THE, MICHIGAN DAILY TITURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1923 ............ .. OFFICIAL N~EWSPAPER OF THlE UNIVERSITY OF MICIGAN t~cror,'t : 3e are i-red. The win- ning sorcrity 'will be given a lov- ing cup. Such is the way Illinois turns out for if3 annual circus. Michigan must rublished every morning exept Monday naI during the University year by the Poard in- I duplicate Illinois, effort and get oneO Co'ntrol of Student IPublications. - 1for itef. ITll,]lan is feasible and MNemnbers of Western Conference Editorial the FtUlrl~' Uo:"Y' working together, Ass.ociation. can put aLafi over. Michigan The Associated Press is exciusiv(,, en- wnsty whwu olti er titled to the use for republication of all news' and here is tli' plan to get it. dispatches credited to it or not otherwise _____ credited in this paper and the local news pub-- lished therein. ____TUHE B{)K PEACE PRIZE Entered at the postoffice a /\on Arbor, In Spite of the pessimistic attitude Michigan, as second class mirte with wth'ich the" American Peace Subscri-'.ion, by carrier, . :j. t mail,thee $4.00.Award ofa has beef~ received,thr 0i ,': nn A i1 ~ io~ a-is no ,) vable r:,,;j why so _lit- nard Set Z'h1 v ~t, , ~di6 ; H3usi- tW itcst should -e manifested - ~ - tY a ic y leading liinkers of' theI Sindcommunications.,ot , 'i'i g 300 cottntr'.. Ahhough veiy few can con- wolds, will be 1iul :.ldin Lailr at the discretion of the Eio.~a request, Ccive a \\ ar} freed from internationalE the identity of cornru\cet i1;bere- confl i. o t'vn 'viththe nationaliicj garded as confides n tiel ontiswie ot V ~ ~ 1 A iAh-r V th prin aW ity of any system that ly praised the organization before h freshman engineering class and ace that they should give it their best sip-t port. The R. 0. T. C. are cramped for quarters, aid 'it is not situated direct-{ on the campus. These are handicaps in themselves and might appeal to a sense of sportsmanship in the student body to the end of gaining their co- operation in the development of the department.I rairnrninrrrriiriiin- Church Sqelals Solve Problem CAMPUS OPINIONI To the Editor: The plaint of the student from Ore-j gon in Sunday's issue was a hit pat tic, and stood out in such vivid contrast to the attitude of another newgomer, expressed in the Sunday Magazine of the same issue, who hails from farther than Oregon, that I am roused to offer some suggestions. That any young man should find him- self lonesome in a great social insti-j Text o~s x mfrall BOTH ENDS0'1iiF DIAGONAL WALK TOASTED RLL1 WE IDELVE INTO 4 jz: TILE POOL --A Fl !! .ii'' I 0M P11 f l NMI %lmiIm. 6 Telephones, 2414 and 176,X I MANAGING EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAHUE News Lditor .............. Jul ian E. Mack City Editor... ..........harry llt,ey Editorial Board Chairrnar.fl . C. Moriarty Z.IT. Ailes .. R. A. l3illington t, 0 ,( Harry Q. Clark 1. I. wotniouse P. M.W~oau Sports Editor .,.... Rld N. Byers Women':. 3itr , .........,)na Hibbard Telegraph Editor.. ...-.It. B. Tarr Sunday Magazine Editor.....V. L. Tilden, Music Editor.. ..........Ruth A Howell Assistant City Editor...Kenneth C. Kollar4 Editorial Board1 Paul Einstein, 1Ru,ert Ramsay 'And r.c v'Propper A:, Isin tS it. G. Batek MJarion Ba, lw iJ. N. Berk, oiaz Lien Bro- n 1'ernadette C.ote G,. W.' Davis H-arold Ehrlich E . C. Fingerle TI. P. Henry. Dorothy Ka-min Jtoseph Kruger Vlizabeth Lielhermn R. R. McGregor, Jr. j ) VcGinnis 7.S. Mansfield Veren :.\l )an eg,., k ichmiann S. L. -Smith W. 11, Stoneman Ti. R; Stone K. T :; vo G7 3 . i ' rle W. J. W 'tior i walj -r,!(Ii wars either in extent. or actual number can not be overesti-"' mated. Mr. Bok is no dreaming idealist who would presuppose a plan of inviola ble perfection, but rather one desir- ous of minimizing earthly ills to the greatest possible extent. Peace for the "a ire world for all time is thc I. epreCs5( d purpose of the contest which he has instituted, but that the former editor redlly hopes to find among the thousands of proposals, one which would stand the strain of centuri ;, is a matter -for considera- ble dot IL. Why is it that anmong the many au- thoritdes on international law, politic- al science, history, and sociology and economics, here no one man has even so much as broached the subject of a possible solution to the problem pub- licly. It would not be hard for one to construe the silence as an expres- sion of the instinct of self-protection against ridicule. Are our thinkers so afraid of being called idealists that they hesitate to dwell upon the sub- ject of an idealistic state of interna- tional1 co-operation and peace? But a month remains before this ,great contest closes and it would in- deed be of little credit to the IUiver- city of Michigan if none of her eminent minds contributed their thoughts to! the final solution. There may be some already completing papers for the contest, but they are yet to be heard from. Will Michigan be represented in the bulk of great ideas which the Commission of awards will divulge at the conclusion of the affair or will she not? BUSPN-ES STAFF Tc;lephoine 000 BUSINESS' MANAGER LAURENCE H . FAVRO'T AdvertisingY............ . .... L. Dunne Advertising .......... ..erry M. Ti 'vten Advertising............C. i. tdy Advertising............- V. eser Advertising.................. K. Schierer Accounts....................C. XW. Christie, Circulation............Jno. Haskins Publication................L~awrence Pierce Assistants Benni:" Caplan Harold ,\ arks John Co"uin Byron Allin L. Crouch S. A. Kna Louis M. Dexter H. Mv. o~ml Joseph 3. Finn H. F. Rs David A. Fox Will i Lauren Haight C. F.. 'h R. F,. Hawkins, R. C. Vih Edw. .D. lloe, -,aker Night Elt~u - J. G. GA-,L-NAixUcA WHAT OTHERS. DO +The suggestion of opening the new Yost Field house with a re.,li"1 of the old Michigan Union fair, for the pur- pose of raising enough funds to coin- plete the Union swiming l o, was made in The Daily yesterd iay norn- } t; hV tt'C?~: ' " Len I'.f' c : t i PI P jfl " I.~'1euarm l. ttladd2~i U ; ixuc I rn=v:rti~tcd for ;ghat it is and brought homo to us for what it is; as repre- sentative and insp~iringly American an institution as we posses." Perhaps the best reason f(,,,the lack of knowl- edge of the army in the lay mind, es- pecially in the middle west, can be laid at the door of army officials and their m'is They seem to desire publicid',j ~ make no appreciable effort to 4r_.i Moat advertising giv- en4 the rL ht through criticism or THIS pool seems to be raising an awful. smoke on the campus all of a sudden. All Chimes' fault, too. We freely admit,_however, that we are so interested in the various ingenious schemes that have been proposed that f we have actually been talking aboutI It to everyone we know. By this sort of digging around, we have un-I earthed several choice expressions of Campus Opinion which follow: Mr. Francis Lathrop Tilden, ed- iItor of The Daily Sunday Maga- zine, said : "A bath tub was good fenough for my old man and it's good enough for me, by George!" Mr. John Kelly, president of the 'Student. Council, refused to give a statement. Mr. Robert Gaylord Ramsay, of the Editorial board of the Daily, said: "The pool is a pernicious enterprise, and I frown upon it." Miss Winona Hibbard, Woman's Editor of the Daily, said: "I think it will be one of thb best things for Michigan in this gener- ation." Mr. Carroll Jones, editor of the Gargoyle, said : "I advocate the counterfeiting machine for rais- ing the money." jMr. Thomas Eliot 1'ii~ae , 'i: editor on the Daily , sai'; v must bring ourselvesi f.-Oau t? Stone Age era, and conbine oai efforts for progressiveness an reconstruction. Why not dive into this pool campaign idea?" Mr. Ralph ]Newell Byers, sport- ing editor of the Daily, said: "I think the; idea's pretty wet," -m . John. Gray Garlinghouse, ni1ght editor on the Daily, said: "It is as important to clwnu sie one's self while in collego as it develop that mind of yours. Ciiw clean, my lads, and contribute to our bath." Mr. Harry Donald Hoy, city editor on the Michigan Daily, said: "I disapprove of the plan. It's too big a drain on the Union." Mr. Carl Egbert Ohlmacher, of the Daily sport staff, said: "I fall in with the idea." Mr. Edgar Ailes, night editor on the Daily, said: "Every re-blood- ed man who really believes in the Maize and Blue should get be- hind this pool and push it, for the glory of dear old Michigan. LET'S GO!" We, Jason Cowles, Booster extraor- dinary, think the pool is great dope. Chimes is frightfully clever to have though t of the nice plan, and we hope to go wading by Christmas. Psych 7 Notes The occipital lobe runs around be- hind the frontal axone, up the fissure of Sylvius, across the fissure of Ro- lando, then due south to the parietal lobe, which is just as clearly marked as the temporal gland which we ob- serve lurking behind the corpora 1 quadrigemina. IThe lecture was illustrated with' a fpicture of a brain, which, if we may be pardoned, didn't help a damn bit. We have received from the Union, the Home of all Michigan Men, a communique containing the names of three of the four freshmen we are to advise. None of them have looked us up to date, but if they will call at this tution of twelve thousand vibrant1 questing souls is not easily imagin- able-and that he should feel that t.he cause lies ini the institution i, rath- er startling. The writer was once a stranger here himself and had the same. desire for companionship. But he did not meetr the same difficulty. If they young man from Oregon were of a religious trend he would find an almost excessive! eagerness to make him feel at home. And, really, there are soma -quite pretty young ladies who frequent the churches. But if hie has a strong aversion to sects he might not object to the inhabitants of Lane Hall. Not .quite so many fair ones there, to be sure,-but ever so many handsome ones, and they are not ignorant of the Iother half of the universe. Perhaps, however, the student from Oregon is purely pragmatic. If so he has mny hearty approval, and opens the way for the, best suggestion I know, and that is-Service. No man *who wants to'get into the harness and -serve the University of Michigan need Iworry about companionship. The SDaily, the monthly magazines, the S. C. A., athletic jobs, the teams--all are needing and seeking the man who has the right spirit of citizenship. This is the surest road I know to the inner social life of the Campus-to the heart of Michigan. Once-a-Stranger. .'r AU STEAMER RUGS AN I)WLiI8 .N T -'-you 11 need some these fall nights. 'i'ey arc as essential to health z' f''4 -aw. fou'l1 need them for tile games, too. We have all kinds and a largeasomL f'r, Checks,( . DI. Arnly Blankets in khaki and grey. Leat ei'Jri Men's,i e r YI and wvomcn's in B 'w suede. Also - Ma~kna~V, ()'~ :co. and SweaterCtw Urusuied X(WI,001 'iY . styles e it Ibe rpKn f a n c 'v. n A -c'itio w have he t' Wveighbt swe~rcI-