THE MICHIGAN DILY (Associated Press Photo) Prime Minister Ramsay McDonald (left) and Sir John Simon (inset), foreign minister, framed Britain's second plea to the United Fancy Makeup Keeps Actor In Dress 5 Hours Modern Louis XI Attire Consumes 40 Pounds Of Accessories MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 5.--Remain- ing in his off-stage dressing; room in Northrop Auditorium at the Univer- ity of Minnesota for five hours was the hard lot of a Minnesota student playing the role of Louis XI in Friml's light opera, "The Vagabond EKing." He was Albert Killeen, and the rea- son for his imprisonment in the dressing room was the fact that his elaborate makeup for the part pre- vented his changing clothes between the matinee and evening perform- ances on the two days the opera was presented. It took Killeent wo hour: to dress and make up for the part each day. He had 40 pounds of makeup in his box and used nearly every stick in the box, he said. The makeup was a careful study of pictures and the death mask of the king. Killeen's entire face was cover- ed with sheer silk, and putty gave his nose a thin aquiline look. Yellow, purple, white and old-age flesh gave the right complexion. Three rolls of adhesive tape and special tights gave the actor's legs the right appearance, and his knee joints were padded to give an effect of emaciated senility. More Headaches Among Fair Sex, Says Professor NEW YORK, Dec. 5.-Co-eds and the fair sex in general are more sus- ceptible to headaches than men, ac- cording to Dr. H. A. Riley, professor of neurology and neuro-anatomy at the College of Physicians and Sur- geons in New York. Dr. Riley is making an intensive research of the headache or migraine in the hope of discovering a preven- tive for it. Causes of the headache are listed by Dr. Riley as: "bright lights, the smell of cooking, perfume from plants, fatigue, indigestion, dietary excesses, acute alcoholism, prolonged mental strain, and previous sick- ness. Dwellers in large cities, students, and those whose work is chiefly men- tal are more liable to migraine than open air workers. At one time people used to drill minute holes in the heads of suf- ferers and insert pieces of garlic to cure the headache. This practice was nevernvery successful, records disclose, and soon passed out, along with many patients. There are two types of headaches, the common migraine, which is the pain-in-the-head type and the sec- ond type effecting thevisual field and resulting in some cases in par- tial blindness. The English channel was flown by 4,311 air passengers during June, nearly double the number carried in June, 1931. By JOHN C. HEALEY The advantages which a college educated man has over all other com- petitors are graphically illustrated in a new compilation of figures taken from practically every available source. The United States Bureau of Edu- cation has calculated that of men with college educations 5,678 out of try for the past ten years have dis- closed that 90 per cent of their men with college educations "make good" as against 10 per cent of those who have had no college advantages. Numerous graphs showing the rela- tion of education to earning power have been prepared by Dean E. W. Lord of Boston University. They show that the untrained man goes every million gain distinction, of men to work at the age of 14, reaches his with a high school education 1,245 maximum income at the age of 40, out of every two million are awarded and averages less than $1,700 a year special recognition, and of those who during his life. have only elementary schooling but The high school graduate goes to 808 out of every 33,000,000 gain any work at the age of 18, reaches his prominence in their chosen fields. maximum at 50 of $2,800, and his The testimony is added to by a total earnings are about $88,000. On scanning of "Who's Who in America," the other hand, the college man be- the bluebook of the most important gins earning at 22 and by the time he people in the nation in nearly every is 30 his income equals that of the field of endeavor. It is found that high school graduate at 40. there are 388 listed who are self or His income continues to rise, de- privately educated, 1,814 who fur- pendent on his abiilty and training, nished no educational data, 1,880 and the average for a man with an with a common school education, 2,- A.B. degree is $6,000 at 60. The total 756 who completed high school, 3,022 earnings of these men range from who attended college but did not ( $160,000 to $200,000 for their years graduate, and 14,455 who are college as wage earners. graduates. A final bit of information offered In business in particular the ad- by the Bureau is that out of every vantage of having a college degree 1,000 children 657 will finish grade has been felt, for surveys of the lead- schools, 343 will enter college and of ing industrial concerns of the coun- f them only 23 will graduate. t._______________________________________-_______________________________________ Bureau's Compilations Prove College Men Have Advantage Autos Collide; Two Couples EscapeInjury Coincidence Is Noted As Men Recognize Each Other As Friends' Two couples escaped serious injury in a week-end traffic crash here, al- though the cars in which they were riding were totally demolished. John Pennefather, of Windsor, Ont., and Eleanor Westley, his com- panion, were both thrown several feet from their car when it collided with a taxicab in which Robert Haw- ley, '35, and Margaret Beckett, '35, were riding, at the intersection of South University and Forest avenues. Pennefather and Miss Westley es-I caped injury when the door of their car was broken loose from its hinges and was thrown open. Dirt from the street was ground through Penne- father's topcoat, suitcoat, and shirt by the impact, yet both he and Miss Westley suffered only minor bruises and abrasions. After the collision Hawley recog- nized Pennefather as the present oc- cupant of his former home in Wind- sor, Ont. Neither knew that the other was in Ann Arbor or the immediate vicinity. Hawleyinvited Pennefather to spend the night and the next day with him at his rooming house. Pennefather accepted. YALE'S CAPTAIN UNDAUNTED NEW HAVEN, Conn. - 0P) -Eddie Warren, who captained Yale's base- ball team last spring despite the loss of an arm in a motorboat accident, is fulfilling his ambition to become a surgeon. He has enrolled in the Yale medical school. Greyhound Busses Announce Special Low Student Rates Special student bus rates for the vacation period, said to be the low- est ever available for the Christmas exodus, were announced yeesterday by the Greyhound Lines and asso- ciated companies at the student travel bureau. at Chubb's, where a temporary office has been estab- lished to handle the homegoing rush, Low rates are also available on the country's leading airplanes, extra planes being scheduled in many cases to accommodate the students. Motor coach lines have also planned additional sections, express specials going direct from Ann Arbor to New York, Boston, and Chicago for stu- dents only. United Air Lines, operating % the transcontinental route, have reported a steady increase in the number of Michigan students flying to points on the eastern and western seaboard, and have made special arrangements for additional sections a week from Friday. Aberdeen Professor To Be Here Tomorrow Professor A, Souter, of the Univer- sity of Aberdeen, will lecture here to- morrow on the subject "A Sportsman Bishop of the Olden Time." Profes- sor Souter is an outstanding author- ity on the medieval period in church history and is a well-known Latin and Greek scholar. For the past 19 years he has occupied his present position as Regius Professor of Hu- manity. He is a fellow of the British Academy. His lecture here will be given at 4:15 p. m. in Natural Science Audi- torium. It is open to the public. Officers Stop Demonstrators In Capital City 2,500 Marchers Storm Washington; Seek Re- lief From Congress WASHINGTON, Dec. 5.-WU')--Red- eyed, cold and cramped from a night spent in their trucks and automobiles, approximately 2,500 demonstrators today looked hopefully to court ac- tion for an avenue of escape from the police cordon surrounding them on Washington's outskirts. On three sides, strong lines of blue- coats effectively hemmed them in, blocking their way to the nation's capitol, to which they had made plans for a protest march to demand relief from congress. It was this police action which members of the League of Profes- sional Groups denounced in saying they had retained attorneys to seek an injunction in the District of Co- lumbia supreme court to prevent au- thorities from interfering with the "constitutional" right of the visitors to "peacefully assemble" and peti- tion congress. League Denies Connection The statement was signed by Mal- colm Cowley, John Herrmann, Rob- ert Cantwell, Michael Gold, Charles Rumford Walker and Felix Morrow. Members of the league said they had no official connection with the march but that its leader, Herbert Benja- min, knew of the steps they plan- ned. The demonstrators converged o Washington in three caravans Sun- day and the dawn that broke slow- ly through heavy clouds found them still pinned in the stretch of street in which they were shunted on arriv- al. Two or three hundred women among them, however, were allowed during the night to go to homes of friends and sympathizers in the city and several who became ill were sent to hospitals. Marchers Helpless Stretching cramped arms and legs, the marchers complained bitterly of their treatment but agreed they were as helpless before police strategy as mice before a cat. Police were massed ahead, behind and through a cordon of woods on one side. A bank leading sharply down to the Pennsylvania railroad yards was on the other side. Some of the groups under police surveil- lance had traveled hundreds of miles. The dome of their goal-the capitol -was in sight but it seemed unlikely they would get there in mass for- mation. Tired? Thirsty? Hungry? CALL 3494 Sodas - Sundaes - Shakes Cokes - G-Ales - Orangeades Tasty Sandwiches Prompt Delivery Calkins-Fletcher Drug Co. I '4 k. _---__{---_____ FREEMAN'S DINING ROOM One Block North from Hill Auditorium It sizzles 1, WEEKLY RATES Lunch and Dinner . . . . . . . $4.50 Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner . . $6.00 Lunch 30c Dinner 50c Sunday Dinner 60c PROMPT SERVICE - EXCELLENT FOOD Serving Michigan Men and women for the Twenty-ninth Year * introducing the new wagner cast alum- inum steak platter the steak "sizzles" * a steak platter that makes the serving of a steak sensational - because the steak "sizzles" . . r we have installed this new "sizzling" steak service at the hut in keeping with our policy to give our patrons the best in food and service . . . you'll enjoy a "sizzling" steak dinner . * the steak is cut from government in- spected choice steer meat-grilled to perfection - and served to you on the "sizzling" platter.. ..the complete dinner costs seventy cents.. I % I 4-i' inkth 11