we will be in a better state of pre- paredness as a result of this policy than we were under the older sgheme. But in the nature of things, this mag- nificent body of citizen officers will not last always. They will grow too old for field service, they will take on new burdens, domestic or business, which will make service impossible; they will be lost through sickness, ac- cident and death as the years go by. For the necessary replacements, Con- gress has established in' each of the larger colleges and universities a training corps for the peace time, training of reserve officers as replace- ments for the inevitable losses in the ranks of the Organized Reserve Corps. Unless the replacements are trained men, the whole scheme fails. Unless the raw material subjected to training is of the kind which officers are made -college men-the labor will have been in vain, for the training will take too much time and tIe product will never have those basic qualities found only in the educated man, which we now know must be at the bottom of efficiency in commissioned officers. . Students at such an institution as the University of Michigan are largely of military age. They will be drafted as. privates in case of war if they are not enrolled as cadets or as reserve officers. This would be a scandalous economic waste of material, which Congress does not expect will happen, and which the student as a citizen should not let happen. It would indi- cate also that the importance of the civic duty was not grasped by the stu- dent body. It would mean that in time of war and the country's need we should have to scramble and' search about for the educated men needed for officers and to train them when found. In the process the coun- If I am correctly informed, the Re- serve Officers Training Corps at the University of Michigan numbers 465 cadets. The number is pitifully small when compared with the number of able-bodied male citizens of military age who are student5 and who should be enrolled in the corps. Congress nas made the policy out- lined in the foregoing; trusting in the willingness of citizens to do their part loyally and completely in peace and war. The part of the college man in peace happens to require that he shall sacrifice a small part of his, time and energy preparing himself for his war duties as a leader of men, responsible to God and his country, that they are skillfully led and cared for. The suc- cess or failure of the scheme will de- pend in large measure upon the spirit in which the men of Michigan meet this demand. The reputation of the University of Michigan, your Alma Mater, in the next war will not be measured by the number of drafted privates furnished butby the number and quality of the commissioned offi- cers who are gradatues of Michigan's R. O. T. C. A REVIEW BY G. D. E. OF ,"THE PASSING OF THE GREAT RACE" (Continued from Page 4) only too glad to import anything for factory fodder. Personally, I should like to have Mr. Grant explain the silly Puritanism brought here by the English Nordics and the big battle which the old stock of Americans has fought to keep it with us, their ruthless trampling of art and genius into the mud of me- diocrity and morals. And why, in the name of ten thousand devils, did the superior Nordics adopt Christianity with its "slave morals" and element-' ary socialism which has since' been working for the undoing of its adopt- day cing to religious. lies in the face for a few million days after my proto- n of biological truths? plasm disintegrates. I do not know, nor does it worry But I diverge, the hour grows late me. In fact, I think that man, like and the lantern from the rafters of all other highly specialized animals, my garret grows dim and flickers. I will pass from the face of the earth, haul out of my wallow of melancholy like the cephalopods, armored fishes, to advise the reading Madison Grant's and the dinosaurs-and the quicker the book from stem to stern. "The Pass- extinction the better I shall be pleased. ing of the Great Race" is comprehen- But I am far from optimistic about sible to any layman of intelligence. tll]Y e si r e eilllllllli11111111illl1111111111111111111g111111111111I111111l11111 i They are just as good as they were before Christmas and that is saying a whole lot. But one can afford to say a whole lot about Besimers' Grilled Steaks They are so juicy-and so good. Get one tonight. We are at the old stand up- stairs across from the D. U. R. station w _srassasiarsu assassssss.................... i . . - sssussu u iwen i in ~n n rrrr.rrr rr Irsr r uu juut11liIjIII1br 1 ® a. Look Your llcst! y OU have only one way of judging people whom you are not intimately acquainted with- that is by their appearances. Oth- er people judge you in the same manner. Let us be responsible for your ap- pearances being everything they should be. INC. Randolph & Wabgtsh 310 S. State 2nd Floor Ann Arbor d