THE MICHIGAN DAILY t.r. t tt t Daily OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the Univer- sity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ,The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second Hless matter. Subscription by carrier er mail, $3.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig- nature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Unsigned. communications will receive no consideration. No man- uscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- pressed in the communications. "What's Going On" notices will not be received after 8 o'clock on the evening preceding insertion. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 MANAGING EDITOR...........GEORGE O. BROPHY JR. News Editor*...... ...............Chesser M. Campbell Night. Eitos-AdamsH. W. Hitchcock - J. I. Dakin J. E. McManis Renaud Sherwood T. W. Sargent, Jr s Sunday Editor............ . . .... .... ..... J, A. Bernstein City Editor ..... . .B. P. Campbell Editorials.... . ..Lee Woodruff, L. -A. Kern, T.. Whinery Sports .. ......... ............Robert Angel] Women's Editor.................-.-..-...- .-...-.ary D. Lane [elegraph ... ,..................... .""""".... "..Thomas Dewe relescope ......-..........................Jack W. Kelly Assistants Josephine Waldo Prank H. McPike Sidney B. doates Paul G. Weber J. A. Bacon C. T. Pennoyer Elizabeth Vickery W. W. Ottaway Marion B. Stahl G. E. Clark Paul Watzel Lowell S. Kerr George Reindel * Byron Darnton Marion Koch H~arry B. Grundy M. A Klaver Dorothy Whipple prances Oberholtzer E. R. Meiss Gerald P. Overton Robert E. Adam Walter Donnelly Edward Lambrecht Wallace P. Elliott Beata Hasley Sara Waller Hughston McEan Kathrine Montgomery H. E. Howlett BUSINESS STAFF / Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER...........LEGRAND A. GAINES, JR. dvertising..... ......................D P. Joyce Classifieds ............................... ....S. Kunstadter° Publication .... .............. .. .. . M. Heat Accounts. ... ..........................E. R. Priehs Circulation................. .....","", ".V. F.Hillery " " ,, " +Assistants R. W. Lambrecht M. M. Moule . H. C. Hunt J. J. Hamel, Jr. N. W: Robertson M. S. Goldring P. H. Hutchinson Thos. 14%Rice H. W. Heidbreder F. A. Cross R. G. Burchell W. Cooley Robt. L. Davis A. J. Parker Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for any ssue of The Daily should ae the b ight editor, who has full charge of all news to-be printed that night. ____________ More than two years have passed since the armis- tice was signed, surely a sufficient time for some fit- ting memorial to have been raised. Two years ago it was suggested that a campanile or bell-tower be erected in which to place the library chimes which many agree are not at present fittingly housed. Surely, there could be no better memorial to the dead than this; that four times each hour, the chimes would ring out for those men who gave "the last full measure of devotion" for us who were left behind. Whether or not it can be shown that the time is unripe for a memorial campaign, we must not forget that the obligation to Michigan's dead i still unpaid, at least in a sense worthy of the I n ver sity. MICHIGAN AT HER BEST Michigan had a visitation last week-end of that ideal athletic spirit which ought to distinguish ii intercollegiate competition. Perhaps it was simply our friendship for Cor nell, perfected during years of athletic rivalry in which neither school has found anything with which to reproach the other ; perhaps it was the memory of Ithaca's hospitality last year; and no doubt tb nature of the event - track meets always call forth the sportsman's instinct - had much to do with is but at any rate Michigan was at her best Saturday night. The applause which greeted the good work of the opponents was from the heart both on or side and on that of the loyal Cornell section ; uni- versally, the desire to render "honor to whom honor is due," whether his jersey bore the "M" oi- the big red "C", was in evidence. The brief enter- tainment permitted by the Ithacans' early departure was a pleasant climax in which Michigan's appre- ciation of the high sportsmanlike qualities of the Cornellians was permitted a fuller and more per- sonal expression. May the same spirit continue to link the Maize and Blue with the Red and White; and may it be- fore long come to symbolize Michigan's relation;s with all of her opponents. Even though a "Weakly" endeavor was made by the Gargoyle staff in behalf of the Union Opera, and unfortunately failed, it does not seem altogether fitting and proper that they should do the Sour Grapes Act. The Telseope A NEW SHIPMENT OF EXERCISES IN CURRENT ECONOMICS--- Hamilton ATA G A H A M BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK DETROIT UNITES LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 1920 Bel een Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson t Eastern Standard Time) fimited and Express cars leave for Detroit at 6:05 a. m., '7:05 a. m., 8:10 a. m., and hourly to 9:10 p. m. ,iin Ieds to Jakson at 8:48 a. m. and3 every two hours to 8:48 p. m. Ex- presses at 9:48 a. m. and e' ery two hours to 9:48 p. m. - I seals to Detroit-5:55a.m., 7:00 a.m. and every two hours to 9:00 p. m., Ials6 11:00 p. mn.'To Ypsilanti only, 11:40 p.m., 12:15 a.m., and 1:15 a.m. Loc als to Jackson-7:50 u. m., and 1::1--p.-- .-- IRAQ[ MAf R RG 4.. "Here They r ®n ^PAT O. Arei, MARCH S M T W T F S 1 2 :3 4 6 S8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Aten: Last season's hats turn- ed inside out, refinished and re- blocked with all new trimmings look just like new, wear just as long and saves you five to ten dollars. We d only high class work. Factory lHatStore, 617 Packard St. Phone 1792. Black or Brown Scotch Grain Exactly like the cut A soft, pliable, cool stock. , Plump, sturdy sole for hard wear. Especially notice the price- Law, edical and Dental Books Bought, Sold or Exchanged 100 SWalk-mOver Boot Shop ii TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1921. Night Editor-HUGH W. HITCHCOCK. \~-~ 115 > South Main Street .._..,__r .. The editorial staff and tryouts will meet at 5 o'clock today, the upper staff at 4:30. MORE VOICE ON THE BOARD According to the latest decisions of the Board of Regents, the student body of the University is to have more direct representation on the Board in Control of Athletics than has been the case in for- mer years. Under the new arrangement the three student members will be chosen by all the male students at the annual spring. elections, from a list nominated by the board of directors, with such ad- ditions as may be made by petition. Formerly the directors chose the student members of the Board in Control, and the Regents ratified. In 1910 a petition put before the 'Regents asked thpt this very change be adopted, but no action was taken at that time. The complaint heretofore has been that tht students as a.whole did not have suf- ficient power in the workings of the Athletic asso- ciation: and that the method of choosing represen- tatives was not fair in that these men were not the choice of the students themselves. Certainly the charge was justified, and it is noteworthy that the governing body of the University has seen the wis- dom of taking action to remove the difficulty. It should be hardly necessary to remind the stu- dents of the importance of this power now put into their hands, and to urge a twofold duty: first, to see to it that the right men occupy the student chairs on the Board, using if necessary the valuable right of nomination by petition; and second, to cast a full and therefore representative vote at every elec- tion. There will be no effectiveness in the new voice thus given us unless we make it heard. MICHIGAN'S UNPAID DEBT The United States in general, and the University- of Michigan in particular, is very successfully at- tempting to forget that the years 1917 and 1918 saw our country plunged into one of the greatest wars of history. Back in the routine of every-day life, it is so easy to forget those dark days when the lists of the dead, the wounded and the missing were a living part of each issue of the daily papers. But there are some who will never forget. There are mothers whose sons are still lying "in Flanders fields"; there are men, hundreds of them, who will carry to the end the scars of a conflict which they waged that those of us who could not go with them might be saved from the horrors which were the lot of the European countries lying before the on-, ward sweep of the armies of Germany and Aus- tria. When the war came, Michigan remembered the duty which she owed to. her country, but we are very quickly forgetting those who died. True, we have dedicated a flag pole to their memory - but is it in truth a fitting memorial to the men who gave their lives for each one of us? Universities throughout the United States are feeling their duty and are doing it - Illinois is to dedicate a new stadium to her sons who fell - Princeton has built a campanile, but Michigan has done nothing so far which can express in any ade- quate measure the sacrifice made by those men who gave their lives for their country. My Bonnie peered into the gas tank Its contents for to see My Bonnie lighted a match - Oh, bring back *iy Bonnie to me.' t Inks & Pastes Typewriting Paper Fountain Pens Metal Pencils .1 b i Biddle's Book Store A Subtle Distinction Two connecting, well-furnished bedrooms,-steam- heated; suitable for two gentlemen or four univer- sity students - ad. in Salt Lake Tribune. Dear Noah: Is there any truth in the old saying, "We become what we eat ?" Curious. Not at all. If this were so most of the baby girls of the country would grow up into milk maids. ''That picture (meaning ours) in all its totem pole glory stow graces the walls of 99 and 44-100 per cent of the rooms in the various women's dor- mitories, it is claimed." - from the story "In the Spring" in Sunday's Supplement. We feel at this time that it would be futile to deny this allegation in its entirety. The author of the above is a member of the Old Guard (those ,trying to guard Michigan against the insidious in- fluence of co-education) and hence is in a position to know whereof he speaks by actual observation. We shall grant, therefore, that his opportunity for so viewing our editorial likeness in the different women's houses is much more extensive than our own. In short, he speaks from personal observa- tion; our denial would be based on hearsay. Despite any inferences which might be drawn from the story in Sunday's supplement we want it distinctly understood that we are an admirer of the author; in all respects he is a regular fellow - parts his hair squarely in the center, eats ham and treats his folks well. Neither do we intend to re- sort to the short and ugly word and so shall chival- rously refrain from calling him - a "fusser." We want it further understood that we like Bryon, al- though we must admit that we have often been called rather simple in our tastes. In all fairness we also want to apologize to him. It will be remembered that it was his story about "the U. S. should retain California" which wecom- mented on rather unfavorably some time back. We have since learned that he knew better than this, that he had meant to use restrain instead of retain. And if the proof readers aren't also mind readers we feel that our'budding Frederick Palmer should not be held accountable. We trust that nothing we have so far said will in any way be interpreted as a reflection upon the ability of our co-worker. 4 To Say It's Wrong Is Right "Have you the correct time ?" "No, I've set my watch according to the campus clock." Famous Closing Lines "A hare in the butter," he murmured as he saw the goat devouring the rabbit. NOAH COUNT. 11 Nickels Arcade What's in a ;Name? ever try TUTTLE'S when you wanted a nice lunch? Conveniently located just one- half block south of the 'Mai" FREE TRAINING During Spring Vacation SELLING BRUSHES You Can't Mistake- It's A Money Maker! Write Box "Brushes" Care Michigan Daily Miss Mary F. Minuis, Chiropodist, will be at the Saunder's Hair Shop to- day. Phone 2673-M for appointments. --,Adv. I E1 I ' I r1 11Im IlIfIIIIIIIIIfIIll IIsIIIIIIII111:9Itll IIIII1fIII I111111 au IIIail11illlllllilfllllf11f~ f~ffll~ l in all sizes at iI Darling & Malleaux_ 224-226 S. State St. 7 Nickels Arcade I - Imported Sport Suits Direct shipment from England Beautiful rough woolens made up in three piece s p o r t s u i t s, coat trousers and knickers. - Sixty dollars - WA GNER & COMPANY State Street at Liberty Established 1848