THE MICHIGAN DAILY OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Published every morning except Monday during the Univer- year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for lblication of a1 news dispatches credited to it or net otherwise ited in this paper and the local news published therein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second s matter. Subscription by carrier or mail, $3.5o. Offices: Ann Arbor Press building, Maynard Street. Phones: Business, 96o; Editorial, 2414. Communications not to exceed 300 words, if signed, the Sig- re not necessarily to appear in ptnt, but as an evidence of . and notices of events will be published in The Daily at the retion of the Editor, if left at or mailed to The Daily office. igned communications will receive no consideration. No mnan- ipt will be returned unless the writer incloses postage. The Daily does not necessarily endorse the sentiments ex- ised in the communications. "What's Going On" notices will not be received after g o'clock he evening preceding insertion. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 2414 NAGING EDITOR ............GEORGE 0. BROPHY JR. s Editor.......... ............Chesser V Campbell rman Editorial Board........................Lee Woodruff ht Editors- T. H*. Adams H. W. Hitchcock j). I. Dakin J. E. McManis Renaud Sherwood T. W. Sargent, Jr. Lay Editor............ ....... ...-... A.. eritein Editor........ ... B. P. Campbell orials*..............T. . Whinery, L. A. Kern, S. '. Beach ts ......................Robert Aigell nen's Editor...........................Mary D. Lane graph ...........---. .++... ..-......Thomas Dewey scope .... ............................-....E. R. Meiss Assistants pline Waldo Frank H. McPike Sidney B. Coates IG. Weber J. A. Bacon C. T. Pennoyer beth Vickery W. W. Ottaway Marion B. Stahl ge Reindel Paul Watzel Lowell S. Kerr ry B. Grundy Byron Darnton Marion Koch ces Oberholtzer M. A. Klaver Dorothy Whipple rt E. Adams Walter Donnelly Gerald P. Overton ace F. Elliott Beata Hasley Edward Lambrecht ston MeBain Kathrine Montgomery Sara Waler enough money for the carrying out of plans for a model high school which will be erected as soon as possible. With this equipment, it is hoped the cry- ing needs for teachers. throughout the state'can be satisfied and greater steps can be made in the study of educational science. The goal of the new school is to attract all prospective teachers from the va- rious colleges and to unite them in a single college so that they can get special training and understand the requirements of education as a distinct profes- sion. With the installation of its new college of edu- cation Michigan stands ready to carry out a plan that it has longed hoped to make a reality. The fact that under the new arrangement we will have fa- cilities for instruction in education equal to those of any similar school in the country gives addi- tional evidence that the University is one that keeps up with the needs of the times. A BOOK FOR GRADUATION FROM G R A H A M S I BOTH ENDS O F THE DIAGONAL WALK __._- PYV H. E,. Howlett BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 960 ESS MANAGER..........LEGRAND A. GAINES, JR. sing .............. ...... ..-..D-P--Joyce ds .................,.... ........S. Kunstadter tion ............................F M. Heath ts. ..............................-..... R. Priehs tion..................................V. F. Hillery Assistants Lambrecht M. M. Moule H. C. Hunt Hamel, Jr. N. W. Robf.rtson M. S. Goldring . Hutchinson Thos. L. Rice H. W. Heidbreder Cross R. G. Burchell W. Cooley L. Davis A. J. Parker W J. H A. )bt. THE STAGE HERO Age-long moments of tense silence - the slam- mimg of a door far backstage - anticipation on the faces of the' minor actors on the stage and the program-fluttering spectators - and then, strutting and magnificent and borne in amid a sudden swish of ecstatic whispering and a quick spontaneous clap of applause - the star! Who has not learned to look forward to this dramatic and skilfully prepared moment of the mod- ern drama? We are all worshippers of stage pres- ence; the great men of our imaginations are all sur- rounded with a nimbus of the sort of thing which we would seldom tolerate in our familiars and which we abstractly despise as "side" and "bluff". When Otis Skinner swashbuckles out upon the stage in some such role as the old officer of Na- poleon in "The Honor of the Family" he catches the quick-stirred flame of romance that lies so near the surface in the soul of youth. He and his kind are masters in the art of magnificent poise and clamant personality. When the romantic hero im- plies "I am the sun" we take his word for it; and whether the plot makes him a delicious rake, an old-school gentleman, a buccaneer or a charmingly stone-age crook, we pay him again the tribute of human nature. The ego has command of us in life's routine, and we hate to admit inferiority to those in our own little universe; but the minute we can get out of the range of galling comparison, our hero-worship instincts climb on top. The stage hero satisfies one of life's great human longings. rIThe Telescope An Infernal Trick An introduction always has Been rather difficult for me, And if I failed to catch the name, I'd say, "Is it spelled 'i' or 'e'?" But once my system didn't work, It surely failed to fill the bill; 'The girl I met, and sprang it on, Was peeved, because her name was Hill. Today's wax mattress is awarded to the individ- ual who wants to know if a "letter of credit" is a capital letter. DETROIT UNITED LINES In Effect Nov. 2, 1920I Between Detroit, Ann Arbor and Jackson (Eastern Standard Time) Limited and Express cars leave for Detroit at 6: 05 a. in., 7:05 a. in., 8:10 a. in., and hourly to 9:10 p.:in. Limilteds to Jackson at 8:48 a. in. and every two hours to 8:48 p. in. Ex- presses at 9:48 a. in. and every two hours to 9:48 p. in. Locals to Detroit-5:55aan., 7:00 a.m. and every two hours to 9:00 p. in., also 11:00 p. m. To Ypsilanti only, 11:40.p.m., 12:25 a.m., and 1:15 a.m. Locals to Jaikson-7:b0 a. m., and 12:10 p.m. 1921 JUNE 1921 S. M~. T. W. T. F. S. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 PAN AMAS We Clean, Bleach and Block Panamas, etc., into the Late Shapes, with all new trimmings to look just like new. We don't use any acids and do only High Class Work. Factory Hat Store, 617 Packard St. Phone 1792. t'W.Uashtenaw Electric Shop 200 East Washingtorn Street I ' ii Increase your business by advertis- ILet a classified ad find lng in The Michigan Daily.--Adv. tiele.-Adv. that lost ar- Electric Fans for the warm days to come- 1 i i .. Bring Your Guests /I Telephone 273 To 7- - 7--7 Persons wishing to secure information concerning news for any 4 Iswue of The Daily should see the night editor, who has full charge of all news to be printed that night.- SUNDAY, JUNE 5, 1921. Night Editor-HUGHSTON McBAIN. SEND A KID TO CAMP The Michigan Fresh Air Camp which will be placed before the students on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, presents a two-fold op- portunity for service. Firstly, financial aid may be given by all; secondly, half a hundred men may serve at the camp as counselors, molding the character of boys still at impressionable ages. The unqualified success of the permanent camps maintained by the universities of Pennsylvania and Princeton is cause for the belief that the Michi gan camp may be equally successful. Provost-emer- itus Edgar F. Smith, of Pennsylvania, says: "The camp is one of the most helpful instruments in the uplift of the boys. A new life is opened to them." George W. Perkins, secretary to Postmaster Gen- eral Hays, says of the Princeton camp: "The Princeton summer camp ranks at the top of tihe ac- tivities of the Philadelphian society." The plan is particularly of the American type of philanthropy. It is not charity of an indiscrimin- atory nature encouraging poverty. Each boy must meet his helpers half way. Most important, per- haps, is that the boy is taken out of his old en- vironment and put under the upbuilding influence of the great-out-of-doors. Many cases are on record of boys who were made valuable citizens by these camps. Supeintendent James Barrett, dean of the evening school of Drexel institute, was started right when he romped, played, swam, ate, slept and lived with college men for two weeks in a fresh air camp away from the degrad- ing influence of the slums. Alumni plan to furnish the site and equipment for the camp. The campus is asked by the student committee to give $1,500 to pay the expenses of one hundred and fifty boys at this summer's camp. Five dollars will send a kid to camp for a week. Why not get behind the committee and see that the whole one hundred and fifty get a chance to go? TIHE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION What is undoubtedly one of the most important steps that has been made in the educational life of the State of Michigan is the recent establishment of a school of education at the University. Coming after fifteen years of untiring work on the part of the educational department, it marks the attain- ment of another goal set by President James B. An- gell when in 1879 he recognized the responsibility of the University to provide the state with edu- cational leaders and brought about the establish- rnent of a chair of the Science and the Art of Teaching. Although Michigan was the first to establish such a department ard the last to change its policy and make it into a separate school the new plan satis- fies a need that the state has long felt. With the reorganization a great deal can be ac-- complished that was heretofore impossible because of dependence upon other colleges. The primary aim .ofthe school is to emphasize teaching as a pro- fession. It will endeavor to do this by turning out competent teachers who will have had a training similar to the laboratory courses of other profes- Sunday Dinner MENU SOUP Willits' Best Wafers Olives Radishes Roast Sirloin Beef Brown Gravy Fricasseed Chicken with Biscuit Creamed Lima Beans Mashed Potatoes Salad Rolls DESSERT Huckleberry Pie Strawberry Shortcake with Whipped Cream Strawberry Sundae Vanilla Ice Cream Tea Coffee Milk Iced Tea 12:00 to 2:00 P. M.-PrIce $1.00 COME EARLY Not Open Sunday Evening WILLITS' CAFE Phone 173 315 South State Chinese Garden Most Popular Restaurant in the City I I YOUR CHOICE OF AMERICAN AND OINESE COOKING SPECIAL MENUS FOR SUNDAY AND DURING COMMENCEMENT li AMERICAN MANAGEMENT 106 SOUTH MAIN STE UP STAIRS "GE T THE HABIT" 1 A Qouth Eppie Taff: Here lies a man named Bennie Starte, Who used cell number ten; He thought his name was Bonaparte, But it was only Ben. Our Latest Song Entitled: "Short Skirts Are Wonderful for Getting Stares." kY; . Portable Phonographs. FOR YOUR OU TINGS Up The senior elections were all taken in fun ttil the girls tried to decide who was the cam'us flirt. Page the state troops. The Game Even if the gargoyle fellers couldn't play ball, they certainly did sport some flashy knicker- bockers. And, by the way, most of the boys from the funny journal believed in that old adage, "It is safer to cover the face than to cover the base". Stolen Thunder Miss Newlywed:-Milkman, do you keep your cows in a pasture? Milkman-Why, of course, ma'am. Miss N. W.-Goody! Fred does so love pas- teurized milk. - The Aggie Squib, Feeling that by this time she knows us sufficiently well, L. H. L. has petitioned us to call her "Erma", and at the same time submitted the following Weir- ian product of a sudden burst of inspiration: Yellow, yellow, yellow, A yellow sun ; Brown white and white brown, A yellow sun; Cold, cold, cold, Cold and slippery and greasy, Slippery and oily and slimey, A yellow sun, Greasy, slimy, slippery, A cold fried egg. AKE music along on your week-end outing or on your evening canoe trip. yourself more if you do. You'll enjoy E HAVE received a new lot of Portable Phonographs. These, together with our ex- cellent line of Victor and Brunswick Records, will help you solve your vacation music problem. Thutwr*311t usir nixse hrs. A.M. loat'. I finlMI 1- 105 u Wllam $'trrdt Famous Closing Lines brush you off," said the telegraph pole to "I'll