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March 17, 1920 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1920-03-17

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

e the character

F.

UN V

"ing except Monday during the Univer.
Control of Student Publications.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
is exclusively entitled to the use for
dispatches. credited to it or not otherwise
d the local news published therein.
(ice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second

ding,~Maynard street.
rial, 2414.
S300 words, if signed, the sig-
n print, but as an evidence of
published in The Daily at the
or mailed to The Daily office.
ive no consideration. No man-
ewriter incloses postage.
ly' endorse the se*timents ex-
STAFF
to 2414

DITOR.....................HARRY M. CAREY
k K. Ehlbert Edgar L. Rice
d. Camphbellt oseph A. Bernstein
'ge Brophy Hugh Hitchcock
.... .....H. Hardy Heth, Lee M. Woodruff
.. ...........Renaud Sherwood
.. . . John I. Dakin
............. .....Brewster Campbell
.........i... . ..Robert, C. Angel
rtment........................ Marguerite Clark
. Thdmas Adams, Thornton Sargent Jr.

of an industry.
The university student, seeking new and little-
travelled lines of endeavor, cannot fail to observe
the opportunity that scenario writing offers. But
he is little better fitted to raise the quality of mo-
tion pictures than are their present exploiters. The
university, with its avowed purpose of educating
men and women to better the condition of society,
seems well equipped for the task of improving
present standards in the movies through a special
course of instruction for the ambitious student.
Can Michigan afford to ignore this?
KNOWING PEOPLE
How many people on the campus do you know
well? With how many others do you enjoy a pass-
ing acquaintance? Do you walk to and fr i
classes without once saying "Hello"' to a fellow-
student? Or, are you kept busy greeting passersby'
as you hurry along from one building to another?
Are the faces familiar to you those of a strictly lim-
ited group of your ,own classmates, or do you know
members of the various organizations in the Uni-
versity? Are there no professors you feel that you
know well enough to do more than distantly nod to
outside the classroom?
And why the fusillade of questions? you may ask.
They are prompted by recollection of the views of a
friend, a former student, who used method in cul-
tivating friends and practicing cordiality. This
student had attended college elsewhere for Iwo
years before coming here. After a few months he
began checking off names in the 'student directory.
A semester later he repeated the process. Ques-
tioning revealed the information that here was a
person who measured the success of his life in the'
University by the readiness with which he made
friends.
We were struck by the novelty of the idea. Many
a time have we heard speakers whose experiences
and wisdom we respected, nominate the University
campus as the place where a student forms the
associations which are his alliances for life. We
forget a large per cent of the acquaintances we had
in high school and earlier days, but the friends -of
our University period are forever cherished .-Ohio"
State Lantern.

GRAHAM'S
ANNUAL BOOK SALE
Beginning Monday, March 15
THE LATEST BOOKS
AT Phil

In

The Sciences
History

GREATLY REDUCED
PRICES

SoC
Eni

In
ilosophy
'iology
glish
Open Evenings
During Sali

Open Evenings
During Sale

No Deliveries--No Exchanges--Terms Cash.
AT- BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK

U'

, - _ __

Assistants
G. IF. Clarke
Thomas J. Whinery
R. W. wrobleski
George Reindel
Dorothy Monfort
Minnie Muskatt

Winefred Biethan
Robert D. Sage
Marion Nichols
Frances Oberholtzer

BUSINESS STAFF .
Telephone 960
MANAGER...............PAUL E. CHOLETTE
........ ..LeGrand A. Gaines, Mark B. Covel
Classified Ads..................... Henry Whiting
...'...Edward Priehs
.... .... Curt P. Schneider, R. A. Sullivan
Assistants
rrecht F. M. Heath D. P. Joyce
Sigmund Kunstadter Robt. Sommerville
err Harold Lindsay Arthur L. Glazer
iwishing to secure infrationconcerning news for any
iaily;should 'pee the night editor, who has full charge
to be printed that night.
ght editors for this week will be: Monday
ark Ehlbert; Tuesday night, George Bro-
ednesday night, Hugh Hitchcock; Thurs-
t, Edgar L. Rice; Friday night, Chesser
l; Saturday night, Joseph A. Bernstein.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1920.
abs' club will meet at 4:30 o'clock this after-
Fhe Daily rooms.
HATCHING SNAKE'S EGGS"
Id story of the hen that hatched the ser
gs offers an analogy which may be applied
isting condition at the University. We in-
liscourtesy when we liken some of the fac-
,he unfortunate fowl, but we are surprised
e men do not recognize the. danger of 'fos-
ertain mediums of publicity-the snake's
me timee past the University has suffered
triment because of false and exaggerated
gtories first appearing in two of the Detroit
nd later in journals throughout the coun-
:omparatively recent "bit of news" was ex-
y papers from San Francisco to New
I from Toronto to New Orleans. The fals-
e report was not recognized even by a very
Eastern weekly.,
effect do such stories have on the state leg-
:o whom the University must look for fi-
pport ? Are the solons a Lansing inclined
.se appropriations for edcating their chil-
the devious mysteries of the ouija-board?
uctors, who, according to reports, cannot
urses more popular than the ouija-board,
:reased salaries? At this .point the rela-
:he professor's income to University pub-
ins to appear.±
instructors are to succeed in their struggle
alaries, they must realize that their encour.-
this 'publicity is self-destructive. And" in
s they tolerate unfair newspaper corre-
s, they do encourage this very thing.
emedy for this unfortunate condition re-
ter direct appeals to the offending newspa-
failed-refusal to give news items to their
idents. Such a step would, indeed, be a
ie for the faculty men to take; but the ne-
f it is based upon the most primal of the
-self preservation.
SCENARIO WRITING
t has been aroused at Columbia univer-
e writing of motion picture scenarios,
writing, strange to say, has been thus far.
rded in institutions of learning. Yet the
1,e come to play a leading part in itodern
an influence extending to nearly every
hey present a field for intelligent work, a
far almost primeval, for their conduct

I

! -

1

the Telescop

Pe

If This Weather Keeps Up We Can Forgive Even
Stuff Like This
'They wandered through the toasted corn,
The grape nuts were in season,
He asked her, "Why not be my wife?"
She answered, "There's a reason."
You are quite right, Clarice, in assuming that
Demosthenes was trying to learn the Russian lan-'
guage when he used to practice speaking with a
pebble in his mouth.:
Dear Noah: -
Is it true that country people are smarter than
city people? ' Rhubin.
Yes, Rhubin, the last census brought out the as-
tqunding fact that the population in the larger cities
is much denser than' that in the rural districts.
Below we reprint an extract from Izee Manor-
dog's latest "best seller," "Diana's Sole Lover."
It was one of those wonderful summer nights in
spring when the winter winds caused even the fall
leaves to whisper among themselves in anticipa-
tion. The orange moon hung like a huge tub of
dripping honey against the blue denim of the star-
speckled heavens. Yet she seemed enshrouded by
an undefinable aura of heart heaviness. She hesi-
tated and then told me, quietly and simply, a little
tale that sent ripples of melancholia across the
tender surface of my soul,
II :
"I met him," she began, in her dulcet trilling
tones, "in the shadow of the old corset factory,
where the river flows in weird, weary wickedness,
with weeping willows sobbing woeful 'wimperings
to the breeze. I knew, as only a woman's intuition
can tell these things, that we were meant for soul
mates - that we had been',destined by fate to know
and love each other."
III .
"But you know my family. They would have.
none of him because-"" She broke pff sharply, great
tears welled in those fathomless, limpid pools of
her luminous, lustrous orbs-her cherry-red lips
quivered like an aspen kissed by a gentle breeze-
her delicate nose trembled like a startled hart
stalked to its nesting place by the hunter. "Yes,"
she continued in a dull monotone, "they objected
to him because-because he 'wore a rubber collar.
And so I have locked my sorrow in my heart, but
always there is imperishably stamped on my heart
a vision of him as he stood that night in the dark
shadow of the corset factory-his powerful head
thrown back, his magnetic eyes half closed and his
rubber collar glistening in the moonlight.
J. W. K.
Famous Closing Lines
"It's great to have pleasant neighbors," said the
lion as he noticed that his cage stood next to that
of the laughing hyena. NOAH COUNT.

DETROIT UNITED LINES
(oct. 26, 199)
Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson
(Eastern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6:io a.
n., and hourly to 9:o p. m.
Jackson Limited and Express Cars-8:48
as m., and every hour to 9:48 p. m. (-.
presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.)
Local Cars East Bound-6:os a. i, 9:5 a.
m. and every two hours to 9:o p. x, io:so
e,. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11;:4 p. in., :10
a. i., and to Saline, chang at Ypsilanti.
Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-7:48 a. . and
t2:2o a m...
Asked At Random
(Any member of the University, pro-!
fessor or student, who has a subject
'he wishes discussed in this column,'
may mnail it to the "Asked at Random"
reporter care of The Daily.)
Today's question: "Do you tin
it wise to combine the Student Af
fairs committee and the Board of
Control of Student Athleties in one
University eligibility committee"
Mr. Cahow, instructor in mathemat-
ics: "It would be well if these com-
mittees were combined, for it would
make the scholastic standard the same
for both the athlete and the other stu-
dent, thus putting them on a parity.
Great care should be used in doing
this, in order that by combining the
two, the standards of eligibility neith-
er would be lowered."
Bruce Millar, '20, managing editor
of the Michiganensian: "I do not
think these committees should be
combined, for the work of the athlete
is so entirely different than that of
students in other fields. For instance,
graduate students may do work on
publications, while they are barred
from athletics. The present system
is satisfactory, if changed complica-
tions would arise; therefore I think
it is better to 'let well enough alone'."
Clayton S. Shoemaker, '20, vice
president of the Michigan Union:
"This seems like a practical1plan to
me. Of course the details would have
to be worked out, but in the end it
would be worth while, for .there are
too many different committees in the
University now."
Hugh Wilson, '22, Varsity 'football
man: "In my opinion this idea
wouldn't work out very well. In the
first place, it would be too much for
one committee to handle. In the see-
and place, the members of each com-
mittee are interested chiefly in their
own work. I do thnk, however, that
the standards of each should be made
the same."
Students of all Colleges should read
page four of the Students' Directory
and sign their names in the space for
that purpose.-Adv.
FIRST RATIONAL ANK
Organized 186
FIRST ANN ARBOR MEMBER
OF TUE 1FE#E R EFS
OLDEST NATIONAL 1#4W
IN 1C AN
3 Per Cent Paid oi Saui4gs
DepoRIts
IIhnaiR

Hey Boy! Have You Tasted The Good

THE'
ARCADE
CAFETERIA

1illi i iln llil I III t111 IU [ l 1 lI ili ilillilliII11X111II li1lilli1lllllll i1111i .
Pargnient's
Exercises Francais
- Bleyer's_
Special Features Articles
I Castle'sy_
Genetics and Eugenics
UNIVERSITY
WWAHBOOKSTORES
a llIIm I IIIIIIIIIIIIII IItI; IlIlII I tIIIII rtlllili1111111 fIIII1111IIiIIil1illi :

Nickels Arcade

Food At The ARCADE?

Up the Stairs

Pure foods at low prices, prepared by experts.

r

Everything displayed on our forty-foot steam and
serving tables.
Select just what appeals to your own individual
appetite.
Bakery goods fresh from our own ovens.,
Delicious coffee with rich Jersey cream.
Kindness, courtesy, and good service prevail here.

.. .. .

As sure as you
are a foot Iiigh"-"

,/

SCHOOL OF
DANCING,

Private lessons in modern
ball-room dancing.

JEANETTE
KRUSZKA

.smQ Eth, E htfM !m4 g
Choice Turkish and ehice p-
ie toltaceos either Rile
entirely new cig re te pierd'I
Camels neyer tire yotW tp I
and sastfying, because they
have such a mellow mild body.
Camels leave no unpleasant
cigaretty aftertaste or unpleas-
ant cigaretty odor.
That's why we say frankly-
compare Camels with any ciga-
rette in the world at any pgr i

br

part to persons inter-
rcial possibilities. Not-
>eal-which rivals even
s a matter of common
kcern, that their stand-
ed on a faulty under-
hey have assumed the

Studio:
516 E. William St.
Phone 14224
Residence Phone. 170-W,

Camels are sold everywrhere in
scientifically sealed packages'
ofO cigarettes for 20 cents; or
ten packages (200 cigarettes) in
a glassine-paper-covered car-
ton. We strongly recommend
this carton forthebmeorofjjce
supply or when you travel.
R. J. REYNOLDS
TOBACCO CO.
Wipston-Saiem, N. C.

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