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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.

April 25, 1920 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1920-04-25

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

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- -Airplane Racing B
tic Portraits For Prominenta
rechuical Quality Universities
(By Associated Press)
New York, April 24.-Air events
planned for 1920 promise to make it
a big aviation sport year, eccording
to American Flying Club. The first-
} -event of importance will be the flying
I (field day of- the Intercollegiate Fly-
ing Association at Mineola Field, (N.
Y.) May 7.
Eleven colleges and universities
rshingan Strest Phone 598 will be presented in a varied pro-
gram of flying stunts, which will be
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _concluded with a cross country flight.
In this race each will be permitted
to enter two airplanes and a cup will
be awarded to the winner. T'4e start
will be made at Mineola Field,-where
the roce also will end after a cir-
rrrp n cuit that probobly will include Phila-
r i- delphia and 1rinceton
Plan Seaplane Race
Arrangements also are being made
-fl l . jby the club for a seaplane race around
Long Island. This probably will be
a held early in the Summer. The club
{N i is cooperating with the training and
operations group of tie United States
Army Air Service in planning for
RADE MARK a trans-continental -air race between
New York and Alaska, a distance of
4,870 miles.
t men prefer the pipe to any other form of smoking. In the tentative plans the course
er's comfort, contentment, .real satisfaction and is mapped out from Mintola across
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DEM UTH & CO. NEW YORK
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VER MOROSCO offers An Oxford
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L Notice the slim tapering lines
er Latest Musical Comedy4
AT
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lidding Heavily.
Place In Sports;
To 21e Represented
United States territory to Minot, N.
D., crossing to Saskatchewan, Can.,
and across the Dominion to Fort Eg-
bert on the Alaska border. In Alaska
the route runs to Circle, Fort Yukon,
Fairbanks by way of Fort Gibbon,
thence to Nulato and Nome. Com-
pulsohy stops at an average of each
150 miles will be arranged.
France To Hold. Meet
Flying events of a sporting nature
will not be confined, however, to the
UnitedStates in 1920. In France a
flying meetis scheduled to2be lld at
Juvisy, netr Paris, May 22 and 23.
The British aircraft exhibition will
be held at London in July. In ad-
dition the British government has of-
fered several millions in pounds as
prozes for vorious airplane sporting
events to be held during the year.
The Cape to Cairo route is being
blazed. Between the two points the
distance by rail, steamship or ground
transport is approximately 6,113
miles. The aerial line is about 5,200'
miles.
Fraternities, have you arranged for
your appdintment with the Spedding
Studio, J-HoR Photographers, to phot-
ograph your group during the Hop.
Phone 604-W.-Adv.

CALL TOB BE MADE FOR
WHOLDCAMPIGNFUNDS
SERMONS TO DEAL WITH NEED
FOR TRUE INSIGHT INTO
GOD'S TEACHINGS
The goodness of God to men, and
the need for a truer insight into the
life and teachings of Jesus, will be
the theme of many of the sermons to
be delivered today in local churches.
A plea for funds to meet the local
budget of the Interchurch World Move-
ment, is to be made today by all the
pastors of the Protestant churches.
Rev. Leonard A. Barrett of the Pres-
byterian church will speak on "United
Protestantism" at the morning ser-
vice. This sermon will follow along
the lines of the Interchurch move-
ment, as presented last week at the
conference of local representatives of
the campaign. Prof. W. D. Hender-
son will resume charge of the student's
bible class which meets at noon in
the center block of the pews in the
church. Christian Endeavor meets at
6 o' clock for a social half hour, fol-
lowed by a short devotional service.
Physician To Speak
"A Host of Witnesses" will be Rev.
J. M. Well's theme for the morning
sermon in the Baptist chuch. At
7:30 o' clock this evening, a prominent
local physician will talk on "Home
Views from a Doctor's Watch Tower."
Regular Sunday school classes will
take place at the usual hour.
At the morning service in the
Methodist church, Rev. Arthur W.
Stalker will have for his topic, "A
Path to God." At the regular even-
ing service, Miss Welthy Honsinger,
a missionary recently returned from
the Far East, will lecture on "The
Day after Tomorrow." This lecture
is given under the auspices of the
Wesleyan Guild.
"The One Miracle" is the subject
of Rev. S. S. Robin's message this
morning in the Unitarian church. The
young people's guild meets at 6 o' clock
for a social half hour and service.
Rev. Lloyd Wallick will deliver the
third of a series of addresses on the
great teachings of the church this
morning in the Trinity Lutheren
church. Mr. Wallick will define the
viewpoint of MartinLuther toward re-
ligion.
To Celebrate Communion
Holy communion -will be celebrated
at St. Andrew's Episcopal church this
morning at 7:30 o' clock. The regu-
lar morning prayer service will be in
charge'of Mr. Webb, assistant rector.
Vesper service will begin at 4:30
o' clock this afternoon.
This morning in the Congregational
church, Rev. Lloyd C. Douglas will
discuss the subject, "Is The World
Growing Better?" Dr. Douglas claims
that it is, and will prove hisRassertions
in an unusual way.
Thousands of books offered at' re-
markable low prices at Graham's An-
nual Book Sale.-Adv.

" Fillerj" Newest
Device Writers
Are Employing
(By Stewart T. Beach)
"And 'tis the sad complaint and almost
true,
Whate'er we write we bring forth
nothing neyr."
William Cowper, "Table Talk."
This post interesting, and quite
challenging statement of Cowper's, ex-
pressed in his "Table Talk," leads the
present day student to ask himself the
question which the English poet raised
in the eighteenth century! Is our
own era bringing forth anything new
along literary lines, or are we simply
travelling again the old, well-worn
paths trod continually by men of let-
ters?
At the outset, it seems apparent that
the question must resolve itself into
two distinct pr.ts, and that it must
be discussed as regardiilig the fields of
both form and style. Is the present
day, then, bringing forth anything new
in either of these two lines? Con-
cerning the first, one must reply in the
affirmative, if he is to credit the state-
men of Carl Glick, a worthy gentl'e-
man who must incur the wrath of col-
lege professors by his classification of
them as "that bloodthirsty crew who
take all the. enjoyment out of litera-
ture by their overzealous attempts at
literary criticism."
But it is an interesting thought
which he expounds in his article in
a recent number of ."The Bookman"
entitled "Discovered: a New Literary
Form!" And his "new literary form"
is the "filler," "a whole Victorian novel
told in seven lines." What is the filler?
If Mr. Glick's 'definition be not sufmi-
ciently lucid, one might further explain
it as that bit of interesting and some-
times apparently quite nonsensical,
but always mysterious, literature
which finds its place in the magazines
where the short-story or the novelette
has failed to cover the'eitire last page.
The filler is unlimited by rule or by
subject-matter-it may be an exposi-
tion of anything, but it must be brief,
and it must contain a. subtle touch
which shall -make it attractive. It is
worthy of note here, simply because of
the fact that it is still in its infancy,
and that some day it will undoubtedly
be recognized as a legitimate literary
form. For the, present, howerer, it
remains an outlaw, unrestrained by
grammatical rule.
And what can be said in- the matter
of style? Surely, here is a different
thing and one finds it not so easy to
lay his finger on any one style which
shall easily confirm the statement
that it is really something new. If
there be any novel touch in contem-
,porary literature, it seems apparent
that we must turn to the one-act play
to discover it. Still in its adolescence
this form of dramatic literature seems
to give much promise, and notable are
the works of Maurice Maeterlinck in
this connection.
Parker, Conklin, Waterman foun-
tain pens. 0. D. Morrill, 17 Nickels
Arcade.-Adv.

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