PAtGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURBDAY, OCTOBR isP 1 I i '' VOLUME . 4 9 44 4 ...,. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1890. NUMBER 1 Med School Applications Data Studied The Medical school is working with the psychology 'department on a study of. admission data ra- quired by the medical school. Wayne Whitaker, secretary of the school, told members of the Committee to End Discrimination earlier this week that the study was a periodic, general survey, it was revealed in a CED meeting yesterday. Whitaker made no mention of what CED has branded as poten- tially discriminatory questions on Eapplication blanks, according to Ed Lewinson, '51L, CED chairman. Lewison added that Whitaker gave no hint of how soon the sur- vey would be completed. Later in the week, the CED executive board met with President Alexander Ruthven. President Ruthven, Lewinson said, asserted that he had asked the medical school for a statement of attitude toward altering or re- moving certain questions asked of applicants. No medical school statement on this question has been submitted as yet, according to Lewinson. Read and Use Daily Classifieds :ROEHME "S O _ -V - -s - - MAKERS OF FRATERNITY 271 Woodward Avejue, 'Graqd Circus Park, FACULTY ANNOUNCEMENTS. GENERAL BIOLoOT.--The under- signed will be in the Botanical Laboratory onWednesday between 10:30 and 12:30 a. m., to consult with students about - courses in Biology, Botany and Morphology. Labratory work in Biology begins Thursday at 9:30. in room 25. V. H. PAULDINO, J, E. REJOHARD. LATIN.-Cour 1. Section V. Livy, will report to Prof. Rolfe, It will be limited to students who gave shown exceptional proficien- *ey. It is expected-that this see- tion willcover more ground than the other sections. Course 3. Section IV will be given by Mr. Clement. HY1ENE.--Students wishing to take the courses in Bacteriology mill find Mr. Novy in Hygiene' Laboratory every afternoon this week. An optional course in Water Analysis will be given this semester. Ma. Noy T. ENOINE?.ING gTCDENTS. .- A course In Foundry Work will be given the first semester. All engineering students wish- ing to take work in the Mechanical Laboratory must see me Wednes- day or Thursday, at 11 a. In., at my office. Nzor. TATLOR, OUR RUGBY TEAM. ibefore, and there will be a game at Buffalo this year that will be marked by sandy playing, and a THE NEUCLEUS O IT PRACTIC- much closer score than Cornell INC DAIL.Y ON THE CA MPUS .. . willlook for. To begin with TeSystematic Work" is to be the Tihe Camnpus has takep on a; foundation of the Rugby eleven home like look this past week. foindatio fteRgyeeven Every afternoon has seen some of this year. At 4.14t., every day our canvas backed Rugby players ery man who wants to play on tossing the ball back and forth, or the teams mtI how up on the trying to kick goals. It has been Campus. At 4:15 the players on cold and raw, but the spectators . . have had many it laugh as the lines of the two teams--for it is boys would form an invincible V Malley's intention to play two and split the wind with it, but if teams every day-and the play. they have had nothing but the era will play in these positionsthe wind to buck against, they have remainder of the day, the late at least been learning to stand comers taking any positions that shoulder to shoulder. And they may be left(?) when they get are doing good work, these few there. At 5:15 the teams will go who are back getting in condition to a bath-room to be placed prob- by tossing the ball, tackling, ably in the basement of the Medi. breaking the line, trying the V cal building. Here a douse and a or the gridiron, and learning the rub and then to Prettyman's, twist that gave Ames of Prince- where they will rest and discuss ton his celebrated nick-name of the plays of the afternoon while a "Snake Ames." supper is being prepared for them' The boys are working under at a training table that Prettyman Malley, who has brought back a is to run for them. This will be trunk full of new trks and has run in the same way that the already began to teach his men a Eastern training tables are. few of them. Abbott, Trainer, "Those who work shall play." Hatch, DePont, Rathbone, Dy. This comes pretty near being an gert,McAllaster, Stone and Chad- Irish Bull, but Malley says that gertt goes," and adtoneIawdnthat. bourne take to them as naturally as "It goes,"and adds "I want at any canvas-back does to water, least fourteen unew imien this year, Of course the boys are all "soft," and I want the boys to. come out and try for these positions. And and short winkd as yet, but if . tliy fllo th lier aiddow byien it comes to selecting the they follow the liner aid down by men who will go East this year, Captain Malley it will be soiled it is going to be a simple question meat and sand that Cornell runs of tire twenty-two men who can up against this year. aind have been playing the best It does one heart good to hear Rugby day by day. Twenty-two Captain Malley talk. If he does men will go East. The Harvard, Yale and Princeton plyers are all; one half the:hinge he wants to do, hard at work now, every man of be will do double of anything them, and it is wine that our boys, that has ever been thought of here were willing to do the agse if t F l t t 1 f C t i a i y t t E s Wright, Kay & Co, F' rn ~ .8jers trpo-ters of Gmrn; and Art cos, .eweters arid Op- tcrans Manufctrers of the Fnes't'Society Badgesnade inthe countnr Samples sent upon pro- per reerences. Dero Opera loVwa BfI( 140 WO ODWA RD AVE., Cetroit, - - M!chigan. they ever hope to down the Eastern team. And the fact is they've got to work if they play this year.. Malley is very, very right, and every man who plays Rugby ought to come out, put his foot in the ball, and try for a position on the team. If you fail for the Varsity eleven there will still be the second eleven, all of whom will take the Eastern trip. Twenty-two men will go East. In the way of material not al- ready noticed Van Deventer, the Shermans, Haynes, VanInwagen, Glidder, Sunderland, Duffy, an.d Prettyman are expected to be here this year. For new material, Jewett, who played a rattling game as half-back for the High School eleven last year, entef '94 lit. Ninety-four also gets Chad- bourne, who played center on the lhillip's Exeter Academy eleven last year, the eleven that mfde such a good showing against such college teams as Dartmouth, Am- herst, and the Tech. Over in the law school they have Stone, a graduate of Swarthmore, '89, who played full-back a portion of the time while there. The most that can be said of these new men now is that they bid fair with practice to be able to get onto one of the two teams. A4 HOME - M A DE P A C H Y D E R M iA mechanical ele- phant, powered by auto engine covered by artificial "hide," lum- bers off with load of children through Essex, England, countryside. -i y {! ST. ANDREWS EPISCOPAL CHURCH No. Division at Catherine 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion (followed by Stu- dent Breakfast, Canterbury House ). 10:00 A.M.: High School and Junior High Classes. 11:00 A.M.: Church School.' 11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer. Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis, S.T.D. 12:15 P.M.: After-Service Fellowship. 5:00 P.M. Choral Evening Prayer. 6:00 P.M.: Canterbury Club (University stu- dents) Picnic and Program at The Island. Bush Olmstead of Lane Hall will speak on dis- placed persons. Transportation from Canter- bury House, 218 No. Division St., following Evening Prayer. Wednesday, 7:15 A.M.: Holy Communion (fol- lowed by Student Breakfast). Thursday, 10:15 A.M.: Holy Communion. Friday, 4:00 to 6:00 P.M.: Open House at Can- terbury House. MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill at Tappan Street Rev. Joseph M. Smith, Minister Edward Farrar, Choir Director Frances Farrar, Organist 9:30 A.M.: Church School-College Age Class. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship (Nursery for Chil- dren). 8:00 P.M.: Installation service for the new min- ister, Joseph M. Smith. Address by Dr. Perry Gresham of Detroit. GUILD HOUSE, 438 Maynard Street H. L. Pickerill, Director Jean Garee Bradley, Associate How the Front Page of the First Issue of The Michigan Daily Looked in 1890 SIGNS OF PROGRESS: AMA Researebists Develop New Smear Test For Cancer 'U' Physics Professor Returns Daily Classifleds Get Quick Results A smear test and the use of ra- dioactive iodine have been reveal- ed" by the American Medical As- Aociation as the latest develop- ments in the field of cancer re- search. After four years of experiment- ing, a group of San Francisco doc- tors have established the smear test as a reliable indication of cancer of the lung. However, the doctors warn that although positive results "appear to be a reliable indication of can- cer, if the test has been expertly and conservatively read," a nega- tive result is not a reliable indi- cation of freedom from malignant disease. The smear test, which was de- veloped by Dr. George Papani- colaou of Cornell University medi- cal college, is a technique for col- lecting sputum and bronchial se- eretions from the surface of the malignant growth and smearing the material on glass slides and staining. it. Study of the Aides may reveal malignant cells. A promising discovery for the treatment of cancer has been made: by four Boston doctors who saved the life of a young cancer sufferer by treating him with radioactive iodine. The patient, a 14-year-old boy with cancer of the thyroid gland and a malignant growth in the' lung which had spread from the thyroid gland, had his thyroid cancer removed surgically. The lung cancer, which was then treat- ed *ith the radioactive iodine, disappeared two months later. The American Medical Associa- tion believes that the outlook for a cure is usually good unless spread of the cancer to another part of the body occurs before the correct diagnosis and treatment. Student Directory ChangesClosed Thursday's announcement in the D a 11y Official Bulletin that changes for the University direc- tory would be accepted through yesterday referred exclusively to the University faculty directory. The notice precipitated a flood of phone calls to the Student Pub- lications Bldg. from students who wished to correct their listings. Editors of the directory emphasiz- ed that the student edition has al- ready gone to press and further changes will be impossible. Faculty changes, however, will be accepted today. Dinner Dates by Thomas r pr ay t .CiAiiS Prof. Gordon Sutherland, of the physics department, resumed his duties this week after returning from Cambridge, Eng., where he attended a conference of the Fara- day Convention, Sept. 25 to 28. At the conference, whose topic of discussion was molecular struc- ture and cell structure, Prof. Sutherland delivered two papers. They were entitled "Application of Polarized Infra-Red Radiation to Problems in Molecular Structure (Application of problems to rubber and gutta-percha)" and "Some Problems in the Interpretation of the Infra-Red Spectra of Large Molecules." He also spent'several days visit- ing friends at Cambridge Univer- sity, where he spent many years before coming to the University in the fall of 1949. Continuous from 1 P.M. W"L- LLJI9 .......... FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State & Williams Minister: Rev. Leonard A. Parr Student Work: Rev. H. L. Pickerill; Mrs. George Bradley Director of Music: Wayne Dunlap Organist: Howard R. Chase 9:30 A.M.: Intermediate Church School. 10:45 A.M.: Nursery and Kindergarten Depts. 10:45 A.M.: Public worship. Dr. Parr will preach on "Things Are -Still The Same!" 6:00 P.M.: Student Guild supper. Movie, "Prejudice." FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 11;00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. Oct. 8-Are Sin, -Disease, and Death Real? 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Primary Sunday School during the morning service. 8:00 P.M. Wednesday:sTestimonial Service. A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and.all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased.} This room is open dalgy except Sundays ad holidays from 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. Please notice the time has been changed from 11:30 to 11 o'clock. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATIN (National Lutheran Council) 1304 Hill Street Henry O. Yoder,D.D., Pastor 9:10 A.M.: Bible Class at the Center. 10:30 A.M.: Worship Services in Zion and Trinity Churches. 5:30 P.M.: LSA meeting in Zion Parish Hall Program following supper hour -- Speakers: Warren Johnson and James Wiggert on "What is L.S.A.?" Tuesday, 7:30 P.M.: Discussion Hour at Center-- "Church Leadership." Wednesday, 4:00 P.M.: Tea and Coffee Hour at the Center. CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) Washtenaw at Forest Rev. Leonard Verduin, Director Phone 3-4332 10:00 A.M.: Morning Worship, Rev. William P. Brink, Pastor of Creston Christian Reformed Church of Grand Rapids, Michigan. 7:30 P.M.: Evening Services, Rev. Brink. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wangdahl, Joe A. Porter, Ministers 10:45 A.M.: Worship, "The Hound of Heaven, Dr. Large preaching. 5:30 P.M.: Student Supper and Social Hour, 6:30 P.M. Vespers, "Do You Believe in Military Preparedness?", Student Panel. -Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, OpenDoily ;: { -- Lost Times Today -- ' N STUDENT GUILD: 6:00 supper at the Congrega- tional Church. Sound movie, "Prejudice." I i I watch 9)d BOAR LEATHER CORDOVAN LEATHER KANGAROO LEATHER SNAKE LEATHER ALLIGATOR LEATHER CALF LEATHER SEAL LEATHER PIG LEATHER WALRUS LEATHER LIZARD LEATHER GOLD AND SILVER LINK BANDS MESH BANDS WOVEN BANDS SLIP OVER BANDS EXPANSION BANDS STAINLESS STEEL SLIPOVER BANDS NYLON BANDS KOROSEAL BANDS UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue (The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor 9:30 A.M.: Bible Study. 10:30 A.M.: Morning Service with Holy Com- munion. Sermon by the pastor, "Presenting the Christian Way. 5:30 P.M.: Supper-Program of Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. Talk by Mr. James Zumberge, Ph.D., "Concerning the Age of the Earth." Tuesday at 9:15: Social Hour. Wednesday at 7:00: Chapel Choir. Friday at 8:00: "Bad Luck" Party. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH W. P. Lemon and W< H.Henderson, Ministers Maynard Klein, Director of Music .Mildred Beam, Director of Church School 9:30 A.M.: Westminster Guild Seminar in Re- ligion with coffee at 9:00 A.M. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon by Dr. Lemon, "Mapping the Unknown." 2:00 P.M.: CAPOS Presbytery opening with Tea in the Lewis Parlor. Supper will be served at 6:00 p.m. Speaker at 7:00-John Bathgate. 7:30 P.M.: Young Marrieds meet in the Russel Parlor. Dr. Harley Bartlett will speak on "In- troduction to Indonesia." Refreshments served. 11 1 i , . ; GOAT LEATHER Narrow, Wide and Extra Long FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Avenue BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH II i I 11 I