w THE -MICHIGAN DAILY 9 , tt tt- class should attend these meetings , r they would be of value. They would -_ -- - ___- represent an attempt to make the E DT RA OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE c lass exist as a group and not entirely '/f'-------- UNI EUSITY OF MICHIGAN i as. a collection of individuals. Through ;(IK\ T4i + ihdeey onn xep Mna these and subsequent meetings later ORDER SOU COMMENT~ gairoon) °' k duriing txke University Year- by the Board in' on a group 'consciousness might be le- ' ciyex. , Control of Studert Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Asociated Press is exclusively en-I titled to the use for republication of all{ news dispatches credited to it or not other-, wise credited in this ;Paper and the local neCws published therein. elp dwhich would leave its im- print on the individual. If this can be attained through the proper administration of available class funds, the comparatively smalls expenditure necessary will be more than.juAstifled in fostering the best interests of the class of '23 as a whole. SAMMY'IS IIARY in. bed 'til the hour of twelve. The t rigors of last night a bit too much for my battered and weary, frame. Partook with much gusto of a. tasty luncheon at' the Eating club and did depart- for parts unknown with joy in my heart and raw liver and whbip- ped ~creamn in _ ay stomach. For a snapnpery walk around the vil- lage and noted hundreds of canines disporting themselves about the cam-, r ntered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, __________ Uichigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mnail, $3.50. NTEO RTC Offices : Ann Arbor Press Buildings MaySITI N 'IT( nard Street.. Smythe is rather queer in that he Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M;. Bus'=I- gee, 9o. has a proneness for reading books - themselves In addition to the reviews I a 1 i i , 1 1 ,fmnnuniletionR 1not to' exced So. word that are written on them. ,Conse- 11 signed, the~ signature not necessarily to appear in print, hut as an evidence of faith,I quently, in his classroom and. outside . and notices of events will be published inredn lie has become somewhat Tiac Daily at the discetion of the Lditor, ifeain left at or mailed. to The Daily office. Un-. familiar with the methods of critics, signed comm~unications will receive no con-ps n eet adtog i d eiderat4cn. No rnaniscript will, be returned pas adpreet n huhh d upJessa the writer encloses postage. The D~aily mits great admiration for the con- do.' not necessarily endorse the sentiments, expressed in the cormanmications. fessed erudition of mcst, modern crit- ___________________________-,ics, he has his opinon concerning their EJ)ITQJIIAL STAF~F value to society which, worthless or, Telephones 2414 and 176.XM otherwise, must be expressed. ,_.._ In the first place Smythe is tired of MANAGING EDITOR cheap inconoclasm w*hich manifests _MARION B. STAHL itself in feigned outbursts of pr'ofun-, { s-- dity and esotericity on the part of a3 %wS 1Editor .. .......... ....Paul 'Watzelgruofetiswhcalhmevs ' itv lditor. -. ....Janes B. Young gopoigtsswh altesle t,.ir t t ity lEdit r..........J. A. Blacont critics,.lie its extremely susceptible Huti lBard Chairman....... F. R. Meiss to a clear and sympathetic analysis, lalpi I 1yers Harry Hacy which aims at good judgment, even if 1,..1. llcrshdorfer R. C Moriartyitdentatint.Btothohr Ii. A. Donahue J. . Mackitdenoatant. utothohr 51,o'1, Fdi . ......Wllace V. Ei.-t' hand, he is not staggered by these . , Im's Editor.......tt . .arionaKoch iconoclasts who murmur softly the M usic Iliitor ........... H. Ailes, 4stoundin~g revelation that there is no Editorial Boar ~ Santa Claus 3or something similar in Loel 'Ker auic Brmn ugene Carmichael an atempt to concea~l their nounte-E pus. Eftsoons fudge Sunday, no mean wit, less soothing to Calkins and a warm A colloquial term of I take it, but none the1 to the :palate. The events of the evening lightly;' taken ulp with study and research in- to the field of feminine pulchritude at* the Library. AND All) 11 EL P The matter of an increase in en- t rance requirements andl scholastic standards for students who are ad- mitted to the University causirng an amiount of discussion entirely out of1 proportion to its importane. New reg- ulations have not tb)Cnfl ormed yet, al- though they are being considered by a. faculty c'omm ittee. Probably some- thing similar to the rules announced by a. downtown paper will be forth- ming. but even so, we wish to lpoint out that it will not (ll a death blowE to the undergraduate body, fraterni- ties, and student activities. The desire of the faculty is to ex. clude from the University the type o_ peole who drop out, or are expelled, sometime during their first year in residence. These m~en and1 women are almost always ineligible for pub~lic ap- !c-arance, and are on probation, and can neither offer the University- any- 'thing nor be0 more than ar hindrance to others who are associated with them in their class work. Classes are over- ('crowded now, and, it is often imzpossi- ble to get instructors who are quali- fied to teach even the elementary couirses. This has been especially true in the Department of English. An investigation of the facts proves that the University is striving to keep out only those people who are almost entirely detrimental to the best inter- ests of the whole institution.. T.>he greatest possibility of harm lies in: the inaccurate propaganda which is being circulated, and by no one more than active undergraduates. It 's JAIKE for thbe Kid r 1 r Assistants ~g"'trwt", Franklin D .HepburnI Sidney Blielfield Winona A. Hibbard R. A. Billington TEdward J. Higgins i Hielen btrown Kennmeth C. Kea r 11. C. Clark Elizabeth Liebermanni A. B. Connable j ohni McGinnis Bernadette Cote Samuel Moore t-velvn 1. Coughlin M. 11. P1ry or Joseph Fpgtein W. B. Rafferty . E. Fiske Robert G. Ramsay iohin Garlitighouse J. W. Rtuw'itch Walter S. Goudspeed, Soil J. Schnitz Portia Coulder ]Philip Al%. wag;ner a BUSIN'ESS STAFF Telephone 960 bankery through self-glorification. Smythe is too conscious of his own shortcomings to give much advice to such self-styled geniuses. But Smythe finds that the worth while critics or the past all adopted certain standards of judgment, such as sympathy and universality, and that these norms were always lived up to. He also finds certain critics in the present era who think that effective criticism fshould be entirely objective and. who are more interested in analyzing hi- cidly thai they are in staggering their constituency. Needless to say these men are castigated by the moderns as being "rocking chaiir reviewers". The lone kid's a goodl o1 He works by night andd lie never stole a_ ton of c( He knows it'doesn't pay. A sorority house is his big There's a-plenty of jack The boy he plays a lone ha The girls, he loves to sea Take the adv~ice of another A fraternity is all1 the but There's no money with kid. The girls get all the j f II C'ONF'I)ENTIALLX SPF Two cases of tempera above 110 degrees! May it's just some early cases of Spring fever? soul, day oalI g stand there, and re. n', kid, ink a brlot her, BUS$INESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER f> Adetsn.......John J. Hamiel, Jr. --- Advertising. .:..... WatrK. Schererl U IIT SE ES t ~1\ ........... .... ... Lawrence II.. Favrot PBIIY EKR 1l'nhcl ni in .............. .-Edward F. Con ii.; C(t tvA r.ilig........... m. .David J. 1Q. fart. hnbedded in the very natui'e of a 1Crcuati>n ...,...... ...x1,01 rSeTid I1.1.Wolfesml-gopfinvdusisanqe A1ccou nts ............ .. LBeaumont I'aflkS salgopo niiul sauiu Assistants craving for what is commonly called Perry M. Hayden Win. YL Good publicity. Desirous of getting themi- Fugene ?4. Dunne Clyde L. Hagerman John C. Haskin H'enry Freud selves ibefore the public, these fanat- C. L. 'Pitnamn Clayton Purdy ics literally worship their own nmes X. 'D. Armantrovt T. B. Sanzenbacher, iilbain ti woxiu. Jr, 'Clifford Mitts when they appear either on the print- Harold L.. Hale 'l'hotas Ale iaciren athlisoanlrg Wmn. D. Roesser l ouis NIAl. exter ed pgeor upon telp faylag Allan S.'Morton C., W'ells Christie group of people. E~xerting evei'y ef- J~i~~Lyt. klimi * ±f~1~fort toward accomplishing this aim, they often stretch the devices of in-; _____ _____ _______ __________-genious mninds to ludicrousness and? TH 4 RSDAY, MARCH 15. 1923 ! fraud. - -___ ------ Recently the midiculou~s side of Night Editor-L. J. HERSHDORFER these fanaticisinslhas been well il- -- -~ - -' lustrated. by the "fever hoax", which' TH~E LEGISLATlORS' VISIT almost endled fatally for the more or 'With a deep-set (desire to learn to less sane perpetrator or the act. Hay- know the University at first hand and; ing ima.(e thme best of her originality. to see with their own eye3 its needs,th"fvrgl"seudtedsid the embrs f bth huse ofthepublicity through a very clever ma- nipulationb of a hot water bottle. Wheth- state legislature will arrive in Ann er or not the attending physician who Arbor this afternoon for a° two day vouched for the remarkable temper- visit.. a.ture of his patient was also a victim While here the legislators will ob- of the mania for publicity, he has re- ceived his full shai'e and will possi- serve the jUnivers5ity in its normal op- bly pay for it through the effect it oration, with scholastic pursuits will have ;on his professional reputa-{ reaching the full swing of the second tion.j soxnester. Staying at-" the many fra- " Many would- be dare-devils have! ternity houses where provision has' paid in full for their overambitious ef- heen 'mad't for 'them the men from ' forts- to obtain the notice of the "pub- Lansing will come intto contact with; lic. Many more will continue to do hundreds of Michigan students. They so. It is only through the realiza- will 1)e given an intimate glimpse of tion. that though one's own life may t he real life that goes on in Ann Ar-; not he of value to himself, it can be hor, as contrasted with so many widely made so with the proper effort, that circulated "college myths". such foolish =acts will be curbed. The legislators have gone to con- The man who realizes publicity by, sidleralble trouble and inconvenience accomplishing a worthy purpose in a In order to be able -to appreciate the worth while manner, adding some- real conditions at Michigan. Momn- thing to the common good of his fel- bers of the University body have an ilowman, is paid for his efforts. But oppoi'tunity to make their visit worth the unscrupulous publicity seeker, like while b~y showing them the actual Escalaba's hot water bottle patient, :Michigan, the University of' from day= must always end. in disillusionment. to day,'and the crying needs of that - -__ Univermity. In one community in the Ruhr dis- 'l'odaty's NoxseiiseN Ain't you ashamed of the waste, Feedin' and stuffin' your Ain't you ashamed of the lose. Get in your galoshesc shoes? Now meb-by you ain't, 'butl ouighta be! Aint you ishamed of the v aste, And gettin' your lessons in haste? Ain't you ashamed of the act, As soon as the Matron tur seeing back?..... ... Now mebby you ain't, but oughta be! Ain't you ashamed of the fool Playin' poker, and as a ru Ain't you ashamed to sit in Aside of a co-edl and nc sight? Now mebby you ain't, but oughta. be! Ain't you ashamed to finall H'avein' learned your hoa jnl. THlE IIABIT OF" EX'ELLI NG list Jake. (Purdue Exponent) InI times when it is almost neces- AKJN(' sary for one to be a. specialist in some ture one line it behooves the individual to 'be concentrate his energies so that he may become proficient at one thing ? ~instead of just mediocre at many.: Jolhr. The old advice that it is unwise to "Put all your eggs in one basket", is ov-el ( due for a revising, It has come to the -Eleen point where to be sucesful it is al-- mot necessary to turn all yotr t tent ion to just that one asket, and make it the goal of yor endeavors. tin'e you It is a tie thing to have a general; k