THE MICHIGAN DAILY ... I I b A It c SPRING It's in the air. It's everywhere. I'll trade you One of the new Model Kodaks for your old one and a reasonable "boot" LRE E t I The real "Spruce Up" weather, when men cast aside their winter togs and bedeck themselves with brand new Spring clothes. I want 50 more 2nd hand KODAKS to rent and sell. I LYNDON 7191 N. University .o.. With Made-To-Measure Suits This season we will give away absolutely FREE a $6.oo Raincoat or Palm Beach suit with every $18.oo, $20.00, or $22.50 suit; or an $8.oo Panama hat or Palm Beach suit with every $25.00, $27.50 or $30.oo suit. Palm Beach suits will be all the rage this Summer, don't miss this opportunity to get one FREE with your Spring suit. e . I I This store is the birthplace of good clothes, where "Malcolm Tailoring" has made its home, and when that "Spruce Up" feeling starts creeping down your spine. Come in here as quick as you can and we'll relieve you. I1 r Shirts to order. Dress Suits to rent 5UoFor thebet stK J MALCOLM Suin town jur 604 east Iberty street Malcolm Block rI . Cleari ng Sale of Broken Sizes inr Mens and Womens Shoes VERY CHEAP, At the Sign of Satisfaction WITH INNOVA1TIONS1 Coach Lundgren Puts Infield Players Through Snappy Workout of Throwin1g tO Bases MCNAMARA, ILL, LEAVES SQUAD Innovations are now being sprung by Coach Lundgren, the first one com- ing yesterday afternoon in the regular practice when he closed the day's work by choosing three sets of infield men and sending them through a snap- py drill in fielding and throwing the ball around the bases. The second surprise of the coach is coming this af- ternoon after the regular workout, when the squad will gather in the tro- phy room for a blackboard talk on the finer points of the game. McNamara, who was one of Coach Lundgren's promising candidates for the pitching staff, and who was the star south paw of last year's All- Fresh, yesterday announced his with- drawal from the competition for a berth among the pitchers on this year's Varsity nine. McNamara has been suf- fering from a pain in his side and doc- tors have declared that he must be op- erated on for appendicitis. it is on account of his coming operation that the left-hander is leaving the squad. Work in the batting cage yesterday afternoon lasted the usual period of about an hour and half, and was fol- lowed by the first of the coach's new lines of work. The first infield to practice in regular formation was composed of Captain McQueen at sec- ond with Maltby at first, the other two. positions being taken by Brandell at short and Waltz at third. Benton caught for the quartet. The talks in the trophy room will be held frequently in the future, it be- ing the purpose of the coach to drill into the men in these talks the lessons which are being learned on the gym floor. The blackboard demonstrations will be of plays which will be used by the coach in practice, and it is iipera- tive for every man on the squad to at- tend the talks. r, - '4 r. / } Jil ii !may Get Your A MI& RAL 'IN \ CAP ANDGOWN -at - 0 s 9 E. LIBE RTY ST. Mack's2 We've the best facilities in town for fitting and suiting you perfectly. We guarantee your complete satisfaction, All caps and gowns are from the well known Aca- demic Costuming House of COX SONS & VININO and every garment conforms perfectly with the intercol- legiate code recently adopted. Orders should be p'laced at once in order to be certain of delivery for swing out. Rental charge $2.00 per outfit complete. Payment not due until gowns are delivered, Rubbers High Class Shoe Repairing _... f ;'I KTTi. _ __ _____ I a W henever You / see an Arrow' Coca-Cola a tip from the men who top all the ge tables. Drink -- -- They know it'sgood to train on-to workr o.Teer- lbest, out-and-out thrst- y= quencher-full of refreshment, pleasure and wholesomeness. .Deliious-Refreshing Thirst-Quenehing .THECOCA-COL A CO N~~ ~~. Atlanta. Ga. ~ .'j Lad es Souvenir Matinee Friday. School Childrens Matinee Sat. Afternoon all children under 12 years of age admitted for 5c. I r ;v- ----- n Ifomufic&tion es for the spring vacation in the veering College and Graduate 11 were erroneously announced in respective bulletins as April 2 to The vacation in both the Engi- ng College and Graduate School e held at the same time as in the ary College, being from April 9 inclusive. res M. Campbell, '17, who has detained in the homeopathic hos- for some time with milliary tu- .losis and who was also operated r appendicitis, has returned to his in Saugatuck where he will re- for the balance of the semester. STHREE ONE SIDED CONTESTS STAGED (Continued from Page 1 . Dillman, Miller, Manwaring.....G........Enstine Baskets from field-Vonachen, 4; 1 Warner, 7; Hyde, 1; Headman, 3; Miller, 1; Melvin, 2; Bond, 2; Enstine, 1. Baskets from foul-Melvin, 1. The fresh lits seemed to meet with but little difficulty in disposing of the senior laws, the yearlings accumulat- ing a comfortable lead in the first half, and adding to it somewhat in the closing stanza. The score: Fresh Lits (25) Sen Laws ((11) Drummond, Case..F........Goldstick Palma ............ F ....... McClelland Miller..........C......... Carlson Boyd..... .......G..........Marx Nathans ......... . G.......... Kerwin Baskets from field-Drummond, 2; Palma, 1; Miller, 4; Boyd, 2;Nathans, 2; Goldstick, 2; McClelland, 2. Bas- kets from foul-Drummond, 3; Mc- Clelland, 3. Edito, The Michigan Daily:--_ I note with tolerant interest the con- cern evinced in the "Imposition is im- position" communication which ap- peared in a recent issue of The Daily. And for fear that our progenitor of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happi- ness," ad infi nitum, and staunch and deadly foe of the predatory spirit in the councils of the law faculty, by the length of his tirade and anathemas, shall have led some well-meaning contemporary into believing that his vaporizing is entitled to some weight and credit, I beg the indulgence of a brief hearing. All legislation, which is restrictive and more or less harsh in the last an- alysis, may be interpreted as class leg- islation. Until we attain the millen- ium this anamoly cannot be obviated. But does the occasional hardship that is worked militate against the further enactment of necessary and construct- ive reformation of existing conditions, whether social, economic or education- al? No one, not even the staunchest defender of the noble profession of the law denies that in some respects it merits reform. And most of the re- sponsibility for the abuse and criti- cism which is heaped upon the members of the legal profession may be laid at the door of the ignor- ant and shyster lawyer. a Whence did he come? Through the easily accessible and insufficiently pro- tected channels of lax preparations: and loose bar requirements. Our friend does not discredit the pertinen- cy of this criticism, but in his mis- guided indignation at the untoward efforts of "those in power who are be- hind the movement" to ruthlessly dis- regard the Declaration of Independ- ence, and in his efforts to espouse all to his cause by spontaneous saluta- tions to "Old Glory," he has lost sight of the vital question at issue. It seems almost elementary, espe- cially after one has had at least some experience in actual practice, to point out the manifest wisdom and .fore- thought in requiring the extra two years preparation before allowing a student to study law. Brought face to face with the pitiful shams foisted up- on the unsuspecting public, one is dis- gusted with an educational institution that permits and . sanctions such a fraud. The right to practice a pro- fession should and must be modified. Actual competition is all that is nec- essary to convince one that the days of the lawyer "who never saw the inside of a college" are dead days, lost be- yond recall. They are "functi officio." There are many law schools which owe their existence to the fact that one can drift through two or three years under careless and incompetent instruction, and attain some sort of a diploma. At the particular bar exam in wvhich I participated last year, such law school graduates (most of them from Chicago schools) predominated. Superfluous to say, they were among Our Guarantee-Every garment must be right. not right you have no right to take it. Windows all look alike; ads all read alike; prices don't vary much. You can select just the fabric that pleases your eye and have it made up to measure in perfect style by ex- pert Metropolitan Tailors, and pay no more than for one of the ordinary suits you see in most shop windows. Let us take y our measure now before the Easter rush is on. Our Prices--$18.00, $20.00, $22.00 & $25.00 If it is Campus Bootery Opposite Huston's 308 S. State Street L those not present when the list of suc- cessful candidates was published. Should we ask our Alma Mater to de- scend to a similar level? No greater farce could be conceived. Yet that is directly where the writer of that com- munication was drifting. Objection is raised that students cannot afford the extra two years re- quired. The public tenders its busi- ness to the lawyer who is best fitted and qualified to do its work. Anything which tends to so educate a maa is a- business proposition with him, and he can "afford" it. No man of sufficient initiative and determination can of- fer the excuse that he cannot afford a college education. The trials and tribulations of working one's way throughcollege can not be presented as a valid argument to one who has enjoyed ;ix years of it at Ann Arbor. And it need rob a man of little of the real pleasures and activities of uni- versity life. As for the suggestion that the "stan- dards be raised but not the require- ments," my friend has overlooked the very obvious fact that the two propo- sitions are indissolubly linked togeth- er-the one a step towards the at- tainment of the other. Furthermore, the "ne plus ultra" of efficiency is rapidly being attained in the Law School at Michigan. If any question exists in the mind of Mr. '17 as to the high standard of excellence demanded by the present law faculty, I have not the slightest doubt but that such dubiousness will be rapidly and effectively dispelled when he comes in contact with the business end of his first semester examinations as a law student. C. HAROLD HIPPLER, '12-'14L. Y.N.C.A. Bureau Hands Out Board Jobs More than six board jobs have been given out by the Y.M.C.A. employment bureau in the last few days, and the authorities report that there are still a few more jobs on hand. Those stud- ents who wish to -have spring work are urged to file their applications. WEIN BERG'S R OLLER RINK UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT Requests your patronage, and insures prompt and Courteous treatment Manager and Employees are Students NEW 'POLICY The new managemet has adopted a policy that will do away with the usual objectionable features of the public roller rink. There will be band music at least one night a week, tis night to be announced later. Students' trade is being especially solicited. Student tickets are on sale at Wahr's and Sheehan's. I Students' Supply Store Engineer's Supplies, Stationery, Confectionery, Newsdealer, Cigars, etc. Open Evenings 7 to 10. Open all day Saturday APPLY FOR STUDENT RATES G. R. MIRIQK, Mgr. L. C. SCHLEEDE 1111 S. Univ. Ave. Phone 1160-R p ...,_ m. 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