rwo THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECF t OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning excepjt 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 npt otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoifice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second cless matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. offices. Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 96o; 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 he published in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if ?eft at or mailed to The Daily office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No man- uscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. rhe Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- pretsed 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- T. H. Adams H. W. Hitchcock B. P. Campbell J. E. McManis I. Dakin T. W. Sargent, Jr. Renaud Sher~wood Sunday Editor...............J. A. Bernstein Editorials...........Lee Woodruff, Robert Sage,, T. Whinery Assistant News......... ....... ..E. P. Lovejoy Jr. Sports.................... ............... Robert Angell Women's Editor..................... ......Mary D. Lane Telegraph..........................* -.-West Gallogly Telescope...................................Jack W. Kelly Assistants JosephineWaldeo Byron Darnton H. E. Howlett Paul G. Weber Thomas E. Dewey Md. A. Klaver Almena Barlow Wallace F. Elliott E. R. Meiss Elizabeth Vickery . Leo J. Hershdorfer Walter Donnelly G. E. Clark L. Armstrong Kern Beata Hhsley George Reindel Hughston McBain Kathrine Montgomery- Dorothy Monfort Frank H. McPike Gerald P. Overton H~arry B. Grundy J. A. Bacon. Edward Lambrecht Frances Oberholtzer W. W: Ottaway WilliamIH. Riley Jr. Robert'E. Adams Paul Watzel Sara Waller Norman C. Damon J. W. Fumne, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER........iLEGRAND A. GAINES JR. Advertising.....................-.............D. P. Joyce Classifieds..................................Robt. 0. Kerr Publication .............-......... . ..........F M. Heath Accounts...................................E. R. Priehs Circulation ..................................V. F. Hillery R. W. Lambrecht P. H Hutchinson 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 I. T. Hamel Jr. D. S. Watterworth R. G. Burchell ing all the demands of this great, growing com- monwealth will stand completed. President Burton has taken the student body into his confidenec to good purpose. Every man and woman in the University is with him in this, the greatest of all campaigns to better Michigan. WORK FOR THE NEW STANDS The alumni body, which forms a great percentage of the paying attendance at Ferry field games, con- stitutes the keystone to the new stadium problem. If the need for the completion of the "U" is brought fully before them - which should not be difficult because of the sad experiences of many in failing to secure tickets - the movement will be well on its way. This Christmas vacation is our immediate opportunity of talking up the new sta- dium and securing the advice of alumni as to the best way of going about the campaign for it. No definite policy of raising funds can yet be adopted, but the suggestion of the athletic board to sell five-year books of tickets providing for ad- mission to reserved seats at two big games every year seems to be the most feasible of all the ideas thus far advanced. The cost of the stadium being $400,000, the board would raise $200,ooo of that sum by a loan, leaving the other half of the re- quired amount to beN raised by some such plan as the one above mentioned.. The ticket plan would provide with reserved seats for five years, and would thus avoid the con- fusion and disappointment which has hitherto at- tended every big game where seats were at a pre- mium, and many alumni had to be turned away on account of inadequate facilities. Surely, if a cal should be issued to our great number of loyal alumni to donate directly to a fund for a new sta- dium, enough money could be raised in this fash- ion to cover the reqiured outlay. But it should not be necessary to resort to this policy, for the adop- tion of the ticket plan would permit the alumni to aid in the building of the larger stands, and still give them a reasonable return for their expendi- tures. A new stadium and seats for 1ll, or the old stands and thousands turned away at every game - the matter is in the hands of the student body. Three hundred years ago Tuesday, the day on which we will all be speeding home via the most modern system of commercial transportation, the ancestors of the Four Hundred were landing from a dinky little wooden ship on the then-uninhabited shores of New England. The Telescope The Modern Poor Richard Said young Mr. Kidder, (A gay dog is he) A peach on the lap Is worth two on a tree. Lloyd Douglas..Wanted--A Congregation SI'aw-University of Michigan GR'AHAM Both Ends of the Diagonal. Walk DETROTIT UNITED LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 1920 Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson - (Eastern Standard Timnp) Umited 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. Liniteds to Jackson at 8:48 a. m. and every two hours to 8:48 p. m. Ex- presses at 9:48 a. mn. 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--7:60 a. m., and 12:10 p.m. DECEMBER S M T 'W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 t( 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ii 14 15 16 17 18g 19, 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 2728' 2% 30 31 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. DANCING Tuesday and Thursday assemblies will be continued through vacation at Packard Acedmay. Phone 150-F2.- Adv. For results advertise in The Mich- igan Daily.-Adv. TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM Crowded every meal BUT Room for All Our Last years customers One half block South of, "MAJ" CHRSTMAS GI FTS FOR MEN We wish to call your attention to our assortment cif SILK & KNITTED SILK NECKWEAR of superior quality and desirable patterns at moderate prices Also a generous selection of Knitted Wool and Silk Mufflers, Wool Hose and smaller accessories for men. Js J" .. - Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for any issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who hasefull charge of all news to be printed that night. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1920. :-: TINKER & COMPANY Night Editor-RENAUD SHERWOOD 0 ., Clothes, Furnishings and Hats KNOW YOUR UNIVERSITY Michigan was the first university in America to admit women, that policy having been adopted in 1870 under the acting presidency of Dr. Henry Simmons Frieze. THE GOOD OLD WISH At last the time has come. Trunks stuffed, books shelved, presents packed, ground snow- blanketed, minds wandering, general good humor; everything points to vacation. Study is a matter of the past, and leisure reigns supreme. So let the winds and the firelogs roar. What are we going to do? Eat, sleep, and let joy be unrestrained for two glorious weeks. And then? We are going to come back strong, laden with money for the pool and prospects of good men for Michigan in the fall. We are going to bring these back as a little present for Michigan, a proof and pledge of our unfailing loyalty.A Six days from now the Yule log will blaze mer- rily away in its fireplace, a thousand times reflected in the scintillating myriads of dancing Christmas tree baubles. In England we suppose the prover- bial boar's head, dressed in a savory fashion, will lie garnished on the festive board, while monocled lords will sip their yellow ale in toast to Santa Clas. Christmas, with all it denotes, is only six days off. By means of tedious elaboration and much painstaking our sentiments on this occasion might be made clear in a more original way. But no ex- position could be quite as eloquent in the expres- sion of what we want to say as the reiteration of that traditional phrase - The Daily wishes every man and woman of Michigan a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. EYE TO EYE "Convocation was never like this !" That was the thought which came spontaneously to the minds of the more than four thousand stu- dents who crowded into Hill auditorium Friday afternoon largely out of a sense 6f duty, half ex- pecting the same kind of an academic atmosphere and the same scholarly, balanced rhetoric of simi- lar occasions in the past - and then found, within the first minute of President Burton's address, that 'all-at once the old tradition was to take a new sig- nificance, that something vital to them, to every loyal Michigan man and woman, to every good citizen who knows the value and need of educa- tion, was being told them in the straightforward fashion with which the President commands in- terest. No amount of statistics could have depicted so convincingly the crowding needs of the Univer- sity, accumulated through two decades in which the state's college education has failed of proper recog- nition and reasonable support. Graphically, one by one, the overwhelming mass of facts took shape and form until, with the President, we realized the inadequacy of the present, saw with him the ab- solute necessity of the pared-down and essential nineteen millions budget, and looked eye to eye with him into the future when a Michigan meet- SOUTH STATE ST. AT WILLIAM ST. jYYi~ .)~ ~ 1~ ..," Said little Miss Sputter, (A pert miss is she) A hair on the head Is worth two in the butter. The Co-ed's Lament turn backward, oh Time in thy in by ten-thirty tonight. Backward,1 Let me get Dear Noah: My last year's overcoat is worn out. What can I do with it? T. H -Rifty Nothing to do, I guess, except to take it down to the Union cloakroom and get a good one for it. The Formula To win affection from, a man Requires profound sagacity; To win the love of woman Takes considerable audacity. Angelena has just written us a scathing Phillipic because of our attempt to scrape an acquaintance with this fair contributor. Well, to show you, Ang, that we, too, can be magnanimous we only wish that you have just as happy and joyful a Christmas 'as we know we are going to - we live too far away to go home and have to remain in Ann Arbor for the occasion. As was probably noted by our readers in glanc- ing over our picture which was reprinted a while back, we are a little inclined to baldness. This fact affords our girl much amusement and whenever the conversation lags she always lights on this Achilles heel of our makeup. The other night she starts in by asking: "Jack, what is it that's causing your baldness?" When we did not even deign a reply she comes back again with: "Don't you suppose it is theresult of your exer- cising your brain too much ?" By this time we had reached the end of our patience and so acting as though a great light had suddenly dawned on us we replied: "You're probably right. That undoubtedly ex- plains then why so few girls on the campus are growing whiskers." And then we went into the clinch. Famous Closing Lines "Ha, a Christmas box," he muttered as he saw the father whack his son's ears on Christmas morn. NOAH COUNT.