FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNlVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusi-ely, en- ted to the use for republication of all news' d ispatches credited to it or not otherwise redited in this paper and the local news pub- lihdtherein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbo, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- waster jeneral. Subscription by carrier, $3.50-; by nail $4.OO. Offi",s: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. hard Stieet. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-i, Bu i iess, 960. Sirned coimnunications, not exceeding too Words, will be published in Tl-e Daily at the discretion of the Editor. Upon request, the identity of communicants will be garded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 170-M AANAGING EDITOR 'HARRY D. HOEY News Editor....... ......Robt. B. r.trr Cditorial Board Chairman. . .. K. t. Moria-t). City Editor.............J. G. Garlinghouse Night Editors X H. Ailes .: . Cpnntarte K. A. 13illingron 1> E. Fiske' .arry C. Clark P. M. Wagner S oits Editor...............Ralph N. B er W -omen's Editor...........Winona Ilibbard Sunday Magazine Editor.....F. L. Ti)lden Music Edtor.. ... Ruth A Howell stan1t City ditor......Kenneth C. Kelldr Director Michigan News Bureau..R. C. Ramsay Editorial Board Paul Einstein Herman Wise Andrew Propper Assistants R.G 0. Baetcke 'R. S. Mansueld Norma Bicknell E. C. Mack lerman k Boxer Verena Moran Margaret Bonine Harold Moore Helen Brown Carl Ohh nacher Bernadette Corte 11 yde Perce G. W. Dais Regina Reichmana Harold Ehrlich E dmarie Schrauder T. P. .Henry C. A. Stevens Emily (line W. II S'onenian Manning Hlouseworth H. R.Stone ootyv Nam in Marie Reed Lilias Kendall N. R. 'Vial uosepph Kruger W. J. Waltliour Elizabeth Lieberman BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960I BUSINESS MANAGER. LAURENCE H. FAVROT ,. tt...ertisi . Adiertising.................... W. 1LUoSSei v'?Wertisi . ....... W. 1' Scherer ,1 ~ ~ ~ ' .IcVato.. C.U.Purdy 'uuhcatton...............LaNrence iercet Assistaptftt G. W: Campbell M. L."reland r sennme Caplan lha id:' .Ial k" Chas. Champion Byron .Parke . n Conlinexe A E. ose .Louis M. Dexter iA.' 'edman ' It is surprising to note, however, at the opening of the baseball season, that student interest has turned near-a ly completely away from this nation- ~i/E,; a ally popular sport in the University. To the call for baseball tryouts is DARN IT sued by Coach Fisher two weeks ago, less than eighteen athletes have re- Ys .i. t.h sponed ot o stuent odynumbr- Yes, sir, this is just one of theE sponded out of student body number- days when every darn thing seems t ing more than eight thousand. Th,, auestion that arises falls in with the. go wrong. Every darn thing. 7 kh 1 CAMPUS OPINION I t amp, S@ to discussion of intellectualism which has had such wide vogue in the col- umns of the daily press and monthly publications all over the country and seems to present a new problem for solution. Is this sudden lack of interest in athletics an outcome of a new move- ment back to intellectualism or is it merely a temporary lack of under- standing on the part of the students as to the actual existing conditions in the University baseball ranks? With the material on hand Coach Fisher can certainly not produce a worthy University baseball team. Only four of the present candidates are veterans and over half of the en- tire number are applicants for the position of pitcher. The inevitable re- sult, therefore, will be either a cessa- tion of activity along Varsity baseballf lines, unless a far larger number of candidates present themselves. De- velopments in this field during the next week or two will show the tend- ency of the student body and can not but be interesting either way the sent- iment turns. A QUESTION OF OOD GOVERNMENT As the 1924 presidential election ap- proaches there seems to be as usual We get dwon to the Press Building and find that it's being torn up to give the Cargoyle more room. Lots of hammering going on, and all that sort of thing. Next we go to get our mail with the pleasant tingle that we always haveI when we-when we go to get our mail. And wot do we find? No mail. . . . Next, we find fifty stupid looking tryouts loitering in our office taking rides in our swivel chair, smoking our cigars, and in general raising Cain while old Man Cowles is out. . . . And finally, as if these tribulations were not enough, we find that we have a sour typewriter in which the letter "I" sticks, causing words like ham- mering and tingle to come out ham- merig and tigle. Well, when all these awful things happened, we sat down and made great dole. . . . * * * WHY NOT BE AN ENGINEER? The engineer is a man of might, Whene'er his talents he uses right, His work about us we daily see, In dwellings, food, and machinery. The engineer writes the history Of industry and prosperity,' Promotes man's welfare, reduces crime, He conquers space and he masters time. IT i ti b O Ia ti S n 1 t I t.. d I9 t d r h c I e r a e r n 0 r, c r I ss I i I t t t i THE ENGLISH IN INDIA To the Editor: It gladdened my heart Sunday to read a touching article on the iniqui- ties of the English in India. I tried to be annoyed with the article by 'Mr. Malak, but no, there was not a seri- ous statement from beginning to end, and in no case was there any attempt to put up any facts supporting those statements. Mr. Malak says that the Indians are not quarrelsome. This is totally wrong, since there has long been bit- ter emnity between the Hindus and the Mohamedans, and one of the chief duties of the Indian Army and the P0- lice is to maintain peace between the two sects, particularly on their holy days. Last year in the Punjab feeling ran very high, and the Government had an anxious time preventing a clash. The inability of the various Indian sects to combine has been tak- en advantage of by the English; most regiments in the Indian army were and are still composed of mixed class- es, that is Mohamedians and Hindus regiments, by which is meant regi- ments which are composed wholly of one caste such as the Gurkha regi- ments, are relatively few and only of those men who, are deemed to be reliable. During the Moplah rising in 1921 the Moplahs did not confine them- selves merely to attacking things English, they desecrated Hindu temp- les and violated Hindu homes. If the Indians are "so content to work for their independence by the slow meth- ods of reform," why did Mahatma Gandhi find it necessary to take fast- ing vows as a protest against violence as preached by the Ali Brothers and carried out by the mob? Then there is the railroad question. Will Mr. Malak please make out a list of important centers in India which are not served by railroads? Except- ing the strategic railroads up to Quet- j ta and on the Northwest frontier I saw no railroads which were primar- ily for strategic purposes. Some of the railroads in India are partially controlled by -the government, but the majority of lines are operated by pri-, vate enterprise and financed in Lon- don. Finally on the subject of industry, the Tata corporations are the wealth iest in India, and the cotton mills. or Bombay are controlled by wealthy In- dians much to the detriment of the cotton industry in Lancashire. There is most emphatically no monopoly of industry by the English in India. J. C. Heraper a mad scramble on the part of bothIv He works in iron, in wood and stone, Republicans and Democrats to win In oils and acids, in flesh and bone, over the confidence and votes of the His genius changes our very lives, David A. Fax re s r Tlai;ht Geo. A. Stracke Will Weise C F. White R. C. MWinter THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1924 Night Editor-EDGARI1H. AILES THE UNION FAIR HAS ITS MEANINA Contrary to the opinions -of a few individuals hereabouts who think that the Union Fair is merely an unusual way in which to create an evening of noise and foolishness, it is at this time thought exceedingly pertinent to im- press upon the minds of all the stu- dents and faculty that the purpose of the Fair is a very serious one, and that it is this purpose and nothing else that is prompting various clubs and organizations and fraternities to lend a helping hand in order to insure success to the undertaking. The com- pletion of the swimming pool depends on the success with which the Fair is put over. Any number of different ways have been tried with varying degrees of suc- cess to raise enough money to com- plete the swimming pool. But it seems as if there always lacked just enough punch and reserve to finally put over a drive or a subscription or whatever it happened to be. And now, as a last resource almost, the old method of raising funds by means of the Union Fair is to be tried. That this Fair must be a complete success goes without saying if Michi- gan is to have a swimming pool of worth. 'And in order to insure this complete success it is highly neces- sary that the Fair undertaking be sup- ported to the very utmost by every member of the University of Michigan. that should or might excuse an indi- vidual from attending the Fair. It is There are indeed very few reasons a just and useful cause for which so iimary of our people have given an un- limited amount of their time, and it isj only necessary that the right spirit be attained in order to work out in every detail the plans which have been laid' that spell success for the undertaking. > But first of all attendance is needed. Ilan to be there and plan to bring your friends for the support of one of the most practical bits of work under-f taken by the University this year. BASEBALL VERSUS INTELLECT- ITAI AW public. This year their task is doub- ly difficult for not only do they have to win the confidence of the people, but first they must recreate it. For public confidence in the political ma- chine at Washington has been under- mined and in many cases completely lost by certain uncomfortable entang- lements of some of its- most prominent members in the Teapot Dome affair. RT e,. ebenfagtet he sad realization th'at their governmet isn't altogether ' their government; Lat' themi' so-cll gov4ri iient "of the people, by the people, for the ~eople isreally a tool by which some dt their ofii als are doing the people; atht pur forign policy and home leg isl.tioi;h s been partially controlled by the unlimited millions of one oil taron; that this controI has been brought- aout through bribery of spme g'litlcal eels who' have had nithei the back1"ine nor the sense of honor to defend the rights and prop- erty of those who put them in office-. Is it any wonder'then, that they haveI little confidence in them? This year the prime requisite of a candidate must be honesty and integ- rity. As Senator Walsh says, the choice must be made on a patriotic rather than a party basis. A man's firmness and strength of character should be taken into consideration be- fore his political viewpoint or party classification. Before the United mocracy it must expose and oust the States can hope to have a real de- political grafter -whose policy is con- trolled by the dollar sign. If ever there was a time when "the straight ticket" should be made a thing of the past, it is now and it is the duty of very American citizen who has at heart the welfare of his country and its place of respect in the eyes of the other nations of the world to use his ballot and irregardless of party, class, creed, or section, vote for the best man. Twenty-Five Years Ago At Michigan From the files of the U. of M. Daily, March 6, 1899. The Anti-Saloon league is circulat- ing on the campus a petition which it is hoped will be widely supported by students and faculty, to the effect that "you (state legislature) are rsepect- fully petitioned . . . to enact .a law providing for the prohibition of a saloon . . . within three miles of the University of Michigan, Ann Ar- bor . . ; and for this wise, humane, and just protectip of our college youth . . . we will ever pray." The Pennsylvanian, of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, protests the de- cision of the judges to Michigan's victory in the recent Michigan-Penn- sylvania debate in the following words. "The debate was decided on the form and manner of delivery, not on the merits of the question. It was - -of- -of -rhatnrnndoaniencn On his creations a nation thrives. Machines write millions to one of pen, j Machines are doing the work of men, Machines all horses soon will replace, Machines are keeping birds apace. Machines that figure, machines that talk, Machines that tell us how far we walk. Machines carry voices from friends afar, Machines. make .peace. and machines make war. This poem is the work of "J. A. M." and was first printed in the Monthly Bulletin of the Swedish Engineers' So- ciety of Detroit., * * * JtEFUTATION ACI R i T I Q U E In glancing over your disreputable col the other dayI was unpleasantly surprised to see many oaths scattered about among your sentences. Espec- ialy in that cheap steal, "The Rover Boys' Revenge," there were many things written which the real Rover Boys would never, never think of say- ing. For instance, the runt Sam habit- ually cursed like a trooper. The "runt Sam" is not a runt as you seem. to think. In reality he is a tall, well-built lad of some sixteen summers, bronzed by wind aid wave, and possessed of a keen grey eye be- tokening the ready wit of a born ad- venturer. IHe never swears, drinks, dances, or smokes, and makes a point of saying his prayers at night for six and a half minutes by the clock. I know all these things are so for I know him personally. In fact I am yours sincerely, Sam Rover . * * * FROM THE DETROIT NEWS "Hitch your mind to a horseshoe and ride to success," was the speak- er's advice. "In my backyard at Ann Arbor there are four horseshoes and two iron pegs surrounded by concrete, and whenever I have a half hour to spare-and I manage to spare it every day-I drag a frined of mine, professor, student, or whoever he may be, into my back- yard, for a game of horseshoes. "Do you know, if you want to make a half dozen ringers in a game, as I usually do, you've got to concentrate your mind on that peg, forty feet away. You can't be taking in every- 1 thing that's going on about, who is passing on the sidewalk, and what kind of clothes she is wearing, and all that. It takes, a great deal of mental effort to play horseshoes, and play it right. "That's why horseshoes is such a I wonderful way to improve your mind. Try it. Your success in this world depends upon the quality of your brains. If you aren't doing any think- ing; if you move in circles, where the expression of new ideas is taboo, it's time you took an inventory. Put your self on a time budget. Set aside an hour, or a half hour, or even fifteen minutes a day, if that's all you think you can spare for the development of your mind. "It's fascinating to be the head of a university of 12,000 young men and women, because the college student soon learns the value of an 'active TAlE TH EATRE I "1 "Wildflower" with its' ox-cart and donkey will be presented this evening at the Whitney theatre, along with the famous "Bambalina" and the equally famous "Wildflower, I Love You." The action, according to the reviews, is laid among the central-European peasantry with its subsequent costumc opportunities, and the plot proper con- cerns the triangle of a sweet country girl, a handsome nobleman, and a very bad and beautiful vampire-a sure-fire combination for musical comedy, so it seems. The production has really scored what the press-agents term "a tre- mendous hit," and with Edith Day in the leading role it is still playing to capacity houses at the Casino Thea- tre, New York. The company on tour is also reported to be excellent, carry- ing a large chorus, a complete or- chestra, and adequate settings. The leading roles are to be taken by Miss Olivotti and Paul Donah. The College of the City of Detroit has announced a Summer School of Dramatic Art under the direction of Sam Hume from August 4 to 30. Th;, announcement, of course, is of the greatest significance to those inter- ested in dramatics. Sam Hume, as is well known, is one one of the most progressive and stimulating producers in the country. From 1916 to 1313 he was the director of the Detroit Arts and Crafts Theatre, making the the- atre and himself mutually famous due to his genuinely artistic performances. More recently he was the director of a six weeks' repertory season in Or- chestra Hall, the first and only real repertory prgoram ever undertaken in America. At present he holds the po- sition of Assistant Professor of Dra- matic Literature and Art at the Uni- versity of California, and under his direction the most ambitious and worth-while plays are offered yearly before a subscription audience num- r' I1 II