4 Feature Section LL 40 41itr Ar t an at t Feature Section VOL. XXXV. No. 157 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 3, 1925 EIGHT PAGES S. C. A. STARTS DRIVE FOR CAMP FUNDS 4, + . Campus Tag Day On May For Boys 5 Will Open Annual Campaign To Finance Student Christian Association Fresh Air Camp Improvements For Permanent Camp At Patterson Lake Form Part Of The 1925 Plans %A Camp Of Benefit To Both Boys And Directors -A- -A- .*+ TINT By Willard B. Crosby UNDREDS of boys accustomed to the smoke and dirt of city life will be given a ten day vacation of rest and play this summer at the Universit y Fresh Air Camp, at Lake Patterson, IF . . . that always necessary hypothe- sis . . . if the students of the University lend their support. This enterprise calls not only for the financial aid of students, but for individual assist- ance as well. Conducted by students and supported by students, the camp is purely an undergraduate undertaking. It is operated by the Student Chris- tian association. A staff of University students, headed by hensis Likert, '26E, will be in charge at the camp. The purpose of the Fresh Air Camp is well known, having been supported for four years by students of the University. It answers the needl for some sort of institution to take care of the un- fortunate children of the city of Detroit, and the other industrial cities of the state. The shores of Lake Patterson, the camp site, will be transformed into a joyous playground for these boys, many of whom will leave the familiar city streets to meet for the first time the freedom of the open. Here they will have a chance to forget the life to which they have been accustomed. They will be shown new sports, new thrills, new wonders, and they may feel the throb of Nature. The summer season will be divided into four ten day periods, from June 17 to July 28. Plans are being made to accommodate 120 boys in each per- iod, making a total of 480 underprivileged boys from the nearby cities who are given an oppor- tunity to reap the benefits of a vacation at the camp. The camp will be made up of deserving boys from twelve to eighteen years of age, carefully se- lected by probation and welfare bureau officers and "Y" scrtaries. Drawn from the homes of the poor, these boys will represent thirteen religious denomi- nations and nearly twice as many nationalities. At camp this heterogeneous assemblage of youngsters becomes united through continual work and play together. Any petty differences are soon forgotten In a game of scrub. Then the lads develop an affection for their lead- ers that often results in a sort of hero worship. The leaders instruct the boys in swimming, games, nature study, and, above all, in fair play. A leader lives in each tent with a group of twelve boys. Leaders and boys associate with one another con- stantly. In this way, the boys acquire a strong af- fection for the leaders and a great respect for their ideal, For the Prevention cf Crime Prisons and all other similar state institutions are filled with men who are the victims of their own childhoods. If these men had been given the right kind of guidance when they were young, many of them would be upright citizens today. If some means had been taken to draw these men away from the environment of crime, they would not be criminal:. The Student Christian association, by means of the Fresh Air camp, is undoubtedly accomplishing a great deal by showing a new sort of life to the many boys who attend the camp each summer. It draws the boys away from the unhealthful environ- ment of the industrial centers and gives them a close association with men of high ideals. Many of the boys who go to the Fresh Air Camp have a badly distorted sense of honesty, so wretched has been their home life and so insufficient their training. One boy last summer came to the camp from a poor family in Jackson. His father, a coal- heaver, had taught the young lad to steal. The re- suit was that. a few days after camp opened, the store money disappered. This fund consisted of thirty of forty cents deposited for safe keeping by each of the boys. An investigation followed. It -con developed that the boy from Jackson had the money. lie finally admitted the theft and returned the money. After this incident, an idea of honesty was drilled into him. Before, he did not seem to know that it was wrong to steal. He was shown awl taught what was right, so that he went back homon knowing honesty and better able to avoid a life o crime. One entire gang of little roughnecks invaded the camp omre summer, proving the source of much trouble during the early part of their stay. The necessary reprimands did not suit their tastes, so they ran away from camp. They were found a few miles away and brought back. The leaders then de - cided to put them to work on the camp roads. Soon the boys became intensely interested in their work. They quieted down and became ardent supporters of the camp. They were so satisfied with their vai- )4.N.% r Il tc " Q { VIEWS IN AND ABOUT the Fresh Air Camp Site at Lake Patterson, Michigan. Sponsored by the S. C. A., the camp has proven an emphatic influence for good among the boys whom it has been able to include. A campus Tag Day will be held Tuesday, May 5, to secure funds for the camp this )ear. We will then have an opportunity .to offer our sup- port to an institution for the real benefit of Michi- gan lads. Speaking of the Fresh Air Camp, Judge George H. Curtis of the Juvenile court at Jackson, in a meeting of interested business men last Wednesday night said: "The camp last year did some of the boys a lot of good. Boys who were giving us a great deal of trouble have not been in court at all during the past winter. Not only so, but in one case which has come to my knowledge, the boy is helping to keep two younger brothers out of trouble. I am certain that straightening out boys' is possible in a camp of this sort. The inspiration seems to stay with them." The history of the Fresh Air Camp goes back to 1921, when the camp first opened. It was due very largely to the efforts of Lewis G. Reimann, '16, that interest was roused in this new undertaking. To the camp he gave his services and all of his time during the summer periods, at the same time in- spiring others to carry on this work. Reimann caused a fund to be created in the Student Chris- tian association for the support and maintenance of the camp. The first camp was held on the shores of. Lake Huron. Handicapped by a lack of facilities, it was possible to offer the advantages of the camp to only 140 boys from Detroit. For thenext two years the location of the came was not permanent. It ex- panded, but nothing definite could ever be planned for succeeding years, no permanent buildings could be constructed, on account of the necessitated shifting of location. Last year, however, a permanent site was do- nated for the camp. One hundred seventy acres of wooded land in the Lake Patterson district, 25 miles north-west of Ann Arbor, was given to the Student Christian association for a perpetual boys' camp by two Ann Arbor men, H. B. Earhart, prest- dent of the White Star Oil company, and M. A Ives. The camp is known as the Virginia R. Ives Memorial camp. The acquisition of this new property makes it posible for the Student Christian association to prepare for a far bigger and great camp in the fu- ture. Permanent buildings are planned, work on which will begin this summer. It is hoped that In the near fture the camp will be able to accommo- date as many as 1,500 boys. The Lake Patterson property is highly desirable as the location of a camp of this kind. It is al- most entirely surrounded by water and is very heavily wooded. Located on a neck of land between Lake Patterson and Bass lake, the camp itself is well situated in one of the few open spaces. The rows of tents, set back on the hillside, overlook Lake Patterson. A hundred yards from the tents stretches a long sandy beach, which forms an ideal bathing spot for the boys. Between the shore and the tents there is a large flat tract of ground that the youngsters have turned into a first-rate base- ball diamond. Building for Permanence Formerly the camp was made up entirely of tents. It was found, however, that some completely waterproof building was needed. Great quantities of water collecting in the canvas roof of the dining hall would seep through on the boys below. This proved to be such a constant source of annoyance that the camp executives, finally determined to pro- vide a new wooden- dining hall that would keep dry in inclement weather. The authorities hope to realize this dream in the coming period of the camp if the necessary fund of $600 can be raised. The intended dining hall will be a building 28 feet by 42 feet with a substantial roof set on log posts. Canvas curtains, which may be lowered on stormy days, will be placed on the sides. Numerous donations, indicating general interest in the welfare of the camp, have been mnade. Among others, a kitchen was given the camp by Mrs. Foote of .Jackson and an outboard motor by the Lock- wood-Ash company of Jackson. It is hoped that one outstanding inconvenienee that has caused much concern in past years may be done away with in the coming season. Formerly the campers have been continually annoyed by the mosquitos that swarmed down on them from the marshes north of camp. Prof. P. S. Welch this year made a study of the mosquito situation at the camp, and upon his recommendation, measures are now being taken to get rid of this pest. One hundred gallons of oil are being poured on the marshes every two weeks. The mosquitos are gradually dis- appearing and will probably be completely extermi- nated before camp opens this summer. Plans for this year's camp are now well under way. Numerous applications for admission to the J 'lhis occasion shculd not rass without some word of comment. Perhaps no crime was committed in Brooklyn which so shocked and outraged all our lpeople. "All of them are unquestionably guilty. One of the outstanding facts in this affair is the age of the offenders. Three of them are but a little more than 21 years old: the fourth only a few years older . "The equally distressing fact is that the age of these offenders is not unusual. Most of the crimi nals are boys and young: men. To be exact, over 80 per cent of them are less than 25 years of age. If the people of Brooklyn ask why so many youths' became criminals, I can tell them. "A dozen years of investigation and experience in these matters have demonstrated that the vast mnajority of all youthful ffnders committed crime because they had bad associates and were not under the priper influence in the years when boyhood was turning into manhood-between the ages of 12 and 18. That is the most important, p'r ol in a boy's life. Then his ideals are acquired, his char- acter formed. In those years, every boy needs to be under the influence of the right hind of a man. He needs such a man's life to supply his ideals and such a man to become his hero. Every boy is a hero worshipper. The reason so many become* criminals is that they ftllow the wrong leaders. Challenge to Manhood "This condition is a challenge to the manhood of our community. What are we men doing? Do we men owe no duty to these boys? Can we longer remain blind to the perils that beset them? Should we not provide places where such boys may meet and play and be entertained and instructed and all the time be under the influence of the men of the right kind? "Shall we turn our backs and ignore existing conditions or shall we accept the challenge and lend ourselves to the task. It's a man's job and it needs red-blooded men who will put something of them- selves into the undertaking. "Men, this is a call to us. Are we awake? Do we hear it? Will our consciences let us ignore it? Shall we not help to make better the boys of today? Should we not begin at once?" Are we going to remain blind to the perils of the American youth? We will have a chance to answer the judge's challenge this week on Tag Day. The Costume Ball of the Architects By F. B. Joslin HE Architect's May Party has now become a firmly established tradition of the Architec- tural College, and with the advent, this week, of the fifth of the large annual May parties, it seems fitting to glance back a few years an'i learn from what h umble beginnings the pretentious par- ties of the present have originated. About. fifteen yearsago, the students of the Architectural College, determined to give a dance. It was planned as a very modest affair, and was h1eld down on Packard street at the Packard D rnc- ing academy. Only students in archtecture at - tended. It seems to have been a success for each succeeding year a similar party was given. These parties came to he known as the '"T-Square Trots'. Most of these early parties were informal and smocks were worn as several of them. Two parties were held in the old Michigan Union, but at neither l;ince that time the May Party has been entirely in the hands of the Architectmral Society, and has been carried out in a more efficient manner anil vwonderfully artistic re'ults obtained, They have based teirA workh largely on suggestions offered by Prof. EmImil Lorch, so that nowV the party resemble3 somewba t the famous Beaux-Arts Eall of Paris. Professor Lorch is one of tle best supporters of the party. 'he faculty of the Architectural Col- loge has. from the ifirst, been favorably disposed toward.s the party and have done all in their power to make it a success. For five years the students in the design classes have been allowed to neglect their class room work temporarily in order to work on the decorat;ons. Tie faculty feels that it is not tirme wasted; on the contrary, many interesting problems are encountered and many valuable le--- sons learned in executing and putting into place the decorations, for which the party has now become famous. novel features that year, besides the beautiful deco- rations. Corsages were given, these being lowered in baskets from the gallery, of Barbour gymnasium where the party was held. Summer informal was worn at this party, as well as at the parties of the two preceding years. This party evoked state wide comment and was up to the time, the most elab- orately decorative party held in Ann Arbor., The Egyptian Party of 1924 was a masterpiece. Never had enthusiasm run so high in the college, or such an ambitious scheme of decoration under- taken. The style chosen was particularly approp.- riate because of the remarkable archaeological dis- coveries being made at the time, and the tremen- dous publicity which was being given old "King Tut", and Egyptian art and architecture. Egyptian art is full of material peculiarly ap- propriate for a decorative scheme, for an architec- tural party. From this rich store the students drew for the various compositions showing the arts