THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,S'ATI_?RI)AY, FEBRUARY 26, 1927 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 19Z7 A THLE..TES' MARKS "IARE HIGERTAAT NON-wATHLETES' THRE YER REPORTSHWVAITME q A K A O E 4 A A D ~ " i 1 e~ I e r~s o f T r a c k T e a n t S o w R e o r d s -vl I t t h e n mn o i p o t s , x NA . m c i Whicht Are -Sinjerior To Those lgn yloe ith 75.7. Tie numei al Of Aniy Other Squad 1 Ilin ill tli pr poitroved to be eq. per cent. Again here, the Varsity Imlenl . 4. .-'... "? " , $y;:;. jr . ",,: have a higher average than the other '" 's...: " groups. in that sport with a rating o3 76.4. The AMA men obtained a slight; Comimando-derd Pinedo's plane, the Savoia-55, is shown in the photo aidvantage over the Varsit~y by se cur- above as it appeared just before the Italian aviator took off on his propos- ng a percentage thiree tenths higher , e 3,00 il flight to four continents. Tile basketball numerals as usual De Pinedo made the flight across the Atlantic sucsflyadlne ,ame3.lower thent eohrgop on an island 270 miles off the Brazilian coast. He started for the coast with73.6per ent.but was forced to return to the island because of storm and seas, This Theschlaticratngof llthe b~ase-- is the enghlth time the Atlantic has been crossed by the air route. ball hathletes cwas 73.5ingr ngthigerf hall the football standing, but not as high as the tracek aind basketball rat- ED CA IO PR F S O S TO A T N iugs. The Varsity baseball athletes NATIONIAL e"DN'ERENCE - T DALLA a2gain went higher with 74.7 percent, I lust retaining that position -over the I ,.MA mnent with 74.6. The baseball nu- Seven faculty members of the School versity of Texas, and Dr. H. T. Man- neral gainers fell dlown with 71.2 per -,of Education's will represent the IUni- ;nel, of the same institution.1 gent, which is the lowest scholastic versity at the annual meeting of the ,tanding of any group of athletes inE National Education association, to l)x__________________ -he IUiversity during the past thiree! held from Feb. 28 to Mar'ch 3, in Dal- eT hercenitages of the athletes and 'Prof. C. 0. IDavis, Prof. Clifford Woodiy, non-athletes wer'e based upon tihe fol-: Prof. Raleigh Sehorlinig, Prof. A. 13. 'owing schedule: A 100 per cent, B13 Moehiman, Prof. S. A. Courtis, land ~per cent, C 70 per (cent and E 20 Prof. Thomas Diamond will leave thisj per cent. week-end for the meeting which w - 11h1(1 last year in Washington, D.. C. ,XHIB T E ITIONS Banquets and special sessionsat OF K ATS'11OD which various problems of education OF EATY Q'b' OR S wi be discussed, make up the pro- grain of the convention,I which wNill AUSTIN, Texas, Feb. 25.-A colle_ I bhave dolegate-s from practically every -ion of tile, first edition of two great, bid, school inl the country. Dr. Fred-' ngllsihp1ets, .J01l1l Keats and3 Percy, erick Eby, professor of tlh,e history o:: rhysslle Shelley, has lbeen placedl education and director of the suimmerj , Xhiblit ion inl the Wrenn library of Session of tihe University of rrexas 'he Univer sity, of Texas by Miss Fanl-{ will speak before the professor's o'' tie Rtutherford, librarian assistant. the history of education onl ",ow to There are the first nine editionls of! Realize- Professional Value of 1;1!- Keats' books and "tile first five of cational History." Shelley'; (i playaeI i>i a sinlgle case. Otlher talks include an address deal- Keats published h i r i'st volumne inl! ig withI national conferences on eedu-' 1817 and the last fin 1820. There is anl cational imethods andl standards of first edition of ea, .i ) these on dis-' supervision, by Dr. F. C. Aver, U~ni-; play. The ex:hibito; s > includes a -_________________ __ numb~er of his prose wr 1, a 'd poems G lli-Curci says voices sho~zuld be published after his death in 1821. trained early.j (Continued from P'age One) room ~jobs have been filled up to (late;crainig a telephone switchboaurd, tion, andi this, together wB 1 inls de- this year by the Bureau of Employ- clerki:ng in a hotel, teaching anid tutor- rived1 from a few concerts, wen Ill ent in the office of tile Dean of Stu- ing, wa