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March 07, 1922 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-03-07

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

ore Recitation And Lecture Rooms
Ire Seriously Needed In Literary
College, Declares Dean.Humphreys

.

ce Stationery
'ing Sale
>ck at big discount
N (Sawaco Fabric)
nvelopes .... 40c,
NDfoIded
- 25 envelopes 10c

That there is a s'erious lack of rooms{
for both recitation and lecture pur-
poses, was the statement issued by
Prof. W. R. Humphreys, assistant dean
of the literary college, in commenting
on the classroom situation in the lit-
erary college- yesterday.
Dean Huniphreys has charge of the
assigning and scheduling of rooms in
the literary college, having assumed
this duty after L. C. Karpinski, of the
mathematics department, found it'
necessary to give up last semester.
"t the,. present time," said Dean
Humphreys, "about 85 rooms areavail-
able to the literary college for use
E as class rooms and lecture rooms."
These rooms include 14 rooms in the
economics building, 10 in the Library,
4 in the physics building, a few in
Newberry hall. Room B of the law
building is sometimes used by the lit-
erary school as a lecture room. Be-
sides these rooms all of the rooms in
University hall, South wing, Mason
hall, and Natural Science building may
be used, except those rooms designed
for the especial use of some depart-
ment which are not assigned by the
committee.,

Ward
y and

krcade

O.

11

s of a High Class Optical
Eyes are Examined by
ethods and Glasses are

measurements.

All At
the un-

any Clinic--minus
work.

4,

L CON
R EST;

Poor Ventilation
"In addition to the fact that there
js, a great dearth of rooms," added
Dean Humphreys, "those rooms that
we have are.used so much and in such
qdick succession by classes that the
ventilation in them is particularly
poor. One class closes and another is
convened without a sufficient space of
time intervening to allow for adequate
ventilation and it is almost impera-
tive that the windows be kept open
even in the coldest weather. Thus it
can be seen that there is not only a
need of rooms to hold the added num-
ber of students but there is an actual
nieed of rooms to relieve the ones used
so much.
"In previous years before the Uni-
versity had grown to any way near
its present size, nearly all of the pro-
fessors and instructprs had offices or
at least were assigned class rooms
where they could hold consultations
with their students. Now, very few
of tle instructors have such places.to
meet their students at convenient
hours with the result that consultation
1SQUES SPRING PLAY
IS "YELLOW JACKT"1
(Continued from page one)
The cast for "The Yellow Jacket" is
as follows' Property man, Elsie W.
Townsend, '22; Chorus, Amy G. Loom-
is, '22; Wu Sin Yin, Portia Goulder,
'244 Due' Jung Fah, Mattie G. Proud-
foot, ,'23; Tso, Dor othy Weimer, '24;
Chee Moo, Joyce McCurdy, '22; Tai
Fah Min, '24, Suey Sin Fah, Beatrice
Champion, '23; Ling Won, Carribel
Schmidt, '23; Wu Fah Din, Velma Car-
ter, '24; Yin Suey Gong, Isabell
Kemp, '22; Wu Hoo Git, Mary Ives,
'23; See Quoe Fah, .Constance Bald-
win, '23.
Mow Dan Fah, Esther Welty, '23;
Yong Soo Kow, Hortense Miller, '24;
Chow Wan, Evelyn Rockwell, '22; Moy
Fah Loy, Shirley Salisbury, '24; See
Noi, Isabel Waterworth, '24; Tai Char
Shoong, Isabella Swan, '22; The
Widow Ching, Adele Zimmerman, '22;
Maid, Kathleen I. Currah, '22; Git Hok
Garfi Catherine Staffer, 24; Kom Loi,
Adelaide Roden, '22; Loy Gong, Vir-
ginia Brodell, '23; Maung Yung, Ruth
Werkheiser, '23; Dancers, Hortense
Hoad, '24, Mildred Henry, '22.
Members of the cast will meet for.
rehearsal at three o'clock this after-
noon at Newberry hall.

between students and instructors often
amounts to nothing more than a hur-
ried question and an equally hurried
answer after classes or a chance con-
versation on the stairs or in the hall-
way of some building..
Even Use West Hal
Due to the lack of class rooms it has
been necessary for classes to be held
in buildings and rooms totally unsuit-
ed for the purpose. Old West hall
is absolutely necessary to the present
scheme of assigning rooms even when
it was found unsafe several years ago
as a public building and slated for
razing at that time. At the present
time several classes are held in the
Library, a building in which no
classes unless seminaries, were to be
held. Also classes are held in New-
berry hall in which there are inade-,
quate facilities for holding classes.
"The only remedy for these ills,"
said Dean Humphreys, "will come
when the new buildings come. Mean-
while, however, our condition will be
relieved,if each department ill co-oper-
ate with the room committee-by mak-
ing sure that its requirements are
checked with the commitee's record of
room assignments.
Cilumbla Begins Baseball Season
Twenty-five responded to Coach
Coakley's first call for baseball play-
ers at Columbia University. The ma-
jority of the men-reporting were vet-
erans of last year's squad, although
there was a sprinkling of former
prep §chool stars. The squad will be
augmented later by Tien who were
prevented from reporting because of
late classes.
Hussey to Speak on "Evolution"
R. C. Hussey, instructor in the geo-.
logy department, will lecture before
the Phi Sigma biological society of
Chop Suey
CHINESE AND
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Quang Tung Lo.
'613 E. Liberty

It's Odorless

Our Motto: QUALITY,

Swissilized Garments Stay

March 14, on the subject of "E'volu- men, and es
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He will discuss the most recent disl *Africa.
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Fits the Pocket Like a Fountain Pen. ComI
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You won't have to shun your
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Energined.

4'

Phone
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E

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e L

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