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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 02, 1920 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1920-11-02

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

THE 1

lICHIGAN DAILY

_

U+£+ z
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday during the Univer-
sity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for
republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and the local news published therein.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second
cless matter,
Subscrition by carrier or mail, $3.5o.
Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street.
Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414.
Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig-
nature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of
faith, and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the
discretion ofd the :Editor, if left at or mailed to Tihe Daily office.
Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No man-
uscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage.
The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex-
pressed in the communications.
"What's Going On" notices will not be received after 8 o'clock
on the evening preceding insertion.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 2414
MANAGING EDITOR......... ...GEORGE O. BROPHY JR.
News Editor..............................Chesser M. Campbell
Night Editors- . Hitchcock
0 T. H. AdamsH.WHicok
B. P. Campbell J. E. McManis
I. Dakin T. W. Sargent, Jr.
enaud SherwoodJ A. Bernstein
Sunday Editor.......... ..............". ersti
Editorials. ........Lee Woodruff, Robert Sage, T. J. Whinery
Assistant News ..............................E. P. Lovejoy Jr.
Sports................. ... ........ ....... .... Robert iAngell
W Qmen'sEditor................I................lary D Lane
Telegraph .......... .... ...............West Gallogly
Telescope......................................Jack W. Kelly.
Assistants

osephine Waldo
Paul G. Weber
Almena Barlow
Elizabeth Vickery
C. E. Clark
George Reindel
Dorothy Monfort
Htarry B. Grundy

Frances Oberholtzer
Robert E. Adams
Norman C. Damon
Byron Darnton
Thomas E. Dewey
Wallace F. lliott
Leo J. Hershdorfer

L. Armstrong Kern
Hiughston McBain
Frank H. McPike
Gerald P. Overton
Edward Lambrecht
William H.Riley Jr.
Sara Wailer

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER...........LEGRAND A. GAINES JR.
Advertising... .... .................D. P. Joyce
Classifieds..................-.................Robt. O. Kerr
Publication ................... "...............F. M. Hleath
Accounts..................... ...............E. R. Priehs
Circulation............... ............. .....V. F. Hillery
Assistants
i. W. Lambrecht P. H. Hutchinson N. W. Robertson
B. G. Gower F. A. Cross R. C. Stearnes
Signuid Kunstadter Robt. L. Davis " Thos. L. Rice
Lester W. Millard M. M. Moule D. G. Slawsob
T. T. Hamel Jr D. S. Watterworth

'Ensian staff to undertake a work of this magni-
tude without at feast a guaranteed sale of several
thousand copies. For this reason, it has been the
policy to take subscriptions in the fall, and to have
only as many books printed as have been ordered.
Last year a good many students did not seem to
understand this conditions of affairs, did not order
their books at the proper time, and were conse-
quently very much disappoiited when they saw the
excellence of the completed volume and found
themselves unable to secure a copy.
Come out now and boost the 'Ensian with a sub-
scription check.
ALL ABOARD FOR COLUMBUS!
That section of Michigan rooters who got to Chi-
cago last fall via every known means of transpor-
tation from Pullman to cattle car brought deserved
honor to the University. Theirs was a loyalty that
was daunted neither by the almighty doar, the
discomforts of hobo travel, nor the cold winds
which swept their makeshift conveyances. They got
there, and yelled in a way that brought visions of
Ferry field to thousands of alumni who heard
them.
We're going to bring the same kind of impres-
sion to Ohio State university at Columbus this Sat-
urday. We remember how they paid us a visit in
throngs last fall, willing to back their team with
their last boxcar-stained shirt. We're going to re-
turn the compliment in a way that will do justice
to the victory we hope to witness.
Via raffle, bumpers, empties, horse and buggy,
flivver, truck, airplane, or if necessary even day
coach and Puliman, let's all be there this Saturday
afternoon to back that eleven with the brand of
locomotive they've been used to.
"See you -in Columbus !" - that's Michigan's
slogan for the coming weekend.
Some of the remarks heard in student boarding
houses regarding the food are calculated to bring
back memories of the old days of the mess kit and
the bucket of company suds.
Is °Michigan infested with souvenir-hunting
fiends, or is it some other disease which causes
people to mutilate the books and paers on file in
the Union reading room?
No one fully appreciates the roving disposition
of a freshman until, as an adviser, he finds himself
forced to trail a few of them around.
Suggestion for a new student organization: a
red-headed club with President Burton as faculty
representative.
What would the average five-day student do it
Detroit suddenly happened to be moved away or
blown up?
The girls in the east end of Betsy Barbour house
certainly have a wonderful view from their win-
dows.
Harding is said to have missed several roll calls
but Debs has been on hand to answer present every
time.
Today we'll find out who is to be the first jour-
nalist to enter the White House.
Another big liquidation is expected when all elec-
tion debts are paid.
Epitaph
Went to college,
Joined the elven,
Played one game
And went to Heaven.

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. m. and
every two hours to 8: 4S p. mn. Ex-
presses at 9:48 a. m. and e-.ery 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.,
also 11:00 p. m. To Ypsilanti only,
11:40 p.m., 12:25 a.m., and 1:15 a.m.
Locals to Jackson-7:50 a. m., and
12: 10 p.m.

THE BANK OF SERVICE
Commercial Banking in all its Branches.
Savings Department and Safety Deposit Vaults.
Exchange on All Parts of the World.
A. B. A. Travelers' Checks.
FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK

GRAHAM

(Two Stores)
Agents for ROYCROFTERS
GRAHAM

OCTOBER
S M T W T

101-103 So. Main St.

330 So. State St., (Nickels Arcade)

F
1

S
°2

Member of the Federal Reserve System.

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
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.
The Kempt Music Studios -Piano,
Organ, and Voice Instruction. Es-
tablished 1880. 312 S Division St.
Phone 212-J.-Adv.
Read The Daily for Campus News.

BOTH ENDS OF DIAGONAL WALK

I_ . ,

.

Good Writers for Every
Student

.. J. ;J.......... .

The night editors for the week will be: Monday
tight, J. I Dakin; Tuesday night, T. F. Adams;
Wednesday night, T. W. Sargent; Thursday
night, H. W. Hitchcock; Friday night, J. I. Dakin;
Saturday night, J. E. McManis.
Persots wishing to secure information concerning news for any
issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who has full charge
4 f all news to be printed that night.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1920.
The editorial staff will meet at 4:30 o'clock this
afternoon.
KNOW YOUR UNIVERSITY
The University of Michigan Union is governed
by a Board of Directors, which directs its activi-
ties, and a Board of Governors, which controls its
finances. The Board of Directors consists of a
president and five vice-presidents, all of whom are
students and elected by the student body, a student
recording secretary, the alumni secretary, five
alumni members; a faculty financial secretary
elected by the University Senate, and three faculty
members.
OUR PICKET LINE
Most students who are of voting age have al-
ready mailed in their absent voter ballots. They
have made their choice seriously, and with more
intelligent reasoning, as a rule, than those of their
age who have not the opportunity a University of-
fers of knowing the facts. Today their ballots will
be counted/with many millions of others, to deter-
mine which of two Ohio journalists shall be enti-
tled to move his family into the White- House, and
with it the ideas and traditions of his party.
The issues of this campaign, so far as Michigan
students are concerned, are settled. But because
we are just on the threshold of active citizenship,
it is for us more than for any other class in the
electorate to remember that the blaze and glory of
a quadrennial election is only the attention-focus in
a political system which works day in and day out
all the year and every year, and which occasionally
works wrong. Our interest must not lie quiescent
until the next tur of the four-year cycle. We
must turn our training, which the state has helped
us secure, into a continuous watchfulness, a service
of practical patriotism to keep America on its toes
in demanding the best public servants and the best
these servants can give. Our work has just be-
gun; let us dedicate ourselves to a real and active
life-devotion on the picket line of- cleaner and more
efficient American politics.
ORDER YOUR MICHIGANENSIAN
This week Jhe annual Michiganensian cam-
paign is under way and, although the kind of book
which will come out in the spring depends very
_ largely on this drive, only Zoo students have so far
signed up for the year books. A college is often
rated as much as anything else by the quality of
its annuals, and for this reason alone, even disre-
garding the sense of pleasure one may obtain in
after years through the possession of such a re-j
membrance of college days, it should be the duty
ofevery Michigan student to support the publica-
tion in every wtay he can.
To put out a year book requires money. The
cost of cuts and materials, of printing and ship-
ping, runs every year into the thousands of dol-
iar and it is therefore obviously impossible for the

Eversharp Pencils
Sheaffer Fountain Pens-
Sharp Point Pencils-

..-

mmm
4 RESIT,

THE EBERBACH & SON CO.
200 - 204 EAST LIBERTY STREET

Home of Sweet and Purity
Always Fresh

302 S. Main

Phone 474-W

Up the Stairs

,

DRESSERS' :
A Pyone6 628.
Ladles Party Gowns a specialty

In Nickel's Arcade

TO THE

Arcade Cafeteria

Where you may select your meal from
a forty-foot table steaming with a va-
riety of all kinds of pure food delicious-
ly cooked by experts. Bakery goods

J. D. L.
interfrater-

He must have been playing in the
nity league.

ARE YOU TROUBLED BY FUNHAMEN-
TAb PROBLEMS?--Sign in front of a local
church.
Sure, we've got a bluebook coming up Wednes-
day in Ec. I.
What Say, Ye Contributors
It is customary for most column conductors to
remind their gentle readers ever and anon that "this
is your column." While we refuse to pass the buck
by accusing an intelligent reading public of being
responsible for this column, we don't mind confid-
ing that we wish we had more contribs so the re-
sponsibility .might be divided.
Dear Noah:
How do you account for the fact that so many
of the boys in school wear those white shirts all
the time? Observant.
We can't account for it, unless it be that they
send their shirts to a different laundry than we do.
Maj. Sign a Few Days Ago
OLD W I V E S FOR NEW
Pathe News
We know lots of married men that would trade
them even cheaper than that.
Famous Closing Lines
"I'll keep this under my hat," said milady as she
carefully adjusted her switch.
NOAH COUNT.

OUR SODAS
AND SUNDAES
ARE THEY GOOD?
I'LL SAY THEY ARE
FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
Corner State and Liberty
"MASTER

I

fresh from our own ovens.

Our Special Blend of Coffee with Jer-
sey cream is exceptional.

Economy of Cafeteria service
bles us to serve at low prices.

ena-

CLEANING
SERVICE"

Co J. FINGERLE.

Phones
1890
1891.
We CaHi for and Deliver

Dinner 11:30 to 1 P.M.

Supper 5:30 to 7 P.M.

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