THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, APRI 1~lillli~ l Il IIII II L 23, 1 7 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 eredited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoflic" at Ann Arbor, Michigan, astsecod yclass matter. Special rate ofpotage granted by Third Assistant Post-1 Subscription by carrier, $3.75; by nail, X4.00t._ O4ices: Ann 'Arbor Press Building, May- hard Street Phones: Fditorial, 4929; Business 1r3r4.l EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925' WNAGING EDITOR SMITH H. CADY. JR. for.W............W Calvin Patterson City Editor...........Irwin A. Olia News Editrrs. . ..Frederick Shillito . Philip.C. Brooks Women's Edito ............Marion Kubik 6ports Editor..,.. ...... Wilton A. Simpson T ph Editor........Morris Zwerdling Vus and Drama......Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Night Editors lBehyner Ellis' Merry Citon Charmpe Stanford N. Phelp's 1 J*Charberlin Courtland C. Smith James Herald Cassam A. Wilson Assistant City Editors Crl Surger Henry Thurnau Joseph Brunswick Rieporters Marion Anderson Milton Kirshbaum Margaret Arthur Pal Kern ]ear Campbell Sally Knox Jessie Church Richard Kurvink. Chester E. Clark G. Thomas McKean Edward C. Cummings Kenneth Patrick Margaret Clarke Mary Ptolemy Blanchard W.Cleland Morris Qunn Clarence Edelson ames Sheehan1 William Emery Sylvia Stone Robert E. nich Mary Louise Taylor S. Martin Frissel Nelson J. Srnmit, Jr. { Robert Gessner William Thurnau Margaret Gross Marian Welles Elaine Gruber Thaddeus Wasilewski Coleman J er,. Glencer Sherwood Winslow l Harvey Gunderson Herbert E. Vedder 1 Stewart oe Milford Vanik Morton B.. hove army, regarding the national defense. He places the burden of national de- fense squarely upon the citizens of the country and thereby removes any shallow criticism of the size of the armed forces based upon a casual ex- amination. It is fortunate that a man of General Summerall's calibre heads the staff and fulfills the position with- out ballyhoo. He is a distinct. asset in a public way to the armed forces of the country. - AXBERT J. liEVERIDGE With the death of Albert J. Beve- ridge, former United States senator from Indiana, this country has lost an outstanding Citizen who has been rec- ognized in several fields.I Born Oct. 6, 1862, in the humble surroundings of an Ohio farm which gave little more than a scant exist- ence, Beveridge made a remarkable rise to eminence. Working at variousJ jobs from the position of a farm hand to that of a book agent, he earned his way through high school and college and finally entered the iegal profes- sion. On the strength of his declama- tory powers which had won him notice in middle western forensic circles,, he became closely alligned with the Re- publican party. His political career was marked by two terms in the Sen- ate during which he helped to enact many progressive measures. Since 1911, though he has held no public office, Beveridge has figured promi- nently in political and diplomatic pos- sibilities. The prominence of the former sen- ator as an orator and a writer has been quite as noteworthy as his po- litical record. His "Life of Marshall"' has been recognized as the most re- vealing estimate of the great chief justice. It is particularly regrettable that he should not have been spared until he had completed a similar vol- ume on Abraham Lincoln which he, had recently started. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 B XNESS MANAGER AUL W. ARNOLD Contracts .. ...........William C. Pusch Copywriting..........T.homas E. Sunderland Local Advertising . ...George H. Annable, Jr. Foreign Advertising......Laurence Van Tuyl Circulation................T, Kenneth Haven Publication................John H. Bobrink Accounts ..............Francis A. Norquist Assistantp Beatrice Greenberg George Ahn, Jr. Selma Jensen Florence Cooper Marion L. Reeding AM. Hinkley Marion Derr E. L. Hulse' Nance Solomon R. A. Meyer Ralph L, Miller Harvey Talcott John Russwinkle earold Utley Douglas Fulle t Ray Wachter Virle C. Withiam Esther Booze 0 SUMMER WHITE HOUSE According to latest reports the number of delegations visiting the President to urge him to spend his vacation in Siwash, Pippinsburg, or Punkin. Hills has swelled into the; hundreds. The President receives them, promises to consider the loca- tion suggested, and that ends it. As the chief executive has stated, he wants to do some fishing and most of the delegations from the West and Middle West have supposed that he meant angling in natural streams and lakes. True enough, he does want to do some fishing, but it is of the po- litical kind. The state which will se- cure the summer White House within its 1boundaries will be the one in which the ,political fishing is of the best. The angling jA incidental. "Tries To Nab Police Auto/' Any- way, this thief dosen't show any dis- crimination. , I I SWITH -ArR. i ]VIcGEHEE Read Rolls while rolling to class on your roller skates. And to- day we ourselves coast while "ile- Cehee" runs the bakery, as the see- ond of the tryouts for next years editorship. * Der Fruhling ist gekommen, and the reason we say it with such as- surance is that because we have seen a vision. Near the corner of Hill and East University Ave. there stands a tree, a cherry tree. Two days ago it reared its naked branches to the skies, a deplorable sight. Today it stands clothed in white samite, mystic, won- derful; it has Jots of blossoms. All hail, tree-well bloomed, oh bloomed indeed! This is the sort of weather that this department heartily endorses: bright sun, blue sky, and Old Glory hanging limp as a cow's tail to the peak of the campus flagpole .... All hail, Limp Flag! Student ingenuity seems unbound- ed. In proof of this rather sweeping statement, we cite the example brought to light yesterday afternoon. Some enterprising youths secured somewhere an old hand-car, and were rolling up and down the disused tracks, much to the ausement of this, and other, departments. * * * STORY How Cheeses are haide, and Why Cheeses are made in Switzerland out of cream and other things. The first thing to do is to dump all the ingredients into a great vat, or tub, ag it is called. There it is allowed to ferment for a few months, and rot. After this is finished, the mess is then taken to the backyard and left there in the'rain and dirt to age. They 4 age and age and Age. Finally they are taken to the house and have holes punched in them. They age some more, in quiet solitude. By this time they begin to smell quite cheesy, andl a canary-bird is let into the room to test the air. The process,is completed. The reason for the manufacture oft this product is that they can be sold for good prices. Needless to say, theI native Swiss almost never takes any.i *, s *t The Schoolmaster's Club is here. All hail, brave Club! * * * It has been hinted that later on in the month the pupils themselves will be given leave to play hookey. Not. just yet, however, children. Let the elders have first chance at a bright and sunny day.... * * * Many of the more sophisticated of the fraternities on the campus have so far seen fit to frown on the new vogue of roller skating. In fact, so rabid have they become, that theyy have, in a few cases, resorted to open war-fare aginst the rolling pedest- rians, contending that they are neither flesh, fish, nor fowl. Their method of combat is to besprinkle the street and sidewalk in front of their houses with large pebbles and sand, and so pre- vent the skaters from enjoying them- selves. In sooth, a dirty trick. : a s Ho hum, time to go home and eatI now. (twelve o'clock, high noon) * * * Lunch being over, though not totally digested, wp hasten back to work. It was not a particularly good lunch as lunches run out our way, so be not disappointed if the rest of the column is not as ah-hem as the first part was. This column, much like Napoleon's army, travels on its stomach. * * * Once a fool, always a fool, and weI doubt not that the boys who were pinched for speeding in cars will be the same ones who will soon be limp- ing around with barked shins and stubbed toes-acquired from a disre-; gard of the Skating Laws of the State of Michigan. * * Sunday is Cane Day. All the Seniors will carry canes. They will sneak out of their various fraternity houses with the sticks tucked up al trouser leg, stump around the corner, pull it forth, and strut about for an hour. God grant that no one drop one while doing some nifty trick with it. . * * * .Cane Day is the collegiate prototype of a society girl's debut. They have a swell coming-out party, buy a lot' of swell dresses,adanceall evening with boys they have never seen-and then are seen no more. Seniors like- wise. FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1927 Night Editor--COURTLAND C. SMITH DISARMAMENT FAILURES Though it took a week's vacation so that the severe 4ifferences of opinion between the delegates which had ren- dered progress impossible might be compromised, the League disarma- Inent conference at Geneva has no more reached a general agreement for the limitation of armament since its reassembly in the third week of Aprij than in its previous session. In the opinion of some observers, the meeting is fast drawing to a close 'because thefwide divergence of views hias precluded the formation of a gen- eral program of disarmament. Due to the British concessions, it is true that England and France are closely aligned. However, thl latter is in sharp disagreement with the United States and Germany because she has insisted that no limitation .should be placed upon trained reserves. There has been a similar dispute over the restrictions on .war material. It is disappointing to all interested In world peace that the conference seems to be coming to such an "in- conclusive end,." Though the decision to treat all phases of 'disarmament simultaneously has also hampered the assembly, its principal difficulty ap-j pears to lie in the obstinate hold maintained by some powers on their . self interests, and by thehcorrespond- ing feeling of ;distrust heldby the smaller powers. .t would probably be impossible to fix, the exact blame for these conditions. Yet, it seems fait to say that France, particularly in the matter of the 'trained reserves, is one of those who:,have not shown the proper attitude. It may be assigned to the fear of aggression with which France has been afflicted since 1870; nevertheless, it is very undesirable. With a deePseated disagreement apparent among the delegates, it is' felt that the sooner -the conference adjdurns the better. Further attempts to adjust differences in opinion will probably be 'made through regular diplomaticbchannels, though the three power naval ;conference called by President Coolidge will meet at Gene- va this summer. Perhaps this gather- ing, in considering one phase of dis- armament instead of many, will be .:mn. 11nneefll t an he n p n w .i TONIGHT: Mimes and Masques present "Anna Christie", by Eugene O'Neill, at 8:30 o'clock in the Mimes theater * * * LAWRENCE TLBBET It is sometime before youthful tal- I ent is recognized-especially at the Metropolitan; a few artistic errorsI or a negligent press-agent, and even that tardy fame is lost. Lawrence Tibbett experienced that eclipse which is so often accorded even the veteran of a dozen seasons, and as a result at that institution he is still getting his sixty dollars a week or such a mat- Lawrence Tiblett, baritone ter-and it concert his salary runs into four figures. j But 'ibbett tiis season created the most startling impersonation of the season in the most startling opus- "The King's Henchman"-and as a result i r anked as one of the greatest baritones in the country. The profes- sion terms it a come-back.... but it meant more in this instance, for it practically signified complete recog- nition. There seems to be a prejudice against American singers at the Metropolitan, and perhaps this is in a sense responsible for his ostracism. But it is anyway difficult to exactly term it. His appearance in the festi- val two seasons ago was a sensation; his engagement for this for "Carmen" in the Saturday night concert may be another. * * 4 THE ROCKFORD PLAYERS-- I "THE FIREBRAND" Robert Henderson, director of The Rockford Players, announces the f4 - lowing cast for "The Firebrand," by Edwin Justus Mayer, which will open their season of spring repertory on Tuesday evening, May 3, in Sarah Cas- well Angell hall: Ascanio ..............Franklin Wait Emilia............Frances Bavier Benvenuto Cellini..Robert Henderson' Angela ..............Frances Horine Beatrice ............Camille Masline Pier Landi..........William Bishop Alessandro, Duke of Florence.... ..............Reynold Evans Ottaviano de Medici.. .......... ... Charles Livingstone The Duchess .......... Amy Loomis A Hangman ...........Harlan Cristy * * * THE HIGH SCHOOL STATE ORCHESTRA A review, by Joe Bates Smith. 'To accommodate the ony hundred sixty-four musicians as well as the Ann Arbor High School chorus which assisted !in the recital last night the stage of Hill auditorium was trans- formed into a pyramid of tiers, the performers in colorful array. The fact that the orchestra had had but four rehearsals while in Ann Arbor before the program, was betrayed only by Norman Larson the conductor, to whom a great pkrt of the credit goes, who also stated that it would be but a matter of a few years before the same system of musical instruction that was now in use in high and grade schools would be initiated into all of the leading universities. But it has been only recently that even ,high school officials have rea- lized the value of musical training in the school lives of the students. To encourage this the high schools throughout America have installed music instructors to teach students who wish to pursue a musical course during their& years in high school,j and a system of renting instruments for the benefit of the students who could not otherwise afford to study. Besides these facilities the school gives a regular credit for the work, and music lessons are established in MAKL-V 3,>5 L MANN'S E M x FELT HAT SALE We are closing out all Spring Hats at special prices. Light shades, snappy shapes. Quality equal to the best. We Clean and Block Hats No Odor-No Gloss Correct Shapes-No Burned Sweats Factory Hat Store 617 Packard St. Phone 7415 11 PLEASE DON'T MAKE PATHS ON THE CAMPUS Music and Drama l i I READ THE WANT ADS : l ii1 u ll ll ulfiillil i ttltll l l nli liilillill u t lll1tIlli 11illIIII, 1 1m! 1 11 1111 i111111 tf11 1!ttf I11 111111 fill S e n i o r rT - PERSONAL ENGRAVED CARDS SHOULD BE ORDE RED NOW AtBoth Ends of the Diagonal A A Congenial crowd well ventilated ball room A peppy band Pot UAUz-ir. a 4ti pv. A good time A Large Shipment of Skates i CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cauts will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. I Just Received "sic" To The Editor: The letter to Campus Opinion just before the spring, holidays, entitled "The Solid South" and written by someone who signed himself "SIC," endeavors by an alleged justification of a particular lynching to justify lynching in general in the South. This is a clear implication of the letter, which contains references to "con- stitutional limitation" (sic), "honest, and true (yet very ignorant) individ- uals of foreign and northern birth" (sic), and the "inadequacy of legal justice in the South" (May I again in- sert "Sic?"). The letter praise the Ku Klux Klan. I can't refrain from protesting against this letter, though I don't suppose it would be indorsed by many, people, even among southern students. The occasional white southern student who has joined the Negro-Caucasian club-one young man from Louisiana, for example-shows that the so-called "solid south" is not so solidly anti- progressive as some southern legis- lators and students to try to make the world believe. But may I make just three points against the stand of SIC? First, the argumentum ad excitement sort of argument, consisting of narrating the details of a disgusting and cruel crime by a Negro, not only does not prove that all lynchings are justified, and does not prove that all Negro men are rapists, but does not prove that theI lynching of the guilty moron is good public policy or good criminology. (And, anyhow,, though I know nothing of the case cited by SIC, I am very loath without further evidence to think that a Negro mildly treated by I a southern court is likely to be as guilty as a Klansman paints him). Second, of the many cases of lynch- Regular sizes, $2.00 pair. Extra Large, Heavy Reinforced for the Big Boy. $2.75 a Pair. Jno. 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