"THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY FEATURE SECTION Published every Sunday as a supplement to e regular news section of The Michigan aily. Contributions must be in the hands of the litor by Wednesday previous to the date of esired publication. All communications or contributions mustE e signed as an indication of good faith. SLIM-What's a Lump Among] be I% so C JtO} F IT WASN'T 1 M SORRY MRS FEEL.- " T341S PIPE SCANT } BUT IF SICK MY 'rEET DON'T NAVE M :21 CFIATTER HEAT W E.' LL. TO MOVE 42 1 c ( . - to o SORE r-u, NACT ' NOT WSEV FrTH1OSE NAVE t- STW EEK OYS t N OT HIN CT ~~tii Sunday Editor.... Joseph A. Bernstein Assistants E.P. Lovejoy Thomas H. Adams W. W. Ottaway Byron Darnton John I. Dakin Literary Editor............Stewart T. Beach Theatres....................Edwin R. Miess (By E. R. 1.) The prize boner of the week was pulled by the fellow ,who said that Pauline Frederick was playing at the Maj. in "Madame Ten." Nearly everything has taken a drop, but B. V. D.'s are still out of sight. There was a young lady from Po- ,dunk, Her uncle she met, he was sodrunk; You're head-strong, she said, At least strong in your head, 'Cause yor breath knocked me down when you blodunk. 1. Do you know that a State street jewelry store -has to change its name? 2. What one? 1. Hailer and Fooler. COURTSHIP In 3 Volumes Book 1. Contemplation. Admiration.S Flirtation.-l Infatuation. S . . 4 I 1 Book 2. Inspiration. Invitation. Hesitation. Perspiration. Refutation. Damnation. Humiliation. Book 3. Demoralization. Dissipation. Realization. Conciliation. Restoration. Visitation. Acceptation. Exultation. Conjugation. Finish: r rigorous, and becomes habitually painstaking, and accurate, so that this exactitude will hold for any set of facts, under any conditions. To be sure, there are fundamental abc's that must be known, just as one must know the multiplication table, but this is subordinate. Now take a glimpse into the college itself, and judge whether it is narrow gauge, or standard. Is the practice of electing studies in other colleges discouraged? Last semester, enrollment blanks for approximately 200 subjects not of- fered in the engineering college were necessary to take care of the demand for cultural electives,'and the election of these subjects was encouraged and advised by members of the faculty! Speaking of culture, there is an in- novation in store for the "lit" who blindfolded, might be beguiled into the halls of the engineering building, and unbandaged in the office of the Dean. Culture? Art? Beauty? His- tory? All of these and more will be found embodied in the decorations. If the Dean has a few moments, and the student is interested, further revela- tions await" him in the sort of prob- lems that the bigger men of this col- lege like-and are able-to think about. Admittedly Practical The play hours of these men are not concerned with the stress of bridge girders, nor is their imagination con- fined to the erection of power plants. On the other hand, the engineer is, admittedly practical. He has to be. His standards are, to a great extent, monetary. But his ambitions are not. They include something bigger, and vastly more important-doing a serv- ice, and doing it well. There is one other point in which the engineers bear * most favorable comparison with other professions. Their .professors can practice what they preach. A trite phrase but an adequate one. More and more are these men com- ing into prominence, not as builders, but as citizens. And I think it no error in saying that the goal, for which the faculty are aiming in the teaching of the students, is a training, not only in engineering, but in living. Living hon- estly, adequately, and with a sense of responsibility to others. Friends? STUDENT CRITIC THE ;uv " oMAKE S YSE LANDALALES GAME AR SAMEPLAYE.1 HUNCH ATSMEr(Continued from Page One) * Paradise" one must wonder, if he wonders about the book at all, just o1what there is to it. - For one thing, Fitzgerald is one of - the first chroniclers of this era of O alleged "jazz-madness' which may have had its origin anywhere-in the war, prohibition, fussing or in a dozen different things, and, perhaps, the book fills a niche as a more or less authentic history of a type of life which is surely prevalent in all of our LME LUt' larger cities. Its story typifies the unrest which seems to be a part of the life of every undergraduate, as f A lTrouble well as of prep school youths and maidens, who at the. tender age when Is . nded-AsTh one would suppose them to be safe at SIt home by the fireside or in bed, are, instead, cavorting about in this new "night-life" of America, donning even- (By Dr. Tom Lovell) ing clothes at twelve, and learning 1. all of the little follies which have Let us go right back in history till late years, characterized only an To see where the trouble come in, older generation. For there stood ADAM and EVE Played Hunch To show how the trouble begins. To repeart, the book is clever, and its style gives promilse of better things to 3. come, a promise which, Fitzgerald has When one starts out quite innocent, sadly belied in a later collection of How they are tempted to get to know short-stories, "Flappers and Philoso- And they'll never rest until they find phers," and in other short-stories The knowledge in searching so. which have appeared from time to 3. time in current magazines. Fitzger- All right then, about the J-Hop, ald is not a genius, nor is he a prodigy Where the good and the bad comes in -he is simply a clever boy who had a That's where the trouble lays "happy hunch" and played it, made In the one that will commit sin. his mark immediately, and then, un- less later wirks change his present 4. attitude, passed by forever any future Loyalty and confidence in combination claim which he may have to recogni- By putting one's foot down to say, tion from the world of letters. I'll play the man and stand like a rock, The J-Hop will only come back that Michigan Daily liners bring re- way. sults.--Adv. PurOFsSIO f STICK SLIPPING is VENERABLEI (Continued from Page One) set of facts, we earn a method Simple isn't it? learn them, and then for their application.. But this training is i i -- -_ i I- WEDNESDAY - SATURDAY DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS IN "The Mark of Zorro" MUSICAL PROGRAMME OVERTURE ORPHEUS - - OFFENBACH SELECTION FROM G. PUCINNI'S "LA BOHEME" I _ Ho B* WARNER and HAROLD LLOYD REMEMBER. S "One Hour Before Dawn" H. B. WARNER "When We Were Twenty-One" The Screen 's Best-Dressed Star II N DI N1 D A 6High and Dizzy" Harold od Number,Pieas u9 Speckrl t. :v - '-- Clean, snappy, original comedy. Lloyd makes the voices with a Lloyd gets a laugh and a kiss smile, ring with laughter. where others get only a laugh. Connect your smiles with Lloyd. t T U E S DI A Y A I Twenty-One Candles- His sweetheart and guardian wait in vain, while the boy, burning the candle at both ends, flings his youth in the flame of folly and responds to the lure of an experienced woman. This boy must be savedx-but how? It's a battle of youth against experience. Y