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September 26, 1921 - Image 11

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1921-09-26

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

y W. Miller, of the
as been secured as
the department of
ry and drawing in

KN,

ST QUALITY POCAHONTAS-any
Size
ST VIRGINIA LUMP AND EGG
KENTUCKY EGG AND LUMP
EST QUALITY PREMIUM AN-
THRACITE
SOLVAY COKE
ur Orders Respectfully Solicited
RUNER COAL 00, INC.
Office-124 East Huron Street
Phone 1950-F1
Yard-Depot Street
Phone 195042

- MR. STEWARD

uie3 , O.iso i n.JJ LUVLA L~L .AM; UL JelI
iViller has distinguished himself in
technical and administrative work for
a number of years, according to Dean
Mortimer E. Cooley,' and has written
eight books on technical problems in
the artillery service. During the war
A he was chief engineer and head of the
techiical service for all heavy artillery
f in, the United States army, and decor-
ated with the Legion of Honor by
. Marshal Petain and cited by .General
Pershing. He is a graduate of Wash-
ington and Lee university end for a
time wa head of the general engineer-
ing drawing department and assistant
dean of the engineering school at the
University of Illinois.
White Takes Turner's Place
Prof. A. B: White, of the University
of Minnesota, will be in charge of the
work of Prof. Edward R. Turner in
English history during the coming
year. Professor White has written a
"Constiutional History of England"
and, according to Prof. C. H. VanTyne,
was one of the most prominent men at
the University of Minnesota. Pro-
fessor Turner, who is on leave of ab-
scence for a year, is now In England,
where he is completing his study of
the British archives in preparation
for his "History of the British Cab-
inet."
~ Dr. Preston Slosson will be an in-
structor in the history department, as-
sisting in the modern history course
for the present. He has been connect-
ed with newspaper work until this
year and for two years wrote all the
editorials' for the Independent, the
magazine of which his father, Edward
0. Slosson, was formerly editor. He
went on President Wilson's ship to the
peace conference and is one of the two
or three men that were permitted full
access to the papers of the "Big Four."
Two other instructors have been se-
cured for the history department, F.
C. Newsome and Dr. L. M. Aitons. The
latter has been studying at the Uni-
versity of California under Professor
Bolton, who is the leading authority
on Spansih-American history. Dr. Ai-
tons'spent the past year in Spain col-
Iectirg material for a work on Span-]
Ish-American history and institutions,
and will give a course on that subject
during the coming year.
New Head for Bureau
Prof. Clifford'Woody, of the Univer-
sity of Washington, will be in charge
of the bureau of reference and research
in the School of Eduction, which was
known as the bureau of tests and
neasurements last year. Prof. Guy M.
Whipple, formerly the head of the de- ]
partment, will be put in charge of ex-
perimental education. Professor Woody
has also lectured at Iowa and Indiana
universities, -and taught the Woody
arithmetic tests, which have been
widely used for several years.
Dr. Brand Blanchard, a graduate of
Michigan, will retur'n this year as an
assistant professor in the philosophy
department. He was selected for a
Rhodes scholarship while at the Uni-
versity and has taught at Columbia
and Harvard universities.
Prof.'Louis Eich will also return as
an assistant professor in the public
speaking departipent. He was at Mich-
igan for several years before leaving
in 1920 to teach at Grand Rapids jun-
ior college.
Hlaines, '09, Will Lecture
Donal Hamilton Haines, '09, who
has been a free lance witer in a
number of fieldssince his graduation
from Michigan, will have a graduate

fellowship in journalism for the year.
He will give lectures on journalistic
subjrects in connection with the regu-
lar courses, the scope of which will be
much extended. Haines iswell known
as an author on varied subjects and
inaugurated his work by a series of
lectures during the past Summer ses-
sion.
Dr. Everett S. Brown, B.A., M.A., and
Ph.D., of Leland Stanford 'university,
has- been appointed an assistant pro-
fessor in the political science depart-
moent. He was an assistant to Herbert
Hoover during the war and has writ-
ten a book entitled, "The Constitu-
tional History of the Louisiana Pur-
chase."
Dr. A. F. Pauli, of the University of

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$3.50 THE YEAR

li1mUUA, wil. ltau ueh place o rror.
John G. Winter, of the Greek and Latin
departments, during the period of his,
leave of absence. Dr. Pauli has made
notable researches into archaeology
and was librarian at Camp Sherman
during the war. Professor Winter at-
tended an international conference of
classical scholars in England this
summer, will pass the winter in Rome,
and continue his archaeological re-
searches in' Greece next spring.

Read

Two new men have been appointed
assistant professors in the engineer-
ing college, Prof. H. C. Smith in the
highway laboratory of the civil eng-
ineering department, and Prof. C. B.'
Gordy, who will be in charge of the
work of Dean J. A. Bursley, in the
mechanical engineering department.
A numberHof men have been appoint-
ed instructors in the economics depart-
ment to occupy the vacancies left since

I

[CdIGAN

DAIL~

k

H. Wyngaarden, G. S. Peterson, F. A.!of Buck
Bradford, and S. L. Horner? all stu- professo
dents at Michigan, have been appoint- Coffey,
ed, and J. P. Troxelj, S. C. Oppen- burgh;
heim, and Bruce Knight have been se- are new
cured from other universities. Two is an i
new men, L. J. Carr and K. W. Gun- English
ther, are instructors in the sociology
department. . Danci
Five new instructors will appear in ets, $1.(

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and

BOOST-'

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MICHIGAN

W E are on the job as
usual.

IN making plans for the,
coming year, consider
the service we offer you;
the quality of ,ierchan-
dise we sell and the prices
at which we sell it.

EI NMA N.
SEN b R F ER

,r

GO

I

_ F r e s h m
Fresm
by readli
Ke ep r ig
Your M IA
.
_ a4-
_

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by

e n!

reading

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right

ng your "Bible"!

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