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April 02, 1937 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1937-04-02

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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Edited and managed by students of the University of
Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of
Student Publications.
Published every morning except Monday during the
University year and Summer Session
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
use for republication of all ews 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 mail, $450.
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTIING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Puisers Represetatie
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y.
CHICAGO . BOSTON - SAN FRANCISCO
LOS ANGELES PORTLAND SEATTLE
Board of Editors
MANAGING EDITOR................ELSIE A. PIERCE
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR .MARSHALL D. SHULMAN
George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey
Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins
NIGHT EDITORS: Joseph Mattes, William E. Shackleton,
Irving Silverman, William Spaller, Tuure Tenander,
Robert Weeks.
SPORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, chairman;
Fred DeLano. Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman, Carl
Gerstacker.
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wierfel chairman
Elizabeth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Hee~
Douglas, Barbara J. Tovell, Katherine Moore, Betty
Strickroot.
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, Marshall Sampson, Robert. Lodge, Bill
Newnan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles
Coleman, W, Layne, Russ Cole, Henry Homes,
Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries Jane
Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion
Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty
pavy, Helen Purdy, Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter,
Jean Rheinfrank. Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence
Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp.
Departmental Managers
J. Cameron Hall, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore,
National Aivertising and Circulation Manager; Don J.
Wilsher. Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local
Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service
Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class-
ified, Advertising Manager.
NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WEEKS
Problems OfThe
Housing Committee. .
A N ELOQUENT COMMENTARY
on the rooming situation in Ann
Arbor was the discovery by the Centennial-Com-
mittee that many rooms in which students are
now living are such that they cannot be used
by visitors to the Centennial celebration in June.
The crowded quarters-the closets that have,
under pressure, been converted into dormitories
-testified to the Committee once again that
Michigan needs dormitories for men, and needs
them soon-not dormitories for a handful of two
hundred, but for at least a thousand. The build-
ings now being erected on Madison Street will
not appreciably affect the crowded conditions
next fall, but they will at least indicate the di-
rection in which we can move if our need is
sufficiently publicized.
The committee not only found that it could
not house visitors in a large number of roomng
houses, but it also faces the difficulty that it can
get cooperation from fess than half of the fra-
ternities and sororities.
At the beginning of the year, Prof. Philip
Bursley, chairman of the Centennial housing
committee, requested each fraternity and soror-
ity, through the Interfraternity Council and the
Panhellenic Association, to inform the Univer-
sity .what accommodations would be available in
their houses-even for their own chapter alumni
-during the Centennial week, and to appoint
someone to handle the room arrangement in
each house.
Of the 78 fraternities and sororities on cam-
pus, only 32 have replied to the request.
Since the Committee is but asking that the
houses help to aceommodate at least their own
alumni, the request seems reasonable and seems
deserving of more prompt attention. Their re-
fusal thus far to accept this responsibility has
meant that the Committee, in an effort to meet
the requests fast pouring in, is obliged to look
outside of Ann Arbor for accommodations of
guests.

Millions Under Arms
(From the Detroit News)
THE THEORY is expounded from time to time
by our more bellicose fellow citizens that the
way to insure peace is to arm for it.
A report just .received from Geneva says 8,-
200,000 men now are under arms throughout the
world, comparing with 6,500,000 under arms in
1931-32.
If the theory above-mentioned is correct, thee,
world's chances for peace are better now than
they were five years ago. We doubt it, and
so do British insurance men whp underwrite pol-
icies on such matters.
Of course, ourbellicose gentlemen will explair
that what they refer to is not the arming of
ALL nations, but the arming of OUR OWN

THEC'FORUM
That Onion Germ-Killer
To the Editor:
Contemporary admits upon its cover that it is
Michigan's Literary Magazine. The essays are
good to the last cedilla and the reviews are
timely and fearless. These features make each
issue worth the small sum (20c or 25c, depend-
ing) asked for it.
On the whole, Contemporary poetry is ex-
ecrable. When Leo Kirschbaum tucked his
tongue in his cheek and gave us "Two roses and
a key" it was fun; campus parodists pounced
upon it and a good time was had by all, including
the author. By continuing to publish stuff of
that character Contemporary deliberately yawns
in the faces of its readers.
The lion and the lizard keep the court
Where Jamshyd played.
Without readers Contemporary will become as
Tempest, Inlander, and many another little
magazines which died to make verse free.
Poetry worthy of the name should have the
beauty of truth or the beauty of music. Good
poetry will have both. If that be a dependable
standard, then there is more poetry in the fol-
lowing sentence quoted from Science News Letter
than in the whole current number of Contempo-
rary,
"The germ-killer from onions
is allyl aldehyde."
It goes smoothly on the tongue; it begins with
a capital and ends with a period; it is novel, true,
and timeless.
-Norman Mning.
The Great Wall Of America
To the Editor:
A few thousand years ago, the people of China
built a wall around their state and 'cut off all
communication with the outer world, believing
that they were the acme of all culture and knowl-
edge, and that, if any further advancements
were to be made, it would be from within. China
had nothing to gain from intercourse with the
lesser breeds. Mongolians were supreme.
Many centuries later, the lesser breeds dis-
covered China, and having blown away the dust
of the ages from her culture, made it possible
that she might arise like the Phoenix from the
ashes of her dead civilization.
We, like the Chinese, know all there is to know.
We are the race of supermen. With a w'all of
prejudice and discrimination stronger than
China's stone wall, we close out all races other
than our own.
We, the blessed nordics, dare not break bread
or bathe on the same beach with a member
of any other race. Black and Jew alike, we must
exclude those who might add to our knowledge
and culture, or extend the boundaries of our
narrow concepts. For are we not the true
Aryans of America?
In this smug little university world of ours,
the benefits of a cosmopolitan atmosphere are
brought to -us by a few hundred Chinese, Hin-
dus, Japanese, Hawaiians, and other races, not
forgetting our own Jews and Negroes. These
possible treasures of human relationship are
brought to use from all over the globe, only to
be scorned and discarded because of the narrow
confines of our inner beings. We measure peo-
ple, but not by what they are worth to civ-
ilization, but by the money in their poke, the
color of their skin, or the shapes of their
noses.
Let us reenact the age-old play, so recently re-
vived at Northwestern. Jews and Negroes are
not our equals. If a just God would only tell us
how much they are our superiors.
-A Son of the American Revolution.
Silver Platters And Gold Leaves
To the Editor:
The letter appearing in this morning's paper
concerning the Michiganensian can easily be
broken into three parts, first an attack on

the letter which the 'Ensian sent to the parents
of seniors; second, a tirade at the modern col-
lege, having nothing to do with the 'Ensian;
and third, a statement that he does not care
to purchase a Michiganensian, which is after all,
a tenable opinion but not news worthy enough
to write a letter about.'
In the first place the writer has apparently
read into a gift suggestion letter all the best
features of a prying income tax report. From
a perusal of the context it is difficult to conceive
how he could have construed it as :an en--
croachment upon the personal life of the student,
or how it could bring "unwelcome inquiries into
our financial status." The letter was, after all,
a confidential communication to the parents of
the seniors, and not a billboard ad. We merely
described the product we had to offer, informed
the parent that his son or daughter had not
bought one, and then suggested that here above
all things else was the ideal inexpensive grad-
uation present. How such an appeal could be
considered as out of the way is beyond us.
As to the second point, the ranting at "Joe
College" and "J-Hop Mame," may we merely say
that such characters do exist and when they
do, we record their activities as well as those
of every other student. If he does not care
to bereminded of these characters, then he has a
complaint against the American college, and not
the Michiganensian.
R. S. has made one interesting suggestion, that
of offering the 'Ensians on a silver platter. We
had not considered that method of sales pro-
motion, but we have decided instead to put
Ano h- c.4-n nnf '.c.non 'Vi n 1 rla f nn o h1, .ic nnlr

BENEATH ****
******# IT ALL
*By Bonth William
EVERY YEAR has its inveterate letter writer
who is willing to pass his revolutionary brain
children on to anybody, gratis, for the glory of
seeing them in print.
Last fall the 1936-37 enthusiast started out
with a tirade directed at George Andros on just
what was wrong with the football situation-
which Andy promptly dropped into the waste
basket as idiotic.
Next came a letter to me from the same gentle-
man, offering one of those All-American funny
name football teams-one of which had run on
the sport page two days before. This also to
the waste basket.
Despairing of The Daily, our correspondent,
now offers this to the Gargoyle which I found
crumpled up under the editor's desk.
Dear Sir:
If you can use the following I can use
the Life Savers, if not pass it on to the
waste basket columnist, Bonth Williams.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Ed. Slezak.
A professor in Psychology experiments on
a half-asleep student.
Prof.: "Do you know who is talking to
you?"
Student: "Yes, Professor."
Prof.: "Am I fair by asking questions in
the condition you are in?"
Student: "You are.,,
Prof.: "What do squirrels eat?"
Student: "Nuts."
Prof.: "Answer with one word what the
squirrels did with the shells of the nuts to
get at the food."
Student: "Cracked."
Prof.: "How do you feel after this exam?"
Student: "Dizzier than ever."
Add the answers in the order given by
the student for the results.
* * *
Anything to oblige you, Ed. old kid. I get,
"Yes, Professor, you are nuts, cracked, DIZZIER
THAN EVER"-and life savers are still a nickel
a pack.
BENEATH IT ALL: Johnny Bethuram came to
the aid of the Boxing Show yesterday when
he got the industrial heavyweight champion of
Flint to fight Don Siegel in the Fresh Air Show.
Johnny Sumner, that dignitary, works in the
Chevrolet Assembly plant and when a sit-down
occurred htere early yesterday-morning, it looked
as if the feature attraction would have to be
called off . . . Charles Jackson, music critic of
Judge calls "I Lost My Love in the Ohio Flood"
the best song title of the year . . . Dorie Bolton,
Pi Phi sophomore, is a skilled master at char-
coal portraits and has done a marvelous one of
Bill Watson, Michigan's record breaking shot
putter, for the 1937 'Ensian.
Walker Graham and Grete Holst, Theta from
the Virgin Islands, take their breakfast almost
every morning in the Arboretum . . . One morn-
ing they munched on egg sandwiches, pecan
rolls, and coffee at 7:30 a.m. and watched the
fog lift as the sun climbed higher into the
heavens. With a sigh Grete put the truck back
in the hamper and they trudged back to eight
o'clocks . . . Charlie Doukas, prop. of the Es-
quire shoppe, had his sign printed without the
"E.' Because on the magazine of the same name
the "E" is always printed in a different color,
Charlie thought it wasn't part of the word, rumor
the Theta Chi's . . . Consumer's Union reports
that only one electric razor is any good at alli
That is Shick, and it is far from the boon to
man which the ads would have us think. It takes
the average person a little longer to shave with
a Shick, it will not shave as close as a blade,
and for $15 (the stipend demanded) you can
buy enough-soap and blades to last from 6-10
years ...
THIS MORNING'S POST brought a letter from
a former Daily Great and a much better
columnist than yours truly. Years ago Barton

Kanq' and Carl Forsythe regaled the Campus
breakfast table with their "Toasted Rolls" and
brought down the House.
I am more than grateful for their interest
in this column and their continued regard for
The Daily and Michigan.
Dear Bonth:
Having enjoyed your column for so long a,
time, I feel I may venture just one criticism,
one which represents not only my own feel-
ings but also those of other graduates here in
New York.
You can imagine how we felt-and what
the other boys in the publishing game said
-when the World Telegram carried on its
front page a story about the "most beauti-
ful" man on campus being picked out in Ann
Arbor. Fun is fun, and you can't beat it, as
Carl Forsythe and I used to propound in our
undergraduate days, Uut when it causes our
University to be subjected to ridicule, it's
just horse-play. It probably afforded you
and the 150-odd voters no end of fun at the
expense of the candidates, but do you want
Michigan= to sink to the classification. of
"rah-rah" institutions so typical of the rest
of the Middle West?
Sincerely and with best wishes in all other
respects,
Barton Kane.
SILENT DRAMA was enacted in the Bell Tues-
day night when, according to my informers,
Dean Alice Lloyd paid that establishment her
first visit. Together with a party of other Uni-
versity matrons, the Dean enjoyed a delicious
steak dinner, but was observed to 0112ff none of

MUSIC ADAILY OFFICI
Publication in the ulletin is con
Harp Ensemble untU 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.
A MUSICAL program of a type in-
frequqently heard will be pre- FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1937
sented in the School of Music Audi-! VQ. XLVII No. 133
torium this evening at 8:15 p.m. byo
the Harp Department of the School
of Music, under the direction of Mary: To The Members of the Faculty of
Jane Clark. The first portion of the the Collge of Literature, Science and
program will consist of unison play- the Arts: The sixth regular meeting
ing by five harpists, including Miss ing of the faculty of College of Lit-
Clark, in: the Song of the Volga erature, Science and the Arts for the
Boatman, arranged for harp by Car- academic session of 1936-37 will be
los Salzedo; three Short Stories by held in Room 1025 Angell Hall, April
Salzedo, "Night Breeze," "Pirouetting Hall, April 5, 1937, at 4:10 p.m.
Music Box," and "Behind the Bar- Agenda:
racks"; and Fraicheur, also by Sal- 1. Adoption of the minutes of the
zedo, in which a fresh, cool wind is meeting of March 1, 1937, which have
represented in contrast to the bal- been distributed by campus mail
mier Night Breeze. The difference in (pages 325-330).
effect is obtained mainly through 2. Reports:
plucking the strings with the nails a. Executive Committee by Prof.
instead of the fleshy tip of the finger, Arthur A. Aiton.
thus producing a harder, colder tone. b. University Council, by Prof.
The second part of the program Louis I, Bredvold.,
will consist of three solos by Miss c. Executive Board of the Grad-
Clark: an arrangement of Handel's uate School, by Prof. F. E. Bartell.
Harmonious Blacksmith, and two im- d. Advisory Committee on Univer-
pressionistic pieces by Salzedo, Mk! sity Affairs, by Prof. Preston Slosson.
rage and Introspection. Carlos Sal- e. Dean's Conference, by Dean E.
zedo is perhaps the leading harp per- H. Kraus.
former, teacher, and composer of 3. Announcements and new busi-
today, and is at present connected ness.
with the Curtis Institute of Music in A full attendance at this meeting
Philadelphia. The remaining portion is desired.
of the program comprises Two Noes Edward H. Kraus.
of Tournier, Lake Louise by Andre
Kostelanetz, Debussy's Sunken Ca- Students, College of Literature,
thedral, and two Negro Spirituals, Science, and the Arts: Except in ex-
with each harpist playing a separate trardinary circumstances, courses
part. dropped after Friday, April 9, will be
_-cOrded with a grade of E.
T E C R College of Architecture, Midsemes-
ir ti eLrR eports: Instructors are request-
II _ed to report any student whose work
is unsatisfactory. Cards for this pur-
Nanc Steele Is Missing pose may be obtained from the Of-
fice of the College of Architecture,
AT THE MICHIGAN Room 207 Arch., or from the Regis-

THIS is a strange picture, but it is
one not to be missed. Its story'
is complex but its treatment gives it
a dramatic power that marks it as
exceptional.
Victor MacLaglen is an Irish sol-
diers who has been through part of
the World War. As revenge upon all
that war implies, he kidnaps the
daughter of America's munitions
king, before this country's entry in-
to the war. On another charge, hav-
ing no connection with the kidnap-
ping, he is put in prison, and because
of a jail break he is given a life term.
His cell mate, Peter Lorre, discovers
enough of MacLaglen's secret to
know that his career is worth follow-
ing. Twenty years later MacLaglen'
is released, and the kidnapped girl
warmly accepts him as her father.
Eventually the whole truth comes
out, and MacLaglen again goes to
prison.
The story is heavy, but it has a
significance that should make an
audience think. It is handled with-
out the bitterness and melodrama
that might have ruined it. Despite its
complexity it is real, and therefore
powerful.
The acting of Victor MacLaglen is
splendid for its intensity and reality
-it is of Informer worth. Peter Lorre
turns out a performance that will
grip you for its technical excellence.
June Lang is sincere as the daughter.
The scene of war hysteria inside of
the prison is a high spot of the film.
You may not enjoy Nancy Steele is
Missing but you will appreciate its
significance.
-C.M.T.
Roosevelt, Old
Friend At odds
On Court lPlan
Wheelers Says Plan Will
Impair Independents Of
Judiciary Branch
WASHINGTON, April 1.-(!)--.
President Roosevelt and his old lib-
eral ally, Senator Wheeler (Dem.,
Mont.), struck opposing blows in the
Supreme Court conflict tonight.
Mr. Roosevelt hammered away at
his contention that a liberal inter-
pretation of the Constitution is
aecessary to permit federal action
upon changing problems.
The Montana senator suggested
that, if the President's proposal to
reorganize the high tribunal is adopt-
ed, the court's independence will be
impaired.-
He lashed out also at Mr. Roose-
velt's recommendation to bring the
Interstate Commerce Commission
and other independent federal agen-
cies within presidential jurisdiction.
The forum for these discussions
was a celebration of the fiftieth
birthday of the Interstate Commerce
Commission. Neither the President
nor Wheeler was present, but their
communication were read.
The President's letter said one
smiles today at "the dire predictions
made by certain obviously selfish in-
terests" when the law providing for
regulation of interstate commerce
was enacted.
Railroad presidents predicted panic

[AL BULLETIN
nstrctive no ice to all members of te
ce* rt the &&,Aqtant to thO Pr d4ot

labor legislation

tar's Office, Room 4 U.H. These
cards should be filled in and returne e
to the Office of the College of Archi-
tecture not later than April 7.
School of Music, Midsemester Re--
ports: Instructors are requested to
report any student whose work is un-
satisfactory. Cards for this purpose
may be obtained from the Office of
the School of Music, 108 S.M., ort
from the Registrar's Office, Room 4
U.H.. These cards should be filled
in and returned to the Office of the
Echool of Music not later than April
(7.
School of Forestry and Conserva-
tion, Midsemester Rcports Instruc
tors are requested to report any stu-
dent whose work is unsatisfactory.
Cards for this purpose may be ob-
tained from the Office of the School
of Forestry and Conservation, 2048
N.S., or from the Registrar's Office,
Room 4 U.H. These cards should be
filled in and returned to the Office of
the School of Forestry and Conser-
vation not later than April 7.
Junior Mechanical Engineers: Due
to the fact that there may be several
summer jobs open, you are requested
to fill out a personnel recgrd card
at your earliest convenience. Room
221 West Engineering Bldg.
To Students Having Library Books:
1. Students having in their pos-
session books drawn from the Univer-
sity Library are notified that such
books are due Monday, April 5, before
the impending Spring Vacation, in
pursuance of the Regents' re'gula-
tion:
"Students who leave Ann Arbor for
an absence of more than a week must
first return all borrowed books."
2. Failure to return books before
the vacation will render the student
liable to an extra fine.
3. Students who have special need
for certain books between April 5 and
the beginning of the vacation may
retain such books by applying at the
Charging Desk on April 5.
4. Students who have urgent need
for certain books during the vacation,
will be given permission to draw these
books, provided they are not in gen-
eral demand, on application at the
Charging Desk after April 5.
The University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Information
has received announcements of Unit-
ed States Civil Service Examinations
for junior engineer (naval architec-
ture), Navy Department, salary, $2,-
000; for -ssociate and assistant tech-
nical analyst, (optional branches--
Coast Al umni Plan
Spring Programs
Alumni of the University on the
Pacific coast are planning a series of
programs in connection with the visit
of the Michigan track team during
the Spring Vacation, T. Hawley Tap-
ping, general secretary of the Alumni
Association, announced yesterday.
Saturday morning, April 17, a dis-
trict meeting, attracting alumni from
all of the coast states will be held at
Berkley Calif., preceding the track
meet between the University and the
University of California.
The track team will spend several
days in Los Angeles before going to

and administration

and industrial employment prob-
lems), Bureau of Unemployment
Compensation, Social Security Board,
salaries, $2,600 to $3,200, and for
curriculum specialist and textbook
writer (mathematics), also textbook
writer and,curriculum research work-
er, office of Indian Affairs, Depart-
ment of Interior, salaries, $2,600 to
$3,800. For further information con-
cerning these examinations call at
201 Mason Hall, office hours, 9 to 12
a.m. and 2 to 4 p.m.
William W. Bishop, Librarian.
Summer Camp Counsellors: Appli-
cation blanks have been received by
the Bureau from Chippewa Valley
Camp, Brecksville, Ohio, and are
available for those interested. Posi-
tions are open to both Negro and
White students, and the need is most-
ly for men this season. Announce-
ments are on file at the Bureau, 201
Mason Hall.
University Bureau of Appointments.
Academic Notices
Sociology 132 (Poverty and De-
pendency): Field trip to Wayne
County Training School leaves the
Michigan Union promptly at 9:15
Saturday morning. Saturday quizz
sections will not meet.
Playwriting (English 150): Read
"Tobacco Road" by Jack Kirkland
and Erskine Caldwell and write a
paper on it for Monday, April 5.
Kenneth Rowe,
Concerts
School of Music Concert: The
University Symphony Orchestra, Earl
V. Moore, conductor; assisted by Was-
sily Besekirsky, violinist; Hans
Pick, violoncelist; an d Joseph
Brinkman, pianist, of the School of
Music faculty; and John Krell, flu-
tist and Karl Farr, clarinetist, both
students; will give a concert in Hill
Auditorium Sunday afternoon, April
4, at 4:15 p.m., to which the general
public, with the exception of small
children, is invited.
Lectures
Mathematics Lecture: Prof. J. D.
Tamarkin of Brown University will
lecture on "Extension of the Mark-
off Theorem" Saturday, April 3, in
Room 3011 Angell Hall at 11 p.m
Events Today
The University- Oratorical Contest
will be held this afternoon at 4 p.m.
in Room 4203 Angell Hall. All per-
sons interested are cordially invited.
Esperanto: The Esperanto Class
will meet in Room 1035 Angell Hall
from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today.
King Henry the VIII tonight and
tomorrow presented by Play Produc-
tion at the Mendelssohn Theatre. Re-
duced prices Saturday matinee. Box
office now open. Phone 6300.
Lutheran Student Choir: Special
rehearsal for the small chorus this
evening at 7:30 p.m. at Trinity Lu-
theran Church, 5th and William
Streets. No rehearsals on Sunday.
Presbyterian Students and their
friends are cordially invited to be on
hand at Lane Hall tonight at 8 p.m.
to join in an old-fashioned "box-so-
cial." Girls are to bring boxes con-
taining lunch for two. Boxes will be
auctioned off to the highest bidder.
Games! Competition! Fun! Be sure
to come. Remember the date-Fri-
day from 8 till 12 p.m.
The Disciples of Christ Student
Guild will sponsor a "game night" in
the recreation hall at the church,
Hill and Tappan Sts., this evening

from 8 until 11 p.m. Ping-pong,
shuffleboard, darts, quiet games,
group singing, and special musical
numbers will provide a variety of
entertainment. All students regard-
less of religious affiliation are cordial-
ly invited. Come and meet some new
friends.
Co1111.11 Events
Graduate Outing Club: Trip to
Camp Newkirk in Dexter is planned
for Sunday afternoon. Group leaves
Lane Hall at 2:30 p.m. There will be
baseball, soccer, and hiking followed
by a campfire program in the eve-
ning. Refreshments will be served.
All graduate students are cordially
invited.
Faculty, School of Education: The
regular meeting of the Faculty will
be held Monday noon, April 5, at 12
o'clock, at the Michigan Union.
The U. of M Outdoor Club will
hold a hike on Saturday afternoon,
April 3, leaving Lane Hall at 2 p.m.
and returning at about 5 p.m. All
interested students are cordially in-
vited to attend.

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