PAGE POTM 'RTHE MICHIAN DAILY 2 rRIDA Y', JAIv U ARX 21, 1927 - ___________ I - , of members on the commit each school or college. s- For the past few years, t Pubishd _every mornfng except t Monday e tjni PPh~chp re tees from1 he J-Hop from nnv I during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications, question as to who was to have su- Members of Western Conference Editorial pervision over the affair. The new Association. arrangement for the other three The Associated Press is exclusively en- classes will be equally as fair. titled to the use for republication of all news At the same ti little power will dispatches credited to it or not otherwise Attesm ietirepwrwl credited in this paper and the local news pub- be taken from the class presidents lsped therein. who will appoint a definite number of Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, members to the committee, the college Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- I having the preference designating the uaster General. chairman in alternte years, ex!pt- Subsciption by carrier, $3.7; by mail, $4.00. mg in the senior class where the elec- Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- tioni of a hairmas, by the committee,- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 2214, was provided to afford opportunity for EDITORIAL STAFF Students in any school or college to EDITOIAL TAFFhold the office. Telephone 4925 More of this kind of organization M G E Tand less over-organization on the MANAGING -EDITOR SMITH H. CADY, 3R. campus should be encouraged. Editor..................W. Calvin PattersonrARBITRATION City Editor.................Irwin A. Oliaa Frederick Shillito Now that the Mexican war clouds News Editors............ Philip C. Brooks Women'sEditor...............Marion Kubik have blown over and the prospects S ports Editor..........Wilton A. Simpso Telegraph Editor....... ..Morris Zwerdling of the United States interfering in Music and Drama.......Vincent C. Wall,.Jr. that country's affairs are exceedingly Night Editors slight, arbitration ought to be the s Charles Behyme Ellis Merry Carlton Charnpe Stanford N. Phelps means used in settling the disputes ohamberln Courtland C. Smith arising over the land and oil laws of a Herald Cassam A. Wilson 1917, resisted by American oil com- Assistant City Editors Carl Burger Henry Thurnau panies. Settlement of the disputes Joseph Brunswick could be made by arbitration very r Reporters Marion Anderson Ptaul Kern quickly if representatives of either Alex Bochnowski Miles Kimball country would make the first move. S Jean Campbell Nvihion Kirshbaum t Chester E. Clark Richard Kurvink. A few days ago President Calles Clarence Edelson G. 1'omas McKean sgnfehiwligestoetete Earl W. D3e La VergneKenneth Patrick sinfe{i ilnns ostl h William Emery Morris QuinneidipueiTeHageScl i Alfred Le Foster James Sheean dsue nTeHge uhwlig Robert E. Finch Nelson J. Smith, Jr. ness, if rightly interpreted, should-go john Friend Sylvia Stone Robert Gessner William Thurnau far in ending the present controver- Elaine Gruber Milford Vanik sies. Since it is the American recog- Coleman J. Glencer Herbert E. Vedder Harvey J. Gunderson Marian Welles nition of the Calles government which Stewart Hooker Thaddeus Wasielewski MortonIB. Icove Sherwood Winslowsi allows it to exist, the sensible thing for the Mexican president to do would BUSINESS STAFF be to offer to submit the disputes to Telephone 21214 a disinterested body for settlement. Such would pave the way for better BUSINESS MANAGER I relations and American co-operation PAUL W. ARNOLD . in the future. Both countries approve Advertising..............William C. Pusch arbitration. It's Mexico's mve. Advertising...............Thomas Sunderland Advertising...........George H. Annable, Jr. Advertising...........Laurence J. Van Tuyl A CHANGE Circulation...............T. Kenneth Haven Publication.............John 11. Robrink It is not so many years since Ja- Accounts...............Francis A. lorquist Assistants pan, with the sudden realization that George A'bn Jr. Ray Wachter it was a powerful state. adopted a Melvin H. Baer Jow Esther Booze policy of bullying superiority in regard Florence Cooper Hilda Biozer to China, Korea, and all the other Daniel Finley Mrrion A. Daniel A. M. Hinkley Beatrice Greenberg less potent nations of the immediate A.R . Hse erMa n eranson district. The net result was that Harvey Rosenblum Marion L. Reading Japan became uniformly hated and William F. Spencer Harriet C. Smith bcm nfrl ae n Har eyTalkotte Flncerolomnet suspected throughout those parts, and Harold Utley Florence W dmaer to this day the little island empire is generally distrusted there. With this former policy in mind, it FN' IDAY, JANUARY 21, 1927 is really quite a reversion from type to find that Japan has become almost Night Editor-ELLIS B. MERRY broadminded in the recent trouble in China, and has adopted a policy al- A POLICY NEEDED most as straightforward as those of With the seriousness of the Chinese the other nations. "We have no ag- question increasing, it becomes qunite gressive policy in Manchuria or else- apparent that the United States should where, our sole occupation being that adopt a more definite attitude toward peace be maintained in that region," China. is the statement of Baron Shidehara', The disorders at Hankow two weeks Japanese foreign minister, in regard The isodersat anko tw wees jto Chinese affairs. ago are now being succeeded by more intesivemob ctin atFoocow. Whatever our opinion of Japanese policy in the past may have been, we While, during the rush on the British cannot help but admit that the present concessions at Hankow American declaration is a marked advance and property and citizens were not mo- I xrml rtfig iha ti lested, it is now reported that one . . America'n has been killed, and that d such aaposition of respect among nations, an American miss-on, , a school, and and Japan can also assist greatly in two hospitals have been sacked. and Japan canals aistre the solution of the Chinese trouble. It is significant to note that at both _________ 'OASTED ROLL muos ic GRA AN - R _XINC__Gi _DRAMA -Q OS" ' % m a A T' "RACINC WITH DEATH IN AN- 'I(h3r Comedy lb presets I TARCTIC BLIZZARDS" will be dis- e Last rning" in li ii For Your Convenience--Two Stores Com letel Stocked cussed Saturday night. Besides the ForYou CotI&inie- atSto8s:C mpleely Stopdi. thteater at 8:34 o ellck.d fact that by going you patronize thiej**{ League Fund, there is the obvious in- RUTH ST. DE E.. . TED SHAWN AND centive 'of getting some first hand THE DEN LAUN DACEl dope on self-preservation in the next A review, by I1illain Lewis At Both Ends *fteDaoa cold wave. Disappointment must have greeted those members of last night's audi- -- Spring is here again-for the fifth oence who were unfamiliar with the I ___________________ time this year. work of Ruth St. Denis and her coin- REAL SERVICE * * pany. There was an absence of all The year's funniest Gargoyle car- ( those qualities commonly attributed N o w toon never appears in that magazine. to truly great dancing. None of the t m o wT im They took it yesterday for the 'En- the dancers executed the trick of the sian. 1 Russian technicians: the tqework of * . ( Pavlowa, the pirouettes of Karsavina, to make sure that your who spin 12 times about on the tip of one toe the entrechats of the new- Fountain Pen "And now," said the Cynical comer, Netchimova, who crosses her Co-ed yesterday, "that the Stu- :legs some 12 times while in the air, is ready for Exams. We will charge you nothing for dent council has reorganized the nor tle miraculous leaps of Lapou- looking it over, or better yet, buy a class social committees, when are ( kova. Miss St. Denis and Mr. Shawn's they going to reorganize the program is an amalmagation of gor- council, and gie the women the geouts costumes, striking settings, col- 4 er status of students?" orful and appropriate music, beauti- ful fighting, and moement by the1 *_ f* dancers. The first part of the the The pen that won't balk or run dry in the middle of an exam. SNOW OR NO? program was uninteresting. "Straus- Holds enough ink for ten exams. Anxiously we await the whims of siana" and such should be left to - the weatherbbureau. If they willsonly others. The Denishawn group does a fix Ann Arbor up with some real snow different sort of thing better. The -not too much and not too cold-we Music Visulations which composed the will have a cutter ride "behind some second part was more entertaining. 315 State St. real horses" tonight. One recalls three young things in yel- * * low chiffon frolicing against an Urban "Racing With Death" will be the blue sky, the lithe iss Humphrey 511,111REAL SERVICE subtitle on that ride of ours, if the playing with a scarf, and a smashing horses are frisky. All we hope is conclusion to this section of the Pro- there is no Antarctic blizzard in thegran in the bacchanalian "Allegresse" HOLIDTAt Y atmosphere. danced by Mr. Shawn and the (or- + * * pany. HAT SALE Right now we want to know some ,~s t ei asls ucsfu .in her "Waltzes." One cannot do ,us- We aro closing out all HATS at efficient methods of stopping the horseice t when it runs away. Will anyone with tice to SchubertmM S D music with the rs!fl Reduced Prices to hiake ready for and hands alone. Pavlowa discreet- Spring Stock. Every hat is fine inpresents a guaranteed horse-halting system ly retains "The Swan" in her reper- please telegraph it in? quality and rig ht up-to-date. v toite; ; Miss St. Denis hotld use; n * * * "Liebestraum" in the same way, for Bi CAMPUS CITIZENSHIP . Cleaned and Plocked. We do sati- . ..she DOES dance that divertismnentW,1 '. In a Uversity it is just as neces- beutifully. Hovever, he canw into factory work. No odor, no gloss, sary to have good citizenship as it is own in the Nautch ldance of the B31- no burned sweats. to have good times. How can we ex- nian Bazaar scene. No twist of the .tonan aaStson.reis o 1 Pect to give this fair country of ours wrist, flashing of the eye, tilting of Factory 11atStore a splendid crop of citizens when we the head, or swaying of the body was 017 Packard ;t. Phone 7415t can't make them take part in campus'lost in her skillful interpretation. Mr --- Wth- activities? Shawn was equally splendid in his No, this isn't a plea for better at- "Cosmic Dance of Siva" and the role Jack ScottsW over es tendance at the debates. What we of the Demon in the Japanese nuin-S want is some votes for this stadium ber. No one with a body likehis BEGINNING TONIGHT name campaign. You'd think this has would be ashamed to appear in some L N some ordinary campus election, rather of the scanty costumes in which he than an important event. dances. Doris Humphrey in this see-Ay,, (a poem) ond number did a strangely athletic i I Do your duty to the University dance with a novel and effective finish And to the B. and G. to much applause. This talented _MAK E Vote immediately. young lady is apt to be lost to the * * * revues, as was Louise Brooks, a form- "CLIPPY" LEADING er member of the company. P "Clippy Stadium" is leading in the In a final consideration of their pro- heavy balloting being carried on for gram, it will probably take the Deni- O N T H E CORN W ELL CO A L -CO KE a name for the new park on the shawns some time to familiarize diagonal. Campaign managers of western audiences with an apprecia- other contestants predict an over- tion of eastern dancing. whelming majority in' favor of their * * * Scranton, Pocahontas respective entries, saying that the in- "TILE LAST WARNING" Kentucky and West Virginia Coal telligent people of the campus haven't A review, by Robert RatmeyKcgi voted yet. There seems to be a tradition ram- " * * pant that melodrama is the easiest I Have You? thing in the world to do, and for that * * * reason it is particularly suited to the Telephone or tele ranh or radio it P-fr dVf. f,-&i.- - .;., -T ff A Hankow and Foochow, the mob viol- ence followed the Cantonese victories over the Pekin army. Radicals in the nationalist party incited the natives against the foreigners, and the mili- tary authorities consistently foundI themselves "unavoidably delayed" inj stopping the mob action Of course, such a policy is no morej advantageous to China than it is to the foreigners affected. As long as the Cantonese government cannot maintain law and order in the terri- tory under its control, it will not re- ceive the desired recognition of world powers. If it continues these tactics, however, mob violence will probably be carried into all the localities oc- cupied by foreigners, since the suc- cess of the Cantonese advance next spring is generally conceded. In fact, it is reported that the Cantonese headquarters is now preparing for a drive on Shanghai. Und or such circunistances, the most effective means to safeguard the lives of American nationals should be de- voloped. If situations similar to those at Iiankow and Foochow are in pros- pect, the government should either warn its citizens to withdraw well in advance of the Cantonese forces, or it should adequaely defend the settle- ments in which they are located. What has become of the man who used to say that he understood the Chinese politcal situation? your votes into the Daily office this morning. POLLS CLOSE AT NOON. * * * needs of amateur pr oductions. It is not surprising that the mind which accepts this dictum will go on to the further folly of saying that melo- i CAMPUS OPINION Anonymon s communications will be disregarded. The namnes of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Too much emphasis cannot be laid drama is the cheapest side of the thea- on this matter. Here is the naming ter, valueless, wind on the stomach of I of the most outstanding edifice on the dramatic art. The person who first I campus, and we can't get up enough delivered himself of this startling in- interest in it to get more than a dozen anity, died before he explained what votes. I he' meant by it, died probably; con- * * * toni -no, t.ban.x-- - -~ d~ralan HOLLYWOOD $ SUPPER Deletal le odi nosphere of glow- igaMark's (rche - *1No harge wi supper uSrday n ight75c SEA D TMF WANT ADS This business has been growing ever since it was established. The secret- "giving absolute satisfaction to our customers." We believe it pays to do business in a friendly way. If you think so too, let's get together. Lempiatng tn s brain wonder, choked WHAT DO DUES DO? I I We just happened to think that per- in admiration of its sheer simplicity. To The Editor: haps the trouble is that so many Some persons, when they get an idea I have noticed lately that The Daily votes were put in the mails that Uncle of that sort, it gets into the skull. has featured an article much to my I Sam is unable to get them all out of and does dreadful things there. Such interest. In it the statement has been the local post office at once. is the case here, and he died. Th j made that Freshman dues are due at * * ' legacy which he left, is this miscon- this time. I do not understand HOW VOTING STANDS ception, which has been responsible whether one must attend the Frosh Clippy Stadium ...................9 for more foolishness in this world Frolic in order to get the benefit from Useless Stadium ..................5 than any other statement that has the dues or whether the money is ex- Little Stadium ...................3 ever been made, except perhaps the pended in a way beneficial to all in- Romeo Stadium ..................1 absurdity so often quoted that Mary eluding those who are not Ted * * * Garden can't sing. Shawns. "A BIG TOWN" If there is any excuse for the thea- These dues, I understand, must be A Times-News editorial-our big- ter it is the melodrama. Clap trap, paid once every year. They are ex- giest local rival in humor-claims1 hoakum, bunk, call it what you will, pended during this time in some mys- j that Ann Arbor is 'now a big town. is the essence of theatricalism. Fur- terious and inexplicable way. I do The proof is that Marion Talley and thermore, the difficulties in tie way not comprehend their purpose due to the Michigan-Illinois basketball game of producing it are tremendous. The my comparative ignorance as a fresh- both drew capacity crowds, although actors are under an obligation to cut man and not having had it explained they were held on the same night, their characterizations with the razor to me by my "fellow officers." Are * * * edge, so many parts of tragedy, so they a "hope" fund for future social We could have give them a better many parts, comedy, with a gener- class dances? Or do they tide the argument to use: on a Thursday ous sprinkling of burlesque. The re-j officers over a rainy day when the night, any week almost, there are suilt of poor drama is dreadful; poort "pater" does not lend a willing ear to three shows each packed to the doors. melodrama can only be atoned by the demands of money spent during And even the library is crowded. the suicide of the whole cast. their extravagant and exuberant col- Therefore this is even a bigger town Comedy Club has produced an ex- legiate days. Or does the fund put the than the Times-News thinks it is. cellent play, and the ingredients of class officers' portraits in the 'En- * * * melodrama, thanks to careful direc- sian? Or is the money used to swell This is the town where commerce tion, are all there. The acting is uni- the class's eventual memorial gift to, and education meet, but the only time formly good, and in the cases of Liv- the University? they meet is in a police tear gas at- ingstone, Denton, King, Wetzel, Ruth T hnvp rn + a mhie Annduin fi ta I tack. I rn - A r T1- -1 . CORNWELL COAL - COKI 4 OFFICE, CORNWELL BLOCK Phones, Office : 4351-4552 Yard Office : 5152 P t "" _ x.M, , -- -- /, , 1 x,, .... ,, t . S.Q: ." - , ho- ' " , P of Q" +QUA.LITV. y* ' !t 5 1 t That the Student Council is to be commended for the adoption of a plan which will standardize the method of selecting committees in charge of three of the four principal socialy functions of the year can hardly be! B. P. S. Paints, Berry Bros. Kyanize and Valspar Varnish- es, Kyanize Floor Finishes, and Celloid Furniture Paint. Old English and Johnson's Liquid and Paste Wax. Waxers and Polishers. Electric Polisher for sale or to rent by the day. $2.00 per day. Duall and O'Cedar dry and oiled mops. Cotton Mops and Sticks. 1 11 All kinds of tool ls and goods to keep the house in order. 3,i I A I