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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.

October 14, 1920 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1920-10-14

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THE MICHIG I

60

OFFICIAL NXWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday during the Univer.
Pity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associared Press is exclusively entitled to the use for
republication ofall news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and the local news published therein.
Entered at the postoffice at An Arbor, Michigan, as second
eleis matter.
Subsription by carrier or sail. $3.50.
Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street.
Phones: Business, 9A6; lEditcrial, 2414.
Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig-
nature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evince of
faith, -and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the
discretion of the Editor, if left at or mail t. The Daily office.
Unsigned communications will reeeive no consideration. N o man-
ascript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage.
'le Dail.y does not necessarily endarse the sentiments ex-
pres d the communications.
rhat'shGoig On" oticeis will not be received after 8 o'oleck
en the evening pueceding insertion.
EDITORIAL STAYM
Telephone 2414,
MANAGING EDITOR ...........GEORGE Q. BROPHY, JR.
News Vditor .. . ........ . .. . ........ . .... Chesser M. Campbcll
Night Editor -
gT. H. Adams H. W. Hitchcock
J. A. Bernstein J. lj,. McManis
Br P. Campbell T. W. Sargent, Jr.
J.. 1. Dakin
Editorials........Lee Woodrug, Robert Sage, C. H. Murchison
sports. .... ........................... .Robert Angell
Assistant ,News..... ,.. .......................LIovejoy
Women's Editor.................................Mary I. Lane
Telegraph . . . . . . .............................West Gallogly
Assistants
Josephine Waldo Thomas J. Whinery Harry B. Grundy
Paul G. Weber R. W. Wrobleski Winefred Biethan
Alinenaa T3 rlow-. George Reindel IR~hert D. Sag9
Elizabeth Vickery Dorothy Monfort Marion Nichols
G. E. Clark Minnie Muskatt Frances Oberholtzer
BIJSINE S STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAiGER ..........LEGRAND A. GAINES, JR.
Advertising......... ............. D. P. Joyce
Credits and Classified Ads........................ W. Rawlings
Publication ...... ........................P. 1M. Heath
Accounits........................... R. Prielhs
Circulation........................ ...........C. P. Schneider
a Assistants
R. W. Ladbracht B. G. Gower Lester W.Millard
Robert O. Kerr Sigmund Kunstadte- V. F. Hillery

i

The night editors for this week will be: Monday
night, Hugh Hitchcock; Tuesday night, T. W.
Sargnt, Jr.; Wednesday night, B. P. Campbell
Thursday night, T. H. Adams; Friday nightJ. I.
Dakin; Saturday night, J. A. Bernstein.
Persons wishing to secure in~ormatin concerning nws for ay,
issue of The Daily should see the night editor, who ha full charge
of all news to be printed that night.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1920.
KNOW YOUR UNIVERSITY
There are eleven deans, one hundred and forty-
nine professors, forty associate professors, ninety
assistant professors, one hundred and eighty in-
strucors, and one hundred and thirty-one demon-
strators and assistants listed in Michigan's faculty.
TODAY - A TURNING POINT
So fmany event and activities are constantly o-
curring on Michigan's campus that we often fail
to realize the importance of some of ther unti
they are over. Today is a day of vast signifeance
in the history of the University. Michigan will in-
augurate its fourth president.
We are now entering a new bra of growth and
progress,-eaterig it under the guidance of a man
Whos ability as a leader has been strikingly em-
onstrated. President Burton has already made us
feel that he is *ne of us, that our interests are his
interests, and that he will deyete himself whole-
heartedly to the promotion of our welfare. We have
stet him and heard him speak and we feel c fi-
Aet that, in k h'dhds, the futire of the Univer-
sity is full of plromise. Coinag at a critical. in-
went in our growth-when we must either expand
into one of the largest and most important institu-
tions in the .country or be doomed to a period of
mediocrity-he has, in his short time on our cam-
pus, shown that he is the right man for the po-
sition of president of Michigan.
As has already been announced, there will be no
classes today; and tomorrow's classroom program
will be more or less broken up. But this. is no rea-
son for a general exodus. On the contrary, it is
the duty of every loyal Michigan student to re-
main in Ann Arbor and take some part in the cere-
monies. There will be a place for everyone for,
although the seating capacity of Hill auditorium
will be inadequate for the occasion, it is expected
that those unable to obtain admission will pay their
tribute to the new president by joining in the ih-
augural procession.
The educational conference to be held here to-
day and tomorrow will offer an excellent opportu-
nity for hearing some of the country's molt em
inent men speak on subjects which they have mad
their life study. This conference, coming appro-
priately with the openifIg of Michgan's new era, is
open to the student body and will be of much gen
ui ae benefit to those attending.
Today is a turning point on Michigan's histor-
eal calendar. Let us do our part by staying in
fown and participating in the inauguration exr-
cses.
ACTION
The fricdon of men in action is the power that
seads the world pounding aead over the rails of
progress. Men's minds are fill of; brilliant ideas,
and their fulfillouent is the stuff of all industrial
and scientific advancement; but too few of them
ever see the light of day. Bell had the idea of in-
venting -a telephone, butif the idea had not been
backed by the power to coivert it ato action, some-

one else would have claimed the credit for this
great invention.
Many students have ideas and aspirations that are
good, but they fail to put them into practice. A re-
sponsible campus position, a place in athletics, or a
"B average" is not obtained by dreaming, but by
working.
Remeber, "There is no greater epitome to a
mans efforts than the simple words, 'it is done.'
PRODUCTION IN ENGINEERING
Although one other state university has for
some time employed a system in her engineering
college for teaching a system of manufacture to
the engineering students, it is a significant fact that
Michigan is the first university to institute such a
systemi on the basis of quantity production. Per-
fection of product is a comparatively simple objecc-
tive for t e average well-traied engineer to reach;
but it is a generally accepted fact that the average
-college gradua'te in any of theengineering Melds
knows little of the economic problems involved in
manufacture and is comparatively unfitted to han-
die executive positions in industrial plants.
In these days of big business, production is the
main issue, and the more the efficiency with which
we can make a useful article, the greater will be
our profits. Quantity production is essential, and
it is a notable advance that Michigan makes in
teaching its secrets in her engineering shops.
DO A MACSWINEY
The facts appearing every day concerning the
MacSwiney hunger strike give rise to a new angle
in the reduction of the cost of living. For if the
good Lord Mayor is resting in an improved condi-
tion after his sixtieth day of fast, the only possible
supposition to be derived therefrom is that the
Mayor of Cork is getting used to total abstinence
and will soon be back in his former good health
minus the bad habit of taking food.
So why not all of us try the MacSwiney hunger
system? If we do, the restaurant owners will soon
starve .oo, and if we are able to hold out long
enough, we should surely get rid of that bother-
some and expensive habit of eating which has trou-
bled and encumbered man from the very beginning.
A QUESTION OF RULES
The new rooming committee of three appointed
by the president of the University to settle room-
ing disputes will act on the basis of rules laid down
by the University. It has no intention of spending
time in abstract discussion of sentimental considera-
tions drawing students to other rooms, any more
than it has time to argue with landladies who feel
that a new need for their rooms justifies them in
raising prices above their contract.
The law on the matter, as heretofore enforced,
has been that a price contracted for on a room must
be upheld, unless exorbitant, and that the student
4vho takes a room must stay in it for the year. Many
cases of flagrant disregard of the second rule by
students have come to the committee's attention,
and often it has teen only too apparent that the
parties concerned were ignorant of the rules.
The committee is formed to see toit that stu-
dents get their full rights, and not in order to up-
hold them in breaking the rules. That they may be
sure of such a guarantee against injustice and ex-
orbitaht prices is in itself a great step forward, and
should be regarded so by the student body
Thne Telescope
ow Well We Know
Senior engineer-Who wrote the song "Pull
Your Shades Down, Mary Ann"?
Senior law-I don't know, but I imagine it must
have been some studious bird who hated distrac-
tica and who lived near some sorority.
Epitaph
Here rests my wife

And may the amgels keep
My dear from talking
In her sleep.
"All other darymen and baggage handlers in the
city report an increase in volume of business."-
From th* Daily.
And then some wag wanted to know if they
weren't cowed by this great increase.
Dear Noah :
I am going with a co-ed and just to flatter her I
mean to tell her that she is pretty in more ways
than one, Can you help me out of this dilemma?
F. Usser.
Why aot begin by telling her that she is pretty
in two ways-pretty ugly and pretty liable to stay
that way.
We wish it distictly understood at this time that
our girl comes from a very good family, a fact she
is always trying to impress on us. The other night
she remarked fo us, "I want you to know that I was
born with a silver spoon In my mouth."
At her words we carefully noted the size of said
organ and then remarked, "Are you sure, darling,
it wasn't a soup ladle?"
But enough of this painful subject.
Famous Closing Lines
"An old head on young shoulders," he muttered
as he saw the elderly spinster and the student
spooning in the parlor.
NOAH COUNT.

-w''

Both Ends of Diagonal Walk

I

t .. . ...._. ...
--_

DETROIT UNITED LINES
In Effect Jane 14, 120
Between
Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson
(Eastern Standard Time)
Llimited and Express cars leave for
Detroit at 6:10 a. m. and hourly to
9:10 p. m.
Lhmiteds to Jackson at 8:48 a. m. and
every two hours to 8:48 p. mn. Ex.
presses at 9:48 a. m. and every two
hours to 9:48 p. in.
Locals to Detroit-5:55a.m., 7:00 a.m.
and every two hours to 9:00 p. m.,
also 11:00 p. mn. To Ypsilanti only,
11:40 p.m., 12:25 a.m. and 1:10 a.m.
Locals to Jackson-7:50 a. m., and
12:10 p.m.
OCTOBER
S M T W T F S
1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
17 18 19 20 21 22 2
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
30
Meu*: 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 1712.
ANNOUNCEMENT!
Mr. and Miss Moses announce the
re-opening of their dancing classes j
for University men and women in the
Nickels" Arcade Dance Hall. Enroll
Monday or Tuesday evening, 7:15 to
8:15, Oct. 18 and 19. Classes will be
held for advanced students and be-
ginners. Private lessons by appoint-
ment. Call 1545-W for further inform-
anion.-Adv.
:V5I li11111111 l I 111111 llli11 1111I iil
ZION 'E
LUTH ERAN
* CH URCH
5 5th Ave. and Washington
- '
Reception to all
-
-Lutheran
Students
= Friday, (Oct.- 15
s 1
8_10 P. M

ARATURE MARE CR.
A school, Room 27--No. 8 W.
Warren, Detroit
Woul you like a try out?

il

S'kee p Anypia ce But
Eat at fez's
THE CLUB LUNCH
7 2 ARBOR STREET
Near State and Packard

AHTWO STORES
hooks and Supplies for all Colleges at'
both. Stores

I

Mks. Fox was bragging one day about the
large number of her cubs.
"How many- cubs do you bring into the
world at one time?" she asked the LIONESS.
"Only ONE," replied the Lioness-- = it
MURADS COST 20 CENTS for a BOX
of 10-BUT THEY'RE MURADS!
MURADS would be lower priced if we left out all
or part of the 100% Turkish tobaccos of the purest and
best varieties grown-or if we substituted inferior grades
of Turkish tobacco.
But they wouldn't be MURADS-they'd only be
Foxes!

"Judge for Yourself-

.1ss

Specia attention is called
#o Murad 24s in TinBoles

t'450
;rt arkt ln
.. x.-:..

z

'-7-77-

rA

No Use Wearing That Old Suit Any Longer
When you can purchase Hand Tailored Made to Measure
Kahn Tailored Clothes at these Attractive Prices
EVERY GARMENT MADE TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL MEASURE

NEW PRICES:

$37.50
$49.00
$55.00
$60.00

'i
"4'
r!

The Kahn Tailoring Co. is-
sued 'orders Oct. 9th to all of
their agents to reduce the
price on their entire line.
This PRICE REDUCTION
takes effect immediately.
This reduction not only
means that they have reduced
their price, but that we are
expected to reduce our profit
at the same time.
This will mean a saving to
you of an average of 25 per
cent on our entire line.

Place your orders early as
this aplendid assortment of
Imported and Domestic Wool-
ens will not last long at these
pricey.

)nknMecaure
AGENTS
TINKER 'I COMPANY
So. State St. at William St.CCothes, Furnishings and Hats

- - --_

.

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