THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pubncaton. CED PR1s3 mutld to the use for tto it or not otherwise W. Michian, so secoad awr Street. ned will EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 ITOR............BRFWSTER P. CAMPBELL ............................Joseph A. Bernstein .............................. P. Lovejoy, Jr. 'itor................................ J. B. Young ama G. P. Overton Dawson M. B. Stahl *ambrecht PaulWatze. cPike hairman....................L. Armstrong Fern hdorfer L. R. Meiss drews $ditor..............Thornton W. Sargent, Jr. ..... ....George E Sloan ... ..... .... .......George Reindel . ......Elizabeth Vickery ..... .............. R. Meiss Assistants n Dorothy-. Geltz Robert M. Loeb H. B, Grundy J. R. Mack Winona A. Hibbard Kathrine Montgomery Harry D. Hoey R. C. Moriarty Agnes Holiquist J F. Pontius H.F.. Howlett Lillian Scher Marion Kerr R. B. Tarr Ilin M. A. Kiaver Virginia Tryon Marion Koch " BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960. 'AGER................VERNON F. HILLERY ........ .... . ........~ ...Albert J. Parker ...7... .....John J. Hamel, Jr. . . .... . ..athian W. Robertson .............Walter K. Scherer ........*. ..Herold C. Hunt Nothing could be more drastic. Provided en- forcement is possible, the speedy elimination from college sports of athletes able enough to earn money by their playing seems a probability. No loophole is left the player. Under the old plan, affidavits showing that he had received no remuneration were taken at their face value; under the new, affidavits will play no part whatever.; Wriggling will be im- possible, for there will be no room' to wriggle in.. However much this new policy may clash with that which The Daily has advocated in the past, the fact remains that the question is not a subject for dispute, at least for the time being. The matter is temporarily settled. Conference officials want ath- letic contests which are' strictly amateur, and they, mean to have them. Under the circumstances, only two paths are left open: complete compliance or open violation. Either one will serve to keep pro-, fessionals out. But since' absolute amateurism is the' ideal towards which the Conference seems to striv- ing, the only thing for the college athlete to do is to abide by the rules explicitly.. I Very likely one thing at least has been accom- plished. The matter has been brought to a point where a crisis is practically inevitable when the en- forcement of the rule is brought up. The coming summer will indicate whether athletes will abide by the rule. If they do, so much the better for tra- ditional "amateurism". If they do not, the officials may have to try still another tack. But whether the rule stands or not, the old "pro" discussion at least seems to be approaching something like a final so- lution. DIG DOWN IN THE OLD TRUNK Today is Old Clothes day. To obsberve it all one has to do is ransack his closet and his trunk for clothes he will never wear again, tie them up in a bundle, and. present them to the University truck when it calls 'round this morning. What happens to the clothes ? That is the best part of it. They go to Europe to furnish warmth and protection to the hard-pressed students in Middle European and Russian universities. These students are .actually heroes. Frank A. Vanderlip, author of "What Happened to Europe," says of them, "Nothing but an indomitable desire for education would enable students to carry on in spite of the almost insuperable difficulties and hard- ships which they are facing." 'They are the leaders ,of the future, and Europe must have trained lead- ers if it is to rise from the ashes of war. The scheme entails little sacrifice on the part of the American student. Much of his clothing is cast off long before it has outlived its usefulness. Sold to a contemporary of "Doe" or "Schmuck", a good suit may bring as much as a dollar. Turned over to. the Old Clothes drive, that same suit may prove invaluable to some student abroad. The cry of stricken Europe is loud: "To you it means noth- ing; to us it means everything!" Senior, have you ordered that cane? Iie Tele scope DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson AE TABLE (Eauir.e Standard Time), Detroit Limit and Expres Cars - 6:eo s. M., 7:so a. M,.8:so a. in., 9:oo a. n. and hourly to 9:55 p.,im. Jackson Expres Cars (local stops. of Ann Arbor), 947 a. *. and every two hours to *opa CarspEastBound-i m:ss . 7 :oo a.1 m. an: every two hours to :oo p. m., 11.o0 p. m. To Ypsilanti only-x:4o p. as.., 5a2: a, M., 1:1 ..... To Saline, changr~ at Ypsilanti. Local Cars Wast Bouad-7 :s# a. in, ':4Q P. i. To Jackson and alamazoo-Limited cars: 1:47, 1o:7 a.n. .12:47,' .47, - 4 :4 To Jackson and Lansing -4lmed: S:4~ 7r BOOKS, STATIONERY, BRIEF CASES, FELT GOODS LEATHER GOODS, BOSTON BAGS, MEMORY BOOKS 0 At Greatly Reduced Prices AT G R AHAM' S ANN UAL BO'O K SALE (BOTH STORES) FOU a new sweater, with class ,numerals, on East Williams Street. Owner can ' obtain same at SURPLUS SUPPLIES STO E. M. WVLSTUER. 1922 S APRIL At T W 2 9 16 23 3a 3 10 17 24 4 11 18' 25 b 12 19 26 T 1922 T F S 6 .7 8 13 14 15 20 21 22 27 28 29 1 Assistant David Park i.H.Wlfe Paul Blum Stanley Monroe William Graulich D. C. Maltby Harvey; Reed George Rookwood E. D. Armnantrout Edwardconlin Lawrence Eavrot. f 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 HAT STORE 617 PACKARD STREET' Telephone'1792- Exclusive Designs in EVENING GOWNS AFTERNOON FROCKS 230 Nickels Arcade Mrs. Grace Van Schoick SLEEP ANYWHERE, BUT EAT AT REXS THE CLUB LUNCH 71. Arbor Street Near State an4 Packari Streets OTHERS S AY: 1. r HAWNF a a o n _ _ -- {. _ t _ , ., G , _ Her Correspon is of vital importance an therefore have suitable especially for the Easter carry a full line of the hi linen papers in all tints i known lines as Crane's a Also handsomely mono moderate prices. We n ciality of engraving and IURnSDAY, APRIUL6, 1922 Editor-JOHN P. DAWSON, JR. stants-fohn Pontius James B. Young VEN PREPARE FOR ACTION of the University have not given up the,~ croveAUfQrsv rerdincrthe hiunior WILJD r Just Received Another Shipment tfa Spring Hats n COLLEGE 'IWQAIEN NEEDED not rill be very mucn alive. e action of. the Sejiate , in denying the right sity to open their play groundless. The storm s action has now sub- question is no longer play was to be opened 1 now is whether the to be regarded as oc- When Baseball Comes When I was sick and lay abed, My folks threw brickbats at my head; They thought it was a jolly sight To watch me dodge and duck in fright, And when I cursed them for their pains; They laughed and hollered, "Keep the change-" But now that I've grown straight and tall, I see the reason of it all, For I've become a baseball ump, And when the missiles go kerthump, My pristine skill I still retain, And though the bottles come like rain, I sway and swerve like any tree, And doggone few of them hit me ! -A. D. woaco. s commensurate they still to be dead traditions? attempt will be' f women on the s of the junior be is cep, The Daily Idiotorial Only two more days left to get that vacation haircut. Don't put it off any longer! Get it now What would vacation be without that full bowl haircut? By the Way DID YOU EVER WONDER IF: There will be another Varsity blotter' out soon? Co-eds will start wearing furs when the weather gets hot enough? It isn't time for campus engagements to begin piling up?* "The Man Who Has Never Been iKssed" was kidding? Spring vacation will ever come? --Vee Dee. or nA the members of nest honesty and than give serious itions which will (Syracuse Daily Orange) Four years of college training both destroys one host of illusions ;and. creates many another " to take its place. Among the chief fallacies that the college womoan inherits along with her education is the belief that there' is only one avenue awaiting her when she goes out in search of a pay-roll. "Oh, teach, I suppose," is the ever- ready reply to the general question her freshman year, and this supposi- tion has always had a phenomenal' way of clinging.; Today the college woman who plans to erter the teaching field, not because she is eager for it but be- cause she knows of nothing else to do, is clearly following the line of least resistance. Vocational guidance of a constructive sort is offered in innum- erable ways, but in two-thirds of the cases, the average student believes that such possibilities in many attrac- tive lines are only for the exceptional person and that the "agency" is still the best and least venturesome place for her. It is in connection with this belief in the necessity for unusual ability or further training that we quote from an article published by the Editorial Pre(Es association-a vertible plea for for the woman with a general college training to enter business fields. The writer says, "There is a surprising dearth of the right kind"of business women in the semi-professions of business such as advertising, banking, etc. These kinds of business require an entirely different type of woman than is ordinarily graduated from the commercial college." He believes that there is a distinct need for the un- iversity woman's trained sense of per- ception. This authority claims it is errone- ous for the college graduate to be discouraged by believing that she must first go through a post-graduate course 'in business to fit her to earn a living. "The greatest need in the business world today," he concludes, "is for the woman who can think and no amount of mechanical or automatic training will produce her ilk." RIDER FOR PENS.-Adv. Matinee Dance Saturday, April 22. Freshman Girls' Glee Club-Union.- Adv. Tailors OftHOE SHOP The possession of taste and the perception of style are denoted more by a man's headwear than any other belonging of. dress. One who does not choose his hat or cap haphazardly, will be plegsed with WILD & CO'S offer- ing. $.5.00and $6.00 Exclusive agents for English Thos. Townsend Caps. 4ade with leather sweats and hand sewed silk taped seams. $3.00 Haberdashers Hatte nwhile, the women must see to it that their tre not allowed to wither and die during the mn period. They 'are on the right track, and r them to keep the ball rolling. OFESSIONALISM GETS SQUSHED essionalism in college athletics has received th blow if rules have any meaning, for at a g of presidents of Conference universities, heads, and faculty representatives in Chi- st Saturday, a regulation designed to elimin- fessionals from college athletics once and for passed. ruling provides that "occasional games dur- ation on teams not professional or semi-pro- al and having no permanent organization are Oihit nrovi+.nanrv t~m.c.nnis r a')~r Says that' dation must president of Our Freshman Friend the president of the Rockefeller Foun- be a piker alongside of the man who is the whole building. . ti*' ? v :. .f The Wonderful Spirit Spring is 'here I know it Because my roommate Does not care to wear My new overcoat Any more He wears My new spring coat Now instead Spring is here. ' 7ho a Brogue " A Modish Spring Oxford for men, comes in black and brown grain leather-Bludher or pattern-heavy single sole-moderately priced, tomat 0i