_.. important part in developing several Local Realtor subdivisions of the city. * Mr. Brooks' offices were for many Dies SG turda years in the present Ann Arbor Trust D At u y Co., until about 12 years ago when he O H eart Attack purchased the building on the north- east corner of E. Liberty St., and S. Fourth 'Ave., now known as the Charles L. Brooks Figured Brooks building. Prominently In Physical He was a member of the Ann Ar- bor Construction Co., Abbott Gaso- Development Of City line Co., and the Huron Valley Build- ing and Saving Association, as well Charles L. Brooks, 53 year old Ann as the Ann Arbor Rotary club, Bar- Arbor realtor, who has figured prom- ton Hills Country Club, Ann Arbor nently in the city's physical develop- Club, Camp Newton, First Methodist nent for 25 years, died early Satur- Episcopal Church, Masons, Chamberl of Commerce and the Ann Arbor Real lay in Harper hospital, Detroit, after Estate Board. i heart attack late Friday. He is survived by his widow, a son, A lifelong resident of Washtenaw Charles, four daughters, his mother, Iounty, he had been active in Ann two brothers and three sisters. Arbor in the real estate field for Nearly three decades, and played an Read Daily Classified Ads Orgi al0Arbor Press building into one special- Bulletin was created. In the ten Origi al Daily ly built for The Daily had been in- boom years which followed The Daily creasingly prevalent that year, but boomed too-1930 found it strongly A ,(, dBwhen the United States entered the entrenched. In that year it was war the plan languished. The editor- chosen as the best college paper in I . in-chief at this period drew a salary the country-it had already achieved yof about $1,000 a year, with four as- the distinction of being the first paper sistant editors getting $125 and a of its type to introduce a special Sun- critic, whose job was to pick flaws in day issue a few years earlier. No Fraternity Men Were each morning's paper, drew $300. The cryptic Alumnus headline Members Of staff Of Board Is Financially Sound "Daily Goes Metropolitan" told of the Financially the Board had grown paper's expansion in news facilities. Pioneer Publication so strong that incorporation was The next year a reporter's dream necessary in 1919 and a year later an- came true and the Board came With the announcement recently other source of wealth was opened through-the beautiful and well- that $12,000 is to be spent by the for the paper when The Daily Official equipped Student Publications office. Board in Control of Student:Publi- cations in completely refurnishing the Publications Building, another chapter has been added to a story STUDYLAP 87C Flexible arm and adjustable shade make these ideal for study. Cord included at this special price. which started in 1890 when a hand- ful of Michigan independents de- cided to start a newspaper. The first issue of that forerunner of The Daily appeared on Sept. 29, 1890. It was a four column, four page affair published by "The U. of M. Independent Association" and named the "U. of M. Daily," if the scanty evidence available is cor- rect. Its masthead bore the name of The Daily's first editor-Ralph Stone, 92L, a sophomore law stu- dent. Fraternity Men Admitted Not until 1895 were fraternity men admitted to the staff. A year after that step thehMichigan Alumnus con- gratulated the paper on a "Wom- an's Issue" and in 1897 the same pub- lication lauded The Daily for being out of debt. The location of the earlier publication offices 'are not sure-rumor handed down from staff to staff for almost half a century says the editorial work was originally done downtown, later moved to the second story of the old University Music Store building and then changed again to the Ann Arbor Press build- ing. Offices were maintained on the first floor for sometime there and were later moved upstairs. But that was long after the turn of the cen- tury. It was back in 1901 when State Street was a dirt road and sopho- mores had to be warned each year not to kidnap freshmen that a group! of students decided to issue a rival publication called "The Varsity News." A merger with "The U. of M. Daily" nipped that plan in the bud, however, and "The Michigan Daily News" resulted. Six Men Organize Two years later, on Thursday, Nov. 19, 1903 to be exact, six men held an organizational meeting for a group which was to be called "The Board in Control of Student Publications." Present were Prof. H. S. Whitney, Dean of Education; Prof. F. N. Scott; Dean Lloyd of the Law School; the Messrs. Thompson, Sims and Stoner. The meeting resulted in new owner- ship for The Daily which up to this time had labored under inefficient and semi-irresponsible management. The student stockholders in the pa- per were bought out in a deal the details of which are not known. Soon after this time one of the most vitrolic criticisms of The Daily which has yet appeared in print came out in the November edition of the Alm- nus. "The Daily bears on every page unmistakable marks of being strict- ly amateur," the publication told its readers.Itwent on to say that the recent change of the paper's name to "Michigan Daily" was laudable, but criticized the size of the paper. "The most ridiculous blunders can be found on nearly every page-Har- vard becomes 'harvest,' Fitzpatrick is 'Fitzgerald.' And so on ad infini- tum." Editors should read proof more carefully, it was declared, and gen- erally the "benefit from student pub- lication work is greatly lessened by slovenly methods allowed to go with- out mending." The Daily curtseyed gently, said nothing. Daily To Steer Middle Course In 1907 the Board in Control stated definitely that "the policy of The Daily is to steer along a safe course between becoming a mere bulletin board on the one hand and a modern newspaper on the other." By 1911 good business management made another expansion possible, and five years later The Daily achieved national recognition. Daily editorial writer Verne Burnett, '17, now adver- tising manager of General Foods Cor- poration, had written an editorial called "Breadth and Specialization." Entered in a contest of the Associa- tion of Eastern College Newspapers, the editorial won. Arthur Brisbahe, the judge, picked it over editorials from Trinity, Cornell, Howard, Dart- mouth and Princeton. Press services throughout the United States carried news of The Daily's triumph. Talking of moving out of the Ann DOC Announces - "Each week a regular weekly board ticket will be given to the holder of the winning number. This board ticket will be given absolutely free - no strings at- tached! The winning number will be chosen from the num- ber on your board ticket of the current week. The winner will be announced at Tuesday luncheon of each week; the first winner will receive his board ticket Tuesday, Septem- I 'I I Univcrsity o Michigan Orato rical Association LECTUIRE COURSE EIGHT OUTSTANDING NUMBERS NOVEMBER 2: TED SHAWN JANUARY 13:CAPT. JOHN AND HIS MEN DANCERS CRAIG "Adventures of a Thrill Cameraman." "0, Libertad!" Motion Pictures. NOVEMBER 18: FEBRUARY 24: SALVADOR H. V. KALTENBORN MADRIGA "News of the Day." "World Peace" DECEMBER 1: JULIEN MARCH 13: BRYAN THOMAN MANN "Japan & Manchukuo." Motion Pictures "The Coming Victory for Democracy." DECEMBER 9: DR. VICTOR MARCH 15: WENDELL HEISER CHAPMAN More of an American Doctor's "Wild Animals of the Rockies." Odyssey.' Motion Pictures. Season Tickets....$3.50,3.00 $2.75 -MAIL ORDERS NOW- ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION 3211 ANG ELL HALL G. E. 60-Watt Daylight LAMP .......30c BRIDGE LAMP Complete with Shade $1.00 Cornbination END TABLE and SMOKER ........ $1.39 MAGAZINE RACK, Walnut Finish.. $1.00 Sturdy Metal Waste BASKETS . 25c and 50c a_ hi: I BE WELL-GROOMED . . . at all ties 0 . . ... ' rr Next! - For your conven- ience and for prompt service nine barber chairs . . . Mani- curing by eiectric machines. Remain well-groomed by visiting often. patronize 1 your I 4 ,I