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April 24, 1923 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-04-24

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TJ [L MICI IIGAN DAILY ___

,

All ~j ~ t~ince worthy of consideration and
~t~~t~U ~ ~ action upon the part of the men to
* j whomn the Buildings and Grouinds de-
C:I AEIV~SPAPERu OF THlE partment is responsible. Past- per-
i a r T'B'l itv m wITi' . T 1 ,finn r"ci ln. t~ hat- it, ic4 tnly h1V

'' CSUD O/

EDITORIAL COMMENTI

__

ed every mrinig except 'Monday]
e university year by the Board in
of Student Publications1
rs f \Western Con frcnccEdlitorial
on.
Associated Prers is exclusively en-
the use for republication of all news
s credited to it or not otherwise
in this paper arnd the local news pub-

making use of the work of the Elec- WHO WANTS
trical Engineerin~g department that ll NOW 0)
the quickest way to secure proper il-
lumination for Hill auditorium will Billets-dou~x
bie reached. As the centribs have been falling
______[___off' within the last fewvcdays ¢ please
ELECTIONS fasten them more securely on the
The date for gener al campus elec-? hook in the future) it has become time

ntrda h osofc tln .s~rto i gi ls t ad n i4n, as second class matter.' the balloting day. approaches comes
ubscription by carrier or mail,~ $3.50. teissetqetona oWosil
ffices: AlnnArbor Press Building, May- h nitn usto st h hl
IStret. receive' this or that position. Many
9 ns dtra,244adL6M ui offices" are .to be filled and the choice}
- -- e- -- --- one more is between p~opular campus1
3rumunications not to acd30-ls idols. Who have admirably earned the-!
,i~nA , . h ;tiizatr not eera r
arilprint, hutt as an evidence of faith, praise and confidence of the student
notices of evients will he publishied i
Sal att'1' (isCV~iin ,the Editor. it borly, and capable men of lesser prom-
a: or mailed to The Daily office. I'll inenec who might frequently prove
ic1 collniuhilicotiolus will receive no con-
ra;tion.l No manuscript Nwill be re(turned the more efficient in the administra""
ss the nwritr (ncloses postage. TheleDaily tion of student affairs.,

to give tihe Tattler thu n 'IIs 51.
Will the senior who recently gave uip
his mustache please be more careful
in time to comle about dropping hisI
Iperfumed. letters in the Library. Two'
were picked up and readt avidly by a,
ISophomore girl who gave them to thej
ETattler as a little tok~en of her re-
[ gard. One was signed Scootsie and the
other bore no sig;nature but it wvas far
from boring. The latter was from
Wyand.otte. When she dloes comle up,

ON BEING WTROWN (
(Philadelphia Public Ledger)
We are usually most vehement when
we are in the wrong, for we are then
on the defensive. When what we were
taught to believe is attacked and the
very foundation ofT our faith is shak-
en. weC find it easier to standl by what
is basic to our education than tor ex-I
amuine the architecture, top to bottom,
andl see what flaw there was and whatF
change ought to be made.
We are so constituted that asia ruleE,
jwe hlate to give in. We like to believe
we are correct-correct not merely in
opinions, but in demeanor, in apparel,
in each dstys life, in the friends wet
mee t and the least things we (10. In all
ways we are to be mnodishb, to follow
the crowd, to live a. life in their opin-
ions. their prescriptions, their dccl-
sions as to whjat we' need. We forgeti
that a fashion which suits another
may not.lbe the most appropriate forj
us. But it is not necessary for uts to
consider our own ind:viduahlty if we.
have none to consider. If we are col-b
orless members of society, with no
kxill of our own, no0 determined way,

:uncanp&Starling
Io n Ens of the Diagonal

e --- ------ 1

s

TFel

a~it 1 El
T,. :. FI
'oris ir:
Ilusic 1?
,n lthAl I".
'aul in

in th commnicatons.This' is not meant to intimate that!
--- - celebrities should be ignored in the'
E.Z1'0321A1L STAFF voting, but merely that no man should
It i~oie;:;i i a~d1763I' be elected to a'n office partaking ot
eldl~le 211 ~l~d 46Mconsiderable responsibility and inven-
MAMAGING EDITOR fiveness solely on the basis of his
TAON'. STAHL achievements in other fields which are
--- totally unrelated to that for which hA
t or.......... ....Pi azl"
t o!. .. .. .. . . . . . ....ames1You ng, is slated. Thie success of student af-
City Fditor....... ..J. _1. Bacon fairs .,varies directly, as to -the capa- I
Board Chairman.......1?. 1. Meiss bility of those men who are chosen to
;ditos- fill such responsible positions as stu-
1>'yers; ]Tarry IHueyI
I rSihdorfer lt. C. MoriTarty dent' councilmen, Union executives,;
Donahue J. E. .Mack and Board in Control members, which
dii f-.......Wallace F. Elliott Should prove beyond question the tre-
I~clitor.........]anion K ocht mendous significance of the annnal'
\Iagazine Edlitor . . . . !I.r. Donahue
litor ................1;.11. Ailes ! political issue in campus life.
.tit".........Buckly C. Rxobbjiusa Figure heads sometimes mean much
Editorial Poard
Kerr Maurice Berman nominally, but when the( final stock Is
stein E;ugenie Carmichael taken, ability and that alone deter-
Assistants mines the success of student affairs.
. .Arm strung Franiklii 1). H cpb urn
1lclic~l 1"i~n _.llbbtk Consequently,, students in' preparing
[Ellington tdar J. 1ii ggins for the election will oo well to think
mownKennth . Kelarof the candidate's past record and his
loia kblrael ~ibnat'le John NMcinuis jd(emonstrated ability for the position
te Cote Samuel Moore-
cot, rtliln \. 1H. Pryor to which he aspires, and not of the I
I'rc 1. IB. Rafferty' man hlimself. :ECR CT
isghouse r l Ramsay
Goodspcd Soll J. Schnitz Trnv MlD.N~fIlHT LC RC

.M

here on the -4th there will be a little'
more info for the boys.
Tattle r.
No man is a hero to his valet-but
what man wanteth to be a hero whoI
can afford a ,valet. bell.

uley J1T
A.1
C. C
rnadeit
in Ga
'iter S
tia (.
mid-l

i

on Pil~er
I ,al1gi n

BUSINESS MtANAGER
ALBERT J. PARKER

A visitor in Ann Arbor, being lit-
tle acquainted with college life and the
ways of students, might be immensely
surprised, upon walinig through the
college district at 11 or 12 p,. M. to note
the 'startling number of study lights."
burning at that time. indicating that a

- goodly number of students were still
1 1 tiin.............. T1dm T. Il atel, Jr. "hard at it" at the midnight hour,r
Aderisn..............Walter 1:.ceer studying ata time 'when most 'persons
1dx ertising...........bawrec Il. Fa<vrot°
T'tblicatio;n...............!?da rd h. Conlini in ordinary communities. are fastI
(>yurting......Dlavid 3. MI. Park asleep.
Clrc ulatinn..............Iownsend 11 ol~
\ oiis................ 1cauniot ralikS This tendency to burn the "midnightt
A5istants electricity" has become inextricably!
I'crry Ml. 1Hayden 1 m. If. Good
if~I,. ] DiJ>n ldeL Irgem behind up with college traditions.
t'4j41 Hery Freud Most university~ people realize that it
C. J,. Putmrani Clayton Purdy
1. ). Armatront V1.sanzernbacher is easier on1 their eyes if they study'
WVilliam 11, Reid, J'. Clifrord Mitts during the daytime ,and yet daytime
Hiarold T,. ilale ThLomas Mc achrlim 'study, except' during cxamination I
WMa. P. 'lncsser Louris M. Decxter
Allan S. Morton C. W\ells Ch1ristie weeks, is scarcely to be seen in °the
I-,imos A. D-,vr r Eward 1;: Rile college community.
ITerbort WX. Cooper
- ----- - Investigation would, most likelyE1
I show that most studying is dlone hbe-
tw-een the hours of 8 and 12 p. m. The
- -- - daylight hours are given over, not;
TUEl"LSDAY, APRIL,~ 24, 1923 only to study and activities, but to
- -. - - -- _.__ ---_.- - -" ree eation, letter writing'," hiking,
'light Edcitor--HOWARD A. DONAHUE sports, and any number of time-ab--
__ __-- --_------ --- -- ------__-_'- sorbing occupations. A proportion oft
'IMiI: FOR ACTION the student body, and certainly not a
The Bu,,ildings and Grounds depart- negligible one, hardly- ever, begins
nuent has' failed repeatedly in its at- studying before 8:30 or 9 o'clock in,
temp:,t' to muake the lighting of Hill. the evening. Finishing their evening
auditorium adequate to the needs of m~eal at approxiriiately 7, they' spend '
'.e structure, notwvithstandling thce the hours from 7 to 9,either at .a pie-
,act that more money, has been util- tore show, in a billiard room, or in a
ized in the process than would bere- talking session with their intimate:
quiredl to install an effective lighting friends.
If students. would begin work ear-
:ysteml. Consequently, it seems rca- Itri.hevnnghrewudc-;
::onabhle to state that, if we are to I e nteeeigteewudcr
have prober lighting in Hill auditor-; inyobesmay tuy aps
mum, it behooves the University au- bunn t1 .ii n ,n.Mn
thorities to take the matter into 'their of ,themn, beginning scholastic activb
owt hadsandse toit ha t1e~en1 'ties when the evening is half gone.
hers of the Electrical Engineering de- fn~htterwr ae ogrta
'pa rtment whose past performances they had believed it would, and baeingi
heave pr~ved their capability of prop01- determninedl to finish their assign -
Orly altering thle present lighting sys- nen1ts, keep going" until the early't
tenri are given a free rein in the mt-horofmnigAcntuepa-;t
ter or c~ last tht.their assistance; tice of this sort is certain to prove'
troratlatthtdeleterious to the health.
is called for.'
Thetecnicl dtal cncenin th IPerhaps nothing would remedy this,
situation more effectively than the
fa ly illum ination in Ifi auditorium m aintaining by each student of a tim e h r e n d l t ' n b f r , a d ;b d e . S c u g t m g t s o
there seems little cause fora repelti- what an unbelievale amount of" time
lion in this article. The lighting s s- is, given over to activities of little
ter, althoutgh altered frequently, has' significance. No rational reformer
been ilnprovdl very little since its first wvould suggest the abolition of r'eprea-
installation..Ao attempt has ever beenI tion hours and recreational activities
ipae y te uilins ad r~udsfor students. But, the elimination of
department to solicit the assistance of ' a tendency to -waste time upon triv-?
they Electrical Engineering department ialities-such a change would be mosti
in thne matter, and while the counsel wloean wudmnthtni
Of& the latter has been soughIt for oe est e n-wmnwudhv
casionally it has usually been disre-mnore time for sleep and physical ex-
garded. cecise.
in contrast to the unsatisfactory___ ___
lighting in Hill auditorium.. is the The "anadgl"sao a f
emir~e"barnyard golf" sseasonihasaof-
eminntlydesiablesystm iista l fciallyarrived, and the clink of horse-.
b the Eleutric -.l Engineering depart-' shoes outside of the Waterman gymn-
irent on 'the second floor of the 11- aasiumn proclaims that the, sport 'is-1
pram y. H-re, through a system of dif-' as piopula r as ever.
1 t a j n iimr frnrn tAhe AZ laA'. t. n s i -

In p Lmp . Yin Itie' Facie .then it makes no (difference whether
A storm w.:s arising front out of the;
es:we travel along or stay behind. When, aLw ne ru eaentntcd
Of a enter a groupgwerarefnotenoticed;n-
Of sude, te gar oftil sn trn when we leave it we shal not be
ed dim. misd
Astillness advanced silently as beforemssd
IRight or wrog, it is something to
a great feast. have a definite opinion. 'Pat does not
Andthesunfaraboe loke sa an .mean a fixed and final opinion, which
grim, no fresh accretion of the facts can'
But nknwinly breze 'oa upasmodify. A mind open to the light, as a'
But nknwinly brezeros upas.window admits pure air, is ever ready
from sleep, 'frtetuh n at h rt
Refreshing and cool was its manner frtetuh n at h rt
more than it cares for the shallow
And the storm disappeared as away grtfication of saying: "I told you so.
a snke reep. .You see now I was right."
Once more the sun spread out its
laring «'ed banner. A min of scence cares more for:
g . j truth ~han for the theory which lie,
Just as the elemients of nature (10 l has taken as a staff on his way to
turn findl the truth. Ile experiments, e
So does the heart and the soul of a Itssadh eet.H ri ro
Wien; any- numnber of times, for the precious
Trouble, wsm tmahat it(id sake of being, in the right at last. It
F spurn is with people as it is with facts:'
You WOere the breeze that made trou- "When half-gods go, the gods arrive."
If we have made wrong choices in our
ble diband.friends, it is possible to discard, and
And now, as the years roll swiftly by, to forget, if it must be dne. If we
The -sun still shines bright in an east- have reached erroneous tenets about
em sy. 'life, and loveamd duty-as we have!
I hope, dlear pal, that years will be; light t se, and tiie to serve us, we
kind. may change, and admit that we fail-
And that some fair day, fair breeze eadpukorevsoto h
yo'lbrmn. Idust of our fal and go o. we are"
aW)~1 but fallible, as we are mortl. TIr
* *1is 1n0discrc d it n a itak, if w do;
'11w ~ogenot elect to remain in it when we have
March 26, 1923 imade it. If ki things or persons we
:Now, Bunk, Listen: have been disappointed-these are not
I'm hard _boiled._ I've been playing all. Hlope ~was given us for a pu--
around with co-eds for years and Is pose; faith abides, and love. "Anlj
know my dominoes. I been a tell- from tie groundi there blossomsied
ing :them that their eyes were like L eta hlledesh.
deep canyons filled with moltcn lva,
that- they were made to interpret ( A1'I L ijE.
God's beauty ,and. a lot of. darn hot, (Cornell Su)
steaming chatter. I always get some On the editorial page o the Pale
reaction, but I got one the other' night Daily New's'aprotest recently ap-
that fixed Inc. When I got to the enid pered against the sale, by university,
of the line, she turns and says "Bless booksellers, of Upton Sinclair's_ lat-
your heart." Hley, what are they est effusion, "The Goose-Step", ptb-
comning to? Back to the Crinoline, lishd by himself. Slanderous the
days? Where's all this emancipation bhook: ay be; injudicious it certairly
stuff anyhoe? 1)i7zy L1)o. is. Yet it seen,a-strange anomaly,
Iil this supposedly enlightened twen-
IHIy, lDo, did Maigaret say that to tith century, that the~proces s of sup-
you? I wondered because I under- presiol, which instinctively calls to
stand that she has pierced your veil mind the Star Chamber, the Inquisi-
of secrecy antd I thought that you and tion, and the Index, should actually be
she miighithbe old friends by now. ' advocatedl in our universities to pre-
* * vent the untutored college mind from
! ay After Tomlorr o's oseise 'Novel, being "con taminated" by "p opa-
"A 'Terrible 1reaiin-I ntaFreud. a na".
*** Who, shall determine what books
Tril MIEN ID)ECAMEFRON are to b suppressed is, as ynet, a
Daniel w.as a dromedary canmel who moot qucion. A bill introduced into
hada nmecoiou s appetite. One dray, the Albany legislature last week, at
when suli'eriug from a particularlyC the request of the "Clean Book
twinging attack of h1alnger, he decided; League"' suggested that those literary'
to betake to a restaurant and eat a products be banned which are "vu-
fmeal.' With this idea in view, he went agar, according to the usually accept-
and looked in the pocket of sand: ed definition of the term." An une-
'where he knept his money, and much lightened electorate can pass no sound
to his surprise found none. "Ai me,")I judgmnet; presumably, therefore, a
he barked, "what a misfortune this is! copy of each quesionable book Is to
I am indeed afflicted!" With this In be placed in the hands of every man.,
view, he retired, lay down acnd wept woman or child in the community, i
for a space. Then he arose with a order to determine whether or not its
wild light in his eye ":Rob lf..ITI. vulgarity is of the "popular" order.
"must," lie cried, "but 1 have urgent' Or the "lean Book League" wril um-
need of food!" Ilie walked slowly doubtedly be willing to pass judg-
,along the street, and entered a drug !net, liftig from hoi poloi the sad
store. On tie countex layr a small, duty of condemning a unclean, 'Po-
-phial of soda i nts. At the sight of sto's "Resurrection", whose publica-
these, D~aniel's eyes fairly popped out' ion in a popular English edition was
of his head, for this was his favorite reccently strenuously oppose.
food. He reached out and rasping 1-owever much one may condemn
the phial, attemnpttl t) make away the intellectual apathy of the present-
with it. Just then a policeman chanc- ;dcay college student, it is inconceiv-
I ed to see ln, anid axrested him. '.ble to suppose that le can willingly
"Come!" said the policeman sternly, be a party to any censorship whose.
"you must go with me." And wwth well-being is a mistaken puritanism.
that gruff statement, le led poor Dan- I i s power in dealing with the censor-
icl tie dromedary camel off to jail, ship situation, in moving pictures, in
BOCC'(ACCO. books, and in newspapers i far
* * * greater than his mere numerical
{ ~New (Camlus (hinme rength. As the educated intellectual
{ ~"Drop tile Ga~ter" leader of tom rrow, it will rest large-
;TIm" court is by the Law building ly with hijm to decide :wheter or not

1DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIME TABLE~
(Eastern Standard 'lime)
Detroit Limited and Express Car-
().-u '~ . 7 :oo a. ti., S :oo a.ni.,',g :0
aM. anid houcrly to 9:0O5 p.m.
Jackson Express C' rs (focal stops
west of ATMn Arbor) -g=9:47 a.cn,, and
every two IivAwr&et) 9'.7 pi.
Local Cars Ens' j ound-7 :oo a.m.
an1'I evrv ctwo is uts to 9 :00 W. iM.,
i1 i:0o p.m. To Ypsilanti only-1 :40
p:*m., 1 :15 a.111.
To Saline--Change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Boond--7:50 a.rn;,
12:10 P.M.
To Jack-son and Kalamazoo-Lim-
ited cars 8:47, 1o :47 'a.m., 12:47. 2:47,
4:47 p.m1.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at
8:47 P.m.
1!33 APRIL 1923
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 123 13 14
15 16 17 IS1 9 I 4) 2l
2 2 3 24 25 26 27 28
WE
41fa MM FR.
Big Stock Always onil axid
LARGE SIZES A SLI1E'lALT Y
Save a DOLLAR or more at our
Factory
Ive also do all kindIs of Clean--
ing and Reblocking of 'IHats at.
low prices° for HIGH CLASS
I --"WORK

.A

f

"Te ua-rry"l

FACTORY HAT STORE
617' Packard Street Phone 1792
Where D. U. R. Stops at State

French anrd A merican Toilet
At

Aim
I
!r

I

Goods

-4--

11

AtRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUTS
Schedit a in Effect October r8, ' z922
Central Time (Slow Tihnc)
D) X X D
l'.Mt. A. M, P.M., P.M.
3:45 7:45.. Adrian ...12:45 8:45
5:15 9:15 ...Saline 11. i:15 7:15
5:45 9 :45 Ar Xnn Arborhv. 10 :45 6:4;
.0hamber of, Commerce Bldg.
D-Daily: X- Dily except Sundays
and Holidays. Friday aild Saturday si'eeial
611s for .Vudents leaves A'irrian Iiv:4 eve's
.Ann Arbor 4:5-
JAMLoiSe11.

'
a

CCLAUDEDAKE'S?
Drug and Prescription Stare
Corner STATE and, N.UNIVERSITY
Phone 308

'

Il

i H

IThis Paint
is Made for
Painting Floor

f'"^ii

Bright young m nen gravilaite to
thme prof essi ,.S, often bec ause.
they don't know s00on enov,,h
about the row ards aind oppori ,n -
ities of business. Write the AVd-

Apaint may be ,good, bult stil not
A od enough for floors., You
mayUv found that out yourself.
However, when you use a paint
made especially for painting floors,
you're sure to be delighted with the
result.
Lowe Brothers Hard Drying
Floor Paint 'is made for painting
floors. Contains extra tough var-
nish that'stands up under the severe
treatment all floors get.
It's called Hard Drying; because
it's just than. Dries hard quickly
and stays hard. Easy. to apply;
easy to keep clean. Wears and
wears.
Come in and see the sample'
panels and ask for literature.

J1

I

7

m~uistraticn Departmient of the
Missouri State Life Insurance
Company, ~St, Louis.

OSWALDHERZ'
112 'W. Washington PF one ?53 ]

I

w.... .
..

('ars lefeor 'oledo 7:10 A. 31.,
2 1". 31. «ald <) 1. 11. Except Suin-
day. Sr§uuda3'%;at, 8:00, 11:1. JantI
8:30.

111 11 jjjjl

We rare Showing the.

NTEW TYSON
Soft Shirts with the latest collar,

4r .
'fiE NEW ATHARVARD"

This is the shirt "you have been look,ig for

TRADE MARK, RCGO

-#

jectors, anl effect of uniformity is se-
cured coupled with the appearance of
d'aylightll rather than the less desira-
ble one of moonlight which resuflts
from (ireet, rays suich as those in Hill

SRadlio enthusiasts- are constantly
discovering new t)ings to be broad-;j
casted fronm Arp' Arbor, and wonder-x
ing w.-en time broadcasting apparatus
will be provided.

Materials oxford, silky finished poplins
broadclothcs, and sillk finished oxfords;

Prief l 9 1'"Iq~

11

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