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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 25, 1914 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1914-10-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE !JMICHIGUAN DiAILY

E
R
i
S

THEY ARE HERE

E a

THE POPULAR
BALMACAANS
In herring bone and ,
Diagonal Sootoh Tweed
$15.00 to $25.00
G ROSS, ON LIBERTY

R
N
C
T
S

TWO WOMEN WIELD
SMI1THYHAMM'ERS
Refuse Leniency of Instructors and
Do. Prescribed Heavy
Shop Work
WOMEN ENGINEERS NUMEROUS
You've all heard'. about women
blacksmiths and possibly thought
them unique cases of womanly pur-
suit, but they are not. Right here on
our own campus we have two women

dIa

0

new restaurant has by this time become
own to all students. You cannot ;walk
mng Liberty Street without having your
called by our attractive windows.

-
GERHART HAUPTMANN
(By Karl Roll (838 H3740 H73)
This study of the life and works of
Gerhart Hauptman was written, as its
author confesses, not only to give the
English reader an easy introduction to
Hauptmann, but also to stimulate the
production of the latter's plays on the
English stage. At the time of publi-
cation, only a couple of the great Ger-
man's dramas had found their way
into the theaters of England. - Holl's
treatment, for the most part, compris-
es a study of Hauptmann's plays as
related to the tendencies of the time..
Between 1889 and 1912, Hauptmann
published 22 dramas in addition to
other works. Not in one of them, says
the critic, was there an insincere note
or a feeble and shallow compromise.
"The dominant chord of his soul is his
sympathy with the poor and unfortu-
nate. The sincerity of his social and
ethical feelings gi.ves them the dignity
of religion."
Hauptmann, we are told, is a. great
sentimentalist, and his wealth of feel-
lng is boundless; but this does not
prevent him from being an earnest
and deep thinker. "He availed himself
of the indisputable enrichments which
materialism had produced.... . Nat-
uralism is the daughter of material-
ism, and, together with Ibsen's influ-'
ence, is the most important element
in shaping Hauptmann's style......
His mastery of diction, be it prose or
verse, is perfect."
,WIRLESSRSTATION
HOLDS HIGH RANK

possible, the station will be open each
night of the week during the school
year.
The station was of great practic-
able value two years ago during the
Dayton flood when it offered the sole
means of reaching the sufferers, and
also enabled the people of this vicinity
to keep in touch with those who were
in that region.
STUDENTS ORGANIZE CLUB TO
SUPPORT GOVERNOR FERRIS
Democratic students in the univer-
sity have organized a Wilson-Ferris
club to work for the governor's re-
election and for democracy in general
on the campus.
A big "Party Prosperity" smokerx
will be held at the Michigan Union at'
7:30 o'clock tomorrow evening. Prof.
R. E. Bunker of the law department,
Prof. W. D. Henderson of the physics
department, Prosecutor George Burke,
M. J. Cavanaugh, attorney in Ann Ar-
bor, and L. H. Dunten, '14-'16L, are.
the speakers on the program.
At the meeting held at the Michigan
Union Friday night, committees were
appointed to perfect the present plans
of the club, which not only include
arangements for the affair Monday
night, but also its permanent estab-
lishment upon the campus.
Staff Appointments Made for Magazine
L. D. Randall, '16, has been appoint-
ed assistant business manager of the
Cosmopolitan Student, the official or-
ganization of Corda Fratres. Other'
appointments to the staff include, W.
M. Johnston, '16L, and D. M. Sarbaugh,
'17L, who have been appointed assist-
ants to the editor.

who once weekly garb themselves in'
the heavy raiment of the trade and
wield hammers of the iron industry.
Both are taking this most irritating,
course on the campus simply because
it is prescribed work for prospective
engineers and they desire no leniency
shown them because they are women.
They may be considered by the un-
thinking public as followers of a
freak profession for womanhood; by
the suffrage enthusiast, as further evi-
dences of woman's increasing indust-
trial independence; by the locality, as
simply girls doing some of the uncom-
mon stunts which Ann Arbor girls
.generally do; but by the sweaty fresh-
man engineer, as he frantically beats
the plasticity out of his glowing sub-
ject, they are the tender temporizing
rays of femininity, enlightening his
otherwise darkly desolate realm. And
the women' are profoundly serious
about it too. They quite modestly'
object to any help from mankind,
though an instructor occasionally
comes along and taps their mangled
piece of metal with 'a few masterly,
strokes, thereby squaring it. Besides,
there is also the occasionatl engineer
gallant who happens by to tell them
how far wrong they are, or to add
some other aiding remark. The truth
is, however, the girls hold their own
with the men students in this tedious
shop work and in the quizzes they suc-
ceed where many men fail. While
women taking this course is not any-
thing really new, this year's enroll-
ment is larger than that of any prev-
ious year; and this fact, of course,
seems to portend a broadening of
woman's sphere of professional activi-
ties.

IV11bf1IbMI rLa Ln1
GAIN 'SOCIAL' FAMI
"Puck" Comments on Yost Machin
And On Teams of Eastern
Schools
PLACES LOCALS IN HIGH SOCIET
At last Michigan has taken her plac
in the hall of fame. At last the V
"Wolverine" has come into her ow
and can "hobnob" with her haugh
sisters of the east, and from this da
forward, old father History, skippin
over a blot which has smeared tl
dates between 1883 and 1914, com
out in a bold record of events as th
now are and are to be.
In the issue of "Puck" for Octob
24, just hot off the press, a depar
ment, headed "The Football Outloolk
discusses in company with the Yal
Harvard, Cornell, Penn, Williams ar
Princeton teams, the prospects for
"Michigan Year." To the uninitiate
let it be said that "Puck" is one of t
two "Blue Books" of the. United Stat
and the entrance of Michigan into t
famous eastern company of the E
Four as the only western colle
worth noting, marks an epoch in t
"Society" history of the world. T
article, though brief, is pertinent a
reads:
"Michigan coaches are jubila:
They have landed 'Giggles' Guncottc
son of the Hymnbook trust magna
The newcomer's advertising value
the eleven is incalculable. He is e
gaged to three chorus girls, an easte
heiress, and an Ann Arbor dishwash
andl has just started an elegant rc
with the old man. In view of the
favoring conditions, the coaches s
it is a cinch that something will udr
on the eve of the big game, and
confident are they of this that th
have already arranged, among oti
things, for a two column scare-hez
and have hired the best newspaper
lustrator in the state to draw I
standard chromo of Cupid in a fo
ball suit wreathing a bride's bougi
of Begonias and Lover's tassles abc
'Giggles' legs."
We don't know "Giggles," Puck,, 1
at any rate he ought to make go
competition for "Hah-vad."

We can assure you that the kind of meals
t you would expect to see served here are
ved. By asking any of our customers you

'roborate this statement.

;4

On

To

Harv

E ARCADIA

Mrs. M. E. Morrow

When the discriminating student wants to see a football,
see a good one.

game he pays

Installation

University's

Surpasses'

612-14-16 East Liberty Street

All Others of Lake Region;
Known Throughout
Country

When the same d. s. wants a suit he pays $25 to $35,sand gets one from

cotton market a large number of stu-
dents from the cotton belt would not
be able to attend school otherwise.
Lambda Tau Rho,'the national red-
. . headed men's fraternity, has just in-
speak at the stalled a chapter at the University of
the coming of Illinois. "Pink" Tenney, of Ohio

owing men will
Union during

111am H. Taft, Elbert Hub-
jamuel Gompers, Earnest
n Seton, William J. Burns,;
Churchill, George Harvey,
D. Roosevelt, assistant sec-
the navy; Henry Breckin-
sistant secretary of war; R.
n, editor of the Boston Her-
Arthur Woods, of the New
ice commission.
-o--
ities at Amherst are volun-
opting a rule not to initiate
ent whose scholarship up to
of initiation is unsatisfactory..

State, the mother chapter was in
charge. Red chapter is at Ohio State,
Crimson chapter at Ohio Wesleyan,
Maroon chapter at Chicago, Cardinal
chapter at Minnesota an'd Orange
chapter at Illinois. The pin is a red-
headed skull.
-0-
In answer to a letter from Major.
Clarence Wiener of London, to the
effect that he will remove from his will
the bequest to Harvard University of
$10,000,000, unless Prof. Hugo Mun-
sterburg, was removed from the, fac-
ulty for pro-German utterances, the
Harvard corporation has announced
that it cannot tolerate any suggestion
that it would be willing to accept mon-
ey to abridge free speech, remove a
professor, or accept his resignation.
Professor Munsterburg has been asked
to withdraw his resignation, which he
tendered that the corporation might
not be embarassed in case it wished
to accept the offer.
--o_
During rushing season at Williams
no fraternity man may enter the rooms
of a non-fraternity man of any class,
except as a representative of a college
organization or with the permission
of the president of the interfraternity

MANY OPERATORS HAVE PICKED
UP MICHIGAN MARCONIGRAMS
Office MAy Be Kept Open For Business
Every Night of Week
During School
Michigan possesses one of the larg-
est wireless stations of any of the
universities of the country. A great
majority of universities do not own
installations, and those which do, for
the most part, have small sets which
they use for demonstration work only.
.The university station is the largest
in the Great Lakes region, considering
both commercial and educational sta-
tions. It is a ten killowatt installa-
tion. The largest commercial station'
in this region, that in Detroit, is only
a two killowatt station. Michigan's
set can not compare, however, with
those of the big transatlantic stations.
Massachusetts Institute of Techno-
logy has a large installation, the exact
size of which is not known in Ann
Arbor. Columbia University has a
standard Marconi set of two killo-
watts. M. A. C.'s set is only one killo-
on the atlantic coast. The government
station at Arlington, Va., and those
at Sayville, L. I. and Cape May, N. J.,
are all 150 kilowatt sets. Washington
University in St. Louis, has a set
which is equal to that 'of Michigan's
in power. North Dakota's set totals
four killowatts. The Christian Broth-
er's college in Memphis, Tenn., has a
set of five killowatts, and is contem-
plating the installation of one of fif-
teen.
The university station is well known
about the country, and many letters
are received during the year from
commercial and amateur operators
who have succeeded in picking up the
calls of the station. The station has
a regular operator, D. A. Nichols, '18E,
and it is hoped that two assistants
can be secured for him. If this is I

TAILOR
Lafayette Boulevard & Wayne St.
DETROIT

Custom-made Ready-to-Wear Suits

$25

$27.50

$30

$32.50

$3'5

of

shmen at Colgate dis-
's, 27 Methodists, 22
Catholics, 17 Con-
12 Episcopalians,
hree members of the
, and one each of
Christian, Seventh
d Christian Scientist
were .not members

MEN OF MICHIGAN are invited to see these Suits and try them on. Nothing like
them elsewhere for the money. In fact this innovation of selling Suits made by Custom
Tailors at the above prices sets a standard of clothes values heretofore unknown.

discu
iffh

n of

the
r of

J. DONALD JORDAN is in charge of this department

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