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February 16, 1927 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1927-02-16

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PACE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNE1 S.Y, lI13RtAM- Y1(', 192

Near 14 meast ems to assume a more,
sobraspect.
For a week, Minister Chen has
Published every morning except Monday
during-the University year by the :Board in, threatened to cease negotiations if
Control wf Student Puhlicrathins. British troops were landed at Shang-
Members of Western Conference Editorial hal. This would seem to indicate that

The University plans to celebrate
the birthday of George Washington,1
famous as the boy who did it with
his little hatchet, by a debate between

Music and Drama

Association.
ii . ~.~'PIress is exclusively en-
°~ wh ~ o repiublicatilon of all news
-htc l'~ de to it or not otherwise
ii ii Iii, ia~rand the local news pub-
Entered at the postoffiee at Ann Arbor,
sc- i~od ,sass matter. Special rate
o~ )o-agegrant-d by Third Assistant Post-
luamer (;en "r.
S::Lsc-;ptioa by carrier, $375; by mail,
r"S : Ann Arbor Press Building, .May-
nard Street.
Phones- Editorial, 4925; Blusiness 21214.
EDITORIAL STAFF~
Telephone 4925
MANAGING EDITOR
SMITH H. CADY, JIR
Eitordto .wiiA
Nhews Editors.....e. ~ ic
Nlusic and Dramna.., _. Vincent C~J.U
Night Editors
Cba' l es ,(:,[i'1yrnacl 1'.114i~ lt'rr
Carlton Chaj'npc Stantord "ON.
jo Chamberlin Courtland Csnot>
)alipes Uerald C,,,isam A.W1s
Assistant City Editors
Carl~ Burger , Henry Thurris
Joseph !1r71 oi s .k
r~eporters

the Nationalistic government consid-
ers it more important to continue its
propagandist activities in that city
than to acquire definite control of
Hankow with the possibility of recog-

tar'cou Andel 50
.lex Bochin,,.
Jean Cainilhel'
Chester E. Clark
Alfred ILe ° 1 "
Robert E. ir
Elaine (Ci u!,
;ti it ' l _ .
), i Kern

i( Kimball
,. It z -.hianm
Pic -erd Kurvink.
G. 'Thomas McK ),a
M -ris Quinn
amues Sheehlan
Ntekson J.Sijhi,.I
Sylvia St liC
lli~brt ). \
slier wood 3Wmnr.

IIILLUU uy .Englana. it SUCH IS the (case,.1Professors Hobbs and 1-eed,
it is well that the British forces land- Sherwood Eddy, all of whom are
ed at Shanghai. ficient with verbal battle axes.
In the opinion of one American ob-***
server in Shanghai, the American
plan for the neutralization of that c tyI
is oI)poseCdjfundamentally because ifH D1,NN
complicity with the British design to'
secure a large neutral area about! "Dame Justice may be slow;
Shanghai is suspected. It is likewise rmre h ol uiry
stated that further explanation of t eo'- crday, "but she gets there in;
prop! a bySecetay Kllog wuld the samg I see wnhere the At.
propoal b Secetar Kelogg ould letic association i eun
do much toward scuring support forisrtnu
the plan, particularly among t~h mrte-'oneny to alumni because the r,
cant i ar finncia mt relt,. svved seat section for the Ind
area. Such a suggestion .aottr a'ketball game is sold out
plausible. If the entire prolem ! _. __________________
placed in the hands of Min .iter Mce-*
! -I .,*. wlo has~ a greater undler- Hlf the column tomorrow is g
~. u;~of time local i'ttation a, well to he given over to Music and Di
as being in closer contact with the reviews, but they will be conspici
people to be persuaded, it is possible '.y ma, led so that you won't mis
that more success might be achieved. tlien for our product.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENTRY I TIWATE
'h'try-out season is upon us a;
One of the most characteristicw ha idcocefoprtn
thungs that legislaftures (10 is ignore
ranging from The Daily editorial
tbi fin(!himontais and le'gislate for the; down to Inlandler business stag'.
ipt --u.To them a crime wave***
i-p rt in 1als, and criinfals mean '. ayb°it feels ra ohn
' hrrefo an or e~temrxi at:?on. T~he 1 a llols at a campus elect ion, o
of pevetiv mesars nveroc-hang up posters for the S. C. A
;us At present, Michiganz is faced} to hold committee meetings at
tvl~h oe o th mos .srios cimeUnion, or to hand out cigars at
situationis in years. The legislature tion time, but the real campus act
mneets, and immediately capital pun-isTeDly
i shment is advocated as a remedy. *
Capital punishment may be an ad- IJflHj) FAVORS
visable step and a deterrent to crime, NOW READY
but there are other and far morelj The efficient J-Hop favors conr
potent deterrents that the state legis-
hitutre has overlooked entirely. It has tee has announced that the remai
apparently never occurred to the of the J-Hop favors are here
grop tat itsin ansng hatifThere are plenty to go around
groupmthatrsits ineLansingtthateif
~ustice was speeded and retributionmebroftec mteeel
made more{ certain and summary thef they are to be congratulated on
crime situation would be to a large tinlllu0heebfreFia
sol~~urved.It hasnenvev rcuirredth remainder in time for next y

zst.
th-
re-
li-

I

and
pro-j.
-I

going
ran-a
ious-
:stakle
again,
ities,
1sidei
1out
or to
kor
tthe
elec-
tivity

E;

TIlS A'FT E1NOO N: The Mlatinee
MNusicale Ipre4eilt Le-wis l < aru sF , liar-
p)sm(,-1ordi~l. as I he IM iv, tar :at 4
Til IS A FTERi~N OON : rThe Organ
Rtecit al inlluHll :ll i- fill at -1:15
O'cloc(k.
Fiske in Ienrih Iisen's "Gi-host s" ill
the lWh iney theater at 8:15 o'clocki.
TONl(IHlT: Th lteiies presents two
(0111 *dit s by Berniard Sha~w, I'Ania-
r asIka, the Rol,-hevik Emiprcss" andi
"lihe Matti of lDctiny" ll anthe )Ti:4nes
fheat(-r tat S :1)Oo'clock.
THlE MITES PLAS
A rceliiv, by Vinrenit iWa'.
Sorving as amiablea mutui~ al fois,
f Annaianska, the Iliolsm i kEpre'E'
atnd '-'he 'Manl of Destiny" comb ied
to form cne of the 11:051o rtut(t
bills over to grace the Mimer theate--
worthy tohe tnentionedl wish I ho saum
ior(ath a last ycar's mos-t (>l(Nt is pro-
fduetions, which have come to be re-
garded as somethlin g latently canon-
Thte first was amusing comedy, at
times fuzriouslyh'reui and at
I n4nes ( lephan"Jino humlor th.t was
wholly insane, Its greaitest \-e=Ki55
was its peculialrly transparent oh: -
~,-4:the andie nc ',ct~it;: '1i> WrL
loo liiilg for Som e , senise i 11!'i hsp a a d v r l e , he n
there was no pocint to the whole Apiece!
:But due to a. splendid and 'T ,atonlic
version of >=trin ftst by ('h1at-le
Livin ;ston, wit h sonne ilarious pan-

For Your Convenience--Two Stores Completely Stocked
GRA HAPI4
At Ioth Ends of the Diagonal
FF* _ , t urn 'SrKILL EDREPAIRING ,
aI'tt Cete h Ih

i'
1i
z
i
3
,,
_i
_i
_
_:
r
:
-
'!
b
i
?I
V7
3t

.Anrd o, f resh bottle of ouir
Your semester's results will be better.
315 State St.

a ; ;

I

=Z4 HOUR SERVICED

BUJSINESS STAFF
PAt.l ".W.ARNOLD
t . entisit .-.......----.-----William C, fuselI
! , " rtisin1g---------------..homnas Sunderlanid
Advertising ......... ...George H. Annajcl, Jr.
Advertising............. auu-euce J. Van Tuyl
CircoIl::tion-----------------.T. Kenneth Haven
Publication............. John 11. Bobrinh;
Accounts ...............Francis A. Nor(Inist
Assistants
Melvin H. Baer J. B. Wood
D. M. Brown Esther Booze
Florence Cooper H ilda Binzer
Daniel Finley Marion A. Daniel
A. M. Hinkley Beatrice Greenberg
E. L. Hulse Selma M. Janson
R. A. Meyer Mlarion Kerr
Harvey Rosenblum n Marion L. Reading
William F. Spencer IHrriet C. Smith
Harvey Talcott Nance Solomron
Harold Utley Florence Widlmaier

tolnilae by i arlan (>S:qty and a h
clously noble conception of Annasa-j
sim lby Milton Peterson, tihe whole was
nmit- successful. ftm hwC~h~
cinder The secondofth ha cmtie-
"The MI'an of Destiny," was an almnost
1.and perfectly liayed production, andI
thatMerited th'e enthusiastic curtain calls.
1get- This unstinted approb~ation may seem
y and insincere in view (fIthe fact tha t the
year's piece was patently impossible in the,
theater. But the cast was miraculous-

PATH
ON 7H0

Tonight, 8-10
L-
Our mid-week dance has become a popular affair
on the campus-peppy crowd, excellent music,
and pleasant surroundings.
G RNE' UDMDancing W ednesday, Friday, Saturday.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY, 16, 192'
Night Editor-ELLIS B. MERRY
T' COOLAIA G S AVAL PROPOSAL
''iPough the favorable replies of
ta id stat an to the President';
p lanc-i radditional naval disarmiameni
plan in any resulting conference, the
mnas~ opposition to the proposal seen
to lie in the predicted refusal of
France to join anly disarmameont con-
ference not <jpon';ei-d by the s-u
of Nation:) d i-armnamnent comnission.
J To some, it migh seem quite right
that Fran,--' should refuse to eo-oper-.
ate 'in any proposal with thme -Gitec
States when the hitter has refused to
join the associatio:.n of nations design-
M ~ed by an American specifically for tha
pronlotfion of wvorld peace. This move
may be one of the signs of the gt-avy
tating forces which Prof. Presto n
Sldsson believes will draw Ami-k-;~
into the L.eague( of Nations.
Onl the othi-i hand, it is difliceelin
set' Nv'iN F calimc, if she i i in( I~cj-
So it o6 ,:1 r' ', arnmauic-i!, should re
lit-' t ( 81 r 0in thenaval quest ir
Sion, the diff~u'ent questions are re -,
now being considered separately by>
the various sub-committees. Mor-e-
over, in considering the naval ques--
tion, .the League consideration would
necessarily be separate because onl~v
the five nations involved in the Presi-
dent's proposal have navies worthy
of mention. The proposed discussion
would not be independent of Or1
League's work, and the regular Am r-
ican delegates now attending the see-
sions of the preparatory disarmamnii
commission would continue their at-
tendance.
Ample proof for the value of such
a conference, even if the delegates,
differed widely at the beginning, ha';
already been demonstrated at Geneva.
The American proposal for disarina-
ment in all it phases, which was prac-
tically isolated last May, has no ,-
been voluntarily accepted by morne
than half of the other delegates.
It is to be hoped, of course, that
the President's proposal will be ac-
cepted and will be productive of re-
-~suits for world peace. If rejected.,
however, it can hardly be fruitless
since it should focus the wor-ld's at-
tention more fully upon such prob-
lems and lend moral support to the
efforts of the League's comnmission.
EXPLANATIO'NS NE El)ED
With negotiations between Eugene

it
Ii
S
e

to them that while we legislate to ex- "Teewsn ralhdhii-
tinguish tthe present crop of criminals
we tolerate conditions in cities that volved," P. member of the committee
are breeding another generation of jmpandt h ol nevee
them just as surely and just as in- yesterday, "Becafise we committee-
evitblyas ny ondiion cold. men laid our own aside at the first
To deal with the contemporary sit- opruiyadtoedspone
;ration may be important as affecting ware merely the cash patrons."
I heec.
the immediate needs. The situation **
i the future is infinitely more im- TL UOOSW~L
portant as affecting generations as
Bret unborn. If we err now i hand- Hey I-ay-You have my support in
ling this vital problem it will be anyoremks ainthtatcl
i-uor that may cause pan infinite written by "NV. A." in the Alumnus.
dmnotuit of trouble in the future. It From the way time article was written,
i,- tnme that. our legislature stops leg- I -would say that the author ought to
islating from hour to hour amnd con- take some Rhetoric and Englishm.
'-eves rComa really lasting and perma- * * *lly
&,.of re ur f r t e rev nt on f A t L ast T hat C utter R ide
When an auto skids on an icy pave-
.FC E h~hA ENGINEERS ment, youm never stop to worry nmuch
i ,'TC(II -1 HIGWAYabout the fate of the engine, but when;
l-'o," their thiteenth annumal confer-I you're out cutter riding on icy pave-
t-r wqo sponsored by the engineering ment s, you have to have some sort
colltg-,Izghway engineers of Michi- of pity for the horse.
;<k7inr-ssenibied here yesterday to be- * * *
+.=a the four-day discussion of prob- -We found that out Moniday night
1, i zs -onnected with road construc- when we took up the first of those
in -it and maintenance.I two offers of free cutter rides, this
Tio even the casual observer of i one being from the Kentucky Riding
Ainrmc an life and prosperity, the'I academy. All the time we had visions'
N nine attached to the work of these of having to slide around on that ice
s1;t it; -.dilV evidenzt. One0 of time! trying- to pick time horse up off the

lyyperfect, when the precarious chuf-
fling of characters almnost on tlie eve
of the dress ru-cearsai is com'side-od.
IKenneth. N lilyproducedtla nailve and'
credulous hrem enant who proved to be0
a p~erfect vehicle for Shaw 's vicaritous
satire of his counat nyu-ncn. icuiard
jWoelhaf wn-_,s not only pic:ctly femnzin-
'; ie, but, intelligently a:nd subtly so.
:Earl I leisch an createdi an etgotisticalj
Napoleon with exceptional consistency.
The unconscious pori~ng and grand-
stand attitudes wve-e not obvious,, hut
the inmsinations iwere evenmoinre ef-
fective. I haven't timge to think of a
goodl adjective for Robert WVetzel, butI
lie was great! Amid the c(;mplete tri-3
unmp~h of the whole was dlue to theI
sensitive yet aggresive imnsertions i
tihe dir-ection, with acting that made
intelligent the garrulous digressions!
both interesting and amusing.I
TH!E PLAY P11' ODUCTION AN I
I)IRECTION
David Owen, director of Play Pro-
duction courses, has announced tr-y-
outs for Andreyev's "Hie Who Gets1
Slapped" this afternoon from 3 to 5
o'clock in University hall auditorium.j
Thme production will be presented on
Mlarch 30 amid 31 imm University hall. All
students officially enrolled in the Uni-
versity are eligible to tr-y out. Mo~th
character and lead parts are nueded,
and as the cast is both large and( of
varied types all interested in dram at-
es are urged to apply.j
THLE ORG At RECITAL
Palmer Christian, University or- 1
ganist, will resnume the series of or-
gan recitals this afternoomn at, 4:1, FI
o'clock in 11111 auditorim-l.

{r. .

(j A'
'11

in..
~~ininrmw~m~ww

ARROW
kiIalw,
on it. This shirt has
the long point collar.
It is made of a gen-
inc imported English
Broadcloth-the best
inl collars and in shirts
that you can b uy.

,-

This is the nameplate thatt
appears on especially well-
built gasoline and oil
equipment for fl~ing -ta-
tions and Ptara ei; on sy-
terns for s'oring oils in
industry; on lubrication
and filtration sstms L
prime mover-s and drive
mazhine3.

Sauitoinoirb 1i% increase,
c' +:tnbetier g s2II v: ad oi
What has beepi do by
ruke-of-tlmb willI be done
Scie-Latfica y.
Already there 'has b ollgrat
pogr} - but t atila
tv ynoh nwith what is to be.
IntionrWl edthose who are withBosi
will grow accordin~gly!I

i 3o ,O, -btuioonis to a fruitful economic
ordoi i-'m acid efficient transpor-
t- tits,
-w-,tl u' is litt lb doubt ton-
C doi: ttevalue of (lie con2feren2ce
it w I. ughe ld. With experiments in
in - .A ontrttom being carried on
thi-ouhout Michigan as well as neigh-
boring states which are represented,
- cere is a broad field for discussion.
:r the results of pass conferences may

IWhen we first got this invitation
months ago, Mr. Morris told us that
the horse would be a swift one, and
since then we have been buying acci-
dent and life insurance. Finally we
were fully covered, the policies total-
iug $9.00, so we took the ride.
Bumt the horse was reasonable, and

4
'?
(r

TOzk. O T ONIDON a I .3 a. T:-Y {_.

bo considered, much will be gained even when it was hitting sixty miles TI L M AIEE MUSIUA1.LE1
rom the sessions armanged for this per, or so, was binid enough to re- Lewis Richards, hiai-pichoris t, mii
year's program. spomnd to the reins. present a program under time auspice
_____________ ** of the Matinee Musicale this after-noor
SATIFAC~ON (1'~ UC(ES A e had a thrilling time, but we at 4 o'clock in the Mimes theater. Hi,
don't think the horse enjoyed it much, rga Wileofspclitre
Last Friday the gates of a millionj for every once in a while it would- to those interested in the develop
dollar laborator'y in East Orange ' toss its head and we could just mont of musical instruments, anda
swung open for the first time in a imagine it saying, "Say, ho, where l special adnmission has been set fo:
year and through the gates passed the d-d you ever learn to steer a Ford?' sudns
car of the owner of thme plant. It wasM
Thomas Alva Edison in a Ford, cele- And wien, by extra heavy tugging 1 I THE FIRST LADY 01"OF'I'kHE
brating Iis eightieth 'birth day by on "the reinsive would convince theI TIIEATI
fe1redaog hm 1 ny'e onr Foremost among the New Yorli
visiting the plant and talking with horse that )' should proma mener
I ~r M0ll~ sa swetl, "ereY~ure-appearance of Mrs. Fiske in a re-
Ford. I steering, or did th° horse lust decide vivsal of Ibsen's "Ghosts." Appropm-i-
Herein there is a lesson of the! to go thaut way?" 1 ately, it. seemns, the engagement was
worth of the true things of life. Edison i:' * *i at thme Mansfield theater. At present
can command many times a million' Then we get all set to show her th play is onm tour, and Mm-. MIntyre
dlafflud encuwith iveyn hexre and- that we could steer a horse, when; has been exceptionally fortunate' in
est afle, wtheer uuy n suddenly friemnd horse would decide hoimmg per-mitted to present it tonight
every imaginable convemnience and to choose its own roads. I " Witehatr h pa a
service., But he has his work-inven- ! been revieweds with almost unanimnous
tion and pleasture do not nix, science IDo-Nvn The Diagonal I praise fomr Mrs. Fiske, and oduring its
demands form a man all of his time B~ut the hardest job of all was try- short Broadway career was particular-
and the best of his energies and fac- ing to persuade the girl that we really l ly popular with the discmriminating
ulties. And so he carries on, doing oughtn't to drive down the diagonal. patrons of the drama. Mr." Mhntyre
the thing that he is suited to do and We'll adnmit it was our own idea in- is also presemnting two equally ambi-
the ting that to him is the mnost} in- the first place, but we once advocated tious productions in Michmael Arilin's
portant thing in life. Of such qualil- haniging Harry Tillotson, and nobody; "The Green Hat" on Saturday night of

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OUTSIDE AND INSIDE CALIPERS
BRASS BOUND RULES
STEEL M'ULES AND PADLOCKS
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ELECTR I AL SUPPLIES
ST"mipY I...A1V ?S AND SHADES
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