THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBR Published every morning except Monday ring the University year by the Board in ntrol of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial sociation. The Associated Press is exclusively en- led to the use for republication of all news spatches credited to it or not otherwise edited in this paper and the local news pub' hed herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, ichigan, as second class matter. Special rate postage granted by Third Assistant Post- aster General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, 3ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- xd Street. Phones Editorial, 4923; Busines, 2121.. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK ditor......................Paul J. Kern ty Editor............Nelson J. Smith ews Editor........ .Richard C. Kurvink ?orts Editor................ Morris Quinn omenn's Editor............Sylvia S.Stone itor Michi an Weekly....J. Stewart Hooker .usic and D~ramsa...... ......R. L. Askren sistant City Editor.....Lawrence R. Klein Night Editors arence N. Edelson Charles S. Monroe seph E. Howell Pierce Rosenberg onald. Klinc George E. Simons George C. Tilley Reporters ul I,. Adams C. A. Lewis orris Alexander Marian MacDonald ther Anderson Henry Merry .A. ,Askren N. S. Pickard rtram Askwith Victor Rabinowitz uise Behymer Anne Schell thur Bernstein Rachel Shearer ton C. Bove Robert Silbar abel Charles Howard Simon R. Chubb Robert L. Slos ank E. Cooper Arthur R. Strubel elen Domine Edith Thomas uglas Edwards Beth Valentine lborg Egeland Gurney Williams bert J. Feldman Walter. Wilds arorie Follmer George E. Wohlgemuth illiam Gentry Robert Woodroofe awrence Hartwig Toseph A. Russell chard un adwell Swanson arles R.nKauf man A. Stewart uth Kelsey Edward L. Warner Jr. onald E. Layman Cleland Wyllie BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE sistant Manager-RAYMOND WACHTER Department Managers vertising................ Alex R. Scherer vertisng...............A. James Jordan Ivertising .........Carl W. Hammer xvice............Herbert E. Varnum rculation...............George S. Bradley counts ...... Lawrence E. Walkley iblications.......... .....Ray M. Hofelich Assistants, ving Binrer Jack Horwich nald Blackstone Dix Humphrey ary Chase Marion Kerr. anette Dale Lillian Kovinskyt rnor Davis Bernard Larson sie Egeland Leonard Littlejohn elen Geer Hollister Mabley nn Goldberg Jack Rose. asg Halverson Carl F. Schenm Pre Hamilton Sherwood Upton g . Herwig Marie Wellstead Walter Yeagley decorations, in the opinion of an Architectural college committee. This in itself ought to be in-,, TED centive enough 'for each fraternity to turn its greatest minds and HOW DO finest imaginations to creative YOU LIKE . work. The awards and the com- THIS COLUMN? petition should also serve to settle some of the "wordy" rivalry be- The Rolls editor readily admits tween eating clubs as to which are that this column contains some- the best in aesthetic taste. Every thing different, but, for once, thebes inaeshetc tste Evrythrough no fault of hisx This aft- fraternity tomorrow ought to at-t tempt to outdo the others in having ernoon he was thinking about the best decorations for Home- home and mother and things and coming day and the Iowa game. things and thingsx Imagine his From these awards, one of the best embarrassmentwhen he was in-s judgments of various houses may that are usually found in the usual be made. I ruulfnit sa ! _ r IDAY, NOVEMBER ght Editor-JOSEPH E. 23, 1928 HOWELL PEP MEETING Tomorrow afternoon a Michigan football team will take the field in its last game of the season. It is a Michigan team which has fought against the most terrific odds which any wearers of the Maize and Blue have ever faced. It is a team which has risen to glorious heights after doomed to al- most utter failure. Tomorrow at 1 o'clock the stu- dent body of the University will have its last chance of the year to show its support of this team be- fore the contest starts on the field. It is an inconvenient time for a pep meeting, a time made neces- sary by a previously arranged con- cert in Hill auditorium for Friday night; but the very uniqueness of the hour may prove a tremendous inspiration if it can succeed in get- ting Michigan into a fighting mood an hour before game time. Iowa. is bringing one of the strongest teams in the country, and a team that until last Satur- day, was seriously considered as the Conference champion. Wis- consin, however, won the game and dimmed the Iowa title hopes. But with the same gentle spirit that a wounded tiger in a corner faces a teasing opponent, the Iowa team will take the field against the Varsity tomorrow. A pep meeting before the Illinois game brought forth the best spirit ever shown here on the fol- lowing day. That was almost 18 hours before the game. Tomorrow, the meeting is before the game and should serve to heighten enthu- siasm to the highest pitch. Here is a way to spend the tense hour before going to the stadium. Use it in attending the first Saturday pep meeting! BRIGHTENING THE HOUSES Homecoming day is usually the day when the football takes the firmest hold on the campus to turn it into a gala place. Homecoming will he celebrated here tomorrow when Iowa plays the Varsity in the new stadium in one of the most important games of the year. In this, the University has been for- tunate, for an important game is bound to draw more people here and to make the celebration better. The practice of decorating frat- IN WHICH THE PRESS CLUB IS WELCOMED The University welcomes the members of the University Press club of Michigan and other mem- bers of the trade to Ann Arbor, where the club is convening for another of its annual Fall meetings. For several years, the club has met here to discuss the pertinent things of newspaperdom and to see a Var- sity football game on the week-end. The club is nationally known as one of the livest and most inter- esting organizations of its kind. The Michigan group discusses mat- ters that pertain especially to their particular line and the ethics and methods attached thereto, more than business and kinded sub- jects. It is the one place where the newspapers of the state can clear views and exchange ideas. The Daily, the University, and those connected with them, wel- come the University Press club to the campus, because each year brings a closer contact and under- standing between thel University and the Press of the state. Campus Opinion Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words it. possible. Anonymous com- munications will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- construeLettersess inghouldeditorial opinion of the Daily. COME ON '32 To the Editor: The sophomores have been in every way disrespectful to the honorable class of 1932. They have called us nursing infants, in- nocents, babes; they have com- pelled us to make public exhibi- tions of ourselves, to be laughed at, to be ridiculed for their own amuse- ment. It is an old saying that children must play, and these sophomores, which word, fellow frosh, is merely a polite term for wise fools, are so, puffed up by the fact that they have spent one year on the campus, that, like a child1 with a new toy, they must show it to everybody. They are the babes in arms, not we. They have ap- pointed a certain group of their class to see that our footsteps are guided in the proper direction. They complain that we do not live up to the traditions of the Univer- sity. Who sets us an example for respecting these traditions? Sure- ly the preceeding class. So that if we have failed in upholding our positions as freshmen, it is solely because the erudite sophomores ignominiously failed to do so too. All the campus has been made to believe, by the propaganda and misrepresentations of the class of '31, that we are witless creatures, nincompoops, greenhorns, children not to be respected at all. Our chance has come at last for re- venge, so let us make a thorough job of it. On Saturday, Nov. 24, having donned the green paint sym- bolical of the best class in the Uni- versity, we assemble at Ferry Field to do battle to these wise fools. Then shall be the time to make a name for ourselves. We must show the campus that we are a class to be respected, to be feared; that they have been grossly deceived by the class of 1931. Freshmen have an aptitude for developing an in- feriority complex. NEVER TINK FOR A MOMENT THAT THE SOPHOMORES ARE BETTER THAN YOU ARE! We have the advantage over them in numbers, strength, and especially spirit. But they have experience. To be sure, it is losing experience, but it will make them all the more dangerowk It is up to us, Men of '32, to prove to them that we are the best class on the campus. They haye never won a victory. Our football team has beaten them this fall. Let us keep their string of losses un- broken. This will mean that every man, be he lit, medic, engineer, fraternity, or independent, must be out at Ferry Field Saturday morning, filled with the will to win. The team that will not be beaten cannot be beaten. Are we ...,4- 4. -Al A 1 TY ~r[xtT places in the usual Rolls columns were not availablex This was a deplorable situa- tion, for he soon found it was impossible even to cut the tails) off the commasx The only alternative was either to run one continuous sentence or to use x's as periodsx The only objection to this sys- tem was the fact that the editor thought the columns would look like one of his lettersx Any way, we have plenty of commas, and, considering that, you know, we had better, after all, use all of them we can, at least as long, as they hold out, assuming, of course, that the commas, like the periods, which have run out, making this terrible mess, can run out, and, furthermore, they look pretty nice, anywayx X marks the spot where the periods would have been foundx * * * The Daily yesterday morn- ing looked just like the United States Daily, except for the news matterx Or, if you took the news matter from the Uni- ted States Daily, it would look just like The Daily yesterday morningx * * .* These x's may not be good periods, but you can call them strange interludesx AxDx, that wild writer in yesterday's campus opinion leaves moot the question of when the class of 1931 is going to cease being the joke of the campusx The answer is easy, AxDx In 1931x * * 5 British Meteorologist Accepts, Hobbs' View -Headline Fame at last! ** * Music And Drama TONIGHT: Flonzaley String Quartet in Farewell Concert at Hill auditorium, at 8:15 o'clock. THEIR FAREWELL CONCERT The Flonzaley Quartet will be heard in the fourth Choral Union Concert in Hill auditorium this evening, at which time it will give one of the concerts in its twenty- fifth anniversary and farewell tour. The decision of this organi- zation to terminate its career at the close of this season was re- ceived with regret by music lovers in America as the quartet has made itself a superlative record for its musical art. Today, the organization stands above all other such musical en- sembles. In America its name is inseparably connected with the growth of chamber music, Begin- ning at a time when few people were interested in this form of musical art, the Quartet has done much to develop appreciation of it The Quartet has been heard in Ann Arbor seven times, appearing regularly at intervals of two o three years. At their past con certs, they distinguished them- selves with the perfection of their ensemble plaving. Messrs. Bti Pochon, and D'Arnhambeau have been with the quartet since its for- mation, and this accomts for the ability of the players to blend their parts into a beautiful whole. The program which they will give this evening is comosed of two exceptionally fine quartets and one pastorale. The detailed program is: Beethoven: Quartet in B flat major, Op. 18, No. 6, Allegro con brio, Adagio, ma non tropo, Scherzo, Adagio (La Malinconia),! Allegro quasi allegro; Ernest Bloch: Pastorale; Schubert: Quartet in G Major, Op. 161, Allegro molto moderate, Andante, un poco moto, Allegro vivace, Allegro assai. P. L. A. DRAMATIC ORGANIZATIONS Articles appearing in Wednes- day's and Thursday's editions of this paper dealing first with Paul Osburn's connection with Dodos, a private experimental group in the theater, and then with Prof. L. J. Carr's offer of his own minia- ture theater to any persons inter-! ested In starting a producing or- ganizatioAi similar to the Dodos, inevitably brings up the question of University productions. In this column last week notice appeared concerning a one-act play contest which the Division of English was sponsoring with a view to amalgamating the creative, producing and interpreting de- partments. The amalgamation, true enough, was one arbitrarily brought about through the good-. will and friendly cooperation o the various, more or less discon- nected groups, and was in no sense a bureaucratic unification. The ideal of unification, so neces- sary if any constructive work is to be done, exists and is the motive force behind the play-writing con- test but is has not occasioned any official action. in spite o a very poor season from te point o view of plays produced, dramatic activity an in- terest seems exceptionaly great this year. That is should elicit such generous responso as Proi. Carr's oifer of a theater is proof of its strength. Prociuction of Paul Osburn's play in i'Ncw York, I more so than a whole legion of Avery-Hopwoodiana, is a guaa> tee of the sincerity and fertility of that interest. For that reason, Prof. Carr's offer has some em- barrassing aspects. it is in every way a generous offer. It should be taken advantage of at once-ifn by no other group than the play- writing class in the Rhetoric de- partment. But it has this disad- vantage, that it tends to force the University's hand--if students are, to be allowed to use it-at a time when no definite official action is possible yet. A number of plans are in the air regarding the creation on this campus of a University theater. These chiefly depend on the method of financing used. But in their result, the aim they are ex- pected to achieve, the chief factor is unification of all dramatic en- deavour into a fruitful whole. This is no idle vaporizing in an editorial way. The dramatic situation as it stands at present is obviously and seriously affected by the extreme disunity of the groups, and by al- mnost complete reduplication of Buddy Golden and his Eleven Wolverines Cooper's Colored Stompers Home Comning DANCE. Saturday Night Two Orchestras at GRANGER'S 9-12 $1.50 per couple Tonight is our regular Friday Nite Dance with Buddy Golden playing 9-1 Winiter Overcoats - --l- Iii I 0 - A Of the Student Council, who have solved every other problem, we ask this question: What would YOU do in the case of Mary Gold? i i E ._ ,' * * * of We'll Wash Your Mouth Out! The G D Debt Now if D owes C and G owes D, Any one at all can plainfully see That what C wants of the Guarnishee Is the debt that's due from G to Dx In An Advance Display of the '{ew Styles for 1928-9 Men who are planning to purchase a new overcoat this winter, should note this: Our smartest overcoats are being sold righ'bt OW! In other words, the smart man is usually the smarty dressed man .... for he shows his good judgment by making it a point to fop in now while our advance display of winter overcoats is in progress. Thus, his is the privilege of leisurely o ing over our entire R~ock at the very moment when our presentation is at its best in number and beauty of styles. / A rumor flew and confusion reigned, A prof had broken an ancient He had sworn in class, the was pained, rule; dean The regents might throw him out of schoolx It seems in a certain class the talk Centered about Harris versus Balk; When in answer to a question wet He replied, "How about the G D debt?" Poison Ivy "Hoover Goes Fishing On Good-Will Tour" a headline informs usx Yes, and he's been fishing for the last seven and a half years, too! We are quite glad to hear that the Council, benevolent organiza- tion, has reinstated the Medical Hop memberx They'll have need of a medic at the Hopx They have postponed the in- quiry into the cause of the death of the South Bend beauty expertx There really isn't any mystery to itx Undoubted- ly some disappointed lady cus- tomer shot himx Gold has been found on a Cali- fornia golf coursex Probably by some poor duffer in a sand trapx * * * Therefore, we urge you to follow his' example and drop in now .... and you, too, will get early choice on the newel Pyles and the mot attradive patterns in our overcoats cuftomized by Hickey. Freeman. p . 4 r 3 Y a 4 4 h K 4v# VAG~1ER&hCOMPAHY ~Jor Tien ~&zSnce 1iX4g 0)J IhV ivy I