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March 16, 1922 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1922-03-16

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

IUAL
8:30 p.m. (11:

IULLETIN
a. m. Saturdays.)

[UNDER MILITARY
BALL TICKETS TODAY

1os"

TH

AY, MARCH 10, 1922

Number 126)

SCounil: r
he adjourned meeting of the Senate Council will be held at 4:15 p. m.
y, March 20, in the President's office.
R. W. BUNTING, Secretary.
', Junior and Sophomore Engineers:
1i Senior, Junior and Sophomore Engineers will be ex psed from
s promptly at 11 a. m. on Thursday, March 16, 1922, and will then
Liately assemble in the Natural Science Auditorium to hear an address
. L. W. Wallace, Executive Secretary of the American Engineering
11 of the Federated American Engineering Societies of America. Sub-
National Engineering Problems." M. E. COOLEY.
eering aculty:
1 members of the Engineering Faculty are especially invited t an
s by Mr. L. W. Wallace, Executive Secretary of the American Eegi-
g Council of the Federated American Engineering Societies, ,Subject,
nal Engineering Problems." Senior, Junior and Sophomore classes
be dismissed. M. E. COOLEY.
ry Sa (Heredity):
embers of the class who are assigned to seats in the aisles will take
amination Thursdayat 9 in Room B of the Law building. If your seat
r is odd, enter by the north door, and occupy an odd-numbered seat.
r 'seat number is even, enter by the south door and occupy an even-
red seat. All others will go to the Natural Science building as here-
A. FRANKLIN SHULL.
mics 15 -Corporations:
;udents scheduled to take the examination next Friday in Room 348,
eering building, will take it, instead, in the Auditorium of Newberry
The remainder of the class will take the examination in Room B, Law
ag, as originally announced. I. L. SHARFl AN.
.eutenant Boston, U. S. N. R., will speak on the "Construction and
.g of Mines by the United States and British Navies During the War",
Union, tonight at 7:30. Members of the A. S. M. E. and faclty of the
nical Department and Engineering Shops are cordially invited. Smokes
usic will follow the meeting. F. R. SCHERER,
Chairman, A. S. M. E.
angle:
ae next regular meeting of Quadrangle will be held this (Thursday)
g in Room 304, Michigan Union.
MARTEN TEN HOOR, Provost.
Nui:
Ie to the Varsity debate to be held in Hill Auditorium Friday evening
gular meeting of Alpha Nu will be held Thursday evening at 7:30. At
me the freshman try-outs for the inter-society debate will be held and
irged that we have a full attendance. The subject for debate is:
ved, The United States should subsidize her merchant marine."
W. K. ROBERTSON, Vice-President.
Engineers:
hn L. Harper, Vice-President and Chief Engineer of the Niagars Falls
A Company, will address the Associated Technical Societies of Detroit
clock Friday, March 17, in the auditorium of the Board of Commerce,
t. . Senior students of the Engineering College are invited to attend
eeting, which will be of interest principally to Civil, Mechanical and
leal Engineers. Mr. Harper has been associated with developments at
a Fallsfor over twenty-five years and his paper will present recent
pectacular developments which are at present withheld ffom publi-
Some rather extraordinary lantern slides and motion pictures will
sented. JOHN C. PARKER, Chairman',
Detroit Section, American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
Ct OrganSeries:
r. H. Russell Evans will give the following program at this week's
Recital in Hill Auditorium, Thursday afternoon at 4:15 o'clock: Pomp
ircumstance, Op. 39, No. 1 (Elgar); Berceuse in D flat (Dickinson);
>f Sorrow (Nevin); Sonata in D minor, Op. 42 (Guilmant); A Song of
(Rimsky-Korsakow); Lamentation (Guilant). No admission charge.
ren' not admitted.)
CHARLES A. SINK, Secretary.
,ht Faculty Concert Series:
ie following program will be given at the concert in Hill Auditorium
y afternbon, March 19, at 4:15 o'clock: Danse Sacree et Danse Pro-
(Debussy), for Piano, Violins, Violas, Violoncellos, Bass; "Ill mio te-.
ntanto" (Don Giovanni) (Mozart), Myrto (Delibes), The Serenade
cs), Happiness (Hageman), Odra 0. Patton; Waltz, Op. 69, No. 1;
aise, Op. 44 (Chopin), Nell B. Stockwell; Over the Steppe (Gretchan-
The Isle (Rachmaninoff), Floods of Spring (Rachmaninoff), Nora B.
re; Sonetto del Petrarca, No. 6 (List), Capriccietto (Moszkowski);
Land (Scott), Staccata-Caprice (Vogrich), Miss Stockwell. The pro-
will begin on time and the doors will be closed during the perform-
>f numbers. Children not admitted. No admission charge.
CHARLES A. SINK, Secretary.
i Union Members:
ill rehearsal Thursday, March 16, School of Music, 7 o'clock.
EARL V. MOORE, Acting Conductor.

Applications for tickets to the Mil-
iary ball must be procured from 2 to
5 o'clodk this afternon in the Union i
they are to be gotten at all, iccording
to Hamilton Cochran, '22, secretary of
the general committee in charge. Al-
ready 650 have been given out, and 700
has been set as the maximum figure.
These applications are due to be
mailed back and in the committee's
hands on March 22 by the latest, it
they are to receive any consideration.
Cochtan also announced that the
Arts and Crafts society of Detroit is
to have complete charge of the decora-
tions, which will for the mostpart
be military in nature. Thre orches-
tras have been procured. Wahring's,
from .Pittsburgh, which played at the
J-Hop, will be here and will bring
several feature acts with it. Wright's
orchestra, a Columbus band of negro
syncopators, will be on hand, and will
bring a troupe of entertainers with
them who will put on several comedy
skits throughout the evening. Ken-
nedy's local orchestra, which also
played at the J-Hop; will again furn-
ish music for a Michigan function.
'One of its members has written a spe-
cial piece for the ball, and this will
not be published until then, when it
'will be dedicated to the affair.
OSBORNE, NOTED PRISON
REFORMER, TO SPEAK HERE
Thomas Mott Osborne, formerly
warden of Sing Sing prison and noted
prison reformer, will speak in Ann
Arbor net Sunday and Monday. AOn
Sunday he will give an address at the
Unitarian church on "Churches and
Prisons," and on Monday 'he will
speak in the Natural Science auditor-
ium under the auspices of the sociol-
ogy department,
CARS WASHED
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OUR HOME COMFORT COKE
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Costumes for the entire cast of
"I.os Intereses Creados," a-play to be
given by the Spanish students, have
now arrived, thus giving opportuni-
ty, for several dress rehearsals. Al-
though cocusciderable difficulty ;was
at first experienced in the matter of
accent, J. P. Holden, '22, director, now
feels that the cast, whiph has been at
work since Thanksgiving, has attained
a satisfactory degree of proficiency.
In addition to the local presentation,
to be given on March 28, the play will
also be produced at the Highland Park
high schol in Detroit.
Albert Gansle
Fine Custom Tailor-
ing Suits made to or-
der at Reasonable{
;Pgrices.

School bonds to raise money for the
ertection of three new grade schools
and for additions and repairs to the
present schools in this city will. will
in all probability be issued to the peo-
pie of this city May 1, according to
announcement made 'last night by L.
A. Butler, superintendent of schools.
The three schbols for the erection
of which the bond issue is principally
made are the Miller school on Miller
Division street, and the school now
.Division street, and the school now
under construction on South Univer-
sity avenue at Tappan..
ChopSuey
CHINESE AND
AMERICAN RESTAURANT
Quang Tung Lo.
613 E. Liberty a

NORTH WESTET
UNIVERSITY LAW SON
(The oldest Law School in Chi
Summer Term, Wednesday, June
Wednesday, August 23, 1922
Fall Term, opens Monday, Sept,
The Summer Faculty includes r
bers of the Supreme Courts of the
lowing states: Colorado, South 4
lina, West Virginia and Illinois.
Requirements for Admission
Candidates for a degree. Proof o:
isfactory completion of three yea
college study.
Special Students. Proof of coi
tion of four years of high scho
its equivalent.
Auditors. Members of the bar
either cannot meet the above rec
ments or who do not ask for cred
studies.
For bulletins and detailed inf(
tion, address Secretary of- the
School, Northwestern Univeri
Building,
31 West Lake Street,
Chicago, Ill.

r13 S. Main St.

Second Floor

Michigan's Favorite College Songs

Price

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I

HAT'S GOING ON

at Hill auditor-

Glee club rehearsal at
of La Sociedad Hispan-

earsal, instrument-
n. 306 of Union.
Chii meets at Un
Ats in their rooms,

A. S. M. E. smoker at Union.
itenant Boston talks on "Con-
etion and Planing of Mines."
Westerners' club smoker at'Un-
Christian Science society meets
ane hall.
FRIDAY'
-Meeting of social chairmen of
freshman classes in room 302

MILLER HOLDS SECOND IN
CONFERENCE COURT STANDING
(Continued from Page 4)
its team which Michigan's opponents
in 12 games garned but 218 counters.
Opponents Average 18 1.6 Per Game
Although Purdue's -record stands as
a better defensive record it would
very likely have been surpassed by
Michigan had the Boilermakers played
as many games as Mather's men were
engaged in. Michigan had an average
of 18 1-6 points per game scored
against it while the loilermakers al-
lowed their opponents; J8and 1-3
points per game. The difference is so
slight that it- is merely a matter of
speculation as to what the outcome
might have been had the Purdue five
played a full schedule. However, the
fact remains that the Wolverines had
fewer points per game scored against
them than any five in the Conference.
AGNES HALL, EDUCATOR,
TO SPEAK HERE SUNDAY
Agnes Hall, secretary in the depart-
ment of religious education for work
among college women, will come to
Ann Arbor next week end from New
York to address students of the Uni-
versity. She will speak at 6:30 o'clock
Sunday evening at Harris hall, fol-
lowing the regular Sunday - evening
supper, and will see students by ap-
pointment.
Miss Hall is a graduate of the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin and subsequent-
ly took courses at the University of
Chicago, the New York Y. M. 0. A.
Training school and at the Union The-

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TOBACCO PRICES
Dill's, Prine Albert, Velvet. Old English, Etc.: 8 oz.,
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