te for herwise IL secondl as St"t. 'he DAi~y office. Unsigned ion. N manuscript will tage. the sentiments expressed OF ;. * . .. BRZWSTER P. CAMPBl LL .........Joseph A. Bernstein .........E. P. Lovejoy, Jr. n...........g.. G. P. Overton M. B. Stahl Paul Watzel . ......L. Armstrong Kern rfer E. R. Meiss W. litor .............'..Thornton W. Sargent, Jr. . . . . . . . . . . . .... George D~. Sloan ...Sidney B. Coates ....George Reindel .... izabeth Vickery ......E. R. Meiss Assistants Dorothy G. Geltz Robert M. Loeb H. B. Grundy J.B. Mack Winona A. Hibbard Kathrine Montgomery Harry D. Hoey R. C. Moriarty Agnes Homquist J. F. Pontius H. t~. Howlett illian Scher Marion Kerr R. B. Tarr M. A. Klaver VirginiaTryon Marion Koch BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 .E..............VERNON F. HILLERY . ... .....Albert J. Parker ...... .... John J. Hamel, Jr. ...... Nathan W. Robertson .... .....Walter K. Scherer ........Herold C. Hunt Assistants :u D. C. Maitby Harvey Reed George Rockwood It. D. Armantrout ]tdward Conlin L~awrence Favrot r, MARCH 24, 1922 or-R. E. ADAMS, JR. -R. M. Loeb r-J. W..Conrad ARD FOR ITHACA!1 Varsity track team leaves for ;age in the last indoor meet for season. The Cornellians are Michigan will show them what eans. Handicaps and defeats; bring disappointment to the ize and Blue squad, but rather king always to prove that their is still alive - and they have 3:45 o'clock. The only place E the student body to be at that tion, helping the band to drown CLEAN PUBLICITY FOR MICHIGAN When Sigma Delta Chi organized last fall a news bureau, for the dissemination of publicity regarding the University, it did so merely for the purpose of showing the Regents that such a service was needed. The men who have been in charge of the bureau, now are preparing to bring a full statement of the matter directly before the Regents at their next meeting. Michigan surely needs some publicity department, if the lack of good stories and the predominance of scandal and smut, featuring Ann Arbor news in the past, is to be taken as any criterion. Local cor- respondents for outside papers do not get all the news by any mpeans; the items they do send out all too frequently contain the kind of stuff that ought never to get into print, bits of sensation which re- flect little but discredit upon the Univprsity. Stories about significant happenings in Ann Arbor too often fail to receive any outside recognition whatever. Student correspondents, for one thing, often are too close to the affairs of Michigan to catch big "tips", and the monthly news letter, put out by the depart- ment of journalism, comes too infrequently to news- paper offices, and is far too academic, to be of any practical or timely value whatever. Its items sel- dom or never are used. All this while, we see long yarns, in outside pa- pers about Harvard, Illinois, and universities on the west coast.. That is because Harvard and the rest maintain news bureaus such as the one suggested for Michigan, whereas we have always been dependent on the whims and vagaries of local correspondents for our representation. Under the news bureau plan, a publicity man would be brough in from outside, and established here as a paid official of the University. He would be independent of everyone but the 'President - that would allow him freedom to exercise proper judgment in choosing stories for dissemination. Furthermore, and most important; he would bring into the University an outsider's viewpoint of what is news and what is not, and he would be hampered neither by the limitations of a faculty, academic outlook, nor by the inexperience and' consequent shortsightedness of the student. He would have his own assistants, would maintain his own exclusive department, and, if the Regents are wise, would be paid a salary high enough to insure the giving of his full amount of effort and interest to the work. The Regents would do well to consider thoroughly the suggestions for a news bureau. Michigan surely needs some organization to secure for herself, not more publicity, but publicity of the right kind. With the popularity of radio increasing to un- heard-of proportions it would not be surprising to be disturbed some evening by a "Hello, Michigan! This is Mars talking. Have you an open date on your football schedule for next fall?" * '2li T lesop Pajantas Listen my children and you shall hear What a freshman did in his sophomore year. The shades of night were falling fast When through the village streets there passed A youth who wore 'mid snow and ice Beneath his robe but this device Pajamas. .A crowd observed his promenade "Some sleep-walker is -loose," they said. "Perhaps he's doing 'it on bets. "That's somnething State street seldom gets." - Pajamas. Some others thought it was a kind Professor with an absent mind. But to no class did this youth go He went to shov the picture show Pajamas. "He sat throughout the photoplay And then proceeded on his way The cold he did not seem to rue Though winter zephyrs breeze right through Pajamas. He disappeared, and in the night The hundreds who had seen the sight Kept wondering for a little while Kept wondering at the latest style Pajamas. The Daily-Adrice from Home "Received your letter addressed to me yesterday and immediately knew that you must need money again. That always makes me glad to hear from you. I think three times in one month is too often for you to have spent all your money, and in the future you might do well to take better care of your finances. I hope some day to read a letter of yours without being touched. As. ever, Your Father." I ANNUAL BOOK SALE BEGINNING MONDAY, MARCH 27 (BOTH STORES) DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TI E ABLE (Eastern Standard Time) .etroit Limited and Express Cars - ba a. in., 7:eo a.,im., #:oo a. in., g:oo a. mn. and hourly toqg:oS p, . . ,jack.n Express Cars (local stops of Aan Arbor), !:47 a. m, and every two hours te s:47 V. An. Local Cars East Bound-5:5 a.m., 7::oe a. ,n. and :evr two hours to #:o p. m.,11.0 p. 're To Ypsilanti onl-ix:4*9. m, 223. 3i To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7 :s a. m., a:4o To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars: t:47, 10.'47, a. 'i., is2:47, 2.47, 4:47. To Jackson and Lansing - IMited: :47 p. ai. 1922 MARCH 1922 8 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, ? 21 22 23 -24 25 26 27 28 29 0 31 HATS - SPRING - HATS Reblocked at greatly reduced prices. 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, 179 Albert Gansle. Tine Custom Tailor- ing Suits made to or- I er at Reasonable Prices. ,' Every Passenger Insured Against Accident SPECIAL NOTIC Compare These Prices Anywhere In the City BOOM LEAT MENS Half Soles and Heels Rubber Heels - - - Lealher Heels - - - Fall Soles and Heels -' $2.00 .60 .60 $3.00 STATIONERY, BRIEF CASES, FELT R GOODS, BOSTON BAGS, MEMORY AT GRAHAM'S 999 TAXI Neolin Special, Mar. 1st to 1 MenR Half Soles $1.00 Women Half Soles 85c 113 S. Plain St. Secand Floor NOW 35 like hell, and beat Cor- - A HOLDOVER council expressed itself g heartily in favor of the ggested recently by The e action in establishing a omecomings was undoubt- he Athletic association set astic track meet Saturday, assurance from the coun- be held the evening of the gly, the association, in per- A in all the publicity .sent ill statement of the festivi- would surround the track layed up big". The coun- ghtly, that the Cap Night OTHERS S AY: THE MODERN PROBLEM (Daily Palo Alto) A certain -W. L. George has sum- marized .it all over again: The real problem is not how to reform the mod- ern girl, but how to live witi her, states this savant, thus giving at least a practical turn to a long-lved discus- sion. And the solving of this problem real- ly ought not'to be so bad, notwith- standing the black and disastrous re- sults predicted for the human race by many who now pass time in mourn- ing the disappearance of the simple and demuretgirl of mother's day. Even after the worst is said of' the blase, sophisticated, bobbed-hair flap- per of today, the present younger set of women must have something in common with 'the old-fashioned girl, for quite as many young men as ever are being daily trapped into the bonds and perils of matriniony. Despite constant regrets of "safe- ty valves," "Letter Boxes," et cetera, stating that the. only true and worth- while girl is the old-fashioned kind, we doubt if there !will be any notice- able immigration to the town of Se- bastapol, which has just come forfward with the claim of great numbers of this very type, willing to scrub, darn socks, and what not for the eligiblb mat We sometimes wonder if this mod- ern' girl isn't pretty much like the ideal young lady of generations past, after all. Women have always been criticised. When they wore long and bulky 'gowns' and bustles these were attacked. Today their skirts are short, and they are for this condemned. Form- erly, tight-fitting, body-restraining, physically absurd garments were worn and severely censored. Today the girl supports her own body as she walks down the street, but she still runs the gauntlet of criticism. To our frightfully modernistic mind it occurs that just a little may be said in favor of the girl of today. Not that the old-fashioned girls was not attractive. She must have been. And we also have it that she was consider- able of a" problem to those people who were worrying over the antics of a younger generation fifty years ago, though many of her class have proved to be the very best type oif grand- mother we 'know today. The modern girl problem will, no doubt be settled along the lines 'sug- gested by W. L. George. But why all this worry about the modern girl, and old-fashioned girl, anyway. Both were good, and bad--we like both of them- and are not both, after all, just normal? EVERIY GIRL Should see the Junior Girls' Play. A new triumph in this annual function is the "Sceptre and Serenade." See the new spring fashions. Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. Tickets at the Whitney.-Adv. -..... ."1111 .: M GYM r A Y 111 A rs W . i rA '. . j ti ' r 1 11! r i . X11 t Ai f a4 r A rr I f O \ . r l1 1' W r rill - 1 } p Y11 , IIIIII r / fir r : 11 11 1 "Y; , iY. I , 1 M 1S i i llilll(Ittilllllltlttlt1111111111t1t1lllltlll1111lI11lI111i111! .1 S r { ~ {L' C / fr f ( ; it 1}IL 1 j1 _ { alt t ..Oki 5 ZIA, -M, - it r trV - _i Every Job Guaranteed Paul, formerly of Paul's P Williams St. is with i 343 SO. MAIN ST r. ;, y v Langham Dude by Leos li that the seniors wish er in the month than plan suggested by The hem, the council has ii. The underclass the two days immedi- t on Right for Spring have no Spring week this year, but 1 why she may 'never have such an faculty, the students, and the mem- ent council themselves still are en- :avor of the plan. They regret that ked out for this year. So de we. at its establishment is out of the present is no reason for dropping LANGHAM CLOTHES ow out the Spring week, ear 1922-1923, it undoubt- compromise may be ef- Festival, the baseball and ap Night, Swing-out, and The plan, though neces- as "live" next year as announcement that there Easy Answers Dear- Erm This is a question which has bothered me .for a; long time and Id like you to settle it once for all. Is the submerged tenth of this campus below' C-level? Yours, Herm. Dear Herm: You might leave this to public opinion. Famous Closing Lines Right Style Lines; Expert Tailoring Van Boven &c C 1107 South i