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October 05, 1916 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1916-10-05

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

: HIP

r'anization of Foreign Students
Plans Meetings and
Lectures
Yith the greatest enrollment of for-1
n students in the history of thel

world's diplomatic affairs will be in-
vited to address the club.
There will also be discussions on
many of the countries across the sea,
including India, Japan, Turkey, and
France.
Following the precedent of recent
years, a vaudeville presentation is be-
ng planned, and is expected to be well
under way by Christmas time. After
the meeting of the beard, President
Frank Olmspead said that a definite
program for the whole year would be

MANY INNOYATWNS IN
ZOOLOGY DEPARTMENT

Constant Temperature Room
of Many Additions
Secured

One

1--

I

r

[versity, the Cosmopolitan Club this Ifrmulated, to be announced at the first
son faces one of the most success- meeting of the club next Sunday after-
years since its organization at Ann noon, The board met Wednesday
or evening, and extends a cordial invita-

One of the chief reasons for such on to any foreign students who are
prospects is the fact that this term not yet members to attend the first
witnesses an exceptionally large in- mneetig next Sunday.
flux of students from other nations._
Although the present membership of
the club now totals about 170 from 27 PROF. CRANE ADDS SERIES
nations, it is anticipated that the prs O'g COURSES IN POLITICS
enit season will see probabli an in-
crease of nearly another hundired cos- A series of courses dealing With the
mopolitans from lands not represented principles and theory of politics is
before. Estimates in this regard in- being instituted in the Political Sci-
dicate that the major part of the new onCe department by Prof. R. T. Crane
students will be from Russia, China, this year.
and Japan. The first of this series by Professor
Among the plans of the club, aside Crane which will be given this se-
from the dinners and get-togethers, me tcr is a two-hour course on the
which will occur every two weeks dur- Introduction to the Principles of Poli-
ing the term, is a class in international which deals with the development
relations. Such an idea is expected to of the simpler political ideas by going
prove interesting and instructive, not back to ancdent and medieval times.
only to the members themselves, but This will be followed in the second
also to students of modern history and semester by three distinct courses on
sociology. It is planned to have Prof. American Political Ideas, European
J. A. C. Hildner in charge of the al Ideas, and the most recent
class, and lecturers well versed in the dlVelopruts in Political Philosophy.

One of the many innovations to the
zoology department of the University
is the new constant temperature room,
in room 460 of the Natural Science
building, which enables students to
experiment on plants by keeping them
at a constant temperature. At first
appearances the room looks like a
huge refrigerator with four compart-
ments, hot air being forced into the
bottom of each one and cold air at
the top. The hot air rises and fuses
with the cold air, making the desired
temperature. It is the only apparatus
of its kind in the University and one
of the most complete in the country.
Other new things that have been
added to the department are the ac-
quarium, the fish hatchery and the
new photographic apparatus. In the
basement of the building are located
cement bins in which all sorts of ani-
mals may be kept. Filtered, distilled
or running water may be forced into
each bin. In the same room is a mod-
ern fish hatchery of the same nature
as the United States hatcheries. In
the photographic room of the depart-
ment is found a new apparatus for
making lantern slides to be used for
experimental and educational pur-
poses, making it now possible for stu-
dents to study specimens more closely
than heretofore.
WOMEN WILL BE REPRESENTED
IN ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION

Har affner
Marx

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Women in the literary college will
be given representation in the Ora-
torical Association, according to its
new plan of representation. A new
ruling of the association provides that
one of the delegates from each of the
literary classes must be a woman.
Twenty members will comprise the
reorganized association, of which two
will be chosen from each of the-classes
of the literary college, and one will be
elected by each of the three Law
School classes and the four engineer-
ing college classes.
The four literary societies on the
campus will choose one member each,
and one will be chosen by the profes-
sors and instructors in the depart-
1,ent of oratory.
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