THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1 _ _ _ I k. A Washington BYSTANDER SCREEN Classifed Directory FOLLOWUP ON ACADEMY Yesterday's Daily had a note on the French Academy. Any student who wishes to follow up will find on pages 122, 123 of the current tLarousse Mensuel (No. 340, June, 1935) a list of the deathless who have been elect- ed to each of the forty chairs from 1634 to date. The list is part of a commemorative article. 1' 11 By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON - The current report of Her- bert Hoover's intention to announce some- time in late summer that he is not seeking the Republican nomination next year is a surprise to the initiated only in that the former president has decided or been persuaded to make any an- nouncement at all. There has been quite definite, all but first hand, information in Washington for months that he was not a candidate and did not expect to be drafted. On the contrary, the essence of this private information is that it pictures Mr. Hoover as sur- veying the field of non-eastern Republican elig- ibles with a view to throwing his, support to the most promising man. His actual or tentative list of eligibles is not discussed and presumably not known, even among his most intimate friends in Washington. * * * * VALUE OF DOUBT THIS is a much more definite sub rosa outline of Mr. Hoover's position than that attributed to unnamed Republican senators said to have been meditating the unusual step of asking the titular party leader to declare himself. Implicit in any such request necessarily would be the suggestion that he declare himself out, not in. It would over- look, also, the very important political fact that the Hoover influence upon party action, either as to platform or nominees next year, may be largely dependent upon continuing doubt as to whether he is in the race himself or not. If Mr, Hoover does issue a formal statement as to his 1936 hopes or plans months before even the first primary skirmishes for advantage take place, its form would be highly important. Mere- ly to say that he ,is not seeking nomination would be tantamount to the Coolidge 1927 enigma, the famous "I-do-not-choose" Black Hills state- ment. That did set Hoover free as a Coolidge cabinet member to work for his own hand. It by no means eliminated Mr. Coolidge as a possible draftee. Such a party stalwart as former Sen- ator Simeon Fess of Ohio kept right on talking, "draft Coolidge," until the Hoover nomination was all but an accomplished fact. NOT A LIKELY COURSE A HOOVER statement this year that he is not seeking another nomination would mean not very much unless it went far enough to say that he would not accept the honor if offered. That does not seem a likely course for him to take, even if it is his decision, as long as he expects to have a voice in Republican national convention doings. It could, however, work out for the beneficiary of Hoover 1936 favor as the Coolidge statement did for Hoover himself in 1927. The years have not cleared away the mystery of that Coolidge "I-do-not-choose" statement. Was it a complete renunciation of another term? Who knows? It could be that it was issued in furtherance of the Hoover campaign for the nomination, in which case Mr. Hoover himself might be the only person who could clear it all up since Mr. Coolidge's death. Certainly in the summer of 1927 Mr. Hoover's friends were stew- ing about Coolidge intentions even more visibly and audibly than any group of Republican leader- ship or near leadership is today fretting over Mr. Hoover's 1936 intentions. AT THE MAJESTIC Double Feature "THE WINNING TICKET" * A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture with Leo Ca- rill, Louise F'azenda, Ted Healey, and others. Also a Hearst newsreel. A vapid, vastly boring "comedy" about an Italo- Irish family's frantic search for a lost sweep- stakes ticket after it has won much money for them. . Leo Carillo shows a semi-promising flair for something besides the Latin-American role, and paunchy Ted Healey manufactures a few laughs. The rest of the time is spent in meaningless gib- berish. For once Hearst's newsreel is the most enter- taining thing on the program, and the only good thing in it is a shoot of the Moody-Jacobs battle at Wimbledon. -R.A.C. (No Stars) "STRANGERS ALL" An RKO-Radio picture with May Robson, Pres- ton Foster and others. "Strangers All" has the appeal of a sign in a fish store saying "Slightly Spoiled Tripe - Cheap." From the beginning of this nauseating story of a hateful, quarreling, and selfish family presided over by May Robson, one feels as happy as if he were one of the miserable group. This story of their tawdry existence, falsely conceived by Holly- wood, could not possibly be entertaining. May Robson plays the part of a doddering old woman all too well. The others, with the excep- tion of one unknown, are uniformly poor. -R.AC. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. rhe classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance Ilc per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Telephone rate -Ic 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 cdate of last insertion. Minimum three lines per insertion. By contract, per line -2 lines daily, (;n- month ................8c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months .......... 3c 2 lines daily, college year ........V, 4 lines E.O.B., colleger year ........7c 100 lines u-,d <,s de.ired ..........9c. 300 lines use(d as desired..........8e 1,000 lines used as desired ........7e' 2,000 lines used as desired........6 The above rates are per reauinig line, based on eight reading lines per inch. tonic type, upper and lower case. Ae Be per line to above rates for al capital letters. Adid 6c per line to abcove for bold face, upper and loerf case. Add i0c per line to above rates ,for bold face capital letters. The above rates are for 71 point type. FOR SALE FOR SALE: New ladies bicycle. 9 months old. Excellent condition. Phone 2-3586. 34 ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBAIN- NE-(FRENCH ARTIST) SCENE LUXEMBURG GARDENS - $10 FRAMED. U L R I C H'S BOOK- STORE, CORNER EAST AND SOUTH UNIVERSITY. LEARN TO DANCE Social Dancing 1taught daily Terrace Garden Dancing Studio. Wuerth rheatre Bldg. Ph.9695 Ns ENDS TONIGHT "Living On Velvet" -- --_- Plus --- _ "I AM A THIEF" Friday - Saturday SWIM PICNIC NEWPORT BATHING BEACH PORTAGE LAKE Constantly Changing Waliter .. x _. I I i I MAJESTIC MATINEES 25c BALC. EVENINGS 35c Main Floor, Evenings - Now -- Two Features - MAY ROBSON in "STRANGERS ALL" and Leo Carrillo Louise Fazenda Ted Healy in "THE WINNING '1"flfr uiEaIcIv I V I _ , STAG E LAUNDRY LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 1x 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. Phone 5594. 611 E. Hoover. 3x STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices.rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 4x LOST AND FOUND LOST: Gold Theta Sigma Phi soror- ity pin between Betsy Barbour and Library. Please return to Betsy Barbour office. t As Others See It 0 Huey In Light Opera 'T MAY BE HEALTHFUL, in the heated spell at least, -to cease viewing the (thus far) one-sided joust between Huey Long and democracy as a fit subject for Greek tragedy, and to look at its pos- sibilities as light opera. If any librettist is so in- spired, however, he will find that much of his work was done some years before the Kingfish was born. William Gilbert furnished the words and Arthur Sullivan the music for it when they wrote "Iolanthe," in 1882. In no interview or speech, for example, has a more telling self-portrait of the Louisiana senator been given than in these words of Private Willis: Though never nurtured in the lap Of luxury, yet, I admonish you, I am an intellectual chap, And think of things that would astonish you. Early in the opera, of course, there should be a stage spectacle of the Kingfish entering the State- house at Baton Rouge, surrounded by bodyguards, militia, legislators, share-our-wealth organizers, etc., while the chorus sings these prescient words: Bow, ye lower, middle classes! Bow, ye tradesmen! Bow, ye masses! Blow the trumpets, bang the brasses! Tantantara! zing! boom! The Queen of the Fairies, in the original version, was addressing the British Parliament, but she could sing these words, unchanged, to the Pelican State Legislature: Every bill and every measure That may gratify his pleasure, Though your fury it arouses,j Shall be passed by both your houses. Enter the peers (legislators in the 1935 edition), to render this appropriate lament: ... Running amuck of all abuses; His unqualified assent Carrying every bill he may wish; THere's a prtykettle of fish!I Those who think of John Drinkwater as a stodgy old carry-over of the Victorian era will find them- selves in a state of misconception when they wit- ness "Bird in Hand," which opened last night at Lydia Mendelssohn Theated. In fact, the only stodgy old Victorian element of the play is one of the characters Mr. Drinkwater has created. "Bird In Hand" is a clever three-act comedy, picturing the circumstances and predicaments which attend the courtship of Joan Greenleaf (Mary Pray) and Gerald Arnwood (Vaudie Van- denberg). Chief of the predicaments comes in the person of Thomas Greenleaf (David Morrison), Joan's father, who is the aforementioned exemplar of Victorianism. Mr. Greenleaf's principles are the shibboleths of the century which preceded him; his strongest objection to his daughter's marriage is that young Arnwood is of the nobility while his daughter is of the "common stock," the hos- telry of which he is the proprietor, owns no tele- phone because such, in his opinion, is but a super- fluous indulgence. The quintessence of the comic element of "Bird in Hand" is to be found in the personalities of three travellers who are lodged at the Greenleaf's inn as well as in the situations which arise out of Mr. Greenleaf's tantrums. Act II, set in the bed- room of two of the guests, is indeed the core of the dramatic action, for the opening act is but a lagging introduction and the final act is a none too subtle denouement, if it may be termed that at all. From the standpoint of performance, "Bird in Hand" suffers estimably in comparison, with the plays which have preceded it. Only three mem- bers of the cast may be said to have discharged their action with credit. Oswald Marshall, as Blangael, one of the guests at the inn, is the ec- centric gentleman that the part required. Mr. Morrison has easily the most difficult role in the piece and, although not particularly convincing, he executed his numerous lines smoothly. Much the same may be said for Miss Pray, although her role is not an important one. -R.S.R. Bi OOKS By JOHN SELBY "AN EASTERN ODYSSEY," By George le Fevre; (Little, Brown). ECORDS of Asiatic exploration usually deal S withlong animal trains which plod wearily across great wastes. A motorized expedition is still a novelty, and the one which left Beirut, Syria, for Peiping in April, 1931, was unusual in another way. Its motor cars were equipped with rear- wheel mechanism running on a continuous track like a caterpillar tractor. The expedition was commanded by Georges- Marie Haardt, an associate of Andre Citroen in two previous and similar ventures: an expedition across the Sahara, and another across Africa from Col- cmb-Bechar to Antananarivo. The second of these required eight months; the Asiatic trek a year. Upon this one numerous scientific bodies, including the National Geographic Society of Washington, pronounced a blessing. The story Georges le Fevre tells in "An Eastern Odyssey" includes almost every exploratory thrill excepting those for which a high sea is essential. The party was fired on by Chinese bandits, one of its cars was left hanging over a precipice when what was considered a.mountain road fell away from beneath it, another car fell through the ice of a drainage ditch, and was yanked out finally, coatedrwith ice but able to go on. The danger was that the extreme cold would freeze the contraption in a solid block of ice. As a matter of fact, there were two expeditions, one which set out from Beirut and one from Pei- ping. This last was captured by bandits early MICH IGAN 5MATINEES 25C Balcony Evenings 35c Main Floor Evenings -- Today - Two features - All-Mystery Program WARNER OLAND "CHARLIE CHAN IN EGYPT" and I JEAN MUIR JOHN BOLES "ORCHIDS TO YOU" Sun4Iay MIRIAM HOPKINS "BECKY SHARP" I 00I - a- P~r~ Ito, .maw -- T - I I BEN BERNIE - GEO. RAFT 'Stolen oHrmony"Saturday - plus - GEORGE RAFT ,ACKIE COOGAN (his best performance) "H omeOn the Range' "T1HE GKLASS KEY" Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre Perfor ance Tonight JOHN DR I NKWATER'S ENGLISH RURAL COMEDY JULY 18, 19,20 8:30 P.M. Single Admissions: 75c, 5Oc, 35c Phone 6300