FO R THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JANUARY 2 -T The latest word that has been given 011t m fr t aU Dail to us on the subject is from Miss E- -lizabeth Bain, field secretary of theL OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE American Social Hygiene association, UNIVEFRSITY OF MICHIGAN of New York, who is at present in Ann Arbor. She says that "the nor- DEDICATED TO Published every morning except Monday mal and wholesome association of men CONFUCIOUS during the Uiversity year by the Board in waln Control of Student Publications. and women is an excellent thing, and Members of Western Conference Editorial can be of great help to those who The other day we were busyin Association. have had the proper kind of previous ourself around the office, when a bc The Associated Press is exclusi-ely en- home training." We can carry this came up to us and said You're wante titled to the use for republication of all news one step farther by adding that for on the phone, sir. So we went to th dispatches credited to it or not otherwise the individual who has not been so credited in this paper and the local news pub- fornate as to have had this"pro phone. When we got to thephone lished therein. fotnt-st aehdti poe Enet ttepsofc tAnAbrUaining" that Miss Bain refers to, we said Hello. Somebody on the othe EntereA at the postoffice at Ann Arbor. dichigan, as second. clars inatter. Special rate of a two-fold gain. To dig into the end said in a bim's voice Hello.I of ostage rnted by Third Assistant Pest- details of what is here referred to is this Mr. Cowles? We said Yes. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, quite unnecessary, for the proof of this Then the bim said Burble burb Oiic-s: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- statement is self-evident. nard St eet. .- On the other hand it is not an un-burble burble burble and we said Ye Phcs: editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- Ondthe.oterdhand itnstnot anrbl less, 960. common thing to see men and women yes indeed. And she went on Burh ^i ned communicatins, not-,exceedfn3o complaining of the decided disadvant- burble burble burble burble, and the Nar s, will be oublished in The Daily at ages of co-education. These cases, we interrupted her on an interrogi thre t'iscretion of the Editor. Up~on request, h~'e hudntb ae o e the identity of communiants will be re however, should not be taken too ser- tive note and said, quite politely, I'l garded as confidential. iously for in most instances, the per- - very sorry, but I haven't heard a si I ng oy ed he ie,, Is le s, Ile en m n- EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-M I MANAGING EDITORl HARRY D. HOEY Newsditor......... Julian E. Maak EditorialBard Chairman. .....R. C. Moriaty City Editor.............J. G. Garlinghouse Night Editors E. H., Ailes A. Ri. Connable R. A. li1n~nn T . F:.iske sons that complain in these cases have in some way been given a per- sonal jolt, or have become disgrunt- led because of one thing or anotherl and have concluded, and full rightly in their own opinion, that a co-edu- gle word you've said. Would you mind saying it all again? And she said Burble burble burble burble burble burble burble? And we said Burble! Then a long silence ensued, which aionalschoolisaatheroort was finally terminated by a very pleas- The weight and seriousness with' which their opinions should be re- spected are in direct proportion to the fairne swith whihhthesensme! ant voice saying Number please. Then we hung up and went and re- flected for a solid half hour. .iarry C. Clark P. M. Wagner -e----------s-. There is a very rare breed of os- S po ids Tditor ..........Ralph N. Bjers people achieve their own coniclusions. trich, having one small purple feather ON omn's E.dittr............. Winona Hibbard As a result of which harmony reigns Telegraph Editor..............R. B. ' xarr on the top of its skull, and highly Sunday M&-gazine Editor....... F. L. Ti~deni except for a few who require a good ize ycnoser fotihs Music Editor.............Ruth A Iloweil nights sleep in order to agree with prized by connoisseurs of ostriches. Assistant City Editor.....Kenneth C. Kellsr And one day there was an ostrich of IEthetmajority.rdthis sort strolling on the desert, when Paul Einstein drew Prppobert RaGay he spied a hunter coining toward him. Assistants He quickly stuck his head in the sand, 8. G. lBaetcke R. S. Mansfield If motion picture theaters expect however, thinking to conceal his eN Berkman E: C. Mack their assertion that the public wants purple feather. HIelen Brown Verena Moran Bernadette Cte Regina Reichman3 the kind of plays they are showing, The ruse worked, and it has ever G. W. Danis W. S11 neman Haroldl Ehrlii H. R Stoke to gain the serious consideration of since been the custom of the ostrich: i, C. Fingerle K. E. Styer to elude hunters in this interesting T. P. Henry N. R. Thal any but the most superficial, they will i'orothy Kamin S. B, Tremble aland novel manner. osil Kruter W. J. Wa itiour I;have to explain the following facts. !Goldfinch ~) Lbrmn- ~ First, why is it that none of these BUSLNESS STAFF so-called respectable pictures have LIBRARY ON A SUMMER EVENING Telephone 960 veOutside a cool wind whispers still of teehne90 ever had really long runs in New ri . . rain York or Chicago or any other big city? BUSINESS MANAGER As the moist fingers of the burgeon- LAUR~NC~ . FAVROTWhy is it that they are never popularintretalihy LAURFNCE H. FAVROT; ing trees tap lightly enough to return a second time to a On the long library panes. Advertising ..................E. L. Dunne j big time theater and do big business? Along the o Advertising......,...........C. Purdy pen north the yet-dark( Advertising. .......... Roesser All these plays featuring love tri- clouds surge overhead; Advertising................W.K Scherer angles, divorces, trial marriages, etc. . Accounts................A. S. MErton While i the west the sky is like a Circi lition.............Perry M. Ilayden come to an early death, the records for field Pubhcatron ...........Lawrence Pierce the past few years show. When they Of lilies underneath the moon. Assistants have made the rounds their produc it is uet e by G. W. Campbell Edw. D. Hoedeak ers may as well throw them away: With is quiet edged by ruffling Chas. Champion 1M. L. Ireland they will never be wanted again. mared john Conlin Harold A. Marks And marked by the slow clicking ouis M.oDexter arond . arks Second, why is it, if the publiccoc; oseph J. Fin I Rockwell wants such suf t htpl-yslike "Th; avid A. Fox t. E. Rose Between the pageants of olddays the Lauren Haight A. J. Seidman I Covered Wagon," and "The Birth of a H. L. Hale Will Weise i ,soaring vault R. E. llawkinson C. F. White Nation," have had longer runs than Stretches a chaste canopy of light; R. C. Winter any such play ever filmed? Although Belo made years ago, "The Birth of a Na- w, along the muffled aisles, Mm- tion" is today one of the best box- ervAmoves, b RDYJNA 512office pictures in circulation. It isFg eyes, FRDY AUR 5 94 scheduled for what, might be justly Hrwl afrmmee ~c edaak rstatona half-rememberedBac- Night Editor-EDGAR H.-. AILES cle timhn ersnain chanal. _________at one of Chicago's grandest theaters Le Jongieur FOREMBRYON GEN1USES not a movie house-in the near fu- * * * OREMBRYONIC IGENIUSES Itue In establishing a $50,000 fund "to We have the honor to recommend There are other plays as good as to our patrons a book called "Yet help humanity at large by trainingthese that should be shown through- those who are destined by nature to Again," by Max Beerbohm, who al- out the country again. Thousands becowe its leaders," the anonymous ways calls his books something like would like to see Griffith's great play, benefactor of Western Reserve uni- I that. It is a collection of essays pub- beefato h een Reservuncthi Intolerance," again. They are class- lished first in London in 1909, and versity, who recently announced this s-lefrtcaisofhe oinI cogift, has uset his judgment to ad- recently reissued in America. It con- gfhsue hijugettad picture art. Pol vantage in founding a fund which may _ ___reart._ talus essays like "On Seeing People prove even more worthy than the Off" and "The House of Commons Nobel Foundation. Desiring to aid tManner," and is well worth the time students of that university who show Twenty-Five Years ittakes to peruse it. particular promise the donor has ex- iQuite aside from the point, it is on pressed his gift as "not for the rank Ago At Mlichigan sale at Graham's. * and file of poor but deserving stu-*** r3Pnt n tint+ 5rPhoann I, ion a C, .., a a~n t - - P 0 V El R T Y CAMPUS OPINION ON BEHALF OF MICHIGAN MORONS AND "STARVING RUSSIAN CHILDREN To the Editor: I use the above somewhat sensa- tional heading advisedly as will ap- pear. I am here venturing my inter- pretation of campus opinion and com- ment on a certain paragraph in Mr. Adam Marx's communication "What About the Union?" to be found in. the January number of the Chimes. The certain paragraph is here quoted: "To begin with, the employes of the Union fail to give the members a cer- tain sense of security, of respect, and of service which should be the atmo- sphere in every club. Rather there1 Is a spirit of antagonism and of con-" descension which is irritating and at! times exasperating. If this is due to the fact that some of the employes are students, they had better be given employment elsewhere. Students are paid more than current wages, and be- cause of their interrupted hours are below the standard of efficiency. If the student body must pay for the edu- cation of certain of its fellows let it be done In open donation, after the man- ner of relief for starving Russian chil- dren, not under the guise of payment for unsatisfactory work." Your statements, Mr. Adam Marx, are put down with such savage assur- ance and in more than firm language, that I hardly dare to question their absolute truth. And yet, since I hap- pen to be one of those who are forced to work in order to be able to con- tinue their education, I feel that per- haps you ought in all fairness to re- consider your implied statement that the student employes of the Union are in general, "antagonistic" and "con- descending." You will, I am sure, pardon me, if I venture the sugges- tion, that perhaps it is out of place for a more fortunate (financially) stu- dent to expect a flunkey-like attitude and a cringing tip-expecting behavior from his less fortunate (financially) fellow-students. Certainly, Mr. Marx, your have a perfect right to expect prompt, respectful service from the Union employes, be they students or non-students-undoubtedly there may be instances when you did not receive such service from a student, as you may not receive it anywhere else oc- casionally. But, granting that, you must also try to see that a, fellow student, probably your superior in culture, education and other respects, can not very well be required to bow and caper around you as would per- haps a floating waiter in a public' restaurant. Isn't it possible that you are, well . . . somewhat mistaken in your impressions? You make a statement that the Union student employes are overpaid. I am informed that they receive from forty to forty-five cents an hour, which is if anything less than the current re- numeration for similar services. As to their, ef!'liency, it has been the ex- perience of most of us, that students have more snap and energy than the languid professional waiter, etc. What makes you infer your statement? Acting on your solidly set down premises, Mr. Marx you propose to discharge all the Union student em- ployes and give them donations, as they are given to "starving Russian children," to help them through school. It is perhaps useless for me to oppose such a conclusion with ar- gument. It remains only to ask Mr. Marx as to the manner in which the student employes shall receive such donations. Walter YESTERDAY[ fly SMYTHE PICK YOUR OWN 'PLAN A new and unexpected development has taken place with regard to the Senatorial investigation of the Bok Peace plan. The Senate decides to investigate the affairs of Mr. Bok's award committee. Mr. Bok who is the first witness called, refuses to state the amount expended by him on his peace efforts. Thereupon the Com- mittee of Investigation dismisses the witness and retires for consultation of ways and means. Mr. Bok, in turn, angered perhaps at the Senate's lack of confidence in Elihu Root, General James G. Harbor, Colonel Edward M. House, Miss Ellen F. Pendleton, Dean Roscoe Pound,; William Allen White and Mrs. Brand Whitlock-all members of the award conmmittee.Mr .,-.bn , ft DETROIT UNITED UNES EAST BOUND$ Limiteds: 6 a. m., 9:10 a. m. and every two hours to 9:10 p. m. Express: 7 a. m., 8 a. m. and every two hours to 8 p. m. Locals: 7 a. m., 8:55 a. m. and every two hours to 8:55 p. m., 11 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:4£i p. m., 12:25 a. m. and 1:15 a. m. WEST JIOUND Limiteds: 8:47 a. m. and every two hours to 8:47 p. i. Express (making local stops): 9:50 a. m. and every two hours to 9:50 p.m. ocals: 7:50 a. in., 12:10 a. m. JANUARY S M T W T 1F S . 1I,2 3 4 5, 6 7 8 .9 10 11 12 13 It 1.5 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 2 29 30 31 FACTORY HAT STORE Electr( The son to th heaters w: THE EB 200 $5.00 AT GRAHAM'S Diaries and Desk Calendars BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK price is very little in compari- ie great comfort these efficient ill give. ERIBACH & SON CO. -204 E. LIBERTY ST. x xYrrYr ..................... Yr rMirliM S"iiY {M ............ i MiilIYY MI H eaters' rK I 0 _r. -' ( 617 Packard St. Phone 1 2 (1here 1). U. It. Stops at State) I- ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS LINE Central 'rime (Slow Time) L.eave Chamber of Commerce Week Days Sundays 6:45 a. m. 6:45 a, m. 12:45 p.in. 6:45 p. m. 4:45 p. M. JAS. H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor Phone 926-M Adrian, Mich. Following Ny Usuzi ~l ou , I Ilaie E ngaged An EXPERT MARCELLER and Hair Dresser Your J-Hop ouse arty MAe your arrangements today for the flowers for your J-Hop House Pa-ty. We will be very pleased in 5ckng~ you in this selection. PLO -A C - (25 E.Liberj 5t. -t Phone13 to assist onl J-1-100 DAY Friday, Feb..8, Make Appointments Early Stoddard Hair Shop 7907 IN. University Phlone 26.52 Wehave an ....... 1 wmmumkl exclusive line of The Tremendous Russian Baritine ;ong Singer will appear in the Choral Union Series 11111 Auditorium VC OP Favors sUL ct uca se iesn m~ utcencra.- ic but .because the scope of his am- bition is more sweeping. Although the magnitude of theI world famed Nobel Foundation is al- most two thousand times that of Re- serve's newly acquired fund, and each of the five annual awards to man- kind's greatest benefactors in the arts and sciences is as great as the total $50,000 gift, it lies within the power of the latter to give humanity. much more. One thousand dollars is of infinitely greater value to the yet unrecognized genius, down and out, than fifty times that much is to the well established and financially com- fortable master of sciences or of lit- erature. If greater interest were accorded the undeveloped geniuses of the world and a bit less honor accorded those who have already contributed their share, great intellects might be spared the trying periods which so often help to ruin a remarkable genius. We do not begrudge the great masters their fame and honor, but they could make most advantageous use of their wealth in an effort to develop greater in-t tellects for society. From Ilte files of the U. of M. Daily, Verses live to tell a tale that prose January 25, 1899. cannot impart; Tales of friendships, tastes and long- Upon a petition from the faculty of! ings; inner lights upon the , the Literary department, the Board. heart. of Regents assumed control of the 1 Prose is cold when love is felt for, summer school, making it a part of one that's dear, 'tis true! the University. It had been a private SI have not inuch o A pauper? Yes enterprise on the part of the faculty. t Save these lines to You Fifteen per cent of the proceeds of POISON IVY the summer school will go to the Uni- versity. Perhaps these Rolls seem dull to you? We really don't see how they Professor Wulgus is recovering from can, because we spent the entire af- an attack of pneumonia and was much ternoon making a study of The Comic better yesterday. in the Science Library. And after all, what better prepara- A large number of students had tion could one make for getting out, been counting on a trip to Detroit to a column than that? see the popular new play "Cyrano de * * * :Bergerac" by Richard Mansfield. Word In comes Rafferty, of the sport staff, has been received however that not and says: even standing room can be promised, Hey, why don't ya put this in yourj so it is not contemplated that the column? several contemplated theater parties Wot, we say. will materialize. I saw a guy hanging around a class in dAch+ Friday January 25 Evening 8 P. M. A limited number of stand- vill be ing room / tickets W placed on sale at the Schoolo Muric FRIDAY MORNING ./ -on o d s "Sate Street Jeweler" 302 South State Street at 10 o'clock and will sold in order of request. be FAMOOKIMM We Ge It ut President Draper, of the University of Illinois, has issued an invitation to each organization of the institu- tion to send one delegate to a uni- versity congress which is called to deliberate on the heavy debt, of the! Athletic association. RECALLING CO-EDUCATIONAL TRAINING Although there has existed for an unlimited time arguments both for and against co-education in our Amer- inan universities, nevertheless, those most closely connected and acquaint- (A tv.thf lip.,.,..-ilnfn - ofC+,k- __ cjustto put a coed'si goulashes on, he says. No, we says. Yeah, he says. IUSBA ND'S SUIT BLACKMAIL, SAYS DOCTOR -Head in the Detroit Times Looks as if the old-time armour was coming back, hey? * * * We reahze tha. it is often necessary for a firm to get printing done quickly. We do not believe that, in the case of the rush order, it is necessary to sacrifice GOOD Printing for speed. Considering the speed on this kind of jobs we have done, the quaiity of the work is invariably urprising to our patrons. When President James B. Angell' heard of the plan to move the Uni- versity to Detroit, he Pxpressed his diann,.nva n iy-ta forma ,m The Siamese Twin is a funny fi It cannot gotodann e.