Page Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY September 30. 1916 } _ 41' S I U B S C R I E 0 I C ir N D Official newspaper at the Univer- sity of Michigan. Published every morning except Monday during the university year. Entered at the post-office at Ann Arbor as second-class matter. John C. B. Parker... Man'g Editor Clarence T. Fishleigh...Bus. Mgr. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Build- ing. Subscriptions: by carrier, $2.50; by mail, $3.00. Want ad. stations: Quarry's, Students' Sup- ply Store, The Delta, cor. Packard and State. Phones: Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. Saturday, September 30, 1916 Issue Editor-F. L. Zeigler WHAT THE DAILY IS The Michigan Daily is the public conscience of the University of Michigan campus. It is the oracle of Michigan spirit. It is the score- keeper, announcer, referee, and booster of the Men of Yost, Lund- gren, and Farrell, and for the most and best of what is said, thought, and done by students, faculty, and alumni. It is a training school for good journalism. Its telegraph ser- vice gives the school of the inland seas a universal perspective. The Michigan Daily is a sound business proposition. Faculty and students co-operate in its management. The University is a vast and wonderful being, and the student paper is its multitudinous voice. Why You Should Subscribe The normal student can handle well only two or three activities. If you sign up for The Daily you are assured of a manageable, worth- while membership into every pub- lic campus organization, because every morning it gives you the master key to the whole situation. You can probably read through most of the paper in an hour, and during that time you are privileged to thunder over the ten-yard line with Maulie ; you can see in a flash the subject of your next con- versation with your acquaintances who are mentioned in the columns; you read.the essence of that special lecture which you couldn't get around to attend; you get the de- tails of all the coming games, shows, recitals, meetings, or lec- tures. By being a member of The Michigan Daily family, you cease to be a mere flourish in a Greek al- phabetic symbol or a mere jumble of words in the Students' Direc- tory; you become a Michigan man, alive in all important university life, at least fairly well posted on the conditions in other universi- ties, the great war, the presidential campaigi, and the border trouble. Thus you become worth more to yourself, to Michigan, and to citi- zenship. After signing up for your- self send a subscription to vour home high school and to your folks. They are watching you. How You May Subscribe There will be tables, tents, and personal solicitations. Everyone will get a chance to subscribe. MICHIGAN INSTRUCTORS ATTEND PLATTSBURG Nearly sixty students and seven instructors from the University of Michigan attended the camp at Plattsburg- last summer. The in- structors in attendance we-e Profes- sor Joseph A. Bursley, Professor Lockwood, Professor Bradshaw, Professor Boak, Mr. Philip E. Pursley, Mr. Meyer, and Mr. Ticker. r $2.5 BY CARRIER TO YOUR DOOR >t {