st Times Today I VIVIAN MARTIN ind s "5The Third Kiss" I ARCADE Shows at300 oo; 8:30 Phones: Theatre. 206--R M t'e Res.. 23r6- I LAST TIMES TODAY VIOLA DANA in "The Willow Tree" Communications Editor, The Michigan Daily: I strongly pratest the action of the Michigan Union authorities in having uniiormed "servants" at the entrance of and within the club house. n occasional visitor in n A.r-. bor, it was my pleasure to be a din- ner guest at the Union Last Sunday. And while I warmly admire this splen- did building and the service which It renders, I was disgusted at the sight of these "servants in livery," students disguised as flunkies. Shades of Prexy Angell! Is Mich- igan really to prove herself guilty of the chIrge of having become the most aristocratic of state universities? I am a Michigan man, through and through. Michigan has conferred three degrees upon me; and eight years of my life have been spent in the University as a student or as a member of its faculty. I am a contr4. buting life member of the Union. As ed atmosphere of student democracy' -whatever that way mean. However useful the Union may have -become, I contend that the placing of unifarmed flunkies at its doors is rankly undemocratic. It is a provinc- ial exhibition of aristocratic non- sensa-It is 'a crude effort to ape the 1 etropolitan clubs and hotels with their solemn and imposing Ethiopian door-keepers In their gilded rainment, And while city clubs and hotels may have a conventional. right to these human ornaments, sucha procedure in a great university that frankly pro- fesses devotion to democratic ideals,. is indefensible.- In the name of 40,000 alumni, most of whom still believe in the splendid democratic traditions of the Universi- ty of Michigan, I condemn this arrant foolishness. GLENN D. BRADLEY, 107 Lit, Ph.D., 1915. are uniformed It is a fact that any e eree person who has had any experience - in the management of olub houses of THE MAJESTr the size of the Union will corroborate, that uniformed attendants in those The idintiy of 'MiA4" t1 parts of the building frequented by heroine of "Tho Third ti ," V iembers ark always more efficient 5est Paramoimt-Artcraft p in performing their duties because starring Viviain Martin whieh - they know that everybody under- presented again today at'theA M stands why they- ire place, where piques the curiosity of the av they .are, they. realize as- clearly as froi ithe first tih t$ alpaI do the members that they are there reveal it Would 'g1v :aWay the for a - purpose. So much-for the -this play which'is themost in I of Du- gs 111111111111.11 . Lauder doirc of hL nCh Sodas oandie SUGAR B( 109 S. MAIN a sophomore I atended the first ban- quet held for the promotion of the S Union. That was in Waterman gym, M back in 1904 when "Bob" Parker was 2 boosting the Michigan Union idea. We sI = then believed that the Union was to become a great and thoroughly dem- )WL ocratic institution, the one and only center for Michigan men in Ann Ar- ST. E bor. Always it was to be democratic. = The Union was born, cradled, and for lilSP{Ii!l10tll "15 years it has developed in a profess- jI FJ Editor, The Michigan Daily: I wonder if it occurred to Mr. Bradley as he wrote his communica-{ tion relative to the "servants in liv- ery" at the Union, that it might possi- bly be that they are needed. If they' were merely ornaments, the presump- tion on which he based his letter, then he would be quite right in what he says. and since the ofiictals of the Union have the same desire as Mr. Bradley "to keep the Union true to its democratic ideals, those same' "flunkeys" would never have been put there in the first place. Permit me to point out briefly why these men are where they are, and also why they are in uniform. 1. The attendants in the "front" of the house are in uniform for the reason that they look better so at- tired. It would be rather inconsist- ent for the Union to have a perfectly designed and appointed building, and at the same time have the employees who are placed in it where they can be of service to the members, attired in the rainment which they wear when they come to the manager's office looking for a sob. I cannot bring* myself to believe that uniformity and neatness are merely evidences of "aristocracy." To me they denote an inward orderliness that assures better management, and a consequeqt- ly increased enjoyment by the mem- bers of their building. 'psychology of the uniform, 2. It is impossible. to make the Union function as a "democratic" or- ganization without paid attendants If there were no doormen, the Union building, built by.18,000 alumni "for Michigan Men Everywhere," would be a mecca for landladies and their retinues, for dogs and laughing, shout- ing children, and for the scintillating recitations of the famed Dr. Tom Lov- ell, and by a natural process of elim- ination the members of the Union would get in occasionally to enjoy the building in the proper manner. I am afraid that even the members of the 'Union who believe in the democratic ideals of the Union would rather that we never go that far in. expressing our ideals. In the last analysis, democracy or no dem cracy, the Union belongs to Its men thers only. The Union ex- presses its democracy in its relations to its members and its rules concern- ing eligibility :to tnembershipj All are alike, all have equal \rights, priv- ileges and duties. These uniformed attendants are hired and dressed in order to make the stay of members in the building more pleasant. Uniform' or no uniform, to my way of think- ing, that is the essence of democracy, and Mr. Editor, I like my democracy with a frill or two for the same rea- son that I enjoy dessert. It tops off the meal. But "de gustibus non dis- putanum est," and I think that Mr. Bradley and myself will at least 'agree on that age old fact. GEORGE .F. iURLEY, '18L. General Secretary. Have you arranged with the Sped- ding Studio for your Michiganensian sitting? Sittings must be made be- fore Feb. 1.-Adv. . v ryl In chch Miss Martin has been featu ed. Harrison Ford is the.leading ma TE ARCADE Important as art isx Eugene O'Brie 'appearing as an aspiring young pain er in "The Broken Melody" today at tomorrow at the Arcade, decides wi Hedda Dana, a girl studying to be ,prima donna, that it is not the on thing in life. Ambition is the cau of the estrangement, that comes b tween the two artists but after mai adventures and much self-reproac they are reunited. '22 LITS WILL HOLD SMOKER TUESDAY EVENING IN UNTO The soph lits are planning to l a smoker at 7:30 Tuesday ever in' the reading room on the sec floor of the Union. Efforts are being made to get C Eddie Rickenbacker here -to add the smoker. In addition, Dean J R. Eflinger, Prof. John R. Brumm, Robert A. Campbell, treasurer of University, and George Hurley, eral secretary of the Union will sp For music there will be a 12 p 'orchestra and a male quartette, Tickets may be obtained at el the Michigan Union or Graham's be store. Join Laschen's Dancing school I at Packard. Beginners, 7-9. dance, 9-12. Big prize waltz this V at 10:30; everyone eligible. C and learn to dance correctly; c single if you like. 0. D. Lash Detroit.-Adv. MARTHA WASHINGTON CANI at Tices' Drug Store, 117 S. Main Fresh every Friday.-Adv., r TODAY-FOR THE LAST TIME V I O ILA DA NA Star of "Please Get Married" i - --- in- E W I L. L OW T RE E" From the popular stage production by Cohan and Harris the image, carved from the heart of the willow tree, that love calls to life in the maiden is a rare fantasy-and it is exquisitely told. TODAY LAST TIMES a Dainty.VIVIAN in "THE THIRD KISS" "She rebelled against the first and second kisses he gave her, in fact she protested with the feroc- ity of a warrior. But after the third-well, see 'The Third Kiss'-it ,was different and so is the picture." "What was so peouliar about this third kiss? What was the matter with the first and second that the third should be so prominent? And wasn't there a fourth? See 'The Third Kiss.' It's Vivian Martin's latest picture and totally different than anything she has been seen in heretofore." "There's a lot of difference in kisses. For instance the third kiss he gave her was differently given and differently received than the first two! For that matter the pic- ture 'The Third Kiss' is totally different than anything Vivian Martin has ever been seen in on the screen heretofore. Don't miss it., VIOLA E NA,. THE WILLOW PE E ADULTS 25 CENTS CHILDREN 10 CENTS COME, EARLY SHOWS START TODAY AT 2:00 3:30 7:00 8:80 "B M E L O B R E R N D Y 3 DAYS STARTING SUNDAY THE AMERICAN BEAUTY "THE BEAUTY MARKET" "MALE AND FEMALE" STARTS WEEK FOLLOWING "SHOULD A WOMAN TELL? 'ENAW ELECTRIC SHOP EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL 202 E. Washington St. Phone 273