I . in
6 IN FRANCE
SIIUII
U~tUaLs 1 oJuay
U. S. Air Methods
1,
nce ; fif-
line per
i
ard makes
exchanged,
,L
Phone 1718
1-tfr
p.
,{ ,l ..
. i _
den only 60' miles. Own-
ar. ee A. H: Pollard at
e,, 209 S. State St. after
U.F.N.
>om house close to State
le for instructor. Can
for only $5,800.60. Gor-
tate Agency, Wuerth Ar-
8-2
Bargain for quick sale.
t with double case, $20.
1026 E Univ 8-2
>om house with large lot
garage. Southeast sec-
$500.00 down. Gorton
e Agency, Wuerth Ar-
8-2
Ford Touring, good con-
holstered seats. Cheap
ale. Call 1322-R, 7p-2
VG housed close to Cam-
can, be had for $100.00'
he other, mostly funish-
9.00 down. Gorton Real
acy, 'Wuerth Arcade. 8-2
WAITIP
ngle room near campus,
ir. Address box zz care
- and give particulars.
6-3.
Student to work nights
unch.' Also students to'
ash. dishes. Jobs, good.
r and next fall. Apply'
Leon Trotsky
Leon Trotsky, Soviet war lord, is a
disciple of Napoleon's famous teach-
ing, "God is on the side of the heav-
iest artillery." He has devoted his
genius to mobilizing the Red forces'
iito strength that causes Russia's en-
emies to have respect for her strong
arm.
Wants Medical
Degree By Maild
Professor Sanders of the department
of Latin, is at present in Paris. Dur-
ing toe past month he ahs traveled
extensively in Spain and England and
an interesting account concerning his
observations abroad is anticipated.
Professor Sanders Is expected to re-
turn the later part of September.
For the past several years Profes-
sor Sanders has been at work invest-'
igating original sources o fthe New
Testament and has contributed ex-
tensively to works upon the subject,
During the past year his place has
been filled by Prof. G. C. Scpggin. 1
Editorial Comment
(Continued from Page Two)
-plates the alternative of turning over
the ultimate responsibility of manage-
ment to college faculties, the impossi-
bility of a change soradicalbecomes
obvious. If -there are trustees. who
are narrow-minded, intclerant, and
reactionary, there are also teachers
who are impractical, shallow and rad-
ical. The problem is to find a happy
mean which shall insure to our great
centers of learning full freedom of;
speculation and research, and at the ,
same time retain in their service
sanity in management and wise ment-
al balance in administering the funts
available for edcation.
These questions are suggested not
so in.uch by the recent upheaval in a
New England college which has re-
sulted in changes in the faculty as by
the naive wail emanating from an
institution headed by the president ofc
the United States Chamber of Com-e
merce and aimed at what it considersI
to be a movement to oust college trus'-
tees from all but an economic interestC
in education. Whether there, is any
real need for a paid propaganda tot
"counteract the tendency to belittle
the trustee's usefulness to higher Xd1h-
cation" may be doubted.. But ft is a
healthy sign to find an element that"
sometimes holds itself deaf to ';ritic-
ism, ignoring any opinion external tol
itself and regarding its own functions
to be akin to a divine trust for the
administration of which it is answer-u
abilt solely to heaven, getting rcstiv
under attack and anxious to set it-
self right before the bar of public
opinion. ,
1 (am E Te 3unaaUy ing of 1,000 rooms
ected'here next yE
Miss Eleanore Hutzel of Detroit, di-
rector of Woman's division of the Po- Woodmen Bul
lice Department, will speak at the San Antonio, Jul
Congregational church Sunday Noon Modern Woodmen
Forum, July 1, on "Girls , and the new tuberculosis sa
Night Life of the Great City." Miss new tuberculosis sa
Hutzel has had a great deal of un- 1,500 patients.
usual experience as a social worker
and the story which she will tell is; Movies Teach F
based on her efforts to protect young' Paris, June 29.-(
girls from the temptations of city fare being used in ma
life. out the country-to t
and better methods
Warsaw to Build Skyscraper
Warsaw, June 29.-(By A.P.)-This Get good values
will be the first city in Europe to have Classified columns.-
LAST TIMETC
Florence Vidor in "Dusk to
COMING SUNDAY-
MARY ALDEN in "A Woman's W(
T LAST TIME T
DONSTANCE TA LMADGE in SA UCE FOR T1
rene
ny t
each
of
'>
Di
Oirr
Strange requests are received daily
in the University mail. Yesterday a
letter was received' in the Graduate
school from P. N. Gupta of Calcutta,
India, in which the writer asked that
a "diploma in public health" be
sent to him by mail. He stated that
he would remit the necessary fee if
the authorities here would inform him
concerning the amount.
This is the first time that an East
Indian has written for a degree in
"public health," although-,the impres-
sion exists in some foreign countries
that a degree from the University,
can be "purchased" for a sum of mon-
ey. Graduates Qf foreign universities
have frequently written to the Uni-
versity requesting for doctor's degrees
after they have completed their work
at home.
Gupta is a graduate of an East In-
dia medical college and health officer
of Calcutta.
Negro Suicides Here
Dave Heater, negro, wanted in De-
troit for the murder of his wife and
sister-in-law, committed suicide in his
rooms on Fourth avenue late Thurs-
day night.
Heater left letters confessing the
Detroit murders.,
Summer School Law books. New
and second-hand at Wahr's.-Adv.
Captain Cabral
Captain Cabral, Portuguese naval
aviator who flew across the Atlantic
from Lisbon to Rio de Janeiro, now
is on his way to America to study
aviation methods here.
West Hall To Pass
As Campus Site
Historic, old West hall is going. The
dilapidated brfck structure standing
on State St., which has housed the
Rhetoric department : for the past
twenty-one years, will be torn down
some time within the . next two
months, according to Mr. Shirley W.
Smith, Secretary of the University.
Back in 1860 when West hall was
just completed and was considered an
excellent speciment of modern build-
ing, it was used as a ward school,
and continued in that capacity until
1902 when the city authorities con-
demned it as unfit for public school
use. ' The University then purchased
the building and land from the city
for $16,000, and from that time until
the present day, West hall has daily
witnessed the comings and goings of
many generations of students. The
building is hard to heat, difficult to
keep clean, and almost impossible to
ventjlate; but the antique, benches
bear hundreds of pen-knifed initials
of students long departed, and the
tiles on the second floor. have housed
the first attempts of scores of literary
aspirants. .
The land which the building occu-
pies will be landscaped and lawned,
and will thus serve as a frontage for
Betsy Barbour and Helen 'Newberry
halls. The rhetoric department,
ejected from the home which it has
occupied for more than two decades,'
will move to the new high school
building this fall, and will remain
there until the new Literary building,
its permanent home, will be complet-
ed.
S
,.
r
3
Today and Sunda
The way to a man's heart is-?
This girl's idea was
"BE A DEVIL"t
Wear ultra-modern clothes.
Let him see you in a bathing suit.
furnished apart-
running water,
35 per month for
year if desired.
S-3
the
will
part of silver fountian
to Miss Hughes, Reg-
University Hall. 7p
black bill fold. Con-
bills. Call 2630=R.: 7p
ELLANEOUS
IN BILBIE, Teacher of
,aind Harmony (on fac-
)etroit Conservatory of
ake pupils through the
07 N. Main St. Phone
4p-21
and up at the Pre-in-
PHOTO-CRAFT SHOP,
:m for four more board-
table. Private family,
ngton St. Phone 2448-.
8-2
TRYOUTS WANTED FOR
SUIMMER DAILY STAFF
Tryouts for the editorial and
business staffs of the summer
Daily are wanted. Students de-
siring to do any work of this
kind are requested to consult
with the managing editor be-
tween 7 and 8 o'clock any night
{ this week at the publication of-
fices in the Press Building.-
The Daily affords practical
- training in newspaper work both
in the editorial and business de-
~ partments.
i i i
i
-,,
i
i
i
i
i
Trustees have much to do besides
raising money ,for the colleges and
universities in their care. It Is right
that there should be a single directing
authority, wise in guidance and just
always in its judgments. A too com-
mon mistake has been to consider the
educational and administrative func-
,tions of a college as-separate entities,,
having nothing in common. If big f1-'
nance and big business are essential
to the promotion of higher education,
not less vital are the men ofslearning
without whom the institutions of
higher learning would be a sham and
a delusion. If the awakening of kthe
trustees advocated by the authors of
the pronunciatlamento to which re-
ference has been made has no other
effect than to arouse public discus-
sion, it will not have been entirely
useless . For what is plainly needed
is less isolation on the part of trus-.
tees and faculties and a closer un-
derstauding and co-operation. If some
boards of trustees need making over
with a new personnel, some college
faculties are equally in need of an in-
fusion of new blood. This should be
the ultimate aim of the public discus-
sion which is being invited..
l
,
i
i
Che
a.
SHOWS
2.00
3:30°
The person who said that "clothes
make the man" didn't go far enough.
= The Heart Raider proves that clothes
make the man fall in love. Vut you
- should see those clothes!
~1lIllllIlllIlulJIllllllllllillll ill lI1111111111|
Also FIGHTING BLOOD SERIES .
ROUND SEVEN
DANCING every night exceit Sunday
at Island Lake (near Brighm n,
Mich.) Special July Fourth cele-
bration, with fire works. Thios'
Orchestra from Detroit.-Adv.
L-
Ii
1
; ;
I,
1,
y 'Just call' 964. when you have
want.-Adv.
Patronize The Daily advertisers.
a
S
- - - - - - - - - - -
! K
I r
,: ;.
.. - i
[MER
lUshed
Daily
Thruout
the
Summer
r
I
SVBSCRI BE
TODAY
.. . . .
f. 7
a
PHONE 960, OR COME UP
TO THE PRESS BLDG
d
OR MAILED ANYWHERE
STUDENTS READ
U
U