THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. NON t tt r Published every morning wicept Monday during the Universit' year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- ttiled 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 herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post tnster General. Suscription by carrier, $4,oo; by mail, 4.50. Offices:tAnn Arbor Press Building, May- nadStreet.. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 2124. EIDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 492 MANAGING EDITQR JO H. CHAMBERLIN Editor.......................Ellis B. Merry Editor Michigan Weekly..Charles E. Behymer Staff Editor................Philip C. Brooks City Editor.............Courtland C. Smith Women's Editor..........Marian L. 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Hammer Hannah Waller Ray Iloteich'- WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1927 Night Editor-MILTON KIRSHBAUM PROFESSOR JACK ARRIVES Having successfully survived the manifold delays of the immigration laws, Prof. P. M. Jack, newly appoint- ed head of the rhetoric department, has at last arrived. - Professor Jack is a young man, of the type which Michigan has secured in increasing numbers in recent years. Hle graduated from Aberdeen univer- sity in 1920, and was inmedately ap- Pointed assistant urofessor of English there. With the exception of one year spent in study at Cambridge, he has been a member of the faculty of Aber- deen university from that time until this fall. Netiehr Aberdeen or Cambrilge, however, possessed rhetoric depart- ments completely isolated from the study of English as our own rhetoric department is. For this reason the method of teaching here will be new to the 32 year old man who will take charge of it, and no revolutionary strides can be expected-at least until le has had time to become acquainted with our methods. It will be many years before Pro- fessor Jack will be able to build a rep- utation, moreover, comparable to that of such nationally known rhetoricians as Prof. Fred Newton Scott and Prof. Thomas Rankin, who have been so long connected with the University. They have lifted the department here to the high place it now occupies and have given it the distinction and pres- tige of years of their work. Th inspiring thing about our new faculty member, however, is his youth. Professor Jack will grow with Mich- igan. The genial disposition and the twinkling eyes which arrived here Monday will become a part of Mich- igan as the men before him have be- conie a part of this tJiversity. To say that Michigan expects great things of Professor Jack would be too trite and superfluous; but to say that Mich- igan will give her new rhetoric head the fullest measure of co-operation of which she is capable is only a fair statement.I THlE iRESEARCI FUND One of the most crying needs of the ; Regents, a fund of $30,600 has been appropriated for this work, and the results, even to date, have been nota- ble indeed. Several researches have been continued which would other- .wise have had to be dropped and a large number of concrete accomplish- ments have been made which wouldl otherwise have been impossible. Photostatic copies with which to chased from the fund where originals were unattainable, an appropr'ation has been made for further investiga- tion of spectra by the physics depart- ment, and in several cases appropria- tions for clerical help have made the compilation of records possible. The Board of Regents is to be com- mended for having supported a worth- while project with the establishment of this fund, and it is to be sincerely hoped that the University may never again lack the facilities for research. WAGES OF CRITICISM Steps now pending which may more severely discipline Rear Admiral Thomas P. Magruder have called to the minds of many the long line of meyn who have been forced to tread the same path. This naval officer who insisted upon revealing conditions in the navy and who recommended the scrapping of the Atlantic bases has been preceded by others such as the late Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, Admiral Wil- liam S. Sims, and Theodore Roose- velt. Sims is the only one of tht group who has ever escaped the blight conpletely. Two imporant factors of the pres- ent national defense system are direct- ly traceable to the criticism of this group, and many more are indirectly connected. In almost every instance the advice has been taken but the ad- visor flagellated for his presumption that anything could be wrong with the system. , The activities of General Wood in particular have since led to the firmly-established system of cit- izens training camps, although at the time the plan was advanced, any uni- versal military preparedness was de- cried. General Wood found his pun- ishment in being denied a high com- mand in the American Expeditionary ,Force. Vice Admiral Sims, through the me- dium of his criticism started when still a lieutenant, effected the changed system of training American naval gunners, and today American mark- manship is recognized as premier. But even Admiral Sims had to cut through the protests of the navy de- partment and win the interest of President Roosevelt himself. General Mitchell's attempt to benefit aviation resulted in his forced resignation, but aviation benefited just the same. It would seem rather unjust that men high up in the service of the United States should be flayed for their suggestions at the instigation of sticklers for form, when the justice of their criticism is evident in its final adoption for the good of the service. GREETINGS Czechoslovakia last week celebrated its sixth anniversary as an independ- ent state. For any Balkan govern- Ment to celebrate its sixth anniversary is considerable of a feat; but when we bear in mind the inauspicious be- ginnings of Czechoslovakia, amid a veritable maelstrom of seething pol- itics and revolutions, this successai survival is particularly notable. Today the Czechs seem to be, o all the Balkan nations, the most stable. Their country has not once been torn by a revolution since the republic, was founded, and for six years they have quietly and sanely progressed. They have raised themselves from the ruins of 1920 to a positon of leadership among the smaller nations of Europe; and on the sixth brihtday of their in- dependence it is indeed fitting that the people of the United States should join with President Coolidge in ex-I tending a greeting to Czechoslovakia. ILL OMENS France, Belgium, Poland, Roumania, Czechoslovakia, and Jugoslavia! An alliance to be consummated within the next ten days by a final treaty between France and Jugoslavia if the dis- patches can be believed. If the alliance should chance to be- come more than a mere expression of amity, as the French official state- ments claim it to be at present, then the only logical coures for Italy and Germany will be another alliance to l counteract it. This maneuvering for! the balance of power is the most ex- plosive mixture which . Europe can concoct, and Locarno, the League of! Nations, and disarmament confer- ences are all likely to topple if a newl struggle for this elusive balance is seriously undertaken. It is to be hoped, of course, that this agreement is not aggressive, and in- deed there is no reason to suppose1 that it is. Anything which portends a1 struggle between various alliances for AUO . PROBL E 3 ' SOLVED After a year of trials and tribula- tions, auto-less and haggard, students of the University of Illinois have at last come to a solution of their prob- lems. * * * They still walk to their classes but on dates they suffer not a bit. It is the unwritten rule. that every rooming house for women must have at least one porch swing. But the sororities have still better facilities for taking care of the poor male. None are complete without three to five swings and copious new vines on porches in addition to the. customary sofas. * * * Of course it has taken Illinois more than a year to arrive at this solution. D'Artagnan and Tiny Tim have great faith in the ingenuity and brilliance of Michigan mentality-give us a year and we'll have a solution too. This column is temporarily being conducted by D'Artagnan and Tiny Tim Help! Help! * * * . AND ANOTHER THING! Although the railroads will profit heavily by the lack of cars for stu- dents in which to drive to the out of town games, many novel methods of transportation will not doubt be used. Here is one which would not be so profitable to the railroads, though. It has advantages. For instance, the rider would be in front of the smoke- stack and wouldn't get as dirty as riding the blinds. And then there was the one about. the man who hung onto the landing gear of ansairplane. Probably few cases of this will be seen this week, though. Chicago isn't worth working that hard to get to. * * * THOSE FAST MIES BOYS 1 Some dispute has arisen as to under what time system are the Mimes boys running their time pieces. At the performance Saturday night, one-half of the female leads was proclaiming about her sweetie's failure to be home at a quarter to two. Loudly and fully she proclaimed on the subject, much to the enjoyment of all who heard. * * * Just as she finished her dissertation on men who aren't home at 2 o'clock, the beautiful time piece which adorned the mantle began to chime in harmon- ious notes: One-two-three-four--- five-six-seven-eight-nine - ten - eleven-twelve! * * *t I THEATER 1 MUSIC M U SI - -- - TONIGHT: Dalles Frantz, pianist, in the Students' Recital at 8 o'clock in the School of Music auditorium. TONIGHT: Comedy Club presents "Duley" at 8:30 o'clock in the MNimes theater. PICKWICK TREADS THE BOARDS Early in September, Cosmo Hamil- ton's play "Pickwick," after a year in the hinterland, came to New York, sedately settled down in the metro- polis, and quietly waited that those might come who would. But it happened that on'e night, some bored dramatic critics dropped in to view the English comedy. And then the denunciations began. Rob- ert Benchley, George Jean Nathan, and all their brothers hastened to hurl their most deprecatory adjectives. "Pickwick" was "stiff," "tedious," a "Punch and Judy show," and various other etceteras. Much as we respect Mr. Benchley, Mr. Nathan, et al, we wish to imme- diately spring to our feet and distinct- ly state that "Pickwick" is' the ulti- mate achievement in dramatizing the gentle humour, the charming naivety, and the pastoral scene; in short the elements that make the "Pickwick Papers" so refreshing in this modern era of the super-sex, inhibitions and complexes. John Cumberland in the kindly role of Samuel Pickwick, was the realiza- tion of an ideal. And so with the rest of the cast, notably Charles McNaughton as Sam Weller, Hugh Miller as Alfred Jingle, and the massive Bruce Winston in the part of Sergeant Buzzfuzz. They brought Pickwick, not to the life, but from the book to the stage. Which, for those who have read and re-read the vagaries of the famed Club, is cer- tainly enough. D. F. S. "lD)VLCY" Comedy Club presents tonight in the Mimes theater their first production of the year, "Dulcy," in which George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly have - collaborated to glorify the American dumbelle. with tremendous bromidic effect. The complete cast is as follows: Phyllis Loughton..............Dulcy Charles Livingston ..... Mr. Van Dyke Thurston Thieme.....Wiliamv Parker Lillian Setchell........ Angela Forbes Harlan Cristy ................ Sterritt George Priehs ... Mr. Blair Patterson William Bishop .............. Gordon Vera Johnson ........... Mrs. Forbes Richard Woellhaf...... Vincent Leach Samuel Bonnell...........Mr. Forbes Robert Adams.................Henry The direction of the production is by Robert Wetzell. S IN GENERAL S Other books in the fiction field e which have won more than passing notice rank among them "The Grand- mothers," the Harper prize novel, which is somewhat similar to the At- lantic Prize work in that it deals with g. the family. Frederick Taber Cooper -- in his review has characterized it as the musty pictures in the old family album come to life. Glenway West- cott has done something very fine with the book and the after effect is in the direction of philosophy. I. G. Wells, in his latest novel, "Meanwhile," has more nearly fol- lowed out his rather idealistic for- mula for good novel writing than in any other of his works. His idea is that any random page torn without beginning or end from the book should be so written and should contain so much of the story as to hold the read- er's attention. The theme of the story is the last year's general strike in England but for this once Wells is more interested in intelligent young people than in oldsters of the Clissold type. Social theory is not the whole of the book which in its writing is splendidly mature. Louis Bromfield's "A Good Woman" which has been reviewed before in this column is still the topic of Fall book chat. Bromfield has tremendous dramatic power, and that with his ability to view the social scene as aI 14 1 I I I From then one, we didn't believe a word she said and were fully con- vinced that her missing man had a right to be out! Most women is pre- varicators anyway! C. S. M. * * * JUST INCIDENTALLY We wondered w.hy those braggarts who predict scores on the sports page didn't have a chirp to offer after last Saturday. * * * After careful investigation we man- aged to learn that our contemporaries fell off a few percentage points. Of the 33 teams picked to win, 23 did so but 7 of the trusted lost and two oth- ers only squirmed through with ties. * * * EVENTUALLY! A STUDENT DIRECTORY Though it is not yet two months since school opened this fall, high hope was expressed in some quarters yesterday that there will be a student directory published before spring. * * * The Mi(hig-anenslan staff (publish- ers of the directory) are, as usual, blameless as new born babes. This is more easily believed wheat one realizes that in teir innocent unconsciousness they probably lave nerVer heard of student directories. * * * A STUDENT DIRECTORY BY NEW YEAR'S DAY. The books may be used for comic valentines on St. Valentine's day if they appear by that time. * * * If it comes to the worst, everyone it whole have earned him comparison with John Galsworthy. The book is a powerful, genuine picture. R. L. A. * * * "Crime," the Samuel Shipman and John Hymer play which was fairly successful in New York last season is an outstanding success in London. * * * Constance Collier this week returns to the stage in "John"-the Philip Barry play which is being produced by the Actors' Theater, under the direc- tion of Guthrie McClintic. Miss Col- lier has been absent from Broadway for nine years-almost since her !I ww ibe mov edt a class ahiead andtI L1 book will appear during registration, week next fall. I