, y Sunday as a supplement to vs section of The Michigan must be in the hands of the sday previous to the date of on. ationsaor contributions must indication of good faith. Seen On The Stage=-=m Screen (By Edwin R. Meiss) "Way Down East," the picture of D. W. Griffith's which has played to record-breaking houses in the leading theatres throughout the country, hasi been scheduled by the Whitifey to play in Ann Arbor next Thursday, Friday, >r.... Joseph A. Bernstein Assistants kin Thomas H. Adams away Byron Darnton ............Stewart T. Beach .............Edwin R. Miess fandled By y Before It s Into Print y Tom Adams) ight Editor? I want to the sport page tomorrow pry, but the sport page is locked. *u will give me the article I will nd get it inte the paper some-' e, but I can't promise anything." ny students have received this er on calling the Daily office late evening and requesting that item be inserted in the morn- paper. Probably a large ma- .of them have hung up with the g that the Night Editor's "sorry, he page is locked" was nothing ,n excuse and that the Night Ed- was too.lazy to try and get the into print. hough the machinery of The. is by no means as complicated at of a metropolitan paper, it is o simple as many people believe. a first step in the process of get- a story into print is the getting 5 news. This end of the work is the direction of the, City Editor. r noon reporters report to him re assigned certain stories about . it is their work to get all avail- Information. If the story hap- to be on some "beat" (the name to a group of news sources are regularly covered by some it is given to the man who is ng that particular group of of- If it is not, it is assigned to special writer. r the story is written it finds ay to the Night Editor's desk, 3 it is carefully edited and a ne written ove it. All stories > they get into the paper go gh ithe Night Editor's hands, and ie who determines what kind o s"' they shal have and what po- in the paper each story shall in the Night Editor's desk the is sent to the .linotype machine, the lead from which the article rted Is'set up, line by line. After tir e story is set up a proof is of it and any errors which may been made are corrected. an all the "lead"-in other type-for a page has been it is placed in the forms. This s is known as "making up." As as a, page is umade up another in order to avoid all chance of is taken. This is known as a proof. If no mistakes are founa .' the page is rushed to the i, which stand in readiness to he 4,500 copies which are made ry Daily. Continued from Page One) It will not be many years be- sery morning The Daily will in its columns all the local, na- and international new that is in the morning edition of the city newspaper,-as well as all ms of campus interest. At pres- ie circulation and needs of ad- er are taxing the mechanical f producing The Daily to very its present limit. short, it is not too much of a i of the imagination to think of )lily in the future as a, great ig school for journalism with s for service to University and lat can only be compared to the jalities of the best public-spir- orning paper. Only when the iption list rivals in length that metropolitan contemporary, ts pages are read with equal in- by "town and gown," only then 'ie Daily even be said to have ched its ultimate standard of and Saturday. Undoubtedly there is a force behind this production which exceeds that of any of its predecessors. Griffith has abandoned, for the most part, in this creation, the spectacular effects which hoisted him to fame, and turns his attention even more effect- ively than usual to scr'een paintings, as a result of which he has achieved scenes worthy of an artist's pallet. The homely beauty of his New Eng- land farm pictures represents the height of his accomplishment.' But Griffith could not forego the spectacular entirely. Although. the greater part of the story revolves about t~ie humble farm, still towards the close, the girl, Lillian Gish, is driven out into the cold of mid-winter' and in despair attempts to drown her- self, but faints on the ice. The floe breaks and she is swiftly carried to- wards the falls below, followed by her frantic lover who leaps, like Liza, from block to block of ice. In the struggle for safety which takes place on the edge of the falls, a degree of intensity is reached which grips the audience and holds it in terrified sus- pense until the close of the scene. Griffith has. rather unsuccessfully -attempted to introduce color effects into a part of his picture, the only place in which it adds to the film being, in an exquisite portrait of the heroinej in evening gown. Much more could be said about "Way ,Down East," but1 space forbids. The producer has in- terjected humorous parts to offset the heaviness of his story, which treats in a forceful manner (though without thel semblance of propaganda),the. ques- tion of the double standard. No praisef is too high for this photoplay; it isf ,one which can be enjoyed a second1 time as well as the first. The Arcade today offers Helenee sea entitled, "Godless Men." The plot deals with a sea captain who because of his wife's faithlessness has brought up his son with the gospel, of hate. A girl who has been rescued and who later proves to be a daughter of the captain's former wife, leads the son to have his father stabbed for protect- ing her, but the father, in a dramatic climax manages to shoot his own son and save the girl from harm. The pic- ture is adapted from Ben Ames Will- iams' Saturday Evening Post story, "Black ,Pawl." For the latter half of the week the Arcade features Norma Talmadge in a picturization of Benavente's drama, "The Passion Flower," which played in Ann Arbor this year on the legiti- mate stage with Nance O'Neil in the lead. TTHIRTIETH YEAR' > (Continued from Page. One) anywhere along in the afternoon as was the old custom. The Daily led all other papers in this innovation. Getting down to modern times, we find that in March, 1920, The Daily again took the lead of college papers and produced the first Sunday supple- ment "in all the land." Facts, facts, facts all crowd to the foreground for space in this anniver- sary supplement, but few can be men- tioned. Few remember the old Daily Celebrity ball, an annual institution given by The Daily to which all men whom the paper deemed advisable to invite were present. Then there is the "Hans' Football Score Board" still standing on Ferry field-a Daily insti- tution. And what of the struggle ,for existence, the struggle for space to print its pages, and of its relation to town newspapers-a great deal indeed, but these things alone would take col- umns of space. Made Advances Everything considered, The 'Daily has advanced through its 30 years of -existence, it las established a place for itself which seems to .have a rock foundation. It has helped mould the lives of leaders in the world today. And as one looks ahead, only specu- lation can ascertain what other gen- erations may write of us 25, 50, 100 D. .1 GRIFFIT HIT NEY T EAT E 3 DAYS STARTING THURSDAY NIGHT MATINEES Presents 'ONE OF THE UNEXAMPLED WONDERS SF THE 20TH CENTURY." -ditori l Boton Herald, Nov. x THE PRODUCER NEW ART FORE SOMBININ. DRAMA, PAINTINI, POETRY and MUSIC WITN A SELECTED ORCHESTRA OF SYMPNONY PLAYERS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY L juiadWick in a powerful story of the years from now. GARRICK MATINEE EVERY DAY 25-50-75-$1 Twice Daily, 2:20 8:20 Sunday Matinee 3:00 THIS WEEK ALL SEATS RESERVED SPTACUAR~IrNi AND TRtLS. ptasmotion pictures among tht ftue te, and deserves al the approbation t recelys. lana Gibson. Metro Present Vincent Blasco Ibanez 4 hePOCRAE En of the APOCALYPSE 14 "The pictured version of the Greatest Work of fiction that came out of the world war, offers this community a glori- ous opportunity to register its preference for films that are worth while. Is doing a definite service and should appeal powerfully to the upholders of the best things in life." James Schermerhorn, Times. S H U BE R T POP. MATINEE $1.50 DET ROT WED., 500 to ER- NIGHTS - 50c to $2.50 This Week ( S THE WHIRLWIND EDDIE CANTOR N. Y. Century Theatre Revue Midnight Rounders The patrons shrieked and raed. They had witnessed the most sensational photoplay climax that ever aroused a cataract of emotions. Enough to raise te. hair on maa' iad and raise the maa out of his seat."-N. Y. Herald.- - SEATS ON SALE IONDAY AT BOX OFFICE.-MAIL ORDERS NOW 0 NAN HALPERIN Harry Kelly, Lew Hearn and 125 others PRICES: NIGHTS: Orchestra: $1.50; 2.00. Balcony: $1..00; i.50. MATINEES: Orchestra: $1.00; $1.50. Balcony: $1.00. Gallery: 5 Gallefy: 5 years from now, when ,The Daily observes the semi-cen- niversary of its founding, ges may well be expected to nplace. I N *Oving to cost, length of production and iron bound contracts, "WAY DOA ote. EAST" )zzll neber be shohvn at less than first class theatre pric .- _