PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY - -----r 1 4r tr tgan U a - 4 OFFICIAl, NEWSPAPER OF THE: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday' during the lnivcrsity year by the Board in Cmi.r4il of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en- itled to the use for republication of all news dispatches criested to it or not otherwise credit-cd in this paper and the local news pub- lished .therein. Entered at the postofiee at Ann Arbor, Mich i an, asi second class mxatter, ubscri'ption by carrier, $3.5o; by mail, $4.00 ofces:' Ann Arbor Press Building, May- naid Street. Min, s, 4ditorial, 2414 and 176-M; Bisi nesS, 960). 'Sj ned communicationrs, nott cxceedini~t 3oo0 wo gi~ll1epublished in The Daiv at the di; 'retion of the Editor. Upon request, the ideatity of communicants will be re- garded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAdUE N~ews dftor..............Julian E. Mack' City Editor..........Harryr H ey Editorial Board Chairman... .R. C. Moriarty Night Edtors F.11,. Ailes A.,1B. 'onnable R., A. Billington T . E.l"iske Hlany C. Clark .G. Garlinghouse P. M. Wagner pomets Editor..............P alph N. flyers W omen's Edits............. Winona 11 ibbard Telegraph Editor.............R. B.3'Parr. Sunday Magazine Editor... F. I,. Tilden Afti tEditor...........Ruth A lowell Assiitant City Editor. Kenneth C. Kellar Editorial BoardR~ii a _~ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1923 tween the students and the faculty.c The letter, completely exonerating a student .who has been punished for. misconduct, was written to the DailyJ in an effort to clear the student'sj name, only after a petition had been sent to the Central Committee on' Discipline of the University. The school-boy tradition of hostil-l ity betweon students and faculty of a. large ITniversity like Michigan has] been breaking down but, even at thej present time, some vestiges of the idea' remain in the minds of many. Only open handeq action on both sides can finally bring about a complete under- standing. The work which student self government has been taking over during the past few years has, in some measure reassured the faculty of student cooperation in administer- i the affa'rs of the student body and a great deal of responsibility has been sw!cessiully put upon the student of- ficers. The .progress of student self government has, however, been retard- ed by the remnants of the antagonis- tic feeling on the part of the faculty. which the students think still exists. When this idea can be ent irely wipedI out, student officers will have the sup- port of the entire student body behind them in the'r cooperation with Un1- vers4ty officials. Frankness, such as was clearly ex- pressed in the faculty letter of yes- terday morning, is the proper policy for the faculty to follow to gain the confidence of the student body. More action of this kind will produce good results. ' IN THE MAKING "America today is overwhelmedi with its opportunities and pos- sessions; we are overwhelmed with our rches. Why then, is life not good? Simply because we doj not know the difference between good and bad, fine and vulgar, high and low:" speaks on "Vavanarola", Prof. J. M. B. Sill of Detroit, U. S. Minister to Kor- ea will speak, on Korea, Professor Harry B. Hutchins, dean of ,the de- partment of Daw, John R. Effinger, in- structor in French will also speak. The last number will be by the Rev.I Florence Kolock Crooker. Thoughj Mrs. Crooker has recently come to' Ann Arbor, she is no stranger to its people. Her subject: will be, "The Ministry of the Beautiful to the Masses". i i r! i "ARTES . SCIENTIA rERITAS" Benefaction I Dear Mr. Cowles: Just to let you get your work forI that eight o'clock, I offer you a few inches of filler: CAMPUS OPINION STUDENT DISCIPLINE To the Editor: "Two students were suspended for disorderly conduct for -a period of one semester," runs an item in the Michi- gan Daily. "Two students charged with drunkeness were suspended from the University of Michigan for the re- mainder of the present semester by the faculty discipline commtitee. * * The committee voted to withhold the names of the offenders," is the an- nouncement in one of our metropoli- tan dailies. Should more than ten thousand boys and girls who are in- nocent be put under suspicion of guilt that two guilty ones may be shielded from public disgrace? Should the fathers, mothers and friends of these ten thousand others be held in sus-j pense lest it prove that the one for! whom they are sacrificing is he whoj has fallen? No one can be eager for place onI the Central Discipline Committee. Its duties are very important and not less+ onerous, and at times unpleasant, than important. Almost any action is surel to draw criticism, and the committee! is to be commended for its painstaking care to discover facts and its unwear- ied efforts to arrive at correct judg- ments. Compromises of individuail judgment must often be the only prac-i tical solution. It is submitted how- ever that no compromise is justified which, to the public, does not draw a sharp line between'}guilt and inno- cefise when that is known,-does not.' to the public, clearly separate the in. nocent from the guilty. :1 - Stores s K a / $ I SLEEP ANY IER BUT EAT AT REX'S Til CLU LUNG 712 Arbor Street Near State ind Packard Streets nh 3C . tR?111 I .kdR'u+km - '3s mm 1-111 ,Ctm +, ¢n a, -X R d 'e ail y "Classified" Columns Paul Esin 16rt Ra' Andrew Propper Assistants P-. G. TBaeteke J. J. McGinnis Marion-Barlow R:S. Mansficid J.N.-Berkman , E. C. Mack Ilen lirowni . Verena Moran Bernadette Cote Regina Reichmann G, W. Davis S. T,. Smith Harold Ehrlich W: 1. (Smneman ', C. Fingerle 11. R. Stone T. P. Henry K. E. Styer Dorothy Kamin N. R. 't'h Joseph kruger S. B. Tremble Elizabeth lieberman W. J. Walthour R: R. McGregor, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF maay ' ~ha S Put not your faith in the pro- verbs, Professor Wenley has said, For they lead 'you astray Put falls in your way, And cohwebs into your head. Should Benjamin Franlin advise you, In accents quite grave and aus- tere To get in your hay . Rise early, just say,. "Aw, shucks, that bunk don't go here." They.,tell us, in fable and story Of the worm that the early bird caught. But I ask you, old boy, Would the bird chirp with joy If the worm stayed in bed, as he ought? "Like father, ,like son" is a motto Whose virtues are daily extolled: Do the minister's lad And his virtuous dad Make, then, two black sheep for the fold? In the Hall of the Folly of Wis- dom There remains just one fact, noth- ing more: Its merits we sing till the welkin doth ring, In our, own little sling, 'tis not "maybe" we fling, We mean it, "It's, hell to be pore". -Phone 62 IlVING 1)W T, ID. S. C. CHIROPODIST 70 ! r. Un e r .t _ DETROITUflE LINS A'iST IRO1 I Lim iteds : 6 a. : ., 9 :10 nt a d -every two imommr. to 9:1 yi m. Express: 7 a. 1n., a i. aand eVer; two hours Io S, 1. 1,.. Locals: 7 a. I1,, 8:5 a. .n. every two hours- to 8:5 p. T1., 11 p. mI. To Yi anti only, 1A:4 p. i., 2:.. a. : and 1: 1. a. in. WEST i)rUN" Limiteds: 8:47 a. In. "nd every I hours to 8:47 :' m1. Express (making ? -.1I stop:;) : , a. Im. and every twNo o ors p. In. Locals: 7:50 a. i., 12:10 a. .m t r y WTE ET TCIDER li lo ' of I gal. or more PHONE 380 EVAGNER CIDER MILL >1., Jst.11r h of Machine Specialty Company - ntix1 9 P. -AMo Sundays 1212 N. MAIN STREET Lecave Cimlrof Connerce' Week Days Sun lys (3 :4.5 a., m. 6 : .^ a. mi. z2:::'5 p. 10. 6:45 P, m. r 4:-45 P. n:. I home 96-M = Arian. michz. ! it ~t A . r% a 'I" ri s d ama "W-.SPRING HELP WANTED Iig money can br earned by students at the university dur- ing their spare hours. The work1is extremely pleasant, and will prove highly profitable. For particulars, address the GARVIN INSTITUTE, 4109 Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Mdichigan. 1 t Telephone 9110 Thus spoke Dr. Alexander Mefkle- john in his first address to a popular BUSINESS MANAGER LAURENCE I. FAVROTaudience since he left Amherst. The accusation is to a great extent true., Adverising.. E. I.Dunne To Dr. MeiklejohnI America is tie Adver'ising. ........Perry A4. Hayden I Advertising.............Purdy land of the dull, undiscriminating, Advertising............. ...VRe uneducated mob. Even allowing for Advertising .... ........W. K. Schierer E n AccountsC...............W....C.W. Christie a certain bitterness of feeling as a I Circuation........Jno. Haskins Pubi,.ation................Lawrence Pierce result of his Amherst experience, Dr. a Assistants Meiklejohn's remarks are to the pointI Bennie Caplan Harold A.r Marks and justified. s lin B Crouch S A Robinson That this is true, however, is not Louis M.Dexter i.III. Rockwell the fault of America or the Ameri- Joscph J. l'inn I1. H. Rose David A. Vox Will- Weise cans. A nation'in the making cannotI Lauren Haicbt C; P. White It. E. hlaskinson R. C. Winter develO p the bachk~todund, the higherj Edw.I U. ttuedemaker _ nat'onal characteristics, the love of tradition, and tie finer sensibilities which characterizes a country like WEDNESDAY, OCTOPR 2, 192 England or Italy. And America up to a comparatively few years, was, andJ Night Editor-EDGAR II. AILES j(to a great extent still is, a nation in --I the making. STUDENTS BUILD THEIR OWN I "We are in the terms of our task," SWIMMING POOL continues Dr. Meiklejohn, "an unedu- The progress made in enrolling the cated people. Our task is not the ed-, ucaton of the boys and grlbut four thousand men necessary to as- tain the ole e and girls,t surehe ompetin , f te Uiontaking the whole people and getting sure the completion of the:Union tiemn ready for the most glorious ad- swimming pool makes the project C venture ever attempted in the realm I look very favorable. The policy of O(f the spirit." We agree with the' conltpietng tile pool in this manner learned educator in that our task is was suggested by Chimes in their (,di-truly the most glorious adventure ever: torial pages of last month and, while attempted in the realm of the spirit; the, idea at' that time seemed inm- M but we do not believe that our task is1 hnot tile education of tme boys ant possible of. accomplishment, the aic- It tn tbn of throsad girls. Oil the conitrarv thorin liar: V.H.L. The small value of fife in the army was b:ought near to Ann Arbor Sun- day morning when a University soph- omore trying out for a commission in the United States aviation corps fell while making a parachute drop as part of his test. The parachute was made by the applicant himself as re- quired by the examining board. . t " - YESTERDAY By SMYTHlE .. , . . , . Kitchener. $ THE MILLENjjUM. "Men," says an old Stoic proverb, I Here is a lad with real Michigan "are tormented by the opinions they spirit. He has helped us get out our have of things, rather than by the work for "that eight o'clock"; though !things themselves." 41N - j A q how he knew we only have one is quite peyoid us. If the football team is tutored by the Athletic Association, as we hear is the case, we see no rea- son why we too should" not have some special dispensation . made in our case: for are we not, in our way, boosting for Michigan? We are. * * * We are informed that the Editor of Chimes was much pleased with the re-r view given his publication in the Daily Sunday Magazine. We are glad to hear that he takes this attitude. True, the review only gave his paper what it justly merited: there was no vain flat- * * * The convictions of the average intel- Y~gent person of today are not the re- sult of scientific and creative thought but rather of conventional reactions and traditional knowledge that have been handed down by previous gener- ations who lived in far other condi- tions than the present. James lar- vey Robinson in his book "The Mind in the Making", says, "we have to create an unprecedented attitude 'f mind to cope with unprecented con- ditions, and to utilize unprecedented knowledge." * Eogm es foi'YoungMen tivity of the men behind the- project has definitely placed it before the can- pus and, in a very short time, carried it nearly half way through. The determination with which this! idea was taken up in the face of a great deal of discouragement, merits the respect of the whole student body and their whole hearted support. These men, realizing the vital need which Michigan has of a swimming pool felt confident that the student body would be behind them in their drive" to complete it and are now proving the value of their judgment by selling subscriptions on the campus. Ti : working interest and determinaton to try is a thing which all too seldom comes to the front at a large univer- sity like Michigan but, when it does; come, even a student body as large as Michigan's is- cannot fail to ob- serve, appreciate and promote it. With such a sincere spontaneous ef-' fort evident on the part of such a large number of the student body, Michigan can look forward to having' a swimming pool by the end of the year. One of the original objections against the plan as now be'ng carried out was that the burden of the ex- pense for completing the pool in this way would fall upon the shoulders of' only 4 small part of the student body, and particularly upon that portion who customar1y bear the brunt of all stu- dent money drives. Indications seem to disprove this theory however, for, dur- ing these early days of the drive, con- tributions have come. in from all oiinrterrc Without rdoubti-Mie-liio'o,-, . y x IM . 7tt :~ ' , erIen n es x a lc lc~,111Ic Wa I AL1