A146DAIL? * * * * * *- * em * ICTS * * pro- * Cincinnati, Ohio, March 18, 1915. I have no doubt that the money necessary to erect, equip and maintain the Mich- igan Union building will be sub- scribed by the alumni and friends of the university. When the facts are laid before them they will realize the immense importance of the project to the university and will be impressed with the thorough 'and business- like manner in which provision has been made for safeguarding the fund, for erecting the build- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *1 " ' e ing and equipping it at a ,mini- * es decid- * mum cost under the direction of * work to * an experienced building com- * mer and * mittee, and for managing the in- * * stitution * Lawrence Maxwell, '74. ding the * - e 40,000 * * * * * * * * * * * * is scat- western where such a thing is possible. So the importance of the general educa- tub oftional campaign cannot be overesti- mber of mated, nor will it be overlooked, and y issued, everything will be done to present 0s essen- the matter clearly and adequately so that when the time comes for the n Union campaign, everyone will be familiar te street, with the project and eager and ready ct which to help in whatever way their means r of all will permit. o years Great Committee System Effected, n, when In the meantime, a great system of nEvery- committee organization will be car- ase was ried on in those localities which were not organized in the summer of 1914. d. The Still believing in the personal element, ition in the general committee members are an man, organizing solicitation committees in ssential every section of the country. These lbelieve- local committees in turn will per- 0 years sonally wait upon the alumni when the ience is time comes, in behalf of the building because fund which it is hoped will total $1,- lent and 000,000 when the campaign is com- to itself pleted. These local committees will ects and be grouped in districts, the country having been divided in eight sections. ve been Each section will be in charge of a 9E, and young alumnus who in his undergrad- s' study uate days was prominent in the work se plans of the Union. These men will estab- mission lish headquarters in their district . in the where they will remain until the close kmerica, of the campaign. From these sub- of the centers the work of organization will rk; Mr. procetd, the entire country being con- * of the trolled from Ann Arbor. nt, and The state of Michigan, containing ervising the most Michigan men, will require more attention and organization than alumni the other districts. Three men will be who are in charge of this territory: J. Griffith idea, its Hays, '11, Edward W. Haislip, '14L, I whose and Leland S. Bisbee,.'13-'15L. Sel- a move- den S. Dickinson, '13-'15L, former ed next Union president, will be in charge of et on to the New York district, with headquar- ituatlon ters, in New York City. From there he gen- will be controlled New York state, bending Philadelphia and Scranton, Pa., Wash- organ- ington, D. C., Boston, Mass., and Mon- cational treal and Ottawa, Canada. The Cleve- land district, in charge of K. S. Bax- not be ter, '15E, will take in the state of Ohio, r funds. Erie, Johnstown and Pittsburgh, Pa., he mes- and Wheeling and Charleston, W. Va. sonally A large section of the country will be nd for- controlled from Indianapolis. From hat the here the work of organization, under carried P. Duffy Koontz, '14-'17L, president nal ap- of the Union for 1915, will be carried under- through central and southern' Indiana, a more Danville, Decatur, Springfield and will be Champaign, ,Ill., Louisville, Ky., Nash- me way, ville, Knoxville and Chattanooga, hysical Tenn., Birmingham, Ala., Atlanta, Ga., y'every and Jacksonville, Fla. Northern Illi- [ye and nois, northern Indiana, Milwaukee, der the Madison and Oshkosh, Wis., will be es mi02 handled by Harry G. Gault, '15, from eay midChicago. The Minneapolis district will day of comprise St. Paul, Duluth, South Da- dazines, kota, North Dakota and the northern td news &papers peninsula of Michigan. This district ato the will be in charge of Chester H. Lang, lets. '15. . . A nnh or.-vf at t o .tn'rvrwillia CHAIRMAIN EXHORTS BA6CKING OF ALUMNI Deanl Bates, Campaign Chairman, Asks for Graduate Support of Union. Building Proiect OThER COLLEGES RECEIVE 1Elr "Plans are now complete for the demonstration by Michigan alumni of their loyalty to and interest in their alma mater," writes Dean H. M. Bates, chairman of the campaign committee. "Michigan has never before called upon all of her former students to help her in any great movement for the benefit of the entire university. "It has required some movement like the Union's to afford this oppor- tunity, but now the time and the op- portunity are at hand, when Michigan men may put their shoulders to the wheel and carry through a project which President-Emeritus James B. Angell, President Harry B. Hutchins, the board of regents, the senate coun- cil and the Alumni association have all declared to be the most urgent, the most helpful and the most import- ant possible addition to the life and usefulness of our university. "There have been many evidences during recent years of a rising tide of interest in our university and all that it stands for. Individual alumni have made handsome gifts of considerable value, but never before has there been sociations to their institutions. Are we wanting in equal loyalty to our own institution? Are recent expres- sions of interest and of a desire to help mere rhetorical or sentimental flour- ishes? There seems sound reason for believing that Michigan alumni, given the opportunity, will prove themselves in proportion to their means as loyal as are the sons and daughters of other colleges and universities to their in- stitutions. "The time is ripe now to press our campaign for funds for a new Union building. The country is rapidly re- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Bay City, Mich., March 24, 1915. It seems to me that the last word has been said on the Union plan which has been thoroughly discussed and is well under- stood. We should now go to it. Alumni in this locality are on the mark waiting for the word. James E. Duffy, '90-'92L .* * * * * * * * Be *I * * * * * * * * * * * * * funds or subscription will be begun simultaneously throughout the country and, every alumnus will be asked to contribute to, the cause. Every pre- caution has been taken to safeguard these funds in every way and to insure, covering from the financial depression which caused us to postpone the cam- paign planned for last fall. Despite some disturbance in business affairs, the country was never sounder finan- cially in all essentials than it is today, Our extraordinary export trade has brought and will continue to bring millions of dollars to this country. In the university we have had a long period of growth in numbers of stu- dents and in richness of opportunity, but this has not been: accompanied by a corresponding increase in our ma- terial equipment. Now is the time to make up this deficiency. Campaign Plans Matured. "Plans for the campaign have been carefully matured. It will be con- ducted by a committee raised by a con- ference of the regents, alumni and members of the Union. The actual direction of the details of the campaign will be in the hands of Homer L., Heath, '07, working in conjunction with this committee. Committees of alumni have been appointed in every important alumni center throughout the country. Graduates of the univer- sity will visit every center during the coming summer to explain the needs of the Union and to assist the local committees in raising funds. Through The Alumnus and Campus News Notes committeemen have been kept inform- ed as to the progress of matters at Ann Arbor. A great mass meeting for alumni will be held at commencement time. "During the summer, other details of organization will be planned and set in motion throughout the country and indeed throughout the world wherever alumni are. And in the fall, the, work of the actual solicitation of PL of New Plans for the Unioi clubhouse, interior, drawn by '79E, of the firm c Chicago, were rec the campaign cor exception of a few gested, the plans the committee. Extracts from planation follow: The exterior is may be characteri2 tion of the English walls will be of bx on a stone baseme ing a "texture" sur the visible roofs w slates. On the first floor and the lounge, bc to subscribers that their gifts will be safely cared for in the hands of offi- cials responsible to the university. The fidelity of any person who may handle any of the funds is assured not only by careful inspection of his rec- ord but by bond given for the faithful performance of his duties. "Will you do your share to help push forward this important movement in our great university life? Will you help show that Michigan alumni are as loyal, as appreciative, as grateful and as helpful as the alumni of any other institution? Will you join us in carrying to completion a cause which our beloved ex-president and .President Hutchins, all of the officers and official bodies of the university have assured you is the greatest cause which has ever been presented to Michigan alumni? We confidently ex- pect you to answer all these questions in the affirmative. Let us make life better for the students, richer and better worth living. Let us'create a great center for the many and diversi- fied activities of our cosmopolitan life. Let us build an adequate home for re- turning alumni; let us build a great memorial to Dr. Angell and let us make it possible for him to enjoy this demonstration of Michigan's greatness and of her appreciation of him." Many Bodies Endorse Union Campaign Campaigning for the Union building fund has been endorsed by the univer- sity board of regents, the senate coun- cil and the Alumni association. tories, the mal dining room, ft and the kitche On the secon hall, 58 by 104 through three dining rooms, men's retiring sions and two- On the third room (20 tab] room, the gri rooms and the In'the base offices, the swi with the lock the bowling al room, the boil chine rooms, ti a project before us which would en- able all Michigan men to contribute to a cause in which all may take a per- sonal interest and which every officer and every official body of the univer- sity has declared to be of the utmost importance in enlarging the useful- ness of the university and the enrich- ing of its educational, social and moral life. Other Institutions Get Aid. "Will Michigan alumni show them1- selves equal to the opportunity which is before them, and will they demon-' state that their loyalty to their alma mater is as great as that of the alumni of other . colleges and universities to those institutions? Consider for a mo- ment what has been done by the alumni of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell and Pennsylvania. It is safe to say that there have been single years when the alumni of Harvard and Yale have given more to their re- spective institutions than Michigan is now asking of its alumni at the end of more than 75 years of its existence to give today. Friends, other than the founder of the young University of Chicago, have given year by year to that institution more than we are ask- ing of our 40,000 alumni as the tribute of three quarters of a century to our own university. Little Stevens Insti- tute with about 2,000 alumni and only a few hundred students, has recently raised more than $1,300,000. Wellesley College, with comparatively few alum- nae, recently undertook to raise about $1,000,000 and promptly over-sub- scribed the amount by three-quarters of a million or more, and it is about to increase its gift from alumnae to $5,000,000. "Instances of this kind might be multiplied. Every Michigan alumnus is familiar with unificent gifts from individual alumni and from alumni as- I- The fourth given over to b toilet rooms for and capable of 120 persons, wi cept that there with two beds e The dining r seat about 1,37 without crowdi r ,, ., nall ensi n un Hugh a th ast te Engraved Cards $1.25 $1.75 $2.75 These prices include 100 Cards and Plate Davis & Ohinger Q * y Prompt Printers 100-111 E. WASHINGTON Phone 432-J : bring the nILU i 1.OIVU L Leii nury win I campaign handled from Kansas City by Louis g to the K. Ffiedman, '15. This district will man-'in take in southern Illinois, Missouri, will be western Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisi- cenes of ana, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Ne- brought braska, part of Iowa, Wyoming, New then the Mexico and Colorado. The Seattle den days district, in charge of E. H. Saier, '13- ough the '15L, will take care of the west coast, even in including Washington, Oregon, Idaho, :udent of Montana, California, Nevada, Utah rt of life and Arizona. ago if it "With such a systematic organiza- alumnus tion of the alumni," to quote the Mich- ght back igan Alumnus, "and with the far 11 realize reaching publicity campaign now better is planned, it is not expected to be a Michigan difficult matter for the Union to suc- will be ceed in its undertaking. Everything 1 be the else depends upon the loyalty, spirit and how and interest of the Michigan men. In hood de- the past this has been of the highest order. It has carried Michigan to the tion that front r'ank of great universities. But and dis- it must not fail now. This movement EVERY face back home shines with expect- ation for your returning. What gift are you taking to that eager brother and.the pals who have missed you? Something different, distinct- ively from Ann Arbor, yet masculine and useful - a Bond Street scarf of course. We want our share in this gift. So we are showing crepes, failles and Rumchundas,Shan- tung silks and foulards--three of these handsome ties for Two Dollars--on exhi- bition in our show windows. T h i s beautiful neckwear display will set a new standard of value in Ann Arbor. Aore than a store -- a campus institution 300 South State Street A good service- 'able Suilt - $20.00 A better one for $22.50 An exception- ally line Suit for - - - $25.00 Palm B e a ch Suits . . $12.00 *8 Made to your measure ALBERT GANSLE Merchant Tailor