THE MICHIGAN DAILY __ _ _ . A T THE THEA TERS Arciad- Katherino MacDonald, in "Money, Mon , Money," is the opening attrac- tion hero on Sunday. It is the story of a girl who wants everything sho crooks. The girl is suspicious of his Purple Mask, upon whom the royalists good intentions, and when her father have centered all their hopes for the Thoug the program is presented by members only, visitors are welcome.Man Must BegiZ hasn't got, and what ha pens as she gets it. She is supported by Carl Stockdale as the father, whose silent contempt for fine society cause: so0 much of his daugliter's unhappiness-. Others in the castare Herschel May- all, Margaret Loomis, Charles Clary and Frances Raymond. Mae Murray comes here on Tuesday in "Jazzmana." Miss Murray s his- trionic and terpischorean abilities are set in a remote European kingdom,. charming, yet full of the oddest con- trasts; where the river flows serenely by the palace, but where the inhabi- tants are far from serene.. Gayety is the face, but intrigue the heart of the situation. Great novelties in set- ting and in costume are some of the features of the production. The scene shifts to New York for part of the time, and here, too, lavish settings are seen. Rod La Rocque is Miss Mur- ray's- leading man in this picture. She is also supported by Robert Frazer, Li hl Belmore and others.. Maest ic "Hecarts Aflame" with Anna. Q. Nil- seiA, ri-ask Kcenan and Richard lel- dr.ck, and "The Electric Hlouse" with mliite: Keaton are the onening fea- tures here this week. "The Electric Hlouse" is the story of a correspond- eice schoolgraduate who receives the &inloma of an electricalengineer by mistak; he is hired to install elec-- t Ve'- aiplialices in a rich man's heuse, and complications arise. 1i ;tday and Saturday "Omar the Tutmaker" will be shown. Guy 'atos Post has hbo title roi# and is su';prtc( by Virginiii Brown Faire as Shireen. it is a colorful picture of i'c sin in thec days when Omar Khay- yam- wrote the Rubaiyat. It is the :f(cry of young Omar, the student of whin s wo ngleets his books to idle in the tavern and scribble verses. lie lot-es thc beautiful Shiren, to whom he i3 seeretly married. Shiren had the isfoitune to please the eye of the S..ah of Shas, who demanded her for his housch ld. When she spurned the Shah she was thrown into a dun- gaci, whre he' child is born, which causes the Shah to order her death. She sent her baby girl to Omar for protection, who brought her up not knowing she was his own daughter. Years- rolled on, with many political intrigues which endanger Omar s life. Later the return of the long lost elder Slircen, who head escaped death by e- inig sold in the slave market, and the reunion with Omar reveals to Young Shireen that she is really Omar's daughter, and a happy reunion re- sults. ()rplieiflu Char'.cs Ray in "A Tailor Made Man" makes a return engagement to Ann Arbor as the opening attraction this week. The story concerns an as- tounding dreamer, is brim full of ro- umance and high adventure and is gay, intcnso, and thrilling. The support- tin; cast includes Ethel Grandin, Edyth Chapman, Thomas Jefferson, anc othnrs. On Wednesday, William Duncan ciin: here iA "The Fighting Guide." A perfectly good cowpuncher gone wrng and becomes a lady's man is the basis for all the trouble in "The Lc: e hand," starring "hoot" Gibson and Marjorie Day. The story concers a 3oung cowpuncher, born and bred on :he ranch and never ten miles from it. Ile decides that he needs a rest and chooses an exclusive summer re- sort fot his vacation. Before his va- cation is a day old, however, he comes upon a girl in trotble, and upon inves- tigtion, .irds that she is all alone and badly in need of protection from returns, he, too, orders the newcomer rescue. A substitute Purple Mask is All men interested in public speaking off the place But in spite of them- sent upon a series of dangerous mis- are esjecially urged to acquaint them-" selves, the vacationing cowboy helps k sions until he is arrested. The decoy selves with the nature of the program them, wins the girl, and turns his first mask is ignorant of the fact that he is end if interested hand in an 'appli- vacation into a honeymoon. being sacrificed upon the altar of ulti- cation for mpembership. Public speak- - -- mate success. ing societies are one of the few acti- ' '1v,.tIt is the adventures o fthis victimiz- vties to which first year men are Life at its wildest and New York at ed Purple Mask that furnish the fas- granted full membership. ih best figure in the plot of "The cination and the thrill of the story. Beautiful and the Damned" which '; aptist Guild Will Banquet ' .jO nare on Sunday. The story is ShiubeK-M1ligan (Detroit) : The Baptist Guiid will hold its an- 3cncerned with Glcria Gilbert, a beau- "The Bad Man," the unusual and nual banquet next Saturday night at tiful but selfish flapper (played by -many-sided play by Porter Emnerson t Marie Prevost) and Anthony Patch, a Brown, will be the offering of the on- First Presbyterian church. Presi-1 young member of the idle class, who stelle Company next week, with Minor dent Spencer of Hillsdale will be the is waiting for the death of his grand- Watson playing the role of Pancho speake.'. father, old Adam Patch, a millionaire Lepez, the Mexican chieftain and bad and social reformer. He falls in love man. We are first introduced to a with and marries Gloria, and the two young man who has lost all he pos- adopt as their mottoe "wait till Grand-y essed after trying to make a go of pa Patch dies." They begin a course farming in the Southwest, adjacent to- of life which leads to dissipation and he Mexican border. We glean that costly pleasures. Grandfather Patch' he is in love with the wife of a guest when he learns of their life of rece tpping at his ranch and that she Is less revelry and debauchery, is over- n love with him; that the husband'is. come with grief and rage, and he dies a semi-villain and has some deep laid a week later. Instead of leaving them plans. These planas are upset when the fortune they expected, Gloria and Anthdny are left penniless. low An- the Mexican raiders headed by Panicho thony falls into bad company and los- LOpez arrive at the ranch, and threat- es his frtnds, and the struggles of en. to execute all the occupants. Pan- Gloria to make a living, follow -in situ-- cho recognizes the men, who have ations abounding with the elements of reviously saved him from death, and surprise andl strong drama. decides to be generous and a benefac- On Thursday, "Affinities," by Mary tor. His idea of a benefactor perhaps Roberts Rhinehart, will be screened. is a little far-fetched according to Colleen Moore and John Bowers have modern ideas, but it provides several the leading roles. real thrills and an abundance of rol- -- [licking comedy. It would be difficult to compare "The lhe, Stage Bad Man" with any other play; per- " __haps its closest contemporary is George Cohan's "The Tavern," for - Gardik (Detroit) both faffirmative and negative, will A superman in satin--such is the base but run along with uproarious herd concealed behind the Purple comedy, villainy, and thrills at' unex Masl, which is the title, as well as pected moments. the mystery, of a capital entertain-. ment from the French of Paul Armont and Jean Manoussi, in which Lo Dit- A D)ELPH[, ASKS riclhstein comes to the Garrick Thea.- M R R O tre Sunday night. The period of the "Purple Mask" is the first Consulate in Fran-ce, when the wings of all Roy- Three special discussions and a bill alists have not yet been clipped by Io be introduced and commented upon, citizen perfects and citizen police I bith affirmative and negative, will agents directed by the inexorable make up the program to be presented Bonaparte. Our sym athies are en- by Adelphi House of Representatives listed with the royalists who -are in- at the meeting held at 7:30 o'clock tesday nightninIthe Adelmeitroom-oon- tent upon rescuing one ot their num- Tuesday night in tle Adelphi room on 'r, the- father of the charming Lau- the'fourth floor of University Hall. rette. Briquet, an implacable police Especial attenti.n is caled by tbe jag-ent; who is a prototype of Jarvis in Speaker of Adelphi, Donald 0. Cook, "Le a'Iiscrables," is assigned to safe- '24, to the fact that this meeting i guard the prisoner, and to capture the open to all men on the campus. Al. -j" Habits Of Li "Man must begin to change his habits if he is to escape the fate which has overcome so many great groups of animals in the past," declared Russel C. Hussey of! the geology department,I yesterday. "In a sense, man has his own fate in his hands today, and yet he is deliberatelyatinkering with the mechanism of life in a manner that is absolutely startling." Age upon age, he say, the worldl To Change ife, SaysIHussey. has seen group after group of animals dominate life and enjoy complete mas- tery of its environment. Then through some seemingly inexplicable circum- stance the species has been wiped' from the earth. In studying the prob- lem~s of evolution, the paleontologist is in an unusually favorable position, with the possibility of tracing the development and progress of animals through a period embracing millions' of years. It is proven from this study that just as there is an individual old age, there is a racial old age, and when a group of animals reaches the stage of racial old age its ultimate .fatie is certain. "Natural selection," he concluded, "has been on of the. great forces in evolution, and has constantly weeded out the unfit from the fit; and although jit has been a very wasteful process it has, in general, made progress, for only by the survival of the fittest can we hope for improvement. Today we deliberately allow the unfit to survive and: propogate, while the birth rate among the higher classes is constant- ly decreasing. 0 MAY FESTIVAL HILL AUDITORIUM Ann Arbor i. WEDNESDAY EVENING, May 16 MISCELLANEOUS PROGRAM Ber~nianino Gigli, Tenor, soloist. The Chicago Syrphony Orchestra The University Choral Union Frederick Stock and Earl V. Moore, Conductors 2. THURSDAY EVENING, May 17 HOLST EVENING 1'mahello Addison, Contralto, and ErIa a Rubenstein, Violinist, Soloists. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra The University Choral Union Gustav Holst, Frederick Stock, and Earl V. Moore, Con- ductors. 3. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, May 18 CHILDREN'S CONCERT Suzanne Keener, Soprano, and Arthur Kraft, Tenor, soloists. Chor is of School Chiildreli George Oscar Bowen, Conductor 4. FRIDAY EVENING, May 18 ARTIST PROGRAM Florence MacBeth, Soprano, and 0ulscppe Danise, Baritone. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra Frederick Stock, Conductor 5. SATURDAY AFTERNOON, May 19 SYMPHONY PROGRAM Ernest Schelling, Pianist The Chicago Symphony Orchestra The University Choral Union Frederick Stock, Conductor STEWARDS and HOUSE MANAGERS" OF FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES For the convonience of your membbrs why not start a charge account with the "WHITE SWAN" PHONE 165 A,, - , We've ot 'Em! Real Tasty 6. SATURDAY EVENING, May 19 SAMSON AND DELILAH-v-SAINT-SAENS Jeanne Gordon,, Contralto .Charles Marshall, Tenor Clarence Wbitehill, Baritone Henri Scott, Bass-Baritone The 'hicago Symphony Orchestra- The University Choral Union Frederick Stoek, Conductor TICKETS Course tickets may be ordered by mail. The orders will be filled in the order of receipt and tickets will be. mailed out about April 1, by odrinary mail at purchasers' risk unless accompanied by t0 cents additional for registration. IVA)CK "A". Remaining seats in the three center sections on the Main Floor, and in the first ten rows of the-flrst balcony, $7.00 each. BLOCK "B". Remaining seats in the two side sections on the Main Floor, and in the last five rows of the First Balcony, $6.00 each. BLOCK "C". Remaining seats in the Second Balcony Front HAMBURGER S Ever Try 'em? BETTER DO They're made to order at the