F 4.6 4 eI 3I4I bRW I4) FICIAL NEWSPAPER &F THE UNIVERVTV OF MICIIAN shed every morning except Monday darla4 t k sr- by the k3.ard in Control of Studet PubliCatlon.s MEMBER OF THE 3A56CIATED P EM Associated Pres is exclu'ia elyextiel$d t a t+a .er ion of ali news dispatches cre ted to it or not i ies a this paper and the local nwe p b hlied thIersei,. ed at the poatoEce at Ann Arbor: MiWcaan as secoad Wr. xiption by carrier orl mail, $3.5o. 8: Ann Arbor Press building,.Maynard Street. es: Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. unications net to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig- t necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of notices of events will be publisked in The Daily at the of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. communications will receive no consideration. No Ivan- 11l be returned unless the writer incloses postage. Daily doesnot necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 1414 NG EDITOR ......... BREWZTER P. CAMPBELL tor...................... .....Joseph A. Bernstein or - .........«.. .. :. P. f wrvt tr City Editor...........'........-..-......J. B. Young itor...... E F. DAason K I. U-t dward Lambr eht Paul Watzel Board Chairman .. , ..... ... L. Armstrong Kern .eo Herabdorfer E .Mels agazine Editor.............Tho to W. Sargent, Jr. Editor.........................George E. Sloan itr................ .................Sidney B. Coates Editor ... ..... .....-.-.. George. eie. Editor..... ......................Eldizabeth Vic 'kery GASOLINE AND THE STUDENT Dr. John Greer Hibben, president of Princeton university, recently received more than one hundred personal letters from all parts of the country con- gratulating him on the position he has taken in ad- monishing parents to prohibit their sons from bringing motor cars to the university. The action of the president was backed up by the senior coun- cil, the student government body, and the motor car in the hands of college students has been branded by those higher up at Princeton as a badge of aris- tocracy and something to be prohibited by the uni- versity if not by the paretns. Is the automobile really a detriment to students, and, as such, should it be kept out of college life? Is it not rather a fact that any action taken in sup- pressing the right of students to bring motor cars to school with them, whether such action be taken by the authorities or the undergraduates, through the agency of their representatives, would be tamper- ing unduly with private rights, and would be jus- tifiable only if supported by an almost universal, public opinon.I A university, like every other community, must have its laws and regulations which are made for the welfare of all concerned. .After these rules have been lived up to, however, the student-citizen is at liberty to do practically as he pleases. If he can own and drive a motor car, and still abide by the regulations and live up to the standards of schol- arship set by the institution, what reason can be ad- vanced for depriving him of the privilege of doing so? But if. he cannot, of course, the authorities should not be, and generally are not, hesitant to drop him from the enrollment lists, or to apply other suitable corrective methods. And, as to the argument usually advanced that the automobile is a symbol of class distinction and thereby a detriment to society, if the student of wealthy parents should be denied by a university the privilege of running his automobile, he might easily find one hundred and one far more harmful ways to practice snobbishness if he were so inclined. A NEW HOME FOR HEALTH The relent announcement that the University Health service would soon move into more ample quarters iri what has been the children's ward of the Homoeopathic hospital, is very welcome as being a tacit acknowledgment of the value of this branch of University supervision over the hives of under- graduates. The Health service, despite its failings, is a much- appreciated institution among the students. This is shown by the fact that, between July I and Decem- ber 31, 1921, the number of. calls increased nearly fifty per cent over the similar period of 1920. In no matter is the old saw about the ounce of prevention quite so important as in that of health, and it is to be hoped that the change of location will aid the Health service to branch out, and to make itself an even greater asset to the campus, if that is pos- sible, than it ever has been before. Text Books and Supplies for All COl( At BOTHSTORES GRAHAM'S Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk DETROIT UNITED LINES- Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Mastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-- 6:60 a. m., 7:.o a. in., a:.o a. A., 9:o a. m. and hourly to 9 :5 p. rm. Jackson Expres cars (local stops of :An Arbor), 9:47 a. a. and every two hours to Lcal Cars.R East Bound-s:5 a.m., 7:a0 a. m. and every two hours to 9:0o p. M., 11.oo p. m. To Ypsilanti only-u :4 p. a., z:is f a. Mn., I.-Isa. in. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Boud-7e a. i., as:4 To Jackson and W-la msaoo-Lmited 8:47,. 10:47, a. in., t2:14,2-47, 4.7. 7:4 To Jackon and Lansing - ited: ,:. 1922 FEBRUARY 1922 S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 16' 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 26 26 27 28 HATS - SPRING - HATS ['UTTLES A Place to bring your friends Nowhere is the food better Nowhere is the service more prompt Assistants S. Andervson Dorothy G. Gelta Berman H. B. Grundy Betron Sadyebeth Heath Briscoo Winona A. Hibbard utler Harry D Hie r yens Agnes Hoinquist .ark H. Z' Howlett Clark Marion Kerr V. Coop er L. S. Kerr .Coughxlin M. A. Klaver onahue Victor W. Kleia ewlck Marion Koch George B.Lardner !t . Leo Robert M. Loeb I. B. Mack athrine Montgomery' R. C. Moriarty I-. F. Pontius Rill an'Scher R. B. Tarr Virginia Tryon Dorothy Whipple TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM Maynard Street Matinee Dance, Feb. 22nd 3 to 6 P.M. Michi ga n Union 75 Per Couple Turned inside out, with all new trim mings they are as good as new. High class work only. FACTORY NAT STORE $17 PACKARD STREET Telephone 1791 BUSISS STAFF Telephone 1 USINESS MANAGER .............. !ERNON 1. HILLER A esin ....................... . . Heath, A. . Parker I9}bf!icaaion ........ . . .."".. Nata .Rbrtsoa Ac.unt. ...... . .....................John J. Hauiel, Jr. Cioculatlon............................ ... Herold C. Hunt Burr I. Rebbins Richard Cutting H. Willis Hedbreder W. Cooley ames Prentiss W. Kenneth Galbraith #E Beamont Parks aurce Moile . A. Dryer " at"seerer artinGoidring Richaridelann z dw. Murane Tyler Steens T. H. Wlfe David Park Paul Blum TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1922 Night Editor-EDW. F. LAMBRECHT Assistant-R. C. Moriarty Proofreaders-V. W. Klein C. R. Betron WITHOUT BENEFIT OF COLD CASH Every student publication has had or is having its prize contest, and it would seem well at this time to inq°tire whether the wave of such competitions, which just now is sweeping over us, constitutes an age or merely a rage. t Time was when publication in a college maga- zine was an honor, greatly to be sought. In that day, the voluntary contributions of manuscript were always in excess of the editorial needs. The most gifted students strove with all their ability to meet 'the standards of their school paper, and, having met those standards, did not soon forget the honor paid to their writing by.the fact of its heat appearance in print. That day is not past. In a few more years its revival will be impossible. The student who writes no longer 'rushes off his best efforts to the offite of the college magazine, but holds. it and waits for an offer. As a result, every college publication must lay aside, at the beginning of each year; a substantial sum of money, with which to attract the youthful writers, and so fill its own manuscript needs. This is professionalism pure and simple, and it tends to destroy both the magazine and the writer.- The work of the college literary man or woman is the work of youth; as a rule, it has not the full background of life, which is necessary in order that it may be placed in serious competition with the work of recognized artists in the commercial mag- azines. The intrinsic monetary worth of the col- legian's offerings is next to nothing. And yet the increasing scale of cash prizes for such pieces of work has reached a point where substantial prices are being paid for them; more, in reality, than the manuscripts would bring if sold outside. That student who has learned to negotiate for a price upon his work before he leaves college, has learned the wrong end of the author's profession first, since only the greatest artists ever are able to name their own prices. It would be better for the youthful people-of-letters if their college training and their college attempts at publication could ap- proximate more nearly the natural conditions with which a serious artists is at first - and, in some cases, always - confronted. The college magazines cannot hope to compete with those publications which habitually pay for ma- terial and which have difficulty enough to make money in their own broad field. The thing has to stop somewhere. It has even to go back somewhat, since it ahs already proceeded beyond the point where the ordinary earnings of the rnagazine will take care of the cash prizes offered each year. When it goes back, plenty of people will wish for a com plete reinstatement of the older condition of af- fairs, in which honor alone was the compensation for distinctive college work. And these persons are the ones who have at heart the best interests of the profession of letters, of the college writers, and of I _, SOId 1lxpouad i 9-Cand oo m 'toe bash iwrting papor that can bemado -- 0. D.'IMonrill 9Nickles . rcade Penalty rules should justify themselves. How about the harvest of election revenues ganed by the treasurer yesterday, at the muzzle of the reg- istrar's gun?' Mere curiosity prompts a query: What does a State ,street, billy-twirling copper think about? 7fie Telescope A Sequel When you've filled so many bluebooks That your writing hand is shot, - When you think of questions answered right And others answered not, -- But on the whole, and all in all You think you did quite well, And then they hand you out an Ain't life Hell? When you're in the Lower Study Hall Regarding silks and lisles, -- And a sylph sits down across from you And straightway nods and smiles, - Then you reply, and she looks cold, For back of you's a belle For whom the smiles were really meant, Ain't life Hell?. -- Lahahe. Efficiency He mixed is beans with honey, He ate them all his life: 'Twas not because he liked the taste, It stuck them on his knife. - Mary Anchor. A Sea Tragedy "The foc's'le,' cried the captain as his vessel was helplessly tossed by a raging sea. The crew deafened by the dashing wayes, barely, heard his despairing cry, "The foc's'le !" "What do you want?" they answered. "The foc's'le!"' replied the captain; "the foc's'le give me the devil if I don't get back into port by tonight." The Student's Longfellow Lives of bankrupts all remind us We can buy our goods "on time". And departing leave behind us Creditors in every clime. Coo Cooed. Famous Closing Lines "Not a bloomin' one," exclaimed the Englishman as he looked vainly to see his rose bushes budding. ERM. THE OOLLEGE LOAFER (Wisconsin Cardinal) To quote the dean of men of the University of Illinois the college loaf- er is .a "passive talkative being." He loves ease, leisure, sleep, cigarets, cho- colates, and girls. He is everywhere. He need not be pointed at because he is as obvious as the sidewalks, as such taken for granted, but by no means a taken for granted, but by no means as useful. He is the man, or lather per- son, who drapes himself so gracefully about front porches, State street store§, and sometimes, if he gets up in time, about the entrance to Main ball. To use his own idiom, he "hangs out" at places where he may watch the co-eds pass and where he may be seen by those same co-eds, for he feeds on vanity-and cigarets. The college loafer has two purposes in life. One is to know the latest dance steps, the spiciest gossip, and to have seen the last show at the Orpheum. The other is to show ,as much distain as possible for the undergraduate who does his work because he likes it, or who does it with energy because it is his duty. The loafer feels that he is in an exclusive society, and is proud ,of his characteristic of mental laziness and sloth. He has no qualms of con- science about borrowing' your notes and then never returning them until you look him up. To him it is coup d'etat if he can so question you about outside reading that he gets the gist of it and may be spared the labor of doing it for himself. The trouble is that,'although he is harmless in himself, yet he infects the whole crowd, because he is allowed to run loose. In short, he is an un- mitigated pest, a public nuisancecand a creature that the university could well do without. It is a problem to deal with him, since he cannot be segregated or quarantined.s There re- mains only the hope that various and well known influences persuade him1 to remain' at home next semester. All Men's winter shoes and oxfords, values up to $11.00,. now $6.65 'WalrS Shoe Store 108 S. Main 5I I 4 ..... .. Make a' note on't! TERE are four out- stmingpoints to our new Spring Suits: 1-a note of distinction in line 2-a high note in quality 3-a low note in price 4-a harmonious note in appearance Y rvk Quite a symphony in Suits for Spring SOPH LIT DUES Soph lits may pay their dues for the year, from 9 o'clock 1until 4 o'clock today in themain corridor of University hall. No tickets for the prom I will be issued to anyone who has not paid. The dues are $1.00. CLASS TREASURER. 'i Note :Awe high grade lines are now open for your selection. C r WAGNER & COMPANY For .Men Since 1848 STATE STREET AT LIBERTYl I