OIN IN WELCOMING ALUMNI AND O.S.U. IN A k I WEATHER tAND WARNER TODAY I 0,4r 3k i4rn lIati ASSOCIATE PRESS DAY AN PNI GHT SERVICE VOL. XXXII. No. 24 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1921 PRICE FIVE U* 5 9RAILBOARD TKES ATION TO PREVENT TRIKE CRISIS- IN NEGOTIATIONS IS MET BY ORDER OF GOVERNMENT TO STOP WALKOUT CONFERENCE SET FOR OCT.26 BETWEEN HEADS Move is Result of Advice From Wash. Ington That All Agencies Would. Support Demand (By Associated Press) Chicago, Oct. 21.-The government today moved to prevent a railroad strike and to enforce obedience by both union and railroads of decrees of the United States labor board, the board formally announcing that it had received 'full . jurisdiction in the rail crisis and ordering the workers not to strike, pending a.conference of union heads and rail chiefs, which is called for Oct. 26. Decide After Oct. 80 A decision from this conference will not be announced until after Oct. 30, the scheduled strike date, board mem- bers said, declaring that in this way a walkout will be averted unless the unions defy the -board's orders not to strike pending a ruling. The action was taken following the receipt from Washington of informa- tion that every interested branch of the government would back the board in its attempt to settle the rail. dif- ficulty, members declared. Men Strike Tommorw Trainmen on the International and Great Northern, a Texas road, yester- day decided to carry out their plans to strike tomorrow and the maintenance of ways in the firemen's union, repre- senting 400,000 rail workers announc- ed here that they would join the pro- posed walkout Oct. 30. These two groups are part of the 11 unions num- bering three-fourths of the nation's rail employees which have voted to strike but have not issued the strike call If the unions choose to carry thorugh strike plans, members of the board said the next move would have to come from Washington, intimating that today's action exhausted their at- tempt to furnish the teeth with the transporation act. STUDENTS TO BEAR FROST ON OCT. 29 Robert Frost, the well known poet, now resident in Ann Arbor, will speak to the Unitarian Young Peoples' For- um of Religion, Oct.. 29, on the sub- ject of "What Do We Mean by Essen- Vials?" At the personal request of Mr. Frost the attendance will be limited to members of the organization. This is one of a series of lectures to be delivered to the members on the general subject, "Essentials of Life," which is to be the theme for the year. A large variety of subjects for lectures to be delivered during the course of the year mark the program of the or- ganization.- During the spring months a formulation of the essentials of life will be drawn up from the material gleaned from the lectures, and pub- lished. WEARING OF COLORS AT 0.S. U. GAME TODAY IS ADVOCATED BEST DECORATEDC, HOUSE TO GET. CUP The industrious drapers of the bunting have not labored in vain. In addition to the pure pleasure of be- ing "dressed up", some one of the fraternity houses or house clubs will soon be in possession of an attractive silver loving cup as a reward for its decorative ability. The awarding of the prize will be under the supervi- sion of the Student council and the Homecoming day committee. The prize was obtained through the joint contributions of the Blu-Maize Blossom shop, Arcade Jewelry com- pany, Calkins-Fletcher Drug com- pany, Quarry Drug company, Busy Bee resturant, and Wagner and com- pany. NO CRALOWED NEAR0 FOOTBALL FIELD TOAY SPECIAL PARKING SPACE PRO, VIDED BY HIGH SCHOOL GROUNDS Traffic regulations for tomorrow as issued by the police department will close up State street from Monroe street to McKinley avenue to all ve- hicles. Parking around the Union will also be prohibited and no cars will be allowed to approach within one block of Ferry field. Park at Wines Field The most convenient localities for parking will be the streets branclling off State street, but as parking room is limited, all townspeople who have homes at a short distance from the field are asked to walk and save the space near the football grounds for those who are visiting from out of town. Wines field, the high school athletic grounds, which may be reached from State street through Hoover or.-Hill street, will be thrown open to parking at a cost of 50 cents per car. This cost will include check- ing and core of car during the game.; The field will take care of approxi- mately 500 cars. Use Nearest Entrance Four special inclined entrances and exits have been arranged to handle he crowd when entering and leav- ng the field and the athletic officials wish to emphasize the necessity for{ using the entrance nearest the seats occupied. HOMECOMING DAY You have come back to the spot that you love. It has a permanent place in your heart. It nurtured you while you were changed from a boy into a man. It transformed the high school girl into the college woman. Michigan is in very truth your Alma Mater. On this campus you took your first chances at real life. Those four years were packed full of experiences which gradually enabled you to find out something about yourself and the world. You have idealized your University. It means more to you than you would care to express. It really seems like home. You belong here! Today is your home-coming!? So we do not need to welcome you. That would be too for- mal. You are glad to be told that it seems tremendously good to all of us to have you come back. We hope that the old home will please you. Do not let externals disillusion you. It is the same fine place that you came to and that you left. It must change, just as it changed while you were here. You may not have realized it but you did not leave the same university that you entered. Do not forget that the youngster you once were is running around the campus somewhere today. If you keep your eyes open you will encounter him or her almost anywhere. Just fre- quent your old haunts, meet yourself, look yourself straight in the eye and see what a real boy or girl you were -- and are. It is worth while to renew your youth whetner you graduated in 1921 or 1871. Someone once suggested that no man is a man who has lost all the boy out of him. Remember, too, that genuine sportsmanship makes real men and women. You know now from actual experience what the college man or woman is learning during a day such as this. They see that a man must get into the game for all that he is worth; that rules must be obeyed; that only thorough-going team work will meet the test; that the best man knows how to lose and that to the bitter end he plays to win.. Behind and beyond the game these qualities will make our University a true home for manhood and womanhood. American citizens will be developed here. We count upon your support in making your university home a place where these qualities will thrive. May this day, on and off the field, add true glory to the name of Michigan! M. L. BURTON, President. REVENGE FOR TWO SUCCESSIVE DEFEATS SOUGHT BY VARSI1TY IN STATE BATTLE THIS AFTERNO CALL 960 FOR SCORES t Results of today's football games will be given out from the business office of The Daily after BuIRTON *-OUTLINES ED0UCATION'S AIM BE FORE PRESSMEN SAYS DEVELOPMENT OF UNIVER- SITY LIFE IS VITAL PART OF AMERICA DUTY TO MICHIGAN WILL REQUIRE GREAT EFFORT Opens with Expressions of Thanks to Editors for Support Before Legislature' ANNOUNCES ENTRY HALF OWNER OF DETROIT NEWS WILL ENGAGE IN IT'S OPERATION CALLS SMALL PAPERS MORAL POLICE OF U.S. Will Give University Publicity in itorial Columns of All His Papers Ed-N Ann Arbor Music Week Ends With Concert Tonight Michigan's first Music week will come to a close with the program at 8 o'clock tonight in Pattengill audi- torium. Interest shown this week by the Ann Arbor public proves that as i whole it is interested in music for everyone and it is hoped here, as elsewhere, that the week can be an an-, nual event. Features of tonight's program are the choir of the First Metodist church, William Wheeler, director; Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler, tenor and soprano; Dor- is Howe, contralto, and the high school orchestra. The orchestra will open the program with several martial selections, among which will be the "Boy Scout March" in honor of the Ann Arbor Boy Scouts, the guests of the evening. Dr. Stalker, of the First Methodist church, will be the four minute speaker and groups of child- ren from Tappan and Eberbach schools will give some songs. ALUMNI ASKED TO HOME OF PRESs BURTON TODAY Characterizing the development of higher education under democracy as the most significant fact in America today, President Marion L. Burton in his address at the banquet of the Press club last night declared that he University must turn out men and women equipped with active mind and resolute character to meet and go through instead of around the prob- lems confronting American civiliza- tion at the present time. W1ll Betray Trust Otherwise, he said, the University will not prove itself worthy of the trust placed in it by the state of Michigan as shown in the appropria- tions granted last spring. Four things are necessary if this end is to be attained, according to President Burton. There must be greater emphasis on the old-fashioned, standards of painstaking accuracy and thoroughgoing scholarship, ac- tive intelligence must be aroused, students must be made to reckon with the present and future, and, finally, they must be able to maintain public confidence through courage to search out the truth. In beginning his speech, President Burton thanked the newspaper men for their support during the Univer- sity's campaign for legislative appro- priations. He assured the editors of the desire of the University authori- ties to co-operate with them in the development of instr'uction in jour- nalism. President Burton's address con- cluded the banquet of the editors. The closing meeting of the convention will be a short business session at 9:30 o'clock this morning. Frost Reception Well Attended More than 50 were present at the reception given last evening by the editorial staff of Whimsies at Betsy Barbour dormitory in honor of Robert Frost. The program was so arrang- ed that the guests, every one of whom was interested in some form of writ- ing for its own sake, were able to speak with the poet on rather infor- mal terms. 7 o'clock tonight. No phones other than 960 will be answered. SPIRIT RUNS HIGN ON EVE OF BATTLE Big Pep Meeting in Hill Auditorium Instills Fight for Ohio State Game CHEERS AND TALKS PROVE THAT MICHIGAN IS READY When cheer leader Al Cuthbert dumped to the platform of Hill audi- torium at 7:30 o'clock last night, the big building was packed with a yell- ing, cheering, coatless mob whose minds knew only one thought-"Fight 'em, Michigan." A ripping locomotive split the air, and the lid was off on what old-timers agreed was one of the most enthusiastic and spirited pep meetings in the history of Michigan. Assistant cheer leaders W. H. Frank- hauser, Jr., '23L, E. K. Pilcher, '23E, and G. A. Heath, '23E, led a cheer each in his own particular style, after which Willis Blasklee, '21L, Introduc- ed Prof. R. K. Immel, of the oratory department. Professor Immel, in a 15 minute talk, kept the crowd alternate- ly laughing and cheering. "Jimmy" Schermerhorn, '18, sports editor of The Daily in 1918, and now a newspaper man in Detroit, came next with an old-time pep speech that brought an ovation from the crowd. An appeal in behalf of the cross country team was made by the cap- tain, F. Pemberthy, '24L, who pointed out the fact that only nine freshmen are out for the yearling cross coun- try team and 20 candidates for the Varsity. "Give Coach Farrell 200 fresh men and he will turn out a team that will be second to none," asserted Pemr herthy. "But it is impossible to make a winning team out of the small num- ber of men now trying out." Capt. R. Jerome "Duke" Dunne and Frank Steketee followed Pemberthy with short talks in which they express ed the fighting spirit that imbues every man on the team, most of whom were already at home sleeping in prepara tion for tomorrow's contest. Coach Yost was called for, but he 'ad disapneared and could not be lo- cated, so the crowd gave him a cheer the band brought the house to its feet frith "The Yellow and Blue," to close the meeting. Band Must Have $500 To Start On Illinois Trip Five hundred dollars must be col- 'ected today if Michigan intends to rend her band to Illinois! Last night approximately $700 was collected. It will take $700 more to send the band. Today you will meet, at various cor- ners of the campus, men with tin pails. They will ask you for a con- tribution. If you wish your band to march thti Illinois field next Saturday, playing the Victors, you will respond. 12 Girls Elected To Mortarboard Mortarboard, national honorary so- ciety for senior women, has elected the following 12 girls to membership. Euphemia Carnahan, Ruth Deemer, Harriet Gustin, Camilla Hayden, Neva Lovewell, Joyce McCurdy, Katherine VISITORS HAVE EDGE ON LINJ WOLVERINE BACKFIELD FASTEST NEW STADIUM EXPECTEE TO ACCOMMODATE 42,0( Buckeyes Claim Team Is Stroge All-around Aggregation Yet Assembled by Wilee When the Wolverines, led by Ca tain "Duke" Dunne, come on Fer field this afternoon to oppose _Obi State in the opening Conferenceba tie of the season they will represe one of the greatest fighting eleve Coach Yost has ever sent upon a grid iron. The largest crowd that has eye cheered for a Michigan team will fi fthe new stadium to its full capacit of 42,000. Spurred on by the retur of Maddock and Cole, members of th famous Yost point a minute machin the Varsity is on edge for the Buc eyes and is out to avenge- ite against them for the defeats adminb tered during the past two years. Buckeyes Well Balanced Dr. Wilce's squad of Scarlet an Grey warriors, 43 strong, arrived thi morning from Columbus in prime co dition for the crucial struggle again: the Maize and Blue. Ohio comes thi year in a new role, that of chan pions of the Conference. Never b fore has an O. S. U. team appeared o Perry field as Western champions an the result of today's battle will larg4 ly determine whether they are to t n the running for Big Ten honor ,again. The Buckeyes boast of th strongest all-around team in Ohio football history. No one man stand out conspicuously above the rest claim of the Ohio camp. They are a evenly balanced 11 man team cor sidered by Wilce to be superior to tb elevens which included the famou Harley to Stinchcombacombnato O)hio State's line is made up of ;me ^nquestionably, the equal of any foi yard wall in the West, while the bac eld is scarcely less powerful tha the line. Wolverines Outweighed To match the Scarlet and Gra eleven Michigan's squad ,is the mo iggressive Coach Yost has turned o for a number of seasons. When the ine up this afternoon the Ohio fo ward wall will have a slight adva Cage in experence and nearly .1 pounds to the man in weight. T Buckeye line is almost intat froi the championship team of last yea: Tn the backfield Michigan is still cor ceded an edge despite the absence e Banks andUsher. Coach Yost is fo unate in having two strong subst: .utes in Uteritz and' Roby, who hav ;tepped into the veterans' places wit out .weakening the Wolverines behin the line. Man for man the two elevens ai pear nearly even and barring all ui sets they should oppose each othe evenly matched with the Buckeye holding a slight advantage, on tb line, and the Wolverines in the bac field. Goebel, at right end, will oi pose Captain Myers of Ohio. Bot men are veterans and are rate among the best in the Conferenc< Goebel's work on the defense ha marked his play in all of the games i which he has taken part. Last yea he was pitted against Slyker in th game at Columbus. Time after tim he piled up the Buckeye advance an more than once stopped the runs h the speedy Stinchcomb. Captain M ers has done brilliant work fc Ohio. Huffman Shades Muiread Stanley Muirhead will play his fir game under Big Ten fire this afte Arthur Brisbane, editorial writer, and daily speaker to millions, last night announced his entrance to Michigan, the state. Further, he stated that he had come to stay; that he 'v/s one-half owner of the Detroit Times, and that it was his intention to make that paper's growth one that would push or pass any competitor. Before "one of the most completely representative groups of newspaper men of Michigan ever assembled," in the words of F. J. Ottoway, president of the Press club of Michigan, this message raised the tenseness of the audience to a pitch seldom reached by any speaker. "The University of Michigan need have no fear such as was expressed by its President tonight-'That if this fails - speaking of the University - democracy cannot be a success. "'This University is a succes3,.and democracy is a success.' University Important Factory 'Newspaper men of this country have been mightily interested in De- troit, tiie fastest growing city in the world. They are interesated in it be- cause of its immense factories, and their consequent production. But I shall tell them through my columns that the only important factory of this state is not at Detroit, but here, at this University. "In the words of Dante, 'Give light and the people will find their own road'. This is the lighthouse. Col- leges make men. They are the fac- tories of democracy." Brisbane Talks to Millions Brisbane daily talks to millions of people. He does not know how many millions. Not only does he write the column "Today", which appears simul- taneously in Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Milwaukee, San Francis- co and Detroit, but he writes an editorial for his evening papers, and a longer one each Sunday. Yet, despite this tremenodus circulation, Mr. Brisbane referred to the papers of smaller circulation, of two or (Continued on Page Twelve) It has been suggested that Michigan rooters at the game today wear some sort of identification so that they may be distinguished from O. S. U. support- ers, who will likely come decked in scarlet and grey. If you have some pieces of maize and blue ribbon pin them on your coat lapel this after- noon, if you have no ribbon a made up combination of maize and blue may be purchased at the Jane Singleton shop in Nickel's arcade. I - FREE MOVIES TONIGHT Through the courtesy of the management, the Arcade and Majestic theaters will give a free show to students and visit- ors beginning at 10 o'clock to- night. The regular features will After the Michigan-Ohio State game until 7 o'clock tonight, President Mar- ion L. Burton and Mrs. Burton will be "'at home" to alumni in the city for the game. They also especially in- vite Michigan alumni who are mem- bers of the various faculties to take this occasion to call at the President's house and to bring with them friends who may be visiting Ann Arbor. President Burton and Mrs. Burton wish in this way to make an opportun- ity for renewing old college friend- ships among those who are returning to the campus and those who have not noon when he Huffman, the opposes former Cal Buckeye left ta Huffman is probably the strong( man on the Ohio wall and has, a c cided advantage over Muirhead in e perience although in the games t year Stan has been adept in flippi through opposing lines. Huffman b an advantage in weight in addition his experience of three years. Montgomery, Margaret Schnaple, Mar- Jc garet Spalding, Doris Sprague, Hazel one Storz, and Elsie Townsend. whe Initiation will take place on Sun- ley. day, Nov. 7. ohns at right guard will undf of the biggest jobs of his < n he opposes the 225 pound (Continued on