'V ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 9, 1920. UES' PRODUCTION A Students Drink Heavily-Malted M'ilk, Coca Cola Kick Isn't There, But the Price Has Gone Up Just the Same. (By Joseph A. Bernstein) Students of the University of Michi- gan are drinking heavily. In the face of prohibition laws, both state and federal, the taste for drink is too much and the thirsty student is succumbing to temptation. It is true that students of the Uni- versity are drinking heavily. Figures, that never lie, tell a tale of consump- tion that rivals that of pre-prohibition days when you could get a drink for the asking. The high cost of living has brought with it the high cost of drinking, yet the student defies even this hazard and will satisfy his thirst. Gone 'Way Up! Even though coca colas have ad- vanced from five cents a glass, and even though malted milks are bringing the drug stores twenty and twenty-five cents each, the students continue to drink heavily. 1 Drinking, they have found, can be done very efficiently, despite the fact that the sizzling hot and powerful sen-. sation of gin or whiskey is no longer there' to make a pathway down one's throat for the final wallop. Even the wallop is missing in these new drinks, yet the students continue to drink of them heavily. Spirits are lacking on the 'campus. Both the Oliver Lodge kind and the bind with the wallop. If you have the kind with a wallop, every man is your friend.. But if you haven't, said would- be friend must satisfy himself with the milder drinks that are served him at the local soda emporiums. But the lack of the kick, deters him not. He continues to drink, kick or no kick, and he drinks heavily. Figures gathered at the various drug stores and the Union soda fountain bear out that statement. UNION SERVI1 oF RELIGIO1 WILL BI( MOTIAERS (II. Hardy Heth) Sometimes it is the faded things that count- The worn-out things, the whimsy, fragile things- Like tired eyes and grayish wisps of hair ST Against your cheek, Or else a shaky voice in some old song, Or thin, white fingers playing ivory keys. 'Can at Mic I The world is full of mothers! They seek locked nurseries to lin- ger in, Handling our broken toys; Lavender-gowned mothers and Pais}ey-shawled mothers, And mothers in darned gloves- It is the faded things that count. i There are world They live whom the lights 1 y. homeless s folk in richIs I Till dreams subdue the b tinseled light. Sometimes it is the faded that count! laze of .I CHURCHES TO -08 t , 6imnftirnno nwhi'mhm~a I !/. ew Lady : ,d lay; and so thoroughly the aristocratic old English women." - Even small parts such as the ac- tress friends of Lady Bantock, are taken by talent well known on the I by campus. "Some are Frances Maire, rery '21, who played Yoto, in "Patricia by Passes," and Mildred Henry, '22, who day, had one of the leading parts n "Alice- An- Sit-by-the-Fire." Other "actresses" ac- are Gertrude Boggs, '22, Amy Loom- >een is, '21, Frances Oberholtzer, '21, Fin- di- ette Martin, '22, Christine Murkatt, '22, "mer and Edelaine Rodin, '22. aedy- Thousands Imbibe! Gallons of coca cola syrup number- ing all the way up to the half century AT mark are consumed at one fountain alone each week. One thousand two hundret drinks, it is claimed, is the average weekly sale of that beverage S at another. , er If every man on the campus would chu drink just one coca cola, a week, the mc total would hardly measure up to what the is considered by many as a conserva- Da tive estimate of the glasses of "coke" ma consume4A The number mounts into the thou- gr sandses rapidly that you'd almost las think that all coca cola factories would "V be kept busier than a bunch of bees, mu keeping Ann Arbor alone, supplied. grc Then there are malted milks to be 12: taken into consideration. From 30 to Pr 60 pounds a week; mixed with gallons "Di of nilIk are required each week to min satisfy the demand one soda fountain cu. reports. The sale of this drink at one uni PPROPRIATE SE J3l P'LANNKED BY ISTERS. IN- Services in commemoration s -day will be held in urches this morning, while in P about deline i-pro- Thea- a mar- r own arch' WILL TEACH CITIZENSHIP Michigan Faculty Members to Instruct Women of Detroit Members of Michigan's faculty will figure prominently in the course of citienship which the League of Women Voters will offer to the men and women of Detroit during May and early June. The classes, which are to be held every Friday afternoon in the Detroit twentieth Century clubhouse, will con- sider phases of local, state and federal government and their relation to the citizen. Prof. Jesse S. Reeves, of the political science department, is scheduled to address the course on May 14, his sub- ject concerning "Michigan Govern- ment." "Municipal Government in Michigan" will be explained on May 21 by Prof. Robert' T. Crane, also of the political science department. Further announcement by the De- troit League of Women Voters\ con- cerning the program is expected to bear the names of other members of the faculty in the University. F'aith?" 3 of the 6rvic, be no eak State street drug store, popular be- cause of its advantageous location, numbers into several hundred and sometimes over a thousand a week. And More, and More Then there are the .other drinks: Grape juice, Appleju, Phosphates, and your' specialties. Sometimes we wonder where the money comes from to pay. for it all. Yet the students of the University of Michigan continue to drink heavily. ing of the Congregational Student's ine s club. comri Communion will be celebrated this sity morning in the Presbyterian church, with with reception of new members. Prof. as sc Henderson's Student Bible class meets at noon. Regular Christian Endeavor Ti devotional services at 6:30 o'clock, to ix preceded .by a social half hour. dent "The Mothers of Yesterday and To- inter day" will be the topic of Rev. J. M. the Wells' sermon in the Baptist church decid this morning. In the evening, the Bap- Sund tist Guild will unite in the University A fe union services in Hill auditorium, they 'ship a '21, Isa Rockwell, by SIX MICHIGAN LAWS GAIN ADMITTANCE TO STATE BAR( Lady have lasted . no less. are difficult able work is Stevens, '21, '21, as 'the of Lord Ban- two old la- "so patrician Six members of this year's graduat- ing class of the Law school have been admitted to the bar b ythe circuit court of Washtenaw county. These men are George H. Kretyschmar, Alexander S. Montague, Raymond A. Butler, Morris D. Campbell, Clifford M. Toohy, Sel Toohy, Selwynn A. Lamnbert. Professor Studying Birds Prof. Norman Wood, curator of in the museum of zoology, lef Wednesday for Berrien. Prof. will spend the summer completih I ing th state. A A .i v I Both TWO STORES