_ THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAR 4r tirogatt Dal-Ill 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 .cless matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phone: Business. 96o, Editorial. 2414. Communications not to exceed 3o words, if signed, the sig- nature not necessarily to appear in pt int, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the discretion of the Esditor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No man- uscript will be returned unless the writer incluses 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 Editors- H W Hitchcock T. H. AdamsH.W H h 3. 1. Dakin 3. E. McManis enaud Sherwood T. W. Sargent. Jr. Sunday Editor . :. ..... - -J. A. Bernstein City Editor.. ......... ...P.. . Campbell E~ditorials.... ....... ;:Lee Woodruff, L. A. yKern, T. 1. Whinery ports.....................Robert Angell Women's Editor........................ .......Nary D. Lane Telegraph.......- ;.-...........Thomas Dewey Telescope................................. ..... Jack W. Kelly Assistants Josephine Waldo Frank H. McPike Sidney B. Coates Pui G. Weber 3. A. Bacon * C. T. Pennoyer lizabeth Vickery W. W. Ottaway Marion B. Stahl G. E. Clark Paul Watzel Lowell S. Kerr George Reindel Byron Darnton Marion Koch Harry B. Grundy M. A Klaver Dorothy Whipple PrancesOberholtzer E. R. Meisse Gerald P.Overton Robert E. Adams Walter Donnelly Edward Lambrecht allace F. Elliott, Beata Hasley Sara Waller ughston McBain Kathrine Montgomery H. E. Howlett ,.a I -_1 I 1 .. _ _ _ BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER............LEGRAND A. GAINES, JR. Advertising................................... D . Toce Classifieds...................................-S.- Kunstadter Publication..................... ........ ,.......FV. M. Beath Acounts....................................E. R. Priehs Circulation..................................V. V. Hillery Assistants R. W. Lambrecht M., M. Moule H. C. Hunt J. Hamel, Jr. N. W. Robrtson '. S. Goldring . H. Hutchinson Thos. L. 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 issue of The Daily should sAe the night editor, who has ull charge of all news to be printed that night. ______________ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1921. Night Editor-T. W. SARGENT, JR. "BIGGER AND BETTER" We have all admired at one time or another the beautiful lines and symmetrical proportions of. ancient Greek statues. Indeed Greek sculpture has come to be our ideal of classic beauty. We had presumed that there were to be found here and there among the Greek populace youths and young men whose physical appearance was nearly as pleasing as the marble images which have survived through the centuries. 'Tis not so. We have been sadly disillusioned by one, Prof. R. T. Mackenzie,of the University of Pennsylvania, who says: "The American college man is bigger and better than the highest type of young Greek in the golden days of Athens," not, mark you, better than the average Greek, but big- ger an better than the highest type of Greek. We grant, without argument, that most of our best physical types are to be found in intercollegiate athletics. And yet we try vainly to recall many men in football, track, baseball or basketball who dis- play the physical beauty of "The Wrestlers" or "The Discus Thrower". We have seen numerous men of undoubted power who were tall and angular or short and bulky. Some are apparently all legs, others all arms and shoulders. We admit their speed, their stamina, their ability as athletes, but we fail to see in their angular lines or their stocky bodies, the grace, the suggestion of effortless strength which inheres in the Greek statu.s If our athletes fall short, how much more do we who are not athletes miss the mark of physical per- fection which was the endowment of the best of Greek youth? If mere bulk is to be considered as both bigger and better, then we probably have the best of the argument. Northern peoples naturally would. But we were under the impression that line and form and proportions all had their due place in judging physical class. We regret our error, but candor compels us to add that we are sorry to see that an- gles and bulk are more desirable than the aesthetic proportion which can come only with symmetrically balanced development. America turns out her great-girthed hurlers of the shot; her distance men have tremendous stam- ina for their one event; her boxers and wrestlers are trained for years in their particular fields; her football teams could probably wipe the turf with a similar aggregation of ancient Greeks, and her best dash men could almost certainly breast the tape ahead of the men Praxiteles modeled; but all this specialization, while it has produced speed and beef and - what most we all desire - victory, has robbed us of that element which the Greeks embod- ied in their ideal, the standard of all-around bodily perfection. Less of the one-sided and purely com- petitive in American athletics, and more devotion to the goal of well-rounded physical development and good health not in the few, but in all, is cer- tainly a higher aim than the "bigger and better" which we have attained. THE PROBATION PERCENTAGE A mighty scrap with the pen rather than the sword has arisen over the lamentable fact that nearly one-fifth of the lit student body went on probation this semester. A lit has asserted that such a large percentage denotes a weakness in the faculty staff; an engineer seems to hold the point of view that the students are at fault. This is evidently not merely a two school argument but one which has resulted from the sincere personal be- liefs of those originally concerned. That everyone is entitled to a university education is undeniably true with two provisos, - first that he conscientiously desire one, and second that he be mentally capable of acquiring one. The great ma- jority of delinquent students are low because they do not study; the mentally incapable seldom reach a university standing. According to inquiry which has been made into the matter at forty different colleges throughout the country, both state and endowed included, from one-fifth to one-eighth of the total enrollment of practically all institutions are of probation ranking at each. Entrance examinations make little dif- ference ill these figures; in fact at one university where both the examination and certificate methods are employed, a larger percentage were on proba- tion from the former group than from the latter. These facts clearly indicate that it is the irresponsi- ble rather than the incapable individual who swells the probation list. The university is an institution for those who desire to learn and are able to do so. The sooner that those lacking in either of these sine qua non's are weeded out, the better it will be for both those who are earnestly attempting to learn, and those who are equally in earnest in their endeavor to up- hold the high standards of teaching which a uni- versity shild set forth. LEAVE MICHIGAN SOME GRASS Recenty, in fact only two days ago, an upper- classman observed a freshman walking across a lawn and gave him a piece of advice in a tone none too friendly. When the upperclassman had finished his tirade, the yearling turned around and said, "Well, look again." The upperclassman looked again, and there on the same well-beaten path which the freshman had crossed were two students, one a senior and the other a junior. Such affairs are daily occurrences, and, at this time of year es- pecially they present a serious problem. A beautiful campus is a matter of pride, but is. only possible when freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors all learn to appreciate the fact that sidewalks, and not the lawns, are after all the best, if not the quickest, means of getting to class. The prohibition of jazz rather than the prohibi- tion of liquor is now the order of the day in Hun- gary. The only difficulty is that dancing doesn'tj have to be imported or held in stock. ~ The Telescope He removed, when he learned that she had fled, Her photograph from-the case. "She has broken my heart," he weeping said, "And I will break her face." Dear Noah: Why do the newspapers so often refer to some minister as a "Fighting Parson"? Lord Helpus. We don't know unless it is because he often puts the congregation to sleep. One objection we have to Many of the girls around This man's school is that They're just like a ball of twine. You know what we mean, Sorta all wrapped up in themselves. We thank you. The following little ditty we have called "A STEADY JOB" or "WAITING FOR A LI- BRARY BOOK": DETROIT UNITED LINES s In Effect Nov. 2, 1920 Between Detroit, Nnn Arbor and Jackson t Eastern Standard Time) Limited and Express cars leave, for Detroit at' 6:05 a. in., 7:05 a. mn., 8:10 a. m., and hourly to 9:10 p. n. 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 esery two hours to 9:48 p. m. Locals to Detroit-5:55a.m., 7:00 a.m. and every two hours to 9:00 p. mn.,I also 11:00 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40 p.m., 12:25 a.m., and 1:15 a.m. Locals to Jackson-7:50 i. im., and 12:10 P.m. Wuerth Arcade I- _ O l iiUMONNW I A NEW SHIPMENT OF EXERCISES IN CURRENT ECONOMICS--- Hamilton AT G ItA HA M BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK MARCH S M T W T F S 1- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Men: 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 do only high class work. Factory Hat Store, 617 Packard St. Phone 1792. I 11 999 This No. for Dodge Taxi - C I C MINNOW SADDLE PONIES 427 SO. MAIN Phone 1687-R STUDENT LIVERY M!OreThan Money There is a supreme satisfaction not to be measured by dollars and cents which comes with the knowledge that you are engaged in a business contributing to a permanent fund of human happiness. The sale of Life Insurance is such a business. Life Insurance is thrift and protection, two fundamental ele- ments in the scheme of a happy life, and to promote this is a work worthy of any man or woman. That the public appreciates this service is best told by the fact that the volume of life insurance purchased doubles every ten years. You may possess the qualifications which will enable you to render this helpful service and permit you to share in the profits arising from the sale of this increased volume. Write The Edward A. Woods Company, the largest Life In- surance Agency in the world, about the wonderful oppor- tunity in its business for aggressive young men and wo- men. Wide Web Garters SINGLE OR DOUBLE GRIP 50c A PAIR THE EDWARD A. WOODS CO. GENERAL AGENTS 711 North University Avenue The Equitable Life Assurance FRICK BUILDING, - - Society of the United States - PITTSBURGH, PA. .1 I strolled into the library, To get a needed book, Filled out a slip, went to the desk, And there my post I took. And thus I stood. Behind the desk A group of toilers never shirk Their all-absorbing business Which is that of dodging work. Those English Golf Suits made of beautiful rough woolens are now being shown. The very small select stock re- quires your prompt action. And they excel. After awhile One less expert than the rest Picked up my slip, frowned, scratched his head, And said he'd do his best. Coat - Trousers - Knickers - Sixty dollars - I think he did. An hour I waited For that much obliging chap, But safe behind a wall of books- He surely took a nap. WAGNER & COMPANY State Street at Liberty Established 1848 At last he came, he brought no book, But instead a look of doubt, And said, "I think it isn't here, But if it is, it's out." Pamous Closing Lines "A prepossessing appearance," he muttered as he saw the shoplifter put the goods under his coat. NOAH COUNT. Jir_ ____ ____ ____ ____