THE MICHIGAN DAILY CHIGAN DAILY Established1890 A- r Pulished every morning except Monday during the Uiversty year and Summr Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. 'iember of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion ar. the Big Ten News Service. sIaorattd (golc ika , 1933 nT Ow cOWA. - 193- MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusivelr eintitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or nototherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. Al rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by ThIrd Assistant Postmaster-General. - Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier $3.75; by mail, $4.25.. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Represettatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New' York City; 80 Boylston Sh-reet, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 492 MANAGING EDITOR..........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN CITY EDITOR......................BRACKLEY SHAW EDITORIAL DIRECTOR............C. HART SCHAAF SPORTS EDITOR...................ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEW'S EDITOR.....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHI EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- Aiam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. dPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPORTERS: Roy Alexander, John A. Babington, Ogden G. Dwight, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L.. Karpinski Thomas H. Kleene, Rich- ard E. Lorch, David G. Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, George I. Quimby, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Robert J. St. Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper. Marie Heid, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER.. ... .W GRAFTON SHARP' CREDIT MANAGER..........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ... ENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- triclt; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; . Advertising: Contracts, J:ack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Cirulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- mer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, David Winkworth WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Winifred Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Betty Chapman, Patricia Daly, Jean Dur- ham Minna Giffen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Isabelle Kanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina Pollock, Elizabeth J. Simonds. NIGHT EDITOR: GUY M. WHRIPPLE, JR. Of Her arsity** M ICHIGAN is proud of her Varsity today, not only because they held an inspired Minnesota team to a scoreless tie, but because every man gave everything he had in so The Michigan team makes no excuses - and none are needed.. Two equally great teams fought for 60 minutes on almost even terms and tribute must be paid to each for holding the other score- less for those 60 nerve-rackng xnsin es. People are saying that Minnesota deserved to Win. That is erroneous, for a team must score to win, and no team could have scored against Michigan yesterday. The fact that the Gophers, who showed all the power in the world in their drives in mid-field, couldn't gain an inch when in scoring territory, is sufficient proof of that statement. The great Lund might use up his energy in sweeping around the ends or battering through the lixje when such gains meant little, but in the shadow of their goal line the Wolverine forwards smeared line plays before they were well started and Michigan's two great ends repeatedly tackled Lund and Alphonse behind the scrimmage line as they tried to go around the ends. It is no disgrace to be tied by a team that has not lost a game this year and has a win over the great Pitt team to its credit. It is no disgrace to be tied by a team that came to a peak for this game after a two-weeks' rest. In the play of the team as a whole, individual showings are almost forgotten, but several men deserve the plaudits of the crowd, more for the sheer courage they showed than for mechanical skill which they are presumed to possess. To Willard Hildebrand, who fought his heart out to stop Minnesota's power drives through center, goes great credit. The Gopher quarterback, aware that Hildy was a substitute for Savage, hurled play after play at the center of the line where Kowalik and Hildebrand held the fort alone, leav- ing Bernard, outstanding as always as always, to' back up the line and defend against forward passes which were Minnesota's cnly hope of scor- ing. The fact that Michigan remains undefeated' in 21 consecutive games is not so important as the fact that though tied for the first time in two' years, the Michigan tradition of a player giving everything he has for the school goes marching on. And because of that, Michigan is proud of her Varsity today - a Varsity which is still ahead of the pack in the Big Ten race. One was Alexandra Carlisle (who returns to the part in Chicago on this Christmas night). At the time she was suffering from a svere heart attack, which forced her to retire from the stage. The next was Minna Phillips of the Theatre Guild; but she was playing the part at the time in the Casino theatre at Newport. There was, of course, Florence Reed, whose per- formance in the part was extraordinary. Some- how an aura of Mother Goddam in "The Shang- hai Gesture" still hung over her Lady Lebanon. It was distinctly Chinese. Someone in the cast called the play "CLIMINAL-at-Large" after she went into it! This fall in Detroit we presented the play with Margaret Anglin as Lady Lebanon. Hers was a majestic performance, and filled with a nobility and distinction that is such a6 part f her peron- ality. There was something Greek aid heroic about her cry as her son was shot at the final cur- tain. For all its beauty, however, the performance was not Lady Lebanon. This character is hard, even cruel, "blood- proud," lively solely in the pride of the Lebanon ancestry. She is a forbidding character and not a little terrifying. This, Minna Phillips, better than any of the others, catches perfectly. Miss An- glin was maternal, sympathetic. Miss Phillips' Lady Lebanon is cold and sharp as steel. She HYPNOTIZES her son. It is a pleasure to do a production a second time, after an experience with theatre audiences. The director can then perfect and shade and polish his play. He can estimate every proper value. He can re-cast certain parts occasionally. His second production should be a real experience in the theatre. "Criminal-at-Large" is only the second mystery play we have ever done. The other was "The Spi- der" and it was grand fun. "Criminal-at-Large" is filled with comedy, but its final impression is certainly anything but fun. It is more than a mere melodrama, for it has been uncannily worked out. There is true psychology behind the leading characters. Edgar Wallace is an admitted master of such melodrama. But in "Criminal-at-Large" he has done an unusually skillful thing. Slowly through two acts and a half he builds a culminative sus- pense. You know something is going to happen, but it actually does not happen until the final moments of the last act. That SOMETHING must, because it has been so long delayed, be really terrific. This is the touch that must il- lumine the entire play. Let me assure you that it really is electrifying. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disre- garded. The names of communicants' will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contribu- tors are asked to 'be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. DAILY GUILTY OF SOPHISTRY To The Editor - Your editorial concerning the campus vote on war participation is guilty of the very sophistry you elsewhere deplore. Your arguments are based upon the hypothesis that our present govern- ment adequately and faithfully represents the true wishes and whims of the majority. Theoreti- cally, this is so, but actually this is impossible because of the party machines, crooked politics, and incompetent representatives that characterize our "democracy.- Even assuming that your hypothesis is correct - that our democracy truly represents the whims of the majority - does that justify war? Don't forget that the majority can be wrong. Before talking so glibly about the merits of majority opinion, it might be well to recall George Bernard Shaw's dictum concerning democracies: "Democracy substitutes election by the incompe- tent many for the appointment by the corrupt few " Arthur Shapiro, '34. PRESIDENT DOES NOT HAVE .POWER TO DECLARE WAR To The Editor - In the Nov. 17 Michigan Daily, under the edi- torial entitled "War Participation," is the state- ment that "the president, who has the power to declare war-." The president of the United States has no power to declare war. This power resides with Congress. It is so stated in the Con- stitution, Section 8, Clause 11. The president may force a war by sending troops to a frontier and beyond as President Folk did in the Mexican War. And again a president may recommend a war to Congress as Wilson did in 1917. But the president has no power to arbitrarily say the country is at war. James Christensen VS 07 Hopwood Poetry ANNOUNCEMENT The Editors wish to announce that this feature will be discontinued for a period of two weeks, or longer. Because of the scarcity at this time of suitable Hopwood poetry, the English department has felt it necessary to hold up its publication. Washington OffIThe Record By SIGRID ARNE EVERY once in a while Harold L. Ickes has to let his left hand know what his right hand is doing. This matter of being secretary of the in- terior, public works administrator and oil admin- istrator, all in one, has its complications. Recently a plan for irrigation of Indian lands came up to Secretary Ickes, under whose super- vision lies the Indian bureau. SoIckes wrote a letter to Public Works Admin- istrator Ickes proposing the plan. Then Public Works Administrator Ickes wrote a letter back to Secretaly Ickes approving the plan. Just a matter of keeping the files straight. DOORMEN, private secretaries, butlers and hostesses have been tied in a knot by the title of a visiting dignitary. He is the Vice Admiral, the honorable RR. A. R. Plunkett-Ernie-Erle-Drax, C. B., D. S. O., com- mander of the British ships in American and West Indies waters. His arrival occasioned much phoning to get the title straight and the tongue accustomed to the rolling syllables. Then it was discovered that the distinguished Englishman prefers {Admiral Drax." ONE of the hostesses who entertained for Maxim Litvinov, Russian commissar of foreign af- fairs, attests to both the shyness and the humor of the soviet official. He agreed to come to tea only if "there are no other guests and if you and your husband will hide behind the furniture until I feel comfort- ably at home." NO MORE spectacled, flat-heeled "women with causes" present petitions to government offi- cials. The various women's organization of major im- portance send their youngest and prettiest en- thusiasts to the White House and to congress whei pleas must be made. One of the prettiest "lobbyists" so far is Edwina Hammond, a young New York actress, who visits her home here occasionally. She has black eyes and black curly hair and somehow always man- ages to possess a bright red hat. She does her lobbying for the Women's Inter- national League for Peace and Freedom. AMBASSADOR AHMET MUHTAR of Turkey was giving a dinner party. The waiter paused at his chair with a platter. "Turkey, sir?" asked the waiter, pointing to the meat on the platter. "Eh?" said the Ambassador. "Oh-yes." Then he turned to Mrs. William Borah, wife of the Idaho senator, sitting next to him. With a resigned smile he asked, "Why in the world did you people name that bird 'Turkey'?" '6TREASURE hunts" have hit the capital as an evening's amusement, much to the annoy- ance of the park police. An irate officer could hardly believe his eyes when he saw a young man shinning up the legs of the Lincoln memorial statue. It seems the vest pocket of the statue has be- come a favorite place for putting "clues" for the hunt. The young man was caught, but he didn't want to explain his errand. "'m just looking for Elmer," he said. That only made matters worse. The statue is held so sacred that sight-seers are not permitted even to take pictures inside the memorial. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance-11c per reading line, (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 106cper reading line for three or more insertions. Mnlninium 3 lines per insertion. Telephone rate-15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 14c per reading line for three or more insertions. 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. Winimum three lines per insertion. By contract, per line-2 lines daily, one month.............,..... ...80 4 lines E. O. D., 2 months.........3c 2 lines daily, college year.......7c 4 lines E. 0. D., college year.......7c 100 lines used as desired.......9c 300 lines used as desired.......8c 1,000 lines used as desired.......7c 2,000 lines used as desired.......6c The above rates are per reading line, based on eigl:t reading lines per inch. Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 6c per line to above rates for ell capital letters. Add 6e per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c per line to above rates for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 7% point ,rpe- NOTICE BLUE BIRD BOOK NOOK. Latest books, clean covers. 5c 'day. Uni- versity Music House. e 6x PERSONAL laundry service. We take individual interest in the laundry problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Call for and deliver. 23478, 5594. 611 E. Hoover. 9x HOME hand laundry. Special, shirts beautifully finished, 13c. Phone 8894. 7x STUDENT and Family Laundry. Good soft water. Will call for and deliver. Telephone 4863. 3x FOUND FOUND: Ladies' brown pocket book on State Street Tuesday. Phone 3908. 165 TAXICABS TAXI-Phone 9000. Seven-passenger cars. Only standard rates. lx WANTED WANTED TO BUY MEN'S OLD AND new suits ana overcoats. Will pay 3, 4, 5, and 8, 9 dollars. Phone Ann Arbor, 4306, Chicago Buyer. 5x CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY Leather cannot be sold at below cost, and overhead, and wages continued. We could not continue in business and do it. But we will give you the best obtainable at FAIR PRICES. Smith's Quality Shoe Repair Service 705 Packard at State Stop in on your way to Ferry Field --___________ .. I SHAMPOO Mondays gedy Ann and finger wave, 50c and Wednesdays. Rag- -Shop. Phone 7561. ix BUY NEW AND USED CARS FROM FINANCE CO. 311 W. Huron 22001. 1933, 1932, 1931, 1930 models. 12x ARCADE CAB. Dial 6116. Large com- fortable cabs. Standard rates. 2x LIRETTE'S shampoo and finger wave 75c every day. Dial 3083. 103 FOR SALE SALE OR TRADE: Complete set of 24 volumes, Blackstone Law. Soft leather, flexibfe binding. Original cost, $150.00. $40 cash, call Rich- ard Jay. 2-1046. 164 LAUNDRY WE DO your laundry work for one- half the usual price. Phone 2-3739. 8x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x 1 I TRY--im Brand SALT the Blue Star Water Soft- ener Saltrecommended by all .. makers of softeners, hand or autornatic. Sod exclusively by Herler Bros. Michi9n Salt Works Marine City, Mich. Dial 2-1713 4 ;' ° I 210 South Ashley - - I KODAK Christmas Kodak Petite comes in your choice a colors, with case to match. Price, $7.50. E% - MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS .Eastman-mat e Brownie cameras sell for as little as $1.50. Colored Brownie prices start at $2. Musical Events FACULTY CONCERT Prelude in C-minor Chorale Prelude "Wir Glauben alle in einem Gott" ..................... Bach, Fugue in E-flat major (St. Ann's Fugue) William E. Doty Septet for Strings, Harp, Flute arid Clarinet .......................Ravel Wassily Besekirsky, Hanns Pick, Anthony Whitmire, and Romine Hamilton Abegg Variations, Op. 1........Schumann.. Sonneto, E-majdr ..................... Liszt Intermezzo, Op. 119, No. 3, C-majo.. .Brahms Notturno........ .". . "...........Respighi Prelude in B-fiat-major.......Rachmaninoff Joseph Brinkman "On Wenlock Edge".......Vaughn Williams A cycle of songs for tenor voice with accompaniment of piano and string quartet 1. From Far, from Eve and Morning this a very enjoyable program. Performed by' men who have already established themselves with Ann Arbor audiences, it is doubly attractive. The C-minor Prelude' and the E-flat Major Fugue are two of the outstanding Bach works for organ, while the Chorale Prelude, by contrast, is one rarely heard. Mr. Doty studied last year in Leipsig with the Cantor of St. Thomas Kirche, a successor, so to speak, of Bach himself, who filled that position for many years. The Ravel combines an unusual group of in- struments: harp, flute, clarinet, and strings, re- sulting in a colorful and rich effect. Mr. Brinkman is to play this afternoon in the place of Mrs. Mabel Ross Rhead, whose appear- ance has been postponed until a later date. His group opens with the "Abegg" variations, of Rob- ert Schumann, one of the early experimenters in the romantic movement. Although his earliest work, it demonstrates his boldness and indepen- dence. The Liszt Sonneto has all the brilliance, unexpected key changes, and swift glittering ef- fects characteristic of this writer. The Brahms is one of the group of short, lyric pieces. Rephigi, Italian, and Rachmaninoff, Russian, two con- temporary composers, bring the piano section to a close. "On Wenlock Edge" will conclude the program. It is a cycle of songs, based on poems from A. E. Housman's "Shropshire Lad," the setting of which is unusually lovely. The vocal part is free, the accompaniment is at times in piano alone, or strings alone, or with both. The wealth of variety in this program will make O UR KODAK COUNTER is an array of delightful Christmas gifts for all mem- bers of the family. Kodak Petite is especially fine for mother or sister.: It's small ; ; ; smart in appearance z : very simple to use. There are sturdy, capable Brownies for brother. And for dad, per- haps, one of the new Kodaks Six-16 with fastf.4.5 orf.6-3 Kodak Anastigmat lens. We have Eastman albums and accessories, too, to com- plete i.he equipment of those already owning a camera: Come in and do your Christ. mas shopping easily. Francisco-Boyce Photo Company 723 North University 108 East Liberty v - 1I BOOKS FOR CHILDRE CHILDREN'S BOOK WEEK continues until Saturday with Special Prices and Discounts. Our stock is complete with both Ol ndn ew titles .rte a ... . w I I B