THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, _ 014r,3ckigRat ll 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. 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 be published in The Daily at the discretion of the Editor, if :eft at or mailed to The D~aily 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 sentiment- pressed in the communications. "What's Going On" notices will not be received after 8 o'clu' , on the evening preceding insertion. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 %1ANAGING EDITOR .... GEORGE O bROPHV JR Jews Editor .... .Chest °: M Campe T. H. Adams H. W. litchcock B. P. Campbell J. E. McManis J. .' Dakin T W Sargent. Jr Renaud Sherwood .. ... Bernstem -,unday Editor.... ............J..Brstu Editorials..............Lee Woodruff, L. A. Kern, T. Whinery assistant News.,............ ....-. ----.. ...E. .o e o Jr; Sports .............................. .........Robert tAng~i W omen's Editor............. ... -...... . - Mary D Lal elegrapb. ........West Ga llogi relescope ...,... ............ ..................Jack W Kelly Josephine Waldo Paul G. Weber FElizabeth Vickery G. E. Clark ,eorgeReindel Dgrothy Monfort Harry B. Grundy Frances Oberhotzer Robert E. Adams George L. Stone Assistants Thomas EFDewey Wallace F. Elliott Leo J. Hershdorferva Hughston McBain Frank H. McPike J. A. Bacon W. W. Ottaway Paul Watzel J. W. Hume, Jr. Byron Darnton M. A. Klaver E. R. Meiss Walter Donnelly Beata Hasley Kathrine Montgomiei Gerald P. Overton Edward Lambrechi William H. Riley ji. Sara Waller' H. E. Howlett BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER ..........LEGRAND n. GAINES JR. Advertising ......................................D. P. Joyce Zlassifieds......................................Robt. O. Kerr Publication ....................... "................'l'a. M.eath Accounts............................:............,2. Priehs Circulation..........................--.........V. F. Hillery Assistants R. W. Lambrecht P. H Hutchinson N. W. Robertson B. G. Gower F. A. Cross . R. C. Stearnes Sigmund Kunstadter Robt. L. Davis Thos. L. Rice Lester W. Millard M. M. Moule D. G. Slawson .T. Hae J~np r. D. S. Watterworth R. G. Burcheli ening shadow over the expected glorious future of intercollegiate sports. Many men of athletic ability seem to have lost sight of the real purpose of attending a university- the securing of an education. While their motives are of the best, and they give their utmost for their school, it should never become necessary for them to neglect their studies if the game demands it. On the contrary, if the issue finally narrows down to the point where the athlete must give all his time to his studies in order to prevent him from fail- ing in his courses, it would be much more advisable fo'r him to resort to this extreme than to continue his athletic work. Eligibility rules seem hard, but they are based on a just balancing of first and second things in college life. The student who, fav- ored in the matter of nerve and brawn, idles along and becomes ineligible, is not only disloyal to the University which might use his ability on diamond, track, or gridiron; he is doing himself the greatest ill turn of all. As Coach Yost exprssed it at a "Big Ten" smoker recently held in Pittsburgh, "Sports are all right in their place, but at-a university they are only a side issue. Studies come first, and then ath- letics." MORE INTEREST IN HOCKEY Michigan's informal hockey team opened its second season of prominence Wednesday night in a 1iastilv-arrancoed game with the Rayls of Detroit and in the period of play annexed the first victory of the year and skated off the rink floor' with a score of 4 to 2 marked up to its credit. Hockey as a recognized sport wasinaugurated here one year ago and during the winter of 1919 and 1920 saw a most successful season, winning all five games played. One of those defeated by the Wolverine squad was the strong Waterston ag- gregation of Detroit and this afternoon that same industrial team returns to Apn Arbor to try for a retaliation. It should be a fast, interesting contest, with hard playing to be done if the Maize and Blue squad is to win. Student support should'be a big factor for vic- tory, At the game Wednesday night there were only some zo spectators present to view the match. One hundred enthusiasts can make quite a bit of noise, but the team deserves better backing in numbers than that. Hockey is a decidedly inter- esting game, a form of sport combining speed, skill, and snap, and no one can consider his time wasted in viewing a contest such as that which the Wolver- ine skate and puck artists staged Wednesday night. The fact that the hockey team is for the present an informal aggregation is no reason for consider- ing that it does not represent us as does a Varsity squad. It is made up of Michigan men and is play- ing for the honor of the University, and we owe it our allegiance. With the right kind of boosting, this informal squad will soon be headed to recog- nition as a Varsity or minor sport. All out to the Coliseum this afternoon! Caruso's physicians declare that his illness has seriously impaired his singing, but his wife says that he will sing again in a few days. The woman must have the last word. ~ IThe Telescope Our occasional flippant reference to the School of Music has brought forth the following stirring defense of that institution: I r DETROIT UNITED LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 1920 Betweeni Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Limited and Express cars leave for Detroit at 6:05 a. mn., -'7:05 a. mn., 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-7:5 0a. m., and 12:10 p.m. I, x kY OR CO VENIENCE TWO SCHOOLS A COMPLETE LINE OF DIARIES AND DESK CALENDARS AT uRAHAAIM 9S JANUARY S 1 T W T 2 3 9 10 16 17 23 24 30 31 4 11 18 25 5 12 19 26 4$ 13 20 27 F S 1 7 8 14 15 21 22 28 29 WUERTH - NICKELS Bsoth E nds of the Diagonal Walk ARCADES I1 Men: Last season's hats turn- ed inside out, refinished and re- blocked with all new trimmings look just like new, wear justtas long and saves you five to ten dollars. We do only high class work. Factory Hat Store, 617 Packard St. Phone 1792. 11 AI 'f J. J"WAICA J.. White Polo Shirts FOR STUDENTS - $2.25 GEORGE KYER HALSEY'S DANCE STUDIOS 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 be printed that night. SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1921. Night Editor-RENAUD SHERWOOD. THE I4EALTH MONOPOLY What has become of the high code of ethics which the layman is led to believe is the charac- teristic of the medical profession?. Doctors, we had supposed, were men of high ideals whose great- est wish was to serve humanity in its hours of dis- ease-ravaged torture. Certainly the plan of Pres- ident Marion L. Burton which contemplates an en- largement of the hospital facilities of the Univer- sity so that its benefits may be conferred upon a larger number of the people of the state, would seem to fall in with the expressed purposes of the medical profession and presumably with the ends of medical men. Such is not the case, if we may judge by the re- ception accorded the plan by the physicians of the state who gathered at the Union last week. Of the four doctors who commented on the extension, three were dead against it and one 'approved with reservations." The opposition laid great stress on the fact that the state would be entering into an un- justifiable competition with the medical profession. How long has the health of the state been a com- modity to be traded in by some specially designated class for their personal economic advantage? Are the ethics of the profession fallen to so low a level that the doctors prefer to have others suffer through insufficient equipment, merely because an increase in that 'equipment might Fconceivably result in eco- nomic disadvantage to individt al practitioners here and there throughout the state? The supposition that President Burton is work- ing toward the sort of state medicine which, through stifling competition, has hurt the profes- sion in England, appears utterly without founda- tion. Anyone knowing the facts about results of such a system would flee from it; and the Univer- sity has no plan to run dead ahead into such a mis-. take. To derive a .conclusion of this sort from the desire to extend the splendid hospital work of the University within reach of others seems rather a pretext than a genuine reason. Is it not high time that the vague protestations of high idealism which emanate semi-occasionally from the medical profession be examined to de- termine whether they are camouflage or merely the product of idle speculation on what things would be like if-they were what they ought to be. If the standards really are as high as physicians and sur- geons would have us believe, can the stand taken by the speakers at the convention be reconciled to them? F' 11 WUERTH - Arcades - NICKELS SEE 100 PATTERNS MEYER TAILOR I a a fmmJ~ These cold days TYSON A bag of fresh Candy GOLF AND POLO WHITE OXFORD SHIRTS Nothing tastes better. $2.95 1921 Spring Price Some ridicule the Music school, It's the cause of much distress. Such noise, such trills, such scrapes On nerves are sure a test. Yet who would not prefer this din To a poor hand at the "uke"? A much bewailing saxophone Cr a frosh just learning flute? and squeaks It has food value. TINKER & COMPANY ii S. State St. at William St. All of our stock has been reduced to meet the new scale of prices It gives . _ ,W.... Signs on a Combined Movie Theater and Office Building DR. BEBANS - DENTIST "DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES" You're right, Clarice, when you say that influence is what you think you have until you try to use it. This one, also, is remarkably well preserved in spite of its years. First stude-You didn't know who I was this morning, when you passed me on the campus. Second ditto-Is that so? Well, who were you? The Near Humorist The bird, who when somebody asks how you can make soft water hard, replies, "Freeze it." Dear Noah: Is betting, as so many doctors claim, really inju- rious to the health? R. B. L. Yes. We have heard many fellows who have been betting on our basketball team complain that something was wrong with their system. Why Is It That At the sight of a girl with a chamois y No one laughs the louder Than the bird who instead of a shave Covers his beard with powder. Famous Closing Lines "Crocked again," he muttered as the flowerpot hit him. NOAH COUNT. you pep. 0 You will find Schrafft's Morse s Spoehr's the best to buy. j,11111111111f111111111 II I 11111111 111 li 1ii 1 Gennett Records.= For 'February = INCLUDES A LARGE VARIETY OF I- POPULAR DANCE PIECES 4657 DARLING .....................(Fox Trot) GRIEVING FOR YOU..........(Fox Trot) GREEN BRO'S. NOVELTY BAND 4658 MARGIE ..,.. ................. (Fox Trot) NIGHTINGALE ...............(Fox Trot) VERNON TRIO-INSTRUMENTAL 4655 BROADWAY ROSE .............(Fox Trot) CARESSES... .................(Fox Trot) = JOE COLEMAN'S PRESIDENT ORCHESTRA AND MANY OTHERS - S - ~C V. PHONOGRAPH SHOP A 640 HAVEN AVE. FORMERLY 12TH ST. t llllltllllilllt11Nll tl111Iltitillt t l 1111 1ttlu itllalliflli 1intiti .5 FIRST THINGS FIRST That college athletics have played an important role in the establishment of a spirit of friendly riv- alry among the- educational institutions of this country is a fact which none can deny. That the man who makes a name for himself and the school he represents on the gridiron, baseball field, bas- ketball court or cinder track, fully deserves the honors which he merits by dint of consistent prac- tice and diligent observance of strict training rules, is also an admitted fact. Of late years, however, the matter has taken on a more serious aspect, and in large measure seems to cast a threat- '.illlilll 709 North University Ave.