THE MICHIGAN DAILY lecturer, have their very definite in- Dir ti " tegral part in the cultural life of a d even morning excePt Monday great university and it is gratifying he -ing the niversty year by te Board in ntr' Of 1) e' ilhmtoti d1eirbe ne ''mree cditorial sociation. the Associatdi Pres a eis xclusiely en- ed to the use for rublicatiN of all news patches credited to it or not otherwise dited in this paptrn a :d th ?oca news pvb- !ied herein. Sntered at the potoffice at Ann Arbor, chigan, as second class matter. Special rate postage granted by Third Assistant Pest. ister General. ubscription by warrier. $4.00; by mail, Offices: Ann Arbor Press Buildiag, May - d Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 1925 MANAGING EDITOR JO H. CHAMBERLIN itor..,..... .....,, ....Ellis -'. Merry r Mihigan Weekly,.Charle E . Behymer ws editor................Philip C. Brooks y mcaof. .... .... Courtlana C. Smith >men's Editor......... Marian L. Welles orts Editor........Herbert E. Vedder eater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr. sistant City Editor.. ..Richard C. Kurvink Night Editors bert E. Finch G. Thomas McKean Stewart Hooker Kenneth G. Patrick ul J. Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum Reporters ther Anderson Sally Knox argaret Arthur [obn. H. Malomey x A. Bochnovtski Marion McDonald an Campbell Charles S. Monroe sie Church Catherine Price nchard W. Cleland Harold L.P assman rence N. Edelson Morris W. Quinn rgaret Gross' Rita Rosenthal ilborg Egeland Pierce Rosenberg rjorie Folmer Eleanor Scribner mes B. Freeman Corinne Schwarz 'bert J. Gessner Robert G. Silbar aine E. Gruber Howard F. Simon ce Hagelshaw George E. Simons eph ES. Howell Rowena Stillman Wallace Hushen Sylvia Stone aries R. Kaufman George Tilley illiam F. Kerby Bert. K. Tritscheller wrence R. Klein Edward L. Warner, Jr. rald J, Kline Benjamin S. Washer k L. Lait, Jr Toseph Zwerdling BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 tUSINESS MANAGER WiLLIAM C. PUSCH G Man ge H Annable Itr. vertisig . Richard A Meyer ve-twing .. . ..Edward L. Huise vetJsic john . ' Ruswinckel cot . f.Raymond Wachter George B. Ain, Jr. ~ii-n , ,, arvey Talcot Assistants erge Bradley Ray Hofelich -rie Brummele, Hal A. Jaeha ::e- annrpnte; ames lJrdan Aries . Cone Marion Kerr rhara oiv;ei' Thales N. Lenington rx Uivelt Catherine McKinL, asie V. Egdea' Dorothy Lyons as [ lker Alex K. Scherer thein e Frohn George Spater uglass Fulleci Ruth Thompsow atrice GHeenev Nerbert E. Varim I"t: .ross Lawrence Walkiey Ill nallWe TUESDAY,' MAY 15, 1928. Night Editor-CHARLES S. MONROE BOYS Today will mark the final effort on the part of the Student Chris- tian association to raise funds for the University of Michigan Fresh Air camp for needy boys, which is held annually at Paterson lake. No brief is, necessary to es- tablish the value of this enterprise to the 400 under-privileged boys who will receive a 12 day vacation out of doors. The first of the two tag days, held yesterday, net- ted $1,883. The goal of the drive, or the amount necessary to carry out the full program planned, is $3,000. Further comment should be unnecessary. THE NEW ORGAN Tonight will mark the opening re- cital in Hill auditorium on the new Frieze memorial organ, built by the most famous builder of organs in the world. The new instrument has been con- structed at a cost of more than $75,- 000, and replaces the original Frieze memorial organ which was obtained; from the music hall of the World's Fair in Chicago. The world's great organists had been attracted by the famous instrument of that day. When the superb work of modern man's handicraft formally assumes its niche in the affairs of the University, few will realize the great forest of metal wind-trunking, first from the blower room to the organ chamber, and then to the various divisions in the chamber, which is included in the organ. Few may appreciate the ex- istence of 8.000 pipes in the instru- ment, the many tone colors, includ- ing diapason, string, wood-wind, and brass, requiring pipe-work of wood. and three or four kinds of metal in varying proportion and weight to ac- complish the desired results. Further- more, there may not be many who willE recognize the great range afforded by the new organ by means of reed pipes to give the delicate and beau- tiful Vox Humana, the clarinet, the oboe, the English horn, the French horn, the trumpet, the trombone, and the tuba effects, to the very fortissimo Contra Bombarde. But certainly none of those who will attend the event tonight can fail to comprehend the value such a recognition of the true worth of good music can have among the members, present and future, of the faculty and student body of this institution. wT.... ... ..'.. - - AA .«4;.1.. a....,..,1 to see the need recognized and the advancement made by University offic- ials. LANTERN NIGHT Ranking foremost among the tradi- tions revered by Michigan women is Lantern Night. Coming as it does as a present day reminder of May day functions which have taken place every year since the founding of the University, it remains as the one significant custom of the graduating ceremonies which includes all Mich- igan women. That it does strive to preserve this tradition has almost been lost sight of during recent years. Always the ceremony has attracted large aud- iences which come to see the truly picturesque scene of the senior women wearing caps and gowns winding down the hill carrying their lighted lanterns. Too often in the past the women of the lower classes have been content to come and watch. This year, however, they are being urged not merely to attend but to join in the line of march which follows the seniors and is in a historic way a homage paid them by the underclass- es on graduation. From the returns of the recent pres- idential primary it is quite apparent that Indiana still prefers government of the people, for the people, and buy the people. It is to be hoped that the local as- sociation of landladies will duplicate shortly the contribution of the Detroit alumni who have given $25,000 for the purchasing of land for dormitories. Little Joe 'Horner, former Michigan athlete, defeated President Clarence Cook Little in a shot-putting contest at the alumni triennial on Saturday. That is the first time that Michigan has ever beaten a Harvard athletic representative, and that came only after the President's two year con- nection with the University. The dedication of the new Frieze memorial organ in Hill auditorium has attracted at least as much attention as the exploits of the B. basketball team. CAMPUS OPINION Annonymous communications will be disregarded. The name' of communi cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Letters pub lished should not be construed as ex- m'sing the editorial opinion of The Daily. HONOR AND HONOR To the editor: The Honor System and its relation to the student body has long been the target of adverse criticism. There is much to say both for and against the present system used in the Engi- neering college; few of us feel com- petent to pass final judgment but the Student Committee realizes that some response is warranted to the violent pessimistic 'outburst 'that appeared in a recent campus opinion. To quote the author, "It is common knowledge that -the Honor System in the Engineering school is unsuccess- ful and any engineer will tell of the amount' of c"ribbing that goes on dur- ing exmingtions an of how books and references are planted to be of assistanice tb the' stud'ent."' Wholesale cribbing of,this, type is ,a complete surprise to us, and moreover we are prepared at any" time to disprove it to any of the numerous doubters. This is not Freshman idealism, vague be- lief, or silly'optifnism* we'know froi observation ,and experience tha.t it }is useless to draw comparisons. We do not claim to be posse'ssors of a curb- .all or a panacea for dishonesty and deceit, neither do we believe it is possible to change such natures in the brief period of four years or less. Perhaps it is possible that the pre- sent system. is an invitation for some massive intellect to successfully cheat entirely unsupervised, 'it may further inspire him with the foresight and cunning necessary to plant a book in such a position that he can make numerous excursions to it, and with no mean ability copy the examination word for word. For the Engineering Honor System is not to prevent dis- honor, its chief objective is to assunie that a student is intrinsically honest, that he will appreciate being trusted and will be worthy of the trust. It is possible for him to cheat often without being detected but should he be found violating the trust his punishment will be sure and swift. What is worse than punishment, he loses our respect and has more of our sympathy. The University College has been a means of bringing this subject to a head. Whether the Honor System would succeed in it is a matter of much discussion. The Student Coun-# cil, Phi Eta Sigma and other corn- ~" HEAP BIG INJUTNt BIG-SHOTS THIS AFTERNOON the heap big injun big-shots are going to collabor- ate with the S. C. A. tag committee in making it hot for a lot of students. * * * DO.DGING THE S. C. A. wasn't so! hard for the athletes, politicians, and l the rest who seem to be able to laugh it off quite easily - but they'll have a nice time, awful nice, if they get the summons of the heap big injun big-shots. INJUNS ON WAR PATH , When from out the Union tap- room From behind the baby's bright face Come the loud and bounding three cheers Telling that the long-mourned "spirits" Wander 'cross the Detroit river Lighting noses of the students; Then the heap big injun big-shots In their knickers and their golf socks Soon gather 'round the back porch 'Round the back porch called Sorosis There to greet the missing link- men Many there await the bidding Of the ballyhooing redskins For before they take the autos To the home of injun big-shots Lots of bluff and story telling First must prove their pull and framing 'Ere the reddish noses bid them hello 'Ere they call each baby big-shot 'Ere the jug of Haig is emptied. ANOTHER TOMORROW TONIGHT: First concert on the new Freize Memorial organ given by Palmer Christian, University organist, in Hill auditorium, at 8:15 o'clock. ** * "A MAN'S MAN" A review by Robert Wetzel Last week there slipped into Detroit a modest divertisement, unheralded by the brave music of publicity; it found a quiet haven in the Cass, tarried seven days, and, folding its scenery like the tents of Mr. Longfellow's Arabs, as silently slipped away. Yet somehow, despite a cautious press- agent, the information leaked out that "A Man's Man" revived several years after its appearance on Broadway, was in the city across from Windsor; and so the civilized minority formed themselves into a hollow square and attended it. They saw the best Amer- ican comedy to cross Detroit's pros- ceniums this season. A vivid lithograph of homesteaders in Harlem, "A Man's Man" speaks tell- ingly of that bourne so recently in- vestigated by Miss Delmar's "Bad Girl." Edie and Mel Tuttle live in a flat next to the elevated; they eke out their little lives beneath the rumble of the passing trains. Charlie Groff is a shipping clerk in a cinema corporation, their friend, a loquacious show-off with a' tongue of silver, if not silver-plate. He can, he declares, get Mel in the Elks along with the regular fellas- for a consideration; and he will put Edie in one of that guy De Mille's pic- tures in exchange for an eminently suitable reward. So, unknown to each other, Mel THE HEAP BIG injun big-shots tak- gives Charlie his Savings, and Edie en for the ride will be baptized and her body; and they are both, as the christene in tomorrow's Rolls. saying is, gypped. Charlie reveals to * * * t them their mutual deception; Mel FROM Tgoes out to kill Charlie, and returns KW, FROM THE sublime to the ; smessy-Charlie has knocked what is ridic llous, here is that contribution' th at Speechless turned in some days'technically known as the hell out of . him. Edie mothers /her battered hus- ago. band. They'll have a baby, maybe, HAVE YOU HEAR and he'll go to college and everything, and be just a real good Elk. * * * Three Star: THE FIRST CONCERT Have you heard that the girls over M at Helen Newberry have gotten so Music makes strange bedfellows- popular that they had to install a one who has spent his entire life in switchboard in the "Residence" Which I liberated Aerica-the only country Would"fiake even the Ypsi damsels 1 in the world where there is such a Ithing as "good music"-may sudden- enviorly find himself hob-nobing with a By the installation the management has succeeded in creating another ban person who has spent his youth i f the uplift of our fair, only fair. the Carpathians- where folk-music and horrid Moldavian counts come roc -c ffttomers are only allowed th, conversing with the de- from-and who learned to sing by sired b three minutes. calling sheep. And it is a noteworthy s4'r Seechless fact that the cultivated American who P.S -.'wonder if that three men never, never makes a mistake at the . ba' Helen's was not etc table often discovers himself singing a mad in the same cast as -z --ETAOIN give some of the less fluent maidensss a chant: the decree should encour- in the same cast with a man who eats age some of the boys to try that mnu- his sardines from the can. Such is the ber if all the more desirable ones are case in tomorrow night's program; the beir d l ofeatured artist Margarete Matzenaur" busy. was born in Temesevar, Hungary, N0, HAVE YOUI Palmer Christian in America, and as for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra SORRY, SPEECHLESS, but our I -it is notorious that a symphony or- tivities are confined to other region chestra is a melange of all the na- nvite ae confied. other re tionalities in Western and Central Europe. The press-agents of Marga- rete Matzenaur, however, have invent- THAT REMINDS US that unless ed no such picturesque breach of table the contributions get a little heavier= ,manners for her as is mentioned there'll be no real contributors' day above. this week. Think of some of the The following is the program for stuff that ought to be pretty good and the Wednesday night concert: have it in to * * * by Thursday at Soloists: Margaret Matzenauer, con- the latest. tralto, Palmer Christian, organist, The * .* * Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Fred- AND HOW THEY BOOED crick Stock and Eric DeLamarter (Guest) conductors. Mabel Ross ONE OF THE chesty baseballers Rhead, piano accompanist. Just came in and after making it Overture, "The Flying Dutchman" well-known that the only thing to oc- -Wagner cupy his. mind now is the finding of Arias: (a) "Voce di donna" from "La a fair, only fair, coed to give his gold Gioconda"...............Ponchielli baseball to, continued to tell how they' "Ah mon fils" from "Le Prophete" booed a certain Corrie Den at Iowa -Meyerbeer City: ' Margaret Matzenauer * * * Concerto No. 1 for Organ and "Gwan," the rabid Iowans shouted,' Orchestra............DeLamarter "you should have broken your neck Fast, with verve; Very slowly; instead of just hurting your ankle." I Brightly. * * * Palmer Christian ANYHOW, "YOU'LL pay dearly for (The Composer Conducting) this," said the butcher as he leaned (Dedication of the new Frieze Me- on the scale. morial Organ, built by the Skinner GAR RICK Starting Sunday, May 13 Nights 75c 'to $2.50-Wed. Mat. 50c to $1.,0-Sat. Mat. 50c to $2. L. C. Wlswell, lne., Presents PAULINE FR4IDERICK In ' New Smashing Comedy Hit "THE SCARLET WOMAN" jv'l o e We Can Help You This Clean-Up Week Phone 4191 Garment Cleanin Company 209 South 4th Avenue C. H. SCHROEN NAOTICE Openin s .or a few more members in the STAR TO UR have eccur-ed~. Th'is is a Personally Con- ducled Tour where second class rail, good hotels, ante and carriage trips, admissions to galleries and museums, services of guides and transportation of baggage is included. 60 DAYS - ONLY $633 Nine countries visited. Leave June 9 or 23. Local people already booked. Sightseeing, Automobile Tours and ideals begin the first day at Montreal, where thre-- meals are included. The next 'day, five hours at Quebec, then Liverpool, Chester, London five clays, Brussels, IHague, Amsterdam, steamer down. the Rhine, Wiesbaden, I feidel- >erg, Lucerne, Interlaken, iMontrenx, Zi'ich, uiaLeipzig, esd n, erlin, Cologne, 'ars five days, then to Montreal or New York. Italy may be included if desired. This is an ideal ton, being, ably conducted, affording confcrtablt! accenlaodations and especially congenial' surroundings at a min- mnum cost. Better hotels and more private rides than usual. In this Escorted Group, travel is accomplished without responsibility. List of hotels and folders by applying to Phone 6412 Agent for All Steamship Lines to Europe, Orienmt. '(:p titeI Lakes, Tours to Yeilowstone, New York, etc, "peril ,oOo fAoursr to n~ooseFrm E. G. KUEBLER STEAMSHIP AGENCY; 601 E. Huron St. Ann Arbor 0.O T U C E To College Men We can cut the brim of your but downm to aniy width you' like and clean and reblock it into the very latest shape. NO ODOR-NO GLOSS No burned or cracked sweat bands. 9 Panama hats and straw hats of c = all kinds bleached and re- S blocked to look like. new.. No Sacids used. New sweat bands and outside bands. Fancy bands if desired. We do enly high class work. C See us for your 'new Panama hat.' We buy them in the rough from the importer and make them nu} ourselves. A fine hat for $7.C0 and $8.00. Felt Haat Sale now on. All of E cur hnts are, equal in quality to the best hits made. S FACTORY HAT SHOP _ 617 Packard St. Phone 7415. (Whee reD .U . Stops at State) 5 lI11I illll1111111IIIHl 11111{IIIIgE= H EA T ER h 4 K S Hot Music -:- - - - - Novelties Bud Golden'S ELEVEN WOLVERINES Granger' s Academy When Dad was a "Modern Youth" ICYCLES,stereopticon lectures, and the "gilded" youths with their horses and carts; at night the midnight oil burning in student lamps while the gas lights glared and flickered across the campus - the gay nineties when Dad was in college seem primitive to us to-day. Now it's sport roadsters, the movies, and radios. At night street lighting sheds its friendly glow over the campus. Without electricity we would have none of these improve- ments. To-day's marvel of electrical invention becomes to-morrow's accepted utility. In the coming years, by taking advantage of new uses of electricity you will be able to go so much farther Three Star NOTICE TO MY PUBLIC Three star, ordinary conductor of this column, must have left in a hurry this afternoon, for now, at approxi- mately' twenty-nine minutes after ten at night, this column is under-set three inches. I am going to fill it up. * * * Well, that above is one inch. We'll Organ Company, Boston, Massachu- setts) Songs: Sapphische Ode ..... Brahms i Von Ewiger Liebe....... Brahms Widmung.............Schumann Erlkonig...............Schubert Mme. Matzenauer Intermission Organ Solos: Scherzo, "Hymn of Pan" ... Moore Impression.............Karg Elert Toccata, "Thou Art the Rock" s I the MAzDA lamp replaces the midnight oil in dormi- tory rooms, while modern 0 that the "tearg twenties" will seem just as primitive as the "gay nineties". Scientists in the research laboratories of the General.Electric Company keep G.E. a leader in the field of electrical progress. Skilled G-E engineers develop each latest invention. The G-E factories carry out the engineers' designs with 1