THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, -i M1. --I -._,. . Published every morning except Monday during the University Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publica- tions. The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled tothe 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, $i.so; by mail, $2.00. Offices: Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR PHILIP C. BIOOKS Editorial Director......Paul J. Kern City Editor.....Joseph E. BrunswickI Feature Editor....Marian L. Welles Night Editors Carlton G. ChampeH. KOakes, Jr. John E. Davis Orville Dowzer T. E. Sunderland Reporters E. M. Hyman Miriam Mitchell Robert E. Carson Mary Lister Betty Pulver Wm. K. Lomason Louis R. Markus BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER LAUIRANCE J. VAN TiJYL Advertising E.. .....Ray Wachter Accounts. ....John Ruswinckel Circulation....... . ...,...Ralph Miller Assistants C. 'T. Antonopulos G. W. Platt S. S. Berar Night Editor-JOS. E. BRUNSWICK FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1927 -w-T TRIBUTE ! "I tried to be critical of America but I could not. I like it ver much."-Professor Hugo R. Kruy of the University of Utrecht. It is seldom that the system c Ameriman education receives as sin cere and significant a commendatio as this. It is rare, even for Amen- cans, to admit that their universitie compare with those of the old world and though we must allow for th fact that Professor Kruyt is our gues: and might consider it discourteous t criticise, the compliment that he ha paid to the University of Michiga: and the American system of educatio though it is significant indeed. Real encouragement ,can be founi for proponents of our American sys tem when a man who comes here wit] a thorough knowledge of the work ings of the European universities, ani who is perfectly aware that our col lege communities do not consist of a group of scholars as do those wit which he is more familiar, can give t the educational system here a recom mendation such as this. It would almost seem for a momen as though those who advocate the "Oxford" plan and a dozen and on other kinds of plane may be wrong after all, and that there is something deeper than we see in our own uni- versities, and something for which we are. not giving them credit. Of course Michigan will never pro- duce as imposing a list of real schol- ars as any similar European school could boast, but America's life is one not particularly conducive to schol- %s. If a person desires to follow for ife an academic profession, he still nay do so by entering the university s an instructor, and whatever other charges may be levied against us we to not deliberately discourage accom- lishment on that field. We are perhaps not a thorough, but ve are reaching an infinitely larger .umber than our counterparts across lie seas. We are criticised for not aving the serious minded students nd for not allowing them a chance o use individual initiative, but our tudents are generally younger than hose of the other nations, and where heirs are handpicked embryo schol- rs ours are everything from pros- ective real estate dealers up. We can cracely boast of our products, in ome instances, but after all it is hor- [ble to contemplate what these same ersons might have been without the aining we have offered them. The obvious ideal situation is a ombination of the two, however, with chance for the scholastic group to et in its concrete accomplishments ad a chance for the group which is ierely being raised slightly above its wvel to do that also. To attempt to i-ow these two classes into the same stem with the same classifications ad training is of course absurd, and efeats partially the desirable end of idespread education. Many of our iture citizens just aren't fitted for iltural pursuits, and why a college raduate should hesitate to become< plumber or bricklayer is mysterious+ deed. He could at least be a much, appier plumber or bricklayer for his lucation, and the problem of leisure i man could open his copy of "Paradise Lost" at the lunch hour and appreci- ate its passages. With the new University college which is about to be established here we are on the verge of this ideal sit- uation. We shall offer to the broad general class of student the cultural training which is the only kind from which he can benefit, and we shall offer elsewhere on the campus, to a different group, that specialized train- ing that may produce scholars and professional men on a par with the old world itself. It is a pity that Professor Kruyt did not delay his visit until this new Uni- versity college started operation, be- cause if he finds it possible to laud even our present system he should find even more worthwhile phases of our new system. We appreciate more highly than we can possible make known, however, the immense compli- ment that Professor Kruyt has paid us, and we are very proud to have such a distinguished scientist in our midst. We are' proud, also, to have elicited the compliment he has paid us, but at present we can not help but feel that Europe has half, and America has the other half, of what might be combined into the most magnificent educational system the world has ever known. We lack Europe's very obvious attention to the individual student, and they, on the other hand, very obviously lack our attention to the great masses of th commonwealth who can profit, if only indirectly, from the college training. GOVERNMENT BY ASSASSINATION The rule of force as, applied to a national government is always dan- gerous. Governments, of course, work on the theory of doing the greatest good to the people they serve, and who compose them, and when they fill in this purpose they are bound to be -overthrown, either by force as in years gone by or by popular elec- tion in our enlightened communities. This week the world has seen the most recent example of the attempted use of force in national government, with the assissination of Kevin O'Hig- gins, strong man of the Irish Free State. The group that took. upon themselves this dastardly piece of work has assumed the responsibility for the future of Ireland threby, for they have taken from the infant republic the man who was the bul- wark of its liberties. It is only natural that people of the impulsive and active dispositions of the Irish would attempt govern- ment by force, and it is only natural that in a nation where brilliacy that in a nation where illiteracy is so prevalent there should be some who do not realize the tremendous respon- sibility which they assume in thus destroying leadership when leader- f ship is so sorely needed. Ireland can never move forward, or backward either for that matter, if it lacks leadership, and the price which leaders have paid in Ireland in thet past few years has been tremendousv indeed. The situation is one approach-e ing in seriousness the case of Frencev after the revolution, and the mend whom the English did not execute as rebels .have been assassinated by theirn countrymen. In Italy, also, for has on six six occasions been attempted in the disposition of their premir, Musso- ini. The situation is only parallel in a small degree, however, for where a nation is goaded by the very essence Af force eve'i extreme measures may be used with justification. Ireland, however, is supposed, at feast, to be a constitutional govern- ment of the people. No single man or small group of men, under such a system, has the right to strike down at the point of a, gun a man whom hey dan not defeat in an election. 'he Irish people must learn, first of all, before they can hope to command he respect of the family of nations which they are about to enter, that government consists of more than a eries of assassinations, and that they- .ow have recourse to a different and Sven more potent method-the ballot ox. Years of suppression have ap- parently develpped an attitude that H ill be hard to overcome; but there t S no excuse for opposing with force w i government based upon democratic c rinciples.P tZ TOATED ROLLV TEN CENTS " WORTH OF AIR * * * Although the exact number of liters of air that could be purchased for the S. C. A Fresh Air camp with the $500 that the Tag Sale raised in Ann Ar- bor yesterday, Ann Arbor no doubt feels that it has contributed nobly. * * * Most anybody could be seen yeste- day, after buying a Tag for a dime, suddenly feeling the heat and going in for a milk-shake which cost fifteen cents.s * * *. History has not repeated itself in the matter of giving. The develop- ment has been constant-and great. The tithe is no longer a tenth, but a ten-thousandth. '* * * PLEASE DON'T MAKE PATHS ON THE CAMPUS Such is the notice that is run in the next column to the right of this page of The Daily every morning during the regular year. Summer session stu- dents indeed enjoy a privilege. Of all the traditions and customs of the University, the one which is best ob- served of all is that of keeping off the grass. * * * You may see a freshman walking without a pot-until he gets caught- or an engineer in cap and grown enter the Law building, but very very rarely will you see a student walking on the lawn. And as for sitting on the senior benches! The seniors don't even sit there themselves. The numerous green benches under the trees near the Library and Angell hall serve only as ornaments in the fall, winter, and spring. And many of the days in The spring are just as nice as those in the summer, only not so hot. If the regular students showed the zeal in studying which some of the bench occupants do now, they would have to go out and sit on the lawn for mental relaxation. Among other things one never sees in the regular session:- Baby Carriages on the diagonal. Teachers teaching teachers. A student studying while the sun shines. A philosophy paper handed in on time. A boy walking down the street with a girl without a necktie. CRADLES AND PIGS Having put on "Cradle Snatchers" for a week without arousing storms of protest, the Roquefort Players are now going to put on a "clean" play with Pigs in it. And now we have an authentic pho- tograph of the kind of ducks the men went hunting for in "Cradle Snatch- ers." We would illustrate what their wives went for in their absence, but due to the presence of so many exam- ples on the campus, it is not deemed necessary. A DUCK HALLER'S State Street Jewelers CORONA The pioneer portable Nearly a million in use. 0. D. MORRILL, Dealer L. C. Smith and Corona Typewriters, Inc.1 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 6615 COTTONI A Jean ° nnNZ ¢ 4 ' S11 SOC1 i. The Training School For Jewish Social Work Offers a fifteen months' course of study in Jewish Family Case Work, Child Care, Community Centers, Federations and Health Centers. Several scholarships and fellow- ships ranging from $250 to $1500 are available for especially quali- fied students. ftr information, address The Director The Training School for Jewish Social Work 810 W. 91st St., New York City TYPEWRiTERS All makes sold, rented, exchanged, cleaned and re- paired. Largest equipment and best repair service. Established 1908. 0. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 6615 READ THE WANT ADS BONDS O FT =~ Seringis the best way Q.f'Se//mg in the bn business IT IS a disproven idea that bond selling is merely a matter of making friends and using them as a re- ceptive outlet for whatever issues come to hand. The worth-while bond house does not want its bonds sold that way. It trains its representatives to work more constructively. When the house and the man representing it are known for their carefulness in fitting the bond to the investor, it builds confidence and subordinates sell- ing to serving. Men who represent Halsey, Stuart & Co. are trained in this policy. It enables them to grow in the bond business and to find a worth-while outlet for their capacity and ambition. College men should find out all they can about the bond business before deciding for or against it as a vo- cation. That will correct any erroneous ideas they may have about it or their own fitness or lack of fit- ness for it. rau will fnd accurate al helpful information on tAis subject in a pampAhlet 'we ha'ze prep ared forcolege men. Writefor pamphlt MD-4 HALSEY, STUART & CO. IN C O R P O R A T E D CHICAGO NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA DETROIT CLEVELAND 201 S. La Salle St. -1 Wll St. III South 15th St. 6ox Griswold St.925 Euclid Ave. ST. LOUIS BOSTON MILWAUKEE MINNEAPOLIS 319 North 4th St. 85 Devonshire St. 4z5 East Water St. 6o8 Second Ave., S. BEAUTIFUL ISLAND LAKE Preferred by people who know and want the best in Dancing. 1 Dancing every night except Monday Sunday Matinees 3 to 6 Famous PICKERS ORCHESTRA Goldkette presentation , T_ n { OR, - ai 1 s for A for Economical Transportation. vfor isYeais Vaicato t tt // ,/1 t. r1( I I The National Parks are open Visitors from all over the world exclaim at the wonders ofourbnational parks. All can be reached over good roads. All lend truth to the saying, "*"S America first". THE automobile has brought the nation's wonder places and play- grounds within the reach of everybody, everywhere. And all of them await you when you own a Chevrolet! Select the model that meets your pref- erence and requirements from the eight Chevrolet body types. Each one is a splendid quality car. Each provides the power and depend- ability for which Chevrolet is world famous. Each provides luxurious com- fort and easy riding and each sells at a remarkably low price, on exceptionally easy terms! -at these Low Prices In every section of the land, therearescenic splen- dors within easy reach over wyell paved roads. Visit thein in comfort in a Chevrolet.. THE HEALTH SERVICE Year in and year out, with scarcely a- notice from the vast majority of hale and healthy students, the Univer- sity Health Service serves the stu- dent body. The benefits which this agency accomplishes are scarcely measurable, but still it receives only a small portion of the appreciation and credit to which it is entitled. The annual report shows that the death rate has decreased again among the students; an unostentatious but a a u ft The Players have added Miss Hughes, Miss Olson, and Mr. Faust to the list of faculty, actors, and others who hlave come to Michigan from Wis- consin.. This spring the head of the Public Speaking department was ransferred. * * * It calls to mind the time, so long ago that it could no longer rankle, when a student publication at Madi- on, on the occasion of the transfer of prominent professor, asked if the university was an educational enter- rise itself, or "just a training ground or better institutions.' -Mefistofele. The Coach The Touring or Roadster The Coupe The 4-Door Sedan "- The Sport Cabriolet . $595 525 625 695 715 The Landau $745 The Imperial Landau - - I/rTon Truck395 (Chassis only) t-Ton Truck O (Chassis only)495 AU pricesf.o.b. FlintMch. Interesting Places Everywhere South, North, East and West - America afford places of interest and beau. ty such. as the gigantic monument being sculp- tured on Stone Mountain. An Ideal Golfer's Vacation Many golfers~ spend their vacations touring from course to course, enjoying the customary courtesy privileges. A different par to shoot at every days Vacation Sports in the Great Outdoors Fishing and bathing are vacation relaxations that countees thousands enjoy. 'there is always a conven- ient take or stream-when you own a Chevrolett Check Chevrolet Delivered Prices They Include the lowesthandling and financing charge. available. University Chevrolet Sales 102 South Ashley ing students physically is measured by small size of the death rate, and from these figures they have been immensely successful. QUALITY AT LOW ever becoming more and more tremendously significant fact, for the .s, would be solved 'if' the work- work of the men whose duty is keep-1