wb. WHAT'S GOING ON -i ig Suitings are i w ready, are you? Karl Yaicolm East Liberty St. Malcolm Building TUESDAY 8:00-Chimes board meeting in room 319 of Union. 7:00-Culver club meeting in room 316 9f Union. 7:00-Youngstown - Michigan elb meeting in room 306 of Union. 7:30-Union orchestra rehearsal on second floor of Union. Open to everyone. 7:30-Freshman Mandolin' club re- hearsal in Lane hall. 7:30--Michigan Dames meet in Lane hall. 8:00-Alexander Watson gives series of dramatic interpretations and re- citals in Hill auditorium. WEDNESDAY 7:00-Varsity band rebeargal In Uni- versity Hall. 7 :30-Rocky Mountain club meets in Lane hall. All. men and women from Rocky Mountain states invit- ed to attend. 8:00--Dr. John Haynes Holmes lec- tures in Natural Science auditorium before Intercollegiate Socialist so- ciety. 8:00-1Mr. Edward A. Rosenblatt lec- tures to Intercollegiate Zionist as- sociation in Lane hall. Election of officers. THURSDAY 7:00-Reserve military aviators meet in room 304 of Union. 9:00-Christian Science society meets in Lane hall. U-NOTICES The next meeting of Fa Soidad His- panica will be held March 2. Geology 20 lectures by Mr. Leverett will begin at 7 o'clock Thursday, Feb. 19,4in room 321 Natural Sci- ence building. All students who work on campus publications, TheDaily, Michiganen- sian, Technic, Chimes, Students' Di- rectory, Gargoyle, Athletic Program, Law Review, whether on the busi- nes or editorial side, are asked to be present at 12.05 p. m. Wednesday in front of the Press building for a Joint publication photograph., , Si -7W- t Nickels Arcade . ... . %LEANERS ' --AND )RESSERS Zo1 E, WRS~lffoTQM None 628.4 T uttle'S Lunches Nunnally's !Candy Maynard St. ANN ARBOR CHOP SUE!Y Excellent CHOP SUTEY from 11:80 a. mn to midnight Steaks and Chops 814 S. State' ed while 1AUMNIDICS (Continued from Page One) munity where U. of M. graduates find themselves. Ann Arbor to Be Center "Of course the first place to turn for organization is the student body at Ann Arbor. Considerable work has been done there already. The 9,000 students are being developed into en- thusiastic boosters for Michigan and they will be urged to boost when they get back home for vacations and to keep on boosting when they graduate. By boosting class reunions on a larger scale than ever and through college publications we can also stimulate spirit. "Student spirit has 4been stirred up. I have been out to Ann Arbor a great deal during the past few weeks and I must say the .re-birth and flaming forth of Michigan spirit has been most gratifying. Athletic Outlook Better "The work of organizing and im- proving Michigan athletics has made great strides. We now have the names of 700 prep school athletes gathered from every source and we will try to enroll them at Michigan through fair and legitimate means. The most en- couraging news we have had since Michigan defeated M. A. C. last fall is that Tad Weimann, the great tackle, will be back next fall and *ready to play.aCoach Yost can do nothing with- out a line and Weimann will be a tower of strength to the line. "One conference after another has been held, at Ann Arbor with alumni from Detroit and otfier centers pre- sent. Results are being obtained. Coach Yost will have at least seven assistant coaches to aid him and sev- eral more if enough candidates for the football team turn out to warrant it. The graduate athletic manager, Phil Bartelme, will have more assistance and the big crowds expected next fall will be handled in an efficient man- ner. The Athletic association is also scouring the country for a first-class trainer. There will be plenty of equipment, and the complaints of last year will be eradicated. An up-to- date business method of storing equip- ment, handing it out, and keeping track of it, will be installed. Plan New Grandstand "An additional grandstand, to cost in the neighborhood of $75,000, will be built and we hope 'to kill the complaint that thousands of people did not want to go to the games because they fear- ed they could not get a seat. "The student body are working like beavers to prevent a repetition of the disastrous football season of last year. $So many stars,,were, ineligible last year because of scholarship that com- mittees aienow formed to keep tab on'all athletes in their studies and to assist them in keeping up their schol- arship. Another committee records jobs, such as clerking, waiting table and tending furnace, etc., for athletes, who have to work their way through college. "Still another committee will1handle publicity and will keep high schools and prep-schools advised of the ad- vantages the University of Michigan offers. Michigan Athletics Clean "Now-there has been a little specu- lation as to whether Michigan men wil offnet material or extraordinary inducements, such as the payment of money, to induce athletes to enter Michigan. Some of the greatest stars in this state have been persuaded in the past to enter other colleges by what are politely called "extraordin- ary inducements." We n1g& lose this year some of the most celebrated stars in the state, boys who should go to Ann Arbor, but who have been ap- proached with alluring offers, by agents of other schools. "But the University of Michigan would rather loss all the high school stars in the state than buy them, as negro slaves were formerly bought on the auction block by the highest bid. der. "Michigan is a public school and is supported largely by the state. First. we should organize the alumni in this state to the last detail so that the University gets all it needs from the state legislature. Other middle western legislatures have been getting more money from their legislatures that we have. Our legislature last session showed a splendid spirit and gave the University all it asked. But there will undoubtedly) be a movement on foot throughout the nation to cut down taxes of all sorts and the University may have to fight for its budget. Mich- igan is the oldest ai% the biggest state: university ail we should see that it retains its standing. To, Encourage Gifts "Second, we should encourage gifts and endowments from public-spirited citizens whether they are graduates of Michigan or not. There are 150 mil- lionaires in this state and none of to give money for special funds to fight diseases, such as pneumonia and the flu, develop medicine, develop eng- ineering, aid the study of social and political problems, buy books, increase the salaries of instructors and pro- fessors, or in a hundred and one ways where the money would be spent to wonderful advantages." SUGGEST SEVERAL CHANGES IN ATHLETIC MANAGEMENT (Continued froni Page One) tion. Chairman Aigler explained that this organization would embrace three types of work: (1) extension of the work of the Intramural department; (2) training students to go out and teach physical education; (3) a sum- mer course, to be made up of our in- tercollegiate coaching staff,'to give the same sort of work that is now being given at Illinois. you wait. 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