THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, JUNE 19, arlht Oummr ir~ii &n :43 ttXq FFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE SUMMER SESSION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the Summer ssion by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- iblication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise edited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as secondr as matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $1.5o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the signa- re not necessarily to appear in print, but as an evidence of faith, id notices of events will be published in The Summer Daily at the scretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Summer Daily fice. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No anuscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. The Summer Daily does not necessarily endorse the senti- ients expressed in the communicatonis.- EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 ANAGING EDITOR ..............LEO J. HERSHDORFER ity Editor..............................James B. Young ight Editors- Howard A. Donahue George E. Sloan Julian E. Mack porting Editor-...........................Jack D. Briscoe Vomen's editor......:........ ".. "....... "..... Dorothy Bennetts ditorials.......... --.... -.. ---......--HerbertBS. Case [umor Editor ......... ...................Donald Coney Assistants formula, "It is true?"-will insure the University from the greatest of all injuries, slander. How great a detriment a "false report can become, can only be understood when it is remembered that the influence of this University reaches to almost every corner of the globe. Like the leak in the dike it grows to great proportions unless stopped in time. Gifts for Graduation GRAHAPI'S BOTH STORES CHARLES EVANS HUGHES The world measures a man not only by what he is, but by what he does, and how he does it. Charles Evans Hughes, Secretary of State, since the first time he ever came into the public eye has fulfilled all of these standards, all of the so-called requirements which make for success. He has gained for himself a name as world leader, a man who is recognized as a diplomat and statesman of the highest rank. When the great nations gathered at Washington for the Disarmament Conference, it was Hughes who threw the gauntlet of defiance in .the ring, when each country faltered and hestitated to make the first move in the permanent assurance of a world peace. Commencement has usually drawn to Michigan many great speakers, but none of greater fame and renown than Hughes has ever addressed a Univer- sity audience. His accomplishments have received national and even international recognition, for to him has been intrusted the major portion of the task of securing an amicable settlement of the country's after-war problems, and the restoration of the land to a sound, normal, progressive basis. The Class of 1922, and those others who attended the gradua- lion exercises, should consider themselves indeed Jortunate to have had the opportunity of hearing Secretary Hughes.' Now Thomas Edison is creating another little tempest all his own with a new set of unanswerable questions. If nothing else, Mr. Edison is a great inventor! U . W. B. Butler Leona Horwitz G. D. Eaton BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 BUSINESS MANAGER....-.........HEROLD C. HUNT Advertising..................-...........Townsend H. wolfe Publication.........................George W. Rockwood Accounts ..............................Laurence H. Favrot Circulation .... ......... .....~... "....Edward F. Conlin Ass fants Elizabeth J. Forsythe X. Clark Gibson Katherine E. Styer Philip H. Goldsmith MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1922 Issue Editor-HOWARD A. DONAHUE COMMENCEMENT (From a Senior's Point of View) For four yearse, Commencement has loomed be- fore us as a dim, distant goal, almost unattainable, and hence, little thought of. Today, when it is a reality, we are little perturbed. The momentousness of the occasion is characterized only by the thought that the day seems little different from others. The youth of today-if a college graduate will suffer himself still to be called a youth-is a rather curious combinaton of easy nerves, one day, one occasion is to him no different from any other. He prides himself upon his ability to obviate all aston- ishment from his make-up. He takes things as they come-is glad or sorry-but rarely excited. ,And so, it is a difficult matter to crystalize in words our reactions to Commencement. Perhaps, after it is all over, after we have felt the pangs which come with the thought of leaving old friends and of meeting new ones, we shall feel little dif erent .for having attended the exercises. We like to think that we should hardly care if we didn't go at all, yet within the heart of each graduate this morning, there is a littte th-rill-a quiet one, perhaps, but a thrill, neverthless. It is one of satisfaction-of gratifica- tion, that we have not failed in the task we have as- sumed and perhaps the greatest enjoymient of Com- mencement for us will come from the knowledge of the feeling of regret wlich might have come had we faltered.by the-way. "Safe now in the wide, wide world." WHERE DOES DUTY END? (As the Undergraduate Sees It) After leaving college there is a tendency to think that one duty to one's alma mater consists in re- turning to it for class reunions, talking about it oc- casionally, and forgetting it the rest of the time. This is not the-attitude which Michigan alumni.have taken to any considerable extent, as evidenced by the continual support which the University receives from all parts of the world. "College spirit" should not end with receiving the diploma. The period after college is so much long- er than the college years that helpfulness should increase proportionately, for the University needs material and moral support as long as it continues to exist. Striking examples of this devotion are numerous here on the campus. Hill auditorium, the women's dormitories, Alumni 'Memorial hall, the Law dormtiory, and the Michigan Union are but a few of these. That the college where one is trained for business or profession should benefit by one's prosperity is and deserves to be well appreciated. But there is another duty owing this institution which is not so readily seen. This is moral backing at all times, and on all occasions, and which does lot mean continual rah-rahing or boosting with tories of this wonderful institution, Michigan. Rath- r, it means probing, and intercepting the -reports o often disseminated to the detriment of the Uni- ersity, and its administration. The continuous ap- Ralion of the test of value-President Burton's Nw w Ofsu p....... 6. ...~r.U ... ... r... . ........ . .. THE FRYING PAN[ -i-a flash in the Pan." The Present Generation An alumnus stood on the Union steps Smoking a bad cigar. A senior of youthful mein he lamped And laughed a low "har, har !" "My boy," he quoth, "you need advice For the world is a sink of sin. He reached him out a horny hand And snaffled the senior in. "When I left Ann Arbor's walks and towers I resolvedto journey far; So I sold beef tea-from Tennesee To the Sanjak of Novi Bazaar. "But at Irkutsk I hocked my boots And I had to soak my clock, For I bought some shares ina doughnut mine- Boy, never buy mining stock!" "And I've got a plan for the good of man- "I'll let you in on the ground." As he spoke of his scheme with eyes agleam The alumnus lost his ground. And the elder knew when he came to That he'd fell for the senior's line. For he'd bought unafares at least ten shares I a Peruvian doughnut mine ! "But you've no idea," burbled the clerk, "how easily the ink flows in our improved fountain pens." "Perhaps not," replied Lucretius, blotting his trousers, t'but I have an inkling." "I can sing in any flat if I have the proper key." remarked Front-door Jimmy, the virtuoso of Sing Sing. '-and this," we said, waving gracefully toward the most recent acquisition of the campus, "is the new Clements Library." We paused for effect. "With a crane it it," we added by way of explana- tion. The Old Altimnus stroked his whiskers. "Oh," he said, "I thought all along it was a training school for the marine engineers, with a mast so as they could practice with sails. Excuse me." Cockide Quatrainss I I like to carve peculiar words Into pretty paragraphs. Thus hoping that some carefree birds Will bust into some lowbrow laphs. "You made me what I am today, I hope - "Well, you can't say you are a .self-made man, then." CALIGULA. The Fishing Season Opened Friday, June 16th _ w Get a CAILLE MOTOR for We Carry a Full Line of your boat. All kinds. F IS H ING TACKLE Save the trouble of rowing the boat. Quiet and easy running Casting Baits Steel Poles Reels Lines - Seines Tackle Boxes w _ - Sa r -w Camps Grids and Accessories for the Summer Vacation s w w w w _ r rS - _ r D 'tFail to See OurGoods. Prices RgtSriePop Larmed Hardware Company (Successors to M. D. Larned) THE UP-TO-DATE HAR DWA RE Phone 1610 310 So. State 1111{liltit"li mmililmtiintNm Im11luiNm mm11Ig"lliit11Hl1l 111t m11Imt{11ill I~I~ tll Ifl lil1ll ll llf11ulIIll il t [fill i lIfitII IH M 11111itI"iit1111111111111 1111il111111 il[ilifl Ifl fl 11w The most appropriate compl1- I Sment of the season- - ~ SWEET PEAS, LILY OF THE VALLEY or ROSES Aa Nickels Arcade 23ELierty _ r * Follo Greater 'Iichigan a- -Iw _ rp r - Nikl Ircad Summeriery PolchiGaterDaily -g Dal duig hrSm erSsso Subscribe today---$1.o at the Press ?uiling lailed anywhere in the United States ~illlljlltlNImItmmmmmmmli11mmIImII"IlIlIImmIIII111mmmIIII I .Rent A T 1 m ilt n u sin ess QColege State and William Streets j reetings to visiting Alumni as well as the Summer Visitors. "THE QUARRY" DRUG AND PRESCRIPTION STORE p. Phone f08-Corner S. State and N. Univ.-G. Claude Drake, Prop.