TFrM TIT tA q'TAIEY- - ~lI~rn5x% ~ .v . : . , . . , . Published ev ery morning except Monday diung the University year by the Board in Control of Studest Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled:to the use fo' republication of all news dispatches redited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news" pub- Uished herein. Entered at tie postoffice at Ana Arbor, Michigan, ts second class matter. Special rate of postag# granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subsciption by carrier, 94.00; by mail, (fficest Ann Arbor Press Building, May- mard Street. Phones: Fdiforial, 4425; Business, 2x214. terway project which requires sacrifices and efforts by Canada and the United States if the move- ment is to be a success. That relation, then, makes such conferences as the one held last week invaluable. It would seem that not only should one delegate go over to talk about such matters 1 of interest, but that occasionallyj Iprominentpersons in the power of both countries should gather for social and political intercoursel which must inevitably result in a l better understanding and a more genuine appreciation of the neces- I sity for whole-hearted co-operation t a z EDITORTAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR $ENNETh G. PATRIC$ between .two great nations of, this continent. COMPROMISE Discarding its former attitude of "take our proposition or leave. EdItor...................Nelson J. Smith C ity Editor .............. stewart (Hooker News Editor............Richard C. Kurvink Sports Editor..............W. Morris Quinn Women's .Editor....... ......Sylvia S. Stone Telegraph Editor.............George Staute, Music and Drama.... ......R. 1. Askren Assistant City Editor........... Robert Silbar I; joseph E. Howe Doald J. Kline Lawrence R. Klt G Paul L. Adams Morris Alexande C. A. Askren Bertram Askwit Louise Behyme- Arthur Bernste Seton C. Bovee Isabel Ccharles L. R. Chubbs frank F. Coope Helen Domine Margaret Fckels Douglas Edward Valborg itgelan' Robert J. Feldm Marjorie Follme William Gentry Ruth Geddes David B. Hemps Richard Jung Charles R. Kauf Ruth Kelsey Night Editors l g Charles S. Monroe Picrce Rosenberg ein George E. Simone George C. Tilley Reporters Donald E. Layman Charles A. Lewis Marian McDonald Henry Merry Elizabeth Quaife Victor Rabinowitz J oseph A. Russell Anne Schell Rachel Shearer r Howard Simon Robert L. Sloss s Ruth Steadman Is A. Stewart ,d Cadwell Swansea Ian Jane 'rhayer er dith Thomas Beth Valentine Gurney Williams tead Jr. Walter Wilds George . Wohlgemuth frnan Edward L. Warner Jr. Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE ALurstant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Department Managers Advertising................Alex K. Scherer Advertising................A. amesHJordan ARdvertising...........Car, W. Hamimer Service....... ....Herbert E. VarnumI Circulation............... George S. Bradley Accounts...............Lawrence E. Vaikley Publications...............Ray M. Hofelich it," the. United States has adopted a new policy of conciliation in dis- armament. Ambassador Gibson has shown the delegates from the other powers meeting at Geneva that this country no longer obsti- nately clings to a fixed method by which the tonnage ratio shall be applied, but rather would consider other means of settling the prob- lem. Although America's concessions in the matter of armies and navies have as yet had no effect as far as actual reductions go, they have done much to reduce the friction caused by conflicting internatonal viewpoints. The United States, though ti would A eckon trained reserves as part of a nation's army, has allowed France and Japan to omit this item from due consider- ation. Mr. Gibson has likewise con- ceeded to the French view that each nation should be granted a total tonnage for ships and be al- lowed to build whatever kind that particular nation felt it needed. France and Italy stayed out of the last disarmament conference principally because the tonnage was not to be apportioned to each country, and the most effective auxiliary of both of these nations, the submarine, was to be ruled out. While neither England. nor the United States has any great need for this type of offensive ship, France and Italy, with their exten- sive coasts, regard the craft essen- tion to their security. The adopton of this conciliatory attitude by the Hooveil administra- tion will go far toward the solution of some of the world's most try- OAED ROLLS AB ks SOME REPORTER SAMPLE C y Meyer Levin. The oohn Day Pell: Who was that lady I seen Company, Jan., 1929 you with last night? A hard-boiled romantic, a cub * '*reporter on a big Chicago news- I paper; a young man with ideals, Meli: That wasn't no lady, but reveling in the realities of life that was my wife! -that is the nameless hero of this * * * . book: The Reporter. Here lies the krunning story of life on the city door? *desk, told in frankness and faith; told of high moments and sharp_ Stunk: When it's ajar-ha, excitements, of blatant celebra- ha, ha, yeoow! tions of beer lords, of shrinking tragedies in Little Italy, o emo- Well, Lark, I guess I get the job, tions raw from exposure. 'eh? Daily does this reporter view the I Seven Years Itch. violations of life, the abnormalities, * **and yet he glories in every gro- HERE'S ANOTHER tesquerie, every brutality that fur- Dear laRk: Ima good Ejucatid nishes copy. At times his work gUyl and ide like To rite rOles wen arouses him to passionate senti- yoU leve,, havE i gotta chance- ments; again, he is overwhelmed by yurz TRuly, here8s my collom:-, the pathos of stray souls that have $ $ $ + fallen foul of the city. He is sent fIrsst guY: wHy doze The chick- on assignments covering wars of un crossed the rode? beer lords, interviewing men prom- $ $ $ inent in public life, and always he sEccund Fella: (Ive forGotten is on the search for elusive "fee- the anser, lArk, he, he, he.) ee-tures." Chicago of a few years & & & ago, with all its hard-boiled char- aftEr i lern Better how to opr- acters, gunman, swindlers, and mo- ate a Typeriter ile be all set so rons, is there for the Reporter to Keap my name On hand, lArk, will write of-a Chicago so accurately 1 you; described, interpreted so subtlely Haff Whit. that one can pick out actual men * * * and events from under the thin Dear Lark: Veneer of words. Actual news I think you're just darling and breaks of 1924-26-from the elab- it's a shame it actually is that you orate funeral of a gangster, to the are not going to write your lovely arrests of swindler "Kid Phiel" are columns any more and I'm all un there, written under hidden names, and frothing with dismay I mean I but easily identified with their true am actually am that you're not go- characters. ing to write Rolls any more, but Typographically, the book is Lark I do so want to write the unique. Dedicated to the myster- column and here is my picture. ious Etaoin Shrdlu of newspaper- -n e w sp ap er - d om , it h a s ev ery p ag e cap p ed w ith a news headline, all concerning some part of the book, but none re- lated to the page on which it ap- pears. Punctuating the pages are the news stories Reporter has writ- ten, set double column and com- posed in journalistic style. The plot of the book and the spaces be- tween the news stories are concern- ed with how these stories were gathered, what experiences the Re- porter had in getting them. Writ- ten in impressionistic style, parts of the book are very choppy, but one gets swift, deft pictures of May I write the column next events, sharp insights into the Re- year, Lark? Please, please, pretty porter's mind. please with sugar on it? Everything made copy for this Mary- Gold. cub reporter, from Chicky, Dinky Saprioni's pet mulatto, who danced Gosh-you bet! I thought {naked on a table in an after-elec- you were dead. tion celebration, to the necking cou- Der l ples who-congregate along the lake Dear Old Larie: Well, it's been front in Jackson Park; from hotel a long while since I last wrote to hold-ups' to warfare in Vittorio you; but in view of the fact that Manfredi's gang. your advertisement for next year's Telephone in to the main office, editor for the "Daily Headache" beat it out to Winnetka-who stole appeared today, I feel that I just Janet Gray's pearls?-chase back to must get in my application before Little Italy, back to the office again, all the others arrive from Lapeer grab a photog, get to the scene.... and Kalamazoo. who?....where? ..why?what? .... Following are my qualifications how?...get the names, feverish for the position: Ihaste....gotta make a deadline.... 1. Left tiddle, Varsity Tiddle- where's Catsnuts gone? He ought wink Team, 1927, '28, and '29. not to climb in a window like that. 2. Have never paid for a Daily It's robbery. .. . thoughts of Linda, or believed anything in it. Linda who had been seduced. He'd 3. Do not belong to SPHINX or have to see that guy; give him a the Stoodent Council. word or two.... down to a smoky 4 Voted for Al Smith little city to cover a Legion conven- 5. Do not wear my Union but- tion. They brought a mule into the .tn hotel and it did an embarrassing 6. Am not connected with the thing.... hooray!.. ..Fleshy-faced B men in an undertaker's cellar B. &. G. boys. stripping skin off a dead gangster. 7. I have never taken the course Postmortem. Blood always made in Roman Band Instruments or Reporter nauseated... Stella, sweet- Precious Gems.cuvdwhneecolmaep 8. I am the author of Wings of curved, who never could make up Wax. her mind; Linda-dreams... .Jno-. 9. Did not contribute to the Tyrol, snoopy-eyed assistant city- Daily's Vindication Fund. ed, nosing through his copy, hop- 10. Not connected with the D. ing for errors..Fifer, rewrite man, damn him, never got a story right 11. Never have (or will) appre- ...names.... who's in charge of the ciate Play Production's efforts. tomeeting...gets the facts....got- 12. Have never learned to use a Cumake a eadl newspaper life U Read the Classified Ads FRATERNITY RINGS AT DISCOUNTS OF 25% to 40% 49th Anniversary Sale' Burr, Patterson and Auld Co. 603 Church Street I .ire..I . . . A A I Drink: D elicious and Refreshing R4IM[Ar~ TO OUR PATRONS Beginning Sunday, May 5, and continuing through June, July and August, we will serve Sunday Noon dinner until 3 p. m., with no Sunday evening meal. The Haunted Tavern 417 E. Huron St. IL Ain't Them Hard Trials About this time of the year, avail- able funds grow scarce, and the thot comes-"Is it worth the ef- fort!" If it is financing your way through school that bother$ yo%,In- vestigate the Consumer's Merchan- dise Association offer to student salesmen. Earnings during vacation for our salesmen range from $400 to $2,500. Hard work does it. Exper- ience is an asset but not required. No investment. Write or call for further information. Consumers Merchandise Asso cation 410 Cedar Avenue Minneapolis K 7j. r ary Chase ? eanette Dale ernor Davis Bessie Egeland Sally Faster Anna Goldberg Kasper Halverson George Hamilton ack Horwich ix Hurphrey k.Iutanta Marion Kerr Lillian Kovin'shy Bernard Larson Hollister Mabley 1. A. Newman Jack Rose Carl F. Schemm George Spater Sherwood Upton, Marie Wellstead "' ,' J r'' .: : OVE~ MILON Ar DAIV N PR Q TU A RE Si BUT T( All of which we may be excus that the pause that sanest temptationu ever succumbed to. same millions the pa freshes has come to n cold Coca-Cola. It delicious taste and cool a of refreshment have pros a little minute is long enot a big rest any time. The Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, OF COURSE IT'S NO AIR PLAYING THE ZOCTOR AND SPYING T SUCH A DELICATE ATION AS THIS. UT TH EN, W E'RE N O P RO CTOR. ND WE C A N ST ANYTHING E M PTAT I ON goes to prove (if ed for saying so) trefreshes is the which millions And to these ause that re- nean an ice- s tingling, fter-sense ved that ugh for Ca. YOU CAN'T BEAT T PAUSE THAT REFRES THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1929 Night Editor-Lawrence R. Klein COLLEGIATE OPTIMISM Optimism concerning the Ameri- can collegiate body is. welcome. When such optimism comes from authoritative sources like Dean Christian Gauss of Princeton; and President Angell of Yale it is dou- bly welcome. At a banquet given by the Yale News the other night both these well-known educators, who have had their fingers on the pulse of American education for years, expressed the belief that the ideals of educaton were nearer achievement today than ever. be- fore; and in both cases the ideal uppermost was of educating the student body. President Angell said: "The col- lege simply strives to give.the un- dergraduate what he; asks for, pro- vided his request is articulate and logical. Dean Gauss said that col- lege, ideally, should be a "place where young gentlemen could as-+ sociate with other gentlemen, and grow to maturity in common aims,+ riot only intellectual, but social1 and moral."< It is heartening to find the, lead-+ ers at one in the belief that ther undergraduate is the most import- ant person in a university. Too often do faculty celebrities 're- gard the institution as merely the, setting for scholastic investigations, and the teaching of callow youth is hurried as quickly and careless- ly as possible. Creative work is de- sirable at a university. But fac- ulty creative work at the expense of undergraduate education is un- desirable. The creative work to be emphasized is the bringing to ma- turity of young gentlemen, by the guiding hands of older gentlemenr "with common ideals." Let us hope that recognition of the necessity oft such important work will bringi about in colleges and universitiesr stronger efforts to obtain facultyt members who have such concep-1 lions of education.j o- - - --0 ,. , :., , t .. 5 43. 0001*1, ing , armament p United States is now to discuss willingly which appears to be effective. roblems. The in a position any scheme HE lIES. feasible and , t 4 'i IT H AD TO BE G'O O D TO G E T W H E RE I'' e-S r IS is I Editorial Comment I l'~.IP/LJ. . r. r r. r r. r r rr. r r r. r r r r. r r. r. r rrrrrrrrr. , c I JUST A THOUGHT OR TWO (From The University of Cincin- nati "University News" Voting is one of the most difficultj functions that the average citizen is duty bound to fulfill. To vote intelligently and wisely, so that the best candidate for office may be elected is a task that is not. only difficult, but extremely important. It is this task that confronts the students of this university during the current week. But in order to vote intelligent- ly a basis for composition and de- cision must exist for each individ- ual voter. In arriving at a fair decision there are several factors to be considered. First in import- ance should be the character of the! candidates. For positions of trust and responsibility the quality of leadership, intelligence, and ability are essential. Having determined what qualities we should generally seek in our representatives; the next question confronting the voter is how to determine which of these various candidates possess these requirements and the ability to co- ordinate them to the achievement of the public weal, Aside from personal acquaint- ance, the only accurate means of judging the various candidates must, of necessity, be their past record, or service to the school during their college career. Admit- tedly this is not always the-most; infallible, method, but it is at least more accurate than either the us- ual hit-or-miss or partisanship se-) lection. Past actions and services constitute a concrete method of judgment that can hardly be dis- 4 4i 4i ti 4 4 1 4 ti 4 Days - MAY 22,23,24,25,1929 -6 Concerts HILL AUDITORIUM - ANN ARBOR typewriter. 13. (Hurdled for luck.) 14. Am backing Gene for Head of the Rhetoric lio. Tunney Embrag- 15. Am backing Pussyfoot John- son for Prexy. 16. Am personally with Johnny Walker MacDonald. 17. 'I love pain. 18. I ride horseback ure. lb Ih it e. A acquainted and Sandy for pleas- but fascinating in its swift, moving drama. Reporters hard-boiled, romantic, impervious - chasing, chasing for Copy to fill yawning holes, jumping at the blast of the cityed's voice, scouring the city, hastily writing fee-ee-tures, turn- ng in long typewritten reports. Not the drama in the news, but the drama back of the front-page stories-that is the aim of "Report- er"-sterling in characterization and frank in its relation-a good book for the sophisticate. R. G. S. APPLICATION IN THE WASTE BASKET BECAUSE THE JOB IS OT WHAT IT IS CRACKED UP rO BE AND I DO NOT WANT TO 'RY OUT STOP-GUMLEY. * ** FOR MUTUAL BENEFIT - torted or overlooked by glib 19. I know where to find some b It is a pleasure to note that an tongues or personal prejudice. GOOD joke books. opportunity was recently given the Upon the successful candidates 20. And last but not least, I am - assistant secretary of state to dis- of this election will depend the not afraid to print the stuff which A cuss mutual problems of the United welfare of the undergraduate body has you buffaloed. B States and Canada with a group of for the ensuing year. Above all let And here, Larkie, are all of those N representative Canadians meeting us not be swayed in voting by the things which should assure me of .i Montreal. At that time matters Jmere bald fact that a certain can- the job sans further credentials. T vital to all concerned including didate is a fellow student in our And, my lad, if you have any en- questions of the tariff, the St. Law- college-certainly we should choose trails, you'll publish this as a fare- rence waterway, prohibition, immi- I that man whose ability and record well gesture. I graticn. and distribu ion of radio'show him to be the person who Oscar (The truth-seeker.) 'w070170 moaivjr +lh-,a C,+*,-nw rfcn dn the mnst for the nniv it . . I EARL V. MOORE Musical Director FREDERICK STOCK Orchestral Conductor ERIC DELAMARTER Guest Conductor JUVA HIGBEE Children's Conductor Edith Mason Soprano Chicago Civic Opera Company Jeannette Vreeland Soprano Distinguished American Artist Sophie Braslau Contralto Metropolitan Opera Company Marion TelvA Contralto Metropolitan Opera Company Richard Crooks Tenor Premier American Concert Artist Paul Althouse Tenor Metropolitan Opera Company Lawrence Tibbett Baritone Metropolitan Opera Company Richard Bonelli Baritone Chicago Civic Opera Company Barre Hill Baritone Chicago Civic Opera Company William Gustafson Bass Metropolitan Opera Company Josef Hofmann Pianist Polish Virtuoso Efrem Zimlaist Violinist Hungarian Master The Chicago Symphony Orchestra The University Choral Union Children's Festival Chorus Samson and Delilah Saint Saens The New Life Wolf-Ferrari Pres v 0 I I NOTICE i I 1I