PAGEID OrR
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
TUESAY, MAY 19, 192&
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(4 ________
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MANAGING EDITOR
PHILIP M. WAGNER
Editor...............John G. Garllnghouse
News Editor............Robert G. Ramsay
City Editor............Manning Iomseworth
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Thomas P.Il enry Fredk. K. Sparrow, Jr.
Kenneth C. Keller Norman R. Thal
Edwin C. Mack
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Women's Editor..............Verena Moran
Telegraph Editor......William J. Walthour
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Louise Barley Ilelen Morrow
Marion Barlow Carl E.MOhlmacher
J eslie S. Bennetts Irwin A. Olian
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Stanley C. Crighton Margaret Parker
Willard B. Crosby Stanford N. Phelps
Valentine L. Davies helen S. Ramsay
Robert T. DeVore Marie Reed
Marguerite Dutton L. Noble Robinson
Paul A. Elliott Simon F. Rosenbaum
Geneva Ewing Ruth Rosenthal
Iames W. FernamberU~srederick If. Shillito
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Joseph 0. Gartner Janet Sinclair
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K. K. Klein I . . J. Wineman,
W. L. Mullins
TUESDAY, MAY 19, 1925
settlement, points out the futility of
France any longer combatting and do- CAMPUS OPINION
layingian agreement. Atonymous communications will be
The ournl sttes:disregarded. The narnes of communi-
The Journal states: ants will, however, be regarded as
"It is indecent to commercial- confidential upon request.
ize sentimental reasons for a re-
duction by putting soldiers' WOMEN ANID TH E POLLS
corpses to balance the scales To the Editor:
against American (dollars. Our If you will permit me the space, I
dead defended France and Amer-
ica fell in with the cause of hu- should like to present an actual con-
manity. Our sacrifices were use- dition existing on this campus, I
less if it were not for the Allies, mean the voting polls in the recent
particularly the United States, campus elections. Women made a
who determined the victory. The particular effort this year to use the
people of France have been list- ballot in choosing those officers for
ening to fairy tales regarding the whom they have the "privilege" ofl
loan problem. The fact is that voting. After registration it was
France entered categoric engage- either consciously or unconsciously
ments which will be impossible to arranged so that women voting would
I repuiate."be sulbjected to the same embarrass-I
In this declaration urging France ments that happen to those passing
to face her debts boldly, the Journal through the arch. It was very ef-
has at last caught the spirit for fective, and many who registered fail-
which the United States has been I ed to vote.
looking. France may be certain that j It takes strong determination to
the United States will dictate easy push your way through a crowd of
terms if she will but condescend to men interested in laughing and
settle, and the sooner she does so the f smoking to a booth at which you call
easier the terms are likely to be. out your name in'the presence of the
many men assembled, conscious that
AN HONORABLE MAN when your back is turned that com-
MUSIC
AND
DRAMA
1IWES
Mimes of the Michigan Union at its
meeting Sunday afternoon in the
Mimes theatre elected the following
officers for the coming year: presi-
dent, Robert Henderson, '26; vice-
president, Paul Bruske, '26; and sec-
retary-treasurer, Charles Heinz. '26.
Valentine Davies, '27, co-author of the
1926 Opera book, was also admitted to
membership.
Plans for the new Opera were dis-
cussed at this time, as well as fur-
ther means to assist Mr. Shuter and
Mr. Iloyer in this year's production.
In addition, it was decided. to present'
a legitimate comedy early in the fall
of next year, such, plays as "The Hot-
tentot" and "Three Live Ghosts" be-I
ing taken under consideration. j
--II. L. A.
* * A
'MISTER GATTI
Seniors! Order your
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While the world is figuratively}Iments fly. Yes, it takes a lot of
holding its breath, waiting for the courage and those who voted deserveC
commendation. I understand thatI
one-time war lord and field marshal, I voting is under the direction of the(
now president of the German republic so-called "Student" council, which
-Von Hindenburg-to take some ac- represents only the men. This coun-;
tion that will give a definite indication cil claims that it has nothing to do
of his policies for the future. Marshal with women's affairs, yet this mattert
of voting certainly is a women's af-I
Foch, who crushed the Hindenburg fair, more off the Michigan campus,f
line during the war, is quoted as say- I will admit, than on. Those who have
ing that he believes that Von Iin- charge of voting next year might at-
denburg "will live up to his republi- I tempt to make it easier for the women
can oath of office like an honorable
man. by establishing women's polls, or by ;
man." eliminating stag parties. Such would
The former allied leader sees no already have been provided for had a'
danger that Hindenburg will attempt women been sitting on the student
to destroy the constitution which he council.
lurking menace in the "reactionaryD
parties" that put him in power. Dorothy I. Cline, 2 .
Hindenburg the man stands before
the world with an oath' of office to!
uphold. It seems almost inconceiv--EITORIAL COMMENT
able that any man in his position -4c
would dare to break'his faith with
the world, but it does not seem en- ( ENERiAL MILES
tirely impossible that Von Hinden- -The Detroit Free Press.
'burg the party leader might be forced The career of General Nelson Ap-G
into some action which might discon- pleton Miles was in and by itself a
cert the entire world. rounded-out episode in the annals of
Will the great militarist feel his American soldiership. It assumes
greatest allegiance to his country or only added significance and glamor
to the parties which put him in pow- when viewed as a chapter in thes
er? Will he permit his personal de- greater epic of America's expanding
sires to take precedence over his duty nationhood.
General Manager Guilo Gatti-
Casazza of the Metropolitan Opera
Company, recently announced the fol-
lowing operatic novelties and revivalsj
for the season 1925-26:
Stravinsy's "Le Rossignol" Manuel
de Falla's "La Vida Breve," Gior-
dano's "La Cena (elle Beffe," Spon-
tini's "La Vestale." Ravel's "L'HeureI
Espagnol," Massenet's "Don Quixote"
(with Chaliapin), Puccini's "Gianni
Schicchi," Cornelius's "Bart eredl
Bride" and the ballet, "Skyscrapers,"
by Jchn Alden Carpenter-also com-
poser of "Krazy kat" and "The Kat-
nip Blues."
Mr. Gatti-Casazza also announced
for the engagement of new singers,
Editha Fleischer, soprano, formerly
of the Wagnerian Opera Company;
Carmela Ponselle, "mezzo-soprano;
Dorothy Flexer, mezzo-sporano; Lau-
ritz Melchior, tenor, from the Berlin
Opera and Bayreuth; and Mario Ba-I
siola, baritone.
Plants for your room, and
fresh cut flowers for all
occasions are as near to you
as your phone.
Call
Cousins & Hall
611 E. University
Phone 7313
Your Order Will Receive
Prompt and Courteous
Attention.
C ASH
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Night Editor-LESLIE S. BENNPTTSI to his nation? The peaceeOf tile world Thoroughly engrossed in the rough
Imyhingeon his e1oice. Marshal business of fighting, General Miles
1,ANTE RN NMUT fToch Jldiikq hqe "will-,live up to his nevertheless pursued his life work on
Lantern Night, one of the most republican oath of office like an boil- the Indian trails with the vision of a
orable man" statesman and nation builder.
beautiful and expressive of Michi- ma tiemnat ainbidr
ga's traditions, and perhaps the first A volume of personal recollections
I THE AMERI AN NElR) published in 1897, after Miles had
truly woman's tradition on the cam-1 ruu
ll oldn's tecten of the stage From all indications, the fight in " spent three decades in arduous cam-
pus, will hold the center of the stage
Tennessee over the case of J. T. I paigns in the west, was sub-titled,
for the women of the campus tonight. Scopes, an instructor who violated "FrOm New England to the Golden
And, as usual, the arl'lval of Lan-
tthe new sta e law by teaching evolu- Gate." From New England to the
tern Night is a signal for, the com- IEole Gtwathpaitrkvr
plete misunderstanding of that core-Ltion, is destined to be a momentous Golden (ate was the main trek over
one in the relationship of the church 1 which America bore the torch of
ony by the men on the campus. The and state. What makes it all the civilization. The indispensable pioneer
men do not, will not, recognize the more interesting is the entrance into stages of this progress were co-ex-
true purposes and aims of this an-oj
nual function. the dispute of Clarence Darrow, the tensive with the period during which
great criminal lawyer and philoso- Miles and other fighting pathfinders
Lantern Night is nothing other than
pher of mercy, who has offered his of his generation disputed the west
it is attended by more elaborate and services free to help defend the iwith the Cheyennes, the Kiowas, the
s teacher. Commanches, the Sioux, the Nez Per-
(10a5 nochane itprsfundaental pr- Mr. Darrow compared William Jen- ces and the Apaches.
does not change its fundamental pun- nings Bryan, who is to aid in the Miles was a "born"' Indian fighter.
pose. And as women are invited and prosecution of the case, to Nero in a On the paternal side he came of a1
attend Cap Night, so are the men in- statement issued Sund'ay to the effect bree'd of Massachusetts frontier col-1
vited to attend Lantern Night. that "Nero tried to kill Christianity onists inured to the perils and thrillsc
Women have achieve'd a definite with persecution and law,'' while of keeping the rapacious, blood-i
place on this campus, and they have "Bryan would block enlightment by thirsty Indian tribes at arm's length.
established expressive and lasting law." His conclusion is that "Nero When he was born, in 1839, the In-
traditions. It is to be hoped that to- failed, as will Bryan." Although he dian "front" still pressed closely ont
night, and i the future the men n is willin to enter the fight against New England. Only the more daring
the campus will take as much interest
in Lantern Night as (10 the women i the "money lecturer and Florida real of the easterners ventured beyond the
in Lan Appnlachihns;only theevry strong
C Night estate agent," as he termed Bryan in Appalachians; only the very strong-
his letter, Mr. Darrow does not feel hearted and bold pushed on farther,
that his services will be needed. beyond the Mississippi, to explore the 1
THE RIGdlT. SPIRIT, AT LAST If Tennessee lawyers are not able' few trails leading to the Pacific.
Personal prejudices, partisan feel- to work up a case which easily will A remarkable record of achieve-
ings and nationalistic tendencies refute Mr. Bryan and his arguments, ment on the battlefields of the Civil
rather than common sense have been the charges of decay in the legal sys- war trained and steeled young Miles
playing the major part in the news- tem of the country will be substan- for his particular performance as one
paper discussion of the French debt tiated to a certain degree. America of the conquerors of the west. Be-
settlement question. Radical Ameri- never has stood for religion by legis- ginning in the late sixties, up to the,
cans are insistent i their demands lation, but rather has been proud of early nineties, his own and his horse-I
thatthe debt be paid and paid as soon the freedom of choice which she al-j men's swords wrote history that gen-j
as possible. At the opposite extreme, lowed her citizens in this matter. orations of American children will
a few of our leaders advocate can- Mr. Bryan may prefer to hold to the delight in reading and to which the c
collation.- old prejudices against evolution. Let nation as a whole will look back as
As for the French, there are very him do so. The scientists have never marking one of the foundations off
few statements coming from them attempted to make the teaching of its growth.-
which do not give the impression evolution compulsory by law, and The latter years of General Miles's4
that they seriously resent any pro- Mr. Bryan has no right to rule it out military career, when lie was head oft
posals for immediate settlement of by law. The problem goes so directly the whole American army, and
their obligations. They have, for the to the fundamental freedom of re- I equally so the years after his retire-
most part, abandoned the cry that the ligious worship in the United States imient from the active army list, were1
debts should be cancelled because that there can be little question as !filled, with varied activity and loaded!
they were contracted in a common to its outcome. with honors. His occasional brushest
cause and have turned to the argu- with political Anemies (or such menf
ment that the present is not the The French debt to the United a ishe sometimes considered enemies)
proper time to take up debt negotia- States has been called a "cloud hang- were exciting. But frequently ie
tions. ! ing over France."' We hope they fought them only because lie believedt
Their point is that France is dust don't wait until that cloud rainw I le was being prevented from serving
now experiencing tremendous dimi- . lewsbin rvne fo evn
mhi poinis traedis dtfft one his country as a soldier. This ag- I
culties with several ether great prob- gressive patriotism blazed out as
lems, including the balancing of the We wonder if the return of the rarely as ever before when America
budget, and the stabilization of the rum fleet is as imnortant to thirsty wasentering the World war and when1
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lErnesi jilt' SdlUillmlhlIl-hlCillk
Among the artists who have been
re-engaged are Margaret Mat zenauer,
Maria Jeritza, Nanny Larsen-Todsen,
Clarence Whitehall, Antonio Scotti,
Feodor Chaliapin, Frances Peralta,
Ina Bourskaya, Rosa Ponselle, Lu-
crezia Bori, Amelita (lalli-Curci, Ma-
rio Chamlee, Lawrence Tibbett, Toti
dal ?Monte, and most sensational of
all, Madame Schumann-Heink, who at
the age of sixty-four and after more
than twenty-five years on the concert
stage is returning to her most fam-
ous Wagnerian roles.
* * *
"TilREE WOMEN"
A review, by Robert Henderson.
Preceded by two highly godawful,
shoe-string vaudeville acts, very ham
and very stupid, the Weurth theatre
is presenting the finest motion pic-
ture, I believe, barring "The Woman
of Paris," and of course, "The Last
Laugh," that the industry has ever
produced. It is Ernst Lubitsch'sI
"Three Women" with Pauline Fred-
erick in the most arresting, poignant
characterization of her career.
The story is familiar and conti-
nental in the manner, centered
around a polished cheapster, the cus-'
tomary tuxedoed pervert who turns
in drawing-rooms and melodramas
from one liaison to another. Miss
Frederick as the first of these a wid-
ow, wealthy and beautiful in spite of
the years that she will not adnit,
quietly grips and domiialtes each
scene as the plot works to its climax.
It is the touchstone of a great artist.
ihe single I ia(ged(enne on the screen.
Other cl:aacters are woven into
1
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7 4- -l
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