THE MICHIGAN DAILY ..........._.. _.. . - There can be no valid reason to con-I ~A ~ u I ~itan~ ~tt 4 test the advisability of adopting a con- ------- stitutidnal revision providing for the OFFICIAL N{EWSPAPER OF THE direct election of the chief, executive V141-ERtSITY OF MICiIGAN by popular ballot. Although cases :;uch as the Tilden-I-layes campaign of 1876 Published every morning except Monday' during the University year by the Board in I and the Clove land-1.larrison election Control of student Publications,. ____ of 1888 where the selection of the elec-I Members of Western Conference' Editorial toral college awarded the office to the Asociation. ______________ ______oan, who, under popular vote, would The Associated Press is exclusively, en- have been defeated are but seldom ex-" ~itled to tihe use for republication of all news dispatclhes credfited t~o it or not other'wise istent, the possibility of recurrence of credited ini this paper an,1 the local news pub-, such incidents should lbe completely -ished-th-r-in removed. The present dlay tendency Entered at the ;t1 Ann Arbor, towar'd simplification of all govern-> M1ichigan, as secon a i;ss' .. 1"C'. Special rate of hostage granted i 1~-' ~. -stan t Post-I mental organization calls for the elim- master ,encral. Subscription by ~aiv 3~ by rnai1,r ination of this unnecessary cog in the $4.00. Offices:; Ann Arbor Pie,,s Building, Mlay- wel hc eeydly the cl- na-d 5t!reet. mnto feeto rceig n I1'houes: Editorial. 2414 and 176-M; B'isi- iain feetinpoeeig n ness, 9o occasionally works, an injustice upon' Sign edl communications, not exceeding 300 the citizenry lof the land. Fids ail be pbllis'ned in The lDaily - at Oe(e cewihmy heproposed] the cl di. rdon of the Editor. Upon reocust,{ the iimtity ot commiunicants will be re-! is the cumbersome nature of amend- gadd scnfdnia. - ___ _ ing the constitution. This in itself t Y Last evening we absorbed the bill at the Maj. It is a most extraordin- ary program. The feature fillum is an expose of the tactics of the wicked newspapers that are all the time just looking for sensational stories: and the old moral of "somebody's mother" or somebody's uncle or somebody's little boy is brought forcibly dome iny the final clinch. The only trouble is that the geez- ers that run these scandal sheets are a lot more familiar with the libel laws than the gifted author of the scenario seemed to suppose. The persecuted heroine could have sued in CAMPUS, OPINION i ; Ii AWonder Selection of Personal Eng raved ChristmsCards 4 ' 4 i f ") fTO~iAL STAFF Te1plons,214 and 176"H MdANAING EDITOR . IiOWARID A. DONAJ{UE News Editor..............Julian E. Alack Laity Editor...................HFarry lI'.ey Editorial Board. Chairman. . ..R. C. Moriarty Night Editors E.H, Ailes A. B. Connable R." A. Billington 1. 1. Fiske Harry C. Clark J. G. Garlinghouse P. M. Wagner Sotts Editor.............. Ralph N. lBjers V. omtn's Editt...........'vWinona Hibbard 'Telegraph Editor ............. ..k. B. TCar r C unday Magazine Editor.... .. F. L. T' -nE Miusic Editor............. Ruth A liowell Assistant City Editor ...Kenneth C. Kellart Editorial Board (would only be a substantiation of the the middle of the firtt reel and recov-1 fattitude which has permitted the col-, ered just thousands and thousands of lege to survive as long as xit has", in-! dollars if she had wanted to; and that difference to the systematic analysis is something that no newspapers ex- of election evils. There is no state cept the Daily ever risk. in the ,Union which, in the pursuit of . fair elections, would defeat an amend-, Political Observation ment providing for popular vote in The ex-Kronprinz of Germany, we the presidential election, Many do; observe, has gone back to his own, his not realize that there is any such in-! native land. He left a touching fare- termediate body- as the electoral col- well for the burghers of Wieringen, lege which acts' as the final chooser thanking them for taking him into of our executives. Any body so in- their hearts when all the rest of the! Econsequential a factor in the pursuit wola oea hm n hntr .of just representative government hasi across into Deutschland on the eve of no place among our institutions. Its AmsieDy powers are all for harm and none for Thdenerofemcayite good, homeland are taking this little jaunt __________as a fearful threat at the beautiful Vll~.1 BLI. ll1AltiGlaw and order they have established; WhOLEALE ilE TINOthey fear that Friedrich will, like Na- Theactvit whch he thlticas-poleon, pull off a coup d'etat and be-! sociation is showing in running and come a dictator or something. But Fnrosnectinii? scalpers~ of football tick.,,Tn -- ,- ~ l~ nn~a WHOM WE PLAY To the Editor: There seems to be some question as to the raison d'etre of such footballz games as the one between the Michi- gan team and the team representingk the U. S. Marine Corps of Quantico, Va. On, the one side were playing men of the professional type whose brawn and long experience can in part compensate for their lack of teair finesse, forming a team whose Bard playing, however cleanly done, canl knock out a star opponent just as ir" revocably as could the hard playing of a tean-m representing an institution of accredited collegiate standing. On the other side, as the opponents of this team of players absolutely without standing in amateur circles, were play- ing men representing an institution which has always boasted of its adher- ence to the codes of amateur sport, and which through its official heads has consistently advocated the Loma- hawking of any collegian caught hearkening unto the sirens of profes- sional sport. With such teams as Cornell available as adversaries in major football contests, it would seem as though the Athletic association, in the future games with the Quantico, Marines, might hire a calliope and circus-cage, in which any attending lions could be transported) about theE field and allowed to roar, while the band plays "We're going to Van Am- berg's show, to see the elephant and the wild kangaroo".I NUMfC VOMITO. DETROIT FEJED LINES E A :;T11017M) Limiteds: 61 a. in., 9:10 a. m. and every two hours to 9:10 1). in. Express: 7 a. mn, 8 a m. and] every two hoars t;o 8 P. If. Locals:. 7 a. In., 8:55 a. m, and every two hoars to 8:5> p. In., 11 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40 m.i., 12:25 a. m. and 1:15 a. in. WEST BOUND Limiteds: 8:47 a. mn. and every two hours to 8:4,1 p. InI. Express (mraking lc al stops) : 9 :50 a. m. and, every two hours to 9-50 p. im. Locals: 7:50 a. in., 12:10 a. m. NOV M1BE Ri S 'ii T 'VV r Fr S 1 2 1s 19 20 2 1 22 23:i2-1 25 4 27 28 1291. 30 EoRIColeg Me G RAH A M'S ..BOTH ENDS OF T11L DIAGONAL WALK. Order Early.- Ill 11 N'sil 11 Read T he Daily "Classified" Columns SWEET CID.ER, I In lots of 1 gal. or more PHOIIV 380 WE DELIVER WAGE CIDER MILL N. Nla j it ,Jwst North of Machine Specialty Company tiwii Until 9 1'. il.-Also Sundays '12,12 N. MIAIN STREET SPECIAL.! a s ____ . Paul Einstein Robert Rar :ay Andrew Propper 4 Assistants .. , I S. G. Tlaetcke R. S. Mansficld J. N. Berkmnan E. C. Mack I- len lBrowu Verena Moran iBerna,lc tte Cote Regina Reichna:.n ~. D lavis 1V. IT.- '1r mtAa-, t . iotli) IKaon S. B T, embit- o Septi Kruge. W. J. Wa~tnioir alizabethL '.iceiernlani BUSINEi~SS STAFF Te~ft'phoue 960 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURENCE II. FAVROT Advertising;................... E. L. Dunne Advei tising..................... C. PurdyE Advertising .......... ....W. Roesser Adve2 tising................ W. K Scher-er Accounts........... ..... C. W. Christie Circulation ...........erry M. Hayden Publcation................Lawrence Pierce $d.10.00 A,, a s};, ,cial introductory price for two weeks, November 12th to 23rd, the will niale a thiorough exaim ination of your eyes and furnish you ets is commendable in as much as the work is done wholly for the pre- servation of the University's reputa- tion and the; protection of the stu- dents and alumni. The tendency to make money from football tickets is unfortunately none too rare in and about Ann Arbor and the quicker those1 hold-ing these ideas cann e madeto LAeanfle Caplan John Conlin. Alin B. Crouch Louis Al. Dexter Soseph J. 'inn s>;i d A. Fox Laur'en EHaight R. R. lfawkinson Assistants Ed w. ,D. Iloedleiaker Harold A. Marks Byron Parker H. Ml. Rockwell 13. E. Rose Will Weise C. V. White R. C. Winter WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1923E Night Editor-PHILIP M: WAGNER. BUY A TAG1, BACK THIE BAND) Michigan today has an opportunity to support her band and send it with the team to Madison. Money is need-;y f ed to do this. Half of the necessary' fund is already raised and the rest1 should be donated in today's tag sale.' By means of the tags a student canI give what he fecis to l'^ his remuner- ation for the ban la srxi es to himself as no fixed priei en asked. The band is e,,nILl ichigan, es- sentially of the Qd-l. and essen- tially a big factoriin stimulating a! spirit and fight in the team which will1 put it on the road to victory. It is hard to imagine a, football game with- out the band. The two have be.come so associated in our minds that the latter seems alm'ost indespensable. A! cheerirg section without "that fight- ing band" ,ati front of it would not look ri'-, li;o d Aihigan man. Year y 'ie band continues its work for~Mc~gn inspiring teams and spectato ri ad bringing great cr~e- dit to itself and to the University that1 it 'represents. Practically the only con- crete compensation that (thy- musi- cians receive is one of these trips to1 some outside football game. The trip to Iowa failed to materialize fromI lack of support and this trip will meetf the same fate unless the money isc remised today.1 The Alumni association has promis-s ed to help the band in the future by turning over to it part of the pro- ceeds from the grid graph reproduc- tions. This will take care of a great'1 share of the burden and eventually, itt feel how unprofitable~ the practice is, the quicker will the practice tend to ; be eliminated. For the large games here at MVich- igan as many, as fifty thousand people are anxious to obtain seats, and each l desires the best hie can obtain. The grumbling among the students at the seats some of them, receive is evi-'I dence enough of the unpopularity of I certain positions in the Michigan stands. The Athletic association di- I vides the number of available seats so that each person attending may have a reasonable number at his disposal! at a fair price. When, however, cer- tain ones endeavor to take advantage of the low price of the tickets and the reasonable method which the associ-, ation uses in distributing them to buy as many as the can and sell them fort outrageous prices, the full force of j the law should be brought to bear.I Thousands of loyal friends of the Un1- iversity are prevented from seeing our big games or are forced to pay large prices for tickets at every such af-j fair. The Athletic association cannot. bear~ down too hard en cheaters of this kind. I Twentmy-Five Years Ago -tMcia At Mfhiga From the files of the U. of AI. Daily,I :Novemiber 14, 1898. Thirty-five 'hundred people saw Michigan's eleven win a hard fought, victory over the teami of Illinois last Saturday afternoon at the D.A.C. Ath- letic grounds in D~etroit. The score' was 12 to 5. Illhinois scored her five points by a touchdown made on a fluke. Michigan would have undoubt- edly scored several more touchdowns brad the field been in any kind of shape. The Philippine Islands is'the title of we, Jason Cowles, one of thC e enet 4v ing'ap 'll ransadtrc essa fe pca rc political observers writing for the WHY THE MARINE GAME? -FACTORYYFIAT STORE ol 'tErgde shell fguranteead i bne slute sorecinl rier press today, believe that his Highness To the Editor: 617 Packard S.I. 'Jole 179° epet. has no political motives for his Strange as it may sound, I wasi (Where I). I;. It. Stops at State) Remrember this offer lasts for two weeks only. change of address, but that he is mov- never prouder of a Michigan team of - C.S Ight K S, Peciabis ing entirely for economic reasons. football men and the victory they won - At Arnold's State Jwelery Store For the Kronprinz, like many an- than I was last Saturday. That any ! - -- ----- - Ij '2 4;outi state ;Sreet Ann Arbor, ich. other blueblood, learned a trade after, eleven men could fight to the end of a C-16;[m:.tl A i, i t }l I LA,~I e ']'lne (5 Taw 'imp) the war; and we believe that be has game of that character, b and against Stave Chamber of Commrnuce >. cc" wi. es gone home to practice it the morea suh ea s heMrie, itot ck ay un sr-I - prftal, posil eas o h relsingh cntrol oftheirtrmneswi'shist12:45 . m 4 . s i. xnr w",,".R . ad er is ng4 45 . . n. 6 4 . m 9 B n w ~ ° A~ O p r ofi abl h ep o i l e asu r tel yfe a d e l sn g ou g t olsta m p th e i t e p r i s4 4 p " r ll p . rad r i i n h e w l s u l y g , a d e o g h o s a m t em a s su p e rb J A S . i. rE L L IO 't r, rop ie tor , : I Pha ~~~'-r(?6-M lAdrian. Mich. e I ra.A Al B9Mao+ tifB IY lftl® t rs..r t R~ 1 possibly because he knows the Lang- players, worthy of the name of Mich- ------- uage better. We believe, in fact, that igan. The victory of course, as is the- he has secured the Ford agency for the result of all *such contests, meant slrn s.- octi&o.0 t1 ~I C rsn a ditito aeWla.nothing outside- of Ferry field and it W W~flI td M__S eo 15 ~ ~ #*##*it *So*to$200Is to protest against such unworthy Sat.Ma. Sct$20 -*."-' I T e Answer g m s that this communication Is 4 e o d n a t Week Thi'seaon's card Long years ago I reamed the earth wgames. "UP SHEon GOESds GreIn Cards Ahandsome hairy man; wrttehaG-LORIA FOnXhei But now I've sunk to depths quite Mihgnhdntigwasee o'~h~Ol O ~ Iiti4 ti and Should be ordered before De- low- gain except in; revenue, fronm such a- must b-seon to be comiber first in order ''to assure I' aldaPtea.disgraceful affair. Michigan had near- ,-. -. e I n c,' l '. Fro0mf dlvey ly everything tolose, such as the great L l'ANWIERII'ti. oe nfut: To those who'd know, there was a dne fhrpaes odtoa EA T AT I 4 ' one:;w have select- I - - G-S'RNI girl, evidenced by the injury of Quarteback THE flJ~ls ~ i~(l i ~e~i ~itml (NTIG TU A wondrous Pithebim: Utrtteijr ohrnmeadj72Ahr8re or' fraerniy crest Phone 595 loved her but I changed mny mind standing if unfairly or otherwise beat- Near Statfe and Pt](ard Streets , egaig When I saw her necking him. Ien by a team of players, organized, - -~r F A E N T - trained and sent onto erry field _______-.. ° ° ' °'"""""Shop Now, fair co-ed, take my advice: !without ever having heard of the PI'te .f;a, ofjmcg Pe on the square with "Him." rules governing Michigan players, and I IRVINGXl A IVOL1'S, I>. S. C. a e iof hcg -'Cause if you don't he'll do like I, with less standing than some team CHIROP D S And rush some other bim. representing, we will say, some pro- ., , 0 Vr !diJOl- - a .~y-®.a-mte~wgs tr«o~ Pithecanthiropus. essional league or an industrial cor- ______L. aIiL;si A, '- i. I a AnArbor Cars poration.__.- r~rlw~ll I conmc from haunts of nut and bolt, Why not take on our football sched- ~iiiilEllliitiI1lllligiiI1!1i~lllg!IiliIllIii2IIIIIIII ~llIiihtiil 11IIliihIlIIIIiUli1ttIII1IIIIijiillirf, Where I was put together; ule teams from the army regiments E Along the king's highway I jolt, and army camps and place them near In. various kinds of weather, the end of the season and feature them ' as big games. t C- I round a corner on two wheels; Thomas E. I-I. Black '1 Lit-'14L. 1=creapetymie I cr rtymie;Detroit, Michigan. t I do enjoy her, little squeals___________ 2 With fearsome anger laden. j~ I hop, I skip, I run, IJjump, YESTERDAY I With many sharps and trebles;, by SMYTH3E -- I always hit the highest bump; _______________ - I rattle on the pebbles. = I I When the Kaiser Returns -" Bing, I bang, I, bong, I but, A picturesque period of history is 1'I W 1 C(C 11EDA XTXT I almost go to pieces; in process. Former Kaiser Wilhelm I'm covered o'er with grime and rust; II of Hohenzollern is preparing to re- ei--t 7 ' "~ Macinnvrcaeenter the Fatherland in an attempt er~, rc a Ito regain the throne of the GermanANO CET T I roam through all the countryside, Empire, while sections in all localities _ N ONETA At night when darkness covers; of his former realm continue their; .~ . R s :r eneath the moon and stars I ride policies of separation from the larg-M r C ..os, The young and happy lovers, r German state.##. rsn. '-'the C ZsfiOP ,talorng Leparimen, and Although I hate like hell to crow, "Wilhelm has secured 12 pasot_~r £ .~ e~ So modest am I ever, permitting the entire regal entourage' " - eZn Big cars may come, big cars may go, to re-enter Germany after five years R epre'sentn ieCso ShradFu ihnsdprmns But I go on forever! ot exile. This dispatch brings to :gzieC'to ShradFrisisDe rmns Randolph. mind the dashing return'! of Napoleon WILL BE AT THE CAMPUS BOO'IERY * * *+Ito Paris and his even faster exit back .:J ot SaeSre Anent the Maj once more, the j into exile. Should Kaiser and CrownM3,4Suh tae tr t Brown Freres were all, right as long ! Prince once gain entrance into Ber- as they played good old-fashioned lin, the royalist activity once aroused _ 1fUrsd~a)', iovember 15th lance music, which is mostly what would not soon subside. The already~ they did; but when they rendered a Idemoralized systems of Germany . 171A SLENDIDr SHOWING OFjt; powerful arrangement of "The Ros- would succumb to the strain produced,-rinadD rn~~ iiigsadC aig ary" they demanded too much of their Eby any further internal friction and cYCga ndD)c, l Siit gs nd otns mediuin. The saxophone was not what the result? A more chaotic Tailored to Measure Intended for the interpretation off Germany than ever before.- powerful compositions like thin onef #* * r cady to WAear Suits and Overcoats December 4th! The day for the w ,uisEvnn Oh yes-The Chief went with us to grand coup! President Coolidge is of Dn e ut 1t VfigCohs. this show, and behind ussat~ a couplet the opinion that in traditional observ- _ Robes hrtNecKw%~ear an CusiornSirins- of bims who thought a number of ( ance of our foreign policy the Unit-' things in the show were cute. Among ed Stag<~s should let William back in- he things that struck them as cute to Deutschland without protest. There; JJ ..sp, ay pom 9 m. 6 0 m we list only a few: The hero of the he can do more harm than any arnmy t main filum, and the heroes of all the of 10,000 men, harm which may pro- advance showings (Majestic Presenta- duce a further state of economic and a large work just issued by Macmil- lan arid company, New York. The au- thor is Prof. Dean C. Worcester. The Is said, that the grid graph will be work embodies observations made dur- run entirely for the benefit of the ing two 'visits to the islands, one in band trips. Until then it is up to the 1887, and the other in 1890, and is il- students to raise the money. The hustrated with many original photo- band deserves the trip and the team graphs. deserves the support. Back the band- and- buy your tag now. General -henry Al. luflield, one, of ______the leading figures in the battle of San-, THE A OL1SM:N T OF TiHE ELEC- Itk go, has been secured as presiding' TORAL COLLEGE office for the final debate next Friday. i E a 'a .p 'a 1 :n i x i t 0 t t' a n With the next presidential election just a year removed, the problenm of formrally declaring the cumbersomeI electoral-college system of p~residen- -tial selection obsolete through thet passing of a constitutional amendment; again presents itself. Even among! Th~le mredical library of lDr. Elizabeth HI. Bates, who has recently willed $140,000 to the Medical department, has just b~een receiv-ed by Professor D~av- is. The library contains over 200 vol- uimes, and among these are several