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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 22, 1919 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1919-04-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL

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KMMi YYW YiYYYwYY w . Y11fYGYti 1....

__

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER AT THE
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
Published every morning except Monday
during the university year by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
U$MBEIR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled
so the use for republication of all news dis-
patches credited to it or not otherwise credited
' a. this paper and also the local news pub-
ished herem.
Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor,
litchigan, as econd class matter.
S usriptions by carrer or mail, $3.5.
ffices: Ann Arbor Press Building.
Phones: Business, g6o; Editorial, 414.
Commimicaton nos to exceed o words,
d ignaed,te iatre not netessatil to ap-
ea rint but s an evidence of fait, and
QcEs of events will be published in The
r a a the discretin of the Editor, if left
at ormildto the Office
onsiged communications win receive no
onieration No manucript will be* re-
turned unless the writer incloses postage.
The Daily does not necessarily endorse the
sentilnts expressed in the communications.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Clarence Roeser ...........Managing Editor
Harry l. Carey.............News Editor
l r...............City Editor
Mailton Marx........Associate Editor
Thomas F. McAllister......Feature Editor
ar~k .Ehbert-----TelegrphEditor
David B. andis...........port Editor
Marguerite Clark...........Women's Editor
Martha Guernsey,..........Women's Editor
Kendrick Kimball......Guillotine Editor
Charles R. Osius, Jr..........State Editor
Paul A. Shinkman........Dramatic Editor
Edna' Apel...........Music Editor
ut Daiy ..... Exchange Editor
Bernard Wohl ............ Literary Editor
- -? ISSUE EDITORS
erbet R. Susser Paul G. Weber
Reafud Serwood Edgar L. Rice
Elugh W. Hitchcock J. P. Hart
William Clarkson
REPORTERS
Thomta . dams John E. McManis
Richard . Mashall C. H. Murchison
Irene Eliis Mary D. Lane
.trm chermerhorn John 3. Daki
ftur W Brown Log an Trumbull
R. Emerson Swart Stewart Baxter
SMarie Cr-ozier Muriel E. Bauman
BUSINESS STAFF
Harold Makinson........Business Manager
Agnea L. Abele....Asst. Business Manager
Wer1& A. Gaines...Asst. Business Manager
WA., LFevre... Asst Business Manager
Wi.A. Ieitzinger... Ast. Business Manager
Doal MMjor.... Asst. Business Manager
Donnet R. Schoffner..Asst. Business Manager
SENIOR STAFF
BrkB Covell Edward Priehs, Jr.
WHgrge A.Cadwell J. Duane Mler
"1Vaynrd A. Newton R. A. Sullivan
JUNIOR STAFF
Curt P. Schneider Isabelle Farnum
Harld P. Lindsay Ceo R. Strimbeck, Jr.
WaprMore Arthur L. Glazier
James A. Kennedy, Jr.
TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1919.
Issue Editor--J. P Hart
SWING-OUT
The senior in his official robe makesl
his first appearance today. The don
nling of the scholar's dress is the be-
ginning of the end of college for those
- 801 to get their degrees. Swing-out{
marks the first stage 'toward com:6
imeucement.
It is with mixed feelings that the
seniors pass in grave review today be-
foreA0heeyes of the campus. Those
w o atch the long, black line do so
with envy, thinking of the year when
1he* will be allowed to march in the
procession. But the senior is think-
ing less of the coming severing of Un-
iversity ties than he is of the happy
days soon to be over.
Swing-out tells the senior that he
soon will have finished his University
career. It reminds him that he mustY
now go forth into the world, and makel
his mark. His days of study are over,£
and he must now, on his own respon-
s'iblity, put them to practical use.
The senior is thinking these thingst
as he slowly wends his way about the
capus today. But most of all he is
4thinking that soon he must leave hisf

reverenced University-his home forI
four years or more, his friends, many
of whom he will see but infrequentlyI
from now on, all the associations that
have grown into his heart since his
first coming to Michigan.1
The senior realizes that he is on the
threshold of a new life. It is hard to
leave behind the many years of good-
fellowship and pleasant memories. Butt
life goes ever forward. And the sen-
ior approaches his coming graduation
with thankfulness that be has been
allowed to call Michigan his own, and
gratitude to her for all she has done
for him.
Buy Victory Bonds -
FLYING SERVICE1
Service permeates our lives today-t
service to country, to University, tot
friend. It is the big lesson the war
has taught us.
Why do we do the thousand and one
little things-from helping a friend put
on his coat to buying Victory bonds?
Precipitate them all-and the residuel
will be Service.I
The Aero club now being formed on
the campus is a manifestation of this
stimulus which caries us onward to
give, to sacrifice, to serve. The sev-
eral hundred former members of the
Air Service, Royal Air Force, and
French flying corps, now in the Un-
iversity, who will form the nucelus of
the club, faced the dangers of learn-

ing to fly for one thing-Service.
Wishing to carry service a step
farther, to make Michigan a leader in
the study of aviation, and to help the
government in its campaign to com-
merialize flying, the former aviators
have determined to organize into the
Aero club.
It is just a matter of service, serv-
ice-and more service, that concerns
us all today.
- Buy Victory Bonds
M Jagazine Review
Russia and world politics are thef
subjects most treated by the authors!
of the latest books received at theI
Library, although a varied list is pre-
sented to the book lover.
War books include "Echoes of the
War," by J. M. Barrie; "France Fac-
ing Germany," by Georges Clemen-
ceau; "War Verse," edited by Frank
Foxcroft; "President Wilson - From
an English Point of View," by H.
Wilson Harris; "The World War and
Its Consequences," by William H.
Hobbs, of the University of Michigan,
with an introduction by Theodorel
Roosevelt; "The Disabled Soldier," by
Douglas C. McMurtrie; "Roumania's
Cause and Ideals," by Leonard A.
Magnus; "A Republic of Nations," by
Raleigh C. Minor; "Roumania's Sacri-
fices," by Gogu Negulesco; and "The
Great /Peace," by H. H. Powers.
Russia's life and problems are pre-
sented in "Six Months in Red Russia,"
by Louise Bryant, who has met Ke-
rensky, Trotsky, Lenine, and members

A vocational conference meeting
will be held at 4 o'clock Thursday
afternoon in Barbour gymnasium.
Girls wishing to enter the tennis
tournament should sign the list post-
ed in Barbour gymnasium.
Girls interested in earning their
board or in making money by doing
housework should see Miss Louise Pot-
ter in Barbour gymnasium.
Seniors will play baseball at 4
o'clock Tuesdays and Wednesdays,
juniors at 4 o'clock on Mondays and
Thursdays. Practice will begin Wed-
nesday. Girls should report at Bar-
bour gymnasium.,
Wyvern preliminary elections will
be made at a meeting to be held on
Thursday. The final elections will
probably be announced about the mid-
dle of May.
The meeting of Wyvern which was
to have been held this evening has
been postponed until Thursday eve-
ning at the Tri Delta house.
Stylus will meet at 7:30 o'clock
Tuesday night with Dorothea Comfort,
'20, at 745 East University avenue.
- Buy Victory Bonds -

Y. X. C. A. PLANS TO EXTEND
SOCIAL WORK IN ANN ARBOR
Work in Factories, Among Foreigners,
and Among Patients
Undertaken
With the organization of the social
service committee of the University
Y. M. C. A. completed, members have
started active work in the factories,
at the University hospital, and in the
homes of the foreigners of the city.
Under the direction of Margaret
Rothschaefer, '20, an English class is
being conducted in the home of one
of Ann Arbor's foreigners. Group
play is being led at the night school,
which is held in Perry school under
the supervision of Miss Dicken.
J. E. Goodwillie, '20E, is in charge
of the work at the University hospital,
where classes are conducted for young
boys confined to the institution
through lameness or othernphysical
disability. Twenty men have volun-
teered to aid in this undertaking.
Plans are now being formulated for
entertainments to be held during the
noon hours in the factories of the city.
- Buy Victory Bonds
Stanchfield, '07, Speaks at lane Hall
Mr. 0. 0. Stanchfiel4, '07, who has
been engaged in rural "Y" work in
India for a number of years, will speak
to the members of the University Y.
M. C. A. cabinet, the board of the S.
C. A., and the board of the city "Y"
at a meeting to be held at 7 o'clock
Wednesday night in Lane hall.
While in the University, Mr. Stanch-
field was secretary of the Y. M. C. A.

Tennis Players Listen
We are at your service with
100 TENNIS RACKETS
Wright and Ditson's Strong line, also H. C. Lee
& Co.'s "Slotted Throat" Racket

Special

attention to Restringing. Peefect work
and prompt delivery guaranteed.

WAH R'S

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

I

1

ALWAYS ASK FOR
nflfl0r s

I C E

C R E A M

Delicious and Refreshing

The Michigan Daily for the rest
the year, $1.00.-Adv.

of

ir l' w FIiIYY ii f + ir r n M, n

of the famous Battalion of
"One of Them," by Elizabeth

Death;
Hazano-

vitz, which is similar to Mary Anten's
"Promised Land;" "Pleasant Tales of
Russia," by V. I. Nemirovitch, and
"The City of Trouble," by Meriel Bu-
chanan.
Fiction is represented by "White
Nights and Other Stories," by Fyodor
.Dostoeovsky; "The Sacred Beetle and
Others," by 3. Henri Fabre; "Another
Sheep," by John Galsworthy; "The
Dessert of Wheat," by Zane Grey;
"The Shadow of the Cathedral," by
Vicente Blasco Ibanez, a story that
shows the moral and social decadence
of Spain; "The Ghost Girl," by H. De
Vere Stacpole; "The Whirlwind," by
Edna Worthley Underwood, and "A
Grey Dream, and Other Stories of New
England Life,' by Laura Wolcott.
Drama has "Artists Families," by
Eugene Brieux; and "Washington the
Man Who Made Us," by Percy lick-
aye, a ballad.
Other books include "The Standard
Bearers," by Katherine 4. Magnus;
"Today's Short Stories Analyzed," by
Robert Wilson Neil; "Formative Types
of English Poetry," by George H. Palm-
er; "Poets of the Future;" "The Peo-
ples' Theater," by Romain Rolland;
"The Best College Short Stories,A ed-
ited by Henry T. Schnittkind; and the
"Music of Spain;" by Carl Van Vech-
ten.
A humorous account of the kaiser's
intended trip to Paris if told in "Little
r ourneys Towards Paris," by W. Ho-
henzollern.
-- Buy Victory Bonds -
MUSEUM OFFICIAL TO SURVEY
WILD LIFE IN WARREN WOODS
Mr. Norman A. Wood, curator of
birds and mammals of the Museum, is
planning to leave about May first on a
study and survey trip through the E.
K. Warren woods near Three Oaks.
This stretch of forest is a portion of
what is now known as the E. K. War-
ren foundation, which includes several
tracts of Michigan land to be reserved
for birds, wild life,'and the natural
flora of the state.
During the camping trip Mr. Wood
will be joined by other members of the
zoology faculty..
-- Buy Victory Bonds -
SOCIAL WORKER, GUEST OF
DORMITORY, TELLS OF WORK
Miss Meilta Hutzel of Detroit was
the guest of Martha Cook building
during the week-end.
Miss Hutzel addressed the girls Sun-
day night on the subject of the Girls'
Protective league in Detroit, with which
she is connected. The league works
in connection with the juvenile cpurt
and other social service organizations.
Miss Hutzel will speak further of
her work at the meeting of the voca-
tional conference to be held at 4
o'clock Thursday afternoon in Barbour
gymnasium.
-- Buy Victory Bonds -
Y. M. C. A. Worker to Leave for Kans
Mr. Don C. Heffley, director of re-
ligious activites at the University Y.
M.. C. A. leaves Thursday to take up
work at the University of Kansas as
secretary of the university Y. M. C.
A. Mr. Heffley will spend some time
in Lansing after leaving here before
assuming hs new position.
--Buy Victory Bonds
The Daily is a campus institution
-Support it. $1.00 for the rest of the
ollqge year-Adv.

School of Dancing
Private Lessons in modern Ballroom

I

McGregor Golf Clubs
Lee, Wright & Detson and Spaulding
Rackets

Tennis Balls

Raokets Rostrung

Dancig

jGRAHAM, formerly Sheehan & Go.

MISS JEANETTE H. KRUSZKA

Studio
516 William St.
Phone 1422R

Ruideiws
2006 Washtenaw Ave.
Phone 1598

NEW DRIVE TO REACH LIBRARY
FROM EAST UNIVERSITY AVE.
Work has been started on a drive-
way to enter the campus from East
University avenue, just north of the

_.

df o

Engineering building and to run to the
east side of the new Library.
That section of the drive immedi-
ately next to the Library will be an
oval, and paved. The remainder will
be left unpaved, for it may not be per-
manent. This roadway is to lead to
the basement of the building and will
be used for trucking purposes.
-Buy Victory Bonds -
For service and results try a Daily
Want Ad.-Adv.
Dependable, Solentlii, Drugless
EYE
EXAMINATIONS
"hone 590 for appointment
Emil HArnold
Optometrst 220 S. Main St

Varied Smartness in Distinct-

ive Suits

I

Try

our HOME-MADE

o

As usual, interest is centered most strongly
in suits. But this year, as perhaps in no other,
the unusually large variety of models gives that
delightful opportunity for individuality that all
women seek. Here are models designed for all

CANDIES

They are both delicious and
Wholesome

types of femininity.

A number are beautifully and plainly tail-
ored of fine French serge (navy blue of course)
and rely for their appearance upon grace of line
and perfection of tailoring, rather than.upon
any trimming note. A few blouse suits, just
out of their New York wrappings, will appeal
to young college women, as will also a number
of exceedingly smart styles in box suits. Al-

MADE AND SOLD AT
THE SUGAR BOWL
Phone 967 109 S. main St,
DETROIT UNITED LINES
Between Detroit. Ann Arbor and Jackson
(March 30, 19:9)
(Central Standard Time)
Detroit Limited and Express Cars--8:1o a.
in., and hourly to 8: ro p. in.
Jackson Limited and Express Cars-7 :48
a. in., and every hour to 9:48 p. m. (Ex.
presses make local stops west of Ann Arbor.).
Local Cars East Bound--6:oo a. in., 9:05 a.
m. and every two hours to 9:t45 p. m., 10:50
p. mn. To Ypsilanti only, t1 :45 P. iM., 1,0:20
a. m., 1:1o a. m., and to Saline, change at
Ypsilanti.
Local Cars West Bound-6:48 a. m. and
11:20 p. M.
WAI KING LOO
Open from 11:30 a. M. to 12:00 p. m.
Phone 1620-B

most every suit makes an excuse for a colorful vestee of some sort, and

shoe string belts are also quite the thing.

Serge, gabardines, tricotine, and Poiret twill are the favored mater-

314 . State St.

Ann Arbor

ials, with navy leading as a color.

i

$25 to $7;

Courteous and satisfactory
TREATMENT to every custom-
er, whether the account be large
or small.
Th e Ann Arbor Savings Bank
Incorporated 1869
Capital and Surplus, $550,000.00
Resources ....$4,000,000.00
Northwest Cor. Main & Huron.
707 North University Ave.

...,I

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