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June 29, 1922 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1922-06-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILYTHuRsIAY, JUN

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will insure above all that sure index to a life w ell
lived--balance.

'ii _________________________________________

11

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE SUMMER SESSION OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday during the Summer
Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to.the use for re-
piblication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise
:redited in this paper and the local news published therein.
Entered at the' postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second
class matter.
Subscription by carrier or mail, $i.5o.
Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street.
Phones: Business, 960; Fditorial, 2414.
Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the signa-
ture not necessarily to appear in print, but as an eyidence of faith,
and notices of events will be published in The Summer Daily at the
liscretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Summer Daily
office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No
manuscript will be returned unless the writer incloses postage.
The Summer Daily does not necessarily endorse the senti-
rnents expressed in the communicatonis.,'
EDITORIAL STAFF
Telephone 2414
MANAGING EDITOR................LEO J. HERSHDORFER
City Editor.................................James B. Young
sight Editors--
Howard A. Donahue Julian E. Mack
Sporting Editor...............................Jack D. Briscoe
Women's Editor................................Dorothy Bennetts
Editorials.....................................Herbert S. Case
Humor Editor...................................Donald Coney
literary Editor.........:........................G. D. Eaton
Assistants

THE RADIO BUG IS DYING
The radio. bug has done with its gymnastics.
Every new invention which is of great importance
must go through its initiatory period of frenzied
excitement before it settles down for creditable im-
provement, and the radio is on the last lap of this
period. Newspapers have made a big thing of the
radio-but they have expounded it only as a pas-
time. Magazines Ahave gone to the extreme and
mixed imaginary performances with the present
actually possible uses of the instrument. For this
reason the magazines have been of greater service to
the radio's improvement, as they have presented
more food for thought.
With summer here the instruments have a tend-
ency to grow sulky and to balk. The present atmos-
pheric conditions bring out the defects of the radio
,n the extreme, and especially will the "home made"
Sets show their inferiority. And this inferiority
must be remedied. It is not only possible, but also
very probable that in the future the radio will be
of more service than the telephone, for it has a
greater range at less expense. But it should not be
pected that any decided improvements would be
made while the craze was at its height, when the
principal thing was to manufacture instruments to
fulfill the enormous demand.
It is fortunate then that the novelty of the radio
and the excitement that its introduction caused are
about over, for now the world can look forward to
much needed improvements.
One national educational organization declares
that there is but one chance in 173 for achieving
success with a college education. As the profession-
al side-show barker cries, "Who'll be the lucky
one
"Humanizing the motor car," barks a recent ad-
vertisement for a well known motor vehicle. We
suggest that a few local cars peruse the ad with a
view toward learning the feelings of the folks who
have to cross State street.

Text Books and Supplies for
A-O-all Colleges at .

Q-

fter

Both btores

GRAHAM' S

iiutn Mores

11

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I

-- I
l

W. B. Butler

Leona Horwitz"

BUSINESS STAFF
Telephone 960 k
SINESS MANAGER..................HEROLD C. HUNT
ertising...................................Townsend H. Wolfe
lication...................... ......George W. Rockwood
:ounts....................................Laurence H. Favrot
ulation.....................................Edward F. Conlin

1922 JUNE 1922
S Kt T WV T F S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 - 16 17
18 19 20 21 -22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30
PANAMA AND STRAW HATS
CLEANED TILE RIHT WAY
Prices for cleaning Panamas $1.25 up.
Prices for stiff straws...... .75 up.
We do only high class work.
FACTORY HAT STORE
617 PACKARD STREET
Telenhone 1792
DETROIT UNITED LINES"
TIME TABLE
Ann Arbor and Jackson
(Eastern Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars--6:oo
a. m., 7:00 a. m., 8:oo a. m., 9:00. a. m. and
hourly to 9:05 p. Mn.
Jackson Express Cars (locall stops of An
Arbor)-9:47 a. m. and every two hours to
9:47 P. im.
Local Cars, East Bound-s:ss a. m., 7:00
a. m. and every two hours to g :oo p. m.;
c :00 p. M. To Ypsilanti only-I: :4o p. m.,
12:25 a. in., x1:is a. in.
To Saline, change at Ypsilanti.
Local Cars, ,West Bound-7:5o a. M., 2:40
p. M.
To Jackson and Kalamazoo-Limited cars:
8:47, 10:47, a. m.; 12:47, 2:47 4:47 p. m.
To Jackson and Lansing-Limited: 8:47
p. i.
CANOE LUNCHES
PHONE 1593.
BLIGHTY
709 N. University
n AUTO LIVERY
WITH OR WITHOUT DRIVER
416 S. Main. Ph. 583J
FOR LIGHT LUNCHES AND PICNICS
GET YOUR SUPPLIES AT
DOSTER'S'

lllill fm l~ iIIIlll i niA 1IIIIIIIII I
For a limited number of
STUDENTS
Good Home Cooking
_ At- Moderate Prices
MRS.' PHILLIPS
- 523 Forest Ave. C
-, --I
2111111111111111tII III111111111111111llllili
't EI

30-o.nDIVISION'
ome Board
$6.00 for THREE MEALS $5.50 for TWO MEALS
Have your seven o'clocks and come to Breakfast afterwards
Breakfast 7:30 to 8:30 Lunch 12 to 1 Dinner 5:30 to 6:30
Mrs. F. Dailey

Ann Arbor
Savings Bank
Two Offices:
N. W. Corner Main and Huron S
707 N. University Ave.

BRING YOUR IDEAS TO THE
ANN ARBOR CUSTOM
SHOE FACTORY
We will make use of them and the best
leather to. make your shoes. Bring your
repairs to our factory at 534, FOREST

Assistants
E. Clark Gibson

.p H. Goldsmith

Katherine E. Styer

THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1J22
Night Editor-JUL IAN ELLIS MACK
Assistant-J. D. Briscoe
SKYSCRAPERS AND LIBRARIES
In this age of skyscrapers and steam-palaces it
is a relief and a pleasure to discover that there are
still some people who hold the finer things of life
above the grosser. The 1,200 librarians from all
over the country who are visiting the University
today are just such a people-a people who are de-
voting their time to the maintenance of the finest
and most beneficial public institutions in the coun-
try. The last few days these delegates have been
discussing their problems in a convention in Detroit.
Detroit opened her arms in welcome to these people,
and drank in eagerly what they had to say. Such
an attitude is a feather in Detroit's cap, for it is
significant that she has not become so entirely en-
grossed in her skyscrapers and automobiles that she
has forgotten how to appreciate the finer things
of life.
The University of Michigan extends a warm wel-
come to these librarians, and hopes that they will
gain not only pleasure from their visit here, but
anything else that the University may have to offer.

F -

-, j

RAIN WATER SHAMPOOS
Marcelling Manicuring
Water Waving
-Mrs. T. L. Stoddard
Tel. 2652 707 N. University

GARRICK Mats-urres., 25-50c
DETROIT Nights, - 25,750, T c. $1.00
i3th Annnal Season Seventh Week
The BONSTELLE Co.
A Comedy in Three Acts by khtchinson
Boyd and Rudolph Bunner
WAIT 'TIL WE'RE MARRIED
CANOE LUN CHES
PHONE 1588")
709 N. University

"John Wanamaker Laughs at Report of His
Death."-News item. Boy, page Lodge, Conan
Doyle, et al.
A Chicago couple that had been divorced for
eight years, were rewed recently. "If at first you
don't succeed......"

ISummer Students- I

Secure your supplies at

812 Monroe Street

^..

KEEPING A BALANCE

President Burton's speech on Tuesday evening
brought a phase of life's activities which deserves
especially the attention of University students. We
are a nation of people who acquire sudden manias
for peculiar things. What is it that causes this
seeming appreciation of particular fads or hob-
bies? Assuredly it is not because it is found to be
best by process of reasoning, for reason requires
time and deliberation, two characteristics which are
entirely out of accord with the pursuit of any spe-
cial passing fad.
People are generally too prone to accept the ideas
of others for their own. The objection is not to
thinking as someone else thinks, but rather in that
there is little or no similarity in this process of ac-
quisition of mental and spiritual contributions.
Too many students are frequently over willing to
accept what an author tells them, without probing
for the truth as it has been brought out in their lives
or experience. Nor have they thought out suffici-
ently well the dissimilarity between grades and the
attaining of an education. Ideas which may prove
fruitful are passed into oblivion because it is con-
sidered too difficult a mental task to think them out
logically and to a.definite end.
Not only is there a general tendency to become
a slave to opinion, but also that of becoming a
slave to work-to letting work become a drudgery
instead of a creative effort. 'Man was not made
to function as a sponge, nor was any human ever
intended to be a human machine. To certain peo-
ple the process of mere note-taking and book-out-
lining seems the sum total of the purpose of their
attendance at a universtiy, when the real aim of it
is the preparation it can give for living fully and en-
oying and appreciating all phases of life. And this

..i... ..... l ....................... ......... ........ .......... .....
TTHE FRYING PAN
-a flash in the Pan."
" """N"t"""'N "" " N"""""
Flapper Redivivus
Has she Massed, the flippant flapper,
From these gay and garbled times;
Doomed to darkness and oblivion
For her multifarious crimes?
Not by jugfuls, sir or madam!
Large it's writ upon the scroll
Of other ages perturbation
For the safety of her soul.
Cleopatra was a flapper;
Queen of Sheba much the same.
Eve, they say, in lustrous Eden
Started the eternal game.
Flappers move adown the the ages;
Salt the lives of all mankind.
A flapper's not a thing of clothing-
A flapper is a state of mind !
'Soap So
"Hello, is this the weather bureau?"
"Uh huh."
"How about a shower this afternoon?"
"I dunno. If you need one, take it."

Your choice of a variety of
summertime foods chosen
from a forty-foot table, loaded

with good things to eat;

it's

WE CARRY A HIGH GRADE LINE OF
GROCERIES

STUDENTS SUPPLY STORE
1111 South University Avenue
Mraterials for All Colleges

no w onder o many have
formed the pleasant habit
of eating at

THE.

A RCADE

CAFETERIA

Gallows-Meat
The feeble-wit you meet at right
porridor who can't decide whether he
you or let you pass him.

FOUNTAIN PENS
ALARM. CLOCKS.

LUSCIOUS
LIGHT
LUNCHES

SNAPPY
SODA
SERVICE

1 _

angles in the
wants to pass

Today's Fueilleton
"Cheerio !" we whooped, vaulting into the jolly
armchair at the Union.
"Gotahel !" remarked Angus MacWhorter, our
prize Scotch gloomer. "I'm low. So low the pave-
ment scrapes the whiskers off my chin.'
"Well, listen," I exhaled jubilantly. "I arose at
7 o'clock this morning."
"I am pained to hear that," replied Angus.
"To hear that I got up so early?" I interro-
gated.
"No," reparteed Angus, "to think you are such
a liar."
Au Revoir
CALIGULA.

EVERSBARP AND
FYNEPOINT PENCILS
$1.00_-Upward
NAME PRINTED IN GOLD ON
FOUNTAIN PENS
25 Cents

I

WELCOME
709 North University

I

HALLER & FULLER
STATE STREET JEWELERS

CAPTIWATING
CANDY
CONFECTIONS

COOL
COMFORTABL.
QUARTERS

I

I

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