____THE MICHIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during Elhe Upiversity year by the Board in Control of Student Publicatvns. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATRD P"AcS The Associate tress is exclusively etitlGd itothe ass'o republication of s' otws dispatrliv, credited t* I i, ac* eth.r "ass credited is this paper and tro iscalewa pubiahsx d oke a ntered at the oetomes a A A Ab r. W sran. as s tesa' clses mater. Subscription by carrier or mal s.3o. Omces: Ann Arbor Press Building. Maynard Street. Pho.ies: Business. g6s; Editorial, a44. Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the signs cure not necessarily to appear in print but as an evidence of faith. and notices of events will be published in Tice Daily at ti~e discre- tion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration No manuscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communications- EDIT&xtIAL STAFF3 Telephone 2414 MANAGING EDITOR............BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL Editor...........................Joseph A. Bernstein City Editor................ ...............James B. Young Ass't City Editor...........:.....-....--.----....Marion Kerr Night Editors- R. E. Adams G. P. Overton John P. Dawson_ M. B. Stahl Edward Lambrecht Paul Watzel Frank McPike Editorial Board Chairman................L. Armstrong Kern e~ditorial Board- Leo Hershdorfer .4. R. Meiss C. T. Andrews Sunday Magazine Editor......... Thornton W. Sargent, Jr. exchange Editor...........................Geodge E. Sloan Music Editor............................Sidney B. Coates sporting Editor.............................George Reindel Conference Editor..... ........-..- ----. --.. -.E.Harry B. Grundy Women's Editor...........................Elizabeth Vickery Elumor Editor........................... ...... . R. Meiss Assistants Maurice Berman R. A. Donahue Marion Koch Jack D. Briscoe Dorothy G. Geltz 3. E. Mack W. B. Butler H. B. Grundy Kathirine Montgomery R. N. Byers Winona A. Hibbard R. C. Moriarty A. D. Clark Harry D. Hoey Lillian Scher Harry C. Clark Marion Kerr R. B. Tarr Evelyn J. Coughlin Victor Klein Virginia Tryon BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER..............VERNQN F. HILLERY Advertising ................................Albert J. Parker Advertising .............................John J. Hamel, Jr. Publication..............................Nathan W. Robertson Accounts................. ...........WalterK . Scherer Circulation................................... Herold C. Hunt L,. Beaumont Parks Edw. Murane James Prentiss David Park T. H. Wolfe Stanley Monroe William Graulich Harvey Reed George Rockwood E. D. Armantrout Eydward Conlin Assistants Lawrence Favrot C. D. Malloch Wallace Flower" Charles R. Richards Richard G. Burchell H. W. Cooper W. K. Kidder D. L. Pierce C. L. Hagerman S. L Baner C. L. Putnam A. S. Morton James Bernard K. C. Seick Berbert Good H. L. Hale Arthur Hartwell A. M. White. Glen Jepsen Howard Hayden J. Blumenthal Eugene 'Dunne John C. Haskins W. D. Roesser J. S. Comnpton SATURDAY, JUNE 3, 1922 Night Editor-H. A. DONAHUE Assistant-G. P. Overton THE NEW DISCIPLINE In accordance with the report of the special com- mittee on inquiry appointed by President Marion L. Burton, the Underclass Conduct committee of -the. Student council will continue to function next fall in the disciplining of freshmen who refuse to ad- here to the restrictions and rules for first year men. In order to avoid any recurrence of certain unfor- ,tunate incidents which took place this year, how- ever,, the Underclass Conduct committee will not employ any, physical punishment, but instead some means whereby the offending freshman may be os- tracized by his own classmates and made ineligible for all campus activities will be carefully planned during the coming summer for use next year. Such a plan, if it proves successful, should finally result in the doing away of all hazing. For it to be a complete success, however, a change of attitude on the part of the yearlings will be necessary. The old idea that the wearing of a pot and the observ- ing of the rules is simply a form of upperclass bul- lying must be supplanted by a feeling of class unity ,and a desire to take life at Michigan as it comes, and live it for all it is worth. High school graduates come to Ann Arbor each fall, cloaked in- all the dignity that a high school ,youth can assume. When, therefore, upon their ar- rival custom steps in, and arbitrarily replaces fe- doras by grey skullcaps, besides administering other shocks to the prep-school poise, it is only natural that the graduates should adhere to the rules at best under silent protest, and that at times more impulsive or obstinate ones should become recalci- .trant, until some action is taken to bring them back to the fold. The action in former years was physi- cal discipline, administered by members of other classes. Under the system to be used next year, the fresh- ntan will be asked to see that every member of their class obeys the rules. Special efforts will also be made by the Student council, at the annual Tradi- tions meeting and other freshman assemblies, to make clear all customs to the first-year men, and to show them that the restrictions imposed -upon them are a part and parcel of their college life at Michi- gait, that they are as fair for one as for all, and that they should be willingly obeyed. With such an understanding gained, the promising new system for the preservation of freshman customs should be made workable, simply because the council will have the co-operation of the freshman class itself. FROM THE ENDS OF THE EARTH Inquiry confirms the impression commonly held that Michigan is conspicuous among universities for the number of foreign students enrolled. Columbia, situated in the cosmopolitan port of New York, so greatly surpasses all other universities in this re- spect as to be in a class by herself; but of those >thers Michigan heads the list by a substantial mar- gin. At Michigan especially, therefore, - though hardly less so at any other great American univer- sity - tie question of cosmopolitanism among stu- dents is one which deserves thoughtful considera- tion. Michigan naturally has a large number of stu- dents from Cana'la, although it is difficult to think of Canadians as aliens except in a technical sense ; they are essentiallf no more strangers than are the men and women from our own states outside of Michigan. Besides them, however, the bulk of our foreign students come from far off South Africa, ,India, and the Orient, with a lesser number from the West Indies and Central and South America. It is safe to say that students who have trav- elled half the girth of the world to attend an Amer- can state university, are above the average of stu- dents in the countries from which they hail. This probably explains the favorable scholarship rec- prds made by nearly all of these students, notwith- standing their language handicap, compared with the averages in the classes which they attend. This same condition also points to the probability that our foreign visitors, themselves naturally ret- icent among strangers, will perhaps always be sensi- tive of a certain amount of indifference, and possi- bly of some degree of discourtesy, on the part of the less thoughtful students from American homes. But there will not be wanting many Americans who will readily comprehend the alien's student's posi- tion, and will find many natural ways to express the personal aid national friendliness which really ex- ists between true Americans-and all well-disposed foreigners. Such Americans do not need to be told that there is no formula for the treatment of aliens who are their fellow students or classmates. Imagination in- deed has many uses, and a little thoughtful contem- plation often will deepen understanding surpris- ingly. When it is remembered that people the world over are after all just people, and that all the ,fine qualities of character thrive in thoughtful and ,adventurous hearts everywhere, there need be no .dearth of jolly good friendships among students .who, though alien in race or nationality, are united ,for the present as fellow students at Michigan. KEEP THE EARLY CALENDAR . When the -school calendar was revised so as to bring Commencement earlier in the year, a change highly pleasing to students was instituted. When ,the Uniersity is adjourned late in the season, as has been -the case at Michigan in former years, it means somewhat of an inconvenience for students who wish to attend school during the summer, giving them only the shortest "breathing space" between the finish of the regular term and the beginning of the Summer.session. - Again, students who wish to attend reunions of their high school alumni organi- zations find it impossible to do so, because of a schedule which keeps them here until June is half or two-thirds gone. By beginning school a week earlier in the fall and adjourning it a week sooner in the spring, a week of study in the crisp invigorating autumn is sub- stituted for a week of school in the hot, uninspir- ing weather of June. Such a change is highly ad- vantageou's to all concerned, and it is to be hoped that in the future the same policy will be followed in arranging the University calendar. Numbers by the Varsity band, by Tang and Ta- vares, by Phil Diamond and Mike Chon, - and then, after nearly an hour, the seniors sang. In the future, it might be well to remember that a senior sing is a senior sing, not a band bounce. ~ 2Tie Teleope We'll Beat 'Em Yet Today we play Ohio State, They're out to win, me thinks. So hack our team with all you've got, And break that darn old jinks. The Fourth one The following is a story which has a fair chance to win one of the prizes, providing the judges do not play golf. You will easily see the reason for this after reading this bit of fiction below. THE FRUITLESS PLEA Scotty Cl.eek, a hen-pecked husband, but neverthe- less, the club golf champion, undergoes a thorough physical examination. "Are you sure that I am in first class condition" he asked the doctor at its conclusion. "Absolutely." "Is my blood pressure normal?" "It is perfect." "Is my heart action regular?" "Beyond a doubt." "Lungs clear?" "Clear as a bell." "Kidneys functioning properly?" "Splendid." "Am I not bordering on a nervous breakdown ?" "I see no signs of it." "Gee, Doc, I'm sorry." "Sorry for what ?" "I thought you could find something the matter with me so that I could go to Pinehurst for the sea- son." / Good Sport We will always claim that the drinks were on the soda clerk who slipped while carrying a tray of badly shaken milk-shakes. - One to Think Over. Do co-eds realize the power of the press? UNCLE BEANIE. DETROIT UNITED LINES TIME TABLE Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Lifuited and Express Cars-6:oo a. in., 7:oo a. in., 8:oo a. m., 9:oo a. m. and hourly to 9:o5 p. m. Jackson IExpress Cars (local stops of Ain Arbor)-9:47 a. m. and every two hours to 9:47 p. m. Local Cars, East Bound-5 : 5a. in., 7:00 a. m. and every two hours to 9 :oo p. M; i I :oo p. m. Tro Ypsilanti only-:: ::4o p. mn., I2:2 a. n., :1s a. n. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars, West Bound-7:50 a. M., 2:40 P. in. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars: 8:47, 10:47, a. in.12,:47, 2:47, 4:47 P. in. To Jackson and ansing-Limited: 8:47 P. in. ro .""""rri""ri" " p " e " r . " " .- i " r r " O " " " r " i " xS " i s WHITE OXFORDS and 1922 S 7 14 21 28 it I 8 15 22 29 T 2 9 16 23 3o MAY w 3 10 17 24 81 T 4 11 19' 25 F 12 19 26 1922 S 6 13 29 27 STRAP PUMPS BRING YOUR PANAMA AND STRAW HATS IN NOW TO BE CLEANED. Prices for cleaning Panama's $1.25 up. Prices for cleaning stiff straws ................. .75 up. We do only high class work. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 PACKARD STREET Telephone 1792 Your wardrobe is not complete unless you have a pair of our white reinskin or buckskin oxfords or pumps with low or ,medium heels. Priced from $4.00 TO $1.50 Chop Suey CHINESE AND AMERICAN RESTAURANT Quang Tung Lo. 613 E. liberty II Albert Ganwsi Tine Custom Tailor- ing Suits made to or- der at Reasonable Prices. G ifts for G raduation 7 9 Grahams BOTH STORES WAHR'S SHOE STORE DOWN TOWN 108 SOUTH MAIN ST. _ r Your Trip Home Will Be a R eal Treat _ ar if you make it in one of our cars. Sell it upon your arrival and poss-= ibly make a little besides. Any= way you look at it you can't lose.= s r - - - ~- i YoUsed Trip epHrmeW llB r s - - a a -r 417 E Huron Phone 2i58 Main Office: 207 E. Washington i ummannell itupn yonumarrval ndmpons' nu r a. Com anaokor tcvr r a _ a r a 1. 113 S. Main St. Second Floor DANA E. HISCOCKI DEALER IN HARD And SOFT COAL WOOD AND COKE Kentucky Egg, Pocahontas, Manhattan Egg, West Vir- ginia Lump, Solvay Coke, G o od Clean Hard Coal. PHONE 109F2 i Are Students Willing to Pay For Up-to-date Text Books? Students are justified. in expecting the very latest material il book form Mimeographed outlines or review questions or supple- mentary readings are tangible instruments to work with and assist one materially in grasping the subject. Time wasted in the library waiting for books may be used to advantage if these supplementary readings are incorporated into a bound mirieogrgphed book (which may also be used as a note book). Mimeographed text books may be revised each year without mak- ing the cost to the student a burden. One hundred books may be mimeographed at a lower rate than five hundred may be printed. "The WRITE Gift" BOXED WRITING PAPER FOR GRADUATI ON BINDS FRIENDSHIP CLOSER. From the wealth of styles and grades in our store you will find it very easy to select the Boxed Writing Paper that will reflect the personality of the one you wish to remember. 0. D. MORRILL. 17 NICKELS ARCADE The Stationery and Typewriter Store A hundred-page book costs between seventy-five cents and one dollar twenty-five cents, depending upon the size of the classes. Mr. Professor! Are you perfectly satisfied with the text or lab- oratory manual you are using? Do you not feel that, by writing your own book and revising it as suggestions are made in the class room and from associates, within a year or two you can present your sub- ject far better than you are at present? Bring in your manuscript; let me know the enrollment of your classes, tell your students where they may buy their text - that is all. No risk, no trouble. Come in and talk it over. Edwards Bros. Publishers I- 308-310.SOUTH STATE STREET