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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 14, 1920 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1920-11-14

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

I t 55.4 *wSSi 11.!' 5*\' ..'A aIL 1

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday during the Univer-
ity year by the Board in Control pf '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
'redited in this paper andi the local news published therein.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second
less matter.
Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. r
Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street.
Phones: Business, 960; Editorial, 2414.
Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig-
ature not nec.;sarily to- appear inprint, but as an evidence of
aith. and notices of events will he published in The Daily at the
iscretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily offie.
Insigned communications will receive no consideration. No man-
iscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage.
The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex-
iressed in the cotnanunications.
"What's Going On" notices will not be received after 8 o'clock
mm the evening preceding insertion.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 2414
[ANAGING EDITOR ...........GEORGE 0. BROPHY JR.

s Editor.........................Chesser M. Campbell
ht Editors-
T. H. Adams H. W. Hitchcock
B. P. Campell J. E. McManis.
..ampbeln T. W. Sargent, Jr.
Renaud Sherwood
lay Editor.-...... . A A Bernstein
orials.............. Lee Woodruff, Robert Sage,JT. . Whinery
tant 'N s...........................E. P. Lovejoy Jr.
ts.... ........................ .. .... obert Angell
hen's Editor ............... ................. Mary D, Laae
;graph .../. .......................... West GalloglY
ope-......................................Jack W. Kelly
Assistantsf
phine Waldo \ Frances Oberholtzer L. Armstrong Kern
lG. Weber Robert E. Adams Hughston McBain
ena Barlow Norman C. Damon Frank H. McPike
beth' Vickery Byron Darnton Gerald P. Overton
,vClark Thomas E. Dewey Edward Lambrecht
ge Reindel Wallace F. Elliott William H. Riley Jr.
4thy Monfort Leo J. Hershdorfer Sara Wailer

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arry B. Grundy

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 90
BUSINESS MANAGER ... .....LEGRAND A. GAINES JR.
Advertising ....................................D. P Joyce
classifieds...................................-....Robt. 0. Kerr
Publication ..............-.......-- . .....-..F. -M. Heath
Accounts ........................................ E. R. Priehs
Circulation..............................." .....V.F. Hillery
Assistants
R. W. Lambrecht P. H. Hiutchinson N. W. Robertson
B, G. Gower F. A. Cross R. C. Stearns
Sigmund Kunstadter Robt. L. Davis Thos. L. Rice
Lester W. Millard M. M. Moule D. G. Slawson
J J. Hamel Jr. D. S. Watterworth

have been and are coming here to look over the
building with a view to constructing others along
somewhat the same lines. Last year Michigan was
the host to a large number of representatives from
various colleges who were here ofr the sole pur-
pose of discussing the Union plan as then being
developed, and of late we find that Purdue is ex-
pecting tobegin the construction of just such a
building, and that M. A..C. has already gone to
work on one which is patterned quite closely after
the one here.
But the pool is unfinished, -at a time when swim-
ning is winning increased recognition as a woniler-
ful developer of good health, and when Michigan
has a swimming team of excellent calibre only pre-
vented fiom intercollegiate competition by the lack
of a suitable natatorium. With the completion of
the pool and the investment of $15,000 in the read-
ing room upstairs, the Union will become a finished
plant, and Michigan's achievement can be viewed
in its entirety by visiting representatives. The sit-
uation offers an opportunity for some'alumnus or
group of alumni to perform a great service for the
University.
ON GOING TO CHURCH
"If a man should go through college without es-
tablishing his . religious relationship definitely and
firmly, he has missed his main purpose in going,"
President Burton declared in this year's initial
Union service at Hill auditorium. In this state-
ment he accented a point fully appreciated by the
thousands of students who regularly attend church,
and pointed out the error of indifference toward
Sunday services.w
No one coming to a university should be so car-
ried away by the cutting of home ties 'that he will
forget the importance of religious life. To the
man acquiring the broad viewpoint that college
training gives, it should be easier rather than harder
to reconcile modern science with religion. It is
true that the importance of creed may be miti-
gated, but if this has taken place creed should be
enlarged into a broader belief rather than no be-
lief at all.
Most home church goers who do not attend
church in Ann Arbor realize that they should. It is
a matter of neglect more than anything else. "Can't
get up in time for services" is the old alibi. With
the inauguration of the Union services early in the
evening, even that favorite standby was destroyed.
If we are not among the thousands of students who
are attending some church service, one of three
things is indicated: either an indifference to mat-
ters which we should know are essentials, a lack
of will power to carry out our good intentions, or
an atheistic viewpoint. Why not do a right about
this morning?
BETTER AND BRIEFER SPOTLIGHTS
Heretofore, Michigan's i spotlight vaudeville
shows have frequently been a mere melting pot for
all kinds of talent, some excellent and some only
of mediocre quality, but there has been so much of
the latter mixed in with the good that the per-
formances have necessarily lost both in quality and
interest. Moreover, it has been the pglicy to aim
toward a little too long a performance rather than
too short, apparently under the impression that the
audience would feel they had not received their
money's worth if it were cut. The result has some-
times been a program which has dragged, and
which, in spite of all its good points, has caused
the crowd to be tired out before it was over. An
hour and a half is plenty long enough.
It is a misfortune to spoil a good show merely
by trying to work in too much material, and it is
to be hoped that committees in charge of the spot-
light productions will see to it that not only is the
talent only the best available, but that the per-
formances will not be drawn out too much. Better
a bit too short than too long.
T he Telescope

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 8:48 p. m. 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.in.

.t

999

TAXI

999

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A Dodge Car
and Dodge
Service-
enoughsaid
999

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99

S M
1
7 8
14 15i
21 22
28 29

NOVEMBER
T W T
2 3 4
9 10 11
16 17 18
23 24 26
30

F
5
12
19
26

GiZ

S
6
13
20
27

I

I THE BANK OF SERVICE

(Two Stores)
Agents for ROYC 'OFTERS
CRHA

BOTR ENDS OF DIAGONAL WALK

Men: Last season's hats turn-
ed inside out, refinished and re-
blocked with all new trimmings
look just like new, wear justas
long and saves you five to ten
dollars. We do only high class
work. Factory Hat Store, 617
Packard St. Phone 1792.

Commercial Banking in all its Branches.
Savings Department and Safety Deposit Vaults.
Exchange on All Parts of the World.
A. B. A. Travelers' Checks.

a a

!a

.. 3"- . . .

Night editors for this week are: Hugh' Hitch-
cock, Mond'ay night; T' W. Sargent, Jr., Tuesday
night; B. P. Campbell, Wednesday 'night; Thomas
Adams, Thursday night; B. P. Campbell, Friday
night;,J6h1 McManis, Saturday night.
Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for any
issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who has full charge
of all news to he printed that night.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1920.
KNOW YOUR UNIVERSITY
' Including yesterday's contest, Michigan has
played 292 football games and has scored 7,478
points to her opponents' 1,596. The first game was
played in 1878 with Racine college and resulted in
Michigan's favor, 7 to 2. In 1885, 1886, and 1903
Michigan was not scored against; while in 1905
Chicago's two points, gained in, the last quarter,
were the only opponent tallies of the whole sea-
son.
"IT'S TRUE"
That is the feeling that found its way to thou-
sands of jubilant hearts after Michigan's eleven -
the eleven that found itself -- fought its way to
the* triumph we all knew was coming, to the final
vindication of Yost's methods, to the long-sought
comeback. When "The Victors" rag out at last
over the scene of a great Conference victory, its
strains came to us with a meaning we have been
unable to ascribe to them for some time, divested
of the emptiness of a boast or a mere heartener.
"It's true," we told ourselves; and we knew it
was so.
But it isn't all true yet. This year Yost and
Michigan have succeeded in producing a great
eleven. Yesterday the coach saw his men play
up to the top-notch of skill as he had taught it to
them. The something that makes a team know
that it can win and then go in and apply every-
thing it has been taught until the victory is
achieved cam eover them. Our task is to see that
the ground is not lost. We must see to it that
overconfidence does not spoil our chance to finish
the present season with a commendable fifty per-
cent showing. But, above all, we must see to it
that the comeback is a lasting one, a matter not
of a week but of seasons to come. We can only
accomplish this by the sort of loyalty which dis-
plays itself in greater ways than the cheer on side-
line and at pep meeting - the sort which gets
every football man in Michigan out in togs each
fall at Ferry field, and which backs the coach to
the final whistle of every season.
Then only will we be able to say "it's true" with
no reservations, clean through to "the champions
of the West."
FINISH THE SWIMMING POOL
Michigan's Union building has been in use for
more than a year, but down in the basement stands
a cement-walled excavation which is of no use to
anyone, a swimming pool of the finest type on the
making, but unfinished and empty.
The pool is begun, but now $50,ooo is needed to
complete the work. Of this amount, fully $25,ooO
will go toward the filtering machinery which has
been specially designed for use in the Union pool,
and which, when installed, will make this probably
the cleanest pool i the country.
Michigan leads in the development of the Union
idea, and delegations from all over the country

I

TUTTLE'S
LUNCH ROOM
Crowded every meal
BUT
Room for All Our
Last years customers
One half block South
of "MAJ

=1

My Dairay Lunch:,a
Our food is the best
Our ,rices are right E
HOURS
7 A.M. TO 1P. M.
5P.M. TO 7 P.M.
_* *
SUNDAYS
8 A. M. TO 7:36P.M.
a. r
512 EAST WILLIAM STREET
w11! l i i 11tllIIn llli tlmilllll
Ask for the
The Smart Looking, Popular Shoe
for CAMPUS, 0
andCLASS ROOM
Ideal, All Round College Shoe
Same High Quality as the
TOM LOGAN GOLF SHCE
If your dealer cannot supply you
write us for catalog and prices
THOMAS H.LOGAN COMPANY
1-lut'180 . Mass. "
Send for the Tom Logan Calendar,
which pictures, suitable for framing,
the International Golf match between
Ouimet, Ray and Vardou.

FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK
101-103 So. Main St. 330 So. State St., (Nickels Arcade)
Member of the Federal Reserve System.
f
'11 IZR
ee
^. r
a
~LOCH BRos. TOBACgO Co.
S Lrit

William in a fit insane
Thrust his head beneath a train.
You would be surprised to find
How it broadened William's mind.

We are one of those birds who are always
anxious to be in on everything that takes place on
the campus. So when "Hello day" came along we
decided to do our bit towards making it a suc-
cess. Therefore, after wandering over the cam-
pus for an hour we finally stumbled onto a good
looking co-ed, to whom we said "Hello" in as
sweet a voice as we could muster. To say that
we were knocked for a goal when she returned the
greeting is putting it mildly. We finally came to,
rushed up to her, and said, "Haven't I seen your
face some, place before?" Whereupon she re-
plied, "I shouldn't wonder, this isn't the first time
I've had it out."
And putting on our earmuffs, like the Arabs, we
stole silently away.
Heard in the Stands
First stude-And do you know, we actually have
a man on the football team who is not only a good
player but an A student.
Second ditto-Heavens1 He must be leading a
double life.
Pamous Closing Lines
"Cradled in the deep," he murmured as he saw
the students asleep in philosophy lecture.

UNION I

=Now

DANCES

HAVE BEG~UN

11 %

The discouraging fact that you
are unable to dance graceful-
ly will probably restrain you
from attending your class
dances.
I will guarantee to teach you
all the modern dances grace-
fully and artistically in eight
lessons.

III

LE VERNE M.
HALSEY'S
USTUDIOS
WURT L7'11CADFJ

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