1F THE MICHIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board inf Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, 'lichigant, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.so. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. nard Street. Phones Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ness, 96. . Communications not to exceed o00rwords if signed, the signature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, anid notices of events will be published in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor; if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Un- signed communications will receive no con- sideration. No manuscript will be returned unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed, in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. STAHL City Editor .James B. Young Assistant City tditor...-......arion Kerr Editorial Board Chairman......E. R. Meiss Night Editors Ralph Byers Ba'rry Hoey J. P. Dawson, Jr. J. E. Mack L. J. Hersh:dor.r R. C. Moriarty H. A. Donahue Sports 'Editor:..............F. H. McPike Sunday Magazine E~ditor ......Delbert Clark Wome's Uditor. ......Marion Koch, Humor Editor ..............Donald Coney Conference Editor............H. B. Grundy Pictorial Editor ..............Robert Tarr Music Editor. .................H. Ailes' Assistants CLASS NOMINATION QUORUMS When the Student council voted in- valid the list of nominees of certain class organizations at the reecnt elections, such action, unfortunate though it was,' was deemed necessary because of the fact that in a number of cases the rejected classes had an insufficient' representation. Class meetings, especially when officers for the year are to be elected, are highly important to the welfare and success of class activity, a fact which too many students failed to appreciate When they made their absence so, keenly felt at the recent assemblies.. Be that as it may, however, the Student council should formulate some definite, specific ruling govern- ing situations of this character, in- :stead of leaving the matter to the discretion of a council committee to determine whether or not a sufficient number of a certain class was pres- ent to make the election valid. ,The" campus must have for its own in- formation and guidance some stand- ard by which to govern itself in other instances of similar significance. It would not be inadvisable, there- fore, to suggest that the Student council adopt some regulation stipu- lating that at least a fifty per cent' quorum of the total membership of a class be present at a meeting or ele- tion, to make the results of that as- sembly legal. Such an act would be doubly beneficial, for it would serve io impress upon the class members the importance of turning out for im- portant class meetings, as well as to act as a quorum ruling which would undoubtedly make unnecessary any repetition of the events of the past week. OASED ROLL HOW DID YOU AL- IBI THAT SUM. MER GIRL TRAILING FASHIONS SCOEIED BY IIECATO3IB OF HAND- SOME HOMBRES t 6 M. I. Pryor Dorothy Benetts Maurice Beinman K. A. Jliliungton MV. B. Butler 11. C. C lark A.1B. Connable Evelyn J. Coughlin Eugere Car ichael Bernadette Cote Wallace F. Elliett T.ae. Fiske ;Maxwell Fead john Garlinahouse Iabel Fishets Winopa A. Hibbard Samuel NMoore T. G. McShane W. B. Rafferty W. I. Stoneman Virginia Tryon P. MT. Wagner A. P. Webbink Franklin Dickman Joseph psteit 3. W. Ruwitch BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 ;USINESS MANAGER ALBERT'J. PARKER Adverti'sin~g........John 3. Hamel, Jr. Advertising .:... ...Edward F. Conlin Advertising. ... .Walter K. Scherer Accounts ..........Laurence 11. Favrot Circulation....... ..David J. M. Park Publication ..... ...L. Beaumont Parks Assistants Townsend H. Wolfe Kenneth Seickd George Rockwood Perry Al.. IHayden Eugene 1,. Dunne W". (;railich, Jr. John C.,Ilaskin, Harvey LI Reed, C. L. Putnam E. I). Armantrout H. V. .Cooper Wallace Fower rdw 13, iedle Harold V 11Halo Alfred M. White Win. D. Roesser Allan S. Morton James A. Dryer Wmn . ,Good. Clyde L. Hagerman, A. Hiartwell, jr. J. Bluimenthal Howard Hayden W. K. Kidder Henry Freud " lU er 1 '. Bostwick L. Piere BEGINNING SAFETY AT HOME rWith the present safety talk andl A B C campaign, attention might well be 'called to the deep ruts at unex- pected places in the pavements of many of our main thoroughgares. The uninitiated driver, directing his car along"the smooth surface of a macad- amised street, finds without any red- lantern warning whatever the front cnd. of his vj3hicle dropping away from under him, the front wheels landing with no uncertain emphasis against the oposite bank of an unno- ticed ditch; needless to say, the rear wheels repeat the performance short- ly afterwards. Momentarily upset by his racking experience, the motorist often finls, it difficult to keep the car's general di- rection away from the curb until he can gain his own and the car's equi- librium. It rather seems that .while. Ann Arbor .is about this matter of making motoring safe for both mo- torist and pedestrian something might, be done towards remoaing these footfalls that warily lie in wait of the car-driver, concealed beneath the shinng level of an otherwise perfect- ly good pavement., This condition might easily be rem- edied if those who find it imperative to dig a ditch across a street would' only remember that new dirt settles, and would return after a; lapse of time and finish their jobs. Back to the scant skirts of yester- year! is the cry of the male con- tingent on the campus. Let the1 shears of Fashion snip and snip again! That is the verdict of a Hecatomb1 (or thereabouts) of Handsome Hom- bres interviewed by the rolls-report- er on State street between 12 and 12:30 p. m. (Greenwich). Their sev- eral opinions are presented below- just try to guess whom they are! Robert, '24-My father is out of work because of longer skirts. He isI a hosiery manufacturer.{ James, '23-As an insurance actu- ary my father says that there is less; mortality! among casual observers than there was last year. Melancholy, '23-Life has lost its interest. Horace, 53-I have a cataract oil one ye, anyway. "OH, DETH-" Young Archibald, the frosh Apollo! When he walks the Diag, the co-eds follow. Many the glances of freshettes fair, When Archie deigns to take the air. But Archibald, unhappy wight, This day hath plunged in such a plight, A thousand years will not set right: At 8 o'clock, or nearly so, As Campus time is prone to go, Young Archie, with unstudious haste, His laggard footsteps classward chased. The clack had struck, but he was near, When, hist! he stopped in full car- reer! What Destiny with luckless Zeal Had put a Spoke in Archie's Wheel? His wild eyes started from their sockets, His hands dug deep in all his pock- ets, He madly clutched his throbbing breast, His pot heaved up upon his crest, He searched the walk, He searched the ground, He searched his pockets through and through, His look despairing sought the clock, The quarter struck: IT was not found. By swifter leaps his panic grew. A tremor shakes his slender frame. Say, doth he breathe his mother's name? A frenzied sneeze, A frantic sniff: He had forgot his handkerchief. NUFF-SED. EDITORIAL COMMENT HANDICAP OR ASSETT (Iowa State Student) Of the everplentiful supply of ad- vice that is dumped at the door of the freshman every fall but few things are more worth remembering from the conglomerate mass than the fact that some time should be devoted to study. While this would have been taken for granted"once, several pieces of propaganda have made it a doubted fact in the minds of a good many college students and others alike. A common fallacy heard everywhere is to the effect that high scholarship dooms a student. to the oblivion of impracticability and general useless- ness after leaving college. j There are extremists on both sides of the question. Some decry every- thing that takes any time from pour- ing over books while there are as many others who want college "life" only. The Student believes e3ry man and woman in college should engage in activities outside of the classroom. Nobody has much respect for a book worm and he hasn't much coming. Activities develop a student in ways that are as"essential as knowledge gained from looks. There is altogether too much un- founded belief, however, that schol- arship is a relatively unimportant or even harmful commodity. So-called hard headed business men as well as some students discount a high grade average and the man that holds it. In 1911 Dr. Paul VanDyke collect- ed some facts that prove that rather than marking a man for failure, high scholarship increases his chances at success in the ratio of 20 to 1 over the average student. Dr. VanDyke made a careful study of the scholarship records and future history of nearly 9,000 graduates of five famous insti- tutions to see how many of them had attained such prominence as to be; placed in Who's Who. t Studying thirteen succiessive sen- ior classes from Harvard, number- ing 2;229 men, 75 won the very high- est scholarship honors. Fity-nine of the 75 are living and of these 59, 27 were listed in Who's Who, or about GRAHAMS' MICHIGAN BOTH STORES Just a few more pop-corn stands and State street will rival, the best street carnival. DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson h. TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars - 6:oc an., 7:oo a.m., 8:oo am., 9:os a.m. and hourly to 9 :o5 p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:47 a.m., and every two hours to,9:47 p.m. Local Cars East Bound-7 :oo a.m. and ev- ery two hours to 9:oo, p.m., iir:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-x :40 P.m., s5 a.m, To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:50 a.n., 2:10 P. M.j To Jackson and Kalamazoo - Limited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, 4:47 pm. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47 p.m. You Never Can Tell!-- May pour any minute; any. day is likely to be cilly and wiudy.; of coursb there'll be a few wn rm, sunny ones. What's better than a coat that's rain and wind proof without be- ing heavy-a coat that you can hang on your arm, or throw into a bag without hurting it? Could any coat e han- dier these variable Fall days i 41' 6 i t'. dI I, I .3a i GABARDINES - WHIPCORDS - TWEEDS, ET. $27.5,0 upt a 1922 S 1 8 15 22 29 M 2 9 13 23 so OCTOBER T W T 3 4. 5 10 11 12 17 1S 19 24 25 26 31, F 6 13 20- 27 1922 S 14 21 28 FRESH CAPS--65c -TOQUES-0c LINDENSCHMiTT-APFEL CO. I SONG BOOK SATURDAY, OdTOBER 7, 1922 Night Editor-HOWARD A. DONAHUE, TO SAFEGUARD EXPANSION That Ann Arbor is in need of a ho-' tel such as is being at the present time contemplated can admit of lit- tle or no argument. But, unfortu- nately, the company intending to un- dertake this project is negotiating for a piece of property at the corner of Jeffel-soni aid State streets, a loca- tion which for a number of reasons will in the cours.e of time prove im- practical. The main obstacle is the fact that the property is directly opposite the University 'campus, and in a posi- tion which is already bordered by University buildings. It is true that the present building program does not call ffOtthe use of this territory. But while the needs of the Univer- sity ten years hence cannot be fore- seen, the past has proved that when enrollment has increa ed and new departments are added or old ones expinded , t-h w building accommoda- tions must be furnished. To be more' definite, although no specific plans have been formulated in this regard, a business administrationtbuilding, a new museum, and gymnasium have already been discussed. Under such circumstances it would seem expedient that the University have under its control all property within so short. a radius for purposes of expansion. Within the past year thirty-five residences have been mov- ed from the eastern vicinity of the campus.. Is it not probable that with the Michigan Unio'n and dormitories there already the next expansion will be to the west? If the hotel company really desires to establish a permanent structure in Ann Arbor it will be to its advantage to seek a place which will prove less liable to interfere with the Univer- sity's expansion. No doubt other sites of equal advantage and greater desir- ability might be found. On the other hand, it would be to the benefit of the University to have no commercial one in two. At Yale 20 senior classes numbered 2,132, with 102 .first honor men, of whom the 80 living in 1911 furnished 31 to Who's Who. Princeton seniors for 20 years in- cluded 100 honor men and of the 76 living 29 were chosen. Of those who had attained high scholarship at Am- herst college and at Brown univer- sity, aproximately 25 and 33 per cent, respectively, of those living , were named in Who's Who. Summarizing, Dr. VanDyke found that of the. 4 per cent. that had dis- tinguished themselves by scholarship one of every two andtwo-thirds of the number were included in the book, the 79 were too young to have had a fair chance to distinguish them- selves. The freshman has a new job in store, that is dividing his time right- ly. Those who fail to remember that! first of all they are here to learn something go home before long while those who ptt all their attention on boks also ihake a serious mistake. The thing to remember is that school work is still the primary thing, though after he or she is able every man and woman can well afford to engage in some worth-while activity. Start Right With a Good Hat? We do all kinds of HIGH CLASS Cleaning and Reblocking of hats at low prices for GOOD WORK. When you want a hat done RIGHT bring it to us, our work is regular FACTO- RY WORK. Hats turned inside out with all new trimmings are like new.r We also make and sell POPULAR PRICE and HIGH GRADE hats, FIT THEM TO YOUR HEAD and save you a dollar or more on a hat. We give values and quote prices which cannot be excelled in Detroit or anywhere else. Try us for your next hat. FACTORY HAT STOREr 617 Packard Street Phone 1792 (Where D.T.R. Stops at State Street) FOR PENS AND GOOD REPAIRING RIDER THE PEN SPECIALIST 308 So. State St. ADRIAN - ANN ARBOR BUS LINE Leaving Hours From Ann Arbor Central Standard Time X'D S 8:45 A.M. 4:40 P.M. 12:45 P.M. 6:45 P.M. X-Daily except Sunday and Holidays D-Daily S-Sunday and Holidays only JAS. H. ELLIOTT, PROP. ADRIAN, MICHIGAN PHONE 926-M F THE 0. & H. SHOE FOR MEN LAST EDITION OF I III ANN ARBOR'S LEADING CLOTHIERS "Exclusive, but not Expensive" DOWNTOWN I :w: AT' :-: I 1 1 11 I $7.50 TO $9.00 The Branigan-a smart oxford in black or brown ,grain calfskin. Its perfectly plain broad toe and heavy sole is assurance of real comfort and prolonged., service. Prices on 0. & H. oxfords are ex- tremely moderate considering their high standard of quality. OKa &THertler For, FOOTWEAR For Men Women LAWY There seems to be an increasing tendency on the part of men who con- template entering the business world, or entering a variety of pursuits oth- er than the legal profession to choose the Law school for their training.. Many men enter the Law school with no intention of practicing law after reeciving their degree. Many men who have been in business en- ter the Law school and later re-enter business. The Law school offers them a type of training which 'they feel of distinct adavantage in prac- tically all lines of commercial pur- suit. They feel that besides giving them the mental stimulation that a college education should give, it gives them in addition something tangible, which will be of directspractical ad- vantage in the business world. If this feeling continues it is likely that a vast number of our future cap- tains of industry will bear an L.L.B. after their names. COACHING The fame and popularity of the courses in coaching offered at the University last summer marks a note- worthy step in the development of' athletics. In the early history of such sports as football, victory de- pended largely upon muscle and trickery. Now it is conceded that a team thoroughly acquainted with the science of the game can account for itself against the best opposition. In sports of today, headwork is a dom- inant factor, and while brains cannot smtpplant agility and athletic skill, they are necessary to direct that skill to advantage. In these modern times when a team is victorious there is no end of credit given the coach. And in pra- tically all instances the credit is well .I . it+hs + P +.ndono foP- 335 S. MAIN ST. Have Your Shoes Fitted by X-Ray A GUY I knew Now plays a harp- He cut his throat With an Eversharp. R ur'ch. Why do nobody but the best-lookingl ones go into beauty parlors? Huh? He's So Dumb He Thinks: That ocean currents make electricity. That a salt-cellar is a traveling sales- man. That the "Diet of Worms" is for fish. I ,. ' i ,," 3 A+ t p . h }+ " ,7r 1 1 ____ 11 I HATE:' Frosh in knickers. People who read .over my shoulder. Toasted rolls (from the restau- rant) * The reservetsystem in the Library. Lumps in mashed potatoes "Daily" editorials Edge- worth. A-one salesmen. Blonde bobbed hair. Blondes anyway. Three o'clocks. Women who be- lieve you. Women who don't. Over-sweet coffee. The history department. Long skirts. Golf shoes. Emerson! Spelling. Land- ladies. Beer.** Barbers. Men who let their wives d'rive the car. Movie magazines. Optimism. F. Roosevelt. People who say "ladies" when they mean "wom- en." Jazz. Pictures from the "Dial.'*** An uninteresting liar. The Satevepost. Overlands. CUCU. Rolls speaking: * Thanks.C ** Are you sure? *** Also from the "Liberator" and "Zhar-ptitsa." Saturday, isn't it? Time does fly. THE PIPE PIKERS (The Daily Iowan) Registration week is open season for the "pipe course" hunters-the stu- dents who come to the university to get a degree rather than an education or at least to make a feeble attempt !o get a degree It is chiefly because of thesesparasitestthat shigher ed u- cation has comne into disfavor amongk a certain class of people who come incontact with them in later life. Sepnding one's time and money in a course because it is easy is about as reasonable as taking a double dose of medicine because it is cheap. When students learn that they are here for their own good; that what they learn is for their own advancement; and that a degree is merely a "scrap of paper," then education will come into: its own. At the same time, on the other side of the fence, some professors are wor- rying over' all kinds of expedients toI keep their course from being dubbed "pipes." This often leads. them to assign a great deal of work from which the student receives little val- tue. Professors should give only such work as they honestly thought worth the time spent in mastering it-in- dependent of'the fact that some stu- dents might be slipping along with little effort on their part. For in the end the student pays for his lack of industry, not the nofessor I The best in town Permanent Groups 1 +HOi Et ZIERER WATKINS BORCHTERS ARNOLD CORtBETT JIAIILL CHON VAUPRE WANAMAKER CLANCY hIONEYCHICSLI ROXBURGii EGELER k JUSTER BRUCE BENNETT, DARLING VAUPRE CLAN CY SWEET CHAPEL JAVIS STILES GREEN RANSOM LITTLETON CURTIS WESTON BECKTON ° FREYBLTRG NISSLE BOXER MILLER AKIN NIEDZIELSKI 11 Our Orchestras are Now Arranged. Secure Your Music Early if You Want THE BEST ... w . .... . . s . . w.a.. .. . : - w.a ..: _ + - r ..w ..ten ^ - + s.,,,.... ,r v...