T1 DAILY asw..a as -- T DIL an ttl AL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY 0OF MICHIGAN every morning except Monday during the Univer- ie Board in Control of Student Publications. :MBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ciated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for if all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise s paper and the local news published therein. t the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second >n by carrier *jr mail, $3.50. Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Stret Business. 96o; Editorial, 2414, rations not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the "sik cessarily to appear in peie t, but as an evidence of ices of events will be published in The Daily at the the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office- munications will receive no consideration. No mar returned unless the writer incloses postage does not necessarily endorse the sentiment- communications. oing On" notices will not be receved after S o'clou preceding insertion, EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 EDITOR ,.. .. . GEORGE O. bROPHY JI< orial Board..........................Lee Woodruff Adams H. W. Hitchcock Dakin J. E. McManis d Sherwood T W Sargent. Jr ........... .. ........ ..A. Bernsteir .B. P. Campbell ....T. J. Whinery, L. A. Kern, S. T. Beach ......Robert Angell or................. ..... ..........Mary D. Lane ......Thomas Dewey ....................... Jack W B ellk Assistants Id Frank H. McPike r J. A. Bacon ery W. W. Ottaway Paul Watzel .l ByronwDarnton ,dy M. A Klaves iotzer F~. R. Meiss im Walter Donnelly liott Beata Hasley an Kathrine Montgomery Sidney B. Coates C. T. Pennoyer Marion B. Stahl Lowell S. Kerr Marion Koch Dorothy Whipple Gerald P. Overton tdward Lambrccht Sara Waller H. L. Howlett BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 9640 ESS MANAGER...........LEGRAND A. GAINES, JR- ng ................................. P. foyce s . . . . . . . .. . ..... -S . K n s t a d t er an................... .. ............... . aeath ................. .. .+. R. Prieh o.n ..............................V. '. Rflery Asitants l ambrecht. M.i M. Moule H. C. Hunt HamaelJr N. W. Robt rtson M. S. Goldring Hutchinson Thos. L Rice 'H. W. Heidbreder Cross R. G. Burchell w. Cooley L. Davis A. J. Parker sons wishing to secure information concerning news for any EThe Daly should te the night editor, who a ful charge swe to be printed that night. SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 1921. Night Editor-RENAUD SHERWOOD. ROPPING ANN ARBOR'S BOARDS iorrow's city election will determine whether \rbor will join the rapidly growing number es adopting charters laid out on simple, busi- res. It is opposed by some as a university xushed by impractical theorists. But the idea ich these new charters are based did not up in university towns, though there seems ao good reason why a university town 'should kward about it. It was the business commu- iat first devised it, and it has been pushed commercial interests, and in many places by zed labor as well. Opposition has been and has come largely from politicians, office sand their friends. Galveston flood overwhelmed the city gov- it, and a commission of able citizens was the job of pulling the city through its dis- This started a great movement to substi- Yr the old political charters, that had made :an cities the worst governed in the civilized a modern business charter. Hundreds of ci- flowed, Staunton,- Va., and Sumpter, S. C., >ing a city-manager plan, which was taken Dayton, 0., when its flood overwhelmed the 1 city government. Many Ohio and Michi- ies have adopted this plan, and none of these is far ever gone back.. proposed Ann Arbor charter is more con- ve than these, but it proposes a simple busi- e, direct action, responsible government of y by one board, the city council, which ap- trained business heads of the five depart- .nto which the city adniiistration is divided, )lds those heads responsible for results. Itt a long advance step if Ann Arbor takes this to get rid f of its complicated government by1 ed boards. This has not been a university ent, but there is no reason why university usiness men, laboring men, indeed all citi- ho want to get returns for the taxes they maintain their city government, should not ard for the adoption of this new charter. SUNDAY'S METHOD aad thought that the Billy Sunday era had Not so; he has simply sought new fields uer. He is now engaged in a series of his. sermons, one of which was recently ad- to the college students in Cincinnati, Ohio. ould be an enlightening experience to see w an average Billy Sunday sermon would be I by a college audience. None who have :ard him can deny the man's self-evident y. Some may ,question the lasting quality of 'erts' religious fervor and a great many more e legitimacy of his methods. We are among st. 'ous action, powerful voice, dynamic utter- these combined with the Sunday personal- e to carry the e-motions of the audience by Paroxism after paroxism seems to grip the As his own nervous tension increases, that idience rises with it. A semi-hypnotic state ically to the command to "hit the sawdust trail and save your soul". To us the religious experience is something deeper than this. It is a response coming from within to answer the need made manifest oftenest by great danger or agony of soul. It is a conscious recogn- tion of an hitherto unsuspected power within our- selves which necessitates no proof of faith. It is the essence of faith from which we draw inspiration and a calm certainty of our own inner rightness. That, we contend, does not and cannot come through an artificial stimulation of the nervous sys- tem such as the sermons of Sunday produce. THE OPERA - A CONSTRUCTIVE REVIEW The fifteenth annual Michigan Union opera has made its last appearance in Ann Arbor. This pro- duction has been bigger and better than those which preceded it both in the beauty of its scenery and the training of its participants. Its music is good, the lines exhibit the sort of witty punch so well de- veloped in the Junior Girls' play, and the success of the inserted dancing and comedy sketches should guarantee the future use of such devices. But there is one thing lacking. To be brief, every Michigan opera should have at least one Ann Arbor scene during the course of the play in order to stamp it definitely as a University product. We do not care to vie with the professional world in staging a pro- duction. It is for us to have something significant which brands the opera "Michigan", which en- hances the feminine roles as played by men, which brings their college days back to each alumnus, if only for a night. The first Union opera, "Michigenda", was not only local, but colloquial. It was meant purely for Ann Arbor presentation, contained quips about pro- fessors, jokes concerning the campus, and songs of Michigan. Two factors, the desire to put the en- tertainment on the road, and a growing triteness of colloquial wit, lead to the broader type of Univer- sity opera which could be understood and appre- ciated by outsiders as well as the student body.-For years almost the sole source of our college songs has been the opera. "College Days", "I Want to Go Back to Michigan", "Ann Arbor Days", "The Bum Army",, all these and many other of our most popu- lar songs have emanated from the Mimes prodc- tions. No matter how good the music of a foreign- set play, it cannot enrich our treasureof. Michigan melody. The "Top o' th' Mornin'" type of opera is ex- cellent at intervals to prevent the growth of dull- ness in more local dramas, but as an annual diet it would hot satisfy the requirements of a true Michi- gan production. Forty-two California hotel owners, by agreement, went back to pre-war prices April . Even in Ann Arbor, the small' lunch bottle of milk has slipped back to a nickel. Let the signs of spring - and peace - continue! When a lawyer who was receiver for a Chicago bank jumped to his death from the tenth story of the bank building, twenty-five barristers at once applied for the position. It's no use, fools step in - etc. The Telescope Ain't It the Trath, B? That we are a regular dancer, Most girls would quite agree, First on her left, then on her right, Wetep with regularity. Women are a puzzle, As I shall clearly show - -Else why do they see the Opera Three evenings in a row. Dear Noah: I have been going out rather steadily with a young lady attending the University. The last few times 'I have called upon her, though, I have been con- siderably annoyed by the fact that she keeps show- ing me a snapshot of a rival of mine. What shall I do? Distracted. Why not get hold of the snapshot and hide it in her Bible. She'd never' find it there.. It's getting nowadays that a proof of a man's de- votion lies not in the fact of how much he loves a girl but how often. And every time one of the Fair Ones pulls something On us and then tries to smooth It over by saying, "Oh, don't get angry with me, You see, that's only my way," We can't help wishing she'd Be like the poor little Babes in the wood. You know, sorta lose her way. We thank you. FASHION NOTE :-Suspenders are likely to be worn considerably more within the near future. G R A. A NEW SHIPMENT OF EXERCISES IN CURRENT ECONOMICS--- Hamilton AT G A HA M BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK DETROIT UNMTEDI LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 1920 Between . Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Limited and Express cars leave fr Detroit' at $:05 a. mn., 7:05 a. mn., 8:10 a. \m., and hourly to 9:10 p. m. Limiteds to Jackson at 8:48 a. ,m. and every two hours to 8:48 p. m. Ex- presses at 9:48 a. m. and every two hours to' 9:48 p. m. Locals to Detroit-:55a.m., 7:00 a.m. and every two hours to 9:00 p. m.. also 11:00 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40 p.m., 12:25 a.m., and 1:15 a.m. Locals to Jackson-7: 6 . &tm., and 12:10' p.m. .999 This No. Dodg H A ..,, _-. I OTHERS SAY : ] E F - - GOOD FOR M3ICHIGAN U (From the Chicago Tribune.) The action of the University of Michigan in making physical training compulsory for all students ought to be generally adopted in colleges and schools. The 1917 mobilization of our more of less "armed citizenry" dem- onstrated, as Regent Murfin recalls, that American youth is not physically what it ought to be. That was anunpleasant surprise, for we had taken it for granted that American life was athletic and free from the defects of an effete society. Now that we know it is not free and have had it proved on a comprehensive scale, it is up to us to correct it and that correction should come in the schools. Every child in the schools should have physical supervision and regular exercise for the correction of weak- nesses and the building up of the con- stitution. Exercise should be carried on through youth, and, for that mat- ter, through life, but during the bdu- cational and formative years it is es- pecially important and fortunately can be prescribed. The result of this will be a great ad- vance in the vigor of the nation, an en- ormous increase in the total volume of American energy and, we believe, a toning up of morale. One of the benefits which would'flow from the universal, military training which congress was not wise enough to adopt was the strengthening of the American physique-as well as the American morale. The University of Illinois has military training and all schools should have it. But a system of prescribed courses in general phys- ical exercise should be adopted throughout the country. Miss Mary F. Minnis, Chiropodist, formerly with Mack and Co., will oe at the Saunder's Hair Shop, Tuesday of every week. Phone 2673-M for ap- pointments.--Adv. I ..+ CALKINS - ILECHER D~UG CO. Ic M Brick Cream For Dinner Today Call- at one of our stores or phone. A I new , special Sunday. ever I 324 So. State St. 10 I E. and So. University Ave. 711 Packard St. ---- __- SCHUM"ACH.ER HARDWARE COMPANY 308-10-12 SOUTH MAIN STREET A STORE OF INDIVIDUAL SHOPS i 4 Junk that old ice box that -ost you more money last summer to keep go- ing than a brand new one would have cost. Ask to see our refrigerators of the following makes: LOST-I pair grey trousers Tuesday between Baldwin avenue and Library. Phone 1504. LOST-On South University, I pair trousers. Return to Dettling's Tailor shop. --Advertisements in last Sunday's Daily. Pamous Closing Lines "First down," he muttered as he saw the fresh- man with his trick moustache. NOAH COUNT. The Belding Hall Stone Lined THE White The Famous Bohn Syphon The Jewel and the Ranney 11 DROP IN AND LOOK E'M OVER