TUSDAY, MARCH 17, 1925. THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T1 I.1 REl7 WO~fRK flOMPIFfl 'Villa Ready For GeorgeV "Youth Not Harmed By Present G r Is A ~ ii om Mrs. kC:,dlrine I. erIlisnis W ith an iformal cereon y I 1nlr-,.~. Mr.Huers and acng-Pes^:n::..............".:."~. itryh asn mleedonyand afer- Mr. 'luhe room ill beud c aiag-reaiding oomrexclusivlyand- wiLlodinhe onatendatntlibwhonillesatond door oftheoUnhonwilthe day.nWhiet TuesdaboMsrwhich A tkonbeplaei tlibrary have ncotpyetarednate Tuiesyi will be oe n th emtbes <>:... . ofthe copion ofherrom wich. heenom wuseaseaseetngraceengn rebigmd tVll e ryrs ine os i h roomexbuil ig lywadcompletdberi alstr s.:?::"%":ing..... Geo.<:.rge of r itain s goin thre t rstad ecp ae ofrsaoa a dewosibe sttrougnermhsdetsvr iles h uk fCnagt sten' c rifto Mrs. Cthrineay. endleuce to winor fh ae husbanewad Day Literature, " Says White "Is thle Amierican iiiiiei'graaduate be- male and female, may frequently car- ing cof1rulhte( by the0 imorail one of ry a liberal qluantity of gin, but the . .C FLngl ili literature a,> taurght by young instructors in ou r colle-es", ashs SArthur Corning Wxhi te, an ins4 rust or in English at D art mouth in the? IMAainch "Plookmian."' Dr. Pari] I~wight Moody, president of Aliddlehury col-I lege, statedI in a recenlt i' sue of Ithe ".Bookmian" that suchi was the ca se. IPresident Moody said, it effect:"h teaching of I hry thm ugat s, imanners, ,jn d aspirations of the 'wonrm we live III, as these are ))resented in literature is more than dlangerous." In his article, Alr. WhileC disagr eC5 with the latter stand, pointing out that "literature is a continuous' stream, never ceasing, bnt alwar)ys flowing on. To c:onsider' contemporary wriiting as an isolated phenomenon is' silly . . . . the literature of all per- iod s an1d all languiages is madle up of the same ingredients.'' ''Contemporary literature,,' he Con- tinued1, "is the exflression of life as these young Americans in our colleges have to Ia ce it. An owtri'-in"-lih e p Tasture will not hell) them. Classr oomi contact with contemporary literature I .ante individual seldom permits the Ain to distlace a wholesome regard for I Imp fuindamientaIl (decencies of life. '1 (oStr underg1'ailuates were a rep- resent ative sample of our population instead of a carefully selected class,4 neit her D~r. Mloody nor anyone else ever need feair for the morals of this ccountry." Crpenter Goes To War College f!")1 the war department iVere, received yesterday by Mfajor William 1". ('arpenter, p~rofessor of military science and tactics, relieving himn from (lduty at the University at thbe endl of the current :semester and divrscting hinm to r eport at the Army Wapcollege, Washington, D. C., on Auzgust 15, 1925, Major Carpenter will take ul) the courses of instruction of- ici ed at the government institution duping thme school .year 1925-26. Infor11nt ion has not yet been re- ' Will Your Children and Theirs go to College? o okwi - - that Brown goes back to his mature at the beginning of dr S twentieth reunion this spring, each school and college year. and that he has just taken He believes that his children t out educationat, insuranceI will more genuinely appreciat W To this day he doesn't know their education by paying for which parent or aunt or uncle it out of their own funds* S paid most of his school and And Brown also believes that ''' college bills. But he does know they will better capitalize their '' that he can never repay those ow incr'eased capabilities, on' (jA obligations created, except by or before graduation, by tak- a: nsrn ml oe o h ing out insurance for the edue education of his own two ctonothnetopdf chlrn generation, as well as to cr a_: NI So he has recently arranged en. an Immediate estate andiffal # dwet oiisfrbtto ca urne f faia- _9 The john Hancock is ~ cliI neet3i nuWgcle e n omnadibning college : aducrwrft rrncRof: e14 staff. " Over Sixty Years in Business. Now tlrt}Sta93in h Over Two Billion Doi. .1 lays on 3t500y0c Lives hSUACCOPN CREHE 4 , S ?FA CV SIQ NIFICANTl IN ITSI'iS E AM~t --NOW PLAYING , othling llt, A BOMB BIURST OF MERRIMENT - He hated to be sick ! But gosh ! How tae hated to get well! Waldo Pendleton, '72. The .title of the new room will be the Edward Waldo Pendleton library. The room liar, been furnished in harmony with the general scheme of the building, the .furniture and decorations barmion- izing with that of the other parts of the Union. The large portraits of former presi- dent James B. Angell and President Em~eritus H. B. Hutchins have been hung at one end of the room on each side of the large fireplace. ~On the afternoon of the formal open- in , a program of some kind{ not yet announced, will be put on in the room iii addition to the reception. Letters have been sent out to all members cd the faculty inviting them to be present at the opening to which all Ibembers of the union are invited. Faculty members may bring their wives, the room being open for one day to women whose husbands are Union members and to women who have a guest card. ti t! t {{ ;I ,I . ~nriii!Plan 23 Class To A"HS1 HOW eunions Here TO LRGEGROAJD Early In Junae, gi ves stude~nts an i orT)D1n1ity to make ''elved regnr-,_ig thet professor of mil- an hones,, individual judgment of val- iiarv science and tactics who is to nes 1)oth moral and aesthietic.! succeed Major Carpenter here. "The numb~er of students who are___--_____ hypnotized by the decadent strain in Madlrid, March 16.-Replacement of contemporary fiction is entirely neg- the military dircecrate by a new gov- ligible. There are always some peo-; ernnient is far off, in the general op- ple who, whether or not they are ex- inion of Spanish newspapers.E p)osed to decadence are just naturally -sick irn their souls." j I te X an d Mr. White, in conclusi on, said: e d t e at A s "Tlm~ American underg-raduate, both i : .; E Akron P'aster Fei ers University Address; Makes lUnique iassiticationi NEX'T SERVICE APRIL 5 Twenty-three classes plan reunions here this year according to figures an-, nouneel yesterday by Alumni associa- tion headquarters. Under. the Didx plan, which is used as a schedule for returning graduates to follow, groupsI Whitney 'Theatre The I Today's quiestion : Do you think that the women of the Unviersity should produce an annual pageant, which would be of greater proportions than the present "Lantern Night?" Were asked: University hall. I The answers: Elois Tygert, '28.-- "Ves, I Zn7)rov flV Cthe idea. It wuld,1j More than 1,600 persons heaird Dr. of four classes return every five Lloyd C. Douglas, pastor of the First I years. ! The alumni in the following classes Congregational church of Akron, 0.,j will meet in Ann Arbor on Reunion deliver the Uiversity service address day, Friday, June 12, and on Satur- Sunday night in Hill auditorium on j day, which is Alumni day: literary "The Mathematics of Divine J~xpecta-f classes of '70, '98, '00 mien, '00 women; tion." This is the largest crowd that '05 men, '05 women, '16 women,, and has attendedI any service given by the '23; engineering graduates of '16, '17, Student Christian association this !'18, and '19; the medical classes of year. '90, '00, '05, '16 and '20; the law class- Dr. Douglas outlined his subject by es of '95, '00, '05, '10, '19 and the '15 classifying humanity in three main dents, divisions, which he called the "driv-s Comimencemient occurs this year oil en," the "1l(," and the "commission- Mondlay, June 15. The programs for edl." The first two classes include! the three other days of the gathering the grea test part of the people of the is: Ymidfay, registration, baseb~all game world, but it is the "commissioned'' with Ohio State, and student enter- class which supplies the great men, taininent in IHill auditorium in the of the world. This is the group whicnh evening;: Saturday, registration,. an- rise.s at tines of great p~eril and needl. nulal meeting in h ill audtorium, Al- It is this group, which supplies the imnini luncheon, Alumni mass meeiig inventors, poets, and real leaders. ' in :h ill auditorium, baseball game be- Dr. Douglas devoted the greater tweein alumni teams, anrd the Senate p~art of his address to discussing the reception; Sunday morning, Baccal- 'cominissioned" class, pointing out the: aureate sermon in Hill auditorium. responsibility which rests on the ------ members of this group in each gen-, Vancouver, B. C., March 16.-Paddy oration. Thew Jackson chor us of 100 ililon, 77, has voted in the United Imale voices sang special pieces b)oth States for 41l years only to learn to- before andI after the speech, day that he is not a citizen. Brag. a . mmmmwwvw - .. .. ucsffist LSEOWNWO&SM S 1 : PA, V, AR'11 ponw2m" I I s am r tsr,' - ' r Alm , ; i !' "3 ,; , E ,t i 1 .} I ?I9 MUSICAL Hr Sn OFr S Edti.' ri ' .n. ' ,I1,3it5 $ , %7 A" e } . r L/ +^ give the freshman women an oppor- tunity to make many friends at the j by thie Student Christian association beginning of their college career, in- AIil5 hnI~.LwsMno h stead of having to wait a few years K.tiuai Con tregation, of Chicago, will before they could mlake a sufficient 51Caik. numbler of friends."- -i Ellen Nylund, '27L..-"No, not un-a Mill 11051)0]is, Mit., Mach 16.- less it can better serve the purp)ose \; "Only you e in ofrshe ,'grad nai for which Lantern Night was inaugur-Ewo t , O icrtyn ated. But, itomy mind, the ccea- Uthe nrs alI oirye r1perd,"ostthes tion and unity which it induces scan- asurvey mad by he rgist ir f th not be added to by a more elaborate nicitoJliust. production." Nelle Densmore, '25S. - "Lantern Night seems to embody all the cere- monies necessary to impress the Un-y iversity women with the fact 'that she1 has passed an important milestone' in- her college life. Further rites , seem superflous to me." Helen Ladman, 126.-"Yes, I think they should, because in a large uni- versity it is very difficult to bring the women together. In an undertaking such as this, the women are given an r opportunity to come together and; show their dancing and dramatic abil- ity.",.. BOXING SH'~OW Re ad the XWant Ad.: A R E' I 1 Margaret Bonine, '25.-"Perhaps the pageant need not be more elaborate, I but if Lantern Night were better ad- vertised more people would attend. At present, it is just a girls' tradition and little attention is paid to it." 1 Books Discussed In Honors Course'' Members of the English Honors course held their meeting Sunday eve- ning at the home of Prof. Louis A.! Strauss. The purpose of the meeting I was to discuss the books that have been read by the members since the last assembly. ;;4111t1111Pl[1{111111{11{11{.{{{{{ l M COPPER, SILVER, NICKEL PLA71 iNG"I done in our shop Razors Ground and Honed. WIat is; IA) IeStage "I A St;ar 1"ry ,. a 4, , f ;; , 1 / ) 1 ., v'c .- } DIvE1, .11ill,Em E Y?9s Special J" kit 1 1 lut erpretatioli ),y Ouir Revised .Jazz Orchiestra , i I Mracli sennett Presents till,~es I i KENNEDYS SL 'GX9 S U'F DI G.AMONDS ~r ~a/ I lting IeIllowineitIIof larrila ge jA IL \ F X r - -Ili- JACK0 BROOKS & ROSS tate of t114' A'reeiiie.Village lFollies TIIURISDAY Awd A"A h> r (at I i1 hi -- U