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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

December 02, 1914 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1914-12-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

'THE Mrc

AN DAILY

THE MIC AN DAILY

an

er Foot wear

w

.a st

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s"
IK
E

A Free Trip to Harvard in 1915
To the student holding cash register receipts totalling the largest
amount on the Saturday preceding the Harvard Game next fall I will give
free transportation to Cambridge and return. To the next highest I will
give transportation one way.
Cash register receipts are given out with every purchase. Get them
any way you can-ask your friends to get them-save them-ask your

LADIES WORK A SPE@IALTY

friends to save then.
We're going to lick Harvard next
see the game,

C. . KIDD *a-- Sophomore

fall-and here's a chance for you to
LYNDON

1530-J

1112 S. Univ. Ave

HAND PRESSING

i

.(

1

ki

$450i.

Short vamp, square toe effect.
un metal andpatent vamps. Tops and quarters of fine grey
cloth. All leather Spanish heels.

SHOE CO.,

115 S. Main Street,

wwwAatft

material°includes particularly miner-
alogical, geological, zoological, and bo-
tanical collections, the exhibitions of
which have been heretofore impossi-
ble because of lack'of space.
Plans have not yet been made for
the utilization of rooms about the
campus, whose present use the mod-
ernly equipped classrooms of the new
building will supplant. Most of the
south wing of University hall, the mu-
seum lecture room, and the basement
of Tappan hall will be evacuated. The
old hulk, which has thus far so insuf-
ficiently housed the psychology depart-
ment, will be torn down and the space
where it now stands between the chem-
istry building and the new structure,
will be given over to a "Mall," the de-
tail plans of which, have not yet been
made.
As the contract calls for the comple-
tion of all but the fourth floor of the
building, by May 1, 1915, many of the
classes of the 1915 summer session will
doubtless be held in its recitation}
rooms. The building will probably be
ready for dedication at graduation
time.

eam for parties, socials and
trade.
3arden Reputation and L,6w-
hocolates.

116 S. MAIM

ua

UDITORIUM

ay,

December

2,

.phia Orchestra
AYERS-90
ucter - - HARRISON, Baritone
COURSE TICKETS, $3.00-$3.50 -$3.75-$4.00
SINGLE CONCERTS, -$1.00--$1.25-$1.50
and the amphitheatre roof.
Bricklaying goes merrily on and
will continue until finished, the cold
f j of the winter notwithstanding. Work
will shortly commence on the rein-
forced concrete roof of the new am--
phitheatre, which will be the campus'
ruction; largest lecture room. It will have a
capacity of over 500, and it is expected
that most of the lectures of general
campus interest will be given in this
OVIDED room.
Probably the most needed feature of
Toes not the new building will be its elaborate
building. up-to-date museums. The importance
is now of extensive museum facilities in mod-
d there- ern methods of instruction has long
:he view been recognized,and in the new science
s. Over building, Michigan is taking the op-
his sec- portunity to extend herself in this de-
partment. Enormous amounts of sci-
delayed entific material, gathered from all over
lateness the world by expeditions sent out at
ow prac- great cost to the university, heret'o-
ed con- fore packed away and rendered prac-
for the tically valueless, will now be brought
entrance to light for the use of students. This

a ta
Califo-nia's Junior Prom was held
last Friday night in the Harmon gym-'
nasium, and 250 couples attended. That
afternoon, a specially written play,
known as the Junior Farce, was per-
formed for the guests. -
-o-
Professors at Grinnell college pro-
vided a special program to entertain
students on Thanksgiving Day. The
nature of the vaudeville stunts pre-
pared was kept secret until the ap-
pointed day.
Cornell and Pennsylvania played a
tie game of soccer with a 2-2 score,
Thanksgiving morning, at Philadel-
phia. This was one of the games on
the schedule of the intercollegiate
soccer league.
-_-_
Frank Hinkey, now head coach at
Yale, was the lightest end that ever
played for Yale. He was All-Ameri-
can end for four year.,
--
University of Oregon students were
accused of kidnapping a bronze statue
from the grounds of 0. A. C. before
the football game between the two
colleges, but investigation by the uni-
versity authorities discredited the re-
port.
Harvard's Dramatic club will pre-
sent at the Copley-Plaza hotel on De-
cember 11, "Peter, Peter, Pumpkin
Eater," a play written by a Radcliffe
student.

Orphem
SAlURDAY, NOV. 28
"'The Thread of Destiny,
Heeza Liar; Natnralist.
Mon. and Tues. Nev. 30, Dec. 1
Charles Richmond, in "=The
Man from home"
Wed. Dec. 2. One Day Only.
Charles A. Stevenson, in
"Shore Acres"'by J. A. Hearn
Different Dartmouth dormitories are
organ7zing orchestras which will com-
pete for the favor of the college at
the 'six-forty-fives," or evening gath-
erings.
Pennsylvania is making overtures
to Folwell, coach of Washington and
Jefferson, former red and blue star,
to take charge of the Quaker team
next year. Fowell has made an en-
viable record at W. & J. Brooke will
be retained on the Penn coaching
staff, whatever the outcome of the ne-
gotiations may be.
---
Massachusetts Agricultural College
is considering a plan whereby courses
will be made continuous throughout
the year, which' will consist of four
terms of three months each. The
summer term will be given over to
laboratory and field exercises.
-o-
Sunday, Nov. 22, was university day
at the Lincoln churches, all students
of the University of Nebraska having
received invitations from the pastors
to attend.
-0-
Members of the advertising class of
the University of Kansas are making
a survey of all Kansan newspapers to
ascertain the amount and class of
advertising- carried. The information
will be tabulated and placed at the
disposal of Kansas editors.
. -k-
According to a recent rule at Ne-
braska, all signs, posters and an-
nouncements must be confined to bul-
letin boards and must be approved by
the registrar. No red lettered signs
or private advertising will be permit-
ted nor may hand bills or cards 'be
handed out at the campus gates.
--
Mid-semesters at the fine arts school
of the University of Nebraska were
held after the manner of the concourse
of the large European art schools.
Students worked for one week with-
out the assistance or advice of teach-
ers, and medals were awarded on the
work done during this week.
-o-
The Canadian government h a s
equipped McGill University with two
complete wireless stations and the
Northern Electric company has fur-
nished additional equipment.
-0-
By catching frogs and turtles and +
selling. them to the University of Kan-
sas, two students are working their
way through college.
News comes from the front of the
death ot Lieut. H. J. S. Sields, stroke
of the Cambridge eight-oar crew in
1910.
While Stanford defeated California
26 to 8, at Rugby recently before 25,000+
people, Lincoln Beachey amused him-
self by looping the loop over the field
and dropping fake bombs on the grid-
iron.,;
-o-
Wellesley College girls are taking in
washing in aid of the college fire fund.
Contributions for war sufferers

ranging from 1 cent to $10, taken up
between halves of the Yale-Princeton
game almost filled a flour barrel. The
fund amounted to $3,927.49.

Maines.GARRICK Wed. Mat.
We.-a. 00'eats $t
DETROIT
Nights and Saturday Matinee 25e-$1.50
William Elliott Presents
"eKitty MacKay"
The Love Story With a Laugh in Every Line

NO LOSS

I-

t

I

Quick on the Trigger
With a Snap-Shot Eye
THE crack trapshooter has to
have steady nerves and muscles
absolutely under control - always
ready to swing his gun into place
and bring down his clay pigeon. This
means trained, not to the minute,
but to the split-second.
We present the names of some
famous crack shots. They like to
smoke, but take no chances on a
tobacco that might "throw them
off." They use Tuxedo because
it is mild, 'relaxing, steadying -
strictly pure.
4 T ePerfect Tobaccofor Pipe andCigarette

Freshman
ALSO
CANDIES'
Sophomore

I-
GEORGE W
leading tra
"I find coy

I

go1Iegc Tcackis Many Things
But the Best Is
the Lunches
AT "POP BANCROFT'S" 722 Monroe

JunIor

11

F UI

F. L. HALL, 614 E.William
Phone 2225

PRESSING

ALSO
CIGARS.
Senor

BY FIRE

I

Tuxedo is made of only thema
finest, choicest, selected leaves of '
perfectly aged Burley tobacco. It v
is made by the original "Tuxedo
Process" which removes every trace
of bite and sting and develops all
the wonderful mildness, fragrance
and flavor of the Burley Leaf in a
way that no other brand of tobacco
has ever successfully imitated.

f

I

A,---

YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE

Convenient pouch , Famous green ti
inner - Ii n ed with C with gold letteri
moisture-proof paper curved to fit pock
In Glass Humidors, 50c and 9Q,
FRE Send us 2 cents in stamps
~E and we will mail you prepaid
tin of TUXEDO tobacco to an
the United States. Address
THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPA

ln,
?C FRED GILBERT (
celebrated trapshooter
'or postage "The coolest, most fra-
a souveniracotmjex-
.ny point in grant tobc yld
ny oin ~rience-Txedo. Leads in.
mildness and purity."
NY
New York.

Room 1299

111 Fifth Avenue

C

.. -. -..

thre student body. seemed to be "We
want football."
-0-
Students of Columbia University un-
der the leadership of Robert Velverde,
'17, are organizing a Ji Jitsu club.

It has been proposed that graduates
and undergraduates of Harvard and
Boston Tech make up the machine gun
company of the eighth Massachusetts
national guard. The war department
has recently authorized the formation
of a machine- gun company for every
regiment of militia.

MAJE S TIC

ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW

Phone 1701
EVERY NIGHT
at 7:30 and 9:00
2 Days2

Tues. Wed. Dec. 1=2

RTER, Master Magician, and
iE LION'S BRIDE" MAN -EATING ION

-0-

od~A% VAEE t AA )

YOU Will bee

1
r

[AGICAL DIVORCE," a novel in which a.
being vanishes in air.
,RY OF THE CRYSTAL CASKET," the
. of a human being from space.
STRAL HIAND) !" where a hand appears in
and writes a message.
, LEVITATION," i V.u strating' Brahuii if
of suspended animation.
ION'S BRIDE," with a crocious, man-
king of the forest.
do us, Spectacular, Weird Mla icai Prodac-
on a Magificent Scale f/crct /for d
Unattem ped.
KE ANY MAGICIAN YOU EVER SAW
)RE. THhE WON DE R M A RV1 O
THE PRESENT CENTURY.

An Entire Carload of
SCENERY, ANIMALS
and EFFECTS.
The Acme of Mystery, Where Every Law of Science
is Defied, and
Where Magic and Black Art are not only Possible
but Where the Senses are Dazed by the
Magnificent Display of
Beauty, Splendora

Dr. John Cunningham McLennan,
professor of physics at the Univei'sity
of Toronto, is considering an offer,
from the University of Birmingham,
Eng.
-0-
Baylor University, Waco, Tex., has
decided to give "suma cum laude,"
i"magna cum laude" and "cum laude"
honors. State universities which give
no honors at all are Kansas, Nebraska,
Iowa, C'olorado, North Carolina, Flor-
ida, Kentucky, South Dakota, Louisi-
ana and Ohio. State universities giv-
ing honors are Wisconsin, Oregon,
Nevada, Idaho, North Dako.ta, Pen-
sylvania, Minnesota, Michigan, Illinois,
Missouri, Indiana, California and
Maine.
-o_
Glenn Warner has resigned as head;
coach of the Carlisle Indians, and will
become coach either at the University
of Pittsburgh or the University of
Minnesota. He will receive for coach-
ing football alone, what he has been
receiving for coaching all sports.

--0-

This little verse
Is just a stall
To see who'll add
To it, that's all.
-New York Sun.
So here is one
To give it length
In union, then:,
There may be strength.
-Youngstown Telegram.
And here is one
To spin it out;
A little breadth
Will help, no doubt.
-Commercial Appeal.
There is no reason,
We contend,
To add much more-
So here's the end.
-Tennessee Orange and White.
Dont' jim the party,
Let it run
Until we get
Our "Hancock" on.
-Orpheum Bulletin.
Where have I heard
That gag before,
There's always room
For just one more.

The first game of football played
at Columbia in four years was staged
a week a-go Tuesday, when the upper-
classmen and the underclassmen play-
ed to a scoreless tie. Following the
game'the consensus of opinion among

Prices: 1000 Seats at tOe. Few Reserved at 15cw
" Entire Lower Floor at 25c. Balcony at 20c-

GET THAT
605W U EWilliamE'St.A
WE USE PURE LARD6 OREN'S CAFETERIA

A

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