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January 24, 1930 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1930-01-24

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N

THE 11C.HI AN DAILY

"Pft
MA?. SARVATM 24, 1930

- ... ,. s. s a u a s a. w. aMT s a m'a aa r a-a . T7X's .. ...

i i F V iii i~x1lY.i +FU'iX fMVV

Pblished every morning except rlonday
touring the TUniversity year by the Board inl
Control of Student Publications.
Member of Western Conference Editorial
Association.
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled
to the use for republication of all news dis-
patches credited to it or not otherwise credited
in this paper and the local news published
herein.

i

Inteied at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate
of postage granted by Third Assistant Post-
master General.
Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail,
jt. .
Offices;eAnn Arbor Press Building, May-
hiard -Street.
Phones: Editorial, 492s; Business, 21214.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 4925I
MANAGING EDITOR
ELIS B. MERRY
Editorial Chairman ........ George r. Tilley
City Editor.. . ..Pierce Roieube,
News Editor ..Donald j. Kline
Spgorts Edito ....Edward L. Warner, Jr.

further developing those criteria T D R L I& U
set forth Cecil Rhodes as pre-LLb t o
requisite for nomination to the ; JL0 W
award which bears his name. Nm ,;,,,,
----u ENSIANS TO THEE INLANDER - H
iiITCH-HIKERS. ? TEN LUCKY j LECTURE SERIES.
Not long ago we called attention! STUDENTS. The. admirable practice inaugu-
to the fact that hitch-hiking, while rated by Inlander last year of pro-
ordinarily harmless enough and!I'h not going to let the 'En san curing the presense of prominent B E ;A.T
certainly convenient, was never-!gta oRls.NsrIdnt! men of letters to lecture here at .
theless doomed to extinction be- care if they do have board covers the University should by all means'9
cause of the violations of com- and sell for $2.00, $3.00, $4.00 or be continue4. In the long list of
mon sense on the part of those who$ (atee the current rate lectures arranged by the University ake Your Reservations for
took unfair advantage of motor- ' there is precious little of the talent
ists kind enough to stop for them. ing to let those guys get ahead obtained that is brought here with HOP
They have almost killed the gooseg me. the purpose of aiding the impor-jJ BREAKFAST
that lays the golden eggs. tant craft of campus writing. Of
It all simmers down to this: They've- taken to slipping tena t ha aps writhg Ofs 0tthe
Since hitch-hikers are not prone ,names, picked at random from the has been cared for by Inlander in
to assume responsibility for them- student directory, into the classi- a satisfactory manner, but to date LEAGUE BUILDING
selves it behooves authorities to fied ad column in order to stimu of this year there has been no hint
outline their responsibilities for late sales. (I'll bet the business of- of announcement of a revival of (1
them. Then, perhaps, the old col-- fiee thought that was a great idea h
peraps-th-ol-co- nthe, custom. --

i

""' " ar bcause they re now sure that morescrdte
Women's Edtor......Marjorie Forimer loge custom of bumming rides will u i ,wrLastw yurr nInlander
TelegraphEditor Casa A.Wilsonast will look at the clas- t year Inlander secured the
usic and aa.......iam o be looked upon in a more favor- peopie at le services of Carl Sandburg and Va-
Literary Editor...Lawrence R. Klein able light, and students particu- sifed ads). Anyway, if you find both lecturers
Assistant City 1ditorQ . Robert ,C. Feldman priu chel Lndsay, bt ecuesand
Night Editors-Editorial Board Members larly will have less difficulty in your name there you get a one poets of first rank in America.
Frank r. ,cooper o-enry J. M oery a lift..bcdioutnacpy fth'
'Wilam C. Gentry Robert L. Sss getting buck discount on a copy of the There is no reason why Inlanderl
Charles R. l~auffnian Walter W Wilds O_ 1- jEnlSjia. I knew there was a catch I
rany r. Willi'ian . I khe. thrhshould not continue its lecture se-
Reporters - in the scheme'ries and develop it into an annual
Reta skih eterMy~jnot event. A timely appearance on the
Hele sn Parc DavidLst.rNicholCampus O iinka{
el e Bar W ailiaX1PNichol Cs: But as I say, Rolls strives to keep lecture platform would be that of
Cary L. Behymer Howard H. Peckham Contributors are askedto heabrief, ?up to date, so in this column you Alfred Kremborg, who contributed
Aenan Brentsonra V rabnowitzee "cofig hles nouls an 0 willfind ten names. If one of them a poem to the February number of
Alla i.Bernstre ictorhnD.Rbinowit imnications will e disregarded. The
rthur achJag ernstennieReitelnames of communicants will, however is yours you will be entitled to a the magazine. Mr. Kremborg is an
Thomas M. Cooley Joseph A. Russell be regarded as confidential, upon re- FREE Ensan. Yes, sir. No one buck experienced lecturer and a delight-
)oa frI. Dener -Joreph Rowitch quest. Lectters published hold not he
Helen Dorine William P. Salarutlo onnrued a expresing the editorial business-you get the whole thing ful one.
M~araret i.ckf*s Charles R. Spopowion ofrTheDillon
alare Ferri hasit r wprow nior nothing. GeorgeDillon, another contribu-
Sheldn Fullrton .Ca Swanson * * * tor to the last issue of Inlander is
Ruth Geddes Jane Tayer A REPLY TOR. ARTHUR L. Julius A. Gimmick. likewise fashionable on the lecture
Ginevra Ginna Ma rgaret Thompson CROSS. -Io osdrb
ack Goldsmith Richard L. Tobin platform, though of a considerab-
GorrisGroverman El izabeth alentine Britain says that she will let the * *ly younger school than that of Mr.
Margaret Har Crol WiO.arren, JrIndians bark and bark but she will I tried to run this preview ofKremborg.
David B. HIempstead (. Lionel Wilens hear through one ear and let it go! Mr. Tapping in Florida in yester- At any rate (in the idiomatic
ea n Kennedy Nathn bAWilelmghy through the other, I wonder if that day's column but the type, being sense), the lecture series would fil
"seliE.y McCracken Barbara Wright t should be the attitude of an edu- made of lead, wouldn't be squeezed sene), the cps. o
Dorothy Magee Vivian Z.imit t a need on the campus.
cated and cultured nation. This is and they had to hold over the LR.K
BUSINESS STAFF the attitude Britain shows to India. photo. Here it is: _______
Telephone 21214 I am rather shocked to read the' AND YET
BUSINESS MANAGER . statement made by Mr. Arthur L.ANOTER WAR NOVEL
A. J. JORDAN, JR. Cross in The Daily of Jan. 21. The The Whistlers' Room, by Paul
Assistant Manager reason for my shock is twofold. The - Alverdes; Covici Friede, New York
ALEX K. SCHERER I first is that a man of such a great City, 1930; Translated from the
Department Managers [intellect, culture, and education as German by Basil Creighton. Price
Advertising.............. iollister Mabley Mr. Cross could make such a state- i$1.50. Publication date Jan. 21.
Advertising.... . .......Kasper1.1 4 iaverson ment. The second is that Mr. Cross, Stimulating to the senses as may
Advertising ......Sherwood A. Upton ' ra itra n TfS~
Service...................George A. spater a great historian and a professor be All Quiet On The Western Front,
Circulation ..... .......... .. \ernor avis of one of the greatest universties;
Accounts .....on of hs Roscoe Beep full of richly communicated ex-
rublicatiois...........ceorg e R. Ilamilton in the country, could become ig- **periences as may be The Case Of
Business Secretary--Mary Chase norant of the world affairs. Sergeant Grischa, there is a quiet-
Assistants I am glad to note in his state- NOTICE ing relief in this newest of War
Byrne M. Badenoch Marvin Kobacker ment he ad'mits that there is at:Novels. The booming connonade i
James h,. Cartwright ThoasenceMurey A Rolls representative is go- .. 4
Robert Crawford Thomas hom i least one cause in favor of India's hat eseoub oein onn
haras i. CDver George RS atterson claim for independence and also ing to stand in the lobby of the the gory pictures that of late are
Norman Eliezer Lee Slayton e he admits that Mahatma Ghandi Library some time today and being presented to us in the pro-
ames Hloffer Joseph Van Riper isavthgmidd an Wel
orris Johnson Robert Williamson Is a very high minded man. Well, count the number of students i cession of war pictures is quite ab-
Charles Kline William V. Worboy Mr. Cross must understand that he who step on the seal. Watch i sent from The Whistlers' Room.
Dorothy T. oomardenlolv' -ris not the first one to admit Ma- your step! Surely it cannot be called a fault
Aries Davis Heli . Musselwhitehatmas merits. Men of intelligence _ _of__tehnique or a discrepancy of
Bernice Glaser llanor Wlkinshaw have already admitted that Ma- truth if the author of a war book
Ylortensetruth if the auhorhof aWwarrbon
Alice McCuy hame Gandhi is one of the greatr Ramsay MacDonald does not attempt to give us the en-
_est men that the world has ever dn*hifedtire panorama of battle front, dy- ;
--prod----i--is-i-dWho is the faculty member with ing men, blasted ideals, and the
Night Editor, CHAS. R. KAUFMAN At this juncture I like to call the brand new Ford who barged whims of a playful ironic fate in
I DY JANUA4, 190 the attention of Mr. Cross to the into the parking, place behind U. his work. It is a quite commend-
book "India in Bondage" by Dr. hall Wednesday and nearly caused able task to concentrate communi-
FURTHERING THE RHODES Sunderlan o n American, a couir-f a panic? He tore up the roadway cative effort to one experience, is-
FUEATHEryINn of Mr. Cross, if Mr. Cross and landed with a terrible crash olated but full and complete.
is an American. Dr. Sunderland in a pile of snow in such a position The plight of a group of men in
Vast improvement in the mech- 'spent his valuable time, energy, that the front end of his car was a behind-the-lines hospital, all
anics of selecting and condition- and money to find out the truth of hung up in the air, wheels spin- peculiarly wounded so that their
ing Rhodes scholars has been' the British diplomacy. I wonder ning. Andy Gump rushed out and normal breathing apparatus is ren-
whether Mr. Cross has ever visited gesticulated and everyone within dered useless, demanding the arti-
achieved by the action of the trus- India to find out the truth of his a fifty yard radius beat a hasty fice of mechanical windpipes that
tees for the Cecil Rhodes fund in statement. If he has ever seen or retreat while the roaring monster cause the individual to give utter-
redistributing the allocation of heard any of the parental treat- (Ford, not Gump) slithered about ance like miniature pipe organs, is
scholarships among the states and ment of Britain, the so called clvi- trying to free itself. Dangerous the background for this book. The
lized people, towards India, he for students to drive? It's twice men thus afflicted suffer not only
in permitting a wider use of the never would have made such a as dangerous to walk. a physical disorder but also a cer-
optional third year for those schol- statement. as. tain psycosis. Cut off as they are,
ars who have definite study plans. 1 If Mr. Cross does not have Mary Horsefeathers from the enjoyment of a complete
Beginning this year, the states enough time to read the book I ' * reality, they form a new world of
will be grouped into eight districts mentioned above, I shall state cer- md their own, a new ethics and a new
of six states each, and the 32 tain pages so that he can utilize Somebody just dropped in longhilosopy and outlook.
scholarships assigned annually to his limited time in a useful way. coeds who sleep in class were laid i oph andoulook.
the United States are to be divid- Mr. Cross mentions in his state- end to end they'd be more comfort tional, simple prose that projects I
ed equally among the districts-- ment that the enormous prevalence able. the exposition, and although lack-
four to each one. In addition, com- of illiteracy and superstition in ! , ing the fire and spirit of the ordi-
petitions for the award will be con-- India allowed a- small band of zea-m nary war story style, it gains its
dutdeeyya nalsae.I.Mortimer .W. Snid nr arsoystlitgisI
ducted every year in all states. lots to whip the country into a effect through its sad and objective
Each state committee of selection 'fanatical state of rebellion at al- Tohecharacter.!
will nominate from the candidates most any given time. For the above Ten Years Ago Today in The Daily. L. . K.
who apply'to it the two best men to mentioned statement I like to call I Organizations to draw for J-Hop__ __ _
appear before the district commit- the attention of Mr. Cross to Dr. booths. . . . Hoover says he won'tA LITTLE
,tee. The district committee then Sunderland's "India in Bondage" consider the presidency unlessT UNIMPORTANT NONSENSE.
wi11l select from the 12 candidates pages 260, 211; 212; 206. there is a popular demand... . i- Three contemporary writers have
nominated, four men who will rep- Then Mr. Cross states that Eng- I nal Opera tryouts... . Dean Myra made metaphorical use of the
resent their respective states. land has already granted India IB. Jordan denies that any men, chemical reaction caused a cata.
It is hoped that two advantages ! such self-governing powers that impersonating women attended lytic agent, and always taking the
will ensue from this change: first, the government there can right- the Women's League party. . . . term more or less out of its scien-
the plan allows for a flexibility of fully be called a ' diarchy. Local Gloria Swanson at the Maj. in tific sense. A catalytic agent causes
distribution in accordance with the representatives aid all other such I"Male and Female." a reaction between two other chem-1
strength of candidates; that is, by internal affairs. For this I like to Iicals and at the same time appears
this system the scholarships will recommend to Mr. Cross to read Haskill Wham to takeno part in the reaction. H.
be distributed among states of a the following pages in the same * "L. Menckn, whose hobby is chem-
given district according to the book. Pages 415 to 431. A Daily reporter just rushed in istry, uses the term in explaining
merit of the candidates. The sec- I Mr. Cross would have been near- I to tell me he saw a robin on cam- why a bricklayer's trade is superior
and benefit is that the plan makes er to the truth if he had stated ".. pus. Now if anybody tells you to any other manual labor. I. A.
possible an election each year in-.....it is most probable that the I that, just ask him to go back and Richards uses the term in his

stead of two out of three years as late uprising will be settled by Inudge that alleged bird. Chances Principles of Literary Criticism in
formerly. British arms rather than diplo- are it'll turn out to be an old' mit- explaining his theory of synaes-
The second change in regulations macy." For this if Mr. Cross could ten thesia. Carl Van Vechten uses it to
governing administration of the find time to read the recommended * explain the relation of one of his
awards permits a wider choice in book pages 432 to 451 he will un- Susie Snitch characters to a group of charac- i
the use of the optional third year. derstand whether British settle the ters in The Blind Bow Boy.
The scholar is to be appointed for uprisings by diplomacy or by arms. The ban against card playing in 1
two years, with a third optional; It will not be a waste of time for I the Union has been lifted but no A NOVEL IN WOODCUTS.
in order to avail himself of the any historian to go through the gambling will be allowed. To some Novels in woodcuts are a familiar
optional pr'ivilege the scholar must above mentioned book. It is a book fellas that'll seem like trying to fact in Germany today, but Lynd
present a definite study plan for1 written after a real study of the fire off a cannon without making Ward' "God's Man" is the first
that term. The additional year may affairs in India. The book contains Iany noise. time such a thing has been at-

Telephone 23251
The Foundation of
Success Is Savingsm
In erecting an edifice one never
begins with the roof. And in build-
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start in with high finance. That may
come later. But at the beginning a
steady, sound foundation of sav-
ings is necessary. Leto one of our
deposit books be the cornerstone of
your successful financial structure.
rersland Mhaics ank

Hut
Fresh
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Folks this is an age of competitive buying as well as selling. The firm that really
grows and makes friends as well as money is the one that takes ,advantage of every
opportunity to fill the needs of its customers at the smallest cost consistent with good
business. We have personally examined every furniture factory of good reputation in
the country. As a result of this careful examination we are positive that we are giving
you real honest-to-goodness construction and quality. Our next problem was to deter-
mine the lowest possible selling price. We found that instead of the traditional 10% off
for cash, we could save 25%. Why not give our customers the benefit of that 25%
and sell for cash? We are! Then again we found that by representing the factories
that we have selected we could also save salesmen's and jobber>s commissions. We also
found that large quantity buying saved. money. Cash selling also makes it possible for
us to buy with cash and in that way we take advantage of tmany real cash propositions.
We realize that many prospective buyers haven't the cash and that installment
buying is convenient BUT *as we are trying to point out it is expensive. The sensible
thing to do, in view of these facts, is to an icipate your furniture needs and use the
installment plan before delivery or save the money first or even borrow it.
urni * iilrmm a

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