OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during th univrsity year by the Board in control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THIE ASSOCIATEl) PRESS 'the Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication o all news (luS- patchescredited to it or net otherwise creditd in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subscriptions by carrier or mail, $3.so- _Offices : Ann Arbor Press Building. Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 244. George 0. Brophy Jr..Managing Editor LeGrand A. Gaines Jr.-. Business Mgr IN CHARGE OF THIS ISSUE Editor..............John I. Dakin anagr...........Dwight Joyce Editorial Assistants - Renaud Sher. wood, Hugh W. Hitchcock, Gerald P. Overton, Leo J. Hershdorfer, Hughston X. McBan, William W. Ottaway, George L. Stone. Business Assistants-S. Kunsadter, R. G. Burchel, F. A. Cross, P. B. Hutekinson. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1920 MORALE IN FOOTBALL The last shrill blast of the whistle has sounded, and the game is now history. The great throng of specta- tors, some happy and rejoicing, oth- ers sad and dejected, is slowly wend- ing its way from Ferry field. The warriors are doffing their war paiit, for the great battle which they have been anticipating for many weeks, is over, and one side has conquered. But there is more than the score, more than the final result as reckon- ed in points, to be considered. That -team is really victorious which can still hold its head high and conscience clear and, even though defeated on the gridiron, can say that it played fairly and squarely from the first kickoff to the final down. Scdres, While denoting superior playing, do not necessarily imply that the .victor was more deserving of the conquest than the team that lost. In the end, it is really that one big thiig which characterized the fighting of the American soldiers in France that counts-that clean,, fight-hard-to-the- last-minute spirit-called morale. A VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM Michigan Is. proud of the fact that she equips her athletic .teams with the best that money can buy, and that her field'and gymnasium facilities for holding contests compare very fav- orably with the other western uni- versities. Btu one important factor in Michigan's athletic program is still a' prospect - recognition of swim- ming as a varsity sport. At the pres- ent time our University is one of the few large educational institutions i the west which is not represented by a varsity swimming team, while in the east practically every college sup- ports swimming as one of its minor or major sports. Neglected as this phase of our ath- letic life has been, there Is, how- ever, no reason why we cannot make restitution for our delay now. Last year an informal swimming team en- gaged in competition with other col- leges in the state, but only in an un- official capacity. The only available place for the members of this team to practice was the Y. M. C. A. pool, but with the Union pool expected soon to develop into a reality, this objec- tion must be withdrawn. It is obviousthat in order to keep abreast with the spirit of the times, Michigan should follow in the foot- steps of her sister universities in the east and west, and proceed with the recognition of swimming as a varsity sport. The Michigan spirit that pervaded the stands today need not be re- stricted to one game, nor even to one season. We have three major, and several minor and informal sports waiting their turn for our support. What's become of the old-fashion- ed football player who wore a nose- guard and after a big play threw his headgear off the field into the water- bucket on the sidelines. "What a kind hearted man," ex- claimed the fair one as the referee announced time up for halves, "he knew those boys needed a rest." There's a bulldog on the campus who reminds us of just two people- T. R. and a certain yell-leader on Ferry field. Was it windy enough for you, Chi- czro? TEAMS FOU9GHT TO BREAK TIEI TODAY'1 lch-1gan - Chicago Game Long Called Football Classic of Wst MAROONS, WOLVERINES CHALKED WITH 8 WINS (By Joseph A. Bernstein) "The Harvard-Yale battle of the wept." That is what critics of western football call the re-instated annual, Michigan-Chicago football game. And justly so, it seems. Since 1891, when football was all following by reversing the score ex- actly, Today the teams fought to break that tie. Both wanted the right to claim supremacy over the other. You have seen how it has resulted. Chicago Presents Patched Lineup (By L.-B. Grey, The Daily Maroon) This year the Maroons are invading the Wolverine stronghold for the first' time since the memorable game of 1904, when Willie Heston, Tom Hammond and Germany Schulz were wearikig the Maize and Blue and Hugo Bezdek and Walter Eckersall were in the Maroon lineup. Chicago was giv- en then only an outside chance - ofr winning. Michigan won 22 to 12, aft- er a bitter contest. . The situation today is not dissim- ilar. Chicago is in no wise as well fortified with stars as it was in the old days, but the same brand of fight is there under the old colors. How- ever badly shot the team may be - when it trots onto Ferry field, there is no doubt but that it will prove a stubborn opponent. First Prospects Good. 'Starting the season with 13 letter men, including Cole, Elton, Crisler and Hinkle, Coach Stagg seemed well 'n the way to clinch Conference grid honors. How near he came to ac- compilishing this is evident from the 7 to 6 game with Ohio State and the 3 to 0 battle with Illinois, when all of these mainstays were either out of the game entirely or were crippled so early in the fray as to eliminate them as factors in the play. Elton was barred on the eve of theC Ohio game by the new interpretation' of the Conference ruling on eligibility of S. A. T. C. players. Cole suffered a dislocated shoulder early in the Ohio game, throwing him out for the remainder of the season, while Cris- ler was laid out later in the same battle, and probably will not appear in the Maroon lineup again until the Wisconsin game next week, if then. Hinkle, by his few minutes of play against Illinois, aggravated the in- jury which kept him from the Buck- e, e contest, and is only a distant pos- s iality. Substitutes Feature At best, the Maroons will present a patched lineup. The forward wall, with Reber at center, Hartong and Redmon at guards, and Capt. Jackson and McGuire at tackles, is intact with the exception of Redmon, who was laid out last Saturday. Lewis and Barker, however, are capable men for Redmon's berth. One of the ends will be cared for by Strohmeier, star of last year's freshman squad. If in shape, Hinkle or Halladay will cover the other wing, but at present Halladay's name stands near Hinkle's on the invalid list. Clark is an Alternative The personnel of the backfield al- lows for almost infinite . conjecture. 'Tatge will be at uqarterback. Han- isch, a fullback, who was out of the Ohio game because of injuries, prob- ably will play one halfback. Rouse and Neff were both hard hit by the lilini, but one of them is likely to fill the other halfback position. Hutch- inson, who performed in stellar fash- ion against Michigan last year, but who was out of the Illinois game, is another possibility. Palmer is the likely choice for fullback, Maroon Goal Hard to Cross Chicago defeated the jinxed Michi- gan eleven last year 13 to 0. Judging from scores this season, Maropns and Wolverines are about on a par. The Maroons have the distinction of hav- ing been scored upon less than any other team in the Big Ten, and of al- lowing only one touchdown to cross their goal-line. It is an enviable rec- ord they will seek to maintain, even with the odds so much against them. Rat h Tub Termed Luxury in Holland The Hague, Nov. 12.-Bath tubs and bathroom fixtures appear on the list of "luxuries" which would be subject to a 10 per cent luxury tax in Hol- land if a revenue bill now before the Dutch parliament were passed. brawn and not so much brains as it is today, until the present time, the eyes of the sporting world ire focus- ed upon that gridiron where the Ma- roon clad warriors battle with the wearers of the blue jerseys. Just once a year that game takes place, and just once a year the sporting ,world is allowed to see the greatest- rivals for football honors in the west, battle with each other. Today another of those "Harvard- Yale games of the west" was played. It had little effect upon the general standing of the two teams, yet it was watched by a crowd that thought just as those men on the field thought - that there was something important at stake. Each Win Eight It is Michigan's ambition to beat Chicago each year, and it is Chicago's ambition to win from Michigan an- nually. Records show that to date, the two tashave each wxon an eual nu"- ber of games. Sixteen have been played. Eight have been victories for Michigan and eight have seen the Maroons on the long end of the score. The game today, however, changed that, as you already know. Football relations between the two schools were opened way back in 1891, with the Maroons capturing first honors by a shutout. For four years they held the edge on the Wolverines, and then it came Michigan's turn to win. That was in '95 when the Maize and Blue ; triumphed by a 12 to 0 score. So it see-sawed until 1905, when Michigan, unable to find competition in the west to match the peerless teams that Coach Fielding H. Yost was building in Ann Arbor, withdrew from the almost new Western Confer- ence and sought conquests in other fields. But that final year in the confer- ence saw the honors hotly contested by the Maroons-and the Maroons won. They made their last game with Michigan until 13 years later, a most glorious victory. Chicago Won in 1905 ' It was by but a small count in that year of 1905 that the Maroons wonj the game, but they won it, making Michigan anxious to get an opportu- nity to come back at them. The score of that historic battle was 2 to 0. A safety scored by Walter Eckersal,, then playing quarterback for Chica- go, and today one of the foremost football critics of the country, spelled defeat for Michigan. Thirteen years later Yost was to "et revenge. In 1918, after an absence of one year nore than a dozen, from Big Ten; races, the Michigan team was put bacl into the running,~and Yost was given his first opportunity to try to reverse the defeat of 1905. The Mich- igan wartime football team got that revenge and won the edge over the Chicago team by a 13 to 0 score, but Chicago evened it up again the year I DUNN, MICHIGAN QUARTER, WHO has been out of the game because of injuries. MICHIGAN HARRIERS HAVE DAILY GRIND (By Wallace F. Elliott) Fighting daily over their long course, faces drawu and fists clench- ed, Michigan's cross country men, the hardest worked and least honored of all Wolverine athletes, are doing their bit to put, the name of their school before the'athletic world. The Var- sity and freshman together number nearly 80, all of them men who turn out regardless of weather conditions and other detriments to outdoor activ- ity, and the result of their labors means honor to the University. Purdue Wins True, the results of the meets held thus far this year by the Varsity are anything but encouraging. The Pur- due harriers overwhelmed Michigan's men in the opening encounter and last week in the state meet at Lans- ing, M. A. C. won a hard earned vic- tory. Credit, however, must not be given exclusively to the victors, for the loser is sometimes deserving of much more than his opponent. Michigan's four best cross country men are, for var- ious reasons, unable to compete this year, and the turnout for the sport is far from the size expected by Coach Farrell. Therefore, to those who have come out for cross country all the more credit is due. They have made possible a team which has fought all season against odds and whose success is greater than the scores of past meets would indicate. Six Man Team The Varsity cross country team is captained by. R. C. Brannaf, '21, and the remaining five men are Houfstat- er, Freeborn, Whittemore, Standish, and Penberthy. On Saturday, Nov. 6, an All-fresh- man run was held to determine the final make-up of the freshman squad. In this the first six men were chosen and those six who first crossed the fin- ish line were Davis, Leland, Arndt Hattendorf, Bowen, and Yakes. It is from the cross country squad that Michigan's distance men of the future are picked. Therefore give hon- or where honor is due. The Maize and Blue cross country men deserve the support and encouragement of the entire student body, for by their work they have shown their loyalty to Mich- igan. No Bolshevism for School -Children Geneva, Switzerland, Nov. 12.-The school children of the little Savoy town of Bourg went on a strike today because the head-mistress of the mu - nicipal school, who recently is said to have become a bolshevist, delivered a lecture praising Nikolai Lenine, the Russian premier. MICHIGAN- TIRE & SUPPLY Snappy: Tire Service co. GOODYEAR, HOOD, OLDFIELD 337 South Main Street THE HOME OF MICHIGAN MUSIC FOR " - - MEN i jAMkW"by &k YNVUSITYMURC tioult A4 Arkr A Song Book Yellow and Blue Varsity Men of the Maize and Blue Win for Michigan Fight, Men of Michigan! Victors VICTOR RECORDS "Victors" and "Varsity" "Yellow and Blue" and "College Days" Mrs... I. rifrt 611-615 Eass i ent i S. B. REYNOLDS,'21 Lit. F. D. WEBB, '21 Lit. Student Props. Smokers' Supplies Magazines Student Supplies Front IgarStore The Blue Corner State and Packard BANKS, uP -i-uMORE, HAS PRO VEfD himself a capable field general. WE CATER TO STUDENTS