THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY Ftt tgr OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SUMMER SESSION Published every morning except Monday during the summer session. Member of the Associated Preos. The .As- sociated Press is exclusively entitled to the tsse or republicationo oftalleewdispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published here- n. intered at the postoffice. Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Sublcription by carrier or mail. $.so 00iccs: Ann Arbor Press Building. Csnmmunicationa, if signed as evidence of godfaith, will be published in The Summer Da t the discretion of the Editor. Un- signed communications will receive no con- ton. The signature may be omitted i publcation if desired by the writer. The Summer Daily does not necessarily endorse he sentiments expressed in the communica- Io-.- EDITORIAL STAFF Telephones 2414 and 176-U MANAGING EDITOR ROBERT G. RAMSAY News Editor..R.....obert S. Mansfield Chairman of the Editorial 'Board... ..............Andrew E. Propper City Editor..............Verena Moran Night Editor.....Frederick K. Sparrow Telegraph Editor........ Lslie S. Bennett Womns' Editor ..........Gwendolyn Dew STAFF MEMBERS Louise Barley Wenley B. Krouser " Rosalea Spaulding Marian Kob Marion Walker J Albert Laansma Dwigt Coursey Marion Meyer Marthat Chase Mary Margaret Miller Wray A. Donaldson Matilda Rosenfeld Geneva Ewing Dorothy Wall Maryland E. Hartloff BUSINESS STAFF Telephone g6o BUSINESS MANAGER CLAYTON C. PURDY Advertising Manager...Hiel M. Rockwell Copywriting Manager...Noble D. Travis Circulation Manager.Lauren C. Haight Publication Manager......C. Wells Christie Account Manager...........Byron Parker STAFF MEMBERS Florence E. Morse Florence McComb Charles L. Lewis Maryellen Brown SUNDAY, AUGUST 10, 1924 Night Editor-ROBT. S. MANSFIELD "In the history of science and throughout the whole course of its progress, we see certain epochs following one another more or less rapidly. Some important view is ex- pressed,. it may be, original or only revived; sooner orlater it receives recognition; fellow- workers spring up; the outcome of it finds its way into the school; it is taught and hand- ed down; and we observe un- happily that it does not in the least matter whether the view be true or fake. Inreither case, its course is the same; in either case it comes in the end to be a mere phrase, a lifeless word stamped on the memory. .. . On the appearance of. anything new the mass of peo- ple ask: What is the use of it? And they are not wrong. For it is only through its use that they perceive its value." -GOETHE. THE LAST ISSUE The pleasure derived from a task completed; the feeling of satisfaction which comes with the consciousness of having done one's best; the grat- Ification attendant upon the realiza- tion of a work well done, all are with the staff of the Summer Michigan Daily today as they prepare their last issue for publication. If the summer has meant nothing more to the staff than an opportunity to do a work of journalistic nature, it could not have been wasted, but It has meant far more and better things than this. The outward manifestation of the re- sults of the summer's work can, it is true, be seen only in the increased efficiency of the staff, and the facility with which they have prepared the news of the campus for publication. but the lasting results of the sum- mer go far deeper than this outward accomplishment and can not be seen; There has been opportunity to come together in Intimate companionshi, and co-operation in a large campus, activity. There come times in the life ok every man when he must wish that all the yesterdays might be tomor- rows and tomorrow would not come He would rather look back upon the past than start out on the ath to the sun. And so it is with a lIttl feeling of regret that the staff of th- Daily lay down their work, happy though, in the consciousness thatj they have done their best, And in draw- ing to a close its career as the of.] ficial organ of the University, the Summer Daily desires to express its1 appreciation to those who have given' their support, and to those whose helnful criticism has corrected some *: Open Letters.: COPELAND CALLED BACK TO HIS NE Y.ORK OR Senator Copeland of New York has been visiting Dr. Beebe of this city for the past week but was called back to his work yesterday morning. Senator Copeland's home was at Dexter, Michigan, for. a number of years and he held a position in the Homoeopathic department of the Uni- versity until 1908. He was a very po- pular man in his University work and was chosen mayor of Ann Arbor for one term. Little investment - big re the Daily Classifieds.-Adv. IRVING WARMOLTS, D.S. Chiropodist and Orthopedist 707 N. University. Phone 62 TO THE STUDENTS OF THE MER SESSION SUM Fellow Sufferers: The Summer session is almost over. A last few feverish days of final ex- aminations, and then you close your books, pack your grip, and hop a train for home and rest. Perhaps as you sit in a day coach next Friday or Sat- urday, homeward bound, you will want to take an inventory of just what the Summer session has offered and just what you have gained by these eight weeks. You must admit that they have not been ill-spent. Lectures, excursions, and classes-have all contributed to help the time pass quickly and profit- ably. A survey of the past eight weeks cannot but cause a feeling of satisfaction to those who have taken advantage of it. It is to be hoped thai this will not be your last summer at 'Michigan. By next Saturday we will all have a chance to take the dust off the seats in the Ann Arbor day coaches; and we can transfer the dust to ,school books. See you in September. Gleefully, SMYTIE. TO MEMBERS OF THE SUMMER SESSION FACULTY Gentlemen: We take this opportunity to express a thought that we feel sure reflects. the sentiments of the -student body. We appreciate the care, the patience and the devotion with which you have conducted the classes of the Summer session for the past weeks, and we feel sure that your work has not been in vain. We venture the guess that stu- .dents are not the only ones who fee' that they have earned the brief in- terval of rest from the middle of August to the opening of the schoo' year. Sincerely, SMYTHE. TO THE BUILDERS OF OUR NE1 UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS C- 262 I Gentlemen: When we return in September we expect to find several changes on the campus. The new Physics building, situatei- between the Medical and Engineer- ing buildings, we hope will be finish- ed atd ready for occupation; the l model high school, used last year for classes of the College of Literature Science and the Arts, we expect to find ready for the purposes of the School of Education; and the new Lit- erary building, which now appears te be in the last stages of construction. will, we hope, be ready to fulfill its duties. Perhaps even the Law clu Text Books and Supplies °s.. ..... __._.._._. ...., ,. it t -, '. - GRAHAM'S Both Stores will be ready for the convenience of those solemn gentlemen with the heavy case books. Conditions on the campus are such that these new buildings are badly needed. Class roows are congestef and are in general put to too heavy use, students are often exjectd to1 walk from a.class in the model high school to the next class in the Na-_ tural Science building in two minutes, and we feel that these new "homes of learning" are essential. Please do not disappoint us. f Hopefully, SMYTHE. TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fellow Pounders of the Typewriter: This is our swan song. We here- by hand over to you the job of of- ficial journalists to the University of Michigan. May the Lord have mercy on you. sin. For months the sturdy spokes- coon of the right wing have been de- nouncing Mr. La Follette because of his control of the Republican organ- ization"In his state permitted him to. dictate the personnel of the Republic- an Presidential electors. They as- sumed calmly that he would run in his state as a Republican and compel Mr. Coolidge to run as an independ- ent. GROOMES' BATHING BEACH Whitmore Lake Ref rshments 0 All Kinds Now comes the Senator's son, Rob- ert, Jr., announcing that the Ia Fol- lette-Wheeler candidacy will be sup- ported by electors running in Wiscon-' sin as independent progressives. The lRepublican ticket will be left free for ;Republican electors whom the G. O. P. organization can rely on to support Coolidge and Dawes. Some weeks =ago the La Follette man who was Republican National committeeman in Wisconsin- resigned. rNow the ticket in that state is made free to regular Republicans. The sit- uation will be bitter to staid old par- ty spokesmen. Neither Reublican nor Democratic leaders have possessed con- fidence of carrying Wisconsin against La Follette. But they felt they might at least be left the melancholoy com- fort of having something to assail. I ilUliElillll .:. -. ... ,:. _ s r .. w r es r r r Ill DANCING- Every Nite (except Monday) and All Day Sunday at ISLAND LAKE Follow M-65 Out North Main Near Brighton In THE Sympathy, SUMMER DAILY. 1._______________________ i of the mistakes that they have mad on the way. AT SEA WITH CONRAD Some idea of the descriptive pow- ers with which Joseph Conrad, whose recent death all lovers of literature mourn, endowed his tales of the sea, making him one of the three or four greatest literary figures of our time, can be grasped from this quotation from the The Nigger of the Narcissus, one of his earlier works: ". ...Forward, the lookout man. erect between the flukes of the twz anchors, hummed an endless tune. keeping his eyes fixed dutifully ahead in a vacant stare. A multitude of stars coming out into the clear night peopled the emptiness of the sky. They glittered, as if alive above the sea; they surrounded the running ship on all sides; more intense than the eyes of a staring crowd, and as in- scrutable as the souls of men. "The passage had begun, and the ship, a fragment detached from the earth, went on lonely and swift like a small planet. Round her the abys- ses of sky and sea met an unattain- able frontier. A great circular soli- tude moved with her, ever chsanging and ever the same, always monoton- ous and always imposing. "Now and then another white speck, burdened with life, appeared far off ,-disappeared, intent on its own des- tiny. The sun looked upon her all day, and every morning rose with a burning, round stare of undying cur- iosity. She had her own future; she was alive with the lives of those be- ings who trod her decks; like that earth which had given her up to the1 sea, she had an intolerable load of regrets and hopes. On her lived timid truth and audac- ions lives; and, like the earth, she was unconscious, fair to see- and condemned by men to an innoble fate. TPhe august loneliness of her path lent dignity-to the sordid inspiration of her pilgrimage. She drove foaming to the southward, as if guided by the courage of a high endeavor. The smil- ing greatness of the sea dwarfed the extent of time. The days raced aft- er one another, and the nights, event- ful and short, resembled fleeting dreams." Not all men can realize the ambi- tion to travel, but the genius of Jos- eph Conrad has brought the sea to our bookshelf. Rome, Aug. 8.-Il Mondo, a newspa- per, wonders why Charles U. Hughes, American secretary of state, skipped Rome. It thinks, perhaps, that the Italian minister in Washington will be able to explain. Little investment -- big returns, the Daily Clasifde4s.-Ad.y, - - 1 .p I EDITORIAL COMMENT I . i "LON MORRIS COLLEGE" (The New York Times) "I would," said Falstaff to Prince Hal, "that thou and I knew where a commodity of good names were to be bought." The Dallas Morning News reports such a place in academic cir- .les. The Rev. Alonzo Morris of Pitts- burg, Camp county, Texas, familiarily jknown In East Texas as "Brother Lon," has given $100,000 to Alexand- er college at Jacksonville, Texas, and ps a result the name of the college will be changed to "Lon Morris col- lege" in honor of the donor. The founder of this institution, which must have been in existen e for many years, since "some of Tex - as' greatest men" have been grad- uated from it (Governor "Tom" Campbell, Congressman John Box and. Judge "Dan" Walker being especially mentioned among its alumni), was the Rev. Isaac Alexander. But it is in no ;faithlessness to his memory that this change of name has been made, for pIe often told the trustees, it is grate- fully recaIled, that if some one would endow the school, he whose name it has borne for so many years would be glad to have the college bear the name of the new benefactor. The sum ,seems rather meagre for a sole en- dowment. But the report- states that "Brother Lon," who seems to be well endowed financially for a preacher, for he has recently made large gifts to other Texas institutions, expects to do more for this college which has taken his name. New buildings are 4n prospect, and one of them is to bear the name of Mrs. Morris, "wh( has always been connected with "Brother Lon's' gifts." One's name appended forever to a college cheer is rather to be chosen than great riches, and the loving fav- or of a body of undergraduatesthan' silver or gold. "Brother Lon" has (made a Soiomonic choice. And if one, would know where other like com-x ,pnodity may be bought, a generous- ;minded person can easily find in the1 -long list of unendowed or inadequate- ply endowed institutions a board of trustees willing to write over its ac- ademic doorway the Virgilian line: "'Nec me meminisse pigebit -," filling n the blank with the name of the giv- en Alma Mater.f ,THEIR LAST MELANCHOLY COX- FORT GONE (The Detroit News) A 1i~~~ ENERGINE I When You Return to Ann Arbor After the happy vacation which we sincerely.hope you are beginning at the end of this busy week, Stop in at 317 South tate Street It may be with the open- ing of college in Septem- ber, or next year when yo ureturn for another Summer Session after a year of labor; Or it may be as you drive through our beautiful City on your way to other du- ties. I I ODORLESS CLEANING We're the cleaners you'be heard so much abut, For our customers all recommend Our consistent good k>ork, for they 're ne'er in do That lye '1 do the salme pork for a friend, ;' PHONE Garment Cleaning PHONE 2508 I "The Home Qf E nergII1e6 209 South Fourth Abenue p___________ i -* We extend to our friends and their friends a cordial invitation to visit our store and examine the latest items of interest in Toilet Goods from the world's best. The Store where the Sun Shines. G, Claude Drake's Drug and Prescription Store Cor. North Univ. Ave. and State St. Phone 308 "The Quarry" The Everhot's best for summer cooking Priced $5 to $16.50 A complete meal is easily and quickly prepared on an Everhot electric stove wherever there's an ordinary light socket within reach. Fries, boils, broils, bakes, toasts.-and steams. Con- vement and economical. The Detroit Edison Company It is a bitter blow to stolid crit- cism, this announcement that Senato La Follette will not seek to captial- 1ze the Republican name in Wiscoa- Read the Want Ads Main at William Telephone 2800 I