p'AGE FOrR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TPTTsnAY, MAY . 1927 i t Published every morning except Monday during the Universit year by the Board in Contrel of Student ublications.- Members of Western Conference Editorial1 Association.X 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-E lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-j anaster General. Subscription by carrier, $3.25; by mail,t $4.00.t Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ptard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4926 MANAGING EDITORt SMITH H. CADY. JR. Edltor..................W. Calvin Patterson City Editor................Irwin A. Oliaa NewsEditrs.......... Frederick Shillito News Editors............-" Philip C. Brooks Women's Editor.........t... Marion Kubik Sports Editor........... Wilton A. Simpson] elegraph Editor..........Morris Zwer in Musio and Drama........Vincent C. Wall. Jr. Night Editors1 Charles Behymet Ellis Merry Carlton Champe Stanford . Phelps Jo Chamberlin Courtland C. Smith ames Herald Cassam A. Wilson Assistant City Editors Carl Burgei Henry Thurnaw Joseph Brunswick Reporters Marion Anderson Margaret Arthur Jean Campbell Jessie Church Chester E.hClark Edward C. Cummings Margaret Clarke biancnard W. Cleland Clarence Edelson William Emery Robert E.Kinch- . Martin Frissel obert Gessner Margaret Gross Elaine Gruber Colema# J. Glencer Barvey Gunderson Steuart hooker., Morton B. Icove Milton Kirshbaum Pal Kern Sally Knox Richard Kurvink. G. Thomas McKean Kenneth Patrick Mary Ptolemy Morris uinn Jaynes Sheehan Sylvia Stone, Mary Louise Taylor Nelson J. Smith, Jr. William Thurnau N arian Welles Thaddeus Wasielewski Sherwood Winslow Herbert E. Vedder Milford Vanik BlUlINtSS STAFF{ Telephone 21214 USINESS MANAGER PAUL W. ARNOLD Contracts .................William C. Pusch Copywriting .........Thomas 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 Assistants Beatrice Greenberg George Ahn, Jr. Selma Jensen Florence Cooper s arion L. Reeding A. M. Hinklev Marion Kerr -. E. L. Hulse Nance Solomon R. A. Meyer Ralph L. Miller Harvey Talctt John Russwinkle Harold Utley Douglas Fuler Ray Wachter Virle C. Witham Esther Booze THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1927 Night Editor-JO I1. CHAMBERLIN TIE GLAD HAND To the delegates of the Michigan Interscholastic Press asociation we ex- tend the glad hand of fraternity and cordiality. Each year it is our pleas- ure to welcome you on behalf of the University of Michigan and The Michi- gan Daily and each year it is our hope that we have helped to give you an understanding of th. motives and the spirit that animates this great univer- sity, and its organ, The Daily. Such an \organization as yours has a 'unique advantage in being able to come here and see the things that are being done in the next layer above. And ours is the pleasure of helping you and trying to give to you some of the vision that we have so that you may follow when we have gone. May this year be the best year of your career as an organization and may your stay here be pleasant and helpful. Our side of the program will be carried out to the best of our abil- ity and we only hope that it pleases you as we have intended. Good luck and a pleasant time! SUPERSTITION AND FORCE About a score of years ago an emi- nent historian,ILea, wrote a book that was considered the final chapter in a story of humanity's shortcomings. He called his book "Superstition and Force," and it was written as a his- tory; a history of a black epoch in the annals of mankind that was pre- sumbaly closed-the history of sup- erstition and force. Two days ago on one of the principal streetof New York a fifteen year old girl mounted a box and began ex- horting the populace to better living and kindred things. There is noth- ing' unusual about this girl, except that she began evangelizing at a very early age; yet within ten minutes, in sophisticated New York, there was a riot from people attempting to touch* the hems of her garments and press her hands. The great historian Lea would be immensely shocked if he could return' today and see another chapter in the failing of humanity that he deemed closed years ago; and his observations, if any, would probably be far from complimentary to 20th century Ame- rica. roads than to make travel on them easy. Three states now have laws against slow travel and two others are now con' idering bills whereby slow moving vehicles would be pena- lized for allowing their speed to fall below a certain minimum. It is wise that this thing be done. The automobile has played, and will continue to play, too important a part I in the development of our country to allow slow drivers to discourage in- creased use of motor vehicles for travel, pleasure, and shipping. Every- thing should be done to encourage the use of motor vehicles and the conven- ience of using them should be increas- ed and not allowed to decrease. AND PARLIAMENT CHEERS To some nations wars seem to be the joy of existence, and though the whining pleas of devastated Europe still ring in the ears of pitying human- ity, France has decided to erect a wall! of iron around her country; aug- menting their already vast land de- fense with even more extensive and mightier fortress. The policy will cost billions of francs, and the franc is not one fourth re- covered from its Worldwardeflation; but the parliament cheered madly' when the policy was announced; in the same address of Premier Poin- tare a thinly veiled threat was cast at Russia, and the United States and other great powers were affronted for their attempt to reduce navies. The French parliament cheered. In the next budget of France no mention is made of the war debts ac- crued in the last war. France is plain- ly insolvent. Americans reconstruct- ed the Cathedral at Rheims, and Ame- ricans succored French widows and orphans in the dark days of 1918. Americans do not regret this humani- tarian accomplishment, and America is not the least bit sorry for what she did; but America must not, and can not, tolerate a continued militaristic policy on the part of the nations re- sponsible for that last great cataclysm. Germany, bound by the rigorous treaty of Versailles, has turned to the prusuits of peace, and is fast gaining back the commercial supremacy that she lost in the war. While France is dissipating its resources in a vain effort to arm, with armaments that will be obsolete in the next ten years, the far-sighted nations of Europe are building up resources that will be in- vincible in another conflict. Beneath the soil of France lie 40,000 American dead, who gave their lives that that nation might continue to enjoy the fruits of peace and democracy. That 40,000 is the tribute we paid to mili- tarism once before; yet forty miles from those American graves, in the great metropolis of Paris, a chain of iron is forged in anticipation of war- and parliament cheers! NEEDLESS SURPLUS Treasury officials who are consider- ing a new move that will abolish all of the war taxes now existent and throw the burden for the support of the government on the income, cor- poration, customs and tobacco taxes, are making a move that should have been made last year, and a move that cannot be delayed much longer if our tax system is to stand and be a com- prehensive and sytematic whole. For the war has been over for nine years and still a large tax has been placed on many things, classed as luxuries, but which are integral parts of contemporary American life. In the last three years the treasury sur- plus has been increasing until at the end of this fiscal year it will be well over $9,000,000. The "government should appreciate that a large treasury surplus does nothing for the prqsperity of the coun- try and does nothing for our national reputation. The thing that counts is not the amount of money that is in the United States treasury, but the sum total of the national resources, the drawing power of the government. These so-called war taxes which have been carried over from the days of the war should be removed as soon as possible and the dependence for funds thrown on the regular avenues of taxation instead of emergency means. OA A TF0101 FOR DE AN OF Politics is the whole thing now.I Everybody's talking it, and, although we haven't received a single cigar yet, we still have hopes that some of the boys get back to the old fashioned )o- litical methods soon. Music and Drama * .* * We aren't handing out anything but wind in our campaign for the office of! Dean of Professors, because we firmly believe that we have the entire cam- pus back of us in our efforts to cor- rect the leisure time activities of our faculty members. As Dean of Professors we plan to go Dean Bursley one better in his regu- lation of student conduct. We will put into commission immediately Presi- dent Little's proposal that educators should have complete control over the leisure of the students. Every pro- fessor must submit a daily report of his conduct outside the classroom. * * * Signing out slips wil be provided in every faculty home, and only one show a week will be allowed. If there are any who disobey, we'll-well, we were going to say reduce their salaries, but we couldn't put them much lower. . * * * Incidently, we will be glad to start a bureau in our office. where the nro- hail.- TWNlGHT: The Earl Carroll "Vail- ties" at 8:15 o'clock in the Whitney theatre. * * * "THE LAST OF MRS CHEYNEY" A review, by Vincent Wall It is quite as Lady Frinton remark- ed: "The only nice women are the tnes who never have any opportuni- ties." Mrs. Cheyney was a good girl (it said as much in the program note) but she had opportunities-and avail- ed herself * * * of some of them. If you know what I mean. Wound around somewhere in this atmosphere of the English drawingl room there are opportunities for both kings of women-especially in a, drawing room like that of the bril- liant and beautiful Mrs. Cheyney. Of course she was a professional lady crook, but ,she was at least made anI honest wpinan at the final curtain- and was charmingly played by Amy Loons.,.., As for the rest of the cast, it was excellent. Robert Henderson as the remarkable butler contributed a finish-1 Penmak e vs You will want one of asterpens" I for exams. Why not get the use of it now? It has 6 to 12 times more ink capacity, alw several pens of any other make. Rider's Pen I 315 State Stre vays works and will outwear Shop 'et i TONIGHT: The Glee Club concert at S o'clock in Hill auditorium. TONIGHT: The Rockford Players present "Pigs", a comedy by Anna Morrison and tPatterson iMcNutt, at 8:15 o'clock in Sarah Caswell Angell I ti uacuu iiu~i u~i c w~t tt ro Ied-and epigrammatic performance; fessors can get board jobs to help mae santtle oney toaruppjemstheit is perhaps his best, barring Patiom- make a little money to supplement the ki. Renl vn rsne h Unvriyspyce .kin. Reynold Evans presented the University's pay checks, amusing sophistries of Lord Dilling in a most finished manner. Lady Joan Bolting will be taken care of care- inaH otfnishedcanner. LadJa fully. Any professor who doesn't bolt Hantned waspade, and means it," was more than a class a week will be fired. * * * played in a roundled and well-con- ceived manner by Camille Masline; TILE BIG TWO and the Lady Frinton of Frances Commodore Clover for B. and G. Bavier managed somehow to get Presi. Timothy Presy r laughs out the occasional-but not of- ten-sterile lines which proves her * * * merit as versatile character women. THE MAY party of the Architects The play itself is probably the best ought to hire another orchestra to sit of the Players' spring season-Lons- out in- the corridor tomorrow night ,dale's parlor chatter is probably the and play so loud that the Roquefort most witty in the English theatre- Players will have to stop. If they even without apologies to G. B. S. In want to run in competition with the fact, the only fault to find in the en-y dance, we think they ought to get tire production is the shabby sets and' some real loud competition--it'll have the general inconvenience of Sarah to be loud to beat the Players' noise. Caswell Angell hall, which suffers e S ** much in comparison with the opalence Be Sure to register today! of Mimes' sensational activities. -I ** * * (W TI )I"LA SONNETTE D'ALARME" D'OWN 'll E DIAGOTNAL A review, by David Scheyer The French profs laughed heartily, ( "You can't tell me," said the so it must have been funny, the cast! Cynical Senio' yesterday, "that gestured effusively, so it must have a diploma is ever going to be been very Parisian, the audience was worth ten dollars to me." somewhat entertained; and that was I ( _ _"La Sonnette d'Alarme" the annual * * * French play, presented last night at CONFESSIONS OF A OLUMNIST 'the Mimes. This being our last issue, we have a The story is of a gay boulecardier, lot of things to confess. We won't Boby Masselin, who is reformed by- a tell everything, because it wouldn't do combination of an attack of gout, a to tell all the trickslof this trade. And solicitous mistress and a pretty young besides we might get hung. niece. After the usual series of farce- * comedy tribulations, the final curtain It really has been a lot of fun writ- falls on a happy family scene. ing this stuff. There's so much around Profuse pantomiming helped out this University that is so funny that the gaps in the audiences knowledge it is easy finding material. And if of French, and put across the comedy you can't think of anything else, the scenes quite successfully. B. and G. boys are always present- Samuel Bonnel in the leading role and always doing nothing, and doing it of Boby was rather unconvincing, but in a funny way. the rest of the cast, with two minor * * * exceptions, took their parts very well Harry Tillotson will get back at us indeed. Worthy of special mention next year. As an alumnus we will try were Gertrude Crampton as Madame to get seats at a football game or so. Toulouzel and Russel Reed as Paginot. He'll enclose with our rejection slip Also, may we say that Marie-Louise a clipping from Rolls, panning the Burt and Dorothy Tisch furnished alum/ii who came back to football the pleasantest eye entertainment that games, and urging that none of the has been seen at Mimes theatre in graduates be given tickets. many a month. We expect our viewpoint on the mat- THE STUDENTS' RECITAL flo il wn cnunge ueuluAiyesecil A warv',Ivr i2y ianJ+ /!necn COOPER'S KITCHENETTE FAMOUS ORM QOD and Collegiate Prices. State St. (over lerrill APratt) SERVICE 1OW RALPH GRAVES -In-- I I "BLARNEY" A Metro Gohwyin This "Ad." with 10c '' RAEel "_t1!#t ltttUlil lilttttttftttt#@tttttlllllillll @ t@t@[@tll iil lti tU tlll tl ttitil ti t[1ttll tttti tt@@!i L t@@@tt;"t11t111t1#1tt11i * .r - A HA)YS = At Bth Eds f th Diaona Ii I "MAKE~ ~rz ELL. MANN'SCIAT7 - --E FELT HAT SALE We are closing out all Spring Hats at special prices. Light shades, snappy shapes. Quality equal to the b9est. We Clean and Block Hats No Odor-No Gloss Correct Shapes-No Burned Sweats Factory Hat Store 617 Packard St. Phone 7415, PLEASE DON'T MAKE PATHS ON THE CAMlNPUS HTonightMA 5 at 8:15 Seats Now Selling at the Box Office First Time in Ann Arbor of the World's Most Famuos Revue JOS. De MILT Inc. BRING YOU & ('OMPANY OF ONE HUNDRED Distinct Personalities, Including BERT LOU DAVE SWOR POWERS CHASEN The Perfect Venue-Louise Brooks. The Earl Carroll Theatre Orchestra 5 - and- LINAMERICA PRICES INCLUD)ING TAX: $3.30, $2.75, '$2.20, $1.65, $1.10 If 'you can't pdme to the box office or live out of town, send a mail order. U 1 rf IV. . IML, r a r .it 3 .t.r sun-In li ,,f /; . is / I CAMPUS OPINION. Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. ter will cliange decidedly, especially since we won't be a big manufacturer or politician. If we should get backE to a game, we'll probably find our- selves sitting next to a freshman-out- side the gates of the stadium. By the way, we don't see why the University charges us ten dollars for our diploma. We ought to get cut rates, because we never really used, the University's resources fully. We'd be willing to take half a diploma if they'd give it to us for five dollars. * * * Getting back to the confessions, we might as well admit right here that it wasn't the B. and G. boys who put up Clippy stadium. It was a gang of architects-in no way connected with this University, or any other intellec- tual center-who have charge of the landscape gardening on campus. * * *" It looked like the work of the B. and G. boys at the time, but we found out the truth later, after the damage to their reputation had been done. It was too bad that they got the blame A review, by Rtobert txessner The University Symphony orchestra E possesses a pure technical spirit, but he true spirit of orchestration was not present--the living, subtle warmth was absent. But it served the purpose of producing the necessary accom- paniment to the individual artists. Fern Schott played the piano with a technique that is nearly faultless but the total effect is hindered by an exaggeration of style that tends to ap- pear too elegant. Pauline Kaiser dis- played exceedingly poor judgment by attempting Bleyle's Concerto in C major. Bleyle never did write music that anybody could sanely enjoy. A more intelligent theme could have been selected without much difficulty that would have better suited Miss Kaiser's talent. Miss Kaiser evidenced much physical energy that over steps nornal bounds to the extent of ruining her posture on the platform. Pearle Reimann has a well rounded talent that arises in abundance throughout her entire rendition. Lu- cile Graham and Pauline Kaiser pro- duced a pleasing Concerto for two IMMUTABLE To The Editor:- The headline "President . Considers Legislation to Check Future Great Floods" shows the faith of this nation in the power of legislation. Knut on the seashore has nothing on us. About a year ago, and by that much nearer to the Scopes incident, a group of several thousand educators in con-j vention at Washim gton adopted after prolonged discussion and with consid- enh1 enthusiasm a resolution to the WHEN Greek or calculus gets you into a tight corner, tie a tin to trouble-a tidy red tin of Prince Albert! Tamp a load of this really friendly tobacco into the bowl of your jimmy- pipe and light up. Match the sun crash through the clouds with every puff! P. A. can't bite your tongue or parch your throat, no matter how fast you feed it, because the Prince Albert process gave Bite and Parch the air at the start. Cool as a Laplander's lap. Sweet, as apple cider. Fragrant as spring blos- soms. That's Prince Albert! One pipe-load invites another. And .. you can hit P. A. from morning till midnight and it won't hit back. Don't put off to tomorrow what you can smoke today. Get a tidy red tin of P. A. and turn on the sunshine . - - now! P. A. i ,sold everywhere in tidy red tins, pound and half- Pound tin hum"dor"s,,and pound crystal-ghass humidors with sponge-moistener top. And always with every bit of bite and parch removed by the Prince Albert prcess. I . willllii w'IMuu ii