THE CHIIGANi: 1 .., .x MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled p the use for republication of all news dis- itches credited to it or not otherwise credit- d in this paper and also the local news .blished herein. Official newspaper at the University of .ichigan . Published every morning except .onday during the university year. F,ntered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor as cond-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- riptions: by carrier, $.50; by mail, $3.00. Jant ad stations: Quarry's; Students' Sup- y Store; The Delta. Phones: Business, 960; ditorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 words i length, or. notices of events will be pub- shed in The Daily, at the discretion of the ditor, if left at the office in the Ann Arbor 'ress Bldg., or in the notice box in the west >rridor of the general library, where the oces are collected at 7:30 o'clock each vening. obert T. McDonald.......Managing Editor . Philip Emery.........Business Manager ews Editor ...............Harry M. Carey ty Editor................C. S. Clark, Jr. orts Editor......James Schermerhorn, Jr. legraph Editor...........Bruce A. Swaney elegraph Editor .............Bruce Millar sociate Editor......... ....Philip C. Pack: 'omen's Editor ......Mildred C. Mighell iterary Editor ......... Margaret H. Cooley ficiency Editor.......Albert E. Horne, Jr. arold Makinson........Advertising Manager aul 1. Cholette.......Publication Manager ernard Wohl...........Circulation Manager arold R. Smith..........Credit Manager Iw. M.rt eFevre..........cOffice Manager EVlsworth Robinson. . Subscription Manager to whom the turning movement has been entrusted. Those barrels and boxes in the var- ious stores and the Union are meant to be filled with "smokes." They are for your classmates. And now one of the Martha Cook girls insists that the new Union is to be the men's dormitory. Mebbe so! The girls are wondering if pet- itions concerning the advisability of 'helping the men keep 'early hours were also sent to the Majestic and Huston's. Drs. Uncle Sam and John Bull are busily engaged in the delicate opera- tion of putting new backbones in Russ- ia and Italy. Anyway Coach Stagg was willing. We'll all go to Chicago, only it will be a week earlier. BAKER GI'VES ADVICE TO UNIVESITY STUDENTS NIGHT EDITORS Herbert G. Wilson k EClarence L. Roeser Mark K. Ehlert REPORTERS Harry W. Weinermn Edgar L. Rice Russell Barnes J. R. McAlpine Chas. R. Osius. Jr . Paul A. Shinkman C. M. Campbell Vera Brown Doiald C. Bromley K. Frances Handibo Eugene Given BUSINESS STAFF L. A. Storrer Orville E. Gates Wm. A. Leitzinger Harry D. Hause Dale H. Baad Lambert Hirsheimer Frank N. Gaethke FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1917. Night Editor-C. M. Campbell MOVING PICTURES OF COLLEGI' LIFE Motion pictures dealing with col- lege life invariably portray the col - lege student in a way that antagon- izes the publi toward his species For instance, the other day a movie, featuring a college scene, pictured tne students as lounging about their rooms at midnight, playing loudly upon guit- ors, smoking villainous bull-dog pipes, And disturbing the calm air of the night with their boisterous drinkin songs. They were dressed in a fash- ion entirely foreign to the American university, and their actions might well have convinced the audience that they were looking at a scene in an asylum, had not a caption announced that this was life in Sapleigh Univer- sity. The harm that such pictures do to the American university and college is laown only to the college man him- self, Wrong in almost every particu- ler, these films tend to antagonize the public toward university life, they do rquh more harm than those unac- quainted with the real situation im- agine. Movie directors, always painfully! correct in the portrayal of a murder or of a scene in the slums, migh1 well+ take a day off and drop into any col-b lege town, see the students seriously1 engaging in their class-work and in the varied worth-while activities, and tlien go back and show the public the truth and not what they imagine the truth to be from a casual perusal of Siwash Days.. THREE TYPES OF STUDENTS When you are called upon to recite,1 do you make a good impression? F Or do you falter and waver and hem and haw and give the instructor time to see that, even though you know the answer to his question, you are1 at a loss to express yourself? In every classroom, we find threer distinct types of students: t hose whot repeat glibly the phrases of the text- book in their answers, parrot-like;r those who frankly admit their ignor-e ance; and those who bury their ignor-t ance under an avalanche of pseudo-I wisdom-the bluffers.s . Obviously, none of these types are desirable. Were the average instruc-a tor to choose from the three, he wouldl very likely choose the latter as his, favorite, not because he knew the mat- ter in hand, but rather because of his quick wit, his ability to think upon the spur of the moment, and his ready facility of expression. The latter, however, does not make & good impression always. But give t4m a 'Workable knowledge of his sub- t, and he will come out ahead ev- ary time. Such is the advantage of "pression and quickness of mind. Some have the impression that a ertan few from Ithaca, N. Y., are go- ng to run into a hurricane some time Saturday. Among the soldiers operating tainst the Italians is General Worm ATTEMPTS TO AID PATRIOTIC STUDENT IN DECIDING WHAT iE CAN BEST DO By Hon. Newton ). Baker, Secretary of War When the call to national service arose, spirited young men everywhere wanted to be employed in a patriotic way, and I suppose there is scarcely a young man in any college' in the country who has not very anxiously addressed to himself the question: "What can I do?" I think that there is no general ans- wer to this question. Even in those cases where it would be obviously better for a young man to stay at col- lege and prepare himself for later and fuller usefulness, yet if the young eman in do doing acquires a low view of his own courage, and feels that he was electing the less worthy course, the effect on the young man of that state of mind toward his own actions probably would be so prejudicial that it ought not to be encouraged. To the extent that the men in col- lege are physically disqualified, or to the extent that they are too young to meet the requirements of the depart ment, it seems quite clear that in the present state of the emergency their major usefulness lies in remaining in the college, going forward with their academic work. The knowledge that the students will acquire at college will equip them for subsequent useful- ness if the emergency lasts until thi: call comes. But we do not want to chill enthus- iasm. We want to preserve enthusiasm and cultivate it and use it; but we do want to be discriminating in our en- thusiasm, and prevent people getting the notion that they are not helping the country unless they do something dif- ferent, which very often is not the case at all. The largest usefulness may come from doing the same thing. Now, it is not unnatural that there should, be these ebullitions of feeling, this de- sire to change occupation as a badge of changed service and devotion to ideals. Our colleges can exercise a steadying influence in this regard. We are going to have losses on the sea; we are going to have losses in battle; our communities are going t be subjected to the rigid discipline of multiplied personal griefs scattered all through the community, and we are going to search 'the cause of those back to their foundation, and our feel- ings are going to be torn and our nerves made raw. There is a place for physicians of public opinion to ex-. ercie a curative impulse. The young men who are in our colleges, who go to their homes from our colleges and make up a very large part of the di- rection of public opnion, can exer cise curative influence by preaching the doctrine of tolerance, by exem- plifying the facts that it is not neces- sary for a nation like the United States, which is fighting for the vindication o a great ideal, to discolor its purpose by hatreds or by the entertainment of any unworthy emotion. Patronize Our Advertisers.-Adv. MANY CALLS ALEREADY RECEIVED FOR TEACHERS FORTY-TWO STATES AND TWO FOREIGN COUNTRIES WANT MICHIGAN GRADUATES "Forty-two states and two foreign countries, have already sent in calls to the University of Michigan for teachers for next year," said Prof. C. 0. Davis of the educational depart- ment, who spoke yesterday afternoon before about 250 prospective teachers. Three hundred and seventy-four of these calls have come from Michigan, 70 from Illinois, 44 from Minnesota, 24 from Arizona, 20 from Washington, and 15 from South Dakota. These calls are mostly for teachers, superintend- ents, and principals, but some are for social secretaries, and social service workers. Professor Davis stated that it is not necessary for students to enroll with the teachers' agencies throughout the state because the enrollment commit- tee has as complete a system as any agency, and that out of 340 students enrolled with the committee last year, all except 38 obtained satisfactory po- sitions, and of the 38 many withdrew their names voluntarily after enroll- ment. "Our efforts will be primarily for the class of '18," said Professor Davis. "Every year we place from 40 to 50 alumni, but it is always the present graduating class which receives first consideration." Enrollment will continue in the reg- istrar's office in University hall until Saturday noon, free of charge. After then a fee of $1.00 will be charged. Spicy News From Other Universities A $20,000 war fund campaign will be launched by the University of Il- linois on Monday, Nov. 12, and will continue through Saturday, Nov. 18. The Y. M: C. A. is preparing for a huge drive to secure this part of the total $35,000,000 to be raised in the United States. T-he students have been divided into 20 teams, each having a leader, and they will solicit subscriptions from students and faculty. Also much work will be done before the campaign begins toward impressing university people with the necessity of the war council's work. Seventeen Seniors at Yale were re- cently elected to Phi Beta Kappa. In June enough more men will be add- ed to make the total membership 10 per cent of the graduating class. The sugar supply at the University of Indiana is almost gone. Fraterni- ties can only buy small lots daily and the local grocers whose supply has not already been exhausted are running very low and are unable to get more sugar at the wholesale houses. Three organizations have no sugar at all, and the rest have very small quantities. Some relief is found in the employment of brown and loaf su- gar. A new supply is expected in a week or 10 days, but the supply on hand is not expected to last that long, and our part in it. Dance at Armory on best floor in city. Saturday night.-Adv. WLomen Board of. representatives of the Women's league will meet at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning at Barbour gy ;- nasium. Today's vocational conference pro- gram: "Government ' Service," by Karoline Kliager, '00; "Religious Edu- cation" by Miss Gertrude Hill. Per- sonal conferences by appointment with the committee at the office of the Dean of Women. Senior-junior hockey game at 10.30 o'clock tomorrow morning at Palmer field. Wieners will be on sale. On account of the vocational con- ference there will be no Women's league party this afternoon. Classes' Y swimming are being formed now and those into rested should sign at once on the bulletin board in Borbaur gymnasium. RATES ON POST CARDS VARY ACCORDING TO SIZE AND USE. According to the latest rules fixed by the post office department at Wash- ington, post cards having a minimum size of two and one-third by four inches, and a maximum size of three and nine-sixteenths by five and nine- sixteenths inches, will be "harged two cents in postage whether cards contain printed or written messages. Cards that are larger than the maximum and smaller than the minimum are to bear two cents in postage if message is printed and three . cents if message is written. The local post office reports that it is having considerable trouble with the post cards due to the people's mis- understanding the rules as regard th increase in rates. An additional one cent stamp must be affixed to the gov- ernment cards according to the new rules. DR. M. E. WALKER GIVES FIRST HYGIENE LECTURE TO GIRLS Dr. M. E. Walker of the University health service, delivered the first of a series of hygiene lectures to 400 University women Wednesday after- noon in Sarah Caswell Angell hall, in which she pointed out a few of the es- sential rules to observein attaining the ideal of perfect health. "The day is the proper unit of time STATE ST. WuAH R'S cI ENGINEERING TOOLS ALAR MCLOCKS ELECTRIC SUPPLIES STATE STREET HARDWAKE NEW BOOKS FICTION AND OTHERWISE The Dwelling Place of Light-Churchill............. ........$1.60 Extricating Obadiah-Lincoln .................... .........1.50 His Family-Poole ... .................................... 1.50 The Soul of a Bishop-Wells................................... 1.50 Great Possessions-Grayson ....:...................... ...... 1.30 Beyond-Galsworthey ....................................... 1.50 Over the Top-Empey .................... ...............1.50 Long Live the King-Rinehart. ................................1.50 Anne's House of Dreams-Montgomery ......................... 1.40 No Man's Land-"Sapper"............ ...............1.25 A Son of the Middle Border-Garland:. ..........................1.60 My Four Years in Germany-Gerard............................2.00 MAIN ST. SPECIAL This week only 1 Pound Michigan Seal Stationery 2 Packages Envelopes, to match 75C 'SBOOK SLATE RS SHOP PHONE 430 and should be divided into work and rest periods according'to the reqlr,- ments of the individual,' said Dr. Walker. "The thing to remember is that you cannot go without sleep all the week and make it up on Sunday any more than you can eat the whole week's allotment of food in one day." Student Council Nominee Withdraws Editor, The Michigan Daily:- I wish to withdraw my name as a candidate for the office of student councilman from the Junior literary class. HARRY M. CAREY. Bring them here to be sharpened. Satisfaction guaranteed. ,HAND WORK. Each blade separately honed and hair. tested. Double edge 35c Per dos. Single edge 25o lor dos. QUARRY DRUG CO'S PRESCRIPTION STORE :.. ..mommommommolo. Dvry Cleaning- Pressing- Repairing Careful Attention paid to ALTERATIONS Suits Made to Measure $25 up Albert Gansle, Tailor 217 South Main Street PHONE 1447-J Opposite MACK & CO. Phone 308 Cor. State and University , I K ---- ... . . . . .. .. .. 7 ,-- . , We have both the inclination and the equipment to furnish the best in banking service The Ann Arbor Savings Bank INCORPORATED 1869 Capitaliand Surplus $ 500,000.00 Resources . . . $4,000,00040 Northwest Corner Main and Huron Streets 707 North University Avenue DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (effective May 22, 1917) Detroit Limited and Express Cars--7:3s a. In., 8:xo a. m., and hourly to 7:10 p. m., 9:O p. m. Kalamazoo Limited Cars-8:48 a. m. and every two hours to 6:48 . im.; to Lansing, 8:48 P. im. Jackson Express Cars local stops west of Ann Arbor)-9:48 a. m. and every two hours to 7:48 D. m. Local Cars, East Bound*-5.:35 a. In., 6:40 a. n., 7:o5 a. m. and every twodhours to 7:u5 p. m. 8os p.: m., 9:o5 p. m., 10:50 p. m. o Ypsilanti only, 9:20 a. i., 9:50 a mn 2:05 p, mn., 6:05 P. in.9:45 ,5 .In. I:I:45 p. , 12:20 a. mn., I :1o a. ni.'z.1:2o a. mn. fo . aine, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-6:o5 a. In., 7:48 a. In., 10:20 p. m.. 12:20 a. m. "Just a Little BETTER" G . Arcade Barber Shop NICKELS ARCADE *~Athetes- Sportsmen- Everybody- Here's your beverage- Bevo is a splendid soft drink on which to train. Completely satis- fies that extravagant thirst that strenuous exercise is bound to bring -satisfies it without any of that after-feeling of fullness that comhes with water drinking. You will find Bevo at inns, restau- rants, groceries, department and drug stores, picnic grounds, base- ball parks, soda, fountains, dining cars and other places where re- freshing beverages are sold. Guard against substitutes. Have the bottle opened in front of you, first seeing that the seal is un- broken and that the crown top bears the fox. Sold in bottles only, and bottled exclusively by ANHEUSER-BUSCH--ST. LouIs Bevo--the al-year-'round soft drink MODERN & SANITARY ICE CREAM for all occasions DISTINCTIVE SERVICE PAM I ._,. . M TRUBEY'S 218 S. Main Street For your Appointment Committee Photograph try SWAIN 713 East University Ave SHORTHAND TYPEWRITING " BOOKKEEPING PENMANSHIP Classes Just Starting. Enroll Today HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE State and William Read the Daily advertisemnents. 'PhA Vvil lp rl v n +n+ho oot __A- i Ann Arbor Branch 7TARR BEST Inc. CHICAGO BRANCHES: Ann Arbor Madison Champaign Minneapolis Ithaca New Haven 608 E. Liberty St. Hats Caps Shoes Suits Overcoats Sheepskins Military Goods (4 8U Ir1 Pete E. F. Burns, Mgr. _ e 1, ' --