PAGE FOUR THE MIHIAN DAILY SUNDAY,.AIACH 6, 1927 _________________________________________ )w 71 - ' T W T- '. 'ra-3.:'-.dam Qf4r qtr41ian tI Published every morning exept MondayI during the University year by the Board in Conltrol of Student Publcations. Members of Wcestersa Conference Editoriatl Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all newsI dispatches credited to it or not otherwise; credited in this pap~r and the local news pub- lisherdtherein. agreement will be useful in gaining the final funding arrangement whichl is very much desired by this country. !When the French Deputies once see that payments are being made with-I out harmingt the financial condition; of their country, ratification of a permanent funding schedule will be secured much more easily. As the first step in the actual re- payment of the French obligation, the Entered at the- postoflice at Ann Arbor, has------------------------- Mchigan, as second class matter. special rate agreement hsmre motnein of pasage granted Vy Third Assistant Post- I Franco-Anerican relations. ineoser General._______ _______ Sub c i1tioui by 'carrier, $3.75; by mail, Otbeces: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- 11 ISIGIHT E nard Steet.Twditnuse ze iltrar, Phones: FVditorial. 4925;lBusiness 2124.w itnuse mni ieaue Robert Frost and Ernest de Sel- EDITORIAL STAFFI court, will visit Ann Arbor within the Telephone 4925 month for the purpose of giving lee- - - ures nd counselling students who MANAGING EDITOR desire advice on literary composition SMITH H. CADY JR. or problems. Robert Frost, former Edio..........W. Calvin Patterson holder of the University fellowship in City Editor..... .........rwian A. Olia creative arts, is distinguished for his New Eitos ........ iPhilip C. Brooks poetry. Ernest d Selicourt is a Women's Editor.............Marion Kubik scholar noted for his work i al Sports Editor_.,..... ...Wilton A. Simpson Ii al Telegraph Edior ........... Morris Zwertingf nineteenth century literaturd. The visit Music and Drama....... Vincent C. Wall Jr. of 'te two eminent men will fartherk Charles Behymnet EdlitoMr considerably the work whichhas been Carlton Chanipe Qu~nford N. Phelps done by the University in recent1 o oChamberlin ourtand C. ,Smith James Herald Cassam A. Wilon years to enhance its htfger cuzltral Assistant City Editors advantages. Carl Burger Jsp Henry cThra Reporters kTHE SIXTYNIN'Tif ORI°fSS Marion Anderson Mies Kimball Wt h eaeflbse lih Alex Bochnowski Milton Kirshbaum ~ Wt h eaeflbse hc Jean Campbell Richard Kurvnk. was carried on in the closing hours Chester E. Clark G. Thomas McKean oftessinal stcrceiti Clarence Edeson Kenneth Patrick (oftessinalstcraeish Earl W. 1)e La VergneMorris Qhnuinn William Emery James Shea I of its accomplishment, the sixty-ninth Alfred Lea Foster Nelson ) Smith Jr oges aIajue RoBert E. Finch Sylvia one Cogeshsaornd It bet Lessner William Thurnau At the beginning of the session, the Eine Gruber Milford Vanik C Olman ]J. Cieleer Herbert E. Vedder, Republianl leaders prepred a egs- Harvey Ti Gunderson Mariani Weles .lattive -idtrm nerwihtefu Stewart Hooker Thaddeus Waielewakipormudrwihtefu Morton B. Icove Sherwood Winslow measures concerning farm relief Pat iKernalien property settlements, inland BUSINESS STAFF waterways, and radio control would Telephone 21214 lie given secial consideration. For r____ some reason, probably because its BUSINESS MANAGER failure in the previous session has PAUL. W. ARNOLD! caused much confusion in the radio Advertising.........William C. Pusch l idstry, the latter of these was en- Advertiing.........Tho As SunderlandI acted. The others and many worth- Advertising.........George . Annable, Jr. w ~hie bills, however, were either Advertising .......... Laurence J. Van Tuyl Circulation..........T. Kenneth haven neVr considere d outside the commit- Publication........John H. Bobrok Accounts. . ,.., ......Francis A. Norquist I tees, passed over with superficial Assistants . treatment, or caught in the legislative Gerwe Ahi' Jr. Ray Wachterja athendotessio. Melvin H. Baer J. B. Woodja athendfte eir. D. M. Brown . Esther Booze Though the Congress was in theI- Florence Cooper Hilda Bizer Daniel Finley fMario A. Daniel hands of the Republicans, the Demo- A. M. Hinkle-v Beatrice Greenberg E. L. Hulse Selma M. Jansn coats were hardly less to blame for R. A.% Meyer Marion Kerr mn fisstrcirig:I h Harvey Rosenblumn Marion L. Reading mayo itshrcnng; I te Wlliam F. Spencer Harriet C. Smith House reapportinme-nt bill, partic- Harvey Talcott N Fance Solomon Harold Utley Florence Widmaer ularly, the rep esentatves from the Southern states voted solidly against ____________________ the measure ordered by the onsttu- SUNDAY, MARCH 6G, 1927 toi meely fbr political reasons. _____- - _________-- The closing filibuster il the Senate Night'Editor-JO4 I. CI-AMBERLIN v the e tnad fte edin-; vestigating commnittee was, of course, I F THlE SHOE FITS the most iecuable and hildlie Lest the belief gain general recep- event in the entire Cogress. Tis' tion that any particular college dean's nnesclato lce h as office was referred to in a recent edi- g fmn nprtn il nldn the 100,000,000 deficiency appropria-; torial titled very plainly "The Ideal1 tion measure needed principally for Dean's Office," the opportunity is taki- the maintenance of the navy. en to restate that such was not the, Although te failure of the latter case. The matter dealt with was the will hamper some government ativi-1 Idea den'soffce:Som ofthe fe- ;ties, President Coolidge has refused tueI h deal dean's officee f to call a special session. His action tn ursofnth esial olldeansfceeItPlaces the- blame where It rightfully in~~~~~~~ ouhw nvriycleeohers belongs/- and points out to the coun- do ot.Butif he hoefit, i shuldtry, ashas Vice-President Dawes, that beput on.fie forUiest the Senate cannot function under its In the ofie'forUieriypeetrls cleans exist several faults which present_______les._ should be corrected, certain of these - S DETPPR being peculiar to certain offices, and ' AI11I none characteristic of all. One of When, at the close of the great war, these is the frigidity which often k college publications took a pacifistic,. meets the visitor. Another is the attitude; it was the opinion of all the "Don't you see I'mi too busy" atti-' people who are commonly giving to tude. Another is the rushing through airing their views, that it was merely of interviews. Another is the "You're an attitude. They seemed to think trying to put something over on me" that this was just another one of those attitude. Lastly comes the well mean- manifestations of youthful insincerity, Ing attempts of assistants to allow' as antekn ftoeyuhu eie few people as possible to see the exe- to depart when possible from the cutive.logical viewpoint. There are two cases for these faults. The publications meant what they in the first place, many deans teacha said, but not in the spirit which thef one or more ?courses in their collegesj commentbrs ascribe to pacifism. Three In addition to their executive work. i weeks ago, when the Mexican wak This may be dlue to a desire to teach,I threatened, pot asingle major col ege jut it would seesm that-the position of ; publication cane out in favor ofche dean shouldoccupy all of the man's breaking of relations, because they did time without preparing lectures each not consider the cause justifiable. 'day and the like. or secondly, it may! This was much against the pr4ognos-1 be. due to the-insufficient salary paid tications of the ;people who knew. for the dean's work which requires 1 The policy of the publications is not, him to teach on the side to meet liv- l however, so pacifistic as not to sup- ing expenses: This situation shouldI port war if in a good ,cause. When the b4 remedied, to provide more time in country needs support for- a' legiti- which the executive can interview stu- I mate reason, the college publications 'dents. and keep. the personal touch., will be among the first to come to the .In some cases that has been lackin'g.I front. -ROLLS_ _ YATI)E ILE'Music and rama. Hang ouit the som igas ai THIS AFTERNOON?: GOy Maier In out the guard! Two real radicals are the 'Faculty Recital In Hill auditori. sneaking utp' on our peaceful cam-pus. tam at 4:15 o'clock. .lust whene the smioke had cleared tTOMORROW NIGHT: "Tlhe Student away from Eddy's invasion, we founmd - Prince" In the Whitney theater at a notice 'In the' Daily Official Bulletin $,i, o'cloclk. for today saying that Scott Nearing TO ROWN H:Th Mie and Norman Thomas were cowing. peet1%t * - j vesent " . . " In the Mimes thea- ter tit S:30 *o'lock. "RI. U. R."- Rickety University ii Rail'oad--conies to' the Minces then- I'"R.A . R." ter this Week. The play tells how the i A phny,- by Karel (4Aj. engineer liar suc ' d 'fficult Job try- English version by Paul Selvr'r and ing to get hi1s locomiotive' out of thie' Nigel Playfair j;athi of speeding *Fords' and' trucks THE CHAiRAVTE1RS SKILLED REPAIRING It is necessary that your Fountain .Pen, should function at all. times. when lhe crosses streets. I DOWN THE DIAGONAi, "The League 'of Nton~or 3 Vaudeville" said the' siiie I Sophomore yester-day, "is what. Cthey ought to call thi Interna- I tial _- Nigh1!t progr'aMo" Pr esident Little wavs -p'e ~t at the swimmtting meet Iasi, night with one's! of lils sons. Lie wanted to" show'- him I Samson; so that he' would uinderistand that 1~BIical sto ry. Acts- on this InternAtional Night' Program will repre~sent almost every, country in the world, not including the Scandinavian. H-arry Domnin: -Gefleral Manager of Rossuni's Universal Robots.. ....CHARLES P. LIVING-STONE Sulla -' A robotess. .LESTER D.- CURL Marius. A 'robot....... ..... ..TXURSTON ELLIOTT MTIIME Helena"Clory .................... -.WILLIAM MORGAN LEWIS, JR. Dr. Gall:' Head of the Physiological Department of' R.' U. R......... .~SAMUEL S. 13ONNELL fMr . Fabry, Engineer' General of R. U.R.,.......... ........... -..FRANCIS KLING-