f THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY . - + . ""l lMember 1937 AssoC dia C CdIle 'iae Press Distributors of Qe .fie D~est Published every morning except Monday during the University- year and Summer Session by the hoard in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use (or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all othe rmatter hereinalso reserved. Entered at the Post Office at AnnArbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4 00; by mail, $4.5G. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVEnTISINO BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Reprisenfative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO a OSTON SAN FR"61CC Los ANGELES -"PORTLAND - SEATTLE Board of Editors 4ANAGIN EDITQR............ELSIZ A. PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR ............FRED WARNER NEAL S0SOCIATE EDITOR...-....MARSHItALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Departmental Boards Publication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; James Boozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver- man,.William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. Editorial Department: Marshall D. Shuilman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, Mary Sage Montague. {por Departm~ent: %George J. And~ros, Cairman; Fred DeLano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Mrca. Women's Department: Jewel Wue feI, Chairman: Eliza- ea M.Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Duglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J, Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSIESSMANAE ................JOHN R. PARK SSOCATEBUSSMA.AGER. LIAM BARDT WOME'S BSNSS MANAGER ......JE~AN KI NA WH e ssstants Robert M'rtin, Ed Macal, P ilBu- then, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Newton Ketcham, Robert Lodge, Ralph Shelton, Bill New- nan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Colemnan, W. Layhe, J. D. Haas, Russ Cole. Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehran, Betsy Crawford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy. Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tr'iipp, Departmental Managers Sack Staple, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. ±'a- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, ContractsaManiger; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Maager; Korman Steinberg, Service Mager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified AdvertisingManager. NIGHT EDITOR: ARNOLD S. DANIELS projects to keep them out of mischief, and to instill in them respect for the law. The boys are willing to learn and enjoy the projects, but "the boys are hungry. They know they can al- ways pick up a dollar by stealing a tire, with a fair chance of getting. away with it. What have the missions and settlements to offer them in place of the food and clothing they need?" asks Stevenson. This week a New York clergyman, possibly stimulated by the plays, broadcast an appealo New York citizens to make jobs for these unem- ployed youths. "Unless you can provide honest ways for them to earn their livings, nothing can keep them from crime," he warned. The answer to the problems raised by these plays is not more settlements, but the-extension rather than the reduction of the national youth program, and the further extension of the priv- ileges of education to all who are able to benewit from it. (THEr FORUM Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contibutions 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 allletters of mre than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial Importance and interet to the campus. Smoke Filled Field House To the Editor: Attending an amateur athletic event of any sort should logically be considered more or less of a privilege, and in so doing we should at least show some little consideration for the desires of those who, through the voluntary expenditure of their time and effort, provide us with thrills and excitement. Monday night, when we were hosts to the In- diana basketball team, one of their men found it nesssary to call the attention of the referee to the excessive smoke that prevailed in the air. The result was a brief delay in the game while an urgent request was made to the audience to observe the no smoking regulation. From this incident it would seem that when we go to a basketball gme perhaps the least courtesy we might show to the players would be to have some consideration for their desires and leave our cigarets in our pockets for about an hour and a half. J.R.P. Human Vs. Property Rights To the Editor: In a discussion of the Supren~e Court and the Constitution it is desirable to inquire into the historical background of these institutions. As historians point out, the Constitutional Conven- tion that framed the original constitution met in closed assemblies where the school of Ham- ilton that feared democracy and trusted only an oligarchy played an important role. So the United States Constitution, though mentioning "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" in the preamble actually dealt with "life, liberty, and property"-the emphasis being on property rights. The Constitutional Convention presented to the various states this constitution emphasizing property rights. The State Legislatures were elected far more democratically than the Con- stitutional Convention and contained people ho had bled for freedom from British tyranny. These state legislatures refused to accept a constitu- tion that would replace the tyranny of England with the tyranny of property rights. Ratifica- tion was refused until the acceptance of the first 10 amendments guaranteeing civil liberties such as freedom of speech, press, assembly, and petition were tacitly agreed upon. The consti- tution itself was to protect property rights, the first 10 amendments were to protect human rights. So started the basic American conflict between human rights and property rights. The Supreme Court has had the prerogative of defending one or the other. In the Scottsboro case and the "yellow dog" contracts, the Court has favored human rights. In the majority of cases, however, as the New Yok Minimum Wage Law, the Railroad Pension Act, the Guffey Law, and the AAA, the Court has ruled against social legislation that had been passed in a demo- cratic, legal, and orthodox manner. Our civil liberties have been more flagrantly violated by lesser agencies of the government. Political speakers have been arrested as "vagrants." City ordinances have revoked the constitutional right of peaceful assembly. Our very University Administration has, in the past, prostituted freedom of press on the grounds that the dis- tribution of leaflets cluttered the campus. The question immediately rises: Why has the Court so often preferred property rights tcA human rights? Why have our American Civil Liberties of freedom of press, assembly, and pe- tition been denied? Could it be that the justices have spent decades in the employment of cor- porations? Could it be that the justices were trained in law schools steeped in the tradition of property rights-law schools often receiving "donations" and controlled by those who have profited by courts giving property rights prefer- ence to human rights. Or is there a more basic conflict? Could it be that we Americans are simultaneously attempt- ing to have democracy in politics and dictator- ship in economics? We cannot be a politically free people if a Sloan or a Ford can arbitrarily and autocratically decide the hours, the speed, the wages, and the length of unemployment of thousands upon thousands of citizens. To demo ocratically elect a legislature that legally passes social legislation and then have this very social legislation ignored by industrial dictators (as Ford's .refusal to abide bythe NRA) is to flaunt democracy. To democratically pass a law against asault: anvd the~n neriifnion a rynim'~ r tohp BENEATH **** ~ IT ALL ftl ---By B~onth Williams~ CHUCK KENNEDY has been graduated since our memorable excursion into the flood dis- trict, and the whole campus is sorry. Chuck, who did time at Hamilton and M.I.T. before carting his bulky frame into the Theta Delta House in Ann Arbor, was probably the most affable and at the same time the best known and most pop- ular male the campus has ever seen. Red hair topping a ruddy freckled face and sense of humor that never failed, big, good look- ing-that's Chuck Kennedy. The campus mourns the loss of Kennedy as a swell gent. I mourn the loss of a great camera man. W HEN Chuck and I and the Champion set out for Louisville with a case of vaccine for the Red Cross and a case of Pabst for ourselves, we decided that the thing to do was to be different. If we wanted to really see what was going on, we'd have to do something to make up stand out above the thousands of other relief workers. The Michigan Daily alone hardly sounded impressive enough but it is a m.ember-paper of the Associat- ed Press, so Kennedy borrowed a trick camera from one of his brothers and we formed the famous Williams-Kennedy AP combination, with the latter as my photographer. Thinking thusly we amused ourselves from Detroit to Indianapolis where we put it to actual test. Armed patrols on the road south to New Albany and Louisville were stopping cars and de- manding permits. We'd just open the window and bellow "Press Car" and they'd hold up traf- fic so we could get through. A LONG DETOUR on a dirt road groaning under the load of rumbling lorries brought us into the little town of New Albany just across the river from the west end of Louisville. There's nothing more ghastly than a town in which there is no light. The only breaks in the darkness were a couple of electric lights outside the school house which were powered by a port- able generator. It's a very peculiar feeling to be racing down a darkened street and suddenly jam on the brakes as you slish out into anywhere from one to six feet of water. Even the Associated Press couldn't stop that. It could get us into a little green frame house near the high water mark, however, where by a flickering oil lantern we counted five bodies stretched out on a living room rug. Back in the brick school house that housed all the town's activity we found the telegraph sta- tion where refugees by the hundreds jammed in to get or send ten word messages. There was just one typewriter in the office, but the mention of "Associated Press" and it was ours for half an hour as we banged out a story that they cleared the wire for all the way to Indianapolis. * C * .* - FREE FOOD in the kitchen below was a matter of course, swell food. Eating side by side with negroes and hearded refugees, tight-lipped little children and courageous old river folk, you somehow forgot the fact that examinations are important. When human life and human morale hang in the balance in a great emergency, college classes lose their significance. There was more education to be gotten from a week in the flood area than in a year of college, and that's the truth. The (/P) combination sought lodging in three or four of the high and dry New Albany houses. Always we were asked in and offered coffee and dinner, but inasmuch as every house already had refugees sleeping on the floor, we finally stopped in at the Church of the United Brethren. Brother Walter, the pastor, and Brother Anson the janitor, gave us a couple of bunks for the night. Up at dawn the Associated Press sought out Major Warfel and obtained passes from him to be conveyed to Jeffersonville in a coast guard cutter. By this time it was light and Kennedy had unlimbered the camera. The coast guard boat was some twenty feet out from dry land and we had no boots. The Major saw our pre- dicament and realizing that it would never do to let the Associated Press get their feet wet, called the coast guard commander. Kennedy climbed on the commander and I climbed on the major and out we went, piggy-back, to the waiting boats. * * * * OVER TELEPHONE POLES, houses and finally out in the-river itself up to Jeffersonville we went where we helped move some 400 people im- prisoned in the Colgate factory there. Camera- man Kennedy was getting some swell shots. Over to Louisville we hiked from there where the mention of "Associated Press" got us into the worst part of the flooded area, where we crossed the supposedly closed pontoon bridge, where we saw the burial trenches in Save Hill cemetery, where we visited the typhoid wards of the hospitalized armory and watched them weed out the sick from the dead. "Associated Press" got us relief cars to carr 1 us wherever it was possible o get through, and finally it was "Associated Press" that got us safely back to New Albany in a little outboard after dark-that is the "Associated Press" and the grace of God. be the relation between the Supreme Court and our Civil Liberties? If the Court continues to leave our civil liberties jeopardized one of three things will happen: (1) The court can encour- age industrial tyranny to encroach upon political democracy (as when Judge Black of Flint sat in a case dealing with GM in which he owned THEATRE C oring Events By JAMES DOLL A FEW OF THE MANY events in the theatre as well as some of the lectures and concerts scheduled hereabouts during the next few weeks are listed here. Some other important plays coming here and to Detroit will be announced soon. CALENDAR Cass, now playing its final week, matinee Saturday only: On Your Toes, the satiric musical show, with Ray Bolger, Luella Gear, and Ta- mara Geva. Cinema Theatre, Detroit, now playing: Spain in Flames, actual scenes from the front. Full length picture with narrative in English. Continuous from noon daily. Federal Theatre, Detroit, 12th at Seward, opening Wednesday, Feb. 17 for two weeks: Martin Flavin's Around the Corner which Play Pro- duction did here before its recent: New York production under the title, The Good Old Summertime. Majestic, Feb. 17, 18, 19: MGM's Romeo and Juliet with Norma Shear- er, Leslie Howard, John Barrymore, Edna Mae Oliver, Basil Rathbone, C. Aubrey Smith. The first American picturization of a Shakespearean play to be taken seriously. Hill Auditorium, Wednesday, Feb. 17 at 4:15 p.m.: Arthur Poister, or- ganist of the University of Redlands. Organ recital. Natural Science Auditorium, Wed- nesday, Feb. 17 at 4:30 p.m.; Thurs- day the 18th at 7:30 p.m.: The Emer- gency Peace Campaign will show Dealers in Death a 4 reel picture about the munitions rackets. 10 cents admission. Mendelssohn, Thursday, Feb. 18 through the 20th at 8:15 p.m.: The Art Cinema League will bring Am- kino's Gypsies. Produced by Mezhra- pomfilm, Moscow, U.S.S.R. It tells in an entertaining way with stirring melodies the new life of the gypsies in the Soviet Union. Orchestra Hall, Detroit, Thursday, Feb. 18: Detroit Symphony Orches- tra, Georges Enesco, guest conductor and violin soloist. Beethoven's D Major . Concerto and Enesco's own symphony in E flat. Hill Auditorium, Friday, Feb. 19 at 8:15 p.m.: Captain Peter Freuch- en, technical director and actor in MGM's Eskimo; author; resident- governor of Thule Colony, Green- land, 1913-1919; will show still and motion pictures and lecture on Arctic Adventures. No admission charge. Orchestra Hall, Friday, Feb. 19: Ignatz Friedman, Piano recital. Mendelssohn, Friday, Feb. 20 at 3:30 p.m., Saturday the 21st at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m.: The Children's Theatre of Ann Arbor will present A Place to Play adapted from Ferenc Molnar's novel, The Paul Street Boys by Russell MacCracken, '84. Directed by Sarah Pierce. Hill Auditorium, Tuesday, Feb. 23: 1 Artur Schnabel, Piano recital by the greatest contemporary interpreter of the piano works of Beethoven. Chor- al Union Series. Hill Auditorium, John D. Craig Adventures Producing Thrill Movies, illustrated by his own Academy Award pictures. Oratorical Board Series. Mendelssohn, Saturday, Feb. 27 at 3:30 and 8:30 p.m.: The Tatterman Marionettes in Ibsen's Peer Gynt. Grieg's famous incidental music to the play will be played by the Univer- sity Symphony Orchestra with Earl V. Moore, conducting. Cass, opening Monday, March 1 for a week: Tallulah Bankhead in George Kelley's Reflected Glory. Mendelssohn, March 4, 5, 6: Art Cinema League will present Gau- mont-British's Nine Days a Queen. Paramout Theatre, Toledo, Thur- day, March 4: Katherine Hepburn in Jane Eyre. Dramatized from the Bronte novel by Helen Jerome. Theatre Guild Production. Mendelssohn, March 12, 13, mat- inee Saturday the 13th: The Hillel Players' production of They Too Arise by Arthur Miller, '38. Winner of Hopwood Award in 1936 and of a scholarship from the Bureau of New Plays. Frederic Crandall will direct. Britain To Inerease Armaments In 1938 LONDON, Feb. 16.-VP)~-A Gov- ernment white paper tonight' set an official estimate of $7,500,000,000 for Great Britain's rearmament program during the next five years. The white paper, on defense of the nation, announced the Govern- ment had ordered construction of three new capital ships and seven cruisers during the fiscal -year start- ing April 1, as the start of the vast schedule. Britons, already prepared for high- er income taxes in the next budget, believed their worst fears were con- firmed in the white paper's warning: "It would be imprudent to con- template a total expenditure for de- fense in the next five years of much less than 1,500,000,000 pounds ($7,- 500,000,000)." The official statement said1 Fh. (Continued from Page 2) be open to the public from 7:30 to 10, Friday evening, Feb. 19, to ob-, serve the moon. Children must be accompanied by adults. Announcement of the following prizes has been made: Loubat Prizes: Two prizes known as the Loubat Prizes of the value re- spectively of $1,000 and $400 are awarded at Commencement at the close of every quinquennial period, for the best work printed and published in the English language on the His- tory, Geography, Archaeology, Eth- nology, Philology, or Numismatics of North America. To be considered for the 1938 award, books must be pub- lished before Jan. 1, 1938. The com- petition is open to all persons, wheth- er connected with Columbia Univer- sity or not, and whether citizens of the United States of America or any other country. In accordance with the terms of the deed of gift, the successful coin- petitors are bound to furnish, free of charge to the University, five copies of the works for which the prizes are awarded. The jury of award.for the current period is as follows: Waldo G. Leland, Executive Direc- tor of the American Council of Learned Societies, Chairman. Carl L. Becker, Professor of Mod- ern European History in Cornell University. Robert H. Lowie, Professor of An- thropology in the University of Cali- fornia. Communications in regard to the Loubat Prizes should be addressed and works submitted in competition should besent to the Secretary of Columbia. University, New York City. Academic Notices English 47, Mr. Seager's section will meet at 11 a.m. MWF, 16 Angell Hall. Allan Seager. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructve notice to all members of the University Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30. 12:00 a m. on Saturday. inge may be elected by students who have not had the first semester's course. Two hours credit, Tuesday, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Mr. Irwin. Hygiene 109, Section 1, will meet Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 10 a.m. in the Natural Science Bldg., Room 4019. Chemistry 3: The make-up final examination for last semester, lecture sections I and II, will be held in Room 122 Chemistry Bldg., from 2 to 5 p.m., Feb. 24. Concerts Carrillon Recital: Wilmot F. Pratt, University Carillonneur, will give a recital on the Charles Baird Carillon in the Burton Memorial Tower, Thursday afternoon, Feb. 18, at 4:15 p.m. Twilight Organ Recital: Arthur W. Poister, Professor of organ, Univer- sity of Redlands, will appear in an organ recital this afternoon at 4:15 p.m., in Hill Auditorium. The general public, with the exception of small children, is in- vited without admission charge, but is respectfully requqested to be seated on time as the doors will be closed during numbers. English meets for gell Hall, ?32, Elizabethan Studies, organization in 2213, An- 4 p.m. today. M. P. Tilley. Tribute To Professor Reeves . .. English 31, Section 7, will meet in Room 1209 A.H. TThS 10. English 128: The class will meet in Room 35 A.H. (basement) instead of 2225 A.H. Earl L. Griggs. English 160 (Section 2) : The class will meet in Room 2225 A.H. instead of in Room 1209 A.H. Paul Mueschke. Playwriting (English 150): The class will meet next week Wednesday evening (Feb. 24) at 7:30 p.m., 3217 A.H., and thereafter on Monday eve- nings at 7:30 p.m., 3217 A.H. Sidney Howard's "Yellow Jack" is assigned for Wednesday. Kenneth Rowe. Psychology 32 meets on MF at 2 p.m. in Room 301 U.H. Psychology 106 meets on TTh at 10 a.m. in Room 307 W. Med. UNDER THE DIRECTION of its founder, Prof. Jesse S. Reeves, the political science9department has become recog- nized as one of the best in the universities of the country. Professor Reeves is a tradition at Michigan. His advice to the University has won him its gratitude and world renown as an authority in international law. By continuing on the polit- ical science faculty after his resignation as chair- ma of the department becomes effective, he is continuing to serve the University. The political science department, under Prof. Joseph R. Hayden, former vice-governor of the Philippine Islands, remains in unusually capable hands. THIS AFTERNOON in Natural Sci- ence Auditorium the Peace Coun- cil is presenting a motion picture entitled "Deal- ers in Death," which we wish to call to your at- tention. Generally, motion pictures or plays on peace have but a limited usefulness. They succeed in arousing an emotional reaction which evaporates with time and leads to no action. "Bury The Dead," when, it was produced here, made most of us- come away from the theatre burning with new hatred for war, but it failed to contribute to our understanding of its causes, and unless the emotion generated by the play was directed into action by some other agent, it was relatively useless. The picture being presented here today has been recommended as being analytical in char- acter, and of considerable interest. Moreover, its connection with the Peace Council's p:lan for the organization of a campus pressure group for peace recommends the project as one of the first specific proposals for effective utilization of campus anti-war sentiments. Dead End... ROADWAY has been witnessing 1)two plays, Dead End, and But For the Grace of God, which have been registering, each in its own way, a single appeal. Both voice the appeal for children of the streets who are Lectures University Lecture: Captain Peter Freuchen, Danish Arctic Explorer, will lecture on the subject "Arctic Adventure" at 8:15 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 19, in Hill Auditorium. The lecture will be illustrated by still and moving pictures. Admission free. The public is cordially invited. Lecture by Dr. George W. Crile: The Detroit Philosophical Society cordially invites the members of the faculty and the student body to at- tend an illustrated lecture by Dr. George W. Crile, of Cleveland, on "The Interpretation of Man" a, the next meeting of the society, which will be held Friday, Feb. 19, at 8:30 p.m., at the Hotal Statler in Detroit. Professor Kasimir Fajans will speak on "Einiges ueber den Aufbau der Materie" on Thursday, Feb. 18, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 2003 Angell Hall. This is the third of a series of five lectures sponsored by the Deutscher Verein. Members of the organization, advanced students of German and others .who are interested are in- vited to attend. Chemistry Lecture: Dr. R. E. Burk, of Western Reserve University, will lecture on "Polymerization" at 4:15 p.m., today in Room 303 of the Chem- istry Bldg. The lecture is under the auspices of the University and the American Chemistry Society. The public is cordially invited. Illustrated Lecture by Mr. James M. Plumer on "Art in Ancient China" in connection with the current Exhibi- tion of Chinese Art in the Archi- tectural School. Auditorium. ground floor of the Architectural Building, Friday, Feb. 19, at 4:15 p.m. Open to the public. The New World Civilization is the subject of a lecture to be given by Mrs. Marzieh Carpenter at the Mich- igan League Thursday evening at 8 p.m. The public is invited to this lecture sponsored by the Baha'i study group. Exhibitions An Exhibition 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 month of February. Illustrated lec- ture to be announced. The public is cordially invited. Exhibition of oil paintings by Karl Hofer, Alumhi Memorial Hall, Feb. 1-21, 2-5 daily including Sundays. Events Of Today Research Club will meetdingroom 2528 East Medical Buildfr to- day at 8:00 p.m. The fol- lowing papers will be presented: "New Material on the Career on Fran- cisco Vasquez de Coronado" by Pro- fessor Arthur S. Aiton; "Some Appli- cations of the Theory of Het Con- duction to Geologic Problems" by Pro- fessor T. S. Lovering. The Council will meet at 7:30. Luncheon for Graduate Stndents today at twelve o'clock i the Russian Tea Room of the Mich- igan League building. Cafeteria serv- ice. Bring tray across the hall. Pro- fessor Lawrence Preuss of the Politi- cal Science department will speal informally on "The Spanish Revolu tion and International Law." Tryouts for French Play: Tryouts for the French Play today and to- morrow, from 3 to 5 p.m. in Room 408, Romance Languages Bldg. Open to all students interested. Psychology 116 meets on MF ture), W or S (recitation) at 11 in Room 307 W. Med. (lec- a.m. Psychology 166 meets on MWF at 2 p.m. in Room 307 W. Med. Psychology of Management (122) meets on MF at 9 a.m. in Room 231 A.H. instead of in 3056 N.S. Scciology 169: Social Legislation (Mr. Fuller), This class will meet henceforth in Room 2225 Angell Hall. Sociology 51: Section I: (Mr. Ful- ler). This class will meet henceforth in Room 313 Haven Hall. Sociology 51: Section 5, Danhof, will meet from now on at 16 Angell Hall. I Mathematics 328: Seminar in Sta- tistics. A meeting to arrange hours will be held Thursday, at 4 p.m., in Rloom 3020 Angell Hall. Mathematics 3, ' Section 1, 9 a.m., M.W.F.S., will meet in Room 401 Mason Hall. Dr. Elder will be the instructor for this section. Mathematics 4, Section 1, 9 a.m., M.T.T.F., will meet in Room 404 Ma- son Hall. Dr. Myers. Mathematics 6, 9 a.m., Tu. Thurs., will meet in Room 401 Mason Hall. Dr. Elder. Mathematics 371: Seminar in Gen- eralizations of Analytic Functions. Meeting to arrange hours and work, today at 4 p.m., Room 3001 Angell Hall. French 202, Methods and Tools: The class will meet on Thursday af-