THE WOLVERINE Xloverine b c OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE, SUMMER SESSION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternoons Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class matter Subscription by carrier or mail, $1.oo Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street Phones : Business-gbo ; Editorial-2414 Office Hours: Managing Editor-i:oo to 2 0 o'clock daily except Saturday; Business Manager-1:oo to 2:00 o'clock daily except Saturday Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the signature not necessarily to ap- ar in print, but as an evidence of faith, and notices of events will be published in The Uolverineat the discretion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to the office. Unsigned communications will receive no consideration. No manuscript wll be returned iless the writer incloses postage. The Wolverine does not necessarily endorse the sentiments expressed in the communications. Mark K. Ehlbert......................Managing Editor Phone 2414 or 2227-NI J. Ellsworth Robinson .................Business Manager Phone 2414 or 1505 esser M. Campbell.............City Editor 1 Howard Weeks...............Column Editor ilton Marx................Associate Editor Martha Guernsey............Womei's Editor Mark B. Covell...............Assistant Business Manager Thornton W. Sargent Jr...................Issue Editor REPORtgRS F. G. Merz J. E. Beretta Robert W. Taylor H. 1-. Heth Samuel Lamport Edgar L. Rice BUSINESS STAFF P. Schneider Richard Lambrecht William Wachs TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1919 we are tending. President Lowell has said that an underpaid teacher is a discontented teacher, a teacher who lacks responsibility and loyalty to his high office. Of this we have had abundant evidence in the case of those who have left their professorships to teach socialism in, the cities-and have there received far greater pay for subversive doctrine than they received as faculty members. But the case is worse than that. When teachers are underpaid and discontented, the profession fails to attract the more vigorous and ambitious type of youth. The gradual decline in the mental and the character standard of university faculties is not so obvious as the occa- sional instance of radical discontent; but it is well understood by those who are in a position to know, and in the long run it is far more dangerous. The duty to the alma mater is a duty of transcendent importance to the nation.-The New York Times. According to a report, there is talk that Lenine is going to resign. When it comes to speaking of Lenine, "talk" is about the best word they could have used. Chicago rents go up 100 per cent in October. Wonder if that explains in any way Detroit's reaching the 1,000,000 mark? Of 66 cases started in one court last week, 40 were divorce cases. Prob- ably the other 26 were started by single persons. Actors threaten to go on strike. But what if audiences did the same? Vienna interns Bela Kun. Bolshevik papers please copy. M ID SUMMER BOOK SALE OUR TABLES AND COUNTERS ARE FAIRLY GROANING WITH BARGAINS in books of Education, History, Economics, Mathematies, Chemistry, etc. Come early and bring your basket. Wah r's University Bookstores For Traveling Anywhere Anytime You vill enjoy using the A. B. A. Travelers' Checks as issued by this bank. They come in denominations of $10, $20 $50 and $100, are cashed by Banks, Hotels, Railroads, etc., without identification. ASKAUS Farmers & Mechanics Bank 101-105 s. Main 330 S. State St. (Nickels Arcade) Go to LYNDON'S 719 N. UNIVERSITY AVE. Eastman Kodaks Eastman Films GUARANTEED AMATEUR FINISHING ENLARGEMENTS FROM YOUR NEGATIVES A SPECIALTY We have led in;amateur finishing for twelve years and are still lead- ing :-Why? Because we give you QUALITY. We guarantee our devel- oping !r no charge. We have the latest and best equipped store in the State and our help is experienced in every line of Photography. IF YOU WANT SATISFACTION BRING YOUR FILMS TO Hill Auditorium LY N & COMPANY UniversityAvenue THEY CALL IT SNOBBERY No term is applied more indiscriminately than "the snob." Whoever ippens to be late for an 8 o'clock, rushing pell-mell through doors and .l1s, too hurried to see anything or anyone, whoever, is unfortunate hough to fail to recognize somebody he has met, whoever declines an invi- tion, why-we christen him "a snob." It might be difficult to define a snob, since most of the time he does not :ist, except in our own thoughts. A candid definition from most of the implaining would be,-one who does not happen to fulfill our own petty sires, dance to our own tunes, pamper our idle tastes. The snob does irive, but he is most active on occasions when few of us notice him; per- aps he even dominates "you and me." The snob is active when college opens in the fall and hundreds of eophytes pour in with glittering high school pins and bursting carpet gs, radiant in expectation but very, very "lost." The snob gets his work . so well that soon the glamor fades, and the new arrivals wander around ke so many peris shut from the gates of Paradise. The genuine snob is ireasoning; he never challenges thought or attention; he always takes a eak, unsuspecting individual to practice his art upon. He is really a 'eature of small consequence. . Why tlwn so much prattle about "the snob?" Is it not because of our ratic interpretations of attitudes, our own jealousies? The exclusive peo- e are those who have an objective above ours, and so we say they are 1 wrong. We clamor for democracy when all the time we are denying imebody the right of going his own quiet way. Certain policies and stes, likes and dislikes, are. as inherently natural, as the "come join the tnd" spirit. There is no snobbery or vanity about it. When we gain the broader view of college we will become, first of all, lerant of everyone; we will learn the magic lesson of forgetting; we will hmire the frankness of men who accept us for what we are worth, mag- nimously leaving us out of where we do not belong. Last of all we, too, ill see that it is sometimes honest wisdom to "draw the latch-string in, id close the door." UNIVERSITY FINANCE The war has accustomed us to such large figures that very few realize, e magnitude of the task which our leading universities have undertaken their "drives" for a proper equipment of teaching and a proper payment the teacher. Thus the graduates of Harvard, who are assembled in Cam- idge for the "Summer School" which is instructing them as to the com- g campaign, speak lightly of the $11,000,000 which they are to raise and nfidently of the 36,000 Harvard graduates from whom they are to raise it. it if the Summer schooling of these financiers includes arithmetic, they ust have discovered that the average gift of all Harvard graduates will ye to be $305.' A billion dollars for the war has come to seem a negligi- e detail; but in the family exchequer a dollar looms larger than ever fore. Statistics as to the earnings of college graduates bring little comfort. ie average is considerably less than three thousand dollars, and this in ite of the fact that in each class there may be several men whose income measured by hundreds of thousands. The drive thus contemplates a levy more than 10 per cent on the average annual income. And the college aduate belongs to the class that has suffered most severely from the r. Hand laborers have exacted an increase of wages which has fully pt pace with the increased cost of living, and in many cases has out- 'ipped it; so. that workingmen have become profuse buyers of talking ,chines and automobiles, silks, furs, and jewels. The salaried brain rker has had comparatively little and in many cases no increase of pay, that many professional men now receive less than skilled mechanics. .e of the posters prepared for the drive bears the legend: "A motorman is 60 cents an hour, a professor 18. Which is worth more, gentlemen, nding the train or training the mind?" But young lawyers, doctors, and gineers are in rmuch the same boat as the professor, as are ministers of all es. Even the very rich graduates have had large slices cut from their comes by war taxation-a further levy of 10 per cent is no small matter for y one. Yet in all probability the drive will succeed. Its success will be of Ad augury for other colleges where similar work must be done. Many of e men assembled at Cambridge predict an over-subscription. They should ow, if anybody. They know, for one thing, that the class of salaried brain rkers to which the college graduate belongs has a record of loyalty and crifice that is second to none. They have furnished most of the officers d a large proportion of the men for our army; and those of them who. re obliged to stay at home have been no less useful in Liberty Loan ves and in general war work. As a class they have received little Lise, or none; and their manifest grievances have been stated rather n insisted upon, and very modestly stated at that. But they, if any ss, may be counted on to rise to the call of duty. That it is a duty there can be no question. ''he world stands in need light and leading as never before. The integrity of our free institutions menaced-at not a few points it is, for the time being, violated. Indus- ally and socially the future of the world looks darker than most of us e to admit. Only one power can ultimately prevail, the power of knowl- On the Other Hand- A dainty epistle in a feminine scroll came in the mail the other day and the author seems to be one of the kind that wants to get back to school. Here are the contents: The Stagnant Summer Stude I'm in the mood right now that I Had when I used to fight, And argue with my roomie, Though she usually was right. It makes me homesick for A2(*) To feel this way again, My convolutions will adhere, And trick my silly pen. My blasphemy when I cannot Behold my favorite prof. () Is such as when I bolted And was summoned when a soph. My course is run. I cannot wait To greet the teachers dear, I hear their voices far above The taxi battle cheer. N 16. *We hazard that this is swift stuff for Ann Arbor. **We didn't know anyone had a favorite prof. And then more: A summer is a lonesome place Unless one's green and blends With all of the environment. One loves the guy who sends The Wolverine. Now may he get The blessing that amends! N 16. If any of the birds that are mailing this sheet to femmes and who think their b. or b. wrote this just drop down to the office and we'll tell you the postmark on the envelope and the' rest will be easy. Many thanks, N 16, come again. Is That So $ An item from Pontiac says, "Be- cause motorists persist in disregard- ing detour signs the Oakland Road Commission has adopted the policy of re-enforcing the barriers with a liberal sprinkling of tacks. Several machines have been stopped lately this way. He Does Too, at $60 Per Get Down in Toledo there is a tailor by the name of Paul Gettum. Also there is a Kipling's Hat Shop in the Maumee Valley. We wondered why Rudyard had stopped writing. There's One nice thing About eating in These grab and grunts Because if You spill any soup On your vest It doesn't leave Any Grease. Herm, Come Home to 'Em A plea in the Chi Trib says: "Her- man C. Werle; where are you? Emily wants to know." Address 540 Bu- chanan St., Gary, Ind. Down in Toledo they have the orig- inal six best cellars. A letter just received from a friendl of ours at the University of Wiscon- sin contains this rather illuminating though somewhat caustic comment: "Things have been so ordinary around here that there isn't much to write you. They had a "Hello Day" here Tuesday which gave all the old hens a chance to greet their ideals. It was good in every sense of the word." -H.W. Mr. James Hamilton, tenor, of the School of Music faculty, and Mrs. Maude Okkelberg, an alumna and former member of the piano faculty, will appear in a joint recital at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening in Hill auditorium. The concert will be the fifth in the series being given by the School of Music during the Summer term. Both artists have been heard in Ann Arbor on numerous occasions. Mr. Hamilton will offer three groups, in- cluding arias, songs, and three "negro spirituals," while Mrs. Okkelberg will render six piano solos. The program follows: Where'er You Walk...........Handel Recitative: Deeper and Deeper Still .andel Aria: Waft her Angels through the Skies.....................Hgndel Mr. James Hamilton Two Preludes ...............Chopin Two Etudes.................Chopin Mrs Maude Okkelberg Aria, "Spirito Gentil" from "La Favorita" .. . .............Donizetti Mr. Hamilton Prelude, Op. 2 ............. Scriabine Siberian Waltz ........... Cyril Scott De Amicitia ...........Carl Beecher En Automne............Moszkowski Mrs. Okkelberg Negro Spirituals, arranged by H. T. Burleigh. By an' By Weepin' Mary Didn't It Rain? Mr. hamilton OMAhA CITY COMMISSION ACTS TO REDUCE PRICES OF FOODS Omaha, Neb., Aug. 4.-The city com- mission authorized today the expendi- ture of $10,000 in buying food supplies to be sold to the public at cost. When two commissioners suggested an inves- tigation to learn if prices are too high, the mayor shouted: "Not on your life. I demand action now. Help the people first, then in- vestigate. We have got to do every- thing we can to give the people the necessities of life or be confronted by an open insurrection." Subscribe for The Wolverine. $.75 for the rest of the summer. - ----- , LEAVE YOUR FILMS AT QUARRY'S DRUG STORE FOR THE SWAINS TO DEVELOP AND PRINT SCHAEBERLE & SON, Music House 110 SO. MAIN ST. Complete line of High Grade Pianos, Player Pianos, Victrolas, Victor Records All String and Wind Instruments SEE US FOR YOUR MUSICAL WANTS Music Notes I Subscribe for Tlhe Wolverine. $.75 for the rest of the summer. Bathing Suits WE HAVE THE TWO PIECE KIND WITH THE WHITE BELT GEO J. MOE, "Sport Shop" DETROIT UNITED LINES Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (March 3o, 1919) (Central Standard Time) Detroit Limited and Express Cars-8:io a. i., and hourly to .: io p.M. Jackson Limited and Express Cars-7 :48 a. m., and every hour to 9:48 p. m. (0x. presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.) Local Cars East Bound-s :oo a. m., 9:oS a. m. and every two hours to 9:o5 p. m., 10:50 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:45 p. m., 12:26 a. m., i:ho a. m,, and to Saline, change at Ypsilanti. Local Cars West Bound-6:48 a. m. and i120 p. M. Mid=Su inmer Sale All Light Three=.piece Suits I=4_Off N. F. ALLEN CO. The House of i uppeahelmer in Ann Arbor Absolutely... The Coolest Place in Town Air Changed Once a Minute ICE CREAM and HOME MADE CANDIES The Sugar Bowl Phone 967 189 SO. STATE Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the account be large or small. The AnnArbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $550,000.00 Resources........ $4,0000.0 1 ' Northwe 707 C, I & turo