)L V JL J I IN k, has to live. At the present the THE SUMMER MICHIGAN. lay Afternoons.' aynard Street. , p2414. except Saturday. igned, the signatures tas an evidence of d in The Wolverine ed to the office- consideration. No encloses postage. ethe sentiments ex- time, twenty-four students are employed in tfte tap- room alone, and during the regular school year, two hundred persons, one-half of which number are stu- dents, are employed in the building. To pay these, people, money is required, how much we may un- derstand when we learn that the pay roll averages $i5,ooo a month. Perhaps certain departments of the Union do make money; they are almost compelled to do so in order that the organization may survive. ,3ut, when we stop to consider that, with total receipts for last year amounting to $400,000, the institution lost $3,070, some conception may be gained as to just how muc of a "graft" the Union is. ..The manage- ment has cever tried to break even, but it must come somewhere near doing so, for there is no endow- ment fund to fall back upon. Good, honest, sensible criticism is highly desir- able; it helps to keep people on their toes. Prob- ably a certain amount of criticism, moreover, is merited by the Union, for no institution of its size was ever known to be perfect. Nevertheless, we must realize that th7e mere handling of an organiza- tion of the size of our own students' club house. is a big task in itself, and a proposition entailing the expenditure of quantities of money. If students have complaints, just and well-founded complaints, to register against the institution, no doubt they will be gratefully received. But certainly mere biased sarcasm will never get us anywhere in a constructive, way. G K A 1 T WO C A O L K E Ha, A . A(- ES A SoaV-jmds of DiaioclWalk I Lecture Program,! July 1s8 5 p. m.-The Asteroid a Ri f Silve Saturn, Assistant .1 or. . . h'_c ,n:;." 8 p. n.-Plymouth and the Pilgrims (illustrated), Dr. S. S. Robins. July 19 5 p. m.-Rural Education in State and Natio, Prof. E. Burnham, of the -Western State Normal school. Kulam-i ....,.. .. _.. _. . e. and Go .' WATERMAN, CC SWAN E .E RSHA RP 11 en( I-ils FYNE ALA RM CLOCKS Haller & Fuller State Sreetjewlers POINT .Managing Etditor RS hn P. Dawson, Jr. ... Harry B. Grundy ......Gwennyth Wrentmore ............Clement Smith D. M. Brimble t, ....Business' Manager tant Business Manager Don Allen Walter Fiske , JR. pouncing the to the posi- B. Grundy to ore the d what re. i with due and man will never is anything but had that very and we like to beingrthe very powerful in the ON RESTORING STATUES Considerable comment has been aroused by the recent action of the British museumA, in London, in restoring the nose of the statue of Demeter of Cnidus. Artists and art critics have held up their han'ds in, holy horror at the idea of desecrating so marvelous a piece of sculpture by adding to its face' a -new proboscis to replace the old. Classical art works, of the type of Demeter, have grown into our memories as they are, and to try to restore them seems, even to one who is neither art- ist nor critic, to be not only a sad waste of effort but a really pitiful attempt to do again something the Greeks did of old and which no one under the sun will ever be able adequately to duplicate. The Vic- tory of Samothrace has lost some of the most important parts of her anatomy, but that does not ex- cuse modern sculptors from making attempts to re- store them. The Greeks had their own style, and a restored cla'ssical statue is no more classical than a grass hut would be barbaric if it were to be adorned with a tin roof. Modern effort is evolving an art of its own, just as did Greece of old. But modern art can never become classical no matter how hard it tries. The Greeks of Praxiteles' time had their typical "style" and we have ours. We had much better spend our time, then, in studying the perfect works of that per- iod and in developing, through original constructive work, our own conception of art than to be eternally planning on how we may patch up what the centuries have damaged. Let's let Demeter's nose, Venus' arms, and Vic- tory's head alone, and see what we can do on our own hook. The Wolverine solicits an expression of public opinion through the medium of communications. As an indication of good faith, however, we ask that 'each writer give his name awd address, though his- identity will be kept strictly confidential if it is so desired. We regret that we frequently are unable to pub- lish letters received, simply beiause of the failure of writers to conform to this request, An easy way in which to settle the Irish problem has been suggested-lock all political aspirants up in a room, and let the survivor write the consti- tution. We trust it is not necessary to continue with long harangues in the interest of Michigan's campus lawns. azoo. 8 p. m.-The Nature pf Cancer, Pro A. S. Warthin. July, 20 5 p. m.-The Training of Public Health Nurses, Prof. B. H. Bartlett. 8 p. m.--Concert. Faculty of the University School of Music. (Hill au- ditorium). July 21 5 p. m.-Leadership and Progress, Dean A. H. Lloyd. 8 p. m.-Educational. motion pic- tures. July 22 2:30 p. m.-Excursion to Niagara Falls, under the direction of the de- partment of geology ai geography, via Aliih igan Central railroad to De- troit and steamer to Buffaol. 5 p. m.-How the Psychologist Tests Intelligence (illustrated), Prof. 0. M. Whipple. 8 p. m.--Readings from Recent Poet- ry, Prof. R. D.. T. Hollister. (Sarah Caswell Angell hall). stbscr>be to the Wolverine. $1.09 for the summer.-Adv. HIGH CLASS FOOD Served at CHUBB'S on State St. opposite Lane Ha i with A Photography the Kodak way is less ex than you think-and any Kodak is si work-we can readily show you how eE Autographic Kodaks from $8.oo up lrolvrnes $2.00 up _.TBIS' 199$ - - -TL - --)-/.- ~ - - --1-v....... - .............. -1 CoU pensive rmple to asy it is. o *6S 051 buys a brand $50new Corona portable type- writer. Other makes at attractive prices, oyou buy. TYPEWRITERS of leading makes bought, sold, rented, exchanged, cleaned and repaired. 0. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade For Home-Cooked Meals WHITE SWAN LAUI E BELIEVE you will find here your ideal c bank. And a bank that every year y( e better * Farmers & Mechanics Bar 101-1t15 So. MAIN STREET 330 S0. STATE S'RF (Niokels' Aroade) Member of the Federal Reserve T ak e aIlI]11]1111111111111111 KODAK F,OR QUALITY A ND SERVICE I days!"' >se days ed since notions i n ath- y given TRY TUTTLES the old is a at, with the ect to stand same as ss, how- rg in the B~ut cer- stic but sity ad- On Mapard Street, 1-2 Block South of Majesto theatre Courteous and satisfactory TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the account be large or small. The Ann Arbor Savoigs Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $625,00.00 Resources .........$5,000,000.00 707 North University Ave. Northwest Cor. Main & Huron Our 1ethods and machinery are up-to-date in every detail. The result is better wor with less wear to the fabric. We caterespeciallyto the studenttrade. One day servi on reiuest. TS.Y US. H. G. Prettyman PHONE 165 W. B. Gra The Ideal Hot Weather Foo( CAM :he cry of the hat I am not e, and did him vay, the soap- the best Urn- loing little or , is as worth- hatted spouter itic type of the e best in the the non- con- Utopianist is the best, then Preferred By Students. and "Towns-people Smithereens to rt, is Worth- jah-howlers :ally quiet Z our liabil- What do you call your Ford? We know pf one on our Campus which answers to the name of "Tie, for tired feet,"'and another owner calls his Dinah- because of the song, "Dinah, won't you go ?" In the same vein, we are calling ours Minnie-you've heard the song-"Minnie, shimmie for me." Know Him? Stew-"How's your math prof ?" Dent-" Bum !" Stew-"Why-doesn't he know the stuff?" Dent-"Yeah, he knows it all right, but he thinks its a secret." The Free Press is running a little Sunday feature on "The genesis of Wolverine names," with the idea of wising us up to' the circumstances under which 'Michigan towns received their titles. A sou nd wheeze, this, and one which we shall take the liber- ty of copying. Take Cheboygan, for instance. A very interesting yarn is told of it's christening. The original settler was an Indian, blessed almost an- nually with a male addition to his family. While slightly under the influence of the white man's pois- on, as a means of celebrating the ninth arrival, he isf said to have wandered down the main and only street one morning, murmuring in thick tones, "Hic, i'sh a boy 'gain !" f FAILINGS' $7.00 per. Week-3 Meals $6.00 per Week-2 Meals N] h IE COOKING Electric Fans Cool, VentiIated Rooms 7114 I10N1OE 1gs tEtT eFast of Cutting", -4104 Talcums Face Creams I I SU1MMER COMFORTS Toilet Waters Ii 1 at ruie, a cmune- was charged, with arcasm, that the its duty to the ercharging them, t was intimated nion is a "graft." er was justified in ess, he, like most recognize, in his Summer Sehool Students for Fountain Refreshments and Fine Candies visit, The Betsy Ross Shop The Fountain Room fleautiful 13-15 Nickle'sArcade -II The, Drug and; Quarry Prescription Store Cor. N. University Ave. and So. State St. PHONE 308 1| G. Claude Drake, rop.