N PAGE TWO THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1927 _________I Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publica- tions. The Associated Press is exclusively en-J titled to the use for republicatio- of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1'os1to ffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $Zso; by mail, $2 .00. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. J EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP C. BROOKS Editorial Director.....Paul J. Kern City Editor..... Joseph E. Brunswick Feature Editor....Marian L. Welles Night EditorsI John E. Davis H. K. Oakes, Jr. T. E. Sunderland Orville Dowzer Reporters Robert E. Carson Miriam Mitchell Wm. K. Lomason Mary Lister Bert Heideman W. Harold May BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURANCE J. VAN TUYL Advertising...........Ray Wachter Accounts........... John Ruswinckel Assistants C. T. Antonopulos S. S. Berar G. W. Platt Night Editor-HAROLD MAY FRIDAY AUGUST 12, 1927 NEARING THE END} In one more week the summer ses- sion of the University will be conclud- ed. Students will leaves the buildings will close for their annually brief per- iod of rest, and the campus will be deserted until the budding enthusiasmI of a new freshman class brings it to life 'again in the early days of autumn.I There is nothing spectacular about any summer session, and the one just closing is no exception, but there is something different about them, some- denced. In three years the United States will have launched eight cruis- ers costing well up among the mill- ions. Great Britain, during this same period of three years will nbt be ex- pected to place money in the manu- facture of candy for nervous sailors;4 ion the contrary, she will undoubtedly place in the water as many or more tons of fighting craft as our yards will. After the enormous expenditure from our treasury, where will we stand? If we understand British cruiserx building abilities from past years, we cannot get ahead of the game, andz may possibly be further behind than we are now. The difference betwe m our sea strength compared to Eng-I land's now, and what it will be three years hence will be small, yet both governments are throwing millions in- to giant machines in an absurd at- tempt at supremacy . . or some-a thing. The childishness of the situa- i tion is rather tragic-and when one considers the triviality of reasons forf disagreement and final adjournment of the "conference" it resolves into something worse than mere tragedy. How the representatives from three world powers ostensibly interested inf a sensible plan of limiting naval ex- penditures could let petty differences cause failure is rather discouraging.' It leads one to believe that all con- ferences are composed of Bill Tbomp-t sons, Governor Smalls and senators. l We might have expected such an out- come from the recent governors' con- ference, but the Geneva locale has been on a high plane heretofore. To see one of the most hoped f)r international agreements so messily handled is like a slap in the face after so many years of "World Peace" yelping. Disarmament has been thrust under our noses so frequently that we all took it for granted as a thing which must come about. It is sa inherently simple and sensible. Now, after a weighty conference we find that dis- armament is a dream and that we must madly build ships in an attempt to keep abreast of other nations doing. the-same thing. Commander Byrd will take "an $TED TRYING TO NO1INATE HILL AUDITORIUM, ANN ARBOR, Mich., Aug. 10.-Rolls National party nominating convention was trying to find a candidate for the presidential nomin'ation today. The party leaders#I were having great difficulty in obtain- ing a majority for any candidate. Since Ma Ferguson received 501 votes on the 51st ballot, none of the follow- ing ten ballots gave any candidato more than 209 votes which S'mall of Illinois received on the 59th ballot. At secret meetings held at the Whit- ney hotel all during the day there was a marked tendency of the western delegations to turn to Ford. It was expected late last night that a Ford boom would be attempted today. On the 62nd ballot Ford made :e- markable headway. Cousins made a long speech before the ballot was taken and told of the remarkable man which he was supporting and how the government would not have to -,e anything but Ford motor cars if 'is candidate was nominated and eler tl. On the ballot the vote stood Ford 549, Small 200 and Ferguson 178. The other candidates received scattering votes. On this ballot Ford was with- in one vote of nomination. Then followed consistant Demo- cratic balloting. Ford slipped from his place as leader in the voting and Small took his place. Vare, Reed and Green each took a turn at leading the list until finally on the 75th bal- lot the Michigan governor had 4721 votes. Vare had 198, Smith 154. * * * The meeting was then adjourned for luncheon and all the leaders of the state delegations went to the Union for lunch where they talked over the possible candidates. The backers of Reed, Green, Borah, Bryan and Smith agreed to withdraw their can- didates from the field, with the un- derstanding that they would be given cabinet posts by any candidate who might win the nomination and elec-3 tion. % Ford, Vare, Thompson, Small and Ma Ferguson remain in the race. The Illinois delegation seemed to be split between Small and Thompson and Vare was conceded the best op- portunity of winning the party's nomi-; nation. Q o~~t tadggCat Event of the Summer Season For the, balance of the week our 1-2 off sale continues In addition to this- We have two splendid groups of coats at-- $10. $15 af . Special reductions on all Lingerie, Jackets, Skirts and Blouses. i t womm n State Street Jewelers TOWERS FISH BRAND VARSITY SLIKR I thing that sets them apart from the ;ornithologist, an ichtyologist, a ordinary collegiate world, and which (logist, a meteorologist, a geologis gives them an atmosphere all their magnetic experts to the South1 own-those things this summer did No doubt this announcement is provide. in Eskimo for the benefit of th Anyone seeking the collegiate at- tives. mosphere may as well not waste his time in the summer period by seeking it at a university. Any semblance of CAMPUS OPINION the swaggering youths that make a Anonymous communications will university a college is lacking in the disregarded. The names of comma i l cants will, however, be regarded summer time, or if it is not lacking it onfidential upon request. is suppressed. The students of the -------- - session average far higher in age than IF RUSSIA CHANGES COLO] their winter counterparts, and many of From Russia, that country of their habits could well be copied with- out harming the scholastic atmosphere flicting rumor, comes the news of the regular term. red as a national symbol is in dis In the summer we have one semes- with government officials. Whil ter without a J-Hop at the end to re- definitely abandoned the mere th compense for it. One semester it is of it is no doubt plunging our sen where there are no football games, no fraternity parties-legitimately, and and statesmen into deep despair. none of the usual nonsense which the what can they do if the usec puerile students perpetrate under the those tongue-rolling phrases name of class conflicts and such which red is connected is denied t things. It is one term in which stud- Imagine, if you can, a Congres ies are placed foreinost, and there are settling the Russian situation wi few in attendance who are not here to study. It is a wholesome atmosphere, using those good old phrases, this studions summer session, and one ruin," "parlor pink," "red revolu which ought to be continued. and so on. And aside from the Perhaps the older students are alliterative qualities of these ph rather more distant socially than the there is the great associative val irresponsible mobs that swarm the red with fire, socialism, anarchy biol t, and Pole." made e na- be iuni- as R con-- that favor e rot ought nators For of all with hem?! sman thout "red ution,' mere rases ue of , and e lari-cselling qual itypencil It the world black degrees Superlative in quality, 3 the world-famous copy ENUS At call deakrs PENCL Buy give best service and a longest t.ear. S.Plain ers, . _. ..2,A Rubber ec._s,Perdoz. 1.20 Amer an Pen-l, Co., 215 Fifth Ave., N.Y. Makers of UNiQUETin Lead Co I d Pencj ;a 1. , ok1r2",1 _ . OO jer .-.z. 1 { r i i place in the winter. Perhaps they are various other bug-bears. Not to be less tolerant of the habitual bluffer able to use them would be to deal a in classes, and perhaps they are a bore! body blow at our country's founda- when they argue with professors on I tions. insignificant points. All these things So, in keeping with our general help- may be true and they still are justi- ful policy, we set out to try to find fled, for when can an ordinary uni- I new phrases, and so far we have met versity term show the assiduous appli- with but indifferent success. There- cation, the sincere academic interest, fore, we ought to put the issue square- * . * AFTERNOON MEETING HILL AUDITORI1M, ANN ARBOR, Mich., Aug. 10.--The afteriloon session opened 'with terrific balloting. The 80th ballot showed a great swing in the vote to Small who had well over 500 but was short cf the 551 majority hseeded for a:m ntuion. Ballot aft~s ballot camne nd went, antl yet no candidate was equal to the t r'nat tao +.f getting t"iough votes. to win the nomination. Finally after the 100th ballot, Chairman Lovell spoke to the dele- gates as follows: "Do you not choose to nominate a candidate? Do you wish to ruin! this great party on the eve of its founding? Fellow men, try to nomi- nate some one on the next ballot. "Do you remember the Democratic convention of 1924? There they took 103 ballots and that alone was enough to defeat them at the polls. We can- not, we must not go over 102 ballots, it is not our fate to equal the record of the .unhappy Democratic party. Men, I implore you to elect someone I on the next ballot!" On the following ballot the vote stood: Small 498, Ferguson 402, Vare 141, Ford 56 and Thompson 1. * * * Brennen of Illinois then arose. He looked about him and began to speak in slow deliberate words, as follows: "Fellow patriots, wue have come here to nominate a candidate to run for president. I know that the nomi- nee will be elected so the race is very bitter, but I wish to say a few words. "Who is it that is saving America from King George? It is William Dale Thompson of Chicago. H3e isj also doing other things too numerous! to mention, but vote for him for your' candidate on the next, the 102nd bal- lot do not beat the De mocratl rec- ord!" On the 102nd ballot the vote stood Thompson 1094, Ferguson 1, Small 1, Ford 1 and Vare 1. Thompson is Rolls National Party Candidate for president of the United States. Following the nomination cheers were heard for several hours and Thompson was heard to remark that he would do away with the army. He has his own gun men. It is expected that the vice-presidency will be filled as soon as the convention can lay its hands on some person from some where. The most stylish and practical rainy da garments for college men and women. Ask for Fish Brand Variety Slickers by Name - StylesandC Watei root Oiled Your Degd Clothing RM0 has the* A.J TOWER CO. BO STON . . 927J "That's the ticket!") A welcome summons to the best thing any cigarette can give - natural tobacco taste Of r and the high scholarship: of these older students? Of course the campus would no doubt be a sad place with them inI attendance the year round, for the! campus is the home of youth, and youth cannot tolerate discouragement; but as an exemplary group of ideal students the summer session attend- ly before the public in the hope that they may be able to settle the matter. First, we might take up the color green which we find to be extremely discouraging. In the first place, while not patented, it belongs by internation- al convention to the Irish and certain- ly would be fiercely protected from ance is a revelation to those- who Russian sullies. And anyway imagine, might suppose it to be just a uni- if you can, Senator Foozle speaking versity. on "green ruin." It simply doesn't The students who are regularly en- mean anything aside from being poeti- rolled in the winter term will carry cal. Let's hurry away from green. something away with them from this Then there is yellow. This seems summer session that they could not i more promising, but still there is no have received anywhere else. They poetry in it. Yellow peril we thought have gained something wholesome in of, but William Randolph Hearst' at their respect for real education, and once telegraphed us that he could not they have seen in the concrete what have two yellow perils on his hands an ideal student should be. They must and we courteously let that color out. not copy entirely, of course, for that We personally never do know what the wpuld spoil the happiness of the uni- Honorable Willie is going to do, but versity next winter, but for an ab- we have known him to do harder cIR o other cigarette offers a like measure of natural qualities, naturalness of character, purity of taste, and genuine tobacco good- ness. Natural tobacco taste gives all that-and then some! stract example of really sincere effort, they owe a distinct debt to the older students who attended Michigan's summer session. things than handle two yellow perils. The rest of the colors no more easily lend themselves to the Russians' pur- poses and we will have to admit that 1_____nra________d Thaf fra lr~n k xV Chesterfield '-jlitj ~fi #aj and yet, they're MULD we are stumpea . nere oresnot- SHIPBUILDING EDITORIL ing that our readers are patriotic and Recent headlines told us that the public-spirited, we are going to ask Geneva naval armament conference them to do their best to help Senator ended in failure. Just how much of Sounder out of ils predicament. LTIGT'T & MYERA TC -frrinC