PAGE TWO THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY a PAGETWO HE SMMERMICHGAN AIL t, i t r i r i r r i i i i i i i i iii a i i ti i r r t i i i/ i /i it t&i $yummier Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Pibica- tions. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- lished herein. Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, postoffice as second class matter. Subscription by carrier, $.o; by mail, Offices: Press Building, Maynard Steet, Ann Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP U. BROOS Editorial Director.....Paul J. Kern City Editor.....Joseph E. Brunswick Feature Editor.....Marian L. Welles Night Editors Carlton G. ChampeH. K. Oakes, Jr. John E. Davis . Orville Dowzer T. E. Sunderland Reporters E. M. Hyman Miriam Mitchell Mary Lister Robert E. Carson Betty Pulver Win. K. Lomason Louis R. Marks BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER LAURANCE J. VAN TUYL Advertising.............Ray Wachter Accounts ......... ..John Ruswinckel Circulation.............Ralph Miller Assistants C. T. Antonopulos S. S. Berar G. W. Platt Night Editor-JOS. E. BRUNSWICK THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1927 THEY WIN: AND LOSE I8 Sixty-seven students of the Univ- sity received all-A grades for the second semester of the regular school year, according to the reports recent- ly made. The customary thing to do, and perhaps the proper thing, is to congratulate this brilliant, or lucky, or perhaps clever sixty-seven and laud them to the skies something after the most baccalaureate style. Some there may be, however, who doubt the wis- dom of this unmitigated praise, and raise an equally just query as to whether they deserve congratulations or sympathy. There is no doubt, of course, that the courses which students take are the primary reason for coming to a University, and there is little doubt, though it is no. means certain, that grades measure success in courses of study. Some of this sixty-seven achieved their scholastic distionction without too great a sacrifice, and if any praise is due, they deserve it. On the other hand, there are other measures of success in a college ca- reer besides grades. An A perhaps signifies excellent work in the course pursued, but at the same time a B in the same course signifies at least superior work, and in ten years it is doubtful whether the A student will retain a great deal more than he who receives the second highest grade. Some of the all-A records, and the least commendable type, were secur- ed through judicious selection of courses, and that also militates against the practice of unstinted glorification. At any rate, those who secured these marks have sacrificed portions of their college careers studying, when they could have been gaining an education, and have spent the hours of effort necessary to breach the narrow margin between a B and an A which is largely insignificant as far as actual accomplishment is concerned. The attempt to grade college stu- dents by hairline degrees along the scale of scholarship has led to a con- dtion which is positively dangerous to the well being of higher educa- tion. The idea that something is to be gained is lost sight of in the gene- ral rush to get an A, and in a large number of cases the A secured is no indication whatsoever that any- thing has been gained. Perhaps in time the American uni, versities will reach the point where they will have but two or three grades, one for failures, one for students passed, and a third for students who show unusual interest in the sub- ject pursued, and who are plainly above average. The nerve-racking strain of adding the last date or the last verb conjugation the night before the final examination could then be done away with, and the University could, become a rendezvous for stu- dents instead of mark getters. If the fortunate student in that uni- versity should come across something interesting and significant, he could follow it even though it did not lead down the primrose pathto A grades, and those students who chose to take a portion of their education in the training offered by other phases of college life than the actual class room work could afford to pursue such lines, also. Scholastic attainment is always to be striven for, of course, but grades are a different things. It is not neces- sary to introduce statistics to show that the students who obtain all-A grades in college are not the ones who lead their fellow men when they bounce head first into the world on graduation day. In addition to this, any human attempt to grade is bound to be fallible, unless the methods are scientific, and there is no scientific precision in the marking system of this University. Few of the all-A students were enrolled in thet advanc- ed science courses, or constitutional history, or any one of a dozen other difficult courses. Tey have chosen their' schedules carefully, and they havetrenounced arportionhofucollege life to obtain A grades. Should they be congratulated, or have they lost? WELCOME Members of the Michigan branch of the National Safety congress, an or- ganization for the purpose of safe- guarding our industrial organization from the high toll of accidents which annually occur, is now in session in the city. More than 4,000 factories and industrial units throughout the nation are members of the congress, and 250 delegates are attending the meetings here. In the course of the year Ann Arbor has been host to a large number of conventions and conferences, from the National Student Federation of Ame- rica up, and though some of them have brought leading scholars and educators to the city, none of them has had loftier ideals of accomplish- ment in the immediate social com- munity than the group now meeting. The toll of industrial accidents each year is appalling-6,000 more than our total losses in the World War, accord- ing to the statistics of the conference -and the men who have as their busi- ness the safeguarding of these lives deserve the whole hearted coopera- tion of everyone who is interested in the welfare of mankind. The problem of industrial accidents is far removed from the secluded cam- pus of a state university, but it is never a far jump from theory to practice, and it is to be hoped and expected that the men from the Uni- versity who address the meetings will give the delegates something concrete in the line of suggestions or proposals. At any rate the University, and the community, appreciate the fine ideals of the organization, and extend their whole-heatred welcome to the dele- gates of the safety convention. AN ADDITION Yesterday an editorial in this col- uin attacked the policy of inter-col- legiate athletics that advertises "Ath- letics for All' and uses the athletic revenue for Varsity athletes, while the students pay for every facility. At the time that editorial was pub- lished it was not known that the Athletic Association was planning to charge for the use of the tennis courts at Ferry field during the summer. Yesterday' the announcement was made that they would charge a fee of $1.50. This is in pursuance with the policy of comprehensive athletic facilities for the whole student body provided out of the receipts from the great commer- cial spectacles called intercollegiate contests. Michigan's Athletic Associa- tion is compmitted to this policy-as far as the outside world is concerned. LET'S START A WAR The great powers of the world (all three of them) have gone into solemn conference at Geneva to see what can be done about limiting naval arma- ments. A few years ago, it seems, someone conceived the brilliant idea that, thouigh it was necessary for them to prepare to# destroy one an- other, they might economize some- what in those preparations by ac- cepting equal handicaps in peace times.I The present conference will not attain what its most optimistic ad- vocates could have hoped. A dead- lock has developed in several quar- ters, and it -appears as though little of a concrete nature can be accomp- lished, immediately, at any rate. There is another phase, however, which ar- rests our attention in the whole pro- ceedings. At the time of the first deadlock it X s announced to the people of the nited States that England was hold- ing up the proceediings by insisence on 16 inch guns. Two days ago it was announced to the same public that Japan was threatening the fu- ture of the parley. Through it all, the representatives of the United States have sat stubbornly holding out for our demands against the other powers, with never a sign of capitulating. Our position may be just and correct, but the mis-representation in pre- senting it leads to a type of inter- national misunderstanding which is not in any case desirable. /T - OASTED ROLL ( J 7 f 6 It seems that somebody somewhere in an airplane. else flew And that SKILLED REPAIRING Xider's Pen Shop Rider's Observe, that Riderpen service is something more than dealer service; It Typew riter Shop s one of the very few places in the whole For the first time, you can now get country where your exacting require- prompt and skilled service on Type- ments are taken care of by REAL Pen- writers, makers. We have entered this field confident While in Ann Arbor, we urge you to that you will appreciate such service. become acquainted with this very un- Let us clean, repair or service your usual service which is attracting world Typewriter. You will like our workman- wide attention. ship and appreciate the prompt service: We manufacture the famous Rider We are headquarters for Royal Type- "Masterpen" and sell and service other writers both Office and Portables, Rent makes as well, and sell machines of all standard makes Get your Masterpen direct from the * at fair prices. factory in Ann Arbor. Give us a call. somebody else is on his way some- where in one. After a while schools will be put- ting big maps on the walls and stick- ing thumb tacks in them everyday to show the progress of the latest flights. * * * Rolls predicts the final breakup of the American home as a result of the popularization of aviation. We pic- ture below th last youthful father's small for an aerial e sad scene when American leaves town real estate o voyage. the his office 315 South State St. Phone 8950 24-HOUR SERVICE "---- W It2 @ ALL COOP MEWS, AD The nice thing about flying is that if the news isn't good, you aren't able to wire it home. You do or die. . * . We wonder why these "birdmen" Keep risking all they have To travel just a little farther In so much shorter time. If transportation gets so fast Just think of all the extra time We'll have to figure what to do To keep from being bored with life. And if so many aeroplanes Fill up all the air We'll need a lot of traffic cops With winged motorcycles. And what a racket they will make We'll have to close our schools Because the children can't be heard Above the aeroplanes. These flyers must get awfully tired Of Welcomes and Receptions They haven't any privacy Or peace of mind at all. And so we wonder why they go But when the weather is like this We think we see the why Is to get cooler air. - A Summer Co-Ed. You see the poets who write for the clumn in the winter have some com- petition. Such as it is. QUERY We've heard so many stories about the summer session students. About how academic and staid they seem. It makes 'us wonder if they'll like any humor column. . For that's what Rolls is supposed to be. * * * Whether mild jokes about education, or burning satire on administration, or half-way funny poetry, or just ran- dom musings would be more apt to please. The last are the most fun to write. * * * In the winter tme the regular stu- dents do so many crazy things that the Rolls editor has no trouble find- ing things to ,laugh at. But in the sumer there will be no one person' writing the column every day. Different people will sit down occasionally and try to keep you either amused or rather entertained for the short time it takes to read a column. * * *> As in the winter time, our readers who are so inclined, or who feel that they could do it better, are welcome to send in copy. Anything will be ex- amined, and if the editors are at all. amused, they will use that fact as basis for hoping that the readers will be also. * * * The regular Rolls editor is out in Colorado enjoying the cool refreshing mountain air, picking strawberries or canning peaches or some equally dig- nified job, resting his 'ind so that he can watch the events of the com- ing year with that keen piercing per- ception which will enable him to in- terpret them in a sensible cynical manner, seeing everything as some- what funny, and some things funnier than others. * * * Fictitious names are used to con- ceal the identity of people who aren't quite sure whether their stuff will ge over or not. We wouldn't sign any names except that it is the style to do so on such columns as this. The names have no significance. -Mefistofele. 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Plan your summer on wheels- in an Erskine Sport Coupel On display at all Studsbak shWWOms ERSKLNE SIX SPORT COUPE $995 ERS K/NEf S IX I The majority of Michigan students are satisfied cus- tomers because they ap- preciate the regard f or personal ownership that is so characteristic of Var- sity methods. DIA L 421-9 '1 LIBERTY AT FIFTH , 0, mms