0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE IV1ERSIT V OF MICHIGAN hed every morning except Monday :he University year by the Board in of Student Publications ers of Western Conference Editorial ion. Associated Pre-, is exclusively en- the use for republication of all news yes credited to it or not otherwise in this paper' and the local news pub- heremi-. ed at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, n., as second class matter. ription by carrier or mal, $3.50. s: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- ree. s: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- i0. nications not to exceed Soo words 'I, tl, . na ire rnot necessarilv to n print, but as an evidence of faith, ics of events will he published in 'v At t'ie dike'"-in ^f the Ilitor. T1 or mail-d to The Daily office. Un- comrmnnications will receive no con. ni, No lmanuscript will be returnedi e writer ecloses postage. The ]wily t necessarily endorse the sentiments d in the communications. FITP)'ORIAL STAFF4 Ieihonm 2414 and 176-11 MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. STAhL tor ..... ......Paul Watzel litor ..............Jnmes B. Young t City Editor...... ..J. A. 1aeon I Board Chairman .......R. Mciss1 versity ono twelfth of the total amount requested in the original budget. Michigan owes him a debt of gratitude1 for fulfilling a need which he saw un- answered, for generously reviving a lgst cause. Many other citizens could render enviable service to the perpe:- uation of this University as a center' of learning and research if they would1 but recognize the ultimate worth of such gifts. REGISTER TO VOTE Everyone who would cast a ballot inj the annual spring elections must reg- ister tomnorrow at the booths which will be placed at various points on the campus for that purpose. Representa- tion is the most desirable way to as-, sure satisfatory administration of stu- dent affairs during the coming yeark and only if the vote represents the thought and desires of the majority of students can such results be secured. You must register tomorrow in order! to vote. hILL RESIDENTS COOPERATE? I The University building program has been arranged insofar as possible to provide for beauty of construction and design in addition to the utilitarian purpose that it is to serve. Indica- tions are that when viewed in the ag-I gregate Michigan in the future will have a campus pleasing to the eye as well as equipment ample to fulfill the needs of the University. But it seems apropos to ask the question .at this time, will the residents of Ann Arbor! keep pace with the University in maintaining homes to harmonize withI the symmetrical beauty of the now. CURRENT EVENTSs Coming from a 2 o'clock I hied me to a certain drugstore on State St.t and started in the door and turned around and reeled right out again. It seems that some one busted a3 pneumonia bottle in the rear but the4 fumes phoomed right up in front andy out the door. I gue:,s the soda hurler was trying to put a kick in some poor duke's drink. From the outside one could easily imagine that the store in question was either a movie running a heart-breaker, some one peeling onions or a broken pint of King Tut9 Cock-tails. Why people should squeezej out tears bigger than oranges over a mere jug of pneumonia seems a little beyond reason, doesn't it? A bottle' of perfume from that place now ought to make d{bim smell just like a newly washed piece of linoleum. Girls, here's your chance to absorb some of that EDITORIAL COMMENT I . I 9uncan & Starling home-like atmosphere.. * * * THlE IIENIECA] Leap to it!! Nosey. HERON )IIah tie harry Ihoey R. C. Moriarty T. ]. Mack Trulla and Ariadne were both invited to a dawnce on the same night. This, however, has nothing to do with the story, because they lived in New York and Memphis and had never heard of each other.' But, on the other hand, so was Delia, wl lived in Trenton, N. J. She had been invited by Rupert, who was by way of being her beau.f tor ..........iarion Koch inc Editor ....11. A. Donahue .. . .. .El I. .Ailes ... Bucklry C. oh.ui. Editorial Board Maurice Berman Eugene Carmichael Derr stein Assistants c, 11. Armstrong 'Franklin 1)). Hepburn y Bielfield Wi'nma A. Hlibbard 1. ]liilivgtoIn Fdward Aj Jlgginrs n Brown Kenneth C. Kellar (dCarkbElizabeth lebermann V'w Cnable John .Mc~inni* tdette Cote Samuel Moore n L Cou ghlin A. 1-1. Pryor hi Fipstei. 'W. B. Rafferty FPske Robert G. Ramsay Carlioghouse VP'"i h :r S. Goodspeed .oil J. Schnitz (Goulder Philip .11 Wagner Id fll;rint campus? She had purchased a new gold dressI At present the campus is surround- of some filmy, diaphanous cloth that ed on all sides by shabby looking made her resemble nothing so much dwellings most of which need painting. as a brazen candlestick. . "Indeed, Many of the inhabitants of these Delia is beautiful," her landlady hadE houses take no pains whatsoever to said, "beautiful as a crocus bud.open- clear their walks from snow in the I ing in the spring,. beautiful as a slend- winter time or to cut their lawns in er wisp of yellow corn, waving in the summer. A large and ungainly dance breeze." Anyway, as she came down hall is now b'eing erected in close the stairs to greet her Rupert she proximity to three churches and In slipped and fell, and came bumpety-I what is ostensibly a fairly good resi- I bump down, landing in a shapelessI dential ,section. heap at his feat. Rupert, seeing her To be sure many of these evils can lack of grace, and realizing that she be cured by a zoning ordinance, but was a complete failure at walkingt because of the. lethargic action on the downstairs, turned -away in disgust part of the committee that is now sup- with a crul leer on his face. "Heav- posedly formulating such a plan, it is ens," he muttered as he slammed the difficult to predict at just what time in door behind him, "how utterly the remote future the work will be gaucheo" Seeing that all was lost, completed, if at all. But even the Delia stabbed herself with the long, most effective zoning ordinance can sharp, polished nail that grew on the not insure, a well kept city if individ- end of her finger. ua remain obdurate in their refusal BOCCACCIO to brighten up and take adequate care * * *. - JWSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER ;i t i , i [j E 'i ! i . i ; .. r t 4 ' 1 /j t 1j 1 7 a ; f } t -. t t A MAN'S RELIGION (Phil. Public Ledger) A Philadelphia church, which has set 100 of its members at work round- ing up others and bringing them in, has sent out a questionnaire to 1000 men in every walk of life, in an effort to ascertain what religion and the church (not that these things are identical) mean in their lives. Years ago lumberjacks challenged a preacher to deliver a sermon on a text of their choosing. He handed them a Bible and they gave it back presently, sayng tleyfoud n veseto hei !from the soul, in the study of which saying they found no verse to their ago ayGrashv eoe liking. They gave him instead this, a gooi many Germans have become sentence, "To hell with the Church!" other groups of young people who That is the attitude of some who say prowl over Germany discovering bodI they are through with churches, jes, scenery -and hunan nature may church people and ministers. They do at least be preferred to the groups of not stop to reflect that the churches, conscientious hikers who used to in- for all their heavenward aspiration, fet the German landscape, rea(iTng are what human beings make them. Baedeker and eating aloud.- They keep talking about what "they" i -meaning everybody else-instead of :'11111IIilI111911l1Iifit IIlIllht111IP'- what "I" should do. They hurl abuse at the Chi'rch objectively as a failure DOROTHY B. LOWRY because it has not prevented war, or CHIROPR A~CTOR reformed society, or brought on the 606 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg. millennium. 'Hours, 1-6 p.m., Phone 4- To this questionnaire in Phila- S'X10lxlh1i111MlIfII3IWIIIIIIttIIiitflflhll lh delphia men respond: "Men are too busy to care." "The World War cre- ated a careless indifference." "The Church seems out of sympathy with wage-earners." "Theologians do not interest the modern man. 'These and similar answers repre.sent - objections that may he overcome by - those in earnest to breathe life into any moribund social institu'ion. If the ashes are cold on the hearth,.fuel may be collected and a new fire kind- led. It hlels nobody merely to find - fault and do nothing. The great need for the Church will keep the Church alive. The world here and there, from time to time, has tried the experiment of getting along with- , nut it and has found that thespirit as -- well as tlv body craved its daily bread. Church worship is not religion, but Its aim is to satisfy the appetite of reli- gion, and the individual shortcomings of the members of the churches are to be set down to their own private ac- y3. count, not to the failure of the Insti- tution as a whole. A world without religion would be a - world of social chaos, and those who - decry the influence and activity of (churches are usually those who wish to lead their lives with their own will /-ยข n' w' a w for all their law and all tlieir gospel." YOUTH IN GERMANY (Newy^ork Times). The New Student has got out a spe- cirl supplement pubVIshed in Germany, which tries to interpret German youth to American youth. By way of reci- procity, Mr. John Rothschild leads off by explaining American youth to Ger- man youth. "What," he asks, "have bathrooms, movies, steel construction r *:. ,and Ford cars to do with the sou of'/ a people?" What, indeed? One might follow with the. question, What is the soul of a people, if any? Mr. Roth- schild drops a hint or two in the act of reassuring Europeans who distrusts r bathrooms and the Ford car: Walt Whitman felt the sprit oIr, America. Sherwood Andeson feels it So does Sinclair Lewis. Herbert Crol- has just written an essay which all Americans should read. DETROIT UNITED LINES Arn Arbor and Jacksow TIME TABLE (Eastrrn Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars- 6:00 a.int., 7:oo a.m., 5:oo a.mn., 9:05 a.m. and hourly to 9:05 p.m. Jackson Express Cars t io.al stops west of Ann Arbor)--9:47 a.i., and every two h'urs to 9,7 m. Local Cars E;:u: Bound-7 :o 'a.'n. ad every two hours to 9:8 p.in., r:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-t t1:4o ' p.m., t1: t Sa.n11. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a.m., f 2' Htti T. To Jackson and ala.nao -lim ited cars 8:47, -0:47 a. m., 12-41, 2:,47, 447 P-tan. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:7 Pm. HEAT Uraiam 's ~foth Ends of the DViagonal ,, , i J i i i r ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schednle in Effect October t. ga2 Central Tiue (Slow Time 1. M. A.MR. P.M. P.M. 3:45 745 .... Adrian .... z:45 8:45 4rts ... Tecurnsek ... 1:1s 8:15 4:30 6:3o .. Clintoni .... x2:00 8:00 5:15 91 5 Saline ..,. 1:15 7:15 5:45 9:45 ArAnn Arborl,. 0:45 :45 Chamber of Commerce Bldg. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays and hfolidays. Friday and Saturday special bus for stildents leaves Adrian 1:4s, leaves JAMEi S 1. .ELLI OTT, Proprietor Phone 46 Read the Want Ads ink........,....John 3. Ilamel, Jr. ing ..............Walter 2lam Schererj in ............Lawrence 11. Favrot1 ion ........ .... Edward F. Conlin ting..............David T. Al. Park on .............Townsend H. Wolfe s ................, Beaumont Parks Assistants M. I rayde - Wm; H Good. pit. I Put-r IT., TI [)ine Clyde L. Hagerman I of their own property. in Ilenry Freutn ar Clayton Purdy Grantir;l:the great good that zoning antrout T. R. Sanzenbacher may .acec pih in making the erec- iteirl, J Clif'Ord Mitts "alXc "ren tion of undesirable buildings in a resi- esser Losis M. Dexter dential sections impossible, if the city dward B. Reidle in th1e attractiveness of its residences Cooper is 'to keep up with the University in the attractiveness of its buildings this must be accomplished largel through the efforts of the individual property, sS1 AY, APRIL 18, 123 owner. If every inhabitant of the city, no matter how inauspicious his dwell-. )-HOWARD A. DONAHUE ing may be will take pains to ade- quately care for it, then the Univer- A sity stud'entin the future may puff out! kNO'I'thRLOSS his chest with pride and say that there ain students of Michigan is only one Ann Arbor, without danger. shocked with the news of of an outsider retorting, "Yes, thankc f tryo of their most promi- God." ,rs. The adverse fate which , h to Sheldon M. Brown JUST BEFORE THE SEASON i a Sweet, took from the Uni- .Michigan's baseball team has re-, a men who had served her turned from a ; southern trip that, in motig whose friends were point of view of games won and lost,; sidents. in every branch was decidedly unsuccessful. It is not endeavor. the intention of Coach Fisher, or his I of. his popularity among his m to make apologies for the showing. I cllard Sweet was chosen by 'In fact, they would be the last to bring, t s president in guiding the forward a point well worthy of con-F >f the Boosters' club, an or-I sideration,--the fact that they were fostering the highest aims undeniably and greatly handicapped for .Michigan. Sheldon. by the almost total fh sence of good, almost completed his work weather for outdoor practice prepara-! s Manager of the Michigan- tory to the journey. With approxi- s book had already gone to mutely one day on the turf before; wouldhave been his final taking the field against Kentucky in o distribute it in May. His the opening contest, to be followed by' tant and noble uphill strug- six more games in rapid succession, belated entrance into Uni- a different result than that actually the highest honors which arrived at oculd not have been ex- students could confer upon c "BuIzziuig Aroutne"-Anlos Iteeto "Oh, Bill," said she, "Keep still," said he, "I'm trying to take a nap." "Butt Bill." said o1_ _i a "Aw Hell," said he, "I knew you'd answer back." Jersey Skeet.I . * * * This Was Funny. Two guys were talking only one was' doing most of it. "Why," says he,I "I've known girls from every country in the world. I've been out with girls' from France, England, Scotland, Ger-. many, Ireland, Russia .etc. I was out with a little dandy from Portugal andE another from Holland. And then there was one from Spain that was crazy about me. She was a sweetheart. And that gal from Siam wasn't so darn bad either. And there was a little bimbo from Haiti who thought I was just about right. There was also " a girl from Borneo-she was wild about me. And another dusky one from-" "Jamaica," queried the intent list-! ener. "No, she wouldn't even smile at me," admitted the' self-nonfessed sheik. Bshsl-zsh-zsh. What Ho! Dear Bunk, do you mean to say Your old contribs have gone away? Not me, I love the column, Rolls It gives a "kick" to lots of souls. The new contribs sure know their stuff But why, dear Bunk, give us the huff, Your old contribs? I'd sooner rather lose my soul Than not to make the Toasted Rolls Now and then. ,. ,; _ I f ' , To eulogize Sheldon -Brown and ichard Sweet is unnecessary. They e another loss to the senior class nmen whse memory will remain' ith their-iass-mates for having giv- i mich owards sincere comrade- ip and the continued ascendancy of ichigan. SENATOR COUZENS' GIFT While -the matter of appropriations ill waits for final action by the Leg- lature, Senator James Couzens has mnou,nced a gift to the University hick wil make possible the building a nurse's home in connection with e ,new hospital, an item already ruc irfrom the program under con- deration t Lansing. As a loyal 'nefac f a worthy cause, as one ho has personal as well as con-" unal pride in the institutions of the, ate.and the University in particular, mator Couzens has rendered a tre- On Saturday, however, a different' Michigan will face Ohio State in thel first conference tilt of the year, the game being scheduled for Ferry field., 'Three more days of practice plus tit splendid experience of the southern trip should put the team in a condi- tion and mood that wins ball games. With this in mind students may looki for a fairer test of the power and title1 prospects of Michigan's Varsity nine in the contest to be played off on Sat- urday. Howard Carter, the American mem- ber of the King Tut expedition, has endeared himself to those claim to be unsuperstitious, by resisting thel "curse of the Paraols" and re aining his healthl. Or maybe it was jest' downright Yankee persistence. A certain student was surprised to find that what he had thought at a The German Jugendbewegung is thus oriented with respect to the def- 3 erence due to local deities and is ac- cordingly allowed to caper through signs of the times are the terror of the rest of the number. It starts with the glad announcement that the great signs of the times are the terror of the the bourgeois and the joy of youth awakening. Most of these moving youth seem to be Communists and all of them pacifists; from the German universities. or rather their noisy na- tionalist elements, one hears another' story. However, it is pleasant to find that even in this new and movable youth the well-known German mind seems to have-survived the war almost unimpaired. For these young men and woen, without exception, treat Youth from its metaphysical and world-his- toric aspects. Yotith in America, at any rate artistic America., is a gainful occupation. In Germany it is a Welt- anschauung. Even the illystrations are profound. There is, for example, a photograph of :z young woman in a bathing suit, pranching on the beach. In matter- of-fact America one would suppose that she had been chilled in the water and was trying to get warm, but 'n j Germany she is symbolic of "Youth practicing the rhythmic movements of the body before the wide expanse or the ,sea." This is not the only case in which one gets the impression that Germany does with deep-sarching earnestness things that California, for instance, does by intuition. Nevertheless, one siapects that the next generation in Germany will be Iart Schaffner 8& Marx sport clothes! They 're smart, serviceable Belts, yolks, plaits, lively col- ors, rich patterns-you find them all in these spring suits for sport wear. Unusual val- So tell me when you've read this not, May I still hang my coat On the contrib spindle? Just Jake. * * * A. What do you think of a fellow who'd get up at three in the morn- ing to go horse-back riding? * * *' Listen, my friend, and you shall hear Of the incredible story of co-ed Mac- Frear Who, when asked for a date,' Replied, "It's too late." And went and pounded her ear. LA1TEBt. * * * Dear Just Jake,- I'm not giving you the huff so don't get huffy. You know that I use lots 1 ._ j *3 - -2 , ues; too at this low price. $37.50 Other models priced to $50 Thn DVT T T L' (P1'VNTTt i A