THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBE.R 4, 1s OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Pulished every morning exc pIGMonday during the Univer- sity year by the Roard in Control 4f Student Pubiations MEMBER OF THE AS3OCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tise 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 Anin Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Suoscription by carrier or mail, $3.5y. Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 960 Editorial. 2414. Communications not to exceed 3oo words, if signed, the sig- nature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be pub~lished in The Daily at the discretion 'f the Editor, if left at or mailed to 'he Daily office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration o man- uscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- pressed in the communications. What's Going On" notices will not be received after 6 o'clock on the evening preceding insertion. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 MANAGING EDITOR........... BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL Assistant Managing EditorH..................H h W. Hitchcock City Editor...............................f P. Lovejoy, Jr. Night Editors- M. B. Stahl G. P. Overton R. E. Adams Hughston McBain Paul Watzel Edward Lambrecht P. H. McPike Editorials .T. J Whinery, L. A. Kern, S. T. Beach. E. R. Meiss Sunday Magazine. Editor..........................T. S. Sargent Sporting Editor ................................. George Reindel Women's Editor ............................. Elizabeth Vickery Humor Editor.................................... E R. Meiss Assistants Harry B. Grundy John Dawson Ben H. Lee, Jr. Wallace F. Elliott Sidney B. Coates Julian Mack M. A. Klaver Lowell S. Kerr Howard Donahue Dorothy Whipple H. E. Howlett Art~old Fleig Marion Koch Katherine Montgomery BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER.............. VERNON F. HILLERY Advertising.........................F. M. Heath, A. J. Parker Publication .............................Nathan W. Robertson Accounts................................. John J. Hamels, Jr. Circulation................................... Herold C. Hunt Assistants Burr L. Robbins Richard Cutting H. Willis Heidbreder W. Cooley James Prentiss W. Kenneth Galbraith L. Beaumont Parks Maurice Moule J. A. Dryer Walter Scherer ar in Goldring Richard Heidemann Edw. Murane Tyler Stevens T. H. Wolfe Figures and sentiment are available to show that Michigan is a real University. The two combina- tions are unfortunate, but not irreconcilable. The fact that it does cost considerable to live here makes more difficult the problem of earning that living. The fact that this is Michigan means that the men and women who come here, willing to work that they may study, are above and superior to the aver- age. Many students who merit the positions they hold, in being above the average in their class- rooms, in their campus life, and in their general service to the world at large, are unable to continue their studies here because of the lack of jobs. Some students ask for and take positions, when not really needing them. That is unfortunate. Some people fail to foresee the necessity of help until the very hour wh n it is needed, and this does not lead to the best man for the right place. But these two items are, considering the whole dilemma, a small part. The big feature is, that there has not been sufficient demand for student help, and yet, in prac- tically every case, the work and spirit of the stu- dents has been adequate and fine. Michigan will lose men and women because of the lack of work for these men and women. That loss will be a great one, and it is one both deplor- able and needless. Have you not some way, in which students may work, that they may study? And will you not tell those who have these positions available, that those who wish to fill them are able, willing, and worth while? JUGGLING TOO MANY ACTIVITIES Once upon' a time two desirable seats presented themselves to an ambitious youth with a yearning for "sittin' pretty". Undecided as to which one to choose, he tried to take both at once. As a result he landed between them on the floor. Isn't it true that a similar fate awaits most stu- dents who try to succeed in a number of activi- ties? The ones who are not content with sticking to dramatics try their hand at athletics or publica- tions. Time passes rapidly. Soon these students become sophomores, then juniors, and when grad- uation comes they have nothing to show for their efforts but a flurry here and there which has re- sulted in their accomplishing practically nothing. Trying to succeed in many lines, they have met with scarcely more than partial success in any. On the other hand, most of the men and women on the campus who have arrived some place have done so by concentrating their energy in one field until they have mastered it. Then success has crowned their efforts; and as a result they have often found themselves installed in important posi- tions on the campus aside from their particular specialty. Written in the archives of the University are the names of a few persons, who have met success in practically every field of endeavor on the campus. But these persons are the exceptions and their cases do not prove anything. By far the majority who have attempted it have landed on the floor in one way or another. It is a logical and profitable plan to stick to one activity. II, Log Log Slide Rules AT GRAHAM' S B~oth ends of the diagonal Ipalk iI : j DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jack.,on T!E TABLE (E4agtern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-6.os a. I., 7:05 a. m.. 8:io a. in. and hourly to 9 :o Jackson Express Cars (local stops of Ann -rlmr. 9:48 'a. m, and every two hours to 9:48 p. In. :ocal Cars East Bound-5 :55.a.m., 7 :oo a. n and every two hours to 9:oo p. mn.. ii :oo Sn. To Ypsilanti only-r r :4o p. M., 12.25 a. in., r : r5 a. mn. o Salize, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:50 a. m., 2:40 p. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars: :48, 10 :4S a. in., 12 :48. 2:48. 4 :48. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited: 8:48 Daily Want Ads Pay.-Adv. Patronize our Advertisers.-Adv. 1921 6 13 20 27 NOVEMBER 1 2 3 7 8 9 10 14 15 16 17 21 22 23 24 28 29 30 1921 4 5; 11 12 18 19 25 26 Calkins Fletcher Drug Co. and the Cushing Drug Co. invite the inspection o TREBOPRICE $6.00 PIPE rL NOTICE TO MEN We do all kinds of high-class Hat work at pre-war prices. Hats turned inside out, with all new trimings, are as good as new. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 PACKARD STREET Telephone 1792 Patronize Daily Advertisers.-Adv. Try a Daily Want Ad. It pays.-Adv. Ivory stopper in the stemn stops all moisture Agents forthe United States and Canada GROSVENOR NICHOLAS & CO., Inc. 12 East 48th Street New York City I _ KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHES - FALL AND WINTER 192, -------- Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for any issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who has full charge of all news to be printed that night. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1921 Night Editor-R. E. ADAMS, JR. JOURNALISM'S BLACK SHEEP Newspaper journalism has during the last decade made admirable strides towards the lofty position of an acknowledged profession. From year to year the percentage of college men entering jour- nalistic offices has materially increased.' The daily articles have evolved to a4-place where they can boast to a certain extent of literary as well as news value. And finally, editors and reporters have set up a -code of standards whereby they publish not merely "what the public wants", as they used to term it, but both ."what the public wants" and "what is best for the public". Such has been the progress of journalism. But just as medicine has its quacks and law has its shysters, so the profession of journalism is often discredited by unworthy members in its ranks. A de- plorable example of this black sheep of journalism appeared as a result of Michigan's loss to Ohio State in football recently. Shortly after the game a state newspaper printed an article containing sweep- ing and denunciatory accusations concerning the University of Michigan, statements attributed to and since utterly denied by the governor of this state. To refute such groundless and undeliber- ated accusations as this article sets forth would be a waste of time. Its effect upon the democratic reputation of Michigan can be only negligible. But the story furnishes an eloquent example of yellow sensationalism and unscrupulous mis-quoting of the sort which for so many years has prevented jour- nalism from taking its proper place in the esteem of the public alongside of the other professions. Such distorting of facts and misrepresenting of authorities ip one instance does more damage to journalism than a hundred well-written articles can hope to repair. If the publishing of false statements affected only the newspaper in which the state- ments appeared the matter would be less serius, but under present conditions the whole personnel of the newspaper profession must suffer condemnation for inefficiency and unscrupulousness because of the fact that one individual, misplaced in modern jour- nalism, went out in the spirit of thirty years ago to dig up news, and came back witha sensational yarn. at the expense of veracity, honesty, and the jour- nalistic profession. HEI.P THEM STAY The proper co-ordination between positions, or jobs, and students, or workers, has ceased to be a mere problem. It may no longer be referred to as an important situation. It is a dilemma. There are more students financially short this year than ever before. These men and women have come to Michigan for the fundamentals of an education. They must want this rather strongly, for they are willing to work in order to study. Almost any class of worker can be obtained, in varying degrees of experience, among the student body who want and can work. Facilities for unit- ing the students with the jobs are at hand - Dean Bursley's. office is taking care of that end. More than i,ooo applications are now on file. Have those who could and might use student labor come through ? Figures have been quoted to show that Ann Ar- bor ranks foremost in the highest living costs. here's a right way in clothes- buying-and another way. Our way and the Kirschbaum way is this: qualty, honest price, full value, guaranteed satisfac- tion. Suits, topcoats, overcoats the Telescope I $30 to $45 The Father's Dilemma The father thought the matter o'er, He'd sent his son to school, He had worked and slaved in his fresh fish-store Just to spoil the boy like a gilded fool. A husky youth his son had been, And a massive man he returned, But the germ of knowledge could find no way in To a head where genius had never burned. The fish store helped this youngster too In football competition, For at the start he wriggled through And won a team position. But, thought the father, "What a fool I've been to slave and spend my jack To send an only son to school, And all I get's a quarter-back." We may lose our faith in boarding houses, but, thank Heaven, we still believe in Santa. -Afra Dighty. Quoth Eppie Taff: They're playing taps O'er Teddy Jones, They caught him rolling Loaded bones. - Ichabod. Our Freshman Friend Was going to give the right of way to some upper- classmen but he saw that none of the other fresh- men did it, so he decided not to. Songs of the Immortals (And those who are a little more vulnerable.) Betty V. is Full of joy, Since she's been To Illinois. Hugo Awn. Speaking of song hits Waldo says he learned to play the catarrh at the nasal academy. - Gus Tow. Famous Closing Lines "Here's some inside dope," said the doctor as he hande his patient a pill. ERM. FRED W. GROSS ANN ARBOR lB __ _.. _ _. __ -..._ _. ___ A l-. _ 1 "When You iuy, lu2 Quality Regarding prices--we always haveinvited comparison with any house in the country providing the factor "quality" is given due consideration. WAGNER For Men STATE STR & COMPANY Since 1848 ET A T LIBERTY E