PAGE SIX TIE MICHIG 4N DAILY PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY Arcade Theatre i "UNDINE" With Ida Schnall - the wonderful high diver surpasses Annette Kellerman. Finest scenery with Water Nymphs ever shown in any Photoplay. To-morrow MONDAY To-morrow R OF DEESDDA University Senate Aldopts Memorial . Presented at i eeting' on Tuesday An appreciation, of the late Dean John Oren Reed of the literary college was read and addpted at the meeting of the University Senate held last Tuesday evening. The memorial, in part, follows: cational standards throughout the him is exemplified in an unusual de- 1 1 state. * * * A gifted public speaker from his college days, when he had won dis- .inction in this field, he was in great enmiand locally, and upon scores of occasions ably represented the univer- sity in meetings of her alumni from the Atlantic to the Pacific. All these activities into which he thr'ew himself with his usual abandon and disregard of self, overtaxed his great vitality, and in February, 1912, his health gave way. * * * He died at fifty-nine, but into his few years' he crowded achievement which most' men might well be proud to leave as the record of a long life. * * * Dean Reed was a man of broad cul- ture and wide sympathy. * * * Posi- tive and strong in his attachments and interests, he leaves a host of stu- dents all over the country, who love him and look back to the time when the influence of his strong personality was a turning point in their lives. In gree the wisdom of this state in wel- coming to her university students from every quarter. Michigan builded wiser than she knew when she provided the open .door through which John Oren Reed entered to prepare for the life he was to give so unreservedly and so effectively to the service of the state that welcomed him. ' * * * * 'I *~ * * * * * * * * * * AT THE THEATERS *3 * .-* * TODAY * * * * * Majestic-=Wilam E. Shay and * * Claire Whitney in "The RXI- * ing Passioni." * * Orpheum-Dustin Farnum in * * "The Call of the Cnmberlands." *' * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * At the Whitney "Maid in America," which ran last winter at the New York Winter Gar-1 den and remained all summer in Chi-r cago, will be the offering at the Whit- ney Theatre next Tplhu.rsday, March >(). The new prOluction abounds in novel- ty rnot only of scene and costuming,. but in the treatment of the numbers. An added feture is "The Ballet of Color and Motion" staged by Theodore Kosloff and danced by the Winter] Garden Corps de Ballet. Pictorially,+ this ballet surpassed anything ever: I done at the Winter Garden, as one scene follows another in riotous color arrangement. This latest Winter Gar-' den production, like its predecessors, contains over a dozen scenes and a company of one hundred and twenty- five players. Marguerite Hields at tihe Majestic The coming week at the Majestic theatre promises to be remembered in the annals of theatricals, when the management has decided to adopt an entirely new policy of changing the bill every night and giving two specialI matinee plays. Two shows will be given daily, except Monday, with only a night performance. The attraction will be Marguerite Fields and her splendid company of conmpetenot actors. The management of the Marguerite Fields Company have included in the list of plays to be offered during the company's , engagement such well- known successes as "The Common Law," "A Widow by Proxy, "Wife or Affinity," "Green Stockings," "Kick In," "A Doll's House," and "The Law of the Land." Majestic-Today The photoplay at the Majestic on Sunday will be one that will attract great crowds. It is William E. Shay and Claire Whitney in the "Ruling Passion," a story of an Oriental ha- rem, a fatal love, and the incense of the warm East. These are the basis and the background of the picture. It is exciting, and was photographed in the West Indies. ACfter a number of exciting esca- pades, the woman of 1 he slums escapes from the harem and tells that the Ha- jahl has in his harem a white woman, who is being slowly poisoned. Knowl- edge of the fact is transmitted to the British Resident, who orders that the report be investigated. The Prince in- cites his followers to revolt against the British rule. Just as his army is leav- ing the palace, the Prince is killed by the daughter of a man whose eyes he burned out. The victim arrives at home. When she asks for her husband, she is told that he is dead. Grief-stricken at the realization of the sin she has com- mitted, she falls back dead: Send the 1}aily home. $1.00 for the rest of the year ** JOHN OXEN REEl) Never, perhaps, within a twelve- month has death made such inroads upon the university faculty as in the year ending with January. The last to be called was John Oren Reed, who died on January 23, at the home of his' brother in Cleveland, Ohio. Beginning his life December 31, 1856, at New- castle, Indiana, and always a devoted son of his native state, he was, nev- ertheless, essentially a Michigan man, and he loved Michigan's university with a devotion for which no effort or sacrifice was too great. * * * He gave the zast 20 years of his active life, as teacher and administra- tor, to her service with such zeal and such disregard of self that it may tru- ly be said he gave his life for his work in her behalf. Dean Read, as he cane to be known in 'his later years, seemed born for leadership. Before he had completed his university course he had served for two years as principal of the New- castle, Indiana, high school. * * * Young, vigorous, resolute, a lover of books, a hater of the student attitude that seeks the path of least resistance, he found a kind of joy in doing a thing because it was hard. College life for him had a serious purpose, and he was a bitter opponent of all organizations and forms of amusement which tended to dissipate a student's time or to divert him from the true purposes of a university course. * * s Because of his ability as a student and the impress of his personality, he had the very rare distinction, im- mediately upon graduation from the university in 1885, of being chosen principal of one of the most important Michigan high schools, that at East Saginaw. * * * Resigning in 1891, he went to Harvard University to continue his studies in physics, the subject tp which he 'had decided to devote himself. He had not finished the year when he answered a call from his alma mater to join the physics faculty. * * * Hee ntered with joy upon his career as instructor, professor, and finally head of the physics department, a position which he held at the time of i S A T IS F A CT I 0 N b: .,;._ , satisfaction --i is the Recompense of Good Judgment -the Reward of Taste. Wearers of Fyfe shoes are primarily persons of judgment and good taste-those to whom pride- vale i abasis of buying, and who in their shoe purchasing are accustomed to acquire only the footwear which is the apex of present-day styles. his death. In this work he found his greatest delight. Here the lovable qualities of his nature were fully re- vealed, and by reason of thepersonal devotion he inspired in his co-workers the department faculty became very like a family. * * * His chief con- tributions to science were in the field of optics and acoustics and he wrote for the technical journals many papers upon these subjects. He was also, alone and in conjunction with his col- leagues, author of severalkimportant school and college textbooks. * * The intensity and thoroughness with which he worked, as well as his iin guistic facility, is well shown in the fact that he was able to go to Ger- many and in a year and a half do the necessary experimentation and prepare the thesis for the doctor's de- gree conferred upon him by the .Uni- versity of Jena. * * * But to the general educational world Dean Reed is best known as an ad- ministrator. His experience as high ing to fit him to become in I904 the C o r first Dean of the Summer Session of the University. The constructive abil- ity shown in this office pointed to him as the fittest man in 1907 to suc- ceed to the vacant deanship of the Col- lege of Literature, Scienc , and the Arts, a position he adorned and filled with conspicuous ability. Here his tireless energy, '* * his positiveness and fearlessness, found, full play, and enabled him to wield great influence, not merely upon the university but upon the whole educa tional world within its reach. His ha- 71315 No tred of sham and sloth, his impatience with shirking and insincerity, his un- compromising insistence upon high standards and ideals,.gave an uplift You will notice Fyfe shoes worn by the most par- ticular kind of purchaser-the person who de- mands the correct shoe for every occasion. dovans $7 Other Styles $4 to $15 R, H. Pyfe & Co. Ann Arbor Salesroom rth University Avenue with Henry & Co., Tailors