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July 17, 1923 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1923-07-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Yold Lengthy
ence On Rhur Situation

Con

' I

MUSIC AND
MUSICIANS
The third concert in the series of
Summer Faculty concern will take
plac in Hill auditorium at 8 o'clock
Wednesday evening, July 18. Mrs.
Grace Johnson-Konold, of the voice
faculty and Mrs. Emma Fischer-Cross
of the piano faculty of the School of
Music, will give the program. Mrs.
Konold and! Mrs. Cross have appear-
ed many times in Ann Arbor. The
public is invited to attend. The pro-
gram is as followp:;
Recit. E' strano'.
Aria, "Ah, fors' e' lui"
(La Traviata") . . . Verdi
Grace Johnson-Konold
Nocturne, Op. 15, No. 2......Chopin
Ballade in G minor.. . . ....Chopin
.... .Emma Fischer-Cross ......
Summer Time .. .. .Ward-Stephens
Solveig's Lied ., ......G. .rieg
Today-
Doris May in "THE UNDERSTUDY"
"OUR GANG" in "BOYS TO BOARD"
Wed.-Thurs.-
John Gilbert in
"THE LOVEGAMBLER"
Stan Laurel in "THE EGG"
Fri.-Sat.-
Marguerite DeLa Motte in'
"JUST LIKE A WOMAN"
Paul Parrott in "PICK AND SHOVEL"%

-

A Memory........ . .... .....Ganz W,
The Wind's in the South ........ Scott m
Mrs. Konold
Liebestraum, No. 3............Liszt CI
Petite Valse........Mrs. E. F. Cross
Polonaise in B' major ....Paderewski
Mrs. Cross
Accompaniments by Mrs. Cross. pa
in
TWENTY-FIVE SUPERINTENDENTS eq
th
ENROLLED IN SUIMWER SESSION ha
29
There are 25 superintendents en- -
roled in the School of Education for !lI
the Summer session and all but one
are men from the state of Michigan.
', 4wse enrolled are: 0. E. Malyeat, .
C. W. Cradell, H. S. Denisoa, O. E.
Dunckel, Leo E. DuVall, F. W. Fast,
W. W. Gumser, Charles Hamilton, Don,
Harrington, F. M. Hazel, C,. A. Hoff- -
man, Leo W. Huff, E. W. Johnson, L.
W. Keeler, B. Klager, John J. Lee,
E. E. Lewis, F. H. Neverth, J. E. O'.
Ntill, A. A. Rather, J. J. Schafer, A. M.

Vals worth, H. W. Wickatt, E. J. Will-I stock room by connecting
ian, C. H. Andrews. with doors. Room 242 v
ped for a seminar and r
RANGES MADE NECESSARY BY for the Zoology Journal
ADDITION OF NEW STOCK ROOM are now held in room 23
Several changes in the Zoology de- GAR RICK MATS. T
.rtment have been made necessary .1hth Aunua Season hrs. &
order to install a new stock room 1thAEleonS NEb
THE BONSTEL
quipment. Room 235 is now used as THE ABSORBING MEL
e supplies dispensary room. Plans "LAWFUL LARC
ave been completed to make rooms By Samuel Shipm
9, 230, 231, and 232 into one large NEXT WEEK-"THE GOLI

NOW THROUGH WEDNESDAY
-- SURPASSING ANY OTHER ATTRACTION OFFERED THIS
It broke summer records
Sunday and sent everyone
out satisfied. -

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,

President Elbert and Chancellor Cuno
This most recent photograph from Germany shows President Elbert
and Chancellor Guno leaving the Berlin Museum after a lengthy confer-
ence on the developments of the Ruhr. The situation hourly ^grows more
acute.

Today-
Constance Talmadge in
"THE STUDIO GIRL"
Bull Montana in "A LADIES' MAN"
Wed.-Thurs.-
Conway Tearle in " ROAD OF AMBITION"
Universal Star Comedy
Fri.-Sat.-
Elaine Hammerstein in
"TIlE WOMAN GAME"
Century Comedy

"The
-Fourll
= We know you'll
like it_ _ _ _ _ _
THVRSDAY --sOOM
EMERSON HOUGH'S GREAT NOVEL " CHILDREN 0
. A Paramount SP,
"The M aNi Next Door'" With THEODORE KOS
L- great cast.

Daily Excursion to
P U T- 1iN- iAY
80l One Round Trip $S.25 Sundays
S 0 Way (Return Same Day) Holidays
Leaes Detroit Daily 9 a. m. (E. T.)
The finest'exclusive excursion ateaiper, the Put-in-Bay, noted for
its large ballroom, makes this trip a memorable one. Orchestra and
dancing aboard, without extra charge. Cafeteria aboard.
Four hours crammed with outdoor pleasures at Put-in-Bay-bathing-dancing-
groves for lunching and athletic Melds. See the wonderful Caves, and Perry's
historic monument.
Connections at Put-in-Bay with steamers for Cleveland, Toledo and Lakeside.
Daily to Sandusky
The Put-in-Bay makes the run through to -Sandusky everyZda . Fare-$1.50
one way.
Special Friday Excursions to Cedar Point
A special excursion is made every Friday to Cedar Point-the fresh water rival
to Atlantic City-the finest bathing beach in the world-large summer hotels,
groves, and all outdoor amusements. Four hours at Cedar Point and seven
hours at Put-in-Bay! Leaving Cedar Point at 5 p. m. and Put-in-Bay at 7 p. m.;
arrive back in Detroit 10:30 p. in. Fare-Cedar Point, $1.50 round trip; Put-in-
Bay. 80 cents.
Dancing Moonights Write for Map Folder
Leaves Detroit 8:45 p. in. Ashley &Dustin
Fare, Wed.,Thurs. 60c. Sa.. sly&D si
Sun. and Holidays, 75c. Steamer Line
Foot of First Street
p Detroit, Mich.

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Read The Daily "Classified" Columns
sali

Classified Advertising
Rates: Two cents per word
per day, paid in advance ; fif-
teen cents per reading line per
day, charged.
FOR RENT
FOR RENT--Three rooms in Nickels'
Arcade. See O. D. Morrill, 17 Nick-
els' Arcade. 21-c-2
TYPEWRITERS

DETROIT UNITED LINES
ANN ARBOR TIME TABLE
Eastern Standard Time
(Effective July mo, 1923)
Limited and Express Cars to Detroit
-6:oo a.m., 7:0 0an.,$': oo a.m., 9:os
a.m. and hourly until 9:05 pm.
Limited Cars to aJackson-8:47 a.m.,
10:47 a.rn. 12:47 pg.m., 2:47 p~m., 4:47
p.m., 6:47 p.m., 8:47 p.m.
Express Cars to Jackson (Local stops,
west of Ann Arbor)-9:47 a.m. and
every twoshours until 9:47 p.m.. 0
Local Cars to Detroit-7 :oo a.m..
855 a.m., and every two hours until
8:55 p.m., i:oo p.m. To Ypsilanti
rnly-1 :4o p.m., 1:m5 a.m.
Local Cars to Jackson-7 :5o a.mn.
and then r2:iola.m.
Connection made at Ypsilanti to
Saline and at Wayne to Plymouth and
Northville.

The Engineering
What sort of engineering is it that
makes a .study of the needs and the
interests of women and creates prod-
ucts to satisfy them? Does it seem
that, in practice at least, this sort of
thing is a little different from your
understanding of what an engineer
really is and does?
After all, when you come to think of
it, engineering is concerned with all
thefacts of life. It takes the old facts
and interprets them in new and
broader ways; but its big job is the
very big job of making more living,
-fuller living,-readily available. It
is, in every aspect, a thing worth do-
ing, whether it concerns itself with
curling irons or converters, or any of
the thousands of products in between.
This is truly the day of the engi-
neer. His judgments and his equip-

in a Curling Iron
ment are sought in almost every phase
of living. Engineering is remaking the
business of housekeeping. Its methodsf
are being applied to merchandis-
ing, to distribution, to the wrapping of
bundles and the packing of boxes, to
the lighting of streets and the hun-
dreds of things that, a few years
back, were strictly "rule-of-thumb".
By the time you are at work out in.
the world, there will be more-though
there are only a few of them left.
Whatever is worth doing is worth
engineering; engineering effort digni-
fies itself. Whether it puts more use-
fulness into transformers or curling
irons or turbines does. not matter.,
The thing that counts is the work, the
creative, constructive service that is
going on for the lasting benefit of
mankind.

"F -s!

I

Typewriters of standard makes
bought, sold, rented, exchanged,
cleaned and repaired.
0. D. MORRILL
17 Nickels Arcade Phone 17181
1-tfr
HELP WANTED- Male -young and !
healhy, men weighing about 150 lbs.
at the University Hospital 'for blood
donors. See Dr. Morrill. 20-c-3
LOST AND F OUND
LOST-A small gold pin with safety
clasp engraved, S.H.S. '17. Call
1029-J. 21-c
FOUND- A gent's wrist watch on
campus Saturday. Owner can have
same by identifying and paying for
ad. Phone 1590-M. 21-c

f

No Lectures
No Written Work,
At Babson Institute they make a
business of teachingtbusiness to
college trained men who wish to
fill positions of responsibility and
and trust without spending yearsat
routine work.
Standard office equipment through-
out. No classes or lectures, but a
business schedule of work from 8:30
to 5:00 o'clock, including daily con-
ferences directed by men with years
of business experience, and discus-
sions with active factory and office
executives at their plants. This re-
moves the instruction from the hypo-
thetical stage and helps the student
to look at things in the same light as
a man actually engaged in business.
Babson Institute, an educational in-
stitution endowed for the purpose of
fitting men for executive responsi-
bilities, invites you to send for the
booklet, "Training for Business
Leadership." Write today.'
Babson Institute
Wellesley Hills, (S~tof) Mass.

souse

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