Tfi'bIE MICHIGAN DAILY ________ tinall overdraw, through not know- 7.: ,...., t 1 tit j ng the anmount of money which they __________________-' have on deposit, seem:;, inexcusable. O S EI OFFICIAL hEWSP. PER OF THLE With the expenditure of but a few, ?UNIVERSITY OF 'MICHIGAN minutes each week, anyone can know ,F Published every morning except Mondayexclho he tad nacII during t eUniversity fear by theoBoard i11 The person having such knowledge BT Control of Student Publications.if illntl 1 rlrfn n n va nn n n-- _ ___ Member of Western. Conference Ed. toriai Association. ers or to prat himself in embarrassing predicaments by' issuintg uncollectible; S1 IMYS l)ARY Bright and early as I climb from out my downy couch and do inhale deeply of the balmy air. Walking I 'The Associated Press is exclusively en- .JA , S tild to the use for republication of all A profitable habit for anyone to form1 news dispatches credited to it or not otheristaofcuryin-itiig wise credited in this paper ani the local1 hto cuac nmitiigan news published therein. adequate knowledge of one's Rnacial) ________________________ IWelfare. The man who knows "how 4ntered at 'the postofice at. Ann Arbor,' Michigan, as second class matter, fie stands" is seldom the man who Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.s. comes to issue with his hanker on Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- matters such as overdraft. Besides, it nard Street.I Phones: Editorial, 2414 and I76-M; Busi' is likely that most of the persons RSS. ~who continually claim to be "bt oke" Communications not to exceed 3o0 words would never have reached that stage if signed, the signature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, of ffinancial impoverishment had they briskly down the thoroughfare,h zming snatches of the Opera "St. L Blues" as rendered by Theodore I is' Symphony Orchestra. I ain minded of a, verse of CUB'S:- LJouis Lew- 1'0- INSII)E DOPE ON SPRING "The call of Spring is lurking Beneath you sky of blue. I do not feel like working In fact I never do." 1 ., . ,;, ;° ,'i .l r'a _?? andnotices of events will be p)ublished ir. maintained +some sort of personal ac- Tike Daily at the discretion of the Editor, ifI left at or mailed to The Daily office. Un" counting device for their own con- signed communications will receive no con venience. sideration. No manuscript will be returned unless the writer encloses. postage. The Daily dove not necessarily endorse the sentimnent: ORAiEW l( tA expesed n he omurnatona - "All roads lead to Rome" is a EDITORIAL STAFF phrase which shows that the old em';.jl TEelephlones 2411 and 176-1 perors were aware of the fact thatit -- quick transportation is a tremnendous MANAGING EDITOR asset to the state. The Romans de-C MARION B. STAHL veloped a complex and highlly effec-! t- - liye system of highways to furtherl News Editor.... ............Paul Watzel! lecomianmltrsicitrssl City Editor .....'...... James B. Youngteeoomcadmiiaiti nee t A -; itit City CEitor .......... J. A. Bac '' f the government. Some of the mlain! N:ltra adCara.... .Mis{atre ight Editor arteries of commerce were constructed) Ralph Byers Harry Hoey 8o well tha~t they have survived the:- I~.J. lerhdoferH. . Mriaty ravages of time, and are nearly as I.ADoae J. MakSplorts Editor .... ;..., Wallace V. Fliott perfect now as they were in the dayss Women's Editor ...... ...... Marion Kochwhntecsusudtoradhm It's a lovely little lyric, and calls up in one's mind visions of Springish t things such as new bonnets, apple 1ad oa b l so s ic r e l n nel-wear, dulcet whisperings andI1 plash of paddles, the first robin and the last lumpy galosh. And so through the dlay anti into the' eve. Tro bed with a most deciddtl feeling of unrest. 1 must purchase m te some shirting-s aind cravat on theI morrow. W1hail Did 11(e Svy have YOU ever called HER by phone and sp~oken...' EDITORIAL C OMMNENT 4AM P1"'1011Y (Oregon Sunday Emnerald)} There is, att the pre'sent tume, a. heavy atta ck being made upon aictiv- ities; thi; is evidenced by the numi- ber of Big Berthas now being trained fronm the parap~ets of Fort Johnson toward the scores of little gun pits out on the students' No Mani's Land. Now, of course this is all r'ght---we must. have conflict or life would get rather monotonous, but we must niot allow the roar ot the big guns to press out the value of they}e activities.I For activities have a value, more of a. value than. most profess ors id ped- agogues are willing to admit. And the nine-pinned man is, oft-times, the possessor of more hard, solid gray matter than the prodigy of the labora- tory, or the child of the library and the seminar. The very fact that a, man has nine pins indicates, p~erforce, that hie is the possessor of some kind( of unciommzon ability. What is that abil- ity? i1' is the quatlity of being 'a good m iixer. 11. means that the inan knows how, to gr;t along with others; that, he knows howr to put an ear to the ground and list to the rumblings; it means that lie knows how to expres~s him- self; it means that he can bluff, that he can persuade, tha.t he can comn- promise, that he cani get things (lone. IHeaven criown the fellow who can get things clone! Don't let us be understood as dis, par'aging the scholar. H-e it' the chap who is going to keep "th1e small, trail 'flame of truth alight in at mighlty windy, teinpestuo~s world. We need more scholars, no doubt, andl any- thing we may do to produce miore scholars is commendable. But let u~s never fegret that it is not the scholar who is to negotiate the daily transactions of the world. It is not he who is to i-oll up hi's Sleeves. get out in the mxiddle of the street and deal with ornery people,, inexact and prejudliced emnotioi, erroneous facts, and warped ideals. It is not the schol- ar who must roughly strike a balance and go forward. The scholar's mind is too delicately tuned, too finely bl ba-anced to compromise or' to deal in subterfuges. Above all things he must be exact,.lhe must be faithful to truth, 'he must forever disregard the clamor of the mob; hie must not heel the journalistic spirit of the modern EAmerican which cries out for a pop- ular ,rough and ready interpjretation of all things =under the stars-and of the stars themselves. methods of study that do not, result in the acquirement, of real i nowl- edge. The problemn is one that mnu4 he leift for the psychologists to so ve. Certain it. is 'that any system. evolvedl will not meet with approval if'. by laying clown a set of elementary rules. to do as lhe pleases. The delicate problem facing the psychologists5 is to. p~reserve the liberty of the student jand yet at the sane time lead hint to work in a systematic manner that will result in a. college graduate who has a mind trained for hard work. Dedicate ('liapel to - iIlhmimiHP The new chapel in H-arris hall i, Z to be a memorial to the late Bishop D. Williams. An appeal is being male 0 ' University alumni of St. Andrew's church to p~rovide funds to furnish the chapel properly. ADRIAN'-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedule in Effect October zE, 1932 Cen'ral Tim~e (Slow Time) l) X X D '.iM. A.M. P.M. P.M. 3.45 7:45 "... Adrian .. 12:45 8:4S 4 :30 8:30 ....Clinton . . ..1:00 8 :0 5:15 9:15 ... Saline . ..ii:15 7:15 5:a5 o:<'; Ar~Nm ArborLv. 10:45 6:45 Chamber o)f Commerce Bldg-. (}----D)aily. X-D~aily except Sundays and I!Holidays. Fr iday and Saturday. special bus for studlewis leaves _Adrian 1-45, leawea, Anni Arbor 4:45. J AMNNSIf. F. ,LU O'lT, Proprietor Phone 46 The Graham Book Stores wi!] give the Building Fund of the Women's League a per- centage on all cash sales of the MICHIGAN SONG, BOOK DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH G RAHA'S BOOK STrORES DOROTHYJAlL.1 B. LOWRY ~CHIROPRACTOR 60 1,4 Nat'l Bu~nk Bldg. Ellours, 1.6 p.m. Phone 401-3~ S LEE P ANYWHERE, BUT, EAT AT REX'S 1 THE CLU7B LUNXCH 712 Arbor Street Near State and Packard Street* ww mmoomwomoft wo nen League i I I' ... i. =======)C--- " PPRESENTING THE HATS OF SbLt NEXAMPLED SMAR.TNESS 11 ~F, Pictorial Editor.... .......... Robert Tarr Music Editor ...................;. 1H. Ailes Editorial Board Lowell Di'err Maurice Berman Eugene Carmichael Assistants Sidney Bielfield R. A. Blillington Hlelen Brown it. C. Clark A. B. Connable% Bernadette Cote Evelyn I. Coughlin Franklin D Xlepburn Winona A. Hibbard Edward J. Higgins Kenneth C. Kelar Elizabeth Liebermiann John McGinnis Samuel Moore M. IH. Pryor W~ 1)P f..-+ Joseph Tpstemn W. B. 1\uUC ILY T. I. Fiske Robert G. H alusay John Garlinghouse Cam pbell Robertson Walter S. Goodspeed J, W. Ruwitch P'ortia Goulder Soll J. Schnitz Rtonald lalgrimn P'hi'is M W V'n or "IBUSINESS STAFFj Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER -Advertising. ......'..John 3. 1Iamel, Jr. Advertising.........alter K. Scherer{ Advertising ............. Lawrence 11[. iavros Pbication................ Edwvard I'. Conlin' Copywriting........... .Dlavid J. AL Park Circulation ..... ......... ownsend 11. 'Wolfe Accounts ...............1. Beaumont Park, Assistants Kenneth Selck Allan _S. Morton George Rockwood James A. Dryer Perry M. Hayden im. H. Good Eugene j,. Dunne Clyde L. Hiagermian Win. Granlich, Jr, Henry Freud John C. Haskin Herbert P. Bostick C. L. Putnam D. L. Pierce E. D. Armantrout Clayton Purdy Herbert W. Cooper 1. B.'Sanzenbacher Wallace Flower Clifford Mitts \villiam 'Ff. Reid. Jr. Ralph, Lewright Harold IL. Hale Philip Newall win. 0. Roe,,er SUNDAY, MARCH 11, 1923 Night Editor---RALPH N. BI'ERS FATIIEI'S L)AY at the head of their legions. to HER for a few But to get away from the mistyf minutes and then AFTER thoughts of the past and to come down you have made a LONG to the present it is obvious that roads IPRETTNV speech wait are still an important factor in the' for an ANSWER and not }n to . hi fa t w s il sr t d yge lthe Germnans in the late war when ' and then dhid you BANG they mobilized -men on the French; the receiver and vell "HELLO" border in a surprisingly shorttime! and get EXCITED and due partly to their perfect system of; THEN did you suddenly railroads and highways. In the' come down to dear OLD United States, the railroads have mother EARTH with a, reached a degree of perfection that 'THUD and realize that. has not been attained in any other SHE has hung 'up on mitiT but our highways are infe- you? rior to those in Europe. ain't it a GRAND Recently there has been considera-. and GLORIOUS feeling? ale talk and agitation upon the sub- AIN'T it now? fect of a concrete road from New; YEIl.. jYork to San Francisco. While as yet h ell. aothing definfte has materialized in : chis direction, still it is not a vain Yir' d Blink [!.pe that within the next ten years a Bcwcy ik a utb~ms highway will stratch from coast to ~an enhni on e ou cast. This wil be another strongiantbe ng rudyicln dese last coupla weeks ya tink,, ya axinof cmmece tat wl anerveto can slip one ovem' on me Ware da ya bind the people together into a n get dis stuff about sayin mie sh oit; separable state of facilitating cheap ;uha. transportation. Every citizen who GeIe'apiyws u atn owns an automobile could then smake's ocawly itYrs lm rn anulti;costecniet (de second letter is an a, dunilibel) yai Such a road would be 'an iinimeasura- Ne asetin tme.of wr wen te tink Helen is a nifty kid W'ed she aint_ 'l'ad wold e haid1 I bin out wid her to menry timdes an~d Ia:the enire-l ntalert tio m was her man but she trew me down I teetr udno rnprain' Say Bunk, didja here about de froshl The resultant stimulus to business in wc al ~Hsosadwn~t m the states traversed by a" coast to coa."t; if deres axmy skatin in de poolroom to- highway would be extremely impor- jnsie Itant. So much so that were the strat- ~ ~~vlQ1) egic value of the highway and the ' impetus that such an undertaking would give to °pleasure driving to be D)ot; Jl!(kl&'5 Down 7obviated, the importance of the pro-; I head a pup) posed road to the nation's businessI His name rvas Menthol would apparently be justification 1-e saw my galoshes Eenough to warrant carrying; the en- And Mentholatum. terpris'e th~rough. Soi'etblroat. ( INULES VNo skating at the Coliseum today. i f i 11 is e,' "* ' 1")III t1 Ott'I1)2 I 9 .3( 6i 13 24) '2 7 7 'It 21 28 1 S 15 - .4 29 '23 30 17 2,1 31 i SPRING -a ~ rG , i p Al s HATS ,FACRoY' [Big Seletmoinof Late t Shakesj c In'SfItRs, i'()(!! WVE MAKE HATlS : Take the "Beaten PIath"~ to our doom'andi save a do]llar or more on a hat. We also do all kinds of Clean- ing. and Reblocking of Hats at low pmrices for HIGH CLASS W-AORK -____ FACTORY RAT STORE 617 Packard Street Phone 17:92 Where D. U. R. Stops at State Read the Want Ads 'k ( ' (I }f i f E -y jfi i I t 71A I j f _ I r S r__ 1 .Mallory's Maslterpiece& ~If you want just a piece of felt, go anywhere. If. you want your Spring Hat to be a'masterpi:ece in felt, come here and choose a Mallory-renowned from 1823 to 1923. All The New Shapes And Shade's In Spring Huts $51 1h I ., , i - k FU I EXiiMPNATlOM4' -- WHIY? (McGill Daily) Showing A omplete Array I Correct Spring Styles In- HAT I. r_- L . .- r -r 'I'.~ 1 z' f , i I i 1 it *:Now that the dlate for F atler's Day has been definitely set at May 12, the student body should determine now to make this day such an unquestioned success that it twill become establish- ecd at Michigan. Heretofore the Ta- ther's of many students have visited the University at timges when there -were n? attractive events scheduled to interest and entertain them. But for -Fmriday and Saturday, May 11 and 12, the committee in charge has plan- i t y S I t * * 4' Fashion dictators of the East have decreed that it is quite "chic" to shin- gle the hair, in the back and bob it on the sidos. Shades of Bechuana Land! Bobbed hair without a doubt omigin-I atodrith the f-a +oir' rio n-.c'l oi en, I 'Todaiy's N onlsen1se Novel "Heart-broken"---Judith Eveme. Don't worry about old age, you girls that the visitin~g fathem's who witness! of the barbarian African tmibes'. The of the late twenties 'cause the D~etroit theca should return to their homes mighty Amazons may have worn Fe rs as"ilshg ee wvith even more esteem for the Uni--3 theirs bobbed in the good old days of puzzles doctor's. Time girl says I1 think I have the wor'ld beat on tcem- . emsity. conquest rtrs''isEeym yn,3 V'isiting (dads will be conducted And now n odern mnai-d; have sug-peaus.MisElyiLos,3 -about the campus, taken through the ;gested a step farther in the fats, ra- ;year's old ,sat up WVednes;day stll varousbuidins, nd lloed o a.- Lin o naura hisut tedenies 'protesting against hem' illness andl varius uilings an alowedto t- ionof nturl hrsut tedenmes maintaining the astounding thermomn- a wondlerful mental stimnulant, but time (extr'emes to which it is carried affect the question. A negative reason for its existuice is that nio Ipsychologist has yet devised a method of testing the knowledge of the student that. cam' supersedle the examination system. Psychological tests are all the r-age. nowadays but they (apparently) test one's mental capacity, not the range or extent of knowledge acquired. The- oretically, examinations are supposed to mnark the culmintation of a syste- matic cour'se of study. Actually, the scholar' spends the h',st week or so in 'frantically cramming facts and ideas that lie was supposed to have absor'bed slowly as lie went along. The rejmmlt is, that the examination once over, away flies knowledge to the windls and the car'efree student is as blissfully ignorant as ever. The" ncrvous and mental strain is al-, so <, factor, and no incol-siderable one at that, which condemns the ex- amination system. Robert Lois StE-v- enison once wrote alpathetic story r21)Jnt a sc-holar whlo plugged all night fom' an exaltin, and who was found 1ill the early hourms of thme next. mor-ning, a hopeless, wit-wandering idiot,. Evenm at McGill we have had in stances of thle %P = Even with Sunday Specials omitted it would be worth ~while eating here for the superb cooking, low prices. But. specials aren't omitted! '._. E . K oW , A t r . .... A rcade Ustairs, Cafeteria, IVickels' A'rc adre 4-QUALIT1Y. S d 0~ MAKE THE BAT ROOM CONVENIE' *QUALITY. NT I -- In fitting up the bathroom, there O.re nmamiy little things which will acd a great deal to tihe comfort andi con- venience of the family, such as a glass shelf ovier the wash standl, a holder for the cup or glass, tooth brush holdIer, soap dish, 'towel rods. papem' holderi, sponge rack to fit over '.he side of the' bath tub, clothes hooks to nmatch the rest of time fixtures. All -- of these things are showvn in our as- ~-- somtment of good duality bathroom fix:tures in either white enamel or nick~el finish and the prices are right. J "0 0 lFSCER CO.., II I '