West,, should not necessarily be Eing except Mondsy diWing te IWiVer. ird in Control of Stud&At eublwationaa- P OF THE ASS/aCATED PRESS Press is excluaive' etL-tied to the ns to. news die xtuhta credits-d to it or not otkervis. ar cndthe aoal news pa blished theit., postoafce at Ann Arbor, Michigan, a see d Tier mail, $3.50. r Pres building, )aynard Street. 966; Editorial, 2414. qm exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig. pear in print, but as an evidence of will be published in The Daily at the left at or mailed to The Daiy office ill receive no consideration. o man ss the writer incloses postage. necessarily endorue the sentiments es EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414, DITOR .,.. ...... BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL ging Editor................Hugh W. Hitchcock .............................. E. P. Lovejoy. Jr Adams G. P. OVerton '. Dawson M. B. Stahl . awibrcht Paul Watrel Chairman.....................,. Armstrong Kern ershdorfer E. R. Meiss ne Editor..............Thornton W. Sargent,;Jr. r........................... .....George 4. Sloan ................................. Sidney B. Cates . e.r.g.e..R..............i.......... ereRiudel ....................... ......... e Vi Assistants fndersson L. L. Fenwick B. H. Lee nan Dorothy G. Geltz )obert M. Loeb rron H. B. Grundy J. F'. Mack c Sadybet Heath athrine Montgomery r Winona A. Hibbard R. C. Moriarty Harry D. Hoey J.F. Pontius Agnes Holmqist Lillian Scher lark H. E. Howlett R. B. Tarr ock Marion Kerr Virginia Tryon **A. L.S.Ker Dorothy Whipple )Uglin M. S. K~aerL .Ys Mon Victor W. Klein . B. Young .hue Marion Koch George F. Lardner BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 ANAGER ............. VERNON I. HILLERY ... .... ., . Heath, A. J. Parker ..... ...........Nathan W. Robertson .... John J. Hamels, Jr. ---.......-- ---H-----.....Herold C. Hunt EL Wills Heidbreder W. Kenneth Galbraith J. A. Dryr Richard eidemann - T. H. Wolfe Paul Blum , .r t~fl Tyler Daid UESDAY, IUARY 24, 1922 Night Editor-M. B. STAHL Assistant-B. H. Lee, Jr. Proofreaders-J. F. Pontius J. D. Briscoe editorial staf and tryouts will meet at 5 today. WHAT THE REGENTS FORGOT of the most significant steps in Michigan's tional progress was taken last May when the of Regents recognized the School of Educa- s an independent professional college of the rsity. Rapid strides have already been made y of adapting the school to its new status, but dden energence into full college rank has d a serious hardship upon a considerable r of students who are carrying work in Edu- the time the action was taken, provision was whereby the present senior class might be ited to the rules prevailing when this school part of the Literary college. Although eight s have passed since this occurred, prospec- achers its the class of 1923 are just beginning n to their dismay that they cannot receive the teacher's certificate unless they change the im of courses which they have planned and in the new college, carrying an increased er of hours of work. Many are not prepared this. new ruling is' of unquestioned value as a of raising the standard of the teaching forces state, and should not lightly be set aside; but gan owes a moral obligation to the students :ome here for training, and this fact should lost sight of. When the present juniors en- as freshmen, those who intended to teach committed to a certain standard which the rsity has changed arbitraril'y. hould be an easy matter for the authorities end the ruling which now covers the class of and make it include the juniors, many of are as deep in the study of Education as are niors. Such a measure certainly would be r one of justice to those concerned, aind eliminate much sof a certain difficulty which ird-year students may face, in attempting to their courses fit the changed requirements. A REPLY FROM THE WEST tsiderable discussion has been aroused in col- e circles of late regarding .a recent statement, ned in a report of President Lowell of Har- to the overseers of his university, regarding .ilings of the present system of handling col- President Lowell says in part: "The single boat race between Oxford and Cambridge on the Thames, and the cricket match between those uni- versities, supplemented in each case by a series of intramural contests, has been enough to stimulate unflagging interest in those sports among the stu- dents. Judging from the effect of the race at New London, one may ask whether or not the same plan would be sufficient in football. The necessity of maintaining for this purpose a public spectacle at- tended by thousands of spectators every Saturday throughout the autumn is certainly not clear; and whether it ought to be maintained is a matter worth consideration." The point is well taken, but it hardly covers the entire ground. The present system of awarding championship titles to the colleges or universities having the highest standing during the year in foot- ball and other sports, certainly furnishes an incen- tive for the entire school, and makes for unity of spirit throughout. It is doubtful, indeed, if the same amount of interest would be maintained with reference to a single-game schedule as is at present evidenced over a championship series, and we are inclined to believe that football would be apt to die a slow and natural death, were the winning of but one "big" game the sole incentive offered to players and their supporters on the sidelines. At the present time, the rules in force in Western Conference football circles havea tendency to over- come the objectionable points enumerated by Presi- dent Lowell. We, of the Big Ten, are prevented from playing a great number of games, and a com- promise thus has been effected between the ten-or- twelve-game schedule common in some parts of the country, and President Lowell's one-game scheme. In the final analysis, intercollegiates are our salva-. tion from a financial standpoint. Last year, Michi- gan had some 4,068 students engaged in intramural athletics alone. But the Intramural department furnishes no returns of itself, and is maintained en- tirely through the income derived from the yearly athletic schedule. It is from the returns of the an- nual Big Ten program, in fact, that Michigan and other universities are enabled to build and support athletic plants of a nature calculated to permit a continual extension of athletics throughout the en- tire body of students. We cannot deny that President Lowell's argu- ments are fundamentally right, insofar as they re- late to college athletics in general. But we do maintain that the Western Conference long since has grappled with the 'same problem as he has been dealing with in relation to. Harvard, and that Con- ference rulings offer about the nearest approach to a satisfactory compromise possible under the exist- ing conditions. "THE ENGLISH YANKEE" The death of Viscount James Bryce, of Dech- mont, has deprived the world of its greatest politi- cal economist, and America of one of her best friends. As the author of "The American Com- monwealth", and more recently of "Modern De- mocracies", Viscount Bryce has gained both fame for himself and understanding for America. Viscount Bryce wrote his first great work before his graduation from Oxford, an authoritative 'teat- ise on "The Holy Roman Empire". At his death, at eighty-three, he had just finished his "Modern Democracies". He had found time in between for a half dozen other great works, for conducting a law practice, for holding the Regius Chair of Law at Oxford, for serving in parliament, for acting as a cabinet minister, for serving as ambassador to the United States, for acting as head of the Belgian atrocities commission, and for traveling in nearly all parts of the world. But his greatest accomplishment, or at least the most important in the eyes of Americans, was his work of interpreting America to England and Eng- land to America. His influence during his ambas- sadorship was undoubtedly a great factor in bring- ing about the present good feeling between the United States and Great Britain. "The English Yankee" may be regarded as one who has finished succe.ssfully a great work, a laige item of which was concerned with the bringing of two peoples into .a closer understanding of one an- other. Tie Telescope It Sure Is! When you have to leave your home and friends And travel back to school, When you have to get to work again And have no time to fool; When you know the "finals" you must take Are coming 'long pell mell, I ask you now, as stude to stude, Ain't life hell? 'When you hear the campus chimes ring eight, And hate to rise from bed ; When you get to class ten minutes late And find a bolt instead; When you turn your weary steps towards home And expect a letter swell, Then find nothing but a bill or two, Ain't life hell? -U. Noe. Famous Closing Lines "A good man nowadays is hard to find," said the elopers as they searched all over the town for a preacher, ERM. DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars - 6:6o a. m., 7:.o a. M., 8:o a. M.. 9:00 a. m. and hourly to 9:og p. mn. Jackson Express Cars (local stops of Ann ,rbor) 9:47 a. m. and every two hours to 9:47 P."im. Local Cars East Bound--gs:asm.,s7.0o a. tn. and every two hours' to 9 *oo p. mn., x 1.00 p. mn. To Ypsilanti only-..z:4o p. M., 12:25 a. in., t:15a. Mf. To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. T heal Gars Wiest Bound-7 :5" a. mn., 3:446 &' ;U fackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars: 8:47, to-47, a. m ., 12:47, 2.47, 4:47. Tn Jackson and Lansing - Limited: 8:47 1922 JANUARY 1922 SMT W T F S 1 i 2 3 4 - 4 7 8 ! 10 11 12 13 14 16 16 17 .19 19 20 1 22 It 24 24 37 28 99 10 31 HATS - SPRING - HATS Reblocked at greatly reduced priees. Turnpd Inside out, with all new tr'm- mings they are as good as new. High class work only. FACTORY HAT STORE 17 PACJ(ARD STREET Telephone 1792 FLASHLIGHTS Get an Eveready and you'll have the best. REDUCTIONS O r O r 'Nri ! m GRA We carry a complete stock. Batteries are always The Eberbach & Son G 200-204 E. Liberty Street r-Invetr S ale of FIN FOTWE=A All Satin and Suede Party Pumps, values up to $10.00 I r. i ALL lOOKS -.j Student Note Books --give you better value for your money. -they work better and wear longer. -all sizes and rulings. -ask to see them. now /' " , , .. ......q '%' T M't J Am'9S Both. Stores Wahr's Shoe Stor 108 SOUTH MAIN STREET .w L005 LTAW g$yg M EN you come to apply for that Vjob let's hope the chief will say: He's a hard worker-clean cut-well eda ucated-with a scientific bent-and he knows his way 'rounA, because he smokes 4 A la hyc The Cigarvette Elect of All Nations" possibly question the truth of Presi- statement that athletics at present ne- xpenditure of a vast amount of time y only a few participants, while the : bleachers, nor can we contradict his at intercolleiates, as conducted now, rge to provide any physical educationi ses. Nevertheless, ,we do insist that on