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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 29, 1921 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-03-29

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

I

9

F ORthe stu den-i± pif.
-the urbVNSot
rivals all for rftpcci
work. 17 black degre .: an
3 copying.
Amfferican Leia
Pencil Co. ;
2zo Fifth Pve,
NewYork '

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~pDDS~ H~[ WL IF. jiWidstoe Elected to High Church Post
E~gS WIL GgDrJohn Andreas Widsto, Presi-
Irn'-uun ri-urn ,~,dent of th~e University of Utah, educa-
iI.EiiHI. ~I.HI~L~ HII.I- rauthoi' and scientistNwas elected,
~ ~LIIIU ~ oit of the 12 apostles of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Sains
lIJVU)SEKRAU FllorrIT j, rThrsayat a meeting hel inj
ON AR ClIIAEiOGLtY AND) S<iIcalt ae (City.- In accepting the pesil-1
FINE ARllTS- tion, it is probable that President
N. Widstoe will resign his present posi-
George ELI Chase, Hudson professor tion because of the-necessity of giving
of archaeology at Harvard university, his entire energies to his new post. E
will give three lectures beginning to-

VAN'SLUNG

Where they all go

Sc and 1^c
at your dealer's

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morrow evening at Memorial hall, ac-'
cording to a recently issued Univer-
sity bulletin.
The subject of the first. lecture is
"(4reek and Roman Sculpture in Amer-
ican Collections." This lecture will
b given at 8 o'clock in the evening
in the upper auditorium.

._. ----. --- -- - ---!E

U~f~fCf19CI~lC~tS~lCdifllCIC~lBti~~e it 9CD~~sos Ci~tibe6EgiilteflCat llo31CCcloc)' ain1o'thck nmorningin
- i'_t ar h 1 nthe upper Iuditor1iU
a MDIdekIks ,.iErie d.The TlIeeavations of the American!
-_Expedition at Sardis."
="Recent Work on the Acropolis at,
Oh Boy! =Athens" is the subject of the final
=. Ea= lecture which will begie at 4~
Tr h mfrbekf ast.Mr. Steward o 'clock on the afternoon of April 1 in
® Fresh Every Day room A.
.;. Dr., Chase received his degree of B.
SWe also have Finie Cr'eamjer~y Bu tter and Country Eggs = A., M.A., and Ph.D. at Harvard and
Salso studied for several years at the
T « ; '. M ERYAmerican school of classical studies
McK:INNON C-' JHA:.LEN. Props. E t Athens.
= 12 W. Libef-ty Phone 6.64 '
Well__Received
WILLI M fI CHRFI -~ - (Y S. B. C.)

H~ealth Service Warns Students I
Warning was issued by the, Univer-
-sity Health service yesterday that
students who make long hikes should
beware of poison ivy and poison oak.~
In case of contact wvith the plants the
best remedy is a thorough washing
with soap and water as soon as po0s-
sibles
Increase your business by advertis-
ing in The Michigan Daily.-Adv.
:9 $' T
U
Yo a e o ortf 0
C o h oor illo
i\ ote .its eeyur Q
- come iand selersampe
pan.. cls -puaint wit .
* ®I

I 1116 So. University Ave.
I 1r

. S.
1 .~

The,

Plumbing, Steam and Hrjt 'ater Heating

Repairing r Seciaty

Bell Phone 525

211 , Fourth

Ave

0

All Work

Guaranteed

Satisfactory

k w
213 E. LIBERTY ST. 7,15 N. UNIV. AVE.
PHONE 294F1 = F2

One of the most Interesting con-
certs of the season was given Sunday
afternoon in Hill auditorium. The
artists played a progra'm,- every num-
ber of which was carefully rendered.
Dr. A. A. Stanley's Suite for piano
and violin ipn E major as played by
fAlbert -Lckwood -and 'Samuel Lock-
wood brought forth strong applause,
which doubled when the autor rose
at the request of artists. and audence.
The Suite is (tl <of the energy of the
writer, the 'most characteristic part
being the "Gigue,"
-The work of Clara Lundell, pianist,
was well received. , She is one of the"
younger members of the faculty, but-
shte plays 'surely and with poise.i Her"
interpretation of Shumann's "Etudes
Symphonique, Op. 13" showed her
-grasp of this powerful work. Her
playing of Chopin's "Ntude, Op. 25,
INo. 6" and saint-Saen's ' Tocc ta,-Op.
1 1"-"were perhaps her .most popular
inmbers.
-~"Ha'anaise, Op. 83" of Saint-Saen
andl "Prelude and Allegro, E minor"
of Pugnani-Kreisler were both skill-
fully 'rendered by Samuel Lockwood,
violinist. His rich full tones, his sure
-technique, and his careful interpreta-
tion made his numbers *fine in quality.
Hie was aided by Mrs. Maud Okkel-
'burg at the piano..
FRESHMEN LISUAK
POOR SEMESTEHRUAES
Thirty per cent of the freshmen n
the liter.ary colle made poorshol-
astic standings last semester accord-
ing to records which have- been tabu-
lated by Registrar Arthur G. Hal.
Grades of the first year men and wo
men are being sent'to the prinipals
of the high schools from which they
graduated.
x Of the 1278 freshmen in the literary'
college 48 per cnt received no grades
lower than C, while 23 per cent re-
ceived a single D or E. .A cosider-
able numbaer 'of 'students in the latter
class made B grades, however, which
raised their average to a satisfactory
Fstandard. Twenty three and one-half
per cent of the freshman class are on
the warned;. or probatln -lists, while
six per cent have been dismissedi from
the University because of failure.
The freshman showing is said by
registration" oficials to be slightly
poorer than in decent" years but this
cannot le regarded as Igniicant.
Records show that 55 per cent of
the (first year men and women are
graduates of Michigan high schools
wile 45 per cent come from outside
schools. Michigan freshmen .secured
a 3 per .cent better grade than the
non-Michigan students but this can-
niot be considered as an essential dif-
ference.
One-half of the freshman class came
last fall from high schools sending'
four or more students to the Uijuver-
sity. The percentages of students
from the large and small high schools-
are practically identical.
Dr linsdade of Oho State, Here--
D.rAlbert E. Hinsdale, professor
of internal medicine in? the Homeo-
pathic Medical school of Ohio State
{university, is in Ann Arbor for 'afew I
kdays- visiting his father, Olr. W. B.
CHinsdale, Dean of the Homeopatic
Medical school of the University.-

Tens of thousands of smokers
S -tens of thousands of times-
have PROVEN this -
"judge for Yourself-!"
2O~t

We go 6000 miles for the
Turkish tobacco
Used in Murad---Why?
Because --Turkish has a taste -Turkish has a
mildness -Turkish has a delight-far beyond all
cigarette tobaccos of all other lands-
Murad gives you real enjoyment, and true
delight such as no Tobacco other than 1OOO Pure
Turkish Tobacco can give.
Facts -Facts..-FACTS---!

dE~sn mte l&

I - .____ ____ ____

W.hen your clothes -co mc
home from the cleaners

Look atthe, linings

0

TJ HERE are many stains "on certain.
' fabrics that Benzol with our meth-
ods alone will remove. For example,
the linings of your garments-'are they
clean? They' are if B enzol was used.
It's a false cleaning that removes
surface spots and lets imbedded, dirt
remain. We use Benzol and guarantee
a thorough. cleaning.

~*1

ie Perfect .cAOuthpiee

Oz Mecn who k-now pipe satisfaction_
will tell you that they prefer
RED 11dNOL to' any other
mouthpiece because it has just'
the right feel on the teeth.
,REDMAN,1O.L is as transparent and beau-
tiful as amber ; but, stronger 2XModern
science has made it tasteless and odorless.
Whether y ou are b'uyin' a cigarette
holder, a cigar holder, or a ,jimmy" pipe,
ask your dealer toshiow y-ou one with a
1EDANOL bit.0
All Shapes --All ,Prices -
L IJ youiir local dealer doesn't carry REDMANOL
p 2ipes and Iholders send us shis natte and a rddres.
RemnlChemicalPrutsCo
657 West 22nd Stree-t
Redan l icago -

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Have ir-WIaster Cleamed
It costs you no more

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