'AGE TWO CELTIC RUNS ACBOUND OFF IRELAND; REPORT PASSENGERS RESCUE THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMf3ER 11, 1928 SCREEN SHOW DRAWINGS OF CONSTRUCTION REFLECTIONS On view at the Michigan is Reg- inald Denny's latest picture,, "The Night Bird," somewhat modeled HARD DANG unable Hol A COB White todayI entran in only today. it was get off break u All o gers w( safely water A Briti the wo passenE harbor gers nu Talki the A Johnsti Roches scriptio "It v see the on the by a Johnso of the "She lying o Roches west a: there i of her S "The and fol tide re more tl her hu the lin thereN disaste: badlyc be *en I am a jettison ship a this ca "Fine saving comes aggerat come a on the Thre passeng left Ne tering. about 6 hap oce The t hit the the lig The ve steady. after the experiences of our recent- AND FAST ON ROCKS ly retired Shakesperian heavy- SAYS LIGHTHOUSE Iweight champion, Mr. Eugene Tun- KEEPER ney. Denny does resemble him somewhat and makes an interest- ER OF BREAKING UP ing film that starts off rather slowt _but finishes up at the final "finis"a To Take Pilot On Board; with a fast ring battle. le Stove In Engine Room Denny has literally "fought his nd Ship Taking Water way up" to stardom through count-c --less pugilistic pictures starting off1 8 Asocwi:1 Pirrs with that famous series of two- H, Ireland, Dec. 10.-The reelers, "The Leather Pushers." No Star liner Celtic, which early' one has ever heard to complainf ran aground at the harbor that Reginald, despite his name, ce, was perched on flat rocks f&lls to look the part. for he's got 15 feet of water at low tide the muscular development to de-f She was taking water and light both Bernarr McFadden andI feared that if she did not "Doc" May.- on the next tide she might Betsy Lee, a comparative new-E ap. coiner, plays opposite the star ins f the 500 or more passen- 'T'h e Night Bird.'' Her ere rescued, being debarked performance as a mistreated in tenders oespite rough Italian waif before whose sim- around the stranded liner. ple charms the champ falls hard,3 sh destroyer co-operated in is .rather good. Sam Hardy in the rk and aided in bringing the role of the prize-fighter's managerl gers to safety through the provides a share of the picture'sX to the docks. The passen- laughs, although "The Night Bird" imbered 253. is hardly as amusing as some of ng over the telephone to Denny's former films. Michael Reginald is the gent, incidentally,I associated Press, Miheelwho is a great aviation enthusiast. on, lighthouse keeper at Point, gave a graphic de- He spent so much time in the air,< n of the disaster. in fact, that Mrs. Denny gave himI the air not so long ago. was a melancholy sight to 'The hour's vaudeville show is ex-I great liner hard and fast cellent with a number of different rocks as if she were held acts of the heralded "All-College" hundred anchors, declared unit providing an unusually good( n, who knows every inch | treat for Mr. Butterfield's patrons. rugged-coastline. If you haven't already seen it, bet-I is entirely on the rocks, ter do so by Wednesday night. I n a flat spur 300 yards-from At The Wuerth point. Her head is due |'Sunrise," the long-awaited F. nd she is so firmly wedged W. Murnau epic, is showing at the s hardly a trace of motion Wuerth all week. You ought to hull. find it a pleasing diversion fromE Struck At High Water the usual stereotyped film, for liner struck at high water Murnau brings a new type of mo- ur hours afterward, with the tionpicture technique to the fore- ceding, there was hardly front here. han 15 feet of water around George O'Brien, without his sail- ll. Only for the fact that or pants, and Janet Gaynor are the er was going at slow speed !stars of "Sunrise." Both give amaz- would 'have been a terrible ing performances, strikingly dif- r. Despite this she has been ferent from anything they have damaged and it remains to ever done before, while Margaret whether she can be floated. Livingston is seen as the voluptuous fraid it will be necessary to siren. a her cargo to lighten the Whether you like trick camera s much as possible before angles or not, "Sunrise" is a dis- n be achieved. tinct departure in cinema produc- weather is essential to the tion and warrants your presence of the Celtic. If the sea be- downtown sometime this week. bad I don't thihk it any ex- B. J. A. ion to say that she will be- total wreck. It all depends weather." e tugs aideck in removing ers from the vessel, which w York Dec. 1 and was en- the harbor to disembark 0 passengers when the mis- urred. ide was high when the liner rocks almost right under hthouse at Roches point. ssel remained upright and RACKS MODERN YOUTH, Speaks Before Large Audience At Second Convocation Sunday URGES UNDERSTANDING Flaying the weaklings who decry the present and look to the past and the future for improvement, the Reverend John Timothy Stone defended modern youth before a large student convocation in Hill auditorium Sunday, and preached a modern gospel of sympathy, con- fidence, understanding, and love. "We need to be sympathetic in- stead of cynical," Stone said, "con- fident instead of critical, controlled, by love instead of compelled by law, instructed instead of restrict- ed of dictation, understanding in- stead of argument, and Christ in-j stead of creed." Taking an informal text from Theodore Roosevelt, "Do the .best you can with what you've got where you are," Stone deplored the prevalent tendency to compare the present collegiate type with that of fifty years ago and find him mentally and spiritually inferior. It is ohly the weaklings who look back to the "good old days" or ahead to a "marvelous future" and destroy the achievements and no- bility of the present day. "This is a day of wonderful op- portunity," he said. We- should be satisfied with it. It is only the poor fisherman who always wants to change his stream, the weak man who is always anxious to change his job. It is-only t;e weakling who wants something else than the opportunity of the present and turns historian \or prophet. OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY: The' establishment of a ground school in aviation at Ohio State will be rec- ommended to the Ohio legislature, by the committee appointed by that body. Pianos, Radios, Victrolas and Everything Musical Make Your House a Home This Christmas Pay next year. Schaeberle & Son Music House 110 S. Main St. Drawings, sketches, and actual photographs of examples of the latest styles in concrete construc- tion are on exhibition in the show cases in the lobby of the new Arch- itectural building. These crawni~gs and pictures' have been collected by Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk, of the College of Architecture in preparation for a book which he is writing concern- ing the practicability of this new, type of construction. Most of the buildings already built from poured concrete are to be foupd in Ger- many where it has proved practical and Dr. Onderdonk believes that more of it should be done especially in America where at the present time concrete is seldom used ex- cept for foundations, sidewalks, and occasional supporting columns. BRITISH COLUMBIA: A new technical school opened in Van- couver recently, equipped with every modern device. Pawlowski To Read Paper At Convention Prof. Felix W. Pawlowski, of the department of aeronautical engin- eering, left Ann Arbor late yester- day for Washington, D. C. to attend a conference called by PresidemL Coolidge in commemoration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the first sustained, controlled human flight made by man in heavier than air machine. Professor Pawlowski has been asked to read a paper on aeronau- tical research to the convention. Only a few men throughout the country were selected to thus de- liver papers to the delegates, who will represent more than 50 foreign nations. Other members of the depar - mental staff in aeronautical engin- eering will take charge of Profes- sor Pawlowski's classes while he is away, it was announced yesterday. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily, $4.00 a year. Continued from Page One) a guarantee of success. We have had several Ph.D.'s who were flatt failures, and it is doubtful whether1 they ever would be successful, even . though they lived a hundred years,- he continued. "The discouraging feature aboutr our younger men and some of the1 older ones is that they are not wil-. ling to make the sacrifice necessary to success-and that is hard work. They are not satisfied with part time work: they want instructor-1 ships while teaching; they want increases continually before theyl have served their apprenticeship: they marry while they are in the, period of apprenticeship and then I PROFESSOR THIEME DOUBTS VALUE OF NATION'S ARTICLE ON TEACHING want professorships; and finally when they do get their doctorate they feel the University owes theta promotion immediately, but forget that that is merely the beginning. "Such an article as was publish- ed only encourages the mediocre. The young man who has the right kind of spirit, the determination to succeed by dint of hard work and sacrifice has just as fine an op- portunity to succeed in our profes- sion as the young man who enters business. Our advantages far ex- ceed those of other professions, provided a man loves this profes- sion and is willing to share its hardships with its pleasures," Pro- fessor Thieme concluded. r - f - . any om ist- hat \ or by e1ry ,; a t i t i ', { i ' _ l jt li } 1 !. Crew Stays Aboard There was no fog at the time of the mishap. The Celtic was within a short distance of where ships usually cast anchor to meet ten- ders which come from Queenstown to land mail and passengers. The Celtic stove a hole directly under her engine room. The mis- hap was due to the pilot being un- able to go aboard owing to a gale. Detroit Theaters CASS THEATRE BEGINNING MONDAY, DEC. 10 Nights $1.00 to $2.50 HAL SKELLY AND BARBARA STANWYCK In the Comedy Success Entitled "BURLESQUE" SHUBERT 7 ' LAFAYETTE WM. HODGE In His Greatest Success "STRAIGHT THRU THE DOOR" Nights 50c to $2.50; Thursday and Saturday Mats. 50c to $1.50