A REVIEW BY G. D. E. of value to both the layman and those (Continued-from Page 5) more scientifically inclined. n 1Be SURE it's a against Miss Bethany Lovell for the Those who have borrowed my books manner in which she at first acted in Toewohvbroedmbok "Arms and the Man" as given by the might start returning them. F R 0 S TT E Comedy club. Ifind outthat sheact- F R O S T B IT E etotelteofhiwspa.Te Sixteen dolts on a freshman's cheat, x. ed to the letter of Shaw's play. The o-ho-ho and a bottle of pop! IF IT ISN T A bad impression that I received was ____adabteopo__I___ due to the play being cut and thus i ,..-. , m -' toteasnceybata ton, WHY GIRLS LEATE SCHOOL F R 0 S T B I Tr E to the absence of a transition which WY~lRSLAESlOI .~ ) ~ 1 1 t would have explained the sudden lapse Sunset Magazine is conducting a of affectedness in the characterization. contest which seeks to solve the pob-T ISN'T FILLED WITH But I am an obstinate fellow and wish lem of congestion in w/estern univer- to criticise something or other, so I sities. Three prizes of $100, $50 -and ask why the young lady who took the $25 each are being offered for the three 1 part of the mother should have made best answers to the question: "Is: the PHONE 2830 PHONE 2830 herself up to look no older than the present-day college education of real daughter, and the daughter who was value to the average girl?" Manuscripts . C E supposed to be twenty-three only look- should) not exceed 2,000 words, and ed about eighteen. Perhaps it was to must reach the College Contest Editor LL'ery flabot meets ivith favor make the most of cosmetics. of- the magazine at San Francisco by May 31. Stella Brunt, whose efforts In Whim- The contest was provoked by the StlaBut hs fot nWi-boom in higher education which has' sies I have been rather hard upon in prevailed in the ten far western state times past, wrote a poem for the last sten otate universities during the past ten or number which was reasonably good, twelve years. Sunset proposes three a and vastly better than one or twosluostote rbem f ng-. other, poems in the issue. Whimsies tion and lack of facilities: heavy tui- as a whole was as much better than tion fees, (which it rejects immediate- and at the previous number as that number ly)raiising the standards of admission was than its predecessor. Lawrence for all students; or limiting the num- REASON ABLE PRICES Conrad .surprised me with a 'rather ber of women students, as is done at bad story, however, in the last issue.Stanford Staforit frm ha ayisse f Sn- Oh, you will like the good old-fashioned To quote from the May issue of Sun- . One of the State street bookstores, set, "According to frequent reports in meals you get at I notice, has co'pies of the "Double the daily press, the 'flapper' reigns su- Dealer" on sale; or, more properly, it preme on the campus....according to did have. On inquiry I find that the the commonly accepted characteriza- copies of the May issue were complete- tion of the 'flapper' she has no morals ly disposed of, and that consequently to speak of, considering them as an o Iydsoe f n"ta osqetyt pa f osdrn hma n M"more copies of the June issue will be antediluvian standard of conduct. She ordered. The same store, I under- may lead a perfectly moral life, but ' 512 E. "W illiam Street stand, is to import several copies of if she. does, her actions in her opinion "Broom" each month from Italy. Now are based solely on common sense and for The Freeman, the Dial, The Book- a careful weighing of the advantages man, The Midland, and a half dozen and penalties of each action. She ac- others. After a time the bookstores knowledges--to herself at least-no may take 'n a modern aspect. limitations and restrictions; they are old-fashioned concepts, bogeys with The Michigan State Geological which to' scare weak-minded sissies ui Survey has published a book written and studious, spineless prudes. The by Professor I. D. Scott, of the Univer- 'flapper' smokes, swears, rides, swims, sity geology department, on the inland dances as and when she pleases; chap- lakes of Michigan. What I have read erones are strictly taboo. The 'flap- of it is excellent, and considering the per' smiles disdainfully and dexterous- fact that ninety-nine out of every hun- ly flips the ashes of her cigarette as dred persons who have been on the she contemplates from the peak of her lakes know utterly nothing as to their vast knowledge of life with what con- formation, the book might be popu- summate ease and skill she can handle larly and profitably read, and hence any boob in pants...." r w w You Get a H earty Me al When you take a walk down town and eat from one of Mr. Besimer's tables. Just say that you want one of the famous Besimer Grilled Steaks "One a day would make you a football man We are at the Had stand opposite the D.U.R. Station on Huron Street. Come up and try a steak with some french fried potatoes. tgeMHHH~n~lHIhatywn ne h e famous cHHH~aH~l~lHHI Story Furnished by the Camera, will be the source of. much pleasure in future years. But make sure your films are de veloped by men who know how. Then you have the assurance of maximum success at picture tak -C L ndon & Co Amateur Finishing 719 NORTH UNIVERSITY HHItt H11 i ii1111tl111 liit t111ll11~ M 1111tiH