PAGE F(-.Ulc THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OCTOIPER 13), 1;25 u' >. every morning except Monday dL, , the 3nive, sit; year by the Board int C(,. rol of Student Publications.1 Members of Western Conference Editorialt Association.1 The Associated Press is exclusively en- , titled to the use for republication of all news~ dispatches credited to it or not otherwise1 credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein. Ewntered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, :Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third \ sistant Post- master (General. Subscription by carrier, $3-50; by mail, $4.00. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phone: Editorijal, 4425; business, 21214.4 EDITOR] AL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR G fORGE W. DAVIS Cha 6r n, I:ditorial Board..-. Norman R. Thal CityeJ'lit .........Robert S. Mansfield News F: h,r............Manning Houseworth Womeif) Editor............ Helen S. Ramsay Sports 1 ditor.............. Joseph Kruger Telegraph Editor.......... William Walthour Music and IDrarna.. Robert B. Henderson Night Editors. Smi~ H. 'jdv Leonard C. Hall WLrI1.Crosby Thomas V. Koykka ,j .OV )re W. Calvin Patterson \-,istanit City Editors u rv.in an 'redei ick H. Shillito 1- 'rdeE.Bailey Stanford N. Phelps I,(,u's R. Markus evelyn Pratt 'Jharles Behymer Marie Reed P~hilip C. Brooks Simon Rosenbaum there seems little justification for't calling special attention to the numn- ber of athletes who have been caught cheating in examinations just because there has been a tendenc'y to makei examples of them. The article also ojects to (lhe hero1 worship of athletes, esp..eciaIly by freshmen. rThe l-icksville (Center team is composed of 17 men, and( they practice and play in a cornfield, but we doubt if the author of the (limes article would contend that th(,re isa any less hero worship of the xule'n on that team in their community thban there is of the several dozen men en ICoach Yost's squadl in the great com- munity that supports their endea vors;. It makes little difference whether a1 team's supporters numb~er one thou- sand or one hundred thousand, hero worship is bound to find its place in the hearts of a certain p~ercentage. Objection is made to the fact that a larger stadium will make of ther game "a great public spectacle." Is there some rule of rhetoric -fat says that a football game dloes not. become "a great public spectacle" until the attendance reae-h'c a m-rk over and above, 45,000? Is there any juatifica- AND~ elbelow you'll find a cont ribu-.,, lion, which we have read six tlimes( f"i~ now, and we haven't lbeen able to T'I'lit t~;:( le~ make overly much out of it. So after * * TWO COMPLETE COLLEGE STORES-' GRA HA MS BOTH ENDS OF THE DIAGONAL WALK the six readling we decided to run it, just to see if the rest of the readers could. If you do finid anything really7 worthy to be called to our attention fplease let us know by telegram col-l lest. The style we think is sort of - well, anyway read it yourself. But before that we have something to call to the attention of the student; (-ouncil or someother organization.' W~e just read in some paper that at 'the' University of Denver the co-edl frosh wear green scarfs. Now that strikes us as being a good idea. Of course we realize that the scarfs x. oculdn't match all the girls' clothes, hut pots don't mnatch brown suits either. Anyone wishing to carry this tion for statements an athletic contest by 100,000 people is to the effect that ulea any further that is witnessed august p~ermission any more harmful There could be locally, has to do so. green woolen l IBFruickingham ARhamRosnatovsky than one at which less than half that 1 for winter and silk or something elseI Edgar Carter Wilton A. Simpsoun number are present? As a matter ofI thinner for fall and spring. Then they Eugene 11. Gutelcunst Janet Sinclair Dougls Doubleday Courtland C. Smith I fact, when we consider the conditions; could have red scarfs for sophs and Mary Dunnigan James A. Sprowl I at the University, a stadium twice the white for Juniors and even blue for James T. Herald Stanley Steinko Russell T. Hitt Clarissa Tapson size of the present one would, in all' seniors. Perhaps no more women Elizabeth S. Kennedy Henry Thurnau ti.Uuiti David C. Vokes probability, make things infinitelya would wear them than men wear; al.ter H. 'Mack Chandler J. Whipple better. With almost 10,000 students toques, but then they could if they) Ellis Merry Kenneth WickwareI :itanton Meyer Cassam A. Wilson wanting to attend, and usually want- wanted to. And no doubt some w~id. Helen Morrow Thomas C. Winter i obi Herbert Moss Marguerite Zilszke ng t big one or more guests, wit;li * Margaret Parker a large part of our more than 60,000 ,.ee If You C21I an a i'Tisz Out, BUSINESS STA-ehogn frsatwthto-"ln with the belief that women sands upon thousands of people in< Telephone 2 r Eti atnery tte rynit e are vainer than men, and that all pro- BUSINESS MA°',, - accommodations for every big game fessors are dumb, there lies deeply BYRON W.. PARl'l every year, and with an increasingI embedded in the hearts of humanity Adve°rtising ....... ........... ... Finnl number of supporters followingr the the quaint notion that the female of A~~~~~~x~O rtsn.......T .1nsted, Jr. I A :vertismag.............. raQtiI.i entz, Jr. teams of our opponents to Ann Arbor, I the species is the classier dresser. Advertisine....... ...NV - I~ Mullin !w a adyfn n usadn irculat ici........1. .H-. Newman wecnhrl.id n usadn But even a cursory examination of Publicatior.............. Rudol ,' Bostelman evil in attempting to satisfy their de- Acc' ' ~ stnt P I . rnldsires to see Michigan in action. the statistics and a vague thumbing GeAsitat r r' i 1. Annbl. oHta. re If there are any evils in football,< of the authorities shows the essential W to w- ier Julius C. eliskow they are inherent in the game itself, QIxoiusso h term hil 1 3obrink Robert P.. hiissaniftearto eOnmasywthodngrfi- Ide . Butzbach Wmn. C. ['risch adithy aeto eprooted to be Onmasywihodngrfi- W, J. Cox Franklin ,J. Rauner extracted, without harming the game, volving himself in hazardous (oc-' Marion A. Daniel Joseph Rera~ntrnshasadrsofbuyar JAmes R. DePuy Margaret S3mith that is to be regretted. IFootball istie1htsadad5fbat r Stariler .F ttThmA Sundern here to stay. If there are any definite definite. Postcard reproductions of T.eneth Haven man.eH. Weanegd objections agas inst the constrction of, Niogra Falls by Moonlight have been J ., ii 'a 1 enan anwadmoeaeutesaim hest sellers for uncountable prO'Ces- Frank E.MotthWeimtn a ew nd orevenuae tahem F. A. No- :aruist _______ students, faculty, and administrativeI sions of te. centuries, andee h _____- officers would be glad to hear them,-I early B~abylonians sacarficed plump but the mere fact that freshmeni idol- mtos h oesotsit n TUEDAY OCOBE 13 ~ ize the Varsity man is hardly a valid( felt forty five years young, only toi ___________ - -objection.I the minor devils. Now when we put ___________________ Ion our linen duster and rubber gloves, Nigh " and proceedl to the examination of the i TH REWRDS F SCHOLAS111' ,subject indicated in the caption, what THE STADIUM ~~~I It is a common-place, too often as- 1 id hne nsye o 'WlAt'L STILE OBJE( r1'OS serted, perhaps, that the honors of women's clothes every four months. fit a rticle in Sunday's Chimes the scholar cannot begin to partake !Changes is a nmild word, upheavels, -wihprported to be a discussion of the same enthusiasm of glamtnor tornadoes, devastations, wholesale !i, recionof he ropsedthat surrounid the distinctions heaped reformnations. One year senile buiz- ne sadium, but which, in reality, upon his more spectacular brethre'cn, zards will be givinzg interviews on the was an excellent surrey of the argu- the business man, the statesman, orI healthfulness and good sense of the C ments aganist intercollegiate foot- o thea politician. olr Too often s people tt look modern short skirt. The very next ball , a prominent member of the upnashlra;n uiyetat only newsboys will stand on street facuilty made a number of statements lutg wisdom from a nutshell, unmindl- cres nwny as nesme,, and arrived at a number of conclu- ful of the vast worlds of ideas with creso id as n umr circus tents will be chic; in the fall ~ "r to which we might well take owihheidsronddtleisa-court plaster will beC the rage. exception,-a number of things which, lwdt go his way,' unrewarded ex- WoTmen's styles undergo radical from one point of view, at least, had cept by his own kind, who take their, changes periodically. Aesthetic prize-' absolutely no bearing on the question ow euirwyofimraiig ciples are more or less fixed. And of improved seating facilities for ath- J so far as man can be immortalized, then we're asked to believe that fe- letc cntets.the adventurous spirit that casts manl males are nifty dressers. We're asked letic cofteresea In discussing these so-called falla- lose in the wilderness orearch. to admit that hoop skirts are charm- cies, it is well to keep in mind the, Prof. Arthur Lyon Cross, for ing and in the same breath that i following two statements, one of twenty-seven years a member of the$ knickers are cute. Watson, the bromoj v"hich appeared near the beginning history faculty of the University, has; seltzer.I +I. - r"n ot 1 . ,1 I been notified of his elec'tion as COI- '11 1 a nrlcl rnt,- .-.. .. Mu Phi h,, ri1ln1i" top.1%'-c t aI\ piano concert by Lois and Cayr t l' T u e sd a y e v e n in g , O( ff )oh e r 2 %, i 11nal - o la theVI , , ' l o . ' l program'Inwill incluide, veral1 o'f te out'4tandling niumber s played in Alr Maier's Interpretatlion "('lats iast spring, especially the Sz.Iain-Saecus j Variations on a Theme of Beet hoven -11;' which they do to a collossal perfc- tion' -- and the Decbussy "La IBitea Jon joux." The program in detail is as follows: For Two " in nos -Minuette and Ca':oti e . .. Sat e1t-S lens Six ''1 iebesliedcr "'1Ylt ze. Iminironilpt tI ia(oco.o.........(" IL II.I Aariations on a T'hemne of Beethoven...........Saint-Saei>a H I.t 'Ballet, '"La. Boite aJ.a lii~x .Dlehnssy (:11r. 1Al aien will unIrralte the story of the ballet as; he ph nys it..) IV. j For 'i'N o0'Pil os P'relude................. ...PoYflen(', At the ruins ot' ll~eizi:s (,1 '0hertl............... C slella Iuian eaa nt I1t-la.nt' . ...... WW;('e B~lue IDantihe . ........ .t aass - ains I 'niH YP11",1I 11. VI w'III The fir st bill of the X'psi lamt i 1y- ers, wh o (are Ott?>ilmtheir eleventh. seaIsoll Xiondiiy. October 1'2(", ik)Ill IPlayhouse, A' ',s jia liti, n lii]alii det Bottoniley's 'Twld ny'"'irt clIic tnlln it z- icr's ''The 's -c ..el Sup:' en'' ferom "The AfI' fS i ,'airs od 'l vage,''by ors 1i',a.t''Pads v'' is a. jazz 1farce a A '111illbein1 ;'eca wvith syi' 'oe Iedinusi'', while "Sall- vage'' is a" ('ilarca,.t; r (lri'ziia I te I T illi ,see mo"Ift 11is. John 'i S- bergen, formterly t rig Q;tr'- t('tte).................... )ebu 'Y CScherzo (Sonata V) ...... to nil rna ait I Lento from ''nph'i;" to...Ilck I''alt ai 81111 'agu Il Cu o MADE IN ANN ARBOR by J. G. Rider Pen Co., I RIDER "Masterpes A 'wonderful pen backed by real service. -Rider's Pen Shop 302 State St.. s .ww war i ..........._ REPAIRING 24 HOUR SERVICEI ATYGURHATS- EVERYONEELSE I DOESI io vo 'er hadtiyou r hat cleaned r'11-' -ree fronti od'or and looking~ Fik !oicwf We CAN dootdiemi rightl If ive wanut ryt to bring in your o"A 1,1 b a t d t r,; it.I P'4- also sA~l hats MADEE 'BY US, - m~~!te ti thie head fre: of charge, it ~ i~ fi ~lWP ind l Ihem superior to C'e fi -aei-made 1hats. ".ACTORY HAT STORE, (HPackard Silreutthonae 7415).j ( = a:'i I). ET. IU. Stps -at State St.) LEARN TO DA"'NCE' at GRAINGER' S Beginning Wednesday, :October 14 Dancing Classes will be held on Wednesday and Friday evenings from 7: 00 to 7:45 I Enroll Now ! Tuition $5.00 per term of Twelve Lessons. r ., 1, r a i 6;-!"' DON'T, "AAKE ,' tT H 4S) O r HLEAD)QUARTERS For GENUINE ORANGE BLO. j I cA aaSCHLANDERER SCNIA444 NC BEFRIEjewele] 4% aann u 301 South kSoM aN9S D)iamiond Ln agemenl nRus Wedding Rings $:35 and Up rC Rondl"'des l'i'iac ss', (1'l* oni '' iiOisea u (d>Fll-'') . ...-SInhsc Capr'iccio ............. ticendeol sohin Serenade ..........Schlubert A\larehe Aliliie...... Sc 1,tubtert. jtli, EliIBaha l ebe -s;y and St awinshy. . . It' 3yo;tc'are a ayt hinag for music and these:' three inl"rish- able modernists, do not allowyourself to mis-s this concert. It sitoaild he a little inastcrplee in (ecutrwAts. { t .1 t t _E i "I er Main __j 7 t f the article, thUfiC lLIe' ar te lia: '-I w cnclude that the sport as now cenda. ted is helpful, let us further <;is in a tendencies by building a la reL.,dium; if it is injurious, let sx frown upon the project." "But that noln alter the unmistakable fact that students could still be allowed I hs h anie without the contests be- coming a great public spectacle.'' .f( one- point, the article says, "Wie- do not sit back and acquiesce' in the killing of thousands of people by~ aiLOmObihes simply because we b~ Hbve that te, good in the automobile more than offsets the evil." But on the other hand, if those thousands of people wanted to be killed, and there was no good and sane reason why they should not be killed if they so desired, the more efficiently the ma- chines killed them, the better for all concerned. And this hypothetical case applies to what the article describes as the "greatest student in- terest, "-football. If't students want it, and there can be on hto that score, and if there ,,yegod and sane reason why they ; si , -riot have it (and as yet none has _;x, advanc-! responding member of the Massa-1 ma'xhrh.pek bu e chusetts Historical society, to sue-! eyes, he hair, her tastefully molded !It 1)as ju'tJIe"> that ft-ri ceed the late George B. Adamus of neck, her teeth, old man's shekels, if was decidlec! in -naeeson~e figur' Yale. The appointment comes as a he's Anierican; her eyes, her hair, coninec(ted,;-ithi tl ilwat]'e fora this1 fitting reward of the many year sde- h er teeth, her dowry, hier kneecaps, year'is Fellowship 'int'rekCLiv yeAnts. voted to the study and teaching of ( and toe nails if he's. Continental. Her God E'dwar.l Cordon Crai; xs em'- history. It is peculiarly significant, gait, her table manners, her attitude ously conside^red for thle honoer. More: in that Professor Adams has long !oil parlor dates, all these are given corn , poncr fle v:< s ;'C1Ii"Jyixnder-- been considered as the most fruitful attention. But nowhere a word about take),11nd ther e wasjiof e I ;aia. and productive scholar in Amrerica, that beautiful -,,4r -lhan gown with pv "Lc ball of Ij~'l'i' U'- w1;ala. and that election to the Massachusetts I that cunning effect. T]here is only oneI And then.I society is always a coveted marks of p~ossible connection between women's 'Thie scandal n-,, t '-'ex r emared, distinction. President James 13. clte and womanly charm. Ask but on. good at lioil v th'a :t is Angell is the only other Michigan' Earl Carroll. 4''i2l za:edtn ~ammms man to niave achieved the honor of And now as the oil i7 running low tra~tive' coiittpcfial. ly tssir c lthe membershnip, just one more point. A towel wrapt ti'opo'-al ctown assI' tot, tao ; The Daily, having looked upon Pro- around the midsection served to dangerous! fessor Cross as a valuable friend, is I maintain the dignity of our pre-his- An so Jessie L> uch i tiilian:. .of glad to acknowledge the honors which tn ancestors. But mant has p o (' ic., t4he ise oi'e' ccl in:l (~th'o by this election accrue not only to grse.Hsclte o rIo !oentear.ln ther eh.- < esd i lte oaeo*aimdr ltr . 'ohim, but redound immeasurable credit 1 complex character and based onl tie- I wnit tell two -,o0,I lpla3' oo upon the University. chanical principles undreamed of int *! --(those pagan times. Tfrotusers, waist- ".IIt t;" A ; FOR ROOTERS ON1I coats, semi-soft collars, hygenic back Somnehow wve