THE~M~Il~ TX~ S NDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1A93 .. . . .. ..r v ar f v a a. a a! L ]lam. 1 .. r ...: .. aY . ..r rs. u} rww The Corner Of State And North U. -65 Years Ago -0 Along about in 1870, just before the University Hall was built, this old Law Building stood alone on the corner of North University and South State streets. About 25 years ago, the Law Building was remodeled and replaced by what is now Haven Hall. Notice that State Street was a two-way boulevard, and observe the famed picket fence surrounding the campus. Parts of University Hall, which was built in 1871-73, and fin- ished the year of the inauguration of President Angell, now stand in the remodeled form in the rear of Angell Hall. The Campus--A Rowdy Old Place In Those Bygone Days Memories Of Sixty Years Ago Are Recalled By Veteran Bookseller (Continued from Page 1) the street, where they dissected it. They would have been content, they said, to have left the theater other- wise peaceably except that the man- ager called the police and fire de- partments. This really marked the beginning of a riot. The policemen, some stout and not as fleet as the students, fared badly. They lost their helmets, their coats, and a moral conflict. The fire- men fared worse. Bringing out their powerful hose to play upon the riot- ing students, the firemen were so un- fortunate as to lose the control of their weapon, which was seized by the students and used with telling effect upon the outwitted fire-fighters. The hose finally was cut and the pieces carted home for souvenirs. "But the settlement was bitter," reminisces Mr. Slater. "Members of the student body circulated among faculty and business men with col- lection pails to gather enough money to keep the arrested undergraduates from prison." Football scoires from -the away games were shouted out to the mob of students from a second story win- Baird Recalls Days As Student At University (Continued from Page 1) until the grounds reached their pres- ent size. Baird said that he remembered the times when the admission to foot- ball games was 50 cents and when the profits of $300 on a single game were considered excellent. It was during the regime of Baird that Fielding H. Yost and Keene Fitzpatrick, the first trainer ever hired by Michigan, were brought to Michigan. In regard to the hiring of Yost, Baird said, "I remember one day receiving a letter from "G" Huff of the University of Illinois saying that there was a young fellow named Yost who seemed to be a fair football coach. So I wrote Fielding and by return express came a 50-pound scrap I book, filled with clippings of his prowess and crammed with glowing testimonials from University Chan- cellors, Presidents, and Regents." He got the job. When asked if he had ever en- visioned the present gigantic athletic department, Baird said that he never in his early times here believed it would reach the "vastness and great- ness" that it now has. After he had closed his discussion of the "good old days," as he termed them, Mr. Baird said that he had presented the carillon with the idea of "giving pleasure to people of Ann Arbor and to the students. Also," he said, "I gave it in order to add to the attractiveness of the Univer- sity." dow of the State Street bookshop, Mr. Slater particularly remembers be- cause it was he who had to run with the telegrams from the telegraph office to the bookshop. Students in those days had to go down to the postoffice to get their mail each day, and each day there was a riot all over again just before the distribution began. Many of the old alumni back in town will remember "Old Doc" Nag- ley, thinks Mr. Slater. He was fa- mous among students for his job, which was to carry the cadavers in the medical school downstairs to the pickling vat. In those days, the med- ical laboratory was located about where the new engineering building now stands. Fraternities in those days were feeble frame structures, made over from rooming houses and private res- idences, and only a small percentage of the more affluent students were members, according to Mr. Slater. Alubum Obtained The album from which Mr. Slater secured the old pictures pf the cam- pus was collected by his grandmother, Mrs. Martha Sheehan, who was the donor of the rock which stands on the northwest corner of the campus as a memorial to the class of 1862. It was hauled, according to a news- paper report, from the backyard of Mrs. Sheehan's home by a team of 16 white horses, and was installed in its present location in an impressive ceremonyin which President Tappan participated. A distinguished; Republican was Dr. Marion LeRoy Burton, president of the University when the plan was suggested that the University ex- pand to include the block in which now stands the Michigan Union. The death of President Burton in 1925 put an end to this building program, and during the presidency of Clar- ence Cook Little, the new engineer- Rev. Heaps Plans llustrated Lecture (Continued from Page 1) the Rev. Henry Lewis will preach, and Holy Communion will be held. Prof. Preston Slosson will speak at 10:30 a.m. today at the Congregation- al Church, and at 6:00 p.m., at the student fellowship meeting, the Rev. Allison Heaps will give his latest il- lustrated book review, "David Cop- perfield." Colored slides from the motion picture will be used. The Rev. Fred Cowin will preach, and lead the service at 10:45 at the Church of Christ (Disciples). At 5:30 there will be a social hour and supper, and at 6:30 Arthur Smith will lead a forum on the subject "Why Do We Have Wars?" Plans Might Forbid Scarlet Capes; God Forbid Scarlet Face Penn's band marched between halves in their brilliant red and blue capes yesterday, but that wasn't what they intended to do. To conform with Michigan's prac- tice, they had planned to discard! the capes, and were almost in theI process of doing so until the earnest voice of a piccolo player was raised in protest. His tale was so pitiful, indeed, that the rest of the band could not but heed the plea. And so they swung out on the field with red and blue capes flowing. The piccolo player had ripped his pants. 0.G. Villard To Give Address Here Tuesday Noted Publisher Will Talk On 'European Crisis' In Lecture Series Oswald Garrison Villard, publisher and contributing editor cf the New York Nation, will deliver an address at 8 a.m. Tuesday in the Natural Sci- ence Auditorium, it was announced yesterday. He will talk on the subject, "The Prerent European Crisis." The lec- ture will be a part of the University Lecture Series and will be given under the auspices of thesociology and eco- nomics departments. Villard is widely noted as an au- thor and journalist. Born in Ger- many in 1872, he attended Harvard, Washington and Lee, and Lafayette College, where he received his doc- tor's degree in 1915. After two years as an assistant in American history at Harvard, he began his journalistic career as a reporter on the Phila- delphia Press in 1896. He afterwards became editorial writer and president of the New York Evening Post, which he left in 1918 to become editor and owner of The Nation. He held the latter position until 1932 when he gave up his duties as active editor to become contrib- uting editor and publisher. Besides his work as a ,journalist, he has written several books. These include "John Brown - A Biography Fifty Years After," "Germany Embattled," "Newspapers and News- papermen," "Prophets True And False," and "The German Phoenix." He has also written monographs on the Early History of Wall Street and the German Imperial Court and many magazine articles. He is the grandson of William Lloyd Garrison, the abolitionist. Three Men Held On Charges Of Theft Three men charged with the theft of six radios from a local radio com- pany, waived examination in Justice Jay H. Payne's court yesterday morn- ing. They were bound over to cir- cuit court under bond of $1,000 each. Bond was not furnished. The men, Earl Hodson, Centerline, and Charles Frazee and W. B. Page, both of Detroit, are being held on grand larceny charges. They were employes on the local trucking line which conveyed radios to Detroit for shipment. DOCTOR MISQUOTED Dr. Thomas McEachern, who spoke before a meeting of the Parent Edu- cation Institute Thursday, was mis- quoted in an article appearing in The Daily Friday morning. The re- search to which he referred in his talk was done by the Payne Fund Foundation of Chicago, and not by himself. Classified Directory T LAUNDRY CLASSIFIED STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Prices reasonable. Free delivery. Phone ADVERTISING 3006. 6 Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. The classified columns close at five Careful work at low price. Ix o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at noOR extra charge. FOR RENT Cash in advance lie per reading line (on basis of five average words to FOR RENT: Single rooms i private line) for one or two insertions.FRRETSiger msnpivt 10c per reading line for three or more home. One other roomer. Across Minimum 3 lines per insertion. rmYotFed os. 23S Telephonemrate - 15c per reading line from Yost Field House. 1213 5. for two or more insertions. State St. 95 10% discount if paid within ten days Minimum three lines per insertion. from the date of last insertion. FOR RENT: A light, airy room for a By contract, per line - 2 lines daily, one month ..............S graduate woman. Inner- spr'ing 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months........8c mattress. Reasonable rent. 515 2 lines daily, college year ........7c hee C.87.9 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months..........c Cheever Ct. 8173. 94 100 lines used as desired ..........9c "- - 300 lines used as desired ..........8c 1,000 lines used as desiredP.........7c Prof. Coffey To Speak 2,000 lines used as desired ........6c R The above rates are per reading line,ussian Conditions based on eight reading lines per inch.OnR sin odton Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add 5c per line to above rates for all capital Prof. Hobart R. Coffey of the Law letters. Add 6c per line to above for bold face, upper and lower case. Add 10c School will speak Monday evening on per line to eters. rates for bold face the social and economic conditions of The above rates are for 7 point Russia as he saw them during his type. visit thisesummer. He plans to de- scribe the present state of the work PROFESSIONAL SERVICES of reconstruction, and then leave his MAC'S TAXI-4289. Try our effi- audience to "draw its own conclu- cient service. All new cabs. 3x sions." Professor Coffey's talk is sponsored TEACHER of popular and classical by the National Student League, piano music. Helen Louise Barnes. which is meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Call 8469. 2x Union. Everyone is invited to attend. ie Police Experiment To Find A Perfect Test Of Drunkenness Walking the chalk-line as a police court test for drunkenness would seem to be on its way out. That conclusion, among others, was reached at the joint convention in Louisville, Ky., of the National Safe- ty Congress and the Institute of Traf- fic Engineers, from which Prof. Rog- er L. Morrison of the highway engi- neering department recently returned. In arriving at this particular con- clusion the convention was aided by a little skit performed for them by seven Louisville residents. First of all, each of the seven was given an innocuous appearing colored drink. In two of these drinks'there had previously been placed two ounces of whiskey, and in three oth- ers four ounces of whiskey. After waiting for two hovrs in order to al- low the alcohol to take full effect, one of the recipients of the four- ounce doses of whiskey was selected for experimental study. For this pur- pose the remainder of the circum- stances under which drunken drivers frequently find themselves were also duplicated as nearly as possible. And thus, When the experimentally- drunk driver was interrogated by what seemed to be police officials, he indignantly replied, "Why, I'm cold sober, cold sober. Only had two bot- tles of beer, anyway." Then he was politely asked to demonstrate his sobriety by walking a chalk line. This he managed to perform successfully with a little staggering. Here, ordinarily, police would have been at a loss; so one of the traffic engineers, Dr. H. A. Heise of Mil- waukee, stepped in. The pseudo- drunken driver was then subjected to tests of his blood and urine, to a session in a reactometer (a device for measuring the speed with which an individual exercises control over his car under driving conditions), to the problem of sorting a shuffled deck of cards, and to several tests of hand- and-eye coordination. 1 ,- _ ____ ,wl I t WATCHES The TIME SHOP 1121 South University Ave. MICH IGAN I 25c Until 2 P.M. TODAY 35c after 2 P.M. S"" FOR THREE DAYS ONLY! BIG STAGE P0 $W y SHOW Lp Na feet WED. C go opd d eo 11 rl L I Daily 15c to 6 pm. WHITNEY -Now. Two First Run Features BORIS KARLOFF ""BLACK ROOM" I I III EIr 11 11