771-1E MICIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NE WSPAPERi01? THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN' Published every morning except Monday during the University Year by the Board in Control of Studezt 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. E~ntered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor,# Vichigan, as second class matter. Suibscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. hard Street.} Phones: IUditorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ness, 960. Communications not to exceed Soo words I signed, the signature not necessarily to appear'in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be publisshed in The Daily at the discretion. of the Editor, if lift at or mailed to The Daily office. "Un- .gned comnmunications wxill receive no non- sideration. No manuscript will be returned unless the writer encloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily, endorse the sentimients expressed in the communications, EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 gind 176-H ONE CAMPWUS fh4EATErt A writer in the Sunday ,Magazine mru secionof he aiy lstReekrevew ed what he purported to be the dra- T D R L matic ituaton at Michigan and de-!f U plored the fact that the University I BOOKRS, BOOKS, £ possessed no campus theater. The BOK OK writer spoke of the Union opera, al- t Ihough his theme was primarily c.on- AN EDITOIAL REPLY cerned with campus achievements in dear sir: th line of more serious3 or "straigh'jl urhwswrn etrdyi"i Idrama. Mrhwswrn1etrdyi i b~ut somehow or other he seemed to ..HwILuhwe e forget the Mimes theater, and the these young idiots burst into print! dramatic activities carried on there Imagine his suggesting that we k.eep outside of the development of the off the grass! It is preposterous. Can opera. This playhouse, situated to~ the you imagine not eating a tomato or rear of the Union accommodates Wo' people, and has a stage more com- plete in its facilities and equipment? beautiful? Why it is ridiculous! Can than the average metropolitan the-, i not murch see that be' uty. whetiler it ater. j appears in the form of lamb A~op)s or EDITORIAL COMME+.NT VRIED RIWAPTIG (.Daily Nebraskan) Instructors frequently at enipt to interest the under-graduates in cul- tural reading not directly pertinent to the subject of instruction, They do this not in order to benefit them- selves or their courses, but merely to suggest to the students reading which they will find profitable. Different means are adopted to arouse interest in a varied amount of reading. One instructor frequently quotes interesting passages from a volume on a given' topic, and 'then casually gives the name and author' with the suggestion that the book twill be found interesting. Another, instructor is fond of sug.gesting boob~s which one should be sure to buy when he begins to collect a library of his own. H-e does' not l~rnit hin- self to books in his own particular LAST k;DITIOM OF BOOKI M Ha;IiGA SONG -: A T :-:o AMS' OT ISTORES i b,..,_, .,. y .1 a I .. '. MANAGING EDITOR MARION B. °ST'AHL In it student productions. are play- ed. One could hardly call the render- ing of such play's as "Thirteenth -Chair" and "Justice" unworthy ef- forts, while the production of "Clois'- ters". a Belgian play, nevar present- ed in America until the Mimes platy- ens undertook it, was a natable suc- cess last 'year. "Cloisters" is to be played again in Ann Arbor this wee>! end and then presented in Detroit by the Mimes players. While it is undoubtedly true that, as the writer of the Sunday iageaz'r" article states, 'Michigan need~s unified dramatics and a permanent campus3 theater if she is to develop her dra- matics to the utmost, neverth aless it, should be remembered that there is at green grass was made to be' dcstrov- ed? I am heartily in favor of walk- ing on the grass! If the authioritics don't want us student$ to walk on ti grass, why then let them abolish t'he darn old stuff!, Let them erect;la. ."Y- of beaverboard or some similar subl- stance and paint it g'reen. Or better yet, let them place a glass covo-rn_- over it to, Ten our wlandering foot- steps off. Yours for artificial cam ouss lawns na a solution of this tlwfal problem. I says right here tha~t you can't thrwart youthful human na- ture. helen. a revolutionary suggestion. It may be doubted whether the advocates of co radical an innovation were thinki;ng of what they .were doing,. To intro* duce thinking into colleges.Vwill upset the curriculum. Many courses will have to be renovated; some will have to ibe scrappwed. The whole: principle is wrong. Thinking' should remain an outside inactivity. ? ,' Ott° , wi{:u y ; k v .w" buys a brand S0new Corona portable type- writer. Other make at attractive prices. See us before you buy.' 0. 17 Y } , f t D. MORRILL N~ICKELS ARCADE field. j ect Many are remiote from the sub- but he manages skillfully to Lose something? A classified Il i N'ews Editor..... ..........Paul Watzel Cityr Editor, .........Jamres B. Young Assistant City Editor......... Marion ! er Editorial Board Qhairman......E. R, Meiss Night Editors- Ralph Bfyers HarryHoey L. J. Hershdorfer R. (. Moriarty H. A. Donahue 3. 'E. Mack Snorts Editor..... ....... .,. F. IM. McPike r Woep's Editor............ MainKc Sunday, Magazine Editor. .,A. IDonanue rictorial Editor............ .Robert Tarr Music Editor ..........E. H5. Ailes Editorial Board Lowell Kerr Maurice Berman Eugene Carmichael \Ass Cants Thelma Andrews. Portia Goulder [A. Bacon Ronald Halgrint Stanley IM. Baxter Franklin 1) Hepburn. Dorothy lBennetts ;Winona A. Hibtlard Sidney Bielfield Edward 3. Higgins R. A. illington 4d'zabeth Liebermann Htelen Browin - Johr1MGinnis Hi. C. Clark Vamuel Moore A. B. - Connable M. A. Pry or Bernadette Cote W. 1$. Rafferty Evelyn I. Coughlin Robert G. Ramsay Joseph Epstein Campbell Robertson Maxwell Fead J. Ruwitch~ T'. E. Fiske Sol .J. Schnitz A. P. Webbink W. I. Stoneman. John Garlinghouse Frederic G. Telmos Walter S. Goodspeed Phi:llp 1. agn~r BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUgINESS MANAGER ALBERT J. PARKER Advertising............ John J. Hamel, Jr. Ajvertising............:Edward F. Conlin Advertising.............. Walter X~. S-herer CopywNritilng...............L'avid J. 1. I arit Accounts...............Lawrence H: Favrot Ci]rcu at'-'n............'...wrrsend IT. \Wolfe - Publication............... L. Beaumont Parks F~ do notcare to rant and raxce, and tell the wvorld how to behave. anrd chase the kids with sticks ,:ndstn. T -4 t .. G .J +,4.ti Li', Js present on the campus a completely' round up the lazy-hones and dlr ,nv' equipped theater, in connection with shoat "h whole world hasr gone to the Michigan Union, where worth: hell" aendl rush t:)r'ngthe ala rm while dramatic enterprises are under- hell. taken, and wThere worthy l~h:.'s av(e I dr) nestlike to br; r'u n ADRIAN ANN ARBORBUS Schedule in -eect Octobr s igs92 D Central Tim~e (Slow Tlie) D :45t 7:45 .. Adrian .... 12:45 8:4: :15 8 i15 ... Tecumseh... 12 :158: 1. :30 8:30 ...Clinton . 12 I:0.08:0r :15 >9: . . ..Saline . ... 11:15 7:1~ 45 9:45 Arknn rborLv. x0.45 0:4° (Court c;eSquare4A. D-Daily. X-Daily except Sunday id Holida~ys. Friday and Saturday specin 'uns fr . tudents leaves Adrian 1:t45. leave' Ann Arbor 445. JAM ES IC. £>LIOTT, Proprietor. ('alone 926M Aarian. MiCl: presented in a finishad a,,nd t,,lcnr:,l fashion. The students might well take ail- vantage of the praductions offrerelDIb, theim own campus theater. 1'f I, F. i SLIPPERY WALKS ?s As i usually the ease at this sea-:o son of the year. we have had a. nun'- ,b r o n w so m ol w d r rcasional thaws. Now the street3 of Ann Arbor are covered with a sheet of ice and then again with pool after' pool of damp slush. Hiaving eonsid- ered the necessity, of kbeeping the side- walks of the town as free from ice . and snow as possible, the city hps kept them scraped after every heavy storm. The University has cleam),d the campus walks off at thi~s tiMe al- so, but how about doing away with, the little snow that the 'scraper-q leave? Both the townspeople and the U~ni- ' versity should care enouigb for the public welfare to interest themselves! in finishing the job. A few mninutoe spent at. the proper time, either just' after a snow fall or during a thaw wvould enable the average citizen to. dispose of the accumulation of snow, or, slush around his premises. Di- rectly after a snowfall the work of, 11 t'. e i? i :-:t iio or he r ann.1 '. tl ,ro is to . . be prea-i or T"11 'r;ith wanzts to bild a shed, or whnen F.zne brother tired of life grabs Cie nidnighbt train with someone's wif'e. I'd rethor sit around ,youa sae, and, smoke - and think -- and drevii -- of me. DjIZZY. IKaUtPnS K aract.3 A roust about, A Joust about, A jolly rai'onteur: With this type rife Our college life W V e're able to endure They always aid Both man and maid When days get blue and bluer. bring them into his lecture. Another professor asks the Stiidents to read articles in magaziney which dleal 'Mithi the whole field of instruction. Oral reports are Isometimnes called for on articles read but no limnitation I~s Iut .on the choice of an article and fre- gnently t.'lese articles have no con- rneetion witb the specific course. Ti-e instructor feels however that some- thing viall ha accomplished if the stu- rlen's can, be interestedl in reading n ag-a~ines --Ahich. deal with the subl- jcrt as a whole. =Since thy.stitensare' not reuuh'ed to dio the r i suiting leisure wrhich it promises and Don. h le regard, an education as a neces- sary evil which must be suffered in fions. reaching this goal. But one [Jrho can't be happy in a university cnmmrunity will, in all prob- ability, find it difficult to he happy any- where. For here everyting combinerst n k h t d n a p r ;a least to remove those things which make him unhappy. The valley of a happiness in Samuel Johnson's ailezo- necal tale, "Rassela.s," did not preszent :op ~a better place to live and to enjoy 1 i-a ing than is to be found in any of a. hundred educational institutions in America. Students have few worries; they are not compelled by necessity to ex-- pend, their energies in keeping thxej wolf from the door, neither have theyI the cares of a family. On the other band 'they do have congenial asso-a- a hero to ates of. their owxn high-grade stamn, mood, amusements, and best of all - a. sense that they are improving theme- selves and getting along in theE world. As a class they are res pected by all mankin1d and, a knowledge of this fact s^rves to. satisfv in a. great N ' -.way, their 7in'71tinctive d'csire for rec-1 og"n"tion. In all it would he hard to I fnd a. coxmnity in whixch li e xwa -cmuxch worth the living. ,r The mnoral, if one nP,-i belap ap~s-de-l, ed is to realize that there is romance and hannriness in, the Job of ed"!zc~at- i'xn oneself. Of course these will al- way s 11; e'vndthe horizon 'nseen and unatt' atibe; thzngs of leng;ing ,ory and purnnlt, but for the studlent toe i road is broad and bright. ., *. ;, , ' , , . s. P y gr. rorthvrestern won the debate, but t .- - - - - .. .. , . _ _ . 'iestcards and mails thenm to the in- tion, and he is no doub~t satiatinf, 1 we won the basketballgae 3 (New ~vYork Evening,'Post) !The prop~osal of a college course in1 thinkring should not 1..)^re~le tet thouz^gh ,lerl. In the fas~t place, t :-; to he limited to freshmen, who will accept it stoically aii a new form of hazing. In the second place. no such1 course can be given until there is anl instructor for it. As this means tat;-' ing some graduate student from the .1.HIS time of year demands the most of fozm-aal evening clothes.' The Hop and the miany ~Iformals that accompany it require evening clothes that look their best even when worn a few times. We ,have tuxedos that are tailored at Fashion Park. In many different styles, each one pleasingly distinctive, they form an -also. tment from which you can choose with per- fect confidence that complete satisfaction will follow your selection. dIividual sPlde t,. Both these mreth-' xds are effective, and p)robably even others Nv'41 arise as the ruling i-s car- ried in.toyeffect. These -re merely derils, lhowev( r. Thie real: y gratifying thing i .that the desire for these things. ' * }This "nameless soholar" has the X wonder which counlts the more? qualities of a true student; he studes I M x * j not for the material gain whichl mayI The thing that counts right now come as a result of his having obtain-! is a little study. ed an education; he studies not for, x*- n d 4$6S"0 Other advertised line priced $30, $:35 and $40 I