T BE MICHIGAN DAILY L..b lE IIII HIGHEST Iie ivell-dreessed young man bvalks with his chest thrown out and his chin up; feeling his superiority without thinking it. And remember this: to be well dressed is not to 0.- Mi be foppish or dandyfied. The really well-dressed (,1 young man is attired in good taste. It is for men who want to buy Clothes of Character and Good Taste that this shop is conducted. If there was ever a spring season when we were better equipped to serve your apparel needs than now we have no record of it--for here you will find the new. shirts, hosiery, neck-wear, hats, and incidentals to a man dress in such variety that your personal taste is bound to be met. r ti o; T A. S C: a e, t( h I i K 'Y i Q ' + . .' l,' ' ifi {t{ i MMM 4 A I It is a good thing to "drop in"' once only to keep posted on style. in while if ,r i' i I BAUMGARTNER'S YOUNG MEN'S SHOP GRAND RIVER AVENUE AT WASHINGTON BLVD. DETROIT P t j during the recent football season. In answering the criticism of Williams rooters in the Princeton Alumni News, the Williams Record said: "Innocent intentions are all very well, but they do not weigh heavily with the damage dispensers when the street car runsc over the street cleaner. Williams menc have not fully acquitted themselvess when they have merely avoided muck-e erism. It is highly essential that theyt also avoid any appearance of muck-o erism."1 One of the most courageous stands on a question of college politics was taken by the Cornell Sun in November,I on the matter of freshman elections. Machine politics with a boss at the throttle was suggested in several let- ters to the editor. "As an election, theE freshman balloting yesterday was a pitiful farce," said the editor, afterl making his investigation. "As a Uni-t versity proceeding it was a crimsont disgrace. Political manoeuvering andt bartering for office in class elections have this fall reached the lowestt depths of rottenness. * * *" Strong words like these follow in a columnt eprimand to the freshman officers who denied all the charges in the next9 issue of the Sun. "Everyone must admit that the tendency is toward a more wholesome way of regarding retarding habits," says The Michigan Daily, in commend- ing the action of a group of leading athletes who united to discourage un- cleanliness among the men who rep- resent Michigan in college sports. Of all the college newspapers ex- amined in this brief survey, the Uni- versity Daily Kansan, alone, has a motto above its editorial column This motto is:F "The Daily Kansan aims to picture the undergraduate life of the Univer- sity; to go further than merely print- ing the news by standing for the ideals the University holds; to play no favo- rites; to be clean; to be cheerful; to be charitable; to be courageous; to leave more serious problems to wiser heads; in all, to serve to the best of its ability the students of the Unver- sity." The college editor who follows out this program in letter and in spirit will not go far astray. He will be writing a bold answer to the pertinent question: "What is the matter with HERE'S A CHANCE TO GO TO FRISCO WITH MICHIGAN MEN 1 i i Advanced students of the piano, vo- al and violin departments of the uni- ersity school of music will appear In the following program at the school f music, at 4:15 o'clock today: 'rio, C minor, Op. 1, No. 3 ..Beethoven (First Movement) Altha Heffelbower, Piano; Thelma Newell, Violin; Wihtred Cook, 'Cello. Sonata, No. 7 ................Mozart Patricia Ferguson Wandrer's Nachtlied........Schubert Wohin ........--.......Schubert Hannah G. Cochrane Adagio from Op. 27, No. 2 . Beethoven Helen Derfus Dio Possente ...............Gounod Chase B. Sikes Sonata, Op. 31; No. 2......Beethoven Allegro-Adagio-Allegretto Louise Rowlands ANOTHER MYSTERY SOLVED BY DAILY'S SLEUTH SERVICE At least one doctor's thesis has caused some little amount of curiosity and worry on the part of campus ped- estrians, especially those who manage to pass the south wing of University hall about midnight. Several persons have noticed a light burning there all night, and wondered who the enthus- astic gentleman was, that had the physical energy to work through the long hours of. the night. Wright A. Gardner, grad, is respon- sible or rather guilty for this impres- sion. Mr. Gardner is performing an experiment, which is to show the ne- cessity of light in the germination of seeds. In order to perform this exper- iment he must have two lights burning 4 hours each day. Of course, he doesn't work there all night. The mys- tery has dissolved into thin air. PEOPLE OF MONROE WILL VISIT ANN ARBOR EN MASSE MAY 20 More than 1,000 prominent men and women from Monroe will journey to Ann Arbor on May 20 to become the guests of the Ann Arbor Civic asso- ciation and the university authorities for the day. The occasion is the open- ing of a "boosting" campaign by the city and university officials. Hundreds of motor cars have been requisitioned for the transporting of the guests to the city, and elaborate plans are now under way for various entertainments. The Monroe citizens will be present at the May Festival concert in Hill auditorium in the evening. A committee consisting of Secretary Shirley Smith, of the university, Chris. Donnelly and Sam Heusel, leading merchants, and B. H. Rawls, secretary of the Ann Arbor Civic association has been appointed to make arrangements for the affair. The guests are expected to arrive in the city about 11:00 o'clock Thursday morning, May 20, remaining until after the May Festival concert at night. JUNIOR ENGINEERS AND LITS HOLD COMBINED DANCE MAY 14 Junior lits and junior engineers will hold a combined dance Friday May 14 at the Union. The social committees of the two classes will meet within a few days to make arrangements for the affair, and a program of special music and feature dances will be plan- ned at that time. Will Take Pictures Until End of Week Individual photographs for the group picture of the senior engineering class may still be taken until Saturday night. After that time the prints will be made ready, and the big picture will be put together. About 210 individual photo- graphs, out of a total class member- ship of 225, have been taken and printed. Heating Tunnel Excavation Progresses Excavation for the heating tunnel, which is to connect the new Martha Cook dormitory with. the university heating plant, is progressing rapidly. The tunnel, when completed, will be about 600 feet in length, and will car- ry the heating pipes and the electric lighting leads to the new- building. To Help Make Speed Test of New Ship Prof. H. C. Sadler, of the naval en- gineering department, went to Port Huron yesterday to assist today at the speed trials of the "Huronic," a new- ly built lake steamer. You may speak words of praise con- cerning good times to be had on Glee club trips, football specials, engineer spring vacation tours, home specials and even Union opera journeys, but when that "Wolverine Special" puffs out of Chicago on August 11, gloriously bedecked with maize and blue, from 25 to 50 Michigan men are going to start on a trip to the Panama-Pacific International exposition that will make all other sorts of journeys seem like a ride to Wayne on the D. U. R. In the words of the poet who collid- ed with the clothes line at night, it's going to be "some trip"-that is, it.will. be, if everything works out according to plans and specifications. And here's the point, it's a safe bet that every- thing will work right because the tour is going to be a "Gregory Tour" which to those who know anything about tours, means that it will be good and that things will work out right. This company has been officially appointed tour agents for the exposition, and with Mr. W. W. Welsh, '12, former sec- retary of the Ann Arbor Civic asso-' ciation, as special promoter of this trip, it has promising prospects indeed. The tour includes first-class rail- road ticket to San Francisco and re- Pullman sleeper accommod seven days at one of the be, a- st hotels in San Francisco, including breakfast, seven admissions to the ex- position, admission to 20 attractions within the grounds, as well as several side trips. The parties will be per- sonally conducted, with a man in charge who will relieve the travellers of all travel worries. Extra side trips will be made to surrounding cities and stop-overs at Denver and Salt Lake city will be provided for. There will be one car for every 25 men and at present it is thought that there will be enough men to go to in- sure the hiring of two cars. Special arrangements will be made to furnish private eating places where the whole crowd may eat together. Michigan is not the only university that will send one of these tours to the exposition, as Cornell, Minnesota and Illinois men have already com- pleted arrangements for the same sort of a trip. A special price has been made for the round trip and reservations can be made or further information secured by seeing J. S. Ieonard, 16L, who has charge of the Ann Arbor end of the --, INTERCOLLEGIATE pertaining to policy in student affairs, and aid the faculty in preserving order Students in American colleges and in the student body and upholding the universities who own or can operate dignity of the university. an automobile have been asked by -o- Prof. M. I. Pupin, of Columbia, who is Ill feeling against the Germans and also Serbian consul general, to join a everything German was shown in To- volunteer corps which proposes to ronto University recently in the case fight typhus and cholera in Serbia. of Professor H. Lupkow. He could not The men will be encamped and every teach German because no one register- precaution taken to insure them ed in his classes. Although allowed against infection. An appropriation full pay for the year by Toronto, he of over $10,000 has been made for the came to the United States. purpost3. --0- I -0- Pennsylvania and Harvard are both1 lining up golf teams for the inter- collegiate matches which will.come off some time during May. -o- Cornell students are considering the adoption and election of a student council with the hope that such a body may unite more closely all the under- graduate activities, control all matters Washington University at St. Louis dedicated the new buildings of its med- ical school last Thursday. The three large buildings which contain labora- tories, dispensaries and lecture rooms, will cost over $1,200,000. -0-- 1any New England colleges will be represented by their administrative officers at the University of Maine to- day.