PAGE FOUR. THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1 Pulished every morning except Monday during the Univcrsity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en-' tited to the use for republication of all news dispatches" credited to it or not other w,se t credited in this paper and the local news pub-_ fished therein. Entered :t 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: Ana Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR1 PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor..............John G. Garlinghouse News Editor...........Robert G. Ramsay City Editor............Manning Houseworth Night Editors George W. Davis Hlarold A. Moore Thomas 1. Henry Fedk. K. Sparrow, Jr. Kenneth C. Keller Norman R. Thal Edwin C. Mack Sports Editor.,.....William H. Stoneman Supe'Editr.........Robert S. Mansfield Women's Editor........ ......Veresta Moran Telegraph Editor......William J. Walthour Assistants Gertrude Bailey Marion Meyer Louise Barley Helen Morrow Marion Barlow Carl E. Ohlnacher Leslie S. Bennetts Irwin A. Olian Smith II. Cady, Jr. W. Calvin Patteson Stanley C. Crighton Margaret Parker Wihard 3. Crosby Stanford N. Pheps Valentine L. Davies Helen S. Ramsay Robert 'r DeVore Marie Reed Marguerite Dutton L. Noble Robinson Paul A. Elliott Simon F. Rosenbaum ,ineva Ewing Ruth Rosenthal ames W. Fernamberg Frederick It. Shillito Katherine Fitch Wilton A. Simpson Joseph O. Gartner Janet Sinclair Leonard Ball David C. Vokes Elizabeth S. Kennedy Lilias K. Wagner Thomas V. Koykka Marion Walker Mariod Kuhikr Chandler Whipple Elizabeth Li ebcrmann BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER Advertising.....................E. L. Dunne Advertising....................R. C. Winter Advertising ....................11. A. Marks Advertising................ B. W. Parker Accounts...... .............. H. M. Rockwell Circulation .. .................. Johrn Conlin Publicatio..........R. D. Martin Assistants P. W. Arnold K. F. Mast W. F. Araussi F. E. Mosher 1. M. Alving H. L. Newmann W. C. Bauer T. D. Olmstead Irving Berman R. M. Prentiss :,Rudolph Bostelman W. C. Pusch George P. Bugbee F. . Rauner B*. Caplan &.D Pyan I1. F. Clark' M. E. Sandberg J. C. Consroe F. K. Sdhoenfeld F. R. Dentz R. A. Sorge s George C. Johnson A. S. Simons 0. A. Jose, Jr. M. M. Smith K. K. Klein 1. J. Wineman W. L. Mulhins CAMPUS OPINION A ionynious commniications will be disregarded. The nam eE T of coEmur cants will, however, be regarded as/ confidential twun req~ueisGSTRLl i)AtAING AA VALUAl1LE IAIL To the Editor: Some time ago this department con- I had been told that to become a curred what might have been called member of Phi Beta Kappa, a person some enthusiasm in the judgment would need to have a "pull," but after I handed down in the Worst City con- reading the article by Mr. Root in test by the editors of Life. The lucky t winner, as you remember, was De. Sunday's Daily, I am convinced that troit, the Garden Spot of Michigan. one man at least arrived there by thge We now wish to retract our sup. sheer weight of his intellect. ! port of the Detroit candidacy, and It has always been my belief that place in nomination the city of Chat-, the main purpose of a college is the tanooga, Tennesse. development of culture. I believe * * * that the development. of the ego is Perhaps you have followed the the most essential part of culture, and stories on the Scope's evolution case it gives me strength to follow up my in The Backward State. They have convictions even though most of the told of the guy that taught evolution students around here think that there in a town called Dayton. He has is something wrong with me. been indited by a grand jury for My opposition to the new stadium breaking the state law of Tennesee. is not quite the same as that of Mr. And as soon as he was indited, there Roof-it is a question of management. followed a great stir, largely confined, I believe that they should have on the however, to the press of the enlight- field an amplifier so that before the ened North., game and between halves, the bright- Clarence Darrow, lately of Leopold- est and most cultured students could Loeb fame, with a record of no death I.i 1 MUSIC AND DRAMA Iil 11 "TAN K-U" A review, by Valentine Davies. Technique has many uses. In play- writing, for instance, it serves as a means of enriching a theme, of mak- ing a fine play finer. It also has other uses; technique has camouflaged and glossed over many theatrical shal- SaleContinues This Week GRAHAM'S ..,.-.a z ti i r } State Street Store~r II .:. .... .- i, lows. Winchell Sraith and Tom Cushing are good technicians. They have taken in "Thank-U" nothing much and made a more or less entertaining evening of it. Supposedly the theme is that ministers are underpaid, that they therefore must receive gifts fromI the congregation, and that because they are forced to accept this philan- thropy, they lose the esteem of the community. It further appears that any sum of money in excess of, say, one thousand dollars ,when given to a a party in due legal form, does notj constitute a gift. Just'what it does constitute is not made clear. At all events an old friend of the minister's who is conveniently weal- thy . . . well of course, he doesn't give exactly-but anyway, he sees to it that the padre is made financially comfortable. Imnediately his social standing in the community climbs; there is also a portion of love and intrigie involved. X h i { i t t f 1 f 1 C E i inspire those of us who have but! common intellects. If they would do' this, then I think that the new sta- dium would be worth-while. Mr. Roof has made one very grea mistake during his university career. Hehas never gone dating. Think o01 all the opportunities that he has ne- glected for the spread of culture! I have been told that girls like to go with a man that they can look up to. sentences in all the men he has de- fended on murder charges, wired Schoolmaster Scope's attorneys that he would be glad to help in the de- fense of their client. He would wel- come, he said, the opportunity for a' debate with the Silver-tongued Sel- entist, W. J. Bryan, who was to assistj in the prosecution. * * * It began to look like a good trial. MAKEF1 T, Ely,) MANN'S c I Straws and Panamas at Reasonable Prices We Also do High Class Work in CLEANING AND REBLOCKING Panama Hats Regular Factory Work No Acids Usedt FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard St. Phone 7415 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) ANN ARBOR TOLEDO Li J Leave Ann Arbor, Chamber of Cominerce, 7:30 a,* I., 11 a. iu., 4 p. i., 5:30 p. in. week days. 1 Sundays, leave Ann Arbor 7:30 a. w., 1 p. in., 4 p. in., 7:30 p. in. Phone 4159 for in fortion.. Hot Sandwiches Salads at Noonday specials m 1. Hot Soups }- Tea Coffee Milk Toddy How eagerly they would have absorb- * * * ed his wisdom and culture and then Dayton, Tennessee has a population passed it along to the ordinary fel- of about 1200 souls. Some of the other lows of the campus. In this way the cities in the state, observing the at- present unusually-low standard of tention the trial was attracting, al- culture would be raised. As it is, all truistically proposed to have the trial of his culture will be reserved for one held somewhere else, so that the woman only-his wife. It is my belief crowds could be accommodated. But that this is dangerous. A woman little Dayton held firm. Like Shelby, can't stand as much culture as a man. Montana, she would have the fight It is bound"to lead to quarrels. there where she could watch it and If the university could only retain make money off it. Persuasion failed its honor students like Mr. Roof on to budge her high resolve. its teaching force, our universt* * * faculty would soon be brought up to And then C'hattanooga had her a high standard. It is becoming very bright idea. She would beat little difficult for me to believe that many Dayton to it. A prominent group of of them could have been honor stu- business men in the city hatched the dents. Mr. Roof should realize this and plan, and figured (probably correctly) should not go out into the business that it would mean more and cheaperi world simply because he can make b ytOldh - .:1:~ pubictythan anything but anOl1 i; The cast for Miss Bonstelle's re- cent production of this play in th*.. Bonstelle Playhouse, Detroit, was un- usually good. Lester Vail, the com- pany's handsome juvenile, proved that he was much more by taking the part of Andy, an "old-soak" handy-man, adding just the right touch of com- edy. Gilda Leary interpreted Gilda Leary very nicely. The outstanding characterization, however, came from Edwin Wolfe, who also directed the play. His portrait of the millionaire father of a wild son was as humorouu as it was truthful. Menart. Kippen (did a nice bit with the part of the young lDon Juan, who reforms on meeting the minister's niece. Inca- dentally, the play is not nearly as obvious as that sounds. Strawberry Shortcake F"u"ntain Specials" Ice Cream Sodas Sundaes Cold Drinks The Arbor Fountain 313 SOUm STATE ST. . . a . *+... - .r.- i WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1925 I Night Editor-STANLEY CRIGHTON ERNEST DE WITT BURTON Michigan is fully capable of sympa-j thizing with the University of Chicago in her bereavement over the death of her president, Dr. Ernest de Witt Burton. Michigan knows how it feels, to lose a loved and respected man, especially when that man is the presi- dent of the University. Words are meaningless at suchI times as this, but by their sympathy and sorrow, Chicago may know that the people of the country understand not only the University of Chicago's loss, but also the nation's loss. Michigan wishes to pay tribute to a a great soul that has passed on, to aI great builder that has been lost to his. cause after laving the corner stone 'more money tint sh1ould e ;willing to( mh iefrste S Ilo Week, The irst time I witnessed a per- sacrifice a little to the cause of cut- The idea was to suborn a young fel- formance of the Bonstelle company ture and scholarship by acceptIng a lov who had been teaching evolution' I noticed that there was something position on the university staff. Chattanooga to give himelf p 40 wrong with the make-up but I was I believe that more members of a grand jury and get indited, and then well down tront and so laid it to that. Phi Beta Kappa should Publish their y with their political drag and At this performance, however, I sat. I they, wt ~erpltia rg n ideas in The Daily. I have receive superior legal machinery, would put well back in the house, and I reiter- a great deal of enlihnment and u- ti trial on in a hurry and leave little ate: there is something radically derstanding concerning a model mni- Dayton flat. wrong with the make-up. In the thr'ee versity student from the artieles o A swell scheme. Southern chivalry, different performances which I have two of its members. Both the article The old Southern hospitality couldn't seen, there has been scarcely a player of Mr. Roof and that of Mr. Johnson be satisfied without a bunch of people whose face did not seem artificially, (concerning "winged collars") iter- coming into Chattanooga to see the amateurishly painted. ested me very much in Phi Beta Kap- trial. The beauty of a good stock coin- pa members. Let us have more art- ,But the Chattanooga teacher turned pany, of course ,is that all the minor iles from them to guide us under- j out to be of finer stuff than any of the parts are well done. This is decidedly clansmen as to what is best in our rest of citizens. He told the Chamber true of the present organization: sof Commerce, in effect, to go home "Thank-U" is an easy play to see and A.N and play with its grandfather's whisk- an easy play to forget. ers. Ile had probably been reading I"Arrowsmith," and he did the big EDITORIAL COMMENT thing. The only music and dIrama this, So Chattanooga was baffled. The summer-the Shakespearian Players _trial, by the latest advices, will be are not returning for some reason-- THE RED RIBBON (' CHASER held in Da ton will be Max Ewing's concert in Hill i I c 4 t 3! i 1 f 1 I r Finest foods tastily prepared, immediate service.-always! Yet Arcade prices remain the lowest in town afeteria '; m- :. r P k :, > r i . .M1 ' f } I Arcade Upstairs, i I I Nic ke is A rcad e cau a a ul u ll, (ful~ 11 O~i1 ,y . a .a, i~aar t . n.. ~ u 11 I 1 and to a great university that must - The Detroit Free Press. * * S suffer the loss of her leader. The "red ribbon chasers" who have Chattanooga is now, therefore received a rebuke from the White) our hunble opinion) the worstc " - WHAT WE DO HERE'1 House for attempting to speak for the the country. But the trial story A great memorial, a campanili, is American government in the matter blow over in a little while and D planned in the, memory of the - late of the French debt question fully d- will again come into her own. President Marion L. Burton bye the serve what has come to them. Ever can't keep a good nian, down. Student council and the officers of the since the war ended self-constituted I * * various classes in every college in the diplomats, chiefly citizens of the R E Q U I E M University. United States sojourning abroad or We feel that it is only fitting There are many things to be gained having some individual iron in the fire, proper that we should at this by such a project: First of all, such have made pests of themselves by as- say a few words in lamentatio an edifice would be a fitting memorial suming to "interpret" American sen- the departed Chimes, long the b Michigan's great timent and American govefnmnent pol- this department's crude jests. 1 toetimegtesndtouMichiantgreicies to the Old World. What they been a good butt, and a regulara completion of one of that great man's have said, frequently, has been given Chimes has had a good year. nzoten a good deal of popular consideration editors have reviewed a lot of camps.rm ns in Europe and in some instances, mons, they have sent out a l More than that, a campanile such as their words have apparently influenc- ( questionnaires, they have had a1 the one proposed would add a certain ed foreign government policies. That good, sane criticism of the Univ indefinable g tscampusthese individuals also have been used Latterly they have taken to out andetcadbeso eitodthiscalt by some of the continental politicians out scoffing, and have pilloried appearance that is now lacking. And who have hoped that their words big game as this department,t might influence opinion in this coun- hop extra, and the Michigan Jou it would open tie field for permanent try is now indicated by the report that ist. wont Iiwhile umemoria Is for each grad. ,eatin~g class. - those who urge cancellation of the I People didn't like this, and p The'e is much to recommend this French debt nearly all receive the didn't like that, but Chimes ke project, it Is a worthy one In every Legion of honor "as recompense for going. For the last two mont Av ay, and it deserves the support of their propaganda." has been razzing The Daily. An students, alumnni, and all others who There seems to be no way of per- it will appear WITH The Daily are interested in the University. suadi g theseloquacious inividua unday. t wi r ly cs ____________________to stop their talking and as they are sonme, but the sermomn reviews an( A LACK OF TI'ACT Inot officials of the American govern- enterprises and the discussions Ament they cannot be ordered to keep girls' lines and boys' lines and d Alexandre Millerand, who was oust- still. The one hope for relief. from will- go on. ed from the French presidency last their activities seems to be through Lucky Davies! With Chimnes year by the Cartel des Gauches, and an effort to shame them into silence week instead of once a month, who was recently elected to the sen- but we are afraid that some of themi a column he'll put out! ate, has been elected chairman of the will be impervious. * * * foreign relations committee of that _ _ _ _A little too solemn, perhaps. body. .. "Yeggs Reteat in Tears After At- Mr. Jason Cow auditorium, probably during the first e (in weeks of July. His program is fas- city in cinating to anyone who enjoys modern y will music, and will include both of th Detroit outstanding Stravinsky ballets, "L'Oi-, v,,,, seam de Feu" and '"Petroushka," the YOU g and time on ot utt of It has one. The f ser- ot of lot of ersi.y. t-and- such the J urnal- people pt on ns b, d now every hange ad the Ponlene "Movement Perpetuel," De- bussy's "Jardins Sons la Olive," and Whithorne's jazz fantasia, "Times Square." The first production in the fall will be a performance of W. S. Gilbert's famous burlesque, "Engaged," by Mimes of the Michigan Uion in the middle of October. Following the tre- mendous poularity of such revivals in New York of Congreve's "Love For Love" and "The Way of the World," Mowatt's "Fashion," -d Gilbert's "Patience," "Engaged" should be one of the most imteresting and success- fuIl comedies of the year. Certainly there is no play more sure-fire in its appeal, or more perfectly suited for an all-male cast. The first performance by Comedy Club will be a program of nonsense farces under the direction- of Valen tine Davies, including Ring Lardner's "The Tridget of Greva" and a skit played backwards in the manner of a similar act in "Chariot's Revue." LestWeFrt Cherish the memory of those of the nation's de- fenders who have gone to their great reward. Un- selfishly they came forward to defend you and I. They fought and died that our country might live on in Progress, Prosperity, and Peace. Cherish their memory WITH FLOWERS. You'll find many beautiful suggestions at the Ann Arbor Foral Company. Phone 6215, or stop in. ANN ARBOR FLORAL CO. 122 E. Liberty St. Phone 6215 / 1 s of The January program under the di- dating rection of Robert Henderson and Phyllis Loughton, again a first pro- nce a duction in America according to the what custom of the past three years, will be Gordon Bottomley's melodrama, "The Lady Gruach." The cast will include Marguerite Goodman, Mary les. Lou Miller, Vera Johnson, and Miner- I