'" FR STHE MICHIGAN DAILY ., a new intellectual attitude in the student body gen- I hr, t0 4 erally. The organization contemplated by the new plan is in effect an approach to the English system Published every morning except Monday during the University of education. Systems of education, however, are' ar by 111e Board in Control of Student Publications. M mber of the Western Co nfeence Editorial Association. indigenous to the civilization in which they exist. OUR REVIEWER The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- The problem is, therefore, more fundamental; it is IS BACK blication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise ditcd in this Paper and thatlocal news published herein. a question of the standards of our entire American FROM DETROIT Fntered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Midhigan, as second civilization. The development of a new intellectual 1Lastr Friday we sent a member of ss matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant attitude is highly desirable. It is an inspiring ideal stnaster General. toward the development of which every sincere edu- our staff into Detroit to review Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50 cator is striving, but it is too sanguine to believe that "Mourning Becomes Electra." He Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, such a change in attitude can be brought about by has at last returned with a coher- chigan. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. a mere change in the mechanical organization of a ent review which we print forth- EDITORIAL STAFF college. with: Telephone 4925 Dear Friends: MANAGING EDITOR GOOD-BYE RAH! RAH! DAYS-i RICHARD L. TOBIN (Ohio University, Green and White) Well, our Mr. O'Neill has gone ws Editors ......................sne...........yDavid M. Nichol We a s g onef Ti 11.,,. arl Prsvth Possibly on account of the mild winter we have; and done it ag-ain, meaning one of Prof Emil Lorch Do You Know "Sam, The Michigan Man" See "NO MAN'S LAND" R ' rev ity Edito r ..... ...................................% r ditorial Director............................Beach Conger, Jr. ports jditor.................... ...........Sheldon C. Fulleriton1 +m n's dit>r ........................Mararet MALThn "pson ssitantNws litor................. Robt1. Pierce nk B. Gilbreth Roland A.I Karl NIGHT EDITORS J. Culleni Kennedy Tames Goodman Jerry I. Rosenthal Seiffert George A. Stauter I ipp; been enjoying, or possibly because of the mucht lamented financial condition, or most probably forc other reasons, the raccoon coat, once so popular onf the university campus, has not been very evident this; year. And with the coats have gone most of theE "collegiate" flivvers which once flitted through the; streets of Athens.c What his become of them? We are inclined tov think that the much bally-hooed "collegiatism," still r quite the thing in popular magazines, has gone outt of style. Of course, there are still a few heavy, fur coats, and there is still a broken down Ford or two.U But these former symbols of college life have defi-I nitely been transferred to most students' taboo lists.' Now, one must have a dark cloth overcoat, and an t those misconstrued matinee:3 that, our most eminent playwright is so fond of. Mr. O'Neill has a strange yen for breaking up an afternoon and destroying an evening. If the Wilson didn't have the softest seats of any of the Detroit theatres we would have made the dinner inter- mission our last curtain. (We liad the nicest bean soup). As it was we wanted to find out what the production was about, since bron- chial disorders all but ruined the first play. Here we might mention that "Mourning Becomes Electra" W. Jones nMey YW. Arnheim niad F. Blankertz ward C. Campbell las Connellan bert S. )eutsih )rt L. Friedman Sports Assistants John V. Thomas REPORTERS Fred A. Huber Mrold F. Klute I(Aliii.. Mfrshall l~and Martin Albe rt I11.Newman t,. erOInC elt it Pruden : Foster Alice Gill-eTt Fra ncet 14laiwester Elizabeth AMann. Charles A. Sanford (Editor's Note: This is the fif- teenth of a series of articles on out- standing members of the University faculty. Another in the series will appear in this column next week.) By E. Jerome Petit. The primary reason that Mich- igan's College o f Architecture stands among the leaders of mod- ern art schools, is that it has at its head Prof. Emil Lorch. It was mainly through the efforts of Professor Lorch and his faculty that the college was granted, in September, 1913. i n d e p e n d e nt standing by the Board of Regents. And this same faculty, developed by Professor Lorch, is the secondary factor in the formation of the re- markable art school at Michigan today.; This faculty, among the best to be found in this country or abroad, has numbered among its members such famous architects as Eliel Saarien, Ernest Wilby. and the late Albert Rousseau, and, of course, Emil Lorch. Professor Lorch's art education came from numerous institutions in this country and abroad. First at- tending Massachusetts Institute c: Technology for two years, he next went to Paris for a year, and then' returned to enter the graduate school at Harvard. He received his A.M. degree there in 1903. Before this time he had been general assistant to the Director of the Chicago Art Institute for three years and also secretary of the Chi- cago School of Architecture, affil- All of the new colors and weaves in fine brushed yarns and s o f t zephyr wools. $1.95 to $3.50 Spvqortwear ORDER SENIOR I' John W. Pritchard josepi Revihan C'. Hlart Schaaf llrackk-y Shaw Pa; t' rI I, Michigan. The observatory is a nice of Architects. At the present time place and all that, but we wouldn't he is a member of the national.1 care to be born there. committee on registration laws for architects and of the National Council Architectural Registration Item 5.-Professor Hildner: "Who Boards, of which he was once the was Thaddeus Stevens?" president. Answer: "He was an old man 74 At the present time he is concen- years old." trating much of his work upon reg- istration laws for architects. He was one of the authors of two registra- GRID DANCE CELEBRITIES. tion laws for architects, in 1914; The wires are hot today with the and the author of a law for joint news that John "Crumb" Reindel, registration of architects, engineers of the Board in Control, Tom Muir, and surveyors, in 1919. that tall fellow who is always in the Professor Lorch drew up the first ... ..i .1 n frn, -- n TTn irunrcji-x., are Ann Arbor to: ii Pontiac $.30 .45 Owosso .90 Ill n ,ties .