PAGE TWO THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1924 rer Ylr WPM _- e OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SUMMER SESSION Published every morning except Monday during the summer session. Member of the Associated Pres. The As- sociated Press is exclusively entitled to the nse for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local newspublished here- i. Entered at the postoffice, Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $.5-o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Communications, if signed as evidence of good faith, will be published in The Summer Daily at the discretion of the Editor. Un- signed communications will receive no con- sideration. The signature may be omitted in publication if desired by the writer. The Summer.Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the comniunica- tois. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414- and 176-M MANAGING EDITOR ROBERT G. RAMSAY News Editor...........Robert S. Mansfield Chairman of the Editorial Board.. ............Andrew E. Propper City Editor..............Verena Moran Night Editor..........Frederick K. Sparrow Telegraph Editor..........eslie S. Bennetts Womens' Editor.............Gwendolyn Dew STAFF MEMBERS Louise Barley Marian Kolb Rosalea Spaulding Wenley B. Krouser Marion Walker J. Albert Laansma Dwight Coursey Marion Meyer Marthat Chase Mary Margaret Miller Wray A. Donaldson Matilda Rosenfeld Geneva Ewing Dorothy Wall Maryland E. Ilartloff BUSINESS STAFF Tee hone 96o BUSINESS MANAGER CLAYTON C. PURDY Advertising Manager.......Hiel M. Rockwell Copywriting Manager.......Noble D. Travis Circulation Manager.......Lauren C. Haight1 Publication Manager........C. Wells Christie Account Manager.............Byron Parker STAFF MEMBERS Florence E. Morse Florence McComb Charles L. Lewis Maryellen Brown WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1924 Night Editor-J. A. LAANSMA "Every far-sighted patriot should protest first of all against growth in this country of that evil thing which is called "class consciousness." The demagogue, the sinister or foolish socialist visionary who strives to arouse this feeling does a foul and evil thing; for he is no true Ameri- can; he is no self-respecting citizen of this Republic, he for- feits his right to stand with man- ly self-reliance on a footing of entire equality with all other citizens, who bows to envy and greed, who erects the doctrine of class hatred into a shibboleth, who substitutes loyalty to men of a particular status, whether rich or poor, for loyalty to those eternal and immutable princi- ples of righteousness which bid us treat each man on his worth as a man without regard to his wealth or his poverty." THEODORE ROOSEVELT, THE RESHPONSIBILITITY OF NOTION PICTURES Managers of motion picture thea- ters have a responsibility of temper- ing their plays to the shorn audience. To speak of the duty of the movies to art would seem to be stretching the possibilities of the mechanical contrivance, but to speak of its duties to the civic community is to touch on a point that few theaters, apparently, consider. There is no doubt, today that the movies are the greatest of all the educational institutions employed in this country. Where once the home undertook the instruction of the youth, the inculcation in his too often re- sisting mind, of the powers, the inter- est the ideals and the knowledge that would enable him to take his proper place in the society of which he was a part, now the radio, and the movies are entrusted with the declicate task. As an educational agency then, the movies stand paramount, even above our -chools, as a source of amuse- ment its place is unquestioned, but when scenes are shown in show, such as certain scenes reminicent of the electric chair and Sing Sing, which are neither educational nor amusing, it. is time some one was starting a pro- test. WE CREATE A QUEER IMPRESS1ON Europeans entertain curious notions about life in the United States. It is 'true that the cinema has not become as general a habit across the Atlan- tic as it has on this side. Neverthe- less, many of the weird impressions of American life which are current on the other side are derived from Amer ican m'oving pictues. These movies efature train robbers, bank holdups, social scandals, shooting affrays, ex- citing episodes in automobile and aeroplane and other sensational things. A stranger observing a number of American films will reach the con- clusion, naturally enough, that Amer- ica is a large country entirely sur- rounded by "sin and sentiment." It is inhabited in the East by unscrup- ulous, but enormously successful, business men, who devote their nights to squandering in cabarets their ill- gotten gains of the day before. In the West the bad men rob stage coaches and banks, shoot sheriffs, and talk sentiment to their favorite steeds. The far North is peopled by bearded scoundrels, who go there to escape from the law, to steal mining claims and to menace lonely girls who are perpetually being snow bound in de- serted log cabins. Canada is populat- ed by the members of the Royal Mounted Police who always get their man. The most remarkable thing; in the South are Kentucky feuds, col- onels who dring "mint juleps," and half-breeds who are mostly bad. The "movie" women of America are notable for the scantness of their cos- tumes and for their remarkable bed- rooms-enormous in size, elaborately decorated, and containing enough fur- niture to equip a hotel. Likewise they are addicted to going to entertain- ments and dancing on the tables or jumping into marble swimming pools. ,Heroes in America, according to the' movies, are always just in time and just naturally stupid. They always manage to get covered with suspicion by retaining smoking revolvers, by shielding convicts, and by assuming the crimes committed by the worthless brothers of the heroines. On the whole, a stranger judging American movies would say that life in America must be awfully inter- esting but just a bit strenuous. Know Your Campus ,"Behind the Library stands what is known technically, if not popularly, as the cenotaph. This monument was erected in 1845 in memory not of the living but of the dead. How many of those who have looked on the broken, lonesome column, half covered with shrubery, have stopped to find out about the men whose names are here inscribed?' There are four tablets on the base of the column each with a vlatin in- scription, bearing the names of Joseph Whiting, Douglass Houghton, Carolus Fox, and Samuel Denton. Professor Whiting was one of the earliest mem- bers of the University faculty and his death occurred just before graduation in 1845. Houghton has been called "Michigan's first geologist." He was a young man of exceptional brilliancy and ability and came to an untimely death in 1845, being drowned in Lake Superior. Charles Fox was the first and only professor of agriculture Michigan ever had. After his death, which occurred' less than two years after his appoint- ment, the establishment of the Agri- cultural college took away the neces- sity of such a department here. Dr. Denton was professor of the theory and ypractice of medicine from 1850 to 1860 and was also a member of the first Board of Regents. He died in 1860. EDITORIAL COMMENT PROHIBITION AND OLYMPIC WINNERS ,1 Text Books and Supplies ' (The Christian Science Monitor) Is it a pure coincidence that theI;G R A H M two countries which led all others in the Olympic Games at Paris-the Un- ited States and Finland-should also Try Class ied ads for big Results. be the two countries that have adopt- ed prohibition? Of course it would be futile to assert that prohibition? Of course it would be futile to assert that LUNCHEONS prohibition has directly contributed DINNERS and to these athletic victories. In neither A LA CARTE country has the law been enacted long E enough to affect the rearing of these - remarkable young men, but it goes - OPEN DAILY without saying that the winners are I 1 : A. M. to not habitual partakers of alcoholic 7:30 P. M. stimulants. Even the most fanatical - partisans of the liquor traffic will Sunday Hours hardly contend that drink promotet. - 5:30 P. M. to athletic prowess or that a world-beat- - - 7:00 P. M. ing Olympic team is to be recuited in the saloons. But even if these Olympic victories cannot be claimed as fruits of prohi- bition, it is nevertheless true that pro- i hibition and athletic excellence are 703 B. UNIVERSITY Phone 3093-M both concording indications of a cer- t a i n s t a g e o f a d v a n c e m e n t , p r o o f s o f "_pr o g rs sbi t hi nmo r a lhe a l t han di n progr~ss bith in moral health and in physical development. Prohibition cannot be made into law in any free and self-governing country unless a Greenwood& large probortion of the population has already decided to abstain from aleo- Kilgore hol, and winning Olympic teams can- not be produced unless the Nation's general physical condition is good. A drunken and demoralized popula- The Mans Shop tion is not likely to adopt prohibition, and neither is a race of weaklings fit to produce Olympic winners. Both ~ - prohibition and vtory in the Olympic Games are hopeful symptoms. The State Street Over "runner-up" countries in the Olympics Calkins & Fletcher were also, significantly enough, the very ones in which the temperance movement is strong, and though a country like Sweden does not have total prohibition it has done much to- ward restricting the sale of alcohol and limiting its use, and in England prohibition is more seriously consid- ered than on the continent. In both Finland and the United States it is the farming population in the interior that is the mainstay of prohibition, and it will hardly be questioned that it is the counmtr ydistricts that yield the best athletes. Not many habitual tip- -After the p ,ors' ans wear the Olympic crown. toere In both Finland and the United **ied~~ *eagt States the law is broken by smugglers, eou secret distillers and their customers, lkesO Heryr particularly along the seacoasts fac- ing alcohol-producing regions. In both countries there is corruption among oficials, who wink at viola- tions, and in both countries there are politicians who do the law only lip service, who vote "dry" but act "wet."N I y Before the national elections in Fin- A FieC land this spring the "Association for!1AcFive Candy Temperance Without Prohibition" re- quested the different parties to refrain from mentioning prohibition on their O°*11'tb"egst' redtrademrktt.Wnt. - so 10., Otoago, Sri., Geo. H. Wlliamo, ros. programs, so that each representative elected would be free to vote accord- ing to his personal desires and con- victions, but prohibition has too much of a popular appeal for such subter- fuges and evasions. In the United States, also, many politicans who are "personally wet" and politically dry," jus f which proves that they think the ma- jority of their electors favor prohi- bition. In both countries prohibition may get temporary setbacks, just as it is far from certain that the American and Finnish teams will always lead all others in future Olympic Games; but it is also certain that progress toward prohibition is being made in a number of countries, and that to defeat the j ' boys from America' and Finland will require rigorous training without al- coholie stimulants. IIA-WING IS TOO GOOD (The Indiana Summer Student) "Typical American young people" IS Both Stores ..... I Patronized Daily Advertisers. Watch Page Three for real values. FOR BETTER SUMMER FOOD TUTTLE'S LUNCH ROOM Phone 150 338 Maynard St. South of Maj II' i FOR QUALITY PRINTING SEE --rourmr 6etter imnpressions" 4 711 N. University Ave. Up-stairs PHONE 2%-R Across from the Campus - ,~ i i i I I I MAKING IT HARD FOR TE INSTRUCTOR Gradually, very gradually, a sus- picion has been growing of late that it might be just as well to treat uni- versity undergraduates as adults in- stead of as children. From time to time students themselves have had a' most irritating manner of expressing their convictions to this effect and then a rather worried Alma Mater would throw a sop like the honor sys- tem at examinations, or student self- government, or student members on a few minor faculty committees. But, of course, the cut system and compulsory attendance at classes is the prop on which the academic world has -long rested. It has always seemed obvious that if a student did not have to come to class he would stay away. If you didn't believe it you had only to go to any class yourself ax see if you would not be ready and willing to stay away the next time. Now one eastern university has tak- en the bold step of permitting the stu- dents to decide for themselves if and when they will attend classes. The old fashioned educator shudders at hearing such news, to him it is posi- tively revolutionary. And it must be admitted- that this new system puts a fearful burden upon the instructor. H enceforth he must make his classes interesting or the students enrolled in his course may decide not to attend. At the end of the semester, under this new system, the instructor must prepare an examination to see whether or not the student has mastered his subject If the student can prove this, his at- tendance record is desregarded. It's an old idea among some educa- tors but it sounds revolutionary to iany others, Whale of a difference ;w cents make!" «. fI was the succinct comment made by one member of the faculty to another in the course of a discussion of the disgraceful conduct of a few members of the student body at convocation Wednesday. Unfortunately this would be the judgment handed down by the major- ity of our elders, we fear, if they were asked to express their opinion of the actions of a convocation audience. Students of Indiana University, how- ever, should not tolerate actions from fellow undergraduates which might be expected from a mob of hoodlums (Continued on Page Three) _ _ { x 1 ......all the d:.-'-. betwec -ordinary cigarette ' and - ,the most skillful blend in cigarette history. ,