PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY ___._r__ , -_.._ 171 A t rtartt4t t1'1 I which, through the generosity of the ,rnnrranmnnnnnim/o!/rA'ilfl R 'i i W If Y 4JIIt4? I6(I 7" t b manager, was increased to more than ----two hundred. The action exemplifies OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF TIHE a splendid and generous spirit.I UNIVERSITY OF ICRIGAN IIt has always been such generous' Published ievery morningbexcet Boa personal action that has nsured the during the IUniersityyear by t Boar band making even one football trip a Control of Student Publications. _ __-;year. Each fall the same process of Members of Western Conference Editorial soliciting aid from the students and Association. __ the townspeople has been followed. The Associated Press is exclusively en. It is impossible to expect that enough ! titled to the use for republication of a news funds to pay for more than one trip dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- can be raised in this manner and so, lished therein. _.. for that reason, the band remained inj Entered A the postoff ce at Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor while the hardest game Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate y. of p o tage granted by '1thisd Assistant Post- played at Iowa last Saturday. The master eneral. y A t onmtie Michigan schedule was being Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, on re iigan s he wascbein $4.00. amount required for the Wisconsin Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- trip nard Street.i is still far short of its quota al- l-'bots"n: Editorial, 24t4 and 176-MI; lsi though attempts have been made to! tis; 960. -- --- - raise it for several weeks past. Thej Signed communications, not exceeding 300 Wisconsin game is the only other away words, will be published in The Daily at o the dis:retion of the Editor. Upon request, from home game and another hard one. the identity of communicants will be re- garded as onfidential.muaswi _re Whether the band will be there or not -d a e .depends on the generosity of the stu-. EDITORIAL STAFF dents and townspeople. Telephones, 2414 and 176-M The band should be assured a perm-' anent support of some sort from year MANAGING EDITOR to year which will insure its football HOWARD A. DONAHUE trips at least. The time is here, hasj been here for several years, for action NesEdito Julian E. Mack City Editor....harry flrey along this line by some University de- Editorial Board Rairmab... C. Moriarty partment Nl'NE PEOPLE- na MOSTLY GIRLS THE HOUSE THAT DIAEDALUS BUILT A Breakfast Serial ri -jD I I EDITORIAL COMMENT RED BLOODED MINNESOTA (The Minnesota Daily) Beware of a repetition of what hap- pened to Wisconsin. This is the lesson taught to Minnesota men and women In the editorial reprinted here, pub- a I IM I k" : I = WIR Ul I- t vg4 This is the sword that reached its--------------- lished first in The Daily Cardinal, of- In the huk of the monster huge and ficial student paper of the University of Wisconsin. stark Minnesota is paid a great tribute in By aid of the string which guided the this editorial. Our loyalty, our spirit, feet our determination never to quit, our Through the silent signless spooky fight, are recognized by Wisconsin. ' street How long before the few remaining Of Theseus the bold who led the band knockers, and kickers, will realize Which came from Athens afar to the that Minnesota speaks for herself and Ithat the cynics, the grouches, have no Of the maid who tried the guest to effect upon her. ensnare At Wisconsin the Gopher rooters did As she taught him to solve the tortu- themselves proud, just as the team did. ous lair Tomorrow the, big game with North- zt. an xih h ih nl A Wonder Selection of Personal Engraved Christmas ,Cards - --AT-- GRAHAM'S BOTH ENDJS OF '1!! DIA\GONAL WALK.. Order Early #I FA i i I I i I Night Edit ars E. H. Ailes A. B, Connable R. A. Billington 1. FI Fiske Haray C. Clark J. G. Garlinghouse P., M.2,Wagner Spoits Editor..............Ralph N. Byers Women's EditWi...........\\'nona Hlibbard Telegraph Editor...............fR. B. Tarr Sunday Magazine Editor......F. L. ilden Music Editor..............Ruth A Howell! Assistant City Editor.....Kenneth C. Kellark Editorial Board Paul Einstein Robert Ramsay Andy w Propper 'A.sistants B. G. Baeteke 1'. S. Mansfield J. N. lerkman E. C. Mack - elen 1lrown Verena Moran l Bertxaduite Cote Regina Reichmain G, V7. Davis WNV . .ncnan Il~,old Ehrlich -. . Stona V, C. Yinngcrl K. E. Styer SP. ieI N. P. Thal Dorothy S1in S. B- Tremble oseph W. .. Wamiour Elizabetb i< xP I .BUSINESS STAFF T'f-phone 960 BUSINESS MANAGERI LAURENCE H. FAVROT Advertisng............... ,.. E. I. Dunne Advertising .............C. Purdy Advertising.......... ...W. Roesser Advertising................W. K. Scherer Acoats... . . C. W. Christie Circulation .. ............Perry M. Hayden Publication..............Lawrence Pierce Assistants I i t 1 E SOUTH AMERICA COMPLAINS Is it that art in the United States is, becoming more and more mingled with commercialism, or is it that this country is beginning to appreciate its values much'I more than in former' years? This question is prompted by the recent news that many of the most famous opera houses in South Amer- ica are on the verge of being closed because they are unable to attract the best artists. The managers complain that because of the enormously high salaries Aaierica pys, they are un- able in any way to compete with us. They are of theopinion, it seems, thatr the artists are attracted here mainlyI because of the vast sums involved. If this be the truth it is indeed a most serious situation. Is art becom- ing a business? Will it too fall into the commonplace? To judge from= the interest given toI art in'thO past few years here in the United States, we are forced to take issues with our neighbors. The mat- ter of salaries is ,merely incidental. It is rather that the American public1 is becoming more alert; and that the artists are attracted here because theyj are given a more marked and willing1 response. They are being appreciated5 more, and too, the elemnent of humant interest is perhaps a more sincere one. It is a matter of greater personial in- Where ImanLIy U.a111m aWit Loyis P western is to be played. Lets it never Fared down the aliment'ry canal be said that Minnesota is a pink tea Of, the Minotaur so huge in span, school, that our rooters will not sup-' The man-bodied bull and the bull- port the team. Minnesota is a red- headed man, blooded school. At the game tomor, Far off in the Cretan labyrinth. row, let us proclaim it to the world, (To be continued) not only through our football team,' ARISTOPHANES. but through the way we support it. Following is the editorial published The item at the top of the column, The Daily Cardinal Nine people-mostly girls, doesn't PINK TEA WISCONSIN- mean anything tq us, but a guy who' Wisconsin went down to defeat, noti has been very critical indeed sug- a tie, at the hands of Minnesota yes-: gested that we use it instead of the' terday and the responsibility for that "lame gags that you've been running , "amthe gagspthayou'venrolumnningedefeat, lies at the feet of he Wisconsin at the top of your wet column." We student body and alumni! certainly hope you enjoy it. cyCheering of the weakest and most A puerile sort greeted the valiant efforts AGAINST OUR L B RARYof the Badger team on Randall field Although I'm scarcely five feet y Syesterday. Big brawny mluscular four, voiced men with dainty damsels at I've bravely tried and stretched their sides feebly hurrahedsforetheir and tried; team or breathed a few mumbled In every reading room there is, words of "On Wisconsin," as a concil- The Century Dictionary's skied. lation to the earnest invocations of Dear A-B-Celt and Salsi-Tech, cheer leador Ez Crane and his men. Drop E-F-G and Proper Names, Time after time, Larry Hall, pep How sad it is that you're no more, leader of a few years back, fervently Meant for the use of tiny dames! called for lunged supported only to go I cannot buy the costly thing, through the motions of a skyrocket in And spread it on the parlor floor; ludicrous silence while the Minnesota I use the general one perforce, stands, bellowed and roared and in spite of their limited numbers drown- { excitement with one of his father's I for one will withdraw and I knowI nightgowns and a little kindling wood. of others who will do the same. But' Our conservative University of Mich- I will have to be shown as will thou- sands of other members." igan was given a similar scare in the fall of 1921 when a member of the faculty "admitted" that he was a mem- IIt should here be made known thatr ber of the Klan and furthermore that this faculty man's name was never he was proud of it. made known. The reporter was made He said: "The Ku Klux Klan is an to understand that secrecy was es- organization of true American men, sential even in a friendly conversation in the highest sense of the term, who with a college newspaper reporter, and want the laws of America to express the student journalist did not violate the true fundamentals of the Declara- this trust. tion of Independence and who want Two years have passed since thati the enforcement of the law to be with- professor made his declaration to thel out fear or fav ror. repoter. It would be interesting to "It is not intended to make war ku now what progress the Klan has' upon any particular group, but it is imiade. I would be still more.interest- to make sure that no particular group infg to know the mind of the Klan pro- will make war upon America. - ;fessor, if he is still a member of tile "I do not approve of some of the Klan. If he perhaps is, we may ex-' things that a Michigan kewspaper pect to find a charred bit of wood on h;s said about the Klan; if however the Library lawn tomorrow morning. this paper can prove that these things Or perhaps some student wag will were done in the name of the Klan, do it. A RIAN-ANN ARBOR BUS LIN E Central 'irne (Slow 'rime) Leave Chamber of Commerce Week Days Sundays 6:45 a.1. . 6:45 a. n. 12:45 p. m. 6:45 p. m. 4:45 p. m. JAS. H. ELLIOTT, Proprietor Phone 926-'M Adrian, Mich. DETROIT UNITED LIKES EAST BOUND Limiteds: 6 a. m., 9:10 a. m. and every two hours to 9:10 p. m. Express: 7 a. m., 8 a. m. and every two hours to 8 p. m. Locals: 7 a. m., 8:55 a. m. and every two hours to 8:55 p. m., 11 p. in. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40 p. in., 12:25 a. m. and 1:15 a. m. WEST BOUND Limiteds: 8:47 a. m. and every two hours to 8:47 p.in. Express (im.aking local stops) :"9:50 a. m. and every two hours to 9:50 p. m. Locals: 7:50 a. m., 12:10 a. m. dennie Caplan John Conlin Allin B. Crouch Louis M. Dexter, Joseph J. Finn David A. Fox Lauren Inaight le. E. Hawkinson .sstsat Edw. D. Hoedlemaker Harold A. Marks Byron Parker H. M. Rockwell IH. E. Rose Will Weise C. F!. White R. C. Winter fAnd must its altitude deptore I will not use another make, The Century's my life-long frier Till it's set down within my rei My education's at an end. I would our flossy arclitect Had made a ten-foot pop table, Unpainted, if the funds gavec And set it where we'd all be ab To olTen every book at ponce- Compare the use of nounsa verbs- e. nd; ach, plar out, ble and I ed the whispers of Wisconsin's thou- sands. Men of Wisconsin! Has the old Bad- ger spirit gone so far into the depths of memory that a football game means nothing more than a pleasing date? Do you know that the women make more noise now than you do, and that even though they accept your invita- tions to games they would rather go alone and cheer for the team? One man in the crowd yesterday grumbled every time he had to stand up because he happened to be com- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1923 - terest , Night Editor--JULIAN ELLIS MACK NOW TO INVADE THE EAST s Two hard games now remain before Twenty-Five Years Michigan can again lay claim to the- Conference championship. The Mich- A o At lichzgan igan-Iowa game Saturday completed only half the Wolverine Conference 11From the files of thie U. of M. Daily, competition for ,this year, and, al- Noyeinmber 6, 1898 though some sport writers believe the hardest half of the schedule is com- Owing to the rush of press matter pleted, there are 'still two difficult on the wires of Evanston, it was ab- games to be won. The season how- r solutely impossible for the Daily toI ever is quickly closing and this month secure a longer account of the game will see the making or breaking of tan she did for her extra, the. first thea championship hopeWs..hall extra ever put out by a col- Only a short timq after the Minne- lege newspaper. It reports however sota game which is the last on this a victory for the Varsity of G to 5 year's schedule, the Conference foot- over her opponent, Northwestern. ball mentors will meet to decide the Students at Northwestern are about games their respective teams will to become proficient in the art of get- compete in next fall. It is true that ting married or Professor Cumorock next season is a year away but it is of the scholl of oratory will know the just at this time that popular expres- reason why. There are to be no more sion should signify the type of sched- awkward grooms or frightened brides, ule desired by the students and the . . or nervous bridesmaids or grooms- alumni of the University. men when the graduates of North- Cornell has, to the present, carried .h western, come to the point of getting through a consistent and successful maried. The groom will be taught to season and is now rated as the strong- lunge into his pocket for the ring est teani in the east by sport writers and get it out at the first effort, and throughout the country. Her victory thus save ten years wear and tear over' Dartmiouth last Saturday was tme on pis nervous system when the real crown to her hope's for Dartmouth had y a tem wichwasadmtfely upeiorday of fate arrives. The bride will be a team which was admittedly superior trained to keep the color in her cheeks to the Harvard team which it defeated amd to look andto ookneither supremely sorrow- several weeks ago. Michigan at pres- ful or intensely happy. The course ent, without question, the strongest will not contain a love making branch taam in the west. But a game this . . for at a coeducationaly institution, the' year between these two ancient rivals it themselves. It is understood that is of course out of the question. students can take care of that part of Next year's schgdule, however, is ibe the responses. It will be no longer now being dcided and, if its makers the greatest point in the course will give any consideration at all to the impossible for the spectators to make desires of the supporters of the Wol- out whether tie parties in interest verine tem-, they cannot fail to recog- ,have said, " will" or "I won't"? The nize the populr demand for an east- answer in every case will ring out rern cewo >1. \ 1s:2 end home game like a pilot hailing a boat at sea. ' ith ed 'r s i or Pennsylvania isI .ai- Tonght the final debate of the Lit- the desire 'f I > olid student body -arv nenartment will be held in room anmd aluumni a University. 24. The Alpha Nu will be represented Now when ts schedule is still in by F. . Rheinfrank, A. R. Wistrand, the making is the -time for followers of and G. A. Ohlinger, and the Adelphi the Maize and Blue to make their de- by L. Young, C. D. Hurrey and A.' sires on this matter known to the Evans. The winners of this debate proper authorities as no amount of meet the winners in tomorrow's de- protest or grumbling can afterwards bate for the filal University contest. produce any results. At the Boston meeting of the Amern- If this privilege w(.re mine, fortable while sitting down. May he How 'twould improve my comic and his lady friend who seemed blurbs!Il. M. P. amused at his sallies never visit a Wisconsin game again and pass them- Nete on the Klan selves off as loyal Wisconsin alumni! The iight-gown brigade is certainly It may be bordering on mob rule trying to get a death-grip on the edu- and Ku Kluxism to suggest it, but cational centers of the country. The some organizations ought to be start somelorganizationsdoughtdtoibe start Goblins and Wizards and King Kluds ed to shanghai those men who insist are running a life membership cam-I on fussing to the game. It's a man's paign at Princeton, it would seem; game, men, and it's a game won not it is rumored that hoods have been by eleven men but by the earnest co- found under pillows in the Harvard operation of every rooting supporter. dormitories; and now they stage a Wisconsin today has an ignoble rep- swell exhibition in the great Mihigan utation of being the "co-eds' paradise." edtcatlonll center, Ypsilanti. 'Wisconsin acknowledges and respects The Ku Kluxers are most subtle in the woman's right to be here, but it, their approach to this last citadel of resents tie disgrace of the charge. conservativee intellect:f theychave' SConservative intellect: they have Occurrences such as that at the game erected the jolly symbol of their or- esterday serve only to strengthen the ganization at three points between report. here and Jackson, hoping thus to con- is this a man's school? Or is it a vince tie canny stadtholders that jellyfish place where effeminate young- Klanism is the ultimate in social, po- sters Stacomb their hair and lisp 'Ye litical, and religious thought. This team" a one would say "May I have appeal to the mental equipment of this next dance"? passible Ku Kluxers is the most fetch- W Wisconsin has had its heroes in the ing thing about the organization, and past and it has its heroes of the pres- is undoubtedly responsible for its rap- ent. In the past these heroes were id development in this country. respected and honored, today they are Well, if they convert Ypsi, the coun- left unlaureled due to a preference for try's doomed, that's all. Ithe allurements of the sorority porch, evening dance, and coupe ride. Caligula last year used to say; quite Two games are left. Wisconsin can often, that he thought the Rolls could make good by contracting 8,000 sore exert a great force for good on the throats on both these week-ends. The campus which is the home of this coll. women are good sports and contract An womenare soy sthrttand cntr.c And we daresay that he did. theirs, if the men won't pester them All his achievements, however, must I with dates. fade into the eternal limbo beside the Put a little rosin on your spine, one which we, Jason Cowles, have ac- men, wipe off that powder on your complished. Do you remember, Girls nose, wear a flannel shirt, if you like! and Boys, what we said a few weeks Be a man! The consciousness of one ago about the cherubim that hold the game lost should rest heavily and per- sign on the Clem Library? We sug- sonally 'on Wisconsin men. Reforma- gested that they be filed off. Well tion comes too late for Minnesota, but (don't get excited now) they haven't a lesson may have been learned. been filed off, but they've been repair- I <<,? i : r t .K , . s: {: lfy Y .6. I' _.. ; . ,o.N_ ._.__ _a ' t?+ k II WA OVER et last! Soft. grain leather Walk-Over grain leather is tough and warm, but it has that new, softer finish that is so comfortable. Here's the Del- mar, brand new, wide at the throat, with the blunt lines that make Walk- Over grain leaiher btog es the witer oxford style for nen. -if ' IfQ~PA ed, polished up, their hair has been combed with a stone chisel, the hold- up-this-damn-sign-or-bust look has Y EST ER D A Y j been smoothed offa their little mugs, B.SMYTI-E and the whole facade of the buildingy has been improved some 300 percent. We, the originators and boosters of KNIGHTHOOD IS IN FLOWER this reform, bow to a gratified public The sign of the fiery cross at Prince- . .We are now one up on ton, Harvard and Ypsilanti may mean Chimes. that an organization known as the r f, ~' 'l' zfl wre' £'TTTAt 1 rn can association for the advancement of sciencea paper of mucli interest t I