WSPAPER OF THE OF MICHIGAN 1 R SESSION morning xceit Monday, city Summer Session by trol of Student Publica- interest in archaeological lore is con- it is the state universities of the mid-I cerned, to any of the older Eastern dle west and the west that have been universities, who claim almost a mon- the leaders in finding room for the opoly on cultural interests. women. This University is as cultural in every way, with the possible excep- tion of culture that is bound to ac- crue with age and tradition, as are our sister uniersiti 1's of the Atlantic coast. And as far as age is concern- ROW'S YOUR ed, there are few universities in that OLD section of the country older than Mich- STRAW RAT? Professor Kelsey has shown the "Fine. How's your mother fixed for soap?": world that this is not a business col- "Rotten. She drank herself to lege, but a real cultural university. I I sociated Press is exclusively en- te use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise this paper and the local news pub- :in. at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, s second class matter. ion by carrier, $1.5o; by mail, Press Building, Maynard Street, , Michigan. cations, if signed as evidence of will be published in The Summer he discretion of the Editor. Un- uinunications will receive no con- Th inturema be oittedi CRAHA 'S EDITORIAL COMMENT n if desired1by the writer. the Daily does not necessarily endorse ' 11TU)ENTS ANDivtAeUATcg ments expressed in the communmca- 'A(ew NDr TiAmeATE ______________________(New:v York im nes) EDITORIAL STAFF To supply something like a founda- Telephone 4925 tion for the ever-fascinating inquiry into national progress or decline, the MANAGING EDITOR sociologists may yet find it necessary NORMAN R. THAL so construct an index of civilization litor.............Robert S. Mansfieldlt osrc nine fcvhain tor............Manning Houseworth on the model of the familiar index of n of the.Editorial Board...........prices. By selecting a sufficiently ......lrederick K. S p arrow, Jr. ditor...... I.........arion t cad large number of commodities, such as h l!.dito.........Leslie S. Iennetts ditor.............Willard B. Crosby wages, rents, pubh health, homicide ditor..........W. CalvMn Patterson prices, anti-evolution laws, vacation T. Barbour Marion Me expenditure, church attendance, an- DuBois Catherine Miller tomobile buying, book consumption, einstervald Robert E. Minnier radio, symphonic orchestras and polar e Lardner Kecnneth B;. sith ehtiner Nance Solomon expeditions, we should be able to at- E. Lehtiner Marion Welles Marcuse Mary L. Zang tam at least a rough estimate of whither we are drifting and approxi- BIUStNESS STAFF mately how fast. In such an index Telephone 21214 of civilization the school and college BUSINESS MANAGER statistics would naturally enter. And JOHN W. CONLIN unquestionably this one item would ng................Thomas Olmstead heavily incline the index in the di- .harles Daugherty ection of optimism. ,o..... ... ..Kernmit K. " Klein4 on................Frank Schoenfeld In the summer of 1900 our colleges bestowed just a trifle over 14,000 bac- calaureate degrees. Ten years later the number of young men and women EDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1925 to whom commencement orators ad- dressed words of admI1niion and hope Editor-F. K. SPARROW, JR. had risen to 22,687, or an increase- during the decade of 55 per cent. In DOESN'T TALI--HE ACTS 1920 ther were conferred 3d,, 2 de- rating his former statements grees, an increase of 73 per cent. Two years later the number was *rnmeontale eonomv., and mak- I- is~ rS , ni ed ibli illy nm of imi r a ver sti w umber of others that directly 47,854. Twenty-five years ago the col- the way, to more efficient use ;leges sent forth one bachelor of arts, is finds, President Coolidge science or the professions for every c fnnouneds teosidentblidgeo5,400 of the population of the United States.Within the next two decades ediate reduction in income the ratio had risen to 1 in 4,000 and more than $300,000,000 on in 1 to 3,000, respectively. The ratio Sfurther reduction in the cost was still rising in 1922, though it may furtherredction inmake cos- be that in the last three years there nment which will make pos has been a slackening in that fever- Ps1 further tax lowering. ish rush to the colleges which set in President's announcement, after the war. The extent of the in- ith the facts and figures that vasion is still more evident in the total ght to the attention of the na- figures of colleges attendance. From positive evidence that at least 110,000, in the yoEar 1f100 it rose to in government office has done 1000 h er10 trs o ian goverkmentboffiermsdoned183,000 ten years later, and to 430,000, ian talk about reforms and approximately, in 1920. In that flood es he expects to effect. And witas apparent that a certain amount lidge didn't mtake nearly as of poor college material wvas swept s .d along. Thus, while college attend- yrs, ance increased by 85 per cent from y after Colidge took. ofie, 1910 to 1920, the number of graduates try hearnthatead tarter rose only 73 per cent. Some of the the governmental machineryI weaker brothers and sisters fell by economy" administration, but 4tewyie the wayside. 7, ra. aan nan4'A k- d death." Tamam, Dear Sir: De profundis clamavi ad te. Last semester I survived a course in the Topography and Monuments of ancient Rome wit hthe grade of A, and last night I went to the Arc. and saw a nice representation of the Roman for- um said to have been taken from the front of Nero's palace which must have been snapped from the Basillica Aemilia. At least it was looking slightly south of west;, and Nero's "Golden House" was located on the Palatine Hill's southern side over- looking the end of the Circus Max- imus and without a possible view of the western end of the Forum. If there had been a sign at the be- ginning of the show saying "Educa- tion Pictures" I would have forgiv- en them, but this was meant to be ac- curate. Oh, well-but you will look into it wont you? -Peat Bog. Daily Disserhation Golf, greater national pastime claims our undivided attention today. It was on a balmy June day that we were setting out to play a mean lit- tle game when a gent says: "Hey, how's for taking us along, hey?" an we says "yes" in a non-committal tone of voice and he goes along and we get set and then he says: "Hey, how do you hold one of these here clubs anyway, hey?" and we brains him and they're going to hang us, but we don't give a damn all of which brings us to what we was going to say Inyway. Golf is a great game. See you to- morrow as Maetinee would say which is plagiarism but we don't care any- way.-And so's your old man. Olaf the Great's Sleepytime Story Now that your alarm clocks have rung and you are ready to go to sleep, Uncle Olaf will tell you all a sweet little story about a man. Just tuck your little tootsies close and shove cotton in your ears and were all ready. Out in the land where men are men and every dog is a police dog there lived a little boy named Knute. His last name was Swelgison, and that was his papa's name and I guess his mama's too. In a little shack which made a sardine can look like a ball room, he was raised with his thirty brothers and sisters. He was he smallest of the little family, being only six feet three and two thirds in his unmentionable feet. Well, anyway, he grew up, which is enough to ex- pect of any child, and went to the city to earn his daily bread- s ie lDeveloped a Hobby Having .a soc klike holeproof (adv.) he soon entered the pugilistic ring, but also developed a hobby (now stop and gaze upon figure 888888) which rocked him like Gibraltar (not an adv.) Thus hobby was cracking safes (see figure 987654321). Once he made one too many wise cracks and now he 's cracking "big ones" in a nice big stone foundry. Newest Fiction Stationery Copeestock SERVICE SATISFACTION _ COURTESY GRAHA 'S of, Summer -School Supplies *320 South State 549 East University _ __ a Subscribe to The Summer Michigan Daily We Do Not Serve On Monday Private Partie Ser HE HA UNTED TAVERN 417 East Huron St. For Reservations Phone 7781 e wer never Con1rWOe Dy any ae-I nite announcement from the Presi-j ent that he was going to do thus and . He didn't make any promises,-- e gave orders, and he saw that those rders were enforced. And then, out fan almost unsuspected calm, comes e official announcement that the peo- le of the United States have been wed three hundred million dollars y the active program of economy irried on by their President. That all, except that we heard that resident Coolidge has issued new and ren more stringent orders for admin- trative care in the expenditure of he money of the people of the nation, Other presidents have conducted ars, made peace treaties, proposed iternational agreements; President oolidge has done something tangible, >mething corporeal, something that, e was not forced into, but chose to o for the common good of the peo- le of the nation he is sworn to pro- st and uphold. Andrew Jackson, -as 'resident, earned a. reputation as a tisguided and corrupted politician. 'resident Coolidge will probably go own in history as the nation's great- st. proponent of economy. It would be foolish for us to praise [r. Coolidge; his actions and deeds re really beyond our amateurish :ope. But we can, and do, thank him or having done what the people have xpected their public officers to do nce time immemorial,- enforce a rogram of economy. CULTURAL MICHIGANa The return of Professor Kelsey 'om the Near East, and the announce- .ent of the discoveries made by the niversity expedition in that portion ' the globe, deserves more than pass. g notice. It exhibits to the world .at this University has more than passing interest in culture, and that e are in no way inferior, as far as It is the sisters who play the more striking part in this surge to the acad- emic shades. Between 1900 and 1910 they held their own. During this de- cade the women students increased by 66 per cent, as against 65 per cent for the men. In 1910 they drew down 33 per cent of the total number of baccalaureate degrees, as against 32 per cent in 1900. But in 1920 the wo- men graduates were 40 per cent of the total Still more striking was the rise in women students. The enrollment for men in 1922 represented a gain of 125 per cent over 1910; but for the women the gain was 160 per cent. Thus, if in our proposed index of civilzation we include woman's pro- I gross as a commodity, we strengthen the argument for optimism. The whole nation is going to college more frequently, and women are, relative- ly, going more frequently than men. Where do the women go after they leave college? Presumably into mar- riage, ito school teaching and into business. That would be a fair infer- ence from the fact that while the wo- Thien college graduates in 1920 consti- tuted 40 per cent of the total, the number of women who obtained pro- fessional degrees in the following year was a little more than 5,000, as against 70,000 men. The teachers' colleges aid normal schools are not included in the "professional" schools. It would thus seem that the women of America come much closer to at- taining the ideal set forth by the col- lege presidents, of an education that prepares for life rather than for a living. A second assumption that would seem to be Justified is that the middle west and the west are send- ing their daughters to college more frequently than the east. Our endow- ed women's colleges in the east could never have accommodated the in. crease in women students from 28,000 in 1900 to 160,000 twenty years later. T Send in attached 3 . Coupon Local - $1.50 Foreign - 2.00 VAN'S will be open at the following hours this summer. 6 A. M. to 1 P. M. and Name..................... Address................... 5 P. M. to P. . We are prepared to give you quick ser-Ice and the best quality food City ........ State ..................... 666666666 Caught in the Act Moral: Beware o fwise cracks. Now g'wan do your sleeping in classes. Uncle Olaf wants to go shoot pool at the League building. -Olaf the Great. * * * And don't think you're not. Tamam. Subscribe for the Summer Daily. S ubscribe One of our Specials Pot Roa Beef with Potatoes, Bread and' utter NO W 30c u ,rrrrrrrerrrrrrr. ^.rir r