THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY [CIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE iIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN SUMMER SESSION ied every morning except Monday the University Summer Session by rd in Control of Student Publica- Associated Press is exclusively en- the use for republication of all news s credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and the local news pub- erein. d at the Ann Arbor, Michiran, e as second class matter. iption by carrier, $1.50; by mail, : Press Building, Maynard Street,, >or, Michigan. unications, if signed as evidence of h, will be ptblished in The Summer the discretion of the Editor. Un- ommunications will receive no con-: n. The signature may be omitted in. n if desired by'the writer. The Daily does not necessarily endorse iments expressed in the communica- EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR NORMAN R. THAL litor.............Robert S. Mansfield .itor............Manning HousewortL Editor.............Marion Mead ditor.............LeRoy L.Osborn ditor...........W. Calvin Patterson Assistants T. Barbour George E. Lehtinen Boron Philip R. M'arcuse. h Brown Marion Meyer Burris Ralph B. Nelson . Guthrie Miriam Schlotterbeck e Lardner Nance Solomon ni Lehtine~n Wendall Vreeland BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER' JOHN W. CONLIN ng................Thomas n.................Kermit An. .. .Frank ASSISTANTS Independence, need not rob the Glor- ious Fourth of any tf its meaning. We \must express our enthusiasm some way, but why with gunpowder interections? We must pick some one day to mark the pecurrence of the grea'test event 'in modern history, so why not the Fourth of July? That grand and glorious feeling must infest William Jennings, now that he's won a place on practically every front page in the nation for the next month. "Dinner Guests Robbed of $800" - FreenPress headline. It is very ap- parent that that robbery didn't oc- cur in Ann Arbor. CAMPUS OPINION Auonymous communi'.atons will be Sdisregarded. The nmes of communi- tiats. will, however, e regarded as conidential uaon request. A "BETTER MAN" - SELF-STYLED To the Editor: The communicatin signed "Anoth er Teacher" which appeared in your columns yesterday morning only echo- ed views which , still another teach- er (male), have had ever since I came on the campus for this Summer session. I walked the diagonal when men were men and, what is more, when women were women-the rough and ready sort who did not care for personal adornment. This, was illustrated perfectly on my first visit to my fraternity house. One evening I thought I would go up after dinner and meet any boys in the active chapter who might be attend- ing the Summer session. I started up the -walk and heard a voice through the open window upstairs (in my day they kept them closed under such circumstances) say: "Wonder who this funny looking gent coming here might be? Slip on some pants and go down and see what the old cogger wants." Those words rang home. They typify the modern Michigan men. Then as for the women. They are a brazen lot, with their short skirts, their bobbed hair, their rouged cheeks, their rolled stockings. Why in my day-and yours, "Another Teacher" -there wasn't an intriguing girl on the campus. No wonder the boys take the co-eds out instead of, "importing," as they had to in the "good old days." Now I understand there are a few women on the campus who conform to the old traditions-making themselves as unattractice as possible-and that they have no more dates than co-eds used to in our day. That is the prop- er spirit. We must get back to the days of long trousers and longer skirts if Michigan is to continue to be the, home of real men. These are just a few things that I would like to have the young people know that we former students notice when we come back-to whoop it up in Summer session. Now when I was in college, our trousers came to our ankles instead of our knees, we wore big, burly black woolen sweaters in- stead of brightly colored ones. We were men. OSTED ROLL ANY ICE ammmeLADY! Sunmnier Excursions No. 348 We were enjoying the reading of Arrowsmith (adv.)) yesterday after- noon when in barged Olaf who is, as you know or otherwise as the case nmy be, a medic. Sezee: "Let's go froggin'-I need more specimens for my lab." "Oh," sezwe, "How, if any?" "Down by the old mill stream," sezee, so we went because that re- minded us of a song. Didja ever hear it? Well, never mind-to get on with our story. To make a short story longer, we donned our waders, entered Olaf's Lizzy of tin and started forth. . Subscribe to NEW CASINO PAVILION Dancing Every Nig EXCEPT SUNDAY NAT NATOLI'S OR CHESTRA ENTERTAINEF The Summer Michigan Daily ONE OF THE BEST This dance pavilion is one of the largest an finest in the S Send in attached WALLED LAKE, MICHIGAN Coupon Forty-five Minutes Drive from Ann Arbor Local - $1.50 IL% i 'V Foreign - 2.00" Good Used Cars We have a complete stock of good We started used cars at all prices. We sell Olmstead K. Mline Schoenfeld a C. Finsterwald Thos. E. Sunderland THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1925 ght Editor-LEROY L. OSBORN XALY MUST PAY, AT ONCE hat the; administrative heads of federal government are determin- Go save, as much money as possible the American public has been for- y illustrated several times during past few weeks. This attitude was iu emphasized Tuesday when Sec- try of State Kellogg informed the ibers of the Italian debt commis- L, In plain, straightforward lang- e, that the United tSates expects y td begin pay ents on her $2,000,- 000 debt at on , and that no mor- 'ium willbe granted. , r. Kellogg is essentially a diplom- and diplomatic ways and manner- s must be perfectly natual with .For this reason he is to be giv- addit-ional credit for stepping from flowery path of diplomatic lang- 5 to talking cold, hard facts with ive members- of the Italian com- sion. is hard to imagine Mr. Kellogg ng fellow diplomats that this itry is tired of beating around the l' and wants immediate action, but Ives the people of the nation a sfactory feeling to know that the at the head of their government e enough courage to take a stand. SOME MORE SANITY mere is more to the sane Fourth than - merely being careful in ting off firecrackers. There is the' lug of a sane idea of what pyro- nics really are. There is the ac- ing of a sane notion .of what is g celebrated. is the unspoken opinion of many fireworks were invented to cele- e .the anniversaries of American pendence and are unique to our land. On the contrary, their id is. lost in antiquity and they hed ,perfection first among the 4ese, who use them today to fright- ,ff devils and not to worry auto- ile drivers. In Europe, the Flor- nes carried on the development isplay pieces, producing the fam- Roman candle. After the Mid- Ages, pyrotechnics in Europe e used mainly at fetes for royalty. enlisted the same devices to com- orate our freedom from -kings.- id those who explode the giants, edoes, pinwheels, and flower pots say that they are celebrating r the signing or the adoption of Declaration of Independence. But Declaration proper was adopted, on the fourth, but on the second. uly. As for the signing of the osed document, that began on 1st 2 and went on for months, one e signiers not taking his seat un- ovember. What we celebrate on 4 is the adoption of the preamble he Declaration of Independence imortal words penned by Thom-i efferson. e sanity that reveals fireworks as list trinkets and the facts already tioned about the Declaration of i ANOTHER TEACHER, One of the better men of Michigan. AND IN 1950, WU ATT To the Editor: * We see by this morning's Daily tha! the vintage of '00 is again breaking into. lrint with their' old lament,, "What is the campus coming to?" School teaching certainly does poison the disposition, doesn't it? Too bad pegtop trousers aren't as preval- ent as they used to be. Still even white knickers may be called pants, if one must be definite. We seem to remember having heard that in the "good old days," a student that took a co-ed to a dance was considered mentally deficient. A good looking co-ed, now, has as many dates as she wants without waiting for those from Ypsi. As for squandering ways, we wond-. er how many dates she has had to acquire first hand information. She certainly does seem well informed. The percentage that Joe Parker used to get probably goes for knickers" (white, they're cheaper), sweaters, and cigarettes. The moral degeneracy is quite noticeable. Co-eds can now walk downtown on Saturday night without a chaperone. What decadence! We suppose razzing one's sorority sisters in, print was considered the height of good form when she was iii college. Our ignorance of good man- ners is lamentable. Would she be so kind as to inform us on the subject. Perhaps these Ypsi "he-men" are more informed, but we would be ex. tremely grateful. Of course we probably couldn't un- derstand, being lazy cigarette-smok-+ ing.loafers, still the information might do us some good, and set a few of us on the highroad to reformation. ANOTHER NASH. "I know a place" sezolaf, "where frogs is bigger as sheep." Knowing well his tendency to slight exaggeration, we took it with a grain of salt, and even a dash or two of pep- per, together with a dash-but we di- gress, Knowing, etc., we set about looking for tadpoles the size of mead- ow-larks. We musta been in the gar- den of Eden, 'cause all we saw was snakeses (note, the added plural is employed to denote quantity). First off Olaf barged into a swampy looking place. "Dar wan hops," said he, falling into the vernacular of his native land. "Yust' wait while I poke him out wance." He poked, but it wasn't a frog-it had a tail, and traveled, like an army, on its stomach. "Hit it, quick!" belows Olaf. "What within?" we asks, hurriedly withdrawing. "A stick," sezee. "Oh," sezwe much relieved, and reaching up we grasped a stick firmly and hit the snake with a sock like holeproof. Then we put the stick back up. Thus with sparkling bits of repar- tee we enlivened the time. After two hours, 43 snakes, five pollywogs and one frog, we went home, late for din- ner, tired out, and. nearly raving mad with the thought of rolls to write. 0 4 4 Nearly Raving In view of the fact that this, like our excursion through the medical building, has furnished souvenirs which we really don't want, we hereby offer 43 slightly used snakes as prizes for the 43 best contributions which are received for the column tomorrow. Four tadpoles will go for honorary mention. Olaf kept the frog, or you could have that, too. SCANDAL Anonymous The above snapshot, sent to our of- fice in a plain sealed envelope, car- ries with it the breath of scandal. A typewritten statement signed Anony- mous, who is somebody we don't know, states that the snap was taken through the windows of the Rho Damyou Rho house. The fraternity is said to be the national sailors' organization, founded in the year of Volstead, the first. We ain't saying a word, mor2 or less. * * * Sunday school is over-hey, where's the fire? q -Tamam. There must be a feeling of security connected with having the world's champion rifle shot for a wife. Wonder what Charlie Chaplin, Jr., will be like? Name....... Address.............. City..................... State........ R. DAY BIRD Corner Washington and. Division Subscribe NOW Read The Daily "Classified" C I, +'I Shaded Scarfs of Georgette Like a trembling rainbow these exquisitely shaded s of the sheerest georgette. the brilliance of some bea color to its finest pastels each scarf ranges. 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