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May 06, 1927 - Image 10

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1927-05-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN

DAILY

________I

IL

ULLETIN

m. Sa

is constructive notice to all members of
red by the Assistant to the President until
rdays). Copy must be typewritten.r
DAY, MAY 6, 1927 NUMBER. 1 5

expect to receive a degree in June should call
te School for the proper blanks for payment of
ist be done before May 26.
to receive a teacher's certificate should call at
r of the School of Education to make arrange-
he fee required for this certificate.
Ruth A. Rouse, Recorder.
1 be "at home" to all of my students, past and
oon, May 15th, at 1030 Martin Place.
C. 0. Davis.
ollege of Architecture:
i and water color sketches by Otto F. Langmann,
well-known illustrator of architectural subjects,
te corridor case of the College of Architecture,

Emil Lrch.

7:30

tonight at
their play,

interference withthle Architects' Ball which
the Gymnasium, the Rockford Players wish
The Firebrand, will start promptly at 7:30 P.
Mrs. W. D. ;Henderson,

is,
to
M.

torary'Societies:
members of Honorary Societies are requested to report
oom of the Michigan Union this afternoon at 3 and to-
t 9 to help officiate at the Spring Games.
James Boyer, Ch'm. Spring Games Comm.
sing:
dman, vice-president of the Grenell Advertising Agency
re a lecture in Room 206, Tappan Hall, Monday, May 9,
ect will be, "Some Modern Tendencies in Advertising.,"
e a required meeting of the course.
t for May 20 will be a written report on The Lyndon
lem, No. 106.
Carl N. Schmalz.
nt Branch:
with Detroit Branch on Saturday, May 8th. Dinner at
Lecture at 8:00 in the new Physics Building. 'Those
the dinner will please place their name on list outside
t Enginering Building, before Friday noon.
A. Lundeegen, Jr., Secretary. *
neers desiring summer work in plants should see me in
me durinig this month.
ours: M., T., W., T., 1-2; F., S., 9-10.
W. P. Wood.
>f Phi Delta Kappa are urged to attend the Luncheon
Michigan Union.
K. D. MacNitt, President.

DEAN CLAK DFENDS
YOUNERENRIN~
Dean of Men at Illinois Praises
Ability of Young People
Of This Age
YOUTH IS UNDER=RATED
"No generation has ever seemed
conventional or self-controlled bythe
previous one. The young person of
today is more resourceful than any
other young person whom I have ever
known. He can do anything that he I
wants to do and he can do it betterI
thari his predecessors. Challenge him,
and he will meet your challenge with
a success that is almost unbelievable."
These, are the sentiments of Dean
Thomas Arkle Clark who is Dean of
men at the University of Illinois, ex-
pressed in statements recently issued,
giving his opinion of the younger
generation.
He says, "There has been a good
deal of talk, and much writing and
some preaching, since the war, at least
about our young people. They are
very different from what our young
people have ever been before, it is
said. They do not do the same things
that we did when we were young, or
if they do, they do them in a very
,different way. Very triue! But it is
important to consider this fact, that
in my younger days, our doings were
considered just as immoral as are
some things which the present genera-
tion do. For example, there was a
good deal said about the waltz when
it came in and we younger people
took. It up. The morally fastidious
lifted their eyebrows and talked in'un-
dertones behind their hands when they
mentioned it. It was thought to be the
most risque social adventure upon
which modern young people had yet
ventured. We who essayed this new
social pleasure were thought to be
standing 'on dangerous ground. Our
parents were worried about us, as par-
ents today are, it seems, about their
children's morals."
Placing the responsibility upon par-
ents'for any changes if there are any
fundamental changes, Dean Clark de-
clares "Our young people today are
different from what we were, but we,
too, have changed, and they are like
no one so much as like their parents.
If there is anything in particular the
matter with our young people, parents,
more than anyone else, and more than
anything else, are responsible."
Concluding his comments on the
yeoung people today, Dean Clark an-
swered the question, "What is the mat-
ter with our, young people?' with
"'There is nothing then matter with
our young people. Where they have
been taught the discipline of home
and have been taught to work and
rely upon themselvestwhere they have
been grounded in the principles of
love and self-sacrifice as many of them
still have, they are the most wonder-
ful young people in the world and they
are going to do great things far above
what we have been able to do. The
A trouble, where there is trouble, is
largely with the parents who coddle
their children and make their lives to
soft and easy. There are too many
coon-skin coats and flashy run-abouts.
There are too many extravagant al-
lowances and too many formal parties
when the young people who go to them
should be playing children's games or
at home in bed. Too many young peo-'
ple are not taught to work or to do
their best at whatever they undertake.

JAPAN BUILDS

TONI
AT 7:30 S
(,Note early opening

to

i
I
.

account of Architect'sL
The Glamorous Triumph of
'Tb, Fir'ebri
Ask anyone who saw
Tomorrow Matinee at
"THE LAST OF MRS. CF
Tomorrow Night at 8
Tarkington's Smart Cor
THE INTIMAJE STRi
Sarah Caswell Angell
All Seats, 75 Cents-At F
and Door.

LATEST.

DIRIGIBLE

A

The Rock

.. s

1
1
i l

Player
Present

Set up under the supervision of General Umberto Nobile, of North
Polar flight fame, a replica of the famous "Norge" has been completed at
Kasumigaura Aerodome, Tokyo, Japan.

v

ADM

I

0

KS

Your

Caps

and

.Gowns

are

For

Distribution

DERRILU

PRATT

WILL SPEAK 1,
TIYES 0 HAITI
mt To Discuss Social
s In Haiti Before
Caucasian Club
S. OCCUPATION'

HISTORY SOCIETY
PLANS RESEARCH
MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS, N. Y.,
May 5-The American Historical as-
sociation has released a program of
scholarship which has been outlined
and would go into sixteen fields of
research and publication. The an-
nouncement was made by the associa-
tion's endowment committee and will
involve an expenditure of over $130,-

Marvelous

Mary

Gar

Always Careful of Her Precious

it at eight o'cloc
Negro-Caucasian
sed by Henri St.
ce, speaking on c(
ation to the neg:

The association plans to spend an
annual income of $70,000 'for scientific
inquiry in American history. A large1
sum has been appropriated for the
inventory of manuscripts in private
and public collections so that thel
student may know where he ilay avail
himself of needed material.,
Twelve thousand dollars has been
saved for a permanent secretariat at
Washington, where it is ultimately
hoped to erect a,1History house to be
used as association headquarters.

writes:

in France, Mr. St. Hill is
ing medicine at this uni-
uring his recent visit to
njoyed many opportunities

F, I

conditions.'

"There

iI~'

aid in an interview,
n the misery of the
since the American
i can be divided into
[ill said. The Indian
til Columbus fouhd-
laiti, was marked by
stoms primitive but
time the control of!
taken over by they
re later superseded
uring these periods,
attoes were sent to
any to be educated.
>es, and pure neg-
Mr. St. Hill, "who
France, crossed the
fayette and partic-
tr for American in-
as these men who
w off the yoke of
p the 'Black Repub-

"My teachers, Trabello an
Richard Bartelemey, all in
pressed upon me the soleni
warning that I must a
ways treat my throat as
delicate instrument. Yi
every artist is under cm
stant strain. Sometimes u
get real relaxation in smo
ing a cigarette. I dire fE
Lucky Strikes-which boi
protects the throatandgie
real enjoyment."

Give Your Mother the Best

When your Mother .comes to visit you this week end,
bring her down to the Wolverine Cafe and treat her to the
best meals in Ann, Arbor. She will recognize the true

goodniss of our food and marvel, like
cheapness of our prices.

many others, at the

I-

-.1 1

rce for over a hundred years,
ian republic did not fall until
rs became influenced by for-
aith and luxury. Revolution j
evolution followed leading to
on and the consequent dccu-
>f the island by the United
ncuding, Mr. St. Hill stated
ety percent of the people of
e not in favor of the American
of the island.

WOLVERINE CAFE

529 South Main St.

Across from the Wuerth Theatre

You, too, will find that Lucky
Strikes are mild and mellow--,the
finest cigarettes you ever smked,
made of the finest Turkish and do-
mestic tobaccos, properly aged and
blended with great skill, and there
is an extra process-"It's toasted"-

I-

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~WWW~

rs V
t;;, ASTEpe

ENGRAVING.
1 V A A IV, N/I'NT TO f-t3 irN'rO X TIVY rV\n

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