THE WOLVERINE fq flicts there is a point beyond which a material. It is at once a politi victory would be to the victor as dis- philosophy and a religion. It is sr astrous as to the deefated. In every ual as well as temporal. It appea struggle for existence, co-operation the bosoms as well as to the bus wins more than rivalry or triumph. of humanity. If It could be sum However beneficial economic group up in one word that word woul consciousness has been in times past 'Justice.' or may be when wisely led in the fu- "As educators we ask for better ture, it will cease to be beneficial better training and higher respec whenever a group loses consciousness teachers, better school houses in w of the higher claims of the community to teach, better equpment for to in which they live. ing, better playgrounds for recrea "The group consciousness of women better conditions, not only in the se I aeeking redress from further continu-: ance of ancient wrongs should haveI a consideration all its own. It is not a narrow issue like a community con-1 sciousness or a race consciousness or an economic consciousness. It in- cludes the whole orb of life. tI is men-{ tal and moral as well as physical and but in the home, for children that to be taught. We wish school trus with broad culture and high .sj tions. We wish communities infi with a fuller and clearer underst; ing of the importance of education of the supreme value of the sere of those that devote their lives to THE "Y" INN -:- at Lane Hall GOOD HOME COOKED FOOD ATTRACTIVE DINING ROOM BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CAMPUS Work Begun on Spanish Monument Madrid, June.30.-Work has begun n a monument to be placed here in emory of Spanish sailors killed at antiago (Cuba) and Cavite (Philip- ne islands) during the Spanish- merican war. MAJESTIC MAJESTIC ORCIESTRA Nightly--All Shows Sunday July 2-House rented to the "Grotto." Not open to the public. " Jumly 5-4-S' "Au.t+ on of Souis" TEACHERS LECTURE ON EDUAINLPROBLEMS (Continued from page four) their country, have become investors in its securities," stated J. I3. Puel- icher, director of savings, seventh fed- eral district, Milwaukee, speaking on "The Thrift Lesson of the War." "In many states, lessons in thrift have be- come a part of the school curriculum. In this way, much has been done to counteract the undermining tendency ever present with great prosperity. "The necessities of war have thught to'the adult and to the child, lessons in thrift and conservation far exceeding any 'easonable expectation. The im- petus, gained should now be fostered and directed into permanent channels so that these valuable lessons of the war may become a part of our na-1 tional life," out. it.' When thus put on a material- :of little moment. The second is more istic basis, industry condemned higher lasting and more momentous, but as education as a hindrance to financial =we are striving to rid our people of success. The arrangement of educa- their racial differences and of their tion as a failure in efficiency had old world customs, to the end that all grown bitter when the great war ex- may merge into a common conscious- ploded most o* our pet theories- ness of American citizenship, we can greatly lessening the value of 'effi- have no responsibility with rospect to ciency' and opening the way for new any sort of race consciousness among attitudes toward the aim and value us, save that of teaching, preaching of education. and practicing genuine Americanism, "We are just entering the third phase first, last and all the time. Lunch and Dinner $5.00 per week, or separate meals Lunch-11 :45 to 1:00-40 cents Dinner-5:30 to 6:30-50 cents Service Table d'Hote ' -' W UERTH THEATRE 2:00, 3:30, 7:00. 8:30, 10:00 Tues-We-1-2--George Walsh In "Put- ting One Over" with a Lloyd Comedy, "Spring Fever" an dtheylatest News Weekly. Remember always a "Kino- gram" on these days of each week, Thurs- Fr-3-4---Oliva Thonmas in "To- Ton" with a two-reelh L-Ko Comedy, "All Jazzed Up." FRIDAY-4th-SPECIAL-REPORTS BY ROUNDS OF THE WILLARD-DEMP- SEY FIGHT, Sat -5 - Helene Chadwick in "Caleb Piper's Girl" with a News and Com- edy. ORPHEUM THEATRE 2:00, 3:30, 7:00, 8:30, 10:00 Tues-ed-1-2-Corinne Griffith in "Thin Ice" with "THE SILENT MYSTERY" N§ 7. Thurs-3-Lila Lee in "Such a Little Pirate"(ret.) with a News and Comedy., Fri-4-John Barrymore in "The Test of Honor," Also News and Comedy, and RETURNS BY ROUNDS OF THE WIL- LARD-DlEM1SEY FIG HT.° Sat-5-William S. Hart in "The Border Wireless" with a News and Comedy. Sun-Mon-6-7-Montagu Love in "The Hand Invisibe" with a Mutt & Jeff Cartoon Comedy, and Ford Weekly. 11 If "There have been two great impulses toward education in the United States. First the desire for personal culture-j an inheritance from the aristocratic ideal of Europe. The second impulse came with the sudden commercial ex- pansion of our great Middle Western cities,"said Miss Eleanor N. Adams, president Oxford College for Women, speaking on "Increasing Group Con- sciousness Among Women as Regards Education." "The lower school urged High School on its puipls as a means of getting on in the world. The High Sc'hool sent its pupils to college with the motto, 'I can make more moAey with a college education than with- Shows at 3:00; 7:00; 8:30 Phones: Theatre, 2g6-M Mgr's Res., 2316-M Tue-Wed-1-2-Doris Kenyon in "Twi- light;" Star Comedy, "Taking Things Easy" and News Weekly. Thu-Fri--3-4-Alice Brady in "The In- destructible Wife;" Christie Comedy, "A Rustic Romeo" and Ford Weekly. Sat-5-May Allison in "Castles in the Air;" "You Know Me Al" Comedy and Bruce Scenic. of our educational impulses in this country-intensive training for good citizenship and service to society. This latter ideal has not sprung as a Phoenix from the ashes of the old sys- tem, for its foundations have been carefully laid by many earnest work- ers who only lacked the support of public opinion in the rearing of their superstructure. As a rule the educa- tion of any individual terminates with the necessity to go to work; the prac- tical value of his education is of pass- ing moment. This haphazard method cannot keep up with the constant change in intellectual, industrial and civic needs. A certain group conscious- ness among women of these unsatis- factory conditions are observable as far back as the formation of the Kin- dergarten association, followed in rapid siccession by mothers' clubs, parent-teachers' associations and other agencies which promote intel-; ligent co-operation between teacher and home. All these efforts have been stabilized by the activities of the Fed- eration of Women's clubs." "The greatest obstacle to securing9 life giving fresh air to school children is the belief on the part of the busi- ness men on the school board and the engineers and janitors in the schools that artiicial ventilation is a Heaven sent institution! When these indi- viduals are converted, and teachers made health enthusiasts by sound courses in the normal schools on child health and feeding: when parents learn that stale overheated air is a poison both at school aid at home, and we all work on the principle that, health habits are the fundamentals of education-then it will no longer be necessary for a child to ask as one did in Chicago-'Say, Doctor, how sick's a feller got to be to get into this here open air school?" said Miss Alice1 H. Wood, of the Elizabeth McCormick fund, Chicago, speaking on "A Practic- al Demonstration in Health Educa- ion" "The lessons of the draft showed us that the homes and the schools of the nation had not been successful in pro- ducing a vigorous young manhood 100 per cent eff*lent for national defense. The homes and the schools must.now combine to improve their human pro- duct," "There are many forms of group con- sciousness among the people of our time. There is a community conscious- ness of local interests as distinct from those of other communities. There is among immigrants and their descend- ants a racial consciousness of peculiar customs and creeds; there is a class consciouness among groups of work- Ingmen of their economic solidarity in conflict with capitalism. There is a consciousness among an increasing class of women of the essential unity of their rights as women to readjust the existing social order so far as it is confused by any injustice surviving from a bygone age," stated Miss Mar- garet S. McNaught, commissioner of elementary schools, Saqramento, Cal., in her speech on "Responsibility in Group Consciousness."1 "The group consciousness of com- munities and of races need not concern us long. We may dismiss the first be- cause one American community is so much like another that any conflict of "There remain the two forms of group consciousness that have a claim upon our attention, our study and our energies; the laborers' consciousness that they are entitled to a larger share of the profits of their labor than they have had in times past or have now; and the consciousness of wom- en that they are entitled to a larger share in the world's work, the world's rewards and the world's honors. "The consciousness of opposing eco- nomic interests between labor and capital is the outcome of the change that has come over the industrial con- ditions of the people of the United States in the developments of the past 50 years." * * * "Great gains have come to labor and through labor to the nation, as a re- sult of the class consciousness of workingmen. In the old ays, it was only here and there that some man more strong, more skillful, or with larger business capacity than his com- rades rose by good fortune from the ranks of the ill-paid hired men to the ranks of the employing class; but now by unity of effort and class co-opera- tion, all workingmen have advanced to a higher standard of living than was possible 50 years ago. "Today, however, this class con- sciousness menaces the prosperity of civilization. Wisely led it has the Spotency of becoming 'one of the highest contructive forces mankind has ever exerted; but ill-directed it is porten- tous of industrial disturbance, civil discord and ruin. "As education did not cause this class consciousness, neither can it set it aside. Our responsibility in connec- tion with it therefore begins and ends with our duty as educators to con- tinually remind both the contending 'groups of their solidarity with the gen- eral interests of the community and of the nation. That solidarity is the base upon which rests alike the pros- perity of both capital and labor. Each side must be brought to understand beyond all-doubting that in their con- DORIS KENYON Supported by FRANK MILLS-a U. of M. Man -IN- "TWILIGHT" By VINGIE E. ROE A DELIGHTFUL LOVE STORY OF TWO YOUNG FOLKS P. S. Harrison says in The Motion Picture News:-"You can safely call Doris Kenyon the most beautiful girl on the screen." DO YOU AGREE WITH HIM? Thursday and Friday ,i ALICE BRADY - n n- "TH E INDESTRUCTIBLE ALICE BRADY - WIFE" Coming-Tom Moore in "The City of Comrades"' GRUEN WATCHES SILVERWARE CUT GLASS LEATHER GOODS 1I a w --.s. - -,.,- +- - Last Times Today WM# S. HART e#reed of Men" VILLAG SMIThY" Sennett Comedy THURSDAY FRIDAY, AND SATURDAY e c fSouls" Tw o Years in Turkish Harems I ALARM CLOCKS FOUNTAIN PENS FINE JEWELRY AND WATCH REPAIRING HALLER C. FULLER STATE STREET JEWELERS L a SUMMER TERM JULY 1 TO AUG. 22 CLASSES IN GREGG SHORTHAND TYPEWRITilG BOOKKEEPING Enroll now PENMANSHIP Matinees, all seats Nights, lower floor Last six rows f " " 0 - -" " 0 o . " 0 " 25c 35c 50c 35c 25c HAMILTON BUSINESS. 11 COLLEGE balcony . . " " " 0 0 " 0" Phone 342-R State and William Sts.