I Wntueriur AT YOUR DOC THREE TIME A WEE-K , ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1921. PRICE FIVE .,.. - Connick 's Works Now On Display Prof. Emil Lorch announces that the College of Architecture has just received and will presently exhibit preliminary sketches in water color by Charles J. Connick of Boston, of three aisle windows fQr Saint Mark's church, Minneapolis. There is also a lumier plate made from one of these windbws . being shown in a diascope, a novel device for showing in detail and color, pho- tographs of such works in stained glass.0 Mr. Connick, who is a well-known" worker in stained glass in this coun- try, executed these water colors for consideration by - church officiAls; after acceptance, a life-sized cartooln in charcoal was prepared. Both of these -are to be placed upon exhibi- tion in the corridor of the Architec- tural college. FIS BS UNDS NEEDED FOR OTHER SECTIONS D Psy. Intel- lecture Boys in First Group Leave For Home in, Charge of Two Counsellors MEN APPOINTED TO LEAD SECOND SESSION OF CAMP Port Huron, July 23.-The boys from the University of Michigan Fresh Air camp left for home this morning under the charge of crew- ster P. Campbell, '22, and John Gus- tus, '22. Last night Mr. Wilde, editor of the Port Huron Times-Herald, and president of the Rotary club of that city, gave the farewell talk to these boys who composed the first section of the camp. A physician and a dentist were sent out from Port Huron by the Rotary club to look after the boys' health. Future sections are to have this med- ical,attention shortly after arriving at the camp. ., The influence of the university men has had a decided effect on the' boys. Practically allhave signified their in- tention of going through high school, and a few have gen decided on a college education! Counsellors for the second seon have been chosen as follows: ohn Gustus, '22, Roscoe Dillon, '21E, Leonard Barre'tt, '24, Duane Lurkins, T. H. Boardman, and James Clark. Experience Has Meant Much to Thirty. three Youngsters From Detroit AT LEAST $500 NECESSARY TO COMPLE'TE WORK BEGUN (Special to The Wolverine) Port Huron, July 23.-Thirty-three kids swimming in Lake Huron in- stead either of not swimming at all, or else going in. where Detroit. Sempties its sewage into the river. Thirty-three kids playing indoor, vol- leyball, and horseshoes out where} there is no donger from automobiles and where no' "cops" are need ed to keep them out of the street. Thirty- three kids sleeping in tents where there's air enbugh and to spare for all and where it's just natural to be healthy. Thirty-three kids, regard- less of race and religion, learning to live and think right. That's what the first section of the University of Michigan Fresh Air camp has meant. -y.,Would Like to Stay Every day the boys have asked each other, "Would you stay for another 10 days if you could?" and in just about nine cases out of every ten the answer is, "Just let them give me a chance and see how quick I'll take it." And those who are working with the (Continued on Page Four) Dancers Served At Taproom lar Another experiment in serving the students who attend Friday night dances was inaugurated by the Union last night, when the management per- mitted men and their partners to enter the taproom for service at the soda fountain after 11 o'clock. The new plan was tried after the experi- ment of' serving the dancers in the assembly hall last week had proven a failure. The regular hour for closing , the tap room during the summer has been 11 o'clock and the management de- cided (that service could be given to dancers after that time without dis- commoding the regular uses of the department. Couples can enter the tap room by the stairway that leads from the wom- en's department. The plan will only be continued during the summer, months in case it is successful, and will have no bearing on the policy of the Union in this :respect next fall. .x, LEADERSOF-MEN (, --DEAN LLOYD CHANGES MADE IN !IWEEKS PROGRAM ,XIA I in Dr, Weller to Give Fourth ]Leeture; Cure of Cancer eir Health His -l- ISubject r to . .e then NO SPEAKR 'SCHEDULED this FOR MONDAY' EVENING Says They Develop Fullness Time Out of of the of Several changes ih the lecture pro- grom for next week were announced yesterday ? y Dean F. H. Kraus, of the Summer session. Two addresses have been changed with lectures that g were scheduled for next month and the speaker for the medical lecture e Tuesday night has been changed.. e Prof. L D. Scott, of the department e of geology and geography, who was to have spoken August 5 on "Michi- d gan's Inland Lakes: Their Value to s the State," will give his, lecture next Friday night instead of Librarian V. e W. Bishop, whose subject was to have 1 been "Large Library Buildings;" and who will speak on August 5 in Pro- fessor Scott's place. Scott an Investigator "Inland Lakes," the subject on which Professors Scott will -speak, I have been investigated exhaustively j by him for a period of more than 10 years. At the preesnt time he has a' e book on the 'press that has been pre-' n pared for the State Geological survey - upon this subject. The lecture, which will be illustrated by a number of e private lantern slides, should be. among the most interesting that have e been presented this year, according d to Dean Kraus. S "The Outlook in 'Education," the e subject upon which Mr. T. E. John- d son, of Lansing, was to have spoken. g Friday afternoon, has been changed' t to August 12, and Prof. C. C. Fries, who was to have lectured on the date 1 on "Formal English Grammar: Its - History and Abuse," will appear Vn t Friday's program. n I Three Talks on Child Welfare J. A. Puffer, a vocational expert of, s New York city, will give three lec- - tures at 5 o'clock on each of the first three days of next week. His subject' t for Monday afternoon is "Community e Co-operation for Child "Welfare"; for d Tuesday, "The Growth of Child Wel- e fare and the Value of Pictorial Mate- e rial in, Arousing Interest": and for y Wednesday afternoon, "The Boy Prob- 1 lem and the Prevention of Delin- o quency." Mr. Puffer has written sev- - eral books upon the problems of child welfare and is appearing here under l the auspices of the National Child - Welfare associatioh. - There will be no lecture on Monday d night, and at 8 o'clock Tuesday even- ing Dr. C. V. Weller, of the Medical n -school, will give the fourth medical 3, lecture, his subject, being "Practical e Points in the Prevention and Cure of (Continued on Page Four) Upholding the students' claim that the prices charged by State street soda dealers are much higher than they should be, at least one Main! street confectioner gives it as his opinion that the cost of preparing sodas is no higher near the campus, than it is down town, and that the Michigan .Union tap room is largely responsible for the setting of rates. In connection with the latter point, it was pointed out that the State street. men .follow the Union's lead,, reasoning that if a University adjunct can keep. prices up, they can do so too. A cut in tap room prices, then, it is believed, would no doubt affect a cut in rates elsewhere. Main Street Average Low The average Main street prices at present are from 11 to 15 cents for' plain sundaes; 17 cents for fruit flav- ors, and 20 and 22 for fresh fruit sun- daes. One downtown store charges 22 cents for egg malted milks, the pricel varying with the price of eggs. An- other charges 25 cents for the same thing, maintaining the same price re- gardless of the changes of egg prices. "When eggs went up in price," says this store owner, "we did not change our prices; we took our medicine." State street men are charging 20 cents for plain sodas, and as high as 28 cents for the fresh fruit article. One of the leading ice cream dis- pensefs on Main street claims that he cannot make his prices any lower. Wages have not come down. There is a great increase in the price of the carbonated gas drums, in water rent. Fruit prices are everywhere exorbit- -ant; candy-makers' prices are sky- high, and light and heat show no signs of coming down. He believes State street prices are somewhat justified by the fact that the State street season is but eight months long, and that summer students do no mean much business. Unsympathetic Another man has little sympathy for! the men near the campus. Rent, he claims, is one-third lower on State' street than on Main street. Overhead is no greater on State street than' Main, and service is in many cases not as good. He particularly emphasized. the statement that the Michigan Union is a determining factor in setting prices, and that the State street men followed the Union's lead in this mat- ter. f That 15 cents is a fair price for a sundae, is his claim and that it has always been his endeavor to give the best quality cream and the best of service. "I 'try to treat others as I would be treated myself," he said. Many of the stores pay Connor the same price for the same kind of cream, and then charge different prices, he (Continued on Page Four) Poems Reflect Life of Time's Says.Hollister z - . (ByS.A) "We should rightly expect that recent poetry, like all poetry, would reflect the life of, the time in which it is writ- ten,"' stated Prof. R. D. T. Hollister, of the department of public speaking, as a preliminary remark to his reading of some recent poetry last evening in Sarah Caswell Angell hall. "Another great factor in modern poetry," he continued, "is the influence of the press-a force which today is moulding our ideals of men, women, and even of social problems." Profes- sor Hollister showed also that anoth- er characteristic of our poetry of to- day is its"great variety, andthe mingl- ing of a great many influences, which find expression in verse. "This is due to the present-day cosmopolitan life," he said.f Professor Hollister read from' two collections of modern poetry: One, a collection of war poems, and the other, a modern poetry anthology compiled by Munroe and Henderson. Whether he was interpreting the exquisite touches of Alan Seeger's "Rendez- vous," or the rugged phrases of Carl Sandburg's caricature of Chicago, his expression made real the fact that any poem is a personality. ti Professor Hollister interspersed his readings with illuminating comments on the works of the poets. TAP ROOM SETS RATES Of STATE STREET SODA D EALERlS, IS GHARG ,ROM DOWN. TOWN SHOPS GIVES FOUR CONDITIONS FOR BIRTH OF GREAT LIVES "In just what does real forward leadership consist? Whence comes progressive leadership?" These were the important questions answered by Dean A. H. Lloyd, of the Graduate school, in his lecture on "Leadership and Progress" Thursday afternoon in the auditorium of the Natural Science building. The particular subject treated with in the discqurse was on "General Gestation and Birth." Traces CourseĀ§ Dean Lloyd dwelt on the early con- ception of great men of the past and traced the causes leading to the pres- ent radical change in that conception. In the past people thought great lead- ets wer.e born "not of the fact and conditions in actual life, but of the spirit." They attributed the birth of great men to the miracle., and super- natural powers of the gods. Accord- ing to Dean Lloyd, "leaders come, not mechanically, but still naturally, in the fullness of time." "This fullness of time," Dean Lloyd explained, "is the climax of the period. of gestation." After a great turmoil, when the existing conditions are un- dergoing great changes, great men are produced. Many great leaders of the past, Noses, Christ, the Caesars, Lincoln, and Napoleon, were cited as examples where the machinery of life took an important part. Born, Not Made "Each was born, not made; yet for each one, in his own way and rmeas- ure, an epoch-maker, producing a new life not commensurable in the old life, there was an important and by no means easy period of gestation during which the formal organized life, the machinery of life, took an important part." Dean Lloyd gave the 'important .conditions of the birth of great lives as follows: 1. "The peculiar intimacy.of tradi- tional ways with life itself, with life's original instinct or urge, as shown by general confusion, fluency, inconsist- ency and often startling transpar- ency." 2. "The critical or climatic pres- ,sure of the accumulated meaning of the lines of life, with a consequent demand, as the time is full, that the meaning be read out."F (Continued on Page Four) CONFERNCE MAT, LRGER PTOWEI EXPECTED . S. WILL ACT ONCE IN PERFECTING AR RANGEMENTS POSITION OF JPAN UNCERTAIN AS Y Government Continues to Stand I Against Admission of Belgt Washington,' July 43. -- Un checked by uneipected developm at Tokio, the United, States gov4 iient, it was believed Friday, will without further loss of time in 1 fecting its plan for a coference of principal powers on limitation of a ament and Far Eastern subjects. The extent to which .Japan is ing to participate in the discussi is understood to be under consid tion at a meeting of theadvisory cc cil, and there appeared to, be reas to believe that the Japanese sta men woild reach a decision favors to a discussion of questions aris out of the orient,' although, perh; yith certain reservations. No Formal Invitations Until the positign of Japan has b more clearly defined, it appeared probable, however, that the formal vitations would be sent to the vari governments. It is known that proposed conference ,was mentione4 the cabinet meeting, but it is un stood not to have been discussed any great extent. The informal conferences bet'w Secretary Hughes and Ambassa Shidai are known to have gone far .wards convincing the administra \that the Japanese government: agree to entering the conference w out material reservations, and that general questions at issue will be proached frankly and freely by all I ticipants. ,t Insistent suggestions that Belg should be given a seat at the con' ence have not served to alter the o ion of the United States govern that the discussion should be lim: to the principal allied and assoei powers as generally accepted. Would Have to Admit Others It was explained that to open doors .to Belgium would make it cessargto permit the entrance of other government application. It declared that in maintaining such attitude there was no intention of crediting Belgium or any of the ( er small powers, and that the con ence always would be willing to h the representatives of any nation, e though not a member of the con: ence. Reiteration of the suggestion thE preliminary conference be held at L don also failed to cause a favbr reaction here. It was indicated clearly that the ' ited States believes that such prel inary discussion as may be necess should take place here. The exact date which the U States will suggest has not been termined, but it is understood I Nov. 11, the anniversary of the si ing of the armistice, is still reg ed as peculiarly appropriate. Yesterd s Scor xyl o wil will al combi 'American League No games scheduled. National League Chicago 6, Philadelphia 1. Brooklyn.6, St. Louis 5. Cincinnati 11, New York 2. Boston 2, Pittsburgh 1. Pittsburgh 4, Boston 3. i sootlight NEXT THURSDAY TICKET 8:00 P. M. AUDITORIU HILL