THE MICHIGAN DAILY Demonstrate Fitness In Annual Athletic Event I TA W Rift Mnv Aroumse Co A field of boys stretches in precise pattern across this field at Praha, where Czechs annually stage their na- tional athletic exhibition, or Slet, as it is known in Praha. For this year's show, 170,000 spectators packed the stadium to capacity. ed as a personality maladjustment,Nr as a conflict of custom with new truth, as a sense of insecurity, or the want of meaning in life itself are Of Declaration Of Indeendence proper considerations which every (Continued from Page 2) highest depression or spiritual naked- ness there have always been men here who have met that challenge. Emer- son, Whitman, Thoreau, the trum- peters of the Golden Day were all possessed of the vision of a spiritual- ly beautiful and materially secure America, and, if for no other rea- son, they are the men to whom demo- cratic America is now turning for the literary manifestation of its own dream. It is of course impossible to return to the past, even to Whitman and Emerson. But they are essential links; from them and from the entire epic through the last two centuries, we can make our own departure. The Ameri- can scene is still as much, of a chal- lenge as it was in 1776. Thoreau's dream of what is to 'live a full life, and Emerson's vision of a society that shall be oriented completely to- wards life, must still be our philo- sophical guides. In the course of our education we have been told many times that with us lies the hope of the country. And note this essential characteristic of our age; we believe and intend to fulfill that admonition. There are many factors in the America of to- day that we cherish and would like to see perpetuated. America is still the land of opportunity; but those opportunities must be open to all, not confined to a few lucky indivi- duals. The American philosophy of instrumentalism, its passion for the material, positive science and prac- tical actions are indispensible ele- ments in the dynamic cultures of to- day; it would be foolish to believe otherwise. But they have become the only living sources of our own cul- ture. Even the radicals in America today can offer nothing more than a diffusion of present values. What 'is forgotten, as Randolph Bourne and Lewis Mumford have indicated, is that vision, heroic pictures, trans- cendental goals are of equal impor- tance to techniques and instruments. There must be a concrete image of perfection; otherwise there is the danger, that in rejecting Utopias, a Utopia will be made of the present from local unions. Ultimately, then, it is the spirit that counts. In the eyes of the sop- histicated and the genteel the "spirit of '76" may be .just another hackney- ed manifestation of the provincial American susceptibility for slogans and catch words; yet the inescapable fact is that that spirit was a live and pulsing one and has cast a long shadow over the experiment in life and culture that is called American. What is most needed today is a re- I I f -I DID YOU KNOW THAT THE HAUNTED TAVERN is the ONLY privately-owned eating place in Ann Arbor mentioned in Duncan Hines' "Adventures in Good Eating" - a list of America's finest? LOCATION: 417 East Huron Street Phone 7781 HOURS: 11:30 - 1:30 5:30 - 7:30 SUNDAYS: 12:30 - 7:30 COOL ON HOT DAYS . .,__ ._._. _ __--__ -_ ---- -_ _- T. I AM A WOMAN WHO MUST BE LOVED... - Shows Continuous Today 1-11 P.M. T'1 1 TT1Y - - -? 1 X-f- III I U I ~L~A"A'~5 'Y'~Y" WA "Z L L~'m U U I I i