THE MIC141GAN DAILY r- OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICIIGAN Published every morning except Monday during :the University year by the Poard in Cotntrol of Student Publications. I Menbers of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- tilled to the use for republication of all news dispatches crdited to it or not otherwise rrdited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Enlered at the postoffce at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $40-. Offic-s: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. 1'hon-s Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ness, 960, Signed communications, not exceeding 300 -*Ni des, will he milli lhcd" in The I )ailv at ie discretion of the wditor. Upon request, the identity of communicants will be re- garded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAHUE News Editor...............Julian E. Mack City Editor.......... ...Htarry l[',,ey Lditorial Board Chairnan. ... R C. Moriarty Night Editors. V. II. Ailes A. B. Connable R. A. l3illington 1'. E. Fiske Harry C. Clark C G. Carlinghouse P. M. Wlagner Sports Editor..............Ralph N. Byers W omnsEditor..,.... ,.....Winona iHibbard Telegraph Editor...a.........R. B. Tarr Sunday agazint Editor......F. L. Tilden Music EditorE.............Ruth A Howell Editorial Board assistance; it must look to the state, the true heir to the museum treasure, for relief. Or if that fails it mustT look elsewhere. "Elsewhere" is a wide, vague expanse, but within its limits the University has found generous, conscientious assistance. The Law SUNDRY THINGS dormitory and all other buildings se- cured through private gifts are evi- I dence of the interest which alumni we think that we, having had Political and friends manifest in the Univer- Science flung in our face for upwards sity's welfare. of a week and half, should have as The old museum mist go, but the good .a chance of copping first money citizens of the state should act as the next man. promptly and make certain that ita Just as a starter, suppose that -in passes in the' manner of ancient West hall and not as a pyre for its precious ex post facto bill of attainder, vested contents. in the inhabitants of that state by and i Paul Einstein S. G. Bactcke Marion tarlow )N. N. Berkman Ilcleri Browvn 1'ernaidette-Cot I arold Ehrlich E. C. Fin gerlc T. P. IIenry Dorothy K;i toseph Krugcr Elizabeth Lien Rotr.-rt Ram say Andrew Propper Assistants R. R. McGregor, Jr. v . McAinis R.S., Nansfield E. C. Mack te S. I. Smith X . I:. Stoneman Ifi. R. Stove N. R, Thal n S. B. Tremble W. J. Walttiour 'cerman IF ITS PONE IN (CI1APAI'N ITI CAN BE DONE IN ANN ARBOR Thirty years ago on May 18,I 1893, the first meet for a state high school championship ever held in the West took place at the fair grounds in Champa'gn. The Uni- versity athletic association, under the guidance of E. K. Hall, now chairman of the national commit-I tee on football rules, sponsored the meet. The interscholastic event grad- ually assumed such proportions that it drew thousands of visitors to the university each year. As more people to view the events, attempts were made to care for the entertainment of the guests. As a result the Interscholastic Circus was started. This burlesque of a real circus is staged entirely by the students who rehearse their acts for weeks in advance. They perfect stunts, acrobatics, mili- tary spectacles and individual clown acts and prizes are offered for the best stunts in each group. Two managers are selected each year from the junior workers byI the athletic board of control. These men issue calls for sopho- more assistants and from this group the junior assistants are chosen for the following year. This summary of the Illinos annual Interscholastic Circus as given to The Daily by a staff correspondent of The Daily Illini. More details of the plan will be presented as will be the or- ganization plan of the Cornell Spring day. Yesterday The Daily suggested a re- vival of the old Union fa'r as the opening event in Yost Field House, for the purpose of raising funds to com-1 plete the Union swimming pool. The Illinois plan is perhaps somewhat more elaborate than the one which with the consent of the v cancies whereof, could be elected to the of-f flee of trust profit and honor, by and with the impeachment of such a com- pensation, freedom of the press. This of course would be balanced by a letter of marque, together with anj emolument, writ and replevin, con-! taining an oath (or affirmation) by and with the recess of the Senate, com- pletely and tranquility adjourned. We the people of the United States, where of thereof hereinafter vested. In witness whereof we have here- unto subscribed our habeas corpus, Ja: Cowles * * * Pass the Ceeky- Sir: I have been insulted, grossly in- sulted. Last night I was out with a man. He was a perfectly nice man. He told me all kinds of nice things. Then he told me that the.night before he had been out with a Normal girl. I was insulted. Marion * This title is all we could arrive at after ten mnutes of profound thought. As you can see, even it isn't very appropriate. * * * This afternoon a bowlegged sand- wich-boy was at large upon the camp- us. Inasmuch as he was the first sandwich person we have seen in some time, and inasmuch as he was a sand- wich child, not an adult, and inasmuch as he was bowlegged, we herewith pre- sent the Yellow taxi company with a free notice. More power to this com- pany and to the whole sandwich family. m* * One of the unfortunate things about America is that we don't have any CAMPUS OPINION Text Books and p s for all AN "ATHLETIC UNIVERSITY!" To the Editw:_ Many memilers of the University are delighted to see that there is a pros- pect of completing the swimming Pool~ in the Mkihigan Union before they CS grow too old and stiff to use it. lgich- igan has long had the reputation of BOTH lNDS FT H ,DAGaNALeWALK an athletic univers-ty. But in the best of all sports it lags behind every col- "lw IL -% C Rr 3 " lege and university--yes, every modern pu'_____Popuar__at._ 11,d. I st -.- high school-in the country. If there a rric Tr t'1": S.i l 1, jJ ' i'j AIil A N-ANN ARBOR BUS LINE -is ' 4 .0 Cetral 'ime (Slow Time) is a Hezelah Sproggs UnTiversty, Virh5 "e J o met. ; . i ' 1 r: Leave chamber of Commerce is'F LL ezeuar "Week Days Sundays founded in 1907, located at Squash c'LL SAY SHE IS I '9 - I; I ;3 1'll .1s nIm. 6s:45 a.m. Center, Noman's county (pop. 903) The xIsical dyl 1 u'Ei 4:45 p:4. pm.. with eight undistinguished instructors Wit' (':iCsi 4 id4 d S r.ts JAS. I. ELLIOTT, Proprietor for a faculty and three hundred stu- IlE ~)11' R Ni A:11:It 10101'IE ! -- ----- --- -- -____1_0_' o e2-M Adrian, Mich. dents, mostly sub-freshmen and special students in fine arts;--you can wager that whatever dlse it lacks there66 :s a swimming pool!eFLYING TALK On points of merit swimming has it over every other sport. I am not '( ,AG '7A talking about the danger of drowning. I NGINEEING BLDG, 310 One can stay on dry laud for that F A. MA 2. mteadgtrun over by auitonmo- U . Royal will gve a short m ,3ny tTO SE laSUBRCRIPT Nta on, aviation, and explain biles. The "be safe when the ship his- course of flying instruc- goes down" argument is the least of IN ANN A R 3 B ion. all the contributions of swimming tohl a a, er e health and happiness. Others, more w'dely applicable, are: I. Swimming, more than any other sport, symmetrically exercises the whole body.. Every muscle is - in play. Good swimmers are almost always better forned and in sounder S general health than any other class:- = of athletes. II. Swimming is adapted to ev- i eryone. Babies love it. Invalds;- grow convalescent on it. Women -- excel at it. The most vigorous ath- letes find in it a supreme test of their power. Merely by varying the duration of the swim and the force of the strokes swimming can pass along the whole scale from absolute Friday TU.kets - T i s ay at 3 rest to the intensest exercise of- which the human frame is capable.I- Provided only that the heart is rea-ra i- 1 a a 3 sonably sound, swimming bars no one from its ranks. X III. Swimming is the only sport that cleanses as it exercises. Froni every pther sport in te world one A-sern l emerges hot and dusty; from swim- ming alone, cool, refreshed and clean. i IV. Swimming is pleasant. N -o---.- one needs to : be- driven to it by doctors as to gymnadium exercises no one requires the impulse of col- lege rivalry or newspaper fame to enjoy it, as is sometimes the case n hard-driven "major sports." V. Swimming is cheap. All tha is needed, is a pool and a change of water in it. No golf courses or marble stadia to establish; no ap- paratus, equipment or elaborate cos tuming is required. 91 f ..cc And this is the sport which the champion athletic university of the! IMI111111111111111111II IMI11i I I 1i I I ii;iI 11111 111II1U1III I Il1ll 111111111111111 18I'= Middle West has chosen for neglect! Very tauly yours, A faculty man. 3YESTERDAY - By SMYTHE Psk SVss Leather CoatS and Lackets, Maeckj Labor Changes Clothes L t r o sda. M k Maior George L Berry president fl Ws. O\e CF c tS ~.I 2al u. C. 9UEC 1 1i BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 900 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURENCE H. FAVROT Advertising.................E. L. Dunne Advertising ...............Perry AM. Hayden Advertising ...C. Putdy Advertising. ....... ...W. Roesser Advertising ............... W. K. Scherer Accounts ... .........C. W. Christie Circulation........ .....o. Haskins Publication ...... Lawrence Pierce Assistants 13ennie Caplan Harold A. Marks John Conlin Byron Parker Alinm B. Crouch S. A. Robinson I ouis M Dexter _ H.M. Rockwell Toseph J. Finn IT. E. Rose bavid A. Fox. Will Weise Lauren Haight C. F. White, Edw. D. Iloedemaker R. C. Winter would be worked out he does not make a greatc WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1923 and money in an Opera The general plan, how Night Editor-EDGAR I. AILES followed at Michigan or _-- - _-insist on originality, we IF $2,000,000 GOES UP IN SMOKE! be a revival of the If the University museum should Michigan Union fair. burn this morning more than $2,000,- 000 worth of collections, representing about as consistent as the fruits of more than a half century professor who attem of exploration, would be a total loss. scrambled eggs out o The old museum is dry and woody andwschcry ggal. overcrowded with exhibits, some of wh'ch are stored in corners where . they are not open to public view. Its avteLl duGtatgeacc lea telling us that 'peace interior is dark and gloomy. It began greatest problem'. Ra to disintegrate more than a decade ago when one of the gargoyles on the tower idea, but st'l a good dropped through the roof. A resident of the city now has the grotesque piece It has been over eight of stone in his den as a souvenir. someone has set a new The University administration since end of the world. the opening of the expans'on program 1 has wisely directed its efforts toward If gas keeps on going obtaining funds for buildings which soon have to be paid for; will shelter classes. It has succeeded to put it in our tanks. re ,far Illinois princes of Rhode Island or any place outlay of time to feature in the papers. The result as we do here. is that our journalists have to spy wever, can be upon the minutest activitaies of the for those who royalty of foreign :lands; 'notably at repeat, it will present the scion o'f the British ruling once famous house. This poor- lad leads what seems to us a most miserable existence. His every costume is reported in as much seems to bedetrail as decency will permit. "His the proverbial Royal Highness played a round of pts to make golluf at the Royal and Ancient Club f his broken of St. Andrews' yesterday. He was clad in a natty rig consisting of blue plus-fours, a green camel's hair sweat- er, and the usual conservative derby. oes teorl d Perferring to dispense with ceremony, e is the world's .ther an old his Royal Highness was accompanied only by the Third Usher of the Black ne. Rod,. Colonel Smitts-Dudley, and his t months since v date for the down we will allowing them . 1 boy-uad." Or when he travels as Lord Renfrew, "Only a simple rail separated him from the rest of the passengers." And the wonder of it all is that in s b in assuring the completion of thoset structures which will possible the dc- Books may be man's best friends, but t commodation of an increased student there are those who prefer salt, and; body. The museum project, in the eyes plenty of it, with their chicken. a of an astute and economical legsla- v ture, was one which could wait. Suchc a ,policy cannot be carried on indefin-'c itely, however. Twenty-Fae Years, So the University, now that its phys- A ® tM ch gan ical expansion has begun to meet the demands placed upon it, must reach A Ij From the files of the U. of M. Daily, t skies. And, among these better thingsOctober 10, 1898. a museum to house its collections, which are among the most valuable in I the ounryshold tke irs plce. The mass meeting at the gymnasium the country, should take first place. I last night was a howling success. Sub- Pennsylvania has one of the finest scriptions were taken to pay the $1,- museums in the East, the gift of a 425 which was the deficit of the Ath- private donor. It is so large that 45wihwstedfcto h ti uide dmus be employedso arescort {letic association, and though they were guides must be employed to escort a little slow in starting, the meeting visitors through its numerous galler- did not adjourn until almost $1,600 ies. It contains both scientific and art had been subscribed.I exhibits. Many of the wide spaces in the Pennsylvania build'ng are filled The Varsity had no difficulty in de- with huge plaster facsimiles in lieu feating the eleven from Kenyon col- of the original exhibits. It is, without lege last Saturday afternoon, although doubt, the finest structure on the at one stage of the game, the OhioL Pennsylvania campus. Pennslvana capus.men had their ball on Michigan's two Here at Michigan we must hide ourmyad teia lonkidiasithoy light under a bushel because the yard line, and it looked as if they bushel--and a shabby cracked old would score. But the Varsity took one of their ld time braces and hold .M k ~ c vv u z v.a, w a a ~aw.a v~~. .rc g . . . az , 2a.. a.. .. pite of all his publicity, he is said to of the International Pressmen's Union, be quite a decent fellow. at the recent convention of the fedora- * * * tion expressed the following platform: The Editor of Chimes complains that "We of the American Federation of he students are sucking their thumbs. Labor stand for four great principles Here is at last proof that the average governing industry. These are the own age of the student entering the Uni- ership of property, an adequate return versity is not 19, as the Editor of on investments, an -adequate sum al- Chimes implied in one of his "Upper- lowed for deterioration, and that wll cuts" recently. workers including managers, get prop- * * * er compensation for what they put The staff of the W G N apparently into industry. went on a wild bat Monday night, i1 udging from the front page display hat greeted the eyes of the customers yesterday morning. See what you can make out of these: A. F. OF L. OUSTS BLACK SHEEP OF REDDISH HUE 10,000 CHEER WIZARDRY OF WELSH WIZARD Lloyd George Keeps Crowd on Feet * * * Detroit, we see, has romped off with second honors in the American league. Iast year the Cobbmen finished third, next year they feel confident of first .lace. Inasmuch as the .baseball pub- lic is sick of watching Huggins and The old standards of labor are rapid.-I ly disappearing. The above is a plat- form that any working man can in- dorse. There is a surprising amount of conservatism creeping into labor platforms. The American Federation of Labor officially denounces Com- munism, confiscation of properties, and any extreme radicalism. Labor no longer goes about with an unkempt beard and a ragged coat; it dons its overalls and working gloves with pride. The outlook is encouraging. For Services Rendered The Prussian Academy of Sciences votes rewards for the past year's ser- vice to its investigators. Some of these gentlemen of high scientific training ,spent many weary months in conducting experiments. Translated O.D. ArmyIBlankets, Utc Pt±aid Blankets, Auto Robes, Steamer RUgs, CoU Th :e w A ese are all wool and are bushel it is-is the only shelter that we have to protect our light from the' wind and weather. TheGuthe expedition isareturning from the Phillipines with a remark-, able collection, and the Kelsey expedi- tion into the Near East, supported by a fund of $100,000 is already planning its dnnenr Wnhat will we do with oI iei rOW mlne e : e Kenyon for downs right on the line. The score was 29 to 0.G The students of Georgetown Uni- versity are rejoicing that the college faculty will allow them to have a foot- ball team this fall. The game was prohibited after the Thanksgiving Mcuraw light each otherfor the worldi into American money, the sum of the title-rand "baseball public" includeres ardsrare as follows- even the Gotham ball-hounds-it is al- To Prof. Guthnick for thermo-elec-{ most certain that thisawriter will see tio measurement of the heat of the some tall swapping, and that some stars, 22 cents. team beside New York is going to To Prof. Pompecky, for investiga- grab some ball-players. tion of fossils, 18 cents. If Detroit gets some, won't it be To Dr. F. Leng, for observing the swell? I ,-,1-,,1,- of tho ornwth of cells in r _rv _. .____ r_. _ . __ .. .._L ..._ .a_ az__ ____.. _7 I Munson Army Shoes, Officer's Dress Shoes. These are for either official or ordinary wear. We have a complete line i