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February 21, 1923 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1923-02-21

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

rE3UARY..21,' 1O2 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY

"PROPOSE CHANGES HAWAIIAN QUAKE AND TIDAL WAVE
IN Xm ETHDSLEA VE TOLL OF DEA TH AND HA VOC
INEXI METODSu Amu'-

AT TAR THEATERS I

I

lloara 'on'dtlers' Nan ncrr 0fR egi-
E ~teru g V rd :ze
ITOSE PA hATFE EAMN ATIO\ S+
Enzginezr throughout the state wil
6o a.ffc'te i the prpo~ed cange in
" re mr;lod ~of examination that is
~alow under onsderation by the Mich-
1- ianSate Bard of 19xaniners for the
cetistration of Engineers. Architects
~and purveyors becoes effective. Thie
snew system ill inlue the examina-
tionis, mic, to be taken limexndatey
following graduation , and the ,other
after two' yers of practical experi-
oence. a
1Jnder te present system of 'ea-
ination as given to architects and e-
I gincrs, the 'examnination is given
tice a.'ear to students immediately
1 following -raduaion, and makes it
NneOgssary lw~ two years of practical
jexperience he included in the regular
'four year college course. 'this makes
neeess.ry folur years of practical
sumaktr'work which the new sstemi
6joroposs to xcude.
lthtough the proposition as now be-+
in'osidered will include only e gi-
"neering. students. "the .examination
i olowztg grtaduation as annunced is
ide 'eougIn i 5Ss sope to include
i rctIlly all "fields. The examina-
* 'tlon'that' i"'poposed includes 10
hdoul =of ,work and is 4a9sfollows:
r' atherna tics 2 hours, drna wing and
derip1jiA.e geometry 2 hours, elemen-
Itary chteiAt y 1 hour, physics 1
* ~ur, surVeying and mapping 2 hours,
o n~inering- mechanics 4 hours, ele-
Re~atar'. etricity 1 hour, heat e-
ginuee 1 hour, .and chemical engineer-
i ng 1. hur .
Due 16kothle fact that the schedule
4iof examntiins inludes'16 hours, it
Wil enecessaryr to extend the exam-
in' atlon oer to days. They will
peolaby e';held during the spring
it' 4ctfo z oa just bfore or after Con-
1 meiacent.
. art}!.C.t.m lnited, of the enginee -
i'm;reeratm#ent, hists agreed to tak
" with ay egneer3 ..two intend taking
thais'04cmnation at hais office in rooml
.b~ o theegneering bulding.
Faculty Memnbers
" !krAt Luncheonr
S'*a membiers othe nversty fac-r
lty.L 'rol. homnas C. Trueblood, of
ilkdeartrnenat of public speaking, and i
PA .Brce . onaldso, of the dle
p fidemt of A~e arts, spoke before the
n A ra~; iitor ChGlaib'r ofComereat.
noon, yesterday at the weekly lunch-
eon cf he, organization at Chamber
of :Co unwce nn."
Teprogram following the lunch-
en'was eoted to ,talks on George'
W ailngton. le*. "F. C. 'Stellorn.
pastor oif theTriity Lutheran church,
ltiodurcedl the speakers. Professor
Tr~ubl W.d gave a number of excerpts
from waz~hn to's faewell address.j
14e was followed by Professr on-
aldson, who spoke on the many paint-
i"n,, And sculptures of Washington..
He' told of' the 'circumtance3 under
whch many of them vrere produced
an1d-la this connection spoke in par-
ticlar, of the. portraits by Charles
Stuart. His talk was illustrated by
lantern slides.
GUN AND BLADE PRAISED
The Gun and Blade Bugle, a month-
ly paper of the Gun; and Blade Club
assocition complimented. the local
icantr n .its Febr tary issue because
of the 'pep and ginger" -displayed i
all ofthle club's actvities so far this1
The .offcern wo will direct the
.affairs of the Mfr~iigani Gun and Blad
Club during the second seme'ster ar
as follows'. President, John A. Boyce
'2a;: vie-presdent~,Rfay :W. =ln'ih
'24E;:secretary,-Floyd.,G. >Rkles,

special; treasurer, lHoward G, Ch am-
berlaina, '233; sergeant-at-arm~s, Ivan
IyCl a 2 .1 3 ae Society Holds Snioker
Alembers of the Holy Name :society,
of the Catholic students chapel held
a smrker in the auditoriu m, of St.Jo
seJo- sanitarium lasi night. -Bishop
Galagher of Detroit Was the princi-
pat Sre'aku:r of the $yenzing...
OPTICAL iGOODS
AND
LENSES GROUND ,
' One Hour Service
CalF a
ARCuADE JEWELRY SHOP

t

,er~en .-TodaIy
A rcade-"F ury," with Richarid
Dartheliness and Dorothy
Gish; "The Message of Emil
Cone;" and International news.
Ma Iestic-- Booth Tar -ington's
"Th~e Flirt;" BullI Montana in
"Clad fRags."
Crpheum -: Cladys Walton in
"Top o' the Morning;" St.ar
corn Ay.
;Wucrth-Lady Diana Manners in
natural color 'bhotoplay, "The
'Glorious Adventure;" comedy
and news.

'Statistical Book
I sc~a d By Glover
"Table: or ATpled Ma." he'i tic i.
Finance, Insurance Statistics" editetl
by Prof. James W. Glover, of the de.-
pairtifleut of nuathematios and insur-
ance, has just been issued by George
Wahr, the publisher. It is the most
complete book of its kind which has
appeared and .contains more than 700
pages- of tables.
The book is designed for use in con-
junction with regular college text-
books on the Esubjects to which its
tables perta in. Its service, however,
is not limited to college students as its
tables will be of use to engineers,
astronomers, bankers or to any whose
work calls for computations in Inter-
est, insurance or statistics.
jFour main divisions have been made
by Professor Glover. 'The first part
is made up of interest tables. A di's-

tinctivo feature of thls part is the
coven place logarithms of values of
compound interest functions. Part
two contains life insurance, and dis-
ability insurance tables based oa the
Ame1 rican exiperience table of mortali-
ty.
in part three a. number of tables for
statisticians and blometriclans are to
be found, most of which are published
for the fir~st time in this took. The
last division of the Wook contains a
seven place table of common logar-
ithms from 1 to 100,000.
No text material is contained in the
baook, and it can be used at exaifla-
tions as well as in the r- gular class
room.
Ted Bennett'sOrchestra
For All Ocoaeis
x i':1 i r reservatious

" .. . _.:. :, _..y .:.c .. . : °"> arrick Detroit -"Tangerine,"
Julia Sanderson.
Pacific club cottage, above, wasliv, i hubrt Mchian Droi)f
fifty feet from foundation; beIo "I l nt'{cmpn n W
fiishing schooner, Susan Marc., Gir.lls."
wahdashore. "-: ___:::________________ I
Tidal. waves following anth y s1Vl p a
earthquake left a' trail of death r
and destruction in their wake Before En ine !ers
throughout the Hlawaiian islands.
Thel"t ocdad.ia ,a. Stephen Q. Hayes, of the WestingU-l
house Electric company of Pittsburg,
twny!hp eewse will be the speaker at the lecture be-1
ashore and buildings along theiggieat8occkonhtn -
water front were carried from tural scienceF auditorium under the
their foundations. - uspices of the Engineering society.'
The waves, several feet high, IHe has chosen as his subject, "Elec-
± trical Engineering in Japan."
brok smlle crft :.. buld.The tall{ will be based on experi-
hugs and carried the wreckage to :.: °::" '< ences, gained during az two years' res-
sea as they receded. Recon- idence in Japan and Australia. In
rtuto fte aefot e these countries he was active in the:
stroyed haof beenwabeuntsd- :, :field of electrical engineering while
straed hs ben beun:doing some work for his company.
_______________________!Mr.' Hayes is a graduate of George-!
CLVLN LUN l~ ' " _ , ,ion L. Burton and Dean Jean' convention and their wives, husbands 'town and Johns ;Hopkin~s universi- 1
GL)~d fda ha) been mnvIted. Tick- I ties. Directly following his 'graduation
PRlES. BURTON, 31 it AXL f E on Feb. 27. The affair will be and riedheeen inie .Tc- from the latter institution in 1894 he
t h -ltlWitnlCee ets, at $2.50 per person, are now on
Th-niesiyof elle-ln. A rttecHepi inon 6:in Ctee - 'sale at the Hotel' Winton and remain was employed by the Westinghouse
TheUnvesitniveri eiaz ., jln. .eeftolowed6by0innere- on sale until noon of Fb 7 ompany. In 1909 he was promnoted
nae association andl the Uieriyo, n willb oloe ya dne at to the position of general and coin-1
Michigan Club of Cleveland will give 17 o'clock. Michigan people attending -. mercial manager in which capacity lie
a reception and (inner for President the National Education association .,Try a,: Classified Ad-it pays.-Adv. has served since.'

Lx

SMOKERS-

Buy your cigarettes in cartons atd save money.

CAMELSI
LUCKY STRIKES
CHESTERFIELDS

1.28 Carton

See our prices on
Single Packages
Qi Cigarettes.

PATIMA AND OARS, $1.60 Carton

EDOiEWORTH PIPE TOBACCO, 1 Lb. Cans,, $1.35

While They Last

MEN'S CAPS, ENGLIS-I TWEED AND OTHERS

$2.00 Values, $1.35 Each

You can 't miss the Red Front

liberty Toggery and- Smoke Shop
Corner STATE and LIBERTY

,..,

5
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r
i
t

I i1

3~~N
-.~~:'- ,~
~ N
."r'' ~\
*~~~'f ~I
\ \
N..>, ~
QKx'.>~.

I

T ies

-'ht

Wear!

S ERVICEABLE as well as
beautiful is this unusually
popular Cheney creation. It
offers its wearer that final touch
of neckwear elegance so sought
for by young men - plus the
assurance of permanent cravat
satisfaction. For the name
Cheney is stamped on the
neckband.
Your favorite haberdasher will
gladly show you the new
Cheney Cravats.

" '< s " f i s t \ "-* ;'.sac*.*.* ,*
s'' '~ '
.:,. ' -'
e'{
'. k, y. "i 4

CRAVATS
SOLD BY
IVAJIJAMS & CO.
4F. W.UERIl &(.0
MAClK &-.,CO

Engineering

Levels

Mountains

MAKE THE HOME
COMFORTABLEI
Through the Winter
We can furnish you the material for
a storm house on that porch, easily put s
up, and that can easily be 'stored away1
for the summer.
Lot us give you an estimate on storm
sash, storm doors and that storm house.!
We have stock sash and windows that
'will enclose that bg.ck porch.
*-N

The Pack Train has become a relic of the
past, along with the Prairie Schooner.
Modern methods of transportation have
leveled mountains, brought San Francisco
nearer to New York, and widened the mar-
kets of all our great industries.
And the engineering brains and energy,
that have developed transportation to the
prominence it holds in the business of the
world today, are no longer employed in
improving means of overland travel alone.
Street Railways,- Elevator Systems, Inter-
urban Lines and Improved Shipping Lines-
these are some of the accomplishments of
engineering in the development of better
transportation:
Neither have the builders of such syst ,~
been concerned only in the actual hauling of
people and materials. A study of the methods
of handling passengers andf freight at the
large. terminals has developed the Terminal
Engineer, who has greatly improved existing

methods, and has developed entirely new
ones, as well.
Engineering, as it is applied to transporta-
tion, has had to concern- itself with many
kinds of materials and many ways of handling
them under all manner of circumstances.
For instance the problems surrounding the
handling of iron ore, in bulk, are vastly
different from those encountered in moving
any one of the finished products manufac-
tured from iron ore, that must. also be
transported in large cquantities. But Engin-
eering constantly meets each situation with
improved transportation facilities.
Industry, as a whole, and the nations and
the people of the world' owe. much to the
engineers, associated with such large manum-
f acturing industries as Westinghouse., They
have not only brought about vast improve-
relents, but they have done so at a constantly
decreasing cost. to those who derive the
greatest benefit from them.

yF
!

The E .Burnham and Mar-
inello Cosmetics are used} by
leading beauty shops every-
where. We have them. You
owie it to yourself to. try
them.

(7.

IUlJ flt
4fuaubr~

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