PAGB FOr THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MAY 29, 192 _ _ Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Aqsociated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwse credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at AnnArbor, 3 chigan, as second class matter. Special rate .i postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.0 0. Offices :Ana Arbor Press Building. May- nard Street. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP M. WAGNER Editor.............John G. Garlinghouse News Editor...........Robert G. Ramsay City Editor............ Manning Houseworth Night Editors George W. Davis Harold A. Moore Thomas P. Henry Fredk. K. Sparrow, Jr. Kenneth C. Keller Norman R. Thai Edwin C. Mack Sports Editor....... William H. Stoneman Sunday Editor.........Robert S. Mansfield Women's Editor.. ..........Verena Moran Telegraph Editor..ss.s.William J. Walthour Assistants Gertrude Bailey Marion Meyer Louise Barley Helen Morrow Marion Barlow Carl E. Ohlmacher Leslie S. Bennetts Irwin A. Olian Smith H. Cady, Jr. W. Calvin Patterson 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 James W. Fernamberg Frederick H. Shillito Katherine Fitch Wilton A. Simpson Joseph O. Gartner Janet Sinclair Leonard Hall David C. Vokes Elizabeth S. Kennedy Lilias K. Wagner. Thomas V. Koykka Marion Walker Mariod Kubik Chandler Whipple Elizabeth Liebermann I the old grad and the University as a concrete whole.B ook otes Few students realize the part that the Alumni association is playing TROUBADOUR: An Autobiography. with a few of the Michigan men of By Alfred Kreymborg. 1925. Boni 1900, 1880, 1870. For after all, there & Liveright. $3. is a common bond between the grad- MEN SEEN. By Paul Rosenfeld. uates of any institution such as Mich- 1925. Lincoln MacVeagh-The Dial igan, one which has so much to do Press. $2.50. .. _...... . ... musc.AND DRAMA fII _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ ---------- Sale Continues This Week w with molding the life of her friends, OBSERVATIONS. By M a r i a n ne IRecital in the IUniverslty School of her dependents. Moore. Same $2. 1 Music at 4:1 o'clock. The Alumni association has been XLI POEMS. By E. E. Cummings. TENs' EIA organized primarily to keep the grad- Same. $2. THE STUDEN ' pRECITALt uates in touch with their alma mater. Here are nine-dollars-and-a-half's The concluding program in the In addition it inevitably keeps them ! worth of books all about artists and series of recitals by advanced stu- more or less in touch with each chiefly poets and chiefly Americans ents of the University School of Mu- other. This "keeping in touch" may to boot. Enough to give one pause- sic will be given tomorrow afternoon paue-1at 4:15 o'clock in the School of Mu- seem abstract now, but how about sufficient to make one take thought. audito'ulo y tewrChurchill, ten earsfromnowOne ondes !sic auditorium by Steward Churchill, ten years from now? One wonders To those who have a care for what the Alumni association of the American poetry it has been evident and Margaret Calvert, soprano, kupil University of Michigan and the Mich-- for some time that the New Poetry of Nora Crane Hunt. The program igan Alumnus, the sole organ for its was, if not giving way to, at least ad- will be as follows: expression, will mean later on. mitting to the field an even newer Gavotte in G minor...........Bach poetry. The work of Frost, Masters, Liebestraum, No. 3 ............ Liszt A CHAIR OF CULTURE I and Robinson and of those others Stewart Churchill Another indication of a commend- who go with these masters has ar- Chant Hinlou.Bemberg able trend in liberal education in rived; their mode of approach to the Cade lasera................Mililotti present day American Colleges is problem of poetic presentation has Bonjour Suzon ..............Pessard evidenced in the recent establishment been accepted. Now the -frontier of Margaret Calvert of the Charles Eliot Norton professor- the arts has been usurped by a fresh Children's Corner ...........Debussy ship of poetry at Harvard university. platoon: men like T. S. Eliot, Wallace Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum Added significance is given this move Stevens, E. E. Cummings, and wo- Jimbo's Lullaby. by the provision of the founder, men like Marianne Moore. Golliwogg's cake walkE Charles Chauncey Stillman, Harvard f In "Troubadour," Mr. Kreymborg Mr. Churchill '98, of New York city; that the Norton I giyes the secret history of this newer Wayfarer's Night Song .......Martin professorship shall include, with movement in the ranks of poetry. Os- The Brownies................ Leoni! verse all poetic, expression in lan- tensibly an autobiography' of Amer- The Last Hour ..............Kramer gaage, music, or the fine arts, even to ica's inveterate cl4am'piion of small Blossom Time .............Needham architecture. I hopes in art, "Troubadour" is really Miss Calvert The newly founded professorship the story of the generation of artists Waltz, Op. 64, No. 2 .......... Chopin will differ from several chairs of who come after the modern masters. Prelude in C sharp minor....... . poetry established at other universi- ( In more than four hundred pages.....................Rachmaninoff ties both by virtue of the condition of firm and resilent prose, Mr. Mr. Churchill that the term "poetry" be interpreted Kreymborg contrives to tell us his Accompaniments by Gwendolyn in the broadest sense; and that the domestic troubles, his loves, his early Wilson. creative workers who will occupy the life, how he wrote a Democratic nom- chair. to be chosen regardles of their inating address, and the publicity for CIRCUS! nationality, but must be men of high ; the movie "The Four Horsemen," as A circus is coming to town the af- distinction and preferably of interna- well as to weave into his yarn por- ternoon and evening of June sixth; a tional reputation. traits, anecdotes, and quotations from fine, modern affair with electric lights Evidence of gratitude for the ef- and about people whose names are as and a water wagon. The menagerie, forts of former teachers are too sel- Mr. Rosenfeld's "Men Seen" is a they say, is colozzal, and includes dom forthcoming from alumni ranks, household things to poetry readers. along with its other world-beating and it is an encouraging sign that sort of who's-who of the moderns, divertissements a tremendous pageant Mr. Stillman should designate the from a pointed commentary on of the Jungle--a thrilling, unparal- professorship as a memorial to his I d'Annunzio to Scott Fitzgerald. His leled spectacle of divas in the manner S (GRAHAM'S State Street Store . .... m .mmm . MAN N'SL fAroSE Straws and Panamas at Reasonable Prices We Also do, High Class Work ini CLEANING AND REBLOCKING Panama Hats Regular Factory Work No Acids Used FACTORY HAT STORE. 617 Packard St. Phone 7415 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) f n[.s-' t?^ r "' [,w.- __ -'i __ - . . -"a _ _ INTERESTING FACTS OF HISTORY George Washington and His Commission On July 3, 1775, Gen. George This comm"ission was the first Washington took command of historic document signed by , i~ the colonial forces at Cam- John Hancock and next to the A bridge,Mass.,withinthe shadow Declaration of Independence, of Harvard College. This event signed by him the next year, is will be appropriately celebrated the most important. oJul 3 1925. snhdThe original engrossed copy of 142 The commission, which made the Washington commission t' jGeorge Washington "General can be seen in the Library of and Commander-in-Chief of Congress. A photographic copy the Army of the United of this commission, aswell as a Colonies" by vote of the Con- facsimile of the Declaration of StnentalCongress at Philadel- Independence, has been repro- phia, is dated June 19, 1775, and duced by the John Hancock is signed by John Hancock, who Mutual Life Insurance Comr /f was then President of Congress. pany of Boston.i The John Hancock is particularly interested in insuring college men and women and in obtaining college graduates for the personnel of the field staff. -2 Over Sixty Years in Busi./. "4 ness. Now Insuring Over r~%r6fd'uav4 Two Billion Dollars in T Policies on 3,500,000 lives 6 .IJFE INSURANCECOMPANY SOS$aTON. MAsAcncU5Sa , BUSINESS ,STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WM. D. ROESSER Advertising.................E. L. Dunne Advertising................R. . Winter Advertising.................H. A. Marks Advertising... ............ .B. W. Parke: Accounts.................H. M. Rockwell Circulation....................John Conlin Publication..................R. D. Martin i f 0 . i e r 3 1 F 7 ARE I P. W. Arnold W. F. Ardussi 1. M. Alvin& W. C. Bauer Irvin Berman Rdn nhB Rntln Assistants K. F. Mast F. E. Moshei H. L. Newmnann T. D. Olmstead R. if. Prentisb W C _ P jh RIO ? ua UPsi oateman ... use George P. Bugbee F. . Rauner old teacher, an emblem of gratitude work bristles with the same names singing sentimental ballads from ele- B. apln . B Ryn or he odtht P'f' hants ut' backs, of side-splitting H. F. Clark . E. Sandberg for the good that Professor Norton that Mr. Kremborg's does; but so phants C. Consroe F. K. Schoenfeid accomplished for Harvard. much more objectively. His attitude clowns, of cabbages and kings and all Ge. rg enohnson A. Sr e onstoward them, however, is fully as the negro stake-drivers granding' 0. A. Jlose,Jr. M. M. SmithTI sympathetic-he puts his moneyon whacking at clanging triangles.f R. K. Klein I. J. Winenian That's a fast one,-they're consider- Ismahtcepusis onyonITecruoftdyihglyha- W. L. Mullins ing Oldfleld, of Arkansas, as chairman the younger generation with as ful- The circus of today is highly Chang- of the Democratic National committee. some faith. ed from the puny thing you knew ten Mr. Rosenfeld is the logical succes- years ago. It has become efficient ; FRIDAY, MAY 29, 1925 The trouble with Gar Wood's race sor to James Huneker. He has the and dazzling. You should be worried was that he was racing a train sched- same journalistic verve, the same en- about yourself if you have not apas- Night Editor-THOMAS V KOYKKA ule, not a locomotive, thusiasm ,for dark horses, the same sion for these raucous, sene. kindof emor, aquiitiv of'in dinotherium of the American scene. ELECTED TO D0,-AND DOING Can YOU remember all the weather forming scraps. None of the essays The 1925-26 Student council has records that have been made during present complete discussions of the Palmer Crian we setAh . .the past few years?1 work of any of the artists consid- nArbita il rsn h started in with a vengeance, and following Organ Recital;Sunday af- Bred; they all hold out fragmentary, shhold outmfregmentary ternoon in Hill auditorium at 4:15i shows promise of being by far the Finding Amundsen may be a matter, judgments, half ideas, no more. "Men rno'clock: Hm most constructive of Michigan's stud- primarily, of finding the pole. Seen" is a convenient handbook to Concert Overture...... Maitland ent governing bodies of the past. At --the more inaccessible of the new peo- CarillonDel t the council meeting Wednesda~y night, This year's crop of examination re- ! pie as Marsden Hartley, Guillaume C. .amarIer thoni etn ensa iht it nld iesl.ICapriccio......... ...Faulkes committees were 'appointed to inves- I fs include a fire sale.__ Appollinaire, et al., but as criticism Aux Etoiles .up ____________________ it should be regarded as an outline of Toct n uu i unr Bc tigate several matters that have long Toccata and Fugue in'D minor:.Bach needed attention, and judging from CAMPUS OPINION the future rather than a summing up Prelude to"Lohengrin"......Wagner the progress made thus far in bther Anonymous communications will be of the past. Goblin Dance ... . ..Dvorak matters, the new councilmen mean to d henes ocnunsd Melody in F.............Rubinstein: solve the problems with which they , cants will however, be regarded aIseats of the mighty, having been an- Rhapsody Catalane..........Bonnet are confronted. frnounced as acting editor of the Dial * * * The resolution which was passed NOT FOR SUPPRESSION in that periodical's most recent issue. THERE ARE NO TEARS, LADY petitioning the Board of Regents to To the Editor: Other and more potent praises than "I have been a slave of the theatre. hire a rooming house inspector is a It has come to my attention that mine have commended her lucid and It has tethered me to the mile radius good one, and one that is really tan- there is a report being circulated scientific mind. Mr. Kreymborg of foul and sooty air, as a goat gible. Something must be done to that the Department of Intercolle- gives, in "Troubadour," an amusing is tethered in the little circle of improve the present rooming condi- giate Athletics bought up all the issue story of how he and William Carlos cropped and trampled grass that tions, especially with respect to over- of The Michigan Daily of May 14 Williams hope to present her with a makes the meadow ashamed. Every congestion, and a list of approved containing a communication written new experience by taking her to a day it clamors for its tale of written rooming houses for men would be of by Robert C. Angell, headed "Is It ball game, but it turned that the om- words; so that I am like a man fight- great value. With this system, an in- Worth While," the object being to niscient Miss Moore had read "Mr. ing a windmill; I have hardly time to coming freshman could find, in the prevent this article from being dis- Mathewson's' book on the art of stagger to my feet from the knock- office of the Dean of Students, a list tributed generally. I pitching.i.t. down blow one sail, when the next of those houses which are most de- The facts are as follows: When I Her verse is somewhat akin to that stricks ne down. sirable as living quarters. read this communication, I believed 'of Mr. Eliot, but still very much her "Consider my position. Consider irabe as living qurters ren ad tis d cnunicationr Ix believes own. She "belongs" to the same ten- how humiliating it is, after making But a nmore important action was that I should secure five or six copies dec-h d-mtonizn ofp- the most dazzling displays of profes- the appointment of an Honors Course of this issue in addition to the one I y committee. This committee is to received and the one sent to the Ath itry. Let me quote a fair sample: sional ability, to have to tell the peo- I TAnItaMrlRtpie how clever it all is. Besides, study the advisability of establishing letic office. These I mailed to some Y o ma inkofm ay mn the get tieder it at in. B ith-, . You make me think of many men thygtirdf ,thtinlywh- honors courses, such as now exist in prominent University of Michigan O theEngishandecoomis dpar- mn.Once met to be forgot again out dreaming of disputing the alleged the English and, economics depart- men.brlinth le ments, in other departments of the There was no effort made to buy Or merely resurrected brilliancy, they begin to detest it. I In a parenthesis of wit sometimes get quite frantic letters University. up the issues ad no attempt was That found them hastening through from people who feel that they can-i In the appointment of this Honors matte by anyone, anywhere to secure it not stand me any longer. Course committee, the members of for the Athletic association more than T Student council have taken a defi- the EIGHT COPIES, which were' 0riskutoibesinspted methe rateful are:themaaers.mAey nite step forward; they have brought purchased at the office of The Michi- Mmforeearin l Ino:etheyf areoiml than one conventional soul with- his Ifrbang. Istead of looking upon out the fact that at least a part of the gan Daily. These copies were brought freakish foreign ways with poetical me as their guide, philosopher and student body wants the Universiy to for distribution-not for suppression. typography. In the first of his forty- friend, they regard me merely as the! get away from its present factory- FIELDING H. YOST. aythrrh.nt-one poems he says, speaking of sky-atherof esofailva like form, grinding out knowledge, Ison their profession and privacy. and to open the way for more indi- LET THE WOMEN SWIM! tsg:"These circumstances will not bear vidual work. Real knowledge does To the Editor:th k thinking of. I have never had time not come from absorbing lectures, It seems to me that it would be a was to think of them before; but now I and books which hold no interest for splendid move on the part of the man- have nothing else to do. Ten times the individual, but rather from the in- agement of the Michigan Union if it can dy lu today I am compelled to reflect on terested pursuit of some particular would extend the privileges of theI minousd!my past life, and I can never justify subject. The Student council has new swimming pool to women of the edible myself the- spending of these three recognized this fact, and it is to be University during certain hours of the spry years o dramatic criticism. I have commended for taking a definite step week. Such an offer would receive, pinks shy sworn an oath to endure no more of comened ortakmt a deinte te II am sure, the hearty assent of time! lemons toward more honors courses. In of the Uerty. It wold geens cit. Never again will I cross the Imen of the University. It would greens coo lchocthreshold of a theatre. The subject "I WANT TO I BACK" scarcely deprive them of opportunities olate is exhausted; and so am I. Oftimes one wonders just how r swiming. If necessary a nomi- "Still, the gaiety of nations must fhte nest woe M usgtn, hoy nal sum could be charged to prevent ! This curious business is the her!- not be eclipsed. The long string of much the University of Michigan, any loss to the Union. tage of the greatest war for democ- betiful lad h university in fact, means to the grad-e utnifultdnw thot tha r n ps rnn thnti tnnk im willv-niillv to-__.-----ent-in- , HEN you walk into the presence of the nman who is going to pay your salary are you going to be able to satisfy him as to abili- ty? Prepare now! Prepare here for Success 'HAMILTON BUSINESS COL- LEGE State & William Sts. Ann Arbor I ir Will you be in Ann Arbor this summer? MARBRUCK TEA SHOP will be open until August 15th Luncheon 11:30-- 1:30 Afternoon Tea 3:30--5:30 Dinner 5:30- -7:00 ri-T- FOR YOUNG MEN SA tIE BY EDERHEIMER STEIN COMPA Y mCusPANoe-y S f tin In Sl b= I w Tom Corbett's. You'll find_ _ a large display of suits in . - - ' = te newest -styles and the- .. -' fisyo n wanydalsatifction your suit before you leave wll por home. In no appare SCyoufiend the typical col- t ewtesto strongly vi- fence as in FiTFORM + CLOTHES. a wa - We will be closed on Decoration Day. Open ti9:30 Frd your s - Ory~rC~~eene r s w: M r r r r w M " Y" r 4 , fi M 1 Y I t 1 I A 1 1