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November 10, 1922 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-11-10

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ _ _ _

lip Nir~iligian g THIS YEAR'S CONVOCATIONS
Last spring a series of monthly con-
vocations of the student body wasl
[FFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE inaugurated with the understanding
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN that should these assemblies be well!
Published every morning except ,Monday attended the practice would be car-
'ing the University year by the Board in1
ntrol of Student Publications. ried on through. the present year.
Although only two convocations
Member of .Western Conference Editorial were held before the close of the
ociation.
school year, both of these drew crowds
the Associated Press is exclusively en- Which filled every available seat in1
ed to the use for republication of all Hill auditorium. That the students
vs dispatches credited to it or not other-
ec credited inethis paper and the local really desire some such opportunity
to assemble in a body from time to
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, time to hear a message from the
chigan, as second class matter. President, or from other men of in-
tabscription by carrier or mail, $30So.
)ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May. terest to them, was fully proved by
'A Street. teratnac tteemeig
Phones: Editorial, 2414 and 176-M; Busi- their attendance at these meetings
s, o6o. So far this year the monthly convo-
cations have not been resumed. The
signed, the signature not necessarilyr t students have lived up to their half
ear in print, buttas an evidence of faith, of the bargain by whole-heartedly
d notices of events will he published in
e Daily at the discretion of the Editor,, if suporting the practice. Has the Uni-
teat or mailed to The Daily office. Un- versity forgotten, or has the resuming
,ned communications will receive no ^ion-
eration. No manuscript will be returned of convocations merely been delayed?
ess the writer encloses postage. The Daily 1_
es not necessarily endorse the sentiments,
pressed in the communications. DIGGERS OF THE PAST
EDITORIAL STAFF Archaeology has a limited following
ithi ontr d ri ih bld inamr4

:E
OASTD ROLLM EDITORIAL COMMENT
WUXTRA! 'ENSIA GET DAD HIS TAG
IMERCURY RISES 3 DAD IllinT)
DEGREES (Daily Illini)
We are all proud of our lads aren't
"A PIPE," said The Old Alumnus, we? And we all want the dads to feel
"is acompanionable article. Now don't ! perfectly at home here and to feel as
think," he admonished the Amiable if they knew every one of us and could
Ectoplasm, "that I'm going to tear call us by our first names without fear
of being unconventional, don't we?
off what the Young Idea of today Then we must not neglect to deco-
calls, I believe, a Line about the ec- rate our dads with the Dads' Day
stacies of 'jimmypie' smokers as that tags; nor must we fail to wear them
fathead used to do in Velvet adver- ourselves. The tags will be available
tisements. No! If that thesaurus- Iat various places on the campus to-
day and tomorrow; we shall have no
guzzler ever smoked anything it was excuse for failure to procure them.
hashish! There are few better ways of pro,
"A good pipe is moting a spirit of informal and hearty
9? something to cherish acquaintance than by such a "label"
in its old age. Even method. The dads like to wear thesel
( pa bad pipe has its tags for they are just as proud of
advantages. I re- their sons and daughters as those sons
member in the palmy and daughters are of them. Conse-I
days of my boister- quently the "I'm John Brown's Dad"
ous youth I used is, to, them, a mark of distinction, and
sodden briar to rid one they are glad to wear.
the room of my landlady, a worthy soul As a fitting accompaniment for the
garrulous like that will always know tags of introduction is the "Hello
who his true friends "are. Dad!" which every student should
vouchsafe to every dad in or der to live
"Of course a pipe, even a modest, up to the tradition of Dads' Day. At
unasuming pipe, cant' go in for so- first some of the dads may be a bit
ciety. You never see, f'r instance, nonplussed by this wholesale offer of
anybody drag out a reeking dunhill comradeship, but before the day Is
at the Ritz-Carleton or Reisenweber's. over they will all be "warmed up" toI
No, those establishments maintain an the spirit of good fellowship which al-
ex-pugilist for that. Cigarettes are ways permeates Dads' Day, and they
the rule. But a cigarette is a pale will all be coming right back at us;
morning-after taste to the palate aft- with an equally hearty "Howdy,
er a session with briarwood. Further- youngsters; glad to be here!"
more you never see women smoking
pipes. Oh, for a minute perhaps in SECTIONALiSM T. 'LASS
England a while back-but a fad, a.
mere fad. But the women don't (Brown Daily Herald)

...

LAST EDITION OF

MICki6GAN

SONG

B OOK

r-i ATi

BOTH STORES

I. r .. .r... ....r .

of

h s2 nd16in t is counr y, anai sn eia in a more
Tphoies, 2414 and 178-1 or less jocular light by the average
person, sometimes even by the college
ANARION E.STAH student. The uerson whose prime oc-
cupation 'isd delving among the ruins
:ws Editor..............Paul Watzel of the past is frequently loolted upon
ty Editor ...............James 13. Young as a hopeless tld foggy. Few students
sistant City Editor . ......Marion Kerra
itorial Board Chairman ......E. R. M,2iss ever consiler seriously thid profes-
ght Editors-si
Ralph yers satsyHbey Jon as a li work. But the conti-
J. P. Dawson, Jr. J. . Mack butions madc by archaeolgizt: to our
L. J. Hel-shdorfe-r R. C. Moriarty .
.C. A. Donahue . y odern civii.Hat,.n are as great as
orts Editor .....F. H. McPixe those made y ,y Aientists in other

DETROIT UNITED LINE$
Ann Arbor and Jackson
TIME TABLE
(Eastern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars-
6:oo a.m., 7:00 a.m., 8:oo a.m,, 9:o5
a.ni. and hourly to 9:05 p.m:1
Jackson Express Cars (local stops
west of Ann Arbor)--9 47 a.m., and
every two hours to 9:47 p.m.
Local Cars East Bound-7:oo a.m.
and every two hours to 9:oo p. m.,
s:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-i 1:40
p.oi., 1:15 a.m.
To Saline-Change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-7:5o a.m.,
12~i :op.mi.
To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Lim-
ited cars 8:47, 10:47 a.m., 12:47, 2:47,
4:47 P.M.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at
8:47 p.m.
1921 NOVEMBER 1922
S A T. W T F S
1 2 3 41
D 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 8 I
19 21 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 2 19 3
Start Righta Wit a Good Hat!
We do all kinds of HIGH
CLASS Cleaning and Reblocking
of hats at low prices for GOOD
WORK.
We also make and sell POP-
ULAR PRICE and HIGH
GRADE hats, FIT THEM TO
YOUR HEAD and save you a
dollar or more on a hat.
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 Packard Street Pbone 1792
(Where D.U.R. Stops
at State Street)

UNITED CIGAR STORE II

$5.00 Gillette Razors ...................................... 99c
$5.00 Auto Strop Razors ...................................9c
One Dozen Gillette Blades............. .... ..........79c
50c Brass Ad Trs......................................25c
Two Dozen Pipe Cleaners..................... . 5c
Barking Dog Smoking Tobacco, 1 5-8 oz........ ......... 30c
16 oz. Prince Albert Tin, $1.35; Glass Jar 'for...........$....1.45
16 oz. Velvet Tin, $1.35; Glass Jar.................... ...$1.45
16 oz. Edge Worth Tin, $1.35; Glass Jar..................$1.60
200 Virginia Brights, Cigarettes for.................. $1.20
B. B. B. Pipes.'.........................' ..'.'...$3.50
Mi11a no, W. D. C., Italia, Pipes (guaranteed)......... ....$3.50
$2.00 Prince Albert Pipes (guaranteed) .....................99c
Locktite Pouches......................................$1.00
Playing Cards, Poker and Pinochle............. ...25c, 35c, 45c
Special price by the Dozen

"Special"

nday Magazine Editor.......Delbert Clark
omen's Editor ... .......Marion Koch
mior Editor . ..........Donald Coney
nference Editor ............H. B. Grundy
ctorial Editor ... .......... Robert Tarr
usic Editor.....................H. Ailes
Assistants

. H. Pryor
orothy Bennetts
aurice Berman
A. Billington
V. B. Butler
C. Clark
B. Connable
velyn J. Coughlin
ugene Carmichael
ernadette Cote'
'allace F. .lliott'
'. Fiske
axwell Fead

John Gar1inghouse
Isabel Fisher
Winona A. Hibbard
Samuel Moore
T. G. McShane
W. B. Rafferty.
W. H. Stoneman
Virginia Tryon
P. M. Wagner
A. P. Webbink
Franklin Dickman
Joseph Epstein
J. W. Ruwitch
J. A. Bacon

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960
BUSINESS MANAGER
ABERT J PARKER
Advetising ..........John J. Iamel, Jr.
Advertising .............Edward F. Conlin
Advertising. .........Walter K. Scherer
Accounts.; ...........Laurence H, Favrot
irculation ................David J. M. Park
Publication .......L. Beaumont Parks
Assistants
Townsend H. Wolfe Alfred M. White
Kenneth 'Seick Wm. D. Roesser
reorge Rockwood Allan S. Morton
Perry M. Hayden James A. Dryer
Eugene L. Dunne Wm. I1. Good
Wm. Graulich, Jr. Clyde L. Hagerman
John C. Haskin A. H'artwell, Jr.
Ifarvey E.Red . Blumenihal
C. L. Futn a owird Hayden
I D. Armantrout W. K. Kidder
I. W. Cooper Henry Freud
1allace Flower . erbert P. Bostwick
dw. B. Riedle L. Pierce
Tarold T,. HaleI

fields and are of inestimable value
to the student of history, art, or litera-
'.re.
The life of the earliest recorded
races who inhabited the region cen-
tering around. the Nile river and the
valley of the Tigres and Euphrates
would be almost a closed book to us
were it not for the excavations of
archaeologists. The art of primitive
people can be studied today largely be-
cause of the copies of statues, paint-
ings, and worls of sculpture unearth-
ed by archaeologists. The recovery ofI
ancient manuscripts, which were writ-f
ten about the time of Pericles giving !
us the foundation of medieval. and
modern literature, is largely due to
archaeologists.
Max Shiemann, who excavated the
region around the ancient city of'
Troy, finding innumerable valuable
vases and works of art and bringing
to light the existence of a civilization
which had been unknown before, was
an archaeologist, as was Howard
Butler, a graduate of Princeton uni-
versity, who recently lost his life in
a successful quest for the coins of
King Croesus of Lydia among the bur-
ied cities of the Syrian desert.
Possibly, the apathy of students to-
wards this science may be explained
by the fact that it is practically im-
possible to give very adequate train-
ing in archaeology in a college course
in any more direct method than that

smoke-they burn tobacco."m
* * *
FAREWELL TO A RED MOUSTACHE
WE HAVE ALL SEEN AS WE
WALKED ALONG THE
DIAGONAL
Divine flambeau!
. Thou envy of us all
And dearest treasure of thine owner
tall,
I grieve to feel
No more thou'lt greet me as I wend

The class should be the distinctive
and outstanding figure in the campusj
life of a university. Unfortunately, at
Brown, class gatherings have become
fewer and fewer, and class spirit has
waned visibly. Sectionalism, in the
form of societies and departmental
clubs, has usurped the position due to
the class. We are having .less and
less of that -binding together of the
entire membership of the class work-,
ing anid acting as a class. The Fresh-
man outfit is possibly an exception,
but that is due more to the natural
grouping of new men than to the
method of organization.
Why emphasize the importance ofI
the class? Simply because that is the'
one great unit to which all smaller,
ones should be subordinated. It is

my way
Into thy sacred precincts day by day;
The rude appeal
That thou shouldst by rough hands be
shorn away
Served but to make more sure thy
sovereign sway!
Now thou art gone!

Mc
3:
4:
4
5:
5:
an
b

ORENCI-ADRIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS
Schedule in Effect October 18, 193
Central Time (Slow Tim e)
D X t D
.M. A-M. P.M. P.M.
55 6:55 Lv. Morenci .Ar. 1:35 9:35
(hotel)
45 7:45...-Adrian ....lz2:45 8:45
:i5 8:r5 ... Tecumseh ... 12:15 8:15
30 8:30 .... Clinton ....'. 12:00 _S:oo
15 9:15 .... Saine .... 11:15. 7:15
45 9:45 Arnn ArborLv. 10:45 6:45
(Court House Square) A. M.
1)-Daily. X--Daily except Sundays
rd Holidays. Friday and Saturday special
us for students leaves Adrian 1:45, leaves
nn Arbor44.
AM S r. ELIIOTT, Proprietor
'ho1l 026-M Adrian, Mich.

P
i
I
of qr

In Twoeds and Soffings

The Right Store with the Right Prites
JETTER & DE FRIES
P11ONE 64-R 118 EAST HURON STREET
----------

s2.o

.ad $2.50

SMART

CAPS

FOR YOUNG MEN

r I -..._..T.;. e

I I

I needs must drop a tear Ithe unit that will mean Much to every A
Thinking of bygone days when thou student after college days. For after P
wert here, college-what? The university views ;
Of thy bewitching lines, thy wondrous those who have graduated in terms of
hue, class units. EIach June brings the
Thy fascination every maiden knew; graduation exercises with the annual
That upper lip so long a prey to revels of the alumnus body on the
doubt campus. But how large is the unit and
By a relentless Fate at last is outj how much informed as to each other,
And braves defenseless the keen win- even to the names of many classmates,
are the members of the classes of 1924

It's not what you
Pay that counts-
It's what ycu get
For what you pay

r:a9r

ONE DOLLAR
OR MORE
FOR YOUR OLD PEN
STANDA' D MAKE
Ia Exchange For a
RIDER MASTERPEN
And your pen troubles are o ve
RIDER'!4 PER -HcLP

w it t , y,

Lutz Clothing Store
vn Town 217 South Main Street Down T

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER
light Editor-L. J. HER
FOR 123 A ND MICI
The class of 1923 had a
700 in its coffers before
ollect three' and a half
very senior as dues for
ear. The proceeds of thi
ogether with the money
essed by the senior cl
ubstantial sum, approa
undred dollars, which w
e left in the' bank until
ense of events during
reek have been deducted
nd then presented to th
n the form of a parting
ind or other from the c
The idea of each class.
iemorial to the Universi
nt, and various relics in
tones aboLut the campus g
f how long it has been i
ever before has a senio
o well fixed financiallya
ais year. In view of this
t not be wise to utilize
Money to directly benef
rhile it is still in the U
During the months fro
ext June are furnished
ortunities for the men
e graduated to come i
ith each other and fora
nity which brings alum:
'niversity reunions. Eve
rst year of its residence]
een unusually active as
inning of the undercl
oth as freshmen and as
'hich resulted from 'the
iterest of those in the
ince then its record has
ne of accomplishment b
pli'it of co-operation.
In view of this fact,
ear should be used to b.
' the class of '23 evenn
>gether. To help effect t
r class could well spare
red dollars for get-togeth
it the winter,-smokersc
ents to bring the men
ith each other. Even t
ere done, there will sti
nfoney left to buy theI
ibstantial gift next Jun

?'Ifl 14>,9

# supplied by a classical education. But, itr anor1923
Bereft of beauty that once grew so
RSHDORFER while the accomplishments of archae- fair. This mediocrity should be remedied
ologists have been great, only a small by better organization and functioning
HIGAN. part of what is to be accomplished kw of the class during the undg t
ppoiaeyhas already been achieved. Archaeol- Like a bright flower we saw thee othclsduighenergraduate I
spproximately os a y ee wchis Artheof fade away days that will make possible a better
lwstarting toing among s tierit And less and lesser grow from day and stronger alumnus body in the
drsrra larger following among university tAndessa; lesseafter college days. - The alumnus body
dollars from gauts to day; is one of ithe strongest factors in the!
the present graduates._Each rose-hued dawn saw thee moress ss
closely trimmed - life and future of any university. And
isBrown university will be n-ade strong-
already pos-, N thEt t e c Till came a time when all thy light B
as1fom Now that the election is over it is was dimmed.! er through increased emphasis on, the
ass 'forms a ;waslasdimmed.it
ching fifteen fitting to recall that the interest in s
will probably the various candidates was mostly Divine fiambeau! Then let us have more get-to-geth-
aferte x sectional, and, that only one man was Thou'rt gone!. 'Tis but the way all eL s, more socials, more smuokers such
graduation important enough to atract the at- life must go.' as the Seniors held recently, so that
d next June, tention of the entire nation. Michigan, Thy day is done; but shall no recom- when classes which are in college now
d nersutyjIllinois, New York and .thie goth r get in the after college days they will
ie University Iot 1rI pense lesrne atr nFonslf n
gift of some states had their own individual con- Wipe dry the tears that mark thy be stronger factors i Brown's life and
lass of '23. tests in which the tension waxed going hence? future.
presenting a high. But the one personage big Bright eyes will linger with a keener
ty is a good enough to enlist the interest df Amer- glance, CLASSES AND JAZZ
the form of ica in his welfare was Andy Gump. Heads turn again, regretting thy mis- (Daily Illini)
give evidence Months before the election people chance It has been found not at all impos-
n vogue. But rom New York to San Francisco sible to absorb a certain amount of
r class been gleamed the newspapers to gain in- By whom at last was rung thy fu- culture here at Illinois even though,
s is the one formation concerning this iconoclast neral knell? as our contemporaries point out, we
s fact, would who 'wore no man's collar" and who, There's only one who knows and he are located in the midst of the corn
part of the with prophetic instinct, styled himself won't tell! -belt. Students are offered a number
"t the class the people's choice". By election Divine fiambeau! of courses that are inherently culural
UJniverslty? night the interest was feverish, and Farewell! and most of these courses are pre
m now until this morning when the newspapers POWDER-PUFF. sented in Lincoln Hall, a fitting mon-
the last o- announced that Gump had been swept I* * * ument to the culture of the middle
who are to into congress by a landslide giving So This Is What Our Nurses Do! west.
nto contact him a plurality of thirty-six votes NURSES ORGANIZE TO PLAY . What a base incongruity, then, in the
im that class over his opponent, the nation was pre- .. BRIDGE AND FIVE HUNDRED midst of a class in Greek mytholgy or
i back for pared to do him homage. -QOD. some other of the classics, are the!
or since thetat Andy is about to take hIs * * * clarionet obligatos, the saxaphone so-
here, '23 has place in the legislative portals of con- Our Own Hall of Fame ' los, the blue notes of "Hot Lips" or
a class. The gress, the people can cease worrying. Assisting the Onion assistants who some of the several thousand Blues--
ass contests about the tariff, taxation, and foreign have been appointed to assist - but offered as inspiration for the victimsI
sophomores' problems, and leave everything to enough of this. We nominate for the of "Corrective gymnastics" in the
loyalty and Gump. At last we have a man in Hall of Fame PETER THE GREAT woman's Building. They burst in up-
class, and congress unshackled by party inter- because he made all the Russ-ians cut on the few minutes the student finds in
s been made ests, a real thiiker as well as a true their beards, a thing that no one has which to forget this highly efficient
y that same orator. ever been able to do since; because existence and browse around- with the
he built Petrograd so that its nhab, ancients, like the ring of an alarm
the present While the University of Texas dis- itants may now emulate the precept. clock into a dream; the bursting of a'
ind members courages the owning of automobiles of the Muscovites and putty up the bomb N1 a garden. He is jerked back
more closely by students, the Ann Arbor Auto club bullet holes in their domiciles; and into reality of things as though by a
his, the sen- is going after more members. Well, finally because he married Catharine ! lariat.
a few hun- Texas is a long way from here. the Great who to our notion was very It may be that the twisted human
ers through- hot stuff. . body will straighten under the shivers
or entertain- When somebody has been badly * * * provoked by the ridiculous chords of
into contact damaged, the city may decide it is I It's a shame, the way these tunes, but the indirect result is
though this time to take steps towards regulating Center and Left fight apt to appear in St. Vitus dance in the
i1 I- "~iIn- iL +-a~i1.il nUn U1Ln2tiL QeiihiU OVrff -A4.- auuuI mrorwtheirno it inconvenient1t

f

W

own

6

m

-BY
-
an 1
BARBO UR GYM
Will you attend andbene-
fit yourselAfa well as
the WOmen' League?
Under Management of

/

k

t4

k

ll be plenty j
University a
e; and after

tramc at t3outn university and Mate.

over tneir g .
But though the older Right
may be a keen sight

students who find it inconvenient to
respond to it, let alone the disturbance
of nearby classes. Jazz music has its

.A P T-

Since the passing game is getting

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