THE MTCICRAN DAILY -- 4 CIA]L NEWSPAPER OF THE1 LY1ERSITY 0OF MICHIGAN le eey morning 1~except Monday! 'se Universit:y year biy the Hoard in1 f Student Publications. !of Western Conference editorial an. ,tociated Press is exclusively eni- teuse for republication of all pxcttcredited to it or, not other~ edited in this paper and tine loca) d at the postn fice at 'Ann Arbor,j *as Accornd class matter. ipti*~1 by carrier or mail, $3 50" Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ret.I I ditorial, 2414 and 176-Mf; Busi-I tnications riot to exceed 30o wordsi 1, the signature not necessarily to aprint, but as ani evidence of faith. ces of events will be published in ly at the discretion of the l';ditor, ii ;r mailed to The Daily office, Un oxnmunications will receive no con~ 1.No manuscript will be returned o writer encloses postage. The Daily ; necessarily endlorse the~ sentiment;; r n the communicatiuns. EDITORIL JSTAFF fephenes 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR MARION R. STARL ditor................. ..Paul Watzel for..... .........James B. Youngi Ct dio......J...Boa rd Chairman....... L. R. Meiss 01r "ert .rs harry HJL>y shdorTier R. C. Moriarty nahue 3. E. 'lack tor...... ..Marion Koch zine Jditt'r. ...., 11. A. ! )ounrue .. . Ailey i 'lBrckley 1.lobinur editorial Board , AMaurice Berman Fugene Carmichael Assitants MStronp Franklin ID .Hepburn ld Winona A. llibFbardy on Edward J. Higgins V1('11110th t_' Kel'ar lF~izabe.th Liebeermann Ile John McGinnis rte Samuel AMoore ghlin N'. H. Pryor r W. B. Ra fferty Rtobert G. Ramsay ouse J. W. Ruwitch odspecd SolJ. _Schnitz T B SINESS STAFF Telrh oe v:#6 BUSINESS MANAGER' ' AL BERT J. PARKER ttsin .........'jon J. Hamel, Jr. tsng..........Walter K. Sherer .,awrtce l.F~r~ atl ar............Edward P. Conli,° wrirntfg.........avid J. M. Park lation .. .......... ownsend H. Wolfe at.. .;,: .B eaumont rParki Asistat M' Hayden Wm,. I. God ic ?. Donne Clyde- L. Hagermna C. flasican Henry Freud rIutn'an Clayton Purdy Armantrot J . BSanenbaher 6 t 11. lr. j r. Clifford Mitts, ' id . Flat Thomas Mcachren .h 'Po~sr ous M Dexter =l Mrton \ C.'wells Christie s fit. ? . dward B.l eidle 1] U &DAY, MAR1sCH 29, 1923 !t l ,dito'-l,' J. H 'RSgHD)RF~I"LR 3nerosity, or sentiment for 'the al- mater, are "factors which should enter into tle" question of Uni- ty appropriations. IYj is a ightforward argument with the e of education balanced' aginst, probleiwt of-state taxes asnd fl- e taxes of the state are unues-; 1* high, and th pledge of¢ ~madoptedl- by the"present 'leg r is moe. tltan commenable. ' ref"1 .Scl'tiny of the disposalf' lic ftttds by .hs represntatives t warrante4' anticipation of every 'th ,thee uide posts'marking the the ULTAvrsity appropriation pilJ. been stArted on its path through egisltatre. M*ore than $2,00,000'' already been cut from the re- rte with'tlie bill still in enbryo, ,Vs dediction'was made after the H.of ithe. bilding ,problem in the1 rsity hlad been 'presented to the slatr, There can .be.no feeling1 the acion came without careful *eatlonI-,on the part of the corn- e X wh irepbrted the bill.1 te a3 "OPrton ,bill, however tr 4wet anly a short distancef _tepatb, at the.end of which it bccoje a $Stte law. At the point eY a ust"puse to ndergo fur- cef exlnination by those who e"p ls ia for the welfare of ,mosimportant educationalf ur lnzmembersaofthe two a iN ll It 4s hoped,view the prob- 'wit that "Icng l100W'which has a'erd thoir decisions on Uni-C ity' pp ropriat'ons in 'bills of pr- hrtlat marked distinction be- t'pcatirnal mtaintenance and uppot, of .other state projects, ;h cannot in fustie to succeeding rations be ignored. It is morey ;llltsines proposiion of dtol-; afSt retlfests, becaue such UNITED THEY FAL2 rAny rticism of the decision of a state legislative committee should e made with the utpost caution, for it' ~is to these citizens of our own state that we have delegated ,the po"r of( directing the ;destinies of our com- monweath; from them we expect leg- islation based rupon clear ad un- biased-=forethought. Because of our confidence in the wisdom of oure elected representatives such an amendment as was appended, in ap- parent "haste,' to the medical school appropriation Tueslay, cannot pass with out commnent.c The clause in question which is nothing more than a committee pro- viso,. prohibits the use of any more state money for the University Medical school unless the homoeopathic school As re-established here. The ameandmrent, n Its content, is not o- jectionale to the lay man: its justi-'lj fcation is a matter for science and fnancial experts to establish. But thet haste, and the lack of 'a background t of investigation, with Which it be- came a part of the appropriation bill is objectionable. It is first of all a complete reversal of the opinion con- tained in the resolution passed by the: legislati~e in 1921 recommending the merger of the two, schools. 'This ac-' tin was taken after the most pains- taking- investigation duringa which both sides of the question were pro. xenrted. The amendment to the preent bill, while it is not significant because it is the -creation of but one committee,1 doies not bear the avowed stamp of approval of either sie of the Ho- oeopathic question. It was attachedoteblonhe'abfreheep resentatives of Hooeopath/ ',were accorded a public hearing before thef1 members of the legislature which gives -it the appearance of nothing, less than a; bolster for their side of!l the question. The whole affair is en- veloped in the atmosphere of unwar-, ranted haste, and demonstrates a com- plete disregard for the action of thee previous legilature.3 It must be remembered, however,1 that the 'committee which has corn ., promised the Medical school appropri- ation did notvisit the University as a committee, during the recent leisla-} Aive tour of the campus. Neither the' ways ard means committee nor the,' finance committee, who were here lst,;I Wek,.broached the sbject of -lon-I oeopathy; it was, understood that1 present conditions were satisfactoryIa in the Medical school; that the merg-' er had been effected after careful consideration and that further con..- went or question was unnecessary. In the face of thee facts, which are more than two years old and which I are supported by two years of su-t- cessful oeration under the merger system, the action of the University committee Tuesday aepars more like one of those hasty bu strategic bat- tlefeld maneuvers, rat her than the work of a scruulously deliberate' body of lawmakers 1 (COUSE PLANNING Anyone who has been in contact rwith students in the College of Lit-' erature, Science, and Arts for a con- siderable length of time moust agree 'whole-heartedly with the statement ofj SDean Effinger, who atributs the un- denlying cause Pf most student fail- res to the lack of a defnte plan of; attack. This can be applied on a larger scale as well as day by day. "Durin g the week when elections 1were bebing made for the second se- mester how frequently could such re- imarks us the following be heard: f"Say, Bill, do you know al good,three hour course I could take at 9 I o'clock ?" or "ould you nut me wise to a course that comes Tuesday and Thutrsday at eleven; I don't want ay afternoon classes." Uniortunately, a vast number of choices of courses are nade on a bas- is of consulting the, hour it which they are given. Some courses are chosen 'because they are supposedly'. "pipes"; some are chosen becauses they fallt within a certain- group, whbere credit is needed;, some arc chosen because the "prof" is amus-l inor gives a, liberal number. of fbol ts. If every student iiw the Lit school' had a plan of action. is choice of courses 'would certainly not be madel so promiscuously. If, for example, lie wanted to take Economics 32 or His- tory 46 his Junior year, he would take i it, no matter how "stiff" or. easy it was, or how inconvenient the hour' was at which it was given. Trhe mere' fact that studnts are not enrolled in the professional schools should not mean that they are d rift- ers, with no definite conceptions of what they wish to obtain from their curriculum. The Lit 'student can carefully elan :a prog~ram for his four undergraduate years,' and more thanj this, can plan his work from week tof week, so that hie can apportion the proper amount of timne to study, recre- ation, and student a ctivities. iT&D ROLL 5 } f Current Corresp dence Ito us, a twotid dLutto peUjJrformiIforf I note Dailly editorial on ever Ares- Michigan in arranging schedules. ent canine problem. The proposed First, to ;give some consideration to solution was tried out before any of the opinion" and- desires of the student1 present Daily staff ever goit to cobl-oy' Scnt gv oe osdr lege Anwayso' long as students,atntohedsrsftealmi faculty and everybody else tramp all;aontth eresftealnniI over everything but the sidewalks,, During our four years at Michigan, andi le-3troy what little possibility o which we have spent in the close 'on greensward an'd shrubbery Alfred et fillnicnt;.a of the Big Ten, each year Al have left us, why not peacefullyI has heard an increasing clamor on the~ and resignedly allow the Campus to pr ftesuetbd o euig go to the dogs? pr ftesuetbd o euig (cynic. to some extent, competition with. some ______of our old Eastern rivals. Phis year Hear! H-ear! Your suggestion cer- in arranging the football schedule, the tainly has a. strong fouxdation and officialp, instead of arranging hone I'm all for you. I think they oughtJ and hiie games with Cordell or' to lock 'up all these bennies who can't; Penns'ylvania, have booked a non-col- tell a sidewalk from a. blade of grass legiate game with the Quantico Ma-E in their taking short cuts to save n ines, which is of no interest to the time. Why the only thing they've student body and which has brought got, is time and most 4 of that 1s forth a great deal of criticism. wasted. Concrete evidence that the student. i ICAMPUS OPINION Edlitor, The Michigan Daily: The athletic officials have, it seems' Gratham 's ANNUAL SALE BOOKS M~ARCH 26th to April 6thi "IBuy a ticket fromi the girl i th the heart on her arm." Ivory Soap-99-44-100 pure. Anything that pu mint be ivory. * * * MY mail I like the men who know th( When 'it come., to treating thi rough-- None of this Plato rot for mi Give me the caveman, he-man I don't c-are for the. honest y Who always tells the .girls the A man is tame who can. be 1 I rat~her he thrilled-thoughi deceived. I like nice manners-but n~t t And I don't like men as cold I hate a man who requestsl I want a man I CAN'T resist JIMt Jea~n-l know Just the g body desires eastern competition 'wag K UNG given Saturday night at t be Cornell ' 0 Track Meet and reception. It was the ure greatest welcome to an' opposing team I that we have ever witnessed at Mich- Jolid. igan. !Showing such superiority over the runners-up of the indoor Eastern In. stf tercollegiates, the Michigan track Cir tf teamr has earned for themselves the, ze ldiesright to meet the best competition that can be secured. The student body al-1 hie so sre that its team be given the zline! chance for national recognition whichy routh a victory ins the, Eastern Intercollegi- ou, Iz ates or Penn Relays would give us, trut--.Michigan has an international alum-' believed, t'ni body. This ;powerful alumni body it means; gives Michigan that prestige which raises' her above th,^ status of an oriP tco icenary "state university"'. Our aluinni t asice!are particularly strong in the East. aic!And yet they have not ben given thle a kis-chance to see a Michigan major sport }dean. team in action. for many years. Why, shouldn't they be given as much con- buy' youi sideration as our Southern alumni You're losing mxoney, if you're' not using the classified columns.-adv. ,,; ETROIT UNITED LINE$ Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE, (Eastern Standard Timhe) Detroit Limited and Express Caro- 6:oo anin., 7:00 4.a'l., 8:00 a~m.i 9:05, a.m. and hourly to 9:o5 p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ana Arbor)-g:47 a~m., and every two hours to 9-*47 p m. Local Cars East Bound-7 :o00a,0. arid every two hours to 9 0o p.,im., 3n r :oo p.m. 'To Ypsilanti oly-1 iz :40 p.m., 3:15 a.mr. 'r3 Saline-Change at Yp~slanti. Local Cars West Beund-v :so a.m., 32:10 P.. To Jackson and kalamazoo- Lim- ited cars 5:47, 0:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, 4:47 P.M. T1o Jackson and Lansing-Limited at I1.323 31A PC H 1923 1 2 3 4f , 6 7 8 .). 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1i7 IS1.)~20) 2t 22 23 24 25 2 0 27' 28 '29 30 31 ,- SPRING, B~ig k'election -of 141051 Sbapes 1VF 3MARtE 11xAT S .., -: Take thne "Beatan Path" to our door and save a dollar or mo~re of a hat.I We also do all kinds of Cican . inn and Reblocking of Hiats at lo1w prices for IIiIH CLASS t _WORK, FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street Phone 17.92 Where D. U. RI. Stops at State ADRIAN-ANN AR~BOR BUS I Schedule in 'Effect" October x85 1922 Central Time (Slow Time) 1) . XX. 1) P'.2\. A. M. PM. P.M. .:45 7:45 ...Adrian, r J2:45 5:45 =1:30 8:30 . .Cnton . .. m:oo 8:0oo 5:~,5 9:15 ... Saline . . .. 11:15 7:14 5:45 o0:05 Ar Xiit rbrLv. if)-45 6:45 Chan~ber of Commerc e ll D--Daily. X--lDailv except' Sutidays I 'md IHolidays. Frid 1an ai Saturday special, 'us for st ients l'aves, Adrian 1i:45. leaves \nu AV60r 4 :45 JAMNI S 11 F 1.1101-1', Proprietor Phtone 46 ~The Best Business Ca Is what every ambitious seni thinking about at the present 11 Life insurance is one of the best of the most desirable, and one c i ~most satisfactory as a perma calling. In assets and volume of bus life insurance is one of the three U ing businesses of this counwry; y( field is comparatively under-deve1 * Only 7 per cent of the economic of humnan ~life in the Unit-ed Sta covered by insurance. .This giv, idea of the bi field still to 'be wc especially. business insurance for and corporations: As. to remunieration:. Repot college. graduates' who have en business indicate that life insuraj at the vet'; top is a source of in( Now is the time for you to cot si what you aregon to do afterf i ~ation.. If you are ambiious'- and I ~ing to work hard d are inter to know about ..I insurance, ac Agency Department OF BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Largest Fiduciary Insitution in New England j e 1 for is time. tone :)f the ineot !iness,- leadV 'et the lop'ed. value ates is 7es an erked, fi'rms its of atered Ence is :come. nisider .radu- -4will- xested ddress 1100]'S-BOOTiS BOORiS-] I want, hut he doesn't talk English. ! who Saw us ply .Vanderbilt this Talk about. a caveman, you ought to. gear' see him throw our furnace around,. In brief, we hope that the athletic He chew's chairs when he's mad-baut' officials will see fit to announce that I think you're n enough, to-landlle Michigan's great track, team: is going' him. First, however, you must tell East. -me if you draw the color line. But; C. 11. G., '23. at that, lhe isn't so dai'n black.' W. C.H1., '23. Sods. Speak! Little Miss Rounder Sat at a counter Eating a chocolate parfait; Then a caie-eaing fool Took the very next stool, And soon ehid two checks to pay. 't il ejidc#. Pro hibitidin Days--Dryer N. ElI. * *s I EDITORIAL COMMENTI FE RENCE (Detroit Free Press) The obvious may become intensely significant if it is uttered at the prop- er time or under' strategic circum- stances. So the:-2 is a world 'of mean- ing in the declara ion of Secretary T-Tugh,4 to ho ffth Pan-Ame~ricaii' d z 1 A maiden who dwelt by the Day of ? ] ''i OLIU ILI sirir~i"u Biscay confe:rence in Santiago, Chili, thy:; Consumed a tumberful of Whiscay ' "present experiences, reinforcing the At nceshegre mot wld nd Ens-' lessons of history, cause fresh recog- Atoc e h r w mot wlyn nition of the futility of mere forlnal T he rest of this story is too Riscay. arrangements in the absence of goodI llflk)I)If will,' and however important maay he * * the' special topics of (discussion, the Here's Olle permanent value of the conference lies QUESTION: Will someone use theintefcthteraegnrtd word r"anedi in a senten('e? powerfuil currents of mutual under= ANS WElR: "odeeigM.M-'sanding and friendly interest, supply-_ ran, sit (lown, won't you?" iug the motive power, through whlich i~Iis~izz. ajiy remnants of suspicion and dis- * * *trust may he removed, and the injuni- Dail healineou ; influences of earlier antagonismr "SPIES PRlN 'OLLEG1'E may be overcome." !Y 0 EN FROM KE hElN(I"i llUTE'S" Here we have warning and couneul., "England for us, bioys, where giris Immediately the mind reverts to thei defy ail obstacles!"' hideous wreck o' the Wilson League , of Nations, which for all practical pun-, ,1 , l', wtNas thu last straw that broke the camel's back." At E: at 'tnation t ine..a poor orlkin' .FOUNTAIN PEN mlay p Irove to be that last-straw, Mr. aLnd Ml~i s Sudent. Bletter let Rider look it ober and know it's right, or better yet, trade it inl SOr 0o1.x of those never failing 'Ridler Mlaster P'ens at idetsPe-So IN ('OLL],"E I.AN 1III'N P(ALSU "