THE WOLVERINE i EXPECT LARGE ENROLLMENT HEALTH SERVICE PLANS TO FOR CAMP AT DOUGLAS LAKE KEEP OPEN DURING SUMMER Sixty engineers have already en- rolled for the summer work in survey- ing at Camp Davis and it is expected that fully 90 students will be on hand to answer the roll call when the work begins next Monday. No particular arrangements for the transporting of the students from Ann Arbor to Douglas lake have been made. They will go direct from their homes or from Ann Arbor individually, and are to report in camp some time be- fore the evening of the 27th of June. Board will be furnished on a co-op- erative basis as was done last year, and will be under student management. Each member of the camp will be obliged to pay only his share of the expenses. Last season this charge for board amounted to $3.57 a week. The university health service will be open to the students of the summer session, and will keep office hours for the men every morning except Sun= days from 9:00 to 12:00 o'clock and for the women, from 9:00 to 11:00 o'clock. The health service is located at 226 S. Ingalls street, and in cases where the student is unable to call for treatment, calls will be made at the student's room on request for a mod- erate fee. A pamphlet entitled "First Aid to the Injured" has been recently published by the service and may be obtained free of charge by calling at the offices. Pictures of the Tappan Bronze will be on sale at Daines & Nickols, 336 S. State immediately after the unveiling. Over Cushings Drug Store. "A BIG BULL IS SOMETIMES BETTER THAN A LITTLE CALF" Once there was a COLLGE GUY who suite, wherein a magnate HELD thought he had a MORTGAGE on the FORTH, and walking past the ROYAL CAMPUS and could FORECLOSE any GUARDIANS who kept the HOI POL- time he wanted to. He was the BIG LOI from running away with THE GUN and knew it. After he had KID- MAGNATE, stepped UP to the DESK, DED the PROFS out of P. B. K. and and said: taken a few LETTERS from the ATH- "Hello, magnate, and how are all the lETIC ASSOCIATION, been president little mags today?" of EIGHTY-TWO organizations, made "What the-"began the magnate, two fraternities and twenty-one HON- reaching for the BUTTON. OR SASSITIES, he waltzed up ONE WELL, the upshot of IT was, that FINE DAY and slipped the proferred EDMUND got a POSITION, which DIPLOMA in his hip pocket, with THE suited HIM BETTER- than a JOB, and REST of the DIPLOMANIACS. Every- instead of GETTING the blue envel- body at COLLITCH was sorry to see ope the FIRST MONTH, he got a raise. EDMUND go, and all prophesied that THEN ANOTHER and then ANOTH- in two MONTHS, he'd be'a KING, or ER. He KNEW JUST where to KID if the KINGSHIPS were all FULL, the KIDDERS, and when to PAT the he'd lope in to SOME QUIET berth as engine on the BACK. HE now owns a magnate, or DICTATOR. And ED- the CONTROLLING interest in 1592 MUND was even SURER of this than CORPORATIONS, and MARRIED the ANY OF HIS DOTING FOLLOWERS. very CO-ED he was ENGAGED to AFTER giving the ALL-ACROSS to while A COLLEGER. the jobs in his TOWN, EDDIE hied to MORAL: 'A BIG BULL IS SOME- the CITY to locate A FIRM THAT TIMES BETTER THAN A LITTLE would appreciate GENIUS. He breez- CALF. ed into A LUXURIOUSLY appointed -By Harold R. Schradzki. I i Repairing of Eye Glasses a Specialty LENSES DUPLICATED FINE WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING Haller Jewelry Co. Telephone 534 308 South State Street The New Catalogue OF THE University. of Michigan IS NOW READY Complete Information concerning seven departments: Collegiate, Engineering, Medicine, Law, Pharmacy, Hom e op ath y, Dentistry and the Graduate Depart- ment and the Summer Session. Special Courses in Forestry, Newpaper Work, Landscape Design, Higher Commercial Education, including Railway Administration and Insurance, Architecture, Conservation Engineering, Pedagogy (affiliated with Ann Arbor Schools for Observation Study), and a course for those preparing for the scientific administration of departments of sanitation and public health. For Copy of Catalogue, Special Announcement. or Individual Information, address S HIRLEY W. SMITH Secretary University A N N A R B O R DiL JAMES SPEAKS AT 70TH EXERCISES (Continued from page 1) building up and supporting these state universities. "You owe a debt to the people of this commonwealth, which you can only return by service to the community." Advises Scientific Spirit "The university man ought, in the second place, to do his work in the community not only in the spirit of service, but in the spirit of science. The whole world at present seems to have become hysterical. Every coun- try in the world is going through a ferment, spiritual, intellectual, moral, the like of which we haven't seen for a century past. The wild antics of suffragets in Great Britain, the blood thirsty orgies in Macedonia, and Tur- key, the terrific and destructive con- tests in Mexico, the conditionof an- archy in Colorado, corresponding con- ditions in Italy, in France, in Ger- many, all seem to -show that some- how or other the world has at cer- tain points gone mad. Urges Women to Marry "You are going out into the world, most of you at any rate, in another relation aside from that of your cal- ling or profession in the ordinary sense of the term. You are going out into society as fathers and mothers, as bread winners, and home makers for the family. I believe that it will be true in the future as in the past, that the average man and the average woman, whether graduates or not, can do their best work for themselves and for the society in a partnership which results in a social unit, effec- tive for social progress. And the wo- man who deliberately chooses this career when the opportunitiy offers itself, or when she makes it for her- self, as every woman can if she will, is choosing a highway to social ser- vice which is far ahead of all teach- ing or library or legal or medical ser- vice she can possibly render to so- ciety. It looks sometimes as if our modern society were giving the hon- ors of social recognition an oppor- tunity, the ease of life, to the bache- lor maid instead of to the wife and mother. the mediaeval period, or from the Roman and Greek period. "Everyone of you," he concluded, "no matter what his business may be, no matter where his lot may be cast, should feel that it is a part of his duty not to be like a dumb, driven beast, drifting with the current, with no attempt to understand it, with no attempt to appreciate what is hap- pening, but like an intelligent, free, hopeful, immortal son of God, to help to do his part, in working out the problem of his civilization." TiREE UNVEILINGS MAIRK ALUMNI DAY and other campus attractions, and short speeches by prominent alumni present made up the program. Hon. W. P. Chamberlain, '84, of Minnesota, expressed a favorable Conference at- titude in a briefwtalkaDeaimnHenry Bates, of the law department and President Harry B. Hutchins repre- sented the faculty. Judge Robert F. Thomson, of Canandaigua, N. Y., was one of the principal factors at the meeting, delighting the audience in his usual droll manner. "The Victors" concluded the program. Form Motley Parade Following the program a parade formed in front of Hill auditorium, each group contributing with a distinc- tive class feature. Blue "jumpers," khaki trousers, a Scotch bagpipe, cow- bells and other distinguishing marks were used by the various classes. A "boat" was the mark of the '03 class, supported by a group of white-clad men and women of the class. At the ball game, the classes were arranged. in blocks, cheering individually and collectively. The program of the day was con- cluded by the Senate reception in the Alumni merorial hall last night, at which members of the senate and their wives received the graduates, and their relatives and friends. Buy your kodak films and supplies at Sugden Drug Co., 302 S. State. tf. We buy peanuts in car loads and roast daily. Only ten cents for a full pound. Dean & Co. 1-3. CAMPUS IN IIRIEF The Michigan Union, for te first time in it shistory, will take boarders during the summer session. The board will begin with next Monday at a cost of $5.50 a week. Manager Heath an- nounced yesterday that a few more men could be accommodated. A few places are still left for board in the cafe at the Michigan Union. The dining room, which will keep open during the entire summer ses- sion, will accommodate 40, and regu- lar board will be served at $5.50 a week. Anyone desiring one of the re- maining places is asked to leave his name at the Union. Librarian Theodore W. Koch re- turned Sunday afternoon from Leip- zig, where he represented the Ameri- can Library a.cciatin at the lIter- national Exhibition of the Book In- dustry and Graphic Arts. Change Union Danc: Schedui The union dance scheduled for Fri- day has been postponed. The first dance will be given on July 4, and weekly dances will follow throughout the summer on every Saturday night instead of on Friday as announced. PHOTOGRAPUER 319 E. Huron St. PHONE 961-M Chubb House 209 South State Street Under the Original Management Summer Board $4.00 " TASTER LIKE HOME " C. S. Chubb Prop. J. Q. Neeland Steward Coolness Quietness Excellent Service Unsurpassed Cookery These are some of the high principles which go into MACK'S Tea.Room There are other elements which delight and please our guests during a dainty lunch- eon here. Open during Store hours. Ladies Rest and Corres- pondence Room in connection. MACK & co. j Cor. Main and Lierty Describes New Equality "We are putting a new meaning in- to the word equality today, which is just as different and as far ahead of the idea which lay in Lincoln's mind, as the notion he associated with it was different from that of Thomas Jefferson. By equality today, we mean not mere equality before the law, but equality of opportunity. And we are beginning to consider that equality of opportunity to be the right of every human being by virtut of the fact that he is a human being, and the adoption of this principle as a positive rule of action will make the society into which you are going, and which you will help to make over and change, as different from the society which we know today, as this is from LYNDON, PHOTOGRAPHER Ann Arbor's Headquarters for Kodaks, Cameras and Photo Supples I make a Specialty of developing, Printing and Enlarging for Amateurs --by iodern Methods. This has been my business for so years and it has increased every day-only results will do this and so whenever you want anything photographic look for the sign of the kodak- thats where things LNove. 719 N. University Kodaks for 10c per day