THE MICHIGAN DAILY Published every morning except Monday 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 .or epublicationtof all news dispatches credited tort or naot otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Bnatered at the PostOffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan as sec.Mond class mail matter. 1bbsriptions during regilar school year by carrier, $4 30; by mail, $.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONA-. ADVERTISNG SY - National AdvertisingService,Inc. 4 CollegePablishers ReYresestatipe 420MAOIBONAVE. NEW YORK N.Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON - .SAN FRANCISCO :Ls ANGEL.ES * PORTLAND - SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGINQG EDITOR........ELMIEA. PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR.......ED WARNER EAL ASSOCIA~Th EDITOR.......MARSHALL D. SHULMAN 'eorge Ancros Jewel 'Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Departiental Boards Publication Department:: Bfle A. Pierce,. Chairman; James Boozer Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes,Ture Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, Willam E. Shacketon Irving S. Silver- " tmanWillam:Spaler, Richard .Hershey. Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, .Mary Sage Montague. Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman;'Fred DeLano and Pred Buesser, associates; 'Raymond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Marca. Wometi's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Eliabeth -Bingham, Helen Douglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER JOHN R PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ..,.JEAN KEINATH BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen; Tracy Buckwalter, Marshal Sampson, Robert Lodge, Bill Newman, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layne, Russ Cole, Henry Homes. Women'sE Busness Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy 'Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crawford, Betty Davy, Helen Pury. Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers Jack Staple, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- ional Advertising andCirculation Manager; Don ;J. lsher Contracts Manager: Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified !Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM SHACKELTON The Child-Labor Amendmet S T HE NEW YORK ASSEMBLY byI an overwhelming vote refused to ratify the Child-Labor amendment Tuesday. Not a small part of the reason why the New York Assembly voted the amendment down is the militant opposition of Patrick Cardinal Hayes, of the Roman .,Catholic Arch-Diocese of New York. Cardinal Hayes, March 1, sent an episcopal let- ter to every Catholic church in New York and vi- cinity. The letter was read in every Mass that Sunday. Names of the local Assemblymen to whom parishoners were requested to write urg- ng against ratification were given from the altar. Form cards were distributed in some churches, even pencils furnished. Cardinal Hayes' arguments against the amend- ment, paraphrased, are as -follows: Too much power is given to Congress, thus infringing on the sacred right of parents to guide the destinies of their offspring; .the states are better able to cope with child-labor, because they are in closer touch with local conditions. The first objection implies that Congress will step in aid interfere with every minute action of children in the household and ol the farm. The second argument is the old states' rights theory: Congress would infringe on the right of the states which are the agencies that should control child-labor, if child-labor must be. con- trolled by any government. The fact that the states themselves have not seriously violated parental rights in regard to education and have not abolished parochial schools (a fact which is of no little considera- tion to Cardinal Hayes) in their regulatory func- tions ought to be enough to calm the Cardinal. Some clues as to how Congress would act with regard to parental rights may be seen in the child-labor act of 1916. It prohibited inter- state shipment of goods on which children under sixteen working in mines and quarries had been employed, on which children working in workshops and factories had been employed, on which children from fourteen to sixteen had been employed for more than eight hours a day or six days a week. The NRA codes prohibited employment of chil-. dren under sixteen in industry and trade with exceptions: children might work three hours a day outside school hours in certain group or re- tail trades, motion pictures, radio and broad- casting, newspapers and periodical publishing.- These restrictions do not seem excessive. Cardinal Hayes suggests that parents can ef- fectively prevent child-labor. But the sordid his- tory of the employment of children in industry belies this theory.. Child-labor in America has been an ugly com- panion of industrial development since the early part of the nineteenth century. According to the 1820 Digest of Manufacturers, children at did ont begin till after April 1, the date on The fact that the stateshave not met this which the Census was taken. What restrictions that have been imposed on child-labor have been for other reasons than parental willingness. Compulsory education laws, and the desire to secure more employment for adultsat better wages are the causes for the fact that more children are not employed today. How responsive the states have been to the pressing need may be seen in the following fig- ures taken from the January issue of the Survey- Graphic. Nine states through exemptions in their laws still permit children under fourteen to work in industry during school hours; seven states permit children between fourteen and sixteen to work nine to eleven hours a day; ten states allow children in this age group to work until 8 p.m. or later. Thirty-two states have almost no regulation of employment in hazardous occupations of six- teen and seventeen-year-olds. The fact that the states have not met this problem in the century and more in which it has grown acute is enough to answer any theory that child-labor regulation be left to the states. And what are the facts of child labor now? Since the NRA was outlawed, the employment of children has increased greatly all over the nation. Figures of the 1936 report of the U.S. Children's Bureau show that in ten states and the District of Columbia and ninety-eight cities in other states, there has been an increase of 150 per cent in the number of fourteen and fifteen-year-olds taking out first working papers. In the seven months after the labor codes of the NRA were nullified, fifty-five per cent more children left school than in the whole year of 1934. Child-labor increase has occurred mostly in the "sweated industries" such as needle-trades, paper box, barrel, basket industries, canning, laundry enterprises. Boys of ten work in the lumber mills, logging in the treacherous swamps. The sugar -beet industries of the West where poverty is so great that almost every child above eight is sent to work in the fields has had -a lot to do with the increase. Wages average from three to five cents an hour. A twelve-hour day is the rule. Illiterate, many of them, undernour- ished, school is a luxury of which they have tasted little. All these figures merely emphasize theneces- sity for federal regulation of child-labor. It is a national problem and as such can only be ade- quately coped with by the nation as a whole, Forty-eight different states have failed miser- ably to secure to every child the right of living in proper environments, the right to an educa- tion, and the freedom to develop into worthy citizens. Must we wait another hundred years for some will-o'-wisp hope that eventually the states will handle the problem? The time to act is now, the means by which to act,the amendment. ITHE FORUM Letters published in this column should not be construedras expressing the editorial opinion of 'he 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 letters of more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the critera of general 'editorial importance and interest to the campus. Guilds And Newspaper Practices To the Editor: A great failing among young people today is their unwillingness to start at the bottom and work up, according to Daily reports of the occu- pational guidance lectures and of the remarks of the editor of the Detroit News to Daily workers and journalism students Thursday evening. Each young person is, they said, self-admittedly- the rule's exception. From the letter's remarks, it might-be judged, however, that newspaper owners and editors have not gotten far beyond young persons in believing themselves exceptions to several standard prac- tices. Such as: 1. The organizing of editorial workers into a guild has some features, the Detroit News editor remarked, "that just won't work. You can't standardize brains andtability andtofscourse that is what all unions try to do." Is this editor not inconsistent, then, in backing so vigorously civil service for Michigan state government? The classifying of government duties as to difficulty and responsibility and applying a wage to each classification, are key features of civil service and industrial personnel practice. Is it because civil service would save the "peepul's" money that he backs the program? Why shouldn't news- papers likewise install a personnel arrangement allowing their editorial people to save more of their money wages? But newspapers are the ex- ception, it seems. 2. It is sound business, he advocated, for a group of newspapers to purchase co-operatively their paper stock, cartoons, cooking recipes and other features produced by labor. But attempts of their editorial workers to use collective bar- gaining for their (the workers') labor is de- nounced as coercion and demands for control of the property. 3. It is progressive journalism, so he claimed, for a paper to send a man to Russia to ferret outtthe information for readers sitting in arm- chairs at home, that the Russian government wines and dines its visitors in style while in the back alleys workers fight over garbage. How many Detroit papers have been progressive enough to show that visitors are shown the glossy surface of the industries there but are not told of the killing speed-up system and the long months of lay-offs that keep the workers' annual income so low? 4. Something for newspapers to support is the plan for public schools devoting more time to training the young people in manual skills and BENEATH **** #~#*** IT ALL "rBy Bonth Williams a. CHICAGO, March 12.-Safely settled in a five- room apartment in the Windemere here, The Daily's Chicago correspondents have spent the last hour and a half trying to get out of a tunnel underneath the Chicago River and find the University of Chicago field house. Corny Beukema, ex-famous Ann Arbor corre- spondent and now on the sports staff of the Chi- cago Tribune, popped his head out of the Tribune tower long enough to promise an introduction to Arch Ward at midnight and extended his best to Art Van Duren and Phil Diamond, his old Ann Arbor cronies. In a city suddenly hit by a penetrating cold wave, a galaxy of sit-down strikes and a taxicab war, the death of J.J. O'Brien, assistant Notre Dame coach, came as an added blow. In today's Chicago American Notre Dame is brought close to Michigan once again by sports columnist John Carmichael who predicts that from tackle to tackle next year Harry Kipke's gridders will be playing the Notre Dame brand of football. And from authoritative sources comes the definite statement that it was Harry Salsinger, sports editor of the Detroit News who was largely responsible for Hunk Anderson's selection as head line coach of the Wolverines. -Salsinger, who for 25 years has been writing the "eventful stories of major sporting events the country over, told Kip that in his opinion, I Anderson was the outstanding line coach in the game. The Daily correspondents would like to extend an invitation to all their friends to visit them over the week-end. The hotel was so full that the management had to turn over a fur- nished apartment with sleeping accommodations for five, plus a fully-equipped kitchen. The preliminaries of the Conference are be- ing watched by a mere handful of spectators here in the field house, about the same num- ber which ordinarily attend a third rate wres- tling meet in Ann Arbor. Jimm.y Kingsley, sitting beside me as Howdie Davidson qualifies for the half, is checking up on points with Harrison Church, track man- ager. Charlie Hoyt has made it Church's job to see that every Wolverine trackster is in bed by 10 p.m. Kingsley and the rest of the Michigan squad are lounging around the track here, watching the half and quarter milers go through their paces in the first trials of the Conference meet. They will see no more action until tomorrow after- noon. ADD'BENEATH IT ALL: Homer Lathrop, now distinguished member of Alpha Delta Phi, has been so galled by the chiding of his friends that he now spends a considerable portion of each afternoon cutting down his tummy on the squash courts . . . The percent of take' on a baffle board and your chances of winning more than"a fleeting thrill can be readily calculated when you know that the average pin game costs $125. The fact that it tkes 2,500 nickels to pay for one of these machines, and that many stores depend upon them to pay rent and light bills, indicates pretty clearly that they are not gam- bling. You haven't got a chance . . . If Union plans work out as expected, outstanding high school students from all over the state will be invited here over the Michigras week-end to get an idea of real college life .. . Plans to move the Senior Ball from its traditional Commence- ment Week setting are being considered because of, the impossibility of securing the Union for any night that week. Why not throw it in some less common spot during Commencement Week when the bars are down a bit? A local pountry club might be apropos in which to write finis to a four-year social whirl ... T. Hawley Tapping is convinced that if the proposed court plan goes through, nothing short of Hitlerism lies ahead for the United States. Naturally he is a die hard Republican . . . Marion Fitzgerald sat up until 4 a.m. reading Zola's Germinal last night. Asked what she thought of it, The Fitz replied, "I took a bath and brushed my teeth." their workers, being in training, need only ap- prenticeship wages, and gives the big owners reason to pay their help just enough more than formerly to make them happy they are in the big time. 5. Mentioning the big time reminds: that the speaker expressed -delight over a fist fight two of his reporters once had after arguing which had more to do with a big story. This glow of satisfaction over being in on things important, the editor stated, was one of the "other com- pensations" making up for the lack of pay in the weekly- envelope. Yet he said that workers get ahead because the boss editor sees talent in their work -and enthusiasm for their jobs. It couldn't be, surely; that reporters do some apple polish- ing to show fitness for a five-per-week pay boost? No, newspapers are exceptions. And that remark: "You can't standardize brains and ability . . . as all unions try to do" smacks of a crack at composing room and mechanical department workers, who are one, of the best organized working groups in the country, and receive as a result much higher pay for their efforts than the supposed brain workers in the editorial department. Is he worried that, considering how highly paid the greasy-shirted mechanical trades workers are as a result of union activity, the brain workers in the editorial department will nick him for plenty more if organized? After all, though, we don't see need for a news- paper owner's fear of paying more wages to edi- torial workers. He can always pass the added cost on to the consumer byu nning 2dvertising THEATRE They Too A rise The Hillel Players-present THEY TOO ARISE by Arth-~r A. Miller. Directed by Frederic O. Crandall. At the Mendels- Sohn Theatre. Last perfomances this afternoon at 2:30 and tonight at 8:15. By JAMES DOLL THE NEW PLAY at the Mendels- sohn has been preceded by a good deal of comment. It has won two prizes, one in the Hopwoods here and one of national significance in the contest of the Bureau of New Plays. It is pleasant to be able to say that the play now that it has been seen on the stage it seems to live up to what must have been expected from it. The audience at the open- ing last night, judging from its reac- tions to it, seemed to agree. The play deals with a Jewish fam- ily in New York. They are and have been - small manufacturers in the cloak and suit industry and it is the way this particular family is treated by the system in the industry- crashed between labor troubles on one side and the ruthless methods of the larger manufacturers on the other. The father who had always thought that labor was just another thing to fight against realizes as the play goes along that the whole system is to blame-that he himself can- not fight against it-but that if he does, he should know which side he should fight. Because the background of the characters, in relation to their family life, is so well presented we are interested in their business dif- ficulties, realizing how the social and econgmic problems are interlocked. The problem is always associated with the characters, never standing out alone. It is in this character study that the play is especially notable. The author has made them indi- viduals we are interested in and see clearly-not only in relation to their rather specialized environment but for their fundamental character- istics in relation to other families in other but similar situations. The chief action concerns orders which the father must deliver in, order to meet obligations that are so pressing that the whole future exist- ence of the business depends on them. A strike of shipping clerks and their picket lines prevent delivery on time. A son with new (read "rad- ical") ideas comes home from col-.. lege and refuses to take the goods through while this is still possible.c Later at a manufaturers meeting the father realizes that the big members] will not hesitate to use strike-break-t ers-and take advantage of the factG that he and the other small manu- facturers will not resort to thesel gangsters. So the business is ruinedl -it is too late to do anything ex-a cept by permitting or urging the older son to marry the stupid daughters of one of the big dealers who has taken over orders which would have saved the business. These business troubles are close- ly related to the home situation- as, of course, they must be. ThisX relation of character drawing of theI father, mother, grandfather and thet two sons, the colorful dialog andt excellent relation of comedy andr drama are the greatest achievementsl of the play. It is primarily con- cerned with the problems of the father and secondarily of the older son. The younger son helps to bring the father to realize how the whole t system fits together but it seems at1 times as if the play were going to deal with his problem of whether to L stick to principals and refuse to help his father or to give up these ideas for the sake of the present pressing situation his father finds himself in. But the author chose- and rightly, it would seem-to deal with the more important general problem. So it is possible that the1 suggestion of the younger son's prob- lem is superfluous. The production showed a fine un- Oerstanding of the values of th-e script but the actors were not always able to bring these ideas out with? consistent excellence in the individ- ual performances. Harold Gast as1 the father, carries the central part ofj the father through the play with con-l sistency. His performance is con- secutive, building from scene to scene and is projected as a whole. Anita1 Newblatt as the mother has warmth and a feeling for the character but1 unfortunately does not have the technical equipment or experience toE make it completely effective to theA audience. The same was true, too, of Samuel Grant's Grandfather. He built the important and difficult quarrel scene to a very effective cli- max. Robert Ulan in Liebowitz's] single scene had both technical as-] surance and depth of feeling. The scene was one of the most memorable in the play. But it was not the in-i dividual performances but the way they were blended together by- the director into a fine realization of< the possibilities of the play on thel stage. That made They Too AriseI effective in the the theatre. Performances of new plays by Michigan students will be more fre- quent when the much-hoped-for lab-t oratory theatre and workshop for such plays becomes a reality. h4illel Players Give SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1937 I) VOL. XLVII No. 116 Notices ..Students of the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: A meet- ing will be held on Tuesday, March 116, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1025 An- gell Hall for students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and others interested in future work in library science. The meeting will be addressed by Dr. W. W. Bishop, Librarian of the University and Head of the Department of Library Science. The next meeting in the vocational series designed to give information concerning the nature of and prep- aration for the various professions, to be held March 18, will be addressed by Dean C. E. Griffin of the School of Business Administration. Faculty of'the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: The five- week freshman reports will be due March 20, Room 4, University Hall. E. A. Walter, Chairman, Academic Counselors, Applied Music Students: All in- completes or absent from examina- tion reports in applied music now outstanding, must be made up by a special examination which will be held Tuesday evening, March 16, at 8:15 p.m., at the School of Music. Re- ports of X or I which are not changed to a final grade at this time will lapse into an E. Academic Notices Makeup examinations in Sociology 141 and Sociology 121 on Monday afternoon at 2 p.m. in Room 313, Haven Hall. Psychology 33, 35, 37: A make-up for the final examination will be given Saturday, March 13, from 2 to 5 p.m. in Room 3126 N.S. Concerts School of Music Concert: The University Symphony Orchestra, Earl V. Moore, Conductor, with the I following contest winning music stu- -dents, will appear in recital in Hill Auditorium Sunday afternoon, March 14, at 4:15 p.m.: Ellen Nelson, pi- anist; Marguerite Creighton, mezzo- soprano; Gratia Harrington, violon- cellist; Emilie Paris, pianist; Jane Rogers, contralto; and Kathleen Rinck, pianist. The general public, with the exception of small children, is invited to attend without admis- sion charge. Exhibitions An Exhibiion of Chinese Art, in- cluding ancient bronzes, pottery and peasant paintings, sponsored by the Institute of Fine Arts, at the Archi- tectural Bldg. Open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p. m. except Sunday through the months of February and March. The public is cordially invited. ,Events Today The Outdoor Club will go hiking this afternoon. The group- will leave Lane Hall at 2 p.m. and will return about 5 p.m. All students interested are invited to come along. Congregational Student Fellow- ship: The Student Fellowship is hav- ing a swimming and badminton party at the Intramural building tonight. The group will meet at Pilgrim Hall at 7:30 p.m. All those wishing to go please sign up in Pilgrim Hall before noon Saturday. Coming Events Caps and , Gowns will be worn at Senior Supper, Wednesday, March 17, at the League. Seniors may ob- tain these -in the League ballroom from 12:15 until 6 p.m. Monday, March 15. German Table for Faeulty em- hers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michigan Union. All faculty members interest- ed in speaking German are cordially invited. There will be an informal 10-minute talk by Prof. H. T. Price. The Bibliophiles of the Faculty ;Women's Club will meet Tuesday, March 16 at-2:30,p.m. with Miss Gil- lette, 1319 Forest Ave. Prof. Fred Wahr of the German Department will speak on Wasser- mann and Thomas Mann. All Ann ArborIndependent ,Women are requested to meet at the League Monday, March 15, at 5 pm. for a very important meeting. Pop -Ooncert: The second in a series of Symphony recorded con- certs will be : given at the Hillel Foundation Sunday, March 14, at 2:30 p.m. Beethoven's 7th Sym- phony, and Dukas' "Sorcerer's' Ap- prentice" will be presented. Bureau of New :Plays, opened last churches Church of :Christ (Disces), Sun- day, March 14: 10:45 a.m., morning worship. Rev. Fred Cowin, minister. 12 noon, Students' Bible class. H. L. Pickerill, leader. Disciples Guild: 5:'30 p.m., tea and social hour. 6:30 p.m. Discussion Hour. Cilf- ford Greve will lead a discussion on Political Freedom. The freedom of the individual under various political systems will be considered. This is the second in a series on the general topic of "Freedom in Modern So- ciety." Congregational Church, Sunday, March 14: 10:45 a.m., service of worship. The servicenwill be conducted by Rev. Stephen' A. Lloyd, His subject will be, "What Price Christianity?" 6 p.m., Student Fellowship. Starts promptly at 6 p.m. After the supper there will be a talk by Professor Mc- Clusky. His subject will be, "Can I be a Christian and Succeed?" The special fellowship choir for Easter Sunday Sunrise Service will rehearse immediately after the meeting. Trinity Lutheran Church, Sunday, March 14: Service will be held in Trinity Lu- theran Church at 10:80 a.m. The sermon theme will be 'Beware in Giving Alms-Honor with Man and God." Lenten services are held on Wed- nesday evening at 7:30 p.m. HarrisHall: There will be a picnic Saturday afternoon, March 13, at the Hall Farm to meet the 'Right Rev- erend, Paul Jones, Chaplain of An- tioch College. Cars will leave Har- ris Hall at 4:30 and at 6 p.m. Epis- copal students and their friends are cordially invited. Please phone for reservations. Harris Hall, Sunday, March 14: There will be a celebration of the Holy Communion in Harris Hall chapel at 9:30 a.m. followed by breakfast. Regular Student meeting at 7 p.m. Miss Katherine Stoll and Mr. Rob- ert Porter will lead a discussion on the talk given by Bishop Jones at the picnic. All students and their friends are cordially invited. Re- freshments will be served. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Sunday, March 14: Services of worship are: 8 o'clock Holy Communion, 9:30 Church School, 11 a.m., Kindergarten; 11 a.m., Confirmation service sermon by The Right Reverend Paul Jones, Chaplain of Antioch College. There will be a tea at 4 p.m. in Harris Hall to welcome members of the Confirmation Class. Lutheran Student Club: A Twen- tieth Anniversary Banquet will be held on Sunday, March 14, at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall in celebration of the organization of the club. 'The speaker for the evening will beProf. Paul Kauper of the Law School, who was a former president of the club. Fellowship hour is at 5:30 p.m. and the dinner will be served promptly at 6 p.m. Tickets are available by calling Alt% Haab, 6968, Marguerite Groomes, )534, or Reverend Mr. Yoder, 2-3680. All Lutheran students are invited and other students who have attended our meetings. The A Capella Choir will meet promptly at 4:15 p.m. for rehearsal Sunday, March 14 at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. -First Baptist Church, Sunday, March 14: 10:45 a.m., Mr. Sayles, the minister, will speak on "The Many- Sided Jesus." Church School at 9:30 and High School young people at 5:30 p.m. Roger Williams Guild , Sunday noon, Guild House, Mr. Chapman will finish discussion of the., prophet Micah. 6:15 p.m., Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor for Foreign students will speak on "Problems of Foreign Stu- dents in Adjusting Themselves to a New Environment." First Presbyterian Church: Sun- day, March 14: "Letters on Life" has been the subject of a series of sermons during Lent at the First Presbyterian Church meeting temporarily at the Masonic Temple, 327 South Fourth Ave. Dr. W. P. Lemon, the minister, will preach this Sunday morning on the subject "For God-Confidence." The service begins at 10:45 a.m. Special Lenten music. At the meeting of the Westmin- ster Guild, student group, "The Len- ten Mood" will be expressed through readings from Classics dealing with the Inner Life. Margaret Brackett, '37, is chairman of a group of read- ers presenting the service. The meet- in r , i A t0.. fl , n-sn - anA 4.-. n-. nrarA DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the offie of the Assitant to the President until 3:30; :1100 a.m. on Saturday.