r ;;r,° ,' 'I Iul &.tILEi" 'l"l'"LEI.u BY CAMPUS PROFESSORS LANDSCAPE DESIGNING WORK POPULAR; MICHIGAN WAS PIONEER (By Prof. Aubrey Tealdi) The University of Michigan was the first institution inthe West to recog- nize a regular department of land- scape design. In establishing these courses in 1909 the University was answering a call which had become general all over the United States for men trained in the profession of land- scape design, or as it is also call- ed, landscape architecture or land- scape gardening. Today the need is clearly felt for men able to lay out to the best. advantage home grounds,' country estates, public parks, land- scape cemeteries, etc., and moreover, all progressive communities realize the vast economic importance of hav- ing city additions laid out, not by the civil engineer alone, but by the man who has been trained to combine with the useful both the healthful and the beautiful. Designer's Training A lan'dscape, designer's training in- eludes in addition to landscape de- sign work proper, work in civil engin- I "3 TARY 19M / 11 Early Spring ve, which adge that a, in later lacker in s part as .re be- '02, at eering, drawing, architecture, botany, etc., and these are all provided for in the curriculum at the University. In glancing through the curriculum it will be seen that much of the work is not of a technical nature. It is quite evident that there are many other qualifications besides technical train- ing that contribute to success in the profession. High standards of hon- esty and professional ethics are indis- pensible. A landscape designer must be able to impress his clients as a man who can enter intotheir feelings and appreciate their aims. He must realize that the opinion of even the best trained man will fail to com- mand respect unless it is presented with judgment and good taste. It will be seen readily then that he must be a man of culture himself and that a liberal education therefore is for him a necessity. Profession Being Pushed The training of professional de- signers is only part of the work of the department: It is considered of equal importance to educate as many of the general students as possible in the principles of the art-to teach them to appreciate what landscape design stands for. Educated people gener- erally are no longer content to be ignorant of the first principles of land- scape work. Field is Great The number of letters received each year by the department proves the in- terest that prospective students take in this profession. The doubt is often expressed whether employment will be found on leaving college. Up to the present there have been more posi- tions open as assistants in landscape offices alone than it has been possi- ble to fill. In addition to engaging in private practice, graduates may of- fer their services as park superintend- ents, cemetery superintendents, city foresters, and managers of country es- tates. The great Mleld of city plan- ning is also open to landscape design students. The day when American cities used to grow up in a haphazard way is over: It is the province of the landscape designer to supply plans for them which shall embody the most up-to-date principles from both the economic and artistic standpoint. The profession of landscape design is one of the most healthful of all professions and to the man or woman properly fitted it should prove not only a profitable but a most enjoyable oc- cupation. An educational film, "The Training of the Soldier," will be shown at 8 o'clock tonight in Hill auditorium. A lecture, together with films released from the war department, by Dr. A. S. Warthin on the topic of "Fit to Fight," will be given at 8 o'clock tomorrow night in Hill auditorium. The latter lecture is open to all the cadets, the enlisted medical students, the enlisted 'mechanics, members of the faculty, physicians, clergymen, and teachers.; Carl K. Wirth, '13E, Ypsilanti, a graduate of the third officers' training camp at Leon Springs, Tex., will be commissioned as second lieutenant in the national army as soon as vac- ancies occur, according to information received here yesterday. Dr. George A. May will give the fol- lowing program to the cadets of the second battalion, First regiment, at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon on Ferry field: Company E, grenade throwing; com- pany F, broad jump; company G, fence vaulting; company H, soft ball. A grenade throwing team, to com- pete with the Varsity, will be picked during the present week. Dr. George A. May, director of Waterman gymnas- ium, has issued a call for prospective grenade throwers to appear at 11 o'clock Saturday morning on Ferry field. The best men will be placed on the Varsity team. Balknop has al- ready been placed on the Varsity team. The general qualification for gren-. ade throwers is set at 5'feet 9 to 10 inches in height, and 175 pounds or over, in weight, Uniform regulations published yes- terday should be interpreted to. mean that the service hat and olive drab wool shirt ma3y be worn at tegular drills,. but not at ceremnles, such as parades, etc. Black four-in-hand ties only will be worn with the olive drab shirt. F. J, Zoellin, '19, Maywood, Ill., and E. F. Perkins, '21, Alpena, both of whom left the University on April 26 to, enlist in the Canadian corps, have notified Dean J. R. Effinger that they have enlisted in Company C, Motor Division No. 1, Section, First Can- adian Tank battalion. They are locat- ed at the present time at Ottawa, Canada. Lieut. George C. Mullen examined some of the applicants for the fourth officers' training corps last night in his office in Waterman gymnasium. The list of men recommended to the camp, and the awarding of th schol-' arship to the Junior Plattsburg camp will be .issued as soon as the decision is made by Lieutenant Mullen. REICHSTAGf MEMBER FEARS RESULTS OF RUSS TREATY New York, May 8.-Warning that the Russo-German peace treaty nego- tiated at Brest-Litovsk will cause per- manent antagonism between Germany and Russia and that it will become the "germ of fierce wars in the future" was given by Dr. Ludwig Haas-Karl- sruhe, a member of the Reichstag, in a letter to the Berlin Tageblatt, recently. It would be better for Germany if the Russian border states were not "segregated" he asserted. Ow- ing to the uncertainty of the future of Russia, he declared, Germany should not be now committed to a fixed .policy.. For that - reason, he pointed out, it would be "more than dangerous for the German Emperor to become Duke of Courtland or of any Baltic country, since "once the Empeior yas connected with the Bal- tic future, there would be no turning back. The new 'borber states (of Russia) should remain free and we desire to remain free," he concluded. Patronize a Daily advertiser once and you will patronize him again.- Adv. Our Merchant advertisers represent the progressive business men of Ann Arbor.-Adv. Also just received a line of Cou IMemberso will be .q New LF SUITS p IMother's Societ Hickey How :1 SEND Give us your order early. GEOI es Introduced .-iWhat is con- to be the most yet by a state become effec- the use of the pulpits and in iools. German ordered out of libraries. Other een placed un- CHEM TO Prof., TAR Montana who is phy- find work. He must ast five days a week, her he is a millionaire Persons who refuse to arrested and charged V7 ers represent men of Ann I ;Stab in Engineering building. e Rule. Finder please Reward. R. H. Stein- h side of Huron river hat with curled quill. skull with letters A. S. ward. 523 Packard St. ega Sorority pin with rd. Phone 1325. ILLANEOUS 'al and Turkish baths, idance. Rheumatism, erve diseases cured. 28 North Huron St., 30,000 War Nurses Needed "Thirty thousand trained nurses one half the number now engaged in civilian work, are going to be required by the government for the army and1 navy," said Dr. C. S. Chase of thet state university of Iowa, who is start- ing a lecture tour to fill the depleted ranks of the nurses. "If the health of our civilian population is to be main- tained, the trained nurses who enter war service must also be replaced. A great opportunity lies before the yo.ung women of universities to meet this great emergency." Declaring that the Liberty moto gram had been held up by a i enough chemical engineers to intend the treatment of the m the different factories, Prof. L. Badger yesterday told the man engineers of the great ne trained men in this field. Chemical engineering, exp Professor Badger, involves mo the problems of the mechanic gineer, as well as the knowle chemistry required by the pure ist. Most mechanical enginee explained, do not know enought istry to design the specialize chinery required in modern ch processes, and it falls to the cally trained man tb design hi chinery as well as to super the operation of it "One of the greatest needs Professor Radger, "is for men ed in the analysis and heat-tre of steel. The great advance Germans in France during the part of the war was due inp the fact that the French shell made of poorly treated steel a quently exploded while being The guns always burst whenev happens and the crew is usually so that the failure of the amm caused great demoralization the artillery." "If you are looking for qui turns in the way of money, do : ter this profession," conclude fessor Badger. "It's a man-siz k g I We Represent the Steinway, Knabe, Vose & Sons, Sohmer, Grinnell Bros., Sterling, Shominger, acid many other makes. The world's famous Pianola Player Pianos, Victor Victrolas. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. ELL