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September 26, 1925 - Image 2

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1925-09-26

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PAGE TWO f

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925

F HSTUDEINTS
WILL MEEIT TODAY

Excessive Bonds
Hl Crime Cure

Members Of Botany Department
Are Doing Research Work Abroad

U.S. May Bar Him

MITCHELL WILSOW
8 U PQ UQSEVIDENCE

Masonic Smoker Is
Scheduled Tonight
Shirley W. Smith, secretary of the
University, will act as toastmaster at

S daoln Club Will Hold
(athering of Season at
Zane Rall

First'

LIST EV TS OF YEAR

Inaugurating its 1925-26 season, the
Cosmopolitan club will hold a social
meeting at Lane hall, at 8 o'clock to-
night.
Following this meeting will come a
series of bi-weekly luncheons and a -
number of evening lectures. All for-"
eign students, and those American
students who are interested in the
Cosmopolitan club, are invited to at-:
tend.
E. C. Goddard and Mrs. Godd- -
! v i give the club a reception at;.-
oiue on Hill street at 8 o'clock,
S~wgiiay Oct..3
Octunsar held bi-weekly, in
the Church of Chirst, by the club. TI -
first of these luncheons will be i'lE
Sa ~uh<,AK10, at 12:15; followed
r luncheons on Oct. 24, Nov. Judge John H. Lyle of the Chicago
7, Dec. 5. police court is putting into effect. a
Interest in Europe is probably high- scheme of his own for reducing crime.
er among Cosmopolitan club members Instead of freeing crimiIIals on small
than among any other group on the bonds as soon as they have been
campus; and some "New Impressions arrested he sets the bail at big figures,
of Europe," will be the subject of and keeps them behind the bars until
Prof. William A. Frayer's speech on they're tried.
O ct. 16. . .
Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners
will be served to all foreign students ather b en
NX6v. 25, and Dec. 19, respectively.
The annual Cosmopolitan club enter-
t? nmnt, "International Night," will
:gain be pr sented at Hill auditorium'Bi e l
early n rhOi second semester. Prof.
~ 1). Meore nd r Voore will 'di
;,t th rou t-: a>ifreryears .
Twot thnp afte on teas, ~ea -. For the first time since the return
home of D a': 'o teas, atthe of i< ther Iden fromn his tour of the
lit Mrs. PA 'atters oy W o.rld, the Upper Room Bible class
bo en , and M rrs. i wdm andro'. Ro X. il i at 7 o'clock tonight in Lane
(1ode, ad.\i s.('ed c.and one*
undai n'ight su pr at the Martha hai The program will be in charge
tl of 0 Father Iden. Former member;
club's pro Fndentering studentsre ine
attend.
t pring vatin Rather Men recently returned from
~\ llV 1 I'II UI~Lit v t>,si FQ tour of Europe and the
r0possxale through a gifttof
tuoun We en ((ii I vnis0 preen:ld to him by members of
-e 'pper Room Bible class. He

Several members of the bpotany de-
partment Are on leaves of absence.
.and are doing research work abroad,
Prof. H. H. Bartlett of the botany de-
partment announced yesterday.
Sterling H. Emerson, instructor in
botany last year, has been granted a
fellowship by the international Edu-
cational board and is absent on leave
for one year to study in Sweden, Den-
mark, and Holland. He will make a
special study of genetics and histol-
ogy, and will be associated with emi-
nent plant breeders of those coun-
tries.. His classes here are being]
taught by John E. Sass.
Studies American Rose
Mrs. Eileen Erlenson, holder of the
Cole fellowship in botany, is continu-
ing her study of the American wild
rose at Brussels, Belgium, and at the
Kew Gardens in England.
Professor B. M. Davis spent the!
summer in experimental work at thel
John Innes HorticulturaldInstitutes
nea~r Lonadon. He made discoveries
in regard to the early introduction of
the American evening primrose into
England. These findings are said to
throw light on the study of heredity
and variation.
Other members of the department
on leave are: Prof. C. H. Kauffman,
who is on sabbatical leave in the
Sierras, studying fleshy fungi for the
purpose of classification; Dr. Lewis
Wehmeyer, wh o held the Cole Fel-
lowship last year, has been appointed
to the fellowship of the National Re-

search council and is now working in
the department of botany in the
Harvard Medical school.
Carolina Man Here
By action of the Board of :Regents, '
the botany department has extended
the use of its laboratories to Dr.
Clinton A. Ludwig, of Clemson col-
lege, South Carolina. The Clemson
botanical laboratories were destroy-f
ed by fire last spring.
During the summer, the Botanical
gardens have been receiving willows
of the Canadian Rockies from Dr. :
M. 0. Malte, Dominian botanist'. This {
material is to be propagated and used
in a monographic study of north-
western willows which is being made
by Dr. C. 0. Ball of the United States
department of agriculture in collab-
oration with the Victoria museum at
Ottawa.
Given Fellowship
In Ordnance Work
The state department may supple-
By action of the Regents Owen Kel- ment its action in denying a vise
ler, grad., was awarded the Ordnance to S. Satlakvala, Communist member
Trust fund fellowship for the year of British Parliament, by barring F.
1925-26. The fellowship is for the en- W. Pothick-Lawrence (above), Social-
couragement of research in ordnance ist M. P.
work and in metallurgy. It carries
with it a sum of $750. Brussels, Sept. 25.-Tobacco, alco-
hol and wine, theaters and other en-
Tokio, Sept. 25.-The Japanese privy tertainments, automobiles and pige-
council announced ratfiication of the ons, are things on which Belgium
Stockholm postal convention of 1924. spends about $11.85 per capita.

Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.-Col.Itheiannual fall get-together and smok
William Mitchell, air service contro- er of Ann Arbor Masons at 8 o'clock
versy center, who is en route to Wash-, tonght in te din room8 of th
ington to appear before the president- Monicit e.dntsrin fthe-
ial board of inquiry, is bringing some versity who are lasons will attend -
documnentary evidence along. The temple wilbe openw foarte n-
He telegraphed the war department section at the conclusion of the
for authority to ship 8Q0 pounds of'soers
manuscript from San Antonio to smoker.
Washington. The authority was grant- SUBSCRIBE TODAY FOR DAHIY!
ed. * *
Y'psi Enrolls 2,333 stP layhous Mats.Tes.ThrS.
Ypsilanti, Sept.' 25.-Registration atasat 57
the Normal college has reached 2,333 Woodward at E11ot Third Week
I which is 170 less than were registered 1 TOhSe' seH C Omipauy
last year. Irthe Astonishing Comedy
Patronize Daily Advertisers.
DRUGS MODATK

FOUNT rkAIN PENS
Inspect 'Our Stocks

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T T-BOO KS
FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS
AK-
X~JA UN.IVERSITY
WAVPI wJBOOK STORE

See the New Big Eversharp Pencil
at 4$1.00

III

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Calkins-Fletcher Drug C o.
Three Dependable Stores
L

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11 DY7- '

Sol

Big Hangar Will
Be Ued To Moor
Pole Bound Plane
)Norway, Sept. 25.-When the
the Amundsen-Ellsworth
,t-e made public it was
o-'Jiatonly a big mast wasj
1~'nmd to oor the airship at Kings-
waiT , ut now the expedition is r'
build also a big hangar.
Col. Nobile, Italian airship con-
structor, advised, this, and Lieut.
Riiser-Larsen agreed it would give
the expedition the best possible start-
ing conditions. The hangar planned
by Col. Nobile will be 110 meters
long and 35 meters wide.
The director of the Norwegian
navy's aircraft facdtory will go to
Kingsway on Oct. 1 to find a place for
the hangar.
Ususual Operation
Provides New Lips
Chadwick, Ill., Sept. 25.-New lips'
were provided for the infant daughter
of Alvin Prowant through an unusual
operation performed yesterday in
Dixon, Ill.
The child's mouth was badly burn-
ed some time ago when she attempted
to eat lye. In the process of healing,
her lips grew. together. Yesterday
her mouth, was cut open, new lips
slashed,-in the opening, and twenty-
seven stitches taken in forming the
new aperture.
Arica, Chile, Sept. 25.-- Jose Cabino
Villanueva, former president-elect of
Bolivia, who last week fled from La
Paz to Chaile to avoid arrest, returned
Monday to Bolivia incognito.
Read the Classified Page-it pays.
Patronize Daily Advertisers.

mI; the class eleven years ago
when he caine to Ann Arbor from
Butler college.
There are now more than 1,000 stu-
dents on the campus and 100 faculty
**members who are listed on therolls
of the class. Membership is open to
all.
TIM[ LIMIT ETENDED
INGLEE CLUR TRY0.UTS

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Due to large number of students
seeking to try out for the University
Glee club, tryouts will be continued
from 7:30 to 8:30 o'clock Monday in
room 308 of the Union. To date 105
men have participated in the tryouts.
It is expected that rehearsals will
start the latter part of the coming
week, with the first concert to be pre-
sented Saturday, November 21, the
date of the Minnesota-Michigan foot-
ball game.
Wisconsin Summer
Session Is Third
Madison, Wis., Sept. 25.-The Uni-
versity of Wisconsin summer session
of this year was the third largest in
the United States, reports reveal. En-
rollment here totaled 5,017. Columbia
university, New York City, had 12,700
enrolled while the University of Chi-
cago had 5,800. Minnesota was fourth
with 3,600; and the Iowa and Mich-
igan were credited with 3,100 each.
SUBSCRIBE TODAY FOR DAILY!'

FO Saturday, Sept. 26th
FlE LOED0m

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KARNRK ights - octo $2.
G ~ fL0 We Mat. 5ot to Si.oo
Sat. Mat. SOCeto$2.50
182nd Time-21tt Sig Week
ANNE NI CHOLS"
ABIE'S IRISH ROSE
SEE IT! You Will Eventually!
WHY NOT NOW?

AT STATE AND LIBERTY
I*
Invites you to Inspect its
modern facilities for
furnishing flowers

i

WHITNEY THEATRE
TUESDAY, SEPT. 29

A Favor for Every Lady

-

Tate

Flower

Shop

4

ENTIRE ORIGINAL PRODUMOIHAJ
PLAY ED FOR TWO YEARS NW4S' OA~K
booi y muic b .;brBtm e
' UY BOLTON I JEROMIEKEN3 DGYLV1O ;

STATE AT LIBERTY

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