F'ORn THE MICHIGAN DAILY. «__-- _ . = m I I LET GUST PRACHT ., SAVE ,: ' > E',L F 4. x.p h'I E .. E 4m Y For Conscientious Tailoring, Snappy Styles, Best Materials and Lowest Prices WE LEAD C - ' ', ROY P. HENRY 515 E. WILLIAM STREET NUMBER OF PROFESSORS DOG SUMMERWORK PLEASES DEAN COOLEY Professors in Chemical Engineering Enter Industrial World During Summer INSTRUCTORS MUST KNOW HOW TO APPLY CHEMISTRY IN ARTS SIMILAR FIELD ALSO ENTERED BY TEACHERS OF CHEMISTRY DURING VACATION "Those who are teaching technical subjects must keep in touch with the industrial world, otherwise they are not teaching the thing that students will need, when they get out of col- lege," said Dean Mortimer E. Cooley, i l l i of the engineering college, when inter- viewed by a Daily reporter yesterday. The remark was made on the in- quiry of the reporter concerning the large number of professors of chem- ical engineering who were employed this summer in industrial work. Dean Cooley added, "They must also know how chemistry is applied in the arts in order that those they teach will be able to apply it. Chemistry, per se, is taught from an academic standpoint whille chemical engineer- ing is taught from an industrial standpoint. One has for its object the furtherance of scientific knowledge; ' the other, the creation of dollars." These remarks, supplemented with an example drawn from German depend- ence on chemical engineering in the w present war, depicted Dean Cooley's definite ideas on the matter of sum- mer employment. Michigan added her quota of chem- ical engineers to the field of industrial work this summer. Among these were the following: Prof. W. L. Badger, who worked for the Detroit Edison Co. on water :softening and the pre- vention of boiler scales; Prof. J. D. Rue, who has charge of the new fel- lowship in paper manufacture, spent some time in New York city studying colors for paper. Prof. A. E. White was engaged in the study of flaws in brass castings for the Detroit Copper and Brass Rolling mills; Prof. E. E. Ware worked for the Acme White Lead and Color works, Detroit, on new formulae for varnishes. Prof. A. H. White studied the utilization of waste waters for a paper mill in Pennsyl- vania. Professors in chemistry, also, were employed in a similar line of work. Dr. L. H. Cone studied and designed a dye works for the Dow Chemical Co., at Midland, Mich. Dr. J. S. Laird studied at the government laboratory of the Bureau of Standards at Pitts- burg, and in various pottery works. Yale Freshmen Score; Hold Varsity New Haven, Conn., Oct. 21.-It took the freshman team to show up the Yale Varsity today, when it scored one touchdown and held the Varsity to no score. "Willie" Winter was the man who put the Varsity to grief, go- ing over the line after the fresh had worked the whole length of the field on line plays. The game was prac- tically over before the regulars woke up to what was going on. Near the end of the 16 minutes of play they worked the ball to within sight of the yearlings' goal, but lost all chance of scoring when a forward pass fell incomplete over the goal line and the fresh scored a touchdown. Ames, the third string quarter, played at that position today. Harvard Varsity Shows Improvement Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 21.-The Harvard Varsity had a hard scrim- mage today against the scrubs. Some improvement was shown in that the regulars were able to score on line plays and made two goals from the field. Mahan booted one over from the exact center of the field and Rob- erts put one over from the 40-yard line. The attack was cooler today, but the defense still appeared ragged. The Little Shop, 225 South Thayer, next to Hill auditorium. Oct22 "MARAT", SUBJECTOF PROF.FRAYER'S RESEARCH Believes War Will Decide Fate of Turkey; Italian-Teuton Alliance a Mistake, He Says "Marat" as a man with an honest purpose, and not an' unscrupulous demagogue, was the subject of Prof. William A. Frayer's research work in Cornell university last year. In his study of Marat, which is not yet completed, Professor Frayer will attempt to prove that the great French leader was not the conven- tional agitator that er s in Hugo's "Ninety-three," and character that too many histor