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May 29, 1923 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-05-29

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L 1 il- AYA1L. 1

ANDAILJY

____

-- - --

AUPEJ 01? THE
MICHIGAN
ing except Monday
ar by the Board in
cations
Conference Editorial
is exclusiv ely en-
>ication of all news
tor~ not otherwise
the local news pub-
fice at Ann Arbor,
s matter.
or mail, $3.50.
ress Building, May-
4 and 176-M Busi

munictions not to exceed Soo words
wd. tle , sigrnature not necessarily to
in print, but as a a evidence of faith,
otices of events vwil be published in
!y at t discretion of the IRditor. If
or mailed to The Daily office. Un-
comnnflWtio.s will receive no con-
Nofl manuscript will be returnedI
the writer encloses postage. The Daily
mt necessarily endorse the sentiments
rd in the communications.
E~DITORIAL STAFF
re~j lhes 2 HIand 176-1
MANAGING EDITOR
MARION B. STAHL
Fditor .. ......Paul Watzel
E ditor ........ .James B. Young
ant Ciy Editor.......... A. Bacon !
al Board Chairman ......E. R. Maeiss
Editors--
,b BersHarry Hoey
. lershdorfer R. C. Moiarty
A- Donahue J. E. IfMack
E ditot......... .allacer . Elliott
n' Eiditor<.... ....Marion Koch
y Magazire Editor .... H. A.. Donahue
Editor........E . ; HI. Ailey
r ~ditor....... ...1BuIckleyk C. Robbins
Editorial Board
Kerr Maurice Berman
Einstein Eugene Carmichael
- .Assistants
y II.Armhstrong s ranklin D. HepburnJ
Y Bielfield. .Winona A.- HibbardI
Killin'gton 'Fdward f. - iggins
-Brown Kenineth 'C. IKellar
Clark . Elizabeth Liebermann
* Connable Joha McGinnis
dette Cote - ~- Samuel ;Moore
n Coughlin 1M. IT. Pryor
iTp'stein ;------. BK.-Rafferty
Fiske bRoert G.a tsay
Garlihghouse T. W. PRwith
r S. Goodspeed Sol J.. Schnit
tGoulder - Philip M. Wabnet
d Halgrim
3BUSINESS STAFF

ingc the departure of the senior class
from their Alma Mater pass on to EEA
year afer te nw domedEDITORIAL COMMENT
another stage in the long line of tra-
ditions made and outlived. Just ten, J Z .;,
years after the now doomed confines I)EDICATED TO YESTERDAY, TODAY, 'fOllRQ1OWl ,
of University Hall were ,deserted fo T'1E OLD J,)
the then tremendous structure, Hill TIIIERS( a
ySince they time when "The Oldestl
privel of these traditional rites for Epistle Dedicatory College Daily" was founded, in 1878,
the first time since its dedication in The Rolls take great pleasure in undergraduate journalism has become
presenting herewith the Old Timers'
1213., a profession in itself. Today almost4
Barely allowing time enough for the NumberyC a proeg in its day ar oey
new setting to contribute an element In the great days when Caligula every college has its daily or weekly
of tr-aditional atmosphere to the oc- ran the colyum, he had gathered round news publication. Beginning often as
casion, that structure which a decade =;him all the brilliant galaxy of stars semi-literary journals, 'they shifted
ago was contemplated as the scene who work is here spread forth t the emphasis until they have come
of many commencements to come is the astoni sed eye. Here we go- .
now relegated to less important func- 'Wait! One more word! The old- to serve the student body in the ca-
i i timers have crashed through so mag- once filled by official publica-
"U" hall was to other things. The nificently that it will take two days tions, at the same time that they
absence a of permanen e hings lmst to get all their stuff printed Re- cover the news of the college and
absence of permanence in almost'fcinfo h irtclm mle sometimes of the outside world. The
everything at the University is well ection from the first column implies ies of the wor h
illustrated by this occurrence, which, no lack of merit, as the contribs are bsess id op e w oracin-
although decidedly necessary and pro- being run in the very same order that creased in complevity, and importance.
per, brings forth the complete lack they arrive in. sorial policie, thet develsoe
ofsnietwihha oeo es*** so that they cover student matters of
of sentiment which has more or less all sorts, and help the papers to serve1
inevitably characterized all mid-west-.Thi: Shall Be Nameless as a medium between the student body
ern institutions of learning. While walking one day in the bright and the-Administration. The report
While progress is not to be dis- summer sun, of the Editorial Committee of the In
couraged, its encroachment upon tra- I met a half dozen young ,men. tercollegiate Conference on Saturday
ditions blots out whatever significance "And where are you bound?" was the suggests that the editorial field cap.
such customs may possess. Only u query of one, ;still be greatly expanded. More at-;
few of those things which are fre- "If not where-why then tell us- tention should be given to develop-
quently referred to as "traditions" are when.". ments in other colleges; scholastic
actually deserving of that term; most;
matters, as well'as athletics and inno--
of the customs accredited to classes I am going to Pong, on the banks of vations in other activities, often war-
twenty-five and fifty years back are the Ploe," rant the interest of. students else-'
but unrecognizable survivals of the I replied to this queer looking chap. where; frequently they are suggestive'
institutions as originally conceived. "I am toff to the land where the katy- of possible reforms, or offer answersE
Cap Night, the Senior Cane, and even dids grow, to mutual problems.
rCommencemnentwould scarcely be ap- But first I must needs take a nap." Even more to the point is the clause
prehended as developments from the a in the report which proposes a more
germ ideas as originated in the minds So I lay in the shade of a sycamore extensive and definite attitude on pub-
of our older alumni. tree, lie affairs outside the colleges. It Is
With the cbmpletion of the new field And I slept for an hour and a recognized that "the undergraduate of
house next fall, it is hoped that per- quarter. today, being the leader of tomorrow,
manent arrangements can be made to I awoke, and was much startled to should learn before graduation to
house the Commencement exerciser see think in national terms." If the col-
there. Then it may be possible to That I had grown twelve inches lege publications can help to rouse
build anew, a traditional location for shorter. and crystallize sentiment on impor-!
this solemn occasion. As the Uni- urchi tant national and international.mat-
versity grows older its affairs become, * * * ters, they will make undergraduate=
in some measure, permanently estab- An awful b iKt Jopinions more effective, give them an'
lished, and within, the next century Is Rtey Jones, outlet, and perhaps help the students'
there may be something similar to the She thiik she's bard themselves to prepare for public nc-
inspiring "Harvard Yard" dust east of W1en she rolls the bones. tivities after . college. Undeniably,
State street. Peregrine Pickled there is at the present time a re-
Permanent structures that will }.* * * vival of student enthusiasm for such
stand for centuries are now being Right here is the rest of the pre- matters. This is a tendency that can
erected on the campus and it is these face. Maybe you haven't observed it. hardly be overdone, and all that the
which will be considered the cradle public, but every one of these old periodicals can do to further it will b6t
of. sentiment by the generations of masters is writing in the medium effort well spent. As the report sug-
re.eforwhichsen. employedt stg
the future. which he oftenest employed in the gests, the international question, with
S- - days of yore. That is true of all the League of Nations as a focus, is
. ON T HE WANE those who have appeared at this certain to be a prominent problem in
Universities, small colleges, and' point, and of those who appear at the coming years. College men, with
'prep' schools founded in the days points lower itheol- college newspapers as a medium,,
should take a vigorous part in the

GIFTS

far.

GRA DUA TION

at
Graham 's
Bioth Ends of the Diagonal Wlk

DETROIT UNITED LIE$
Ann Arbor and lark4,s
TIME TABLE
(Eastern Standard Tme)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars.-
6:oo a.m., a:ou a8., B8oo a.in., 9:O9
am. and, hourly to 9 :os p.m.
Jackson Express C-rs (local stops
west of Ann Arbor)-!):4ay -m., and
every two lh urs to 4:4 7.m,
Locat Cars Eas- ound--7 :-o a..n
ativ every" two, hours. to :oo p. im.,
x r:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti only-iri:40
T.. Saline-Change a$ Ypsiianti.
Local Cars West Jound-7:So a.m.,
I2:l4 p.m.
To Jackson and Ralamazoo-Linr-
ited cars 3:47, 1o:47 a. m., 12:47, 2:47,
4:47 pirn.,.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited at
8:47 .O. "

{
I

ADRIAN-ANN ARDOR BUS'
(R~ffective May 14-Central
. Time)
Bus leaves Adrian 6:00 and
11:45 a. n. and '.1:45 p. in. Leaves
Ann Arbor 6:45.a. ni. and 12:45
and 4:45 p. m.
SUNDAY-Leave Ann Arbor
6:45 a. m. and 6:45 p. m. Leave
Adrian 3:45 p. in. only.
Meet D. U. R. cars at Saline both ways
for'connections for Ypsilanti, Wayne
and Detroit.

iL

OUR SPELA-
INK
WILL 1LLASE YOU
RIOER'S PEN SHOP

SL~EEP ANYWHE
ET ATC R
ECLUB L
1 712 Arbor S
IN ear State and Pact

1923 MAY 1923
1 2 3 4 5
a 7k 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 10 17 19 19
20 21, 22- 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30) 31
WE
PAFcor~SELL
EARS STRAW
t _HATS

6 1 lllltt~tttltllt111tlttt:11!!!~ ltll1111!llilitllt~llllillillllllf it l itiill!
"THE HOME OF BETTER SERVICE"
-. We Clean and Block all kinds of H at
You will find our Shoe Repairing, (
all kinds, excellent in quality.
/-
. Call 1568-J. 'Give us a trial
1-The Ain Arbor Hat Cleaning and Shoe Repairing Shop-
625 F. LIBERTY'1t'
Take Along hrfisot
-ON--
OUTING DAYS AUTO TRIPS,
-AND-

SS vANAGER
T' J. PARKER

AT IEASONABLI PRIIES
and SHAPE ThEI to fit the
head free of charge
We also Clean and Rehlock Pan
aras and all kinds of Straw
Hats at low prices for HIGH
CLASS «WORK.
(No acids used)
Straw Sailors cleaned by our
FACTORY PROCESS look as
wellnand keep clean as long as
when new. Bring in your hat
now and get a gobdl clean fac-
tory job that lasts.
FACTORY .AT STORO
617 Packard Street Phone 1791
Where D. U. R. Stops at state
TOLEDO-ANN ARBOR BUS
-Cars leave for Toledo 7:10 A.XM.,
2 P. i1. and 5 P. 1. Except.Sun-
day. Sundays at 8:00, 11:00 and
8:30.

sing ..............Joln J. ITame, Jr.I
ising ......... Walter K. Scherer{
sing............Lawrence IT. Favrot'
tion ..............Edward F. Conlin
iting ..... .David J. M. Park*
tion.............Townsend IH. IWolfe1
its ..............L. Beaumont ParksI
Assistants

i
j
','
i
, .
,,, i.

1 'CAMPING TOURS
See th6 complete line of Thermos Specialties

at our store

L. Dunne Clyde L. Hagerman
Haskin Henry Freud
Putman Clayton Purdly
Armantrout J. B. Sanzenbacher
n H. Reid, Jr. Clifford Mitts
IL. Hale Thonmav Mc-achren
f. Roesser Louis M. Dexter
S. Morton C. Wells Christie
A~* Dryer Edward B. Reidle

-old
in
ICs

rhert W. Cooper
TUESDAY, 'MAY 29, 1923
ht Editor-A. B. CONI'ABLE, JR.
INSTRITTON BY "CASES"
eldom has an educational idea re-I
ved endorsement from so many
icators, considering the recency of
development, as has the so-called
se method" of instruction.
- he "case method" is designed with
view tp making courses more in-
esting by selecting problems or
es for discussion as they actually
cur in the business world, the prac-
ability of this type of instruction
ving a peculiarly strong appeal t
certain tyne of mind known 'a

when religious 'sects Nwerestrict in Tappan at Ten
the maintenance of their individuality Classes are passing now and there
are largely breaking away fom the is a loose. shifting mass of youth
hold of any theological doctrine#.' The gathered at the shady doors of Tap-
latest development in this regard wa, pan Hall--The sun, mounting to its
the action taken at the annual con', zenith, heightens the transparent
green of the leaves and the trees!
ference of the Northern Baptist's Con.
cast cool,' soft shadows on the warm
vention when it was -decided that the red brick of the building; on the
President of the University of Chi- gray sidewalk and on the babel of
cago need not be\a Baptist. and that, .men and women-The entrance to the'
only three fifths instead of the foriner building bubbles with a crowd that
two-thirds of 'the Board of Trustees seems to be going neither one way
must be of the Baptist faith. This nor the other-Straw hats here-No
is proof sufficient that the people are hats there-Blue suits-Golf suits-
generally coming to regard religious Hiking boots- Bobbed blonde hair-
segregation as an unnecessary feature -Hairy ~Prussian Blue sweater coats-
in educational institutions. A flash of white silk-A floppy black
Clearly, broad minded scholars will hat garnished with red roses- Mur-I
not be the product of a school ru? mur of Shakespeare confined to as-
upon the basis of the firm set be" signments-Of Education confined to
liefs of professors belonging to one theories--Of prattle confined to noth-
sect. Cosmopolitanism has been f ing-A haze of cigarette smoke from
great distinguishing mark of the against the building-Evanescent odor
American. It is a characteristic form- of lilacs, warm pipes, and rustling,
ed by the highly extensive life which perfumed skirts-The doors slowly
he leads; a life of such a wide di- clear--A crushed cigarette here-A
versity of interests that its impress, doleful yawn there-Colloquial part-

"practical mind." ion is noticeable even to one of hi
Vhere the case method is ' used, own nationality. The non-segrega-
-tbooks are usually dispensed with, tiolnal character of the many state
-ept for an occasional reference to universities has in a large measure
ue authoritative treatise. The prin- been responsible for the development
les of the subject under considera- among the younger generation of a
ri are supposed to be established feeling of the unity, the power, and
ough discussion - of the, various the greatness of our nation.
'es oming up for analysis, In the days when the boundaries
Vt present the case method is used " of the United States barely reached;
the Michigan Law school, and is out beyond the forested slopes of the
ng used in certain courses in the Alleghenies, when the interests of the'
erary college, where it seems to be ! populace embraced only -the ideas ox
narkably popular with the students. early New England, religion, in. one
uch study has peculiar advantages form or tanother, comprised the cen-
ich cannot escape notice. Where tral structure for education and edu-
' 1 f cational measures. Fortunately, with

IS
r''

ings which dwindle into a murmur as
damsels flit to their powder-puffs
and thence to front rows of class-
rooms, and men shamble in with sub-
missive eyebrows and tired eyes-'he
Campus Clock clangs the quartet
hour.
THE HALIBUT
. * * *
TI E SUBNERGED VIC
Once there was a tiny vic that lived
in the north end of a green canoef
named "The Mabel." It was a neat
little vic, done in svelte lines and har-
boring a judicious, selection of the
latest sob discs in its tummy. The
tiny vic was proud of the fact that'
it held the record among Huron vice'
for inducing the largest number of
footipounds of sentiment in the balmy
summer eves.
It played soft, saponacious records
in a most salubrious fashion. And'
often ripples would flatten out and
purr contentedly as it played. And
once a star fell for its stuff.
- But one day the man that owned
"The Mabel" took an S. of M. damo-1
sel up the river and with her he took
atmosphere in the form of the Schrec-
klicheit aria from "Die Fliegende

discussion.
BRYAN
(Philadelhia, Public Ledg:r)
Mr. Bryan in the General Assembly
of the Presbyterian Church brought
forward a resolution to refuse finan-
cial support to any school or college
teaching the doctrine of evolution, a,
expounded by Darwin. The defeat of
this resolution was undoubtedly due
to a general feeling that the emphasis
of variant opinions in this issue is of
far less moment than the active and
private endeavor of religion.
Mr. Bryan appears to be laboring
under a misapprehension' as to the
outstanding needs of the Church of
which he is a prominent member. He
thinks the greatest service he can per-
form is to keep the pot of controversy
boiling with his own misreading of the
Darwinian doctrine, instead of doing
all he can to give vital breadth and
boundless circulation to the message
of God to man and the exemplar3
beauty of the life of Christ on earth.,
The truth is all one; there are not
two sorts; religious truth and scin-
tific truth have never required a- r,,t
conciliation.
When a man says what Mr. Bryan
is reported to have said regarding h14
inission to stamp on and stamp out
Darwin on the assumption that Dar-
win traces human lineage directly
from the monkey, one must feel that
Mr. Bryan has lost the sense of pro-
portion,- the sense of humor, and a few
senses besides. Surely today tihe
Church needs, and society needs, men
who cling to the central, important
issues of man's life on earth, in re-
lation not simply to the hereafter, but
to his present duty in the human
premises. We do not need glib rhe-
toric. We do not need stormy petre-
lizing over the troubled pools of
thought; we need real thinkers, who
meditate before they speak and art
too magnanimous to see their own
vast shadow glory-crowned as the fea-
ture in all issues.
What an opportunity "the Common-
er" has on the Education Committee.
if he will but use it to increase the
wisdom of other people in signifi-
cant matters instead of to expose his
own opinions in relatively unimpor-

To men who

begin

at the bottom - r

I

' 0O
l

for big men.
big field there's. always
There is room up here.

I

o 1

Y

I_ D

,0~

0
natior, you can reach the top.
energy, experience and imagi-
strength to cline. With added
G
college training will give you
facturing and commercial. Your
graduates - engineering, maui -

I

room
In a

- _
- - f,

The Eberbach & Sont
200-204EAST LIBERTY STREET

X

o,1

divisions of the industry open to
There are three ever- broadening
large, and finally the whole world.

r^

I

0

Y

-

is used the studient s desire Tor "
mething practical is met, the dis- the expansion of the country and the
ste for reading page after page of meeting of' East and West, the old
ry" textbook material is recognized, narrow minded Puritanical spirit gave.
en, analytic thinking is encouraged, way to the new conception of religious
id the student is made to feel that, Ifreedom of thought and practice. Ac-
dcrpayn the schantgesadthtereecthat
hough li is not necessarily con, companying the change, there came
ibuting any solutions to vital and revolution in the educational institu-.
solved problems, yet he is privil- tions. The cosmopolitan spirit which
ed to ponder over the same prob- is now such a distinctive feature ol -
ms w ithw«hich en of affairs have our schools came as the natural re- I
en confronted. sult of the. changing atmosphere of s.
How widely ,the case method will growing nation, influenced by modern-:
40irSLJo le'~~n &jutMr veuuiu

town are the state, the country at
or communication. And after the

I

I

e used in future years is a matterI
r conjecture. Certain enthusiasts for
e method believe that it will practi-
ally revolutionize the educational
rstem of higher institutions of learn-
g when its adoption becomes wide-
)read. That it is practicable for use
certain courses has been proven.'
rhether it will work in certain otherE
,arses is a matter involving no lit-
e difference of opinion. -

istic tenaencies tor ireeaom.

c e u'ae- -i ear lg it, power,
,..... ! our awn home town is completely
is now only in its youth. Not even
Pablished in manner remember that the industry
the interest of Elec-
trical Development by -U
an Institution that will
bh hedped7by what- its infancy. As you begin in a like
ever helps the when the electrical industry was in
Industry. HERE is where the executives began
I,/°®

f

Hot lead seems to be having tho
desired effects in bringing Chinese-
bandits to teris. The captives might
have been freed from much priva-
tions if such means were undertaken
at the start.
Now that peace has been restored;
for the moment in Europe the Ruhr

Hoellander." , tant issues! It seems a pitiful waste
The little vie did its best but when of energy today, when all the man-
it came to the triple-tongueing in the power a good crusade can summon
upper regisler it kicked over back. is needed, to spend oratorical ability
wards into the purling flumen. in a negative and destructive effort.
And now, they say in Astolat, when- The many foes of the Church-includ
ever anyone drowns in the Huron he ; ing the lukewarm and the supercilious
always hears the tiny vic struggling who do nothing but.find fault instead
with the triple-tongueing in "Die Flie- of lending a hand-are forever ready,

Zily

ti.

[ i

Pi

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