THE MICHIGAN DAILY __ OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE IUIVEIISITY OF MTCHIGA N Published every morning except Mondayl during the University year by the Board in Centrol of Student Publications. Member of Western = Conference Editorial Association. The . Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- 'wisecredited in thi paper and the local news published therein. entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ciard Street. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ess, 6o. Communications not to exceed goo words f signed, the signature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events 'will be published, in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor; ifa kft at or mailed to The Daily office. Un- signed communications will receive no con- sideration. No manuscript will be returned unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-M MANAGINQ EDITOR MARION B. STAHL News Editor...............Paul Watzel City Editor.... .........James B. Young Assistant City Editor..........J. A. Bacon Eldituiial Board Chairman.......E. R. Meiss Night Editrs- Ralph BLyeas IHarr' Haey L. J. llershdorfer R. C. Moriarty II. A. Donahue J. E. Mack Spots dior ' ..Wallace l . Fliott Women's Eitor............Marion Koch Soay Magailie Editor.I... . A. Donahue Pictorial Editor............ ...Robert Tarr Music Editor................... H. Ailes ;Editorial Board Lowell Kerr Maurice Berman Eugene Carmichael Assistants without interest for all students of, the sUniversity. The purpose of the 'Ensian is not only to fulfill the wants of the graduating classes, but to fur- nish everyone with a book full of memories which will be cherished aft- er leaving Ann Arbor. For this rea- son, it behooves every student to de- cide today whether or not he can af- ford to be without a Michiganensian. 1/ / DrROLLS 'llE A RNA (A The -TOW xUy , , TO CAPTAIN BIRKS Iv r To Howard M. Birks, who has so ably performedon theMichigan bas- ketball team during the past, two years, has been delegated the honor of captaininig the team next season. Birks is cne of the very few of last I do. season's players who will be back forIandL duty next winter, and he has shown umn himself a most valuable player in fill- Help, ing in the gap left by the ineligibility .T This may be a surprise to the fev- erish readers of3 this column ' b u ty 'TOASTED ROLILJ have changed hands ~ again. Femur toil me that I'd like 'em.' Here's hoping that From now on henceforwards until another arrives this col- will be conducted by BUNK: as4istance, succor and aid! !.!! * * * ' EDITORIAL COMMENT A THoU.IT FOR )OVIE HATERS (New York Herald) The army of "movie" haters is not exactly militant, but its hatred has a, very grim quality. it will concede* nothing to films except boredom. So! it i~s with some trepidation that we rise to suggest a service which the "movie" may have, rendered these self-same haters. That is to compel the theater to improve. There seems to be a general agreement that never before ha.s the New York stage reached so high a level of plays and productions as this year. There is Shakespeare superbly done. The-re are the Russians. Therej are a dozen plays fairly reeking with ideas. The bed-room farce has been replaced by downright drama ably constructed and setting forth an orig- inal theme in original fasiion. Even the girl show has developed a sharp; edge of satire. A dozen years ago we were graciously permitted to attend perhaps one Shaw play a year. This season it is as if the managers had scoured the Continent in an effort to produce nothing but drama appeal- ing to the intellect so far have our box offices traveled since that distant day when Canada first spoke her lonely message to an apathetic city. No, we do not argue that the "rnov- The Graham Book Stores will give the Building Fund of the ''omen's League a per- centage on all cash sales of the MICHIGAN SONG BOOK DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH 1 Wornen l'S GRAHA M 'S BOOK ST O R ES .. ' of William Miller. Michigan basketball fans are hop- A XODERN HERO ing that the ineli-giibility jinx will not> The man in my estimation, pursue the team next season, and that That is worthy of being called brave, Captain Birks will lead his team to Is not always the battlefield hero, the highest place in the Conference. Or the one who can laugh at the For the past two seasons Michigan grave. has had the material for champion- ship teams, but both this season and It's the man who can stilll keep his last injuries to players and ineligi- temper, 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.m., 9:05 a.m. and hourly 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 Bound-7:oo a.m. aad every two hours to 9 :o0 p. in., ir :oo' p.mt. To Ypsilanti only--i i :40 P.. r :5 aan . To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound--7 :5oan., 12:1(1 p.m. To Jackson anti Kalamzoo-Lin ited cars 8:47, o :47 a.m., 12:47, 2470 4:47 p.1m. To Jackson and Lansing--I.mited at 8:47 p.m. Th Gahm oo Sors il gveth Buldn FnofteWm'sLuer -i s R I G i Thelma Andrew. 3ianley 'l. Armstrong Stanley M.' Bazter Dorothy Bennett, Sidney Bielfield R. A. Billington Helen Brown It. C. Ctark A. B. Connalile iiernadette Cote velyn T. Coughlin oseph Fpstein Jr . Fiske Jh arlkighouse Lter S. Goodspeed 1 r i fn flif Ronald Halgrir. Franklin D Hepburn Winona A. Hibbard 9dward J. fliggins lXennetth C. IKel ar Elizabeth Liebermann john McGinnis * rmuel Moore A7.If. Pr -or W. B. Rarferty Robert G. Ramsay Campbell Robertson J. W. Ru witch loll J. Schmitz Frederic G. Telmos Philili Nf. Wanner )USINESS .STAFF' Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT ,J. PARKER Advertising..............John J. Hamel, Jr. Advertising..... .... .Walter K. Scherer Advertjiing ............L~awrence I-I .Flavrot Publication................Edward F. Conlin. Copywiritintg............. David J. M. Park Circulation-.- . .owtsend H. Wolfe Accounts............T,. Beaumont Parks bility have wrought havoc with Michigan's championship aspirations.! But the worm must turn, as the say- ing has it, -and Michigan will watch with confidence the .work of CaptainI Birks and his teammates next sea- son. Meanwhile, we congratulate the newly-elected captain. THE NEW ARCHITECTURE The exhibition of drawings submit- ted in the Chicago Tribune prize com- petition, which are now on view in Alumni Memorial hail, represents what is possibly the greatest achieve-. ment in the history of modern arch- itecture. Including among its num- ber, the work of architects from all parts of the world, this collection demonstrates the architectural ten- dencies, not of one or two nations,j but of the earth at large. Through the instigation of this con- petition, the Tribune has given a greater incentive to the perfection of art in the designing of office build-I ings than anything in the past Some of the results which have been pro- duced are truly astounding. Hereto- fore the conception of a cold, inartis- tic, bulk of stone has been the usual selection as the only fitting plan for the practical fulfillment of the needs of an office building. Now we have presented before us positive proof that office buildings can be made as beau-x tiful 2,3 cathedrals; pure in design as well as imposing in structure. ' Motifs. from the many beautiful ca- Ithedrals of France, the temples of the Greeks, ard mosques of Byzantium have been incorporated in the plans for these ,superstructures of modern engineering. Preserving the harmony and symmetry of the artistic, these architectural geniuses have combined the ideals of the past with the me- chanical possibilities of the present to produce what is to be the most! beautiful office building in the world.I The results of the Tribune's contestj show clearly that architecture is not1 in a period of decline, but that in this1 age of commercialism the skyscraper nway become just as much a symbolofj architectural perfection as the Gothic cathedral of the middle ages.j And dance the whole evening through, Who can laugh and smile the live-long while With a half inch tack in his shoe. POISON IVY. - / y..y) 1923 F'EBRUTARYI 192 PA44E. JUST JEAN ies" have built up new audiences. Couldn't 'som-ething be done to elimin- Fresh sources have undoubtedly been ate the moon-eyed . tapped by the film; but that these raw overs who insist on sharing all their recruits are already ripe for the the- tender love ater and for the theater at its best secrets with any unfortunate who we shall not urge upon the "movie" happens to be handy? haters. What we suggest is that by The goof in my Spanish class assures; presenting a certain kind of emotion- me in most ardent !al spectacle exceedingly well and very and poetic language that his girl is cheaply the "movie" has forced the a divine creature theater manager either to lie down of exquisite charm and beauty. The and quit or to seize himsef by his Romeo in my Math bootstraps aidd ho.mt his trale to a' class swears on a stack of Bibles 37 new level where the "movie" could miles high that not, try as it would, compete. his girl gave beauty tips to Venus. That level, it seems fairly clear, is And so it goes. the drama of ideas. In the spectacular 1 2 -1 5 6 7 8 9S 1 11 12 13 14 15 16 1 1S 19 2)0 21 22 23 '2 25 27 27 2S SPRING c HAT N OW READY Our $3.00 and $3.50 Hat GUARANTEED 3 17 11 CROFUT and KNAPP HATS S . I 4' ' i As S N Cavanaugh Edges Rain Proofed Crushers Lutz Clothing Stoe. DOWN TOWN -.- WC Save You a Dollar or More on a Hat 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 Where D. U. R. Stops at State -; Kenneth $eick George R&ckwood Perry M. Hayden Eugene T. Dunne Wlm. Graulich, Jr. John C. Haskin C. L. Putnam E.' D. Armantrout Herbert W. Coop' Wallace Flower \Villiam 1-, Reid. Assistants Allan S. Morton I James A. Dryer Wm. H. Good Clyde L. Iagerman Henry Freud Herbert P. Bostick D. L. Pierce C4ton Purdy er I. B. Sanzerbahert Clfford Mitts Jr. Ralph Lewright : Only more so. And then might be very interestin and all that but I don't L have a girl so I can't appreciate it. Although if co-ed is looking for..-- Well I guess. You bet. * * * -. CONF'DE.NTIALLY SPEA Those Hawkeyes proved to be eagle-eyed saturday night. t * * An' now that the sidewalk tin' dry, it might be menti the grass is coming into con again. It seems that as so sidewalks get dry, the stu to walk on the grass. No you 01 trump, you, I've gi some. It field, in sentiment and slapstick, the g "movie" is supreme. In melodrama it happen to can give the theater a close run. .When you come to the play of wit and some fair thought it is left standing at the post. A scenario of Shaw would be nothing but captions; and captions are the BOZO. bane of the "movie", an evil to be eliminated as far as possible. It is a' AKING plain business proposition that we sketch. Many a clever manufacturer ... of high-grade products has eluded dis- aster by improving his wares so that they -were beyond the competition of ~ cheap machine-made rivals. Has not just such a swift move been wisely s are get- and ably made by the theater mana- gers of New York? Luckily, buyers oned that stood ready and eager, composed, to sideration a large extent, of our friends the on as the "movie" haters, who found here a kind des begin of entertainment that 'neither Douglas femur, Fairbanks 'at his daringest nor Mary Pickford at her prettiest could pre- Dt77 aplantend to parallel.' Spring Harold ,. Hale Philip Newall Wm, D. Roesser TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1923 Night Editor-ROBT. C; MORIARTY WHIMSIES' NEW VENTURE - Among the numerous offerings of' plays, concerts, and lectures with which the present season is so full, a group which possesses much signifi- cance is the series of poets and nov-3 elists to appear under the auspices of; Whimsies and the local Collegiate Alumnae. The first of this group,' Dorothy Canfield, is to appear in Hill -auditoriim tonight. This is the sec-1 ond series ,of its kind, being a sequel of the modern poets brought here by the same oragnizations last spring, and which were so enthusiastic'ally re-; ceived at that time by the entire community., The literary lecture series originat-j ed with the group of- student writers who are the editors and contributors of Whimsies. These students were in contact with the literary celebrities', who occasionally visited Ann Arbor,' and they were convinced 'that a good- 'ly part of the community would like- wise appreciate the privilege of such} contact. So hearty was the response in favor of the idea as set forth in Whimsies that flans were made -by its proponents fof- arranging a series of lectures. Twelve hundred persons aftended the first lecture, and subse- quent ones were even more numer-i ously attended. The conviction that there is a per-1 manent place at Michigan for a dis-1 tinctive literary series of this charca- ter each year led the sponsors of the- series last spring to attempt a second venture this year. A trio of two nov-1 elists and a poet has been secured, and possibly another name or two may be added to this list later on. The students and alumnae who are work- ing to make the literary series a per- manent feature at Michigan are de- serving and should receive the same support- which greeted their efforts' last year. TIlE LASt'1 CHANCE Th Mihiganensian opens its final! ,inherintion drive on the Camnus i ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedule in Effect October i8, 1922 Central Time (Slow Time) D X X D P.M. A,.M. P.M. P.M. 3:45 7:45 .... Adrian ... 1245 8:45 4:15 8.1s ... Tecumseh ... r2:15 8:15 4:30 8:30 ... . Clinton .... 12 :oo :oo s:15 9:15 -... Saline .. 11:15 7:15- 5:45 9:s5 Arknn ArborLv. 10:45 6:45 Chamber of Commerce Bldg. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays and Holidays. Friday and Saturday special bas for students leaves Adrian 1:45, leaves Ann Arbor 4:45. JAMES H. ELLIOTT, Proprieto: Phone 46 TOLEDO - ANN ARBOR BUS DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Going North A. It. P.1M. Lv. Toledo 7:00 10:00 2:00 5:00 Arr-. A. A. 9:35 12:35 4:35 7:35 Ooing oth Lv. A. A. 7:00 10:00 2:00 5:00 Ar. Toledo 9:35 12:35 4:35 7:35 EASTERN TIME SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS Goinig North A.3M. P.M3L Lv. Toledo 8:00 11:00 5:30 Arr. A. A. 10:35 1:35 8,:00 Going South Lv. A. A. 8:00 11:00 8:30 Ar. Tol. 10:35 1:35 11:05 Cars Leave Court House ___ -''--- Pumps --A patent grey trimmed strapped pipp, with. cuban heel hxere by filegrass of the campus may be saved. We're going to divide the Student council up into shifts and have them stationed at strategic points on the campus, where they can read- ily catch all grass lovers and hay- seeds who hate dry sidewalks. On 1 Sundays we're going to have the Board of Regents take the council's place so that "Hill's" gang can have a rest. $ .50 A WORTHY CRUSADE The arrangement being fostered by the Y. M. C. A. whereby a number of students of the University will be enabled to take an educational coursej at the University of Mexico next- summer deserves encouragement. Al- though Mexico seems destined to play an important part in our economic, political ,and .social relations in the future, the- average educasted person knows little about the internal af- fairs of our border state. Mexico at present is endeavoring to! form a stable government, and to clean up -the country from within in' an effort to gain some measure of prestige internationally. If this can be accomplished throughout a period of years, political advancement plus 1 the development of dormant economic? resources should make Mexico some- thing of a world power, and it will beE to our interest to aid Mexico in bring-! ing this about. But aside from this Mexico has al- ready progressed far enough cultural- ly to be of interest to University stu- dents. A goodly amount of litera-. ture, some of it of vaue, has been pro- duced, and though the best 'Mexican authors are read extensively by Eu-1 ropeans they have practically no following in this country. Impressive cathedrals modernized after the art of the middle ages may be seen in Mex- ico City and other metropolises of the country. The "University at Mexico City has an enviable standing among educators. Mexico in its new period of develop- ment needs the help of America. Its needr assistance economically, but above all it needs young Americans who through studying socal, political, and cultral cnrditinns will nrnnaoat- TEARABLE. * * * Cano Puellani- (Pardon, Robert) Thou haughty, stingy bobbed hair!- Thou wadna deign methinks to share Frae rich store o' smiles sae fair Just ane w' me. I loth wad waste a gift sac rare That thou wad gie. I dinna ken but that the Grail Wadna a fairer quest avail Than een like heather i' th' dale. Just two wee winks Wad hand me mair than barred jail Or iron links. Mair precious than auld gold thy lips!. How well they'd gie a kiss that dips Deep lown into the soul and slips A Lethean bliss O'er every mon, apocolypse Of Love's abyss. Thy smiles, thy kisses kept frae me! In .sooth then I a thief maun be; And if I'm caught I will them gie Right gladly back To prove that generosity I dinna lack., ZEKE. We wonder if ZEKE is really from Scotch stock or just has some. * * * Dear BUNK, The Joisey Boid back in the fold again! I haven't seen him ever since: I gave him the 0.0. by the bridge below the vinegar works. That's the night I-took his brass knuckles away from him and sent him to bed for a few days. Ran across him on the OPINION;S (Ohio State Lantern) There is a constant clamor from certain groups of intellectuals who very steadfastly aver that they have a right to what they choose to call their opinions. But the query often arises: Have they this right? Do they really know why they believe as they do? James Harvey Robinson, in his book -The Mind in the Making", lays par- ticular stress upon a certain aspect of our thinking. This aspect, though far from being remote impresses us as being one that istoo seldom realized. ~ "Most of our so-called thinking and reasoning is our attempt to justify to ourselves not our opinions, but the prejudices we already hold," says Professor Robinson. In other words, we are always trying to find reasons for believing the things we want to believe. We are always trying to fit facts to our prejudices. One can cite numerous instances which are points in proof of Profes- sor Robinson's statements. Politics, on the one hand, furnishes us with illum- inating details. People are Republi- cans or Democrats, but, have they come to be one or the other by any reasonable process? As one editorial writer queried recently, do not most of us inherit our political views and then try to find reasons for clinging to this inheritance? In labor controversies most of us start with a fixed point of view rather than an, open ,mind. It is essential that we follow the facts and then ar- rive at our opinions, whatever they may be. Universally it is true that men dif- fer, but we can honestly try to study a problem and get at the real truth in regard to it. Let us not seek to justify our prejudices, but to have opinionps based on fact rather than surmise. PHONE 1115 Wahr's Shoe Store i S,. MAIN HOSIERY - - _PA_ _ 41 . { , i r, We're cleaning and pressing Men' suits for $1.50----and I with benzol, not gasoline! we call for and deliver Muddy walks, a gradual lowering of temperature, and a growing antipathy on the part of the average student to- wards his hoonks, ca~re bt the' onlyr ITelephone U II 'I