THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY U AlLY OFFICIAL BULLETI, N blication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session t1 3:30 p. m. (11:30 a. m. Saturday). fme V THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1925 Number 197 ilon; e Detroit News Building, including the WWJ broadcasting station, e automatic machine switching office of the Michigan State Telephone ,ny (for the City of Detroit), will be visited Saturday, July 11. The leaves the Packard and State Street Station at 8 A.M. Luncheon will ved in the Cafeteria of the Bell Telephone Company. Total cost $2.50. Names should be left in Room 8, University Hall, by Friday Bobbed Bandit Uses Toy Gun Carlton Wells, Director of Excursions.' The Campus The question: What is your opinion of the stand taken by Scopes in the Tennessee Tri? Where asked: Tappan Hall. Answers: V. A. Altenburg, Superin- tendent of Schools, Lawrence, Mich., "Scopes is doing exactly the right thing. If these laws which make it. unlawful to teach truth are enforced,. our civilization will go back to the dark ages." John H. Blue, Southeastern High School, Detroit: "Although believing in the theory of evolution, I disap- prove of Scopes teaching it in a com- munity where it is restricted by stat- ute. In so doing, Scopes acted in an untrue manner as an agent to a pri -I cipal. His approach should have been in the form of an appeal to the people; for the repeal of the evolutionary statute, and then teach evolution." Prof. W. H. Irian: "My opinion with reference to the stand of Professor Scopes is that he was teaching the regularly adopted text-book in his classes in about the same fashion in which most of the high school teach- ers of Biology teach that subject. He probably had only a limited know- ledge about the whole subject of evo- lution and had no intention of becom- ing a national figure through his teaching. It is~my opinion that his knowledge concerning evolution has materially increased since the charges of violating the Tennessee law werel made against him. How he or any- one can be expected to teach BiologyG without presenting the theory of evo- lution and the scientific evidence sup-1 porting it, puzzles me. It seems to me that he had no other alternative than presenting these matters." Supt. H. R. Dumbrille of Bellaire: "In my opinion, any legislation res- tricting freedom of thought or teach- ing theories as such, is a step back- ward toward the dark ages'." T. H. Hunt, School of Education: "I believe it is a valuable test case. It will decide for the nation at large how far science can go in the face of traditional opposition." Moscow, July 8.-Accepting the in- vitation of the Chinese Federation of Trade Unions, the Soviet Trade Union Council has decided to send a trade union delegation to China. Simul- taneouslythe council voted to send $25,000 for the relief of }Canton vic- tims. Dance at Union Friday~Nite. kly Bulletin: All notices for the Weekly Bulletin for the week of July 13 to 18 ild be left in the Office of the Summer Session, Room 8, University Hall, re Thursday noon, July 9. E. H. Kraus. Lents of Engineering: No student in the College of Engineering will be allowed to drop any ect without record after three weeks of summer school (July 11). The ement in the Daily of July 3 does not apply to the College of Engineer- The Summer Michig offers the members of both an enjoyable way ing surplus time and experience in journalie more men and women ed for both the edit business staffs. All pei are interested are re'q call at The Daily offic building, Maynard str afternoon this week. BONSTELLE ats. n PLAYHOUSE and Sat Woodward at Eliot. Eves Downtown Ticket office at THIRD WEEK The Bonstelb in Louise M. Alcott's Fan "Little Wor Meg, Joe, Beth and A Brought to Life on the MUICII BATHING B (Near Sauier' Cayn OPEN 9:30 A. M. TO 8:I Dance at Union Friday T. R. Running, 0. W. Boston. ve Members, Phi Delta Kappa:, There will be a short business meeting of the active mehbers of the Delta Kappa Fraternity in Tappan Hall on Friday (July 10) at 7:00 Walter 0. Shriner, President. iagara Falls Excursion: . Between 1:30 and 5:30 on Thursday afternoon, tickets and berth res- rvations may be purchased at the Summer Session offices in University all. This will be the .only opportunity to obtain them. The special car for the Niagara Falls excursion will leave the corner of ackard and State streets promptly at 3:10, Friday afternoon. The ,Greater etroit will leave the D. and C. docks at the foot of Third street, Detroit, romptly at 5:30 in the afternoon on Friday. Ernest Rice Smith, Director of the excursion. 1 V Margaret Dale, 19, of Tennessee, longed for the bright lights, and ran away to Chicago. In most of the places she sought work she was turn- ed away because of inexperience. In others would-be employers made of- fensive advances. Hunger gnawed at her. 1She turned to robbing men in taxicabs, using a toy pistol, because she was afraid of real ones. This is the story she tells as she awaits trial in Maywood, Ill., jail. a ray from the infinite source of truth." Is it too much to expect that some time, legislators as well as business men, educators and scientists, may, show that they too stand on the moun- tain top of human knowledge, gained by endless evolution before man and4 scientific investigationand preserva- tion of acquired knowledge. by human efforts? Vera Cruz, July 8.-The state of Vera Cruz is going dry without the necessity of prohibition laws, due to the high government taxes o i srloons. Dance at Union Friday Nite. L BOOKS.... New and Second-Hand Text Bo A complete line of school supp Organic Evolution Discussed By Smith' (Continued from Page One) complex sutures, culminating in the variable, highly complicated and beau- tiful forms of the Mesozoic Ammon- ites. In addition to the proof offer- ed by this regular development in' Geologic time is the study of the in- dividual highly developed Ammonite. By breaking off succeeding whorls from the mature Ammonite shell, suc- cessively simpler sutures may be un- covered until the simple straight sut- ure of the ancestral fres is uncov- ered." In the words of Haecke, "the Ontogeny (the development of the in- dividual) repeats the Phylogeny (the development of the group)." The Evolution of the horse has been repeated so often not only in Scien- tific literature, but also in poetry and song that bare mention will suffice here. We should emphasize here,' the progressive stages from the three and four-toed Eohippus to the modern horse, but that these states took place however, that not only do we have in regular sequence in Gelogical time. Now,-the Evolution of man, and as Huxley stated,-"The question of all questions for mankind-the prob- lem which underlies all others, and is more deeply interesting than any others-is the ascertainment of the place which man occupies in nature and of his relation to'the universe of things.' Here lies the crux of the wholI situation. tlis believed not that man descend- ed from a monkey nor even from an ape, but that man and the Cro-Mag- non man occupy the same twig on a branch and that other twigs o that same branch are occupied by the earlier species of man as well as by the anthropoid apes. A graphic illus- tration of the above is on exhibit in the Geology' Museum in the Natural Science building Various stages in this story may be illustrated by the increased brain ca- pacity in the development of man, the duplication in position and func- tion of every bone in Gorilla and Man, the Identical direction of trend of hair in both groups, etc. Possibly even more telling evidences of the connec- tion of man to the lower animals may be shown in his embryonic stage. Dur- ing the first three months of his de- velopment in the womb, man has pass- ed progressivly through stages of Pro- tozoa, Coelenterate, Worm, Fish, Am- phibian, Reptile and Mammal. Even after birth, the babe shows certain ape relationship by his pose of feet, power of grip and in all some 180 other characteristics. Thus, man iden- tical in his origin, stages of formation and nutrition with the animals which lie mmediately below him in the scale,, is the cap-stone of the story, up to the present,, of Organic Evolution. And again in the words of Huxley, "Our reverence for the nobility of manhood will not be lessened b the knowledge that Man Is, in substance and in struc- +,i. n; vits .s.bus,,, r.' ,bea ment of intelligence and rational speech, whereby, in the secular period of his existence, he has slowly accum- ulated and organized the experience which is almost wholly lost with the cessation of every individual life in other animals; so that now, he stands raised upon it as on a mountain top, far above ;the level of his humble fel- lows, and transfigured from his gross- er nature by reflecting, here and there, UNIVE WAHRS S300K yy ...... .....uo..a..........."....n" ....................".......................... ss................nn.. a...u.".. ... s.aonn.N U. N 0 W N 0 W July Tenith A Girl They Loved to Kiss -She was gorgeous and when she used her eyes-"Good Night." A5 : P* LESH All subscriptions to the hummer flflcbioan must be paid before July tenth.. After this date the rate of $175 will be charged. On I ALSO A GOOD COMEDY-"THE MILK BANDITS"-AND NEWS .... ..... .......,.,,....,..........,,,..,.... ....,..... ...... ' i iiiiiil di rtoic~ccorcccroccccoccorc~ooococcoccooccIII I r-- I4 C COOL it July 15 the paper will be stopped, and the gubscriber billed for all copies received at the rate of five cents .,,., STARTING TODAY r" BEN ES ou VR p Caramount Qicture r per issue. t Subscriptions may be paid at the Press bldg., Maynard st. -The: ... . a E BE DANIELS' greatest dramatic chance-and how she takes it! Directed by. E. Mason Hopper. Kenneth Harlan, T. Roy Barnes, Hel'en Lee Worthing in the cast. --Stage- RAY & EDNA TRACY -In- "Piano Eccentricities" Summer Michigan Daily Sunday-ADOLPHE MENJOU in Lost-A Wife"