THE MICHIGAN DAIL'Y TUESDTAY. OC TORRR 9_ 1409A .____.__ - ..i. . - . aa .. ".a ~ a v r. w o c 0, 1-0.60 ills fitir4toatt loattg l i blished every morning except Monday ig the University year by the Board in rol of Student Publications. ember of Western Conference Editorial iciation. ie Associated Press is exclusivelyen I to the use for republication of all news tches credited to it or not otherwise ted in this paper and the local news pub- !d herein. itered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, igan, as second class matter. Special rate ostage granted by Third Assistant Post- er General. ibscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, ffces Ann Arbor Press Building, May. lStreet. hones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK or.... .............Paul J. Kern Editor... ......Nelson J. Smith s Editor...........Richard C. Kurvink -ts Editor...............Morris Quinn men's Editor........Sylvia S. Stone or Michigan Weekly....J. Stewart Hooker ic and Drama ............. R. L. Askren stant City Editor. Lawrence R. Klein Night Editors ence N. Edelson Charles S. Monroe ph E. Howell Pierce Rosenberg ald J. Kline George E. Simons George C. Tilley Reporters - regular routes. But these cities, most of them, were of formidable size, offering unusual opportunities for such development. It has re- mained for Ann Arbor, however,. to be one of the smallest cities in the country to offer to its inhabi- tants and transients first class mail service via airplane such as can ordinarily be obtained only in cities of much greater size. It is splendid that Ann Arbor can pride itself on such a service, but it is important, too, that the people here educate themselves to the ser- vice and realize the opportunities it offers. Most of the air mail cit- ies within a range of 450 miles can be reached from Ann Arbor by this service the same day the article is posted here. Moreover, practical- ly every stop on the great routes from here to the eastern and west- ern coasts and many points south can be reached by air mail the day following its receipt in the post of- fice here, a remarkable saving of time over the ordinary service. Moreover, the rates are exceeding- ly low, affording air service at very little additional cost over the us- ual rates. Such a convenience and accom- modation as is now available here offers tremendous possibilitieshfor use by both University persons and townspeople. It will afford students and faculty quick communication with the outside world. The value to commercial enterprisers in town is obvious. All in all, the air mail service is a worth-while proposi- tion for this city, and it should merit careful investigation and consideration by all who use the mails from Ann Arbor. .ttril r img rr m iirmi ti,,amfI elrr fanktI h, OASTED ROLL THEY'RE GOING TO HAVE ELECTIONS -s 11 i SENIORS ON CAMPUS spiring for their election ings today and tomorrow. * * * are con-I proceed-I A I.. Adams rris Alexander. her Anderson A. Askren 'tram Askwith elon Boesche vise Behymer hur Bernstein bel Charles R. Chubb ra Codling ink F;. Cooper en Domine ward Efroymson uglas Edwards lborg Egeland bert J Feldman jone Foilmer ar Fuss Iliam Gentry M1 Gillett wrence Hartwig Iis Jones hard unig rles . Kaufman Ruth Kelsey Donald E. Layman C. A. Lewis Leon Lyle Marian MacDonald Henry, Merry N. S. Pickard William Post Victor Rabinowitz Jahn T. Russ Harold Saperstein Rachel Shearer Howard Simon Robert L. Sloss Arthur R. Strubel Beth Valentine Gurney Williams Walter Wilds' Edward Weinman Robert Woodroofe Joseph A. Russell Cadwell Swanson A. Stewart Edward L.'Warner; Cleland Wyllie Jr. WE WONDER WHY the lits vote tomorrow while all the others work their politics today. Can it be that the various factions hope to get the engineers and dents and lawyers to vote a few dozen times? * * * OH, NO, WHY they never do that here. THE BOYS AT the caucus meet- ings have been scheming and plot- ing for a long time. * * * . ONE BRILLIANT SCHEME was to hire busses (or is it buses?) to call for a platoon of co-eds and run them down to N. S. aud. * * * TO CUT DOWN expenses they're going to make the girls walk home, however. WHAT THE DEVIL do they worry about money for anyway? They might send in a bill to the sororities for "rushing" expenses. * * '* EITHER THAT OR charge it to the overhead of the class after they have their treasurer elected. * * * BUT KERNEL ANNOUNCES that the student council is going to have a representative sitting in on the committee meetings. JUST ONE SLICE to the melon. * , , IT WILL BE the umpty steenth time that Kernel and Anna Chris- tie have been bucking each other. * * * TIHAT FEUD EXTENDS way back to the days when both boys were freshmen at the local high school. They ran for president then, but a third candidate, a freshman even though he'd been in school long enough to make the all-state grid team, licked both of 'em. * * * THERE'S NO WONDER, then, that the boys are not running themselves this time. POLITICAL DICTATORS, ha-ha, never come out into the open un- less they win. ALL THE PUBLICATIONS mag- nates, dumb but mighty athletes. * * * BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAY MOND WACHTER Department Managers Advertising... .......Alex K. Scherer Advertising........ ..... A. James Jordan Advertising...............Carl W. Hammer Service ................Herbert E. Varnum Circulation............ .George S. Bradley Accounts....... ..Lawrence E. Walkley Publications...... ....Ray M. Hofelich Assistants Irving Binzer George R. Hamilton Mary Chase Dix Humphrey eanette Dale Bernard Larson Hernor Davis Leonard Littlejohn Helen Geer Kasper Ialverson T. Hollister Mabey A gnes 1- Carl Schenm Jack Horwitch Robert Scoville TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1928 Night Editor-GEORGE E. SIMONS TIME FOR ACTION Campus interest is centered to- day in the first regular meeting of the Inter-fraternity council to- night. At that time two questions of paramount campus interest should come before the council and action be taken in the case of each. The first and most important of these is President Little's proposed investigation by Federal agents of alleged violations of the prohibi- tion law by fraternities. The other is the question of holding closed fraternity parties on the Saturday nights following football games. It is perhaps too much to expect that the Inter-fraternity council will in the course of a single meet- ing be able to act upon any two questions of interest but certainly there is no apparent reacon for such a difficulty. And there is ev- ery reason to urge that body to{ action.1 Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less thanc300 words ii possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be rgearded as confidential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the, Daily. "SPENDTHRIFT AL" Republicans, by way of call- ing attention to the economy of the present administration and contrasting it with what might happen under Smith, have pointed with mixed horror and alarm at the gubernatorial expense account of New York state for the past ten years. Statistics, those convincing and superbly misleading arguments of political stumpers, have been drag- ged forth to prove that taxes in the Empire state have doubled under Smith, and half a billion in bonds have been saddled by him on the taxpayers. The half billion in bonds is the biggest source of heat under the pay-as-you-go Republican collar. Here we encounter the supreme in- difference, or if this be slander, the apparent apathy of the Repub- lian party toward the public wel- fare of New York. Stump speak- ers for the grand old party hesi- tate to examine the necessity for and the business acumen behind these bonds. Republicans, of course, can dis- pute the protection of human life as a function of government, and they can campaign against the elimination of grade crossings by defeating Smith on the ground that he is a spender, but if they tell the people the whole story they will not collect many votes. Three hundred million dollars worth of bonds were issued in 1925 for the sole purpose of eliminating grade crossings. Other funds derived from bond issues' have been devoted to con- structing a mammoth psychiatric institute to care for the insane and feeble minded, prisons to house an increased prison population of 2,000-a post-war heritage-parks and parkways for the recreation and health of New York's city usc A Drama sannan..........aaaua nuao THOUGHTS ON THE VITAPHONE By D. B. Hempstead, Jr..^ Wide and varied has been the comment upon that mechanical contrivance of recent birth know n Oat " a h ee f ioR SW as the "Vitaphone." The function d 4J N .LALL ~ 7J-- of the apparatus is the synchron- ization of reproduced sound with actions of the characters on the _ screen. At the present time there are manifold imperfections con- nected with it which lessen the ef-n s ficacy, if any, of the illusion. How- ever it is not rabid optimism to' assume that these imperfections you of the superiority of will eventually be overcome. Some devotees of tha celluloid have ven- tured the opinion that Vitaphone is simply another way of spelling V aer ic e the doom of legitimate drama. 1_ 1)V- This idea,, in our, estimation, is one of the most insane ever con- ceived, and with our customary in-soweean testinal fortitude we take this op-- portunity of advancing the con - to you to come n V our toyo t om advisit ou viction that if the Vitaphone con- -/ tinues to do what it has thus far done, it will not be long until that pant and see for yourse element of the great American public which a few years ago for- what modern equipment, - sook the galleries of the legitimate theatres for the front rows of the p nstak g methods, and movie emporiums, will gladly and even hurriedly return to the for- skilled workers can accom- mer. The Vitaphone brings to the _ lsh movies the one thing for which they have no use i. e., the human voice. The reason that moving pictures P o have proven so profitable for the ex-peddlers who produce them, is because the movies place absolute- - ly no strain on the mental facul- ties, such as they are, of their audi- ences. The movie patron has nothE ing to do but sink into his seat, open his mouth, and watch. On the other hand it does require w some cerebral activity to assimilate dramatic dialogue, and if the czars = of the "dumb drama" make this collossal demand of their public they will completely obviate the U-ND Y o- appeal once held by their product. The Vitaphone, for all its ingen- uity, can never bring to us the tan- gible real personality of the actor LIBERTY AT FIFTH as the stage can and does do. It - deprives us of one of the greatest pleasures to be found, that of ex- periencing an actual, existing per-- sonality reach out over the foot- lights and become a part of us, we 1 part of it. If the progress of the Vitaphone is ideal and leaves to its origina- tors nothing to be desired the time may come when it will be possible to produce a sensible, artistically capable play but only by hiring LEGITMATE actors, LEGITIMATE directors, and playing a LEGITI- MATE drama. When this is done what twill they have accomplished? Simply this-they will be doing poorly what the legitimate stage " does insuperably well. The very idea thumbs its nose at the * thought of itself. True enough it would be and is interesingtoher singers, speakers, and orchestras through this medium but there its value ends. Even the funniest of legitimate comedians are pathetic- ally unfunny on the Vitaphone. Artistically the moving pictures have a function, a function how- ever which they are net, on the whole, fulfilling. Their realm is because of its physical limitations. S The movies can secure scenic ef- fects impossible to the stage. Fan- tasies and fairy tales could be beautifully told. Recall "Peter Pan," "The Thief of Bagdad," and Thet*e British others of a somewhat similar na- choice the and ture, that is the sort of thing in which moving pictures can achieve American markets is avail- consummate artistry. It is in that field that their true potentialities able in our shoe department exist. The fact that they are ne- r '": II" 4: : SOMEBODY JUST "Who's mighty?" * * * ANYHOW, THEY'LL thanks be that there of them. * * * QUERIED- ALL RUN- aren't more 'here is little need to propound arguments for and against the proposals. Federal investiga. i of any possible liquor viola- is among the fraternities shoulc 'dly need support; and surely experiences of the past yeai e demonstrated the desirabil- of orderly closed parties on the hits following football games. only question seems to be that action. And 'in that field the er-fraternity council has all too mn been notoriously slow. idiana plays in Ann Arbor next urday and a number of frater- es are desirous of holding par- after the game. Campus and ernity opinion 'have already en- sed the move. Nothing further be done until some action is en by the council. That action t be taken today if the parties med for this week-end are to E r t F. AND SOME RUN who don't even have records at all. BUT WHO CARES about that anyway? DID you notice the! M. T. A. is approaching? * * * THAT SOUNDS like Michigan Teachers' association, and we'll bet that's just what it is. Don't be surprised if you see that they come sometime. * * *.' TEACHERS DO. * * * WHAT CAN THAT possibly be? Maybe it means that the Michigan Team'S Awful! * * * BUT THEY DIDN'T have to print bills to let the people know about it. * * * eheld. There should be still less cause r discussion as to proper enforce- ent of the prohibition laws, and ompt action may result in even eater benefit to the campus. Dis- ssion of the subject has reached place where endorsement by the ter-fraternity council would be F the utmost significance, and ith an ever possible modification the auto ban to be considered, -operation with the University esident in as logical and deserv- M A /S Y~tll Al't '1' d C A11 M41 M Atl ' dwellers, schools which are reflec- G. F. K., THE author of the frosh 'glected by the great producing ted in a doubled high school popu- froth stuff printed a few days ago, companies is not odd. What could lation under Smith, twenty millions felt like] passing his double "o" one expect from an industry whose to stamp out tuberculosis on dairy again and so here goes. virtuosos are ex-shoe clerks and farms, and an enlargement of the * * * whose ruling powers are ex-pants public health nursing force from "YOU'D THINK we could afford repairers. 500 to 1,200. Deaths in rural dis- a new pillar next to the Library in- If this state of affairs continues tricts from causes connected with not many moons will have waxed childbirth were decreased a third would like to stand "Spendthrift and waned until M. Zukor and during Smith's regime. Cal" and his Washington Republi- others of his kind will have to sell If you can get a Republican to cans. In 1920, it may be significant their controlling interest in the admit the desirability of these im- to note, the Republican platform Western hemisphere, learn the provements inaugurated by Smith, promised a broad and comprehen- English language, and go back to he will stick stubbornly to his sive development of the nation's work. point that they should have come waterways. Nothing was done stead of that old busted one." more slowly and been paid for out about until 1924, when the Re- of taxes. On the other hand the publican platform promised an- "DO THE ARCHITECTURAL stu- Smith reasoning is that the mini- other broad and comprehensive "AL mum life of the improvements paid development of the nation's wa- dents have to spend all their time for with bonds is 100 years. They terways with special reference to studying figures on Martha Cook?" will be giving service to the public the upper Mississippi and the St. long after the bonds have been re- Lawrence route to the sea. A close "QUAINT, ISN'T it, the campus tired. Then why shnld the nreent sp nxnh o nnmPCCinna - nr custom of awaking so late a malted