THE MICHIGAN DAILY Here's the Place and Now's the Time to Order it . -YOUR DRESS SUIT JTl FOR THEL G. H. WILD COMPANY "CLOTHES OF THE BETTER GRADE" STATE STREET TAILORS AL SESKS FOUNTAIN PENS Be prepared and write a good Exam. with a We carry all makes of Pens STUDENTS' BOOKSTORE DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson. Cars run o n Eastern time, one hour faster tan local timue,t Detroit Limited and Express Cars--8:10 a. n. anti hourly to 7:o p. 1., 9:10 p. in. Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and every two hours to 6:48 p. In.; to Lansing, 8:48 p. in. Local Cars, Eastbound-s:35 a. in., 6:40 a. m., 7:03 a. in., and every two hours to 7:05 p. m., 8:05 P. n.,,9:05 p.n "., 10:45 p. in. 'o Ypsi- anti only, 8:48 'a. n. (daily except Sunday), y:zo a. M., 12:05 p. m, 6:05 p. m., 11 :15 p. m., 1:15 a. m"., ;1:30 a. m. Local Cars, Westbound-6:12 a. n., 7:50 a. m., and every two hours to 7:50 p. n1., 10:20 p. mn., 12:20 a. mt. The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Organized 1869 Caphal.. ........$ 300,000.00 Surplus..........$ 150,000.00 Resources over .... $3,000,000.00 Banking in all branches Main Office, N. W. Corner Main and Huron Sts. Branch Office, 707 North Univ" eriyAvenue. COME IN AND TRY OUR Chinese Combination Lunch TRY AP MA'S JEWELRY STORE For Akirm Clocks and Michigan Pins 113 SO. MAIN STREET Our "Tailor-Made' Clothes Cost No More Than the Average "Ready-Made~ CAN SLE, The Tailor 108 E. Washington St Second Floor CHOp off a few minutes and eat some of 'W-411KING LY10 314 S. State St. Phone 124-M FIRST NATL. BANK OF ANN ARBOR, MICH. Capital $too,ooo Surplus and Profit $$65,ooo DIRECTORS: WIRT CORNWELL WALDO M. ABI3OTT GEO. W. PATTERSON HARRY M. HAWLEY S. W. CLARKSON HARRISON SOULE FRED SCHD .D . I. B.SUTTON F~. ID KNN1}. FOR CHOICED CUT FLOWERS I GO BISCHOFF'S GRE I TGO C O FI HOCUSE 220 Chapin St. Phone 809-M The Farmers & Mechanics Bank South Main Street State Street Office Corner Huron 330 S. State St. m- i-- i NICHIANDAI L O ficial newspaper at the Universty o 1 Michigan. Published eeiy morning except Monday during T-he university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class 'fatter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier or mail, $.5. \vant ad, stations: Quarry's, Students' Suppi> Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State Phones 1usiness, 960; Editorial, 2414. Francis F. MKinney...Managing Editor John S. Leonard....... .Business Manager ;. Rodgers Sylvester News Editor Tonm C. Reid...............Telegraph Editor Verne Burnett.............Telegraph Editor r. I. Wright..................Sports Editor J. C. B. Parker..........Assignment Editor! Conrad N. Church...............City ditor Edwin A. Hyman ...............Cityditor Lee Joslyn...................ity ditor Irwin Johnson.........hr. Eficiency-Board G;ordon). Cooke........Statistical Editor Edward E. Mack........Advertising Manager II. Kirk White.........Publication Manager Y R. Althseler........Circulation Manage C. V. Sellers ....... ......... ...Accountan C. T. Fishleigh ..Assistant Business Manager Night Editors Leonard W. Nieter William F. Newton Earl Pardee Wilam 11. ort Reporters II. A. :tgerald I. T,. Stadckcr Waldo IR. hunt Golda Ginsberg Martha Gray Nat Thompson W. R. Atlas R. T. McDonald E, A. Bauingarth L. S. Thompson Bruce Swancy F. I,. Ziegler R. . Blum C S. Huntley Business Staff Albert L;. home Rosco Rau E. C. Musgrave F. M. Sutter If. S. M\cColl Maxwell Cutting C. E. Campbell 1) W. Said George Nobil FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1916. Night Editor. . ....Walter R. Atlas CONGRATULATION Too frequently the Council has been accused of attracting men of small calibre and giving them a chance to put something after their names in the Michiganensian. This might have been true at one time, though we are inclined to doubt it now. Last year it managed to ac- complish some things in spite of an overwhelming disbelief in its capa- bilities. This year, with much of the adverse pressure removed, it has handled itself very creditably. The coming semester holds still more promise. Henry C. Rummel has been selected to guide the organization for the en- suing term. To our way of thinking no better man could have beenm found. We donot say this because he has been a prominent man on the campus; not because he has a pleas- ing personality; not because he can keep a premise, but because he has learned to think in terms of the Uni- versity and subordinate himself to her welfare. A FREE DEBATE Tonight in Hill Auditorium Michi- gan meets Northwestern in the first intercollegiate debate of the year. Our traditions in this line of endeav- or are as highly valued as in any other line. The men who shoulder the responsibility of keeping the record bright have spent long, grinding hours in preparation for the struggle. They deserve the best of support. At the beginning of the collegiate year little cards were given out with Selected Editoral r 1 By William I. Faunce (Detroit News-Tribune) Thousands of young people are ask- ing: "Can I get into college?" It would be well for them to ask: "Wil I be able to stay in college after I get there?" About 25 per cent of those ,who enter each year drop out before they are graduated. In some small, com- pact colleges only 10 per cent drop out. In large, loosely knit institutions sometimes 50 perycent disappear be- fore the coveted diploma is reached. They enter college full of life and hope, and theyfall out baffled and dejected. Why is this? It may be for excellent or unavoid- able causes. It may be because of ili-health or financial disaster or the pressure of home obligations. It may also be because of pernicious friend- ships or false ideals formed in the freshman year. It may be because the college itself neglects the in- dividual student and leaves him to sink or swim alone. But the chief trouble is that the average boy is not "prepared" for college. He does not stay in college because he has no staying power, no capacity for attention, no ability to concentrate. I met in the college library a student from one of our best New England families, bending over a book, weary and bored. "How are you getting on?" I asked. He answered: "How in the world does a man spend a whole hour looking at one book? After ten minutes I find myself looking out of the window?" "How old are you?" "Nineteen." "Nineteen, and cannot concentrate for one hour? You ought to have learned that," I said, "when you were twelve years of age." Soon after he "dropped out" and is now wandering over New England looking for a job where success can be won without attention-and there is no such job. The trouble with many boys when they enter college is not that they have bad habits, but that they have no habits at all. Not that they are going wrong, but that they are, not going anywhere. They are versatile, attractive and aimless. They cannot focus their minds for an hour on any object or subject. They are distracted minds, bundles o scattered energies. They know a hundred things on the surface, nothing down to the roots. They have ten times as much in- formation as their father had at the same age, and yet do not know the meaning of work. They are dazzled by a constantly changing world. They can tell the name of every au- tomobile that whizzes by the front door, but can not solve any problem that demands 20 minutes of honest thinking. They are charming young fellows to Office Supplies in general. The greatest stock in ihe County Main St. each book of athletic coupons. These cards are good for admittance at the auditorium tonight. Some foresighted person was preparing for the oppor- tunity which offers itself now. Are we going to do our part? UNIVERSITY flOOKSJTORES State St. WOULD YOU BE HAPPY? Then uv a HANDY DESK CALENDAR Hear the Hits From NewYork's LatestOperas "Sybil " "World of Pleasure" "Katinka" "Stop, Lek Listen" and other-s at the * C. yvenrsd uWi1 t ee Cor. Maynard and Willi"am Stre e s, You may also need a ""National" or Excelsior Dary um Go TO For the BEST in SODAS CANDIES I INCH ES Quarry's Prescription Store OII State For CITY LAUNDRY THOS. ROWE, Prop. Detroit Street Phone 457-M P.M. 2 5:30 P. M. to 7 P. M: . Zichigan Inn Chop Suey JANUARY S A L E iberty St. Opp. the Arcadia 1,A GOOD STRONG BANK WITH EVERY BANKING NEED Id Dncig pS DISCOUNT ON ALL WOOL NS FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS hENeY A& OMPA Y, TAoIL S North Univer-sity Ave. Dlrectly North of Law Btildgzg Patent and Dull Dancing Pumps and Oxfords for Men know, but nearly useless in any .col- lege or in any business office. They are not "self-starters;" they must be cranked constantly by some employer or teacher,*or they can not move. It would be an immense gain to American colleges if about one-quar- ter of the students now in them could Patent, Dull, Bronze Kid, and Colored Satins for Ladies. A H R'S SH O TORES """"" MAIN STREET STATE STREET be immediately excluded, and their places filled with the eager outsiders who are longing for a chance to study -but who is wise enough to select the men that are not worth while? We shall have to depend on the clumsy examination systeni for a long time to come. But two things we can do. We can every one who wants to enter college that "preparedness" is vastly ire than cramming down the lan- gt ages and mathematics. To be prepared means to have ac- quired a real ambition. It means the power to say "no" to foolish things and "yes" to the big things of life. It means to possess a backbone that is more than a "chocolate eclair." It means getting done with "kiddish- ness' and resolving. to play the man. le who is still a child--in fickle pur- pose and flabby will-should stay out out of college again in January. "Can eaehers of Commercial Subjects preparted at imilton Business College State andWilaiams Ste. IIll RADUATES VISIT FORESTRY DE- PARTMENT EARLY IN WEEK Old acquaintances gladdened the earts of the members of the forest aculty the fore part of the week. E. . Jotter, '09, and 0. F. Shaefer, '14, ere the visitors to the department. otter is forest examiner on the Trin- ,y National Forest in California, and haefer is forest assistant on the Coco- ino Naional Forest in Arizona. ROFESSORS CHOSEN TO GO TO GRAND RAPIDS FOR CONFERENCE President Harry B. Hutchins yester- ay announced the appointme'nt of Women's Organizations The members of the Athletic Com- mittee will meet at Barbour gymna- at 4:30 o'clock. There will be a meeting, of all women interested in writing music and lyrics for the Junior Girls' play at Barbour gymnasium at 5:00 o'clock today. There will be a special party given by the Women's League this afternoon at 4:32 o'clock.% Dr. Rachel Yarrow, of Hull House of Chicago, the settlement house of which Miss Jane Addams is the head, was a dinner guest at Martha Cook building last Wednesday, and gave the girls a talk on the work now being conducted at Hull House. For Young Men Correct Evening Dress H AT-high silk with broad felt band. COAT-swallowtail with trousers to match. WAISTCOAT-single breasted of white pique or lined. COLLAR-poke or wing. CRAVAT-white pique or linen, figured or plain. SHIRT-white stiff linen or pique. JEWELRY-pearl links and studs. GLOVES-white glace, cape or silk. REEFER-grey, black or white silk. SHOES-patent cloth top button, patent oxfords or pumps. Complete new lines of the above articles up-to-date in style, moderate in price a.. a man. The other thing we can do is to in- sist that the college itself shall take better care of the freshmen. All the colleges are now waking up to the wate and wreckage of the freshman y ar. In different ways we are all attacking the same problem. At Harvard the remedy is offered through freshman dormitories, practi- cally scgregating the freshman class. At Princeton the remedy is found in a system of preceptors, each one hav- ing a squad of five or six students under his personal guidance. At Amherst it is proposed to open to the freshmat'n courses in economics, which will lead them out of "prep. school studies" into the discussion of the fundamental problems of modern At Brown we shall require all new students this year to take a course of one hour a week in what we call the "Orientation of Freshmen"-instruc- (Cointiliuc on Page Five) rofessors H. C. Adams, J. S. . R. Friday and Dr. Rufus Reeves, Our Service is always Gentlemanly, Courteous Tucker [ and Prompt. Stark 2255.' tf represent the university at the fifth .nual state conference on taxation mIch meets in Grand Rapids on arch 1 and 2. - EXCLUSIVE ung me's haberdashery on sale by F. Allen & Co., Main street. Now is none too soon to make arrange- ments for our Taxi service for the J- Hop. Stark 2255. tf Shirts made to order.-G. H. Wif Company. State St. Tailors. WAGNER & COMPANY State Street Estab!isbed 1848 - U q_ pq IN I I