OFFICIALttLEW8PAPER OF THE U\IVERSITY OF MICHIGAN' 1'iblished every-.inornng except Monday duri t e tS6vr ar by the Board in Control f1tidet'-'l1ications. Merer o Western Conference Editorial The Assopi tAA esne is exclusively en- titled to the use fur republication of aill news dispatchescredited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and the local news pulihed therein. EInterej at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class matter. Subs ilpti4~bu y.,arnei( or mail, $3.50. Of cesAnn :A pr Press Building, May- nard Strcet. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ness, o6o. cnrununic.ationasnot to exceed 3oo ords if signed, the signature not necessarily to appear y rr t e an evidence of faith, anti -itices of ev(-nts will be published in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Un- signed -corntounw ens 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 Telephoness 2414 and 176:M MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. STAHL 4l News Editor... .. ....Paul Watzel City EFditor...............James B. Young Assistant City Editor..........Marion Kerr Editorial Board Chairman........R. Meiss Night Eitors- Ralph Byefs * RIatty IUoey J.'P. Dawson, Jr. J. y. RMack L. J. Vlershdorfer R. C. Moriarty H. A. Donahue Sports Editor . ... II. [cPike Surlay Magazine Editor.....Delbert Clark WomeAi's E."dito: .......Y. .lMarion Koch Humor Editor .. ....... Donald Coney Conference Editor..........I . B, Grundy Pictorial Editor ................Robert Tarr Music Editor................. H. Ailes Assistants i. FT. Pryor Dorothy -beinetts Maurice Berman R. A.K illington" W. B. Butler H4: t. Clark A. 13. Connable FVeljn J.. Coughlin Fhugeue Carmichael Serndette Cote. WAaitace F. Elliott T.1Fiske Maxwell Fead John .Garinthouse Isabel" Fisher Winona A. Hibbard " Samuel Moore T. G. McShane W. B. Rafferty W. IH. Stoneman Virginia Tryon P. M. Wagner A. P. Webbink Franklin Dickman Joseph Epstein J. IV',Ruwitch . A. 4Bacon BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 940 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER Advet ising.............John J. Hamel, Jr. dvertiing..........Edward C. onn :advertising........Walter K. Scherer Aeco nts...Laurence H. Favrot ircuia ion ........ ....David J. M. Park liations.............L. Beaumont Parks Assistants A new service is now provided for Michigan 4tudents with which a good- ly number of them are not yet ac- quainted. The University Health service, in newer and larger quar- ters, now maintains a student hospi- tal, which, however, is not a hospital in the usual sense of the word, where people are sent only in most serious cases. The Health service cares for students who are in any way "below par," whether suffering from colds or minor ailments, or more seriously af- flicted. Formerly students depressed with some slight illness stayed in their rooms attended by their room-mates, until they had supposedly recovered or become seriously ill. Occasionally one of them would return to work be- fo e he was really well and would thus prolong his period of convalescence, and often spread his malady to oth- ers. The new facilities at the Health service enable students who are ill to place themselves under careful suer- vision of nurses and doctors, by whom they will be properly cared for un- til they are well. Hospital care is absolutely free to students,.and it is to the advantage of any student suffering any physical im- pairment to report promptly for treat- ment there. The Health service should be used not only in correcting ail- ments, but should be consulted in matters pertaining to positive health. Much constructive advice can 'be ob- tained if the student but take the trouble to procure it. - EXTRAVAGANCE? The college of twenty years ago was regarded as an institution for the traing of professional men oly. It wa the rare exception that the man who did not intend to become either a doctor, ;lawyer, teacher, or a min- ister took a college course. Such study, with no definite end in view except to delay the young man's go- ing into his chosen work, was re- garded by all as a sinful waste of time and energy, to say nothing of the use- ful space such tommy-rot as Greek took up in a man's head. In those good old days the idea that a college education would. enable a man to more fully enjoy and understand life never occurred to the adults of the generation. Today, the graduate school of a uni- versity occupies much the same posi- tion in the minds of the majority of people as the college did twenty years ago. It is regarded as a luxu- ry that is reserved for those who con- template devoting their lives to a pro- fession. To \,consider taking more work in a college after having spent four years in academic pursuits is looked on as an additional waste o time. That this attitude towards graduate work is extremely fallacious is quite evident to the college man. It is only in the last two years In col- lege that the student is able to spe- cialize to any degree, and often nbt until his senior year. To have a con- summate knowledge of any field, a man must devote more than a year or two to it. At present, Harvard university, and many other of the eastern schools re- quire a bachelor's degree before spe- cialization in jany field is permitted. Business Administration and Law are the two best known examples at Har- vard. Four years is regarded as the minimum time that should be devoted to genral preparation. Only at the end of that time is the man considered ready to specialize. This semester four hundred and six- ty students are enrolled in the grad- uate school of the literary college of the University of Michigan. This is a rather low percentage, compared with the total enrollment in the col- lege. It is' evident that at present the graduate school is thought an extrava- gance in the popular mind. But opin-' ions are gradually changing, and ten years from now post-graduate stud- ies will undoubtedly be as sought aft- ver as are the undergraduate studies of today. Arid then, where will we go from there? UR3TED F I xo 3IMATTI WHIOh TEA LOSES KIPKE WILL LOLL G1 ' mWIN "DO YOU write that supposedly fun- ny colyum in The Daily?" she asked, holding us spellbound with the flue- tuations of her eyelashes. "My dear, it IS funny," we remon- strated dmittingly. "Wellit certainly is peculiar," she said..... "Left" left "Right" right flat The cruel thrust in In Left's Last verse Has made me Disbelieve I am Just "Right." \ CAMPUS OPINION LAST ED11 Editor, The Michigan Daily: In an editorial appearing in The Daily of Oct. 31, the statement is made by a contributor that today there isA nothing to distinguish the manner in A T which the college man dresses from that of the individual about town. To substantiate this argument, the writ- er cites the disappearance of peg-top trousers, and the like.B O8 ' However, other things have taken their place which does distinguish the college man from others. Today, it is nothing novel to see corduroy cuits years, to pass out of existence. Fra- being worn by men on the campus. ternities are already considering The city inan would no more think of whether or not to hold house parties wearing one as an every day suit, then during Junior Week. If the various he, would think of talping a trip to the houses could be brought together, moon. Again, it is certainly nothing some 'provision for a better and more uncommon to see "sheep-skins" being equitable distribution of parties be- worn by students. He who appears tween the two periods might be ar- thus attired is not the subject of ridi- ranged. It is the duty of the Student to cule but rather the rule. And yet, council to call such a meeting which 01 anyone wearing such a coat other than would, lead towards a reinstatement of O2 in a college town would be looked on Senior Week upon the social calendar. M as a factory worker or laborer of some or sort. We also have the so called 'self_ erasing footprint shoe" which as made DETROIT UNITED LINE$ its appearance lately on the campus. Ann Arbor and Jackson These shoes are worn by students, TIME TABLE and only by students excepting per- (iastern Standard Time) hap the Detroit Limited and Express Cars- hs the'police'6:oa.m., 7:oo a.m., 8:0o a.m., 9::o5 These days, there are as sharp dif- a.rn. and hourly to 9:o5 p.m. ferences in dress between college man Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ann Arbor)--9 :47 a.mn., and and townsman as there were ten years every two hours to 9:47 p.m. Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m. ago, but with the passage of years, and every two hours to 9:oo p. m., new distinctive forms of dress appear 1I:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-II:4o among the students that supersede Tq Saline--Change at Ypsilanti. that of the past. We of today see Local Cars West Bound-7:50 a.m., . .12:10 p.m. nothing peculiar in the mode of dress To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim- of college men, because it is largely cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, common .to 'alL, but in after years To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47 p.ml. when new fashions creep in the con- : trast will be marked. * %I 'ORES - I Liebe Right: Monday's last stanza. * * * col for theI Or Emulsion DEAR CALIGULA: I observe in the columns of the Time Snooze a story which says that down in Indiana there is a man and a woman who have been married 10 years and have 12 chil- dren-wait a minute: two sets of trip- lets and three pairs of twins. The fain- ily name, says the story, is Scott. HERE COMES THE THOUGHT: Wouldn't it be fitting and appropriate to name the next arrival "Great"? AD 1000. -Rhetoric Instructor: Write a de- scription of a group in action. Young Co-ed: Would two be con- sidered a group?1 * * * "I always miss the good things peo- ple say about me." "Don't miss much, do you." *' * * Only I2'Days M'ore get $1.00 for your d fountain pen-any ake or condition-at re of our stores. Better Flurry ALKiNS-FLETCHER D UG CO. 324 South State Street E. and S. University Aves. State and Packard Streets . . .,. 6 O NG A. G., '25P. Diviine and Is Doris B. 'unique 'ownsend H. Wolfe evth Scick eog e Rockwood - 'errb M. Hayden ;ugene IL. Iunn Vn. Graulich, Jr. ohn C. Haskin arve 'y l. Reed L. Puinami B.~ra rout . W .Cooper VI,le lower-, Alfred' M. White Wrn. ID. Roesser Allan S. Morton James A. Dryer Win.I. Good Clyde L. Hagerman .A. Hartwell, Jr. J. Plumenthal Howaid Hayden W. K. Kidder Henry Freud Hbert P Bostwick L. Pierce She doesn't use "n'est-ce-pas" < In writing to me. * * * . rch. DIRGE I cannot write As once I could; My words, alas! are weak and sod- den Though years agone they waxed as bright As fire, as strong as Mary Garden. I cannot seeY The heavens more; The autumn is but cause for cuss- ing; The Stars are distant as John D.; . The moon is only god of fussing. Doused is the visionary glim And God Apollo on the hummer; The Nine are heading straight for Orcus; And I am glum and getting glum- mer. For 1o, I am a luckless wight: I can't compare, although I would, The noble stuff I used to write- But don't get scared; I never could! TOMAS A CELANO. s, * * BOO EDITORIAL COMMENT TO THE STATE POLICE (Grand Rapids Press) Many Grand Rapids residents who attended the Michigan-Illinois football game at Anti Arbor will bear testi- mony to the series of traffic jams, which not only within the university city but on the roads east, and west and south, toward Detroit and Lan-! ing and Toledo, held up congested: lanes of automobiles in a smother off gasoline fumes for an hour or more at a time. The Press believes this is l an affair efor the attention of Col. Roy Vandercopk and the state police. Towns the size of Ann Arbor have no police force capable of meeting a traffic coigestion which would con- siderably bother the best corner cops in New York City. Boy Scouts sent in to help are useful but not trained well enough nor husky enough to clear out the jam. It was necessary Saturday to phone Detroit for policemen. A de-I tachment of mounted state police on' the job at such events could wholly prevent the original crush and send the thousands of cars safely and ex- peditiously on their way. This is a legitimate opportunity for the depart- ment of public safety to extend its use- fulness. 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 Hat! We do all kinds of HIGH CLASS Cleaning and Reblocking of hats at low prices for GOOD WORK. We also make and sell POP- ULAR PRICE and HIGH GRADE hats, FIT THEM TO YOUR HEAD and save' you a dohar 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 x8, 1922 Central Time (Slow Tinie D X X TD P.M. A.M. P.M.'P.M. 2:55 6:55 Lv. Morenci .Ar. 1:35 9:35 (Hlotel) 3.:45 7:45 r...Ariazi ....2:4 5 8:45 1215 8:15 - 'Tcumnseh .. 12:15 8:15 F:30 , :30 ... Clinton -,.. .- 12:00 8:0o 5:15 9:15 ...-Sahune -....'11 :15- 7:15 5 :45 9:45 Ar inn Arborlv. :oF5 - 6:45 (Court House Square) A.,M. D)-Daily. X--Daily except' Sundays and Holidays. Fridgy and Saturday special bus for students leaves Adrian J:45, leaves Ann Arbor 4:45. )AME SII. ELLIOTT, I roprietor Phone 026-At Adrian, iMicht. COMING SUNDAY Charles, 6T 94 F Y0 Lst To Obtain Applications For bsentee Ballots _ _ Ch nge! I R epubilcan Club Booths FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1922 Open from 2:00 to 5:00 Night Editor-HARRY L. HOEY NEW MAGAZINES The last decade has .,witnessed the gradual evolution of the literary mag azine in the United States. Ten years ago only a few national publications were devoted turely to literature, and these were largely in the hands of old fogies and unsatisfactory as to sub- ject matter and treatment. Within the last few years there has been a grad- ual influx of literary magazines of a high calibre until at present the num- ber exceeds twenty-five., The fact that these newer ,publications are for the most part thriving financially would indicate that they serve a constituen cy which our standard magazines have not reached, or a,. any rate, have not completely satisfied. Tlhe literary magazine as we now know it differs from the ordinary pub- lication in that it makes no attempt to reap large gains through.appealing to advertisers. It does not aim to dif- fuse a few worth while, articles -as oke s, in with an overflow of medioc- rity. It is concerned merely with plac- ing the works of our b'est contempor- ary writers before its constituency, caring not so much how many read them, as who read them. Judging these magazines in the light of their accomplishments most of them have been successful. Their contributors are largely youthful rad- icals with sufficient education to. know what they are about, with abil- ity to write inspiringly, and a desire to strike at the fundamentals of life, rather than merely to appeal to the curiosity of the public in a journal- istic manner. Their chief value lies not in the opinions which they give out, but in the thought that is stimu- lated by these opinions. These literary publications are ef- fective influences in our national ex- istence. While they may be' read only by a few, they serve to bring before the discriminating reading public the best produced by our modern authors, and thus inspire these men by insur- ing them an audience-to write for Front of Nickels Arcade Engineering Arch U. Hall Notary Pubilo on Third Floor Mioh!gan -Union, THE KPYS of Geddes aver with fitting ceremony to be pr to the chump who asks a que three Tpinutes to the hour. calr * * * HYMN OF HATE Oh, How I hate to see, By I A blonde-faced girl With a brunette deck! -Daily * * * THE ,PILLORY ILLINOIS FIGHTS WISCO3 TODAY ON ANN ARBO FIELD -Daily Ma Something our sport staff nue are TO BE, OR NOT TO IE esented (Cornell Daily Sun) stion at Ever since the failure of last year's 'Senior Week, considerable uncertainty culus. has been expressed as to whether it 1 should be repeated this June. Instead of the usual ten or fifteen fraternities Ifeck!' entertaining, only two or three ven- tured to hold house parties at all. Outside of a few impromptu subscrip- Illini. tion dances there were no outstanding social events; the customary open dances were entirely lacking. On the NSIN other hand, those who attended- the U Senior Ball or the concert given by the Musical Clubs are convinced that aroon. nothing could have been done to make missed. them more attractive. The concert was well attended, but the Senior Ball re- * sulted in a deficit which caine close to * absorbing all of the class funds. It * was a serious blow, coning after grad, * uation and left a ridiculously small sum with which to endow the class * secretary. The fault was certainly not with'the committee. No morer attractive or efficient arrangements could have been made, than were provided for the ut 1922 Senior Ball. All steps had been taken to ascertain how many students would be on hand. The poor attend- re ance at Senior Week in general was ess largely responsible for the small re- ceipts It was a condition that could ..Y 3 i r.m . rig,, 5 i r * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I1ESEURE Blilliards BROS. Pool PIE WITH A RICK Attorneys for a Chicago distillery made the assertion that alcoholic h- quors haye great value as an aid to the culinary arts. They contend that its use in such articles as mim*e pie should be permitted. There may be a grain of truth in what they say. Certainly the framers of the Volstead Act did not mean to deprive us of such a delicay as mince pie. If the interpreters of the-law should permit the -free use of alcoholic bev- erages in mince pie and other foods where it is a "necessity," the baking business would certainly return to "nor'malcy" and perhaps do a little better than that. And who on earth would 'ever think of using such pal- lid flavorings as nutmeg, vanilla or lemon extract any more? The leisure class. Terrible Times We were awfully hungry So we bought one withot And led it into A movie , Thinking to eat it the] In the enveloping darkn( In peace ,. " '? I ; : , i s - . ., 1^ Tuxedo Suits Tailored To your individual. measurement $ .00 $45 to $ 8500 I And then the blighted electri- not be easily foreseen. For the coming cian year, this experience of 1922 should be Turned up the lights! taken as an example, and plans should * * * be made to prevent its recurrence. Our stocks are filled with new ideas in Tuxedo waistcoats, shirts, ties and Krementz jewelry for your approval. ISN'T IT strange that whenever we get a GOOD team we never can find any other good teams to play with it? * * * Life is darn funny. * * * i One of the most feasible explana- tions for the social breakdown of Sen- ior Week was the excessive emphasis placed upon the mid-year festivities. More houses gave parties during Jun- ior Week than had entertained for sev- eral years previously. Whether this was directly responsible for the fall- ing off at the end of the term or not, it must have had considerable bear- ing. , I : Every day we cut out run it in this colyum. * * * a strip and TINK tH c The Home DER & COMPANY Among our. modern conveniences there $ght to be soine way of mov- ing Ohio's stadium up here to accom-I Sometimes we wish it were fun- nier.s South State at William Street e of Better Clothes und Furnishings at Fair Prices I E I Y