--- I-._...,_ ...._.MI ...C1.L. JC t--- L f-111u d Fs Volstead! . MILLS SPEAKS TONIGHT ON TELFPKONE SYSTEM Frauds His job ilI VLNQ1JENVY ;1FIGURES: " t"Fdent nm-ral;;, ranners, rand sclioL j~asipare not wiorse 110W than in tihe ,,tL in the (,p:i(n of Regisrar Ar- "t ,r (. f1?1l. "1 do not believe in the confetion whlich is held by 1many 1111 students hv deteriorateod in t} ,e respects", he declared et- A , k p p r ' ' f i Jh o a r s h ip st a n d . i,,shty)'b cmnlainz~g te total en- '911nt J.gures an4(l r~rrespofldng riumnber of delipnquent5 in four differ- ent year~s, 1895, '1901, 1714, and 1924. that the scholarship is on about the samne standard. In 1805 when [the total enrollment Nvas 1,437 in the literary college, in- ("'uding 300 engineers wvho were then included in that college, 4.2. percent of' the total student body was on the declinguient list. Nine years later, in 1901, the p)ercentage of delinquents -ws 4.1 percent. Th'e enrollment war then 1,.391, the engineering students haiving; been qrganlzed into a separate college that year, In 19 4't~e 1 f ,o °.cliiciintsin eluidedl 17.~3 p ecent of a -student bodyf W 2.614. MItouglp this percentage is (-onls (era )y reotr thli that of 1904. .Dr. 1I'al l eee thait the difference1 is not realysn(~fi1nt because, of the faict th t in, 17121 the. present gradi'ng ;ysie : ua ah loted and. niachinery, in that; xa- y, becan or effective in Afterth ia ,e etr pof this year, 1.8.9 perceii the student body was ~placed on the delinquency list out -of a total enrollmneut of ),200. Dr. fHal points out Clhat this percentage is jabout'the same as ten years ago. Bert: use of these facts, he concludes 'that scholarship has not 'gone downl ~any. In regard to the other two ~points, morals and manners, Dr. Hall{ -ays that he has consulted with older .Ann Arbor citizens who have been in ~personal contact with students rnd have had an opportunity to observe them closely and that these men have ~expressed themselves as of the opin- ion that the general condition is "just ~about the same." "It is a human tendency to see the1 ~'Gole Age' hbe il ndsaid Dr,. TI {ll, t"int I r~eally believe tbat we picture1 the present timie Worse than it is."" Statistics- slowing thern-ber --of 5t[fd ehts Who i V'rt -sent' home nac-- count; f (,6rslip),thb number who woce °~res#f l zndfto1returin, and alsc, the numtber on wNarning-n probion out by Dr. 4Hal.4 In 1895 there were three students or .2 percent sent home, 26 or 1.8 percent placed on probation, and 32 or 2.2c po. ceint warned. In 1904_.six or .4 . percent wvere ',sent boom'~,-30 or 2.1 percent plac(I()n pobti~on,=and 22 or 1.5) pericent on the warned list. Following, the change in the grad- ing system. in 17 t4l47 or 1.7 perc:ent were asked toleae, 1.0 or 3 told not to return. 2 41 or 9.2 placed on pro- bat~on, and 156 or 5.9 percent warned. This year 1683 or 3.2 percent was sent home. 22 or .4 requested not to re turn, 1146 or 10.5 placed on pro- bation, andl 252 or 4.3 percent 'blaced n warning. lFrankfort. Mar. 12 -Baroness Math- "What the Telephone Transmits and IHow We Hear It" is the title of the lecture which John Mills of the West- ern E'lec tric company will deliver to- night at 8 o'clock in Natural Science :auditorium. Mr. Mills is well known from his books, "Within tihe Atom,' "Radio Communication," and "Letter,. of a Radio Engineer to His Son." The lecture tonight will be non-technical and of interest to psychologists and physiologists as well as to membersI of the 'Detroit-Ann Arbor section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers under wAhose auspices it is being given._I Three reels of moving pictures, re-' cently ,made in New Fork under Mill's technical, direction, show the prinei-' lies underlying the telephonic investi- gation of speech and audition which has been going on for some time in the laboratories of the Bell Telephone system. There are animated movies showing the operation of the voice mechanism, of the ear, and of the transmitter and receiver. Then there are graphs which are animated to show the most recent results in the analysis of speech and the measure- men of the sensitivity of the human1 ear. NW STREET NEP lion 17C. ., lr lyuut IN", ThO lurcll ase of a, new -motor i- up ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~l stetsepri en otmlt I~mhe oblievt, thatf cyni: isn is e' by the IBoard 0)l. Public;wrs.: ai anlae.Sarah Slocu11, ,a Next week 11: . A. B301, street comiis-;"'Ap('rnos, Kj1"to b p) I I oy lK r siofln,. . H.Atwell andl Tits 1lutz- 0' py0 Mabel 011 .. :I lip e > : Eoel, miembewrs of the board will visit! Q i syfo n caint;;wi facb oes in Chicago), Cleveland and:\ ~ pKea; W 1. 1 rod s' -1 U t icer, N. Y., in Order to look over the w in t i.'1I he housen for inci' ! t11)' ,L different types of street sweepers and' ed t rice; and E nt her .N rin: a )I" sel(,Ot1thc best, hene ;fe',ant fr hr vpk:ai, AtM a recent meeting of the hoard, t Ca tile of street sign, nmadle iQlanii(The reatest d'itlitcultf a;ll Etl );- all'hu nalley was seletedt,1:1 .; Ike 1parts of elderlySp1)pl1 thec samnles s uhmitte~d. A Ona ~P(Jt ei igiigteryuh <) cOhw ;; decided on orders will ho' plai cd forfdelivery late in the s)IrMw eigIe wt.S vmbhi n l 'ota h e in vl eh lce la riaesilyugmn n ".! 1;,I l~. ,.ti _ n 'v11~einhV VI F I I n'a t'la nne w th al h r ig it hey are nything else. A mmixtil '_. 'fin isa 1 a lak scall!.used l:n tj <>. ndents ho drc i. 'ov r '_ougep, pade :oyr how to act X11 V em'I'uy.lite fountalin Jpenili9 a I on ~c nt yiimalid int1Inap F t f i }{ S 4 "r Ire X; )Vells President Coolidgehado edtt there is need of anasitn toue (7&RhET1ON Duy? to an error, The Daily pubP,.Ite, tP- rr. n- of the number of people 't t I(iEthe Union Fair as 9,200 ye. ten- l 0. J. Kvale1 _Rep. 0. J. Kvale, Farmer-Laborite,' who defeated Andrew J. Volstead for re-election to congress from Minneso-;1 a because Volstead wasn't dry'enough sic! ), is urging passage in the house i of an amendment to the Volstead act !, which.lie declares will sop up the country completely. Tubie am endmuent14 provides for the making of ownership of liquor under any circumstances il- legal. IN ENCINERING WING1 The $15,000flin 0ba t W NCdl was't exhibited by thle Aeronautical society, at the Union Faair last week--end ,will_ be moved today from the Field house and p~ut into a permanent l)ositon' in the basement of the south wing of the E+ast Engineering building, the quart- er's of the aeronautical engineering deC- p artment. The ;plane, a donation of R. F. Bak- er, '25E, andl'Milton Wigund, of Grand :Rapids, will be used as a model for Ohe design classes. -It is 25 feet long' and h i,- a wing spread of 50 feet Due to this it may be impossible to'- mount but one wing. D~ifficulty is expect'd by Prof. F. V Pawlowski, of the aeronautical en- gilieering department, in bringing the, plaice into the basement as it must be" done" through the elevator shaft. The boat will not be used, for any practical flights although it can reach a speed' of-75 miles per hotur and. develops 1501 horse powecr. It is of thbe° two passen- ger type. -bit h The machine, wliich %vasbul y te ;donors in (,rand Rtapis, has bee~n .fow by themin inthat city forth-e part!t "Jimmie the adtaker" sells anythingj quickly.-Adv. general whose whole timercan b-l (k]a- while the amounlt received from I given to land fraud cases, and Ira i Iohns wa, $4,600. The correctI Wells has been named to takte u t n iuher of p)eople attonding was 4.6001 this task. Mr. Wells served as districot v h i e a mount, -eal ised was half of attorney under Fe. Mont 1Reily when the: this or $2,300i. the latte1r was governor of P~orto Mico! Cairo; Mar. 12. --Many American t and DAILY CLASS IIFI :5 hIING B;x r!tishl tourists are held upl in Egypt aid t t n;1 _ ;:1 is Still a pret t ni i b ,, ' ii t, a ('")1veieb It V w~i . girl. s~ifipams osat (lllnaz li, wiie and lace'd it on the ircuj , llhere is lttally ~jlackin, ex cept ,fr, ;hitH eki e pc ordr a c t e r s! ) a r!l'ou g A e i c Aa i i it. r a i ! i l c iveiii o l u e e:o u to heiseves orto heandtece hatx. 'er ~r te mt sunof f a cen7t. CALKtINS" -FtLETCH ER Mr. Mills is in town as a mnember oiff1.rI.'a -11 iliI'aeiiciy1005wtcidsut the Bell System delegation which is O ITE1VSM~T cttansrie - (iscuissing employment with seniors in engineering, business administration: F11111tt1'1 1 1 llil iltEt1 6t 1Q111illll1fl1111i0 andl other departments. K -. o NAT"LXE.NBR&BOS Town, South Africa, has sent' 47,000- francs worth of French bonds as a ~r1 gift to the French government in pro- ..WIll 116W test against speci llators. It is planned to cancel the, bonds and place them; in'sCOTE3FRT-I=O GEM N- a miuseum. - At onei=n + c o APRIL 3rd and 4tCh send down ANN ARBOR,MCH Sof Oh Henryl The - - this ide froast beef) -wa . ,8411 roa ' 'K.W. Cor. l3th St. 'Heniy rodwy ry",~i 211 fff~1tIfliif ~lte 4fftlixsi~~llfll 11MIffflf'lfl~flll.f SUGGESTIONSI flowAb'~t aN~xv--T *~~ Sair bIus, Tooth. Brush Flair Brush'i Bath Bri' Hand Brush r Drop in at any one -of he three most up-to~-ate inAnn Ayb'~r- drug stores -, V - ~' I,,-' I I 1c-i-iI TUEl } 3&'fr the "all,,ins IKld'c "a4rcs -'1 *- ~ -.- , --- - .-. -- - 4h $err~l t her.irered traemark of the Willi1am. eon cand~~tPU., Geew .,a. N. Willamsebn, Pros, r. STUDENT'S SUPPL--Y SIFORE 1111 S. UNIVERSITY I ALL SCHJOOL MATERIALS FOR it I" dift ENGINEERS ARCH ITECTS LITS I "Evcr-Ihing for the Student" lda Rothschild, widow of Baron Wil- liam Karl Rothschild and oldest fam-' ily of the German banking family ofj ttfr name, died Sunday at the family! castleI in Grunbeing. She was 92 years Pat.oni~e Daily Advertiprs-Adv.. R'f 1 with INKtI PN °ThMe SeFon ANFOOSSIBF"D _ t 44,f Save a dollar on your clean'- ing and pressing! By getting one of our cash cards. which gives you $6 worth of wo rk for only $5. Better work, too, than you'll find elsewhere in town! I., I Th " " .. four 0 PP 0 R 7 U.N'l ! A $4,000,000 corporation with 250 branch offices offers Profitable emplovnment to college students. You will be backed by one of th-e big gest national advertising campaigns. ever run. VACATIO I #M ir ++ arr oa U ADIAN1M-ANN AIRBOR BUS LINE Central Timte (Slow Time)4 Tmave Chamrber_ of Commercej Week tDays Sundays 6:45 a. i. 6:45 a. m. z a:45 P. ' .45 p.M.' 4:5;.-m.I A~ tELLI OTT, 11,oprietor Pho~ne gab-M Adrian, Mich. SRESERVE YOUR, TERRITORY NOW. FOR PARTICU:LARS SEE ORPHONE I m -Don't Miss "The Sweetest ]Kiss" i LL: W. -Slack, '25, Head Oreganizer Lyndon Studio or 579-M ,John DeTar, '25.:."...........619-R RZ. H. Davis, '26L........2368-M H. E. FiTfsche, '24.........28634J J. A. Avery, '25L... .......... ...189 D}..-I.h Kie'25 ................2970-J V. J. Francisco. ........... Lyndon Studio R. C. Woodhouse, '27L..........1612J Perry M. Hayden, '25, Head Organizc r Mchig-an. Daily or 2738 Jack Eastwood, '25.......2878-R John Elliott, '26....... .....YApsi 785-W Seth Hubbard, '24 .......1,612-R Millard Pilyor, '24........ .....1680-R Elmer Salzman; '25... ....2726-M Clark Stevens, '24 .............I .680-R Ross L. Taylor, '24.... ...... 2308-M I I ® I