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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.

November 22, 1921 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-11-22

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUTESDA'Y, r

_..._

aT4r £irji0zu att r
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY
OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday during the Univer-
ity 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 er not otherwise
credited in this paper and the local news published therein.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second
lass. 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-
ature not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of
aith, and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the
liscretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office.
Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No man-
iscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage.
The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex-
ressed in the communications.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 2414

visable to leave our trophies in the Union, instead
of moving them into the new club house -- when it
is finally built.
A BANQUET FOR LOYALTY
Tonight the Union is host to the men who put
over the Union life-membership drive. These men
gave up time and energy that the drive might be a
success. They expected neither fame nor financial
reward. They had nothing to gain for their hard
work save the feeling of work well done, the knowl-
edge that they had accomplished something worth-
while for Michigan. Their services were given un-
selfishly and without hope of reward.
Such events test college spirit. These two hun-
dred guests of the Union tonight are to be congrat-
ulated upon their loyalty.

Rusteraft Agency
GRAHAM' S
Both ends of diagonal walk

ANAGING EDITOR .......... BREWSTER P. CAMPBELL
ssistant Managing Editor.... .......Hugh W. Hitchcock
ty tditor ................................E. P. Lovejoy, Jr.
ight Editors-
R. E. Adams G. P. Overton
Edward Lambrecht M. B. Stahl
Hughston McBain Paul Watzel
litorial Board Chairman........................T. J. whinery
sistants-
S. T. Beach E. R. Meiss
L. A. Kern Leo Hershdorfer
anday Magazine Editor.............Thornton W. Sargent, Jr.
:change Editor.................................George E. Sloan
asic Editor...................................Sidney B. Coates
orting Editor ................................ George Reindel
omen's Editor ............................ Elizabeth Vickery
.mor Editor .................................... E R. Meiss
Assistants
R. N. Byers y, L. Fenwick B. H. Lee
W. B. Butler H. B. Grundy E. Mack
A. D. Clark Agnes Holmquist athrine Montgomery
Harry C. Clark H. E. Howlett- R. C. Moriarity
. P. Comnstock Marion Kerr R. B. Tarr
ohn P. Dawson L. S. -Kerr Virginia Tryon
.. Donahue M. A. Klaver Dorothy Whipple
W. F. Elliott Marion Ko~h L._. Yost

,t,

J. B. Young
BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER.............VERNON F. HILLERY
Advertising......F. M. Heath, A, J. Parker
Publication ............................ Nathan W . Robertson
Accounts .............. ...... John J. Hamels, Jr.
Circulation-................................. Herold C. Hunt
Assistants
Burr L. Robbins Richard Cutting H. Willis Heidbreder
W. Cooley James Prentiss W. Kenneth Galbraith
L. Beaumont Parks Maurice Moule J. A. Dryer
Walter Scherer martin Godring Richard Heidemann
Edw. Murane Tyler Stevens T. H. Wolfe
David Park Paul Blum
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1921
Night Editor-HUGHSTON M. MBAIN
Assistant-Robert B. Tarr
Proofreaders-Leland L. Yost
John F. Pontius
There will be a meeting of the entire Daily edi-
torial staff and all tryouts at 4:30 o'cloc this after-
noon.
PAY UP TODAY
Today, with the observance of Class Dues day,
a custom is being initiated which promises well for
the development of a stronger and better spirit of
.o-operation among the various classes of the Uni-
versity. There are advantages in this new system
of dues collecting, for it will be of inestimable
value to the officers of the classes, who know from
sad experience how much the activities of a class
are hampered by a slow-filling treasury. Again, this
novel plan will also be of aid to students, who will
find that the setting of one definite date for the pay-
ment of class dues eliminates the uncertainty and
annoyances of the old method. The location of the
booths where class representatives will be stationed
is announced in the news columns of today's issue
of The Daily.
A University class organization is conducted on
the same basic principles as any city or state gov-
ernment, which demands fundamentally for its
successful management on the payment of taxes
from those who compose its citizenry. With the
class, dues correspond to the taxes of the civil gov-
'ernment, and no class can function well unless all its
members co-operate. Surely, with this in mind, and
with this opportune system of paying dues, no stu-
dent can fail to realize that it is his duty to pay up
now, and so, by aiding his class, benefit from the
advantages of the organization.
A UNION TROPHY ROOM
Michigan's retention this year of the Little Brown
Jug, by Saturday's score of 38 to o, suggests another
item which may be added to the long list of the
University's needs. We have footballs and cups
and trophies galore; we have the Minnesota Jug, the
Jug of all jugs. But so far our trophies are kept in
-no one place in particular. Part of them are stored
in Watermangymnasium, part in the offices of the
Athletic association, and no order or arrangement
whatever has been followed in placing them.
The Brown Jug and Michigan's other acquisi-
tions deserve a good location and plenty of well-
kept space and room. They deserve to be housed
in a well protected position where every Michi-
gander can view them as being relics of what Mich-
igan has been able to do in the past.
Perhaps, in due time, the new club house on Ferry
field will be constructed, and in it no doubt will be
placed a specially prepared trophy room. But that
club house so far is but a prospect, a hope-to-be of
the future; for Michigan needs other structures far
more than she does that one. Meanwhile, we have
the Michigan Union, with all its space and its quar-
ters, the center of all activities. Why not a trophy
room located there temporarily? Why not place the
Brown Jug and our other relics in the Union where
students, by seeing them, may be brought to a reali-
zation of what Michigan is and has always been in
athletics?
Perhaps, after a time, it might even be deemed ad-

THE MARCH OF PROGRESS
Vilhjalmur Stefansson, arctic explorer, explains
in an article in the November issue of World's
Work the manner in which the course of civiliza-
tion has been slowly drifting northward. He points
out the fallacy of ideas about northern lands that
were prevalent when the-wise men of Babylon failed
to see potentialities for much beyond barbarism in
the Greece and Italy of their time, when Benjamin
Franklin thought that the sugar plantations of
Guadeloupe were more valuable than all Canada,
and later when our seasoned politicians thought that
in purchasing Alaska we were getting merely a heap
of ice for our money.
How much farther north civilization will extend
it is almost impossible to say nor is it necessary.
The world ;noves around rapidly and as can be de-
rived from the above data it is futile to predict what
will be in store for any nation or locality in the re-
mote future. As short a span of time in the world's
history as a century and a half ago few would have.
guessed that in 192I the United States would be one
of the leading nations of the world, that the coun-
tries in the orient would be strong factors in the
international scheme of existence,' or that a league
of nations consisting of almost all of the greater
and lesser powers united for the common good
would be formed.
Predicting just how far the wheels of progress
will have turned a century or two hence is a diffi-
cult task and one which not many can perform ac-
curately. Only a few years ago the Wright broth-
ers dreamed of the supremacy and practicality of
the airplane as an instrument of war and a vehicle
of speed in times of peace. Hardly anyone at that
time could conceive of the early realization of their
dream.
The march of progress is rapid. Its speed is us-
ually under-estimated by those who attempt to pre-
dict where it will arrive in the near or remote fu-
ture.

1921

r

I

DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIRE TABLE
(Eastern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6.o5 a.
M., 7:o5a. mn., :ro a. m. and hourly to 9:10
p. M.
Jackson Express Cars (local stops of Ann
Arbor), 9:48 a. m. and every two hours to
9:48 p. in.
Local Cars East Bound--5:55 a.m., 7:o, a.
m. and every two hours to 9 :oo p. m., xx :oo
p. m. To Ypsilanti only- it:4o p. m., 12.25
a. in., ix: z a. in.
'ro Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a. m., 2:40 p.
Mn.
To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars:
8:48, 1o:48 a. In., 12:48, 2:48, 4:48.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited: 8:48
P. in.

- 1

TF~UTT"'LE-'S
A Place to bring your friends
Nowhere is the food better
Nowhere is the service more prompt
TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM
Maynard Street

4

nhe Telescope
Isn't That Sweetf
Some folks remark
That Monday is blue
Because of the washing
Which they have to do;
But here on the campus
The saying is true
Just 'cause there's no Daily
For me or for you.
- Gwendolin.
The college student would have just a wee bit
more to be thankful for if next Thursday only came
on Friday.
Quoth Eppie Tafi:
(In very free verse)
Here lies Edytha Goldenglow
Who simply lied of mortification
When she spilled her books and rouge and every-
thing
Right in front of those horrid old engineers sitting
on the Senior benches.
-- Submitted by her friend.
Quite Stationary
She: Are you a stationary engineer?
He: Well, I've been in the sophomore class for
three years now. - Cicero.
A Worthy Ambition
If e'er in West Hall I should preach,
In truth, this subject would be chosen,
And prove it - for the Scriptures teach
'Many are cold, but few are frozen".
-Vee Dee and G. G. B.
Dear Erm:
Is it true that girls who wear horn rimmed glasses
make spectacle of themselves?
Yours , Blink Eyes.
Dear Blink Eyes: Perhaps the girls don't look
so well in glasses but we understand they see bet-
ter.
Stolen Thunder
It's great to read about the work
That Luther Burbank does.
He's invented squirtless grapefruit.
And a peach that has no fuzz.
A seedless watermelon he is
Working on, I guess.
But I hope if he tries chestnuts
He will meet with no success.
- Sun Dial.
Famous Closing Lines
"This air is very familiar," said the musician as
a gust of wind whisked his hat off. ERM.

I

4

When You Want Quality
GO TO THE STORES THAT HANDLE QUALITY PRODUCTS. THE FOLLOW-
ING DRUGGISTS AND CONFECTIONERS ARE NOW HANDLING THE OR-
IGINAL CHOCOLATES AS WELL AS OTHER BLOOMFIELD PRODUCTS:

Packard Street
THE DELTA
CALKINS-FLETCHER DRUG CO.
BLUE-FRONT CIGAR STORE
State Street
CUSHING DRUG CO.
QUARRY DRUG CO.

SUGDEN.DRUG CO.
BUSY BEE
FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH
HUSTON'S
TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE

J. B. SUMNER
FISHER'S PHARMACY
MUMMERY DRUG STORE
EDSELS REXALL DRUG STORE
OLYMPIA CANDY CO.
J. E. DIROFF
FOSTER'S SMOKE SHOP

YOU ARE ALWAYS SURE OF QUALITY WHEN YOU BUY CHOCOLATES MADE

-- BY --

/Z3loom field's

A

pppr

"When You Buy, Buy Quality"

499"k-e"-

LIKLY LUGGAGE
meaning "quality"

WAGNER
For Men
STATE STR

& COMPANY
Since1848
ET A T LIBERTY

ZE

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