A 4-fJ'%l " I a a U4 tr 1 an ifltti 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 miatter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.5o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 960; Editorial. 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 wards, 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 of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No man- uscript will-be returned unless the writer inlloses 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 2411 MANAGING EDITOR...........GEORGE O. BROPHY JR ews Editor.............................Chesser M. Campbell fight Editors- T.E H. Adams H. W. Hitchcock 3. P. Campbell J. E. McManis 3. 1.Eakin T. W. Sargent, Jr. Renaud Sherwood nday Editor...... .......... .....J. A. Bernstein litorials.............Lee Woodruff, Robert Sage, T. J. Whinery sistant News .................. P. Lovejoy Jr. orts .........................................Robert Angell omen's Elditor................................Mary D. Lane legraph........................-.............West Gallogly lescope ......... ..............-................Jack W . Kelly Assistants sephine Waldo Frances Oberholtzer L.gArmstrong Kern ul G. Weber Robert E. Adams Hughston McBain mena Barlow Norman C. Damon Frank H. McPike izabeth Vickery Byron Darnton Gerald P. Overton .E. Clark Thomas E. Dewey Edward Lamnbrecht orge Reindel Wallace F., Elliott William H. Riley jr. orotly Monfort Leo J. Hershdorfer Sara Waller a Al El G. Ha arry B. G~rundly BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER .........LEGRAND A. GAINES JR. dvertising .... .............................D. P. Joyce assifeds......................................R6bt. 0. Kerr ublication-..............-................'..M. eath ecounts................. ......i..R. Priehs rculation......................................V. F. Hillery Assistants W. Lambrecht P. H. Hutchinson N. W. Robertson G. Gower F. A. Cross R. C. Stearnes iiund Kunstadter Robt. L. Davis Thos. L. Rice ester W. Millard M. M. Moule D. G. Slawson J. Hamel Jr 0. S. Watterworth R. B. Si J. J. s aaw . The night editors for the week will be as follows: Monday night, Hugh Hitchcock; Tuesday night, Thornton Sargent; Wednesday night, Brewster Campbell; Thursday night, Thomas Adams; Fri- day night, Jack Dakin ; Saturday night, Renaud Sherwood. _ r Persons wishing to secure information Concerning news for ay issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who has full charge bf all news to be printed that night. ;WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1920. KNOW YOUR UNIVERSITY Michigan's Library ranks tenth among all the colleges of the United States in the number of books possessed. At the end of the last fiscal year, June 30, 1920, there were 432,800 books in the Li- brary. This number is increasing at the rate of i8,ooo annually, of which at least 4,ooo are gifts. The Library building, which was opened. last February, together with its equipment, cost $615,- ooo, but in order to complete the equipment $25,000 more is needed. THE STATE AND THE UNIVERSITY -Headlines appearing in newspapers of all sec- tions of the country announce that the University is asking the largest budget in its history - $8,69,- 0oo to be secured in two installments from suc- cessive legislatures, and this appropriation to be entirely separate from the regular mill tax for edu- cation. Why is it that Michigan and other state universities throughout the entire United States, riot only-feel justified in asking such expenditures, but go up to their capitals with a reasonable confi- dence that legislators will look at the matter in much the same light as the Regents? The answer involves a complex of business j udg- ment, sentimental considerations, and sound public policy. It is as though, in its great and ever-re- newing mine of human resources, the state had found like any miner that the raw material of man- kind, while in many cases dross and incapable of development, is on the whole as worthy of working up into the finished product as is copper and gold. Experience and science have shown that men in- herit their capabilities, and that it is hard to keep a remarkable man down even in face of such obsta- cles as lack of education. But it is just as true that 'capabilities may be turned in many directions; that many of them may lie dormant forever if not brought out through the intellectual awakening which education is bound to create; and that, as a matter of fact, by far the majority of useful and great men in all fields have been those whose col- lege training has enabled them to save time in at- taining that breadth of positive knowledge and of human understanding which has been the leading factor in their success. The state which accords the recognition of the open purse to these facts is simply funding itself for the future. The college man will be a better citizen, and a power for the state's future public efficiency; he will be a better business man or pro- fessional man than he could have been without his educational opportunity, and therefore a factor in increasing' the state's wealth; and his training al- most inevitably will broaden his general culture, and thereby aid in raising the state's intellectual standards wherever he comes in contact with his rieighbors. The exceptions which make their way into too many headlines are only the dross; and Michigan could make no finer investment than the appropriation which President Burton has asked. THE RED CROSS DRIVE That enough funds may be raised to permit it to continue its benevolent, humanitarian work, the local chapter of the Red Cross is this week con- ducting a subscription drive. Always ready to offer its aid wherever it was needed, spreading its protecting efforts to take un- der its cover the sick of Ann Arbor, aiding the needy children of the poor, the Red Cross has es- tablished for itself an enviable reputation as a charitable organization owrthy of support. The world war especially proved the practicability- of the Red Cross, while at the University its beneficial work made itself amnifest among the students in the military units stationed here. A campaign with a purpose as commendable as this is deserving of the backing of the student body as well as Ann Arbor citizens. WHERE WE'LL BE! If a messenger should arrive from Mars tomor- row afternoon to disclose the secrets of trans-. planet communication there's just one place he should hope to find the eight thousand students to be listed in the Michigan directory - and that is somewhere in the cheering multitude that will see the Wolverines off for Minneapolis. The entire University, so far as is physically possible, is going to turn out with one accord to show the team be- fore it goes that' although it will be playing six hun- dred miles away from home next Saturday every one of us will be behind it during every minute of the Minnesota game. Tomorrow afternoon as never before the team will see a physical manifestation of the loyalty of the University. Like the team, we are gointg to finish the 1920 football season "with a punch" and we feel the "punch" wil be served in the famous j ug. THE "M" CLUB'S OPINION Michigan's "M" club, composed of athletic "old grads," held a reunion Saturday before the game and elected new officers. But they did something much more important than that, for, by expressing their satisfaction concerning the way in which Michigan has come back, they showed that the spirit of the alumni of the University is not only back of our athletics to the limit, but is also back of the coach. The "M" club is composed of men who know Michigan football, who have watched it through all its glories of the old days and through its recent disasters, and their opinons are not to be sneered at. They are the kind of people who do much and talk little, they had a great deal to do with this year's improvement, and when they say they are pleased with the result it means something. If we of the student body will always work as hard and talk as little as the men of this club of boosters, we are going to see some even more as- tounding results. iThe Telescope Owed to a Stick of Gum Little lump of grayish matter Perched coyly 'neath my seat, Have you mingled with the chatter Of some lingual athlete? Were your molar-dented features Ever sought by lustful eye As in a drug store window You sat, ready for some stude to buy? Time-tried mass, you teach a lesson Show the woeful, wantom waste Of'the heedless ones who buy you 'For your saccharinous taste. To the hundreds who daily write asking how they too can command large salaries as column conduct- ors on college dailies we refer them first of all to our own daily diet: Eat pickles, drink a quart of hootch, And guzzle a pint of rye, Then on a mince pie gently mooch And wash it down with dye. This much done, the rest of column conducting comes comparatively easy. The other night when we were having a little tiff with our girl she comes to the fore with, "I'll tell you, Jack, you men dont' appreciate just how much we girls mean in your life. Now take yourself, for instance, what would you do tomor- row if all the good looking girls in Ann Arbor were to die tomorrow ?" She had us there fair and square, so we did the only manly thing we could do and acknowledged so by replying : "I guess the only thing we could do under those circumstances would be to start running around with the co-eds." Famous Closing Lines "I propse to fightit out on this line if it takes all summer," said General Grant as he hung up the receiver after trying to get the correct Ann Arbor party. NOAH COUNT. DETROIT UNITED LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 19 20 Bet ween Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jaclison tEastern Standard Time) Liiated 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. Liiteds to Jackson at 8:48 a. m. and every two hours to 8 :48 p. mn. Ex- presses at 9:4s a.tm. and e.ery two hours to 9:48 p. m. lov&s to Detroit- :55a.m., 7:00 a.in and ev:ery two hours to 9 :00 p. in., ailso 11:00 p. m. To Ypsilani only' 11:40 p.m., 12:25 a.m., and 1:15 a.m-. LocaIs to JcLkson-7:50 a. m., and 12:10 p.m. I' GH K 1 S S R 14 15 21 22 28 29 NOVEMBER T W T 2 3 4 9 10 it 16 17 18 23 24 25 8s F 5 12 19 26 wS 6- 20 27 I I (Tw o S Ot ores) Agnts for MOYCROIF ERS a. " B1TH ENDS OF DIAGONAL WALK 4 'r rr +' + Mel: 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 Hai Store, 617 Packard St. Phone 1792. ALL SUITS SCHOOL OF DANCING If you can walk, you can dance after four private lessons with MLLE. JEANETTE KRUSZKA I And Ames Uses Local Nethods In Drive With a three column cut of the Michigan Union on the front page of the Iowa State Student, a paper "de- voted to the development of a better and greater Iowa State college," bear- ng the date Nov. 12, the issue tells of the success with which the students of that institution raised more than a quarter of a million dollars for a Un- ion. The Iowans copied the Union idea from Michigan and have used the loc- -4 methods throughout the campaign. The student body was apportioned out to be solicited by teams. The success of the attempt is testified by the re- sult which shows that nearly 90 per cent of the student and faculty bodies, have made pledges either this fall or last spring. The amount of money was raised only through the co-operation of all the students. The women of that col- lege have made almost a 100 per cent subscription record. Pledges have ranged in amounts from a few dollars *o more than $100 with the average about $80 for the men and $35 for the women. Already $317.550 has been "aised and $10,000 more is expected o be subscribed within the next few days. 137 STUDENTS GET GOVERNMENT AID The government at the present time is giving aid to 137 ex-service men of the University by giving them a Chance to be fitted for the particular vocation they choose. No restrictions are placed on the course of study a man may elect. The majortiy are pur- -quing courses in business administra- tion, according to F. D. Wahr, local counselor of the federal board in charge of the vocational training for 'isabled soldiers. These men are dub- ject to all University rules and in ad- dition are obliged to attend the Sum- mer session. These men are divided into two groups. Those in the first group re- ceive from the government their tui- tion and school supplies, while those In the second are entitled to tuition and monthly allowances of $100, but forfiet their War Risk payments while at the University. Married men re- ceive $135 per month and additional amounts for dependent children. Ann Arbor's progressive merchants use The Michigan Daily.--Adv. I 0 OVERCOATS OR PHILIP MILLER, '23 LET US PROVE THE FACT For Appointment Call PHONE 2308-R Between hours 12-2 OR AT THE STUDIO 324 E. HURON Two Blocks West of High School IAMsa EWE E AT wNs s SLAO~4AS~pRf BRSlLE~ AR3 SILVEii5WflIS AR DIAMONDS A Gift of Beauty Is Joy Forever. Also a Fino Invetmeut. Schianderer & Seyfried 113 E. Liberty Street Ann Arb.r Michigan i E 27 %OFF Wadhams & C. Two COMPLETE STORES STATE STREET MAIN STREET TRADE MARK REQ. '3U.S. A ~ Men's Dress Footwear SMARTEST DRESS OXFORDS Nothing smarter for Evening dress, nothing more comfortable for dancing. Patent or dull calf as you wish. Every college man has need for these PRICE $I11 A I Walk-Over Boot 115 South Main Street Shop Xmas Cards, Booklets, Leather Goods M Books, Pennants, Mich. Pins, Fobs, Spoons, etc. Find them at the ONLY STUDENTS' SUPPLY STORE 1160-R 1111 South University Avenue, Phone