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June 06, 1936 - Image 4

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FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1936

THE MICIGA N DAILY quences of our unpreparedness in the last war"-
To them we. reply: We did not have to go to the ~ ,~ ~ AT~T
last war. Would that we had been so unpre-N B E N E A lT * * *
pared that we could not have gone. What would
you have us prepare for-invasion? By whom? The * ** IT A 11 ,
Yellow Peril? R.ussia? xi ? YJ th t f

j

.4

11

Z uvw ~ t 1 xtz .i i exico :Your reaLs or
invasion are calculated to throw us into a frenzy
of preparedness and are not in accord with
facts (the conditions of the countries you believe1
about to attack us).-
If you choose to discuss the question of war
on a practical basis rather than an ethical one,
we still say to you that by thinking of ourselves
only, we are the more surely heading the world
and ourselves for another and greater conflict.
Peace is not a negative condition of states;
it is not just the absence of war. Rather peace
is a condition of international humanity-when
citizens who live in Europe and men who live
on this continent alike begin to realize that the
fight for markets or national pride is not worthl

JAL JA.

_ -w
Publisned every morning except Mondav during the'
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.
BOARD OF EDITORS
MANAGING EDITORD......F.......ELSIE A. PIERCE
ASSOCIATE EDITOR............FRED WARNER NEAL
ASSOCIATE EDITOR.........MARSHALL D., SHULMAN
George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey
Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Clinton B. Conger
Departmental Boards
Publication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; Don
Smith, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks.
Reportorial Department Fred Warner Neal, Chairman;
Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, William Spaller.
Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman;
Robert Cummis, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph S. Mattes,
Mary Sage Montague.
Wire 'Editors: Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, as-
soedates, I. 5Si lverman.
Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman; Fred
Delano and Fred Buesser, associates, Rayman Goodman,
Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler.
Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman; Eliza-
beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas,
Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore,
Ruth Sauer, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS MANAGER...................JOHN R. PARK
ASSOCIATE BUS. MOR. ............. WILLIAM BARNDT
WOMEN'S BUS. MGR.................JEAN KEINATH
Departmental Managers
'John McLean, Contract Manager; Ernest Jones, Publication
Manager; :Richard Cioushore, National Advertising and
Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, Local Advertising
Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Jack
Staple, Accounts Manager.
NIGHT EDITOR: I. S. SILVERMAN
Make The
s W ILLIAM AILEN WHITE spoke well
When he advised Republicans
against any sort of coalition with Democrats.
The issue should be a clear one when it is pre-
sented to the people in November. The Demo-
cratic party, despite what any Republicans or
Democratic walk-talers may say, is the New Deal,
And the G.O.P. is the opponent of the New Deal.
That should be made clear to the voters, and we
say with Editor White, "nix" to any coalition or
confusion.
In connection with this, it is interesting to note
the charges made by Carl G. Bachmann, Borah
campaign manager, against Governor Landon, the
Kansas constitutional budget balancer. Bach-
mann declares that the governor has supported the
New Deal, thus making him unfit to lead a ticket
against said New Deal. If Bachmann is right,
this but adds another to the list of reasons why,
in the opinion of The Daily, Governor Landon
should not be nominated for the presidency by
the Republican convention.
We agree with Bachmann, as we emphasized
in yesterday's Daily, that it is about time that
somebody told the truth about Governor Landon's
political views. It is strange indeed to find a man
who is given an excellent chance to become a pres-
idential nominee silent on his attitude toward the
multifarious and serious problems that beset the.
nation.
But even stranger is the silence the Landon
camp maintains toward the oft-repeated charge
of Senator Borah that the Kansas governor is
backed, supported and subsidized by the monop-
olistic Standard Oil Company. If Borah is wrong.
let Landon deny the charges. But if Borah is
right, let Landon keep still if he will, but let him
not, under any circumstances, be given a position
in which he has an opportunity, however remote,
to become President of the United States.
In view of Landon's silence on such charges
against him, it is easy to understand why he
does not even smile at the Borah quip that he
"balanced his budget" in part with millions of
dollars from the New Deal Works Progress Ad-
ministration.
Answer To.
H. C. And R. H.

3HE ARGUMENT for military pre-
paredness advanced by several cor-
respondents in the Forum column this week is
one of the strongest reasons why war is almost
inevitable.
Surely we can assume that those who wrote the
letters are in favor of peace, and would do any-
thing in their power to avert a war, knowing as
they do its horrible consequences. Yet the de-
featist attitude which they adopt takes it for
granted that war is inevitable, and at the same
time makes it so.
A nation bristling with arms is a menace to
peace. An entire change in the tone of foreign
policy, and an unwillingness to submit interna-
tional affairs to arbitration is natural on the part
of a nation which knows that, if it fights, it will
win. Our goal is not to win the next war, it is
to eliminate it, and we can never do so by build-
ing bigger and better armies and navies.
We would be foolish indeed if, in an excess of
idealism, we threw down our arms entirely. In
disarmament, success depends upon the coopera-
tive soirit of all nations, and we believe that

A IL-d A-d

a squad of lives, let alone
youth like ourselves. We
world condition with a gun

the lives of 10,000,000
cannot approach that
in our hands.

f. -- -

THE FORUM

Letters published in this column should not be
construed as expressingnthe editorial opinion of The
Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded.
The names of communicants will; however, be regarded
as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked
to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense
all 1-tiers of over 300 words ard to accept or reject
letters upon the criteria of general editorial imoortane
and interest to the campus.
Women In Nazi Army .
To the Editor:
1. Women in the Third Reich are relegated
to the traditional Kinder, Kueche, Kirche (chil-
dren, kitchen, and church) . . . German girls
must mould their lives according to the new Wel-
tanschauung and fulfill their duties to family,
race and state-Voelkischer Beobachter, leading
Nazi daily, June 14, 1934.
2. Co-education is discouraged and is even-
tually to be abolished. Some ten thousand women
have been placed in small camps where they- are
trained to grow crops and love the soil.-The
New York Times, April 18, 1934.
3. Hitler has condemned women's rights as "a
product of decadent Jewish intellectualism"; Lib-
eralism has a large number of points for women's
equality. The Nazi program for women has but
one: this is the child. While man makes his su-
preme sacrifice on the field of battle, woman
fights her supreme battle for her nation when
she gives life to a child."-Address by Hitler at
Nuernberg party convention, Sept. 8, 1934.
4. A similar conception is to be found in the
recommendations of "Das Wissen der Nation (Au-
gust, 1933), a Nazi periodical: "Every Aryan hero
should marry only a blonde Aryan woman with
blue, wide-open eyes, a long, oval face, a pink
and white skin, a narrow nose, a small mouth,
and under all circumstances virginal. A blond
blue-eyed man must marry no brunette, no Med-
iterranean type woman with short legs, black
hair, hooked nose, full lips, a large mouth, and
an inclination to plumpness. A blond, blue-eyed
Aryan hero must marry no negroid type' of woman
with the well-known Negroid head and thinish
body. The Aryan hero must marry only his equal
Aryan woman but no one who goes out too
much or likes theatres, entertainment, or sport,
or who cares to be seen outside her house"
5. "The Nazis have ended the emancipation of
women, returning one-half of the human race
in Germany to the subjection of an older and
darker day." Rev. John Haynes Holmes of the
Community Church in New York. -M. Levi.
Hateful Nonsense
To the Editor:
Question to be answered:
Although we are a peaceful nation -although
less so than Germany or Italy -we are spending
over a hundred million dollars in teaching over
one million students that "Pacifism is baneful,"
because "It promotes distrust of country, debases
the spirit of nationalism, is destructive of patri-
otism and cooperates with destructive forces for
the overthrow of national institutions." (War De-
partment Training Manual 2000-25)
Since space is limited, I will not proceed to,
give my ideas on the R.O.T.C.
However, I wish to propose one question asked
and answered by Durant Drake, Professor of
Philosophy, Vassar College: Would Anything
Justify War Under Present Conditions?
In considering this problem, please "consider
the probable results of non-resistance, and com-
pare them with the probable results of war.''
Feeling quite certain that H.C.'s Forum article
was correctly interpreted by its readers, I am
urged to apologize for the author - for a fellow
University student having uttered so much naively
inhuman and hateful nonsense.
- Louis Deutsch

1 '- O- By lonz Williams-
E NOTE with regret the passing of two long
standing traditions from the local book-
maker's establishment. J.J.L. is gone. Lured
away from his position as official tabulator of the
sport of kings to keep Ann Arbor market operators
posted on the momentary fluctuations of the
economic world, the little cockney has taken a lot
of color with him. No more will his sharp high
pitched voice cackle out through the haze of cig-
arette smoke as he chirps back at the genially
brusque operator, "I say--, that cawn't be right,
get that line over again."
Imbued with the patience of eternity and an
amazing ability to figure to the penny what an
eighth of $12.60 is, J.J.L. was the perfect stooge.
He would pick you a horse or agree with the one
you selected, and between chalking up the bugs
at New York and the mutuels at Kentucky, he
invariably had time to answer courteously any
fool question that was asked.
* * * *
IATS OFF to Prof. Bruce Donaldson for his Fine
Arts 101 course. Anyone who can lecture on
art four times a week to 300 literary yokels look-
ing for pipe courses, make theni like working
their heads off to get through, and really get
them to appreciate the fundamentals of sculpture
and architecture besides is doing a real job. Son
of the dean of Detroit's architects, John M. Don-
aldson, Professor Bruce inherits much of his
father's charming personality including a ready
wit and the ability to say exactly what he neans
in the simplest manner. Canny Scatchman that
he is, Prof. Donaldson has a dee'p and sincere1
appreciation for the beauty and execution of art,
besides which he is as swell a gent as you will
ever find.
* * * *
rTHOUGH he'd never admit it, Sam Stoller is
practically assured of a glimpse of Germany
when the 1936 Summer Olympics open at Berlin.
Already having qualified for the semi-final trials
by virtue of his performance in the Conference
meet at Columbus, the Wolverine speedster, who
is appearing in the role of crooner at the Mich-
igan this week, is almost certain of an Olympic
berth.
The dash squad is made up of eight men, includ-
ing a sprint relay team and one alternate, and
if there are eight athletes in the country who can
beat Stoller at a hundred yards, then Tom Kleenet
will win the next Kentucky Derby. Only Metcalf
and Owens can be definitely rated ahead of the
Michigan flyer, and even naming Chick Wallender,
Ben Pollack, and Eulace Peacock as equals or bet-
ter, Sam should have little difficulty in making the
squad.
* * * *
EXALTED YODELER supreme of the VarsityI
JGleeClub, John Strayer was put in a mighty
interesting position at the sing following thet
Swingout march Thursday. Handsome John as-
cended the platform to lead the seniors in song
as they filed into a compact group in front of the
library steps. He stood up in dignified fashion<
and raised his arms as a signal to his comradest
of 1936, but at that precise moment Signor Revelli
gave a command and the entire class about faced,
leaving John to stare at the back of 500 heads and
slowly lower his arms. -
* * ~ *' *
FROM the office of the Detroit Free Press comes 1
the ugly rumor that most of the staff is either
democratic or socialist, .and that personally the
members of the editorial department are not in
sympathy with the broad views of Malcolm Bin-
gay. Indeed, the office wits have invented a new
slogan which they plan to submit to the author
of Iffy, the Dopester. The slogan reads: "Lan-
don for God-he's too good to be President."
need ironing out. Mr. McFadden, publisher of
Liberty, True Story Magazine, and other periodi-
cals devoted to the uplift of American culture,-
literature and morals, has carefully nurtured a
"Draft McFadden for President" movement which
originated in Liberty's Vox Pop department.
Soaring toward 74. Mr. Hearst would probably
exhaust himself educating 128 million Americans
to salute the Dupont Republic -before breakfast,
lunch, dinner, and evening beer. Then the physi-
cal culturist could step into the job of Running
Things. As the World's Busy Body Builder, he
could practice the unique idea of feeding an
unemployed family on 23/ cents a day. This

would keep America safe for Americans (some
of them), albeit with the introduction of an old
Chinese Coolie custom. But ("for God's sake"
as Bernarr would quaintly put it) "We'll balance
the budget."
Look at those cabineteers, requests the Advance.
No unbalanced budget with Mr. Raskob admin-
istering a five per cent sales tax; no inquitous
taxation of profits of our industries with Raskob
and Dupont linking intellects; no pacifist dis-
armament with Schwab loking after our National
Defense (and Bethlehem Steel).
And there's Mrs. Dilling the author of Who's
Who -I mean the "Red Network" of America.
sWould not her first duty as secretary of labor
1 be to deport such "reds" as Mrs. Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Harold Ickes, Historian Beard, Norman
Thomas, Rabbi Freehof, Bishop McConnell and
their ilk?
As a final suggestion can't we have Mr. Hearst's
publications named the official interpreters of
the news to prevent any subversive ideas from
gaining circulation and thus making public opin-
ion safe for God, Our Country, and Our Mil-
lionaires?
Hearst's country 'tis of thee -
(Salute, teacher, salute)
Sweet Land of Liberty -
(Salute, preacher, salute)
Of thee I sing:-

A Washington
BYSTANDER
By KIRKE SIMPSON
(rASHINGTON, June 5.--To some
political newswriters, Senator
Borah's radio declaration that under
existing conditions he "must regard
as final" what the Republican party
does at Cleveland in the way of rid-
ding itself of "monopolistic control"
sounded very threatening. To others,
it added nothing to indicate more
clearly what the Idaho senator might
do if things do not go to his liking
at Cleveland.
"Final" is a positive word. Does
it imply that having labored with his
party during all the 30 years of his
Senate service which have made him
dean of that body, Borah now has
come to a parting of the ways? Does
it mean that he actually will bolt the
party, give it up at last as a bad job
from his social and economic point of
view, if the Cleveland platform and
ticket do not satisfy him?
Certainly the Borah record in elec-
tion years does not lead to a conclu-
sion that a "final" decision on his
part against the party could be
marked merely by silence in the na-
tional campaign. He has been silent
before, later events proving it was
only a temporary estrangement.
Smith's Loyalty Tradition
THERE is no finality about Father
Coughlin's reported intention to
iemain out of the presidential fight
entirely if it is to be a Roosevelt vs.
Landon affair.
Who would say that a Philadelphia
walkout by Al Smith, even to the ex-I
tent of campaigning for the Re-
publican nominee, would represent a
"final" Smith departure from his
party? The odds are all against
Smith doing anything of the sort,
repugnant as the Roosevelt renomi-
nation may be to him, if press com-
mentators and some of Smith's clos-
est political associates have it right.
Yet not even nicely phrased ges-
tures from various Republican nom-+
ination aspirants' corners suggesting +
a cabinet place reward have lured
Smith into anything beyond that
"take-a-walk" expression at the Lib-
erty League dinner. His attitude more
than anything else served to stop the
anti-Roosevelt coalition ticket idea in +
Republican circles a-borning.]
It Would Be Historical
AMONG the major political figures*
of the day, Smith and Borah are
the two upon whom their party labels
have seemed more to be permanently
engraved than merely pasted. For
either actively to campaign for elec-
tion of a man of opposite political
faith to high office would be an his-
torical event in politics. Borah was
severely tested in 1912; Smith in
1932. Each time the party idea was
stronger than the urge to break away
from life-long affiliations.
In each case, too, perhaps, linger-
ing hopes of eventual achievement
of the presidency may have had some
influence. Their age as well as the 1
fall of the political cards this year
would seem to remove that factor for
both. That should not be forgotten
in trying to foresee what either might
do
+ BOOKS +
By JOHN SELBY
"The Commonwelath of Industry,"
by Benjamin A. Javits (Harpers);
"Men Who Run America," by Ar-
thur D. Howden Smith; (Bobbs-
Merrill).
YBOOKS which are likely to arouse
howls of horrified anguish are al-

ways a pleasure. There is no as-
surance that Benjamin A. Javits'
"The Commonwelath of Industry"
will do this, but the chance seems
good.
Mr. Javits has a thesis, a very sim-
ple one, it is that the land of the free
would benefit, in fact might find sal-
vation, by divorcing industry and
government. He would confine the
government to government in the
elementary sense, and prohibit its
interference with the conduct of in-
dustry. He would set up a common-
wealth of industry, managed with
due scientific precaution, which
would take over the blood stream of
the country and direct it for the coin-
mon good.
At least theoretically for the com-
mon good. Mr. Javits' idea is that
such an organization could (for ex-
ample) scientifically fix prices. "We
are living in an era when it is of
paramount importance to protect the
seller's interest in contradistinction
to the buyers' interest . . . " thinks
the author. He visions the Entire ad-
ministration of our theoretical
"plenty" through a system which
holds that a profit is "a social neces-
sity."
Oddly enough, the week produces
another book which has a direct
l bearing on Mr. Javits' idea. This is'
Arthur D. Howden Smith's "Men Who
Run America," a group of 30 short
studies of highly important Ameri-
cans. These are the men who would
administer Mr. Javits' common-
wealth of industry. once industryj

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the
mversty. Copy received at the office of the As&istant to the President
wA 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.

SATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1936
VOL. XLVI No. 177
Notices
Commencement Tickets: Tickets
for Commencement, Alumni Sing,
Alumni Luncheon, and the programs
for Commencement Week may be
obtained upon request at the Busi-
ness Office, Room 1, University Hall.
Only two Yost Field House tickets
are available for each Senior and it
is requested that each Senior please
present his or her diploma receipt
when applying for tickets.
University Commencement An-
nouncement: The University Com-
mencement exercises will be held on
Ferry Field, Saturday afternoon,
June 20. The gates open at 4:45
p.m. Audience should be seated by
5:20 p.m., when procession enters the
field.
The voice-amplifying service will
be interfered with by outside sounds,
and, the audience is therefore re-
quested toaavoid conversation and
moving about. Automobile owners
are asked kindly to keep their ma-
chines away from the vicinity of
Ferry Field during the exercises.
Tickets may be secured at the Busi-
ness Office, University of Michigan,
Room 1, University Hall, until 5:30
p.m., Saturday, June 20. All friends
of the University are welcome to
tickets. There will be no admission
without tickets.
In case of rain, the exercises will
be transferred to Yost Field House,
to which the special Yost Field House
tickets only will admit. These tickets
are also available at the Business Of-
fice, Room 1, University Hall, Uni-
versity of Michigan, and will be is-
sued 2 to each graduate. The Ferry
Field ticket will not admit to Yost
Field House.
If it becomes necessary to transfer
the exercises from Ferry Field, out-
doors, to the Field House, indoors,
after the exercises have started, per-
sons will be admitted to the Field
House without tickets until the seat-
ing capacity is exhausted.
If it is decided, in advance of start-
ing the procession, to hold the exer-
cises in Yost Field House, the power
house whistle will be blown between
4:30 and 4:45 p.m. on Commence-
ment afternoon.
H. G. Watkins, Assistat Secy.
Plans for Commencement. Com-
mencement, Saturday, June 20, 6 p.m.
Weather fair. Time of assembly,
4:45 p.m.
Places of Assembly:
Members of the Faculty in Angell
Hall, Room 1223 Rhetoric Library
where they may robe.
Regents, Ex-Regents and Deans in
Angell Hall, Room 1011, the Regents
Room.
Students of the various schools and
colleges, as follows:
Literature, Science and the Arts on
Main Diagonal walk between Library
and Engineering Buildings.
Education on walk North side of
Physiology and Pharmacology Bldg.
Engineering on Main Diagonal
walk in Engineering Court.
Architecture on Main Diagonal
walk in Engineering Arch (behind
Engineers).
Medical on diagonal walk between
Chemistry Building and Library.
Nurses on diagonal walk between
Chemistry Building and Library (be-
hind Medics).
Law on East and West walk, West
of the intersection in front of Library.
Pharmacy on East and West walk,
West of the intersection in front of
Library (behind Law.)
Dental Surgery on North and South
walk in rear of North wing of Uni-
versity Hall.
Business Administration on walk
in front of Physiology and Pharma-
cology Building.
Forestry and Conservation on walk
in front of Physiology and Pharma-
cology Building (behind Bus. Ad.).
Music on diagonal walk from Li-
brary to Alumni Memorial Hall, near

Library.
Graduate on East and West walk
West of Library entrance.
Honor Guard at Waterman Gym-
nasium.
Line of March, State Street to Fer-
ry Field.
Weather Rainy: The sounding of
the University Power House Siren at
4:30 to 4:45 will indicate that the
exercises have been transferred to
Yost Field House.
Students will proceed directly to
the Field House and enter through
the North doors.
Members of the Faculties will enter
through the north doors and take
their places on the platform in the
Field House.
Regents, Ex-Regents, Deans and
Candidates for Honorary Degrees will
assemble in the office in the North!
end of the Field House.
L. M. Gram, Chief Marshal.
Faculty, College of Literature, Sci-
ence and the Arts: All reports of I
or X should carry parenthetically the
grade which the student has earned
in the course up to the time I's or
,X's are reported "e.g. I(B), X (D)."

complete, if some small portion of
his work remains unfinished, provid-
ed his standing in the course has been
of grade C or higher.
To All Students Having Library
Books: 1. Students having in their
possession books drawn from the
University are notified that such
books are due Monday, June 8.
2. The names of all students who
have not cleared their records at the
Library by Wednesday, June 10, will
be sent to the Recorder's Office,
where their semester's credits will be
held up until such time as said rec-
ords are cleared, in compliance with
the regulations of the Regents.
Win. W. Bishop, Librarian.
Senior Engineers: Caps and Gowns
rented at the Michigan League must
be returned to the Michigan League
on Saturday, June 20 immediately
after the Commencement exercises in
order to obtain a refund. The re-
ceiving room will be posted on the
League bulletin board. Bring the
receipt slips issued with the Cap and
Gown.
School of Education Seniors: Com-
mencement Announcements will be
distributed in Alumni Memorial Hall
Friday and Saturday morning, 9-12.
Orientation Leaders: All orienta-
tion leaders for next fall are request-
ed to leave their summer addresses
in the League Undergraduate Office
as soon as possible.
Le Foyer Francais, 1414 Washtenaw
Avenue, (Kappa Alpha Theta House),
will be open for the coming Summer
Session under the auspices of the
French Department. Women stu-
dents of French may live and board
in the house and men students will
be admitted to luncheon and dinner.
Application for residence must be
made through the Office of the Dean
of Women. For further information
see Mr. Charles E. Koella, Room 412
Romance Language Bldg., every
morning from 10 to 11 or by appoint-
ment.
The following schedule will mark
the lifting of the Automobile Regu-
lation for students in the various
colleges and departments of the Uni-
versity. Exceptions will not be made
for individuals who complete their
work in advance of the last day of
class examinations and all students
enrolled in the following departments
will be required to adhere strictly to
this schedule.
College of Literature, Science' and
the Arts: All classes. Tuesday, June
16, at 5 p.m.
College of Architecture: All classes.
Tuesday, June 16, 5 p.m.
School of Business Administration:
All classes. Tuesday, June 16, 5 p.m.
School of Education: All classes.
Tuesday, June 16, 5 p.m.
School of Engineering: All classes.
Tuesday, June 16, 5 p.m.
School of Forestry: All classes.
Tuesday, June 16, 5 p.m.
School of Music: All classes. Tues-
day, June 16, 5 p.m.
College of Pharmacy: All classes.
Tuesday, June 16, 5 p.m.
School of Dentistry: Freshman
class; Tuesday, June 9, at 12 noon.
Sophomore class; Tuesday, June 9,
at 5 p.m. Junior class; Tuesday, June
9, at 5 p.m. Senior class; Thursday,
June 4, at 5 p.m. Hygienists; Tues-
day, June 9, at 5 p.m.
Law School: Freshman class; Mon-
day, June 8, at 12 noon. Junior class;
Wednesday, June 10, at 5 p.m. Senior
class; Wednesday, Junes10, at 5 p.m.
Medical School: Freshman class;
Friday, June 12, at 5 p.m. Sophomore
class; Saturday, June 13, at 12 noon.
Junior class; Saturday, June 13, at
12 noon. Senior class; Saturday,
June 6, at 5 p.m.
Graduate School:' All classes. Tues-
day, June 16, at 5 p.m. Candidates

for Masters' Degree; Tuesday, June
16, at 5 p.m. Candidates for Doctors'
Degree: Saturday, June 6, at 12 noon.
Assistant to the Dean of Students.
W. B. Rea,
The University Appointment Bu-
reau, 201 Mason Hall, has received
the following Civil Service notice:
Teacher in Comunity School (Pri-
mary, Intermediate, Special or Op-
portunity, or One-Teacher Day) In-
dian Field Service, Including Alaska.
Twelve hours of education, 2 years
experience, in this special field are
necessary requirements. Applicants
must not be over 40 and must be
physically fit.
University Bureau of Appoint-
ments: Mr. V. F. Ludwig, Sales Man-
ager of Mishawake Rubber & Woolen
Mfg. Co., will be in Ann Arbor this
afternoon to interview men for sales
work. Kindly call the Bureau, 4121,
Ext. 371, for appointments, or call
Mr. Ludwig at the Allenel Hotel this
afternoon.
The University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Information
has received announcement of United
States Civil Service Examinations for
Junior Park Archeologist and Junior.

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4

As Others See It
Rally! Constitution Saviours
(From The University Daily Kansan)

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1
a

IT BECOMES somebody's patriotic duty to rally
the Constitution Saviours into a united front,
writes L. C. Anderson in the Allegheny Valley
Advance. Since nobody else has come forth, the
country editor assumes the burden. Nay, more
than that, with full recognition of the immediate
need for political action if the country is to be
saved, he nominates:
For President - William Randolph Hearst.
For Vice-President - Bernarr McFadden.
And he sugests for the united front cahinet,

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