OF THE URIIVXRtIT° ULAN pt Mon" y dudrlwt the Ysltiev. if Student blict1oss. mornd i Ind on MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS mAsociated Press a xcivelj titd to the a for" as i all news dp.iatch Aere to'i t :iss.t otk*?vaa ithin papas and tbe local news pablisb'pi therelA., d at the post~ce at Ann Arbor, Miian. as saccad ng, Maynard Scraet. , 2414, ) words, if signed, the .ig. rint but as an evidence of ablis~ed in The Daily at the mai d to The Dail office. no consideration. No man- iter Iicloses jpostage. endorse the sentimients ex- nmi tut EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 1414 ANAGING EDITOR .......-BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL ewa Editor.................................Joseph A. Bernstein ssistant City Editor...... .....................J. B. Young ight Editors- R. E. Adams G. P. O artes John P. Dawson M. 1B. Stahl dward Lambrecht Paul Watzel itorial Beard Chairman............L. Armstrong Kern saistants- Cee. Hershdorfer Z.R. Mes.. inday Magazine Editor.............Thornton W. Sargent. Jr.' change iEditor ........... ......i..~.. . ...George E., Sloan uicl Editor................ ,,, .. .. ...Sld ey B. Coates orting Editor .............George Reindel omen's Editor ............................. Elizabeth Vickery nmor Editor ....x......... R. MAims Assistainta er.son Dorothy G.Gelta z H. B. Grundy n. Sadyebeth Heath a Winona A Hibbard Harry D. Hoeg Agnes Holmiuist H. 1±. Howlett k Marion Kerr )Pr L. S. Kerr Min . A. Kliaver e Victor W. Klein Marion Koch George E. Lardner 1is. it.I e Robert M. Loeb >.Mack Ksthrine Montgomery R. C. Moriarty - P. Pouting illian Scher. R. $. Tar Virginia TWon Dorothy Whipple A. D. Clark Harry C. Clar Robert W. Coo EvelynJ. Coug H. A. Donahue 14. L.Fenwick BUSINESS STAFF Tiephone 960 SINE8s M(ANAGER .... .... VERNON F, RILLERY, Ivertising ........ .............F. ,. Heaths A. J. Parker blication ...... ........... Nathan W.Robertsn Mounats 9............ 9......... .....John J. Hamelsjr. rculatioaa ........g ..... ..,......*. 9 *9Herold C. Hunt finished before mornig. Then, through the waning hours of the night, plods the weary collegian, count- ing the lectures which offer sweet repose for the morn. -_ Hence might the passing transient wonder at the midnight lights in campus windows. "The stude doth murder sleep", and as long as friendships and formative minds are found in universities, as long as human nature remains the same, he will con, tinue to do so. AID TO THE PROFESSOR With the blue book lash a sordid memory of the dimish past, a word of retrospect. Those professors who have given to their classes all they have, in time, energy, faith and effort, de- serve the sincere thanks of the students whom they have helped. It is only the decent and proper act to administer thanks, where thanks are honestly due. Salary, monetary pay, does not compeisate for everything, particularly when that pay is inade- quate or out of proportion to the work done. Of course, unsolicited and gratuitous comment is apt to be out of place. Granted all that, however, every intelligent student, real or imitation, ought to make it a point, in his rounds of campus calls, to drop in occasionally, and, either orally or in writing, inform his instructors just what he thinks of their courses, the methods of presentation, and frankly grant his appreciation or its lack. Naturally, the professors themselves have a dis- tinct duty which may well be borne in mind through the coming semester. They owe the expenditure of a certain degree of effort to the student just as the student does to them. Professors and instructors who dole out pages of date and figures are shooting at the wrong target; those who make no prepara- tion before confronting their classes sin even more than the unprepared student. The professor, put- ting it in mathematics, is to his students as one is to abput one hundred and fifty: the responsibilities are his. Be that as it may, if the faculty man is at all con- scientious, he ought to be considerably benefited in the management of his class work by an honest ex- pression of opinion from his students. Certainly, anything that can aid' the instructor in making the most of his course, for the ultimate benefit of him- self and those under him, should be utilized to the utmost~ THE GREETING EVOLUTES Time was when woman was sweetly dignified and aloof. No man was worth recognition in the feminine field of vision 'unless his hat was off and his head bowed in token of his deference. Maybe she deserved it; at least she thought she did, which amounts to the same thing. That time passed. Time was when'her inquiring gaze became less veiled and subtle, and she was perfectly willing to recognize a gentlemanly salutation in a respectfully doffed hat and a courteous word. As the poet say, time passed. We are now in an age in which the sweet lady is question has reached the evolutionary point of hail- ing all comers, whether well-known or not. She is perfectly willing to respond to a negligent greeting in the form of a mumbled "Huh !" or a surly nod - she glows 'and gurgles a reply with the same gusto with which the medieval lady replied. She appar- ently expects no higher tribute in the way of greet- ing. Naturally few people get more than they ex- pect or think they deserve, and the time may come 'when the man stalks elegantly by and the lady, doffs her new spring hat in honor of the occasion. 9e Telescope Behold There was a young fisher named Fisher Who went fishing one day in a fissure. A fish with a grin Came and pulled Fisher in, Now they're fishing the fissure for Fisher. Mary Anchor. DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Pastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars - 6oo a. m., 7:eo a. m., 8:oo a. m., 9:oo a. m. and houry o a lc. stop of Arbr), ,:47 a. m. and avery two hours to 9:7 a. m . Local Cars Est Bound-s : ba.u. 7 Ie a. on., and every two hou rs to- :oo p. -Lmi. oo p. m. To Ypsilanti only-: i40 p. ., a.1:23 a. m.,1:15 a. ML To Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars Weost Bound--7 :5e a. ms',a840 pTo Jackson and Kalsniaoo-Iimlted carss: 8:47 10:47. a. in., 12:47, 2.47,4:47. To Jackson and Lansin--iiasited: 5:47 p. M. TUTTL w Text Books and Suppliesfor Ai( Both Ends of the Diagonal W i ', tMH i HH H~ nlllM~MH~iiiiiiiiiiii Y A Place to bring your frien Nowhere is the foodbetter Nowhere is the service more prompt TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM Maynard Street 1922 S FEBRUARY M T W T 1 2 F S 1922 S 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 29 24 25 26 27 28 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 VAT STORE 617 PACKARD STREET Telephone 1791 ES Here are some {of the best new records alk ibbins )nt Parks herer on. .L - l * Assistants Richard Cutting James Prentiss Maurice Moule 'ua-tin Goldring Tyler Stevens David Park H. Willis Heidbreder W. Kenneth Galbraith JA. Dryer Richaraidn T. H. Wolfe Paul Blum TELEPHONE 214-F.I OTHERSSAY- COLLEGE PROFESSIONNLISM IN SPORTS 1 11 1_'i FRIDAY, FEBRUAY 17, 12 Night Editor-EDW. F. LAMBRECHT Assistant-H. E. Howlett Proofreadrs-H. H. McMullln J. W. McFarlane LET'S HEAR THE PILGRIMS The presence of Robert Frost in Ann Arbor as a guest of the University has brought to this city in he past few months a number of prominent liter- ary people, and this is one of the things which his residence here was intended to encourage. It was to visit Mr. Frost that J. C. Squire, editor of the London Mercury, came here in - December. The poet Witter Bynner and the critic Jesie B. Ritten- house have been recent guests at the Frost resi- lence. Carl Sandburg is coming soon, and it is just >ossible that Louis Untermeyer, Vachel Lindsey, and other artists, will be in Ann Arbor before the close of the schol year. These people are on lecture tours and only stop here to fill the gap between Winesburg and Po- dunk; the city of Ann Arbor does not appear on any >f their itineraries. Their coming here is as a lit- erary pilgrimage of which the ttudent community :akes very little notice. The chief literary figures in A.merica are coming to our very door, and are be- ng permitted to go away without being heard. Any one of a number of campus organizations eould arrange to detain these artists so that the en- :ire University could hear them. It should even be >ossible to arrange for othersto come, and so make p a lecture series which would be invaluable to all wvho are in any way interested in Airmerica's literary >utlook. This certainly ought to beddone at once., W e cannot realize the full measure of benefit from Robert Frost's presence here this year, unless we ake advantage of the opportunity so afforded, of ' hearing the more outstanding of his contemporaries. THE MIDNIGHT LIGHTS A transient, traversing Ann Arbor at midnight, might believe that the vast majority of students had orgotten their lights in going to bed. But a call to eport the negligence would uncover robed and lippered youths deep in text books, or composing etters, or reclining and conversing in comfortable moke-laden rooms. The college student retire's ate, extremely late. Nor is this phenomenon another deplorable re- ult of the war. We might suppose the war to be esponsible, as it is responsible for much that is tartling. But do we not know that even before the nvention of the modern electric light "the student urnt the midnight oil"? To the student the day is a time.of classes and, outine work, a number of hours in which the sun hines now and then, and often a pleasant time to e out. The night, however, is something more. It s the throbbing heart of college education. In its hadows the university student learns to know his riends, airs his views with a puff of smoke, while omrades take them with a grain of salt, tears down nd rebuilds the world at leisure, argues, defends, rd accuses, shifting his subject as often as his po- tionis of experimental comfort. Time flies quickly under such conditions, and ach night firm resolutions "to get some sleep this me or bust" are broken, as the student remembers y4 enly an assignment or letter which must be It Is Rumored That thousands of-dollars are being lost in wipers because intellectual women have begun ing their ink to match their stockings. (Chicago Tribune) If the girls of a girls' school had slid, down the water pipe at midnight and had been discovered trying to climb back up it in the morning after a night of jazz they could not have upset their' world more than the University of 11- linois and Notre Dame boys have done by making a Roman holiday for Tay- lorville and Carlinville. The football coaches have broken hearts.. Two football teams are all shot to pieces for next year. Faculties are looking askance at the. young ment under their care. The collegiate world in these parts is a physical debacle and a moral collapse. Universities are blighted, young men are blighted, athletle directors . are blighted, future seasons are blighted, and a considerable portion of this sec- tion of the country sits in sackcloth and ashes because of what these young men Absaloms have done in their pre- versities. The corn fed moral sense of these parts probably ought to be more shock- ed by the conduct of the college boys, who, by playing football at Taylor- ville, seem to have broken the heart of the world, but we cannot get them out of the picture as a group of Penrod Schofields. The football coaches sug- gest Penrod's dancing teacher and his agitation when Penrod itched. We do not favor the young gentle. men of the universities sneaking inte games under assumed names. We do not favor them absenting themselves from scohol to play professional games or going to school merely to play games. We believe that in vacation time it is just as reasonable for them to make money playing baseball for a summer hotel as it is for them to make money acting as swimming instructors, life guards, waiters, or desk clerks. We be- lieve that college rules can permit a boy to make money out of his athletic skill without making him less an hon- orable college athlete or less a desir- able student. It is an English notion that there are gentlemen players and players, and that although the two classes occasion- ally may play together they must never meet. No such destinction belongs to America. 'Enslan to Sell for $6 in Drive Contrary to previous statements, the price of the Michiganensian during the second campaign on March 7-9 will be $6, no matter whether the book is pur- chased with cash or on time pay- ments. This will raise the cash price. 50 cents over what it was last semes- ter. 'Enslans Exhibited Copies of the Michiganensian of for- mer years have been placed on exhib- it in the lower corridor of the Gen- eral Library. The oldest copy is dat- ed 1897. The case includes a copy of the Annapolis year book, The Lucky Boy. Dance at C. of C. Inn. Wed., Fri., and Sat. nights. General admission.- Adv. k _.. ~ : , - w rr irwi wrJri i ai rwww r iiiaih iin.. ': U ' 0 0A1 s. I for you'w "TT " "When Buddha "Smiles "She Loves Me, She Loves Me Not" "I Want You Morning, Non and Night" "Granny" These are all the very newest records . and the ones that you will hear tOt-4te next-two months. Of course -we have all- of the older pieces. such -as £6rhe Sheik" "Yoo Hoo" April Showers" and "Kalu A." We make it a point in our adver- tising to keep you informed at all times as to the latest and most;pop- ular pieces. * *, 305 Maynard Street We have 4l the J-Hop fLusic pen- buy- An Ignorant Admirer Willie was A first year man Who rated a Valentine Very slushy and with A meaningless poem On it. Willie said Somebody who adores me Is awful ignorant And we more than agreed Saying Anyone who adores you Is. "Consider tiwLadies O MAN dresses for himself aloneI He satisfies himself and pleases the ladies. That's where our new topcoats come in. They look as well on you as you 'think they do and elicit quick approval from the, ladies. Another shipment of HickeyFreeman Coats has arrived $45 - $50. WAGNER & COMPANY For MenSince 1848 STATh STREET AT LIBRRTY Parlor Talk "What's the difference between a haunted house and a handsome man about to kiss you?" asked she coyly. "I give up," murmured the Adonis, growing in- terested. "Why, you can't let a haunted house." - G. Kewpie Famous Closing Lines "Here's something to roll under your tongue," said the gossip's doctor as he handed her a ther- mometer, ERM.