PACE FOUR PAGE F'OU WEDNTHDAMNOVEMBEN11,A1L2 WFIDNvsDAY, NOVFATTII- 'Il tl, 1925) i M111 Y11 f lYIIFIIwISX1 l1 . a . _:.:.. .-b ~I~hnau~3ujtxNOI{TRIESTEIIN'S S11111A 111' A ~, Northwest erm univ-ersit, 1-!ring completed the plans for at.new Innili( Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in; dollar stadium, is face-d by ;t2t Control of Student Publications. ( dilemma---the IproposfAl sti scl~ er.' ' Members of Western Conference Editorial!mr hn8 ethihadi ''e Association, fore fatid~i(en under l. a tz:tenz' ; cal- - - - ing ordinance. Once 110fl pi i The Associated Press is exclusively en-1 titled to the use for republication of all news; dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished therein, Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $3.50; by mail, $4.00. Offices : Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones:; Editorial, 4925 ; business, 2x214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 492 5 MANAGING EDITOR GEORGE W. DAVIS Chairman, Editorial Board .. .Norman R. Thal City Editor............ Robert S. Mansfield, News Editor............ Manning Hiousewortb Women's Editor............ Helen S. Ramsay Sports Editor.. ............Joseph Kruger Telegraph Editor.......... William Walthour Muskc and Drama.Robert B. Henderson Night Editors Smith H. Cady Lecuard C. Hall Willard B. Crosby' Thom~as V. Koykka Robert T. DeVore W. Calbin Patterson Assistant City Editoz e Irwin Oliani Frederick. H. Shillito Assistants 4 I I Gertrude E. Bailey Stan ford N. Phelps Charles Behymer Evelyn Pratt Philip C. Brooks Marie. Reed I~.Itarnum . Simon Rosenbaunm Buckinghami Ruth Rosenthal Edgar Carter Wilton A. Simpson Eugene H. Gutekunst Janet Sinclair D)ouglas Doubleday Courtlan l C. Smith Mary Dunnigan Stanley Steinko Jamies T. Herald C'larissa Tapson Elizabeth S. Kennedy Henry Thurnau Marion Kubik D)avid C. Vokes Walter H. Mack Chandler J. Whipple Louis R. Markus Cassam A. Wilson Ellis Merry Thomas C. Winter Helen Mort ow Marguerite Zilszke Margaret Parker BIUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER TYRON W. PARKER k Advertising.............. J. Finn) Advrtii'"...........T. D. Olmsted, Jr.l Advertising .............Frank R. Dentz, Jr. Advertising..................Wi. L. Mlli Circulation ...................1. L. Newman P'ulication..............Rudolph Bostelai Accounts.... ..............AauliWtAanol IngredY M. Alving S. I. Pardee George H. Annable, Jr. Loleta G. Parker W, Carl Bauer Julius C. Pliskow John H. Bobrink Robert Prentiss Elden W. Butzbah Win. C. Push W. J. Cox Franklin J. Rauner Marion A. Daniel Joseph Ryan lames R. DePuy Margaret Smith Margaret L. unk Ruth A. Sorge Stan Gilbert, Thomas Sunderland T. Kenneth Haven Wil. H. Weane 1. E. Little Eugene Weinberg ]''rank E. Mosher Wi. J. Weinman F. A. Norduist ___________ WEDNESD)AY, NOVEMBER 11, 1925 Night Editorx-W ILLARD B. CROSBY ARNISTCE IAY3 The clamgour of this day seven years I ago that dinned in the ears of the world and made them ring,--ars which but a moment before had list- ened with wavering emotions to the1 newsboys crying, of the latest "big l push," ears of at joyous, carefree world inadescribably glad for the chance to clear its blood blotched sur-f face was :justified-the exhausting1 nauseating buden of war was lifted. Thce great horde of the world's peo- ples revelled in the ecstay of unpre- cedented relief, unmindful of the. never to be mended tragedy about them, or of the magnitude of the serv-1 ice performed in the trenches. But apart from that vast mob of revelers, a smaller body sat in deep dejection. A throng of aching longing hearts made miserable by that same tragedy,1 the fear of which the others had so joyously received riddance. 'With the passing of the years and the advent of sobriety, selfish joy has{ given way, it is hoped, to sympathy and admiration. Sympathy for the families of those who made the su- preme sacrifice, admiration for the valorous deeds that have peserved us. The residue of the cataclysm that rocked the whole world are n longer divided, the bond of sympathy has made them one, evermindful of the awfulness of war, and desirous of paying an everlasting and entirely fiting tribute 1o its dead. Of this much we are certain, but. vhet her or not the greatest human weak ness----sel interest-will make strict adherence to the only advisable plan impossible is quite another mat-1 ter. Two minutes of silence at 111 o'clock today as advocated by the League of Remembrance is the only proper Armistice day celebration; a! ri-;ht tribute to lives courageously given, it should prevent a lapse of mnemory on the part of the people of this country. A bit of a reminder--silent heads bowe, a prayer running through the (usty brows-of' horrible Mars andI the inuiolated victims he scatters over lis immense altar. The first hurst of emgotion over the passing of the late large-scale killing is to be replaced by a new Armistice dlay, and propriety, if not good taste, de- mands the co-peration of every citi- A a nr rrnni innn +nn..-,-n..a-, advancement by the university ae being held up by real estate ownoi'.f in Evanston, who object to the heigh- of the building, claiming, it is rmor -t ed, that 'it wil knock the air off the city!" Evan stonians should realize tat. the increasing greatness cOirum u- versity brings more students, more money, and more publicity to their city. There is not the slightst dloohl that a new stadium for the lPurple!5 Wildcats is an absolute necs-itr T' Northwestern-Tuane game \\was phty - ed on Stagg field, through the courtesy of the university of Chicago. and the Northwestern-Mficigan ame1 was played on the mncply-ow~ed Grant Park; stadium, 'which was not intended for football and is not suitedl for use as a footal stadium. North- western has a team wit hout a field. 1 While it is true tha t the owners oft1 adjoining real est ate. are -wit''iOn hheir rights in objecting to the eretin ofc the new structure, they shold ape-!t elate what it mneans to Nothwetrnan andI therefore to Evanston .A mod- ern stadium instead of the dilaidated wooden structuire ta~tnow oectupios5 the ground would attzi-ct thousands of spectators to Evanston yarly. From a purely commercial s andpoint,I as well as from the sense of loyalty to the university in its effort. to pro- gress, the objectors should give Northwestern a special permit to dis- regard the zoing ordinance and hurl- ry their stadium to completion before September, 1926. "Tot, 3, Youngest i foot ch Viclnim Lands in Hospital"--Tribune head-' line. This youngster is ot t fe, o to speak. QUA ('hS TI a American college n iow.'co- fronting a crisis that is the restlt of its own success, according to Profes-- sor Richardson of Dartmouth in hiis speech before the Assoiat io o0 American Universities in coufrence at Yale. The American peole, keep- ing in mind the successes of college, men in every professional branch andk academic endeavor, are 1rega ding with greater respect and with neini- terest the value of a higher edce-I tion, and are trnitg to the univers- ties with an enthusiasm wich is very embarrass ig. "The peopIIe of his country, per- haps without discriminating (thouh as to what they wan, or why they want it, senm bent upjo (-Jt elding, not only to the embryo professional man and scholar, but to every youth~ who may manifest, however langudly. the desire, the privilege of carrying his educational developmaen t as far aa he may choose,' st ated lProlesor Richardson, The laity revealed in c~t ance e- quirements and the act, that public' opinion deems tat a state tnilversiy afford education for all are the ult i- mate causes hat. explain wchy orit seats of higher learning are thronged I to capacity; why professional fild are' flooded with charlatans, quacks, and shysters. EDITORIAL COMMENT FALING MASULI1NT'Y - (The Cornell Daily Sun A peculiar criticism. wb ih old graduates are wont to makle is that since their days their Alma Ma L';nj have become woefully (effemina e.] They lament the passing ot the ol time class rshes, the compa rat ie serenity after football games, -and the growing dearth of class spirit. M1'en were men years ago, it sems, but, have now become so effeminate tt they even shave every day. QOu- thority says: "WI t A' 11Al eia j lniversities need rightflt ow, is los jut elle('t andi itore w bysblu, ind share when they sing in t lie htin li roomz' cnt produce those ruiniing prohiundo notes from the wa ist l' . ! ot her gradluate, a I larvard ni in , ('com ig back to a pqa ne oI VI a a Imary, XVotlc(l dw hot ter 1,the '(co-01k; . was tflie) Willi inis of his day wiit s N OTHI NU It has beeni called to our att ction 1 1 .is coun 11oft en bcozo es coin--( ftusedl with ilurneighbor, pr icularly winu \\e Iimppl 'to10 ae too much itto say; al11110111.vi'hltI tn-renlt o vei-lAV'S with the realm of i lat next-I dor. In:l vciow of I tis inact, an(I out 01' jus--i tii:Jq'tk5 the ra'en erf,1'this depart ient we fteel thlit it would beon(ily fair to sLate tthat Some tmaterial ofourOns ap-l 1>ea veda-en lih oft tilli 01thle atja cient (:lkilhlii yst erdlay. TPhis was not. nme thttt to 1)e at iri,al inanly way, and was mewrly a mistk. "6TAM HOUR INE"' Something should lbe said, we feel, by way of (nourapt(anent for ''am- bourine,''tie twentieth annual pre-j sent ation w~ch Wlimes will offer as the1 Opera (diferent. F1ronm all reorts antI thee frames now exhibited in te Union it loops as if it were going to he quite a show. As tiee publicity thus far has been quite normal ini most ways, we canot think of anything particularly worthyofometexpthebvusun onl the title. We I-ave sinice 1learnled that such rhiymles as Lexington and Indian, are ju~tc f te lhaht est teutancy itlmoenf verse. If this is the case, we are pr'oud to fcel that we have been out- stripiing the modernist in laziness and general lack of ingenuity, for se- cra.l years flow. We now come l'ot, and with just pridte sta~te thlat in onet of our little limericks which appeared in this (c0- unin, we rhymed green with seem. k\'Lb oalle- a ccusi- e LI:; Sof rot being u:> to (late? There is a [ hery a fot tlhatwhen visit 11a -ic( Ivlwr1o1, it 1is wrong, yla, cr iinlto mentin tli eillness in leis tl t nitlhi <<.:> gr-at ifying a; it was uniusual1. WHi t thetiitIi7z of thle se'onidlat came a:) 'e1lung of a dtled art in te it )'!:f''tlo£n. 'JTitilmdti he'ii a.pi'- SIogu tlo t i e a et. Whicho, while well deli veretd, was soin et iung of a b nre, but. the stage, its o-ctnpa-nts, and111its indo'tin 1mb nirl'cd nio~re of the true professional stag eIthan flldi the first. Then, camen the truly exceptional act- in,,,of* "d" arguerif e (oo~lmfuil, who, NwithJ i'din erva. I:diller, easily led the entire lust. ii inftenrttat ion ; dominiatinlg the a('ction, linows, 'Ind 1stage. Tb or-' Were ulnfortunate0 happenings ---there ;lwaiys will b~e in student pro-, duc l ions as ihero are in professional presenlt tions. It must, hlowever, be :pai hI II:at filie lateness of time opening -ui'i ain a nd thelie unet'essari ly long tWait bet wt'cn tli e acets',were both pieces of had jutd ment, as these de- lays r-esiulted in a late final cut rain- so lt'' indee~d, that such women stu- dents who Wore in the audience were compelled d'it heott break University ridts to see thle end or leave in tile id ddh? of tIt thecolldact. it a hiy ~rmncilibv aim or'ganizationl ent irely t-tomposed of womten, thtis seemTs tim out glitloss. IS C IWI OIt'EDPIIIST 70I. University Ave. Phone 21212 Frequent service . I y tl i !1 1 I , 1. Y CC atto Novelty printing; has become the most 'r effective attraction in all publications. We are prepared and equipped to .serve you in any such capacity-just drop in or phone us. We print "Our Patrons are our best boosters" , Speci argalS We are running bargain tables at both stores. Displays are changed twice a week. Prices are so greatly reduced we cannot advertise these- bargyains individually. It will pay you to watch them each week. ;OW..:0./." °" .1PI./"./«/.Ir.,P-000,I Zr-Xwo OfZoz .r'..0.d~.I"d. 1dC-owao olelo ' " .II. Mi N, the Craft tZc sop Yours for better impressions"f 711 . 1. i, 2n tliiiir Dial 5102 f 7/ IJJ. rrr. ---- I'l 1 1 111 1 i 1 [1 111 11 1111-1 1 11 111 E I ro'oilly deviot e to our educatIion.- It I seemls wr'ong' for1' 1us1to have to hoave . 1I( 'TIUAN ARTIfST! th is olice 5;t-l'en toItte ntdclsss. Wornmani Pr-ten, a graduate of the 1t" is rather f- orte111)111 tli f.l-, i. IWil- hintivem'sil y itn19)22, aot one time a n11011- - liatma-; holdsthsliis viewtIe wilhlec- ti' 1'r1or Puppe~lteters and the 1 thet-I tain ie)( ableht to hmave a felleir ;pprecin - cu-ic fa(-Lltly, andtt now professor of tloin of IIn-#li ins for Avhicli tils In- I'E{nglish at thto Nor-th Carolina College stituttioll stands. forw om,-zxen, hats just printedl privately ** * a volume of verse under the title of (' OT ITl A(',Nl7 j"Walls." Certain of the poems were There seemis to be0 nothing quite as - wi-it ten whlile he was a member - of We have an1 exceptionally large assoyrntm~ of personal Xrnas ca tds for yjC; r in- speciion. APPLIED ARTS 2 Nicksels Arcade The Shop for Unique Gifts a -iot~allt, as a mantit I twho, apen~us to wear- au.blue uitoIform withIlbrass but- ton s a tendg('t pai a good sinlury for tramin~ tg;the sith-walk'a. - The ofhebet' -eniing, a perfectly Ieef' Icr-onIwd ws 'watit inug to Enter - the Arc-adeo theater was surpisedl to, ii avetwo 411clh - -or- gentlemniil- { (o!;y -urash into its in itist anldt opo'ui t !hlo -le Ichx'wouldI litvo) be'eltll mad kn Illenty of tinle for t he, exit ing; herd. i odl p Cenledth lis mintlhwa v the two had beconme W illilaul hanl 141atry bl l t il li ns ofthe liw p o -cl t w l fcren1ce to) the eiine clem'et. t -u lyi-i-wityv 'hio at a ualtal k up anti Truly sointthijg inmust h' 1w1cw1 0-"i"do i it'spaxce for ten ttitiut 0)5 keep- college muon are1)becom1in~g all tort - ugh h i ioagitl intri'uders. feminate. F'rotnm the iabov rt't-'tt5- It'theois tiny sihretdof le it)gIiniity? one might almoost bliiev'e ft' il,< n,,., - I :1Iw loeft in this Ct01tlliIuniity, it the Whimsies group-at its best-and take their name from "Brick WAall," the conmposition -'that created such a local temipest several years ago. j The entire htok shiows tile most sni-prising tf1s-dies of talent, andi en- tirely aside, of course, from either muisic or drama, may the column V'(11nmiiIelld yon to its bookstores. P'arts of the collection lean heavily on1 moionls and11their- magic, but over ?,uit tve !herr leu-calit.cars a pie-e (of uim- affected simplicity anti beauty. "Thle ]Ytotlhei' Speaks,'' a sonnett in Auei-- can, is this talent in its most lutcidl lit oultl "An oftlenrl'f t'r 00om1 - fromt Jim.l- t odoay. I'lie icom'lite sto seltdom no1w I'd wvon- leretd why It wvas. [But. now I see. I wish h' told- lie mutst ,a' known-before he went. I knew he likedlther, but-well- somehow I- THE 'Tl-IR-EE THINGS TH-AT MA -E SATISFIED FOR CUly" CAFETERIA- Quality Service .pr'ice ALL DESIGNED TO SUIT YOU PER FEC T LY Eat 4eood "i el Many of us eat too much. Don't nibble between meals and spoil your real appetite. Don't humor that false hunger you think you feel ! Take a bite of WRIGLEY'S-let its friendly, satisfying flavor allay the false craving, settle your stomach and get you ready, for a good mel. And AFTER EVERY MEAL let it pleasantly aid digestion and CLEANSE THE TEETH ! -WIv MIPWAQ I -A' --.., 1, '0 items a bout sI udenf s lpu\l-(etizig ther noses and1 smoking sc-enittedui cigt n?°+ H-owever, we soichow tlievt' ti htin the dissatisfiedl sleoakrn quoutedl above are slightly t'xaggert ling orl' tlse do not appreciate thle new muscline' ip- terests of the underpgraduiates, tliey with their keen insight nloting only-~ 5 ~~pi si p u k-l v in tlt o hanmds of lint-ti'lw, it'' to s sizes inc'-ea se ahouut 50) pt(r c'n i. onm) warimig a.muni form anth 1?eiitg ;given -tuittloity which they ar'e hif romilbeoing able to he Nwouthy. '1', e en101wouldl nodoutt( be exce-t- lent ill handling hiekpot-ket 5 antI petty Etlierco 5, Weeo ltey handed tover'ttlj "1 . I 11 I :4 1