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April 11, 1924 - Image 12

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1924-04-11

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____ ____ ____ ____ ___THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Ven.1 tilation S udy, TTtfrm he had been connected fobs Stone is a (director of the Atlanta
xJIUIsLTO E NEW a RNEi twenty years as a law partner of and Charlotte Air Line Railroad,
~I Herbert L. Satterlee, son-in-law of J. President of the American Association
Piroblem' In School B uildaings E[D L " I g it lPierpont Morgan. of Law Schools, member of the Corn-
FGHTER Resuming active practice, he be- mittee for Restatement of the Laws o1'
In of the foremost problemns now OJne scriou matter that is c ~in came the litigation expert of his the New York County Bar Assooa-
igthe modern educator in theI ing the attention of those who want. Stone loves to fight." firm. tion, memb~er of the Legislative Draft-
.struction of high school and col- to) take up the nmatter here is the 'So members of the New York bar lie attacked Attorney Genieral 1jug Research Fund and of tihe Amei-
e buildings, namely the question: question of finanrce. The wor'k will ',vho have watched him since he re-; Palmer during the war for raids by ca Bar Association.
j In ~1899 he married Ms ge
ventilation, is under consideration no dioub t tokc three or four years and entered law 'practice, following his g Department of Justice agents on al- inaMssvgne
state and University authorities ,everal thoumends of dollars, said resignation last June (effective in a4I leged radicals, charging Mr. Palmer y-a xe in his home town of Chester-
etriewhether it can be inve - IPoesi ig yesterday in pointing year) as Dean of the Columbia Law!1 was violating the laws and the Con- field. They have two sons, Marshall,
ted in the engineering research outwthut the. state Attorney General's Scehool described Harlan Fiske Stone,l stitution by making wholesale arrests an instructor in mathematics, and
artment here. ofhc( e hs issued an order that n10 new attorney-general in the Coolidge! without warrant. Later hie traveled 1La'wson, a student, at Harvard.
'he problem, it is agreed by all h'ilnds (,iahu l~l~itced by the abnttro atnen ocnonetmk
cerned, is a comnined one for the sho i(5O'! ihgnfrr-in stdeof"lceim'frte1"i ieheaak" lt nyigI
Lical school and the department of: searth(onsthis problem of0 ventilation. s~ mall town boy, born in Chester- igsuiso sakns"frte Jmi h dae"slsayhn
Iein rearh The mn ~1 os or 4a iSai~fiti that he field, N. H., Oct. 11 1872, Stone was government. quickly--Adv.
it be consulted to handle it: an ! )ijkvent the jnvet5tIigton was neces~- graduated from Amherst in 1894. H-is
Sneer, a ventilation expert, and a i ,; but that hewa doubtful as to one vice in college according to class-
Lalepr.W1(ther (oI-not it could he carried out. mates was being "too serious mind-I
.s pointed out by Dean Hugh C bo' The melterI of inveigation of yen-'ed" That won him a Phi Beta Kappa SE2JNIO R S!t~
he medical school the present ee;tila~tion as hroueght up at a recent ktey. He was graduated from Colum- ~TN TXh1
sive ventilation systems that are tmeeting of d1ifferent local school board na Law School in 1898 and admitted
vin use are usually faulty and doj members andl officials here n Ann to the bar the same year.(Plc Yo rrd r fr
do any good toward aiding th-e Arbor by Prof. A. F. White of the en-( He entered the law office of Sulli. lc o r -u r o
th of the school children. gineering college at which Dean Ca- van R Cromwell with whom he washI1 TT 11£A~~C
Very often," he said, "a new schoolj hot, Professors Riggs and Anderson an expert in litigation, and the next j CALLI1NG CARDSJ
ilt in a small city, and the schoolI were presnt. At that time W. L~. Cof- year was appointed an instructor in I.N
rd is advised to put in an expens- I fey, deputy superintendent of public; law at Columbia. A full professorshipNO
ventilation system. When this is instruction of this state and presiding in 1905 followed his appointment as!
e it is found that the engineer! officer at the meeting, was authorized (associate professor. Five years later '
n can not make it operate. In to appoint two committees to investi- hewsmd enoIh a col n r v d o rn e
tion there is a serious question gate the matter. Uher a s dietn tewaschool. ( j(
o whether the system. can do what rated a period of "legal scholarship" I A EM
esired. Note'dfv-IU,,ri s' at Columbia, together with a practic- I ________________________________
rhere is no doubt of the fact that altjhtacrin.t emeso
does carry contagious disease andamythacodn to ebrsf
most serious menace to the health °' .. ..... .. the bar, has marked Columbia law ;
~' hlrn h eto n y-graduates in recent years. His an- I 12 . MAIN ST. PHONE 1404
must, of course, be whether oranual reports as Dean attracted wide'
attention and contained notable con- Iiwok ouprccalto t'rT MfA'~Y 9ThfS r A IrEh'1
nises ntepbi col.I rbtast h icsino eaedical problem from that stand- c' 1yk problems.1
At and must be solved on evidence l}Following his resignation from COPN
hat benefit. >: y Columbia Dean Stone re-entered theCOP N
fears ago carbon dioxide was { I firm of Sullivan& Cromwell, at theStioesPrn rBnd sadEgav s
iht to be the cause of sickness r same time withdrawing from Satter-
itransmitted in the school room J I lee, Canfield & Stone, withwhc

5!, 51

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tps were taken to get rid of it.
now definitely known 'that the
ial content in the air is the most
tant factor. It may be that all
elaborate 'ventilation systems
o good and that open air is the
way to meet the problem."
n Cabot, Prof. H-. E. Riggs of
nlgineering college and Prof. HI.
derson of the engineering college
in saying that this is one of
host important problems facing
chool builders today. It is im-
at to the state from both a health
?oint and from the expense, since
ie present outlay of money may
edless waste.
Lin g the question from the view-
of 'the engineer, Professor An-
n. says that their probl'em is one
pensq primarily. The best sys-
,or the least money is what,is

Alber~to Sanivi

Signor Salv\i, considlered by many to
be the world's greatest living harpist,
will be one of the soloists to be here
(lu ring May Festival week.

WHITNEY 'THEATRE

SATURDAY, APRIL

12

I

.CHAFPLES FROHMiAN (
A~l Pnesen zs
(IN PErPSON)
"IN S'AZL/SBL'RY FIELD S L
\NS A~S HNO STAGE @O M)EDY Hl/1/f D
T HE GREAT "-

A'

t , .. , , ; . '. * r- A , '. 1, ,j

1)PRt. T/IATPE7 "NEW YORK. CAST AA'D PRODUCTON
kAlL NOW
Eniclose Self-Add(res sed Enviielope
PRICES-Lover Floor, $2.75. Balcony $1.10, $1.65, i{2.20
ALL SEATS RESERVTED
SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE
TIA
THE ANN ARBOR RAILROAD
ACCOUNT
SPRING VACATION
For the accommodation of University of Michigan Students, re-
ning home Friday, April 11th for Spring Vacation, the Ann Arbor
Iroad will provide the following train service:
SPECIAL TRAINS
Lv. Ann Arbor ................11: 40 A. M. ( C.T. )
Arr.. Toledo ....... .......... .2:00 P. M. (E.T.)
This Trrain will handle passengers ONLY for Toledlo and points
pnd.
Lv. Ann Arbor ........ .........4:41 P. M. (C.T.)
Arr. Owosso ...................7:20 P. M. (C.T.)
This train will stop at Howell, Mich., and Durand, Mich., to dis-
.rge passengers, protecting Pere Marquette and Grand Trunk comn-
tions.
REGULAR TRAIN SERVICE
In addition to the above Special Service the 'following reglar
n service Ann Arbor to Toledo will prevail:
Ann Arbor 11:40 A. M. (C.T.) 2:00 P.M. (C.T.) 4:30 P.M. (C.T.)
Toledo 2:10 P. M. (E.T.) 5:00 P. M. (E.T.) 7:00 P. M. (E. T.)
(N ORTHLBOUND))
Northbounnd .trains Nos. 51 and 53 leave Ann Arbor, 8:10 A. M. (C.
and 4:41 P. M. (C.T.) respectively, connecting with Grand Tirunik,
higan Central, Pere Marquette and G. It. and I. for all principal
tinatons in lower and upper peninsula of Michigan.

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