L DULLLI (11:30 a. m. Saturdays.) 1098 8, 1922 Numberl nittee, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: leeting of this Committee in the Dean's office Friday 4:10 p. m. JOHN R. EFFINGER. eting: .t 4 p. m. in Room 212 Chemistry building., C. H. STOCKING,Secretary. able to meet these' classes on Friday, March 3. SAMUEL MOORE. 1equired Medical Examination: ce of the Deans held March 1 it was agreed that in the who do not submit themselves to the medical examination :s, by their action of April 29, 1921, have required of all oward a degree gained in the year in which the delinquen- 1 be withheld until the delinquent has complied with the F.' E. ROBBMNS. News of the Day IN BRIEF Washington, March 2.-Examination of two .of the three offers for private lease, operation, and completion of the government's projected properties at Muscle Shoals was virtually com- pleted today by the house 'military committee. Itwastannounced that the last offer before the committee for consideration would be taken up to- morrow, and that investigation of the proposals of Henry Ford and the Ala,- bama Power company. had been prac- tically completed. The committee excused Thomas W. Martin, president of the Alabama Pow- er company, from further testimony. Representatives of Mr. Ford-and the company were accorded the privilege of reappearing' if they desired to bring other evidence. Schenectady, N. Y., March 2-Sche- nectady has a modern Jove who sits on his throne in a laboratory of the General Electric company and hurls threats at will. He is Professor Steinmetz, electrical wizard, who an- nounced today that he had succeeded in producing and controlling an rin- door thunderstorm with all the char, cept the thunder clouds. Dr. Steinmitz hoped his apparatus will contribute largely to the develop- ment of lightning arresters as it pro- vides for the study at close range of the phenomenon. His experiments have convinced him. however, that there is little likelihood of man real- izing his dream of harnessing his thunderbolts and making them work. Moscow, March 2. - The central committee of the Socialist revolution- ary party, together with a number of the active members of the party, who for a long time have been in the "Che- ka" prisons, will be handed over to the revolutionary tribunal for trial. Theyare charged with having been involved with having been. in the plots of 1917 and 1918 with intent of assass- inating Lenine, Trotsky, and other Soviet leaders. F AIR ALL THIS WEEK February 27-28. March 1-4 - 7:30 209 EAST WASHINGTON (Over Hoags) "Columbia" was the subject of the its present system of g lecture delivered ii English by Mr. closing a stirring plea Herrera last night before the Spanish a united western hemisl society in Tappan hall. Mr. Herre- ra who himself is a Columbian by Daily Want Ads Pay.- TEMPLE ASSOCIATION GOING ON IIDAY meets An University at Mimes Union the- le class meets " party at the urch. ss meeting at ftsmen only. third degree. ivited. nes Union the- at hein prints and orig- s is on display in y of Alumni Memor- e architectural corni ngineering building lay of etchings of the RECOGNITION ACCORDED TO HOBBSIN HOLLAND Cons iderable attention has been arousedby the presence of Prof. W H. Hobbs, of the geology department, in Holland as exchange professor with Prof. H. A. Brouwer, of Delft, who is lecturing here. Following is an ex- tract from the Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant of Jan. 30, referring to Pro- fessor Hobbs' first lecture in the Technical High school. "Professor Hobbs, one of the most famous geologists of our time,. has come to the Netherlands in exchange with Prof. H. A. Brouwer, of Delft, who recently left here for the Uni- versity of Michigan. "Since this is the first time such an exchange of intellectuals has occurred in our country, the Chief of the Divi- sion of Higher Education in behalf of the Minister of Education and in his name delivered an address at the close of Professor Hobbs' lecture. "On this occasion' the American minister, Mr. Phillips, with the secre- tary of the legation, Mr. Hewes, were also present, as were the curator.(re- gent), Mr. de Vogel, the secretary of the board of curators (of the univer- sity) and several distinguished intel- lectuals." '22 LITS ELECT TWO COUNCILMEN W. W., Michaels and R. S. Peare to Serve This Semester William W. Michaels and Robert S. Peare were elected to the Student council as representatives of the sen- ior literary class at the third regular meeting of the class held in Mason hall yesterday afternoon. The program committee announced that the senior programs would be on display in Graham's window during the early part of next week. The program selected has a cover of French grained leather with a cop- per plate of Alumni Memorial hall. Order blanks will be mailed out next week. These must be filled out and turned in before l1farch 20. a TODAY AND SATURDAY .4.' J UST RECEIVED Burchard and Inglis - Dental Pathology-- Noyes - Dental Histology-- DeQuervain-Clinical Surg. Diagnosis Treves - Surgical Applied Anatomy Wahr's University Book $t( A Ta e of Fiery Love and Temp estuos Wooing on the Spanish Isle of Mragdalene DELIERS [I6N THREj ri A picture with the glamour of Old Spain - its impetuouus loves and the lure of the soft moonlight nights on the ancient tropical isle of Magdalena. RNATIONAL TRADE IM- LANT ECONOMIC FACTOR el- MacClintock, of the es bureau of foreign and nmerce, delivered two lec- students of the economics and others interested yes- in he afternoon and one ng. in the afternoon on the )o We Want Foreign MacClintock emphatically t foreign trade was very lthough only 10 per 'eent d States' total commerce hat 10 per cent is an im- >r in these days of unem- d over-production.. Dr. gave many statistics, and e belief that the great fu- erican trade does not lie erica but in the Orient. on "Government Help to ,de" in the evening, the >ld of the part played by States bureau of foreign c commerce in aiding for- n: every possible manner. hat it is to the advantage ryas a whole to promote ge world commerce, and t every turn. AN TYNE TO TURN APRIL 18 R. A. WALSH Presents fi nr4o y , w 9 r w l ;. . y .. i .; Y ., k ,. 14 ,, 4 r. '.. 'r'i FYI .'... 3 . . . .._: .... . .._ _ __... o... ., .a F~~~~~'~7 =73 I"' M m s I .__ -, - With Read Michigan Dailya will buy wisely.-Adv. Ads and you DE M IRIAM COOPER COMING SOON :ENLARGEO ORCHESTRA SPECIAL MUSICAL SCORE The Peak o'the Week 11 Dancing girls and stately ladies with their cavaliers - majestic scenery of rugged mountains and the splendor of the old haciendas. # Van Tyne, thead of nent, will return to ndia, April 18, ac-' - received by Pres- rton. He will come z canal, arriving in on the P. & 0. Thence he will go re he will sail for ADDED FEATURE "AINT LOVE GRAND" A SUNSHINE COMEDY ndia, Professor Van Tyne n. extensive study of the nment. He was requested nment to study the situa- had every opportunity to sively and to meet all e material which he ob- embodied in a book which .e shortly after his re- Returns from Erie, Pa. >ole, of the physics de- s returned to the Univer- short stay at his home lue to illness in his fam- DeMWeI ~Satu~da A N inimatepicture of Alove that rushed too ; soon .Into marriage. Set like a sunburst in glisten. ing fashion. Dancing through haunts where pleasure twinkles among the lights. Cast Includes: Leatrice Joy - Conrad Nagel Jack Mower - Edith Roberts Theodore Roberts NTED to >ort at I >'clock 11 LA viSTATO L kTiRA's..1 R