PAGE FOUR. -rHE MICHIGAN DAILY TU.1. .rR 7.t.+A Y, JANUARY '17, 19.28 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'FVIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1928 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conferetice Editorial Association. 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- lished herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master tGeneral. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR JO H. CHAMBERLIN ONWARD SCIENCE! With the reception of a complete studio scene in minute detail over the radio, another dream long looked upon as a possibility, has been realized. Radio waves have now been shown capable of carrying both audition and vision to private homes, and science has taken another tremendous stride onward. The technical details of the process are not nearly as important as the fact that the feat has been accomp- lished. With the first reception re- corded and undoubtedly shown to be fact, experts are already busy experi- menting with the possibilities in range of the new system which has been termed television. Tests and time will remedy inevitable early im- perfections. The advances in recent years made in scientific circles are many and noteworthy. Science has arrived at the stage where any new and even re- mote possibility is regarded with fervor rather than incredibility as was the case in the days before the inven- tion of airplanes, steamboats and radio. REFORM Three cheers and a hip, hip!Every one has decided the University should have a restaurant, all of its own. * * , As the only true representative of the student body that can make itselfo heard, we are framing the idea in the form of a proposition. * * * Resolved, That the sum of Four dol- lars should be added to 'the tuition ofb every student, for which every stu- dent will get the privilege, in fact willK be compelled, to qat two meals a day at the University's expense.e * * t] Of course, the practical part of the enforcement of this enactment will bet left to the office of the Dean of Stu- dents. Rolls may have started the idea, but we're not going to be re- sponsible for the consequences. RELAXED FOR VACATIONS THEATER BOOKS MUSIC TONIGtH T': Tle Students' Recital in the Schtool of Music auditorium at S o'clock. * * * THE MIMES "Icebound," the Owen Davis Pu- litzer Prize play, which was to have been presented next week has been withdrawn temporarily from the Mimes' schedule, and instead "Sev- enth Heaven" will be revived for three performances, Thursday, Friday and Saturday of this week. Ft II i Bargain Tables are always a feature at GAHAlVIS I Both Ends of the Diagonal iI' A F .3 "" """""."..... ". .." Editor.. ........Ellis B. Merry Editor Michigan Weekly..C harles E. Behymer Staff Editor.......... .Philip C. Brooks City Editor...........Courtland C. Smith Women's Editor...........Marian L. Welles Sports Editor............Herbert E. Vedder Theater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr relegraph Editor... ........ Ross W. Ross Assistant City Editor.... RichardsC. Kurvink Night Editors Robert E. Finch G. Thomas McKean J. Stewart Hooker Kenneth G. Patiick Paul J. Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum Reporters Esther Anderson Marion McDonald Margaret Arthur Richard H. Milroy E emons A. Bonfield Charles S. Monroe Jean Campbell Catherine Price Jessie Church H arold L. Passman Clarence N. Edelson Morris W. Quinn Margaret Gross Rita Rosenthal Valborg Egeland PierceRRosenberg Marjorie Follmer Edward J. Ryan James B3. Freeman David Scheyer Robert J. Gessner Eleanor Scribner Elaine E. Gruber Corinne Schwarz Alice Hagelshaw Robert G. Silbar J oseph E. Rowell Howard F. Simon Wallace Hushen Rowena Stillman Charles R. Kaufman Sylvia Stone William F. Kerby (George Tilley LawrenceFR. Klein Edward L. Warner, Jr Donald J. Kline Benjamin S. Washer Sally Knox Leo J. Yoedicke Jack L. Lait, Jr. Joseph Zwerdjing John H. Maloney BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM C. PUSCH Assistant Manager... George H. Annable, Jr Advertising..............Richard A. Meyer Advertising..............Arthur M'. IHinkley Advertising...............Edward L. Hulse Advertising............. John W. RuswinckeI Accounts................Raymond Wachte Circulation.............George B. Ahn, Jr Publication...................Harvey Talcot Assistants yl r s h S r s k George Bradley Mlrarie Brumler James 0. Brown James Carpenter James B. Cooper Charles K. Correll Barbara Cromell Mary Dively Bessie V. Egeland Ona Felker Katherine Frohne Douglass Fuller Beatrice Greenberg Relen Cross F. J. Hammer Carl W. Hammer Ray Elotelich IHal A. Jaehm amnes Jordan Marion Kerr Thales N. Lenington Catherine McKinven WV. A. AMahahfy Francis D. Patrick "George M. Perrett Alex K. Scherer Frank Schuler George Spater Wilbert Stephenson Ruth Thompson Herbert E. Varnuin Lawrence Walkley Hannah Wallen TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1928 Night Editor-PAUL J. ,RN TIHE MOVIE One of the very obviously worth while projects in connection with th general program that aims to bring the alumni closer to the University iq the recently completed University moving picture. It has long been on of the regrettable phases of our edu cational system that men and women once graduated, gradually grow away from the institution with which they are connected; and it is still more re- grettable when an alumnus who i, really interested is unable, through pressure of personal affairs, to return for years and years to the school a which he received his degree. The recently completed moving pic- ture, in its distribution to alumni groups throughout the country, can- not help but awaken many fond rem- iniscences and cannot help but give the graduates an idea of the tremend- ous expansion of Michigan in the last few years. The picture itself is an excellent piece of photography, and has caught the spirit of the University in a dignified and entertaining man- ner. Exhibition to alumni and to the stu- dents are not the only fields in which the moving picture can prove useful, however, and though the authorities in charge have not, as -yet, broached the idea it seems on the surface as though a large number of state high schools would be willing and glad to show the picture. The predominance of the University in the educational field of Michigan is such that any high school student-considering a con- tinuation of his education cannot help but considering continuing it here, and with the growing numbers of such students it would be both enlighten- ing and helpful to distribute the film among them. The organization of the University Extension division would serve well for the scheduling of such showings, and with the general prac- tice of holding high school assemblies it would be a comparatively simple matter to disseminate through the pic- ture an idea of the educational insti- tution that represents Michigan. It is to be hoped that this possibility of giving high school students in the Particular lenience will be shown HAVANA to out of town students. Inasmuch Never before has the United States as the Ann Arbor boys get all the sent to the Pan-American conference breaks on the auto ban, the rest of usI so distinguished a delegation as the ought to make it up this way.I one which is at present attending the * * *t sessions at Havana, Cuba. In addi- For instance, all students who are tion to President Coolidge, our most not in town during vacations will not astute statesman, Charles Evans be required to eat their meals at thet Hughes, and our secretary of state, University. As a special concession, Frank Kellogg, are present, demon- in exceptional and extraordinaryt strating, if it need demonstration, the cases, we may even permit a few to tremendous moment which the Wash- eat whenever they please. ington government attaches to the * * * business to be transacted. MARRIED STUIDENTS TOI It is very apparent that there will GET THEIR DESSERTSI be opposition to the "imperialistic" Ordinarily the rules will be relaxedY policy of the United States at the only in the case of married students. . conference, and there is not the They will be required to eat two meals slightest doubt but what the "Colossus at one time. v of the North" faces considerable op- * * * position. By far the great majority In order to keep up the intellectualt r of delegates, nevertheless, are bound atmosphere and the true University t to be sanely conservative, and are spirit, only Phi Beta students will be bound to see that without capital qualified to serve as waiters. from the United States South America Alaba Rococo. cannot achieve any rapid develop-- ment. RLS N;UCS The United States, nevertheless, ROLLS ANNOUNCES should religiously avoid any attitude The Featuie Production of the which can be interpreted as haughty. "ER If the Pan-American confederation is to succeed, its members must be treat- A Roll's Own Serial ed as equal partners in a great enter- Perpetrated by Poison Ivy prise, even though leadership, sug- Begins Tomorow. - gestion, and even defense at times must come from the United States. It CHICAGO 31YSTERY SOLVEI is an inspiring prospective-this ideal Again Roll's own private detective of international cooperation extending force has triumphed. Miss Royden's from Maine to the Straits of Magellan, Chicago lecture was cancelled because and it is an ideal of international she smokes ENGLISH cigarettes. friendship which seems closer to re- * * * alization than any scheme of inter- AND STILL THEY WONDER - national friendship ever promoted in An editorial in the Ann Arbor e the history of mankind. News wonders at Hickman's depravity. Our Latin-American neighbors must They also give a list of his High S always bear in mind the fact that the school offices and distinctions. great resources and powerful position The third office he held was Stu- e of the United States entitles her by dent Councilman. the nature of the case to some small prerogative in the program to be fol- WEATER JIREAL- lowed; but the United States on the W tht: nulEAUg other hand, must remember that it isP Weather toght: Insulting. the right of a sovereign people to * * y - choose their form of government even 1 THE PRINCE OF THEM ALL if that form of government be com- s munism. As a speial feature, we have se It is by this course, and by this cured an interview with a good course only, that the gr dfriend, Mayor Thompson of Chicago, o lye great dream of on the automobile ban. t unity throughout all America can be , ~ * accomplished; and it is to this course The Mayor greeted us with a grin that the Havana conference must lead, that helped him to get in the position i Friendship, amity, cooperation - the to be what he is today. As we were, - golden dream of international rela- ushered into the office, he exclaimed - tions-all are possible in this New heartily, "Wie geht's?",, World of ours, and may no pharisee * * * arise to inject a note of discord into That almost stopped the party, but t the harmony of the scene. The ideal fortunately we remembered a little of Pan-Americanism, fostered and language too, so we shot back "Pas nurtured through tender years of trop mal." Then we added, "Why all adolescence, appears at last to be in the Deutch, Mayor?" a position to come into its own, and it * * * is to be sincerely hoped that the The hair on the back of his neck Havana conference will sl further went up like a flash. Muttering ' 1 promote the work which has thus far ferociously, he pointed to a sign en- been so successfully achieved. graved upon the desk. "No English Spoken Here. REAL SERVICE * * * Elsewhere in these columns appears We had trouble with the German an account of Dr. Grenfell's lecture, until the mayor found we went to but no mere account of what he said, O lge. Then he told us to slip back Sevenif it could be as glowing as his into our own language, because we own words, could possibly do justice couldn't speak English if we tried. to the man. Dr. Grenfell's accomplishments in But to get back to the car ban, the Labrador are the first mark of the Mayor declared that any young whip- ersnapers who put English on a great man. He has not been content ba didn't have ens ough simply to carry the science of healing dea ilave sense enough to the ignorant inhabitants of that to drive automobilesr country, though that alone would be Gargantua. more than enough to occupy the ener- The above material was selected, gies of a natural lifetime, but he has and occasionally revamped, from the, provided education for their children, contributions sent in by those who are an industrial economy adapted to foolish enough to want this job for Labrador conditions, and prosperity to 1 ynext semestr r a region formerly exploited and im- Benjamin Bolt. poverished. And now he is busyI creating an endowment fund, so that unselfishness a re the outward signs? when he has to pass the torch to of an inward grace truly Christ--likeT some one else, his five hospitals and in its qualities.r the spirit of his great work may not Those who heard him Sunday at St. "Icebound" will be produced some time next semester, and several other titles which have been tentatively se- lected include "The Devil's Desciple" and "They Knew What They Wanted," another Pulitzer Prize play. * * * THE FACULTY CONCERT A review, by Vincent Wall Shortly after the sternly classic phrase and sonorous grandeur of the Beethoven Fifth had died away, and - the applause occasioned thereby had subsided, the concert really began. I wish that I knew Grieg A minor Concerto, which Mrs. Okkelberg play-~ ed with the orchestra, sufficiently well to describe it in detail. But as it is only the few hundred people who at- tended the Faculty Concert Sunday afternoon can appreciate the inter-. pretation which Mr. Lockwood and Mrs. Okkelberg gave it. It must re- main a success d'estime-but as such it was one of the most vital and in- spiring moments in the musical sea- son. It begins with a long roll from the tympani and a few octave scales for I the piano. From there it passes from the most ecstatic lyricism to the ro- mantic flush of outpouring passion, Grieg was a fresco painter, handling his brush with furious energy, magni- licence, and dramatic intensity. Be- side his vast and tremendous scenery, the music of Mehul and Mendelssohn,1 and even Beethoven is all brown, all gray, all darkness and sometimes small. But it was not Grieg's triumph. For without Mrs. Okkelberg's artistry, there might have been moments that verged on the artificial. Her tech- nique was smooth without being mechanical Her forte passages were given clearly but without too great emphasis . Her legato was simply executed with per- feet restraint. In short, her perform- ance was professional from beginning to end, and something worthy of being repeated if the occasion presents itself at any time during the year. * * * THE ROC1KFORD PLAYERS Opening with "The Thirteenth Chair" next Sunday night in the Whitney theater, the Rockford Players have a schedule that it is interesting and more. The plays are popular-a few just a bit too popular-but they are all of interest and are successes. The players have been together some eighty weeks, and have as their center point Mrs. Mansfield, of. the vibrant voice and legends of the thea- ter of the nebulous nineties, togeter with Charles Warburton, director and actor in the Memorial theater at Stratford-on-Avon, and Elsie Herndon Kearns, Walter Hampden's leading lady. These with Frances Dade of Holly- wood and the cinema, the English Velma Royton from Boston, Robert Henderson of hectic memories as di- rector and occasionally in leads, and Holman Faust and Franz Rothe as juveniles, comprises the company which is now rehearsing in the dusty, "theater" atmosphere of the Whitney. The fat cupids above the proscenium are >eing polished off, there will be a tuxedoed jazz orchestra in the pit-in place of the classic ensemble of other generations!-and the curtain will rise next week on this company that is returning to Ann Arbor, with the fruits of three crowded seasons-with So many of the town and gown look- ing forward to it as a little gayer and a little smarter than any that have gone before. * * . In "Rosalie" Mr. Ziegfeld has found a successor to the "Follies" in the New Amsterdam theater which should be equally popular. That latter en- 1 tertainment of All-American glorifieds has gone out to instruct and amuse the provinces. And at that "Showboat" seems to be Mr. Ziegfeld's triumph of the season. laving succeeded "Rio Rita" at his j new theater, it is the most talked of musical show in town. Detroit Theaters . "a~a.aasaa0aaaaaaaaaa easa p -. w r CAS S THEATRE Mat, $1.00 to $2.50 Nights, $1 to $3.50 SCHWAB & MANDEL Present "GOOD NEWS" Forty Flapper Freshies ABE LYMAN (Himself) and His t.° t uE t+ t M aN 0 ) MYt a flIl(l Ills ill ht>.tm hi -. 4 CLASSIFIED ADS BRING SATISFACTION LI Woodward, at Eliot PLAYHOUSE NIGHTS, 75c, $10. Mats. r1TIes., Thurs. and Sat., i()c, 75c A FUNNY td1OW Sa" oJaJey s ew onk Wow "Loose Ankles" i I SERVICE Come in and examine PIV. I Shubert-Lafayette Br~lllg nn Sun~day, Jan. SOl, THE SPIDER l t ., Thurs. ani. Sat. Price : E eninigs, 5e to $25. PoIular iMt rI hII°.s, 'Oe to Saturday Iatiee, , )- tot $2.T) (Plus Tax) I THE NEW PORTABLE We are having a wonderful sale on this Champion of all portables. "Everybody wants one." Anyone can quickly learn to use one. It is a time saver and time is money. Themes should be typed-Theses must be. CLASSIFIED ADS PAY - RAE 1TODAY AND WEDNESDAY PATSY RUTH MILLER IN "HELL BENT FOR HEAVEN" Lupino Lane Comedy Ths "Ad" with 10c R RAE I Rider's PnSo Authorized Dealers. Complete typewriter EM S E R V ICE pg service. I MICHIGAN PINS FOUNTAIN PENS ALARM CLOCKS HALLER'S STATE ST. JEWELRS I , IfI II I I l I t t I I l 1 1 1 1 1 6 1 1 1 H 11' 1 1 l 1 1 1 i l l1 .: .. :. w r _ r r University SchoW f Second Semester Begins Feb. Degree and Certificate Candidates Courses for those who are for Graduation GENERAL COURSES FOR SPECIAL STUDENTS EARL V. MOORE, MUSICAL DIRECTOR BYIM FIOX I3BaIIE , Solfeggio GL.EANNCARISCI-iN, Sociolo-Y PALMER CHIRIS4TIAN, Organ DONNA1 ISSELSTYN, Pian.o NICIOL~A S FALCON E, Baind Instruments MARBIAN erS'jUjj FREEMWAN, Violin , l111JE GBRA IyIAIII, P'hto R, T. i.MOM11. SE ,Public Speaking NORA CRANE hNTVoice Gll CE .l{3 I N e N hAJ(OL F, Voice , AIWRT L t ohiwODl), Piao GLENN MCGEOCII, History MIIGARE' MacGREGOR, Organ JOSEPH E. MADIY, IMethods GUY )IAIER, Piano 1,LS MAIER, Piano MARTA ME I YXI, Pian o HATI) OKKELBEIIR, Piano LIA PA EN'T, French MABEL ROSS RH-E:AP), Piano LEON' SLATER, P clwoigy HELEN SNYDER, llhetoric OTTO J. STAhL, Pianao and Theory NELL I. ST'OC i KWE LL, Piano 1T AY A. STRON, 4Voice W A L'ER W E Lo c, Me hod N(IIA B. WETMlOiE~ Voice A I "-I