'TF MIHTI-N DATLY_ _ _ _ _ _ _ . .. SMOEANOUC[So Houise Treasures, CISFOR CONTE-ST:At Museum, Butildingy is I a h EXPEL TWO UNIVERSITY EDITORSI Bates Will Address 9HARGING BAD TASTE IN POLICY ' Swing-Out Exercises Because of allegedl "bad taste" in now "a .college, dividled against, its:i Dean 1 enry IVI. Bates of the Law rticles appearing in literary and The other edlitor recently suspend(1C(1I school has been selected to give the Iaddress at the Swing-.out exercises, it humor magazines pub~lished b~y two Iw'as the hea( of Columns, literary -land w none etra yJh UNIVERSITY MAN RETURNS TO CITY Dr. Carl E. Luthe, associate dtirpe- tor of anthropolog4y, has returned to Ann Arbor after attending, the Amer- ica. Oriental Society nmeeting, held last week in Washington, D. C. Dr. TYPEWRITERS - Corona, LUnderwood, Remigton, Royal. we have all makes. j ome in colore4d dwo finishes, 0. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade. Phone 6615. IRead The Want Ads :.: ,x ,.,'] k '( J >> rt '' '' Exhibition cases for the new mu- RoyilQakAn Zelad ig Seioi~scum have arrived and are being Will C:omopete Here In State Chaiponiii Iebterapidly installed. A crew of men 'he _____fr omn the Building and Grounds de- .a j p rtment are engaged in connectinga MANY ISITRS EPEGTR u the electric wiring and placing Jud es or he lev nth A nn al t he glass in the sections.w Judge forthe levenh Anual Thirty cases, comprising mrore than! State Championship debate were ant- one hundred units, have been set up. nounced yesterday by Prof. Gail E. These were(designledl by R. A. Wiese, 1b D~n~oremanaer o theequipment engineer for the museum Michganand were manufactured especially for f high school debating league. They are the university building by the Hamrilt- Dr. Edw ard H. Kraus, dlean of the on Manufacturing company of Two ;l College of Pharmacy, Prof. William A.I Rivers, Wis. They are being set up in Frayer of the history department, and the main exhibition, rom, on the 4e Dr.ClreE. rifi, cea o, te cholsecond floor and in supplementary It Dr laeE.Gifideno teScolrooms on the third flcor.t of Business Administration. A unique system of lighting will be t More than 3,000 high school stu-_ used, to illilninate the exhibits. iglt- dents are expected to attend the ling boxes will bje installed along the- chamnshpcotstti ya. l sides of the cases and a 'white light reay te xtesio}*will w1% ine, flrom the3 tops through read .te Eteniondepartment' has, !gr oupid glass windows. K~e' switches heard from 59, high school principals1 will: be usedi for all the lights. signifying that their schools will be Tecssaeartgtadds representedl at the debate, with an in- prof with weather strips along all (liate nmbe o Thsesection's and around all windows. dictednuberofdelegates.Ths Plate glass onlly has been used in thej 59 schools have accounted for 605 winidows of the coies. Doors are ar- (lelegates, ranged to swing open from the top. Royail Oak aIRIl Zeeland are the The units comprising each section of -two teams which willcopt for thetlie. cases are interchangeable 's that compte t~y jseparate sections may be arranged at! state championship. Royal Oak will1 will. hriinp' more th~i5an 80 ; 1,-a oh +n. D ther universities beside \l1.S.C., the: comic magazine o1' the U'niversity ofA ditors of the respective publications Washington. Hie vas removed from have been suspendIed from school byi office for "gross abuse of the funs-i uithorities. ., ino i fie"Acrigt rf An article entitled "B3ull Sessions ' ino i fie"Acrigt rf which. was printed in the Clarkj Karl M. Lieb, chairman of the pub-lca- /lonthly of Clark university w as the tions coiucil .of that university, an basis for suspending from that uni- iarticle, "Manuscripts Pound in a. versify the members of the editorial spittoon,' was "abominably vulgar" board. The article, said by the author,aningosadtte to he a. "comnedy playlet on the c1on- _____I__ flit of ideas in the college mind" was1 labeled by Preside.nt Atwood of Clark! ALTER TEACH1ING METHOD university as, "obscene." Following the ousting of the threeI HARVARDJ. - rhe department of1 editors, mass meetings werc' held in geology hzas been changed to the the school auditorium in protest to tutorial sysitem, in which small the president's action. The (deposed groups of studlents (1o their work editors said that the institution is junde~r one netr mittee fr'om the Student council. Thle Cuthe also attended to some Univer- Swing;-ovtt will be held onilrTuesday, sity business in New York during the May 8, according. to plans, vacation period. f}. YO FR EYEF I Last 4 Performnances Today-You'll Love It Snodgrass, '28F7,('lair lan of the com- !yRR The P icturization of This famsous Prize-Winning Novel. of TI ITAMY, Youthful Passions Reaches New Dramatic Heights MARTHA OSEK4 dfrA.yOW R A TREMENDOUSLY ABSORBING . DRAMA Under The Dominating Whip1 sh Of A Cruel Husband and Father, Judith Arose From The Depths of Despondency To The Heights of Love and Happiness N EVEJA 01N fljAJPS (debate, while'Zeeland expects to bring umioe than 100. Both Royal Oak and Jackson high ,-chools are,(declaring a holiday on April 27, the late of the debate. Jack- -,on high school's large chorus is go- ilug to sing before the debate opens. The Vatrsity band is also going to play before the contest. Theil question which has. been de-, bated through the preliminary and the elimination :series of the Michigan high school debating league, and .which will he the subject for the State Championship rcontest is: Re- solved, That the direct primary sys- tem of nominating candidates for pub- lic office in the United States should be abolished. Royal Oak will defend the -iffirmative, -while Zeeland will defend the negative.I ~Shaw Grocery Cap, SStaple and Fancy GROCERIES Quality Meats Phones 3 712Z-3940 , - El .1 i E 9 The Training Schl for Jewish Social We Offers a fifteen znot hs cour graduate stuidy in Jewish' Fa Caise Work, Child"Care, C munity Centers, Federations ealth Centers. Several scholarships and fel ships ranging from $2$0 to $: are available for especially q fled stu~dents. The nexvt Sch ool Year li July 9, 1998 The Training School Jewish 'Social Wor 210 W 91st St., New York ork Wl se of Sand :stow- 15004 uali- egins for ,k city I 1ty. h j IlUi' er- /. I NOW SHOWEINGr 2 :0() and 3:30 7:00-8:40, I0- Q- 010-50) SEE??? hat Happensed:at Jean Hersholt Alice Joyce I E I i I l 1 i 4 i 5 5 i Ihf1 f rr w I 1S RTA HAE 1ARIT AND) BEAUrTYI 'l llFWORLD N . 1\, 811, rFTOPICS _ L A T ~oiCY AR S IA"j SYN O '$1S BY! M AJ E 1 C O .I s r l -N IT L S "'f '( t ": BS I.' Ill ES 1N IVV ION KEN HOWELL'S COLLEGIANS "SURIPRISES IN II'I ,J L .0"1C5 ., __ _ "J. ".~"./Jl1.k! 1.Pi/~. +/JY,././1.1,r '",/". .J. P".f °".. "1. ./. ',/./Y,././"./.d"°. ",r!. 0'0;%. "./1./"1 I F ish Dintfr Today We a re serving a speci a Fi$ h Dinner toda Ameal that tastes different, that is duff ent than other fi s dinners. Give Us a Trial LINCOLN REST A.UIANT .213 E. HURON ST. :?3 S. SI'rF VLI) JNG 0 S.Il'LrIl's CO CSIB; RINO - , ff .k I IJ./"1'. I'.~~l .I'ISJ.1././,/. ".! /'", /"..4.1.J".dJ././".lJJ.I".I ./.i.J"1,l..I /"~..,+ .J"../dd"../ If 'MAY FE-.STIVAL Ann Arbor, May 16, 17, 18, 19 SOUTHER~N MUSICAL BUREAU Russell Bridges, Pre'sid'ent Healey Building Atlanta, Ga. I Now Showing-Today and Saturday Y! , /(//// F j A " ., 4 , t March 13, 1928. -qfti.- -WON P~reseunted b1y with (mtulys ]lrochweil amld 'Ilobarif osivori'I Dr. Chas. A. Sink, Pres., University School of MWsic, Ann Arbor, Mich. My dear Mr. Sink : Your favor of February 29th enclosing copy of your May Festival program was duly received. I appreciate your thinking of me in this connec- tion, and I wish it were possible for me to take ad-' vantago of the wonderful -feast of good music you have engaged for your Festival. I don't see howr you could improve on this program, and your patrons are certainly to be congratulated on the op- portunity you are affording thee to hear these wonderful artists. I wish you every success with your laudable undertaking. STARTING SUNDAY An [.Underworld Story That Rings with Truth ! !,\eoeJaff qir it lttt wz a . i1 ~ ' I II North, South, East and West ! R P