PAGE TWO ' THE MICI GAN DAIL Y NUMBER OF WAR 1NNQS'Former Law Scho( DE RE SE__HI 1ff R ecent listscompile'd by PronCC:% D [ H A S S H I IA ,y lisu r, of* the Law sch~( ool, sh1ow , __________school or' literary college nc-,v hld'r Comparison Of Mid-Semester Rieport;.! seats in high 'ourts tS I1nouglhout this With Years 1923, 1924 Shows ; catr} More Failures 01Onof Ith"c5 mn, e. corge S7 tI Hr land, is at present-a just ice flin the PLAC~E SIXTY ON PROBATION, 0,*usi~ in 1S) and 1883 hbut li nt reainto A Students Hold Seats obtain his degree, p~referring to fini hi>; studies privately,.lie was given an honorary dlegree by the University in 1917. Twenty-one of the alin in i hold seat e oil thle Supreme courti benches of t heir respeet ive :tates, vhiles11 of them arc- ii fed oral dist rict counts. The re- miai ug three are in =i tots where the C1h ighest courts, are not: the supreme cour2ts, i ; far example, Judge C"harle ; C . Black, '81 L, who sits on the Now =\louh ile state of! Michigan has Jersey C'ourt of Error and Appeals lbe most nivorsil v alumnii in the beneb, whicPh is I he highest court in that state. fedecral courts within its boundarie s, Altogether those 319 meu aredi Montana with four le.d-, the way in f ribut ed a uong 21. different, st ates., thisi regard in T he state supreme; They .Toc, !pv laces in, feder l courts con its. Warnings issued and students plat-j ed on probation following the mid-se-i mnester examinations held recently are less. in number than those of last fall at this time, according to an-' nouncement yesterday at the office o, W. R. Humphreys, assistant dlean of the literary college. Statistics showe that 201 warnings were issued and 60!) /placed on probation this fall as comn- 'pared to 239 warnings and 100 placed on probation, at the same time i 1925. The figures reveal that although a decrease has been shown this yeaai- nevertheless the number of student:,' placed on probation and the number of warnings issued following the re-E cent mid-semesters and those of last year were greater in number than 1924 and 1923. In 1924, following the fall mid-semester examinations, 147 warnings were issued and 66 students i placed on probation. s. E, v.u t. i)u .a. rive) 41 to L, 14 1LA. i I V L. 11411ai1,I Al L-V Goo) H-omle Cook,,,i n '1h b~ est meals in 'town-that's Tuttle's. Food fliat is selected and prepared in On,- best wvay, and served with the utmost care. 338 Maynard - I A dignifle'dbsn y! ': Rte: / s Any retail business that has grown to a volume of more than $100,000,000'a year must be c fondedupon sound business principles. Kresge's is a dignified business. It meets the everyday human needs - of folks everywhere. The S. S. Kresge Company has developed the art of retail store-keeping to the point where it may well be termed a science. Merchandise of standard grade is sold in Kresge stores-but in such quantities that prices are consistently lower than in stores that lack the organization and resources of a great national institution. There are already more than three hundred stores in the Kresge chain- and new ones are being added constantly. For these new stores we shall need managers-competent men, thcroughly experienced -- and Kresge-trained. A linmited number of young men-college men of good character and prom~ise-will be given the opportunity to train for these positions. Write at once and arrangements will be made for You to meet one of our representatives. SHe will tell you -all about our organization Sand the opportunities it offers college men. Personnel Dept S SKRESGE C 1S I02.3' $TOM.S ,*"* 15-90 1122 STOR.ES Fefi KreS, iB HARRY W. REPPERT from newsboy to Kresge Store Man~zger When a boy, Mr. Reppert atten lcd school in Reading, Pa,, where he sold the Saturday Evening Post to earn spending money. Later he attended Wharton School of Accounting and Finance, Ujniver- -ity of Penn,3lvania. Mr. Reppert has this to say of his business career: "I became acquainted with a Kresge' store manager and heard the story of the Kresge plan of intensive training on a practical scale. After a weeks' deliberation, I started in training. "Remember this: I held a good position in a steel mill (with my own letter heads, desk, stenographer, etc.) and was reputed to be the fut- ure superintendent of the depart- ment in which I was working. "My friends and business associates couldn't see the future of the chain store business. They actually laughed at my change from a com- fortable position to stockman in overalls. But today,thanks to myowns judgment and the Kresge Company, Ihave reached the point where I am managing a store of my own (Dunkirk, New York), have in- creased my earning power consider- ably and best of all, I have a future that is worth whi14 ahead of me." I 1 OEM = INow I c fr 'I'lloJII)s Blurke's C.lassic of Liiiieliouse COLL E EN -~ d in 'nl" 'Ii Pict""eb lot i Ieitir