PAGE TWO THE SUMMER MICHIAN DATI V FRIDY. JLY 2 192 '^ 'I^' " W e + wa As l ~ L 2?1i1 ra v z G G I 1 V OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SUMMER SESSION 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- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not othe, wise credited in this paper and the local news pub-, lished herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class ratter. Subscription by carrier, $i yo; by mhail,l Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street,! Ann Arbor, Michigan. Communications, if signed as eviaence of good faith, will be published in The Summer Daily at the discretion of the Editor. -Jn- signed communications will receive no con- sideration. The signature may be omitted in publication if desired by the writer. The Summer Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communicA- tions. EDITORIAL ST4FF Telephone 49 MANAGING EDITOR MANNING HOUSEWORTHI Chairman, Editorial Board......Eugene Ii. Gutekunst City Editor. .. .. ......... William R. Breyer' Music and Drama.........William C. Lucasl Woman's Editor...........Julia Ruth Brown Night Editors Wilton A. Simpson Theodore Ilornberger Paul J. Kern Frederick Shillito Douglas Doubledayj Assistants ever. Then Bernarr McFadden taught him how to keep well, and charged him nothing! Naturally whenever he reads "vicious" attacks upon his benefactor, f he rises to tell what he knows. What is startling about Mr. Sin- clair's letter is his naive reference to such matters as surgery and dent- DRAMA - ------------ istry. When it is remembered that a GILBERT AND GALSWORTHY man spends from five to seven years John Galsworthy's intensely dram- of his life, just in order to pull a atic one-act play "The Sun," is an- tooth or to perform a surgical oper- ation, the performances of such tasks nounced for performance by the Play- do not appear so trival as Mr. Mc- ers next week as curtain raiser to W. Fadden seems to make out. Undoubt- S. Gilbert's "Sweethearts." "The Sun," edly there is a whole lot in keeping grimly tragic, almost sordid in its oneself physically fit, but that isaonly humanity, should prove an interest- the half of it. There must be some ing contrast to the dripping sentiment- means provided to cure those unfor- ality of the Gilbert play. The effect tunates, who, through ignorance or of such a contrast is not easy to an- indifference to health rules, are not alzye, but judgng fom similar selec- continually in the pink of condition. tions in the past the incongruity is The mistake apparenly rises from a more apparent than real. It is un- false idea of a doctor's calling. In fortunate that the curtain-raiser has America his function is primarily to been so largely neglected in recent cure sick people; it is not to pre- years. The one-act play is a form of vent people from becoming sick. That drama too rarely witnessed and the Mr. McFadden was able to keep the psychological effect of the curtain- body of Upton Sinclair healthy and I raiser is not to be ignored, either, free from disease was a fine thing, from the manager's standpoint. was even perhaps a literary boon The selection of "The Sun" is par- which posterity will never forget. But ticularly fortunate. Assuredly one of It also must not be forgotten that the finest one-act plays in the lang- had it not been for such matters as uage, it is promised an excellent per- surgery and dentistry, Mr. Sinclair formance by Camille Masline, Richard might never have been in a position Woellaf, and William Bishop. to reap the benefits from the teachings of Mr. McFadden. GLORIFYING THE FEMININE FORM Florenz Zeigfield's amusing attitudeE "Outside of the Court house in the on the question of stage nudity in re- fine 011 city of Dussledorf they rais- cent reviews has evoked loud guffaws .c hfro mthe Messrs. Shubert and Woods, ed a wonderful statue of Justice. One . . who plainly think that the producer night lightning struck the sword from of "The Follies" is posing. Of course the hands of Justice. That is what ails American Justice."That Ma there is some truth in Mr. Zeigfield's justice."--Judge Mar-contention that nudity as originally cus Kavanagh. Illinois Superior court. introduced by him took the form of artistic tableaux at the rear of the j "For the first time in its history stage which were no more immoral the Mexican government has money, than many of the most admired paint- and instead of spending it in prepara- ing is public galleries. But it has now tion for war, it is using it on roads reached a point where the ladies of and other civil improvements."- the chorus fear not to parade be ore Gerenal Serrano. the footlights clad in a bit of gilt braid GRAHAM'S TEXT BOOKS FOR ALL Departments of theUniversity GRAHAMS At Both Ends of the Diagonal .I Gail Lyons George T. McKean Thaddeu- WasielewskiI Morris Zwerdling BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 31224 BUSINESS MANAGER PAUL W. ARNOLD Circulation ...... . .. Kenneth Haven{ Advertising-.... ..........Francis Norquist Assistants Edward Solomon William I. ooki DO Prete Collegiate Shop 28275 Buys Any Light Colored ADLER TAILORED Other Suits Suitable for Fall Wear 401 nI Years' Experience *21 East Liberty r i HEN hoop shirts and the Virginia Reel were in vogue, and loving hands at home fashioned Grandfather's home- spuns for the prom ....even in those days, Anheuser-Busch was nationally known to good fellows. And today .... when feminine heads are bobbed and shingled, and we dance the Charleston in expen- sively tailored clothes to the stir- ring strains of a jazz orchestra ... . BUSCH (A-B) ~~PALE DRY is the favored drink of college mep because, like the college man, Busch Pale Dry is a good mixer every- where and every time. 0 0 A fI FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1926 Night Editor-THEO. HORNBERGER i ANOTHER PORTFOLIO? The National Education association at its convention in Philadelphia fos- tered the creation of a Federal de- partment of education. Miss Mary' McSkimmon of Brookline, Mass., who carried tremendous influence at this conference may be quoted as saying; "The United States is the laughing- stock among nations because it as yet has no national department of educa- tion." The Curtis-Reed bill, which is now pending before Congress, is a means whereby this state of affairs may be changed, according to the association. Acceptance of this bill would mean the establishment of a national pres- { r i I i a and colorea lignts. In a recent review "Jazz is a caricature of music. A 12 agile ladies thus attired, and at- J caricature can be artistic. In so far tached to cables, were swung out over as jazz is artistic it will survive,"- the footlights to the intense delight Joseph Weber. of the occupants of the first six or sev- en rows. When the show filled its en- "No matter what we build, let it gagement with this number intact and have the setting nature intended it to no protests registered, the critics have."-:Merle Smith. one and all admitted the public was - - becoming appreciably sophisticated, --- - which may, or may not be a good thing. The outcome will be interest- EDITORIAL COMMENT - ing to watch, but, Mr. Zeigfield to the contrary, the public does not seem to WHERE DICTATORS FAIL be tiring of the unclothed feminine i P i Lform, or the racy play, just at pres- Philedelphia Public Ledger} n i I , ^ AN HEUSER-BUSCH Sr Louis KLEIS BEVERAGE CO. Distributors Ann Arbor, Mich. i J 14**_ - amomm- -- I tige for teachers--something which Under a dictatorship a nation may Concerning this matter the good, they saddly lack. But primarily the be consolidated, industrial disorders grey, Channing Pollock has some- advocates of legislation on this mat- halted finance and business compell- thing to say. "On Broadway," writes ter are striving for a means of edu- ed to toe the mark, heavy taxes col- Mr. Pollok, "business has never been cational research-a way in which lected from all classes. With his abil- better-for exhibitions that vie with proper methods of education could be ity to keep a people at work for a the motion picture, the comic supple- quickly brought to light. minimum return, a dictator may over ment, and the house of ill repute. However, the Curtis-Reed bill is a an apprciable period affect the econ- For art and dramatic literature busi- wolf in sheep's clothing-or at least omitc workings of a nation. Hess has never been worse. The pres- it has the potentialities of becoming These things Mussolini has been' ent theater with its appeal to Peeping such. Its adherents declare that it able to do in Italy. But even a Mus- j Tom and Laughing Jackasses, may or would not disrupt local traditions of solini cannot gain absolute sway over;may not continue to exist, but if it education, but it cannot be doubted the finances of a country. His power does, it will be considered the theater that the passing of this bill would is limited in this field. Mussolini no more than "Old Sleuth" is consid- soon mean standardized instruction. could not prevent the lira from going ered literature or the chromatic com- At first benevolently offering advice, down with the French franc. icalities of "Pa's Son in. Law" are its paternalism would not be long in A dictator also has great moral considered art." To which we hear assuming a dictorial role. power. Italian Fascism is a fine a loud chorus of amens. Legislation of this sort has its ad- frenzy of patriotism. The loyal Fas-, If it would only occur to those who vantages no doubt-teachers as a cist devotes himself to his country be- are loudest in deploring the state of class do need prestige, and proper fore all other interests. He is ready affairs in the theater that the only education means are lacking. But to sacrifice himself not only on the way to bring about renascence of the the disadvantages are too great. A battlefield but also in the business of !dramatic art is to support a truly standardized, "canned" education life to keep Fascism pure and un- worthy performance when it does ap- would certainly smother individaul- defiled. pear. The other course lies in the ism. Some localities ought to be en- But Mussolini could not make all institution of the Little Theater or the lightened from without, but not many, his Fascists individually honest. He resident stock company. For the re- A national educative system would could not free them from the taint view, salvation seems to lie in emula- mean that sooner or later all Amer- of wanting to feather their own finan- tion of those two excellent English icans would be almost identically cial nests at the expense of Fascist reviews which have aDneared in this Is .d alike, and teachers would be mere mouthpieces of an immense machine. Regardless of the merits of the bill, a Federal department of education would be a usurpation of State con- cerns. The State is better suited to decide upon a remedy to combat its evils of education than is the nation- al government. Intimate knowledge of local affairs could not possibly be of much significance in Washington. The national government is already bothered too much by matters which should be handled by the States--it is time to start drawing the line upon centralization by starting with thisl latest move. McFADDEN'S PROTECTOR In an open letter addressed to Time, Upton Sinclair. American writ- honor. He is now in the midst of cleaning up a big bank scandal which involves many higher-ups in the Fas- cist regime. There are some prob- lems that not even a dictator can solve. CURIOUS INDEED!' (Philadelphia Public Ledger) A curious phenomenon-this rush to get into Sing Sing Prison. Prison- ers at the bar, we are told, are chang- ing their pleas from not guilty to guilty in order to expedite their in- carcertion. Others are refusing to take advantage of the multifarious technicalities which often keep them outside prison walls for indefinite per- iods. It is quite possible that somel who would not be convicted at all are convicting themselves and beseeching country, Chariot's and Jack Hulbert's 1entertaining "By the Way," their chief contribution being the significant fact 'that a sketch need not necessarily concern the sexual relations of milady and her boy friend to be funny. And for the nude ladies, we can stand it if they can. * * * Apropos of the above it may be Mr. Pollock is somewhat soured at the varied reception of his drama, "The Enemy," which he advocates as a "stirring indictment against war." Strange to say critics have been far knider to this play than to the dramat- ist's recent panaca, "The Fool," which received an immense amount of at- tention from the public in spite of critical sneers. Burns Mantle, Percy Hammond, and William Lyon Phelps, all agree in putting "The Enemy" among the ten best plays produced last season in New York. Burns Mantle's "official list," the most recently published, included, be- sides "The Enemy," "Craig's Wife" (the Pulitzer Prize play), "The Green Hat," Eugene O'Neil's "The Great God Brown," "The Last of Mhs. Chey- ney," "The Bride of the Lamb," "The Wisdom Tooth," "Young Woodley" (in which Glenn Hunter is still appear- ing), "The Dybbuk' 'and the "Butter and Egg Man." t --1 ---I d7 {7--0f i & iiii ' -1 f+ i'f4t1f~ i- r- - op*o L, er, accuses the magazine of being too the authorities to "send them up the severe with one Bernarr McFadden, river." Not knowing the facts, one health expert and millionaire editor.. bight suspect a wave of repentance on McFadden made the statement that the part of these persons so anxiousl cancer will yield to dietary treat- to begin serving prison terms. The ment, promising to cure it under that reason, of course, is something else method. Time. received this asser- again. A new and stricter parole re-1 tion with a deal of skepticism. gime goes into effect on July 1. Those Mr. Sinclair then rose to remarl admitted after that date will have to that he had spent several thousands serve their minimum terms, and good of very good American dollars on behavior records will come under doctors and dentists, "end except such closer scrutiny. Naturally, all who matters as surgery and dentistry," can make it want to get in under the they had done him no good whatso- 'older and easier rules. AI . .1