PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1928 f -1+3 + By selecting nominees through the overdone, as eve Q t agency of the council itsielr these students have lef evils may be to a large degree rem- account ofa lifeo OFFIC1AL NEWSPAPER OF THE odied and the candidacy assured for gerated optimism. en now not a few t the University on of ease due to exag- I UNIVE1ISITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Studer t Publications Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of allI news dispatches credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor," Michigain, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3 5o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and x76-M; Busi- ness. ;g6o. Communications not to exced 3o words if signed, the signature not necessarily to appear in print, buttas 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 be returned unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily flocs not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communications. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-3I MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. STAHL News Editor.................Paul Watzel City Editor................ Janes B. Young Assistant City ditor.......... Marion Herr Editorial Board Chairman.......L. R. Meiss N ight JEditrs- Ralph Byers "larr Hoey J. '. Dawson, Jr. J. E. Mack L. J. llershdorfer R. C. Moriarty 11. A. Donahue EDITORIAL COMMENT SLIPPUNfx Th'se..3 41fiAERAL AlRTS (The~ Daily Iowan) worthy men: Colleges should be rep- resented in proportion to their size, thereby making a more equitable dis- tribution of authority than is now in order. With a reduced .group of officers and additional executive power the council would no doubt find itself overburdened with work. To obvi- ate this, outside students might be r--- -OL ]EVERYBODY WAS MIOT FOR Ti E PAPREUMS CONCERT Venus on State Street One can engage mu an enAiess con- troversy regarding the "aristocracy of brains" and still never reach a conclusion. The discussion of limit- ing enrollment of colleges to the in- tellectual few so far has deat only in generalities. If we are to be re- LAST EDITION OF TICHIGA SONG BOOK BOTH STORES t, enlisted to carry on some of the Just where the crowd from the Arcade' minor administrative and routine du- Falls o'er the gents in Calkins' ties of the organization. To repay i, doorway, j such men for their services the nom- I saw a fair, bull-breasted maid, ating committee of the council azing before her in a sore way. might choose from among them a Long at this damsel un-Synoptic limited number each year as nom- I stared, by joyed amaze knocked inees for Student council positions. I fighty; Finally, a small ex-officlo group For I, with nicely classic optic, should be appointed as members of the tudnt ouncl, hisRecognized Mistress Aphrodite. the Student council, this group to pe comprised of men hxolh~ng certain But where the erst - unconquered positions of importance in student ac- Queen tivities. By its very nature, the coun- Of mundane and of stellar crea- cil must at all times be in closest Oel touch with the 'students of the Uni- F r s h For, absent was lher haughty mien, versity," and in no other way can 'itj And Fear now claimed those beau-I achieve this as wellasthroughcanm-teous features. umnication with the leaders in ac- Bewildered and a bit affrighted, tivities who are in a position .best Shewatched the female streamfloat to establish this intimate touch. by her, The reorganization of the Student bygher s council is no easy task. It involves Seeing her classic beauty slighted the carefully weighing of many ideas For hard cold eyes and lips of fire. and suggestions. The Daily has at- I U mirU dp fripndlP e dau, rl4I warded by the newly awakened inter- est in improving the standards of American colleges, we can best doit by applying the new plan to our own institution. !.In the case of the University of Iowa, a discussion of the "aristocracy' of brains" excludes professional col- leges which are usually conceded to be more technical than cultural in their aims. Only the college of lib- eral arts reasonably comes within the limits of such an argument. Since most professional colleges, however, have a prerequisite of liberal arts work they are more or less affected by the standards of the colleges of liberal arts. '1e arisiocracy of brains would -imit enrollment in two ways: by high entrance requirem'ents., or by weeding out students who fail to keep pace with high reqrtirements once they are enrolled. The first is rather unfair in view of the fact that to- day intelligence tests or preliminary iwork can not be trusted to measure a student's ability in scholastic lines. The second method, then, seems to be the more just way of eliminating stu-- Sports Editor..................F. H. McPike Sunday Magazine Eiditor......Delbert Clark Woen's Editor..............Marion Koch Fiumor E;ditor ............... .Donald Coney Uouference Editor.. .........11. B. Grundy Pictorial Editor...............Robert 'arr Music ditor.................;. I1. Ailes Editorial Board TLowell Kerr Edt Iauric Berman llAartin Nlave ;ugcn Carmichael Assistants Thelma Andrews Walter S. Goodspeed - A. Bacon Portia Goulder Stanley M. Baxter Ronald Halgrim Dorothy Bennetts Franklin D .Iepburn Sidney Bielfield Winona A. Hibbard R. A. Billington Edward J. Higgins Hlelen Brown 1'lizabeth Jiebermann W. B. Butler John McGinnis H-. C.' Clark Samuel Moore A. B. Connable M. .H. Pryorj leruadette Cote W'.B. Rafferty lelne I. Coughli Robert G. Ramsay Walac e F. Elliott Campbell Robertson joseph E pstein _ 3. 'W. Ruwi tch MaxweI el-ad Soil J. Schnitz T. E. Fiske W.1 1. Stoneman . P. Welibink Frederic G. Telmos John Garlinghouse "I 4. \"rl BUSIINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER Advertising..............John J. Hamel, Jr. vertising...............Edward F. Conlin Advtis ............Walter K. Scherer ~ ,1.i.g.........Fars. Accounts...............Lawrence H. Favrot ( iua . ............... WoI. Vlfe Pu ication..............L. Beaumont Parks Assistants tempted here to set forth what it be- lieves most needs remedy in the or ganization. Any' other views in re-; gard to student government . which may be held on the campus will be welcomed by the Senate Council com- mittee for consideration as it ;s attempting to revise student govern- nent in so far as is possible along lines which coincide with student be-; liefs in this regard. unnl'eu , renuless, sau, alone, She viewed these morons, wink and chatter; A graceless walk, a shrieking tone, A brainless bean-what did it matter? For with neat swiftness each en- chanter Bagged her fool quarry. "What an era?" I i . DETROIT UNITED LINES Ann Arbor and Jackson1 TIME TABLE (Eastern Standard Tune) Detroit Limited and Express Cars- 6 :oo a.m., 7:oo a.m., 8:oo a.m., 9:05 a.m. and hourly to 9 :o5 p.m. Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:47 a.n., and Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m. and every two hours to 9 :oo p. In., i i :oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-11x :40 p.m., I:15 a.m. To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bcund-7:50 a.m., 12:101 p.m. To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim- ited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12;472 2:47, 4:47 Pjfm. To Jackson and Lansing--Limited at 8:47 p.m. 1923 JANUARY 1923 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 1I 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 We do all kinds of Cleaning and Reblocking of hats at low prices for HIGH CLASS WORK. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard Street Phone 1792 ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS Schedule in Effect October i8. 1922 Central Time (Slow Time) D X X D) P.M. A.M. P.M. P.M. 3:45 7:45 . .. Adrian .... 2:45 8:45 4:15 8:15 ...- Tecumseh . .. 12:15 58:15 4:30 8:30 . Clinton .... - 2:00 8:oo 5:-5 9:15 Saliine ...1:15 7:15 5:45 9:45 Ar ltnn krborLv. 10:45 6:45 (Court lIose Square) A. M. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sundays and Holidays. Friday and Saturday special bus for students leaves Adrian 1:45. leaves Ann Arbor 4:45. JAMES H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor 41on, g26-M Adrian, Mich. 213-15 W. LIBERTY ST. I INTELLIGENT AND INTERESTED A FEW BLOCKS OR A FEW DOLLARS - Which means the more to you? We are located two blocks west of Main Street, and lower rent enables us to give you the best prices. "SERVICE FOR PATRONAGE" SCHLENKER'S HARDWARE PHONE 554 Cried Venus, Headed for sickened, and instanter safe and sane Cythera. IIOCKEYSS FIRST BOW Friday night Michigan is to have the opportunity of watching the first formal intercollegiate hockey match that has e-2r taken p'ace in the mbiddle west. Wisconsin, time hon- ored rival in every field of athletic effort, comes at that time to meet the Michigan Varsity in the first lap of the race for the championship of the Western Intercollegiate Hockey league. Thel teams will play two, games, the second one Saturday eve-n ning; and Weinbei1g's Coliseum should be crowded to ca.pacityA fat game time both nights. A great advance has been made in the University's athletic progress by the, action of the Board of Ath- letic Control in raising several infor- mal sports, among them hockey, to' a Varsity standard). Inly by 'the same whole hearted suport as is OUT OF THE NWI I IIN 1 Dere ca Ise in town honey and got, me iron nrukkles on me mitts Im lay-' in for this hear full mune boid ges he Jinks just hecuz i dig in for a coupla f'eki ota croak or somethin nix i been out on the rode railroading (I means trainin) and tell dis full mune not to worry about the A arbor polise- forse gittin me if u read the A arbor ilnes ges ull notis as how one toid of de cops is ofi vacashun but he aint vacashun hell cal, hes restin un in de U hospital sun parlur get de connex- shun? hows to fix me up a date wid Ail Eva or Elizabeth i'll wear a lily in dents. The stadard of our college of lib- eral arts is admittedly low. The pro-s feisor who said that two hours o% concentration daily were sufficient to make the average student eligible for Phi Beta kappa spok with a knowl- edge of the facts. One needs only to look about hin to see mediocre sti- dents who without any outside prep- aration are receiving average grades. Naturally a few of the more brilliant under any plan will "get by" -rithout working, but when the average stu- dent does, something is radically wrong. A few courses are "stiff" and the student who is unfortunate enough to" register for one becomes disgruntle, when he sees his classmates having .ch an easy time in their courses. All compain of hard work, naturally. Were the hours of recitation de- creased to four or five a week, the same note of dissatisfaction would be heard. Higher requirements in liberal arts wou'd do much to raise the standard of the whole University. If the ad- r inistration cancelled the registrationr of all those students who professedly are not here for work, and of those Your bank should be sound, accurate and efficient. But that'is not enough. Banking service to be of the most use to you should be also intelligent and interested. That is what this bank tries to be FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK 101-105 So. MAIN 330 So. STATE ST. 960 For Daily Want Ads. p tJ9 4 Kenneth Seick george Rockwood Perry M. Fhaydena Eugene 7. Dunne \'m. Graulich, Jr. John C. Haskin C. L. Putnam E. D. Arinantrout Iherbert W. Cooper Wallace Flower wti:: '.iI+ Tr. Allan S. Morton ]ames A. Dryer Wn. IH. Good Clyde L. Hagerman Howard Hayden Henry Freud i erbert P. Bostick D. L. Pierce Clayton Purdy . 1. B. Sanzenbacher Clifford Mitts Chocolate and Maple Nut Fudge 75c pound YOU'L LIE I S accorded other Varsity teams, how-jI me coat and stand in fronta de ever, can the new sports be success- at seven clicks of de clock tell Maj her adaad B. Riedt Ralph Lewright 1 Harold L. hale Philip Kewalt ful. The hockey team has arranged (one of em) to wear boxing gloves or who find it impossible to keep pace Wm. D. Roesser an ambitious schedule and without a black eye with the poorer students, the morale the moral as well as the financial heres to you of the liberal arts college would be backing of the campus it is not hu- DE JOISEY BOID strengthened and there would be no manly possible for it to be entirely * * * need to worry over increased enroll- WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1923 successful. j AN ORIENTAL TALE I ment. The leisure hours of liberal Without a doubt hockey is a game (Owing to the extreme excess of arts students if spent in any worth- SNightEditor-ROBT. C, MORIARTY that nine-tenths of the students have emotion we labored under yesterday while way and not as they are in never seen and for that reason many because the office manager said we the popu'ar loafing places about the STUDEN U COUNCIL REX'ISON will refuse to attend, in fact could must get another hook if we expectea campus might be a reasonable excuse As an organ of student government not be persuaded to attend. There are to get so much mail, we forgot to in- for requiring academic work. the Student council of the University many others, however, who forced by lude the signature on the emient One danger, however, in requiring has been declared insufficiently ef- the urge of the sporting chance will poem "Now Twenty Years in this more work is tie tendency of most fective by an investigating committee turn out for the first game. This Cellar." Had it been signed it would professors to confuse this with add- and as a result the Senate council last class will be the one that will I have sportel the same johnhancock ed mechanical preparation. Real'; has appointed a faculty committee to furnish the hockey following, for few as the subjoined contrib.) thought is the thing needed most in I plan the reorganization of the Stu-I people who have ever seen a game Pedro was blind, and te had to live liberal arts. The whole system today deantf council witit the end in mind # have failed to becom~e confirmed en- on the charity of his friend Juan. One is based on memory work.. The stu- thusiasts. It is a sport that combinesday Juark h tgooutdent whocan remember aosofsn of mnaking its function more satisfac-. a ua se imt oot i~dntwocnreebraoto n tory. t-he science of footlall, the combina him and help gather the cocoanuts. significant facts gets the A'. Con- Tlie Student council itself is not tion demands of basketball, and the Juan was going to climb the trees, structive thought or criticism is at fault. Within the limits of its individual skill of baseball with a and all that Pedro was to do was neither encouraged or rewarded. power this body has carried on ac- 'speed that belongs to hockey alone, count the nuts as they fell. ceptably. The investigating commit- There are no confusing rules, the "All ready?" came a voice from "IT IS ALWAYS TTE 'ORREVT tee found that ,"as individuals its scheme of play is simple and the above. ITIING TO BE A GENTLEMAN" menmbers are of the best type and sepectator can fol'ow the game in, "All ready," was the answer from (Colgate Maroon) have, personally, the respect of their telligently from the first play. below. If a col'ege education should teach fellows". The Student council is Above all other attributes of the "One," shouted the blind man when anything it should teach men to be ant unsutccessful organ of student game itself, the greatest reason why he heard thumping on the ground. gentlemen on all occasions. And it government because its powers are the Coliseum should be packe:d to the Silence. Then a sharp voice, does this to a large extent. It has a! almost entirely administrative, where- doors tomorrow night and Saturday "One, h..1! It's me who has fallen." social life that trains ilei how to act as they should be largely executive night is Michigan spirit. Above every, "But," protested the other, "how in more or less formal groups. Its in nature. . . thing else that Michigan honors and could I tell you weren't a nut?" classroom and campus etiquette en- At present the council consists of treasures is this indefinable some- FILIPINO. deavor to impress upon the college 26 members, elected by the various' thing that we call spirit, the quality ! * * student what are the right and whatE classes of the Univ'ersity' as their Ifor which the Mahize and Blue Is DEAR CAL: My ypsi is so dumb she are the wrong things to do under representatives in the organization. known throughout the country. That thinks George Ade is something good given circumstances. The trainiun These men may be seen wearing is why the six Wolverines who take i to drink. that is given is so effective that it is badges at class games; they are in the ice at the first whistle Friday JIMMIEENDEE. often possible to distinguish a college charge of celebrations. They issue night should be backed by a banner * * * man in a large gathering. statements of advice or warning, but crowd. They will be representatives And the adoption of the following Bzit it is the belief of some unin- they are in no position to compel re- of the University opposed to one of song, tune, "Wearin' o' the Green" telligent indlividua's that to pull sug- IVac armid's Candies, 715 N. University s , _ J r r +r i i r r s I History and. Business, In the tumultuous days b e f br e the French Revolution there lived an old French nobleman who made a practice of crushing his wine glass between his fingers, saving as he did so - "The poor must live." He had the mistaken notion that by the destruction of property he was in- creasing the market for labor and thus adding to :he prosperity of his country. The times in which lie lived excuse the old nobleman's cttitude - but there is no excuse for the existence of this viewpoint today. And it does still exist, although in dif- ferent form. You have often heard it said-"Spending money judi- ciously is better than hoarding it in a savings account; for more business is created and everyone is benefited." This is the truth - but not the whole truth. The function of the bank is to increase the prosperity'of the community by a careful system of credit control. We feel that this bank is doing its share in the development of Ann Arbor. Thco Ann Arhnr Qa'unn, I Rair , ' epect. They can hardly be called our most respected rival student government; they are an ad- pionship in this sport w ministrative body. This the Senate tre and glory to thoset council committee must take into quired in football and cr consideration in its reorganization and the one to which we hlarm . vancing in basketball. 'n adition to this, a number of It is up to you. Thep other changes should be made in the not do it all alone. council. Be there. The class system of representation should be replaced by a r-presenta- A PRACTICAL APPL tion of colleges, nominations for coun- Could .not the now pop cilmen to be made by an executive E "Every day in every way conniittee within the Student council ting better and better", s. A cham- ill add lus-j already ac- ross country are now ad- players can- iCATION pular jingle, y I am get- be applied obviously merits consider:>tion: 7 love the Tap Room at-mo-sphere, Saggestive of the Inn; I nick my tee-e-e-e-e-e-eth without re- straint - I see it's being done. With a spoon I eat my Quaker Oats, I use it next on prunes, Then plunge it i-i-i-i-i-n-n-n the sugar bowl, They have no sugar spoons. This merely to suggest the possi- bilities. Other experienced hounds gestive "wise cracks" that draw the laaugh is the correct thing for a gen- tlemnn. Tlhmi same class belleves j tlat doinI crazy stunts in front of one's girl in order to attract atten- ! tion is the pert to be played by the r'ollege mean. Loudness and hoister- nusness are the basis for their ac- tions. But the true gentleman is an unob- triisive' person whose every action is sedate and dignified. He knows 'his place and does not endeavor to force himself into comnany where he is