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February 23, 1923 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-02-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

F ^IDAY, F. BRUARY 3.192:

Y4 iYMiIW 1 W _-

- feelthe oncoming of a cold to avail
j hemselves of the opportunity which'!
-the University provides for them.
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE Furthermore it is essential that oth-
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ers should not be exposed to the
Published every morning except Monday germs which work the destruction and'
during the University year by the Board in therefore all should guard against
Control of Student Publications.I
1transmitting ,whatever illness they
Member of Western Conference Edtorial may have.
Association. ________

0 ROLL
i)EVOUR THE
ROLLS AN LET
THE C ItIIBS
FALL WHERE THEY ]MA .
When Weary of the Wide, Wide
World
I'd love to be an apple red
And cling to twigs a month or two
And wait for you; when all is said
I think I'd stay and hang for you.

The Associated Press- is exclusively wen-I
titled to the u'se for republication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not other-
wise credited in this paper and the local
news published therein.1
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
Iichigan, as second class matter.
Subsription by carriersor mail, $3.50.
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May-.
nard Street.
Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi-
ness; 96 0.'

VONSERVATIS.M IN EVERY'I'ING'
If there is one real criticism that
may justifiably be directed toward
the present system of marketing prod-}
ucts it is in the evils which arise out
of nation-wide advertising on the
part of producers. .While advertising
has decided beneficial results, arising,
out of the various productive econo-
1 ir naiblP ly with na larze de

EDITORIAL COMMENT
4 MOTIE PARNASSUS
(Philadelphia Pub. Ledger)
It has 04.4t the "movie" makers ten
years .an-i untold millions to learn
what the ancient Greeks knew well-
that appreciation of art and beauty at
their best is a common heritage. It is
not grounded or conditioned upon any
adventitious circumstance of birth,
wealth, education or intellect. It is
an elemental appeal to the hearts and
souls of men.
Therefore, an international confer-
ence will be held this summer in Lon-
don or Paris, where the most famous
literary men of Europe and America

MICHIGAN S
:.: A T

O NG

iii

LAST EDITION OF

BOTS'
BOTH STORES

BOOK

..._

mies possime only wlz a gjt, w
Cnmunications knot to exceed goo words mand for goods, there exists never-
I f signed, the signature not necessarily to
oppear in print, but as an evidence of faith, theless the perniciousness of creating
and notices of events will be published in
The Dailyat the discretion of the Editor, if wants which di not at all result in a
left at or mailed to T';he Daily office. Un- gain for the consumer, indeed a de-'
signed communications will receive no con-j
sideration. No manuscript will be returnedE cided loss to him. Such a case is the
unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily arhitrary setting of styles on the part
does not, necessarily endorse, the sentiments
expressed si the communications, of manufacturers, and nation-wide ad-I
_-vertising to make those styles a so-

. $
k
f
r j
i
1
tl
S

I'd be a small tomato green
Instead a big ripe juicy one
And press you to my heart sol
Alas my frame won't stand
fun,
To be a cauliflower proud
And love and court you till
wed
I would by Jove, but you aloud
Might swear I was a cabbage
I'd love to be an onion sweet

lean;
such!

and should be
hope to make a

i

will discuss artistic standards for the
motion picture. The bond betwceen
we're the great literature of the world and

cultivated by all who#
success in life.

L

head.

EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephones 2414 and 176-H1
MANAGING EDITOR
MARION B. STAHL
News Editor..... ......Paul Watzel
City E"ditor..........James B. Young
A >ir.:iiil. City 1Editor........J.. A Bacon
1,noraI louad Chairmna.....EL,. R. Meiss
Night ~ios
Ralh 1 i Cyers arry liey
1,. Ie IlIeishdorfer R.tC. Moriarty
i1. A. Donahue J . '. Mack
norts Editor....... ...F. Ii. McPike
Women's Editor..............Marion Koch
sd iMa e Editor,. I ..HA. Donahuej
Pictorial Editor................Robert Tarr
Musicl Editor..................E. H. Ailes
Editorial Board
Lowell Kerr Maurice Berman
Eugene Carmichael
Assistants

cial necessity to a prideful public.
For example, notice the wasteful-
ness of the style system as it is ap-
plied to clothes. The styles of clothes
are arbitrarily set in advance by co-
operation of wholesale manufactur-
ac' Thin t t1, l A is the mnonrodue-

And you a tender weakling squash.
I'd make your heart a jazz tune beatj
And make it strong as mine, by gosh.
But oh, to be the supple soup
A-A "nrnwhnrn .n mrnr t ll

i
!s
i
i
fi
f
i

ers. , e sny.e seL pe011I-U And neVer hAnan nave to igrow a ai ,
ed by practically all the large cloth- To never bow, to never stoop
ing manufacturers-no other style can But just into the stomach fall.
exist' at that particular season. Then 13. (t. L.

i

Thelma Andrews k
Atanley AT. Baxter
Dorothy Bennetts
SidneyLilil
R. A. Iillington'
Ilelcn l own1
H4. C. Clarkc
A. B. Connabe
Bernadette Cote
rvelyn I. Coughlin
seh';pstei
T. X. hFiske
John Garlighouse
Walter S. Goodspeed

Ronald Haigrim
! ranklin D .Hlepburn
Winona A. Hibbard
Edward J. Higgins
kennieth C. IKelar
Mii abeth iebermann
john McGinnis
Samuel Moore
'11. H. Pryor
W. B. Rafferty
Robert G. Ramsay
Camp bell Robertson
j. . Ruwitch
Sol J. Schnitz
Frederic G. Telmos
Phiie f1. w ne

comes the use of advertising, and the
now antiquated garment of the previ-
ous season is declared "out of style";
the public seems to feel that it is2
"better to be dead than out of style".-
The practically whole, but "not thel
thing", garment must be discarded.
sold to second-hand dealers at theirI
proverbial low price.
There is a remedy for this condi-
tion. and not only does it apply toj
clothing but to every commodity. The
answer is conservatism. A conserva-
tive article is always in style. If thef
public insists upon gratifying its de-
sire for things novel, when the old
article serves the purpose just as
well, it must continue to pay the price.
of never receiving the full value of
the thing they buy. Conservatism in
everything on the part of everybody-
and the college student is not ex-
cluded - would stop the national
waste, a waste not only of money but
also of productive effort that might
be put to other things.

Toastemr
POISON IVY and TEARABLE are
all wrong that is both of 'em have got
the wrong dope on this Mary jane.
Here's my version.
Mary was a little lamb.
She is a blonde, you know.
Wherever little Mary Nvent,
Some male was sure to go.
SISSY.
* * *

I
i;
i
1
3
I'
{

Rolls:
You're right there are
sions to this Mary poem.
very modern one.

more ver-
Here's a

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER,
- LBERT 3. PARKER
Advertising..............John J. Hamel, Jr.
Advertising....\...Valter K. Sherer

Mary was her Mother's lamb,
And did as her Mother said,
But times have changed and so has
she,
You see Mary's a bold co-ed.
* * *
TIIE ADVANCE OF SO('IETV?

the motion picture will be made clos-
er, so that we may see projected on
the silver sheet, with all the verisim-
ilitude of historic setting and proper-
ties, the people whom we have vis-
ualized through the writer's art.
The "movies" have developed so
rapidly that almcyit the youngest can
remember their salad days when the
"one-reeler" was used to clear the
house after a vaudeville show. It is a
far cry to the cinema palaces of today
and the spectacfes of many reels,
costing fortunes and made only after
months of minute research and artis-
tic planning.
Perhaps it is a fair criticism to say
that the greatest recent development
of the screen has been on the techni-
cal side. The men who make the
movies have learned to make them
marvelously well. Too often they are
the perfect settings of stones that are
paste or badly flawed at best. If the
world's best writers will make an ef-
fort to project real literature upon
the screen, realizing that no audience
need be "played down to", then we
will have a, new art form comparable
to the play and the novel at their
best, making a wider human appeal
than either.
OVERLY BROA1-MINI )ED
(Daily Iowan)
Student: who pride themselves un be-
ing broad-minded are in most cases
merely refusing to have an opinion of
their own. Great men, with few ex-
ceptions, have had single-track minds.
Lincoln could conceive of only one
side of the slavery question. Wash-
ington, Jefferson, Roosevelt, Monro,e,
Wilson, and all the other great men
of history recognized only one side of
a question. A successful person must
hear both sides, but must also make
a definite choice between them.
Very few students really have defi-
nite opinions on anything. They re
merely passive, and pat themselves on
the back for being broad-minded.
They are always ready to hear the ar-
guments of both parties, but hesitate
to support either. This isn't being
broad-minded, but merely simple-
minded. A person who does not vig-
orously oppose or support is not es-
sential; his value to the world is
zero. His mind is so broad that it
never focuses on anything.
A good citizen must be broad-mind-
ed, but only to a certain extent. After
ever ready to hear the other's argu-
choose the side he believes right, then
defend it. It is all very well to be
ever ready to hear the other's argu-
ments, and to heed them, but the sig-
nificant fact remains that world lead-
ers have chosen their paths of action,
and, believing that they were right,
ignored all others.

0 7
11 12 13 14
1s 19) 20 21
25 2 27 28
IF Y
i , $ andWE. '
Our $3.00 and

FEBRIARY

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann A-bor and Jackson
TIME TABLE
(Eastern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-
6:oo am.. 7:oo a.m., 8:oo a.m., 9
a.m. and hqurly to 9 :o5 p.m.
Jackson Express Cars (local stops
west of Ann Arbor)--9:47 a.m., and
every two hours to 9:47 p.m.
Local Cars East Sound--7 :oo a.mf.
an, every twoE hors to 9 700 p.i.,
i:oo p.in. Tn Ypsilanti only-ru:4o
P).mi., t:1t5 a.im.
To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-7:50 a.m.,
0To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim-
ited cars 8:47, :0:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47,
S 47 akson and Lansing-Lmited at
8:47 p.m.

SPRING
HATS
NOW
READY
$3.50 Hats

Ii .________________'.-'-

U.JNITED CIGAR STORE.,5
F R E E"
2 15c Tins of Choice Smoking Tobacco, 2 doz. Pipe
Cleaners with every $1.50 Royal, Italia, Briar
Pipe, guaranteed, for....................91
$5.00 GILLETTE RAZORS cut to - 9
$.oo GILLE'ITE BLADES, [one dozen] _ - 7
FRESH BOX CANDY
$1.25 Gondolier Chocolate Chcrries, lb. - - 5
$i.oo F UN DS' Chocolate, per lb. - 3
This Candy is shipped fiesh from factory every week.
The Right Store with the Right Price

8c
8c
9c
9c

GUARANTEED
We Save You a Dollar or
More on a Hat

I
1
g

16
X23

..MENU .
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25
Cream of Pea Soup
Cabbage Salad
Fricasse of Chicken wifli Piscuit
Mashed Potatoes

11

1923
.10
17
X2,1

JETTER & DeFRIES
118 EAST HURON ST.
PHONE fG4-R

.I

Roast Veal

Advertising..lawrence 11. Favro:
..... . daid a1.r M. CPan ROUGE-AND WINTER WINDS
C tion.................ownsend 11. Wolfe Nature's handiwork is ever the best.
uts.......... ...eaumot rk', Consider, as an exception to the rule,
Assistants
Kenneth Seick Allan S. Morton the case of rouge. The female whose
eorge Rockwood James A. Dryer cheeks are colorful during February
Perry M. Hayden Win. I Good -
Egene r. Dunne - Clyde L. Hagerman and March and June and July can
Wnm. Graulich, Jr. H:~enry Freud "_foolnolicly-sherouges._Thebloom
JohJ.C. Iaskin IIerbert P. Bostick fo nobody-she rouges. The bloom
C. -L..Putnam -D. L.. Pie'ceofyuhiaricalan mstbre T
. D: Armantrout Clayton urdy of yout is artificial, and must be re- IN the days of our forefathers
Herbert W. Cooper r. B. Sanzenbacher newed. She dips her powder puff in-
Wa.lace Flower Clifford Mitts to her rouge box with the same fervor THE art of tells fibs was
1\)1lia, i I. Reid. Jr. Ralph JLewrightTH aroftlsibws
Harold L. Hale Philip Newall that Ponce de Leon drank from the
Win. D. Roesser
Fountain of Youth. LACKING very much. We all
In winter nature's girl i~s supreme. * * *
Her countenance is red from the REMEMBER when George's
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1923 brisk, sweeping winds, red from exer- * * *
4eise in the outdoors-on the hockey DAD happened to see one
Night Editor-HARRY D. HOEY rink or in the woods. The elements * * *
color her cheeks-not rouge. OF his nice new cherry
hANDS ACROSS THE OCEAN Moral to this-there is none. At * * *
The theory that international peace least it should teach, however, that TREES broken, and the famous
in the econonic and social world can men notice things which women think'
they pass by., ,
only be brought about through ade- yREPLY, "I cannot tell a lie, I did
quate understanding of one another, TE HEALER it with my little hatchet."
a.iion the nations of the earth has Clarence O. Mega, of that much-be IN these days of golf
been generally accepted as the one loved family' whose pictures have ap- WH sNthe cham
vagu demand ofbuniversal amity. I ieared in previous issues of these col-
g e asyrstereasbeeumns, ip above everything else an ar-
to o tain better understanding be dent disciple of M. Coue. He consid- HAPPENS to see one of
Stween countriea through the inter- ers himself a Heaven-sent messenger NICE new records broken,
* clhnge of university professors and whose sole mission is to spread cheer,
students between America and Euro- Iand good-will among his fellowmen.
pean nations. Having proved very AND the usual reply,
During these pastA two weeks, with***
valuale, 'heas num r f "exchange influenza and grippe prevalent on the "IT is easy for me to lie because it
professors" has grown from time to
ti but the attention given to for- campus, Clarence has 'been busy day is the only way I could break a rec-
has been sorrowfully and night administering aid to the ord.'
hinUtuensstricken. He is ever jolly, and goes- * * *
Ilcglected by universities the Uni- from room to room with his merry
cil States.
omp aring recent statistics of the "Every lay in every way. " which he Many a man without much brain
American University Union which is forces the helpless (but willing) pa-Can write of love and perfect bliss;
oranized Atient torepeat fifty times, and then, But I'd like to find another fool,
for he bnefi of men-with the sick man's resistance weak- Wha rt umvrelk hs
(alyn students abroad, the number of ened, seats himself at the bedside and Who can write a bum verse like this.
sch~lolarships offered by European in-. flatrsh,
crelates tales of last night's dance and
stitutions for Americans is found toi the formal tonight. all
1) almost twice as great as those ;heaigroess. In part of th'OEYTA
put at the disposal of foreign stu- I if Clarence hears a muffled sneeze or iCUNTS
dents by our universities. This fact llght cough, he immediately searches Fine feathers may not make fine
certainly does not speak well for the out the guilty person and requires him birds, but it takes a dolled-up chicken
part which the United States is taking to recite the "Every day,,slogan ot to land a bid to the J-Hop," says Jane
in promoting a world fellowship. . .ud..nd thadvies1is victim t Blue.
ud~~~~~~~ an*hn dieshsv*tmt

We do all kinds of Cleaning
and Reblocking of hats at
low prices for HIGH CLASS
WORK.
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 Packard Street Phone 1792
W\here D. U. R. Stops at State
ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS
Schedule in Effect October re, 1922
Central Time (Slow Time)
D X X D
P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M.
3:45 7 .:45... Adrian .... 72:45 8:45
-.j 8; ... Tecumseh .. . xa:i 8:i5
:30 ,8:30 ..-Clinton ...x:o 8:oo
5:15 9:15 ..Saline . . 11:15 7:15'
5 9:4 ArXnn ArborLv. 10:45 6-45
(Court 1-Ioie Square) A. My.
D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays
and Holidays. Friday and Saturday special
bus for students leaves Adrian 1:4s, leaves
Xnn Arbor 4:45
JAMES H. . LLIOTT, Proprietor
'hone 926-M Amrian. Mich.

Corn

Pickles

Sweet
Raspberry Pie

Till

Ice Cream
,Milk

Peas

Tea

Coffee

Cocoa

This is the Sunday Dinner of
Flynn's Boarding House

Cur meals ate like those mother
$5.75 a week
PHONE 1118-W

cooks and only
607 HILL ST.

4
~ I-
&
i
S

y.

! L

A Complete Line of
Drugsand Drug Sundres
Toilet Articles. Perfu'mes
Connor 's lce Cream
EGil bert's Chocolate
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded
MANN'S DRUG STORE
213 SOUTH MAIN STREET
..-.. .......-..._._........_..._._..._.__.._..._......_....--...._._.-_-_-_-_-_-

There is a tendency to undervalu-
ate the contributions which foreignj
stiudents make to the life of a great;
university, to say nothing of the
priceless knowledge which they usu-
ally carry back to their homeland and
diffuse among their fellow citizens.
Certainly there could be no better way I
of promoting a friendship between1
Germany for instance and the United
States than by representing the true
basic principles of our social order to
them through representatives of their,
own people. Were Michigan and our
other big universities to offer a num-
her of scholarships for foreign stu-
dents this result would undoubtedly be
attained, for American student life is
as representative of the fundamental
traits of the nation as anything.

"Git fer home, Bruno, else yer good
P11 Jun-o". Clarence never loses his
sense of humour, as all of his friends
will attest.
If he meets a patient on the street,
even if the latter looks completely
recovered, Clarence will advise him to'
visit the Health service at once and
to repeat Coue's mental panacea on
the way over. So Clarence spends his
days in self-,sacrifice, that his friends
and fellows may not suffer. He gives
up his meetings and movie appoint-
ments, bolts classes and sleeps
through lectures-all in the interests
of humanity. Rebuffed and scorned
though he may be, he is never daunt-
ed-Clarence the healer is a true mar-
tyr.

Contributions, contributions.
The general talk on the campus is
to the effect that the Spotlight has
gone out. It will stay out too if the
talk is on the campus. Some of these
knockers should stop talking so much
on the campus and do a little on the
stage.
0 .* * s
Spring is here. Ha, Ha, Spring is
here. They're selling new spring
models on the faishion promenade
(State St.), Ha, Ha, Have you seen the
latest "zips"? -those pretty green
silk flagf with red "hips" on them.. I
went out the other day in my new
spring get-up, I got caught in the
rain, and now my neck matches my
° 7,;i" T-siTe .4o nrino i siut near

1)AYI)REAMIN('
. (Ohio Lantern)
(all it what you will--preoccupa-
tion, daydreaming, lack of concentra-
tion, or blank-mindedness-the habit
which is common to the great por-
,tion of students here is one that
should be thrown aside by all as soon
as possible.
Manifestations of it are seen every
where. A classroom lecture is one of
the places where it is most often
found. A student's room is another
place where it is too often present.
The habit prevents one from doing his
best work, whether that work be
studying, taking notes in a classroom,
or planning some phase of school ac-
tivities.
To a certain extent everyone has
the habit, for who has not taught
himself with a feeling of being rudely
awakened when his thoughts have
been far from the subject at hand,
and, as the old phrase says, "One's
wits gone a wool-gathering"?
Attempting to rivet one's attention
on a particular problem, the attention
often wanders and minutes fly by and
the work lies untouched. These men-
tal trirs to far places may be en-
joyable, but they use valuable time
which could much better be put to
tangible things.
The man who is interested in sev-
eral extra-curriculum activities often
finds himself when working on plans
for one phase of campus life, carried
away by his thoughts to some entire-

C

LOS

I I - ,

GRE NNA ,,N

CUSTOM TAILOR

- 1
u.. v . S,6 .. r . . - . .... -

Tuxedos
Evening Clothes
Golf Suits
SATISFACTION

i . , I.
y L A A j
- , spy
~ 21

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