hereafter of stomach. trouble.
ce censor. Professor Shull has been in poor
.oving pie- health for some time but he was not
anig them forced to give up his work until Mon-
previously day. The case was diagnosed ac one
ties. of the gastric ulcer and the patient
. ordered to be confined to his bed for
dical Care a period of two or three weeks.
of the Zo-t
en placed. Patronize the Daily Advertisers.
W YORK
.R MUSIC
SETY
MUSICIANS 11
Ann Arbor,
nber15
rS, VIOLA, 'CELLO,
INET, OBOE,
Me
Fine and Beautiful Program
iano, Oboe, Clarinet, French
B..e........................Beethoven
et, Violins, Viola, 'Cello).......Brahms
a Holiday" (Piano, Flute,
.cGaossens
eleven instruments).......wolf-Ferrari
for the Course including concerts by
3), Carolina Lazzari (Feb. 28), a'd Trio
and 'Cello (Mar. 30), $2.00, $2.50, $3.00,
iversity School of Music, Ann Arbor.
OARS FOR YPSILANTI PATRONS
_Communications_1
Editor, The Michigan Daily:
This morning I picked up a Chicago
paper and immediately turned to the
sporting page in quest of news per-
taining to Michigan athletics.
In the splendid article written by
Walter Eckersall, be refers with
amazement to the opina. held by some
people at the Aggie-Wabas gL mr '
26, with respect'to Fielding H. Yost.
This foremost football critic, says he
did not hear a word in defense'of Yost.
Mr. Eckersall goes on to say that Mich-
igan's disastrous season was due to
the lack of good material, rather than
to the lack of good coaching There
is not a football critic in America bet-
ter qualified, in finding 'where the
trouble lies in a losing team than
Eckersall.
Find Reason for Losses
The writer can easily see how difi.-
cult it is fai Michigan to end a season
so disastrously without making a great
attempt to correct the faulty system.
Certainly this is the spirit of Mich-
igan men should have; yet let us-be
sure we have found the fault, before
we pass criticism.
No one had anything but praise for
Yost when Michigan reigned supreme
on the American gridiron. With pride
we took back to the long string of
victories attained by Michigan, when
every coach'was wondering how low
he could hold the score against the
team coached by this master mind 'of
'football.
Yost's Men on Big Teams
Only last week a noted eastern
critic picked an all-time all-eastern
eleven and a sinillar all-western
eleven. On the latter, every man was
chosen from Yost's teams. With pride
the writer saw the names of Neil Snow,
Heston, Schultz, Craig, and others.
This is not all, for every son of Ann
Arbor must have. glowed with pride
when he saw the headlines in numer-
ous papers, stating that Williams had
not been able to win from Yost since
1893, that Illinois had her first victory
to win over \a Michigan team.
's Blames Matrial
Last year; Yost turned ot one of
the strongest elevens in the country.
He was competing against the same
coaches that he met this year. Modern
Iootball was as much in vogue last year
as it is this year. His material last
.year was not better than the material
at other schools, but it was as good.
This year, with the same coach, the
same spirit, and a better student body,
Michigan lost most of her conference
games. Has Yost changed so much in
a year? The spirit and the fighting
qualities of the team were present, as
shown in the Northwestern game, but
the material was not there. Every
school in the conference, except Mich
igan, had the best material in their
history, and, every one of them desired
the supreme honor in western football,
Sthat of defeating Yost.
Stagg Criteized in 1918
I wonder if the students at Pitts-
burgh are knocking Glenn Warner, for
losing two and tieing one out of the
A Wonderful Showing of
FITFORM
U, roats
- -as well as-
three big games of the year? Last year
rumors wer out on the Midway that
Stagg didn't know modern football, and
was no longer wanted by the students.
Eckersall quickly went to the defense
of this great coach, declaring lack of
material caused Chicago to lose every
game. This year Eckersall's statement
was confirmed, and one would be fool-
ish indeed to venture on the Midway
the statement that Stagg doesn't know'
modern football.
HERBERT EARL WILSON.
Interchangeable Portable
Type Model
THE
MULTIPLEX HAMMOND
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