THE MICI UGAN DAYY , ... ,; ..... [AL AEWS'PAPER OF THE ERSVLY OF MICHIGAN d every morning except Monday University year by the Board in Student Publications the ones who were selected. They, too, are worthy, and yet were outdis- tanced in fair and worthwhile con petition. These men must carry on, for it is only through their aid thn; the new managing editors and busi- ness managers can hope for success. To the men who have gained appoint- ments go the very best wishes of the campus for a year of prosperity and achievement. r----------/ma OASTED LL :* MASEBALL! The Annouilccnient The management feels that at this( most auspicious moment an announce- ment of great import should be made and hence it is in the making. And ifI i .. I EDITORIAL COMMENT 1 I POSTER SNATCHING (M. I. T. Tech) of va vc.u+,ca,.say of Western Conference Editorial The Associated Press is exclusively en- itled to the use for republication of all news lispatches q-edited to it or not otherwise redited, inthis paper' and the local news pub- shed therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- iardl Street. C. Phones:etditorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- less, 960. Communications not to exceed 300 words signed, the sinature not ecessarily to ppear in print, but as an evidence of faith, ad nlotices of events will be published in 'he Daily at Pie discretion of the Tditor. if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Un- igned commnnications will receive no con- ideration. No manuscript will be returned unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily loes not necessarily endorse the sentiments xpressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STA'F Telephones 2114 and 176-. MANAGiNG EDITOR, MARION B. STAHL News Vditor...................Paul Watzel City Editor .............James B. Young Assistant City Editor.J. A. Bacon FRditorial Board Chairman......E. R. Meiss OPPOSITE EXTREMES Most freshmen enter the portals of University hall on registration dayI with "general education" as their in- centive; the key to their advancing period of college education (if such they make it). Knowing a little of ev- erything and not much of anything,1 too many seniors dismount their high horse on the platform of Hill auditor- ium, sheepskin in hand, and take their i place among the multitude of other generalities who are struggling for existence. A broad, general education, long ac- cepted as the worthy successor to nar- row and classical learning, not infre- quently degenerates into a state ofj questionable value when such great numbers of graduates lack any sort of definite training or information. AA' was stated previously in these col-1 umus Princeton university has seen the impending trouble which lies in the way of the continued success ot the system now prevalent throughoutr the United States, instituting a plan4 which calls for greater speeialNkation# in some one field of study than was previously required. Breadth, just as anything else has its limits and it should be the aim of every institution of learning in the country to see that no curriculum oversteps these bounds, lest the men and women in our pres- ent universities be as narrow in their broadness as were the biased sdholars of th middle ages. everybody will give us their kind in- dulgence for one minute--Cecil, cease playing* that jewsharp immediately or I will report you-I will take great pleasure in informing you all-Kiki.- will you stop kicling that bucket- that Tomorrow is a foxtrot. .* * * It's nicer that warmer days are here. The world has changed conipletely. For co-eds to us so dear Are dressing much more neatly. Gumshoe Gus. Gus, allow me to congratulate you on what might be called, but most em- phatically isn't going to be, a perfect bit of poetry. * * * ' Echoes from a Boiler What makes me stay at home from . school? . What makes the devil's spirits rule? What makes my Temper like a mule? An Ame'rican characteristic which has not endeared us to our European. cousins is the habit of souvenir snatching. Money often obtains a wel- come for Yankee tourists, but the agony of the natives who see their shrines profaned is too familiar to bear repeating. The spirit behind this desire to carry away a splinter from the castle's great hail shows itself in the corri- dors of Technology. Stealing posters from the bulletin board§ has become so common that this means of giving information may become extinct. Posters which require hours of hard work decorate some student's room when the should be on the boards. An ambition to have surroundigs which recall the pleasant past is not. evil. It is the means and not the end to which publicity men object. After their few days in the public eye poet- ers will be given away. Surely the desire for wall decoration is not so strong that it cannot be held in check long enough to make the drawing at gift and not booty. D uncan & Starling Grahams 73oth Ends of the Diagonali 0 1- I I I" I ., success at all, require an audience with credulity fully as long-eared as their own. Let "Jimmie the adtaker" find it! DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited.and Express Cars- 6:oo a ym, 7:00 a.m :oo- a.m., 9:o5I a.m. and hourly to 9:05 p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:47 a.m., and Severy two hours to 9:47 P.m. Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m. and every two hours to 9:eo p. m., i1t:00 p.m. To Ypsilanti only- 1:40 p.M., 1:15 am. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a.m., 12T:io p.m. To Jason and Kalamazoo-Lim- ited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47 p.m. 4I ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedtie in Efect October iT, 1920 Central Tine (Slow Time D P.M. AM. P.M. P.M. 3:45 7:45..-Adrian. ..s 4 8:45 S:Co ::3o ....Clinton, t2,o 5 :oo :1~5 9:1.5 ..Saline . 1..a:r5 7:15 5:15 o:e'5 Ar0.nn ArborLv. 10:45 6:45 Chamber of Commerce bldg. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays and llnlida' s. frtiday and Saturday speccia bus for students leaves Adrian 1:45. leave: u1 1XrOor 4 :45 JAMES .H. PLL1OTT. Proprietor Phone 46- 711 TO'DEO-ANN ARBOR BIV Curs leave for Toledo 7:10 A. 31 2 1'. M. and 5 P. M. Except Sun day. Sundays at 8:00, 11:00 am 8:30. .-------------------- --- ,--*--' --. . . i''4 k: SPECIAL Suits with extra Trousers $35-$3S--$40 HORACE CLAVEAU \o. So. StateSt. : { { I IIR rM 4 I Y T I1Mi A' Editors- ph Byers . Iileshdorfer A. Donahue Harry Hoey :. C.Almiarty J. I;. Mack s Eitr.......Walaec F. El1+ott en's Editor.. ..Marion Koch ay Magazine Editor ....11. A. Donahue1 c Editor.................E. 1I. Ailes 0;r Vitor ..........Buckley C. Robtnes Editorial Board 1 Kerr Maurice Berman Einstein s Eugene Carmichael Assistants cy IT. Armstrong Franklin D. llepburn y l ielfield Winona A. Iibbard ;1 illington I'dward J. lIfigginas n i' ownenneth C. "ellar Clark Elizabeth Liebermann, f Connable . John McGinnis dette Cote Samuel Moore n 1. Coughlin M. 1I. -Pryor h pstein V. 1. Rafferty Fiske Robert G. Ramsay .;kJ linghot se 5. 11%. 11^ iti-h cr W. Goodspeed Soll 3. Schnitz a Goulder Philip M. Wagne: il/tilatgrim' BUSINESS STAFF . Telephone 160 BUSINESS MANAGER' ALBERT J. PARKER li.ing......JohnJ . Ilamel, Jr. ~.Walter K. Scherer riing .........Lawrenced I1. avrot iclion . E.. .dward F. Conlin writing ............David J. M, Park ltioni............ownsend 11. Woale L. Beaumont Parks Assistants l d. sraydn Wanm. IT. Good ne . 111nne Clyde L. Hagerman C. 1I; .:in .henry Freud. fPutmar. Clayton Purdy. I;A' rmantrout J. B. Sanzenbacher iari 11. Reidl, Jr. Clifford Mitts Ad L.I-ale io-a,;Ml,'achren 1. Roesser Louis M. Dexter S. Morton C. Wells Christie "s A. Dryer Edward B. Ridle ert W. Cooper MY BOILS. What makes my sleeping always: tough? What makes my pillows, Oh so raugh? What makes my voice so mean and gruff? MY BOILS. What makes the doctor's bills so high? What makes me cut out sweets and TAKING NOTES (O. S. U. Lantern) Note-taking in University classes is' a real test of the student's ability to distinguish important points front un- important ones. In every class one may- see students industriously taking down every word that is uttered by the instructor. It matters not. that the same thought is repeated in sev- eral ways for the sake of explanation. Each statement. is religiously taken down by the student.J rA 1923 1 8J 15 APR~IL .< 1,923 2 9 1{ 30 3 10 1; 21 4 11 pi . 12 2 19 6 13 7 14 21 28 V 1 t C . I pie? When examination time comes it is T7STiia# ":mnirnc. fhn i #__Iir, on .,i, , ,.,n# Whnat . makes the nut-house almost j nigh? THE VARSITY GLEE MY BOILS.t - Desirable and praiseworthy was thej publicity accorded Michigan in the re- What makes my neck in torture swell? cent Glee Club tour. The club was What makes me need a padded cell? received popularly and enthusiastical- What makes me wish I were in ((le- lv in the few cities it visited, and a leted)? higher respect for Michigan was a MY BOILS. brought home to the several thousands . uiinell Cares. who witnessed the concerts. * * * There was a time, not very far back, THE IIENDECAMERON when Michigan spread her name vivid- Rodney Snedeker was in love! le ly as far east as New York and as far loved with the intense passion so char-- west -as the coast through the medium acteristic of all Snedekers. iis was of her Glee club organization. That an intense and passionate disposition, was a time when the Glee club was and he wooed his love, one Thisbe Wit., one of Michigan's most valuable fact-. liams in a manner so intense that it t ors in extension service. But now the had practically won her. But one day question is asked: Has not the more while walking around the city of mundane organization, the dpera thinking of his Thisbe, a damp, dump usurped the place. once held by the thunderstorm carme scurrying along,! Glee club? Such should not be the and drenched him quite completely, I case. . Imagine his-annoyance! For he had a The Glee club has ever been the date with his Thisbe on the following, personification of college harmony and and the storm had given him a sniffly joyousness, of a higher character than cold. On the following evening he came the opera; and the Glee club shoula to her house. They adjourned to the continue to be looked upon by alt as parlor and made, as of one mind, the representative expression of stu- toward the nice soft sophey. Immedi- dent life. In other universities that ately upon being seated Rodney is the case today,- and the Glee club started to woo. "Hodey," he whisper- at those institutions holds an envied ed, "you sibply bust love be! I cad't place among the best and most de- stad adother bidute without you! You sirable of campus activities. do, dod't your" Thisbe viewed him probable that he who has been so in- dustrious in note-taking will make only an average grade. The best marks will go to the student who has taken fewer notes. Then the student withi the voluminous notebook wonderswhy he did not stand at the head o his class. - The reason is evident. Nearly 4very course covers so much work i4 the period of a quarter that it is almost impossible to cover all the work of th ! course thoroughly in the short time available for "cramming." The student who has taken 4ow every statement, minor as well as ma- jor points, has a conglomeration tthati he can at the best cover only superfi- cially in review. MFR. SWEA Ji t Big Stock Always on hand LARGE SIZES A SPECIALTY Save a DOLLAR or more at our Factory We also do all kinds of Clean- ing and Rebl Ecking of Hats at low prices for HIGI CLASS WORK FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street Phone 179 Where D. U. R. Stops at State French cand American Toilet Go At G. CL AUDE DRAKE' Drugs and Prescriptin Store Corner STATE and N. UNIVERSITY Phone 308 S I I "ThesQuarry 11I 'N' _,- . .- ...- -.-... S sl NDAY APRIL 22, 1923 ditor-JULIAN ELLIS MACK1 SPRING EVENTS After more or less anxiety as to So amid the glamour of the ann iether spring ever would arrive it is Opera and other musical and drama ally, with us in all its grandeur. ventures the Varsity Glee club sho 'sterclay. saw the opening baseball not be forgotten. Membership in me of the season while tennis squad means a- constant round of pleas d golf teamare rounding their men comradeships and enjoyment. It to shape for. their initial contests. the iost distinguished of Michiga eanbile plans for the greatest sex-' musical or dramatic representati s of sprin gyents in Michigan's his-, which ever appear outside of Ann1 ry a, be .completed to assure the bor, and it will remain so to outsid ccess of the new project bringing because"its.very name is traditiona getlier all of the major events Of the accorded distinction in university ason witilti the period between May Icles. and 19. Accordingly,- much is expected Swing Out; an Night, Father's Day, the Glee club.. It can only accomp' e May Festivsl, baseball games and what it should if the finest vocalt track meet with Illinois will be but ent of the campus can be listed on me of the interesting events occcur- i roster. ng during this brief period at which ne Michigan will be effervescent ADRENALIN ith the spirit for which she prides Medical men have for many ye rself. This-occasion is the most op- experimented with means of prolo >rtune time to have friends and par- ,ing the life of a patient on the ve its visit the University, since doing of death. People suffering from frig they will see the enthusiasm which ful diseases have been kept alive irmeates the inner workings of the days on specially prepared drugs. stitution at its very height. is,- however, out of the ordinary Tradition, even during the football physicians to attempt to bring to ason is never more impressive than an unborn- human being. the pre-commencement ceremonies . New Jersey doctors recently exp Swing Opt, Cap Night, and Senior mented upon a baby born three we ngs. 'Underclass games represent prematurely; the drug adrenalint -e s irited naturo of college life and 'injected several tims into the hear usical 'indl dramatic presentations the baby. The child was brough e cultural side. If it is the desire life and according to the physic: any student to show others what gives every promise of surviving. s Universlity is and means -let him Ipossibilities of thIs potent drug, e sure to. extend them a cordial in- renalin, are unknown, but the suc tation to'attend this week of spring achieved in these first experiment ents -from May 1U to 19. indicatory of the wonderful f nual with alarm. -"ph just a little doze' atic quld n it ant t is an's ives Ar-' ters ally cir- of lish tal- its ears ergi ght- for It for life perl- eeks was 't of t to iane Tha ad- cess is is eats cold," he explained. "But snuggle up i to be, This. ad say't you dod't bidd be so buch. Thisbe arose in a hough,; "Young man," she said, "you are posi-- tively crude. You need never see me again!" Rodney Snedeker then went out, and drank himself to death. BOCCAC(IO. * .* ... Yes, Narcissa,-I know how sonie of us -co-Eds do pet! Too well! What you did forget to say, tho, was that the cat can scratch thew king. Which it would do, were it a real honest-to-goodness, she- woman cat; but being sort of a kitten I suppose it purred{ and said, "Uh, huh." II. E. 1. * * * On the other hand, the student who has had the ability to distinguish be- tween the important and unimportant points has before him for review an outline of the important wortk of the course. Minor matters have been dis- regarded. He an cover the major points thoroughly, and his results will show the wisdom of this course. Note-taking is a science. There is almost as much anger in taking too many notes as in faking too few. The power to pick out important points, developed in classroom note-taking, will be invaluable in later life. THE PLOT (New York Times) Good Americans used to smile con- descendingly at the French for their , tendency to dramatize politics. Such a cry as ",We must have a traitor" ("II nous faut un traitre") seemed pecuriarly absurd to our superior com- mon sense. But we are rapidly be- coming more Gallic than the Gauls. In our important public affairs we must have not only a traitor but a whole line of conspirators, apibus- caders lying perdu. villains masquer- ading as innocent bourgeois, assassins and spadassins behind every wall or hedge. Simple and rational e plana- tions no longer stisfy. Everything. that happens must be due to a plot. The Mildest imaginations of melo- drama are transferred bodily to the political stage. Never has this urge to tieatricality, been more crudely displayed- than, in the great excitement astir in certain Republican minds over the proposal of the President that the United States join the World Court. This did { not seem to the ordinary looker-on so astounding and incredible an event. The steps that preceded it were well known. To eyes not bloodshot it looked merely like a logical sequence to what had gone before. But noth-a ing of this will go down with ont dramatists of politics. They instantlyj begin- to fly around looking for con- spirat irs, recreants and traitors. They see the whole thing as a kind of masked ball, into which it is their f ind Spring a nd warm weather-- a change from the heavier foods of wintertime. tite, health in o ur You'll wh at's best for appe- menus A rcade Cl 00 Up s tairs, Ni c k e l's r e - - - --.. .. .. - - . - -' Seasonable goods for all seasons. We now have a.full line of goods for the spring time. I wish somebody's paw Would go straight out Law. On that southpaw from makes the straw1 draw: and get the Saginaw whoI that will not FERRY'S LAWN SEED FERRY'S GARDEN SEED WHITE CLOVER SEED FERRY'S FLOWER SEED Pshaw! I gnaw, I chaw,t I tire ny jaw, my craw is raw; That straw won't draw-it has a flaw -it's nothing but a toy see-saw. t MANDEVILLE & KING FLOWER SEED SPADING FORKS, SPADES, SHOVELS, RAKES, HOES, CULTIVA' S PUBLiCATION APPOINTMENTS After a deliberate consideration of e qualifications of each applicant, e Board in Control yesterday select- the men who are to head Michi- .u's student publications during the .ming year. These men have achieved their post- which the medical world may in time perform with it, . Adrenalin has been known to medi- cine for a number of years; it was used slightly during the war, but its } true value was not recognized until recently. If this lone case can be taken as an indication of the- worth of adrenalin, it is evident that it may be; Hurraw! Bring on the brute that bra Haw!" And heave him into the River Precipitate that dumb south makes the straw that (iwiw. 31I * * * Dear Bunk,- I think that Burnie-burnie fectly terrible to write that me and my garter falling d the garter, I mean. But I iys, "Ilee Kaw. paw who IN FACT EVERYTHING THE GARDENS. ; I will not duty to make their way as honest men in order to pull off the disguises XNEW. of scoundrels. Of course, President Harding himself never figures in the 1 exposure except as the good, kind- was per- hearted man who had been imposed In about I upon by intriguers. But there is no own, just end of candidates for the role of chief want to villain. Secretary Hoover disputel it TO IMPROVE THE LAWNS AND alspar varnish and paints and Arbroid cement to re ar EE the canoe and make it look like new and be safe to ride in. MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR HARDWARE AND ACCESSORIES. WE WILL TREAT YOU RIGHT. ,-, -, . . . :._