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On The Campus

On The Campus image
Parent Issue
Day
3
Month
May
Year
1888
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Field day thi? year will fall on June 2. The Glee Club sing at Dexter tomorrow night. Tbe last chamber concert will be held this evening. Jndge Cooley is stek at Washington with pneumonía. Geo. Whyte, assistant in general chemistiy, is ill with malarial fever. Dr. Dungter is in a very critical condition - the effect of a large abscess. Mrs. Prof. Harrington returned from her long California visit Tuesday evening. Erwin F. Smitb, of Ann Arbor, will take Mrs. Stowell'i work until her recovery. Mrs. MacLean, wife of Dr. MacLean, died at her home in Detroit last Friday evening. The Michigan Scnoolmaster's clubmeets in room 24, next Saturday both morning and afternoon. A. L. Cülton, '88, will spend the summer vacation at Harvard college observatory studying astronomical photography. Mies Harriaon, now taking post gradúate work in the University, has been offered the professorship of English literature at Penn college, Iowa. F. F. Sharpless,'88, will probably accept a position next year as instructor in metallurgy and assaj'ing in the Michigan school of mines, Houghton. A party of six, comprising Professors Vaughan and Demmon and Messrs. Novy, Tulley, Gay and Prebble, will start for Europe in the steamer "Leesing," of the Hamburg line, June 21. Geo. Wahr sold tho ticket?. Otto J. Klotz, U. of M., 72, is now astronomer for the Canadian department of Interior, and is at present in British Calumbia doing something in regard to the boundary of Alaeka. His wife was from Ann Arbor. Professor Louisa R Stowell was taken dangerously ill, Saturday, with hemorrhage from the stomach, and is still in a very critical condition. Mrg. Stowell, beside8 holding a high position in the University, is well-known throughout the states as a woman suffragist. She took a leading part in tbe late women's congress at Washington. Gen. Sheridan will lecture before the Students' lecture association, Saturday evening, on the Modern Pagan, it being a reply to Ingersoll. He is almost a rival of Ingersoll insparkling, epigrammatic speech, and is exceedingly entertaining. Gen. Sheridan is not Phil Sheridan. He gained his title as general when he was adjutant general ol Louisiana during the reconstruction period.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register