PAE FOTR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TTTVRSDAY, MAY 14, 1925 - ~-~- Published every morning ecept Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association, The ,A'sociated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republicationi of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Enter~ed at the postoflice 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: Anna Arbor Press Building, May- tard Street. E~DITORIAL STAFP? Telephone 492; MANAG;ING ED)ITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor............ ... John G. Garl~nghouse News Editor.,.......... Robert G. Ramsay City Edit............ Manning Houseworth Night Editors George W. Davis FHarold A. Moore Thomas P. Henry Predk. K. Sparrow, Jr. Kenneth C. Feller Norman R. Thal J-%dwin C. Mack Sports Editor......,. William 11. Stoneman Sunday Editcr.......... Robert S. Mansfield Women's Editor .............Verena Moran Telegraph Editor...William J. Walthour Assistants Gertrude Bailey Marion Meyer Louise Barley. Helen Morrow Marion Barlow Carl E. Ohilmacher Leslie S. Bennetts Irwin A. Olian Smith 11. Cady, Jr. W. Calvin Patterson Stanley C. Crighton Margaret Parker Willard 11. Crosby Stanford N. Phelps Valentine L. Davies Helen S. Ramsay Robert T. DeVore Marie Reed Marguerite D~utton L. Noble Robinson Paul A. Elliott Simon F. Rosenbaum skuneva Ewing 'Ruth Rosenthal ames W. lernrnbcrg Frederick H. Shillito Katherine Ditch Wilton A. Simpson Joseph 0. Gartner Janet Sinclair Leonard Hall D~avid C. Vokes Elizabeth. S. Kennedy Lilias K. Wagner 'Thomas V. Koykka Marion Walker Mariod Kuhik Chandler Whipple Elizabeth ILiebermann BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER Advertising ....................T;. L. Dunne Advertising.....................R. C. Winter Advertising................."H. A. Marks ,Advcrtisiu ................ B. WV. Parker Accounts.. ".... "...... ......H. M. Rockwell Circ'1laticm I.................... John Conlin IPublicat ion..................... R. D. Martin Assistants r. W. Anold K. E. Mast W. F. Ardrrssi . FE: Mosher I. M. Alving 11. I,. Newmann W. C. Bauer TI. P. Olmstead Irving Blernian R. AT. Prentiss Rudolph 1lostenan W. C. Pusch George P. Blughee F. . Rauner B. Caplan . D. Ryan .1. F. Clark WT. E. Sandbergr 7. C. Con sroe F. K. Schoenfeld F.R. Dentz R. A. Sorge George C. Johnson A. S. Simons 0. A. Jose, Jr. M. M." Smith K. K. Klein I. J. Wineman W.1 Al Itullins THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1925 Night Editor-SMITH Ii. CAD'S., JR. George Paish has made such a state- ment. If such be the case canicel-I lation by this nation is the only remn- edy. But what the present adijnis tration insists upon, what the press of; the nation has rightly clangored for (d1';4S Wh'S is some sort of settlement on a-i isi- JIEJE TOI)AY ness basis. Franc'e has colntinal ly evaded the question of a(definite ude- A o c a u po h al cision. So long as she does so there ulti4 pr fwd3~sag n will~ ~sietakintiscutr. itm'ig~ Thiur'sday's onig htpaper would w e hoietalkit this1country be put out in a novel way, so as to shnh age tl Uited tate a erimit the whole staff to attend the whenhe all th UnietlStaes I publication banquet Wednesday nlight. "Shylock." If such were true seven; year wold ot ave laped it outThe schemie (a brain-child of R. Gay- the exctionof ri inglordymeaifroay ,president of The Daily theexatin o a inle ayn('t fomPurity League) was to have all the France. We repeat that. total or par- I copy on the dIesk by four o'clock, and tial cancellation may prove t) be the. onl fesile oluio ofthedieina, #have the night editor and his assist- onlythifealuin ofco hen diaemna ants write heads until, six. Then they hut his an oly cme wen Fanc were all to tear hack after the ban- admits that there is a debft; to settle. !que an finish it up. When this day is at hand the discus- We readt Gaylord's lucid description sion will end. of the plan, and found it good. We said If the Senior sings had been started to ourself that it was a good thing a few weeks earlier, the Choral Union to have the -copy in early once in a might have uncovered some valuable fwhile, and that there was no reason material. why it should not be in early every music I AND t DRAMA I______________________ _______________________________________ ------------ Seniors! Order your Personal Cards Now CAMPUS OPINION Ationyrnous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- (lay. We also noted mentally, with soni ccheer, that we would not have to write a column on that day. r ants wil.however, be regarded as But yesterday at luncheon, we were{ confidential unman reauest I ;nrondto the phone and Editor 4IT , III I13i Grarlinghouse announced himself. He To the Editor:I asked :us how we were. He then ask- Now that the plans for Iho fnew Ice1 us if we had a good time in the stadium are puiblic pirop~erty I feel it morning.. He knew we had, because no less than a dluty to register my uii_ he had seen us. Then hie cleared his worthy opinion in r egard to them. throat and asked us if wve "would Though' I despair that those of us who mm eymc etigotaclm oppose enlarging the intercollegiatte this afternoon." athletic plant will be able to acconip- , t, seems that he wantedl to go to fish much in the face of studlent and te banquet too, andl that the only way alumni sentiment, yet I wish to make he could do it would be etc., etc. " onc public attempt at least to helps* avert what many considler a grave Well, it just happened that we had mistake. Two considerations impel me a columnm that one of the competitors to (10 this. First, the selfish one, that. j ha~d written, still lying in our drawer; I will feel no pangs of self- reproach so we said. rather reluctantly, that we in case the stadium is applroved, no 0 supposed, as a great favor to him, we remorse b~ecause I did not try to tyre- could get it out. It would be a lot vent it. Second, that I am confident01' extr'a work, we said, but we would that there are a majority of the fac- do ,it for John. Hle thanked us. ulty and a large number of the mo~re intelligent, alumni who, though silent fiWe blew in at the office at about are oppose(d to a larger stadium I qjuarter to four, intending to get the am even given hope that, mainy stu- column out of our drawer, edit it, dents are of like mind by the fact write an introduction, and dumrp it that thc afimative in the recent f ac- on the desk by four sharp. ulty-student debate on the modific't But it *wasn't there. tion of our athletic system was c lear'- **# ly the more p~opular side with the Now that wve have the column to audience. outrself though, there are one or two What will a, larger stadium mean?; little things that we intend to say. It Will mean greater Roman holidays+ One of them is about the Mother's DayI than we now have, which will in- celebration that took place here and #evitably react upon the students so as there all day Sunday. There was to produce greater interest in football. 'something maternal going on all the ,t'he players themselves will. Ie forced time, so we made a day of it. into an even more rigorons ,trma ining*** than they now are subject ed~ to. We( We started off with the service at have spring football now; we will the Presbyterian church, and a dis- have. winter {football soon. These men m tal thing- it was. Whenever there will think and act football the- year was nothing doing ,the organ would round. Oh yes, they will "get by" in play sonie airs designated here anti their work in one way or another;I there on the Program as "Old Home they have to. B~ut they will not deC- I Melodies." All the other itemis on the velop any real breadth of mind. Physi- program were somehow linked up with cal exhaustion is not. conducive to M'other. Thus, for instance: careful intellectual analysis. Solo (Mother's Quiet Hour) But after all the players are but a "In the Secert of His Presence" drop in the bucket of university life. hym1-n 4)5 (Mother's Bible) What of the rest ? Thley will talk 1"flow Firm a Foundation" football at every meal for two months I Scripture Lesson instead of at every other meal. They Solo will spend more afternoons watching( "The Old Mother" ............ Grieg football practice than they now (10. Dr. Dieterle Thev will follow tIhe team to IfoIreign , * '* 1 li ,1 i 'k +)i i ToNI(aITI: The Ann Arbor Play- miaker's preset Iwo One-Aet Plays In the Wrmksbop at S :15 olok. TONIxHT: "Thew Passing of the Th'irdIFloor Bak" by Jerome 1K. Jeromie Int University 11bailt 8&o'c(loc. TONIGHT: The Students' Recitl in the School ofI Mi' at S o'clock. "THE LOVES O1" UL'L" Frank Wedekind's startling "Erd- geist" from his famous, infamous "Lulmu" cycle- one of the half dozen plays, incidentally, recommened in the ill-fated article lpulishel some months ago on the Faculty Women's Club-was presented in New York City at the Forty-ninth Street theatre this Monday evening under the title. "The Loves of Luu." The translation was by Samuel A. Elliot, Jr., director of dramatics at Smith College, and the production was directed lby I1ine Haupt with Margot Kelly, Paul I)ou-I cet, and Mr. Haupt in the leading roles. The introduction of this pla y into America is of te greatest. signifi- cance, for if the performance devel- ops into a poular suc(cess it will on- q uest ionable bring in its wake a flood of similarly daring undisguised dramas. It will mein an era in the theatre of sensual frankness ap- proaching. even equalling, the liza- betha n and estoration coedies- both periods, by the way, of unsur- p~assed (dramiatic creation. As Professor Watr pointed out in his article on the modern (Germn stage, recently published on tne Mu- sic' antd Draa paIge of The 1Daily, Wedeindl 'struck out his own pat h in uitter~ indifference to contempora ry theory a ndl pract ice. H e was aroused against the moral; antd convetons of the bourgeoisie. Ile aimed to reveal truths . .. . and he became aieciless and cynical critic of the life about. himt. . .. Hiis scen s are grotesque. ecstatic, lyiric. H is people ae hart of the g?ea I menageriePoli fe as he cal led it ; in them nat ume's fiines ae slumibering, ieady at, any provocat ion to bur st, forth into annihiIilat ing flme. "They are Ilike element a forces, supler-men andl women, orn out of their place itnul time, like theirCire- ator and doomed to be misunderstood and scorned by t.heir contemporaries Wedekind is as he has been calle, 'a tragic moralist in an immoral world.' " The New York reviews of the play ai'e particula rly inteesting, especial- ly Stark Young's cit icism in Thew New York Times. "It was a gala evening''' he says, 'for the ironical fates that preside over stage fortunes. . .. Stu- dents of the modern tleaie may be interestedl to observe in this play of Aledekind's a foierunning of many of lie characteristics of later writing; there are many preictions of the ex- pressionistic drama in particular and many instances of the psychological subtleties and shadings that are found more completely employed in later dramatists. "About this play andI its perfo'm- ance last night it would be only too easy to be funny; those who long to be amutsed may go there and lagh, it would be more woiti while to point out that thte play is technically around a theme of the struggle between various wills, and the sex a ttact ins per- sonified in woman. '['le attractions and r~plsions of sex according to the courage, strength, humor, business, i ; i a i E I a r { 11 1 (rIk I i t i ( y i (t( I . i .....a'.. r. MANN'e ~i We Also do lir"li Class Work in (LEANING AND) REBLOCKiING .FATS of all Kinds FACTORY HAT STORE 017 Packard St. Phone 7415 (Whei'e D. U. R. Stops at State) 1- GRAA' BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK GARRIhCK Wedht - - - 5tcto$2.50 Wed. Mat. 50Sc to $1.50 Sat. Mat.' - - 50C to $2.001 Tho Miracle Play of America ANNE NICHOLS' '"Able's Iris. Rose"! SEATS NOW FJl THIS A'ID N Xr W. EK * 1 " MAKZRS s GoprE FuROST COMP'ANY' 'P SO "AST f : r PL ACE YOUR ORDER - for Pcrsonal x I ,tdsNo 1= ~~100 C"'11dz: and Plat (Script) $2.75 a100 Cards and Plate(slid Cold English) $4.00. OTHER'S famous "don't" al-= 100 Card1s and Plate (Block) $4.00 ways accompany the meal 1= with our pastries. They're goodlies ! 1 00 Cards and Platc- (Slid 1 Old L nglidh) $5.00 that a real boy can't wait until - their course arrives. A happy part of any meal. Fresh every day. Let us quote you price on Cl:Ass Announcements and We Deliver- Phone 5501 sv o oe q E: l r tc~, f -V' yoffc'C Outfitters _________I 112 sou'ri-1 MAIN PHONE 451 Su scie o T e lbra D llbeĀ°1l111for11111111Time111"1 .fMichigan11111 11111111111Da.11111ly111 to I A SIIYLOCK THERE WAS* The French debt has been the sub- ject of endless discussion in which the participants have been prone to take extremle stands. On the one side are those who denounce France In hitter terms for failure to meet her obligations to this country, 'failing utterly to consider the French view- point which undoubtedy Jhas some jus- tification. At the opposite extreme, persoTmn;, like Professor Hobbs char- act-rie fthe united States as thej "Shylock of the Nations.", Neither stand is accepted by The Daily. Extremes of opinion, we be- lieve, are seldom justified. In answer' to those who display an unreasoningI Ad. ,{{i J1' I' I failure to understand the feeling fields even oftener than at. pmesent, r'Ie sezinon was one of these ser- which ia'tuates their policy we can leaving Thursday or Friday and're- $(a. t iat starts off '"In the hurry only ptint. to the facts that for decades turning Monday if' their' Ford(s hold 1 wid fiistle of this materialistic age, this heroic people has been literally up. Literary students will, if posii- 00.3s age -of commercialism, we are apt terrorized by the German menace. To ble, do even less week-end work dm-i'- to scoff at everything sentimental," them self'-preservation is a real con- ing the fall. ,, i en various baser sorts of affection siderat ion and must remain so until A more subtle influence will he the I were; damned with faint p~raise: they see an impotent Germany. So it 'elevation of the foot ball star to a Friendship (e.g. David and Jonathan); is tta t they spend hinge sums onI higher pinnacle than hie now oc'cupies. I'Bother Love; Love of man for wo- ai'mament in a vain belief that Obvious, spectacular achievemient will; man ; but the best of all is Mother such will insure security. So it b~e even more womshipped than at. Love. originality and cotrtiol of mecn living is that irega rdless of high tax rates present. The greatest fault of unil-" Ver'y shortly, you may be sure ,we in a hiidebound society aeu h they have been unable to commence versity life today according to all fell to reading about the Box Supper erratic and head-long story that p~aymment of their debts as have other competent observers its externality, to be given for the lucky lucky Pres- Wedekind has written.I nat ions ..suchr as England. will be heightened. And yet the friends bytemians Wednesday evening at six "In taste, in a sense of humor, in Eqgually easy to refute is the argu- of the stadium say it will not affect I (clock.' From that we skipped over urbanity anti finish) and .proportion the irtient that the vacillating ploicy of thme the intellectual life of the University. to the accounit of the Trip to Jerusa- play conies a long way short, Many French government concerning finan- I might add to the list of iindic't- hem" Contest, which was won by Miss PeCple' will want to shoot somehbodly ci11 obliga:tions amid her insistence on ments the, inci'eased debaucher'y whaich CGook's See Do Done class. The Busy! for permitting su~ch a piece to be seen citorranoms ililtary preparations is the comes with each) increment of young Bees got second money, with thme Boy a t all. On the side of po~sitive virtues best one, in view of the broader inter-; and foolish alumni at thme gaines, the! Scouts and Blue Jays following in the it is ob~viou~s that Wedekintl exhibits ests of futumre world peace; and that evil influence of placing university order namred, thme Go-Getters also ran. iii this drama a lpowerfuml and energiz- this c'ounitriy is too exacting when athletics on a par' with professional * *jing gift, a view of life that is pas-1 aftem' sevenm years of uncertainty it basebl~al for every Tiom, Dic'k, and j In the after~noonm we went to hear sioliate, iuncivilizedt and vehement,1 <7~k for a tdefinite settlement. France ITarry to witness amnd bet oni, amid so\Mr. Cues>t. The house was lammied. ando shot thmrough with strange non-I at prsnosluIsiga dl ats na asan Mr'. uest. was a master of the larinci- forgetable suir prises an d subtlety amid in ('01151 ructitug huge armaments as a; How (I th ese siiptzor't 'i' of thle tl e of comic relief. At the end of alm~ost diabo)01ical insight, itesr the maeans of sec'unit r.(h'anted that the projetct meet these a grnmeits? By say- each of his touching poents lie would darker and more ertic ob8sm siotf m'cemil('elcions give her cause for 'Ing thlimt thei increased r'eceip~ts will t .ay sonmething that would jiust set out* natures." it+ i'fblCrl l'1Olse will gi nothing in ' nak~e possible mm greatem' intramumral1 the whole house (pi'actically the Ills Ononohiulisfm-Ci- the' Ibug rain except cotntinued poverty. ; pr'ogramn! I aim I emptell to uts" that whole louse) howling. "Life is just nitta ; lie is safe whether it, become Geran.y withi her steadily increas-' colloqluial but. highly expressive temumin a tup of tea," said Mr. Guest. "Won't a success or a failure. Neveirtheless, ig bir'thirate in the futumre will be a -hutnk! Itf thle xce-'mreceip~t. nowf you make it sweet fbi' mme ?"' h added. 11 this umuchi is certain: the tendencies powerful friend, amid an increasingly received from football gamrei; were dle - * of tihe Amierican stage foi' the next dle- !enmihj le ritiy. France by Tier ploicy; voted to emnlarging the mt ramnrral It miparedl, in time course of his (adei lie balanced jmn the rec~eption New iskepn alive those hatreds which programr instead of e apantding the ine- address, that mnos't of his gener'alize- Yor'k gives this weird and terriblei arc lumundl to brmn Germany dowmn tercollegiate plant, andl hiring, ;as tions ,a bout Life and Mothers and animd truu umsepiece. tivout her at some (distant time. She Professor Rkeed so aptly paut it, "ogre ;Kids wer'e mmade only after long and*** caitmiot hope to compete with Germany coach for every maim onl the football pa instalmhing observation of his own 111IE ANA' ARBOR I1, I'lIIA ERS in preparnmg for warm' many years team,'' the fuimds would be .amlle. A life, and of Mlrs. Guest, amid of a per- l'hie Annt Arbor Playniakers will hecnce. It would he much wiser for, second argumment is that, the st adiutm son called Buddy, whom w e imagine prsniw n-c plays ini t heir her to attemnpt to* erase the age-long, will secur'e for the l'nivem'sit r .r ore' to be his son. From the general tenor Playshop at 716G Spring Street, on rivalm'y by a coneilliatory policy while alrumni suppor't. To which the obviors. of his observations, we deduced that1 Thursday, Friday, and Saturday eve-; she temporarily has the uipper hand. answer is, the support of those alumani lie has a good nmornmal wife amid a good rings of this week. The first play is! T.lhe question of the French debt to 'who cannmot appr'eciate thle harmiful normal boy..............."Whole-hear'tedly to Clotho," by Paul i i . f i { i lhhhI~lhh~hhhhI~~hlI~hhhlh~h~h~hh!I~hhhhII il1 l ~lIaflIII I 1111 1 i i[l liai [1251 ll I I I III il hIf 11 l hh IhhlhhII h1 Today Today , Th rough Through o' Saturday f Saturday, --Presents- M ANNA Q. NILSSON MADGE BE -LAMY CHARLEY MUJRRY - I BULL MOINTANA J/ACK RICHARDSON' I ~ YILARRON V.14KMANN 11at1 Roachi 1 "I lOL D MVY 3AI", loe atg Added Attractions 11143 HOLIN SSTRS DEFINED SINGEBST; An Established Big-Time Act