THE MICHIGAN DAILY X T public eye than they think. It is also time that they not only take anI -active interest in civic affairs but OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE make manifest that interest to the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN world. In former days the Univer-' Published every morning except Monday sity was the storm-center of all po- during the University year by the Board "Ilitical. debate, and questions of moment Control of Student Publications. were decided by deep students of: Member of Western Conference Editorial those questions; they were decided by Association men particularly qualified to cast an The Associated Press is exclusively en-intelligent vote. But now the univer- titled to the use for republication of at sities are blamed for an utter lack news dispatches credited to it or nother of interest in all civicpand wisec credited in this raper and the loca o neeti l ii problems, a( news published therein. the twelve votes lately cast out of 'Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbo four thousand qualified voters do not Michigan, aa second class matter, offer any substantial evidence that Subscription by carrier or mail, $350. Michigan may be"excepted.' Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May card Street. Every qualified student voter nust e :ditorial, 4 and i6-M; Bus wake up to the fact that the call to OASTjD.ROLLw R RIIIIES ti EDITORIAL COMMENT { < Wated: For Burglary- THLE LO E liiID His activities have again started. His speciality is robbing she-frats and causing consternation therein. Tlhe say he carries mice in his pocket in case of discovery. One girl's description of hin fol- lows (the others saw only the mice); "He is rather tall and just as attrac- tive as he can be, only he wears that' slick black mask. His voice is deep and thrilling He wore one of those adorably brilliant ties and the cutest' little hat; and he has the nicest man- ners. His Norfolk suit was quite 'dark brown and so were his eves I Communications net to exceed soo word. 11 signed, the signature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith and notices of events will be published is, The Daily at the discretion of the Lditor, P left at or mailed to The Daily office. Un sisme cmmniationswill receive no con citizenship is one particularly direct- ed toward him. The problems of thd day demand specific knowledge and studied consideration; and above all what the nation needs is intelligent ,r i i r W .voting. ()ut of consiideration for the -Kt ua w a , ;ideration. No manuscript will be r eturnee ,,U unless the writer encloses postage. The Dail} University, Michigan students must should judge. But that voice I shallI does not necessarily endorse the sentiment make a just and representative show- never forget and such a line! Oh! I expressed in the communications. _________________________-ing. hope he robs us again, and leaves an- other lovely note. I've got that one EDITORIAL STAFF im meoyboan th ohrIt Telephones 2414 and 176-M TESTS FOR ATHLETES i my memory book and the other girls want one, too." Skeptics and casual observers have MANAGING EDITOR been heard to remark frequently that ,I,, ~ I ,S, , MARION B. STAHL athletes were doing themselves more was whe harm than good, by their athletic ex- Time was when ews Editor..............Paul Watzelskya unversity!built City- Editor...........James B. Young ertions. You know, they are wonts l Assistant City Editor .........J. A. Bacon to say, "that these athletes don't live men. Seems like now, ;ituriai Board Chairman....... E. R. Meiss Ji' e ulir Nigt C ..ditorsr-.as long as ordinary men, because so it's men building Rtalph Byers Harry Hxey much exercise affects their heart." the university. L. J. Hershdorfer R. C. Moriarty JoKr. 1. A. Donahue J. E. Mack The University Medical Department Sports Editor ...........Waace F. E'liott at Cornell has decided to settle the * * * +r amen's 1ditor......:....Marion KochHE!GRS EYt ;,- l' * Marito;..1. A. Donaui question once for all. They are plan- HEY! GIRLS 1EY!! Pictorial Editor................Robert Tarr ning to examine from twelve to fifteen I am a great big tall, Music Editor.................... E. H. Ailes oarsmen on thiis years squad, giving h a n dsone, conceited, Editorial Board Lowell Kerr E Maurice Berman them fluoroscope examinations, by ; deceitful sopho m o r e. Eugene Carmichael which it is claimed accurate tracing Aht yes -- but I am Assistants of the size of the heart can be made. lonely, ah, so lonely. tanley T,. Armstrong Franklin D .Iepburn These records are to be compared Bunk, why don't you Sidney Bielfield Winona A. Hibbard R. A. Billington Edward J. Higgins with similar records made at the end start a lonesome col- tickrn ro-un' e'nneth C.IKellar I. C. Clark Elizabeth Liebermann of the crew season, revealing any column for such as me? A B. Connable , ohn McGinnis enlargement which might have devel- I have a Packard Se- Bernadette Coate Samuel Moore tepet o oiy Evelyn . Coughli el. H. Pryor oped in the hearts of the athletes. clan, plenty of money, Joep pstein. W. B. Rafferty r. Fiske Robert G. Ramsay Other institutions in the past have and lots of good quali- John Garlinghouse Canpbell Robertson attempted to determine whether or ties-but am best by test-isn't therez Walter S. Goodspeed 1J. W. Ruwitch Portia Goulder Soll J. Schnitz not extreme athletic exertion has re- some one? Rald r Phiim M \arner sulted in overdevelopment and sub- -Just Jake. BUSINESS STAFF sequent poor health, but their records Telephone 960 are not convincing or authoritative. Jake, my boy, you don't need a col- This investigation at Cornell, how- umn, any more than you need to wor- ever, should reveal with considerable ry about whether or not a Humming- BUSINESS MANAGER accuracy any changes which the sea- bird flies with its tonsils. All you ALBERT J PARKER sons activities may have made in the need is a little nerve (you have that) erathletes.and a little publicity (you're gettingj Advertisng.... ...John J.. Hamel, Jr.atetstht Grs isatnmesMa- Advertising.. .. ...Walter K. Scherer Such investigations as these de- tat). Gl hs ts C Advertising..........Lawrence .11. F ayrot Vublication ................Edward F. Coserve enthusiastic support, for if they Dandruff. Copywriting....David J. M. Park furnish concluisve evidence that pres- Circulation. . . . ownsend I.Wof Accounts..............eaumont Parks ent day intercollegiate athletics ask A Tear froi l eara.ble Assistants too much of a sacrifice from the en- The sun at its meridian blazes down Kenneth Seck Allan S. Morton trants into various sports, changes of Somewhere else--not in Ann Arbor. George roclwiood James A. Dryer Perry7M. Hayden Wm.1 I. Good a sweeping nature are almost certain An owl, in the cimmerian darkness, Eugen .a liunne lyde L Hgrman to be made within a reasonable length Hid from view, John C. Haskin Herbert P. Bo- ' oI Shouts hoarsely, "Towhoo! Towhit!" C. L. Putnam D. L. Pierce ~ o ie E. D. Armantrout Clayton Purdy I sit in the dark Herbert W. Cooper J. B. Sanzenbacher Drinking the stygian gloom Wallace Flower Clifford Mitts A N1RSIGPORM Wi~aniI .Reid r. Ralph Lewright Ayewhwinse termak (there is e'en 'no moonshine) Harold L. Hale Philip Newall Anyone who witnessed the remark Ant m rins m no hn niano recital which GuyvMa er l t l 1 w C((LLEGE JUDGMENT (Daily Palo Alto) '1For beatjty I am not a star There are others more handsome by fa r, I But my face. I do't mind it, For I am behind it. It's the folks out in front that I jar." The above lines are by Woodrow~ Wilson, nparently without excuse A. Bonar Law, Premier of England, holds the distinction of being the ugliest man in Parliament, and is proud of it. In the popular elements of personality (the "power that cot- pes", etc.), he must be wholly lack- ing, for people, even members of Parlianment, will not listen to his speeches. Still they are said to read them always for the meat they con- tain. The good fellowship elements of per- sonality are too often the sole basis a' colome men's judgment of one another. Honor societies often pick too many men on this basis, with the result that in really important enter- prises they sometimes lack the power to put over a real worth while proj- ect, as past methods have shown. Good fellows intead of good execu- tives are often put in office A "dough", "gawky", "goofy", "stub- born" or otherwise wrong freshman may be ignored by group after group until some intelligent senior puts him on the right track, after which he often puts earlier critics to shame Fortunately this last possibil'ty is less in evidence here than at many universities, because of the broad or- ganization of Stanford living groups. Students wilh ideas, strength. willingness, and interest, are needed in activity. Many of us will do well to judge people more on power to accomplish something. Men with this quality in the long run usually do not prove such bad fellows. Good fel- lowship, as such, i:5 over emphasized in college. SIR PHILIP'S GRIEF AND Jl%1 (Detr6it Free Press) In what sounds like a shrewd diag- nosis of the situation in which Great Britain finds itself with re'ard to France, Sir Philip Gibbs says events are going to force "England quite soon to take sides definitely with France in coercion of Germany, or to tell France politely but firmly, that we must resist and oppose by all politi- cal meacs, her occupation of the Rlhi'neland with its destruction of Ger- man industry and its dragooning of German citizens who refuse to work under French bayonets or to shInit to French domination and martial law in time of peace." Sir Philip says this will be a "very terrible decision" for Great Britain to make, but the burden of his conclu- sion is that while that country will be loth to break with France, it "can- not and will not associate itself with France in this use of force and bru- tality to. exact tribute from a de- fenseless people whose national ruin, increased by this coercion, prevents them'paying. And Gibbs offers to his fellow-countrymen whatever comfort there may be for them in the asser- tion that the fault is the fault of France, not of Great Britain, which ha had forced on it an issue it would be happy to avoid. However, Sir Philip is not hope- less. lie confesses to a "gleam of hope" which has suddenly burst upon him. This'gleam is nothing less than the old stock suggestion that the way out of the Ruhr difliculty is interven- tion by the United States. But in presenting this scheme as a novelty. Gibbs is more diplomatic than some of his brother writers. He puts the thought into the mouth of an unnamed American who is made to say that "when intervention must happen, the United States and Great Britain will have to straighten things out." In short, we find emphasis on the idea that force of circumstances, or shall we say fate, rather than deliberate choice is going to govern Washing- ton's attitude. This is interesting, and possibly in- structive as a warning to America to be especially careful in sailing clear, particularly in view of the reiteration by'Pr'emier Poincare of his announce- nient that France will not accept me- diation or even enter into indirect conversations with third parties re- gardling the Ruhr situation. But Gibbs is not only interesting, in spite of the seriousness of the topic he discusses, lie also is entertaining. It is quite apparent after reading what he has to say, that lie and those oth- er Englislunen for whom he may speak are not so much oppressed by the thought of making a "terrible decision" which may make "those Engli.sh dead lying in French soil turn in their graves as this hideous mock- cry of their sacrifice", as they are by the thought of being obliged to take such a step alone. It seems quite ap- parent that their sorrow over a break wv th FrNance would be immensely as- i' r happenings in the Ruhr, they are did- tinetly none of our affair as a nation. DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jacksn TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Car- 6 :oo am.. 7 :oo amrt., 8 :oo _a.m., 9:0[ a.m. and hourly to 9:os p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:47 a.m.,tand every two hours to 9:47 p.m. Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.n. and every two hours to 9:oo p. n., ii :oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-1x:40 j p.m., i:is am. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti.- Local Cars West Bcund-7:5o a.m., Ia:a t .ni To Jackson and kalamazoo-Lrm- ited cars 8:47, -0:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, j 4:47 p.m. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47 p.m. SLEEP ANYWHERE, BUT EAT AT REXS THE CLUB LUNCH 712 Arbor Street Near State and Packard Streetse ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schednle in tffect October ze, z922 Central Time (Slow Time) D X X D PM. A.M. P.M. P.M. 3 :45 7:45 .... Adrian ... 12:45 8:45 4:15 8:15 ... Tecumseh ...:1:5 8:15 4:30 8:30 .... Clinton .... t2:oo 8:00 5:T5 9:15 .... Saline .... 11:15 7:15 5:45 9:d Arknn ArborLv. 10:45 6:45 Chamber of Commerce Bldg. D--Daily. X-Daily except Sundays and Holidays. Friday and Saturday special bus for students leaves Adrian 1:45, leaves Ann Arbor 4:45. JAMES H. E LLIOTT, Proprietor Phone 46 VICTOR ALLMENDINGER PIANO TUNING hthoQI of Music Tuner PHONE G6:i Office at Res 418 N. Division St. omen'S League The Graham Book Stores will 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 11 GRAHAM 'S BOOK STORES i STRICTLY HOME COOKING HEPLER'S STUDENT LUNCH 409 EAST JEFFERSON ST. , ~ 1923 MARCH 192 -1 18 5 12 1 ) 26 6 13 20 e 1 7 14 21 2S 1 2 8 J 1 1 5 16 1 30i 3)~ 2.W*a:an 23 3 10 17 24 31 4/ -1M I9 Congen ork ~~r0~ s i HAT S n W READY Big Seectioii of Iatest Shapes WE MAKE HATS -:- - Take the "Beaten Path" to our door and save a dollar or more on a hat. We also do all kinds of Clean- ing and Reblocking of Hats at low prices for HIGH CLASS - - - WORK -___ FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Pickard Street Phone 1792 M'here D. U R Stops at State for college graduates In deciding upon one's life-work there is one very important consideration every far-seeing man will make. He will select a field where the edu- cation gained through his college career will not e An ideal future is offered by the Fire, Marine and Casualty Insurance business. Insurance is close to the interests of every busi- ness. It is close to the interests of the officials of every business. It is a matter which will bring you into immediate contact with big men and big affairs. The Insurance Company of North America is a national, historical institution - founded in 1792-with over a century and a quarter of well earned prestige. Conservative policies and de- pendable service have been responsible for the growth and for the constructive activities of the Company in the development of the entire insurance profession. Insurance Company of North America PHILADELPHIA and the IndemnityInsurance Company of North America write practically every form of insurance except lif,. - - rrrw rw r- i You'll find a GOOD BUNCH at the Blue-Gold Lunch 695 CHURCH ......i f7 TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1923 Night Editor---HO WARD A. DONAHUE1 POSTPONED1 Because of a rush of other matters hiich lprecluded its thorough consid- eratio, according to statements, given< cut, the Board in Control of Athletics postp1oned its de1(cision concerning the proposed naming of Michigan's new - field house in honor of Coach Field- ing H. Yost until its next meeting in ' April. This is not the first time that the; wtter has been tabled; although it is true that when the Student council, presented its petition Saturday the climax of an intense campaign upon the-part of student and alumni of the university for Yost Field house was Teached. From now until the April meeting e~ntlbers of the Board wil have con- sid eable time in which, Vo delib- crate the request. They have the facts in hand. They must realize the weight of alumni and student opin- ion; almost a quarter of a century of exceptional service on the part of Coach Yost is worthy of recognition; the ;greatest athletic structure in any university of the country today pro- vides an appropriate tribiute.' These facts should be weighed be- fore the next meeting is called, so that at that time the members of the i Board in Control may finally decide upon a matter which has aroused no l little interest and anticipation upon able iiiano recital which Guy Maier f and Lee Pattison offered before the audience in Hill auditorium recently could not but marvel at the unique manner in which they entertained their listeners. Demonstrating a new 1 type in the realm of first class musi- cal artistry, these pianists played: with an uncanny unity, except in the two brief numbers which apparently were inserted into the repertoire for the purpose of reflecting the merits f the other compositions. m m Thegse two movements, from a mod-! ern Italian composition, which were characterized as "not to be taken too seriously" in the program note were neither beautiful, comical nor ingenious. Sadly enough, they repre-I sent the ambitions of some talented composer to add a bit of "music" to the composiltionp of the world. Cer- tainly there is no excuse for believ- ing that such tomfoolery would even be recognized as music by the mostr savage of African cannibals. Lacking in harmony and rhythm, the tones were merely combined in such a way; pis to produce a ridiculous snicker throughout the audience, and in fact even on the face of one of the pianists,. who himself must have realized the absolute lack of artistic merit. If the purpose in playig 'these numbers was to cause the- others to shine by comparison, the artists can be com- mended upon their choice; if not, their taste was evidently off-color. Mr. Wise Student says he's get- ting most of the semester's work done these weeks, 'cause he knows it will be twice as hard to work when "ca-! noeing time" comes. Now we know why he's called wise. Ratiocination. I sit and think of nothing- Absolutely nothing. Dearest, I think of you. TE~'ARlABLE. Dere Bunkie: (Ali that makes it dif- ferent!) Much bursting out of jaundice-coated Uneeda Biscuit kids on the campus, presumably in celebration of the alleg- ed Spring rain yesterday. Something ought to be done about this-I strong- , ly suspect that a committee on sup- pression is even now considering the matter. Or shiuld be considering it. All of which reminds us that we were walking home with our Temporary. Best Beloved t'other nite, he being sparklingly arrayed (no, not spark- ingly--the word is obsolete!) in golf hose and nickers, a slik bandana car- rying all the known colors, a fancy sport coat, and the inevitable battered headpiece. Along by the cemetery, a real fancy wealthy-wagon (Chevro- let, methinks) drew up beside the' curb, and from the depths af the flap- ing side curtains came an enticing, "Wanta ride, girls?" And all the rest of the way home my T. B. B. had it borne home to him that the female of the species is more vicious than the male. I1 ask you! j Squitessence of Squatroot. helen,-- You asked me if I heard about the dear young thing that simply couldn't stand up before those library stares. No, I haven't. She must be a flighty, little creature. ** * OIl1 HAPPY HOUR I'm tired tonight, I'm oh, so tired My head whirls as a dervish wild. My energy is all expired, And I'm just a weary child. But when tonight in bed I'll creep, My weariness will all be o'er, For I will fall in slumber deep, And snore, and snore, and snore, and snore. POISON IVY. * *' * Question:. Can you inform us engi- ners why the Dents don't extract; roots on a slide rule? Beelbee. Answer: Yes. Convenient location, and quick service make it .easy to eat at' the new M-Lunch in a hurry! 322 South State-next Graham's . the part of those who follow Michi- gans athletics. 'WILL VOTERS VOTE? The Daily will guarantee to help the Buildings and Grounds department It is a fact quite widely known that only twelve out of four thousand qualfied students at the University of Michigan voted at the fall elections, despite the fact that adequate meansI was taken to acquaint the student ith the method of "absent voting". This unfavorable record speaks poor- ly for the degree of interest Michigan studIents are taking in civic affairs. It presents an especially inviting and vulnerable attack for the people who continually preach that tax-payers are not receiving satissfactory returns for keep students off the grass, if the B. and G. department will in turn put up some coathooks in class rooms. The Ann Arbor train from the north was only two hours late the other night. It must be getting to be spring in the upper peninsula. The average life term in Ohio lasts between six 'and seven years, accord- ing to statistics. Ohio criminals are evidently short-lied. Th e iost acceptable ,Easter Gift Is, Whitman's Candy We shall have some of the regular assortments in Easter wrappings without extra charge. Send Whitman's.