IL AIM IIGAN D.ATLY ,. ~ ,.,;,.r,,, - -- OFFICI AL A .WSLPAPER 01" THE IT-N IV ERSIT1Y OF 111iCJHCAN 'Iiblishcd every m-o rning except Monday fing me Unitvcrsity year by the Board in itre! of Student Pub lications! lini;,r, of Wcstcru Coiiferenice LEditorial ie Associatea Pre-Ss is exclusively eni- d to the use for republication of all news patches credited to it or not otherwise dited in this paper and the local; news pb ,ed therein. rnter ed at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, .iig;ari, as second class matter. ;bseription by carrier or mail, $3.50. ffics: Ann ;Arbor Press Building, May. d St, eet. 'honecs: Editorial, 2414 and 176-\,; Busi- 5, 960- onnnirmications not to exceed 300 words ;,< ijerfthe bigenature" not 'necessarily tfd rear in print, but as an evidence of faith, tnotices of evecnts will be published in J at t'j ,i c ^t'on of the Ed'tor. IfI. at or mailed to Thle Daily office. Un- ied comrrmnniicationis will receive no con. cratinn. No manugscript will be returned 0111 the wvriter encloseS postage. The Daily s not nccessairily endorse the sentiments ressced in the conmications. E"'ITRTALSTAFF ielepl ons 2.'tIajid 178-'1I M1ANAGING ED~ITOR MARION 13, STAHL v atr Pahl "Vatzel Y Ed: itor..............Jamres 'B. "Young' :1'tant City E;dito... ... A. Pacon itonarl if oard Chniruian......1$. R. Meiss' the mnob is an unfair, uipspol tzman- - -. .. lilke thing. it countenanecs the pitt- ing o1' one victim against a hundred *ROL ca~tors. To be a good mob, it must 3 / a lways; have overwhelming odds on S1i G0UL its own side. It is driven by the same JL force that burned witches at Salem Y~tItlBE' and for'ced Christians into the cata- SorIae combs-mob fanaticism plus a' sensel-SorGae of mob strength. not1* At the present moment, a sister un- 'Toasted Dolls versity finds the accusing eyes of The editor of this, here now column the worldl turned upon her, because i is all het up as well as hurt and sadly of a fatality said to have grown out of a ,student mob. demonstration. Al- bewildered. In fact, since the affair; though the name of the institution is of a day ago he has been very hard a all times linked up with the trag- to get along with. He feels that edy, it was if any at all only a small band of irresponsible students who some where, some how lurks an im-{ were directly involved in the death! position. It is with mingled thoughtsl of their fellow student. Such a situa- of hesitancy and out-raged righteous- tion may arise in any locality when ness that he broaches the subject.: mob spirit prevails over fairmindedl- But, as cicero once saidl, "A subject ness and common, sense. once broached is like an egg once! The remainder of the spring season,; poached." It is broken and no mat- here will be one of intense rivalry between the two undeyclasses, here in ter how bad (the news) it must be the I iveirsity. We are assured that i finished or -the populace. will arise it will be a friendly rivalry; the co- with one accord and deem the broach- mon sense of the contestants will dic- ! r "a heel." But 'as stated above, I tate that. Let us see at all times, as feel that I have been over-looked wel-l, that spirit of fair play which 'de-r carelessly. A s far as I can remiem- mands that every man be given a ! er this is the first year that the chance. Michigan men must never1 humor editor has not made Miebi- retrogress to scenes of "the mob and gamua for the last three or four deC- its victim."caries. Consider one protest lodged.I ... .. _ ;Said Bird Bunlk. jEDITORIAL COMMJNENTf (IIa'i'vard Crimson) The war made it mobre than ever al;- parent' that whole masses of peopleI were being led about by the nose. -Men- fought without knowing why they were fighting; storms of passion arose' out. of misapprehension. ThereforeE the resolve was taken in the heat or the battle, that the masses should be leavened by education, and the men'j should be taught ,to live peaceably' side by side through seeing one an- other clearly. In the U~nited States} the first material development of this idea was the formation of the Corn- n-ittee of One Hundred under the Pmad- ership of Elihu Root. Its purpose, announced early in March. is to bring. Duncan & Starling Graham 's' VIotIz Ends of tMe Diagonal I F -~'---~ -- The Daily t' Are you ALIVE? Use classifieds. ~-Adv. -, STRICTLY ROME' COOKING~ to the American voter the which form the necessary basis soundl reasoning upon intern. affairs." But it was to a, school of greater scope that the idealists war looked forward. They found a university soiflOwboe Man's Land where studow-s every nation might gather, as sof iil [ttiC nt 1 'of the would i~l NoI fr-oml in tOe D~ETROIT IJIITEXJ LNES Anm Arbor grid Ia( k-, TIME TABLE (Lastern l aindard *lime) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-- .':oo a.m., 7 :o, a.rn.. 8 :o o ..m., .or a.mn. and hourly to 9 :o5 p.m. Jackson Express C-rs (local stops w-,; i'f Aun Arbor)--9 :47 a.m., arnd- every two h ,urs to 9 '47 1. 1r1. Locai Cars Eaix* joud--7 :oo a.mn. a:6eeytv or o90.i i :oo p.m. To Ypsilanti 01ny-1 s :40 P.m.., 1i:15am I. To Saline--Change at \'psi~anti. Local Cars West Bound-7 :5o a.m., To Jackson and Kalamazoo--Lit r- ited-c'ars8-47, :0:47 anm., 12:.17, 2:47, 4,47 P.m1. To Jackson anti Lansing--Limited at 8:47 P-1.. i E f i i f{ I { i HELER'S STUDENT ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS S chednie in Effect October 18 L~ Central Tie (Slow Th~ee~ P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. 1:45 i A Adrian ... 12:45 8:45 ,:1 9:135 .. Saline .~.11:15 7:15 5:45 Q:45 gAr Ann A~rborLv. 10:45 6:4S Chamber of Commerce Bldg. D-L~aily. X-Daily except Sundays .uri holidays. Friday and Saturday special )uslu students leaves Adrian 1:45. Iavea Inn Arbot 4:45. JAMES iI. FP1.UOTT, Proprietor Phone 4G6 LUNCH 40.9 EAST JEFFERSON ST. 7,'1 L. i si'lne P.A Ilici A. 1; tFdito s- 1, ;csharHoy 1 rr~didorter :. C.'M o: iarty A. Donahue J. Z. Mack t, Editor .........11Wallae . 11ol fen's Edlitor ...........Mdarion Koch lay Magazine Editor . .. .I1. A. Donahoe is Jditor....... ...I. Aileb Editorial Board el Kerr Maurice B3erman lin tein Euge: e Carmichael Assistants e:; 11. Arnustro~ig Franklin D. Iiepfburl? e'y Ikificld Winona A. Hibbard A, ll:: ton Edwt ard J. 1higgin~s n J~ro %n 1)\cnnth C. Kellar C.Clark J.,lizabeth Liebermnann 1. Connahle john McGinnis adetute Cote Samuel moore in r. Coughlin Ai.11. Pryor Epl~stein NWl. I. Rafferty L'is6ke Robert G. amnsay t (arlinglise I \V-"'v' er S. Goodspee4c Soil 3. Schniitz is ("oulder JPhiilpAL. NWag-net- t1l1 Jlairn BUSINESS SAFF Telephone C960 BUSINESS MANAGER_ ALB3ERT J. PARKER famous Mediaeval universities, ex- change their ideas- on God and Man,, ,And hear the most learned lectures of every nation. Such a university I TAG i)AY In accordance with the custom of' sending: a number of poor youngsters' to the summer camp maintained un- der the auspies. of the Student Chris- tan Astiociation, the annual Tag Day campaign to obtain funds by audent ;k * *o The wEeather than we have been having cnduring lately reminds one to come forth with the old slogan, "Do your Chriatinas shopping early." OUIJA. Pardon mne for dinarreing, OUIJA, Would be a clearing house for inter- national misapprehension. Fortunately before the calm of peacCh a5 cooled the iron, another im)-; portant stet) in this direction hras beer) taken, in this case by law. Iii The Hague, the center of- neuItrality, ant academy for the study of internatinal 1923 MA.il.iy > 1f lfl.r3 1 2 3 ~i subscription takes place today. This but i: thinky you might better havelawsVtobeSfunde. To i every worthy cause represents the only or- t aidl, "Chiris tma IS slopping." You country mlay, send qualified stuzdenats, ganized movement on the campus tof know it is far to early to shop, including diplomzatic reparesentatives, do charitable work of any permanent* to hear world-famnouzs juit n nature, for in the organization' of the ID1ear Bank:s"ean sav ~rhowl zr,,,nt or -,.cin.i1l '! OPENING A NNOUN CEMENT We ewill open on TUESDAY, May 154b, at 7:- 30 P. M. wvith a complete line ol Jewelry. You will find a special assort- ment of, M-Jewelry, for your inspection. The openinq. Flowers for the ladies ADTHPLT TD AITATT