=A: is TvV THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILN WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1929 GI~r fummnr Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of alt news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter.;I Subscription by carrier. $r.5o;, by mail $2.00 Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFFj Telephone 49252 MANAGING EDITOR LAWRENCE R. KLEIN Editorial Director..........Howard F. Shout Women's Editor............Margaret Eckels City Editor............,......Charles Askrea Music and Drama Editor.. R. Leslie Askren Books Editor............Lawrence R. Klein Sports Editor............S. Cadwell Swanson Night Editors Howard F. Shout S. Cadwell Swanson Assistants Noah W. Bryant ' Edna Henley HWalterWilds Harold Warreni Ledru Davis3 The increase in the prestige, drawing power, and beauty of the University, and incidentally of the town, caused by the erection of the new dormitory will certainly main- tain property values at their old level and will add to the income of the town a sufficierlt amount to be balm for all real or imaginary in- juries. State taxes will, of course, be increased if there is any deficit which has to be made up at Lan- sing, but the addition proportioned among the population of Michigan would amount to little compared to the quantity of objection being raised. Continuing its advocacy of a waiting policy, the News suggests that dormitory building is a hang- over from the administration just past, and that it would perhaps be better to' learn the views of the new president before carrying out the project. The views of the new president will, it is to be assumed, be as constructive as were those of President Little, and there is lttle reason to doubt that he will indorse the carrying out. of a progressive building policy. Dormitories have been a part of English universities, for centuries and are to be found at most of the important colleges and universities in this country. There has never been any thought in these institu- tions of isolating the building of dormitories from the building of laboratories, or lecture halls, or li- braries. If, in the opinion of our leading educators, the environment of college men and women is bet- ter in dormitories, why should we insist upon :Keepiig them in scat- tered rooming houses? Of course, the News insists that with so, many more important matters to occupy the attention of the university au- thorities "it seems almost ironical for the regents to be getting excited over the subject of 'rooms for girls.'' On the contrary, it seems to us that the well-being of the young women who come to Ann Arbor from cultured homes, expecting to find conditions of comparative, comfort, is as important a consider- ation as any that can come before the regents. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER LAWRENCE E. WALKLEY .Vernor Davis Assistant Business Managers Geor Davis George Spater Accounts Manager.............Egbert Davis Circulation Manager............Jeanette Dale Night Editor-S. Cadwell Swanson WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, 1929 ROOMS FOR GIRLS "It was unfortunate,"says the Ann' Arbor Daily News, "that the Ob- servatory St. dormitory plan was taken from the shelf, dusted off,* and again made a subject for ac- tion by the University regents." However, it is more unfortunate in our opinion that the News has seen fit to take a definite stand against the University in this mat- ter, although we appreciate the fact that they have at last taken a stand, The taking from the shelf Editorial Comment and the dusting off are, of course, nothing but the products of a fer- H tile mind in the throes of pseudo- WHO'S GUILTY creation; the dormitory plan has (From The Daily Iowan) never for a moment been anywhere The day of mourning in Germany but under the active consideration on the tenth anniversary of that of the regents. That it has not country's signing of the Versailles become an actuality before this is treaty and the subsequent resolu- due merely to the patience with tion of the reichstag denying sole which the governing body of the guilt for the starting of the war University has waited for the makes a very good excuse for a chamber of commerce and its co- taking of stock. horts to advance some really good Immediately following the war, reason why the project should not Europe was divided into two camps. go "through. That is, Wilson was in Europe re- The general trend of the article p=esenting a newer and more ideal which the News has published type of diplomacy, while the war 0_ -_- Music And Drama A LETTER TO JOSEPHINE Dear Josephine: A theater note from Cairo, Egypt, mentions the fact that during the past theatrical season the Con- stantinople Civic Theater cast pro- duced "Hamlet," by one, William Shakespeare, translated from the original English into Turkish. "Hamlet" was a considerable suc- cess; so they say. As further proof of their vir- tuosity the players interpreted the scene between Hamlet and "the players" entirely in pantomime. The exhortation against "mount- ing" lines and "sawing the air with gestures was delivered without the help of a single line of dia- logue. There would seem to be some kind of fallacy in the very exist- ence of, a group known as "The Constantinople Civic Theater"; it sounds like something that just isn't but Waring's Pennsylvanians have done their bit for Art and made the country Constantinople-mind- ed with, that jazz number, "C-o-n- s-t-a-n-t-i-n-o-p-1-e"-and if you don't think it's maddening to d-a-s-h - every letter you're c-r-a-z-y. Pity the poor linotype operator. Yes, Josephine, a linotype is a columnist's typewriter. You feed paper into it, concentrate on the personality picture of your great aunt Harriet-and there's your col- umn for the next day. I Only, on damp days poor Har- riet's picture doesn't come through so well. Static don't you know. Harriet can be quite amusing on clear days. We enjoyed quite a protracted "contact" the other day, in the course of which the dear girl remarked that Life was a short-circuit. I asked her if that had anything to do with the "burn- ings" I'd been suffering lately. She explained that what she meant was that everything-by which she really meant "every- thing"-anyhow, everything, is electricity-spirit world, physical world, and everything like that. Wherefor, Life as we know it-and of course, as Harriet once knew it; to which she herself adds, And How! (Gay old devil, that girl)- I well, Life is a short circuit with matter. You can easily imagine, Jo- sephine, what a thrill "contact' with Harriet would have, now can't you?. Harriet said she quite enjoyed the Constantinople Civic Theatre production. Ophelia was such a nice girl; such a such! I remarked that she was probably a Circassian, brown haired and blue-eyed, but Harriet didn't pay much attention. I guess, because she was thinking about that young man who played Hamlet. I guess Harriet learned more than I'd given her credit for. Anyhow, that "mouthing" business bothered her. It made her wonder. And- being played in pantomime!! Bless her old insulation, she said it stepped up her frequency a couple of thousand volts. You'd never have thought that of great aunt Harriet, would, you?) But she keeps right in touch with our world; and she can, because what's to stop a frequency? Now I ask you. That is, barring young men from Constantinople with pli- able mouths. She said she nearly had a fit dur- ing the flight, recently of The Yel- low Bird, that French trans-At- lantic plane. She was playing con- tract-bridge at the time they were starting (Harriet tells some won- derful ones about the games with those "current" cards. Imagine holding a hundred amperes in no- trump?), and she missed seeing Arthur Schreiber sneak on board. My, she was mad! I worried -for her frequency (it corresponds to blood pressure, you know). But she got even with him for doing that trick, and how she enjoyed telling about it. Young Arthur, you know, was in the tail of the plane, all curled up. Harriet just followed him out over Nova Scotia and prodded him, where he was in the tail with her psychic finger. When you figure the amperage of the vengeful Harriet you can un- derstand the shock that was to Arthur. Harriet says that was why he came forward and discovered him- self to Assolant and the rest of the crew. Anything to get away from Harriet. Assolant told him to sit on a cracker box. It was in self de- fense, and it worked, because Har- riet in later life had developed an aversion for crackers. She had had trouble with her teeth, you see, and of course cracker crumbs under the "plates" are just as bad as crumbs in the bed. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE $1.50 KEEP Yourself In- formed of Campus News YOU MUST Read The Daily Official Bulletin. rIT Y SUMMER Shorthand, Dicta1 Calculator, Bookk Secretaric Blue Bird Hair Shop WE SPECIALIZE IN LADIES' HAIR BOBBING Call 9616 and make an appointment to have your hair trimmed to suit your features by Mr. Bartlett, formerly with the J. L. Hudson Co. COURSES phone, Type ,eping, Penr al Training writing, 7nanship, I r1141II1I111111111111111IIiIIll1111111I 11iII11111111111III III IIIIl1ia TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of ma- chines. Our equip- ment and person- nel are considered among the best in result of twenty building. a Enter Any Day Write your name and address here for further information. Name ............................Address............... HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE the State. The years' careful State and William Streets Ann Arbor 1 Q. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 6615 I" ~IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIli2IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIiiIIIIiIIIIIIIIf III w You Too may become capable by taking our thorough practical training. Be- come prepared for a splendid position with opportunity for advance- ment. 11. -I nu i m -II1 m11II IIIIIII maI 1Il] 1i11t111 1111 I REFRESHMENTS 1 I for the SUMMER DAYS Drinks Sandwiches Salads COOL OFF at the Sweetland 212 South Main Street RESERVE A SEAT IN reemaninin' Room 200 CHAIRS One Block North from Hill Auditorium Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner $7.50 per week Luch and Dinner, $6.00 per week READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! I amounts to one word, "wait." The reason or the advantages in wait- ing are not made clear. It is pre- sumable, however, that what the News hopes for is that the pro- cedure will be delayed until it is forgotten. It is indeed regrettable that so highly esteemed a newspa- per should choose to be so react- ionary. They tell us, for example, thatj a waiting policy may result in a donation from an alumnus large enough to build a dormitory. It is difficult to see why an institution with the prestige and importance of Michigan should have to hold up its progress for a ' distant and doubtful gift from an alumnus. It1 is difficult also to find a reason why an institution that is state-sup- ported to the extent that this one is should not look to the state forj the resources with 'which to con- lords of the allies stood for another. Of course it was the natural re-' action after a victory.. Wilson suc- ceeded,in embodying in his famous "Fourteen Points" a statementl which led everyone to believe therel would be little said about the guilt! for the war. Wilson was overruled by the Eu- opean statesmen. As had been done in every treaty for centuries, Germany and the other Central powers were forced to accept sole responsibility for the war. Much research has been done inj the 10 years just past. Books have been written. Controversies havel arisen. The most recent and the most dispassionate treatise on the guilt is that of Bernard Fay. View- ing judiciously as he does the avail- able facts and existing conditions before the war, Mr. Fay makes some startling conclusions. tinue its development. And will an Heretical as Mr. Fay's thesis alumnus-built dormitory have any seemed at first, it has come to be different effect on city or state tax- generally accepted. Mr. Fay places es than one built with other funds? the guilt for the World war in this It will be as tax free as any other fashion: Russia is most guilty be- building on the campus, and, al- cause through the ignorance and though the tbuilding expense may incompetence of the czar she began not come out of the citizen's pock- mobilization when arbitration could et, the upkeep and increased tax- value on land will. The An Arbor Daily News and, for that uiatter, all of the citizenry of Ann Arbor seemed very much upset over the financial tangle which the regents got into over the dormitory building project. Un- doubtedly the regents have been in a tangle on finances before, and it is not remembered that it oc- casioned such an uproar. Perhaps1 we must seek the reason in some other direction. Is it possible that Ann Arbor is so state-minded that it is worrying about the feelings of the people up in the northern .pe- ninsula on the subject of a dor- - mitory for girls at the state uni- versity, or is it merely that Ann Arbor is afraid of increased taxes and decreased property values? If; it is the latter, we should like to I have been possible. France, the country that held out I for the German acknowledgement,j of guilt, is held by him to be second most guilty because she, too, mo- bilized and took steps which made it necessary for Germany to attack. Germany is third in the list of! guilty parties. She is placed there by the fault of the kaiser who sent the famous "blank check" to Aus- tria. Serbia is given a rank because of the Serajevo incident and Eng- land is placed fifth. A word can be said for Mr. Fay in that he did not attempt to rank or absolve his own country, the United States. Perhaps we are more guilty than we ourselves are aware; but that is beside the point. The clause in the treaty which fixes the guilt solely upon Germany and her fllies is now entirely out 1=;