THE WO LVERiNE --- ----- ----T HE-W O..__-gR--- 'inc 'iE SUMMERL;3 of No ex- Mlanaging Eatot norPe s Manager r like mate- ideal government measures which were designed fr the{ good of all. What rankles most in the breast of the average American, in this respect, is to hear how patents are so manipulated as to give the clever patentee control offer the distribution of a hundred and one other things lie never invented. Concerns may do th'is in numerous ways, one of the best-known be- ing ;to tying out a new miner part jst before the expiration. of the patent term. In essence our patent is a privilege granted by the people. Apparently. under our present laws the license is unnecessarily large and the, time has come; for legislation which will 'safe-guard the in- vcntor withoult allowing him or his employer to hold up the public.. WELCOME, ALUMNI! NMichigan seniors,, intent on the pleasures and du- tie's of Comrmencemient wee, the last week. they 1spend as undergraduates of the University of Mich- igan, extend the' hand of wbcomie to the many miembers of the Alumni who are back in An Ar- bor to renew the old ties with the University Many of the alumni return to strange scenes, the campus, and surroundings hake changed greatly in the east few years; to those who havelbeen in far countries, it is a new Michigan,' at least on =the sur- face. "'ai, tundernileat:h, there' is nothing new, that impcrt'ant 'anid indefinable something - Michigan spirit - has not' changed, and though the campus miay present a new face the really essential ele- ments have not ;changed, and will ,not, as long as Michigan holds" the 'proud position she now does. fMichigan pis proud to welcome back these many'' thiousands, who-make 'up the trute Michigani' and a~re the real membilers of the University. EAS'tERN PH-ILOSOPHY "To establish a state university would matre the attainment o f higher';training possible for those without, the proper 'mental qualifications - which is 'not justifiable to our educational system" reads A recent. editorial "E~ndowed vs. State Institu- tions" in the Harvard Crimson. Could any argumnent disclose a more selfish, a .more bigoted, a more :typically "eastern" point of view? Common judgment in the Middle W~est holds that the very purpose of state universities is to baring higher training within reach of all who have the energy and amtbition to secure it- to- give mean 'who, through 'no' fault 'of their own, are not financed for the advantages which accrue to their more wealthy brothers, the opportunity to use their faqulties to their fullest power by hving them trained. That the state profits by developing its humitan resource has always been a maxim. "_Tle fetish of size in education is fatal" the edi- 4orial declares. Thcn the Whole :system of state universities~ in -the Middle West is a failure, and the only salvation for our wrecked youth is to dis- solve that system into small units such as endowed institutions'? "TFhe idea that colleges are for all is- impossible. Thousands would' not know what to do if they had the benefits of expensive higher training" the editor continues. Wye are the last to advocate that the state should aplplyt its taxes toward establishing a field where indolent "incapables" may sit [ 'four years. waiting like a watermelon to get ripe. Buit are not those who "without the proper mental qualifi- cations" automatically weeded out. 1 Glance at the list of freshmen that dropi out the first semester of each year. Dpes the editor aver that .he can judge who will and who will not be capable of digesting and be benefited bly "college education? Should financial standing be the basis for determining "mental qualifications"? These questions' arise quite naturally from the 'Harvard editor's discussion.--D. F. L. in The Daily llin. STIJ1ENT PU'BiaCAT1ION 11(D:'E Arch D. Mc~onald, '221, h-a beei appointed by President Marion TL. Bur-- topn to fill a vacanucy on the 1Board in Contrel of Student Publications caus~ed by the resignation of _Hugh W, 'Hfitch- cock, '22. Hitchcockc has been ap point- ecd assistant editor ofj T'-e Daiily and it is impossible for him to hoild both po- sitions. Take a T7 00 L L 1 Photography the Kodak v thain you think-and any work-we can readily shoe AutograLphic Koda kS Br7olvnieS $2 -ArYsYA13Lr '.tL P H $7.00 per Week-3 Mal $6.00 Per Wee-2 Mecls HOME CO(M Cool, Veti Jlloed oolls E,-st4of Cuolling's*; Flat I S i .... The Ideal Huit\'W -4 Cuteous and satisfactory TREiLATMAENT toL verycust~om- er, whether the account be large or small. The An Arbor Savings Pauk Incor-porated 1869 C,,10ital and Surplus ";,ltll3! 11O6 Resor ces........; O ,3D)tl 707 North Univ ersity Ave. Northw.est. Cor. lain & Huron IFor HName-Cooked Memls E I Preferred By 'Student 'towns -people . 1 I- As 0-se all- ast, TRY TOTTLES Keep Cool: Step into one of our Palm Suits today 'and~ forgetI hot weather; priced $15 to $25 Beach fhe On Maynard Street, 1-2' Bock South 'of Majesic Theatre U Iil L wylih the J. KARL MA LCOLM, 6O4 E. - randl,- 'an~ itinlltni1s than six score tSt onl thatcx a senie of tval- alppreciatiotn of hy, of how to -orthl of ideals. ;ed' the biggest lot be ready Ivto is the tUniver- NALILE R AN D FULL E STATE STREET $- buys a brand $SOnew Corona portable type- writer. Other makes at attractive prices., See us before you buy. TYPEWRITERS of leading mnakes bou ght, sold, rented,' exchanged, cleaned and repaired. 0. DMORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade HIGH CLASS FOOD Served at CH UBB'S on State St. ,opposite Lane H all W EBELIEVE you bank. And a like better . Farmers& Mechanics Bank _ 101-105 5O. RMAIN STRE-- ET330 5E0. STATE STREET (Niacels' Arcade) Member of the Federal Reserve r~411 11 1 1l 1 111 9t9i199~ 1N G 5l9i~fi11t¢tl lE6 will find h bank that a at are I1 Lthe ler allI . Each here is no 1t i f there uI'her ap- pirit it vas (" upI to the I DON LD ON 711 NORTH UNIV'TY AVE. Smithereens rent from the life ago that any mran o fell asleep a cen- veil believe himself miy come to today. -lht have altered inl- an Important part Jor indlirectW t race- Ios Which have so ice rely reret what c present ag'e. They I leisutre which they ,before the rush of e world off its feet n faster methods of On thec other hand1( fly believe that the ace in which to live itnt iic discover ies S o prevalent are n another ag;e have at we seldoll tlli; k yes are madle more aluable. -Occasionl- ije recalls to mind Colitillr.Colltndcing 'I (W ritten exercises every Tuesday, Th~ursday, a nd Sa