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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.

November 27, 1914 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1914-11-27

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

I

I

Foot-wear
Eli

HEAR
"I Want to go Back to Michigan"
(Fox-Trot) on the Edisom

HAN D

LADIES WORK A SPEOIALTY

I k

Twelve New

Up-to-date Dance Records in this
week's Supplement

C.I. KIDD---Sophomore
1530-J 1112 S. Upiv. Ave

LYNDON

719 N. University

p.
h

r
r.....-.-.,
i r r .

amp, square toe effect.
mt vamps. Tops and quarters of fine grey
Al leather Spanish heels.

N1

)E CO.,

115 S. Main Street

parties, socials and

and Low-

a s.

;It s. PMs as

"0

KIUM
fiber 2,

e,

More than $700 has been collected at
the University of Kansas, for the Red
Cross.
-0-
Out of 400 college men examined by
the University of Chicago medical de-
partment this fall, 26 have almost per-
fect health. Six per cent of them
passed with high marks. Forty-eight
men had abnormal hearts, which is a
great decrease over last year's num-
ber. Smoking sems to be more preva-
lent, as 50 men confessed to be habit-
ual smokers, as compared with 10
last year. Fifty-three said that they
were occasional smokers. w t
The tests revealed the following sta-'
tistics; wearing glasses, 92; defective
eyesight, but no glases, 55; color blind,
6; hypertrophied tonsils, 132; tonsils
remover, 20; deflected septa, 45; sep-
ta' spurs, 39,; enilarged bones, 74; de-
cayed teeth, 45; perfect teeth, 39;
hearts abnormal, 48; smokers rare, 53;
habitual, 50; appendices removed, 14.
---
Ohio State Day will be celebrated
today by alumni associations of Ohio
State University. -
-0-
Columbia tasted the. first football
match since 1910, on Tuesday, when.
a game played between the upperclass-
men and the underclassmen. It was a
miniature Harvard-Yale game, as the
underclassmen were coached by Char-
ley Hann, of Harvard, and the upper-
classmen by Arthur Howe, a famous
Yale quarter-back of a few years ago.
Great preparations were made for this
contest by the undergraduate body at
Columbia, and it partook in every way
of a big contest, as the band was pres-
ent in full uniform. It is rumored
that, because of this game, Columbia
will try to have football reinstated as
a Varsity sport next year or in 1916.
-0-
McGill University, following the
example of the English universities,
will grant degrees to fourth year stu-
dents who enlist in the Canadian ex-
peditionary forces, before the conclu-
sion of the present college term. Stu-
dents of the first, second and third
year classes will be given credit for
a full years' academic work.
Smith's are the most numerous in
the University of Colorado. Johnsons
come second and Adamses third.
Women at the Universities of Indi-
ana and Illinois are agitating dormi-

II

iilommunietito

Orpheum Theatre
House of Famous Plays by Famous Players
Mon.-Tues., Nov. 23-24 - Marguerite
Clark (Mary Pickford's only rival) in
-Wildflower," by Mary Germine.
EXTRA !-First of the "Strand" Euro-
pean War Series, to be shown each
Mon.-Tues.
Wed., Nov. 25-One day only.-Ethel
Barrymore, in "The Nightingale," by
Augustus Thomas.
Thurs.-Fri., Nov. 26-27-RobertEdeson
in Where the Trail Divides."

Archer & C.rr
+Musloal Sketch;
"The Fortune Teler"

"tBaby Helen"
Sensational Juvenile
Comedienne

hestra

Maxwell H olden
"The Shadorwgraphi

Baritone

701 MAJESTIC THEATRE T1
WHERE EVERYBODY CO(ES
Friday, Saturday, Nov. 27, 2

I,

Two Carlctons

The Nonchalant I
Acrobats I

-$3.50--$3.75-$4.00
-$1.00-$1.25-$1.50

Editor, The Michigan Daily:-
Before we permit our sentiments to
carry us away, and before we permit
the tradition sobbers to make us lose
our reason, let us consider the Junior
hop in a coldly impersonal light, and
try to evaluate it.
Most everybody on the campus is
willing to say, at the first question,
that we "ought" to have a J-Hop. It
is an old tradition, and, for some rea-
son or other, the cloak of tradition
hides all its sins,
.-The man who never expects to go
to a hop, as well as the man who is
willing to believe all kinds of stories
about the J-Hop, are both willing to
agree that there "ought" to be a Junior
hop, if the faculty will only allow it.
And some of the members of the fac-
ulty, who are not always thought of
in the popular last stanza of the Cap
Night song, admit that we "ought" to
have a Junior hop.
Ought, I take it, is a term of moral
significance, and, in matters of moral-
ity, we must not demand too much of
reason. Perhaps this is why almost
no one gives any real reason for bring-
ing backthe bonnie dancing jubilee.
Some there are who think, though
they do not voice their opinions In
the marketplace, that the J-Hop is a
matter of university pride, that it is
an ,institution which is uniquely col-
legiate in nature, that the topmost,-
the most excrutiatingly beatific air of
college life.is not breathed outside the
environs of the hop hall. To these,
the Junior hop must be the very
quintessence of all that is beautiful,
scintillating, brilliant, lively, joyous,
sensuous, soulful, surpassing. To them
there must be no limit to expense, no
limit to extensiveness and intricacy of
preparation, no equal to the beauty of
the fair dancers, though the country
be scoured from end to end to find
them; there must be no perfection
lacking in any detail of novelty and
Ingenuousness in the performance of
the musicians, no possible improve-
ment in the gowning and tolette of
the ladies, no want of the least bit of
finesse in the execution of any of the
steps orginated especially for the occa-
sion. A J-Hop super-fine! Anything
else cannot be a J-Hop. But those
who take so frank an attitude are in
the silent minority.
What kind of a J-Hop may be ex-
pected if those engineering the plan
for winning faculty approval succeed?
Democracy! That's the touchstone
which will make up for all that will
be lost. Democracy, as some may re-
call, is the excuse for many of the
miserable failures in student activities.
A glorified Union dance, or Y. M. C.
A. social! That will be the festive al-
lurement that will be prepared for the
most beautiful girl in every town from
Oshkosh to Ishpeming. If one gold-
plated young student's plans fall short,
he may at the last minute invite that
nice girl who works in the Varsity,
and she may wear that blue dress
that made a hit at the Maccabees' two
years ago. Or If his tailor disappoint,
that suit in which he graduated from
high school, may satisfy just as well.

MR. & MRS. JAS, LEONARD with RICH, ANDERSON
In GO. BEKNAMD SHAW'S (based)
CAESER & CLEOPATRA "TITLED" "WHEN CAESER C'S HER"
Coming "Carter" The Great American Magician

NO LOSS BY FIRE

F. L. HALL, 514 E. William
Phone 2226
I Gods Called For
PRSIDelivered

p

Freshman
ALSO
CANDIES
Sophomore

College icackis Many Things
But the Best. Is
the Lunches
AT "'POP BANCROFT'S" 722 Monroe

** GARRICK a
DETROIT
EMMA TRENTINI and CLIFTON CRAW
In the Musical Comedy-
"THE PEASANT GIR

Peo

W h y ? These reasons-
SAm located on second fdoor

I

I put saving between first and second
floor expenses in the garments I make.
What I save-you make.
Walk a flight and save the difference

Favorite
siness andipublic
bacco satisfaction
,rettes of unique
eir individual ik-
heirdistinguished
rt, fashionable to

tories.

GANZLE, The Tailor

_p._..

The Universityof Arizona has taken
1,000 feet of film of the campus for
advertising purposes.

108 E. Washington St.

2nd Floor

Students.
mustaches,

of Earlham .who
have organized.

wear

I

AM

,I

r, milder tobacco in the world than
>ne other with such a sweet, mel-'
rance. This rare, balmy aroma is
ve as it is distinctive and pleasing,
tained and en- Aek E
rolled cigarette. book of ;paper.
nd-made cigar- e
ome enjoyment
ion to more mil-- u
all other high-.
iccos combined.

All members of the varsity band are
requested to meet in Hill auditorium
at 7:00 o'clock tonight, and bring their
instruments with them.
Fresh law class will hold a meeting
in room D of the law building at 4:00
o'clock this afternoon, to discuss plans
for a smoker, to be held in the near
future.
There will be a meeting of the Mich-
igan chapter of the Brotherhood of
St. Andrew at Harris hall at 6:30
o'clock tonight,
Alpha Nu society will hold a rally
meeting at 7:00 o'clock tonight, on the
fourth floor of University hall. New
members will debate.

The hop is too expensive, says the
misinformed state press, so the cane-
mittee will cut down the price of tick-
ets to five dollars, and will string five-
inch streamers of yellow and blue
from the corners of the gymnasiums.
Instead of booths, the original plans
of the'architects for ornamenting the
gymnasium will be retained, and
chestweights, and dumbbell racks will
rest the eyes of the chaperones when
they tire from watching the antics of
the dancers,
The hop will be managed by the:
classes, The wonderful efficiency dis-
played by classes, their great skill in
providing entertainment for t ro or
three in the class outside of the social
committee and a couple of its intimate
friends, makes the classes the logical
organization, or disorganization, for
handling the Junior hop. But no one
expects much from this year's hop, so
if as many committees are' chosen as
possible, the greatest possible happi-
ness will result.
Everybody who is in favor of bring-
ing back the J-Hop, is enthusiastic,k
of course, about the democracy, and
simplicity, which will characterize it.
For these, let its old glories no.
Whether or not anybody attends the
J-Hop, does not matter, just so long
as there is a Junior hop.
Just so long as we once get it back?

This is the hope of all who desire a
"democratic," or any other kind of,
hop that the faculty .will let go
through. We will mold it to our own
taste after it is once restored. O.
course, the faculty is just as foolish
now as when the song was written,
so we'll slip one over on it, just as
we slip it over in classes 'everv day.
Such might be a paraphrase of the
conversation with their inner selves,
carried on by the supporters of the
project.
Well, Mr. Editor, the writer is about
the last person in the world to talk
about the J-Hop. He is not a J-Hop-
per, nor ever had hopes to be. He has
waited patiently for someone else to
say what has tickled his unpleasant
fancy, but at last, impatience has
drawn him to the typewriter.
Charles Weinberg.

det, show-
'our Own"
tte papers,
,on postal
iam, Dur-

CCO COMPANY

or . , .
F
f
i iiiiciEi ii u E i i

i-

INTERLCOILLEGIATE

ord Detroit Walk
and Russell Hat-
d a new record
ween Ann Arbor
ey made the dis-
'o cities in seven
s, recently. This

lowers the previous record of 12 hours
and 40 minuter by four hours and 45
minutes, and will probably be a hard
one to beat, as the average was con-
siderably over five miles an hour for
the miles covered.

605 $ William St.
ONLY CAFETERIA OREN'S CAFETERIA

During the Yale-Harvard game at
New Haven, the Yale undergraduate
Red Cross relief committee took up a
collection of $7,463.91.
-o-
All- students of the university of
Kansas were excused from class in
order to attend the moving picture en-
tertainment given for the benefit of
the Red Cross.

,

, .

m -

Id have Likeness, Permanence,
lic Finish, that describes a

aa

P ortr i
Studio: 319 E. Huron Street

Phone 9

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