AI r-M JV1I- re t Mir-41--alt Dattll FFICIAL NEWSPAPERF 0T HE UNIVERSITY 0OF MICHIGAN blished every morning except Monday during the Univer- r by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS e Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for -ation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise 3 in this paper. and the local news published therein. tered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second latter. >scription by carrier or mail, $3.50. ices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street Dres. Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. mmunications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig- not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of rd notices of events will be published in The Daily at the on of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. d communications will receive no consideration. No man will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. e Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments e in the communications. hat's Going On" notices will not be received after 8 o'clock evening preceding insertion. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 GING EDITOR . . GEORGE , bROPHY 'JR ditor ...Chesser M Camr n Editorial Board............. .........Lee Woodruff Editors- T. H. Adams H. W. Hitchcock J. I. Dakin J. E. McManis Renaud Sherwood T. W. Sargent. fir Editor ..................-- .....- A. Bernstein itor... B. P. Campbell Ls.............. T. J. Whinery, L. A. Kern, S. T. Beach . . . . . . . . . . . . - - - -K. R o b e r t A n g e ll 's Editor ..... .... .....................M ary D.Lane h ......................................Thomas Dewe r ?e............. Jack W. KeT Assistants do Frank H. MePike r J. A. Bacon ery W.W. Ottaway Paul Watzel :1 Byron Darnton dy M. A. Klaver altzer 1. R. Meiss .s Walter Dnnelly iott Beata Hasley ain Kathrine Montgomery Sidney B. Coates C. T. Pennoyer Marion B. Stahl Lowell S. Kerr Marion Koch Dorothy Whipple' Gerald P. Overton Edward Lambrecht Sara Waler H. 1a. Howlett, BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 MANAGER..........LEGRAND A. GAINES, JR. ~........ .................D. P.Joyce ......... ...S.Kunstadter ............. ....... F.M. Heath .. E. R. Prieh, . ................ .......V. V. Hillery Assistants mbrecht M. M. Moule H. C. Hunt el, Jr. N. W. Robertson M. S. Goldring tchinson Thos. L. Rice H. W. Heidbreder. ss R. G. Burcheli W. Cooley Davis A. J. Parker wishing to secure information concerning news for any Daily should ae the night editor, who has full charge to be printed that night. FRIDAY, APRIL 8, 1921. Night Editor-BYRON DARNTON. A MICHIGAN VACATION sh joyously from our last classes today,; our books and notes and wend our way thousands of other home-goers to the sta- e to take a temporary leave of Michigan. quizzes, assignments, are far from our and in their stead we picture the pleasures that vacation will bring. go, let us not forget the real purpose of a President Marion L.Burton once defined me to vacate, when we should empty our need be), and come back strong, healthy, retic, ready to tackle our work with re- in the South, the track team will be upholding the Maize and Blue on the west coast in a dual meet with the University of California at Berkeley. Of late years, college athletic teams have been making more extended trips than ever before. In 192o the University of Chicago sent a baseball squad to Japan while this year Harvard and Cornell are going to Europe for track meets and the Waseda university nine of Tokio is to make an American tour, playing two games at Ann Arbor late in June. Although games such as these with representatives of other countries are not always practicable, the fact of a general tendency toward more and more intersectional contests is certainly one which should make for good feeling among American schools and colleges and should increase the prestige of each of them. Michigan is fortunate in being able to extend her athletic activities to the Pacific this year. We are confident that when the Maize and Blue squad lines up against the Western contenders tomorrow, its members will do their part in upholding Michi- gan's honor, spurred on by the knowledge that those back home are with them just as at Waterman gym.- nasium or Ferry field. Moreover, although Coach Derrill Pratt will leave us for the big leagues soon after the spring trip, he and his men may rightly feel the same urge. Michigan is behind her' teams wherever they happen to be; win or lose, her stand- ing abroad depends to a large extent on the sports- manship and fighting qualities shown by her squads on their yearly excursions. The nine can play in the South with the full knowledgethat every game is being watched in the news columns by as many Michigan eyes as will follow the home season games in Ann Arbor. THE FLAG RUSH RETURNS Decision by the faculty to permit reinstatement of the Flag rush in this year's spring games means that Michigan will have once more the best and most scientific of its interclass contests as well as the most exciting spectacle furnished by any event on the frosh-soph program. The Flag rush is in- comparably superior to the one-sided bag rush or the catch-as-catch-can-rope-tying event which have been introduced as substitutes since 1916. It re- quires organization, speed; leadership; and as has been proved more than once, gives the smaller side a good fighting chance. Theoccasional injuries which influenced Unive- sity authorities to drop the traditional eveht i the fall of 1916 can be avoided by a committee strong enough to enforce the rules, and this by all means must be attended to. With such a provision, it is hard to see why the Flag rush should be anywhere near as dangerous as the rough-and-tumble tying and penning up of last spring's contest. There are plenty of men on the campus who have seen the rush in past years and should know how to manage it as well as to train the opposing sides in the best methods of attack and defense. Michigan should not only welcome back the Flag rush, but carry it off in a way that will assure its revival as a tradi- tion The Telescgpe Somebody Forgot to Page the Undertaker "What do you think of Ann Arbor on Sunday ?" "I never speak disrespectfully of the dead." The following is from the pen of the famous German poet, Herr Nett, who is in present vogue with women all over the world, the Boulevard ex- cepted: Alas, alack! I lack a lass; She shuns me, with a shiver. But, why blame I, A luckless guy, 'Cause she fell in the river? No, Clarice, not all those long locked Lotharios you see striding about the campus bareheaded are freshmen. Technically, some of them are not re- quired to wear a pot. The original of the following little ditty entitled "Shuffling the Spots Off the Cards" was so worded that three Jacks beat a full house. We trust that its author, Miss Tery, will pardon our temerity in' revising her brain child. The hero calmly shuffled the cards, The villain he had stacked them, The heroine at the hero sighed For she was there to back him. G R A A NEW SHIPMENT OF EXERCISES, IN CURRENT ECONOMICS--- Hailton AT G R A HA M BOTH ENDS OF T HE DIAGONAL WALK DETROIT UNITED LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 1920 Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Limited and Express cars leave for Detroit at 6:05 a. m., 7:05 a. m., 8:10 a. m., and hourly to 9:10 p. M. Limiteds to Jackson at 8:48 a. mi. and every two hours to 8:48 p. m. Ex- presses at 9:48 a. m. and every two hours to 9:48 p. m. Locals to Detroit-5:55a.m., 7:00 a.m. and every two hours to 9:00 p. m., also11:00 p. n. To Ypsilanti'only, 11:40 p.m., 12:25 a.mn., and 1:15 a.m. Locals to Jackson-7:50 a. m., and 12:10 p.m. 1921 APRIL 1921 S M T W T F S 1 2. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Men: Last season's hats turn- ed inside out, refinished and re- blocked with all new trimmings look Just like new, wear just as long and saves you five to ten dollars. We do only high class work. Factory Hat Store, 617 Packard St. Phone 1792. OTHERS SAY:j- WHIY IS AN AMATEUR , (From the Chicago Tribune) Vernon Parks, University of Mich- I igan baseball player, played summer _P ball on the Pacific coast because he b needed money. That has been dis. covered and it disqualified Parks as an amateur. He canhot play ball HOM this spring with the Michigan team. If Parks had been a restaurant waiter, a janitor, book salesman, a tango teacher, or almost anything else during the summer he would not have lost his athletic standing, but he would not have made much money. He is a good ball player and as such could make considerable money play- ing with minor teams. He was a student of the University F in good standing. He was not there YOy because he could play ball. He was not taking a course in penmanship or music in order to win ball games for Michigan. He was one of the many young men in the universities who are not sent to school with plenty of Mild father's money behind them. Choi If you have a boy ambitious enough tea to go to school and rely on himself, at least for part of the money needed, and vigorous enoUgh and skillful enough to play good baseball, you are likely to have a pretty fine young Am- C erican, the kind you would want to encourage. We know that American scholaS (Continued on Page Nine) CORSAGES. 1111111 il1l1ll1ll GOODEW FLORAL COMPANY PHONE 1321 225 E. LIBERTY u rr r. . ..L a rrrr.. r rr irr r r rw+ rri H 999 This No. for Dodge Taxi A o You Need Extra Courses? end for catalog describing over 400 courses in History, English, Mathematics, Chemistry, Zoology,Modern Languages, Economics, hilosophy, Sociology, etc., given by correspondence. Inquire how credits earned may be applied on present college program. o STUDY DEPT. CHICAGO. tL.LINOIS ----------- W.P- PUT IT ON THOSE HOT BISCUITS! U CAN'T TELL, THE DIF- FERENCE! 35c PER POUND dCured Ham.........28e ice Sirloin..........Si ice Pork Chops........Qc d Rosettes .....40c th the holidays comes a duty, a pleasant task .1 Michigan men and women. That task is to lly 'prepared with informatioi concerning the -rsity, its athletic'record, its scholastic advan- its traditions, its activities, so that when Is or prospective students questiop us, we be ready with convincing answers. Vacation s two things: opportunity to serve Michigan, elaxation from studies. SEEING AND LISTENING he Inquiring Reporter" of the Chicago Trib- m his rounds recently made it a point to ask ersons who were in the habit of taking the ban trains at the Randolph street station why did not use the new subway for pedestrians . leads under Michigan avenue at that point. out of the five questioned, although they I that way almost daily, did not know there ny subway at that place; a third was aware of istence but did not know it had been finished. s incident illustrates a general failing on the f a great many of us. It brings out a tendency >f us have to look at things without really see-, tem. Psychological experiments have shown he average person perceives only a small per- e of the details of newly seen objects. Even :hings toward which we possess a great deal niliarity, details more often than not pass un- d and we frequently cannot say whether this ag has eight or only six pillars across its e; what the positions are of the figures in that of statuary, or how the shape of the body of ain familiar type of motor car compares with' f another. These points are somewhat minor, arse, but our ability to forget them is quite cant nevertheless. same tendency is constantly found to be true at we hear. We are only too apt to miss the >ints i a lecture merely through slight inat- i to what is being said. And .how many of remember names? whole trouble is due largely to a mere lack, centration and attention on the part of the er or listener. The ability to observe is one of the elements of personality which we, ege, ought to cultivate. By an effort it can de part of our equipment. TWO TEAMS ABROAD" le Michigan's baseball nine is on its way to- v to begin the season with a series of games -All Kinds of Cheese Ro-ufoI Carmemlbert Domuestic Swiss Liederkranz Phila.Cra Pimento TT Brkand4 Cream uDelicatessen 119 E. Liberty Phone 2620 M 11IIII llIII1111111 11 i IIII~ itiIIl tIIIII THE ENTURY MARKET CALL 1091 QUICK SERVICE "Near the King's court was a young child born With a hey-lilli-lu and a hi-lo-lan And his name it was called Hynd Horn And the b irkand the broom bloorn bonny," j He was born to a life of danger and adventure, suffers ban- ishment and shipwreck but wins to happiness at last. YOU will want to see the dramatization of this famous old ballad of Hynd Horn presented by Lillian Owen's m arionettesI "Three Jacks have I," the villain said, "What have you - quick - no excuses?" But alas, all our hero had Was an ace, a trey and three deuces. But our hero was quick, as heroes are, He said, "I'll beat your faces," So he rubbed a spot off all three two's And then he had three aces. "26t Best Dolls in AmerHca Wednesday, April 13th, 8 p. m.- Dear Noah: Is it good luck to throw a horseshoe away? B. Q. T. Not always. Once the horse we were betting on threw a shoe which didn't bring us any good luck. Famous Closing Lines "Rah material," he muttered as he saw the cheer-, leader teaching the yells to the frosh. NOAH COUNT. Pattengill Auditorium Ann Arbor High School Students $1.00 Others $1. Tickets on sale at Wahr's Bookstores I