THE MICHIGAN DAILY TU Fje £idrtijun Daity FFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HICHIGAN ibl'ihed every morning except Monday ng the Unriversity year by the Board in :rol of Student Publications. ember of Western Conference Editorial ciation. he Associated Press is exclusively en- I to the use' for republication of all s dispatches credited to it or not other- credited in this paper and the local a published therein, ntere3 at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, higan, as second class matter. ibscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. flices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May Street. hones: Editorial, 2414 and ,76-M; Busi' * 6o. mmunieations not to exceed 300 words igned, the signature not necessarily t ar in print, bit auran evence1sf faith, notices of events will be publishwed i') Daily at the discretion of Fhe Editor. i a mornailed toThe i)aily fri ?. tn ied comr uni,atiouis vt ill rr _ ven;;on ration. No manuscript will i euue &s the writer encloses postage. l Snotinecessarily endorse the sentiments essed in the communications. nue, just east of Hill auditorium. Thus from a fond dream the Women's building was converted, as if over night, into a definite reality of the most satisfying kind, to materialize in 1926, contingent only upon the suc- cess of plans to be devised for raisingR the prescribed construction and en- dowment fund. These plans have since been put actively into effect. The prospect of a splendid Women's building in the near future should be compelling, even to those students who will not witness its realization until after they shall have become alumnae. It is safe to say that there is no alumnus who, a half-dozen years ago, invested in the then prospective Michigan Union, but will affirm today that he has felt repaid many times over, in satisfaction, by the successful consummation of that project - the pride of Michigan and the model for other universities.1 The present women students have a similar opportunity to gain an im- measureable amount of enduring sat- isfaction, by resolving to subscribe, during the three-day drive for a life membership in the League. "EveryI Woman a Member," is the clarion slo- gan which will spur the efforts of the organized workers, and should make their appeal Irresistible. EDITORIAL STAFF ephones, 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR' MARION B. STAHL4 T ASED RLL HAVE YOU SAVED YOUR OPPY FOR NEXTYEARI THERE IS at last, thank God, a. thermometer on the fro'nt of the Li- brary whose rise we can watch with perfect equanimity. We refer to the onward and upward arrow of the Woman's League Life Membership Drive which we presume will soon be painted with red ink. At least here is one drive in which the down-trodden male will. not be asked to partici- pate. Or is there an associate mem- bership for men! TO A BENIGHTED YOUNG FRESH- MAN NAMED PARKS WE CONVEYED THE SUBSEQUENT REMARKS: "WHY DO YOU CHOSE TO WRITE UMLAUT U'S?" SAID HE: "I MAKE GERMAN MARKS!" * * * Blue Laws fcr the Cancer "Nine cases out of 10," says Our Own Daily, regarding the anti-cancer c "!;pa gn, "do not cause pain in the early stages. This is unfortunate." ud this from the Ed page. "The Ii rity~ wedical school is to co- operate with the national officials. . ..." Who, even for cancer, wants to submit to a co-operation? S* * "i ANT HEARTNE'ER-" WHAT if you n CHURCH and at the church .OU saw the adorable GIRL in your French CLASS and you said f ELLO like a damn IDIOT and she mur- r,= mu red HELLO like an angel AND then you let HER walk home ALONE wouldn't you SPEND the next three DAYS trying to think of an EFFECTIVE way to kick YOURSELF as I did? urch. Our Own Freshman is so ignorant that he thinks "The Divine Comedy" is mack Sennet's masterpiece. * * * ews IEditor....,....... Paul Watzeac__ ity Editor ....... James t nn ssistant City F-dr ....aondWANTED: SELF-EXPRESSION ditorial Board Chairman,..,..t , . iss ight Edit rs Much has been said from time to Ralph Byers laf vIfc J. P. Dawson Jr. time concerning the lack of opportu-' ,. i. lcrsh .rC arty nity for student self-expresion at, ports Editorn .-cP Michigan. Whether this has resulted unday Magazine Ed tor,... ,Delbcrt Clark from a lack of observation upon theI or E' d art of those who have made the con- us Editor ...... II A;1e. H. Pryor rothy iemiett s urice 13 rman A. Billington Cone r. Car Assistants Iuhn Comrr bouse sabel Fihet \'.olla 1 i ma T. Ga . Hiblhcie XVB R afferty , \. Wagner A. f' Wc.hbnk Ifnklin lit Kon f Joseph Epstein W. RuwitcA J. A. Bacon BUSINESS STAFi1 Teleph one (60 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER fdvertising.............John J. Flamel, Jr. Xdvei tising...............Edward F. Conlin Advertising..............Walter K. Scherer ccouns.... .....Laurence H. Favrot :ircuiaiiou .........David J5. Id.ark' Publication ...........I,. Beaumont Parks Assistants townsend 1. Wolfe Alfrcd M. White Kenneth Seick Win. D: Roesser George Rockwood Allan S. Morton Perry '.A ,iayden James A. Dryer hugeiie I,. Dunne Wi. R. Good Wm. Graulich, Jr. Clyde L. Hagerman John 'C., Hass n 4. Hartwell, Jr. havrv ] 'Deed J . Blumenthalr L Putnam Fb0ward Haydn '. DArnt roar 'W. K. Kidder' E. W. Cooper Henry Freud S.allace Flower He rert P Bostwick Fdw B. Ricedle L. Pierce Ha t L. Ilale TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1922 Night Editor-RALPH N. BYERS ARE YOt GOING? Despite the fact that the Minnesota- Nlichigan game is less than two weeks >ff, only a very few students have sgned up to take the special train which will be secured for the occasion f a minimum of 200 students signify heir intention to go. A number of students who intend to' aecompany the team to Minneapolis, t- seems, are delaying their final de- vision until after they learn the re- sults 'of next Saturday's game with Wisconsin. While this is not an un- xpected procedure ordinarily, those who hold off until next week in this tentions or not is,-of course, a mat- ter of question. But the student pub- lications, at least, have found to their disappointment, that in general the student does not caresto exert his privilege of self-expression. One of the interesting features of Chimes has been up to the present time that section known as "Hot Off the Diagonal". In it were printed any' contributions from the University body upon topics of interest, regard- less of their point of view. Yet, this section was discontinued early in the present year because of a lack of stu- dent contributions to support it. Other publications, too, have ,found the same scarcity of stu{ v opiniion as evidenced through communications.{ The Daily has set aside an entire col- umn which can be devoted to the ex- pression of campus discusion. Despite this accommodation, only once in ;a great while are communications sub- mited for that column, and the few that, are turned in usually represent the work of some instructor in the University. The various criticisms and discus- sions constantly carried on from day to day indicate that students really do have ideas about things. 'Evidently it is mere laziness or lack of energy which accounts for the fact that so few of their number take the trou- ble to air their opinions where they may ,be of some good.. Student self-expression is not cramped at Michigan. The publica- tions have made special provisions to see to that, even to the extent that the name of the writer of a commu- nication need not necessarily be di- vulged in the. publication of it. It is only up to the students, when they have an idea which they feel should be shared by the rest of the student body, to take advantage of the privi- lege for self-expression which the1 publications afford.{ NEW LEARNING CENTERS Our county jails are not such odi- our abodes as they once were. Evan- iyA lft n d m rohrnll nur rvmin a- CAMPUS OPINION Editor, The Michigan Daily: In some amazement I have read the article in yesterday's Daily in full- some praise of the New York Nation, with especial emphasis upon its splen- did "patriotic" attitude during the late war period; with which attitude the soul of the author of the review was in such full accord. The writer intimated further that he has been a constant reader of the Nation for so long that he cannot remember when the acquaintance began, but some of your readers may be less informed i concerning the war history of our then leading literay-political weekly. The Nation and the N. Y. Evening Post were at the time owned and their polics controlled by Oswald Garrison Villard, pacifist and pro-German, and one of the most aggressive in that class. An intimate friend of both President Wilson and Count von Bernstoff, his counsels have been be- lieved by some to have played a part in either forming or maintaining the admlnstration's attitude toward Ger- mnany during the interminable period of note writing. The editor of the Ntuai.n an the associate editor of the Pf;,iA both resigned, and each as told the writer that he did so because he c(yld not longer take responsibility for the policy of his paper and main- 'tie his self-respect as an American eitize>; -et both these men would crt niv he classed not as extremists nit Ka moderates. The successor to Mr. Fuller as editor of the Nation has appeared to have no such compunc- duns. Patriotic professors in the Uni- Uirsity of Michigan who for years had bwk->u subscribers to the Nation stop- pald their subscriptions and sent sting- ing rebukes to the office of the pa- per. Theodore Roosevelt on more than one occasion publicly denounced the Nation and the New Republic for j their anti-American attitude.j When the long series of plots against the American government hatched in the German Embassy and its sub-office in New York City had been brought to an end by the hand- ing of his passports to the German ambassador, the New York Times de- scribed with some fullness the touch- ing farewell interview which took place between Villard and von Bern- atorff. Previous to this at a public asembly in New York City where Vil- lard had made an outrageous anti-. American speech, he was interrupted from the audience by Mr. Henry- A. Wise Wood who put to him the ques tion whether in the event of an inva- sion of New York City by the German armies he would fight to defend his home. His reply was a decisive No.' Asked if in case the women of his family were to e treated by the Ger- man soldiery as were the women of Belgium and France, he would inter- fere to protect-them, he declined'to answer. It seems necessary to add that judg- ed by purely literary standards the Nation has taken the foremost pace among our weekly journals and has been excelled by but few anywhere in the English-speaking world. This is the' secret of its hold upon the col- lege-trained man and measures its re- sponsibility for the generally apathet- ic atitude of the American intellectual in face of the great perils which con- fronted the nation between 1914 and 1918. W. H. H. Lose something? the Daily will find A classified it.-Adv. in I . ip DELICIOUS t DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Car- 6:oo a.m., 7:00 a.m., 8:oo a~im., 9:o5 a.m. and hourly to 9:05 p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:47 a.m., and every two hours to 9:47 p.m. Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m. and every two hours to 9:oo p. 'm., I :0o apma. To Ypsilanti only-xix:40 P.m., I :15 a.m. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound- :5 oa.mn., 12:10 p.M. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim- ited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 1 2:47, 2:47, 4 J47 k d.111. To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at :3:47 P.m. Yes, Everyone Says So When Tasting GILBERT'S CHOCOLATES ALWAYS NICE AND FRESH -AT - 'the Eberbach& Son*Co. 200-204 EAST LIBERTY STREET LAST EDITION OF 1922 NOVEMBER 1922 S M .W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 14 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 '20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 2S 29 30 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 j dollar or more on a hat. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street Phone 1792 (Where D.U.R. Stops at State 'Street) L Does our name have a too formal sound? MICHIGAN SON G BOOK :-: A T Do you hesitate because of it? Then quiet your doubts, For our American Management With Chefs of Both Nationalities Is an Ideal Combination! *" BOTH STORIES MORENCI-ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedule in Effect October t8. 1922 Central Time (Slow Tine) D7 X X D P.M. AM. P.M. P.M. -:55 6:55 Lv. Morenci .Ar. 1:35 9:35 (H3otel) 3:45 7:45A....Adrian 12:45 8:45 1:15 8:1~..5'l'ecumsh 12:15 8:15. 1:3o 8:3o .Clintcn... 12:0o8 :oo 5:15 9:15 Saline. ....15 7:15 5:45 9:45 Ar nn Arbor Lv 10:45 6:45 (Court Douse Square) 'A. Md. D+;Daily. X-D~aily except Sundays and Holidays. Friday and Saturday special bus for students leaves Adrian 1:45, leaves Ann Arlfo 4:45.:. JAMES I. ELLIOTT, Pronrietor Phon. 426-2M Adrian, Mich. I I The ChineseGardens 106 S. Main Street Phone 1549 Here's another poem. Poetry beneficial. It fills up space so. * * * IS I I I , i I TRUTH IS BEAUTY love to do the classic stuff, With nude, fair Dryads in a ring; I love the innocent country fluff Where sweet-voiced birdies sing; I even love the poetry rough That puts the Garg o'er with a I like to write romantic frivol; Amorous verse is lots of fun; The dreary- realistic drivel / I do as well as anyone; L ever bing. While I can turn around and snivel About the sins I've left undone. Yet, though all sorts of songs I sing- Both saccharine and virulent, too- My favorite kind of carolling Is that which I have just gave vent to: That doesn't mean a single thing- And isn't meant to. FIELD GLASSES A LUXURY? You'll not think so any longer when .you know that on account of the exchangetsituation,, you can now secure the finest im- ported field glasses and binocu- lars for less than one-third their normal selling price. If you ever expect to get a pair of good glasses, now is the time, while prices are way down. The fa- mous 8-Power FIeld Glasses used by the German officers are goifig as low as $8.25. :Other wonderful values in prism bin- oculars. Get in touch with I THE 0. & H. SHOE_, FORMEN eight-fifty : ... e*:* THE BRANIGAN:-A Fall Oxford for men who wear the latest in footwear. This 0. & H. model carries a broad heel- slightly rounded broad toe and the heavi- est single sole obtainable. Tomas A Celano. * A pardonable abberation. The man is a Garg contrib himself. I Not the "L~a Vie" We Know * * * * * * * * * * * * * i t i EDITORIAL COMMENT .I SEWARD S. CRAMER, 1 Cutting Apartments, Tel. 85),0 who will let you test them out. Such excellent glasses give life- time enjoyment in a dozen diff- erent ways. JAMES H. LEWIS 453 Washington Street BOSTON, MASS. se s an marti nanuw cru m- VENTC ase will find that at that time it will * "LA VIE NOTICE" * e too late to make any provision for gists have succeeded in removing * "Activities cards for La Vie * special train, and that they will be most of the objectionable features of * can be secured at the Y.-M. C. * RADIO RETURNSI >rced to pay full fare both ways if = prison life, until now the jails in one * A. at the desk near the north * (Ohio State Lantern) of our states, at least, have been con- bey care to see the game. ord st test, haves* entrance. . " * When -we were a freshman and elec- The charterin of a special train is Te t teso nsite * -Penn State Collegian. * tion night came, we bundled up and Theh trarteringoofPanssecialitrainti ot a matter which can be accom- . * * * * * * * * * * * * * went downtown to stand on the curb college have made it possible for in- lished in a few days' time. Variousclat e ade it possible strtinto e and watch the returns which were roceure mut b carie ou bythemates of Jails 'throughout 'the state to' a rocedures must be carried out by the secure a college training free of "The high price of silk hosiery since flashed on the screen across the Ailroad companies themselves, and charge. Through the medium of an the war flas presented a serious prob- street from a newspaper office. It onsequently it is imperative that they charge, Through the mriof can lem to the University women." meant several hours of discomfort if e notified considerably in advance of extension service the prisoner can -OOD. the nigjt was cold, and the returns he date upon which the accommoda- pursue at leisure a carefully planned * * were often biased and incomplete. on~ are desired. and well organized curriculum Ininope. oit are adesired.n n shop, engineering, mathematics, diaft- In the Among the Magazines sec- Tuesday night, in the room below Wita h the lactsm mind that Mich - ing, busines law, foreman training, tion of OOD Sunday Mag a writer us, one of the engineers hooked up a an has the only team i the county or any one f a number of other cours- speaks of "Bolshevist-colored eyes." radio set in some complicated way to thast the has not yefbeen rgames es. After the course is completed the Could he mean blackened optics? the buzzeri system in the house or to nd that the indications of past * * * his bedsprings and recived complete prisoner is given his diploma. Ands nake a victory probable next Satur- pser his te n hisdoa. And We have recently purchased an hair- returns from the election as they were ay, students must come to a deci- wher terme In g risonehs erned ucut. sent out by radiophone. ion at once as to whether they care another college graduat is turned out * * * His room was packed, and occa- folwtetemit oher ter.n-iintom the world. and- I I olli th"team into Gophertrinthe soralds.atern-ri rs s Some of our very best friends had sionally a bulletin was sent out to cry. The Union must have the signa- 'Tescal istat. Wo ionersisrspoken about our' Hyacinthine locks. the felows who couldn't crowd in. tres of those men who intend to take * * * Those who felt like studying did so, he trip inmediately. willnsnd hun d sy o dl t- It seemed up to us to either get a and got the returns now and then au- The Minnesota-Michigan game will hair-cut or buy a violin. thoritatively stated. Others sat around peaceful seclusion of ' aIounty jail, he tore ,than likely be- the deciding fac- u ofacntjilheI* * * awaiting the returns which the ama- 'r in -wheter te Wlverne sallcan secure all of the benefits of high- r in whether the Wolverine shall of Violins are expensive. teur operator pulled in out of the nce more rule the west. If you are er education totally at the e e * * * ether. + ,.,-+~, -+ the state? tI ra.._ . _ O'Kane & Hertler For FOOTWEAR. For Men 335 S. MAIN ST. Women Have Your Shoes Fitted by X-Ray I w r! 1I M II i I riilli Y MI CIG ;ARE T TE S .. III - : . .. L ABl& rw going to witness the tiittle, sign up now and make possible a special train for Michigan rooters. EVERY WONAN A MEMBER The project for a Women's building on the campus, comparable to the men's Michigan Union, was definitely launched by the Women's League one year ago. The University, to encour- Pedestrians and automobilists must be especially careful at the corner of South University and State streets. The corner is a dangerous one and up to the present time no methods have been adopted to regulate traffic there. The use of gliders instead of air- da cul Wed rather play an ocarina any Is the average American soon go- y. ing to be able to sit down to his radio * * * set and learn anything he wishes to We have recently purchased a hair- know, without further exertion than t. to turn the knob of his variable con- * * * denser? for TWENTY Incidently (and this info is gratis to! men) the quickest ,way to get what you want from the barber is to rush into the shop with your watch in your' It is mighty handy sometimes, es- pecially on a snappy election night, but how far is it going to go? Danc- ing by radio, holding rifle meets by C" There is no other,~ cigarette Of sueth quaiy i 0.1 m