F1'OU THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 192 fraa-A A ..-I .i N i & a.- a THE MICHTGAN DATLY' SATTJflDAY, 3ANUAflY 29, 1927 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoffics at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- waster General. Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR SMITH H. CADY, JR.. Editor..................W. Calvin Patterson° City Editor.................Irwin A. Olian Fredcrick Shillito News Editors............. Philip C. Brooks Women's Editor..............Marion Kubik Sports Editor............Wilton A. Simpson Telegraph Editor......... .Morris Zwerdling Music and Drama.......Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Night Editors Charles Behymet Ellis Merry Carton Champe Stanford N. Phelps Jo Chamberlin Courtland C. Smith James Herald Cassam A. Wilson Assistant City Editors Carl Burger Henry Thurnau Joseph Brunswick 1 Reporters Marion Anderson Miles Kimball Alex Bochnowski Milton Kirshbaum Jean Campbell Richard Kurvink. Chester E. Clark G. Thomas McKean Clarence Edelson . Kenneth Patrick Earl W. DeL La VergneMorris Quinn William Emery James Sheehan Alfred Le° Foster Nelson j. Smith, Jr. Robert E. Finch Sylvia Stone Robert Gessner William Thrurnau Elaine Gruber Milford Vanik Coleman J. Glencer Herbert . Vedder Harvey J. Gtderson Marian Welles Stewart Hooker Thaddeus Wasielewski Morton B. Icove Sherwood Winslow Paul Kern sions throughout China, including ex- traterritoriatlity. As was true of the American offer to negotiate new treaties, the proposalq displays an attitude similar to that shown in the extraterritorality agree- I ment of several months ago. In addi- tion, however, it demonstrates a con- scientious desire on the part of the British government to settle the diffi- culty as soon as possible. Rather3 than wait until the civil conflict with- in China is settled, as the American plan almost necessarily must do, Eng- land has indicated that it will deal with both the Pekin and the Can-E "tonese governments. In this way, they will show no preference to either fac- tion; they will be dealing with the representatives of all the Chinese peo- ple; and at the conclusion of the in- ternal struggle they will be able to operate under their new commercial, treaties, previously prepared, while the other countries will stiil be in- volved in diplomatic action. Although England is required to deal with the situation more intimately than any other nation, it seems that she is now pursuing a more advanced policy than is the United States. The effect which this move may have upon concerted action of all world 1 powers concerned in China is quite interesting. ,With America and Eng-, land both moving toward separate action, it would seem that the united action which might naturally ;follow from the extraterritoriality agreement might be pigeon-holed. On the other hand, the initiative displayed by Eng- land and the United States may dead all the other nations concerned to a general settlement. At any rate,* if either England or the United States succeed in making a settlement, it will pave the way for better rela- tions between China, whatever gov- ernment it may have, and the rest of the .world. WANTED: DEBATES When the University wants to train a football team it schedules practicej games; when it wants to train a base- ball team it sends it on a southern trip; when it wants to train debaters, t% :Fif~~~~~~~~litff r lIIIUJ IIIII111 111i1 flilli iltlillililillif11111"111111111111F nr lltlgng u11111111111111111ill 1111111tigggii ll1111 __ __ __ __3 MUSC END RGAIM1Ai~ WATDVDRAMA M ;} W A N'IE1)- What this country needs is an efli-:l iTONGT: Comuedy Club presensi cient weather bureau. If the Repub- t - F' (;°r licans can't make up their minds s aler t :3(? o'clock. F 1or our Conven efce-Two r sCompetely t ke whether to call his winter or sum- - mer, let's put the Soealists in. -I'll! )ED USAWN LCTURE A e ciw, y Vincent WallGH Any party that can spend millions TB hde estgct qualifications of trle arAth to put a man in office ougtht to be able etqaiiat~so rea- 21 1o scare up a couple of thousand to tistry are sufficiently vague to make'- a g: provide stabilization of the weather Mr. Shawt n hesitate, and apparently _________________________ ____________l__i__lll________lII IN 111i 11t111 11111y1g t11lllllllllttl111111111111 industry. A subsidy would help a lot.i * * *t Where you waded yesterday you? slide today, and probably will bake in the warm glow of the sun tomorrow. CUTTER RIDE CALLI.D OX t ACCOI' -T OF RAIN We had it all arranged to go cutter riding last night, and then the weath- er man spoiled the fun by sending rain. We wanted to go with an u- brella and slickers, but couldnt get an umbrella big enough for the horse. * * * Perhaps we can get one of those cutter rides in tonight. Unless the roads get too dusty. TOMORROW! for this reason he limited them to his trade. There are those who dance for their living-all the low comedy per- sons cf the revues and such! 'there are those wlio love the shows for their blattan pn01l;city; and then there is the artist, willi; to make the sac- rhices and work tirelessiy for the perfection that success demands. Now all this did sound like bunk y.steirday afternoon in University hall F ° PEM 4 0 O Y F Y SKILLED REPAIRING i I It 18 2 O tilfle to make sure that your o ntain Pen is ready for Exams. We will charge you'nothing for looking it over, or better yet, buy a The pen that won't balk or run dry in the middle of an exam. Holds enough ink for ten exams. Six to twelve times as much ink as other pens. Rider's Pen Shop BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER PAUL W. ARNOLD Advertising...............William C. Pusch Advertising...............Thomas Sunderland Advertising............George 11. Annable, Jr. Advertising............Laurence J. Van Tuyl Circulation ......... ......T. Kenneth Haven Publication............... .John 1. Bobrink Accounts ................Francis A. Norquist Assistants George Ahn Jr. Ray Wachter. Melvia H. Baer J. B Wood I3. M. Brown Esther Booze Florence Cooper I!ilda Binzer horses are as frisky as the cutter boys say thiey are. (Don't send floiiers unitil yOu make sure we took tile ride.)* - CIPY SUNDAE LATrEsT audit 0rium when Mr. Sh awn wxas Wai 1 Fame has at last come to Clippy. lyhoolng the cosmoPolite- ci thn im Baseball players have candy bars pus. Eut it is really tine. The stage named after them, and there are csi- in itself, and dancing is primarily a gars bearing the names of the greatest (wing 01 the stage. has an appeal that statesmen in our history, but Clippy ikeeps t hem all in the harness foi' has an ice cream sundae specially years 01 o'ourso' Mr. Shawn places his concoctedl to honor her. arit (in an inlinhi ely higher level than * * * Variety and~ musical comedy with their This "Clippy Special"' is a great jiot(ers andI slapdVsh comedians, or dish, too, and Clippy herself would be any c f the othieri theatrical genres. glad to eat one. Perhaps she will B3ut thle applhcation i emamis the same. some day, if she ever runs away from1 Tii whle at of dant cing ithe in- the campus white house again. rreaiosnthlnsad 'th * * * the micaninug that is to be conveyed. Whenwe eardaboit tis ew dshThe costumes and setting that are used we chased right OVer 1 ( the Betsy aeol tnenso(Iawgtm RPss shnn. and tnld themm wo thouight di~,o. The ntural shl idn a an 315 State Street i REAL SERVI 4 CE 4 DANCE DANCE P LE ASE PAH ON T H E I -AT ARMORY FRIDAY AND SAT RDAY NIGHTS LUNDQUIST'S WOLVERINE ORCHESTRA a Daniel Finley t.rionrA.eDaiel who differ from athletes in that they A. M. Hinkley Beatrice Greenberg . L y Hulse Selrna M. Janson may accomplish something with their R. A. Meyer Marion KerrI Harvey Rosenblum Marion L. Reading training after they leave school, it William F. Spencer Harriet C. Smith tringafethylvesolt HarolyTalcott anrece Wimonier herds them into a class, lets them work for a semester, and then givesI about a third of them 17 minutes on the platform as the extent of their SATURDAY, JANUARY 29, 1927 vast training. About fifty men are interested Night Editor-CARLTON G. CHAMPEI enough in debating at Michigan to try out for the class. Fifteen of these, or IRRECONCILABILE ATTITUDES a tew more, are taken into this class. Last week the Senate Committee on Then, after they all work for nearlyI Student Affairs considered the peti- a semester, developing one of the tion of three fraternities to give most valuable qualities that an Amer-4 dances in conjunction the week-end ican citizen can have, the ability to of the Junior Hop. The petition was express himself, six of these fifteen granted, but with the provision that are chosen to compete with a teami no outside guests could be invited to from another university. This is the the two evening parties, and only one opportunity that Michigan offers to guest per man at the afternoon dance. the man who aspires to some degree This action was taken en tho grounds I of proficiency in the field of public that the responsibility was divided be-j speech. tween three houses and the dances It is not that more debates could would therefore be more difficult to I not be easily scheduled. Harvard, control. Yale, California, Kentucky, all sec- fraternitytions of the country are anxious to At the same time, one rmeet Michigan teams, and dozens of may give a daneandsendwreni offers are turned down every year vitationsto the entire membershipfor contests of this kind. It seems of two neighboring houses, without rthesurdfthat aischool which rather absurd thatashol hih drawing down the ire of this commit- enr shol c tee. And yet each of the three- fra-t .it.w i itself to the training of six men, and ternities acting together was willing giving them only seventeen minutes to assume complete responsibility for aieceothe latform.eA footl . apiece on the platform. A football the dance at each of their houses. Just how these two attitudes can be player who played with the team only ra single quarter of one game would I rhardly consider himself experienced. If the University intends to interest Debaters with the same experienceI itself in the number of persons at- are considered the fortunate few. tending fraternity parties, it is going If Michigan has produced justices too far. As long as one house can be of the supreme court and some of C definitely held responsible, and can be America's leading lawyers under these punished for infractions of rules, the conditions, it is inspiring to conceive University has doneits part. And this what might happen if we were to give was fully taken care of by the ruling these men half a chance here. When a of last fall that abolished the "open" program of reform, with much press party and led to written invitations. agenting and loud publicity, is an- Each of the three fraternities en- nounced by the University it might be tering the triple agreement was will- well to include, as one of the more ing to be held responsible for the ac- modest and unsensational items, a few tions of the men from the other houses i more debates for the men who work while they were within its walls. t for whole semesters and never give If each fraternity had applied for per- a public speech.I mission, separately and invited 'the I__--_ other two, the permission would have THE PORK BARREL been granted. Why, under these cir-j From the appearance of the rivers cumstances, when they applied to- and harbors bill which has been ap- gether, but1 with all three caring for proved by both the House and the one particular party, was it not Senate, it may be judged that the day granted? I of "pork barrel" legislation has not To be sure, this was a ticularenieydspar. entirely disappeared., case and other influences may have determed the decision but for the When this measure was transmitted Unieritydtoedlimiothguetflisthofto the Senate after being passed by1 Uiversity to limit the guest list of the House, it provided for expentli-I any house, when it is willing to stand t tures of $35,000,000. Then, in that S responsible for its guests, is going too august body which has named co.n-. far. Precedents once established are mittee after committee to safeguard easily followed, and often point to the public interest, amendments were future policy. Permission should be added which more than doubled the granted in such cases, with it definite- appropriation. ly understood that each house is to be The inclusion of these expensive held responsible by the University for items which had been rejected by the the actions of whoever may be an in- . . i' . i I I I -qm u, I-- d .1 I I $1.00 per Couple ARMORY UNDER NEWMANAGEMENT tey ought to ay us tribute fow. Th classical technique the use of the name ROLLS introduced to humanity, and the faculty. ; . aasmasnohn;ti'Ete y t * Bottom, clogging and soft shoe is really but a perversion of older folk T.lhey dished us lip a free sample I _d _ - cances4 that were called into being right away. If some of the placesI that sell totsted rolls would. only feel. that way about it we night partake of some midnight lunches. The only reason we went over after the sundae was that we knew some- body would think of it, and go in, in- troducing themselves as Timothy Hay, and demand a free sample. In order not to embarrass anybody, we went Virst, and tell this to you now as a purely for entertainment, and that have become mere show-off. Mr. Shawn, in addition, exoneratedc the chaice of the Denishawns in in- corporating their Eastern numbers into their current program, At the end of the season, the whole company is tired of the old routines, and is ready to pioneer into new fields. The public which was educated for a re-s petition of this program condemns the new features. Bitt if there was no further work done in the field the whole art of the profession would be at a standstill, and this. is the main purpose of the Denishawns in their work-to create and infuse into their work an originality and beauty thatl can be continued.j The futurr dominating factors of the business world are the young men of today. who will take advantage of the opportu- nities offered in our eflicient business course. <,cod Semester Yebruary 14 HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE - - - CARAMEL PECAN FRUIT SALAD VANILLA A delicious surprise for your Sunday dinner. Make your meals a success by servg ou specialty ices and ice cream. - - DIAL 4101M -- - - "The Home of Pure Milk." I- -1i1I111ilU IIilllllllllU II~iiil llilIlllii~ l1D11I~ 1: i warning that the trick won't work now. s * s i i' I DIANCE ON IAGONAL Rolls will stage a big all- campus dance tonight on the diagonal, if the walks are as i i I ; State and William Ann Arber Sts. F slippery as they were yesterday. "LAFF TAT OFF"- - Refreshments will- be served in l On Mlonday and Tuesday nights, the Clippy Stadium and En- February 7 and 8, Earl Carroll will gineering arch. I bring Don Mullally's comedy "Laff That Off" to the Whitney theater. The * * * show is now at the Garrick after a WESTERN UNION has suspended fourteen months run at Earl Carroll's service to ROLLS. Ve weren't ableWalla k's Theatre in New Yor. to pay the bills for the flood of tole-[ The lot deals with three young grams expressing confidence (collect) bachelos who admit an a-tress to in our interity. So we can't print any their apartment as their "sister' F more. all right-they meian it. Tlhen they * * * all fall in love with her after saying 101 A re-count has been demanded in they won't. The result is something ; this Clippy Stadium election. We Avery -opwood and Frances Hodge- haven't the funds to pay the salaries so Burnett might have done if they of all the clerks needed, as the ex- he okt peculir t aThe ut it penses of the first counting broke us. all is that it really is the New York r cast; I think for the first time in the D Wl "rahng ude pride Ihistory of Ann Arbor. And this re- oes the money to finance the recoulnt r fe-es the common eomlant of the iesults? road-which means every city in the FOR SALE: Man's fur coat, skiis, country except New York-that theThere violin, typewriter.-Daily classified. nderstudies and second tate 'hOss d Taking the evidence in reverse order, p(ol'O 'replare the principals. ibere m it looks like a disoaraged author :are thenames, if' you don't believe mco. rInv whose landlady dislikes music, and me: Marion Wells, Pauliite Drake, who broke an ankle on a steep hill, latte Foley, Clarence Oliver, William and wants to go to the South Sea 'Cargaii, Norval IKeedwell and Ja'k islands for a real rest. M'athz ws. won't vouch for th char- * * *acte1 work, but other v se 0r. Mt FRESHMAN are respectfully urged tyre is present ing thne seine comnpany. to wear their pots--Student council. The work of Clarenca Oliver is wellJ The most serious aspect of the matter known. As a character actor he lies is that if present conditions are al- plavye Sito the George M. Ctoliain roles, Inrro o nt~tnna x+ , - a iir"x]-czna nli 5 ~ f nt - rerr . rrs. rrrrerr. . s re. ~,a .err., cor c ., . .i-rrr~~rr. :.i. ,rs r.o,, , 1 ho ARMERS AND MECHANICS BANK -105 S. MAIN STREET 330 S. STATE STREET s# F, I in inventory of this first-"month of the new year show favorable is time yet to make the year a successful one and the best nine wherein your policies were good or bad during this vestigate your financial status, and change or improve your own good. Ytake IYourself a 'Success way first your- a 3