On The Campus
The Castalian will be out in about two weeks. The Glee Club will appear at Grand Kapids, April 11. A meetint; of the Hobart Guild wül be held this evening. Maj. Soule is at Detroit, to-day, attending a meeting of the Loyal Legión. A meeting of the Prohibition club was held in the law lectura room last evening. The Base-Ball Association meets next Saturday, to elect a manager for the season. L. E. Torrey, Sigma Phi, has gone to Chicago to take a position on the Chicago Tribune. Ex-prof. Hennequin had an article in last week's Argonaut on "The Kinds of Dramas." The S. C. A. officials are maUing a o.anvass among the studunts for moaey to use in the new building. The regular March meeting of the regents has not yet been called, but it will probably bc held about the 20th. Prof. Cooley deliveredalecture atHyde Park, 111, Monday evening, his subject being "From Joppa to Jerusalem." Oq Friday evening, H. W. Douglas will read a paper on "TheEIBciency of Artificial Lights," before the Engineering Society. Dr. E. E. White of Cincinnatti, will addres tna Philosophical Association early in April, on "The Philosophical Basis of Education." The sophomore girls hada-group picture taken Saturday. "'Twas just too sweet for anything," as one of them afterwards remarked. A number of the students will attend the winter meeting of the Detroit Athletic club, Saturday. The fare for the round trip is but $1.15, if fifty attend. Max O 'Rell, the famous French writer and lecturer, at Umversity hall, Friday evening, March 14, will be one of the best of the many excellent entertainments offered by the S. L. A. this year. The case against Messrs. Smith, Randall and Tukesbury, the students who were arrested for participating in a rush at the post-offloe reoently, was settled on Saturday upon payment of the costs by the boys. The receptioo given by the Younp; People's Society of the Congregational church to the raembers of the Students' Christian Associatiou, Friday evening, was a pleasant affair and was largely attended. A new fraternity has swung out. This time it is the ladies of the medical school, who have the fever, and the name which they have adopted is Alpha Epsilon Iota. This is the first Laternity everorganized by ladies inany medical school in the country. Treasurer Soule received the following on Tuesday, which explains itself, and is the subject of congratulations to Dr. and Irs. Lupinski, both well-known here: "Grand Rapid, Feb. 17, 1890. Cordial greetings from Hugo Houghton Lupinski, born Jan. 30, weight ten pounds." The sixth annual reunión and dinner ol the Washington Association of U. of M., was held at Willard's hotel in that city, last evening. Like its predecessors the reunión was a pleasant affair, fully a hundred of the alumni of this University being seated around the festive board. The program for the meeting of Alpha Nu, on Saturday evening, is as follows : "Some Early Chemists," W. H. Nichols; recitation, W. A. Kirkland ; reading, Miss Conner; vocal solo, Miss Phelps; debate, "Resolved that church property should be taxed," aff., C. E. Filkins, neg., Lugo Pam. The modified plans for the new hospital have arrived. Ad administration building and five wards are contemplated. The wards, two for the old school and one for the homoeops are all that are to be built at present, and Secretary Wade is now figuring hard to bring these within appropriation. There was a good attendance last Friday night, to hear the lecture of Rufus Waples on parliamentary law, which has attracted so much attenticn of late on account of the contest in congress. Though the lecture was only an introductory one, it was a very interesting and instructivo one. The next lecture will be delivered in the law lecture room, Saturday morning. The executive committee of the U. ol M. Alumni Association of the Southwest, which met at Kansa9 City recently, decided to hold the annual banquet at that place on May 23. Arrangements will be made to entertain 200 guests, and a guarantee fucd of $1,000 haa already been raised. Among the distinguished alumni to be invited are Pres. Angelí, Pres. C. K Adm8, Hon. D. M. Dickinson, Judges J V. Campbell and C. B. Grant, and Robert E. Frazer. Here is what the conversativo ol( Londoc, Enp, Globe hasto offer in regard to the work done in the U. of M.: " 'It is said that the University ot Hiuhigan is the only institution in the Unileil States in which the principies of dram-tic com position sre taught.' We are inchned t hink this is a blessing for the S ates ani for the English-speaking world ia general If all University men were taught how to make plays (so far as it can be taught) the world would soon be filled with the roariog of multitudinous dramatiats." Speaking of the University G'ee au Bar.jo o'ubs entertainment, the Dundee Reporter Saye : "The company come 25 srong and will give an entertainmen where you can enjoy one hundred an twentv laughs in one hundred and twent; minutes. The jokes are funny in the ex treme." Ju?t imagine advertising our high toned, full-dressed society boys, a9 thougi they belongedto one of Haverly's minstre companies. But the "ad" took, and th boye were greeted with a large and enthusi astic audii-nce8 at the cDncert there, Situr day evenitg.
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Old News
Ann Arbor Register