THE MICHIGAN DAILY______
~j1th ey do to the general public's love1
7.U of agood sporting contest for its own
sake. At present, the public, uncon-
IL NEWSPAPER OF THLE' nected with the competing universities
VElSITY OF MICHIGAIN except as fans at the athletic contests,
d every morning except Monday; holds almost an equal responsibility
eUniversity year by the Board in for the cheering as the student. "For
StudentPublic-i---.- the honor of the school" may well be
s of Western Conference Editorial translated at the jpresent time into a!
n . phrase which more nearly approaches
sociated Press is exclusively en- the reason for athletic contests "for.
:he use for republication of all newsthpulcyofhesol.
credited to it or not vtthcrwisethpulcyofhesol.
i
nAL
YO x4 110
AND A sOTIE
OF RUN
"THE GOOD OLD DAYS"
1
i
i
the inspiration of free verse. Adieu!.
mes petits! Adios! Aufwiederseben! I-
J. .i. .+'.L. }
The dandelions came out today.,
After all, life is a pretty funny sort
of a proposition, isn't it?
_r ?fr. Jason (Cowles. -
1 C AMPUJS OPINION I
G LFo HP_ TORES
BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL,
rl*TnnI I1iITrn I ;ure ARA- UBJ i '
Camp time, tramp time,
Hear the distant call:
Laks and mouintains,
nthis paper and the local news pjub-f
rein.}
ed at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
n, as second class matter. Special rate j
ge granted by Third Assistant Post-1
General.
ription by carrier, $3.50; by mail,
s: Ann Arbor Press Building, May-
treet.
s: editorial. 2414 ana x76.M; Busi-
;0.
d communications,. not exceeding 300
will be published' in The Daily at
retion of the Editor. Upon request,
ntity of communicant will be re-
as confidential
EDITORIAL STAFF
'elepliones, 2114 and 17611I
MANAGING EDITOR
HARRY D. NARY
n
p
'r
i
,l
1
i7
S
r...........Rcbv, B. Tara
ard Chairman...R. C_ Morarity
...... . . C. Garlinghouse
Night Editors
i~A. B. Connable, Jr.
P. M. Wagner
or............... Ralph N. Bvcis
,ditor ............Winona Hlibbard
or..... ....Ruth A. Nowell
ity Editor..Kenneth C. Kellar
:higan News Bureau. R. G. Ramisay
Editor...Robert B. Henderson
Assistants
ey Elizabeth Liebermainn
man R. S. Mansfield
nell R. C. Mack
,l
1
i7
S
i
i
V own
Conrad
te Dote
Davis
Ehrlich
ernambers
artrier
hHeath
enry
Hlousew'o
V er eiia Moran1
Iiarold Moore
Ca, l Ohlmacher
Ilyde Perce
Andrew Propper
bladeriReed
g9 Regina lReichnann
EdiarieSchraud. r
0. A. Stevens
W. LH. Stoneman
orth Mfarjorie Sweet
Frederic G. Telmos
N. R. Tiai
W. J. Walthour
Hernian Wise
1
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 90
BUSINESS MANAGER
LAURENCE H. FAVROLI
i .. . . . . .. ... . .E. L.' D inns
n g................Perry M. llaydl~
' ng.....................1V. Roe~ser
rg..................... H. E. Rose
; . . . . . . . . .... ..1 . L. Htale l
o ......... ... C. Purdy"
ion .................Lawrence Pierce
Assistants ''
Campbell N. I:. Holland
,aplan. 1LI. L. Ireland
in B ~ yron Parer
LDexter A. 1. Seidman
i. inn Geo. A. 'track
IATI7RDAY, MAY 3,1924
I Bk on Si ' A and all. I__________________
The base-ball season is now In full Beconoeadal
~wn n hedahrteo rn- Trails a-wining,i THE FOREIGN STUDENT PROBLEM' -
inthers has increased-in the funny~ Hail the break of day; To "The Editor:-
papers. Our ambition is to hear a Pack your knapsack, Teei e tdn owo u
eal live oflice boy use that excuse. it wy university life means more than to
i ; ~the student from other 'countries, and i.
California and the West are greatly!. Sunlight fading, priualpras h tdn
worried over the recent report that the Eivening shadows fall; fgrom the far east. He looks forwardj
hoof and mouth diseases are attacking Campfire glowing! to it as a great adventure and as the'
Ford cars. I rnscnett l.i consumation of his training; it is to
_____-----Pleasant memories, make him intimate with American
ARKS AND THE NATION Jy htfl ahdy ways of thinking and doing, to turn
Mr. William B. Shearer was former-1 Closer friendships him out in our sense a gentleman and
Live for aye! ii
ly a naval expert employed by the DVDSAR a scholar, to make him a man apart
United States Navy Department, and DVDSAR hnh eun.Aehshpsfl
s an authority worth hearing. He Member Camp Diretors' Ass. whilen ertrsrehshpsfl
has made a public statement as to the They seem to be fulfilled in different
This little poem leads off the CampI
strength of the American Navy. 'cases in very unequal degrees. In
Summed up, Mr. Shearer's statement Advertising Section in the New St. our own university, the conditions
is that whereas the naval arms con- Nicholas-and a blinger of a section' seem more favorable for the womlen!
ference of 1922 set the ratio of Great) it is. The old stuff is all there itj students than for the men. For at
Britain, the United States and Japan is'doplc le least a dozen of the women who come
at 65-3, the ratio is :now 5"-3-1. The from the far east are residents in !.
According to Mr. Shearer the United Wyonegonic, the Tall Pines Camp, can hadly imagine a better positio'
States is now inferior in ships, in gunl Camp Mystic, Kineowatha, Junaluska, th9an this for getting what tey wiant
calibre 'and elevation, In oil fuel andi Twa-Ne-Ko-Tah (a camp °foi' girls) j from a foreign experience. Their
in naval bases. Certainly it was not' Minnetonka, Neshob, Campn Leater-'licontact wih America is not limited!
the intention of the United Staten I to the clas -room; they see how,,we
Government at the time of the navalstcigCapTilsndaVhe live and how we deport ourselves
conferenlce that such'a thing shoulda the Cape Cod' school of nonsense with others; they learn what we think,
happen. The general impressin inn , r al mfodelled atei" s.ich gllr aout, they peetate into ur :back-
the publi mind when this agreeent4 glen as Nbc sst-and. thzre his gjn4 a an va evg cqiraan
was 'tade a short two years ago .was Cm geogn ap wea English that is fairly idiomatic. With
that' the competition; in naval con- w sa-a school for stammerers careless- most of the foreign students, and ap-
struction had been checked, and yet! ly hove in among the camps-Camp I parently with all the men, the case;
that the necessary defence of the Rip Van Winkle-etc. etc. i s different. They are not members
United States had not been neglected. They are all ideally located on of fraternities. 'They live as a rule
We see now a condition which, if ! "beautiful lake Sebago" or on "the in houses where, often, the only stu-;
true, is both humiliating and alarm-, lakes and mountains near Lisbon, N. dents are countrymen of their own.
ing.Wha wee te rsy ope ofH,". or "between Boulder and ( With these students they feel at
those who thought that parchment ,EtsPri h er fNtr' home; with others they do not.
could do the work of guns and ships?+ Playground," or "in the beautiful and Hence the thing that usually happens
The United States has no navy yards picturesque Virginia mountains" or is the formation of a clique. The stu-
and no naval bases; it is outgunned "on enchanting Lake Iona," or "ex- dents of one country tend to room to-
by the British navy and the latter's! hilerating Wisconsin" or "fascinating, gether, eat together, converse togeth- d
successful oappositioni't$ new gun el = Ofrd, Mich." er, 3anIse thbemselves together; hat
vaton n or prt as esuted~n Customers at these camps will find is the line of least resistance. lin3tE
our being outranged; Great Brita$4 {cnenia" thlns; they° if "'T ith'h It is certainly not the line of h~osti
1has niiiet1e, V a 'Bass &A,_a anhs lowcdown on the birds and the basts j l~e Fr altasunineteey are
an h Bni tates has non - the' little denizens of the fodest- western university in body, they; ay
VA i' h1pa'nes ~jaef~e~]-teyi owant wi'lk'ih,-rd b ning half thehr time in their'
vtn hghlevfire heal1 l (~narshoot like-wh. eion ury--
aebingu;~ n r one shoot like? '4- Everything" that can be don to i
rai n bdyjehnh ~ oyhood. Heatnever enttta sis f sale.The -osmpoitan i
rai nfighting urjits.prv;
International practice has pro- Pi- '#awsset, not far fromn os- Club is performing a genuie service
the holden use of ac ion. With a'4:co" Q It-Inevr ived ,a whoi I.in the "4. uch iservice nt ght
a evl~t ~o'e he~overn e"4, sum ier outdoors, swimming every iperhaps be extended. ,Might it 'not
the time . fox, , ilAi,,ups arrived. - ixrflring at seven-they call it a dip, # e 'possbl, 'fr e canple,to reo nize,
_____________ 1 I believe-having a swell breakfast f; deiberatey and nofficially,.te h yid-
;° ' x }- d
Have you ,noticed how lpnes . lt '..ev s'y.Ka- nng t cbas f thm foreign ~studet_ antd la lw
cetro h ~pslo~UW tent for inspection, learning the teahafcly dvr, perhaps
.#names of butt~rf s allm ni , eat- Itgivig h 1. iiown choice, *who
the pretentious offcea of" the Buil ing igselni~ ~t1W~ii~pa~Isol
and 'rud Delrrtnient are ano ,indoor all afternoon, eating a swell'aletapontoeehm
thse mssng?, from time to time, to know hiim per-,E
Isupper with ricepuid~for ~esrt, saly on .hs teghad
'sitting around the campfire every [weakness, a'4 to 41o s much ser
ste-Survivors of modern, liquor are1 evening, listening to one of the lead- + ing as practicable? Such personal
showing a tendency to favor proibi- ers read a story out of Boy's Life,;°
tion heaing guidance would make his education a
Lion, earinga bugler witha cold blow taps I less machine-like process; it might
very mushily, and hearing the boys change somewhat the ideas of' us
FOLLOW THlE WALKS 1sng the words even musierly still., which he will carry back when he
Ever since the weather would per-'I He missed it all. goes; and cosidering the relative
mit it a large force of workmen have I smallness of his numbers, it would I
been kept busy in an attempt to beaut- 1 Lectures In Writing Free Verse not, I should think, lay a tax on the1
ify the campus. One of the main! faculty beyond what his better re-
things that needed attention were the NO. 1. presentation of u at home would
various paths that the student body Peach blossoms-ah!. and were I but- in the long run fully repay.
had worn In the lawn during the But a buttercup- 1;1B.
course of .the winter. These paths .'I'd :yell-oh ! - -
were used as short. cuts, at placesI Don Juan Leigh
where the following of the sidewalk I
EAST 13OVUND
Llmiteds: 6 a. mn., 3:10 a. m. and
every two ho::: to 9:10 p. mn.
Express: 7 a. n., 8 a.,im. and ever: y
two hours to 8 p~. m.
Locals:7 a. mn., 8:55 a. mt. and'
every two' hours to 8:55 p. M.
11 p. im. To Ypsilaiu only, 11:40
p. mn., 13:25 a. m.' and 1.15 a. in.;
WENT 'BOUN~D
Limiteds: 8:47 a. mn. and every twoli
hours to iip. in.
IExpress (making local stops) : :l
a. mn. and every two hours to 9:601
p. Mn.
!f-rwal: 7:50 a, im., 12:10 a. 13
Read the Want Ad~
41 (11 7 8 9 10
11 12 1. 114 15 10) 17
IS 19 20 121 ~2 23 2l
NOTICE
Ill order Lo 4close wutgall Sparing
f'elt liats 11efore StawHat Stave
IvP .re mhaig theLollovvg ;sc-
rifices:
All $3.50 Jrwts "Now. ......$3; 01
All 1.00 1atsN ov. ......35:
All 4 ,) HAts 'Nov......
All 5.00 hats N(m. ......4I2
Lotsi lof arge Sr<*.,
FACTOR~Y hAT 'STORE l
r17 Padf~ardt !IS. honte 179-)2
LueveChzrrbtrr ol omrtS: e
W eek lDa s Sun :ivys
6245p . prx
4:45 ,. m.
JASb.IH. ELLIOTT:, ';-'t
Rec1.d the (Ian'lt IAds
A graduation C
he will prize
A RIDER
Patronize Daily Advertisers.-E
.................... ... . . . .
Hand Woven (Counterpane
Ernhroideired& Tufted Kimono
{X'oian s lEchange 10 UNickels Arcac
'i on asso' haas go:ing r ; at.. ................$6.c
ICeasrtet asggat............5
.1Also newv, sport h-t Cat... . ...... .......... $5.C
Popular- Price Hat Shop
333 SOUTH1 MAIN
(Whes're D,.11J. R. Stopsiat St."Ite)
~-
Li
t®
i;-. "I
Engraviui 1 I- i
tEditor-HARRY
.C..,CLARK-
THI HY AND WHLY NQO O
CHEERING
pecialization always tends toward
)fessionalism and thereby lessens!
asiderably the spontaneous euthus-s
;m which amateur principles bring
"th. The high degree of specializa-!
n in all forms of extra-curricular
*pity has grown to an alarming ex-
t in the last few years and es-
cially is this phase true of inter-
e'giate sport.
P'he letter of the rules governing
ateur sport has been observed, more
less strictly, in all of the colleges
the country, -but the high degreeC
public interest aroused by collegi-
competition, and the use of strong
letic teams as college advertising
diumns has made it necessary to
courage athletic stars in high school
,upetition to attend the colleges and
iversities of the country merely be-
ase of the shoving they will make
the varsity athletic teams. These
me causes have also brought about
ger and more intensive training
Iods for the men on the major sport
ins and has made necessairy the
lding up of large and expensive
ching system for the purpose. of
tting forth, at atny cost permitted
amateur rulings, teams of great
nning ability. All these things
ve contributed to place intercolleg-
e atheltic competition on a basis
ich smnacks very strongly of profes-
tnalism,
Tendencies of this kind have been
subject of much discussion and at-
tion from college and 'university,
ministrations throughout the coun-
T.Attempts have been made to
=an the athletic slate now, before a
at landslide in college opinion en-
ely disposed of intercollegiate ath-
ic games.
bilven within the undergraduate
dies themselves murmurs have from
te to time been making themselves
ard above the uproar of loyalty
eeches and cries. Possibly the most
standing evidence of the growing
ect this attitude is having on the.
dents of nearly all our large uni-
sities and colleges is the noticeable
ense of a great amount of span-
eous cheering. We find editorials
college newspapers decrying the
~( p 1 /
w
A, 02 i Old eweler
mmy Aft
sp
5,
.
would have taken the "hu.rrying" stu - Ladies and Gentlemen:-
dent a. little out of his way. Students Too' many people- have the idea
seem to have learned the axiom of that verse should be poetical in form
geometry, that a straight line is the as well~ as in thought. .Nothing could
shortest distance between two points, be further from Truth. Verse has
and some made use of it to the sorrow discarded its rhyme scheme, Just as
of those who wish to see their camp- in. the future newspapers will dis-
us a real beauty spot. I card print. The. poetical form of a
All of these unsightly paths have poem is unnecessary. For that mat-
been dug and grass seed has been ter, the poetical thought is unneces-
planted. If the seed is given half a sary. Modernists have shown this.
chance it will probably do a great The difference between, free verse
deal in a few weeks. Some students, and prose is merely the way in which
however, seem determined not to give it is smeared on the page. The free
it a chance. The seed had hardly verse poem should look as if a squab
been sown and the workmen had with muddy feet had waddled down I
hardly left the spot when various' the page. Its words should be the!
students ignoring the very evident at- harshest, ugliest, vilest possible-ob-
tempt of the university, to obliterate tainable in a heap of garbage. To
the paths, started to follow them I illustrate:
again. My heart is a sewer-rat
The university has spent a great That gnaws
deal of money this. spring in an at- And gnaws and gnaws....
tempt to beautify the campus, they, You can see Carl Sandburg and
have bought a great deal of shrubbery Amy Lowell biting their nails and dy-
and this is being planted; but what ing with envy-and Robert Frost be-
is the. use of it all if some students coming frozen. Poetical form and
still persist in saving themselves a poetical thought being unnecessary to
few steps at the expense of;, the uni-- poetry, you can lug in all m-anner of
versity and those of their fellow stu- foreign swear-words and secure that
dents who enjoy a, beautiful campus?'i subtle mysterious aroma so much ad-
________________I mired in free verse. Attendez, mes
All our campus lacks is a statue of enfants:
some great man astride a horse. The milkman (ah' coqluin!) has
_________________delivered
Spring is here, but where are the 1lis auto-complex solution-
campus benches? S'l vous plait-c'est lait-
________________ I With "savoir faire" and none
''ni~n- T pr '-Arn.- ict .l tT,.! 'f'the "double e~ntendre" sol
TONIGHT,: tiele iclilgami Repertory
Theatre'Ipresenlts Shiaw's "Man itand
Superman". in the Whitney TIhea tre
at 8 o'Clockr
FRhDERIO. McCONNEL has an-
nounced the cast for "Man and Super-
man," Bernard Shaw's satire to be
produced this evening in the Whitney
Theatre- by the Michigan Repertory
Theatre. Katherine Wick Kelly, who
played the leading role in "Anne Ped-
dersdotter," will have the part of Mrs.
Whitefield, Norma Harrison Thrower,
the adventuress in ''March Hares,"~
will be Ann Whitefield, and Carl Reid,
the important character of John
Tanner.
The remainder of the cast will in-
clude Emmanuel Gebaner as Roebuck'I
Ramsden, Parker Tyler as Octavius
Robinson; Verda Stewart as Miss
Ramsden, Daphne Williams as Violet'I
Robinson, Russel Collinls as Ihenry,
Straker, K. Elmo Lowe as Hector
Malone, Jr., 'Ben Levin as Mendoza,
and so on and so on through the more
minor characters of the unusually
large cast.
For the final time, you are reminded'
that individual seats are still avail-
able at the Whitney Theatre box office.
Dance
to Th~fese
1Vew Vecof'ecords TODAY
193 03
1930
Thei
Mernr Lane--Waltz (Vocal Refrain)
Don).7 HorneBlues-Fox Trot'
Waring's Pennsylvanians
Waring's Pennsylvanians
lHilo Hawaiian OrchestraI
Hito Hawaiian Orchestra
MHult Hula 'Di-eam Gr-a
Sad Haw~aian Sea-Waltz
- 19304
75c
f
From One Till T'o--F<ox Trot (v,,wth voca_ l refrain)
X1hit'ey Kaufznan's -Original
In a Chals'o 'bin (ong elancholy)-Fox Trot
Whitey Kauf'man's O rginal
Penn Serenaders
P ern Serenaders
Othr Fin-e "Rcords in
-This New LSt
Vidrcla Nc. 50
Mahogany or Oak.
';acb i ea!r C ])£1 plays h i(( crt o No. 2 In c AMino)r for lianoan
orc be'siru acvcoianitid by the Plhila!delphia Orchtra cli 'Three Red
Seal Reoor ds.
TWO sa(cred SC~iCtGion;by EgrI e odTi!iy iE Qur
tet.
Four othe.r espcially ipleasing lightvclseetos
HEAR THE ENTlIRE LIST AT
.w,
_.__,. i
I
11