THURSDAY, 1)CTO13ER 21, 1926 THE MICHI AI s' I)AIL.Y P G-I'lJ - TTPIP THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE4THREJ~i -AIOALUMNUS TE[LLS OF 'ONDITIONS HERE. NI I. DOCTOR SAYS MTAJORITY {}F STUDENTS WERE MEN I FROM ARMY ENROLLMENT WAS 1,255' University Was Made UpCOf But Three SColleges; 5i25 Was Registrationi In, Medical Selhool Dr. J. A. Work, Sr., '70M, has re-! ' turned to Ann Arbor from his home a,, Elkhart, Ind., to celebrate the six- t~ ieth anniversary of his entrance to the University, Sept. 21, 1866. In an 'Interview with a Daily reporter he :gave some interesting reminiscences Rf his days here in the University and tolJd about his life.J The majority of the students in those days were soldiers who had been d~emobilized from the armies of the C 'ivil war and had no occupation when ~;they were discharged, he §aid. There it were many Southerners, Dr. Work s aid, in the student bodies of the three schools which made up the University tit that time. The total enrollment ( vs1,255 and of these there were "525In the Medical school which rated ~ high or 'higher than the Eastern c oleges. Such men as Dr. Ford, who held the chair of anatomy, Dr. Sager, who held chairs of obstetrics, gynecology, and r cildren diseases, and Dr. Armour, who held the chair of materia medicat iVere mem'bers of the faculty of the Cldllege of Medicine. Dr. C. J. Doug-' Rle held the chair of general chemistry ,iirud Dr. Prescott was the professor I of analytic chemistry. Several of these men lectured here for half of the year and went East to give lec- #iztres there part of the year. The only buildings standing in Dr. ~Work's time which are still being used a,"University hall with its wings; i ecenter of the Law building, ;which has since been added to; and part of thePliarn~hceetical building, which ao has P~een added to and was used iit the 60's and 70's as a chemistry building. The old medical building stood where the, new Physics building is located and was a two story struc-' tue with. pillars fronting on East' University street. The auditorium in1 the Law. buildingb was the largest on the camIPuns and was filled with 1,000 d; students every Sunday afternoon when1 Dr. Haven, then president of the Uni- Sversity, adressed them.j _ Ther wver no~ hospitals in Ann Ar- bor for the use of the University, but "World's Greatest Plane," Unused, Droops Under Rust W,1AITING LINE FOR EXTRA ILLN7 17OFE R -A WA,\RD 1FOR TICKETS EXHAUSTS SUPPLY AT NC, CONOMIC ESS AYS j 3ale of extra tickets for the Michi-tbook.ie(:phoned TT'i'1<.n aldi i ,room l riiwamre'nePCn) reti g"an- Illinois game was scheduled for 0 I mate arrlived atiti iho secenet a few niln- (t he -. I!ulJectt f coulitiie a i !I to (o'clock yesterday morning, lbut someif te's later wit f ev? hooks., i"e"ueo i liec of' the more ambitious students were MAll lhe tickt( iol;S110-iiutakoldg fwt s i ~h h at Perry field hours before that a p- sites before t e it(, iI~ 'a I.Snos s \atl~3 e 'l Ipointed timhe. At 5 o'clock there wereI or the sale So? ~terk. : (lI'. ~aIe Xlei j14 in line. At 7 o'clock there were xia7olek 1bati nu 1t lr IA attnnIjutof 1,i jmore than 100 Waiting for the sale j of fIlie linte Ied ed hO (l ltice igan pni of tickets to begin. Accordinig to 1 a ry ''It'i loto busi ie sasCutheara eii w O n e g ro u p o f stu d e n ts, w h o ev id e n t- h ie s" a a g r o f t talet I abSOo (IJ [ . r mrt s ct i , w h c is o I yhad some army training, dvsdation b iioe a1 10 Ide , i h istem that insured success. Two of ,as,.jnany persons t wailugnin(, f of 01St iga ~r erhgan e the group arrivedl at the scene at 2 o'-, ticlccts at the timhe li(, l('15(11IIl), 1j,51up' Ot itd1 ~rsn oatin clock to wait their turn. They brought h le h ad tickets. Thlere were only (a50, tit(dSilS lescn chair s and pillows with them. Every tickets offered for sae Insit eve part I i' l' t ~ awo husa irelief squad arrived an d ___---t_ ---- =lutit (lvliop 'I iahe sse 11 it lo those waiting in line wvent home to WHNT . -TlAmrcnpth 1at c ul ci i1tio ~ 1tinish their interrupted sleep. sellooilr J. K. M~itcehell, &A. XVTIon ,}w<<(e. 1i1"e 1 '5 hud o i:( r(ech- rpxv' o tickets were to be sold to every Imasterv,' which isailed front. Tam pa ft is 1) Wil, but Iite l!XV 1)one v oledta'Atoetcibok So e'reat theonth ox' those in line were reported to have ( not reaelied her d'estinaic isti.2, hay I )ec. 31, 1.021, :n,(; mauscipt had a,, many as two dozen books. One' bei_____________________£ cttes that hewould have to g ti havelhis Atheltici REA , THE W A T ' klat o f t(Ii 11 iioil a n te 1 oiaiauv at that IIfil'. I ...... INOW PLAYING Phrased the Ei of All College 3bar~s b IRob.L. E , 1 td od ant!ea mi~n~ l 14i' IMA 11, 1 1 la I I, The great Barlinjg Bomber in fl iglt and,inset, W,tlter Mortli t, ivnfor :-nd deigner of the 'iaiut pilane DAYTON, 0., Oct. 20.-A $400000 giant of the air stands idle in its han- gar at Fairfield air depot, near her~e. Unused for almost _three years, the "'greatest airplane in the world'' is, rusting ingloriously away. At the time of its construction much was said and written of the Barling ,Bomber the dream and design of a! quiet young Englishman in the employ of the governmental experimental ser-I vice here. It was a triplan iof0iii ate.;- it. "'.e founid eut, what we xx a jt ed to tic proportion's, motored by fotur iel 1 Iknow,' Hi 3t:,t , " iInd now W ere ty engines. through."j It p~assed itas tests perfectly, froth i 'The J lulle, the lr eever' lblilt ill Dayton down to St. Louis at the timeu this coulth vy and onle 1' the few ra of the Pulitzer races there, to ade one ia tt s of thle air, 'vie; conspicuously or two other flights -anid t.lien1 was, successfiul as at flyer. After at few d- "forgotten." 111 onst ra ions 01f its nh in ty, however, Army officers explain I lint the plane it was run into a vacant shed, cov- was an exper'iment aaii l amer' of ('e ret wit ii'tI mAr)llin-arnd left to wear I impIortant lessonis were leatrned fr'om t itself* out in disuse. PAPERS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN SHOW HE SOUGHT SOLITUDE FOR THOUGHTS ANTHROPOLOGICALI CLUB IS STJARTED .(By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 20.-Box boxes of his papers, now saft away, bear evidence that Lincoln sought solitude thoughts, as he walked. To' visualize Lincoln thoughts on envelopes on walks in Washington was lege of one of the few menI ed his letters and paperst death, of Robert T. Lincoln them from further perusal fi years. They show Lincoln' the development of his ideas that' his most famous addre: re-phrased and re-writtens four and five times, until the finished' gems of rhetoric. A scene is reconstructed. inal A is ill () 1''a iz 'at ion ofanta'nthropological' ~~e u p o n lsh e e a n id ev l p ed a n d llth e r a t l i il ''i t o 'ur'i dt5 o ie t t~ n xesy stoedsheearndlperhapsa o l ad i ltslnI (11tnt itercet edin a itt lrepologl fel stre j~earngrevisions. Somne shet ls harec Abraham !two revisions interlIined. s t l nart cIl talenlu. dTusa for his Hundreds of foolscap not es>with1 * .~a e socaI( IietO l such pieces of elivejope for heading"s, ?attlcopelog , :Mted ol tat. the l'poe IO~ scribbling ar'e inl Lincoln's Iaper's. Ind~icatir~ug his'(of the leb'1 iv as to bring abtout cooper- his daily 1thiorottghllesis, for example, the lasdh atti ,etweeti I rhose cilltcr est di h the priv- two dr1ats of tihe final paragralht sticad ieeo(e r eei who view- his second inaugural add res reftht could niot he garitedi by individural before theC cited. They show forcefurlly the_ wog- effort. To attain this end( it i planned a removed ing of his mindl, the careful develop- Ito have, _iii addit ion to( consideration of'! for twenty meat of anl idea iire a thing of beauty. I genterl'n (i scov(ries in He field, coutri- s method, "I am loathe to clos(e," the latst dr u'aft hutiltls from vai'ouIs -ielil ers otn spe- s, the fact read. "We atre not eicluites li I1)mw (fanhoplgy1n[hc sses were 'friends. We must not be enelimce " cl x rcineetd sometimes Though passion may have sI r iaied, itteyie le'ee. ey became must tot )break our bowls (of ,affec!t7ion.1- The mystic chords of rmenlory, l reh- LANSING. -- It took 2,2190,02 1,000 It shows ing from every battle-field midl patr iot: poutids of milk to lutetch te thirst of- k to reach grave to every living heatrt and Iheart Ii - Michigan folkl duting thle fiscalIyeat' paper. He3 stone all over the broad laid, ill yet e ' lng:iny1, and lit took abutn' 100- ber of let- swell the chtorus of the Uijuon when edti Iny- from one, J again touchedl, as so rely as titer will; oo0)0ound1(1f (If ieliiganTiritade hut.-' id turns it be, by the bet ter' angels (If out' natirec." ter to biutte r thi11brea d. s hris idea. s a second SUbsecrilbe for the MleigatutP Iilly. 7!A THE . T ADS IN ONFE 1W1 Supported by fI;OITCE IL~SON (All American Half Bt )TARY IcALLIST1EI From thme Story by BYRON MORGAN and D lirected by SA-11WOOD)! -Policy- 1'ic Sc 50c 7:00 and 8:3i All Set 0c(hildren :' ,thy 1 . -Tit,, w -AND IN :A DI~d'"N-- C r'~Y N"H NG E> 'I'OjtIf 'Filc ws eFFk s ;f a 3 Pirdi6 ~--COMiINC~S1IA # r p F _P : 1. 9' fi s x .II 4 R S x { r d { + i i -1all clinics were. conducted in ther Lincoln stopping in his walk FMedical 'amphitheater b'efore the class I in his coat packet for note p Sand dissecting was also carried on! finds none, but finds a numb there before the class. ters. He takes the envelope Dr. Work 'was the secretary and one tears it open at each end ani of the founders of the Medical Lyceum, inside out. There he writes kthe first medical club. There were His walk continues. Perhaps n'medical fraternities and this was l envelope would be used, a se U-0 first and only organization of itsI noted. ~kibd. - Back at his desk, he wor A.s now, there was a normal school piece of foolscap paper, trr ~at psilanti. velope down to the size of Dr. Work has had sons graduate tion on it, and paste that cl from the Medical school here in 1906 the top of the foolscap., Ber and. 1911 and had a grandson who clipping the idea is de'velol graduated from the engineering sheet is' marked number or school two years ago. it, a second sheet whereupon i F n.v w rnaos R econd idea- ild take a m the en- his nota- lipping at ,neath that >ped. The ie. Under n the orig- I if1 )I 10 ii-- je I E L D I C, K y T _ -- . 1 _ .. ..=.r .. a :, OW'kAtt:end The N~u* MATINEES! w 4 1 All popaaa la roagutnmodels oil display inzvites Youl to calzl anad i aspsct the newT /asfs and Thater cxdursivcy'ur own de s~lg '9 tOW.&H.1.922 Not An Advertisement - Just An Announcement! ...,.r...._...,,I ___j All A VHITEHOS &'RY BROADWAY AT 40TH1 STREET I44- WEST 42"° STREET METROPOLITAN OPERA H OUSE- lh.mx;. KN I( ERLIoCKER BUILDING + 84 BROADWAY-AT MALL._STRE-ET I'.PP-N"YLA I 1 7-COLLEGIATEr ENTERTAINERS-i 7 VICTOR RECORDING ORCHESTRA ALLNEW PROGRAM, II CS . ,,. .. . e... ., .' .. t~ + .Y..F t. :. ?. .t r. . '='R'.:. t 7 '% ;: r ? -' ', :t. prG. tV'' r# R i e TF-oEATP.E ONE L URIOU N - ' Ao lei FF Oct. 27th m 14 AT THE MATINEES-Thursday and Friday- Miniature autographed photo's of Fred and Tom given to all' the ladies attending. Special request program for the men: In addition to their a'll new\ program, Waring's Pennsylvanians will play your favorite selection (at the 4 ax e_____ a ..__ ..__ flPR ZEyS ?oefY~Up RA d i 1 nio n c-m c k lAl RICES i ' 5 11 I r ,