THE MICHIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE' UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Members of Western Conference Editorial Association. The 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- lished therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Atbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Ariistant I'cst- viaster General. Subscription by carrier, $3.5o; by mail, t4.oo., Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard $treet. Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Bitsi- ness, 960. Signed conrunications, not exceeding So0 words, will he published in The -Daily at the Ois-retion of the Editor. Upon request, the identity of communicants will be re- garded as confidential. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones, 2414 and 176.M MANAGING EDITOR HOWARD A. DONAdUE News Editor..............Julian E. Mack City Editor...................Harry ikey Editorial Board Chairman.... R. C. Moriarty Night Editora E. II. Ailes A. B. Connable R. A. Billington I. E. Fiske Harry C. Clark J. G. Garlinghouse P. M. Wagner Spoits Editor............. Ralph N. Byers Women's Ediur............: Winona Hibbard Telegraph Editor...............R. B. 'air Sunday Magazine Editor,.. .... L. 'roden Music Editor..F.... ....Ruth A Howell Assistant City Editor......Kenncth C. Kellir Editorial Board . .- "The war at least had this of value for us; our young people through it saw the vision and felt the thrill of throwing themselves into the performance of something that needed to be done. For them it was a kind of spiritual adven- ture. When we as a nation have this spiritual vision and embark on this spiritual adventure, then we can educate our youth as we feel we ought. We haven't it as yet, but it will come tomorrow. "There will be, moreover, an- other radical change in our col- leges when this day 'comes. They will be fundamentally intellectual, with less thought for the exter- nais. Their 'work will be solely the training of youth, the build- ing of minds, with knowledge as the instrument. And present-day knowledge, too, has been growing. The minds of today know more than they used to, are far rich- er than ever before. But no body of knowledge is understood un- less it is unified. It must be brought into a single concept. Today it is like a picture puzzle before it has been put together. When once we have accomplish- ed this, something new, the mean- ing of the whole, will flash into being. "One failure of our colleges now is that our graduates do not read books, a fault largely of our lec- ture system. The student by this system is kept in touch with third-rate minds. When I say this I do not mean that our teachers are third rate. But I do mean that Aristotle, Kant, Darwin and Shakespeare are first-rate minds; that leaders of thought in our own period, like Einstein, are in the second group, and finally that our teachers belong in the third group of minds in our communi- ty today. But however good the teacher is, he has no right to in- terpose himself between the pu- pil and the first and second group ' TOMVE ROLL ALMOST OUR ALL-POETRY P T ANULBER IPLAINT OF A YULGARI'ST p CAMPUS OPINION instein I oert Ra; Andrew Propper Assistants isay B. G.s Jaetke R. S. Mansfield f) N. Brkman E. C. Mack helen Brown Verena Moran Bernadette Cote Regina Reichmai Q. W. Da AS W. ii. Soneman Hlarold Ehrlich H1. R. Stots it. C. Fingerle K. E. Stycr '. r. Henry N. R. TVial erothy Kamin S. B.Tiemble oseph Kruger W. J. Waitiour Elizabeth Lieberman BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURENCE H. FAVROT ,Advertising .............E. L. Dune Advetising.............. Purdy fAdvertiing...........W. Roessr Advertising.............. Scherer Accounts......... ........A. S. Morton Circulation .-.. . ...Perry M. Hayden Publication ...............Lawrence Pierce Assistants G. W. Campbell °Rdw D. Hoerlemiker ennti{ Caplan "N. 'E. Rolland as. Champion M L. Ireland onn Conlin Harold A. Marks Louis M. Dexter Byron Parke joseph' J. Finn' 1. M.t Rockwell D avid A. Fox It. E Rose Lauren Haglit A. J. Seidman IH. 14.tHale., Wilt Weise .E Iiawkison f._C F. White , R. C. Winter WED SDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1923 Night Editor-EDGAR H. AILES ALEXANDER MEIKLEJOHN DIAGNOSTICIAN AND PROPHET Addrssing a gathering at the Town Hall in New York recently Dr. Alex- ander Meiklejohn disclosed some poig- nant reasons for the current dissat- sfaction with American clleges and pronounced a single, cause as the rea- son for the complete inadequacy of the present system-the lack of a con- scious purpose in both academic in- stitutions and in the nation itself. Feeling that his presentation and ex- planation of shortcomings of Ameri- an colleges have an immediate in- :erest to men ambitious for the fu- ure of the University of Michigan, 'he Daily is reprinting herewith the najor content of his lecture: "The question really is, 'What will America of tomorrow be?' Our colleges can't be better or dif- ferent unless we as a nation are also better or different. The rea- son that colleges today, with their football, glee clubs, fraternities and sentimental alumni, are what they are is because we ourselves are what these things represent. America is still growing up, in numbers, wealth, power complex- ity, and this is also true of our colleges. They add a ;hundred teachers, a thousand students, a score of new courses or new buildings much as a boy adds two inches to his stature. "The external and mechanical growth is the main reason for our dissatisfaction with our col- leges. Tomorrow they , will be grown up, will have passed the period of the gawky boy. Whenl this will come it is hard to say, but it will not come until Amer- ica herself is grown up. Andl when this :day does come, and I 1 am.inclined to think it is not so far off, America will have some- thing very definite to do. Shec will have something very definite to ao. She will have a conscious1 purpose. "France had a conscious pur- I pose, the glory of France; Eng-s land had it, the greatness of thet empire; Germany had it, the con- I cept of the Fatherland. The. of minds. Let the student get his opinions directly from the Kants and Spinozas. "Outside control has sapped the courage and independence of scholars. They must be made to feel again their responsibility for education. At least try the ex- periment. I think it will succeed, for it has the advantage of com-' mon sense. The young people of America are ready for a new day, spiritually and intellectually, and they will achieve it if they aref not hindered by our presupposi- tions and prejudices. I hope the old people will either get out of their way or join the young in their movement for the spiritual adventure." CHIMES FINDS ITSELF I With its appearance on the campus Tuesday morning ;Chimes has justified itself against whatever charges of uselessness and misdirected efforts may have been voiced against it about the campus. For the first time since its inception five years ago, has Chimes fulfilled its purpose. Invari-I ably highly superfluous matter has found its way among the pages of the monthly, which, in its last issue, excludes the uninteresting and non- sensical for material highly enter- taining, interesting, and not without1 literary merit. Chimes has a function to perform as a campus opinion magazine, to stimulate the student body to thought, -and occasionally to action. In this, it has during the past largely failed, but the current issue furnishes plea- ty of "food for thought" which will, without doubt occupy the minds of a large precentage of the undergradu- ate *body. Acknowledging the diffi- cult position which Chimes occupies' among the various other publications of the University, it deserves con- gratulations on its admirable execu-} tion of the function newly assigned to it. .w ry~ ~.. , .~ ....-w ,-n. Twenty-FiWe Years Ago At Michigan From the files of the U. of M. Daily, Dec. 12, 1898. . Oh take your Aubrey Beardsley prints, Of women's ugly faces; Drag off the whole Rococo crew, With their endless airs and graces. You can cart away your Titans, Your Corots and Rembrandts fine- And give me just Coles Phillips, Who can make silk stockings shine! L'Envoi: For I've never read Homer and Dante; Nor Dumas, either father or fils;I No-I simply go to the movies, And thrill to the Mounted Police. Peregrine Pickled ** * Lands! Mr. Stanley Baldwin, long one of the most distinguished figures in Brit- ish public life, has added a new lau- rel to his already nifty collection. He is, we believe, the only-man in Eng- land whom Professor R. Mark Wenley does not know personally. We are informed that he didn't even bow to Mark the last time he was in the old country. From the Opera Program I A rare spirit pervades the campus of the University of Michigan. It is broad, liberal and cosmopolitan. -President Burton's letter The eighbteenth annual Opera of the Mimes of the Michigan Union can truly be called the "Opera Different." -The author of the Opera Roundelay Stillness-like death Sweet one-be mine My heart' bleeds when your car- esses wane- Opaque shadows-your lips A-A ,Ahhhhhhh- Oh Cupid-Ahhhhhhh Oh hell I can't do it like Poi- son Ivy. Carlo. P.S. HO HUM-just another poem. * * * CHILD'S GARDEN OF CAMPUS ANIMALS See Bebe is a clinging, child, Her lips are red, but pouting. She wears her hat tight to her head, Her skirts she's always fouting. On street her clothes are nicely mil; Much tailored, too, but fetching. She easily makes friends with you- Her life she's always sketching. She likes to read the poets wild- The very worst, but skillful; With sentiment she's highly cursed, P And she is often wilful. Yet you will find this clinging child While often cross, but pleasing; She looks at you all at a loss- And then her hand you're squeezing. Hidalgo. All the boys scouts in Ann Arbor hav been asked to help in the col- lection of money to put up a swank 'shrine' in memory of the late Warren Gamalel H{arding in his native city. In an official bulletin issued to .the scouts of the city by the local execu- tive, one Swits, we find that they are 1 to be rewarded as follows: * * *"Each troop that se- cures 100 percent contributions froni its members will be award- ed a handsomely engraved certifi- cate bearing the photograph and . signature of the late President and a picture of the iWl4te House which will be suitable for fram- ing. The certificate entitles the troop to an associate member- ship in the Harding Memorial Association." * * * Last nigt we heard Mr. Lindsay. His glass of water was all bubbly even before he arrived. When the introducer announced that Mr. Frost might come here to lecture, a person applauded. The introducer, after calling Mr. Lindsay "significant" sneaked off the stage. THE LEAGUE AND ARMAMENT To the Editor: With all due respect for Prof. W. H. Hobbs and his theories I would submit that he has triumphantly ar- rived at a conclusion by the simple but faulty process of assuming as truth, that which he wishes to be- lieve. He points out that the "history of the human race thus far has been largely a history of its wars" and then assumes that history must re- peat itself and reaches the conclu- sion that efforts to change the course into the channels of peac are use- less and futile He attacks the League of Nations Non-Partisan association by quoting from Justice John H. Clarke who as- serts that wars are in the brewing land that sohething must be done to! prevent them. Even Professor Hobbs acknowledges that future wars are' likely: he differs from those who fa- vor the League as to the means of either pieenting them or limiting their scope. The League idea is to attempt to settle differences between nations just as individuals settle them within a nation; Professor Hobbs advocates the old theory of "every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost". The League does not stand for total abolition of arm- aments immediately, that is a prob- lem for the, nations to agree upon, I but it does stand for the idea that such agreements as the Washington Conference can and will make any further expansion of military estab- lishments unnecessary. His assump- tion that, because the League believes that an agreement among the nations may bring about peace, its adoption would place our country at the mer-1 cy of the world because our whole army and navy would be wiped out, is false. Armaments are to be lim- ited, it is hoped, but only in con- cent with the rest of the world. Does Professor Hobbs believe that the work' of the Washington Conference should be undone? Does he believe that further reduction along the same line is impossible? If sotlihen his theory by analogy, that becuo history shows that wars have bees waged they will continue forever, ' hpen to correc- tion. The stand he take i"confusing. His whole argument seems to be that per- manent peace is impossible and there- fore we should not waste time in fool- ish movements to bring it about yet! in hiss look "The World War and Its1 Conequences," he a proves the state~- ment that "the petrnanent peace of the world can be secured only through the, gradual . concentration of prepon- derant military strength in the hands of the most pacific nations". Can he assure us that such a combination will be permanent? Will it conduce to the peace of the world to have it dominatedaby a powerful military al- Sliance of a few nations? Will these nations remain "pacific and demo- cratic" when they possess such pow- er? Can he point out any such alli- ance that has been lasting and has brought about permanent peace? His history refutes him. Evolution, change, the desire to be free from such res- i'traint has ever brought about the rise to power of new nations and the downfall of others and the conse- quent dstruction of these "few power alliances". Why not give the idea of! allowing all nations an equal chance! to be heard, a trial? If it fails the results can be no more disheartening than that of these military alliances. K. F. Clardy, '25L. YESTERDAY By SMYTHE Coolidge on American Homes "In a free republic, a great Govern- ment is the product of a great people. They will look to themselves rather than Government for success. The destiny, the greatness of America lies around the hearthstone. If thrift and industry are taught there, and the example of self-sacrifice often ap- pears, if honor abide there and high ideals, if there the building of fortune be subordinate to the building of character, America will live in secur- ity, rejoicing in an abundant prosper- ity and good government at home, and in peace, respect and confidence abroad. If these virtues be absent there is no power that can supply I these buildings. Look well, then, to the hearthstone, therein all hope for America lies." Any example of the writing of Cal- vin Coolidge will reveal the character BOTH - ~n ENDS O F T7E D -IAGON A L 'w.s .. 1 DETROIT UNITED LINES EAST BOUND Limiteds: 6 a. in., 9:10 a.im. and every two hours to 9:10 p. n. Express: 7 a. in., 8 a m. and every two hours to 8 p. m. Locals: 7 a. m., 8:55 a. m. and every two hours to 8:55 p. in., 11 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40 p. in., 12:26 a. in. and 1:15 a. m. WEST BOUND Limiteds: 8:47 a. m. and every two hours to 8:47 p. m. Express (making lcal stops): 9:5U a. m. and every two hours to 9:60 p. In. Locals: 7:50 a. in., 12:10 a. in. -TONIGHT ____ Grangor's L i1 t Read The Daily "Classified" Columns I I I liDECEMBER S 1W T IW T IF S 1 2 3 4 5 '6 "7 8 3 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 .. . _____ PRE-HOLIDAY SALE ON MEN'S HATS Hats that were $3.40, Now $1.00 Hats that were. $4.00, Nov $3.50 Hats that were $4.50, Nov $3.75 Hats that were $5.00, Now $4.25 Hats Cleaned and Reblocked at low prices for High.Class Work. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard St. Phone 1792 (Where D. U. I. Stops at State) Open Until Evenaigs Christamas Cam's I WAL AJ)RIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS LINE Central Time (Slow Time) Leave Chamber of Commerce Week Days Sundays 6:45 a m. 6:45 a. m. 12:45 P.mt. 6:45 p. m, I 4:45P. M.1 JAS. PH.ELLIOTT, Proprietor. Phone 926-M Adrian. Mich. Toot Tobles ? Have your feet examined and diagnosed by a spec- ialist. Consultations Free. IRLVING WARMOLTS D. S.(C. Chiropodist and Orthopedist 707 North University Phone 2652 t 'I B U Y A M A N ' S G I F T S I N A MAN' S ST OR E Gloves--ne o he many things you can take him from this big store for Christmas. There is To Prove We're I BIt from ' Habt euch vorh' Dodd, Mead and company are about rit, . to issue the authoritative book on the Paragraphos wol Dreyfus case by Mr. F. C. Conybeare, Damit ihr nachh whose articles in the English reviews, Dass er nichts over the pseudonym of "Hugenot," B uche steht. have attracted such wide attention. The author is the son-in-law of Max Muller, and owing to this connection has been able to give the opinions of' Which, being r various distinguished Germans on the American idiom,2 subject, and their feelings in regard Get up your stu to it. The book will contain protraits " So You can tell of all the prominent characters con- The prof don't sa nected with the Dreyfus case. That ain't in his Highbrow, Here's a n Faust- er wohl praepar- - hl einstudirt, her besser seht, sagt als was im Mephistopheles every style he could possibly desire. M~any unusual values at $3 endered i means .ff ay nothing book. nto the Others at $2 to $7.50. I T-"q -T- 'r -w° "r d r lk o