THE :HIG. ILY IN L OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday ring the University year by the Board in ntrol of Student Publications. Mfember of Western Conference Editorial sociation. The Associated Press is exclusively en- led to the use for republication of all ws dispatches credited to it or not other- se credited in this paper and the local ws published therein. Entered .at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, .chigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. DOfices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- rd Street. Phones:. Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi. 5, p60. Communications not to exceed 300 words signed, the signature not necessarily to pear in print, but as ai evidence of faith, d nlotices of events will be published in e Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if t at or mailed to The Daily office. Un- ned coinunications will receive no con- leration. No manuscript will be returned less the writer encloses postage. The Daily es not necessarily endorse the sentiments pressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-M Whimsies, and The Michigan Daily. Chimes, starting out three pyears ago as a monthly magazine of campus opinon, has gradually assumed a more literary trend. It encourages through special columns communica- tions from the student body, and also fosters pro and con discussions on the leading problems affecting the campus. Special articles from men prominent in the world outside, and literary chatter of various degrees of importance appear in every issue. The official University year book, known as the Michiganensian, offers considerable opportunity for those interested in this special type of journalistic endeavor, and especially for campus artists who desire to ob- tain the b'est advantages for their talent. The Gargoyle, a monthly mag- azine devoted to humor, provides training in commercial art in addib tion to practice in managing, editing, and the writing of humor. The Student's Directory is the last publication which falls under the jur- isdiction of the Board in Control of Student Publications, an advisory body functioning as a check as well as an aid to student initiative. Two other publications, however, Whim- sits, a purely literary periodical, and The Technique, a magazine which concerns itself with engineering af- fairs, are campus publications inde- pendent of this board. Of all the publications, the largest staff is necessarily employed by The Michigan Daily. Tryouts for this pub- lication gain actual newspaer experi- ence both in the reporting line and in the mechanical field of setting up and printing. Work on any of these publications furnishes a desirable preliminary to a journalistic career, but regardless of the course chosen by a student, the worth while experience and broaden- ing influence reaped from work on campus publications are the secret of the wide student interest which has given them success. OASTED LL READ .'EX AND WEEP SARAH JANE (With apologies to Rudyard Kipling's "Mandalay") Where the old Diag meanders And U Hall stands hard by There's a co-ed girl a-awaitin' And I know she thinks of I. When the sun is perched o'er West Hall Then the chimes ring this refrain: Come ye back, ye snuggle puppy- Come ye back to Sarah Jane. Oh her silken hose had clocks in, And she never missed a date, And she rolled her own, by golly, And she smoked her cube cut sitraight. And I saw her first a-readin' With a "Whiz Bang" on her knee Plucky lot she cared for "Whiz Bangs" When I introduced "La Vie"! Ship me some place east of Main street- Let me find my Sarah Jane- Let me hold her in the moonlight And talk French to her again; For the Campus chimes are calling And it's there that I would be- By my beautious red-haired co-ed- With the "Whiz Bang" and "La Vie". SHEGUNDAI. ' Concerning Football . "JOHN WALKER, '24 TO LEAD BLOCK I CHEERING SECTION - Daily Illini. We may have prohibition, but Michigan is getting a Case from Cleveland next Saturday. And our Reserve supply is running low, too, I EDITORIAL COMMENT I I 11 MANAGING EPITOR MARION B. STAHL, City Editor ..........James B. Young Assistapt City Editor ........Marion Kerr Editorial Board Chairman......E. R. Meiss Night Editors- Ralph Byers Ilarry Hoey. J. P. Dawson, Jr. J. 1. Mack L. J. Hershdorfer R. . Moriarty H. A. Donahue Sports Editor ..............B. H. McPiie Sunday Magazine Editor.......Delbert Clark Women's Editor..............Marion Koch Humor Editor...............D .onald Concy Conference Editor ............H. B. Grundy Pictorial Editor ...............Robert Tarr Music Editor .................E. H. Ailes Assistants SAY HELLO (Daily Northwestern) What do students get out of col- lege? This is a question which is sooner or later asked of every col- lege man or woman. The answer va- ries in many cases but it always in- cludes one thing-friends. G Four years of intimate association and co-operation in common causes are bound to brink people together. Some of the greatest friendships in the world have been formed on a college campus; yet students of to- DETROIT UNITED LINES day fail to make the most of the op- i portunity which the college campus is Ann Arbor and Jackson offeBring them. TIME TABLE Northwestern's . campus is no ex- ception. It offers the same chances (Eastern Standard Time) to meet people and the same chances Detroit Limited and Express Cars - 6:oo t-eaother '., 7:00 a.m., 8:oo a.m., 9:05 a.. and to co-operate with thenm that .h hourly to 9:o5 p.m. campuses offer and have offered. But Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of have you ever stood between classes :7p.or-9:47am., and every two hours on a campus path and watched the Local Cars East Bound-7 :oo a.m. and ev- CrowS g0by? f yo hav youwillerytwo. hours -to 9 :oo ,p.m., i T :oo p.m. Toi crowds go by? If you have you will Ypsilanti only-i z:4o p.m., :15 a.m. have noticed how comparatively fem To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. people give any visible sign of know, Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a.m., 2:10 p. "m. Ing each other. Perhaps they are ac- To Jackson and Kalamazoo -Limited cars quainted, perhaps they are good 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, 4:47 p.m. friends, but in their hustle and bustle To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47 p.m. they pass by without seeing or speak- ing. A simple word of greeting or a 11922 OCTOBER 1922 wave of the hand might go a long S N T W T F S way in cementing friendships already 1 2 3 4 5 6 8- 9 10 11 12 13 14 f rmed. New friendships are formed 16 17 1 19 20 21 only as someone takes the initiative. 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Why throw away one of the advan- 29 30 31 tages of a college education? Start Right With a Good hat! Get acquainted. Say hello. #_We do all kinds of HIGH CLASS Gleaning and Reblocking of hats at T1VE BUDGET FOR STUDlENTS.-a low prices for GOOD WORK., When (Daily Illini) you want a hat done RIGHT bring The common complaint of students it to us, our work is regular FACTO- who wish to be active on the campus RY WORK. Hats turned inside out and yet never make an attempt to de- with all new trimmings are like new. vote their energies to the particu- lar work that they desire is that they We also make and sell POPULAR do not have the time. With a nor- PRICE and HIGH GRADE hats, FIT mal number of credit hours a semester THEM TO YOUR HEAD and save you the average curriculum does not take a dollar or more on a hat. We give all the time of a student but the trou- values and quote prices which cannot ble arises when students fail to put be excelled in Detroit or anywhere their work on the budget system. else. Try us for your next hat. Every student should routinize his u FACTORY HAT STORE work as far as possible so that his time outside of class is as much a 617 Packard Street Phone 1792 schedule as his class work. Many an (Where D.U.R. Stops at State Street) assignment that could have easily been prepared in two hours takes four hours by some student just because DR.W.S.MILLS that student has four hours on hand DS in which to study and consequently OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN wastes half of the time. 616 First Nat'l Bk. Bldg. wis s oOffice Hours Phone Time is one of the essentials that 9-12; 1:30.5 321-F1 the world pays for in high salaries. In any business the man who arranges his tasks so as to accomplish the most received more money. 'the soon- er a student learns to work on sched- The Official ule and to include in his sche.dule ac- FRESH TOQUES tivities outside of his books without decreasing the time spent on his work WAGfRCOMPrNY he has learned a beginning principle!for Ten c2>Ao nce i4& I in the business world. 1. II. Pryer )orothy elmnnetts Maurice Betman P. A. Jillington W. B. Butler 3. C. Clark e. ti. t..unable velyn T. Coughlin ug eCarmichael ernadette Cote 1'. E. Fiske Iaxwell Fead Jolm nGarUnkhouse Isabel Fishei Winona A. Hibbard Samuel Moore T'. C. McShane . B. Rafferty W; R. Stoneman Virginia " Tryon P. M. Wagner A. P. Webbink' Franklin Dickman Joseph Epstein J. W. Ruwitch BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER Advertising...........John J. Hamnel, Jr. Advertising ..............Edward F. Conlin Advertising..............Walter K. Scherer Accounts...............Laurenice 1. Favrot Circulation...............David J. M. Park Publicationf............L. Beaumont Parks Assistants Townsend H. Wolfe Alfred M. 'White onetl Seick orge Rockwood ry M. Hayden gene L. lunne n. Graulich, Jr. n C. Ilaskin .vey 1. Reed L. Putnam P. Armantrout W. Cooper llace PFlower - v. B. Riedle rnld L. Iale Win.D R oesser Allan S. Morton James A. Dryer Wtu. II,.:Good Clyde L,. Hagerman A. Hartwell, Jr? J. Blumenthal Howard Hayden W. K. Kidder Henry Freud Herbert P. Bostwick' 1,. Pierce WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1922 Night Editor-ROBERT C. MORIARTY SURROUNDINGS Have you ever stopped to think just what we all expect of our sur- roundings? If a Ford car passes along the road rattling as noisily as usual, it goes by unnoticed. . But should a Packard or Pierce Arrow make the same amount of clamor, everyone would immediately wonder what is the matter. We have become accustomed to expect greater si- lence in the performance of the more expensive car. And customarily, the better auto- mobile is more carefully treated than its less dignified brother. The user feels naturally a little more interest in the condition and beauty of his car. Unconsciously, perhaps, he is in- fluenced by its presence. He tries to live up to his car. The same applies to the buildings in whose environment we pursue our college careers.; The other day a passerby near Martha Cook dormitory was struck with a suden feeling of discordatthe sounds of Gin, Gin, Giny Shore" floating through its church-like windows. There was no reason based in fact why jazz music should not be played in a dormitory. And yet, unconsciously the passerby had established in his mind a connec- tion between that architecturally beautiful building and something equally as fine and spiritualsin music. In our ordinary humdrum sur- roundings we expect jazz music, and a hundred and one other mediocrities commonto everyday life. But inspir- ing surroundings, especially at the formative and inspirational period of University life, inbreed a love and respect for better things in the man or woman who lives amid their spell. No efforts, no matter how great, can be better spent than in obtaining this beauty for the future Michigan which with few exceptions she has not been given in the past. STUDENT ACTIVITIES VI. Publications More men and women are engaged in working on publications than in REDUCING THE BOOK TAX A certain professor in the literary college has what seems to be a new plan for combatting the rising price of text books. Not resorting to the usual practices of either forcing the student to pay an exorbitant amount for the text ,or of selecting one less desirable, though cheaper, he has adopted, through the consent of the class, a co-operative scheme by which the student may have the use of the book upon the payment of merely a nominal sum. Described more fully, the plan is to pureiase fifty texts directly from the publisher at a discount, and place them in one of the smaller rooms of the library where they. will be avail- able to each student who pays the re- quired sum of a .dollar. As the class is comprised of between 150 and 200 students, figuring roughly there will be one text for every three students, allowing for the fact that a few will undoubtedly choose to purchase the book from the dealers at the full price, which is optional. Some inconvenience might be ex- perienced on the part of the student in being forced to go to the library whenever he wishes' to study, but the benefit to be derived from the propo- sition in the form of the use of the best available book on the subject for such a small sum ought to tend to overbalance this discomfiture. And, while space In the library is not available for a university adoption of this plan on the campus, it is. very applicable to courses in which the price of the text is too high for stu- dents to conveniently purchase it, or when a book is assigned merely for part time use., ELECTIONS The yearly class elections are being held at the end of the present week, the nominations on Wednesday and Thursday, and the election proper on Friday. That these elections may promote the good of the campus as a whole, it is of prime importance that the student body do two things: con- sider carefully the qualifications of all! candidates, and make it a point of duty to be on hand to vote. Each of these is essential. To vote carelessly is worse than not to vote at all, and not to vote is shirking a re- sponsibility to one's classmates and to one's self. A man who votes with- out consideration, or one who does not do so at all has no right to crit- icize if things on the campus are not run to suit him. He will have a right to blame none but himself, least of all the men in office. Someone has remarked that the footsteps painted on our campus walks remind him of the fable of the fox who feared to follow the other animals into the lion's den. He no- ticed that the tracks only went one way-In. The same seems to apply to the footsteps. Come, fill the cup, and in the hands of sharp-eyed Schmuck Your garments cast for mayhap half a buck; Another month is now upon its way But cards may haply bring us in some luck. THE HALIBUT. --- CANADA HARRY; speaking: "It's quite worth wile," said the vampire, as she spied the old and foolish millionaire approaching. HEARD ON THE DIAGONAL "Yes, Helen, he is just as absent-minded 7 - as that! You won't be- lieve me when I tell you! She sent me in there, and I went up and asked him, and do you know what he did? He put his hand up to his ear and said 'Hel- lo, hello,' just like that!" '"My dear! Did he really? You know, I used to know something fun- ny like that once, but I've forgotten what it was." ..... . "George, how's it I don't see you out with the girl any more?"-. "Too much of a good thing .-. kind of a girl she is, out with. one fellow one night and another the next . ." "What's the matter? Does she throw 'em over?" "None of 'em, boy, none of 'em!" 0 NUFF-SED. I gave her a little ring But I did not see her smile; With much delay she answered thus: "Line is busy, .wait awhile." Doc Sundwald gets $8,000 a year and still we have a cold! A LIZARD'S PROGRESS "Forever wilt thou love and she be fair." - . -Keats. A friend of ours told us that to get acquainted withra girl (any girl, he meant) in class, we should look at her until she looked at us-and then not cast our eyes down in shy confu- sion-but to continue to look at her with calm and undisturbed enjoy- ment. We thought we understood. "And then we wink at her, eh?" We guessed wrong. A smile, we were told, is thei absolute geinteel limit. We tried it the next day, 'but al- though we stared at her steadfastly throughthenwhole hour she never looked around. What shall we do, Caligula? URCH. Don't get the idea that we are the .nephew of Beatrice Fairfax, but just this once we suggest that the poor girl had a stiff neck. . . or maybe she is deaf. . . . Ah, throw a brick at her the next time! I hIDE 'EMt (Indiana Daily Student) It has never been a contention that students of a great, free, coeducation- al university should be compelled to wear a uniform costume. Our ideas of liberty have developed considera- bly beyond this stage. It is usually assumed that a person may wear any- thing or whatever he chooses, provid- ed he accepts the ignomy and what- ever ridicule discriminating persons who perceive the departure from the accepted taste, heap upon him. At this time .of the year it is not unusual for the accomplished colle- gian to observe upon the campus large number of young persons who fondly imagine themselves honorably conspicuous if they wear a sweater bearing the initials, or one dyed in the colors of some beloved alma mater high school. Such sweaters are not always in good taste. The colors are usually in such combinations as to show eloquently the choice and fancy of youth. Particularly obnoxious are they when 'worn by several hundred freshmen, who flock upon our cam- pus, and create a florid mixture of color as varied as David's coat. It may be an inspiring sight to a cosmopolitan to witness the mingling of national costumes, but he who takes pleasure from the clash of provincialhigh school colors, has an imagination of petty magnitude. If the wearing of such colors and insignia is necessary to the pursuit of happiness to the embryo collegian, he should not be interfered with. But he who wishes to be taken for a col- lege man or woman will tear off the letters and tone down the clashing colors with dye or wear such gar- ment in the privacy of his study. Seaplane Leaves for Detroit (By Associated Press) Washington, Oct. 3.-The navy sea- plane NC9, sister ship of the NC4, which made the first transatlantic flight left Hampton roads to- day en route to Detroit by way of the inland waterways. She will carry to the Michigan city naval per- "Rags are royal raiment," says the old song,"when worn for virtue's sake." The trouble is, the casual observer doesn't know about the virtue and concludes that you don't know any better-- or haven't the price. You might wear mediocre clothes because you believe in democracy, but you can't tell everybody about it. It's more sensible to wear good clothes because you believe in good business. ., I I q Society Brand Clothes look like success- that's why successful men wear them, WHAT STRUCK YOUR EYE TODAY? "A guy carrying a pair of iceL skates." IMP. A girl 1earnina' to warlk on hi~'hl, Wadham's &8zCo.* TWO STORES I I I