THE MICHIGAN DAILY .SNVI "BARGAINS!" "BARGAINS!" EDUCATORS MEET 1HERE NEXT WEEK' i faculty flembers Back FPresident Special Bargains IN SUITS--$32.00 With Extra Pants-$38.50 Polo Shirts $2.00 College Stripe Ties $1.00 Bow Ties 75c Sheeplined Coats $15.00-$17.00--$18.50 Suede Moleskin $18.00 Ulsterette Coats $20.00 Wool Vest $4.00 Wool Hose 75c to $1.50 Conference of Mississippi For Representatives Froml Valley Schools Set Dec.8, 9, 10 E. J. SCHNEIDER 1119 SOUTH UNIVERSITY AVE. GOSH! I WISH I KNEW SHORTHAND! Don't ask your neighbor to explain what the Prof. just said. You can get it yourself if you know Stenography. Don't spend frantic hours before the exams. copying lecture notes and "getting dope" on "what he likes." You will have all in your book if you know Stenography. In that debate, you can keep track of all that is presented and note down your refutation and retorts as well if you know Stenography. A SAMPLE LESSON FREE is for a limited time offered to students of the UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN to show you that you can learn stenography by mail. Back of this offer, stands the AROND SCHOOL OF STEN- OGRAPHY - one of the most successful in the East. s Without undertaking any obligation of any kind, you judge for yourself what you can do.. I We want you to see that you can learn by our method and how we teach. For a short period, the fee for THE COMPLETE COURSE, in- cluding 'the standard text-book used in the New York City High Schools, willbe r15. Don't dilly-dally. Write at once for your free Sample Lesson to PROMINENCE ON PROGRAM GIVEN VOCATIONAL PROBLEMS In response to a request from rep- resentatives of the institutions con-4 cerned, the United States commission- er of education has called a "confer- ence of men from institutions in thet Mississippi valley states engaged in1 training teachers of the manual arts and industrial education," of white schools, to be held in Ann Arbor on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Dec. 8, 9 and 10. Prof. George E. Myers of the education department will direct the conference. The chairman of the program is William T. Bawden, as- sistant to the commissioner of the United States Bureau of Education. Each institution in this territory has been requested to send a representa--' tive to the conference, and the depart- ment of public instruction in each state of the territory is also invited to send members. It is expected that more than twelve states will take part in the meetings. President Marion L. Burton, Dean. Allen S. Whitney and Prof. George Myers are listed among the speakers at the conference. C. F. Kleinfelter of the Federal Board of Vocational Edu- cation at Washington, will also speak, as well as prominent educators throughout the vicinity. Various phases of the problem of vocational education will be taken up, as well as problems of teaching by correspondence. E. T. Filbey, acting director of the vocational bureau of the Detroit public schools will open the conference on the morning of De- cember 8 with a discussion of the influence of the vocational motive in the choice of curricula by high school students. SUTO KELP UM SHORTAGE LUNCH PROBLEM RECOGNIZED AS SERIOUS OBSTACLE TO INNOVATION Present congestion in class rooms may necessitate the using of the hour from 12 to 1 o'clock as a class period, acocrding to the opinions of many of the faculty. Registrar Arthur G. Hall states that the practical problem facing the Uni- versity in the establishment of this in- novation is whether the restaurants, eating houses and fraternities would be willing to extend their lunch hour so as to take care of those having twelve o'clocks. The manifest problem to such an ar- rangement is whether student help could be secured at these different hours. Those managers of eating houses who have been interviewed object to twelve o'clock classes on the ground that it would necessitate an addition- al force of waiters and make the work heavier for the regular help. Registrar Hall stated that so far as the instructors are concerned they would, on the whole, welcome such an arrangement because it would mean that their classes would be over by one o'clock. "Reassure the President" is the slogan under which various copies of a letter bearing on the limitation of armaments confersnee are being sign- ed by university Faculties and trans- mitted to President Id