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October 25, 1922 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-10-25

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

41 Af4f

41 .mq

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE'
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday
during the University year by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
Member of Western Conference Editorial
Association.
The Associated Press is exclusively en-
titled to the use for republiceition of all
news dispatches credited to it or not other-
wise credited in this paper and the local
news published therein.
Fn'ere3l at the postoffice at' Ann Arbor,
Michigan, as second class matter.
Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50.
Offices:etAnn Arbor Press Building, May-
nard Street.
Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176.M; Busi-
,less, 96o.
Communications not to exceed 300 words
if signed, the signature not, neces-sarily to
appear in print, but as an evidence of faith,
and niotices of events will be published in
The Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if
left at or mailed to The Daily office. Un-
signed communications will receive no con-
sideration. No manuscript will be returned
unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily
does not necessarily endorse the sentiments
expressed in the communications,
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephones, 2414 and 176-3I
MANAGING EDITOR
MARION B. STAHL
hews Editor.................Paul Watzel
u.ty FEditor.... .......James Ii. Young
Assistant City Editor ....'...,.Marion Kerr
Editorial Board Chairman ... .E. R. Meiss
Night .Elditors-t
Ralph Byers IHaury Hoey
J. P. Dawson, Jr. J. E. Mack
L.. J Hershdorfer R. C. Moriarty
H1. A. Donahue
Sports Editor..............F. rHMcPhe
Sunday 'Magazine Editor.... .Delbert Clark
Womei's Editor.............Marion Koch
humor Editor..............Donald Coney
Conference Editor........H. B. GOrundy
Pictorial Editor ................Robert Tarr
Music Editor.....................,H. Ailes
Assistants
M. 1. Pryor John Garlinhouse
Dorothy Bennetts Isabel Fishet
Maurice Bet man Winona A. Hibbard'
R. A. Billington Samuel Moore
W. B. Butler '! :. McShane
H. C. Clark W. B. Rafferty
A. B. Connable W. H. Stoneman
Evelyn J. Coughlin Virginia Tryon
Eugene Carmichael P. M. Wagner
Biernadette Cote A.- P. Webbink
WallaceF. EIlli.tt franklin Dick'nan'
'x. r,. F iske' Joseph Epstein
Maxwell Fead J. W. Ruwitch
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER
ALBERT J. MARKERx
Advertising........John J. Hamel,, Jr.
Advertising.......... Edward F. Conlin
Advertising..............Walter K. Scherer
Accounts.............Laurence 1-. Favrot
Circulation .. ........ .David J. M. Park
Publication.............L. Beaumont Parks
Assistants

shadowed its backwoods past, alas that
St. Joseph, Mich., and environs, should
be tAhe scene of an occurrence which
cannot but send America back to the
pioneer stage in the eyes of the
world.
Although lions may be the mon-
archs of the forest and may furnish
satisfactory decorations for sundry
coats of arms and merry-go-rounds,
few people would contend that they'
add to the dignity of a community
when running at large in its ntdst.
That is the catastrophe which has
come to St. Joseph. Although,.no one
has seen any lions, every evidence
points to the fact that these anachron-
isms of a backwoods day have come
forth from some unknown jungle to
haunt America even as a purple past.
So convinced is St. Joseph about
the presence of the beasts that an
expert lion hunter from Chicago and
his wife have been summoned to the
scene of the rally and intended to have
every single animal trapped by last
night. Meanwhile the rest of the na-
tion is holding its breath In suspense
lest this new reversion of America,
to savagery be aired abroad by our
indiscreet press. It is hoped, how-
'ev'er, that the newspapers will be
satisfied with the "bear" stories they
already have, and will consent to let
the lions alone.
Only one real hope remains in the
breasts of those who think America
too highly civilized to be mixed up in
an affair with jungle beasts. If they
are right, everything will be cleared
up, and the entire continent will be
vindicated. Once before America was
frightened by the ravages of a herd
of elephanta, animals which when
captured were returned to the circus
whence they had escaped.
One hundred and ten million inhab-
itants of this fair country should
bend their knees tonight and pray that
the St. Joseph lions may be only
members of a traveling zoo out on a
party, in order that America's civili-
zation may travel on triumphantly,
and not suffer the handicap of a blot
on the 'scutcheon.
WHIMSIES
Today the Michigan student body
will have the opportunity of subscrib-
ng to Whimsies, which will be pub-
lished bi-monthly during the current
term. Whimsies is distinctly different
from any other campus publication, in
that it is purely a literary magazine,
essaying to publish literary, material
of the highest type obtainable among
Michigan students.
The magazine was started three
years ago, and in this short period has
published. many articles of genuine
worth. .In so, far as it has aimed to
foster .interest in the attainment of
literary excelleice it has met with
the moral support of the campus. To-
day students will have the opportunity
to gve it material support, in the na-
ture of subscriptions to the maga-
zine. A hearty response is necessary
if Whimsies is to continue its work.

OATED
0A~uROLLS
MICHIGAN WINS
(JSASAURDAYin
"DOWN WHERE BROADWAY
BEGINS"
Down where the bright lights never
cease burning,
Down where gay Joy keeps Life's
wheel turning,
That's where Broadway begins.
Down where the pace is a little
swifter.
Where a soft couch awaits the care-
free drifter,
And no one cares for the preaching
lifter-
That's where Broadway begins.
Down where the nights are a little
brighter,
Where the bonds of Folly are a little
tighter,
That's where Broadway begins.
Down where the bands never .stop
playing,
Where for every dance the Devil is
paying,
While in saddened, homes mothers are
praying,
That's where Broadway begins.
Down where men's hearts with grief
are aching
Where the vows of love some fool
is breaking,
That's where Broadway begins;
Where there's much of singing and
more of crying,-
Where there's much of laughing and
more of sighing,
Where the road is pawed with Folly
and lying,
That's where Broadway begins.
DE JOISE BOID.
Quoted From Somewhere
"If we weresa great university with
a new million dollar stadium erected!
to the cause of the higher educationI
we guess we'd dedicate it with a two-:
hour address by Calvin Coolidge in-
stead of the more spectacular foot-
ball licking."
As a Faculty Man Sees It
Let us sing:
Casey, Jones is now a faculty man,
Puts in his lectures all the pep he
can
He's glad that Novembember is a-
coming soon
For he hasn't had a payday since the
Last of June.
CAL CULUS.
* * *
SPCA - SPCA - SPCA - SPCA -
SPCA2
One day way back in the middle of
the summer, I met a young gentle-
man named Jimmy La Mothe. He was
a sturdy knight of the cloth, born to
the wool, as it were, and in his. eye
was the unmistakable gleam of that

I EDITORIAL COMMENT
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
(Ann Arbor Times News)
Self control, executive ability, in-
cluding the knack of controlling oth-
ers, and government, or the control
which society exercises over itself; all
three of these forms of control are
included in the training received in a
university.
Self control must first be learned,
for no man can exercise real control
over others until he can control him-
self. Executive ability, or the knack ,
of controlling others so that a maxi-E
mum efficiency is attained by the
group, is the next important step.'
Then come lessons in government,
where individuals are submerged inf
the larger units of society.-
Much of all these phases of gov-
ernment can be learned in the uni-
versity, but it is largely in the life of
the campus that such lessons are
taught and not in classrooms.
The social organization of the aver-
'age university campus is such that
students are thrown into each other's
company. Mixing is forced on every-
one, and the great value of getting
the other fellow's viewpoint is learned,
unconsciously. Often the organiza-
tion of society outside the campus is
such as to discourage mixing, and a
real effort is needed to make social
connections.
Campus life, with its excess of or-
ganization, serves a useful purpose in
giving ample opportunity to every
student to meet his fellows to broad-
en his outlook and his experiences, to
learn self control and, in a small way,
to control others. Only in recent
years, however, has much first hand
instruction in government been given
to university students. Government
used to be seen by students only
from the viewpoint of the governed.
Student self government is a com-
paratively new thing, but it has al-
ready proved successful. While the
guidance of older heads is still need-'
ed frequently, University of Michigan
students are already learning to gov-
ern themselves in many ways. In
questions of discipline and conduct
the students are often far better able
to govern themselves than would be
any faculty body.
Student self government has played
a big part in the abolition of hazing.
Freshmen and sophomores who would
resent advice from members of the
faculty as being tinged with an old
man's viewpoint are learning to 're-
spect the better judgment of older
students, those who have been elected
to the Student council by their fel-
low classmates.(
Objecting to patronizing words of
wisdom from their leaders, they wel-
comed, in many cases, tips' on conduct
from upper classmen.
Society generally has been passing
through an unsettled period since the
war. That almost worn out expres-
sion, "Jazz," has been made to repre-
sent what many have felt was an un-:
natural element tending to upset and
unsettle social standards. An out-
break of hazing has been one result
on the campus of this general spirit
of unrest.I
Studea self government has faced
a real test in this outbreak of haz-
ing, and it has won an encouraging
victory. While there have been a few
cases in which students refused to
recognize the advice of those empow-
ered to guide campus conduct, the
vast majority of students have backed.
up their elected representatives in a
way to call 'forth deserved, praise
from members of the faculty.
In learning to govern themselves,

university students learn a great les-
son in citizenship, for self govern-
ment in any group teaches all three
forms of control. It is a fine lesson,
too, for young people to learn early,
that control of others and group gov-
ernment come easily enough, once
men have learned to control them-
selves.

LAST EDITION OF

MICHIGAN

SONG

BOOK

:-:"AT

GRAH'AMS'
BOTH STORES

Ir er n-ir

ed wrestling mats are in constant use.
The time has come when we must
recognize one of the greatest of all
sports, a sport that originated.with the
first tribes of man and has stayed with!
us through all the, ages. The first
Olympic games featured wrestling.
Wrestling will be featured again.

e . .

.m.

WREN THE POSTMAN

DETROIT UNITED LINE$
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIME TABLE
(Eastern' Standaid Time)
Detroit Limitedtand Express Cars.
6:0o a.m., 7:oo a.m., 8:oo a.m., 9:05
a.m. and hourly to 9:0O5 p.m.
Jackson Express Cars (local stops
west of Ann Arbor)-g:47 a.m., and
every two hours to 9 -47 p.m.
Local Cars East Bound-7 :00 a-..
and every two hours to 9:0o p. m.,
11 :oo p.m.aTo Ypsilanti only-i1:40
p~m., ;1 ,a.m.
To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-7 :50 a.m.,
12:10 p.m.
To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim-
ited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47,
4:47 p.m.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at
8:47lp.mI.

1

I

comes with a letter you in-
stinctively note the character of
the envelope and later that of
Ug wlthe enclosure. As you judge
' others so others will judge you.
So use correct stationery, cor-
r : rect in quality, shape, size and
color. You can obtain it here
at all times and at a price which
makes the use of incorrect sta-
tionery ridiculous.
0. D. MORRILL
17 NICKELS ARCADIE
Order Your Engraved Greeting Cards While the Selection
is still good.

r
Ir,

'11

Townsend H.kWolfe
Kenneth Seick
George Rockwood
Perry M. Hayden
Eugene L. Dunne
Wm. Graulich, Jr.
John C. flaskin
Harvey E. Reed
C. 1~. Putnam
E. T. Armantrout
i. W. Cooper
Val' ce Flower
dw 13. iedle
Ilar lidL.I1-1cal

Alfred M. White
Win. D. Roesser
Allan S. Morton.
James A. Dryer
Wm. H. Good
Clyde L. Hagerman
A.- Hartwell, Jr.
J: Blu penthal
Howard Hayden
W.I K. Kidder
henry Freud
Her berrtP Bostwick-
L. Pierce

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1922
Night Editor-ROBT. C. MORIARTY
A'NATIONAL UNIVERSITY
Prof. Albert Bushnell Hart of Har-
vard has placed Michigan on his list
of "national" universities, a distinc-
tion which he confers upon only five
others, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Chi-
cago, and Cornell. Only these sir
universities, in Professor Bushnell's
opinion, have had sufficient influence
upon American history, offer adequate
enough curricula,', and draw their
student bodies from territories suf-
ficiently diffused, to be worthy of the
'term "national".
It is significant that Michigan is'
the only one of a number of great'
state universities that. Professor
Bushnell recognizes. Pennsylvania,
California, Illinois, Ohio State, all
truly splendid institutions, are lack-
ing in one or the other of the -char-
acteristics which make Michigan more
than. merely a state university. One's
curricula is too t limited, another'sI
students are drawn from too limited
an area, and so on..
4At times when the Universiy has
seemed to be threatened with over-
growth, well-meaning citizens of the
state have suggested that only resi-
dents of Michigan be allowed k theE
privileges of securing their educa-_
tions here. They have argued that a
state university has no interest in
providing education for the non-res-
idents, and they have claimed that
the taxpayers should not be burdened
with the extra' cost involved. Fortu,
nately, such sentiment has never
grown strong enough to secure action,
and Michigan's. graduates, as a re-
sult, are scattered broadcast through-
out the world.
The policy of dispensing education
to any who wishes it has born fruit.
It has raised Michigan above the rank
of merely a university for the state
into the select group of colleges which
may be rightly classed as American,
and it has made the state of Michigan
the patron of an educational institu-
tion which has had its influence upon
the rieople of the entire world as well

1922 OCTOBER 1922
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31
Start Right With a Good Hatt
We do all kinds of HIGH
CLASS Cleaning and Reblocking
of hats at low prides for GOOD
WORK.
We also make and sell POP-
ULAR PRICE and HIGH
GRADE hats, FIT THEM TO
dollar or more on a hat.
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 Packard Street Phone 1792
(Where D.U.R, Stops
at State Street)
MORENCI-ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS
Schedule in Effect October 8, t192a
Central Time (Slow Time)
D X X 1
P.M. A.M %. P.M. P.M.
z:55 6:55 Lv. Morenei .Ar. :35 9:35
(Hotel)
3 45 7:45 .. . - Adrian .... 12:45 8:45
:15 8:1s ...Tecumseh ... 2 :15 8:15
14:30 8:;#0 ... . Clinton ...12i:00 8:00
5:5 9:15 Saline ..11:5 7:15
5:45 9:45 Arta ArborLv. o:45 6:45
(Court House Square) A. M.
D--Daily. X-Daily except Sundays
and Holidays.
Meet D. U. R. cars at Saline, both ways.
JAMES H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor
Phone 926-M Adrian, Mich.
UNIVERSITY
DINING
ROOMS
Under
New Management
If you're particular about the
things you eat; if the high-
est quality and best foods
appeal to you; if you de-
mand first-class cooking and
A-1 service; if any of these
things are true, then the Uni-
versity Dining Rooms are
the place for you.
TWO MEALS . . . . $5.50
THREE MEALS . . $6.50
1212 South
University Ave.

-

Draperies Make the Home
More Homelike
GET YOURS AT
- FPilbeam y& Marz
206 South Fourth, St. By Special Order

dauntless courage which overcometh
all obstacles and turneth not tail at
TABLE TALK the smell of the deadly moth-bawl.
Someone has remarxed that you can But just the other day right back
tell a man's intelligence by the jokes in the middle of this week, I met my
he laughs' at, and to a considerable old friend flittering aimlessly down
extent this may be true. But what State street, the gleam of his eye re-,
may be an even better criterion of duced to a mere flame. There was
intellect is one which Ralph Carson, about him that atmosphere of an un-
returned Rhodes scholar, hinted at in resisted doom which one sees only
a talk he gave last week before the about him who has sniffed the fatal
Ann Arbor Exchange. ball that has his name graved on it,
After a highly interesting descrip- and I was struck with pity at the
tion of Oxford life and' ways, Mr. Car- dumb hopelessness of his whole atti-
son declared:r "An American cannotI tude.
help notice the keen intellectualityof ,"Why Jimmy," I chirruped. "What-
the British students. In many re- ever has done this to you?"
spects they have a zeal and keenness "Ah, replied Jimmy in a doleful
we do not. Their table'ralk is about voice, "well may you exclaim! I am
subjects an American would marvel without home, without shelter, with-
at. They know history and poetry and out hope. Yesterday Adelaide Ko-Ed
music and what is being done and felt the bite of bitter winds, and shook.
has been done in all." . from the folds of her cat-fur coat my-
self, my family, and all of our -rela-
It might be a good idea if the Uni- tions I am now going out to find a
versity professors came to an under- nice convenient canned-heatcan in
standing with each other as to wheth- which to drown my woe."

"R-r-roll Out."
y, ohik e r s ! T h e re 's a
crispness and tang to
the air! Y'hol for a hiket A
snug cap, a pair of knickers,
and a sports sweater do the
trick! And talking about
sweaters-=We've a limited
number of beauties at rock-
bottom prices! Also caps.
And knickers!
The new sweaters now
showing in our windows
will interest you.
5.00 up

er classes begin at ten minutes after
the hour and stop on the hour, or
whether they begin on the hour and
stop at ten minutes to the hour.
Meanwhile, the students will continue
to come unavoidably late in a num-
ber of cases.

. Y

,or m7en 9 sAlnce 1949

EMPTY.I

* * *

THE SECRET OF ENDYMION'S
WOE

UNIVERSITY WRESTLING
(Dal, Iini)

}

Fame is gained in peculiar ways.
When Frederick Edrupt, now door-
keeper of the Middle Temple, Lon-
don, ran errands many years ago for
a young and struggling writer, he

}
13'
1
4
i

little thought that s'ome day]
ture would be syndicated in
pers of the world because
one-time messenger boy for
Dickens.

his pic-
the pa-
he was'
Charles

Selene, lovely goddess of the moon, , How do they do it? Ames college,
And youth Endymion were wont to one of the smaller educational institu-
. spoon. tions of the West, not yet admitted
To visit punishment for this affair, into the Big Ten Conference, recently,
Zeus doomed the reckless youth to showed the entrants in the Western
sleep fore'er. intercollegiate individual wrestling
Dear Reader, when you work your championships, that it was in a class
secret still, by itself. Of the five Ames men chos-
Just think how moonshine brought en to' compete in the titular bouts,
this youth to ill. four men won the individual cham-
ARISTOPHANES. pionship in their respective classes.
* * * This meet carried no bearing on the
NO WONDER the big ditcher is championship, as the title was award-
working up the valley from the pow- ed on a percentage basis to wrestlers
er-house. Think of all these 200 representing the University of Illinois.
dents saying "Spit here." However, the meet did leave in its
* * ' * wake a lesson worth heeding. With a
Women's League student body of only two or three
"ALL WOMEN ON CAMPUS CANVAS" thousand students, the Hawkeye col-
-poster on Libe bulletin board. lege has turned out the best team in
There's always, a sparring match the West for almost five consecutive
when they try to get a half-nelson on years. True, Iowa is a wrestling
our pocketbooks. state, but there is another and more
* * * definite reason for this unusual suc-
We are glad to notice one thing. cess.
* * * Wrestling, one of the best builders

AIS C.HA'

"I " P i + atie i'f Stdr ian £rna 'tr"x

ELAA

Every year a convention of one
kind or another, medical or suffrag-
ette, tells us that kissing is unsani-
tary and must go. But so far noth-
ing has been done about the matter.'
The convention which met last week
suggests that nose-rubbing be used
as a substitute.
Isn't it about time for the "In"
doors of University hall to be paint-

PL AYED AT HILL AUDITORIUM LAST NIGHT
Unless you were there you did not see him.
But you can hear him every day in your
own home on Victor records.
We have all his' records.
3~Ini~ AM--i M £1eM' _X--s

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