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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 30, 1922 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-09-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MR4

[IGAN D

.y

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 republication of all
news dispatches credited to it or not other-
wise credited in this paper and the local
news published therein.C
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
Michigan, as second class matter.
Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50.
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May-
nard Street.'
Phones: Editorial, 2414 and i76-M; Busi-
ness. 060.
Communications not to exceed 300 words
if Isigned, the signature not necessarily to
appear in print, but as an evidence of faith,
and notices 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 bie returned
unless the writer encloses postage. The.Daily
does not necessarily endorse the sendrments
expressed inthe communications.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephones, 2414 and 1761X

during the Christmas recess. Through
the medium of its committees training
is offered in practcally every phase of
the theater. For the women the Jun-
ior Girls' play produced by the Jun-
ior Girls' society is the paramount
dramatic event.
A more scholarly and sedate form
of dram tics is reflected in the Play-
ers club, which was organized on the
community theater basis to give sci-
entific training in playwriting, act-
ing, and managing, to students of
some ability and an inherent interest
in the work. Several pays usually
given in groups of two or three are
produced by this club yealy. The
other organizations mentioned, pre-
sent, in most cases, one play a year,
the quality of which is usually high
enough to warrant the customary
large attendance.
Membership in most of these so-
cieties is generally excluded to first
year students, and is usually by ap-
pointment or election, although not
difficult to attain by any tryout show-
ing diligence and some ability. All of
them are governed by students, and
under the direction of a faculty mem-
ber or outside head. The prospective
candidate for dramatics, be it acting
or some other phase, should seek out
the society corresponding nearest to
his needs and work will be gladly
given him.
Besides the helpful experience
which is acquired through partici-
pation in this field recognition of a
tangible variety is not lacking. Honor-
ary societies exist for those who have
distinguished themselves, foremost
among which is Mimes of the Michi-
gan Union, an organization which
has been identified with the best in
Michigan dramatics since its origin.
Campus dramatics have been stead-
ily rising in the esteem of the stu-
dent body, but in the belief of many
the desired standard of excellence can
be -attained only when there is more
collaboration among the various fac-
,tions.

TED NL
WES HALL IS
BUYING BOOKS 1
I've bought all my text-books, byl
golly;'
But, oh what a price I have paid:
I've heard tell that college is jolly, i
I think they should furnish first aid.-
Now Sellar's "Essentials of Logic"
Set me back just two bones and a
eye
And Scott's mighty tome philologici
Made a scar that I'll have till I die.-
And unified Math bfoke my jaw-bone,
And Taylor on Ec got my teeth- l
Ten thousand fought for "Apollo"
And I was the one underneath.
But I've got all my text books, by;
golly,'
So what do we care what they cost.
I'll study until I'm a doctor-.
Then fill in the bones I have lost.
SHE-GUN-DAH.
Gallows-Meat
The curse who always breaks in at
the head of the line.
TERRIBLE JOKES
"He said he had married beauty and
brains-"
"Yes?"
"And they arrested him for big-
amy."
QUEER FOLK
A. queer young boy
Is Samy Toles;
He never reads
The Toasted Rolls.

EDITORIAL COMMENT
TESTING HINDS
(Daily Cardinal)
Tests of mental alertness have
been adopted to relieve congestion at:
Northwestern university. Students of
exceptional ability are to be permit-
ted to take heavy schedules in order
that they may shorten their courses to
three years.
The problem of the brilliant stu-
dent who is held back by those less
capable is one which all universi-
ties should face. Students of in-
tellectual superiority should be de-
veloped to the limits of their capa-
bility. -
Northwestern has taken a step in
the right direction, but the mere
loading of work on the brilliant willt
not solve the problem.
Brilliant students, under the pres-
ent system, are generally instructed in
the same classes with those less bril-
liant. They hear the same lectures,
use the same texts, work at the same
assignments, progress at the same
rate.
A brilliant student may be retard-
ed by the intellectual plane of a
course as well as by the volume of
work he is allowed to undertake. A
lecture which is difficult of com-
prehension for one student may waste
the time, hinder the progress, of an-
other student.
It is better for a good student to
put in his time on a few courses
adapted to his needs than to take
many simpler courses.
Wisconsin has met this problem to
some extent, and in a logical man-
ner.
This system is !good; it permits,

TEXT BOOKS and SVPPI

for all Colleges
at Vi~th Stores

uIRAHAM

.1'

Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk

:

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIME TABLE
(Eastern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars - 6:oo
a.m., 7:00 a.m., 8:oo a.m., 9:05 a.m. and
hourly to 9:~05 p.m.
Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of
Ann arbor)- :47 a.m., and every two hours
to 9 :47 p.m.
Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m. and ev-
ery two hours to 9 :oo p.m., isx:oo p.m. To
Ypsilanti only-i i-:40 p.m., 1 :15 a.m.
To.aSalineChange at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound--7:5o a.m., 12:10
p. m.h
To Jackson and Kalamazoo - Limited cars
8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, 4:47 p.m.

STEAMCTANDG
STEAM FIT TING

S.

i_

MANAGING EDITOR
MARION.B. STAHL

City Editor----.......... James B. Young
Assistant City Editor-......Marion Kerr
Editorial Board Chairman--....E.R. Meiss.i
Night Editors-
Ralph Byers Harry Hoey
J. P. Iawson, Jr. J. y.Mack
L. Ji-[ershdorfer R. C. Moriarty
H1. A. Donahue
Sports Editor-.......F. H. McPike
Sunday Magazine E-ditor.......Delbert Clark
Women's Editor--------Marion Koch
Humor Editor ...----.......Donald Coney
Conference Editor----...----H. B. Grundy
Pictorial Editor--------------Robert Tarr
Music Editor....... .........EH. Ailes
Assistants i

To
p.m.

Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47

1922 SEPTEMBER
S M T W T

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24

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7
14
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28,

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1922
S
2
9
16
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a'

Carefully
Selected Pleats,

iaw"

11

M. H. Pryor
Maurice Berman
R. A. Billington
W. B, Butler
it. C. Clark
A. B. Connable
Evelyn 3J. Coughlin
Iugene.Carmichael
Bernadette Cote
T. E. Fiske
Maxwell Fead
john Garlinghouse

Isabel Fisher
Winona A. Hibbard
Samuel Moore
T. G. McShane
W. B." Rafferty
W. H. Stoneman
Virginia Tryon
P'. M. Wagner
A. P. Webbink
Franklin Dickman
Joseph ERpste
J. W. Ruwitch

Start Righit With a Good Hat!
We do all kinds of HIGH CLASS
Cleaning and Reblocking of hats at
low prices for GOOD WNRK. When
you want a hat done RIGHT bring

And likewise queer
Is Jennie Hamps;
She never borrows

We use the utmost care
in choosing the meats
offered our customers.

ii

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER
ALBERT J. PARKER '
Advertising-------------john 3. Hamel, Jr.
Advertising ....... .. .Edwar F . Conlin
Advertiig ..............Walter K. Scherer
Accounts...............Laurence H. Favrot
Circulation..... .....David J. M. Park
Publication-............L. Beaumont Parks
Assistants

Townsend H. Wolfe
Kenneth Seick
George Rockwood
Perry M. Hayden
Eugene L. Dunne
Wrn. Graulich, Jr.
John C. Ilaskin
Ifarvey E. Reed
C2. L. Py'tlnam
r. D. Armantrout
H. W. Cooper

Alfred M. White
Wm. D. Roesser
Allan S. Morton
James A. Dryer
Wim. H. Good
Clyde L. iagerman
A., H'artwcll, Jr.
f. Blumenthal
lowaid IHayden
e K. Kidder
Henry Fren'd

i v v " T

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1922
Night Editor-LEO J. HERSHDORFER
CHEAP ADVERTISING
Cheap advertising invariably at-
tracts smallishopkeepers or enterpris-
ing salesmen of hot dogs, pot mend-
ing, or gasoline saving devices. Very
often the methods of gaining public-
ity are \quite ingenius, and as long as
the advertisers do, not become offen-
sive in their practices, they deserve
only credt for their energy and per-
severance.
Ann Arbor, however, is from time
to. time beset by certain individuals of
this species who, in order to put a
special brand of something or other
across to the public in the cheapest
manner possible, buy a can of paint
and' splatter up the sidewalks of the
city or campus with signs telling of
the, latest song hit, or how to make
tires last twice as long (by using
them half as much). Nice, reasonable
advertising, with free billboards. All
you have to do is bring your own
paint.
What one ordinary individual in a
city can do, all others should be al-
lowed to. Wouldn't Ann Arbor make
a neat appearance if everyone palnt t
ed his trade, or his favorite fruit, or,
the list of his relatives on the side-
walk in front of his home? It is up
to' the city to take some definite leg-;
islative steps whereby cheap adver-
helps mar the beauty of Ann Arbor's
tising of the type which at present
thoroughfares shall be made expen-
sive to those who practice it.
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
3. Dramatises
Probably no activity on the campus.
progresses on a larger scale than does
dramatics. Numerous societies exist,
all dedicated to the production of one
or more .plays a year, and many of-
fering training in playwriting, stage
direction, publicty work, and manag-
ing, as well as in acting. Each so-
ciety is mutually exclusive of the rest
and little attempt at union or collabo-
ration is made.
The- best known and perhaps the
most momentous of the organizations
of dramatic bent are Mimes of the
Michigan Union, through its annual
production the Michigan, Opera, the
.Tiner Girl, eity_, ha Pm-ara

INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL
There has been considerable com-
-ment and wondering over the fact
that intramural football, which a few
years ago was so-popular at Michigan,
has been discontinued. A movement
is now being considered by the .intra.-
mural department which will rein-
state that branch of sport. It is
planned to begin on a small scale
by organizing four class teams, and
expanding in future years as success
justifies.
Intramural football had to be giv-
en up at Michigan two years ago sim-
ply because the participants failed to
realize the exactions of so strenuous
a game. They did not indulge in the
weeks of constant effort to put them,
selves in physical condition, such' as
the Varsity team does. They imag-
ined that they could jump right into
the game and stand the strain. Ex-
perience showed they were mistaken,
and many casualties resulted, some
being quite serious.
During the last year a number of
boxers and cross-country men have
similarly injured themselves by
jumping into the sport with little or
ho preliminary training. This is a
problem with which the intramural
department must contend. They are
planning to solve it through the serv-
ices of a coach who will see that the
men indulging in such strenuous
sports as boxing, cross-country, or
football, are thoroughly hardened to
the strain before they enter into any
competition.
Much is to be said in favor of in-
tramural football, and its return
would be heartily welcome. Yet if it
is to be a permanent institution, and
a beneficial one, the participating ath-
letes must realize that no man can
jump from a summer of compara-
tively "soft" work into a stiff, honest-
to-goodness football game, and not be
the worse for his folly.
No successful Varsity team does it.
No other team can afford to try.
NO CAUSE FOR WORRY
tA scientist recently announced that;
this earth of ours was made of a
jelly-like consistency which might go
to pieces at any time. His statement
caused considerable alarm from those
who are wont to take such foretell-
ings seriously. But a moment's hon-
est reflection will dispell all gloom.
As far as we know, at least for the
past six thousand years, things in the
planetary world have been doing
their bisiness in an orderly way. The
sun has been rising and setting on
schedule and the moon has regulated
the tides all right and things on the
whole have been performed very de-
pendably. So that despite the prog,
nosticating of gloomy scientists the
old earth, sun, moon, stars, and sat-
telites have won and deserve our Im-
plicit confidence.
Attention is called to the fact that
articles applearing in the Editorial
Comment column do not necessarily
express The Daily's opinions or poli-
cies. They are chosen rather as
points of view on subjects worthy of

msore development on the part of the it to us, our work is regular FACTO-
Postage stamps. good student. But it should be fur- RY WORK. I-lats turned inside out
-her developed.
IF YOU sat down in a leisurely 'way If combined with tests of mental with all new trimmings are like new.
in one of the ten chairs you might We also make and sell POPULAR
alertness, the advanced section plan
have sat in but didn't, and the adum woud b a r-al thod for obtain- PRICE and HIGH GRADE hats, FIT
thing caved in under you and lacer- ing educational efficiency. THEM TO YOUR HEAD and save you
ated you and all that sort of thing- a dollar or more on a hat. We give
WOULDN'T it make you feeljust It would make more nearly posi- values and quote prices which cannot
WULDNT ifmak youeel utnde the development of each student be excelled in Detroit or anywhere
a little better if you set it up and to the limit of his potentialities.else. Try us for your next hat.
the same identical chair? EDISON A BRIGHT LIGHT IN A FACTORY HAT
I ASK you-wouldn't it? IRA WORLD STORE
urch murch. (Flit Weekly Review) 617 Packard Street Phone 1792
Thomas A. Edison, wizard of elec- (Where D.U.R. Stops at State Street)
He's So Dumb He Thinks______________________
Thatthe DagonalTwalksa tricity, celebrated at a banquet the
That the Diagonal walk is a newj
other day his fortieth anniversary as_
step.. a supplier of light to this dark world,
That a Home Ec. is an - economics rThe Official
of curs. It was just forty years ago,
student who doesn't go out nights. that Edison in overalls with nothing FRESH TOQUES
to guarantee success but unfailing
THE WRINGING OF THE BELLE belief in himself threw the switc-h at. V/AOIER iCOMPANY
The situation wastense-not past his workashop, at 257 Pearl. street,
but present. There she was, slini) pLLfI5 Men .. '.ince Ilo ,
New York, which started light from
graceful--but terror-stricken with- New York;'s first pawer plant.
al--for was he not approaching with With nane of the welath he has
a menacing look in his eye? (He now, with' few of the friends he has
now, Edison was poor, insignificant,
-e. made a rush forward--but she and almost inmrags. But hope which
eluded him. Again he tried-and is the tailor of the ragged boy did
again she escaped his outstretchedth
arm. H cusedaudblythe jab, and today the achievements;
arms. He cursed audibly of this man echo and re-echo into
"I'l catch you yet, and when I do, every nook and, cranny of this cosmos
I'll wring your neck!' he promised, that the secret of greatness in life
advancing menacingly, is hope in the future and faith in
She failed to elude him. He seized ones self.
her and-horrors of horrors-he did Edison ga-v6 the world a thing it
as he had promised. He wrung her needed and the world remunerated
neck! him. He believed along with every
That evening he complacently said other man who ever succeeded that
to his wife, "I told you we'd have the most of us get in life not so much
chicken for supper." what we think we deserve as the
CANADA HARRY. equivalent of vhat we give.
Sing a song of State Police;
! Suit vase full of rye;
Four and twenty Booze Cops ,CAMPUS OPINION
Su1 nitcmfull ~i-ye; AMPUIOPIION

fl

GIVE US A TRIAL

223 N, jlAIN
Phone 393

Glil's

.......

A

Atarket

ti '
.. 1.-

L

A

"4

Manding nearly by.
When the case is opened
The P'lice begin to sing
'Isn't that a dainty case
Before the Judge to bring+!"
ICONOCLAST.
A LAST LEAF*
As he shuffles one step more
Toward the Treasurer's door
Last in line
Someone whispers, "When he came
He was tall; nor was he lame
In his prime."
Though the gray now streaks his
beard,
His last coupon, brown and seared,I
He clutches at.
Eyes grown dimmer one by one
And a cobweb has been spun
On his hat.
BETSY BARBOUR.
Speaking of Doctor Abrams and the
Tiernans and all that sort of thing
it's a wise child that knows its own
father.
HOT YOUNG DOGS!
Out of Our Own Daily: FOR RENT:
Rooms for students or medics, steam
heated.
The difference is, you see, that the
medics have to work.
We gummed the show again.

Communication to The Michigan
Daily:
A recent editorial in your paper
spoke of the lack of individuality
among American students. Not long
ago a French professor who visited
the United States is reported to have
lamented this same fact, stating that
American students were all too ready
to believe everything he said. But it
is more than likely that he is plac-
ing the blame on the students unjust-
ly. If what this foreigner says is
true, and students do believe every-
thing professors say, it is largely be-
cause they are expected to do so.
As courses are given today, a class
of several hundred meets with the
professor tWo or three times a week
and he lectures to them, giving them
his theories of the subject at issue.
There is little means of knowing what
they have learned, except by the pe-
riodical giving of "blue books". But
when questions are asked in these
"blue books", the student is expected
to remember what the professor has
said. There are no two or three an-
swers to the question-there is only
one--the one which the professor had
given out in lectures. Students know
this. They -.know that under the
present systm professors seldom if
ever present any incorrect theories
or statements. They are so accustom-
ed to taking everything as true that is
heard in lecturg, that it is second na-
ture for them.
A startling statement from the pro-
fessor now and then might shock them
and hrino. rnth , nnP.rit n it i,e

I

It will pay you to
listen.to this music.

LL over the country the whistle is blowing for
. ,the kick-off, the start of that great gane--
another college year.
Be on your toes when the whistle blows. A good
start will carry you well on toward your goal.
Let the football candidate, start by working
away till his muscles ache from bucking the line.
Let the aspirant for manager put in careful
study of his team's needs, always eager to help
-arranging atrip or carrying a pail of water.
Let the publications man be alert for news and
fireless in learning the details of editorial work.
Whatever activity you come out for, crowd a
lot of energy into these early Fall days.
And if a good start helps win campus honors,
it helps win class room honors, too. The sure way
to be up in your work is to aim now for regularity
at lectures, up-to-date note-books and particular
attention to the early chapters of text-books, thus
getting a grip on the basics.
This is best in the long run, and-selfishly-it is
easiest in the long run. That is, if life after college is
made easier by the things a bigger income can buy.

the. interest of Elec.
Weial Development by
an Institution that will
be helped by what.
ever helps the
Industry.

l

A co-ed smiled at uts
the Diag.

yesterday on

bnlp y
6f 66

We smiled back.

electric Copaty

i

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