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March 05, 1937 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1937-03-05

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I

C: 14 (C.AN rI

I I t'Ar

ICHIGAN DAILY

*

7--.
Member, Assocated Collegiate Press, 1936-37
Ptibsed every ;Horing e ept Moday du~ringthe
ti ersity year and mmer ession y the Boain
Control of Student Publications.
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusivel entltld to the use
(or republication of all newsdispatches crecited to it or
not' otherwise credited in this 'esae.Alrights of
re i blication of all other mater h a reser ed.
tered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as
secndclass mail matter.
oby mail, .during regular school year by carrier.
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIrtNG RY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publishers Rejresenga:Ive
420MADISON AVE. NEW YORk N.Y.
CHICAGO '.*bOTON, NPi4! ANttwlcSO
LOO ANGELES PORTLAN SEATTLE
Board of Editors
Ih4AGING EDITOR.........ES , .PIERCE
&SSOCIATE EDITOR .......ED WAERNEAL
ASBQCIATE EDITOR.......MARSHAI D. SHULMAN
George Andros Jewel W'uerfel Rich rdl Hershey
Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins
Departmental Boards
P'ulication D Iepartment: Elie A.PPerce, Oairma i;
PamesBooer, Atiol& S. Daniels, Josephlatfts, Ture
Tenander, Robert Weeks.
tbprtorilep~t %"~ent: Fre Warer 00108 Charman;
alph Wurd, Wiliam a.acleton, Iiving S. iver-
man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey.
Ediorial Dtpartmant Mra hfll D?. Shulman, ohairman;
o~bert Cummnisr, MarySge nae.;
Sports Department: George J. Andrea, Chiairman: Fred
peLane and Fred Buesser, associates, Ray ond Good-
Uian, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, RicharX La-
urca.
Woen's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza-
bth M. Anderson, Eizabeth Bingham, Helen Douls,
argaret Hamilton, Baraa J. Iam, Kathane
Moore, Betty Striekroot, Theresa Swab.
Business Department
BUINESS MANAGER..-............JOlN t. PARK
A OCIATEBSNESMAAER WILLIAM BARNDT
W MEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......JEANKBEINATH
BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy
Buckwater; Marshal SAmpson, Robert Lodge, ill
lewman, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe,
Charles Coleman, W. Layne, Russ Cole, HenryeHomes.
We' en's $ siness Assistants: Margaret ceries, Jane
8teiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion
Maxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crawford, Betty
avy, Helen Purdy. Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter,
Jean elinl ankDI? 1e a, Florence evy, Maioe~
ichlinski, Evalyn Tripp.
Departmental Managers
Jack Staple. Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na-
tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J.
Wisher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local
Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service
Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class-
ified Advertising Manager.
NIGH-:T EDITOR: WILLIAM SHACKELTON
Federal Food
And Drug Regulation.. .
CONSUMERS in America for many
years have been the victims of an
anarchical lack of regulation of food and drug
laws. Bills for the correction of this condition
have been devised and subsequently killed in
committee or by lobbyists.
The first stage of consumer gullibility occupied
the early years of America's industrial revolution.
Only through motion pictures and the memories
of our ancestors can we know of those days
in which the "charming Indian princess" danced
before the bewildered eyes of the consumer while
the crafty barker relieved him of his precious
dollars for an omnipotent cure-all. If some of
the stories are to be believed, the cure-alls us-
ually developed into flat beverages or into such
potent cures as to make a cigar-store Indian
go into his dance.
However those were crude practices in an early
period. The industrial life of the nation spread
and multiplied the opportunities for getting-'
rich-quick. Subtler means for deluding the con-
sumer were developed. A Pure Food and Drug
Law of 1907 was enacted but proved worthless
as it has been shown in that revealing work,
"100,000,000 Guinea Pigs," by Kallet and Schlink.
Despairing temporarily of trying to meet the
almost invincible opposition of patent medicine
and adulterous food manufacturers, consumers
set out to form their own research organiza-
tions. The two most famous are Consumer Re-
search, Inc. and Consumers Union which test
all articles with their own staffs of doctors,
chemists, and special investigators.
Nevertheless these methods furnish no funda-
mental solution of the problem that confronts
the vast number of American consumers. The
reports of the researeh agencies reach only a
small group, in the hundred thousands, while
the consumer cooperative, involving more hun-

dreds of thousands, does not attack the problem
of securing a higher quality of consumers ar-
ticles. Higher quality can be achieved by federal
legal regulation of the quality of food, drugs,
clothing, household, and other consumers ar-
ticles.
Rexford Guy Tugwell in the early days of
the first Roosevelt administration attempted
to push through Congress an extensive pure food
and drug act. Unfortunately for the consumer
he met the powerful opposition of a harrow-
ing silence and coldness from the nation's press.
At the moment there stands before Congress
the Copeland Food and Drug Act, which has
been attacked for its loopholes by the keen ob-
server, Paul W. Ward of the Nation.
The Copeland bill, with three glaring loopholes,
Ward points out, is backed by "the Senator for
Vick's Vaporub (Bailey of North Carolina), the
Senator for Listerine (Clark of Missouri) and
the Senator for Parke-Davis (Vandenberg of
Michigan)."
Loophole number one-a section prohibiting

imagine, Ward asks, a typical federal judge sub-
jecting a manufacturer to the publicity that an
injunction will bring after he has promised to
be good?
Loophole number three-Ward points out that,
in the section on advertising claims, the phrase
"false or misleading in any material particular"
will cause all the legal precedents of the Food
and Drug Administration to be upset.
For the safety of the consumer there should
be a bill setting up standards for all consumers,
articles; an administration with large powers to
investigate and seize adulterous and misbranded
products; and careful criticism and control of all
advertising whether in the press, over the radio,
on the screen, or in any other form, oral or
visual.
THE. FORUM]
On How To Fight Against War
To the Editor:
A letter signed "Realist" was printed in The
Daily Feb. 26. At the end he asked for concrete
suggestions. An attempt will be made to push
him a step further in his realistic observatons
of human relationships. It is agreed that an
emotional reaction against war will not serve
to prevent it but neither will a logic which
seems to be based on shaky premises and which
concludes that there is nothing to be done.
Let it be suggested that "lust for power," "jeal-
ousy . . . for another's money, land, or superior
attributes, etc," "fancied insults and slights" are
in reality reactions to economic pressures.
In your own community you can observe
forms of reaction to economic pressure. There
are those individuals who are indifferent and
make no attempt to investigate objectively the
major classes of interpretations of contemporary
events, those who have a measure of under-
standing but remain quiet because of the con-
stant threat to their prestige and security that
comes from being outspoken, those who are in-
capable of understanding because their success
experiences and relatively comfortable positions
have conditioned them to the complete accept-
ance of the traditional, and those who are di-
rectly interested in protecting special rights and
privileges. These are some of the classes who
will support a leadership which has the lust for
power. They are the small elements of lust
for power which when integrated will readily
support the continuing of conditions which are
basically responsible for the threat of war.
From the earliest times there have been
struggles for control of the surpluses produced
by the populations of the world. It takes human
effort of all kinds to turn the resources of nature
into the things that are necessary to support life.
For a long time social groups have been able
to produce more than enough to provide for the
very minimum requirements of their members.
This extra product is what is meant by the term
'surplus."
Through the ages there have been developed
countless devices, adaptable to the countless
forms of organization for production, designed
to secure this surplus for the benefit of a few.
There have also been countless movements on
the part of producers to do away with given
methods of appropriations of this surplus. Med-
icine men, slave holders, feudal lords, and the
like have developed their techniques to fit the
methods of production and by their various de-
vices have succeeded in appropriating for their
own uses surplus goods. Having Wealth, these
classes have always been in a position to com-
mand support. The very development which
has outmoded their practices has placed tradi-
tional morals and psychology on their side and
as a result force has been the common means
of unseating them.
In the modern world ownership of the tools of
production, i. e. of jobs, is the technique of ap-
propriating surplus goods. During the develop-
ment of large scale social production this tech-
nique has served the social function of pro-
viding the accumulation of capital goods, with-
out serious threat to the welfare of the masses
of working producers. In fact, the condition of
the masses has reached under this technique

heights undreamed of by the slaves and serfs
of other times. The very nature of the de-
velopment has, however, led to the concentration
of wealth. It must continue to do so. With
income from ownership centralized and the pos-
sibility of using that income for developing fur-
ther producing facilities constantly narrowing,
we have reached a point where the welfare and
security of great masses is seriously threatenedL
That is what constitutes the menace to our peace.
Japan, Italy, Germany, need colonies not be-
cause of over-population with relation to what
they can produce, but because they cannot utilize
their surpluses in a manner that will cause the
necessities to flow into the hands of their pop-
ulations. Economic pressures are driving them
to war, yes, but the necessities are not those
imposed by nature.s
Since the introduction of power and scientific
method has been developed we are capable of
producing at an unbelievable rate. Because we
insist that traditional methods of distributing
the product be adhered to after a situation
has developed in which those methods do not
work we are faced with sociological phenomena
that threaten our peace. Distribution of the
right to use goods must be organized in such a
way as to satisfy the needs of the masses. This
cannot be done without altering traditional
rights in the ownership of property. Major
changes in the distribution process are sure to
be made, however, by the masses themselves.
The peoples of Europe are very near to adjust-
ing their economic relationships by changing the
ownership of properties which are social in func-
tional nature to social ownership. A war crisis
will precipitate the change and it is likely to be

BENEATH ****

"amaSyBonth illams.a~na
WEDNESDAY marking that eventful date when
your columnist attained his majority, he
rashly asked a few of the brethren into the
motor city for scotch, of which they consumed
two fifths, for dinner at which two of them
passed out, and for power, during which they
} hooked him for eight bucks.
The day however was not a complete failure
due to the fact that sometime during it he ac-
quired, among other tokens of manhood, Webb
Miller's I Found No Peace.
Webb Miller, like Fred De Lano, grew up in
the environs of Dowagiac. From a timid, delicate
farm boy who could never bear to see blood shed
and who remained a vegetarian for the first 20
years of his life, Miller became a cub reporter
for the Chicago American where he covered a
hundred murder cases, followed the pursuit of
Pancho Villa across the Mexican border, and
thence hied himself to France where he scooped
every other correspondent on the front in
getting out news of the Armistice.
But Webb Miller, who today is still afraid
of people, had just begun. He tells the story
behind the fake armistice of November 8th-
the first authentic story about that grim hoax
in 18 years. After the war Miller covered the
trial and execution of Henri Desire Landru,
Blue Beard of France, who seduced, robbed, and
murdered 283 women.
In 1930 Miller journeyed to India where
he witnessed British troops with long handled
swords mow down both the passive followers of
Gandhi and the Indian terrorists.
When the Ethiopian war broke out Webb Mil-
ler was with the Italian forces in Africa and
together with Floyd Gibbons scooped the world
on the outbreak of the war-scooped it so com-
pletely that the United Press had the story three
quarters of an hour before the Italian Foreign
Office.
p And so he went, from one great adventure
to another, this bashful, impressionable Michigan
farm boy with a flair for graphic description.
Whether he rode on the Graf Zeppelin or wit-
nessed an execution, he still remained sensitive
by temperament and although he has reached
the top of his chosen field, his boyhood charac-
teristics have not been materially changed.
Despite everything which Webb Miller has seen
and written during 24 years in a ringside seat,
he still would trade it all for his youthful ideal-
the peace of Thoreau's Walden. As he says, "I
Found No Peace."
WHEN RECENTLY two well-known Campus
gentlemen spent a hilarious evening in
Detroit, they became acquainted with a duet of
intriguing taxi dancers at one of the better
Woodward Avenue establishments.
The adventurers, both members of a prominent
Campus fraternity, tossed out a fine line of
bull, but as the evening wore on, caution flew
with it and the brethren told the gals, should
they ever be in the vicinity of Ann Arbor, to
drop up to the House and have dinner.
Saturday morning next a lilae envelope, heav-
ily scented and addressed in a small fine hand,
greeted the brethren upon their descent to
breakfast..
The girls were going to Chicago and plannedj
to stop over for Sunday dinner and see what a
frat was like.
An hour later, two harassed looking individuals
were seen waving frantic thumbs out the Toledo
road. One carried a suitcase.
*, * * *
ACE BAILEY who brings his Toronto Varsity
here to engage Michigan's Wolverine hockey
team Saturday night was once the king of
stallers in the National Hockey League.
In case you don't remember that far back,
Bailey was a member of the Cotton, Blair, Bailey
line which was so hot for the Maple Leafs a half
dozen years ago. Whenever one of the Leafs
was sent off the ice, out would come the
Bailey, and either Cotton or Blair and put on a,
real puck ragging exhibition.
It was Bailey, incidentally who was probably
more responsible than anyone else for the wide
adoption in recent years of the helmet now worn
by so many major league hockey players.
Five years ago hockey suffered a bad loss and a
black eye as well when Ace Bailey was almost

killed. It was one of those unavoidable accidents
which came as a result of pure chance, but-
the papers gave it a sensational play and it
put hockey on the spot.
The Leafs were playing Boston before a ca-
pacity crowd. Eddie Shore made one of his
famous solo dashes down the ice and missed.
It was while Shore was racing to get back to his
defense post that he crashed into Bailey and
almost killed him.
Doctors despaired of the Leaf flanker's life, but
after months in the hospital, Bailey recovered.
His hockey career as a player was over, but as
a coach Ace had just begun.
Bailey loafed around for a year, slowly regain-
ing his strength, and then he undertook coaching
the Toronto Varsity, one of the best college
hockey teams in either the United States orb
Canada.
Saturday night Ace Bailey will be sitting on
the bench while his charges tackle the Wol-
verines, but you can depend on one thing ands
that is they will know how to handle the puck-
to taking the action that a sound logic dictates,
i.e., in helping to organize the forces necessary
to make the adjustments necessary to remove
the causes of war. If war cannot be avoided the
effort will not be lost because the same approach
is the one to be used in shortening the dura-

IT ALL

Sheepnot Men
What R.O.T.C. Achieves
(From The Daily Texan, which is
opposing the introduction of cam-
pus military training.)
ONCE UPON A TIME, in the not-
so-distant past, everyone was
supposed to believe that the best
means of creating character, manli-
ness, and moral fibre was some form
of military training administered at
an age when an individual was more
susceptible to innovation than he
would be when older. However, not
everyone believed that such was the
case at that time, and now we are at
the point where we have to make no
pretext at believing it.
The obsolescence of such an idea,
i.e., "the army makes men" is best
verified by some of our recognized
leading American educators who from
time to time have expressed them-
selves in no equivocal manner. Pro-
fessor W. L. Cox of the New York
University states, "Compulsory mili-
tary training in public schools in
contrary to the spirit and purposes of
a democratic society; it endangers the
rational and peaceful settlement of
domestic and international disputes,
and it stultifies youths and adults
whom it keeps in a state of perpetual
infantilism." Professor John Dewey,
who has taken an active part in the
campaign on college campuses for the
abolition of the R.O.T.C., has stated,
"Education of youth and the reflex
of that education on parents and
friends is an important part of the
forces which have militarization for
their consequence."
Support for the opinions of Pro-
fessors Dewey and Cox is not diffi-
cult to find, if we look for a moment
at policies and publications issuing
from the War Department itself. Ap-
pearing in the "Infantry Journal" for
December, 1982, is an article by Cap-
tain John H. Burns, the following
suggestion is made: "The military
problem, psychologically speaking,
resolves itself into taking every ad-
vantage of the herd instinct to in-
tegrate the mass. This military pro-
cessing of civilians is a purely em-
pirical thing, but it is an eminently
sound one. It has been handed down
from past armies." This is the pro-
cess resorted to in creating leader-
ship, character, and manliness, and
it seems in direct conflict with the
idea of developing character by per-
mitting the individual to expand to
the fullest extent in those particular
capacities that he is favorably en-
dowed with. Instead of furnishing
the means whereby the particular
characteristics can be developed, it
seeks to leaven the whole of person-
ity into a compact and obedient and
uniform mass.
In the same article, Mr. Burns
states: "Three things, then, are fos-
tered by close order drill; one, the
growth of herd consciousness; two,
the development of the habit of au-
tomatic obedience; and three, the
recognition and acceptance of lead-
ers, and the belief that these lead-
ers have herd approval behind their
actions."
T IS OUR BELIEF that students
of The University of Texas are not
so docile and susceptible as to de-
sire or to tolerate the existence on,
the campus of any organization who
sought to carry out close order drill.
In our definition of character, there
may be many who would disagree
with us, but we are rather certain
that no one familiar with the pur-
poses of our present educational
structure in character development
will deny that the conceptions of
the War Department and the
R.O.T.C. are not consistent with the
aspirations and practices of a co-

operative democracy in which men,
women, and youth act on their own
initiativeand according to their own
judgment.
In 1922 at the Conference on
Training for Citizenship and Na-
tional Defense, the Secretary of War
said: "The War Department finds it-
self is a peculiar dilemma. While
the Federal Government is respon-
sible for national defense, for the
raising and maintenance of armies
and a navy, the physical, moral, and
mental education of our youth is re-
served to the states and to the people.
The Federal Government finds itself
with a large responsibility, but with
no jurisdiction over the fundamental
factors upon which success ultimately
depends." It is no wonder then, that
students and thoughtful educators
do not desire the establishment of
military training in our educational
institutions, especially when it is
supervised and administered by
those who have declared that their
purpose is to create a growth of
herd consciousness, strict obedience,
and respect for uniformed authority.
One more quotation from the "Mil-
itary Bible" issued to the R.O.T.C.
in 1925 is found a slightly inconsis-
tent instruction insofar as develop-
ing manhood and character is con-
cerned: "To finish an opponent who
hangs on, or attempts to pull you to
the ground, always try to break his
hold by driving the knee or foot to
his crotch and gouging his eyes with
your thumbs." (Does this produce
men )

PRIDA, MARCH 5, 1937
VOL. XLVII No. 109
PrsdetNotices
S Presidentand Mrs. Ruthven will be
at home to faculty members, towns-
people, and their friends on Sunday
afternoon, March 7, from 4 to 6 p.m.
To the Members of the University
Council: The'meeting of the Univer-
sity Council for March 8 has been
cancelled.
Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary.
Marsh and Mandlebaum Scholar-
ships for 1937-38: Students in the
College of Literature, Science, and
the Arts may now file applications
for the above scholarships, on blanks
to be obtained in the office of the
Dean of the College, 1210 Angell Hall.
Applications must be returned to the
same office before noon on Saturday,
March 6. Awards will be announced
in April or May.
Notice to Seniors L.S.&A.: Seniors
wishing to pay their one dollar dues
before the final list of names is hand-
ed into the Senior Announcement
Committee will have their last op-
portunity Tuesday and Wednesday,
March 9 and 10.
A table will be set. up in Angell
Hall on these two days for that pur-
pose.
Students, College of Literature, Sci-
ence and the Arts: No course may be
elected for credit after the end of the
third week. Saturday, March 6, is
therefore the last date on which new
elections may be approved. The will-
ingness of an individual instructor to
admit a student later would not af-
fect the operation of this rule.
School of Education, Changes of
Elections: No course may be elected
for credit after Saturday, March 6.
Students enrolled in this school must
report all changes of elections at
the Registrar's Office, Room 4,
University Hall.
Membership in a class does not
cease nor begin until all changes
have been thus officially registered.
Arrangements made with the in-
structors are not official changes.
Social Chairmen for fraternities,
sororities and other student organi-
zations are reminded that all party
requests must be filed in the office
of the Dean of Students for Dean
Bursley's approval on the Monday
before the event of which approval is
requested.
Fraternities and Sororities are re-
minded that only a member of the
University Senate and his wife, or
persons selected from a list submit-
ted to the Dean of Students by the
organization at the beginning of the
year may be used as chaperons for
social events; Additions to the ap-
proved list which any house desires
to make must be acted upon by Dean
Bursley prior to their use as chaper-
ons.
Extra Curricular Activities: Man-
agers and chairmen of extra curricu-
lar activities are reminded that they
should submit, to the Chairman of
the Committee on Student Affairs,
Room 2, University Hall, a complete
list of all students who wish to par-
ticipate in their respective enterprises
during the second semester, in order
that their eligibility for such activi-
ties may be checked. The name
should be presented on blank forms
to be obtained in Room 2.
Seniors of The College of Engineer-
ing: Call at Room 412 West Engin-
eering Building at once forsyour
Drawing I, II and III Plates.
Senior Engineers: Group picture is
to be made and placed in West En-
gineering Bldg. Any man receiving
an engineering degree in Feb., June, '

or August, 1937, is eligible. Required:
class dues must be paid and 'Ensian
picture must be on file at any of the
three studios.
Senior Engineers: Today is the
deadline for delinquent seniors. For
the benefit of those who have not;
paid their dues, there will be tables
in both the East and West Engineer-'
ing buildings from 8 until 12 o'clock.'
May I again remind you that;, you
will not be in the class picture; you
will not be permitted to rent caps
First Aero Seminar
To Be Held Today
The first of the twice monthly aer-
onautical engineering seminars de-
signed to acquaint students with
problems in aeronautics will be held
at 4 p.m. today in Room 1024 East
Engineering Building.
"These meetings will give members
of the faculty, graduate and research
students an opportunity to discuss
papers and recent developments in
areonautics," Burdell Springer of the
aeronautical engineering department
said yesterday. The meetings will be

and gowns from the Engineering
Council; nor will your name be print-
ed in the senior announcements, un-
less you pay this fee?
Academic Notices
English 12'7: The make-up final
examination will be given in my of-
fice, 3226 AH., today at 3 p..
Karl teberg.
Zoology 1 Make-Up Ex m for all
those who missed the final exaina-
tion in this course last semester will
be held Saturday, March 6, fro'm 8 to
12 a.m., in Room 2091. This will be
the only opportunity to take this
examination.
Philosophy 32: Make-up examina-
tion today at 4 p.m., 202 S.W.
Political Science I make-up exam-
ination for first semester, 1936-37,
today, 3-5 p.m., Room 2037 Angell
Hall.
Anthropology 34: The make-up
final examination will be given today
at 2 p.m., in Room 306 Mason Hall.
Economics 53 Make-Up Final:
Room 207 Ec., today from 2-5 p.m.
Geography 33 and 113: Makeup
Final Examinations will be given on
Monday, March 8, at 3 p.m. in loom
9, A..
Exhibitions
An Exhibijion of Chinese Art, in-
cluding ancient bronzes, pottery and
peasant paintings, sponsored by the
Institute of Fine Arts, at the Archi-
tectural building. Open daily from 9
to 5 p. m. except Sunday through the
months of February and March. The
public is cordially invited.
Exhibition, Architectural Building:
The Annual Big Ten Exhibit, estab-
lished to foster student interest in
art in the Big Ten Universities and
to provide an opportunity for student
artists to exhibit their work, is now
being shown in the third floor Exhi-
bition Room of the Architectural
Building. Open daily from 9 to 5
p.m. excepting Sunday, until March
10. The public is cordially invited.
Events Today
Aeronautical Engineering Stu-
dents: There will be an organiza-
tion meeting for an Aeronautical En-
gineering Seminar this afternoon
at 4 p.m., in Room 1024 East En-
gineering Building. The purpose of
this Seminar will be to present sum-
maries of research work being done
in the department and reviews of
technical literature. All students
now enrolled in research course's are
expected to take part in this work
and shouldbe prepared to preent
brief outlines of work already' ac-
complished and their plans fd6- fu-
ture work. Assignments of tecljljical
journals in connection with th re-
view of literature will be made at
that time. All others interested in
attending this Seminar are cordially
invited.
Esperanto: The Esperanto glass
will meet in Room 1035 Angell lall
from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today.
The Congregational Student t'el-
lowship will give a party this
evening at 8:30 p.m. There will be
dancing; also other forms of uriuual
entertainment are planned.
Faculty -Women's Club: The New-
comers Section will be entertained by
Mrs. Ruthven at her home this
afternoon from 3 to 5 p.m. Mr.
Enoch Peterson, of the Instituteof
Archaeological Research, will show
several interesting films.
Liberal Students' Union of the
Unitarian Church presents a pliy of
Tchekoff, "The Boor" today at 9:15

p.m.
Coming Events
Acronrutical Engineers: I.Ae.S.
Members: The inspection trip to the
Stinson Plant which was previously
announced for Saturday, larch 6,
has been postponed to Saturday,
March 13. A meeting will be held
Thursday, March 11.
Tryouts for the Lutheran Stfdent
A Caiella Choir will be continued
this Sunday afterioon at the zion
Lutheran Parish Hall, 3:30-4:30 p.m.
Mr. Rozeboom will conduct rehears-
als for the ladies' division of the
choir at 4:30 p.m., for the main choir
at 4:45, and for the special chorus
group at 5:30 p.m.
S.C.A. Members - and Friends:
There will be a party and dance at
Lane Hall from 9 to 12 this Saturday
evening. Jacobs and his Wolverines
will furnish the music.
Rendezvous Men: There will be a
party and dance at Lane Hall this
Saturday from 9-12. Jacobs and this
Wolverines will furnish the niusic.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the
University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.

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