Coach . p'V0.m1.1 1. m51 g1 ulu . w and before it is too late. "1 GRAHAM Both E day during the Univer- :nt Puhlications. TED PRESS entitled to the use for d to it or not otherwise published therein. ,r, Michigan, as secopd ynard street. >rds, if signed, the sig- but as an evidence of ed in The Daily at the ed~ to The Daily office. ot necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- iications. ......Managing Editor Phone 2414 or. 1o16 ... .....Business Manager Phone 9600r 2738 -..............News Editor .CityEditor ... Sports Editor ................... Women's Editor .,. . .Telegraph Editor 0ITORIAL BOARD Charles R. Osius, Jr. H. Hardy Heth ACTIVITY AND "SPLURGE" Activity, is usually connected with the idea of "splurge",-the noise of publicity and the lure of prominence. Likefthe proverbial frog and the puddle nany people think that a leap is made just to make a splash, 'that the active individual wants only to be heard and noticed. So, inactivity is often condoned as modesty, or reticence, or unpreten- tious reserve. This is one of the false ideas that permeates our life. Anyone looking for a moment behind the scenes will see the superabundance of work to be done and will realize thpat the most efficient man makes the least "splash" in doing it. Recognition of his effort is a trivial circumstance, a'thing al- ways erratic, a thing to which he does not pin his faith. Just as the best things in history were done in obscurity and without much thought of reward, so in the university the big man is seldom really a self-honor seeker. After all, the self-satisfied are 'those who ignore the oars and merely drift. Selfishness is more often expressed by the lounger than 'by the climber. It is a false sense of things that would lull multitudes into the lethargy of the Rip Van Winkle sleep. About io per cent of the students at Michigan are participating in activities.. Where are the remain- ing 90 per cent? The best part di colegiate training may lie in the matter of learning to accept either success or tem- porary failure in a manner creditable to one's self.' Student activities promote this spirit more than any-, thing else inside of university walls. A neophyte' soon learns to appreciate the magnanimity of men who leave him out of where he does not "belong." Far from anticipating the "splurge" he soon learns the emptiness of it and faces life expecting to find less but wishing for a great deal more. Kipling put it well-,-"Hear you, old peoples,-we have done nothing in the world. All our work is to do; and it shall be done, old peoples." e Michigan's Oldest Bookstore GR/ lk Ann Arbor Agents for the Roycrofters , .r _ - I Advertising Manager .Issue Manager .~Office Manager ..Publication Manager .Circulation Manager . . . . . . ..Subscription M anager DEAN KRAUS NOW ATTENDING SUMER SESSIONS MEETING Dean Edward H. Kraus, of the Sum- mer se sion, will return Saturday from New York where he is at present at- tending a meeting of the administra- tive officers of the summer sessions. of American univerities and colleges. nr Dancin School ARMORY PROF.H. II.HMITTENTHAL'S new class begins FRIDAY, NOV. 28. If you spend your money r with me you get' results. I guarantee to teach you the latest dances. If you want to be popular, be a good dancer. Clas, 7:00 to 8:30. Special ' price to ladies, 8 lessons, $3.00, or 50c per l9sson. PERSONAL XMAS Samples are ready te o WAH RIS' ...Guillotine Editor .~Music Editor .Literary Editor .xchage Editor ............ Campiagn Editor . .........Efficiency Editor UE EDITORS mas 11. Adams Brewster Campbell ge Brophy , John I. Dakin FORIAL STAFF Pay your suiscription. to the Daily. DETROIT UNITED LINES (Oct. 26, 319) Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6:io a. m., and hourly to 9:io p.m. Jackson Limited and Express Cars-8 :48 Sm., and every hour to 9:48 p. M. (Ex- presses make focal stops west of Ann Arbor.) Local Cars East Bound-6:5 a .n., 9:g5 a, in. and every two hours to 9:os p! im., 10:50 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, r11:45p.,in., z :xo a. n. and to Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-7 :48 a. M. and 2:2o a. i. Patronize TREATMI er, whethe or small. TheoAnn I ert C. Angell ert D. Sage nns J. Whinery STAFF in D. P. Joyce quist Robt. Somerville wton Arthur L. Glazer MBER 27, 1919. ster P. Campbell. Capital and Surplus, *554 Resources ... -. .$"00( Northwest Cor. Main .& 707 North Unuversity ... The Guillotine Tactical holiday that > do not only with nan purposes of to- d ancestors counted we, as an altra-pro- wealth of past ex- 11, Thanksgiving Triolet How much' should we be thankful for? Thanksgiving's cheer we borrow For having peen within the store The suits and shoes so dear before E'ep costlier now, three times or more- We ask ourselves in sorrow, How much should we be thankful for? Thanksgiving's cheer we borrow. r voling . A. S. used ance to of rear j Student Breaks Jaw in Auto Accident.-Daily. Think how much he will save on board. :ritical situations make this dive. The demands are for >erpetual training for good land can be answered only t us not simply accept the by saints and sinners, wise ved long ago. Let us look that there is more to do now " -cl Prht pe c1ocktik Ever tixlethe clock ticks, fifty. Evr time ethee eight Fatimas are lighted 5 ih'~ in the United States. oth ngh grade- garette has so manY gug, aswervifg friends'- ' VaixaTurkish blend is carefully balanced that it has Oi s of the fter-effects of heavier les skillfully blended tobaccos T wyati3ia are sensible..-as Your irst packageW prove A When Tom Marshall heard that the rumor of President Wilson's death was unfounded he ut- tered a fervent, "Thank God." And humanity echoes the same sentiment because they know Mr. Mar- shall. who ASKETBALL SITUATION reasons advanced f or the disastrous season was the failure of Michigan est' the spirit that counts by getting ig their services to the coach whether d themselves Varsity or mere Scrub rhaps neither. ne of the reasons for a disastrous. tball season will be this same one t a 'general waking-up on the part all interested in this sport before the s any farther. g to turn out a successful basketball n ? Coach Mather reports a squad of -which means that less than three- e per cent of the ,men eligible to play i to the call. What is the reasoning nety-nine'and three-fourths per cent? vhat reasoning they have employed is her false mddesty or sheer indiffer- i that a Varsity squad is made up of rofessional material at hand has sup- o consistently exploded in the past liscussion. As for the matter of in- ailure to recognize an emergency, it )ncerting to be forced to the conclu- of the most obvious lessons of the has been passed over. unnecessary for the coach to plead n out. Michigan has been granted a :h because she presumably wants a team and the prestige that goes with more than 3o men at Michigan who )layed basketball. o will report regularly even though, r of the game, may be sure that he is in the solution of the athletic prob- er all, it is a duty far too easily per- hirked. If a man will cast off a re- light as reporting for basketball s that he should,.he may feel some Wheezes of Yester-Year (This one created a furore a year ago) St. Peter-How did you get to heaven, Patrick? Pat-Flu. Mary had .a little Ford In short she called it Lizzie And every time she took a ride The darn thing made her dizzy. Buffalo men to hold smoker in Union.-Daily notice. It should be-held in the Nickel's Arcade. Dear Louis:- I heard something real clever the other evening. I was in the Campus Lunch and a man came in and ordered soft boiled eggs and the waiter opened one and asked the man if he wanted the other one opened and the man looked sort of funny and saint, "Open the window instead." And then the waiter said, "What's the matter, didn't I cook them long enough?'? and the man smiled and glanced at the festive hen fruit and said, "Yes, but you didnt cook them soon enough." Sir Dancelot. The man who courts But does not wed Often goes To court instead.. -Guillotine, Nov. 20. Another Precinct Heard Fromn And he who weds Butcourts girls still MAY get in court Against his will. -H. Van Antwerp, Farmer's, Ky. Renovated Couple Girard Avenue-Owner will rent three rooms and a bath to refined young couple newly painted and plastered.-News. 1.9 a1 7ooo - gain cf21 per clock-tick since 1917 ATIMA'S big gains are mostly among men who like the Turkish tobacco taste but who tire of the over-richness of too much Turkish. One way of proving this is to point tothe fashionable clubs and hotels of the country. Until a year or so ago these places had little call for any but straight Turkish cigarettes. Today at nearly all of them, East and West, Fatima is a leader-at many of them, in fact, the largest seller. If you wantjust enough Turkish, try Fatimas. NOTE: Fatima contains more Turkish than any other T'erkiah Blend cigarette, Famous Closing Lines "Here's where I do a little more boa ded student as he grabbed the turkc rg," said the "s neck. JIS XVI,