TI IL MICH IGANDAL ._ ran ttversity. Some of them have already interviewed employment managers in various Ccommercial institutions. 0th- PAPER OF' THE ers have written a great many letters ) -XICUWGAN Nili a.view to establishing' favorable ruing except M.onday~ year by the B~oard in relations with a concern and later. blications entering its employment.r SConference 1'ditor'ial College -'radulates, having 'been re- xliel mI~inded frequently and in no uncer- is exlsaise-ti termsc that much is expected ofI it r io ot~e-*sethen becaunse of the unusual advan- rd the local news pub- tages which they have enjoyed, are generally anxious to find imimediate t _. emc 1>le' rep, to r~ an ed at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, employment, to get; their taste of n, a sseconld class matter, practical work, andl to test their abil-' ription by carrier or mail, $3.50. es: Ann Arbor Press Biuilding-, May: ty'. In their anxiety'to -get' work, reet. some graduates accept the first propo- es: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M ; 'si inta ok psal od t nutnictions not to exceed 300 orods them. H-aing accepted a job, they d, the =ignature 1not 1 ece~sarilv to may fined little prospect of a 'future in Print, but as an (evidence of faith, wt h illwih1a'epoe )ices of events will be publish'ed in wt h imwihhsepoe ily at 0(,e i;crtion of the I-,dtor. ifj them, and-yet, if they have no abnor- or mailed to The Daily offirce. I-n- lima tyfo er communications will receivc no con. witl.initiative, they mysa o er on. No manuscript will be returned wththi9 firm In 4 rut, so to speak.- he writer encloses postage. The Daily ot necessarily endorse the sentiments Graduates who think long n'd Vwell c(d in the comrnun'ications. before entering any. field of endeavor -- - - ;are taking the wisest course. They EIDITORIAL STIAFF should be careful to choose, first ofT IClp1Q^>tW$ >i ?1lI and 174T all1, the type of work for which they --j are best fitted. and second, they must MANAGING EDITOR ;be certain that their employers are MARION B. S TAHL men of genuine business integrity, - highly progressive, and of unquestion- dtor...........Pahl X'atzcl ditor..............JaesB. Young e(1 honesty. 'Lastly, graduates should1 ut ityEdtor........'X Baonrememhib that 'the job carrying the Bo];ard Cha.irnmn......h;. R. Meciss l~diturslargest prospect of immediate finan- Edtr- BEvers IMarry Ilocy cial reward may not be the. best, II(,Sidodfer R, C. Mor iarty everything considered. Students of 1Donahue J. I. 1Mack. economics have frequenty 'encounter- .Wala~el~' Elottedl the phrase "in the long run," and i's Editor........a1rion i~och Magazine Editor . .. .1]. :A. )onahue might do well to bear that in -mind E~citor........ ...lIL Ailes while considering various proposi- kdlitol..........Bu~ccley C. Robbins> Editorial Board tions. T.' rr '\IoYr i. ) . na i 1 t I I j k'. i 'c i II 1, }r L I' " i { TOASED RLL jEDITORIAL COMMENT ( llI Q I iII (New York Tines) Professor Bliss Perry's remaorks on About Those ('ates decent and indecent literature before One very helpful suggestion camxe the New Engla nd Watch and Ward in this mnorning as to what Seniors society contain much good se~ek.. can do with their canes if they* are Everybody muxst approve the remcrly unable to use them otherwise, There he suggests-a buyers' strike against is no question but what they all needj bad book,, andl a. campaign in behalf lots of practice. 1 understand that, of good books. This, perhaps, was the chop-stick idea. is impracticai be- superfluous at that particular meet- cause. not one Senior can afford two , ing, since righteous organizations such' canes with the present high cost of a Professor Perry was aqer- ssinif. O'I-enrys and Mighty-goods. Besidesl often find it necessary to,, i omxote the you 'don't need chop-sticks to eat sale of bad books thxrough, agents toasted rolls. Mangle writes in that Provocateuirs; 1u the principle is' he can scratch spots onl his back with souind. his cane, that he could never reach Yet it is5 hot altogether crtain that before andl says that it serves equally# it would ,ton the publication of the ' :well as a billiard' cu. sort cif books that Professor Perry re-' You Seniors, addrlxess further sug- gar is as Pernicious. Not all the men gestions to aid your bewildered lclass- Iwhox publish them do so merely to mates, to Toasted Rolls and we'll g~et ik money. What na ughty wvriter them on the right track.t ever sold like Zane Grey or Harold P. S. Dana tells me that his;cane Bell Wrigltt? And whatever the publ- in. handy to .hold itxis winldow' open at lisher's. attitude, there is no doubt night in spite of the Vibration pro- that some offensive hooks now current dikced via his room-nnitte's nostrils. ar by authors who are sincere. They * * ~ * Iwould write for the sake of self-ex- ,Jist, as WlveI, Per'lups pi'crssiou, if they knew that the sale, Seated one day Idt my labor wouldn't moxaunt to a; hundred copies; I fahioed ~bautfulwheze n(Ithere are publishers who would But ye BiN~i camoe and opened the prodtce their hooaks at a sure loss. i windlow' Further, the mere fact that it is And, the wvheeze blew away onl the ne" ssary to call fox- a buyers' strike breeze. ( 'S©-_N V. j .Plies that the public wantts, theseF jwicked books . A moralist night ar-- Thincan &r Starling raam 's 23011 Ends oef the Diagonal Ii " . -__. _ It's time to get the old uniform out aind to the cleaners so that it'll pass. inspection at the Military Ball Fri- day evening. ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedixle in 'Effect October x8, 192s' Central Tite (slow 'time) D N X D P .M. A.M. P. Nt. P. M 5:45 7.45... Adrian. ... 12:45 8:45 4:3o 6:,3o (: - liton . 1,v x-oo 8:00 5:1 9:15 .«Salie . 11 ;:157:i5 5 :5 Q a ArI n rbor Iv, b10'-45 6:45 t .. I STRIjCTLY 110.1E COOKING4 HEPLER'S STUDENT -,I i I -----.-I DETROIT UNITED LINE$ Ann Arbor and Jackson TIM~E TABLE (Eastern Standard Tlime) Detroit Limited and Express Cars- 6:00 amr., 7:00o amr., 8:oo a.m., 9:05 a.nm. and hourly to q :Qs p.m. Jackson Express C"rrs (local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9 :47 a.m., and every two hours to 9:47 pmT. Local Cars East 13ound-7 :oo a.,n. and every two hours to g :oo p. mn., ri:oo 'p.mn. To Ypsilanti only--x :49i P.1.i, r: r5 a.mn. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West JBound-7 :5o a.m., 12:0 p.mu. To Jackson and Kalamazoo--L~in- ited cars 3:47, 10 :47 a~m., 12:47, 2:'47, 4:47 p.m. To Jackson and Lansing--Liunited at. 8:47 P.m. . r. alp1h rf. Slav t' { F ue1P tlatja mafll n ofrzoneo e~tn~n- ;Ii MixwiI jiatil i'c Jermld 1Elinstein Eutgene Carmichael Assistants Icy I1. :1; mstronig Franklin i1). hepburin tey Bielfield Winona A. lihbard V, Billington P1"dward J. Iiggins C~n iBroun Kenneuth C. Kellar. C. Clar~k ' lizabeth I~iehermlanu CI. Co'uable Jon McGinnis iadette Cote SaMuel -Moore 1n ..Coinghiln" 3AI. ThPyor ph, $l"I),tein IV B.lof frty l, hiske Robert G. Rarnsay ter S. GoodlspkeJ oJ i. Scltnitz' la Goulder 1Phi~i l . \V'agni,. iali llalgrini 'BU-SEISS STAFF! Tfelepholle 960 B3USINESS MANACERP . LI.ERT J. PARKER, i drtiai f~. .-.... . . 11 T fT I -nel, Jr. A tl'. i''' -. .I,-~ i 11.' If. avrot l ....l ... l) id1 T. 1M. Park Ciri-ra1, .,owlsend 11. Wolfe L.Beaumont- Parks .sistanits Per . ~l 1a tin i n. ImT.Good EueeUT~ unne Clyde TL. Hagerman I lw C. 11 a I Ii= rlenry Freud C. T. Putmnan Clayton Purdiy j;. 1). Alrnantrout )I. 13. Saiizenbhachier, William TI. Reid, JT. Clifford Mitts Harold TI.. hale - Thoma; MrFahren Wmn. 1). I2oesser Louis 1M. TDeter Allan S. Morton C. Wells Christie Tames A. D~ryer E dward B. Reidle' Herbert WV. Cooper TH3URSDAY, APRIL 26, 1923 ight Edito '-L_. J. HER;S~dDOBFP. .k RJ'IN1"IBLUNI)ERS PRotation of offices which is so nec- ess ary in Un1iversity activities where, nu are graduating every year or ac-" cetlingto Jhigher positions is often conconfltanft w ith adminlistrative inlef- ficiency m anifesting itself in th e jor e ti -le, be n a e y a f e year by the various holders of the sane office(. But this .is not alto- ,ethera necessary evil, and it might bje alleviate;d somewhat if the outgoing office hlder or organization head woldc make out a list of the mistakes lie had made andi his experiences IDEALS OF 1917, Forecasting a return. to the pdhiti- cal idealism of the war period, Wood- row Wlo has expressed in olptimis- tic terns hi~ confidence of th' Amer- ica n publi which he terms5 "essenxtial- ly sound" in judIgment. Thus the leading 'figuxre of the r, c.*rnt war re- ida~ealistic ;na e'suppressed in the interest of Famount of utility 11b the pictutres of moas ,rfso Pry elzn fruit that h1ung in the dlinn room t-sanr (luring the, bicycle age. They were supress t. eiifi~ htw a' -often usedI to cover holes in the wall Onofhsberaistug re xpaper. But you can't hang basket in general, is misleadcing, if aplpliedl to -4of artificial fruit on the wall. tepeetcnrvryi e ok And, as for beauty-if artificial frutit "nesaIatota lrIe h is °beautifunl, it mnust fllow as the State or Fed eral statutes," says Pro- night the day, and as a sophomoire fessor Perry, "he has. nothing to fear. an A-i, co-ed, that the real article is What writers and publishers of in- evnrr sa dagoey tr ~ecent books are really afraid of is M a thing of beauty and a joy forever. not inquisitors, hut the law.", That :F ., i ' f r ' r I , ,' t C. i r , t. ,' 1923 APRIL 1609 1 2 3 -4 6 ( 7 15 10$ 17 18 11$) 20) 11 202 -1)2t 25 24 t27 28 H WE Big Stock Always conItMid IJARVt64'SIZES A SPECIALTY Save a PO~LLA~t or more at our Factory vWe'also (10 all kinds of Ciean..- ing andi Reblocking of hants at lowr prices' for 1-IGII CLASS _ WORK--__ FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Pack~ard Street Phone 1792 Where D. U. '1 Stops at State Chlainiiler 0 of Comerce ldg. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays LUNCH and hlidavs. Friday and Saturday specia' bus for students leaves Adrian t :45, leave~, Ann Arbor 4:4.ts 40)9 FAST JEFFERISON STr. JAMEIS 11. IELLIOTT, Proorietair ; Phone 46 ROBERT BER M A N } VIOLIN INSTRUCTION- !=For. Advanced :Students E /PUPIL OF AND AUTH-IORIZED = EXPONENT OF TE METHOD OF- LEOPOLD AUER - For. appointment Phone' 161 2-R- - Ejoithirs. TO' DEO-ANN ARBOR UAS C'ars leave for rToledo 7 :14) A. M1, 3 P. 31. and 5 P. It. Excep t 5111- (lay. Sulndays Ail S:00, 11:00 and4 5:3. I k i . 7 t t # 1 E, I L , i' I f , r Gumnshoe Gus. The Lone; anid Short of It A sharp retort's a ranlKling thorn, And oft it is the wrong of wit; With friendly words are roses born- And, that's the 'short and long; of it. So if I write ini rhyme or~ prose I'll make no shari retort of, it. The thorns shall not outvie the rose-- And that s the long and short of its. "Philos saPhas hi I 1.agartho()," Said Socrates, in soing of xvit That ended with-" Ios krateistos" And T HAT'S the short and long of it. Stan11wood. I hold you responsible for the strange lang;uage. It's all Greek to me. wh-lile performing 'the duties ,incum - bent on Ihim for the benefit of' his suc- cessor. This procedure mig;ht Prove espe- cially beneficial in the case of the va- rious sectional and extra curricular; societies on the campus. At pres