__________THE MICHIGAN DAILY The Michigan Daily Established 1890 blished ever~y- norzaing except- Monday during the esity year and Sumicr Sessibn by the Board i rol of Student Publications. tber of the Western Conference Editorial Associa-. and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS e Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use epublication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherswise credited in this paper and the local news shed herein. All rights of republication of special itches are reserved. tered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as, id class matter. Special rate of postage granted by I Assistant Postmaster General. bscription during sumiier by carrier, $1.00; by mail, During reular* school year by carrier, $.00; by $4.50. ices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. preentatives: Litteli-Murray-Eutsky. Inc., 40 East y-fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street,. on, Mass.; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago,' Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Office Hours: 2.12 P.M. rial Director...................:.Beach~ Comger. Jr. Editor.:..................... ...Carl S. Forsythe Editor .............................David M. Nichol Editor..........................Denton Kunze raph Editor......................Thomas Connelian is Editor............................. C. H. Beukema tant City Editor................Guy M. Whipple, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Office Hours: 9-12; 2-5 except Saturdays~ ness Nlanager...............p.Chares T. Kline tant Bisiness Manager.......... ... . Norris PI Johnson MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1932 SOJ %e Ann Arbor. .. Students of the 1932 Summer Session, we welcome you to Ann Arbor! For eight weeks the many facilities offered by the. University of Michigan's educational plant will be at your disposal. In addition to the regular opportunities available dur- ing the winter session, extra features such as tours, noted educators from outside universities, plays, and lectures have an appropriate place on the program. Those s wmer students who have been here be fore know the advantages offered and how to make the best of them. Those who. have never been here before will soon dis- cover the excellent combination of in- struction and recreation which attracts students here year after year and promises to make this Summer Session ithe largest in- the history of the University. If we may be pardoned for mentioning Qurselves for a moment, we should, like to point out the new organization of The Daily during the summer. Formerly man- aged and edited by undergraduate stu-~ d'nts, the paper this year will be under the guidance of full time professional graduate newspaper men, who will devote their entire summer to bringing campus, city, national, and international news to the students of this session. Because of the large number of graduate students en-. rolled; it is hoped to make the paper more attractive to the mature student than it has been in past summers. The campus opinion columns will be open to all stu-~ dents at all times for opinions they may wish to bring to the attention of our readers. Summer school is a worth-while invest- ment, particularly for the: recent gradu- ates who have, as yet, been unable to obtain jobs. No one's education is ever complete, and it is probably the realiza- tion of this thought which has, made the Michigan Summer Session grow from year to year until it. now approximates one- third of the regular enrollment. The best of educational facilities are yours for eight weeks. Welcome to.Ann Arbor! tional meanings attached to words and to theirI arrangement? Of course, no one better knows all this than so expert a student as Professor Fries.r He has simply allowed his enthusias m for th.e free development of language and economy int education to carry him beyond the restraints imposed by the princile of reasonableness. No one will deny the inevitability and probable advantage of orderly change. It i the supeme quality of English < s a language d4t it is open to every offering of terse and meaningful expies- sion and yet that it holds fast to derivatives to which convention has given sanction. It is doubt- less true that it is an illogical language; that it muddles along as do its users in their ordinary affairs; that it is the despair of precisionits and purists. It has its counterpart in English polities of which Lord Grey has observed that there is in every Englishman a root of rebellion agai.nst authority but that this anaichical quality is cor- rected by. a sense that order is necessary. Hero is the essence of the case. Though our word forms and modes of expression are always changige, good usage yet holds tenaciously to those which it has demonstrated to be adenuate. Easiul! iv' constraints of high standards etablished by ex- perience may be anything but irtrcs s. I assume that Professor vriewould ot o quite so far as to substute for the f'iiAoxrury modes of expression of cultiv ted eoplc the lan guage of the comic strips. Where then will he draw the line and througi his influential position seek to mould nublic 'rpactice? I there any ad- vantage in endorsing " i nx d -i x i- ti s elve" ju"t because it is widely used? Is "'ve absolutely got to go" any more elegant, if you will, or eorret, or desirable or simply forceful than I must go" I venture to believe that any debater habtuatn hinself to such modes of expression as those. quoted would find himself in dfficultie 'when meeting the classical challenrc e "Define your terms, man." Language, like a tree, undoubtedly grows froi the bottom acnd to lIfn a basis of amiCable setlement Ysveytuly, i ',I I I n er "tu nt, z 1 111 ul WVe InVite'rY our Patronage *~ ~5,C e Pressed Call-and Deiver s...50c Cleaned and fo Handfinished Call and .,Deliver.- One-Piece Plain Velvets and Formals Slightly Higher. C aa an dK n x.r Blocked on Factory Machine, Same as Stetson, Mlory, Dobbs and Knox. Any w at 25C Cull arnd Deliver We do not shrink Wool Sweaters. III] dam PusOpinion Letters published in this column should not be construedas expressing tleeditorial opinion of The Daly. Anonymous communications will be, disre- garded. The names of conmmunicants * will, how- 'ever, be regarded as con f-dential upon request. ontributors are asked to be brief, confining theni- selves to ess than 300 woids if possible. The following letters were intended for publication in the last issue of The Daily last semester, but arrived at The Daily too late to be included in that issue-The Editors. PROFESSOR FRIES AND THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE It is always risky for the untrained to cross swords with the professional. Yet the expert, from the very intensity of his concentration on his subject, may allow his enthusiasm to lead. him beyond the bounds of those general princi- ples by which his work needs to be controlled. It is because. rbelieve that Professor C. C. Fries had overlooked a general principle which must govern all kinds of investIgation that I risk taking issue with him on his own subject of correct English. as set forth in the May Bulletin of the School of Education. and. to which the Ann Arbor Daily News gave front page. space on May 31st, The late Profes or F. N. Scott once asked an Englishman how he determined the correct pro nunciation of a word and received -the reply that he asked the first half dozen people he thought should know; and Professor .L. A. Strauss has a lively story of his encounter with an irate mother who objected to a teacher's insistence that her son learn his letters in alphabetical order. Pro- fessor Fries endorses, as good English, "It is me." We may grant, as an original proposition, that there may be no good reason why any word should be pronounced in one way rather than. annther nr awhv A shdhoul nitrece Ft in the I-- We Specialize in White uannels Our ork a erd ce uarantecq~ To The Editor: A committee of three Hindu students was elect- edin a general meeting of Hmndu students on the Michigan Campus May 7 ,and after inivestiga- tionl'ias deid d t)o pu b lhthis letter!to.absolve Mr. Chakravarti and to lay the bfamn on Mr. George Matthew for his attack on Mr. Chakra- varti. We fid Mr. Ma+thews s uniling to make resti tut len fol bran t t ari of Mr. Chakravarti whici the latter was wear when he was aacked by Mi-. Mahew. We als find him uwilling to apologize to Mr. Chiakra- varti. We fhid A r. Matthew is nwilling to ought to, havij' attacked him in one of the Uni- versIty building. The letter we hve snt to ea Joseph L Bursley fur thei esplauis our positions: Dean Joseph E. hira Jy, Dean of Men, University of MiChigaii. Dear Sir., In a gra met ti f te lnd sudeit. on the Miciugan Cameus ld Fr;Ja. My 3 , .3 the undersina'd co:-ned '. ' nuac vl to ac in their behalf to sette amniea thie &hfn u "CLELANERS ANYERS, fiU Phione 2-l3231. I