THE MICHIGAN DAILY. 1AIGN OF N S VAT REPUTI for Clubhouse Campaining I in Newspapers of Ma- rity of Great Amer- ilan Cities , OUTLOOK, COLLIER'S, HCE ARTICLES RECENTLY Emphasize Democracy an; Debt to President- Emeritus Angell for ublicity for the Michigan Union ding campaign has been floated ing the past few months on the At magnificent scale of any previ- university endeavor. Mr. C. hes, of Detroit, general publicity rman, assisted by E. W. Haislip, ,, and others, has succeeded in ing stories and editorials in most ;he leading papers of New York, cago, Buffalo, Detroit, Cleyeland, edo, most of the Michigan cities, in numerous magazines, including Metropolitan, Leslie's Weekly, The look and Collier's Weekly. elow are editorials quoted, respec- ly, from The Outlook, Collier's kly and the Chicago Herald, all which have appeared during the several weeks: 3mocracy at Michigan University The University of Michigan will go >re its 35,000 alumni in October h a request for $1,000,000 to erect, ip and endow a building for the higan Union-an organization ch will embrace in its membership ctically all the men in the uni- sl T " b is P G, 1V tf v a z) b if VS U Y1 b it A li li u S: e s, h 0 it ii d ii v r .p t' a e r. shows have swallowed the circus.' These difficulties of class and clique are to be met in practical fashion by giving the melting pot a chance to boil. The alumni are organizing in I83 cities of this country for the cam- paign which is to build the Union clubhouse, and every University of Michigan graduate ought to get in touch with his local committee at once. What 2,000 Michigan men go after they are certain to get. The clubhouse plans are for a beautiful and useful building, and the results of its use in lessened snobbery and increased de- mocracy will be very pleasant to watch. We can fancy some of Hurry- up Yost's hardened 'buffaloes' frater- nizing with tea drinkers from the first families of Detroit! Why not? They'll both learn something. And, above all, it must be finished in time so that Dr. Angell can see the working out of his idea of years ago."-Reprint from Col- lier's Weekly. Democracy in the Universities. "In some respects American student life is finely democratic. In other ways, however,'the colleges and the universities have become citadels of snobdom. This latter state has result- ed despite the unceasing efforts of some of the noblest minds. The tide has run too strong. "American colleges, certainly those of the middle west, were not organized in the spirit of European institutions which aim to fit young men for the intricacies of aristocratic society. We. do not divide students into the nobil- ity,, the gentry and others; at least, we profess not to. But class lines are rather rigidly drawn. "The contrast of riches and of com- parative poverty is vividly reflected on the college campus. Societies, secret and otherwise, tend to crystallize the class differences. A generation ago many educational authorities attempt- ed to wage a war on the exclusive clubs, notably upon the Greek letter fraternities. Not much success attend- ed the effort. The instinct for secrecy and for clannishness appeared too powerfully developed in the human animal of college age. "A happy aspect of this collegiate snobdom has been seen in the fact that many of the poorer students have done better in later life than their richer: fellows. They have been the suc- cesses. Doubtless they have found solace in that. But the universities have been the losers. The lack of a democratic community life has tended to make the campus barren. "With its 6,800 students, gatheredE from every state in this country and from almost every foreign land, Mich-f igan looks to its student union to de- mocratize its undergraduates, to give them a chance to educate themselvesl by mixing and mingling with one an- other; in short, to gain that broader s education which comes from knowing men, and to develop the communitya spirit, which ordinarily, sad to say, does not develop in many college menj until years after their graduation. "The criticism of the colleges, which, it must be admitted, has come with] increasing insistec-, during the past decade, Is that-instead of broadening1 a young man's outlook,dthey narrdw it; that, in short, the colleges foster a spirit of class and clique snobbery. "The movement which Michigan has undertaken is valuable because it is aimed towvard the effecting of an equal- ity of opportunity. Dr. James B. An- gelI, president-emeritus of Michigan, is right when he says that the mind and character of students receive as deep and abiding impressions from mixing with oneanother as they do from class-room experience. It is not the fault of college students them- selves that they leave their alma ma- ters without the breadth that comes from rubbing elbows with cosmopoli- tans. The trouble has been that the university has not been the clearing- house that it might be for undergrad- uate activities, thoughts and tenden- cies. No common meeting ground has been given the student. The fact that the average student would prefer to live on a democratic plane has been proved at Michigan, where the men- bers of the Greek letter fraternities- traditionally the aristocracy in all col- leges-have given their enthusiastic support to the plan for the democratic Michigan Union."-Reprint from The Outlook, Wednesday, July 21, 1915. Mixing Them Up at Michigan "Years ago Dr. James B. Angell, now the well-beloved president-emeritus of the University of Michigan and one of the great figures in the history of American education, shocked many of his staid contemporaries by holding that young men in college get as much from one another as they do from their professors. Truth wins in the end, and now Dr. Angell's young-men are beginning to catch up with that patriarch of 87 summers. In October of this year some 2,000 alumni of the University of Michigan are going out to get $1,000,000 in cash from the 35,- 000 graduates of that institution, and with it they are to build and endow a home at Ann Arbor for the Michigan Union.aTheir alma mater needs this service, for she has over 6,000 students gathered from every state in the union nd from every quarter of the globe, ut no common meeting ground for th em. The Union is the one associa- tiv body to which nearly all of them bel ng, but not a fourth part of the mem rs can get into the present quart ,rs. The result is that the stu- dents kleet where they can in the fra- ternities and other clubs, and do not get the full breadth and inspiration that oug t to come to the members of such a bd. A= Woodrow Wilson said GIVE ALL. STUDENTS ORATORYTICKETS Cards to Admit Bearer to All Debates and Oratorial Contests to Be Held During Year ASSOCIATION TO CONDUCT FIVE DEBATES IN PEACE CONTEST Michigan Will Meet Northwestern and Wisconsin in Dual Word Fests. In an attempt to stimulate interest in the student body for the oratorical association and the numerous debates and speaking contests held throughout the year, tickets are being given free to all students of the university, which will admit them to all oratorical con- tests. In past years, the quantity of attendance at the debates has not been satisfactory, and the authorities in charge have adopted this plan in an effort to draw out larger crowds. The tickets are being issued in con- junction with the athletic coupon books, and it is planned to make this an annual affair. Membership tickets to the oratorical association will admit the students to all of the five debates and oratorical contests of the year, the first being the peace contest held on the night of December 17. The Michigan-North- western debate is the next contest scheduled and it will be given on the night of January 21. The annual ora- torical contest. comes March 3, while on March 31 occurs the Michigan- Wisconsin debate. The cup debate be- tween the members of the campus de- bating societies, on April 28, is the last contest for the year. The peace contest is perhaps the most important of any on the sched- ule, as it has a national scope, due to the fact that more than 30 states in the Union are involved in the same contest. The United States has been divided into six groups of states for simplifying these contests: (1) The north Atlantic group, (2) the south At- lantic group,, (3) the southwestern group, (4) the central group, of which Michigan is a member, (5) the west- ern group, and (6) the Pacific group. The winner of the state contest goes to the group debate, where he co- petes against the several other state winners in his particular group. The six men who win the group contests compete for the grand prize atthe national peace contest hld at Lake Mohonk, N. Y. All students are eli- gible, and prizes of $75 and $50 are aiven first and second places in the state contests. The second contest on the schedule is the central league debate, in which Michigan will meet Northwestern in Ann Arbor, and will send a team to debate with Chicago on the same night. The question for this year is: "Re- solved, that Congress should adopt the literacy test for all European immi- gration." Each of the four debating societies will give six men to the de- bating squad, which will be gradually cut down to the requisite eight men by Thanksgiving. The oratorical contest on March 3 is open to all students of good stand- ing in the university, and the winner represents Michigan in the Northern Oratorical league contest held at the University of Illinois the first Friday in May. Michigan will meet Wisconsin on March 21 in University Hall in the Mid-west Debating league, and will send at the same time a team to de- bate with the University of Illinois. This league has only been founded for one year, last year's debate being the first to be held. The question for this year has not yet been determined, but will be decided on November 1. The debaters will be given awards of $50 each in addition to receiving gold medals. You Welcome I YOU' MUST know this shop to fully appreciate GEOLOGY SECTIONS' AIREDBYBUILDING Department Promises to Rank Among Best in Country Because of .ew Science Home IMPROVES RESEARCH FACILITIES the meaning of these . Words of welcome. The older boys know--ask With the opening of the new science building, the department of geology will rank with the best in the country. The department has been located pre- viously in the museum, where it was considerably cramped for room. The museum collections, however, will now be allotted more space in the new structure, where they can be studied and exhibited with greatest ease. In the past, students interested in the numerous exhibitions in the mu- seum were much hampered by the fact that a large number of the speci- mens were stored on the third floor, where the opportunity for study and display. was limited and access to all displays was difficult. With the open- ing of the new exhibition rooms of the geology department, students will find the research work of a much easier nature. The exhibition room proper of the department will occupy the hall of the second floor, and in addition a six-unit display room. In the second floor dis- play room cases will be placed, where many of the geological collections will be situated. The 'preparation room, where many of the fossils for the de- partment will be mounted and pre- pared for exhibition, will be, located in the basement. A special laboratory for physiogra- phy will occupy a portion of the third floor. Here it is planned to keep map collections of the department in vari- ous cases. A special case will be made which will hold all the topo- graphical maps published by the United States. On the roof of the sci- ence building a thermometer sheltei will be placed so that observations 01 the weather may be taken throughout the year. them. MAKE OUR STORE YOUR STORE i i y r f t SHALL ATHLETES BE NUMBERED Pulford Says Board in Control and College Scribes Are Against It George R. Pulford, sporting editor of the Toledo Blade, wrote an article recently in which he expressed the idea that the board in control of ath- letics at Michigan were in league with the college newspaper correspondents, which has caused no little comment. Pulford based his assumption on the fact that the board has been opposed to numbering the Wolverine athletes' on the grounds that it would be much easier for foreign newspaper men to come in aiid write up games, thus crowding out the college scribes. "The power of the college correspondent is on the verge of being shattered at Ann Arbor," says Pulford, "thanks to the football rules committee's endorse- I iTl ClothiS The Home of Hart Schaffnuer & Marx Clothes re lk 217 So. Main Street Prof. A. h. Crittenden Teaches at Ohio Prof. A. R. Crittenden, of the literary college, was a member of the summer school faculty at Ohio State Univer-{