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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.

March 28, 1915 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1915-03-28

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


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1:

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We Do Repairing
AND
Altering

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Znd hand KODAKS to
LYN DON 719 N. University

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OWN

F. L. MALL, 514 E. Williamn
Phone 2225
I~'QQ~h~f!Goods CalledFo
and Dlieed
PRESSING a.LOS F
NO LOSS BY FIRE

C.l1. KIDD---Sophomore
1530-J 1112 S. Univ. Ave
Popular Matinee Week March 29
Wednesday Nights & Sat. Mat.
BEST SEATS $1.00 25c to $1.50
DETROIT

I

M nmp ewwi~s ATC fE
NgE t QRA A R tSIJ, S ILV ER 5N ITN A AE

11

H. H. FRAZEE, Presents
THE NEW 3 ACT FARCICAL RIOT
THEW E P

TRACK MEN TRAIN
FOR A. A. U. MEET
(Continued from page 1)
the Conference lads in whatever event
he is entered.
The continued cold weather on
Ferry field hinders the best track con-
ditions, but Coach Farrell insists that
his athletes put in daily appearance.
This is more particularly true of the
men who are trying for positions on
the Drake relay team, and for those
who will be sent to Chicago.
A majority of the Conference col-
leges will be represented, and Mich-
igan's entrance has added consider-
able interest to the big meet. It will
be the first official appearance of a
Michigan athletic team in Chicago for
years, although on several occasions
Michigan men have participated in
open meets which have been held in
the Windy City.
Coach Farrel believes that he has
discovered a new phenom in Martins,
a freshman who seems to handle the
javelin uncommonly well, When Steve
deteced the first year man working
away with the javelin over in the cool
of the Ferry field baseball bleachers,
he was considerably impressed with
the way the youngster disported him-
self. The youth was throwing the
rod regularly for a distance around 125
feet, and with a record of 160 feet in
"prep" school, Michigan may possess
a real artist in this event. But few
meets, however, recognize the javelin.
Its advent in athletics has been
viewed with increasing favor of late,
and it may become an accepted branch
of track work.
PLANS FORMED FOR RELIEF OF
MICHIGAN MISSION AT BUSRAHI
Miss Hobliausr Writes of Bad Condi-
tions at ospitals; Amal
Canvass Arranged
According to reports recently re-
ceived by officials of the University
Y. M. C. A., the existing conditions at
the University of Michigan mission at
Busrah, Arabia, are three-fold acute
to what they were at a corresponding
time last year. The hospital which
has been taken over temporarily by
the British government is filled to its
capacity, and the attending physicians
and nursesaall of whom are Michigan
graduates, are working literally dlay
and night.
In a recent letter, Miss Minnie Holz-.
hauser, who left Ann Arbor last year
for the Busrah station, just prior to
the annual Busrah campaign on the
campus, further says that the unini-
tiated has no conception of the suf-
fering which the native British and
Turkish soldiers are undergoing as a
result of the war which now has Bus-
rah as one of its far eastern centers.
On a recent visit to Ann Arbor, Dean
Talcott Williams of the Columbia
School of Journalism made the state-
ment that the geographical position of
Busrah is such that at the close of
the present war, it will be the greatest
center of trade in the entire East. Hie
based his statement on the fact that
the great Bagdad railway, Which is
now in process of construction, will
have Busrah as one of its main ter
mini.
The Michigan mission is the only
medical mission within a radius of
1,000 miles around Busrah, and from
reports received in this country, not a
little pait of the development that has
been going on in Busrah in recent
years is due to the general moral and
hygienic clean-up affected by the
Michigan men and women at the sta-
tion.

The annual (jmpaign among the
Michigan students for the support of
the mission will probably come off
during thei lst part of April, and this
Y(ar an innovation in tiie clection
of funds for the maiintenance of the
mission is planned.

C

By FRED JACKSON. Staged by EDGAR McGREGOR. Great Cast with
Herbert Corthell, May Vokes, George Parsons and
RALPH MORGAN. VDGAR NORTON. E IZABETH NELSON. BERNICE BUCK
CLAIRBORNI FOSTER. HUGHC CAMERON. MAUD TURNER GORDON.
AND OTHEIRS
WEEK APRIL 5
THE ACME OF COMEDY ;CONCOCTIONS
LEW FIELDS
(Himself) aid Com'pany Ifn
Twhe H~gh Cost oJ Loving

it

-Two games have been slated for to
morrow in the class basketball cham-
pionship, the senior laws meeting the
fresh engineers at 7:05 o'clock, and
the combined architects tackling the
junior sledge-wielders an hour later.
Both games will be played on the cen-
ter court at Waterman gym.
-At the annual election of the Wes-
leyan guild held Friday evening, the
following officers were chosen: presi-
dent, Howard. L. Haag, '16; vice-pres-
ident, Miss Mabelle Chapman; secre-
tary, Irma C. Hook, '17; treasurer,
H. W. Simpson, '17E. The newly
elected officers will take office .begin-
ning June 1.
-)fr. 0. )V. Boston, instructor in e-
gineering. mechanics, was unable to
meet his classes last week because of
the illness and death of his father.
-Red Cross examinations will be held
at the university health service office
at 1:00 o'clock Saturday, April 3. The
examinations will cover the know-
ledge of bandaging and treatments of
injuries.. Any student who took the
course in first aid either last semester
or previously is eligible for the test.
-Senior Dental society will hold their
first meeting of the year in the dental
ampitheater at 7:30 o'clock tomorrow
night. The committee in charge has
arranged a program with the main
topic on "Prosthesis," while a number
of subordinate questions will be
brought up for discussion.
Cercle Francais will meet in the
society rooms at 8:30 o'clock tomor-
row night.
Cast, chorus and specialty men will
hold a rehearsal at the Whitney thea-
ter 2:30 o'lpck this afternoon.
3omplimentary dinner to Union cast,
chorus, specialty men, and all com-
mitteemen except members of the fin-
ance committee, at 7:00 o'clock tonight
at Unipn,
REILAMN SELECTED
FOR 'Y' PRESIDENT
(Continued from page 1)
for several departmental "Y" organ-
izations will be elected at the time of
the campus Election Day which will
be held during the first week in May.
The presidents of these organizations
will represent their various constit-
uencies at the regular meetings of the
main cabinet, the officers for which
were chosen at yesterday's election,

Window Cards
A SPECIALTY
Davis & Ohlilger
Prompt Printers

Dance Programs and
Banquet Menus

o9-1 1 E. WASHINGTON
Phone 432-J

m
suoiT TERM STATE
INSTITUTE TO OPEN
(Continued from page 1)
4:00 o'clock-Conference, Pfofes-
sor ,Coffman.
'Wednesdayg
9:00 o'clock, lectre-"elementary
Curriculum Making," concluded, Pro-
fessor Coffman.
10:00 o'clock, lecture-"Qualities of
Merit in Teachers," Professor Coffman.
11:00 o'clock-Demonstration of the
Use of Scales for handwriting and
Drawing, Professor Thorndike.
2:00 o'clock-Measuring Achiev -
ments in English Composition, ?P4es,
sor Thorndike.
3:00 o'clock-Either (4 Roii T
ble for Discussion and Criticism @r (b)
Presentation of Tests in Spelling and
History, Professor Thorndike.
4:00 o'clock--Conference, Professor
Coffman,
Thursday
9:00 o'clock, lecture-"Causes of
Failure among Teachers," Professor
Coffman,
10:00 o'clock, lecture-"The Tech-
nique of Superintendence, Professor
Coffman.
11:00 o'clock, lecture with lantern
slides--"The Use of Standard Tests in
Supervision," Mr. Courtis.
2:00 o'clock, conference-Drill in
Arithmetic, Mr. Courtis.
3:00 o'clock, lecture with lantern slid-
es-"The Function of Standards in
Teaching," Mr. Courtis.
4:00 o'clock-Conference, Professoy.
Coffman.
Plan Get-Together For ]ixie Club
Arrangements for a banquet and a
final get-together meeting of the Dixie
club will be discussed at a meeting,
April 6. A representative of the Ken-
tucky club will present to welcome the
members to an All-South smoker given
by that club. The committee on per-
manent club rooms will report what

---m---w -

i

progress has

been made.

Senior Class Masquerade Call -Qp
Due to objections which coulclA t..
be overcome, the senior lit masqter4 e
party, which was to have been h
immediately following the sprjig vaeli-
tion, has been called off. Ii place of
this party, the class social committee
is planning an evening dance to be
held during the latter part of April.

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