PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY S-UNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1923 4 i I club or society and forgets the 1 greater end for which he is striving. He limits his friendships to his own OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER 0 TIE respective group and does not mix INIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN with the great mass of Michigan stu- dents. He then places his own group Published every morning except Monday first and Michigan second. His eyes during the University-year by the Poard in Control of Student Publications. are blinded by a handful of associ- _______________________-ates. Last Thursday President H. P. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. Faunce, of Brown university, delivered the opening address of the school T I LL I f IJ I f ITURRAII FOR JACK WALTO he Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lishled, therein. sEntred at the pt.toffee at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subcription by carrier, $3.5o; by mail, $,4.00o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Sireet. lPhoacs Fditorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- ness, 960. Signed communications, not exceeding 300 w~ -.willlhe putished in The lDaily at the discretion o nthe Editos. Upon request, the identity of . communicants will be re- garded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176-1Ii MANAGING EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAHUE News Editor...............Julian E. Mack City Editor...................I larry Hoey Editorial Board Chairman.. ..R. C. Moriarty Night Editors V TT -A,1- .. R ("nn lr year to the faculty and student body of Brown. He began by saying: Cliques can 'have no place in genuinedemocracy. College men should show the world that allI their smaller loyalties are swal- lowed up into one great loyalty to the college itself. Unity, work, loyalty-these are the three indis- pensable elements of college life.I Write these words into the by-laws of every organiation here at Michi- gan claiming to have the good of the University at heart. Read them at every meeting and let them be meni- orized by every man, for they embody the exact need of our campus today.{ What we want is unity and loyalty for the whole of Michigan. - ENTERTAINMENT A fear of culture often prevents Progress of the Building Programn Yesterday we made a personal in- spection of that part of the building program listed as One Literary Build- ing. Although . it is already near enough completion to give some hint of its coming architectural beauty, it still lacks the homelike quality which we should like to see in our Literary Building. The floors, for example, instead of being covered with ankle- deep Axminister, are paved with a double layer of loose brick. The walls, which, according to all the architectural tradition in re literary buildings, should be draped with the masterpieces of Rembrandts and Cor- ots, are at present finished in a rough concretish material-anything but tas- ty. The present sta.rs won't do at all. The whole thing is very dirty. We aren't much of a critic of liter- ary buildings; but we should say that what it needs is a woman's touch. * * * Those of our readers who don't be- lieve the Daily is a swell paper should get hold of a copy of "The New Genetation", "The Leading West Side Newspaper" of Chicago, published by R. V. L'bonati, one of last year's cam- pus Boosters. This is in every res- pect a hustling little paper, but it has a long way to go to catch up. The August number arrived .in this office yesterday afternoon. It con- tained a full account of President Harding's funeral, and a book col- umn with a review of Oliver Twist as the main feature. Huzzah for Libon- ati! * * * Tribute There is just One thing that Makes Mr. Wenley A greater man than Us-and that's The Yray he says "Ladies and Gentlemen". EDITORIAL COMMENT A STAMPEDE WOULH BE BAD (The Detroit News) This nation is in some d(angor of being stampeded by hysteria out of prohibition, just as many think it was stampeded into it. Political centers in the East, Repub- lican as well as Democratic, are as- suming a decidedly humid atmosphere. Observers point to the attitude of Sen- ators Pepper and Reed of Pennsyi- vania, and the anti-prohibition plank just espoused by Senator Edge of New Jersey, one of the few important Re- publican office-holdiers in the state as "wet as the Atlantic Ocean." These activities in themselves do not mean so much. In their relation to public feeling they mean a great deal. Senators Pepper, Edge and Reed, trying to read the writing on the wall before the pen has left it, think they see an anti-prohibition wave coming; they want to be on its crest instead of wallowing in its trough or submerged in the un