THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, .. ... .................. . ..... . ...... . ..... . ..... . THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1c as it now can be passed. By this time it is obvious that the mere amendment will not completely repel the makers of commodities and war. But to repeal an amendment a Congressman must stand up and speak. It would be a war speech he would have to make and it might be effective. Granted that' there has been enough public pressure to have passed such an amendment, Congressmen will be loath to scream against it. General Butler's suggestion is not a complete solution, but it is a step we can actually take now against war. We could be patriotic, nationalistic, American. We could be all of these and at the same time sleep with all our limbs in our accus- tomed beds at night. . . r ,. Publisned every morning except Monday during thb University year and Summer "Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mal, $4.50. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. I l E FORUM EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Telephone 4925 BOARD OF EDITORS MANAGiTNG EDTTOR..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............THOMAS E. GROERN Dorothy S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS Publication Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman; Clinton B. Conger. Robert Cummins, Richard G. Her- shey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal. Reportorial Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman; Elsie A. Pierce, Joseph S. Mattes. Editorial Department: Arnold S. Daniels, Marshall D. Shulman. sports Department: William R. Reed, Chairman; George Andros, Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman. Women's Departmenik,: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman; Josephine M. Cavanagh, Florence H. Davies, Marion T. Holden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER...........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER............JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .. .. MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER .ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS Local Advertising, William -Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohgemuth; Circulation and National Adver- tising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica-. tions, Lyman Bittman. NIGHT EDITOR: FRED WARNER NEAL 'i Want To Be A-Lawn'.., ACH YEAR, when the buds come bursting through, The Daily runs its editorial about anti-social people who depart from the travelled ways of life and beat paths across the campus lawns. This year, what with the depression beaten, floods receding, and new buildings for the Univer- sity rising, we feel too generous to chide over small things. (But we still think they're unforgiveable boors.) 99 Per Cent Pure ... WELL," Mr. Hitler is probably satis- fied now. He has "proved" to the world that the entire German nation, concentration camps and all, love their Reichsfuehrer deeply and approve whole- heartedly of any action he takes. Of course the ballots had only.a place to mark a, check after "yes," and there was a penalty for notI voting, and if a German left his ballot blank he probably would suffer at the hands of the Storm Troopers. But Mr. Hitler knows that the rest of the world thinks the elections are perfectly lovely and democratic. So of course the Germans recorded how they love their dictator. They would have loved him if. he had told them he wanted them to approve a conquest of Siberia or if he had asked them to vote favorably on the question of eating sauerkraut for breakfast. So, the matter of approving some- thing the German people REALLY approved of was nothing at all. Mr. Hitler took as great a chance as a man who bets that Christmas will arrive on Dec. 25. A real sportsman; Herr Adolf. But now everything is rosy again, and when un- understanding Americans, who are so foolish as to believe in democracy, cast aspersions at the Nazis, Mr. Hitler can say: "Dictatorship? Didn't all the Germans vote for me in the elections? I guess I'm popular, I am." Th, Butler Plan... WV'E'RE ALL AGAINST WAR but none TIof us seems to know what we can do about keeping ourselves out of one. If a plan is adequate, it is too complicated for the people to understand and if it is simple, it appears too much so to be useful. General Butler has said that the Army and the Navy have not one military plan which is defensive. He holds, and he should know, that every single move the military makes is offensive. He says, and we are inclined to believe, that the armed forces of the country are making for war rather than peace. In its truth the statement may be novel to some and to most it is frightening. But the general does not intend to frighten us alone. From him has come a wise if vehement demand. "If you want to stay out 1f war you can. All you have to do is pass an amendment to the constitu- tion making it a crime for any man with a gun on his shoulder to go beyond the continental bor- ders of the United States. We can't fight if we don't leave home." The plan is simple and it is sorely needed. Of course the super patriots will rail against it but that would be fine. It would incriminate them. Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of conmunicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial imoortance end interest to the camnpus. Health Service To the Editor: Two years ago I had my eyes examined by a competent oculist to change the lenses in my glasses. Aside from the time spent in having the drops take effect, I spent more than a half hour in an actual examination to determine just what lenses were correct for my eyes. A short time ago I went to the Health Service to have the lenses changed again. After the time had been allowed for the drops to take action, the specialist in this office began his examination. Two different trial lenses were placed before one eye and one before the other and the prescription was filled. No more than three minutes were spent in the examination. Is it possible that with three trial lenses and three minutes of time, a thorough examination of the needs of one's eyes can be made? I realize that one cannot expect too muchdfor nothing. Nevertheless, the Health Service makes a claim for examining eyes and fitting students eyes for the close work demanded of them. Does it pretend to fulfill this task in such a short amount of time? If it is impossible for the University to afford a more thorough and complete examination, why does it make a pretense of supplying students with the proper glasses? -J.W.P. Editor's Note: The following statement was obtained from the Health Service in answer to the above letter: "Our ophthalmologist finds that for some students the recheck on lenses previously well fitted is so easily done that only a few minutes of his time are required. Others require much time and repeated tests, depending upon the general condition of the eyes. We appreciate the viewpoint of some students in such sit- uations. It is an example of the conflict be- tween most efficient methods of medical prac- tice and those which will please all patients. We like having such questions raised with us at once when there is doubt in any student's mind. The fact that the service is supplied without specific charge should not be accepted as a reason for accepting unsatisfactory serv- ice. Health service attention will compare fa- vorably on the basis of indicated thoroughness with that obtainable anwhere." Our Rich Heritage To the Editor: The continued daily reports of the damage of the devastating floods brings to mind how valiantly the men of vision fought to save the forests in the early days of the movement back in 1907 when Gifford Pinchot was Chief of the U. S. Forest Serv- ice and Theodore Roosevelt was our President. The fight was on between the vested interests who would grab the timberlands of the West, getting many a John Doe to sign up and then turn over his property to one central lumber company, and those who would protect the welfare of the Nation as a whole. Big business was not interested in the denuded mountain sides and the resulting floods, and the fact that tons upon tons of rich topsoil were washed away by the Mississippi and its trib- utaries season after season with the melting of the winter snows. Well do I recall that when our bill was up before Congress I would remain at my desk during a noon hour to answer a possible 'phone call for informa- tion. Many a clerk loyally worked overtime pre- paring needed data. We were all in the fight, knowing the cause was just. Could all of the vast emergency appropriations that have gone to aid the flood sufferers of the Mississippi valley from that time down to the present, or an equal amount, have been used for wise flood prevention, the appalling disaster in this year of our Lord, 1936, could not have come to pass. To what purpose are the lessons of other nations when we fail to take heed? China's problem is perhaps best known. It has vast stretches of de- nuded mountain sides, formerly covered with for- ests, which are today a constant flood menace tak- ing heavy annual toll of life and property. And we, the richest nation on earth, in the face of such inevitable results, permit conditions in our country to grow worse and worse from year to year. With special interests increnched as they are, is it possible so to legislate as to protect the inter- ests of the whole people? Are we living in a democracy or is it such in name only? Must our rich heritage of rocks and rills, of woods and tem- pled hills be sacrificed to floods and dust storms? We the people of these United States must be alert and up and doing. Since science to date has not discovered any method whereby soil can be fas- tened to the steep mountain sides once the surface has been washed clean, there is no pound of cure after the damage is done. It would seem that some of the huge sums on their way to such new and untried projects as the Florida ship canal, for instance, might better be used for the well-known thoroughly authenticated project of flood control. e Conning Towe Saturday, March 21 BETIMES UP and to the country early, and my wife said to me in Saugatuck, "Look, there is the Governor," and I said, no, that could not be, forasmuch as the Governor must needs be in Hartford, where there is such great devastation. So she said that she would wager me a pound that it was, and I said that I would bet her two to one that it was not; and she said, "Well, I will wager you that it was his car," and I said "Done and done!" So 'I felt that there were three pounds that I would not have to pay her, and two that she would owe me. So home for luncheon, and thenafter fell asleep, and in the evening I read until nine o'clock, and so to bed. Sunday, March 22 UP EARLY, and at work on the attempt to write some verses, without the success that I tried for; and so in the afternoon to the train, which I had to wait for one hour, owing to the flood in Hartford; and so to Stamford, and G. Root and his daughter Anne met us there and so to Bronxville, and had a merry time there at his house; and to Dot Lewis's for supper, and I sate beside a young woman from Vassar Col- ledge, Miss Banning, and she told me that she lived in Duluth, and I asked her whether she were kith to Margaret Culkin Banning of that city; and she said that she was, and that Margaret was her mother, and that there she was, across the table, so after supper I made an excuse to speak with her, and so did so most of the evening, and she to me, and for my part, mighty pleasant it was, too. So after all had left I to bed in Bronxville, and slept mighty -well. Monday, March 23 UP, BUT NOT very early, and Dorothy and I by motor-carre to the office, and so hard at work all day, and read about the six-year naval treaty of Great Britain, France, and the United States; and one was that the maximum of capital ships is to be 25,000 tons; and that caused me to look up things about Sam'l Pepys and the British Navy; and when he first was associated with the Admiralty the battle-line was thirty ships, and the total tonnage was about 25,000; and when he left office twenty- eight years later, the total was fifty-nine ships of 66,000 tons. Lord! Mr. Pepys is best known for his Diary, and Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes for his poems and breakfast-table essays, but it is the British Navy that is Pepy's monument. as it is obstetrics, especially in the reduction of maternal mortality, that is Dr. Holmes's. Though there are many who still think that his immor- tality rests upon the fame of his son that was Mr. Justice Holmes. So at this and that all day, and on the train heard some men discus- sing the allegiance of Dr. Townsend to Senator Borah, and I wonder how Mr. Borah likes that fealty. But I think that it will do him no good. Mr. Borah I heard last night over the wireless, but it seemed to me that if I had not known who was speaking I could not have told, save that it was not the President, for say what you will about him, but not I pray, you to me, save it be short, he speaks the speech trippingly on the tongue. So home, and to supper, and early to bed. Tuesday, March 24 U P VERY EARLY, and to the station, and met there Mike Williams the pamphleteer, and I upbraided him for being a neighbour of mine, thought he dwells a ten-mile span from me, for not coming to visit me; and he tells me many things, but I forgote to ask him why I no longer get The Commonweal. So rode on the train with Florence Clisbee, and we solved the cross- word puzzle in a few minutes, but she is more adroit and patient than I, forasmuch as her first duty is to solve the cryptograms appearing on the penultimate page of the Herald Tribune. So to the office, and all day there, at many duties, and hearing that because of Mussolini's nation- alization of Italy's industries, stocks in Italyhad decreased in value. And I wonder whether there would be a learned financial article, called "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Stock Market." So in the afternoon about the town on literary business, and so to dinner and then- after with my wife to see Rob Shrewood's "Idiot's Delight," which I not only enjoyed bet- ter than any of his other plays, but felt that it was good, and would do more for the cause of peace and against the cause of war than plays written and played in the blinding heat of propaganda, and Mr. Lunt and Miss Fon- tanne so good that it seemed that nobody could be any better, and that is how it seemed to me about them all, from Miss Jacqueline Page and Mr. Richard Whorf, who is the most versatile actor ever I saw, to Mr. Bretagne Windust and Mr. Sydney Greenstreet. My only fear about the import of the play is that most of the talk about it will be about Mr. Lunt's song-and-dance act instead of the poignant import of the play; yet perhaps that is just as well, for when people think there is a lesson or a moral in the play- house they fear to go. Lord! I think this Sher- wood is a passionate, bitter fellow! So to a party at Alice Guinzburg's and had a pleasant time talking to Mrs. Lord, and so home at two in the morning. Wednesday, March 25 LAY LONG, and so to the office hard at work. and read that yesternight Gerald Brooks had died; which saddened me beyond the tell- ing of it. So home and to bed early. Thursday, March 26 E ARLY UP, and by train to the o lice, and Aread of the death of Paul McCullough, and how the stories of it said that he and Bobby Clark had appeared in London in 1922, and then, the same year, in "The Music Box Revue!" Which all is true; but I well recall how Neysa and I went to the Columbia Burlesque Theater, on Broadway and 49th Street, in 1919, to see, THE STAGE The Ann Arbor Dramatic Season enters its seventh year this spring when for five weeks. from May 18 thicugh June 20. the leading plays and players of the New York stage hold court in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The sven years have brought Ann Arbor a gala crowd of actors, the cream of the professional theatre. In these seven years, Ann Arbor audi- ences have become the most the- atrically sophisticated outside of New York itself. The plays in past Dra- matic Seasons have ranged from Greek tragedy to Nel Coward. The list includes the Electra and the An- tigone of Sophocles; and at the other end of the scale, Pivate Lives and Design for Living while they were still running on Broadway, with Ann Arbor the first city outside of New York to see them. There has been Twelfth Night with a cast which included Jane Cowl, Tom Powers, Walter Kingsford, Rollo Pe- ters, Robert Loraine, Joyce Carey. Lewis Martin and Anthony Kembe- Cooper. There has been a long-for- gotten but brilliant performance of Strindberg's The Father in the first; Dramatic Season; there was Violet Kemble-Cooper's fantastic perform- ance in Paul Osborne's The Vinegar Tree, and Patricia Collinge's exquisite performance of Candida. Surely no one will forget Eugenie Leontovich's radiant interpretation of Mistress Pepys in And S To Bed; or Walter Slezak and Olive Olsen in Meet My Sister; or Geoffrey Kerr in The Animal Kingdom; or Edmund Gwenn and Melville Cooper in Labur- num Grove. Last spring there was the electric opening night of The Ugly Runts at its world premiere. Unforgettable, too, was the opening of Ghosts with Nazi-, mova and Romney Brent and Mac- Kay Morris in performances that have made theatrical history. It is a mat- ter of considerable pride that Ann Arbor first saw this production which was hailed in New York unanimously as the triumph of the season. "Great," and "superb" were words that Brooks Atkinson and other critics used un- sparingly of this production which had its inception at Ann Arbor, and was a duplicate of the Ann Arbor performance. Ghosts, more than any other single achievement, has lifted the An Arbor season to national at- tention and importance. + ART__ Of interest to Ann Arbor art pa- trons is the Second Annual Exhibi- tion of pictures created by the chil- dren of the Detroit School for the Deaf which opened yesterday at the Gordon Beer Art Galleries, 38 E. Adams, Detroit. The children range in age from 6 to 18 years. Their work is a com- plete vindication of the efforts of those who have devoted their lives to the training of children unable to hear. Through the medium of color and form they who are denied the normal channels of experience find a new medium of self expression. The range of their subjects is interest- ing: there are hockey games, air- planes, landscapes. Their drawings are vital and alive. During the last year's Exhibition, 28 pictures were sold. All proceeds from the sale of the pictures are given to the school to further the children's art work and topi'ovide supplies. The Exhibition will close Saturday, April 4. THE SCREEN AT THE MICHIGAN "PETTICOAT FEVER" A1 Metr'o -uidwyn-Mayc'r Picture sar- ring Robert Montgomery and Myrna Loy, with Reginald Owen, some Eski- mnos and others. "Petticoat Fever" is one of the best light comedies of the new year, and beyond that there is little to be said about it. If Conrad Nagel and Laura LaPlante, for example, had been cast in the Loy-Montgomery parts, things would not have gone so conventionally and smoothly, and there would be more opportunity for comment. Reginald Owen is one of Holly- wood's best performers, and the Es- kimos more than hold their own. It's a very pleasant show. Hollywood has come through with a new idea which gives the audience a chance to participate in the pic- ture. A ough it is dignified with the name o 'Audioscopiks," one simply holds some color'ed cellophane (or whatever it is) up in front of his eyes, and it looks like a baseball is going to hit him in the face, and other star- tling things are going to happen. 'Audioscopiks" is are a good idea. --R.A.C. OberlinThleolOgiaII rfo Spbeak Saturday Dean Thomas W. Graham of the graduate school of theology at Ober- lin College will be the guest speakerl DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication In the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the Oaiversity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President unt2 3:30; 21:00 a.m. on Saturday. TUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1936 VOL. XLVI No. 128 Notices Students of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts: A meeting will be held on Tuesday, March 31, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 1025, Angell Hall, for students in the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts and others interested in future work in Business Administration. The meeting, one of the vocational series designed to give information concerning the nature and preparation of the various pro- fessions, will be addressed by Profes- sor R. G. Rodkey of the School of Business Administration. The next proessional talk, to be given by Dean H. C. Sadler of the College of Engi- neering, will be given on Thursday, Apil 2.f Seniors, College of Engineering: Class dues must be paid promptly. Failure to do so will result in the de- nial of the following privileges: 1. Attendance at the Senior Ball. 2. Rental of cap and gown through the Cap and Gown Committee. 3. Name included in special com- mencemnnt program; also right to purchase special program. 4. Picture included in class pic- ture to be hung in hall of W. English Bldg. Howard J. Jackson, Class Treas. Biological Station: Application for admission for the coming Summer Session should be in my hands be- fore April 15 when all applications will be considered. Announcements of courses offered can be obtained at the Office of the Summer Session or from the Director. Applications should be made on application blanks which can be secured at my office, Room 1119 or at Room 3089, Natural Science Building.- George R. LaRue, Director. Phi Beta Kappa: The local chapter of Phi Beta Kappa is anxious to have on its lists the names and addresses of members of the organization who have recently moved to Ann Arbor. The names may be sent to the Sec- retary's office, 3233 Angell Hall, by U. S. Mail or by 'Campus Mail. Any members who have not been receiving the notices of the Annual Banquet and desire to have them are asked to inform the Secretary. Orma F. Butler, Secretary. Senior Aeronautical Engineering Students: All seniors are requested to make out personnel records as per the form posted on the Areonautical En- gineering Department Bulletin'Board. These records are necessary in order to help graduates secure employment. Chinese Students in Aeronautical Engineering: There are two notices posted on the Aeronautical Engineer- ing Bulletin Board which may be of interest to Chinese students in that field. They are concerned with open- ings for Aeronautical Engineers in China. Attention to all concerned: A call will be made shortly after Spring Va- cation for all Librettos, books, manu- scripts, and plots for next year's Union Opera. An opera, to be pro- duced, must be written by a student. Mimes, honorary dramatic society and sponsors of the Opera, have of- fered a prize to the winning manu- script. Students are urged to try their hand at writing a play so that this traditional Michigan institution will not pass out of existence. Academic Notices Students of Mathematics: A com- prchensive examination in Mathe- matics for students who are this se- mester entering upon concentration in this subject will be held in Room 3011 A.H. on Tuesday, April 7, 4-6 p.m. J. W. Bradshaw. Economics 173: Examination Wed- nesday, April 1, 8 a.m., in Room C, Haven Hall. Concert Graduation Recital: Margaret Jane Kimball will appear in a piano re- cital in partial fulfillment for the de- gree of Master of Music, in the School of Music Auditorium on Maynard Street, Tuesday, March 31, at 8:15 p.m., to which the general public, with the exception of small children, is invited, at which time she will play the following program: Antiche Danze ed Arie .. .Respighi Gagliarda (Galilei, 155) Italiana (Ignote, XVI) Sicilian~a (Ignote, XVI) Passacaglia (Roncalli, 1692) Sonata in A flat major, Op. 110,. Beethoven Moderato cantabile molto espres-' sivo Allegro molto Adagio ma non troppo Fuga: Allegro ma non troppo Prelude, Chorale and Fugue ..Franck Miroirs ...................... Ravel Oiseaux tristes Une barque sur l'Ocean evening, March 31, will be in sections as follows: Sopranos and altos at the School of Music auditorium; tenors and basses at the School'of Music An- nex (above Ann Arbor Press). The Adelphi House of Representa- tives will meet in the Sigma Rho Tau Room in the Michigan Union at 7:30 p.m., after which time there will be an inter-society debate on the sub- ject. "Resovled: that the Engineering College should extend its curriculum to five years, to include more cultural subjects." All members and others interested, are urged to attend. Tuesday afternoon Play Reading Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Tuesday, March 31, 2:15 p.m., in the Alumnae Room of the Michigan League. A.I.Ch.E. meets at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1042. Mr. Howard Grant, presi- dent of the Swenson Evaporator Co., will speak on "The Development of the Black Liquor Evaporator." Re- freshments. Members of Delta Omega are in- vited to an informal dinner tonight, Tuesday, at 6:30, at the Michigan Union. The guest speaker is to be Dr. Erna Von Abendroth of Germany, who is traveling in the United- States under the Carl Schurz fund. She will discuss "The Development of Social Welfare and Public Health in Ger- many." Members are urged to at- tend and bring members of the fam- ily and friends. Reservations should be telephoned to the Union before noon today. Hiawatha Club: There will be a meeting of all members and proposed members of this organization Tues- day evening, March 31, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan Union. A speaker has been secured and a program ar- ranged. All members are urged to bq present. Hillel Foundation: Important meet- ing of full Hillel Council on Tuesday at 5 p.m. at the Foundation. All members pleace attend. Christian S e i e n c e Organization: There will be a meeting of this or- ganization tonight at 8 o'clock in the Chapel League Building. Students, alumni, and faculty members are cor- dially invited to attend. Alpha Kappa Delta meeting Tues- day, March 31 at 5 p.m. Room D, Ha- ven Hall. Election of pew members will be held at this time. Coming Events Phi Beta Kappa: The annual meet- ing for the election of officers and new members and the transaction of routine business of the Chapter will be held on Thursday, April 2, 4:15 p.m., Room 2203 Angell Hall. All members are urged to be present. Art Section of the Faculty Women's Club will have a business meeting at the Michigan League on Wednesday, April 1, 2:00 p.m. All members of the different groups are urged to at- tend. Chemistry Colloquium will Acet Wednesday, April 1, 4:15 p.m., Room 303 Chemistry Building. Mr. G. M. Kosolapoff will speak on "Quinonoi- dation of Acridyl Chlorides." Faculty-Alumni Dance: The last dance of the series will be held on Wednesday, April 1, at 9:30 p.m., in the Michigan Union ballroom. Engineers: The A.S.M.E. is spon- soring a combined meeting of the A.I.E.E., AI.Ch.E., A.S.C.E., and both groups of the A.S.M.E. on Wednesday evening at 7:30 p.m at the Michigan Union Mr. Herman H. Lind, general manager of the National Machine Tool Builders' Association, will speak on "Mechanization in Industry" from a rather broad angle. Mr. Lind is highly interested in seeing that the techanically trained young man "gets a break" in industry and has given a series of radio talks pertaining to this subject. This is an open meet- ing for all engineers. Roger Williams Guild: Tickets are still available for the Thirtieth An- nual banquet of the Roger Williams Guild to be held at the Michigan League on Friday, April 3, at 6:15. Dean Thomas W. Graham of Oberlin College will speak on "The Prisoner Speaks." Call 7332 for reserations by Wednesday noon. Phi Tau Alpha societas honorifica Latina Graecaque ante diem quartum Nonas Apriles (April 2) hora usitata in Hospitium Mulierum Michiganen- sium coveniet. Disputatio de auctori- bus litterarum humaniorum scripta- rum per instaurationem magnam erit. Omnes Adeste! The Transportation Club will visit the Ford Plant Friday, April 3. Will leave the East Engineering Building at 1:20 p.m. If going, please leave t I