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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 26, 1921 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-10-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

O= FICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF MICIGAN
Puk-ished every morning except. Monday during the Univer-
sity year by the Board in Control of Student Publications.
MEMBER OF TJE ASSOCIATD PRESS
The Associated Press is exclus' .y' entitled to the use for
republication of all news dispatch.' credited to it or not otherwise
credited in this paper and thr ocal news published therein.
Intered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second
class mttatter.
/ Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50.
Offces: Ann Arbor Press building,Maynard Street.
Phones: Business, 6o; Editorial. 2414.
Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the sig.
"ature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence ofe
ft, and notices of events will be published in The Daiy at the
discretion >f the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office.
Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. o man-
uscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage,
The Daily does not 'necessarily endorse the sentiments ex-
pressed in the communications.
"What's Going On" notices will not be received after 6 o'clock
on the evening preceding insertion.
Tdlepbore 2414
MANAGING EDITOR..........BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL
Assistant Managing Editor........ ..Hugh W. Hitchcock
Cit Editor .................................E P.'Lovejoy, Jr.
Night Editors--.
M. B. Stahl G. P. Overton
R. E. Adamsf Hugston Mcflain
Paul Watzel Edward T;ambrecht
F.H. Ml'ike
Editorials . T. J Whinery, L. A. Kern, S. TB each. E R. Meiss
Sunday Magazine Editor.........................T. S. Sargent
Sporting Editor................................ George Reindel
Women's Editor ................... .......Elizabeth Vickery
Humor Editor ................................. E R. Mess
Assistants
Harry B. Grundy John Dawson Ben H. Lee, Jr.
Wallace F.s Elliott Sidney B. Coates Tinian Mack
.'A. Kaver Lowelf" . Kerr howard Donahue
orothy Whipple H. C.LlowlettArhold Fleig
M 1arion Koch Katherine Montgomery
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 9(O
BUSINESS MANAGER ............. VERNON F. HILLERY
Advertising . . . . ,.....,.............F. M. Heath, A. J. Parker
Publication............................... Nathan W. Robertson
'Accunts .....,. ........ .. . ............... John J. Hamels, Jr.
Circuation ........... ...... .... .....Herod C. hunt i,!Assat
Assistants
Burr L. Robbins Richard Cutting H Willis Heidbreder
W. Cooley a James Prentiss " . Kenneth Gaibraith
"LI. Beaumont Parks Maurice Moule J. A. Dryer
Waltes Scherer .ia tin Goldring ' Richard Ileidemann
Edw. -Murane Tyler Stevens T. 1-. Wolfe
Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for
an* issue of The Daily osould see the night editor, who has full
chtarge of all news to be printed that night.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1921
Night Editor-R. E. ADAMS, JR.
MAKE lIT GO BIG AT URBANA
"Talk has been floating about here recently to the
effect that the Athletic association should make it
a point to plant freshmen and certain others in a
given section of the Ferry field starids, at footballj
games, this section to be considered the mainspring
in the cheering. The Student council has recom-
nnded such a plan for the forming of the "M" at
the Minnesota game; the senior engineers recently
passed a resolution asking that such a policy be
adopted in the distribution of tickets.
Suggestions of this sort are all right and are
surely practicable. But it is nothing short of a dis-
grace that a university of the size and boasted su-
periority of Michigan should have to make a cheer-
ing section. On the cards used for sending in appli-
cations for tickets to each of the big games is a ques-
tion, something to this effect: "Do you want-student
coupon number so-and-so exchanged for a seat in
the cheering section of the south stand?" The an-
swer ought to be unanimously "yes" on the part of
the freshmen and sophomores, and very heartily so
among the upperclassmen.
The fact remains, however, that it is not. Re-
cently 'a number of ticket orders were examined in
the Athletic offices, for the simple purpose of as-
certaining approximately what percentage of stu-
dents asked for reservations in the noisy division.
Of the senior applications examined, but six per
cent specified a preference for the cheering sec-
tion; and slightly more than twenty-seven per cent
of the juniors answered "yes", while the freshmen
were split half and half in their preferences. ,No
statistics were given with regard to the sophomore
class.

It is said that a great many of the applications
for tickets outside the cheering section were from
men attending the gane alone or with other stu-
dents. Why such should be the case is practically
inconceivable. The cheering section contains seats
on the best part of the field, yet we students appear
to want seats elsewhere, whether, we go with co-eds
or relatives or by ourselves. Would we prefer not
to cheer - would we rather let George wear out
his throat rooting for the team than to expend our
own vocal efforts in supporting the Maize and Blue
men - or what is wrong with us?
Not so long ago an editorial writer in the Wis-
consin Daily Cardinal, speaking of the financial end
of the proposed Wisconsin Union building, made
the statement in effect that Wisconsin was recog-
nized by everyone as the finest university in the
West. Perliaps she is. But the notable feattfre
about the whole affair is that these are exactly the
sentiments that Michigan has been so loudly ex-
pressing for some twenty or thirty years past. The
question in our minds now is, whether Michigan or
Wisconsin isright in her assertions. Have we of
the University any right to go about hallelujah-
howling, when we condemn our coach, fail to sup-
port our team, and have to be forced into a cheering
section on the field, and all this at a time when pros-
pects at the start pointed to a banner year in foot-
ball?
We still have a chance to redeem ourselves. Mich-
igan has not lost the season entirely by any means.
Last year she dropped four games early, 'in the
basketbalf season and ranked at the bottom of the
list: but she came through thereafter with such an -

astonishingly clean record that she tied Purdue and
Wisconsin for championship honors and surprised
every basketball fan in the Middle West. Michigan
can do the same thing in football this season if we,
the student body, will it. P She may not win the pen-
nant, but she can make a most creditable showing.
She can at least keep her train on the pedestal in-
stead of allowing it to drag in the dirt and be trod-
den upon by others.
We have an opportunity to go to Illinois at an
almost-unbelievably low rate. Today, applications
for the Illinois special are still being taken. The first
train is assured and we can get others at the same
fare charge. But today is the time to sign up;
don't wait for tomorrow or the next day.
By showing a little more of the spirit that filled
up the first special to Urbana, we can and will make
a good showing for Michigan next Saturday.
TO BE TAKEN DAILY
Arthur Brisbane, the famous editorial writer, in
his talk before the Press club convention said, "The
earth must be watered drop by drop. To allow a
square inch of water, or a square foot of water, to
fall upon the land would wash it away. It must be
allowed to fall drop by drop."
Is it not the same way with studyig?
To get any real value from his course the student
must do his work day by day, for it is impossible for
anyone to "cram" at the last minute and retain any
definite permanent impression of what he has read.
Mathematics, like-the cathedral, must be built little
by little. In any study the foundation must first
be laid..A superficial knowledge of a subject gained
through a last-minute "cram" is like a house built
upon the sand - it cannot endure. The man or
woman who gets the most out of their college life,
whether they are studying medicine or music, is
the one who builds carefully and faithfully, by get-
ting each day's lesson and adding totheir store of
knowledge until at last they have completed their
structure of education and crowned it with a di-
ploma, the symbol to the outward world of work
well done.
When you are studying don't build your house
upon the sands.
BE ONE OF THE FEW
One dark night - so the legend goes - a certain
monarch placed 'a large boulder in the middle of the
road. Thousands of his people, thereafter, severely
stubbed their toes, or troubled to walk around it. At
length, one lusty youth, wiser than the rest, seized
the stone, and heaved it from his path. And where
it had rested, he found a bag of gold.
In this life we live, Opportunity is the monarch
who places obstacles in our path to impede our
progress. Many people become daunted by the dif-
ficulties. It is the few who delight in doing the hard
things - the "impossible". It is the few who heave
aside the disappointments and difficulties of life.
And it is the few who succeed.
Let's take our megaphoes and our arm bands and
our ribbons and everything Michigan that we have
to the Illinois game at Urbana.
Tune Telescope '
A Symphony
Whene'er in my dreams I wander
To fanciful lands of flowers,
And the birds about me are singing
For the joy of the passing hours,
My soul responds to the gladness,
And that it may live again,
I strive to produce the music
In the tones of my violin.
I touch with reverent fingers
The strings wherein spirits dwell
With power to soothe and comfort
In the joyful story they tell.
Forth come the tones in their splendor,
For my song an accompaniment make,

When, lo -- from next door a note tender,
For baby - ah baby's awake.
--Jay. G.
The doctor's business goes back to abnormal again
with the favorable government- decision concerning
unlimited beer for the sick.
Quoth Eppie Taf:
No word as yet
From Eddie Green
Who caught a smoke
In the magazine.
-The Log, U. S. N. A.
No matter how bad business may be, rouge and
lip-sticks always have a reddy sale. - A. H. L.
Isn't It the Truth'
While sewing on her trousseau
A young lady once said, "Don't younneau,
If I made this of tulle
I would be a darn fulle
To expect only my ankles toussheau."
,-Q. Y. Knott.
Badge at Ferry field Saturday: ISLES USHER.
A shining example of someone who gothis geology
mixed up with his stadiumetry.
Famous Closing Lines
"This sheet is about to go to press," said the
laundress as she got out her flatiron. ERM.

Log Log Slide.Rules

AT

GRAHAM'S
Beoth ends of the diagonal Ivalk

II

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIME TABLE
(E~astern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-6og a.
,. 7:05 a. in,,8:xo a. m. and hourly to 9:1o0
;,. nM.
Jackson Express Cars (local stops of Ann
labor), .9.:48 a, m. and every two hours to
):48 p. in.
Local Cars East Bound-5:55 a.m., 7:00 a.
In. and every two hours to 9:oo p. m.. it :oo
.. m. To Ypsilanti only--11:4o p. m., 12.25
a. M., 1:15 a.m.
To Saline; change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-7:50 a. M., 2:40 p.
Mn.
To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars:
8-48, 10 :481 a. mn., 12:48, 2:48, 4:48.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited: 8:48
P. in.

Get 'em from 0 & H

Men s
Shoe Shop

i

1921

OCTOBER

19211

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2 8 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 81

' TD

A
Scotch
Grain
in
Black or Brown

NOTICE TO MEN
We do all kinds of high-class Hal
work at pre-war prices. Hats turned
nside out, with all new trimming .
Bare a% good as new.
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 PACKARD STREET
Telephofe 1792
ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS
SCHEDULE EFFECTIVE OCT. to, g
Retd Dnr" Central Standard Time
A.M. . P.M. P.M. A&PM
Oaliy Daily Daily Daily
7 :30 -1:30 Lv... Adrian ...Ar. 7:00 12.45
8:0S- 2:05 ... Tecumseh ... 6:25 ia:to
8:5 2:25.....Clinton ......6:os 11:50
9:15 3:15......Saline+...--.5:15 z1:oo
9:4 3:45 Ar. Ann Arbor Lv. 4:45 10:30
A.M. . P.M. P.M. A&PM
Read Up
SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS

Quality, and Service

in 0. & H. Footwear far surpass the average-
but the prices are much lower. Drop in, 'we'll
tell you how we do it.

O'3ANE & AERTLER
335 SOUTH MAIN STREET

P.M.
3:30
4:05
4:25
5:i5

Lv... Adrian ..Ar.
.... Tecumseh .
...Clinton ..
.Saline.
Ann Arbor Lv.

P.M.
9:00
8:2S
7:IS

Featuring Thompson Brogues

STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Engineers and Architects Materials..

Stationery

Fountain Pens.

Pennants and Blankets

Laundry Agency

Morse and Gilberts Chocolates

Eversharp Pencils

1 -1

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.n fi---

-,

1-.,

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The Complete Education
OU see her everywhere-at the teas,
in the classroom, on the campus, at the
J.gam~es. And invariably her youth is al-
luringly expressed in clothes that breathe an
air of joyous smartness.
For education embraces not only a knowl-
edge of the arts and sciences but the devel-
opment of an artistic sense of refinement as
well. And nothing so admirably reflects that
refinementas good taste in clothes-youth-
ful clothes--clothes that reveal all the natural
charm and grace of happy-hearted youth.
The creators of House of Youth apparel
have entwined that spirit in every suit, coat
and dress that bears their name. Their new-
est fall styles now being featured by the
leading stores, are a revelation in youthful
loveliness and in moderation of price.
SCHULMAN & HAUPTMAN
38 ast 29th Street, New York
IT Avenue De L'Opera, Paris
We shall be pleased to
opl direct you to the store
in your city featuring
House of Youth apparel
"Doris Goes Shopping" an interesting
booklet will be sent free at your request
Exclusive Apparel
For Misses

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