PAcE FOURL THE MICHIGAN DAILY WToDN Y MA R CI T - - - --- Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- card Street. Phones: Editorial, -2414 and 176-M; busi- ness, 96o. EDITORIAL STAFF lielehl)ones 2114 and 176.3 MTANAGING EDITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor..............John G. Garlinghouse News Editor..... ....Robert G. Ramsay City Editor...........Manning Houseworth Night Editors George W. )avts harold A. Moore Thomas l'. 1Elenry Fredk. K. Sparrow, Jr. Kemeth l.. Keller Norman R. Thal Edw~inC. Mack Editor........William H. Stoneman SnbvEditor.......... Robert S. Mansfield W 's Editor....... ..Verena Moran 'elegraph Editor......William J. Walthour -Assistants Gertrude Bailey Marion Meyer Louise Barley Helen Morrow Marion Barlow Carl E. Ohhnachcr Leslie S. Benoetts Irwin A. Olian Smith I[. Cady, Jr. W. (alvin Patterson Stanley C. Crighton Margaret Parker Willard 1. Crosby Stanford N. Phelps Valentine L. Davies Helen S. Ramsay Robert T. I)eVore Marie Reed Mlarg erite Dutton L. Noble Robinson Paul A. Elliott Simon F. Rosenbaunm Gecneva E ,wing Ruth Rosenthal James W. Fernamberg Frederick s1. Shillito Katherine Fitch Wilton A. Simpson Joseph O. Gartner Janet Sinclair Leonard hall David C. Vokes Elizabeth S. Kennedy l.ilias K. Wagner 'I'bonias V. Koykika Marion Walker Mariod Kbikk Chandler Whipple Elizabeth Eiehermann BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER Advertising.--,, -----------------... L. Dunne Advertising..................ER. C. Winter Advertising. ................H. A. Marks Advertising..................B. W. Parker Accoutnts... ,.....,.......... H. At. Rockwell Circulation.....................John Conlin Publication ...................R. D. Martin Assistants P. W. Arnold W. L. Mullins W. F. Ardussi K. F. Mast I. M. Alving H. L. Newmann Irving Bernian T. D. Olmstead Rudolph Bostelman R. M. Prentiss H. F. Clark W. C. Pusch C. Consroe J. D. Ryan F. R. Dentz N. Rosenzweig J. R. DePuy M. E. Sandberg George C. Johnson M\. L. Schiff 0. A. Jose, Jr. F. K.,Schoenfeld K. -K. KIlein I. J. Wineman WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1925 Night Editor- F. K. SPARROW, JR. CAMPUS OPINION Anonymous communications will be disregarded. The names o fonun cants will, howevcr, be regarueu as confidential awon request. To the Editor: Your admirable editorial is a com- plete vindication of the Student Friendship fund, but so great is the harm that may be done to a charitable organization by the least rumor of want of integrity that, I should like to add another word in con rmat ion and reassurance to students who gener- ously made their contribution to it. The fund has the endorsement of Herbert Hoover, who of all living Americans is best acquainted with the real merits of every relief project. No one ever will suspect the man who saved Belgium from starvation of being in love with German militarism, nor the man whose personal influence has weighed with three successive administrations against the recogni- tion of Soviet Russia, of being pro- Bolshevik. Moreover we know exactly where every penny of Michigan relief money went. Most of it went to main- tain a soup kitchen for relief of "bourgeois intellectual" Russianestu- dents who are the Iersecuted victims of the present regime. As for Mr. Eddy's speech, it was so far from being pro-Bolshevik that it appeared to me the most effective indictment of Bolshevism that I have ever heard; his very moderation of tone and anxiety to find what he could for praise, made his final condemna- tion of the absolute tyranny of Rus-1 sia's present rulers.all the more el- fective. One has only to contrast Mr. Eddy's candid statement with the dis- ingenuous (yes, even dishonest) at- tempts of men of the Scott Nearing type to minimize the element of1 despotism and terrorism in Russia, to see the absurdity of calling the Y. M. C. A. secretary pro-Bolshevik. The only hint of pro-Germanism in his speech was a rather vague reference to a possible revision of peace terms with reference to the German-Polish frontier. On this incidental point 1 personally incline rather to Professor Pawlowski's view than Mr. Eddy's, but I must in candor admit that Mr. Eddy only echoed the opinion of hun- dreds of English- liberals (such as Sirl Philip= Gibbs) who gave such ardent support to the war while it was going on as to clear themselves entirely of any charge of being unduly "pro- German."I Let us beware of using epithets too freely. A man^ really "pro-German" in any offensive sense is not a mane who holds rightly or wrongly the idea DASTED ROLLS 20 DAIS Saint Jeall The mist of curling incense softly swayed, And through its bluish curtain, from afar, The aschal candle winked, a distant star, Diamond-like, within a sea of shade. Down through the transept window shot a blade Of vari-colored light, a mottled bar, Like shattered fragments of a painted" jar, That dyed the stones whereon you knelt, and prayed. Was there an awe and sorrow in your mind, To lay your missal down and take a lance? What soul-destroying valor must have gone Into that last sad prayer, as, youth behind, You went out where the voice of fight- ing France Shook heaven with a cry-"Sainte Jeanne! MUSIC AND I 11 DRAMA Easter Cards and. Narcissus bulbs * * * A. L. Polltlcad Panacea The news leaks out that the Stu- dentI Council has invited the Hon. Charles Beecher Warren to speak at Cap Night. The Council, of course, will be remembered as the organiza- tion that lured Edwin Denby out here to speak last spring on the same solmen occasion. Their invitations, in other words, are always a trifle belated. Any po- litician who receives a request to speak in Ann Arbor in the future may well begin to cover up his tracks and Lay Low for a time. * * * The Council would do a big favor to the Commonwelath of Illinois if they would invite Governor Len Small to orate here this spring He would be impeached and ousted inside of a month. * * * Vox Popull1 The words of "Miss Alma Barnes, prima doona," staying at the Bradley Hotel in Chicago, as given to the In- quiring Reporter of the Chicago Tri- .bune in answer to the question, "If you were President, how would you Irun the country?" "I would certainly start right at the I bottom of the job I'd have everybody who caine into this country looked after, to see what they did here. That mieans that everybody .would be rPgis-, tered,the same as they are in Europe. That would solve our crime problem." Sentiments of William H. Gaughan, express driver, who was asked the same question: "If I were President I would try to put prohibition out of commission; get the debts that France and all the. other countries owe us paid up, and give the soldiers a good, straight, straight bonus, without any red tape attached." * * * Working quite inlependently of the Conductor, the Star Cgntributor has evolved the following: 1olls Creedoe Today's Quiz: Do you think that{ Angell Hall should be torn down?1 'Where asked: The smoking room of the library. The responses: Dartwell Todd, grad.---Yes, I think that Angell hal THIS AFTERNOON: The Organ Re- cital in hill auditorium at 4:15 o'olock TONIGHT: The Students' Recital in tile Recital hal of the School ofA 11-. sic at 8 o'clock. TONIGHT: Three One-Act Plays by Masques in Sarah Caswell Angell hail at 8:15 o'clock. * * * THE NEIV LEE ('LUll With their appearance tomorrow evening in Hill auditorium, the Mich- igan Glee club will return to the old informal concert which has been al- most forgotten on this campus. "Some years ago, the Glee Club en- tertainments were casual and color- ful," said Mr. Theodore Harrison of the School of Music, "Yet lately these concerts have become exhibitions, rather stilted and severe. This year we return to the old style, for even thouigh the club appears in full dress, there will be none of this tedious waiting while it parades to and from the stage; the men will be before the audience all the while. Then the pro- gram will he vigorous and varied, with the amusing numbers of the Mid- night Sons' Quartette, the deeper mu- sic of the Varsity Quartette, and those selections by the Glee Club Trio, with Philip La Rowe at the piano and two violins, as well as the popular numbers by a special orchestra. "The whole idea is to secure va- wety; this does not muean that there will be no classical music on the pro- gram, no pieces which have power and beauty. For, quite to the contrary, several of the numbers will please the most fastidious music lover; con- sider Schubert's "Omnipotence" ren- dered in all its vigor by the whole club of fifty-five voices with a heavy organ accompaniment. But besides this there will be college tunes, and songs with an easy, humorous turn, and popular pieces-all types of mu. - sic, arranged to form a strong pro- gram which will swing quickly from one extreme to the other, a program at once live and interesting. "At the start of the concert Laides A.tque Carmina will be sung by the whole club from behind the scenes; then some of the old Michigan songs, the Varsity and the 'Victors,' will be contrasted with a whimsical negro ditty or a parody on 'old King Coal.' Then such a song as "Toreador," from Car- ien; a deep and stirring song, wil be followed by that old piece, 'The Bum Army,' with its Ypsi chorus, which Earle Moore wrote so long ago for that Mimes opera ca lied the 'Crimson Chest,' that old piece which made such a strong appeal on tie last trip to the coast. besides all of this, there will be an organ solo by Dwight Steere, the 'Hymn of Glory," which Yon of Italy composed and dedicated to the Amer- ican legion, a thunderous piece, a stir- ring piece, if there ever was one. "But perhaps the best of all the numbers on the program is that song which the judges at the recent Glee Club contest rated with perfect inter- pretation, the 'Cossack,' written with all the fire and pathos of the Slav by Moniuszco. "The program will be vigorous and varied, with no slow moments, with every piece well done." J. A. S. BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL S WALK I# ...wa. ...... wommay.ft mmm -.-. of the Moscow Art Theatre. slawsky with settings by James Reynouds. In every sense it is the niost elaborate production to appear in Ann Arbor during the last few years; the cast is large, the staging modern and color- Nul, and Otis Skinner himself, is among the dozen distinguished artists of the American theatre. This student saving on athletic coupon books is like the economy made possible for the Scotchman when the street car fare went up a cent- he always walked to work. Venice, March 31.-Professor Victor Eber-Rosenstein, noted Austrian hist- ologist and anatomist, died here to day at the age of 83. MANN'S IATS Look at YourHat- Everyone Else Does We have the Latest Colors-Pearl, Silver, Radium, London Lavender, etc., etc. Save a Dollar or More at Our Store We also do high class work in Cleaning and Reblocking hats of all kimds. FACTORY HAT STORE 017 Packard St. Phone 1792 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) ' 9 AND FT'S SOV4LE TALK W HEN you want just pure,' golden singing beauty of tone, it's the trombone that will give it. And if it's jazz--Oh, Boy, when you get to fooling with the slide you can make a "slip-horn" talk! Versatile? Well rather! Here's an instrument equally at home in Grand Opera or the "Blues" indispensable, in fact, to both. Which spells opportunity! The' trombone is in demand every where there's music. You can learn it readily. Come in; we'll tell you more about the famous Conn trombone. Conn Music Shop 11 Nckels Arcade{ j 111111111Ii1IIIIIIi11ii E1ili iilIi i fII l tillIlilli il h i ll ii 111111 1 Iill hh ii1 1111111 1 - r Mae It A Pleasure'., And not a . duty to eat your meals,,; w} SYou'll find Ideal suirroundinigs and;:. pleasant music in our diing rooms.: - -- w Ti-E VARSITY L ODGE 611 Church " I11I11I1f111111 IILi11111111111111111111 Ei11161 1? 1133 1 lii11111111111I11111111111111111111111111111 x When you serve ice cream, serve the best. That means gettnmg it from the Ann ArborDairy. PIIONi 423 ANN AROR DEAIR Y CO 14OME O0F IPURE 'MILK t ',; I I 1 Si E-STEPPING THE ISSUE that it might eood poliy to "let Michigan is an industrial state and up a little" on a efptel and disarm- therefore depends to a great extent ed Gernany, but the man who, back uponther labreresforherprospextyntin 1914, when Germany was powerful upon her labomcrs for her prosperity, and cherished high hopes of victory, The laborers in turn depend very paid court to the war lord and his largely upon the actions and ,pro-f train. The man who is pro-Bolshevik visions of their employers, under in any offensive sense is not the mod-I whose jurisdiction they work and erate socialist or social reformer, or through whom they receive wages for even the muan who for reasons of con- the support of their families. Both mercial policy would like to recognize the laborers and the manufacturers Soviet Russia, but only the man who are limited in their activities by the accepts for himself and would impose' laws of the state formulated and pass- on others the evil concepts of class ed by their representatives at Lan- dictatorship and the reign of terror.' sing. Very sincrely, Because of this inter-relationship, Preston Slosson. everybody in the state ought to be in- __ terested in some way in the new To the Editor: Wo'kmnan's Compensation bill which I have read with interest in today's is now in the hands of the House Daily Professor Pawlowski's answer committees to which it has been re- to my "spectacular challenge" to ferred in preparation for its discus- "duty and honor." I regret to final sion before this body. That at least that his explanation does in nowise the representatives of the two oppos- prove that The International Student ing forces of capital and labor are Friendship Movement is or was "clev- vitally intereste d in the measure is erly veiled German-Bolshevik propa- shown by the fact that already lob- ganda" as claimed in his letter No. 2. byists both for and against It are The Daily's eritorial "A Few Quali- active about the capitol. fications" proves first of all that there The bill contains the recommenda- was no German propaganda. What Lions of a special commisson on work- does Professor Pawlowski have to say men's compensation appointed a year to that? Can he prove by means of ago by Governor Groesbeck. Its es- reliable figures that there was Ger- sential provisions would make the man propaganda? If he cannot, then employer responsible for ill health of he is clearly making propaganda him- employees when the' cause of such self. illness could be traced to occupational As for Bolshevik propaganda, even diseases, and would increase the sum if Professor Pawlowski can show that, that employes must pay to each per- needy students in Russia received' son granted compensation. more help than those of other comn- As in all attempts to benefit the !tries, there is no proof as yet that this' workers, even at the slightest ex- constitutes Bolshevik propaganda. As pense to the employers, ° industry's far as I know, Russia is exceedingly, lobbyists have hurried to Lansing to poor. Russian iprofessors and stu- fight against the bill. In spite of the dents suffer intensely. Therefore thej fact that the manufacturers of the need of help in Russia is grvater than state were represented on the corn- elsewhere. Why call a "worthy mission that investigated the propo- cause" Bolshevik propaganda? sition by Harry F. Harper, president Finally, if the statement in the Ed- of file Motor Wheel Corporation of itorial is correct (and I have no rea- Lansing, ai'lnd regardless of the un- son to doubt it,) namely that"forI derstanding that the measure has the every dollar of money solicited in the support ot Governor Groesbeck, there United States by the Friendship Fund are always sone employers who will and spent in Germany, three dollars, oppose every move to aid the laboring of its money has been spent in Po- I men no iatter how just it may be. land"-then, according to Professor More significant than the mere ex- Pawlowski's own reasoning the Inter' isoence Of opposition are the side- national Student Friendship Move- steppmng methods which are being ment was not "cleverly veiled Ger- 1 mused to arouse antagonism to the man-Bolshevik propaganda," hmut quiteI measure. Profiting by the valuable decidedly "Polish propaganda," to say experience gained in effecting the re- i the least. jection of the Child Labor amend- -M. Levi. iment, the lobbyists are preparing to -emcf lhwi h" f rumor hinw tho hill might n-,.i v,- a. efl1 +hn A-r'. +' T 1 I s I I I 1 i I 1 1 1 1 'l 1 t i , !iirm w tp. torn clown, Why' Well, I J suppose it is a pretty good building, "IYE WHO G ETS SLA PPED" as buildings go, but all the same, it A review, by Kenneth Wickwar,. don't hold up the campus standards. Victor Seastrom. in making the Marie Lorft, '28.-Yes, I've only screen adaptation of "Ile Who Gets been on the camps ten months last Slapped" has permitted little of the Wednesday, but all the same I can delicate mysticism of tAndreyev's readily observe how such a building original play to be lost. It is an art- as Angell Hall should be sent the way istic triumph for the industry and a of its predecessors. highly compelling production. In its Lars Magruder, '25.-Bruce Donald- story of the bitterness, and incongruity son's fine arts course has shown that of a clown's existence lies all the I)oric collums should be unadorned, strange cruelty of life, the hope and and on that count I should say-i-yes, love in despair, disillusionment. 'demand, that Angell Hall should be Lon Chaney in the part of He easily destroyed to make way for a newer does the most finislhed work of his and roomier structure. As to the career. He shows the same amazing plumbing, I can't say. ability to keep clear the play of fa- Patricia Snipfer, '26. -- eaven cial expression througl a difficult knows I can't see why dear old Angell make-up that characterized his 'por- hall should he devastated. The arch- trayal of Quasimodo in "Notre Dame, iteeture may be all wrong, but only f butt with none of the Ilunchback's re- the educated class would notice that. volting deformities. With a few good vines, Angehl Hall Norma Shearer as Consuelo, the would be terribly cunning. bareback rider in the little Paris cir-1 William Blake, '2G.-Absolutely not. cus, is in turn capable and lovely, It's time someone took hold here with marking her inevitably as still another I a firm hand and knocked some sense ' actress of certain importance. into these here students. Not that I Obviously re-worn adjectives are of; think the bldg. is beautiful, or any- little use in trying to do justice to this thing like it, but shucks, what's the play. There is a breadth and depth ruse of wasting the taxpayers' money? to the entire structure, an irony and -Washington. pathos that is continental and novel. * * * One reviews despair and hope andI We are pleased to report that Phil love-nearly all of life through a sin- Diamond and his boys are doing some gle vivid cross-section. And at theI pretty swell stuff at the Arcade. Mr. very end one grasps the Russianj Helsden's new plan does not, we ob- I point-of-view as He makes his last serve clash at all with the vaudeville speech to the audience "out front": acts that are being billed at thie Maj, "But always," he cries, "always, hion- n, lii nrorchestra has the house to itself j orable gentlemen. the clown comes out c o. E.co. Hibernia Bank & Trust New Orleans, Louisiana FAVROT & LIVAUDIAS, Ltd., Architects '.expressionz in A rchit&.ure" IN the bank building thearchitect has sought always to exrress the ideal of dignits: the engineer has expressed the ideal of stability.; Architecta en ineer topether have made of the American business building a co-ordination of design, construction and equipment that is a world criterion. Each year finds the American business building anticipating even more remarkable developments in the near future. Certainly modern invention-modern engineering skill and organiza- tion, will prove more than equal to the demands of the architecture of the future. Read the Want Ads O T I S ELEVATOR CO MPA Offices in all Pracipal- Cities of the World N Y 0 Don't think that the recently increased meat prices prevvent your eating economically. Try some of the spring foods the Arcade has placed on its menu "r u a