ection Two 5k i4 an .tt Section Two ,. XXXIV. No. 111 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1924 PRICE. FIVE ..... ... AMERICAN STUDENT T OO S ATIS FIED; SLOSSONASET SAYS YOUTH OF THIS COUNTRY LACKS.INTEREST IN' GOVERNMENT FOREIGN STUDENT MORE INTERESTED IN NATION e Men Here Use Energies lass Battles, Not Politics, Is Charge III "Our American university students are too satisfied," said Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department, in a recent Interview concerning the relative influence or foreign and American students upon the economic and political .onditions of their'coun- tries. Professor Slosson said, "Conditions are such that we Americans are not forced into serious consideration of existing situations, and therefore we take little interest in them. The Euro- peon student, on the other hand, is forced by burning necessity to play his' part in the politics of his country." Use Energies in Politics Professor Slosson pointed out that whereas the energy of our American institutions is partially used up in the hazing of freshmen, and in sophomore battles, the European students puts his love of a lark into a riot to get better government. It is a well known fact that most of the changes, most of the trouble, even most of the socidlistic leaders, come from the universities in Europe. This is because the European students are geared more closely to the political times and needs of their country;. Professor Slosson gives three reas- ons why foreign students are mote actively a part of their state than are we Antereans. First, they are nore mature aid advancet in learning when they ente le fiunW&erty. The lyceep of rance and the gymnasiums o Ger- many give .the tudents two years ad- :ance of the American freshman. Moile S4ect Ulks Attends". Seconf, a smaller, deeper-thinkin g and much more selet class of students attend the foreign university. Third, the eonomic and political conditions are so much more acute the student must playia 'larger part. The students in Russia strike for political purptses and are successful, the professor pointed out. During the Revolution of 1917 they took charge of the leaderless soldiers, and fed and clothed them. In England, the Oxford 'Union, and in the Slavic countries, the Sokal, are patriotic societies through which the students express their inter- est and influence in their state govern- ments. - The American student has taken but little responsibility upon himself so far, he says. The Harvard men put down a police strike, and Columbia broke a motorman's subway strike in New York, but outside of these few in- stances, American students have par- ticipated little in public affairs. Library Receives Books On Gardens Books about gardens and flowers' are among tie works that have .been posted on the February booklist at the main library. Amateur gardeners and flower lovers will find in them an opportunity for acquiring a fund of practical information that can be uti- lized in spring planting. Among the books listed are Duryea's "Gardens In and About Town"; Hard-; ing's "Peonies in the Winter Garden"; Wright's "Flowers for Cutting and Decoration" and Teall's "A Little Garden All the Year Round." All of I these works deal not only with the methods of artistic garden arrange- ment but also give careful instruction on the 'cultivation and care of plants. Deals With Plant Names A book that deals with a novel angle of flower study is a small vol- ume called "Plant Names," by T. S. Lindsay. This work comprises an in- teresting 'resume of the history of plant study through the ages, begin- ing . with T ophrastus, the Greek philosopher who first wrote botanical treatises. The'e are also several chapters on the origin of plant names, which explain how the English namejs of plants have been drived from var- sous sources. Some plants were named in honor of notable botanists, as the dahlia Students Heavy Mail Recipientse That the average student receives as much mail as a family of five, was asserted in an interview with a Daily reporter by W. L. Baxter, who has etn 36 years of continuous service with the local post office. Mr. Baxter entered the service as a carrier in 1888, one year after free city delivery was established in the city, and after 25 years of this work was put in charge of the stamp department, which he has managed since. Mr. Baxter can recall the Uni- versity was but a fraction of its pres- ent size;' co-education did not exist way back in those days. The students, according to the post office official, were mostly middle-age, bearded men. What he 'enjoyed most to tell was how the students used to come down to the post office in the evening be- tween 7 and 7:30 o'clock to receive their mail, and how they frequently rushed the post office and broke doors and windows. Few changes have taken place in these years. The University has grown a great deal, parcel post service came about sixteen years ago, mail is de- livered twice a day, and the whole post office department has been sys- tematized. As a health-builder Mr. Baxter heartily recommends carrying mail. The most troublesome problem that confronts the postman is that of the student who habitually forgets to no- tify the post office of change in ad- dress. CITY5 FORTUNE TOLD Remeniscences of Ann Arbor's past and prophecies of her future were ex- pressed by the four prominent speak- ers at the centennial banquet last Wednesday night in the Union.. At this celebration of the one hundredth anni- versary of the founding of the city, ,Harry B. Hutchins, president-emeritus of the University, recalled his early life here. Prof. Orlando W. Stephen- son of the American history depart- ment, told of the first settlement of the 4ity, Mayor GeorgeE. Lewisdescribed Ann Arbor as h thinks it wil:lbecome and President Marion:L. Burton dis- cussed "Civic Pirde" as it exists 4n Ann Arbor today. President Hutchins, who came 'hereI 56 years ago, recalled the days when life.was more simple than' it is now, when University students might be seen with their little buckets going to the store to buy kerosene by the light of which they sudied, and when many students sawed their own wood which they burned in the stoves in their rooms. Used Wood Stoves Wood stoves, he said, were used in the University buildings as late as 1872, and it was one of his duties as a professor to keep th fire going in the class room. Two dallars a week was the highest paid for board In those days, said the speaker. There were some 90-cent places.. President Hut- chins had one of these but when it began to cut down on the eats eh hunt- ed around for a two-dollar place. He commented on the influence that Ann Arbor has exercised through the students who have come here. "More than 60,000 students," the president said, "have gone out from the Univer- sity and tonight more than 40,000 of them are still living and carrying for- ward the name of Ann Arbor and the University." )Mayor Lewis Speaks Mayor Lewis contrasted this picture of the past with his idea of what Ann Arbor will be in the future. He thinks it likely that Ann Arbor will, at no distant date, become part of a metro-, politan city including Detroit, Pontiac, Ypsilanti, and Monroe. The first building in the city was erected on the ground now occupied by the Ann Arbor Savings bank on the corner of Huron and Main streets, ac cording to Professor Stephenson, who traced Ann Arbor's early history. John Allen and Elisan Runsey, the first settlers here, came on Feb. 2l, 1824, he said. President Burton was introduced by' Dr. Hutchins as - "The man .of the hour." Burton Speaks on City President Burton declared that civic pridewas the result of reverence for four things: the material things of the city, such as institutions, homes, parks, and beautifying influences; the citizens, past and present, who have made up the city or live here today; the spiritual atmosphere which pre- LOOKS LBIKE POLITICAL PUSHBALL ",0 00 !AA'0 1* ii ~ 'fK -I Reporter Finds Strange Names In University .041 1000, 4C8 Rich and Poor, Bigge- and Little, Noble and Small, Meek and Lawless- they are all to be found in the Stu- dent directory, accordingrtothe in- I vestigations of a Daily reporter yes- terday. There are those who are called True and Frank, and Young and Airey, and Hard, Sharpe, and Stern. One stu- dent is Trickey, another is Good. A few are Bright, and several are Wise. There are Sweet girls, and Savage fellows, a professor who is Stout, and a student who is Bald. There are I several Green students;, most of them are freshmen. One instructor is a Darling, but others are Grim and Gray. The Lyon and Lamb come together on the University faculty. One student is Looney; another a Nutt. Mixed in with the Blessed students and the Blessings of our faculty, jumbled with the Hale and Strong members, the Kings, Earls, Barrons, and Dukes of our university we have members who are Katz,. Wezels, and Shrimps, not to mention the Foxes and Wolves, the Badgers and Coons, the Bulls and Bucks, the Grubbs and Moles, of our University. Brook and Stream Found There are Birds here-Crow, Par- rot, Peacock, Swan and Martin. The University of Michigan is a veritable paradise for the Fishers, the Fowlers, the Archers, and Skinners, who are here. There is Field and Forest; Hill Plain, and Mountain; Wood and Grove; Pines and Oakes. There are Floods and Snow, Frost and Hale. There are Waters and Marshes; Pools, Lakes, Brooks, and Streams, with the Beaches, Banks, and Bays, the Glenns, Havens, Caves, and Dells. There is Summer and Winter, Day and Knight, Sun and Storm. There is May, with the Roses, Lillies, and Flowers. There is August, with Ashes and Weeds, Dust and Clouds. 'Then there are Traps for the Fowler, and Lines for the Fisher, with Grubbs for Bates. There is a Camp here, too, for the sportsman. Scratch Here, a Burn There It is true that there is a Scratch here, and a Burn there among the stu- -dents, but in spite of the Paynes an(d Hurts, the Thorns and Brambles, the Burrs, Briers, and Blights, we have not allowed ourselves to lose our Smiles, and Pride is still on the can- pus. Perhaps this is because with out, Days and Weeks here at Ann ;Arbor' we haveour Innes but ,we have' not Outs. Or is it because we realize the "where there's a Will' there's a Way." At all events there is a Will and al Way on the campus. We have Christians among us, and church officers-Sexton, Elder, Par- son, Priest, Abbott, Bishop, and Pope. Paul is here, and St. Peter; also Adam and Cain. We have a Chapple, and a Bell, and a Cross, and Angells. And the Lord is with us. Justice and Law Present Of course Justice and Law are here, although one student is Lax, and an-, other Lawless. Bolts are on record inl some classes. - "India had her civilization when Europe was still the home of cave dwellers; she has not taken her plac ..among the great modern nations be cause her vast wealth has made he prey to one great conqueror after an other since the time of Alexander the Great. England, like all the rest, i only occupying India for her own gain." So spoke Mr. Nur M. Malak '27M, graduate of the Indian Medica college, in an interview with a Dail: reporter concerning his attitude in Indian politics. "England has ruled India for 150 years, yet if the English were to leave India tomorrow they would not leave a single lasting impression in ou country. Propaganda has led the out sider to believe that the native Indiar is crude and quarrelsome, and that i he were left under a government o his own mutinies and chaos would break out. This is a false representa- tion, but the Indian people have not the nans to tell the outside world what manner of men they are and what are their wants and needs. Railroads No Aid "It s believed by foreigners that England is doing all in'her power foi the betterment of India. British prop aganda tells of the railroads and canals that have been built to hell Indian trade. As a matter of fact the railroads only serve to connect Eng- lish military centers.. Do you suppose that a large town, if it happens to be of these lines, can get a railroad buil to take its products to a market? Well 'there is no way that they can, '"But are nupy our people encouraged to organize their own. industries?" Mr Malak Wag asl:ed. British Hinder Industries "No. If they~try to better themselves industrially they are hindered. Sup- pose that an Indian started a tanner3 FOREIGN STUDENi RULE OVER INDI INDIAN )FEDIVAL SCHOOL GRAD ATE GIVES VIEWS ON COUNTRY SAYS AMERICANS HAVE WRONG IDEAS OF LAN Investigators Given No chance )iscover True Facts, Is Claim yA t X0 MAZE OF ICE, MUD, WATER l MAKES WALKING PERILOUS To jump or not, to jump is the question repeatedly to be decided [.:by after dark promenaders on' ( 'campus and off'these evenings. For it may be..a'slide or it'may be a deep dark-puddle. Which- ever awaits, ote misstep inevit- ably has an upsetting effect.' Daytime travel 'has 'enough' difficulties. The campius trip s' interrupted by all manners of snow banks, gullies, and mud- holes. Usually there is a con- venient brickpile to be negoiated. Or, perhaps, you may be fortun- ate enough to find a sheet of I solid ice on which to skate to your 8 o'clock. Above all, however, the weath- er man warns us, we must re- member that spring is coming. -t 1 t Hayden Wr$tes On Philippines: Stressing the need of a national language for the Filipinos, Prof. J. R Hayden of the political science depart- ment attacked the political evils af- fected by the existing babble, of tongues in the Philippines in an article in a recent issue of the Chris- tian' Monitor, "One of the most significant results to all Filipinos," states Professor to all Filippinos," states Professor Hayden, "is that it has made the de- velopment of a national press and a national literature impossible," Although there have been many fa- mous writers and poets, such as the noted Rizal, they have all written in thei'r own dialects or in Spanish, Pro- fessor Hayden points out. Hence their Jwritings are readable only to their groups and are unintelligible to the vast majority of Filipinos. Lack Readers This diversity of tongues and ab- UNION FAILS TO PROVIDE FAMOUS CAMPUS DELICACY Toasted rolls, that delicacy dear to the. palate of all Michi- gan men, has-been ignored, over- ,looked 'and abandoned by the' Tap roomof the Michigan Union. Lack of the proper equipment with which to toast the rolls is the reason given for their non, appearance on the bill. -of fare., Students. seeking nqurishment in the tap room have called for these rolls'and have been refused them. "This oversight," says a prominent senior, "is nothing less than criminal. The equipment should be purchased at once, that toasted rolls may not perish from the earth." I ' - , 11 I PRIVA9TE SCHOOLS BANNED AFER 1826 IN, OREGON, or 'some other little business of his owi'. Soon' ai Eglish official would come around, look the place over, and say, 'Your place is unsanitary; you must close up,' or perhaps,. 'We hear that your employees are holding meet- ings and spreading dangerous propal ganda; you must dismiss them.' In such ways as that, which no one ever hears about, the Indian people are made to support English trade." "You say it is untrue that your peo- ple are naturally quarrelsome?" ask- ed the interviewer. "It is untrue, as I can show you," he replied. - "The English in India are a mere handful. If my people should choose to throw'off their 'control they could rise like a 'great tide, sweeping everything before them with scarcely an. effort. That they do not do so, but are .content to work for their inde- pendence by the slow methods of re- form, is not this proof that they are peace-loving? RADIO- INVADES CANADA .' TO RELIEVE ISOLATION! Winnipeg, Man., March 1.--(By AP) -Radios carrying the latest news of' the world into remote farm homes and hooking up pioneer prairie settlements with large cities, have become an im- portant factor in colonization in the Dominion, according to a report issued by the department of marine. "The radio has robbed prairie farm4 life of its isolation." reads the report.! "Loneliness is no longer to be dreaded. Settlers and their families listen-in on current news of the day, enjoy high class concerts and entertainments, re- ceive information from agricultural colleges on new farming methods and' courses in household management, and! get the latest market .quotations on agricultural products. "Of 100,000 receiving sets estimatedj to be in operation throughout the Do- minion, more than 60 percent are own-' I ed on farms. This is especially true: in the prairie provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. ,.In Mani-' toba, the provincial government aids broadcasting through its publicly-own-.j ed telephone system." , Broadcasting stations in Canada, numbder 38, the report -shows, and are located in the principal cities from coast, to coast. .Investment in receiv- ing . sets amounts to more, than $2,- 000,000.. Students Warned Of Auto Rulingsl sence of a national literature has re-i Private schools 'will cease to exist! suilted in the absence of a national I after 1926 in the State of Oregon, as reading public. Professor Hayden es- a result of the bill for compulsory edu- pecially noted this lacl, of reading in cation recently approved by the voters his travels through the islands, for he of that state. A similar bill being con- failed to see a single Filipino sitting sidered for the State of Washington. reading. A bill for complsory public school As a result of the absence of Filipino education has brought on one of the readers there is a great scarcity of biggest legal battles in the history of books, newspapers, magazines, and li-, priyate schools, it is said. J. A. Hill, braries, according to the article. The president of Hill Military academy of total circulation for the daily papers Portland, Ore., has taken the bill be- there is only about 132.000, and most ' fore the state courts. In a speech in of these readers live in' Manila, and I Chicago a few days ago Mr. Hill criti- a few of the larger provincial towns cized the new legislation as a "men- where the press' is very influential, ace to education." The advantages of "Consequently" states Professor private school education to certain Hayden, "there are no powerful organs types of student, as well as the in- of public opinion in the Philippines. creased' taxation annd public burden, Family troubles seem to exist on the1 campus, judging from the Battles,E Cannon, Broomes, and Bricks. Yet Love is ever-present, and there is only one Bachelor. All the names appearing in this ar-f ticle are of students or faculty mem-j hers. Would you believe it? If you for public' life in concentrated in Manila and the Filipino element in the insular government is fairly sensitive to the Manila press. Press Not Representative were cited as objections to the new ruling. Fear Spread of Law Once established in Oregon, it is feared that similar attempts will be1 Intala in ritha cf~aac an i wih fh "The tr'ouble is that the press (does jnane in other states, and awt the not reach and does not represent the precedent of successful suits there, masses of the people, and that there meet with success. are very few papers outside of the in- As presented in the Oregon legisla- sular and a few of the provincial: ture the new ruling will affect girls' capitals. There are no national news schools as well as men's. This has gathering and news disseminating s sent the 200 members of the National vices. Likewise there are no national Association of Principals of Schools novelists, poets, or historians, nor, as for Girls up in arms. Miss E. R. Tre- has been said. is there a national read- main, principal of Ferry Hall. a prom- ing public. 'there will be none until inent school for girls in Lake Forest, the Filipinos develop a literature in a ill. and' president.of the association, language which is common to all of 1 is leading the representatives of these them.., schools in an attempt to defeat the idea. Buffalo Alumni Club Meets Object to Snoblery' Women's Alumni club of Buffalo, One of the commonest objection of- S uin u o fered to private schools has been that asceymd 2 of fre ih .-y+ ' YIlestigators See One Side don't, look them up in the directory, "You in America think of my people says the reporter. . as uncouth and backward because you never hear 'the truth about us. Your ! 'investigators' see only one side of the question because the Briitish govern- MAment sees to it that they are in of- NW ial bands every minute. S Forthssreason I do not see how Professor Van Tyne's latest book It is the consensus of opinion, a re- (India in Ferment, by Prof. C. H. Van cent investigation has revealed, among Tyne. history department of the Uni- many upper-class men of the Univer- versity) can contain any information sity that the present forms of "razzing" of any value. Your tourist friends and hazing the freshmen at college are bring back only the same old stories harmless to the individual and bene- i about how in India girls ade widowed ficial to the class as a whole. A num-] at five, how babies are thrown to the ber of both independents and fratern- sacred crocodiles, 'and how we are ity men were asked to give their opin-! head-hunters. And you believe it of ion concerning this question. us, who have one of the oldest civili- Every upper-classman approved of zations on eath- Suppose I were to the requirement for freshmen to weari-go back and tell my'people only about "pots" and toques because, they said, your' worst points,-your vices and it greatly aids in bringing about your : scandals. But no we come. to unity of the class. They claimed that America; to learn, not to criticize. any persecution received when wear- , Americans Seehi "Immoral ing these hats tends to .arouse class !You Mont 'ealize how:rude and im- spirit, thereby, strengthening the moral. u seem according to our bonds of unity. standards. 't .makes me perspire to The freshmen-sophomore games, the see your . young men and women upper-classmen agreed, stimulate: mingle in public wearing bathing suits { greater class interest. However, a -almost naked! Our standards are minority believed they promote a different from yours, for we are a dif- I wrong kind of spirit: that of hatred. ferent people, but that does not mean