THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1923 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1928 -C- -. _ t . _ _ _ - _ i ished every morning except Monday the Universit year by the Board in I of Student Publications, ber of Western Conference Editorial tion. Associated Press is exclusively en- o the use for republication of all news :hes credited to it or not otherwise d in this paper and t.e local news pub- herein. red at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, ;an, as second class matter. Special rate toage granted by Third Assistant Post- General. cription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, es: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- treet. es: Editorial, 4925; Busines,, sta,. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK . ........ Paul J. Kern ditor...............Nelson J. Smith Editor.........Richard C. Kurvink Editor ..:.......... Morris Quinn a' Editor.. ......Sylvia S. Stone Michigan Weekly.. J. Stewart.ooer and Drama ..........R .Ake nt City Editor.. Lawrence R. Klein Night Editors :e N. Edelson 'Charles S. Monroe E, flowell ;Pierce Roo-mnberg 1j Kline George E Simons George C Tilley Reporters it T. Adams ri Alexander her Anderson A. Askren tram Askwith ise Behymer hur Bernstein on C. Bovee be] Charles R. Chubb nk 2. Cooper len Domine iglas Edwards borg Egeland ert J. Feldman jorie Folmer ram Gentrv wrence fHartwig hard Jung rle R. Kaufman h Kelsey nald E. Layman C A. Lewis Marian MacDonald Henry Merry N. S. Pickard Victor Rabinowitz Anne Schell Rachel Shearer Robert Silbar Howard Simon Robert L. Sloss Arthur R. Strubel ..Edith Thomas Beth Valentine Gurney Williams Walter Wilds George E. Wohlgemuth Robert Woodroofe Joseph A. Russell Cadwell Swanson A: Stewart Edward L. Warner Jr. Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Department Manager. Advertising ..............:..Alex K. Scherer Advertising...............A. James Jordan Advertising............CrW. ame as-Crl W.Hammer Service...........Herbert E. Varnum Circulation..............George S. Bradley Accounts..........Lawrence E. Waikey Publications...........Ray M. Hofelich ing Binzer nald Blackstone ry Chase nette Dale mior Davis sie Egeland en Geer n Goldberg per Halverson rge Hamilton nes Herwiga Wal Assistants Jack Horwich Dix Humphrey Marion Kerr Lillian Kovinsky Bernard Larson Leonard Littlejohn Hllister Mabley' Jack Rose Carl F. Schemm Sherwood Upton Marie .Wellstead ter Yeagley IDENTIFICATION Although homely persons on campus may rebel at the idea, the time has come whereby students in the University should have more complete means of identifying themselves as members of certain classes. Recent methods of check- ing class members in elections have proven to be faulty, even if they did greatly improve another situation, and the use of identifi- cation cards, bearing the owner's picture and issued by the univer- sity, has greatly aided matters at many other schools and colleges in this country. As a suggestion, these cards should be issued by the University to every student who enrolls, and should be used as means of identi- fication at athletic contests, class and campus elections, and other student affairs, in place of the treasurer's certificate. The card should bear the stamp of the Uni- versity, a likeness of the person to whom issued, address, class, and other necessary information to prove that the bearer is the same as the person to whom issued. It is well known that athletic coupon books are used often by many besides the owner. Dupi- cate voting in class elections is too well known to be discussed. Other events arise where a means of posi- tive identification is necessary. Other universities are now using the identification card plan with success. The card is as sure a means of spot identity as any of- fered. This University, especially in the light of present affairs, would do well to take steps to adopt such a means of identifying its std dents and thus eliminating much trouble and misuse of other names. Evidently Michigan is not the only school which is having diffi- culties in class elections. At the University of Colorado thirteen students, either freshmen or juniors, will be dealt with by a board of elections because forty- five illegal votes were cast in a recent sophomore election. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to beabrief, confining themselves to less than 300 words it 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. RUM AND ROME There came into our hands re- cently a copy of The Fellowship Forum, purporting to have more than a million' readers, with the following blazoned forth in 120- point type, two inches high, "Rum- Rome Party To Be Crushed," this in 36-point bold-face, "Romanist Predicts An 'Over-Night Change' of American to Romanism 'Early in Smith's Administration' and "Protestant America Will Not Per- mit Smith and The Pope to Put A Bartender's Apron onUncle Sam," and this, "Election of Smith Seen As Great Triumph For Pope Throughout World." To say that such a flagrantly outrageous attempt to fan into flame the ashes of religious war- fare and arouse all the dark pas- sions of prejudice and intolerance is condoned by Republicans wouldf be futile. And yet former Senator Newell Sanders, introducing Borah at Nashville, said, "Tennessee is a Protestant state andj wants a Pro- testant President," and Borah, al- most in his first words, said, "Sen- ator Sanders has made my speech." This by the way is the same Borah who is silent now on Repub- lican corruption, and who declared in 1919. that Hoover was unworthy to be entrusted with $100,000,000, and that he was a violator of the statute laws and the constitution. i yD OSLL Today the sophomore lits will go To ballot at the sophomore polls- We men of thirty freely give This sound advice through Toasted Rolls. Remember, when your man's behind, A sportsman never gives up hope; Approach yourfriends on the Student council- Demand that they recount the vote. Your opponent may be way ahead- Ahead by forty votes or more- But recounts show that twenty, ballots Were added on the wrong man's score. Several scattered votes, you know, Will often win or lose a race- Scattered between the voting room And the Student council counting place. And sometimes ballots in the boxes Change their names-determine the winner By ghostly, supernatural means While councilmen are eating dinner. But nobody cares about class elections- How inanely futile to care! Washtenaw wins. Was it Shakes- speare said, "Fair is foul, and foul is fair?" Then vote, you men of thirty-one With carefree hearts and gaily- Washtenaw may run the council But State Street has The Daily. Yellit. 0- -o [ CAMPUS CHATTER [ 0- _-o More than one-half the students who went to the Ohio game have returned to Ann Arbor, and a few have already re-entered school. With Haliburton, Leacock, Luckner, and others coming, local autograph hounds are filling their fountain pens and laying in a good supply of brass. SEVERAL EXCEPTIONS have been taken to recent editorials in The Daily, the management is happy to announce. Circulation figures continue to climb.-(advt. PROFESSOR PILLSBURY of the psychology department has bought a "what-not" at last, after years of auto-suggestion. Several young men made social calls at local sorority houses, last week-end. Lucky girls, say we. . .. Remember the sophomore lit elections today! Exercise your privileges! President Little, well-known part-time resident of this muni- cipality made a speech the other day in Canada. Ah, ah, Prexy! TATLER. Music And Drama I THIS AFTERNOON: In Hill Auditorium, Sr. Fernando Germani, visiting Italian or- ganist, in recital, at 4:15 o'clock. TONIGHT: In School of Music Auditorium, Dalies Franz, pianist, will give a concert, beginning at 8:15 o'clock. * * * OPERA "BREAK" Amid a fanfare of more or less furtive publicity the Mimes boys have for the past few weeks been working themselves up to the point_ where finally they feel justified in announcing that there will be a Union Opera, titled, beautifully, enough, "Rainbow's End." Having used everything in the way o) working-titles, from "Ragtime Cowboy Joe," to "The Feet Coms In," the general tenormo f.this year's extravaganza of colo :d athletes' sweat is to the cf < t th3t; there is a West, and that inthis West things happen which y'd never breath to your mother excep over the glittering screen of foot lights. But the show is not naughty. It is really a departure, and quite a nice one. The story deals with a group of traveling players, Jitney players, who travel and travel and travel over the hot burning sands until the parting of a mesa-or mesquite, or mescal, take your choice-clump! Well anyhow, the clump parts and there is a long-lost college friend. Strange things do happen in the desert. It seems there was also a college girl, who had been intimate-in a collegiate way, of course-with some one, maybe the man behind the clump, so of course there are complica- tions, all sung to the tune of "Don't Send My Boy to Harvard" But everything irons itself out, as it will you know, in a college show, and the opus closes in a riot of color, and with sand in your eyes from that infernally burning desert. Everyone has been working very' hard with this embryo opera. It is shrowded, almost embalmed, in secrecy, and the machinations of the choruses and the cast and the musicians and so on, are so nefarious that special precautions have been taken to guard the pub-, lic from undue shock-until the opening night. But then it will be discovered that Michigan has again done something new in the way of collegiate comic opera, and glory will gather and gather, along with the alumni, at the show-points along the itinerary of the Opera Special train. The route planned includes such beauty spots 'as Philadelphia, New York, Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland. Last year New York was not visit- ed, which may explain why vital: statistics in that city took such a drop during the holiday season. In Michigan the troupe will stop at Lansing, Grand .Rapids, Saginaw, Kalamazoorand other cities of his- toric as well as aesthetic interest. Someone with a sense of humor has assigned credit for the show to Hugh Claney and David B. Hempstead, as authors, and to Ed- ward Heyman, William Watkins, and William "Bud" Lewis for inci- dental musical effects. Thee Ann Arbor opening will occur December 10. R. L. A. !I rY r 1 f= 2.C1-THEATR E--2d Today Only- MARGUERITE DE LA MOTTE . in "BROADWAY MADNESS" A tale of jazz-mad daughters and countrybumpkins. Added Comedy News TONIGHT IS PRESENTATION NIGHT PRIZES PRIZES Get your Tickets free daily with each adult admission ticket for the Arcade scholar- ,ship.En =Matinees Evenings . 10c, 20c 10c, 20c, 30c Good News Regular Dinner 35c Regular Supper 30c Lenas Diner 210 S. 5th Ave. Home Cooking Want Ads Pay Want Ads Pay Want Ads Pay Y r 1 t Typewriters FOR SALE OR RENT Typing Multigraphing Mimeographing HAMILTON TYPEWRITER LETTER SHOP State & William Dial 7831 I 100 Expe'rienced Tutores covering LIT SCHOOL ARCHITECTURE ENGINEERING EDUCATION BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Only 8 More Days Canoeing SAUNDERS' CANOE LIVERY WE CLOSE NOV. 1, 1928 on the Huron River at Foot of Cedar St. m1U 1 11 11 I1 lII IUmiI ' MACK TUTORING A GENCY Daily & Sunday 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. 3 1 0 So. State St. Above College Inn *4 Phone 7927 1 a.. e '.- Ali. "1, .'jA sDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1928 ght Editor-PIERCE ROSENBERG f . "FIGHTING WOLVERINES" In a university communitI as aid and conservative as Ann Ar- or, any attempt to interest a udent body ,in pep meetings, or ny suggestion that vocal support f an athletic team is desirable, is pt to be looked upon by the unin- rested as moronic and totally un- orthy of grown men and women.I That this .attitude of criticism nd opposition does exist it must e admitted and regretted. It is course simply a branch growth that cynicism so often found nong members of the so-called telligensia. Its believers, at best, e but few in number. Their in- uence nevertheless, is demoralz- .g. Friday night, Michigan studentsI e to be given their first oppor- nity of the year to demonstrate . tangible and definite form their illingness to support a Michigan am, in victory or in defeat. To lose who have never attended a p meeting in Hill auditorium, it sufficient to say that the event a spectacle in itself well worth FOR. YOUR MORNING BREAKFAST YOUR NOON LUNCHEON YOUR EVENING DINNER U W I L L F I N D OR- PIPE cc'D 3D)g W IO0 1 ~IIJFEE OR AFTER THE SHOW AT NIGHTS THE BEST PLACE ON THE CAMPUS Operated By CRIPPEN DRUG STORES 723 North University Ave. Just Below Our Campus Drug Store to 'tf;~ it4., JW EL EL~J ~ ~JELI ~JiJ 'J ~JJELJ ~J~J LIW LI JEL ELIELIELI E~lELI U E E~ ELIE~iJE~lEU JEI U Ei E ELIJEL E~iELIELI LI LI LI EIIE:11111M.,I LI C, It has, moreover, a very definite ace in college life, being a tradi- n almost as old as intercollegiate mpetition and one as deserving perpetuation. In a year in hich Michigan is unfortunate lough to have a loosing football am, the desireability of a firm id loyal student support is the ore to be emphasized; and there no place where it can be of more lue than at student pep meet- gs. There has been a tendancy at ichigan within recent years to crease the number of pep meet- gs. Now, it seems, the time has me when the Varsity is deserving real sendoffs before every game. a result officers of the Student umil have indicated that addi- nal pep assemblies may be, fnned for all of the remaining; mes this year if student interest indicated by the attendance in; [1 auditorium Friday night shows, But to return to the religious is- sue, we would like to print in The F e ll o w s h i p Forum, Governor Smith's creed as an American, Catholic, published in the Atlantic Monthly of last April, from which we quote: "I recognize no power in the in- stitutions of my church to inter- fere with the operations of the Constitution of the United States or the enforcement of the law of the land. "I believe is absolute separation of church and state, and in the strict enforcement of the provisions of the constitution that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or pro-i The last NEW YORKER tells of a new game that is being played in that city. It has to do with cig- arette lighters and betting gentle- men. A man recently paused in a prominent place in that city to light his cigarette, and had just started to thumb his light- er when a stranger stopped him. The smoker looked up inquiringly, and was greeted with "Do you want to bet five dollars that your -lighter won't light the first time?" The smoker was a good sport, so he accepted the bet, thumbed his lighter which broke into flame, and lighted the tobacco. The stranger handed over five dollars without comment. The winner was curious however, and quizzed the loser as to the reason for the strange bet. The stranger replied that he and others made from $50 to $75 each day betting with other men who were willing to stake five or ten dollars r'on their be- lief that their lighters would light the first time. Such is the latest way to make money, Dalies Frantz, brilliant young pianist, and holder of a Julliard foundation scholarship for students of unusual ability, is to give a con- cert composed of Johannes Brahms compositions this evening which should attract those fond of good music. It will be remembered by those who have attended convocations during the past year that Mr. Frantz has assisted at them with marked success. He is a musician of unusual promise who has been in Ann Arbor for the past three years for the purposes of special study under Guy Maier. His repu- tation is not merely local however, for he has already toured the ma- jor cities of this country, and was heard in concert last summer in Munich, Vienna, and other Europ- ean cities. Mr. Frantz's concert this evening is notable in that its composes an artistic and representative group from the masterpieces of Brahms. The "Sonata in F Minor" composed of "Allegro Maestoso; Andante Ex- GRANGER'S - -mmmm DANCING TONIGHT Eight to Ten The popularity of Granger s is due to the most pleasing environment for dancing in combination with ,the snappy music of Buddy Golden and his Eleven Wolverines. This is the opinion of thousands of students who dance at Granger's. k Dancing Every FRIDAY WEDNESDAY SATURDAY Eight to Ten Nine to One Nine to Two elve 1 ,1 11