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October 21, 1922 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-10-21

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY THf

t~~ific bent. The preparatory work T,
4is required as a prerequisite to,1EDITORIAL COMMENT
OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE is designed for the most part to coun-;-
UJIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN teract this situation, but by dint of j LET THE UNEWSPAPERS
Published every morning except Monday circumstances it is not ample enough, 1 SLAUGHTER Daily Cardinal)
ring the University year by the Board in and in some cases not at all is re- BEGIN: .. .Det lu sh rnin gHa
,ntrol of Student Publications. quired Read the Gumps this morning? Have
ALL NIGHT autos have been hur-
Member of Western Conference d torial Obviously, the prime danger which tling through the brittle Autumn dusk you been following Andy and Min and
sociation. follows in the wake of over speci and far into the night. Nationally ad- their Chester and Uncle Bin and the
The Associated Press is exclusively enI zation is lack of general knowledge, verised motor horns blare defiance to rest of the relatives through all their
led to the use for republicationt otall which in most cases spells ignorance'.h onwihmyo a o ae rbltos oyuko o uf
ws dispatches credited to 'it or not other-. . the moon which may or may not have tribulations? Do you know Torn Duff
lse credited in this paper and the local The man who is indifferent to knowl- been out last night. and Helen and do you laug'i at Wil-
ws publish ed therein. dg of any sort which does not con-
Vivid autos. Multi-colored autos. bur's attempts to support a wife? Do
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, cern his own particular profession Blatant yellow and blue autos. Au- Jerry's antics around the New Monia
ichigan, as second pclass matter. will never be a powerful constructive
Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.50. influence in any community and the tosehln alodsain frihyu wt
offices: Ann Arbor Press Building May- 1 smell of burned gas- amusement? Yes-All right, they're
rd Street. 6M Busi- advantages he has derived from his o Ii n e, lubricating pretty good comics and it doesn't hurt
Phons: Editorial, 2414 and 7 dc will be of use only as a oil, and the doubt- anyone to laugh a bit. No--Well, you-
means of personal aggrandizement. ful, fruity odor of 're not missing the biggest thing in
Communications not to exceed So words Michigan needs specialists, but pref- ful, rity Trf 're not ysi hei't thing in
signed, the 'signature not necessarily to th ieIrfi ie ab o ae' h iet
pear in print, but asan evidence of faith, erably of the variety of students who /owing. TformAnn . read the comics.
d notices ofeevents will be published in devote part of their time through out- flo fo Ann- d the coics.
t at or mailed to The Daily officet Un side reading and through their as- from aV the states strike of half a million coal miners;
fned communications will receive no con-th faculty students to in the Union to Columbus bearing at the present time? Have you any
less the writer encloses postage. The Daily storing up general knowledge. Michigan men. Chariots of fire from notion as to the responsibility or the
es not necessarily endorse the sentiments Miin e Cao ofrfo ni atth epslyrh
pressed in the commtunications.Veil and Syracuse to Rome. On to probable outcome of the strike? Are
EXACT TIME IN ANTIQUITY Rome! Hail the arena and its thirsty you for or against the four power
EDITORIAL STAFF A new theory of the use of the obe- sands! Viva el Plaza del Toro! treaty, or don't you know anything

LAST EDITION OF

M I I G A N

SO NG

B0 OK

iii

AT

t-
Chicken supper will be served at
The Catholic Students' Fair, Saturday
evening, Oct. 28. Don't miss this big
chance.-Adv.
Michigan Daily and Chimes for $4.50.
DETROIT UNITED LINES
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIME TABLE
(Eastern Standard Time)

BOTH STORES

if
ap
an
lef
sib
Sid
un
do
ex

.1
DON'T FORGET THAT WE ARE
Always Ready to Serve Your
Wants in Hardware and
1 Accessories

IF IT IS NOT RIGHT, WE WILL
MAKE IT RIGHT

Telephones, 2414 and 176-M '
MANAGING EDITOR
MARION B. STAHL
News Editor................Paul Watzel
city Editor...............James B. Young
Assistant City Editor .... ..Marion Kerr
Editorial Board Chairman ......E, R. Meiss
Night Editors--
Ralph Byers Hairy Hoey
J. P. Dawson, Jr J. U. Mack
L. J. Hershdorfa R. C. Moriarty
H. A. Donahue
Sports Editor:. .... ... H. McPiice
Sunday Magazine editor....,Delbert Clark
Womea's Editor........Marion Koch
Humor Editor ....... .Donald Coney
Conference Editor .......,...H. B. Grundy
Pictorial Editor ...........Robert Tarr.
Music Editor........... -..E. H. Ailes
Assistants

M. H. Pryor
IDorothy Bennetts
Maurice Betman
R. A. Billington
W.' B. Butler
-. C.' Clark
A. B. Connable
:gvelyn J. Coughlin
Eugene Carmichael.
Bernadette Cote
Wallace F;lliott
T.axe. Fiske
Maxwell Fead

John Garlinghouse
Isabel Fisher
Winona A. Hibbard
Samuel Moore
T. G. McShane
W. B. 'Rafferty
W. H. Stoneman
Virginia Tryon
P. M, Wagner
A. Y. Webbink
Franklin Dickman
Joseph stein
J. W. Ruwitch

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER
ALBERT J. PARKER
Advertising... .. John j. Hamel, Jr.
Advertising......... Edward F. Conlin
Advertising .....Walter K. Scherer
Accounts ...... " ..Laurence H. Pay rot.
Circulation............David J. M. Park
Publication............L. Beaumont Parks
Assistants
Townsend H. Wolfe Alfred M. White
Kenneth Seick Wm. D. Roesser
George Rockwood Allan S. Morton
Perry M. Hayden James A. Dryer
Eugene L. Dunne Win. H. Good
Win. Graulich, Jr. Clyde L. Hagerman
John C. Haskin 'A. Hartwell. Jr.
)iarvey Z .Reed f'. Blumentlial
C. L. Putnan Howard Hayden
E. D. Armantrout W.K. Kiddcr
H. W. Cooper Hlenry Freud
Wallace Flower Herbert P. Bostwick
Edw. B. Riedle L. Pierce
Harold L. Hale
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1922
Night Editor-L. ,T. HERSHDORFER
READY FOR THE GONG
At 2. o'clock this afternoon the ref-
erees' wllistle will usher in what
promises to be one of the most hotly
contested matches in football history.
before one of the greatest crowds
ever attending a game in the west.
Every Michigan heart is tense with
the desire for victory. If team sup-
port has any beneficial effect it will be
evidenced by Michigan's team, this
afternoon. Never has such an army
of rooters accompanied the eleven to
a foreign field. Never has one-fourth
of Michigan's stands been filled with
the supporters of an opposing univer-
sity.
The outcome of the conflict remains
to be seen. Those of us in Ann Ar-
bor will watch the scoreboards this
nftrno nand hone. and pray. and ;

lisks and pyramids of Egypt was ad--
vanced not long ago. A recent in-
vestigator in Egyptology claims that
these ancient monuments universally
supposed to have been built solely as
the burial places for the Pharoahs,
were in reality erected for purposes
of astronomy.
The writer claims that the original
use of the pyramids was by the
priests, who used them as gigantic
sundials by measuring their shadows,
and thu computing the time of the
equinoxes. So exact were some of
these measurements, that they were
able to compute the number of' days
in the year, carrying the operation,
to the third decimal place. The proc-
ess of construction continued, each
pyramid' made. more, accurate than itsl
predecessors. It was only after one
of these structures had been aban-
doned for a more exact one that it
was converted into a tomb.
Our own Washingon monument, ani
obelisk, is impractical for this pur-
pose because of its extreme height. It
is claimed that the shadow at its tip
become so blurred and indisinct by
the time they reach the ground that
an' accurate measurement of any,
kind is impossible, But the mono-
lithic Stonehenge of England is also
mentioned in the article as having
been probably constructed for this.
purpose.
It certainly appears that the an-
cients were not as deficient in the
measurement of time as is usually
considered to be the case. As fads
run in cycles, reappearing quite often,
it is only reasonable to 'suppose that
'withinthe next fifty years, each of us
will, Carry a miniature sundial,, ad-
justable to any meridian, instead of
t. present stem-winding device.
THE TESTING VAT
We hear much about the value of
the college bred, with frequent ref-
erences to Who's Who, and such pub-
lications.. It seems to be quite uncer-
tain in the minds of the majority of
people just what the relative value of
the college man is. Statistics, how-
ever, are more certain proof than is
conjecture.
The head of a Boston insurance
,company has for the last few years
made it his business to go at com-
mencement time to universities, a dif-
ferent one each time, and to sign up
as employes, the most popular men
on the campus, the captain of the

Viva! Viva! Gladiators-Ave, Ave!
* * *
OiR
The proof reader let the Bulletin go
to press yesterday with the story-
telling class announcement headed
PUBLIC PEAKING 6." Spelling - is
not his long suit, eh? It should be
'."Public Peeking 6." But if there's to
be any story-telling about let's hope it
is kept dark. ICHABOD.
* * *
WHO'S THIS lad "Lefax" whose
name we see so frequent on notebook
covers?
And What About the Campus
Students?
"Campus Trees Receive Trimming."
-Our Own Daily.
Dennishawn, Dennishawn!
Flitting figures
Here and gone
Hearken to the drum's slow beats
-Everybody wants front seats!
CLARA, THE BEAUTIFUL MORON
There are dumb girls at the score-
board
As well as at the ga e.
But there's a certain rand of dam.
sel
That afflicts a lId with shame.
She's a rare and fancy critter
And her neck we'd like to wring:
She enters late-score zero-zero,
Cries "We ha-cen't missed a thing!"
- * C
THE SECOND ROUND
As we skips aroun' the ring, Sullie
socks a right, misses me glove and
hits me, the livin' punchin' bag. That
wasn't 'sackly fair but boxin' ain't
such a clean game. When I counters
a weak left to his glove, he feels my
ribs with a mussy right and I squeez-
es one to the jaw. Y' see there was
lots of spectators aroun' to see the
human bag in action so this sorta
rattled Sullie. Y' must get the idea
that bags ain't supposed to hit back
on the jaw..
A rainbow might have lots of colors
but there's nothin' that can compare

about it? Detroit Limited and Express Cars - 6:oc
In other words, do you read any 7:o0 om, 8:oo a.m., 9:05 a.i. and
hourly to 9 :05 p.m.
news in the newspapers? Yes-All Jackson Express Cars (local stops west of
right, it's a good thing to know some- Ao97 r o)-.9:47 a.m., and every two hours
thing about what is going on in the Lccal Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m. and ev-
w ery two hours to 9:00 p.m., i1:00 p.m. To
World. No-Well, there's the rub. Ypsilanti only- i::40 p.m., i:1s a.m.
A big majority of the students at the To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti.
university read the Cardinal, so that Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a.m., 12:10
P. n1.) ,
campus news is pretty well circulated, To Jackson and Kalamazoo - Limited cars
but how many read other newspapers 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47, 4:47 p.m.,
to get a knowledge of the affairs -of To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at 8:47
the country and world, hot off the pm.
press and do not wait until it is di- 1922 OCTOBER 1922
gested' into some history, political, or S M T W T F S
economi6 course on the hill? 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
With capitalistic presses, socialis- S 9 10 11 12 13 14
tic presses, with definite policies un-- 1' 16 17 19 19 20 21
derlying what goes into print we may 22 22 27 28
prin wemay 29 30 31
doubt, and not without foundation,
that the newspapers do not always Start Right With a Good Hat!
give up the news as it occurs, but We do all kinds of HIGH CLASS
rather that some of it is garbled to Cleaning and Reblocking of hats at
suit some ulterior motive. low prices for GOOP WORK. When
But then, just because everything you want a hat done RIGHT bring
we may read in them is not true, it it to us, our work is regular FACTO-
is far from wise to shun all newspa- RY WORK. Hats turned inside out
pers. with all new trimmings are like new.
And for those who read the -papers, We also make and sell POPULAR
the comics, the sports, the daily PRICE and HIGH GRADE hats, FIT
short stories, the love-lorn problems, THEM TO YOUR HEAD and save you
and the features may be interesting a dollar or more on a hat. We give
in their turn, but many -can afford values and quote prices which cannot
to give just a little time to pursuing be excelled in Detroit or anywhere
the news columns, for we can have else. Try us for your next hat.
faith enough to believe that not FACTORY HAT STORE
everything published is falsehood.

. ;

-PHONE 1610

The Up-to-Date Hardware
310 SOUTH STATE

OUR SECOND HAND
CARS ARE STILL

f ;:;

PRICES RIGHT

> .
tl
1
S
"
.!
1
3
e
I

AUTOMOBILES

THEY'RE NOT JUNK
LOOK 'EM OVER

SERVICE PROMPT

LARNED HARDWARE COMPANY

-r

$200
and up

MODELS
(Ohio State Lantern)
A model, to an artist, is a person
whom he employs to pose for pictures.
He sees in the model certain charac-
teristics which are copied. The ar-
tist makes his picture after the im-
age of the model.
Every person is in a way a model.
Though he may not know it, his life
is exerting an influence on those
about him; others are imitating him
in certain acts, characteristics, or
personality. Whether he is the right
or the wrong sort, there are always
some to whom his qualities will ap-
peal, and these people will witlout
their consciousness be molded after,
hie example.
A good model is a scarce article.
Artists will pay high wages to one
who is perfect in figure and expres-
sion. Likewise the model who satis-
fies the wants of the exacting stu-
dent are few in number. Many are
repulsive to the person of high' ideals.
Others are mediocre, with no out-
standing good and no outstanding bad
qualities, insignificant in personality
and weak in resolve. They are unno-
ticed by the average person.
Once in a while a gem among peo-
ple is found. His life is one in which
courage, ideals, fellowship, honesty,
and a host of other attributes are ob-
servable. Whether he is conscious of
it or not there are always radiating
from him waves of impulse, inspira-
tion, encouragement. His actions and
mannerisms are copied by those who
know him. His acquaintances are all,
artists and he is the model. Their
personality in time will reflect a pic-
ture of himself just as the canvas
comes to take on the appearance of
the painter's model.

017 Packard Street Phone 1792
(Where D.U.U. Stops at State Street)
RIDER'S PEN SHOP
For Expert
en epairing
308 So. State St.
31-HOUR SERVICE - FAIR PRICES

Ann Arbor Nash Co.

MAYNARD STREET

I 4i

Tolet Articles
--are important
The touch of a well groomed
woman may be obtained only
when Milady's boudoir table is
well equipped with just the right

a 7
'*.R6
0 bJ Q
b -..
i
I

"-

football team, and in general, the big-.
gest men in the graduating class ofs
that year. It is his opinion that if ai
man has the qualities which are nec-t
essary to make friends at school, or a
to lead a football team successfully,v
or to take a leading part in activities,
he has the qualities that will make'
him a Success in -the b sinPC wnld

aL ernoon , a L I "'k," 'a"U'- k ,C u'u 1 e1,1 'i-t'k " b Au YY ss wori.i
yell as though we were really in Co- Experience has proved that thist
lumbus man is correct in his supposition. The
And those in the stadium at Ohio vast majority of men, he has chosenc
will do their share to see that every have been successful under him. ThisI
suport is given the Varsity in its su- may or may not prove that a collegeI
preme battle for victory. education is the sine qua non to busi-t
Tonight may "The Victors" be sung ,ess prosperity but one thing it doesj
with joy in every word! show.
The man who has made a success
BROADEN OUT of himself on the campus can usual-
The average student's attitude to- ly be assured that the world will not'
wards his work reflects the dictum of be too difficult an opponent for him!'
political economists that this is an to cope with after he leaves school.
age of specialization. The desire to Colle life niay not give a nMan the'
remain strictly within one's own necessary knowledge to set the world>
sphere of action is found everywhere on fire, but it can be taken as a reli-
on the campus, though particularly able index of what a man's lot in aft-
among followers of the various pro- er days is liable to be.I
fessions, as the work in the literary
college is by nature a liberal edu- Who was it that said the Diagonal
cation. And while 'the idea behind walk goes straight until it reaches
specialization is absolutely sound, the the Law building and then turns
student who tempers his own partic- crooked? The laws claim that the
ular work with a willingness to question to be answered is as to
broaden out into other fields of en- which was there first, the Diagonal'
deavor, through the medium of out- or the building.I
side reading and personal inter- ---
views, is more valuable to the com- Judging from the number of laun-I
munity than the one who confines dry boxes which go home the first ofI
his efforts to his profession. the week instead of the latter part,
The tendency towards over special- students are evidently inclined to be
ization manifests itself in the con- forgetful of the fact that Monday ist

with a hurricane of gloves. Why they's
so majestic and so brilliant that y'
can't even see them. One of 'em had
the guts to come up from sopieplace,|I
and meet my precious jaw. " ere's th'
way the birdies call us guys o' th'
pushin' game: Somethin'- that we
don't sorta feel brushes our lower|
facial projection, the knees feels like l
the joints has deserted, our wingedl
hands begins to fly, gases fill the!
dome-so slow-movie way we stands
fixedly instead of strolls, and gliding-
ly we soar not up but down. Thus F
the birdies' work is done.
SIDBEE.
* * *
OLD BUT GOOD?
"I've been here once before," I said.
The barber looked my way:
"I do not recollect your face,"
Was all that he could say.
"That's easily explained," quoth I.
The barber questioned, "How?"
"It's simply this (go easy there)
My face is all healed now."
"ili 1 ..

;naps, Actions, T

¢i
} r,.
Nnr h

toilet articles for her personal
needs.

There are creams, s

1

powders, and other toiletries for
each individual complexion and
need - and the woman who, is
careful of her appearance will se-
lect accessories that are best fit-
ted t oher needs. Wise selections
insure the permanency of a beau
tiful complexion.

nrt .
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.
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The problem before each individual
is to choose the right kind of people
as his companions for gradually and
unconsciously the personality of those
with whom one associates will be-
come his own. He can become a per-
son above reproach or below recog-I
nition, or he may be among that class
in between with no especial individ-
uality.
- ---k

COTY'S LORIGAN POWDER is of a
light 'texture, is delicately scented,

FIANCE POWDER is among the pop-
ular powders-it comes in the various

* N * *

Ce.

eit i. :
i
i

I
i
I

* Someday
We shall come up on
Sumbuddy wearing
A fuzzy sweater
And touch a match
To it

and comes in shades to match every complexions and is a powder that
complexion. This powder will give a will give the skin a beautifully
very natural appearance to the skin,
smooth appearance and yet will not
d is t dn 3 jit J,,.tU pd91 .

The intramural speedball contests
haven't really become crucial yet. No
instance has been reported of frater-
nity athletes practicing with a ghost
ball.1

And laugh with fiendish glee.
* * * 'There are 36, lunch rooms in the
And Just As We Go to Press the vicinities directly skirting the cam-
Most Important Question IS: pus. Certainly must be a hungry
"Know where I can get an OSU bunch around here.
ticket?"

alc ac s picec $l v..
COTY'S L'ORIGAN PERFUME is con-
sidered one of the most delicately and
pleasingly scented perfumes. It may
be had in a fiaconette which is very
handy to carry in the handbag for
$1.00 or may le had bv the ounce for

injure the texture. Priced $1.00.
FIANCE CREAM LOTION is aq perfect
erolument-it relieves all cokditions
and discomforts of the skin--it sooth-
es and softens and makes an excellent

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