Tr1E MIC1i. GAN DAILY AN DAILY -- - -,- ~ able. The "flop houses" of Detroit are particularly wretched; the condition of men who room there is emphasized by a statement made by an inmate during the current investigation: "Aw, lots of the guys here get sick. You don't want to pay any attention to that." This is not a "humanitarian" editorial. We seek ! merely to restate a practical way to provide em- ployment for many men, and at the same time 3 to cut down crime and vice and improve living conditions in the greatest city in Michigan. v----- --- ea Student HeaIth 's1i F .ilGo t t CAMPUS SOCIETY ScrenReflections - ----- - - e1Four stars means extraiordinary; three stars very good twostar goo; on str ust another pice; Published every morning except Monday during the go stars ktp away fro n ita University year and Summer Session by the 'Board in no ,.5keawyfoxit Control of Student Publications.A ienber of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- T KH M'CIG N tion~ and the Big Teni News Service. "THE KING'S VACATION" MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use AREGULAR ARLISS PICTURE for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or SMOOTH, UNSENSATIONAL rot otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special The King .......... . .....Ueorge Arliss dispatches are reserved. The Queen ......... Mrs. Florence Arliss Entered at thte Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by The Valet..................O. P. Heggie Third Assistant Postmaster-General. I Helen ................Margery Gateson Subscript~on dutrinag sumimer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by Millicent...................Patricia Ellis mnail, $4.50. Jh ..... ikPwl Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, John....................Dick Powell Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214, George Arliss maintains his reputation for Representat ives:. College Publications Representatives, Gog rismitishsrptto o Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City 0 80 suave sophistication in this picture constructed Boylgon Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue. along regular Arliss lines. As the king of an un- Chicago. ..., i EDITORIAL STAFF named European country who abdicates to per_- *ANAGING EDITORTelephone 4925 Rmit a bloodless revolution to take place, he shows CITY EDITOR.......... . ........... KARL SEIFFERT his usual complete mastery of the part and his SPORTS EDITOR ................ JOHN W. THOMA$ usual smooth reading of lines. WOMEN'S EDITOR ...........MARGARET O'BRIEN uulsot edn flns ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR.........MIRIAM CARVER Margery Gateson as Helen, the king's first love NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, John W. Pritchard, whomhe had to 'divorce in order to take the Joseph A. Rerihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, throne, plays competently the role of the socially Glein , Winters. DORMITORY NURSING Inall institutions of learning, the problem of how best to conserve, promote and supervise the1 health of the students is of paramount import-,T ance. Its complexity increases with the size of the group. At the University of Michigan, a sys- tem, referred to as Dormitory Nursing, has de- veloped during the past few years and serves as an assistance to the dormitory heads. a conveni- ence to the students ard an extension of the Rep University Health Service' . The establishment here of resident nurses in l the dormitories and residence halls for girls orig- 0 inated at Martha Cook Building in 1925. During LiedNextI 1 0 JA;.P Z I L "M wl' 0Ih 4A Crt I A-% rVV~iii -1V - Nt 1 1 9 With the opening of the new mSchool"tomorrow,h~ League Hosiery Shop plans to show INovel Features PhnIw the Micnjan co-ed how to start Ihe -. i2 business of staying young early. -C li OlCding to Miss Mary Manchester, ( oItIo Iraiidn ki t 1 i I . iI i I l'o Lis [1in 1ntge 0of tale snop. ki t 1 i . I" I I I, i' SPORTS ASSISTANTS: L. Ross Bain, Fre4 A. Huber,1 Albert Newman, Harmon Wolfe. REPORTERS: Charles Baird, A. Ellis Ball, Charles G. Barndt, Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter, William 0. Ferris, Sidney Frankel, John C. Healcy, Robert B. Hewett, George M. Holmes, Edwin W. Richardson; George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Barbara Bates, Marjorie E. Beck, Eleanor B. Bium. Ellen: Jane Cooley, Louise Crandall, Dorothy .Dniman, Jeanette Duff, Carol J. Hlnan, Loi .1ottr,aHlen Levi- son, Marie J. Murphy, Argaret D- Phalan, Marjorie Western.- BUSINESS STAF? Teleph1oe -1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.................BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANA(;ER..................HARRY BEGLEY' WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......DONNA BECKER DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; Advertising Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ice, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- culation, Gilbert E. Bursley, Publications, Robert E. ainn-. ASSISTANTS: John Bellamy, Goirdon Boylan, Allen Cleve- land, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen nuusi, Russell Read, Fred Rogers, Lester Skinner, Joseph SudoW, Robert Ward. Elizabeth Algier, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris Gimmny, Billy Griliths, Catherine McHenry, May See- fried, Virginia McComb. TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 19331 ambitious woman, eager to get something out of life before it is too late and to marry her daughter well. The king, finding that she is not the same woman that he left 18 years before, finally dis- covers that he no longer loves her. The Queen, portrayed by Mrs. Arliss, is a sym- pathetic soul, who, realizing the king's love for Helen, releases him from their marriage on his abdication. Meeting her accidently, the king finds that she is after all the woman he has been look- ing for. The parts of Millicent, the king's daughter, John, her mechanic lover, and the valet are not outstanding. This picture will appeal to those who like George Arliss, but it varies little fron other Arliss pictures. -B. S. "MUSIC LOVERS NIGHT" TO BE INCLUDED ON MICHIGAN PROGRAM A novelty feature known as "Music Lovers Night" will be inaugurated at the Michigan thea- ter on Wednesday night with the first 12-minute program by a concert orchestra of 19 musicians. Only two numbers will be played each Wednes- day night and the first two weeks are definitely arranged for, the management announces. The continuance of the policy will depend on the reception of the idea by the public. This Wednesday night the orchestra under the direction of Florian Liijdbergh will open with selections from Spanish Caprice by Rimsky Kor- sakoff. The second and final number will be a popular number ."I Played Fiddle for the Czar." The personnel of the orchestra has been recruited from the University groups, and in addition to the musicians, will also occasionally include vocal interludes by University singers. If the program is successful, it is said by the management, it will provide part-time employ- ment for many persons. The orchestra has been rehearsing their first program for three weeks and the past few years, each of the five main dormi- Elections for next year's Junior Ellen IHelsley, representative 01 a tories, Martha Cook Building, Helen Newberry Girls' Play commitee will be held at cosictics company. wiii give he hs- Residence, Betsy Barbour House, Mosher Hall and 4:15 p. im. Thursday, March 30, in sons which will show each «voman Jordan Hallhashadan' okithe Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, ac- how to give herself a facial, and ac- Jodn H l as hda nurse working on a part- cording: tu Helen DeWitt, '33, presi- quaint her with the cosmetics xvhich time basis. During this present unprecedented dent Of the League. arn erwthetheo esi. year there have been some irregularities in the The elections will be under the di- aKboving that the women canont system but the policy will undoubtedly be con- reeetion of the Judiciary Council. pay much for lessons Miss Ileisley tinued. The nurses are usually students in the Margaret Schermack will be chair- has reduced the price of the sermes Department of Public Health Nursing who are man. to 50 cents. Lessons xviXi be conducted taking full academic work. In the dormitory the Nominations were submitted by for the towns-people in the morn- nurse works tinder the direction of and in co- two sophomore representatives on the ings and for the students during the operation with the social director. Both nurses League Board of Directors who are afternoon. and social directors co-operate with the University Barbara Bates,.'35. and Mary O'Brien, -------- Health Service. '35. They were assisted by one other The Dormitory Nurse is expected to emphasize member, Nan Diebel, '35, whom they Lner mi. is the educational and preventive aspects of disease cIhose to assist them. rather than the therapeutic. She is usually Chair- Nominations made by this commit- tee are: for general chairman, Bar- ..Oi mnan of a Health Committee in her house and bara Sutherland, '35, and Marie is often referred to as Health Adviser. Her speci- Metzger, '35; for assistant chairman, 1ThisinIAT- tI fic objectives are as follows: Mary Stirling, '35, and Mary Sabin, (a) To interest students in the promotion of '35; for property chairman, Virginia ------ community and personal health. Cluff, '35, and Susan Mahler, '35; Alpha Chi Omega and Theta Phi (b To disseminate certain health facts re- for finance chairman, Hilda Kirby,. Alpha entertained week-end guests. garding such common hygiene matters as: '35, Margaret Phalan, '35; for pro- Theta Xi gives a supper dance, overweight, underweight, sleep and rest, gram chairman, Marie Murphy, '35, ALPHA CHI OMEGA mental hygiene, care of infections, cor- and Eleanor Blum, '35.1 Roberta Dillman, '34, acted as rection of defects, etc. Other nominations may be made maid-of-honor at the wedding of (c) First aid and routine treatment of minor m the floor, stated Miss DeWitt. Adele Norton, '31. The ceremony took illnesses. y o sopho- place at the bride's home, Rochester, (d) Serves as a connecting link between the more women are urged to be present Mich. as the offices voted upon are some Thelma Berner, '32, arrived from Doritory and the Health Service, of the most important held by junior Buffalo, N. Y., for the week-end. Mrs. Specific instructions are 'given covering the women, Miss DeWitt concluded. Samuel R. Park of Caro, Mrs. J. W. routine treatment of minor illnesses. The Health Lyons of Jackson, and Mrs. John Service furnishes the necessary medicines, dress-, V St.iS i 'In Fauver, Detroit, visted their daugh- ings and incidental supplies. -? AS0 .xk ters for the week-end at the sorority. Each year sees an improvement in the techni- For Sprina eason Ap ALPHA EPSILON PHI ques and policies that make this type of health 1Alpha Epsilon Phi had a pajama service an activity worth fostering. party for actives and pledges Satur- -Health Service Life is just a succession of swag- day night. Games were played and ger suits these spring days. But our chow mein was served. Vivian Cohen, - - - --- eyes were drawn by one suit in par- '33, sang. ticular. The straight skirt and box THETA XI Ecoat of hrring-bone were in a beige- An informal supper dance was held gray. The (oat, fastened only at the at Theta Xi Sunday night. Mrs. L. B. neck by a "frog" of silk braid, flashed Hayes and Mr. and Mrs. Gene Moffet SPRIG HAS CUB open to show the short charteuse of Detroit were chaperons. Other jacket underneath, which in turn guests were Juanita Pillatt,. Joliet, Howling porch Victrolas, memorable treks tocoverd a mi n ht = 1-- , Sevnrl aduil ions have been made io the (commniitees that arc assisting ewith arrangements for the Campus Cabaret to be held April 1 in the main ballroom of the League, it was announced yesterday. Hilda Kirby., '35. chaiman of the floor committee, has announced that the following people have been named to her committee: Jean Hayward, '35, Charlotte Anderson. '35, Patricia Kelley, '35, Betty Sue Calcutt, '35, Lois Kcddy, '35, and Dorothy Leake, '35. Three more names will be added tomorrow, Miss Kirby said. Constance Giefel, '33, is assistant to Miriam Carver, '33, chairman of entertainment. Anna Miller, '36, and Lois Jotter, '35, are to assist Eleanor Blum, '35, chairman of publicity. Handbills' were distributed last night to all thersororities, fraterni- ties and dormitories. Dancing to Pete Blomquist's or- chestra will be from 9 to 12 p. m. En- tertainment consisting of several solos, two trio numbers, a tap spe- cialty and a tango will be the fea- tures of the evening. The cabaret has been planned. so that an inex- pensive evening of fun can be had, the price being 25 cents a couple and 15 cents for single admission. Jacobs, '35, Mona Barns, '33, Audrey Bates, '33, Helen Holden, '33, Ruth Stesel, '33; Helen Houck, '36, Gladys Draves, '36, Eleanor Mann, '34, and Virginia Roberts, '35. THETA PHI ALPHA Helen McCarthy, '31, of Grosse Pointe, Irene Finnegan, '30, Ann Robb, '31, Margaret Robb, '34, and Virginia Hanlon, '32, all of Detro: , spent the week-end at the Theta Phi Alpha sorority. T Y P E W R I T E.R ill Makes - I r ae and. Portable Sold Rented 2 & rued R ired Large choice stock, h.Bsy mezs, Do Do MORRILL, 314 S. State St Ann Arbor. ! E A TOSLPH"P I I i I I Detroit In The Mirror And A Bit Bewildered.. D ETROIT CAN'T TAKE IT! The dynamic city of Michigan has entered its own art museum; has looked at the murals painted therein by Diego Rivera; has turned away, puzzled, but possessed of a vague idea that they were supposed to present the spirit of Detroit; has examined reports of art critics, who have shown that the paintings do actually interpret Detroit as a city entirely industrial, sci- entific, materially progressive; has thereupon de- claimed wildly against the presumption of Rivera, who has disregarded all the finer things that are supposed to go into the intrinsic makeup of the city. A signed article in one newspaper protests vig- orously against the artist's oversight of Detroit "culture." Nowhere in the painting, it is insisted, is there any hint of the lofty ideals that pervaded Detroit's founding and growth; nowhere a hint of the struggles of the pioneers who made the city what it is today; nowhere a sign of the cultural ideals, the dynamic spiritual enterprise, that characterizes the metropolis--nowhere, in short, a glance at the real soul of Detroit, It is easy to see what has actually happened. The painter Rivera saw the soul of Detroit only too clearly. He saw the city essentially composed of industrialism, mechanical civilization, scien- tific and technological progress. He recognized that Detroit, in the past few decades, has lost those ideals that originally characterized it; that the city is now dedicated to what he has put into his murals. Whether this immolation of spirit in favor of industrial progress is laudable or otherwise is im- material to the present question. The point is that Rivera has placed a revealing mirror before De- troit, and the city doesn't like it. Detroit can't take it. It might have been advisable for the cit- izenry to appoint a committee to determine just what Rivera thought of Detroit before he began painting of the mural. etroiLs 'Flop iouse' Situatioi e. S UDDEN conspicuousness of De- troit's "flop house" situation, result- ing from five deaths within the past few weeks, all the mortalities directly attributable to unsan- itary conditions in the lodging places, points to an excellent means of providing employment to many men in Detroit within a very short time, and at a comparatively small expense. It is simply to make preliminary inroads into the slums of De- troit, with intent eventually to abolish the in- adequate housing conditions and to substitute in- expensive but modern apartment hotels which would soon pay, at least in part, for themselves. This sort of work has been done in New York. The slums of Manhattan have been for years the symbol of civilized degradation. For many years the gradual growth of cramped and unsanitary housing conditions on the east side of the na- fion's largest city was almost completely over- looked by all municipal departments except the board of health and the police. But, more re- r-ar lt nnr-n r- - nff^ . 17 0'no- c- - n..._ + - gE fJ(iE ous.l l.; Mary Lawery, Manchester: Jane the woods, discordant seenades and crowded gt-Iiting and simply cut as ,ioflet, Det'oit. Margu cite Dayton bridges with the murmurir g of the brook drown- it was, the under jacket was not and Margaret Conklin, both of Ann ed by the purring of- honeyed eulogies beckon the :bulky but gave contrast and added Arbor, were among the guests. advent of spring, which in straight news fashion warmth against chilly days that are Women in the University who were was coldly heralded as occurring at 7:28 o'clock still to come. And above all, we no- presenI were Sally Place, '34, Doro- last night amidst snow flurries and high water. ticed the "coat hanger" silhouette of thy Marshall, '33, Dolly Robbins. '33, Bicycling, roller skating, wagon coasting and that topcoat. As Paris has dictated, Marian Heckathorn, '35, Greta Wess horse riding will be ushered into their own as that is the effect which must be borg, '35, Marion Foley, '34, Barbara soon as the sleep-provoking rain subsides and achieved style. The entire outfit was Casper, '34, Jean Royce, '36, Helen topped by a. black turban that needed- enough scrip can be garnered to garnish the cam-atpin by hld ktuin itsedrdu pus with yellow ties and baby blue spring frocks. a h- ood it in its precarious _ Forthcoming sunshine will find scantily-clothed positioniI roof dwellers trying to get the jump on other tan- A aspirants for a bronze pigmentation. ;,Ter j Stone quarries and gravel pits swollen into . 5 readiness by spring rains and melting ice will feelA the more adventuresome cautiously dabblin . _. WFinger Vave ham moo 1 ,rea-!tment .... Shampo & Marce . I~iacel.....-..... :; . .75, $1l.04) " the feature is expected to increase attendance on Wednesday nights. I Ub y ng a goose-pimpled foot in their too-cooling depths. -----------** The scorching sun driving couples into coke em- poriums, on walks ending in crazy stream wad- W Points ing races. Breezes wafting through open windows and whipping the pages of neglected text books. Lilting melodies from spring's bright-featheredj By FRANCIS WAGNER Professor Thomas Reed of tne political science department once worked as secretary to Hiram Johnson, once the great reform governor of Cali- fornia and now fiery United States senator and exponent of Bull-Moosism. The clock now situated in the tower of the Engineering shops building once adorned the tower of the old library. It was moved to its present' location at the time of the building of the new library. Ann Arbor has 110 city jail. Persons arrested by the city constabulary are confined in the county jail on Ann Street. Carl (Pete) Lehmann, local attorney, who died recently was reputed to have one of the loudest legal voices in southern Michigan. Reporters from Detroit papers claimed that they could write theirI stories in the telegraph office across Huron Street from the courthouse when "Pete" gave an address to the jury. When Governor Alfred E. Smith travelled through Ann Arbor about five years ago, his offi- cial car failed to stop at a red stop light on Main Street. Local residents kicked to the police. But Al wasn't arrested. The recent appearance of Ignace Jan Pader-' ewski here marked the sixth time that the noted pianist has played before a local audience.1 Horatio Abbott, in a talk before the DemocraticI convention last June in Chicago immediately fol- lowing the Roosevelt nomination, predicted that Michigan would cast its vote for a Democratic presidential nominee in November for the first time since the Civil War. Ann Arbor is practically on the line between Group V and VI climates according to Koppen classification. Both groups are indicative of mid- latitude forest and prairie lands, the former with mild and the latter with severe wiriters. em ... ,, io ~rsa t~ "F,, ,,,..... t- . friends. Gosh, if it would only stop raining. Indiana Daily Student STARS & STRIPES -- ByKarl Seiffert The German Ambassador to England is said to have such a large wardrobe that lie handles his neckties with a pitchfork, like hay. Well, we have more or less the same trouble, and nov our other shirt is beginning to get sort of tattered too. FARRELL DISGUSTED WITH FILMS, FLEES -Headline Quick, Henry, the Flit! Infant mortality among oysters, according to authorities, has been cut by the use of new in- cubators, which certainly ought to be good news to anyone who is contemplating hatching out a brood of oysters. It has been found that a piece of Rochelle salts will act as an amplifier when an electric current is run through it, Which certainly ought to be good news to anyond who is contemplating running an electric current through a piece of Rochelle salts. GUESS WHO? DEP'. "At the time I make My report on the De- troit banking situation to the citizens of De- troit, I shall have something to say with re- spect to a personal attack which was made on me over the radio Sunday afternoon." -Police Commissioner Watkins of Detroit. L* *EA * VULNERABLE Motion Pictures: Michigan, "The King's Vacation;" Majestic, "20,000 Years In Sing Sing;" Wuerth, "See-1 ond Hand Wife." Exhibits: Ann Arbor Art Associa- tion presents the work of well-known Mexican artists, 1:30 to 5 p. im., Alumni MemoriaTl Hall. Women As Authors, General Libiary. Student's Free iand Drawing Exhibits, Archi- tecture Building, 1 to 5 p. m. ALUMNAE HOUSE The residents of Alumnae House entertained at a supper dance Satur- day night. The music was provided by radli, Mrs. Sarah Cennant and Prof. Hugh Keeler and Mrs. Keeler were chaperones. Members -of thel 'committee who arranged the party were Laila Wilson. '36SM, Florence Kep,. '36, and Rose Cruse, '36. A brand new, naor vw'ay to make IEXTRA MONEY ad do your cfassinates at favor at the same time Most of your friends smoke, don't they? Ten to one, it's one of the - noaional ly - known r 4 t brands shown here. Here's a plan forselling them the cigaretes that they'll be buying any- way-making money by the transaction - and -n- putting them in a posi- tion to make money, too!'0" The Allied Sales Plan Shows you how. It's Sim- Iple, easy, profitable- - and even non-smokers wil be inteesed in i.-_z w Wrt n rtothw 4 you can earn all those littleextas that r S 1TR such a boon to a college men ar d women. 1 - 7, g.1.- Burr, Patterson& Auld Co. Detroit, Michigan & Wallerville, Ontario Special This Week Sue., Wed., and Saturday Reg $5.00Permanent Wave fol r ay.....- Comnplc't, %ith S~lhmoalld Finget' Wave. Phone 2-2757 207-8 Mich. Thcatrn Iekdg A A FR A N K 0 A K E S M ..a A _..., A! /. t! 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