. SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1.9:: THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE L ,AW1 M SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 1925 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Further - Su gesinsFrh Increase f_ Campus Intellect The Concluding Installment of Mr. Robert Cooley Ange11's Report on college tIntellectual Conditions ercollegiate athletic contests should ~e faculty men, might well be fol- Il n e ' t Hlan ' n ve s t e loe.Yale, Harvard, and Princeton A G a c AtH l ndsU ie iis haeagreed to leave their teamns corn- '.)letely under the direction of the cap-' preparatory Education in Dutch High Schools Corresponds To The American ains during their annual games. chol Other suggestions worth considering; College, Preparation for ProfessionalScol are the abolition of all freshu-an var- "sity teams and the building up of ifnlyto eeaottew s ntramual copetiton tothe pint IBy A., 4. Il ariiouwi boy and girl leave the high school atfnaytokwrabuthwrs where candidates for varsity positions The,, universities of Holland are oldi1 eighteen sufficiently prepared to spec.heltBuhe ilthndifrnl are picked from the b,,,-t players on institutions if compared with their ialize at the outset in one of the five. when he is finally i~tle r etm the class, fraternity and club teams. iictacetsscsi mrc.Btuniversitiy faculties, be it law, theol- her7te, od 1; o f l ~~ The latter, would mean. that intercol- among the venerable universites ofl~ohmeiieo ~ a-__._ i Eiror~e which trace tiheir history back ogy, pioohmeiie rscience.ives >. hlegrate schedules cool) be cut down 'aa c Much also may be (done to makee tlnht,,eplni'??t tnnency oil ther.t Lt~aL1 large un~veriies in which inter- Waand cass contests substituted for the to some mediaeval founder they are Wa the American undergraduate By +,6 thm JuniorCobutgmoderenfupstartsclupolewhich theurlearns in her four years at college is mona~ th Jnir oleg or efetie.ci 1pj ti,''a~ie t lt ow oecollegite athlehtics have been estab- early season games. It oes, wothout~btmdr ptrsuo hc h rt3 Special .ntiat(Yry orese have. al-.>C, ':Ofbis aftr a notli' IS not red~u. ihe oralogti, wud eacig.ain"ha..cnerne aleio'e-moSS of 01(dage is yet to grow. They condensed) in the curriculum of the ncti; rerady .been diiscussed., The trend of sum ii. 1£ thare,+; little o no u1Qli j.wisely in completely overturning te ter existing conditions would go on lave no recollection of the Middle ls w er a h c yinna - ek 1i the times toward a more uified cr- tally tatniimclaivt eonitetto a couirse sse toego.Aun neet eoda poigayelreetAgs. They came into existence when imai and high school. all th ...iartlum as at Reed College, 'Yaeaidl h'. t U" i~ilt. liy CXlIled. It onlly ;and suppo 'r9woldcertainly "fall off; Io lns eindto accumoate more miasticisn_, in the northern Nether- Having succesfully passed the final to °",:RAmehrst. s on the'whole good sinzce lends V i U)irV2J.' i ie~lllfltul *stu- the ju t towould e19e wih pecatos.. inainy i sesgo orand:;, had become a thing of the past, Iexamnation at one or tie other of easd I it, gives 'students' a broad cultural Amt's:gratpyia lnti rn tndta utfo nvriy opytls and owe their oigin not to private' these schools the student holds in his ' ut frundafton upon which they mnay , anit'r of li he xr-ciriicular a~tvi-!athletic h)ouses, etc., which would who are engaged to tain the mrid.' dvotion of a pious founder but to the' certificate the ky to the gate o h re hil eimpse"; peialtzalhngalogcollective initiative of a young democ- university. An etrl new life is mde ~upr~rpos spcia tiaiiing'almigties a t ,uirement of a good reading knov,--Isiv ead f iepbi"hv adIr is tha t thre is no osil hp^tefacnain' fth ntlecullife; l-nvelge which he seeks and, I- an industry of letting mros to stu-DM ledge of a modern foreign language up on the college a strain 1.o which of coping with the evils of profession- (and1 they can give less publicity to. lc~rt', wa;vtch over his moals. dents lput a Latin notice up over their 1~eks hefm'epasingintethrdeearwokereesouht int tobetubectd,"ofx alsm ndhf teduhelthoovr-tndoo leseuinerstcnthttrse1'fnrtent dooftheReInliotremifrot dorInfrmigote ppospctieedar such as is now in force at Harvardl1<, 1 Jdom fCicg e- rowth of college athletics unless we mnr ~lk were rumannyo the unvrste as F'resl 'nen that they have Cubicula Lo-. w'tc . ise' d e '. j d o o C ic g o ti r enr v " " " mi n o r____ _______ ______l___e am releti ces . Y t, c 6 in t e U n o . c a n d a . i:e sp e n d s a p le a sa n t dla y , fu ll T Since interest will be maintained by t itUtion oOP higher learning as " an This cause. your comnittee tOIeWOSer ,, I(R1('o: ~'or rovimCial pride did not allow fi vlep~rene, in libigpety IO self-expression in intellectual matters ;anusemeit park?" And James Bryce, 1is lprncipally to 1)e found ini the prey- I Rolland to remin in iisole Ipossession .ark, winding stircases, inspecting 0usd1h u rcl m as wl50'ok e m rc b te eh p it s sem o ii g ah ei o c e a e a]f rh~h rl ari g h e u ui u n s m l u ra s rt r within it, students can bhe eno- than any American wrote: "This is ItI nillii placing the priincipal euipblai- Due t)ain unrfomtunate error i11: of these old provincial institutions viewing landladies of' various looks r54 it aged to write scholarly articles and strange inver sion of what might e cis uponi the winning of games andj handling the vast amount of itatist- ore taken over. 1815, by the new, and tempers, from the forbiddingI Spami even to publish their own literary. and expected ini a hi 'h civilzation, and college championships. And x-Pres-' cal dlata necessary in preparing last Kndmo the Nehelads tos o vimrago to the ingratiating gossip, nahl jscientific journals as Latin-American ! a strange perversion of the truet ident Meikejohn expresses his opi-, Sunday's account of the gifts of aln- Leyden, the oldet of them all, of! praising to each the rooms just visited zes ' (ueto h xsigpuhc prto miemst ie ti o nion of coaches in these terms: "These ni iand friends to the University since U:eh ado1roign Ase-before hers in aigthe wever disappo ind tedbr' ions might easily expand on the in encuraging symuptom. It reminds one ' outsiders, demanding for ten weeks' its foundation Miss Octavia W. Bates, dlamn possessed within her walls an hp fbaigdw h ~nfn-52r ' ellectual side, with more attention to inordina:te passion fomr the sports ofl y'oo'k salaries twice those paid to our 77, 96L, was not given the credit due Antimenacuni Illustre, which in 176, n tsoedfiut omk phsAe !s special articles on particular phkases I the amphitheater, and, especially,form' best professors for a year-theose out- her as one of Michigan's most proms-i wa raised to the rank of a university. mmid after each fresh inspection, and tiesc a of knowledge. Furthermore the fiing-! cbariot racing, which grew more andI silers make the rules of the game, 'sent. alumnae. j hit it. still differs. Zrm its three returnin'g home in the evening with an hof f ling of undergraduates with graduate mnoie intense with the decadence of l ominate the play, and substitute for l Mss Bates, a leader in woman's suf- equals befoe-mentoned in that it r&}I anxious misgiving that the rooms he' "students and faculty mkembers in a art and literature and national spirit I our games annual contests between f(rage up until her death in 1911, was, mains a muniepal institution, where-cI ' purely informal manner' though very in the Romian Empire. What does I themselves" The same authority]I one of the pioneer, among the women a; the othes e State unvrsite:' r " tdifficult to bring about, s worth every, civilization mean, except that we! favors the abolition of the Board of students in the Law school, in fact Itednca ~eule-' effort expended on it. An institution realize nmome and more the superiorityI Control as well, saying: "It has done shte was president of the law class I h,,nduc t i or nvr smlrto the Elizabethan Club at I of the" mind over thve body?" Fromk In the way of enlarging the scope of in her senior year. She is tie donor tie is comprtively simal. The siiarIIlarget of themr cannot comnpete inm Yale where graduates and undemgrad. ianother point of view, "the real value athletic management what no under- or the Bates General Lirary fund, u'er wthanAercaocllgeo aes interested inlterature and art of an athletic contest may be repre- graduate board would ever hkaveprvsn for which was made in her tPerhaps sonic such ting might 1)0isth nunmber of players and whose do. It has built Stadiums, Coiscmaeeugte, ster isms, ---amd methods are entirely dfferent. dAVlOped in connection with the denomimnator is the nurnber- of atch- I Bowls; it. has brought the gate re-; a oeuvln fte Ru ti Union. Doubtless t~e higher types of ers present or absent As tie latter celpts of a team foir a season into thke 'I A hmlcn cohs nohequilt of extra-curricular activities sukch' s increases, the game degenerates ito a'udei of thousands of dollars. In theereamWcalnt.Thecuriclu deaigciWlosot h pr noapcaladl~idesR a h Xant Adb e f~ur universities provides exclu- ~O N spectamusil'an a word, it has over managed our co-,svyfowhtntiscuryIcal- CITY O AN 'b)e made the bass for further contact'teseaceio a gamblinag device.'f ege gan e, slvnte h oe'I"cdps-rdaewr.TeDth .-letweenn mture ani inmmati' minds. In short, nearly all thoughkfl obsem'v I amd the public place from which every 'ell____po____t-g____aduat________work._______The____DutToch'pra The increase of itellectual interest Iers agree that college sport as the other type of exaggeration Inevitaly r pamong college muen aiwomnenshold comp~etitor' of profesinlbbl oessoabaellcn." ' 'lllllil[111!lll11131111[I~liillll81'Tll[111!"TIlll'll as far as possible be accomnpishdb and pugilistic contests mst go. Since a single institution such as PEJ 'IOO O positive ,means; that is, the, studenkt Complete :aolition of. intemcolegi.- Michigan cannot well act alone in a oI. PLPEZ OO Comefor shoaid' be led gradually to -a fuller' andi I ate 'athletics .isuggests itself as the matter of this sort, a. conference of ICmc ln7t iner appreciation of things of the q 'um(kest solution1 to the prole. executives, members of governing' mind, without being forbidden to in-- Suphmrlrs of this vie-w cite the Case boamds andi faculty representatives of I 1j SA =y trshislinohrmtes o-tfReColgwhic was founded n all the universities in the Western YJ S v e -P C A NO 11 -A.K D. evr, theieundemgrad uate, cani not iol- 1910. hirntiuin ia ot. had ony Conference might well be called to '' 4 ". .. - Sarting from Genale Drive,.ca to T General- Sheridan: 'advice:- ietcolegmt' te msi except 'during agree uponl a joint plan of action.I= ff~ e~ eiuo tett anSrei 'nd .then le silent; Sit a_ W;andnd cl laims etter than a cap, a low collar zsldnnpy black bow. Thus ac- ed they descend upon the town ie first day of the groentijd, the g trn: e. There is no way to es- fromn the trial. F!or their uni- mai-kts them the lawful p)rey of den classes, who can order the command their services, sum- thm, and dismiss them at will. own wll counts for nothing. thoe seniors-for tie time be their betters wish them to do is .o theman, andl they carry a cor- :un of that law in thir breast =t 1mm. tI form of a three week' for the masters a; .l tyrant -s t) their ordlers and e'e rv) ent in, 'e L.eyden freshman gt'- on of respite in those three week; rflom. That is on the third of ;e,, the day on which, in theo year the city was relieved from Its imh beseigers. That evommi is an- y Comm emorated , 1 both citi- a ,d students, andi the'green- bein g deemed unworthy of nig in the fesivities, eave Ley' it a herd to find among the gal-- of Am'sterdiamn AsCwelcome a re-- riorn their oppressors as Leyden (Continued on Page Fifteen, ARBOR Adby LC-II COMPANY: xiiary11 JRON 3t on J cks Avenue, aieea o m th on Main etaeet to. ra i rd ,Dn to Qh dadit d cflst o1 e; iorilion l Iincohmi A a'ei to er A-.enmue a I 'acn-rt-.f. i'd St street to Main St're't, o' rth st on Huron Stree't, west on ve. rH MAIN Gr(een Street, west on Utoover onth on. South Main Street .to .venue to Spring Street, north eet. West ton' TiQ ,'.11 r C + 4-:1) Street to Miller .Avenue deAt Avenue to Green Street. WASHTENAW f Washtenaw anti Austin Ae- Avenue, to South Uniersity Avenue to State Street, north :et, West on. Williams Street to et to Catherine Street, east on et, northeast on Detroit Street. est on Moore to Pontiac Road ft Street, southeast on Swift iBroadway and Detroit Streets itherine Street to Main Street Street~ east on Williams Street Street to South University Avenue to Washtenaw Avenue, ~ to Austin Avenue.§ cello have t) work. i'mrethan t 1Iire - hours a day t sulhiroit themsevcaN .4- IE TY-10 ,iSeldoimthave time enough tot)d(Ithirc' O.4-L. E T tutdics just ice. They tihus lower the! m Starting a 'ternately from Sonle 0 Sp ecstndirylwivr y -rI hti Iri esandfrom eenth and Madison intentions may be.Probably it woild IS~toresoth.bem t Sret et on ,Lie better f1'01such men to be advised I -I Street, orthInga FouSrth trt I to tay at y untiltey hadt aredStreeteat oIngallsh r~ Street o th 'eknough to scape tisbu rden. THE t ftreet to Ann Street, east on An? F',Togethier with' severe emtrnccxe im- ', rturning same route alternlatingj unlnhn a-must be IA IID lriW ' i steaks cooked to delicious p°i'- T Lierty to Seventh and Madlsy pWvaed oi the perfunctory student II1L~*~Jz.A~ etol efaueti evc let tet t during his dehiege- Coui'"se. 'If lie can±!,,etol Wefaue hSsrie . the discoveretd his rmnoval should le Oly in the arstocracy)O good r and on1ce tried you will l e ad pN . M. C. DEPO'[ "rut omatic. Tie exclusion from the I( o ofsuet;woIclthes w5ill you find such su . re ;ester. IMSarting from tie ihigan Can n - exa .rinati~nof studentstrett Sawhoretsotho I ave shown no int rest in a Subject i L)cri JWformlL Viting near- ti treat.on0Monre Street otonstU would prevent, bright mmn from grass-; nvo o riyCes e o teevorLre hig oouae:by last iJnlutflcamig clir ini our custom tailored or - nvesity Avenue to .Hill Stret sherq imntr ay hnor .Street, south on Church Street t lii-mqieeto smn mui . rcc'K2-o-mar models.I Prospect Street to Wells Street, 1oints as 'hours for entrance to ie " ' vne I(Burns Park). Senior College a d then dro ig 01't1 students who fail to ireach this stand- I B E -AE " r at r f e . n ,e w u d e -Hchide a few Imldesra lhes frommi thle AcroSS fro m i 1. B l pa t =Stai ting front Geddes Avenue inc--nt .,Geddes Avenue to Washtenaw SPIT aL 'Boulevard and West Liberty. :treets n orth on S eventh -e W s L b rt Street F u . .o lunom Street, east onlHuron on ingalls,. Street to Cathe-rie to Clark. Street, south on Cl;rkg in Street to Observatory v ret. the. srrvle from Seventh Ind ion "in' Sonic Doi'1{ ant d , tra-l Depot, southeast on Carey- tate Street to Monroe St!-, ' niversity Avenue, south on L.t teast on Hill Street to C:::. , n Lo Prospect Street, southear:-. east on Wells Street to LUnc1(, RTH MAIN anti Osw ego Street, we:-r gn Avenue, noithiwest on V.- -