FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY ......,.......+...... ....y ......w ir i gttn Baitt I Published every. morning except Monday ruring tne University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. fThe Associated Press is exclusively en itled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and Me local news pub- ished herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- taster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.oo; by mail, ffices: Ann Arbor Press Bilding, May- niard Street.: Jnones: Editorial, ,5; Busies, .21. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK Editor. ;........,..Paul J. Kern City' Editor., ......Nelson J. Smith News Editor .... Richard C.:Kurink S ports Editor.... Morris Quinn Women's Editor .....Syvia S. tone Editor Michigan Weekly.J .Stewart ooker Music and Drama... .M L. Askren Assistant City Editor ....Lawrenc I Kleinf Night Editorsl Clarence N Edelson Charles S. Monroe joseph E. Howell Pierce Ronberg Donald F Kine George 1+. Simons eorei. Tilley Reporters Paul 1. Adams C. A. Lewi iorz s Alexander Marian Maclonald Esther Anderson enrrv Merry C. A. Askren N. S. Pickard Bertram Askwitt Victor Rainowni Louise Behymer Aune 8 cll Arthur Bernstei" Rachel Shearer .Seton C. Bovef, Roer, Sibar Isabel Charles Howard Simon L. R. Chub Robert L. Sos Prank Z. Cooie Arthur R. Strubel Helen fDmine Edith Thoas xDouglas Edwards eth Valentine Valborg Egeland Gurney Williams Robert J. eldmnev Walter Wilds Marjorie Folme George F. Wohgemuth William Gentr Robert 'Voodroofe Lawrence Hartwig foseph A. Russell Richard Jung Cadwell Swanson Charles R. Kaufman A. Stewart Ruth Kelsey Edward L. Warner Jr. Donald ,E. Layman Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE Assistant Manager-RAMOND WACHTER AdvrtiingDepartment Managers Advertising....Alex K. Scherer Advertising...... . . ..A. James Jordan Advertising..........Carl W. Hammer Service..... .. ......ierbert E. Varnum Circulation................George S. Bradley Accounts.......... ...Lawrence E. Walkley Publications...............Ray M. Hofelicli Assistants Irving Binzer Jack HorwichI DonaldBlackstone Dix Humphrey Mary Chase Marion Kerr Jeanette Dale Lillian Kovinsky Vernor Davis Bernard Larson Bessie Egelad Leonard Littlejohn Helen Geer Hollister Mabley Ann'Goldberg" Jack Rose Kasper Halverson Carl F. Schemm George Hamilton Sherwood Upton Agnes Herwig Marie Welstead Walter Yeagley FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1928 Night Editor-PIERCE ROSENBERG THE VESTRIS DISASTER De mortuis nihil nisi bonum Captain William Carey, master of the ill-starred Vestris, true to the gallant tradition of his calling, has gone with his ship. The succession of blunders that brought death to more than one hundred passengers and crew should not be levied against his memory. But there is a lesson and a warn- ing to be drawn from the Vestris disaster that should not go un- heeded in shipping circles. When his ship began to list dangerously on Sunday, Captain Carey had two things to consider. If he broad- cast his SOS too soon he would incur a huge salvage bill against his company; if- he sent it too late, he would risk the lives of all on board. The human factor entered the equation, judgment erred, and a hundred lives were lost. Per- haps, as a result, other captains will not be called upon in the future to exercise such close dis- crimination in attempting to cut their companies' sahvage bills. Perhaps, also, more attention will now be paid to checking bulkheads, drilling life-boat crews, inspecting life-boat equipment, and comput- ing its adequacy to meet an emergency, before a passenger ves- sel is allowed to clear a port. Six- teen years ago the Titanic disaster had the effect of making owners look more closely to their live-sav- -ing equipment. If there can be a silver lining to the loss of a hundred lives, it will be found in the sudden shock ac- companying the realization that the sea has not lost its perils. The fact that a stout vessel can spring a leak and go down in mid-ocean despite the mechanical perfection of the age will help to correct the criminal carelessness of ship own- ers who fail to provide adequate life-saving equipment.. HARDY PERENNIAL When Congress convenes in short session next month another of those hardy perennials, this time sponsored by Senator Norris, is' destired to flower again in the Congressional Record. Condition:, . . . .. , .,.. i . ..L .. bangs open his last session. Sen- ator Norris will argue with effec- tiveness that Herbert Hoover, en- gineer, president-elect, an' one of the principles in making Boulder' Dam a campaign issue, should be' on the job instead of resting in the South. Another campaign issue, farm re- lief, will probably be considered in the short session, and there again the president-elect stands commit- ted and would find it advantageous to pitch himself into the problem instead of letting his luke-warm farm-relief colleague lead the fight, possibly necessitating an extra ses- sion. The delayed inauguration is a hang-over from the days when it took a week to go or to send a message from Boston or Savannah to Washington. The interim be- tween election day and March 4 was necessary to allow the votes to be counted, presidential electors to reach their state capitals, the election to be decided and an- nounced to the winning candidate, and finally for that candidate to travel to the capitol for the instal- lation ceremony. Today the results are known to the nation within a week of the first Tuesday after the first Mon- day in November, and the presi- dent-elect could reach the capitol from any city in the world before the short session of Congress con- venes in December. HELP THE BEAR Among other things to which Mr. Hoover stands pledged to accom- plish when he gets into the White House is the same business-like re- organization of departments of government to which the party pledged Coolidge in 1924, and Hard- ing before him. Perhaps under Hoover we will get. the long-promised reorganization. In his methodical, autocratic, per - sistent way, he seems to cat up problems of organization and re- organization-and it will be a glorious day for United States bears. The past eight years of Republi- canism have been shockingly in-- adequate with regard to the preser- vation of wild life-especially bears. With amazing disregard for the dictates of economy and effic- iency, the flower of our national1 wild life, our bears, have been al- lowed to shift for themselves as best they could under the cross purposes and discordant views of three departments. The departifient of commerce has1 been detailed to watch over the preservation of Arctic Bears, the department of interior to exercise jurisdiction over the preservation of Grizzly Bears, and the depart- ment of agriculture to protect the lives, interests, and welfare of Brown Bears. May this travesty on efficiency, that has so long allowed our bears to go to seed, be speedily ended. We trust that little bears, medium- sized bears, and big bears, arctic, grizzly, and brown bears may soon see the light of a more prosperous day when the Great Miner places them under the responsibility of a single department. We have finally located Coolidge's campaign speech for Hoover. It seems that the Vermont economist uncracked enough to say, "Good- bye, Mr. Hoover, Good luck!" when the nominee left the White House to board the train for Palo Alto. Smith men are looking for some sort of Dawes' plan to liquidate election bets. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to he brief, confinig themselves to less thanS 30 words it possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as condential, upon re- quest. Letters published should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. Th OATE RLL ARE SPELLING IS TURRIBLE ' BUTT IT COULD s r P IhrA~~~~rrmmar jJnmrniuf,, BE WURSE It scams as iff Rols is about the the only colum in the paper nowa- days that exscapes mutilation at the hands of the proff readers. Spelling, grammer, punctuation and dicshun in Rolls is always perfect because we proof-read it ourself. * * * Yesterday's editorial on gun- play presents a bizzare, if novel use of the comparative of real. "Gunplay is not all in the hu- mor magazines. It is realer than most thought, and some- thing that cannot be solved by placing a ban on it." Well, Well! This Is Sad Sad Headline in yesterday's Daily says that Graham McNamee "Com- bines Seven Numbers With Popular Talk Talk." This is a" second cousin to the Pow-wow, or else he hails from Walla Walla. Furthermore, "the lava flow," said the Mt. Etna eruption story in yesterday's Daily, "was decreasing steadily today. The main stream was slowly moving along withmth slowly moving along." We never heard lava we've always imagined something like that. flow, but it sounds The Terror. * * * The editorial staff Daily may be terrible of The spellers but the advertising all week has been screeching about "The Doctor's Dilemna," "Mer- chendising," "Susscribers," "su- berb," and "ak." * * * Isn't it a shame that there weren't enough formal dances this year so that every Student Coun- cil member could be appointed to a committee? * * * Complaints have been pour- ing into the Rolls office, criti- cising the editor for not mak- ing the column more literary. To quiet this tirade of protest and abuse we have planned a little sketch entitled "Getting Goethe's Garter." * * * Let us all stand with bowed heads and the salem brfore the great Tillotson. Our seats came today, and they were ON THE FORTY-FIVE YARD LINE! This Tillotson fellow is really a great. chap when you get to know him and the students are all wrong in their' violent criticism of him. * * * Music And DramafLo ONE-ACT PLAY CONTEST Le The Division of English announce the completion of plans for the pro- Les duction of student-written dramat- ic material. Finally, 'and at long last, this move has been taken, as a culmi- Larus Richmc nation of plans begun some years Gentler ago with the amalgamation, still I ha more or less incomplete, of the de- Tobacc partments of Speech, English and Two along o Rhetoric with the view of concen- revel i trating the various efforts in each mixture of these departments into con- did not 1 little bhi structive educational activity. From joke wa this point of view the above an- worth, nouncement is incidental. It is for a 1i merely one of the results sought Englan after. was sur But from the point of view of tion an Gret IB student dramatics at Michigan it is iar sn a most important step. cities in For a long time this column hasannoun been suggesting some sort of uni- I the hon fication which would permit plays very gr written byustudents now enrolled! to be produced by student organiza- tions, with student casts and tech- nical men. This in an effort to build up for Michigan a dramatic' tradition, as well as a dramatic workshop, which would equal that Sm of Princeton, Yale, University of___ North Carolina or Wisconsin. Co- incidental with the several essays on the subject which appeared early in the Fall, there was con- siderable activity among the de- partments included in the Division of English directed toward the same end. The services of Mr. Kenneth T. Rowe were secured for the Rhetoric faculty to handle a course in dramatic writing. Mr. Valentine B. Windt was secured to take the place of Mr. Fleishman, now on leave, to direct the activities of Play Production. Conferences be- tween these two men, the one with + a knowledge of the creative ability shown in play-writing classes, the other sure now of student ability in the synthetic field of produc- tion, have developed a number of plans for immediate execution is ci which should provide a tremendous. but advance for the drama locally, and tizin should pave the way eventually for Yo still more constructice efforts. I ente The first step to be taken is the Sp announcement of a play-writing: competition, open to the entire membership of the University ex- I L cept taking instructorial work, with the view of discovering any dram- 5 atic material that may be worthy of production. The. form of ma- N terialdesired, however, is the one- act play-this for the purposes of simplicity in production, balance in program, and to give a larger representation of authors on one evening's bill. The judges for the contest will be announced at some later date, but they will certainly include the most expert'of the fac- ulty in matters of production, and dramatic and literary merit. Plays to be submitted should represent, not the author's idea of what l amateur actors could do best, but his honest effort to treat a dram- atic idea. Judgment will be based on literary and dramatic merit, with problems of production coming secondary.1 The contest does not offer a prize -in the accepted sense of the word. The gratification of public atten- dance should however, have a strong appeal. But from the sin- cere dramatist's point of view laboratory production, in which the author can remold his lines, alter all the business he imagined would be so effective, and generally fol- low the best traditions of dramatic creation which are based on the axiom that plays are not so much written as rewritten, would be more to his advantage. The casts required for production will be drawn mainly from those enrolled in the Play Production group, working under the direction of Mr. Windt. .- The success with which this group gave "The Little Journey" is an index of the calibre of work which will go to produce the amateur plays, and promises sincere and adequate treatment of any play submitted. If response to this contest is suf- ficiently enthusiastic, it is further planned to conduct a similar con- test for full length plays, for which the rules outlined above will hold true, but announcement of this will be withheld until the one-'act play contest is completed and student sentiment can be measured. Student cooperation should be immediate, and it is hoped that theI purpose of this step, which is toward bringing the different divi- C- - n a o I Q c ,4 4 41 .---- . . . .. cal Smoker harns Bitter sson Abroad New York, March 13, 1928 & Bro. Co., ond, Va. men: ve used Edgeworth Smoking o f or the past twenty-five years. years ago I took my trusty briar )n a trip abroad, intending to n the delights of the famous es in London. I confess that I carry along with me any of the lue tins of Edgeworth. But the s on me. I went back to Edge- only this time I had to pay 45c c tin of Edgeworth! roug entally, on a trip through id and later through Ireland, I prised to find the wide distribu- d ready sale of Edgeworth in Brta~in.A frequent and famil- ain Dublin, Cork and other n Ireland was a white streamer cing a new shipment of Edge- To make such a conquest in me of smoking tobacco must be atifying to your house. Sincerely,..K J. T. Kelly krewx Grth Extra H~igh Grade oking Tobae . a r a r r t's ;tr, " i entifically prepared food ot an empty expression, means well-cooked, appe- g dishes. u will always feel safe in rtaining your guests here. ecial attention given to private parties. uncheons and Dinners Now located at 14 E. Jefferson ext to Jefferson Apts. Near State C o | | | | i- To H. W. H., the red-headed jailbird of the English depart- ment, of you we ask the ques- tion, what would YOU do in the case of Mary Gold? Comfort and Protection o 0 * * * The mud bath that a deluge gave Los Angeles the other day is prob- ably the result of the prayers of 1,000,000 Florida residents for the past three years. "Greets Wife With Bullets and Shoots Himself, Too," reads a headline in a Chicago paper. She probably said, "Hello your- self!" . LETS GO, '31 The last year has seen the class of '31 go down to defeat before the onslaughts of the class of '30. In the coming week you are going to meet the freshmen on the tra- ditional battle-ground of Ferry field. To beat them will require men who are willing to fight for the preservation of the glory of their class. At 8 o'clock, Monday night,, November 19, your class will rally together in the Union ball- room to discuss their future plans. Every man must be present, for it is only through cooperation that Aimee S. McP's invasion of the British Isles is leading the British to believe that St. George didn't complete the efficient job that is accredited to him. * * * Well, anyway, we can call her the Good Aim ambassador. As an example of the progress of the Student Council in their cam- paign to eliminate graft in class elections and appointment, they can point with pride to the fact that one man who has flunked two economics courses and dropped a third has been a'appointed to the auditing committee of the junior class. * * * We hope that when the honor- able Mr. Charlie Dawes presents the honorable Mr. Charlie Curtis with the honorable Vive-presiden- tial gavel, the honorable Mr. Dawes doesn't lose his temper and tunk the honorable Mr. Curtis over the head with it. * * * mnip M~ lnriim.. hoa . Y- Vt- \ 7 - A 7 II* 0E - Every genuine Alligator carries the d tinguishing mark of authentic style. Here rainwear, in gay or conservative colors and sma models, that is the accepted all-weather selection the leading colleges of the country. Famous fa rics of featherweight lightness and semi-trap parency made absolutely waterproof by t exclusive Alligator process. Before selecting th essential part of your college wardrobe be certa I I