TH ,.MICH--IGAN DAILY .: .. . :, . jD' cay, is a salve which most of the yl ounger generation might apply free.s CAL NEWSPAPER OF THlE rosier complexion in life. w l~ TERSITY OF MICHIG A ' - I ,. ..__.. CAMPUS OPINION LAST EDITION OF E~ditor, The Michigan Daily: MI CH IGAN SONG BOOK blished R the~ -01 of I every morning exCept Monday University year y the Board in Student Publicati us. amber of Western Conference Edltorial lation. eAssociated Press is exclusively en- to the use for republication of all dispatches credited to it or not other- credited in this paper and the local. ptiblished therein. tered. at the postofflce at Ann' Arbor, ign s second class matter.atirr il$5. r~ipion3I : Anni treet. ;s:Fdi bor Press Building, May- 1, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- MfARCH AND SIDEWALKS Although everyone' thought the weather man had stolen a mar ch on the proverb which says "In like a' lion, .out like a lamb", tradition made3 a strong comeback yesterday after- noon and the weatherman sought sheel- ter from a snoWv-storm which usheredj February to oblivion and March to~ its rightful place on the throne. I Once again: the sidewalks of Ann Arbor have taken on their full winter regalia, and. once again will the elong- suffering populace wade through tons of water in going about their busi- ness ere spring arrives. Now4 that :one-half of the proverbj has been fulfilled, may the other half' not fail! But in any event, the side- 'walks and the residents of Ann Arbor are a b)ad' combination. The side- walks hold slush and water better than those in any other community, while the residents fee less obligat- ed to clean them off than those in any other community. Consequently, for the good of those individuals who ha- J~I FOR WARD) MIARCHI SLPRI G G iSPIhN Gi Sit The changing seasonp alterna With soft caress and sting. One dlay the lark sinags to hi Thenext the snowbirds sin; The sun beams down, wex .clothes. ., With song our cloisters rin; The next the 'snowbirdis sin jThe radiators sing. I feel each ware and balmy I' strum my lute and sing Tomorrow I may freeze andl Tonight 1 sing of Spring. li 11 Thank you r your editorial, "Ab- stracts". Biut, pray remove the quo- I~ G. tation marks., Syncopation is not al- te ? ways, a virtue.; "Love", yes! But not merely the way of a man with a is mate ; mai! What about the devotion of1 19 the mother, the physi(: an, the artist, shed ourj the patriot, -the soldier, the investiga- f ~or nay, the acridI partizan? "Reig- tg. ion," yes! But, not, external1 organi- g. zatlon- howeer, inevitable. Consider St Augusti~ne's imimotal affirmiation! gust "Politics," yes! But recall that, asj !we must get a living, so we must live bust I together. "Abstract ideas." yes! But only as the mythical average man ac-! SI,3 y. -counts his- interpretation of "aba-4 stretct" and "concrete". This is best LORI' one o1f the several inversions which,; ,.~t.by a strange -pardox, govern so much. ti gIAMS' BOTH STORES -:__.I ::AT 0 * w* CommuicIationls not to exceed _300 words signed, theo signature not- necessarily to )pear in -print, but as an evidence of faith, id notices of events will be published in1 he Daily -at the discretion of the Editor, ifI t at-or mailed to The Daily office. Un- gned comunications will receive no con- deration. No manuscript will ,be retained less the writer encloses postage. The Daily nq not necessarily endorse the 'sentiments zpressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephoenes 2414 and 176-H1 MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. STAHL ews Editor..... .......Paul Watzel ty Editor...........James B. Young ssistant City Editor.......J. A. liacoun ditorial Board Chairman. .E. R. 'Meiss ight Editors-_ Ralpht Byers Harry 113ey 1.. T. JHlershdorfer R. C. Moriarty 11. A. Donahue J. E. Mack forts E;ditor ...........Wallace 1F. E'liott. omen's Editor........... .Marion Koch, nday Magaz ince lditor. 11,.f. A. Donahue' ictorial Editor.. ........Robert Tarr usic E~ditor............. ...".. K. H. Ailes Editorial Board owell IKer-'Maurice Berman Eugene Carmichael AssistantsI DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE- (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited' and Express Cars. 6 :oo a.m., 7 :oo a.m., 8 :oo a.mn., 9 :o5 a.m. and hourly to 9:05 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 Bound-7 :oo am and every two hours to 9 :oo p. m.,, x r :oo p.m, .To Ypsilanti oly-1Il :40 pxm., I :I5 a. in. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bcund-7 :50 a.mn., 12:10 p.m. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Tim. ited cars 8:47, :.1:7 a.m.,,.x.--47, 2:~47: 4.47 P.M. VICTOR ALLMEND INGER PIANO TUNING Schio ofi Music Tuner PHONE 38062 - Office at Res., 418 IN. Division St. I i I G4OLDl and SILVER PENCILS 1..3 OFF Invent ory sale HALLER'S - State Street I I r -I * a * FAMOUS MEN OF ILIS'I Fig Newton discovered of gravity.l Favorite reark, "Sweet cookie'- Omar, the cigarette hound.. Owner' of human life-till we sit down togeth- er to think it over!. R. Ml. WENLEY. ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedule in Effect October t, t922 Central Time (Slow Time) D) X X D (,.M. A.M. R.M. P.M. 1,45 7:45 .. Adrian-.... i2:45 8:45 1:15 8:15 . .. 'Iecunseh .. ia:tS B:t5 7:15 9:15 .,.Saline * 1.1z:15.7:15 :%5 o:a5Ar*Ann ArborLv. 10:45 6:45 Chamber of Commnerce Bldg. I i I S.'TRICTLY HOM COOKING HEPLER'S STUDENT Thelma Andrews ,stanley If. Armistrong Atanley M. Ba:er Dorothy Bennetta Sidney 1Bielfield R. A. Billington Hlelen lFrown 1-I. C. Clark A, B. Connable fBernadette Cote Evelyn 1. Coughlin T.I; lis1ke John, Garlinghouse Walter S .Goodspeed Portia GOtulde'r Ronald Ilaigrimr Franklin D .Hepburn Win ona A, Hibk~ard Edward J. I-iggms lhunrth C. Kelar Flizabeth Lieberman Joha McGinnis Samuel Moore AL. I. Pryor W. B3. Rafferty Robert G Ramsay Cam pbell Robertson J. W. Ruwitch "oil J,, Schnitz Frederic G. Telmos Ph}ili 11L:Wasnner BJJSINESS STAFF Telephlone 960 bitmalIly take cold or worse when thet of the Ruby Yatch When asked for snow melts on city walks, it is to be ;a. smoke hie would say, "W4hat do you hoped that spring when it finally think Khayyam?"l comes will arrive but once, and not x * revert to winter. Julius Caesar, the Roman withI - ~Gaul. "ET tu" was his answer, when EGYPT-TTLS asked how many cream puffs he, ate. Widespread popular interest has** ollowed the recent excavation~s by Willie Shakespeare, who was barredt Egyptologists in unearthing the tom~b from Avon. Hie wa~s the- man who of Tutankhamen. Novelists and drva-} said, - "I'd rather be writer, thanI matists are now turning to ancient President." ; I+gypt for their subject matter, worn-I I ens' styles are to be jgoverned by John Euznyan, who wore the first norms which 'prevailed, centuries be- pair of tight shoes, and handed his fore Christ, and New York manuf'ac-, last name down as a result. turers aria competing for the right tot ~ use the name, Tutankhamen as a Alexander, who composed Alexan- trademark for their products, with dei's Ragtime Band so that he could! the possibility that numerous litiga-l watch Aristotle., tions will' result. Even newspaper POISON IVY. correspondents who first ignored the * excavations are now being forced to ;DZear femur: (elve deeply into Egyptian history to! When I Played on the saw dust pile give. their constituents new informer- in Toledo I 'heard this version: tion about the discoveries ,and qt~es-I tionabe stories about the lives of' Mary hats a little lamb, the Pharaohs And here's the anecdote: Were it not 'so easy, in the light of It grewv right up, then disaip-- past experience, to ascribe any curi-- peared. osity in ancient Egypt on the part ofs Now who's got Mary's goat? the many a-s ransitory, it would be* * tempting to hail archaeology as the H -as anybody seen Harry lately? 1-Ic cpopualrizer of interest in civiliza-, is certainly the moan of mystery. Pin- ;tions of the past. It has done in this kertons men have; been here in town respect what history never could do, for two weeks since his last escapade but it lias done it only for the' mo- and the haven't accomp~lished a thing. menat. The present curiosity concern-i He must have gotten a new set of dis, ing the tom-b of Tutankhamen on the- guises. And the speed with which he- part of munst persons arises from so. changes thenm! '-N0o onecan catch thati dial conditions; the excavations that- bird. ! 'are being made .are of such impor- When last seen Tie was sitting alone tance that ,right now -no one can af- inz a hzighi powered car in front of Cal- ford to be totally in ignorance of kips' wearing a bathing suit and hold- them. Manufacturers are wise ill ing a silk umbrella on a zero day. capitalizing the interest which now , t i. exists, but their endeavors are not*** " likely mto, maintain it for any length } ONFIENTIALLY SPEA1 ENG of ie On the other hand, long after the Lots o' people are wave of popular curiosity has ceased! cyn cuete r o exist the lbenefits of the discover- I on probation all week. ies now, being made to scientists will j: They donL know how- still be in evidence. It is likely to be lk they are.. I've been IEDITORIAL COMMENT PREJi:,lVDIC'ES (Purdue Exponent) We naturally assumne that most stu- dents study somie cour'se for the goodl which they can derive from it, and for: the interest which they have in the, particular subject. The uctuation in- the size of the classes in several "lan-' guages at Ohio State university dlur- ing and after the wsar, however. would tend to' di'3prove this assumnp- tion. Statistics show that tkher enroll- ment in Gorman classes at that uni1- versity dropped from 1.240 before the wvar, to 61t at the time the United States ibecame actively engaged in Ili( struggle. Of the latter number, only' seven were in elementary courses. Then came the ar-mistice and with it a marked increase in the size of the German (.lasses. 0.1 the other hand, one year of the war shot the enroll-- (ment in French classes from 1,038 to 2,149. After the war the number _______7 __and___Holidays.____ Friday and Saturday special LU N GI'L -~__________________ bus for students leaves Adrian 1:45. leaves 40rATJE F R O JAMES II. l;LLIOTT, Proprietor 40IAS EFESNST. 1,923 FEBRUARY 1923 Phone 46 1 2 3- 4 5 6 7 S 9 10 11 10 13 1.1 15 16 17? tillItI{1iIIII1111111111il11itl1111llllllll~ llllt' SPRING - .- ~c Rs HATS S SPECIALS EVERY WEEK READY, < 4____________ Our $3.00 and $3.50 Hats , GUARANTEED We Save You a Dollar or CCR A More on a Hat We do all kinds of Cleaning andl Reblocking of, hats at- low prices for HIGH CLASS - WORK. PHONE 1427, 2830. FACTORY HAT 'STORE - 617 Packard Street Phone 1792 r Where D. U. It. Stops at State . THIS WEEK- SLEEP ANYWHIERE, BUT - Cri.AAM EL with PINEAPPLE PARFAIT'. EAT AT REX'S THE, CLUB LUNGH 712 Arbor Street w Near State and Packard Streets S ONLY 69c A QUART AT. YOUR DEALER'S, " Day oy day, in every way, I am at your service", JJI MME, the ad,,tak- - er. Call95(96 -.-A ..d ":. -- . - ______________________________Iii[_________1111J__11111ii111111Nfi1N,11 ___ - BUSINESS MVANAUER ALBERT 3. PARKER dvertising..............John J. Hamel, Jr. dvertising...............Walter K. S hereri ivcrtiaing............L Iawrence 11. Favrot. iillic-atii................Edkward F. Conlin opi'rilg............Pavid 3. M. Part< rcnlation......... .....Town-send -. Wolfe ccounts........... .L. leaum ont Parks Assistants enneth Seick Allan S. Morton eorge Rockwood James A. Dryer rry M. H-ayden WfnI, IH. Good ugene j,. Dunne Clyde L. Hagerman ni. Graulich, Jr. Henry Freud , hn C. Haskin Herbert P., Bostick L. Putnam . L. Pierce- lerlbert W. Cooper j. B. Sanzenbacher allace Flower Clifford Mitts 'ill1 it . Rid. Jr. Ralph Lewright. arol L. Hale Philip Newall , ' '' I ,, } I' j: I; 'r . i i , i I Assuming that those twelve hun- (Ired students elected to. study Ger- man because they considered it of value to thlem in future years. why should tha fact that Germany was our, enemy decrease the value of the Ger-' man language? Its value to the chemn- ist and to the scientist was not .les- sened. Or -why should the fact that France became our ally during the' warincrese fz^Th r fa of the- French language? The reaction in clais sizes following the wvar naturally points to the fact that, personal and national prejudice, to a great extent, influence our thoughts and actions r'e- gardlless of true value. (The Clumbia Spectator) ..ter . tiFCC( Y .f THIURSD.AY, MARCH 1, 1923 Nighit Editor-HARRY D. HOIEY APPLY FREELY Sir Walter' Raleigh is the hackney- ed historical example of courtesy, po' -.A'philosophy of education -which has been: attempting to pushi its he-ad up through the mass of educational effi- ciei es o~ f the nmst f t- c',wr rl liteness, gallantry. One action, the j a trible easier for ar2chaeologists to rmoval of a. cloak,' gave his narane its receive financial backing because of,; what Lord Carnarvon and his cohortsI mostpoplary ko~v c~necionhave done. Scientists will be able to with histor..it is evident from, re- make 'a better evaluation of Egyptian mark whch hve eencurrnt hatculture, and more attention is likely 1 the college studlent is in no danger of to be paid to Egypt by archaeologists'- bein:; register~ed in history on a simi- from now on, because of the many lar count. The college student is notI new contributions to science being1 courteous, polite or gallant. aei h ale fteKns The accusations undeniably have a ImaeithValyofheKns Ipopular curiosity in this movement is 1 basis in fact, but they cannot be 'al- buzt for the 'moment,'but scienltific ini plied alone to college students. The1 terest will be more lasting.I same concerns modern youngsters and I___________ also grown-ups wNho have not attend, CLEMEN1CEAUi - A PILOSOYIhER" ed college. The maan who yields heis' As a fitting conclusion to a brilliant seat in a street car to a ;woman or to, career in world's statesnmanshmip and- anothier mnan much2 his elder is indeed; diplomacy, . Georges Clemenceau,- the exception whereas he used to be I France's renowned fighting premier,' the rule. The tip. of the hat has been i has begun the writing of a monucmen-I redlucedl for the most part to a mere:; tal work of philosophy by which hie- wave of the hand or nod of the "heaidI hopeis to be judged by posterity. I-ay- The common courtesy, of dfeference to nr endeared himself to his conteni- Ig;e or sex in1 ente ring,- a building is, porary compatriots, the Tiger has i too often honored in the breech, while; made up his mind to leave behind Wther marks of respect° occasionally I something more than a name, that- shown in the past seem to have been the future genierations, as well as the: relegated to the ash-heap. present, may know something of the In regard to courtesy to women sev- old statesman's speculations upon er-al reasons suggest .themselves for the "deeper respects of the aims or ; the change in attitude, foremost aimlessness of life". among; which is ithe ise of women to Undertaking the tremendous taisk . j, station of equality inilpolitical and of writing three tremendous volumes sometimes commercial life. If women ',so late in his life, Clemenceau is de-* are to compete withi men in these,- termined that lie shall live to complete strenuous fields, there is something in them and that they shall not be pu-) th~e idea that they are no longer the lished until after his death. This weaker sex, and should be granted shows his dominant desire to be judg-j only the consideration given other ed by thoughts as recorded in a boob zuen. mrather than the impulsive action-s of In addition to this, women take un- a fiery statesman or scandalized poli- dlue alvantage of the deference shown ticiani. on probation fiye montl When Coach Fisher starts to horse-hide covered ball1 out boys of the diamond anf~wer and the cr-ack of the ball hit 7o glove you can bet the next happen is spring. Sprig Sonig Oh' ..glad the tidIings- Oh. . . -eath where is thy Oh. ... come -'and sumnner Oh?'..blaa. .tis blaa we ChIorus Oh my! For goodness sal The ca.pus is a lake, We sprin~g from cake 'to c. Oh!'..art thou a fake? C'onti 'hbuos, contiiffuiI {All ZE -O'N (GRAN JOISEY jCher Eddie riPoor:-- Ze colyn, she is on ze wvl good. But, monsieur, I pray where is ze noble Joisey Peut-etre he has allaid frr 4midst, eez it not so? Heez say were of ze goodly humor, s intairessawit, and I know zal JoKr. "vwas championed in what its earlier. friends might term an unexpected i dt hequarter, when Ehihu Root addressed gttethe Alumni of Hamilton college from and the Which he was gradluatedt fifty-nine the call I ;as H. -is remarks wri at ting theyerao.- - wriprt as follow~s thing to- "Probrably we all forget the greate'r lart of what we have learned in col- lege, but the things we can't lose are the influences upon character that go ring! with us to our dying (lay. Y spring! "Physical force, backedl by the ac- bring cumrulated wealth of centuries of pro- Ssing. ductivity, i:24-, failed to bring happi- ness to 3mankind, Misery, poverty and distress have followed its utmost ke! use, and the world now seeks a new p~ath to happiness through the spir- ;ake itual re-enthronement of those p~ower~s of civilizati~on that dlependl upon what Jejiza. ; men really are, and upon the be Art and soul and -cha racter of -:tmen. All lolls. he world over . mankindl is longing. that th~e(daylbe speeded when no- - 'I{II1) bility of character and spiritual pow-. er mlay control the va-st and coinmli- cat'd n achinery of life. iole~aii "It. is, first' of all, Our colleges that - o yu,1 ust. teacth Ilie 'qualIities upon which y B~oid? thle futur-e of ouir beloivedl country do- pmorlefldl. The gener-al, the statesman,. yings leyI the mlan of a frairs, all pass away and] itd m-~yaro forgotte n. ,,But to have buildled t- mot l- Movie directors, please, copy IL t"eu cuz true zat ze colynin readers miss ze! Boild. Yours for more like heem. yelii-ats iesrevi. I can figur-e out about as mnuchl from1 the above as I can an hours talk With Doe Lovell. The only thing to: do in a case like this is to agree. A 1BI-GJOB13 01FOR GILUS H-ead in T. 1)?. 'Northwe Ater launch-' es campaign for $10,800,000.' hens~ It is- not likely that a man -ho has once suffered commercially, The 'economics students who saw r inistance, by alowing a woman to; the caption, "broadly speaking" on recedle himt in a Conference or to I the front. page of a Daily, must have Ake his place in a line applying for a ! thought that The Daily had become a position,-witi llo11w his sense of gal- textbook overnight. intry to put him in the ,sale, pro- icamient 'jseconld time., Thus the Obviously the boxing argument now -nman has sufferea in one ways for I attracting attention in Chicago need one's. self into the strictur-e of these undyzi'g nsi itutions to have aided the development (4 these pric-less p,)s5sesionfl1 civilization, is to have lived not in vain a-nd it is to have lived ini peroetuity."' - Some of 1us forget, that Ithese rer'- manent influci~es .ii character may be; found -outside the classr-oon; othiers of us forget that the ma terial of the classroomi hc.s its charac.ter building fom-ce; but by-- far thle vast: majority come to college with what little char- aster they possess sealed up in a bale of dogma, amnass a few facts , acquire a. degr-ee, and .leave college, having men Published in an in the interest of Elec. the a rincal Development by if an instil utioi that will feel t be helped by what- while ever helps the No more movies no more funl Probation week has just begun, i