THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JA F __ LIONS CLOSE FEBS 7 R SECOND SEMESTERI Wow Boys! She's A Flapper And A Movie Actress Work on the dining hall of the Law club building has progressed to a point where the walls are ready to re- ooceive the roof. The dimensions of the' hall are 140 feet long, 40 feet wide and 60 feet high. There will be carved panelling of oak,12 feet high, aroundI the entire circumference of the room. The entrances to the hall are to be All second semester election blanks for students enrolled in the literary college must be handed in to the proper class election committees in University hall from Monday to Thursday, Feb. 4 to 7. The freshmen election committee will meet in room 206' University hall, the sonhomore committee in room 208 in the same building, and the junior and senior committees in the Reg- istrar's offce. The above information together with a list of changes which have been made in second semester courses since the last announcement of the literary college is found in the sup- plementary announcements which are now being distributed from the Reg- istrar's- office. NiON WILL CONDUCT LD BOOK EXCHNE A book exchange that will enable students to dispose of second hand books and to buy other books will be established during the second week of examinations in the lobby of the Uni- ion. Any student wishing to buy or sell books may list-them at that time. The exchange is carried on by the Union as a service to students. A double file system is kept, one listing the books for sale and the other those who wish to buy books. Those wish- ing to buy books are thus allowed to get in touch withthose wishing to sell them. Last year more than 500 books were exchanged through the service. Rob- ert Grab, '26 is in charge of the ser- vice this year. W. L. 0BA0GERTO ATTEND MEETING ON RSEARCH Prof. W. L. Badger, of the chemical engineering department has been in- vited to attend a meeting of the Nat- ional Research council to be held in SNew York on Jan. 29. At the meeting of the council, which is composed of prominent research workers in var- ious branches of science, a committee on heat transfer will be formed. The purpose of such a committee. according to Professor Badger, would be to supervise and coordinate all phases of research on heat transfer throughout the United States. The work would be- of an advisory nature only, and the committee as such will carry out no research work of its own. The publications on evaporator de- sign which have issued from the de- partment of chemical engineering in the last few years are given as the reason for this recognition. Two Students Added To S'. C. A. Cabinet E W. Davis, '25, has been appointed chairman of the inter-church relations committee of the Student Christian association it was announced yester- day. Davis will become a member of the cabinet through this appointment. J. L. Nathanson has also been ap- pone as an active member of the association's cabinet it was announc- ed. Nathanson is prsidnt of the University Jewish student congre- gation. SMOKIN IS ]PROHIBITEDUE C IN YOST FIELD JHOSE JI I Smoke laden air is disturbing I to athletes on contending teamsC in the Yost field house, and dur- ing any athletic contests hereaf- ter prayed there the ruling pro- 1 hibiting smoking within this I building must be strictly adher- L ed' to by everyone present. 1 'ii heavy oak doors hung on massive hinges and under each portico in the long entrances will be hung heavily leaded antique lamps. The entire floor of the room will be of marble flagging. Just above the wainscoting and at various degrees of height frorm the floor, carved stone figures will be placed along the walls. The ceiling will be constructed of heavy oakJ planking and supported by grotesque- ly carved oaken beams. This wood SEMI-A work will be given a natural finish with probably a dark stain as its base. There will be a false roof above this ceiling and this will be covered with lead. The room will be lighted by chan- deliers suspended from the beams and they will hang considerably below them. All the windows will be lead- ed after the old English. A terrace is to be constructed in conjunction with the dining hall. A roof from the side of the building will extend over this GENERAL-STEAMSHIP AGT Tickets. Travelers Checks, Letters of Credit. Tour- 1st insurance. etc. Passport, visacs. clearance papers. readmissilon affidavits, etc-. Information. £j Europe, Orient, Cruises, Tours, etc. our legalized papers bring relatives and friends to V.13. fromforeigneountries. NSVRANCE.e Ali ktnds, a oryu uiess, home, auto, etc. E. G. tUE LEP, 601 E. Huron St. Phone 1384 A14N ARBOR, MUCH. terrace and it will be paved with lime- department of Chemical engint stone flagging. Some of the faculty member's The architecture of the room and have been changed and their terrace tends to the Medieval English. painted on the new doors hence ing some to go to the new offic Some slight confusion has been new offices will not be occupies caused in the Chemistry building due the start of the second semest( to the remodeling that is being done to the rooms recently vacated by the Patronize The Daily Advertd !# ;k,. 7 ;.1, r, t A New Patter'l NNUAL SAMPLES Clearance Sale! .------------ ---- Oh to be a flaper and a movie act -the movies and in geology, and Oc- ress! Clara Bow, a newcomer to the casionally even in real life. The in- screen who is pictured above, is both. spiration for Gertrude Atherton's O "novel, "Black Oxen," was a gland op-f of these things in "Black Oxen," eration and treatment practised by a which is coming to Ann Arbor, Jan,!Vienna doctor to bring aged people, 27. She makes eleven changes of cos- especially men, back to youth. This tume during the course of the picture. doctor did not claim that his treat-- Conway Tearle has a scarcely lessment invariably brought rejuvenation desirable role as a cynical New York of appearance, but only of physical ca- newspaper man who falls in love with 'paityan ener. nhat is undoubt- edly why men were willing to undergo Rejuvenation sometimes happens in the operation more often than women. Suits, Overcoats, Top Coats, Hats, Caps, Bath Robes, at {d W. cSiW.Iz, Permanently on Display at GUV W OLFOLK & Co. '36 S. State Street Ann Arbor, Micil. Designed by WHITEHOUSE & HARDY BROADWAY Az 40'"STREET 144 WEST 42" STREET MrmopoumA Om Hous. Bo. Krncamoc!nR OB'ING NEW YORK 25% Reduction - I Brushed Wool Building Progress Plans are being completed for the new landscape improvement work on the campus by the landscape archi- tects, Pitkin and Mott, of Cleveland, 0., and it is expected that they will be finished duirng the next two or three weeks. according to the building and grounds department. As soon as the plans are ready the department will be able to order the shrubs and bushes that are stipulated on the plans for the work, for spring delivery. While the work of cutting down trees and removing undesirable shrubs can be carried on in this kind of1 weather very little of the constructive work can be accomplished, and it will have to be postponed until the season permits. The plans also call for new arrangements of cement walks on the campus and also for the installing of walks around the new buildings. As few cement walks on the campus as can reasonably accommodate the crowds that use them between classes} wil be laid, as some objections have been raised to the amount of cement that is now on the campus. f The building and grounds depart- ment is now started on the work of removing the undesirable trees on the campus. It is estimated that there are between 30 and 40 such trees that will be removed because of their age, appearance, or position on the campus ~landscape. The writer went through the work- shops of the building and grounds de- partment. Most of the trade work of the University is done in these shopsj at a pecuniary saving to the Univer- sity and the work is usually more satisfactory. The shop, which occu- pies a space of about a square block, is divided into five departments, elec- trical, blacksmith, furniture construe- tion, tin shops and paint shop. The electrical department manufactures all the large switch boards that are installed in the University buildings besides doing whatever repair and up- keep work is necessary. The furni- ture shops manufacture all the furni- ture for the University, such as benches, desks, tables, chairs and. cases. The tiu shops build all the heating conductors for the buildings1 and fans and ventilating systems while the paint shop finishes all the work that demands painting that is turned out by the rest of the departments. Nights50 to $ 2.00 GARRICK Sat. Mat. Soo to $1.50? Wad. Mat. 50a to $1.00f WALKER WHITESIDE Due to the illness of Miss )miry stevens, the playing of" Love in a Cottage," which was cheduled for this week, has been postponed. Mufflers and Sweaters at 331/3% Reduction Heavy Union Suits, Flannel Shirts, Sweaters, Lined Gloves, j Whitne MONDAY -~~ P- ';OLIO eYsf om a I- SIEATS NOW 1= iiflfililiililliI Theatre JANUARY 28 All Collar Attached Shirts at 20%zw Reduction " :1AROLO MUMAY '1V ,ANY~rlE SC9Ar' 2n n4OriQ't Compny 96T TO (1Q61 C. ,; , 'ora, - :mU of =AMBA55AOacf' h Wadhas & Co.' The Home of Society Brand Clothes STATE ST. MAIN ST. ., i OWN" PHONE 480 A 'I IRVING WARMOLTS D. S. C. Graduate and Registered Chiropodist and Orthopedist 707 North University Phone 2652 I DAILY REQUESTS LIST OF J-iIOP IESTS FOR EXTRA The Daily will publish a J-Hop Extra Saturday morning, Feb. 9. All campus organizations hold- ing house parties at that time are requested to mail a list of guests and chaperones to the editor of the J-Hop Extra as soon as nossi1ble. i I., i Choice of a Career From the Yale News THE NINETY-FOUR Someone, probably an insurance agent, was quoted recently as saying that from the mass of one hundred college graduates one individual only rose to the Polo and butler class, peril- ously near the top of the financial lad- der. Five others became comfortably off and found themselves after twenty years at the small yacht and chauffeur stage. The other ninety-four presum- ably congregate in the great section of the American people who drive their own Buicks to the golf club. In other words, dreaming about being a rich man is one thing, and making the grade is "something else again." Yet the ninety-four presumably work just as hard as the sumptuous six. Their business is the axis on which a small and uninteresting world revolves. They have become devotees of the dollar and when that fickle deity deserts, have nowhere else to turn. Jammed in a dull, straight rut of business they can never leave the road and jump the fence4 into finer fields of life. This, then, isf the portion of ninety-four men out of every hundred now on the campus.. The answer to. the problem lies in the proper choice of a career., Between now and Commencement we shall have something to offer on the subject of "Careers." Watch for the space with the Famous Signature. J .................... I .............. .................... The Michiga J-Hop Extra, February 8t contain a gr attending th and guests p .1 in Daily will issue a Saturday Morning, h. This extra will oup picture of those e Hop, lists of booths )resent, and a corn- e of the previous ties. Reservations ay be made by call ness Department of call 960. Agppwmb AV th. EArtra plete resum JANUARY 8 11 T WV T f S . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 .11 12a 13 1t 15' 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24'25 26 27 28 29 3 t 31 .. FACTORY HAT STORE 617 Packard St. Pione~i92 (Where D. U. R. Stops at State) night's gaie for copies me ing the Busi The Daly- f -------------- 1.,,,,. ... ..... . . . . . . . . . . . ..,,,,,,f,