'T HF MTrT4T[;AN nATT .Y VrT- TTIl.Q"A "V' M A V i rl lu, r t rn j I t bconnecting link between the student body and the faculty from the Stu- Published every morning except Monday 'dent council, or in giving expression tring the University year by the Board in to studentthought through the col- ntrol4 of Student Publctions umns of student publications. Theirs, emei *' Wster. Coference Editorial also, is the office of representing the The Associated Press is exclusively en- University on the athletic field against itled to the use for republication of all news other institutions; and theirs, finally, lispatches credited to it or not otherwise :redited in this paper and the local news pub- is the duty of representing publicly tished herein, the best that Michigan can produce at Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, its state University. Michiganas second class matter. Special rate Red paint, and war whoops, and if postage granted by Third Assistant Pst- bakcrrde eoeqieadf 'naster General. blank cartridges become quite a di- 4Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, ferent thing when considered in this Uffces: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- quite different light. The initiation card Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 2114. into an honor society is a recognition, in a way, to the man received, but it EDITORIALSis a deep and somewhat solemn re- Telephone 4925 sponsibility imposed on him by the MANAGING EDITOR same move. If the future of Michigan JO H. CHAMBERLIN is in any way bound up with the -ditor..... EllisEP. Merry present interests of its student body, d')r Michigan Weekly..-Charle E. Behymer News 7ditor...............Philip C. Brooks and if the men chosen for these so- Women's Editor.........Marian L. Welles cieties represent the best of student Sports Editor..--------Herbert E. Vedder thought that that student body has to Theater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Assistant City Editor.. -.Richard C. Kurvink offer, then the societies become more Night Editorsthnasetclr nd omw t Robert E. Finch G. Thomas McKean than a spectacular and somewhat Stewart Hooker Kenneth G. Patrick empty honor; and they become a vital Jau . Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. m oving oren the life o the Milton Kirshbaum and moving force in the life of the Reporters Esther Anderson . Sally Knox University.- Margaret Arthur Tohn If. Maloney Theory would seem to indicate, and Alex A. Bochnowki Marion McDonald ean Campbell Charles S. Monroe experience has proved, that honor so- essie Church Catherine Price lanchard W. Cleland Harold L. Pasman cieties, at least on this campus, ac- Clarence N. Edelson Morris W. Quinn c. .a Margaret Gross Rita Rosenthal complish far reaching and material Valrorg Egeland Pierce Rse berg benefits for the University that are Marjore Folmer Eleanor Scribner ames B. Freeman Corinne Schwarz scarcely appreciated to their full mag- I obertjT. Gessner Robert G. Silbar Elaine . Gruber Howard F. Simon nitude. It is doubtless fitting and Alice Hagelshaw George E. Simons proper to congratulate men chosen for Joseph R,. Howell Rowena Stillman Wallace Hushen Syvia Stone membership in these groups- men parles R. Kaufman George Tilley William F. Kerby Bert. K. Tritscheller who wear red paint-but it is equally Lawrence R. Klein Edward L. Warner, Jr. fitting and proper to remind them of Donald J. Kline Benjamin S. Washer ack L. Lait, Jr. Joseph Zwerdlig the responsibility which has become theirs-a responsibility in leadership, elephneS2TAFF activity, and example which can not be taken lightly. A responsibility, it BUSINESS MANAGERis, which bears closely on the future WILLIAM C. PUSCH of Michigan. Assistant Manager...George H. Annable, Jr. Advertising..... .. .Richard A. Meye CAPS AND GOWNS Advertising..............Edward L. Hulser Advertising...........John W. Ruswinckel Today, as on all Wednesdays Accounts................Raymond Wachter Intervening between Swing-Out Circulation.........George B. An, Jr. Publication ...... . .Harvey Talcott and Commencement, seniors are Geerge Bradley ayntHofelich requested to wear their caps and Marie Brummeler Hal A. Jaehn gowns to classes. The tradition lames Carpenter lames Jordan Charles K. Correl Marion Kerr of thus distinguishing seniors dur- Barbara CroneU Thales N. Lenington ing their last month on campus is Marv. iliveh Catherine MKinven Bessie V. Egeland Dorothy Lyons an old and colorful one which has Una fielker -Alex K. Scherer Katherine Frohc George Spater been allowed to lapse partially in Douglass Fuller Ruth Thompson the past few years. Beatrice Greenberg Herbert E. Varnum Helen Gross Lawrence Walkley This year, the Student Council .r . Hammer Hannah Wallen and The Daily have made a par- THURSDAY, MAY 17, 1928. ticular effort to revive the custom in all its former significance, and Night Editor-PIERCE ROSENBERG the cooperation of all seniors is solicited. The first Wednesday of wearing the caps and gowns, last week, attracted considerable re- RED PAINT AND THE . spouse.. It is to be hoped that the FUTURE OF MICHIGAN practice will not be allowed to The title of this editorial is very lag for the remaining few weeks odd. There is small connection, in of the semester. fact, between red paint and any Uni- - versity if we look at the superficial A. headline from a New York news- paper reads: "$125,000 Gems Stolen side of the situation. Few students From N. Y. Store." Why, that would will make an off-hand association be- not even get in a Chicago paper. tween the two things, and probably fewer professors will make such an k association. Some persons, in fact, CAMPUS OPINION will probably fail entirely to associate Annonymous communications will be the two things through their common disregarded. The names of communi- denominator-honor societies. cants will, however, be regarded as denoinatr-horor ocieies.confidential upon request. Letters pub- This week has seen and next week lised should notrbe construedras x- g ressig the editorial opinion of The will see the annual spring initiations Daily. hT by the five campus honor societies. Tuesday afternoon Michigamua, old- To the editor: , est and most influential of the group, It is to be fondly hoped that the held its initiation; yesterday Sphinx; and Triangles, Junior literary and en- contention appearing in Friday's Daily kineering honor societies, held their as to the "impossibility" of establish- spring initiating ceremonies, amid the ing the honor system in the Literary" usual public demonstrations and dis- college will be taken by the majority7 :urbances. Next week the final pair, of the Literary students with a most Vulcans and Druids, will stage their generous helping of Salt. From time eremonies on the campus. immemorial we have been told that All of these initiations have a high few things are impossible, and the entertainment value to the onlooker establishment of the honor system in md a very flattering influence on the largest of our colleges is not one .hose initiated. Few more picturesque of them, regardless of the implied fact ceremonies could be devised than the that chaos now reigns in the Engi- >udlic demonstrations. of Sphinx or neering examinations. he meeting of the tribe of Michigam- While it is to be regretted that the ja around Tappan oak. If this were honor system is not working in the lhe only purpose of the societies they Engineering college, it is nevertheless vould doubtless justify themselves, worthy of note that this college stillF .a F T Tra 1'A1V- .J lVAA'..l-iJ.Jl V..) L Zi..J A- 7i L uLxA~X s MA~sX 1 ,9Ii. t t ____ i d ! / / / /! / O J l / / I / i T i 4 !! / N l / / / / / / / / !/ / OASTED®RLL INTRODUCINGf THE POET LAUREATE WELL, IT WAS worth it-even i the federal authorities do catch u fo robbing the mails, we are happy to b so martyred for the cause. This i what we way-laid on the way to th Inlander: * * * ODE ON INTIMATIONS OF THE IXWORTALITY OF THE CIGGY BUTT To G. F. All hail, thou smouldering ciggy butt, Be thou Lucky, Chesterfield, or wha Old Gold, thou treaare of them all- But why shouldst litter Angell Hall All hail, thou half-extinguished wee That comforted man in his hourly need, Thou blessed respite in life's wild trammel- But what smells worse than a dyin Camel. Oh banished butt, but not yet gone, Not relegated yet to the campus lawn No printed warnings tacked on th wall Have taken thee yet from Angell Hall So elevate still thy stagnant stenchco Thou mashed butts 'neath mouldy benches- No signs can remove the tobacco yearning From President Angell's Hall of Learning. Come, students, from your deadly classes, Light cigarettes inside the door, And departing leave behind you Mashed butts upon the floor. Score ye not the bold professor He who tells you not to smoke. Must not his sense of humor have Its semi-annual joke? Flick your ashes on the steps- Preserve those steps of stone! Ay, maybe then th' insidious moth Will leave those steps alone. Scratch matches on those noble pillars That hark back to the Greeks, For all the sooner will they look Like genuine antiques. And sing, 0 muse, of the janitors' wrath- How they loom through the bluish haze, Plying their brooms among the butts, Sweeping them up with angry gaze, Sing of the sweat upon their brows As they toil in the summer heat, Cursing while they do their best To keep our building neat. Praise the speed of these worthy men As across the floor they go, Like flivvers taking hills on high When the gas is getting low. Smoke on, you men of Michigan, The lighted butt still flout: The Regents have not acted yet To rule your smoking out. Enjoy the privilege while you may, Old time flies like an eagle, And the self-same butt you smoke to- day Tomorrow may be illegal. Closed the boulevard, gone the autos; And three to one we'll bet, Men'll soon be bounced from Michigan For smoking a cigarette. Yellit * * * YELLIT'S OWN STORY "AS IS WELL-KNOWN hereabouts, hough there is nobody in my family who ever gave a darn about litera- ure, it has always been my ambition o write." WE'LL INTERRUPT HERE just ong enough to caution you that he's not telling the whole truth. Though his identity is really a secret, we'll ip you off to the fact that if you read is name as the Chinese would, you'll e surprised. * * * NOW THAT WE caught him fibbing s they say, wo have no more cre- ence in his story and so we'll forget im and pass to a relate,! subject. * * *E SOME ADVERTISEMENTS a THEATER BOOKS MUsiC i -i TONIGHT: The second Festival program in Hill torium at 8:15 o'clock. May audi- THE MAY FESTIVAL A review by Vincent Wall The doldrums of these calm spring evenings were ruffled last night by the pageantry of the first of the May Fes- tival Concerts. The new organ came to exhibition, along with a richly voic- ed diva, a famous orchestra, a well- known guest conductor and other in- gredients sufficient to please hoity- toity social Ann Arbor, inspired stu- dents from the School of Music, and the hoi polloi that is the rest of us. Wagner's "Flying Dutchman" was given an excellent reading by the orchestra and Frederick Stock. Both were in a virtuoso mood, and Herr RIBBONS AND SUPPLIES for all makes of TYPEWRITERS Rapid turnover, fresh stock insures best quality at a moderate price. O. D. MORRIL L 17 Nickels Arcade. Phone 6615. Woodward, at Eliot BON STELLE PLAYHOUSE NIGHTS, 75c, $1.50. Mats. Tues., Thurs. and Sat., 50c, 75c Week Beginning Mon. May 11 "WHAT ANNE BROUGHT 1O11IE" By Lary E. Johnson "SHAVOLENE surely leaves my skin feeling fine. No burn, no sting, no irritation. Just all-day comfort that's really wonderful t" THOS. W. PLUNKETT 11 Moss Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Packard Motor Car Company SHAVOENE No Breh.a-o Lather Reall ySo f ten your bear furtarmore if you rub' in the bits of WUM2 0r ;lnvoleine remaining after ., j having, you'll get a glo- 0u rlaz r I-us, exhilarating. mas- bla stays sage. tWICe aslone AT ALL DRUGGISTS t d N. t; tl Stock conducted in his usual manner, with clearness and taste and with a definite direction that makes his work both inviting and stimulating. In her first two arias-"Voce di Donna" and "Ah, Mon Fils"- there was proof of Matzenauer's grand sense of style and dramatic temperament;! her voice has not grown hoarse with the wear of the years; it has still that mellow warmth that charms the var and the intelligence. More than that, she is able to be intense, and at the same time restrain her perform- ance within the limits of the concert stage. Her German group later was a well-chosen series of ballads, with- out descending to the sap songs and sentiment that so many prima don- nas seem to think necessary. Mr. DeLamarter's organ concerto that followed (under the baton of the composer) is rich, of extraordinary depth, and blends beautifully with the orchestra; moreover, the performance of Palmer Christian was what might be called inspired. His playing has something in it that even the most adept and agile-fingered of the mod- erns, or the most sincere and metic- ulous of the classicists have failed to grasp. He has simplicity '(which is the attribute of a great artist) coupl- ed with a superb command of that in- tricate complex of stops and key- boards, and finally some sentiment. His second group included a Scherzo, "Hymn of Pan" by Moore, and Mi- let's Toccata, "Thou Art the Rock" that were immense. In a program by ther:selves they would have been a sensation, and last night they were given an ovation of sorts. Matzenauer's last aria was "Gerech- ter Gott" from the Wagnerian circus -I mean the "Rienzi." I have never forgiven Wagner for doing here ex- actly what he accused Meyerbeer of doing-of making his operas a show and spectacle. But it was a splendid vehicle for Madame's talent, and though long and difficult, she possess- ed the power to hold her audience and at the samne time work her will upon the appointed music. In short, it was a very interesting concert, and all very good music. If the rest can aproximate the mark which it has set, the whole may very well be considered a neat but not gaudy! plume in the bonnet of the University Musical Society. * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON PROGRAM Soloists: Benno Rabinof, Violinist; Marie Montana, Soprano Program- Overture to "The Impressario" i T i S r w r + _ i i r CASS THEATRE Nights ...........50c to $3.50 Wed.-Sat. Mats......50c to $2.50 The Musical Sensation You Have Been Waiting For Schwab and Mandel's Thrilling Operetla THWE DESERT SONG, GA R RICK Starting Sulnday, May 13 Nights75e(to $12.50-Wed. Nit. 50c to $1.50-Sat. Mat. 54c to $2. L. C. Wiswell, Inc., Presents PAULINE FREDERICK In q New Smashing Comedy hit "THE SCARLET WOMAN" .I1111IIIII IIIIIDIIID11i1D111D lIIIIIIIl P- =IOITICE To College Men e We can cut the brim of jour hat down to any width you like and clean and reblock it into the Svery latest shape.= NO 0DR-N GLOSS -I No burned or cracked sweat: bands. Panama hats and straw halts of - =all kInds Ijieached amid re- - blocked to look like new. No acids used. New sweat bands and outside bands. Fancy brands if desired. We do only high class work. See us for your new Papauim hat. We buy them in the rough from the imp~orter and mzakeA them up ourselves. A fine hat :. for $7.00 amid $8.00. Felt Hat Sale now on. All of 2 our hats are equal in quality to , - the best hats made.* * FACTORY HAT SHOP 617 Packard St. Phone 7415.- = (Where D. U. It. Stops at State) . ' :.I :. .. M b 1 I i* Subscribe For The Weekly. PLACE YOUR ORDER for Personal Engraved Cards Now 100 Cards and Plate (Script) $2.75 100 Cards and Plate (Solid Old English) $4.00 100 Cards and Plate (Block) $4.00 100 Cards and Plate (Shaded Old English) $5.00 Let us quote you price on Class Announcements and save you money The ayer-Schairer Company STATIONERS, PRINTERS, BINDERS OFFICE OUTFITTERS 2 I b x 4 4 t t 7 112 SOUTH MAIN PHONE 4515 i _. ._ r ~. for every educational institution should have a certain number of pic- turesque traditions, if for. no other reason than the building of associa- tions in the minds of men and women who graduate from its halls. Red paint played and will play a large part in these ceremonies. Such a large part it plays, in fact, that nearly all of the impressiveness of the public ceremony would be lost to at least two of the organizations with- out its employ. Red paint lends at- wosphere, color, and distinction to the cnterprises of the societies represen- ted. has its portion of "flunks" just as those colleges who have the conven- tional eagle-eyed monitors fluttering up one aisle and down the next in a frenzy of anticipation and in a surge of over-estimated self-import- ance. Clearly, then, the furtive plant- ing of books in secret archives of the Engineering buildings is not quite as productive of results at examination time as might be believed. The Freshmen of Phi Eta Sigma have an idea. They would start withl the incoming Freshman class and keep the good work going forever after. And since this scheme has its pos- sibilities, it is not entirely within the province of the Class of 1930, the Class of 1929, or the Class of 1928 to say that it is "impossible." Further-' more we wouldn't even be concerned over the question "To Cheat or Not I to Cheat" if this plan were adopted. The idea is good. Even the most ver- dant incoming Freshman can often overcome a wayward tendency, as t1 t t n h t h b a n1 Ii -Mozart Aria, "Siccome un di" from "The Pearl Fishers".............Bizet Marie Montana Concerto for Violin and Orchestra E Minor, Opus 64....... Mendelssohn Allegro molto appassionato Andante-Allegro non Troppo-- Allegro molto vivace Benno Rabinof Cantata, "The Quest of the Queer Prince" ..................... Hyde Children's Festival Chorus Violin Solos: Waltz Scherzo...........Chabrier Gypsy Caprice........... Kreisler Witches' Dance .......... Paganini Benno Rabinof Songs: The Crying of Waters -Campbell Tipton The Soft-Footed Snow ..Sigurd Lie In the Silence of the Night -Rachmaninoff Love Went a Riding ..Frank Bridge "She Stoops To Conquer"-an all- star revival of Goldsmith's famous Red paint, however, is not the end of the ceremonies in any sense; and that is where it becomes connected with the future of Michigan. Into these honor societies, year after year, go the men who have accomplished most for their University, and whol have given the most to her service. Hidden under the red paint of the ceremonies are students who, in addi- I 11