FRIDAY, MARCH 5,1926- "TU'G' NATr"T -l A NT T N A TT V 1% t Pt" PtetY1"f 7Y14Nt FRI~AYMA~eH ~, 1926 1 llY.1J VV litiNLHUL' I PAGE THRES I ImtOmn22.8MA A DOf N- -tAt I H THVEIIANO 14000 HONOREDBY STAFF UI. S. Steel Mayi Lose Judge Garyl High Grades A re Received A Op Ap O 44 OO O A e0 44oe*pab eIy~ 4fp OQ 0000 0 ,ny.e O00 "* .":" . "e,.3y Opera Cast Museum iHead Andd ('ursa u'lPresentied 11'itli Guts. At R egu la r Weekly Cclloqt uuii SERVICE APPRECIATED Presentation was m ade yesterday afternoon by staff members of the Museum of an offer for a portrait of himself to Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, director of the museum, andl of a silv- er loving cup to Norman A. Wood, curator of birds. The evl.tnt took place at the weekly colloquium of staff members and graduate students of the institution. Themessage to Dr. Rutliven, sign- ed b more than a dozen members of the museum. staff, came as a result of the fear by sonmc that he would ac-1 cept ,a position elsewhere, but which he :declined. The letter asserted, "as a feeble expression of the joy we have in the anticipiation of your contned service with us, we wish to state that Mr. Leon A. Makielski has consen ted, 'at your and his con- venience, to make your portrait, which we beg you to accep~t." The work of Mr. Makielski, instructor in drawing and painting in the engineering col- lege, is familiar in Alnn Arbor, a (is- play of some of his portraits of fac- ulty'limembers having appeared at thr: Libratry last year. Dr. Ruthven, who obtained his de- gredof doctor of philospoby from the University in 1906, has been director of the museum since 4911. The loving cup was presented to Mr.WAood, in, appreciation of his 31i years of association with the mnus- eunm,'during which time he has estab- lished a reputation as one of Mich-. iganis leading ornithologists. The .ol- f f 4 f46 0 0 4 4444A4A4As' 49 *4,4, 4, 0 , O 4 4, F t 9 'Vt 4.' *'( *f O A*{ 4e ~ ? 44A 44*4' t 'fm"G*' 'Gutiwhe xplains Crude Carvings Of .Indian Stone That the boulder found near Van- couver recently With crude carvings on it is an excellent example of In- dian petroglyphic technique and that' the probable age of the discovery isI conclusion were verified it would up- the opinion of Dr. Carl D. Guthe, of, set the 'present theories of the age the museum of anthropology, of man on earth. The animals engraved on the bould-t Accordii--g to Dr. Guthe, it is quite er are thought to have great spikes as possible to interpret the "spikes~ growing from their backs and Van-j as entirely similar to those found on Indian petroglyphs, which have beefs couver archaeologists infer that 'per- discovered comparatively recently. haps the Indianus who carved the fig-__________ ures may have been familiar with din- osaurs, brontosauri, and other sci-! Little investment--big returns, The Decspite more than two hours of I practice daily in the three months pre- : edhig the opening performance of the Union opera, "Tambourine," 11 per cent of al,,the marks received by the 60 men participating in th-e cast and choruses were "A's". One member of the Girls' chorus received an all-A record in the five courses he was tak- Of these same 230 courses pursued b~y the stage aspirants, 32 per cent were recorded with a grade of "B" and~ 41 per cent with "C". Nine per cent of the marks were "D's", and five ercent were either incompletes or late grades. Only two per cent of the marks re- ceivedl by the entire company of cast, choruses, orchestra and committees! were 4"E's" Unsatisfactory grades for the sec- and semester last year eliminated sev- eral hundred tryouts from "Tambour- ine" when practice was resumed in the fall. Mid-semester reports dur- ing practice 'last semester also hin- deredl several of the candidates. Of the courses taken by the 24 men in the orchestra, 13 per cent were "A's", 23 per cent were "B's", 51 per cent were "C's", and 13 per cent "D's". Let The Daily sell it- for you, thru tne Classified columns.--Adv. DETOITTHEATRES I D THOIS WEEK it is impossible to ~efinitel~y ascertain entific-mythological animals. If this Daily ClassifieQs.-Adv. ;; h ,.. ------------------------ Today and Tomorrow orwompowsponomm - C I ---------- Matinees lOc, 25c, 35c. Nights l~c, 35c, 50c J' With rumors afloat in Wall str eet that Elbert 11. Gary intends to re- sign as chairman of :the b)oardI of th e United States Steel corporation, largest industrial enterprise in the w orld, Nathan L. Miller, former gover- nor of New York, is being suggeste (I as the man likely to succeed him. Mr. Miller became general counsel o f the company last November. Mr. Gary has been head of the corpora tion since its oganization 25 years ago. Hobbs Speaks To I{,ok in furthering arrangements 'for *j the Greenland expedition which he Clubs And Alumni will direct next summer. Ort Tuesday h le addressed alumni at a luncheon Prof. William H-. Hobbs of the geo-) in Indianapolis, and Wednesday he logy department returned yesterdayI spoke before the Adventurers' club of from a trip which included Dayton,1 of Chicago. Indanaoli, ad hicgowhee h IOn Monday Professor Hobbs con- Indianapolis, adCiao hr efre with the officers at McCook field, Dayton, with reference to equip- lection of birds under his care and ment for next summer's Greenland study numbers thousands, expedition. 0 of the Plains! ,She was a girl born to ease and luxury.. He was a' man of the Western frontier . .. At Love's call site followed into the heart of the praiirie wilderness. A lie of adventure and romance a storied ta lo of the making of nwen and woruwn an4 theo birth. of a woman's, soul! With HER0ERT RAWLINSON l If i I I l If F- 11 UST PUBLISHED--and of Special Interest to the Students of Medicine G AR R I c EKes. 50c to $2.50 Wed Mt.54cto ;1.50 Sat. Mar. 50c to $2.00 The Big Musicoinedy Jit? "Kosher Kitty KFelly" Direct from Eight Months Run on Broadway With Or'~inial Cast BonteloPlahoseNights 75c to z5 BonsellePlayouseMats.Tucs,,Thur. and Sat , '50c-75c Woodward at Eliot Tel. Glendale 9792 The BONSTELLE CO. In Geo, N. Cohan's Comedy-Drama 'The SONG and DANCE MANI" Lafayette at heq Schubert Lafayette Night, $z a to hl ih $3 50 Sat.Mat. 5oc" $2.00 Pop.Thurs.Mat. 5oc to $2.00, plus tax. Cad. 8705 Triumphant Return-One Week Only GREENWICH VILLAGE FOLLIES America's Greatest Annual Revue-All New II1 from the rea , story by/ ARTHIUR STRINGER' U''F. NEAT/ :( MICROE HUTER By Paul De Kruif, a former Michigan Man w 3 SUNIVERSITY ii f rl. --And a Big Added Bill- ..r: .. .. 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