Tu17 QT TTATAFR MTC HMAN DATT .Y MONDAY, JUNE 20, 'AGE TWO 1 L'rn ,7UT11AlrP 1Vl.T oT-st-111 1J1-flAT MNAY UN t Uait trinwr versity's most admired institutions. It is hoped that in the future as 41r r i g a iua it this year, every group of returning i'a "-' alumni will note with pride the con- Published every morning except Monday tinuing progress ofcthe University, during the University Summer Session byk the Board in Control of Student Publica-and wil receive such a hearty wel- tions. come as those of us now in Ann Ar- < The Associated Press is exclusively en- bor extend to them. titled to the ,use for republication of all news_ dispatches credited to it or not otherwise DSILN -RPOIIIN credited in this paper and therlocal news pub- DISCIPLINE--b PROHIBITION! lished herein. The Regents, after months of argu- Entered at the Ann Arbor, Michigan, ing, and after putting into effect for a postoffice as second class mattr. few weeks the compromise advocated 'Subscription by carrier, $.5o; by r mail, fwwestecmrms doae $.oo. by The Daily, have decided to ban Offices- 'Press Building, Maynard Street, Diy aedcddt . Ann Arbor, Michigan. student automobiles except "in ex- EDITORIAL STAFF ceptional and extraordinary cases.", Telephone 492 # The Daily respects the Rengents for MANAGING EDITOR their careful consideration and their PHILIP C. BROOKS interest in student welfare. It notes Editorial Director......Paul J. Kern their discretion in delaying their ac- City Editor.....Joseph E. Brunswick tion until after most of thie students Feature Editor.....Marian L. Welles had left town. The Daily pledges it- Night Editors self, as an institution supporting the Carlton G. ChampeHLK. Oakes, Jr. voice of authority in the University, John E. Davis Orville Dowzer to further the enforcement of what- G. Thomas McKeanT. E. ,Sunderland R o sever regulations are in effect, to such Charles Kaufman Louis R. Markus an extent as it deems logical and Mary Lister Miriam Mitchell compatible with the best interest of Betty Pulver the University community. B SINES4 STAFF . However, the editors respectfully Telephone 21214 maintain their opinion on automoble BUSINESS IANAGER regulations as stated in previous edi- LAURANCE J. VAN TUYL torials. They do not feel that the Ad Ut A .RayWachtercompromise plan has been in opera- Accounts.................JohnRuwinckel tioii long enough to judge wisely Circulation .....................Ralph Miller C ... _--ah e its success. They do not feel that evi- dence so far indicates that the plan has been anything but successful. FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1927 They do not consider a complete re- -_ _ --__- striction feasible. ADIEU On April 23rd, The Daily published Michigan bids Godspeed today to the following opinion: "It is admit- more than 1900 members of the class ted that the rulings this year have not of 1927, of a wide variety of abiltybeen, successful. The trouble, how- and accomplishment. The class, typi- ever, lies not in the regulations, cal of -what Mencken has termed this which are the sanest treatments of "gargantuan intellectual rolling mill," the problem yet advanced in the is anything but homogeneous in. ex- United States, but in the prescribed perience, social strata, ambition, or means of enforcement. When ade- intellect. That diversity has added quate enforcement is provided the sit- much cdlbr to the associations of these uateonforceen isnpro . sit- guation will be under control. Coi- outgo studenfs, although at e plete abolition of student cars is un- same time it has complicated infinite- necessarily harsh, needlessly patern- ly the'multifariOus worries of the ad- alistic, and would never meet tie ap- ministration. proval of the student body at Mich- These seniors, however, have had igan...*..*..*..*.* the common experience of four years at Michigan. Bearing in its age and "This is no evidence, however, that traditions a similarity to the smaller theA regulations cannot be enforced. endoed astrn nstutinsyetem-The Daily recommends that the Board endowed eastern instiutions, yet em- bodying all of the progressive ma- of Regents change this one section, terialism of the Middle West, the Uni- creatlag a committee of three, to be versity can be said to typify most composed of the Dean of Students, a .irepresentative of the office of the dean truly the~ cosmopolitanism of America ,o oeadoeohrmme f of women, and one other member of today, the faculty to be appointed by the Altoug eiher'onthewan orun-President of the University. At the dergoing a strange transformation, there is still a vast body of exclusive- same time the budget of the ofice of the Dean of Students should be ly Michigan traditions and customs,efs-s- the elements which prevent it from raised, if this is necessary, to provide being aroiling mill. The class of '27 a salary for a man to handie the im- beinge amoolling mill. classroft'27 bequeaths to its successors the sacred mene amount of clerical work that duty to maintain and further .that will be necessary if the rule are to Ibe properly enforced.'' spirit,-as essential as intellectual pur- suits in producing broadened citi- Three days later, in discussing the zens, who, can achieve success by stand of President Little as he stated means of their ;social ability as well it in an address =n Hill auditorinu, as by their academic achievement. this colurin carriedl the following ecm- On another side, these s.eniors, or ment: "The abolition of all auto- those of them who have had the vision mobiles will, assuredly, cure the ill, to appreciate it, have profited by as- but it will also punish hundreds of sociation with a faculty unsur- Michigan students who have the re- passed in its possession of emi- quired scholastic average, the com- nent scholras, of sympathetic teach- mon sense and the good judgment re- ers, and of an admirable integrity of quired to operate a car-and this general character. This class is the group, the President says, constitutes last to enjoy the inspiration of its re- the majority. If this is true, The vered friend, Dean Lloyd, who was Daily cannot see that the passage of stricken during one of its own cele- such a law could be anything but brations. The classes which follow unjust." will be the first to realize the bene- Soon after, when the new plan was fits of association with new men en- put into operation, advertising space tering the faculty, who may by di- was given to appeals to support the vine inspiration achieve the heights regulations, and the following ap- of character which Deah Lloyd ex- peared in the editorial column: "The emplified. Daily appeals to the committee, and There will always be seniors, more more especially to the student body, of them every year, and never any- to expend every effort to prove to the thing new that can be said about them. administration that Michigan men and There only remains to give them the women are willing to do their part. usual bouquets, to felicitate them The co-operation of the campus is upon what they have accomplished, essential." and to attempt to impress upon them The Regents have appointed a new the sincerity of the good wishes which assistant dean of students. This part they receive. Perhaps thir most com- of the plan as advocated by The mon problem is that of their future Daily was not carried out previously. occupations. Whatever they do, they It seems such a tremendous task to will all enter careers in which it is even approach complete enforcement, their duty and their trust as alumni that a more lax plan would be pre- ever to strive to enhance the glorious ferable, since the more complete is reputation of the University of Michi- the enforcement achieved, the greater gan. will be the respect of possible viola- tors for the authority in power. HAIL AND FAREWELL! However, the ban is to be accepted As representatives of the largest as passed. Now it only remains to body of graduates possessed by any hope .for a liberal interpretation of University in' the country, the visiting the provisions for special permits. In alumni form an immense delegation to accordance with its opinion that a ma- investigate the activities and progress jority of the students are perfectly of their Alma Mater, capable and competent to operate cars Within their own group, they have without harm or distraction. The conducted the annual alumni conven- Daily trusts that the administration tion and stunt program, with notable will allow those people to continue success. As investigators, they have driving. The difficulties to enforce- watched the graduation of Michigan's ment will be endless, and in order to dramatic spectacles; they have inspect- avoid such complete failure as would dramtic spectacles; they have inspect- result in disregard and virtual upl- ed the ever-growing mass of buildings lification of the ban, the only possible which house the University; and they means of maintaining control, admit- have seen the beginning of work on tedly desirable if not too drastic, ap- the new Women's League building, pears to be to employ considerable which bids fair to be one of the Uni- lenience in granting special permits. __________________,, //I/////I/I7I/it/I/""""' 0 1 r: OASTED OLL THE REGENTS' CARE s ri 4 * * * The Regents certainly added a note of joy to Commencement. All we we seniors are rejoicing now that we are graduating while this is still a University, and not a kindergarten. * * * I - FRE EMAN 'S DINING ROOM 809 East Washington (One Block from Hill Auditorium) READ THE WANT ADS Typewriting andj Mimeographing Prompt, service. Experienced oper- ators Moderate rates. O. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 6615 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY for repairs. Will reopen Friday Imorning, June 24, DAN'S DEN 106 South University .. r 1 We will close I' Ix 5' DOWN THE DIAGONAL "Now that the Regento3 are taking so much interest in the life and safety of students," re- marked the Cynical Senior yes- terday, " maybe they will tear down some of the fire-traps and tumble-down shacks in which they hold classes." .: * * * Maybe it was just a coincidence, but: June 15-last of students leave town; June 17-Regents place ban on autos, after delaying it two months. * * * GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN Student government. Cap Night. Freshman pot tradition. Theater riots. Cheering section. Student cars. What's next? * * * IT'LL BE MISSED-GLADLY Clippy Stadium is gone! And just when the Horse Marines were going to hold their Class Day exercises in it, too. Here it is the only time in the year that the benches would have been useful, and the B. and G. boys had to go and move them. * * * But the engineers are happy-they have their senior benches back-way back, in fact. They are so far from the diagonal that the boys get tred hiking over to them. * * * BULLETIN: Clippy Stadium has been located. It is now on the lawn in front of the Convalescent hospital, where people are so glad to be in the open air for a change that they don't mind looking at even such a horrible sight as that gem of architecture. * * * COMMENCEMENT comes only once a year-for which we can all be thankful, especially the B. and G. boys who had to rake up all the leaves and. paint all the fire hydrants. * * * STUDENTS ARE ALL WRONG! BOYS, WE'RE ALUMNI NdW Now that Commencement is over, we won't see anything like it until the next Democratic convention. * * * If the mortality rate among tradi- tions and customs around here is as high as it was the past year, the next class can look forward with great glee to receiving their diplomas through the mail, instead of waiting all morn- ing for them. * * * Why, according to all the figures on what a college education is worth, we should each have been earning $5 per hour this morning. r*** Incidentally, if anyone knows of a newspaper that is willing to pay even fi,ve dollars a month for the services of a college graduate, we'd like to hear about it. * * r W'd like to go to a University that hands you out a job instead of a di- ploma at Commencement. * * * AS ONE ALUMNUS TO ANOTHER After a year of panning the alumni, we sort of hate to have the stigma attached to our own name, but all the professors seemed anxious to thus curse us, so here we are. And since we're here, we might as well make the best of it. r* * * We always thought students were foolish, childish and useless, And that alumni were the grandest things on the face of the earth. * * * It has been our only regret that we have but one life to give to the alumni. Give us alumni or give us death. We prefer the latter. * * * We wish we could find some word of cheer to brighten the paths of the much-trampled on students, but all we can say is that some day they too will be alumni, and can come out from under the heavy wing of the Univer- sity, out into the "cruel" world, where they too can act like free men, and try to live down the fact that they are alumni. Timothy Hay, A.B. '- i lll1 ill,1t1 11 illfl 111 lllllll l - ro - Our friends, when re- turning to Ann Arbor, alwatys drop in for our EXCELLENT MEALS. Cor. State and Washington CORONA The Ioneer rtabl NearlI a mlo in use. 0. D. MORRILL, Deale L. C. 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I wcant to send you these few words inl apprew olation-of the splendid service which your company has been furnishing to us. and the ,*7&n4. ii24et. which you have taken in cur business. With best\r regards, I as Very truly your* AH. 4 e -'O ui ....- Apparelf in figure. alike to thi figure. I priced. For Ten For G For Shop For Wal For Dan For Moio For Trave - . X1, . J w TEAT LXPWISS Charm Of tl$Yl -!J. or the young in y Youthful modes te Miss and the Intriguing-ultra years and the ,young s that are becoming woman of slender -smart-moderately ,umes for every occas- elected by oar faahion s, presented here in assortment for yrour selection: Cotumen rm days in the city. vacation days at the cable resort. In vivid ammer tones including ttering new orchid and ew tones. nis Of ping thing cing ring eling Costa ion-se experts wide easy for wa Or for fashion new su the, fiat honeyd Shopiof 1"