100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 22, 1923 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-03-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

A A AL..£tYJ !L'..t a1%.5r-1L Z "L,Jt:: A

EH OF THE
WHIIGAN
except MondayI
)r the Board in
>ns.

found in the manner in which student~s '
handle their bank accounts. Willfullyj
overdrawing, in the state of MichiganMo
is a penitentiary offense. Yet it is1
hard to believe that possibly mode*
than fifty percent of the students en-I1
rolled in the Ulniversity keep such s 3r R Y U ?
poor accounts as to unwittingly over- R P
draw at sonle timhe during the year.I
One bank is. Ann Arbor chose a !!NOW*e
student ledger at random and, rani About contributions. 'Phey've been
through tw~enty-five consecutive ac- a bit: irregular for the last few days I1
counts. Out of these, twenty-four had and- I'm hoping and praying that those
been overdrawn within a year's time. contributing will loosen up and crash1
Local banks are at present sendin~g1 through with lots of quips and jestsj
out from five to ten letters each day, to save mze the trouhle of making my°

LCAMPUS OPINION
Editor, The Micehigan Daily:
At first, they vere faint rumors.
Then came louder and more audible
grumblings. At this moment the noi4e

F-

DLARA

co

A CYCLE OF SEVEN HISTORIC.

L

-n Conferenice lditoria)
-ess is exclusively en-j
or republication of all
edl to it or not other-
spaper and the local

Presented by
_MATINEE MUS"IC'ALE
Pattengill Auditorium
March 26-April 3, 16, 23, 30--May 7

dat the postoffiice at Ann Arbor,
, s second class matter.
itiona by carrier or mail, $3. 50.
.Ann Arbor Press Building, May-
-eet.
*;editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi-
ilation, not to exceed So0 words
, the signature not necessarily to
nprint, but as an evidence of faith,
ices of events will be published inV
ly at. the discretion of the E~ditor, if
)r mailed to T~he Daily office; Un-
:omnunicatiofls will receive no con-
. No manuscript will be returned
is writer encloses postage. The Daily
t neessarily endorse tliz sentiments
Iin the qornmanicationa.

calling attention to overdrawals up-lt
on the part of student depositors.,i
Once in a white mistakes will cause
!,a situation of this nature to occur,
but overdrawing to the extent whichII
has characterized student accounts re-s
cently must be due in most cases to'
criminal 'neglect or willful disobe- 1
dience of the. law.
These are but two flagrant .instanc-,
es of the things wvhich occur because
'college n- n are allowed to think they
are different.- It is these habits of
irresponsibility which make possible
such accusations as the aforemen-
tioned, comnmunica-tion contains.
U~niv'ersities are snore and more
coming around to' the place where
they feel thernsefve~s a part of the
Sworld rather apart from it. Stu-
dent pranks laughed at ten years ago!

own. The girls have been falling oaf
to a marked degree and I'M consider-
ably disgr'untled, too. I crave to hear
from the women, I crave' it. And es-1
pecially the lovely ones. 'The latter}
are\ requested to bring their stuff in
person around two in the afternoon.
I mnight even start a Date bureau,fur-
nishing references myself. Brit, any-
way, I crave wonen-I mean contri-
butions from women.

1'
t
r
f
i
Z
xt
i
z
E
r
i
f

STAFF
and 17 6-.X

CON PIENT ALLY SP'EA KING~
In the sprint final in the
inter-fraternity track mneet,,
the winer stuck out his tongue
at the finish and lick~ed his
nearest rival.

I
I
I

... .Paul Watzel
....James B3. Young
nan.E.. . R. Mciss

3 o r. I

* * *

Toyday's N oisensP Novel

I
_. i

a p -1yers I~hry IWey are unthought of now. On the whole ; The First Born- ,Wheeler Day N.
&J. Ilershdorfer . C. Moriarty
A.)ndul.~.IIc the college man is growing ,Snore1 Knight.
s ~Edit[ .r...........Wall.ace RF. Fjoft business like and alert. But there is **
ns Editor........... .Marion Koch still a long wnay togo and the only * 17 sJutSE E
r Iat.c~ lcia...,H .1oehu o l1Ti sJs k F ditor...................Zr. H. Aies way to makze college men reliable and Sh takdhesrtwlou atic
ii dtr.....uke .ku.responsible when they emerge from And- not a penlson gaped,
I~ditorial Board
:11 Kerr Mautrice Berman college, i,s to make them reliable and~r For that's the latest nmole in whicht
l ugene Carmichael responsible in2 college. Milady's clothes are draped.
Assistants College men are not different. They Mick A1 e.1c
-yJF1 1r"stron~iy ranklin D .Hepburn are governed, by the, same laws and *
'y ielfield Winona A. Hibb~ard#l
Blillington L dwar'd J. Biggins should hold the same ideals of honor; But Its Nice_
Brlown l liaetCh~el ark a does ever other citizen, and the I aso oeamie we
Clark Elizabeh Liebermannasr'Idysoyrea ainset ,I
etCotbe john lMoores sooner this is realized by college stu- Would write her meaning clearly,
nI.Coughlini M. H1. Prvor dents the more qulickly will the tol-i And finish up her note so neat,
bE^pstein W. B. lRafferty erated irregularities and demoraliz-i With simply, "Yours Sincerely".
I iske Robert G. Ramsay 1
Gar'linghouse J. V1' Ruwitch I inn attitudes disappkar forever.h
'r S. G~oudspeed Sol J.Schnitz _______
a (oulder 1Philipy I. Vagner IALLWOOL_!
,i ________________ I 'A SCULPTi~ORV'Xw71UIO 4
BU1SI'NESS STAFF Those who attended .the lecture at ;But modern Janes have changed a
Telephone 960 Hill auditorium Tuesday evening went b itt
-Fwith the supposition that they were to They fib the whole note through; i
B3USINESS MANAGER hear a talk on sculpture, jiEst as thecy Adtecakonteedo t
wou1ld go to hear a talk on poetry orl "Tihere's .no 'one, dear, but you."
ALBERT J. PARKER, politics. .They returned to their]
[ s ............... John J. Hamel, Jr. homles atri a vr ihafe-ALL BULL! I
tilin............ .Walter K. Scherer ing that they had enjoyed an, Intel-. PAUL.
.Eir..... dward', F. Cc'; ir lectual entertainmnent as well. Lora-**
Hriti ..............David J. ll. Pr oTf woi eonie oeo Once upon a time a big Swede came
,a OU..................'owm~send 11 ofe do T
L~t.......... 1. BaumntPeksthe foreftnost sculptors of America galloping into, a country, hardware t
Assistants delivered what was possibly the most store, all out of [breath. Me gasped
e L . D~nne Clyde IL. Hagerman unique talk'[ ever given in Ann Arbor. to the proprietor, "Aye'm being yased
C. llaskin Henry Freud Combining the art, of a Michael An- by the yeriff, where can I yiule?" Thej
Futnam; Clayton PurdyI
Armnantrot I . BSanzenbacher gelo with the oratory of a senator, he owner pointed to a sack" of potatoes
'v U tcii.Jr. Clifford Mitts finished the address off with a touch and said, ":Dump those out and pull
Id I. Hale Thomas Moclachren
D. Rzoesser Louis 'N. Dexter of humor befitting an Al Jolson or d--i't over your head, ya big stiff."
S. M^ortoii C. Wells Christi?
ADrr drd.Rede Eddie Cantor.' The big Swed did as hie was hid.
t W~t. Coopef_________ The purpose~ of his lecture was es- ; I a minute in camoe the sheriff, h~i~
-- - ~sentially serious, having as its aim,breath, following. closely in , short
the "acquainting of the public with the pant,. .."Have, you seen a. big Swede
£HUR~DAY MARCH 2, 1923 sevrets of a stud'io but throughout thecoiinhr?"Nsadte an
entire lecture, humor and' by-play tol in the store. "What's in that sc?
J. 1d1 -L j ER SU DORFE a noteworthy part.,M. ' aftcme returned) the sheriff, pointing to thet
_______________- down from his thigh position as a re-! same sack that the proprietor had
ILEL;E MEN AR"? ,DIFERENT i spected genius and acknowledged anz- i pointed to a minute hefore. "Nails,";
a burring comrmunication to The ftlority on art to the level of Is stu-; said the proprietor,' tersely. "I'm go-i
dent audience and enjoyed with them, ing to kick it," said the sheriff. He
y' printed on ithis '[age, a formertebifidd oadqievcosy
~th brefperiod he spent on, the plat-' ito n ut iiul'
igan an acuse colege en o for While he indulged in many,"ige ige"cm rm te
iureia~1~."1 hy cnno bepuns and witticisms Which amused' thesak
'ed thy ae sipsod;the doaudience never once did, they losej* *
keep) promises. Such assertions, sight of the serious purpose in hist TWO WITHOUT'
often come in from the business bringing before them the magic of-l Adam and Eve had an awful time c
1, and thaey are undoubtedly true., the studio. While his facial lemron- ; And truly I'm no liar-
any read1ers of current fiction will tain wthcyfgueddntj They couldn't own a car at all
ember the novel of Charles Nor- I embody the highest principles of art, I Becaluse they lacked attire.c
entitled "S~alt, or the Eduation o°f they' served the dual purpose of aimus-1 Because they lacked attire.
ti ,'3 Al'1'vr' . which. has been n o1- -- ..

hmas ceased entirely, and there exists
the sharp fact: college men are not
reliable.
This is a report from the outside,
from organizations and corporation.,
who come in .contact with college men
in two we'ys-first through working -
with them, as an outside force with
whom they occasionally do business,
and more definitely where college menl
are employed by the oragnizations di-
rectly.
'You can't: trust them to do anything.
A typical college man will promise I
you;,anything, and forget to do 'any of
it." This is a sentence from a man1
who deals with a good many hundred
graduates in a year.
Such a statement is more than a~
moere acquizaton--it is too nearly an
established truth.
With athletics, publication work,
and various activities, there is every!
'reason for punctuality, promptness,!
.accuracy, and truth. If college menj,
in college cannot deal with each oth-
er so as to establish a reputation of
reliability they will stand small showI
in their work later. A man Wh11 ,
makes a promise and fizzles' in keeping
it is x b ad' as the forger, of a check?.
HeB is worse than a man who ste ak;
Ordinary business assumes a man
to be honest. It takes that for
grantedl. To have it disproved fre-
quently, and too' frequently with re-
gard to college gradu~ates is not good
-and lack of reliability is nothing,
if not dishonesty.
When you make a promise keep it,
if you break a leg to do it. To be
bothered rwith inhibitions, and corn-'
plexes and loss of m mory is a weak
,frail method of admitting that you in
general' lack: spark.
The world can run against a great
many handicaps, but people have no j
form of exchanu.ge more elemental than
communication, and when, it falls be-
low p~ar, and looses value, it cannot
be manipulated, or added 'to in quan-~
tity to supply a demand for true '
specie.I
At first there existed only faint rur-
mors. Now there is the sharp fact:
College m~en tire not reliable!3
ONE WHO KNOWS.

Course $2.00; single, 75c.
Courtesy of Graham's Book StIore

8

c'ETRO11T UNITED LINE$
Ann Arbor and Jack~s--
TIME TABLE
(E~astern Standard me
Detroit Limited and Express Cas-
a.mn. ;nd hour ly to 9 :os p.m.
Jackson Express Cars (local stops
west of A1nn Arbor)-9 :47 a.m., and
every two hours to 9"4~7 p.m.
Local Car% Eas' mound-7:zoo a.mn.
and every two hours to 9.0o' p.;.
11 :oo p.m. To Ypsilanti 0111Y-111:40'
p.m., 1.i5 .a.mi.
To Saline-Change at 'Ypsilanti.
Local 'Cars West Bcund-7 :5o a.im.,
12 : to p.m.
To Jackson and Kalanazoo--L.jm-
ited cars 8:47, -0 :47 a.m, 12:47, 2:47,
4:47 p.m.
To Jackson and Lansing-1,irited at
8:47 P.M.

Paper lof equal value in-lined, colored or tinted

_..._

i

grey are not considered~ tints).

STOCK REDUCING3 S.
With each purchase of
Correspondence Station
of any id at regular prices you will re(

-,

. fREE OF Cli

Wahr's,

1923

MAR1CH

4
'It
IS
~12

13
19
26

IL

6
13
20)
27

I7
14
21
25

.1

2
9
1$'
2.3

1923
It
10)
17.
24
81

The stock is of best quality andl all clean goods.
I!any paper manufacturers have advanced their pi
L.This is your opportunity to stock up at less than
0. D. MORRILL

rc I'AT BT
,,, 'WE lE OY NOW
CprUS' HERS, rhl!o!I
Take the "Beaten Path" to
our door and save a (dollar or
more on a hfat.
W~e also dlo all kinds- of Clean'-
ing and Reblocking of I'ats at
to~ p~rices for HIGH'IGLASS
--_ WORK -__
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 Packard Street Phone,1792
Where D. 'U. R. Stops at State

147 NICKELS ARCADE

THE WOM~EN'S_ LEAGUE BUILDING FUND rece-ives
ALL cash sales na de at this store.

ADRIAN-,ANN ARDOR BUS
Schedule in Effect October rE; 1922
Central Time (Slow Time)~
D) X 'X D
P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M.
3:45, 7:45 .. Adrian .... 1x:45 8:45
i:vs 8:t?' .Tecumseh .. t2:15 8:xs
4l:30 8:3o .. Clinton .... 12:00 8:0o
5:r5_.9:15 .. Saline .. ti:5 7:15
S :a, o : eAi kin rborLv. 10:45 6:45
Chamber of Commerce Bldg.
D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays
and Holidays. Friday and -Saturday, special
bus for -,tudents leaves Adrian T:45. leaves
Ann Arbor 4:45.

I

EDITORIAL.,COMMENT

I

-
S.TRAWBER]
BLACK-\
SUNDAY L'
1m I iIII iiIIIIIIII 11t 11 iJ

)ME MADE
.RY SHO

WALNUT CA

lI

WARNING TO MED)DLERS
(Philadelphia Public Ledger)
Garman we'kening in the Ruhr has
been rapid Cluring the last week. The
pressure of the great Teuton.,captnin.
of industry has stirred the Cuno gov-
ernment to fresh efforts in Lbndlon
and Washington. , While Germany is
by no means ready to surrender, she,
is thinking about. it.
'ghat Germany has been doing for r,
week is hunting for a way to save
the Germani face. The Cuno .govern-
ment is looking for some one with ane
asbestos glove who will help Germany
claw her 'Ruhr' chestnuts out of the'

1WESERVEF.~
VENLNG SUFE

JAMES fl. F T'.LLIOTT, Proprietor
Phone 46

I I

I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
FOLLOW 'T17AT. HUNCH
TO THE
BLU-GOLD LUNCH
605 Church

t
e

ir for somne years. While this book
'o not present the college situation
fthe present day, 'nevertheless it'
~sportra:y some canditions which
'Jlexist.. The hopeles's unreliability
n1ih whrich Griff'ith MAamsworks 'aft-
r lI.ving university and the conse-.
iemit series of disasters are picturres
unrd to forgez. The communication'I
1 (Iuestion accuses the college man
f failings' which are almost identi- l
Wh'le these assertions are. not
1esn~to hear, they havo a bas
n college life itself which could be
enedied. The germs of unrdliabili_-r
y,' shiftlessness and irresponsibility
re allow edi to flourish unhampered
imply because of the belief that
College _Men Are Different". The aver-;
ge student considers himself and his
;roup, either consciously or uncon-
t4'ously, on a different planem of priv-,
lge and Justice than are those out-
ide. Ile has this attitude because
ether people have taught it to him.
ven his instructors encourag;e him toj
[old it.'
As a result hie figures that respon-.
ibility and strict obedience to Jaw
re things which it- will be time
hough to assume after he has left
ollege. "Anything you can get away
rit.h" is too often his motto for- per'-
onal conduct. But such an attitude '
annot help being a demoralizing in-
luence whlich reaches 'beyond col-
ege. The irresponsibility of student
_ays is only the foundation.t
At Michigan as well as other uni-
ersities employing the proctor sys-
emi of conducting examiinations, 1

ing andlinstructing.f
There are but ia very few men of
such, high and undisputed rpeute as
Mr. Taft who would make the, effort
which he displayed to amuse and in-
struct his auditory simultaneously.
The. audience certainly cannot ask forI
more than a straightforward lecture,
strict in its adherence to serious prin1-
ciples, but Mr. Taft has seen fit to
bring his message before the public in
a way which depterves admirable comn-
ment. He has'gone beyond the realms
of . pure oratory merely because ¢f
the earnestness of his intent and the
Igratification which it affords himn.'

On time Wire
IRrrrrrrrrrrrr-i-n-g.,
j"H'ello, XYZ Fraternity ?"
"tYes."
"Is Harold ther'e?"
S"Is D'ave?"
"I'll see"
k "No, not in."
"Then Joe?"
"I'm sorry."
"~Well, .I'm awfully- lonesome.
you come over?"
"Ahi-thanks! "
"By the wa*, who is thi;s?"'
"'The ,janitor."
BANG'.

i
i
I
,
i
i
t
i
4 ,
{ ,
t

GalcGallic1000011f106i00101 110111i110t{6t fire911t111[ls.il~ l01011~ illllit0i11~ 11I
K~erlin is putting out as many "feel- =
ers" as an octopus has arms. One
went out to Premier Benes, of Czecho-
Slovakia, without result. Another
was stretched toward Rome and Pre-! R L N-0r
reaching arcro s to, London and on A
over the Atlantic to Washington. For 5t Avenue Bot Shop, e'
a month Germany has been- striving;
to bring abot mediation through' = Our ReOpresentative wil
some third Power. In the last week
these efforts were redoubled. Every - .E hbta
move has failed, leaving her face to -
face with henFrncem t o ISa-
urday is calculated to end these ma-h Frenc anoncmn ofSti0o U ntil fc ihheFec.M A R C H
neuvers. France has grownr weary of.
themr. Since JTan. 11 Paris has main- -___________________________________
tained that Berlin must talk to France-
if Germany wants an agreenment. The - 011I11II~ I~i1001[0ti0lttO0Y1i11til l10t1t1![1i11Ut0lllD~f~1flllif1

Won't

Cornell entertained -Michig;an royal-
ly last year over the week end of
the Cornell-Michigan track. meet at
Ithaca. Michigannmust return the
hospitality this year. Tickets' are
still avyaila'ble for the banquet Satur-
day" night in honorf of the 'visiting
harriers.

..t
E
.j
'
i

ING 1 PIEG.
~This weeks prize of one cold boiled~
potato, awarded by The Sons and!
Daughters of Mulatramala, for the'
champion pun, goes to TEARABLE.
He writes, me asking, "Hlave you Sen-
ior Girls Play ?"!

French foreign office has now rgit-
orated that*** the French govern-
ment persists in it, attitude. The gov-
ernment would consider all offers of'
mediation as unfriendly, even hostile.{
It is resolved to ignore all "bondages"
of 'whatever character which might
come from intermediaries,, whether
qualified or not, whether Allies., or neu-

Do you know, that a "Do You'
Know" column is being run each~
morning in The Daily, telling: some-
thing ot interest about the Univer-
sity? A glance at this column each
day will gradually provide a better
knowledge of the place in. which you,
are spending four years of your life.
"Acute Situation Prevails' in Ruhr"
says headline. But most people are
getting to the stage where they failj

i They All Fall
A maiden passed with silken hose,
Well suited Lor display;
4spinster puckered up her, nose,
And turned her head away.
The= maiden went her way content,
The men all' stopped to stare;
'The spinster sawi, and then she went
And bought herself; a pair.

trals.
This is blunt word to Germuany that
jher face is not to be saved and, that
she may as well walk up and take
her medicine. It should end the rest,.
less maneuveringis of Berlin. By the
use of the phrase "unfriendly, even
hmostile", the French have warned, all
European, neutrals to attend strictly
tto their, own businesses.' If Great
Britain ha,s .ben in any doubt about
low the French would regard itr
Ine-vention or mediation, Britain now,
c knrows. 'there has, never been, of
course, a chance that the United States
would touch the Ruhr quarr'el unlesI
fornall and urgently invited to do'

Even the finest ,.foods.. should
require only a small part of

your allowance.

T hat will be

true enough if you eat here
where prices are, actually low

*: * n<

I

to -se an1ymLig cute about it.' It is run-ored that iin the excavation
un~irneath the floor of thq State
Incitation pearls are now to be made street book- stores a copy of one of
from herring scales. The herring, KingT sppla ito mgzne

A.'

m ,

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan