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April 06, 1937 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1937-04-06

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THE MNICHIGAN DAILY

CHIGAN DAIL

Y

- S
--t
l ea-'
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 news dispatches credited to
it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.. All
rights of republication o all other matter herein also
reserved.,
Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as
second class mail matter.
Subscriptionsduring regular school year by carrier,
$4.00; by mail, $4.50.
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936.37
RPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publishers Representative
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 Spller, Tuure Tenander,
Robert Weeks.
SPORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, chairman;
FredDelano Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman, Carl
Gerstacker.
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wuerfel chairman;
Elizabeth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen
Douglas, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty
Strickroot.
Business Department
BUSINESS MANAGER .......:.........JOHN R. PARK
ASSOCIATE BUSINES MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ......JEAN KEINATH
BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy
Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Hobert Lodge, Bill
Newnan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles
Coleman, W. Layne, Russ Cole, Henry Homes,
Women'srBusiness Alssistants: Margaret FerriesiJane
Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion
Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty
Davy, Helen Purdy, MarthaHankey, Betsy Baxter,
Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence
Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp.
Departmental Managers
J. Cameron Hall, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore.
National Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J.
Wilsher. Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local
Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service
iManager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class-
ified Advertising Manager,
NIGHT EDITOR: TUURE TENANDER
Life
Insurance . .
AT ONE OF THE THEATRES this
week the newsreel carries a brief
reminder that just twenty years ago this week
the United States was entering the great fiasco.
A series of graphic shots portray the message
to Congress, the declaration of war, President
Wilson, blindfold, picking draft numbers out of
a jar, and a thousand young men, our age, leav-
ing their jobs and school to train in barracks
(and that was fun) to go overseas (singing
"There's a Long, Long Trail Awinding" was also
fun) and to go into action at Argonne (positively
killing), then a long shot of "row on row" ..
Ordinarily this would have been the end. They
are dead. We cherish their memory, pooi' fel-
lows. (It'll be nice to be called "por fellow.")
But the interesting feature of the newsreel was
that tiis was not the end. Further pictures
showed youths in colleges expressing in no un-
certain terms their opposition to war as an in-
strument in the modern world. Students were
shown assembled in front of their schools, dis-
cussing the causes of war, and-perhaps some-
what optimistically-its cure.
This was something new and encouraging. War
will not be eliminated simply because a half mil-
lion college students demonstrate against it, but

in order that its causes may, be understood, that
propagandistic methods may be less availing,
people have to care about war, have to think
about it, and one way at least of making them
think about it is to have a half million potential
lambs bleat against the sacrifice.
There were people who opposed war before
1914. They went down like straw huts in a heavy
wind.'- Will these five hundred thousand young
men and women be signing on the dotted line
when the bugler warms up, too?
They will if they have done nothing but dem-
onstrate.
The student strike for peace means more than
generating emotion by speeches, by music. This
kind of emotion is easily aroused, and can be
more easily aroused against peace than for it.
Even at best it evaporates with time. In order
to be effective, these demonstrations must arouse
feeling which leads to action, and must define
that action. It is the function of these student
demonstrations against war to encourage more
people to interest themselves in the cause of
peace, to instruct them in the present state of
those factors which endanger peace, and to
suggest to them specific roads of action to make
peace more of a reality.
If the student peace demonstration to be
held here April 22 does less than this, then we
will be missing one hour of classes for nothing.
But if it can get across to the ten thousand
students who ought to be assembled there the
idea that such measures as the Nye-Kvale Bill,
Secretary Hull's, reciprocal trade agreements,
and some aspects of the Pittman Neutrality Bill,
ought to be supported, such measures as the Hill-

THE FORUM
Lettrs ublshe inthis column should not be
construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The
Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded.
The names of communicants will, however, be regarded
as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked
to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense
all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or
reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial
importance and interest to the campus.
Sheriff Andres Pro Again
To the Editor:
Either Art Miller didn't see the Washtenaw
election returns or else he doesn't believe that
such an affront to the Roosevelt deity is possible,
but for his benefit I'll point out the county did,
as a matter of fact, vote Republican from Pres-
ident down to coroner, drain commissioner, (an
important office since it leads to the lieutenant-
governorship), and the rest of the county offices.
I'm not quite clear as to whether he thinks
that Washtenaw County workers will or will
not sit down of their own accord, but it is my
contention that, they do not want to, although
outside organizers, yes, the "radical political-
gangster type," want to make them do it, and
here is part of the proof:
(1) Carpenters at work on the State Savings
Bank Building remodelling on Main Street were
ordered to sit down by William Lalond, business
manager for southeastern Michigan for the Car-
penter's Union. The reason for this order to
local workers was that the Detroit general con-
tractor, James A. Moynes, was employing as
foreman a non-union Detroit man, Joh Seiler,
whose work had been satisfactory to Moynes for
eight years, if not to Mr. Lalond. The local
men voted to continue working in defiance of
the orders from Union headquarters.
(2) At a recent closed meeting of University
Hospital workers in the Labor Temple down-
town, a part-time student worker arose and
urged some 150 gathered there to stage a sit-
down without warning, and then present de-
mands. Several of the fulltime workers replied
that "this fellow is a part-time worker, and in
a couple of years he'll graduate and join the
very forces we're trying to combat. What right
has he got to try and jeopardize our future posi-
tions. We don't feel he belongs in this meeting."
(3) An otherwise unemployed organizer told
me two weeks ago that CIO in Detroit, with
whom he is affiliated, had promised him 5,000
men if he could find a pretext for a strike at
a local plant employing 1,200, which -he is at
present attempting to organize. A girl operator
at the same plant who had been discharged
for undependability warned the company offi-
cials that unidentified organizers had told her
that if she did as she was told they would get
her job back for her by "pulling a strike." In
this same plant a committee of workers came
to the manager and told him that the next
time he let a union representative into the
plant to talk to the workers they would throw
the union man out.
There are but three samples of the sentiment
of Washtenaw County labor and of outside ef-
forts to organize it. It is against the possibility
of those 5,000 "sympathizers," or, shall we say,
"persuaders" from Detroit that Sheriff Andres
will direct his so-called "punitive force" if the
court directs him to do so.
As to the legality of the court order against the
sit-down, there can be little doubt, but the non-
enforcement of that legalty in recent strikes
makes such forces as the veterans' military police
necessary.
-Clinton B. Conger.
Come Over And Help
To the Editor:
I want first to tell you I deeply appreciated
your very excellent editorial as of Sunday, April
4, entitled "Students and the CIO."
I am not a labor-organizer, nor a worker in
any capacity in any labor union. My abilities,
whatever their force, are not, I think, those
which would justify my choice of that work as
my vocation. But as a student of social move-
ments and problems I have watched closely and
tried to understand the growing labor move-
ment, all this year.
It seems to me that the CIO labor movement
while wisely and necessarily militant in the ex-

plicitness of its demands and the methods it has
used to achieve them, exemplifies at the same
time an admirable saneness and self-control. A
labor organization comprising scores of thou-
sands of workers, both men and women, acting
with judicious avoidance of violence to property
and life is certainly far preferable to the labor
movements this country has had heretofore.
Most of the credit for both the humaneness of
its methods and its insistent power are, in my
estimate, due to the able direction of John L.
Lewis and his many capable assistants such as
(in Michigan) Homer Martin and the three
Reuther brothers. It is no inconsequential thing
that an economic system should so rapidly and
with so little overt destructiveness be readjust-
ing to new conditions and new needs.
Labor's great need for college trained men
to interpret it to itself and to the public, for
research, facti and news-dissemination, and
bargaining" is, as you point out, patent to all
interested persons. There are, as you not,, some
students here who have done more than simply
try to understand what the thing is all about.
The spirit of the labor movement has, like the
religious. revivals of other days, caught them
up into devotion to an ideal of human betterment
-betterment in a form more consistent with
modern industrial life. Again like religion, the
labor movement challenges these students to risk
their lives in its cause. No one knows what great
opportunities, if any, are ahead in this work.
America has always been willing and able to
venture her path of progress into uncharted
areas, and there are evidences, I think, that it
- will be so in the labor movement. The spirit
of fraternization among workers of many creeds
and colors which met the observer in the

BENEATH ****
*** ITALL
SUNDAY NIGHT The Bell becomes a sort of
haven with an atmosphere of homey comfort
and friendliness as a half a hundred week-end
weary glad makers congregate to sip a brew
or three and prolong the interval between them
and dark blue Monday.
The tension of Friday and Saturday night is
missing, the semi-abandon, the raucousness of
tone, the urge to drink and do is gone. Irv and
Pete and Freddie and the host of other, white-
coated fetchers of the amber move more leis-
urely. Dick stands behind the cashier and bangs
dime after dime; if he stands on his tip toes he
can just see' what's going on over the no sale
button.
At the door Johnny, genial and obliging,
stands looking speculatively out over the throng,
ready to bring a table out of nowhere to oblige
an old customer or make a friend of a new.
Surveying it all, the line of white coated wait-
ers at the bar, the entrance and exit of party
after party, the murmuring buzz of a great host
of voices is Ralph in his big chair. Portly and
genial, Ralph is the very spirit of The Bell.
With a word and nod for everyone he keeps an
eagle eye on the entire assembly, his kitchen
and his bar and still finds time to make sporadic
trips around the floor to see that everything
is jake and greet the latest arrivals.
Sunday night the most faithful of the old
guard fill The Bell. The seniors and lawyers and
medics are there, not to guzzle but to enjoy the
suds and the atmosphere and the companionship
which the Bell always affords. Chairs shuffled
back and forth as parties meet and combine, and
girls and boys rise to go their separate ways and
return to sip some more.
A bell pongs lustily as another keg is tapped.
Smiles and good natured laughter accentuate a
feeling of jovial comfort and contentment of a
Sunday night. "There is a telephone call for . .
SPORTS NOTES: Well the battling Bengals
finally sold Aloysius Simmons to somebody
and that, the Griffs, belonging to Foxy Clark
Griffith of Warshington. The Tiges lost at least
$60,000 on the, deal. They bought the slow-
footed Polish center gardner when what they
were most in need of was a good pitcher. With
the same gone-for-ever-bucks they very prob-
ably could have lured the wily Cubs into parting
with Lon Warneke, who has a lot left despite
a doubtful arm . . . The high flying Red Wings
will steam into the Garden across from Jack
Dempsey's notorious Gotham eating spot tonight
to attempt to subdue the ambitions of the up
and coming New York Rangers. Lester Patrick's
boys have hoisted themselves up from third place
in the American Division to the Stanley Cup
finals through the great performance of a kid
line and the acrobatics of Davie Kerr, Ranger
net minder. Incidentally, tonight's game in the
City of Seven Million will be the last chance
New Yorkers will. get to see their stalwarts in
action. The circus is coming to town and the
ice must go. Consequently all of us lucky fellows
who are vacationing in this neck of the woods
will get a chance to see the World Series of
hockey from the rafters of Detroit's Olympia ...
Phil Haughey, senior architect and president of
the Clan Psi U, will not make the trip east to
the ivied walls of Yale and New Haven for the
national A.A.U. swimming meet despite the fact
that he is a ranking diver on Matt Mann's great
tank squad. School means too much to the
ex-Eagle scout who once won a trip to Australia.
Instead Phillippe will remain in the vicinity of
Battle Creek and Ann Arbor doing sketches and
tiying to win another trip this summer-this
one to Europe.
. ,* * *
BENEATH IT ALL: Ralph Thomas will take
the last leap very soon, with an heiress, his
old friends intimate . . Bill Morgenthaler was
the spirit of spring who attended the Alpha Rho
Chi party Friday night attired in a girdle, a
bucket for a topper, and a fur benney . . . Bob
Hendrix is keeping himself busy driving a Red

Arrow Cab for Bill Wagner. . . And his frat bro.,
Bob Ewell, is learning to fly at the local airport,
but still has the unfortunate habit of kicking the
wrong rudder bar . . . The service in The Book
is no better as a result of the now-you-see-us and
now-you-don't policy of the dissatisfied em-
ployees. More detectives look more uncomfort-
able in more ill-fitting suits of evening clothes
in the Book Lobby than they would at a precinct
captain's testimonial dinner . . . Harvey Patton
has quit the ardors of the law for the ardors
of the Detroit News City Desk . . . Foster's, the
new spot just out of town, is likely to prove
a pretty popular rendezvous for Campus folk as
spring and warm weather progresses . . . Max
Hodge has done a swell cover for this month's
Gargoyle showing one hundred years of progress
... with a punch. . . Milt Woodward, ace Con-
ference sports columnist, was stuck up and
robbed in a Harlem apartment house by a pair
of gunmen who relieved him of his watch and
a two dollar bet . . . and speaking of New York,
the current Minsky show now running there is
entitled, "Oh, Sweet Strippery of Life" . . . Jack
Johnson, ex-colored heavyweight titleholder, has
embittered his race against him forever by
picking Jim Braddock over Joseph Louis when
and if those two gallant pugilists ever meet face
to face . . . Eloise Martin, Delta Gamma who
skyrocketed to fame as the typical Drake co-ed
and D. G. is now billed at the Hollywood Restau-
rant on Times Square as Heloise, an alteration
undoubtedly effected to lure in the midwest
sucker traffic that constantly seeks to do New
York up brown . . . Johnny Park is still seeking
an explanationas to why Gil Tilles dumped a
bucket of beer full into his (John's) new suit
Thursday night. Particularly since John was in-
side the suit. Neither can Gil and Tlov dtricr-

AS OTHERS
SE IT

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the
University. Copy received at the ofne of the AlelAtent to the Pres.dent
until 330; 11:00 a-m. onSaturday.

TIl

TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1937
VOL. XLVII No. 136
From the New York Herald Tribune Notices;
It was inevitable that sooner or President and Mrs. Ruthven will
later the charge would be made that be atsiome todstudents dnesda
the new treaty between Italy and
Yugoslavia marks a "defeat" for April 7, from 4 to 6 p.m.
France. A more accurate word would
seem to be "disappointment." "De- Apparatus Exchange: The Regents
feat" implies that France has lost at their meeting in March, 1927, au-
something which she sorely needs thorized an arrangement for the sale
and for which she has unsuccessfully of scientific apparatus by one de-
3triven. The truth is, however, that partment to another, the proceeds of
although France would like to retain the sale to be credited to the budget
Slose ties with the three nations, account of the department from
Forming the Little Entente-Yugo- which the apparatus is transferred.
'lavia, Rumania and Czechoslovakia Departments having apparatus
-this combination is no longer as which is not in active use are advised
important to France as it was before to send description thereof to the
she alliance with Russia was con- University Chemistry Store, of which
eluded. The function of the Little Prof. R. J. Carney is director. The
Entente was to create a body which Chemistry store headquarters are in,
would at the same time hold down Room 223 Chemistry Building. An
Aiustrian and Hungarian ambitions effort will be made to sell the ap-
sor regeneration and serve as a check paratus to other departments which
,n German ambitions in eastern are likely to be able to use it. In
Europe. When the alliance was made some instances the apparatus may be
with Russia, France obtained a poten- sent to the University Chemistry
;ial counterweight to German ambi- store on consignment and if it is not
dlons in the East that is much strong- sold within a reasonable time, it will
:r and more valuable than the three be returned to the department from
little Balkan states, which it was received. The object
Despite the rumors of discord of this arrangement is to promote

which followed the meeting of the
ieads of these three states on Fri-
day there is nothing to show that
;he new Yugoslav-Italian agreement
naterially alters the line-up in the
Balkans. French influence in Yu-
;oslavia disintegrated several years
ago. Germany has steadily gained
n prestige both in Yugoslavia and
Rumania. Only Czechoslovakia re-
:nains unalterably anti-German. But
all three states are still as much op-
posed to the restoration of a king
:n Austria or Hungary as they have
always been, and equally opposed to
any territorial concessions to eitherl
)f these two nations.
The truth is that, except as possible
militarytallies, the Little Entente has
;eased to have much importance in.
French policy. French influence in
these states has been small-and
steadily waning. On the only ques-
:ion of real concern to France-the
possible union of Austria and Ger-'
m'any-the Little Entente, together
with Italy, is just as opposed as is
France. While a special rapproche-
meit between Yugoslavia and Italy
,an be proclaimed by hostile critics
as a blow to French prestige, the very
fact that it removes one of the great-
est causes of friction in eastern
Europe is as much an advantage to
France as to Italy and Yugoslavia.
Ihe original estimate of this treaty,
therefore, remains unchanged-that
it is valuable as a stabilizer of Euro-
pean peace.
THE SCREEN

economy by reducing the amount of
unused apparatus. It is hoped that
departments having such apparatus
will realize the advantage to them-
selves and to the University in avail-
ing themselves of this opportunity.
Freshmen in the ,College of Litera-,
tureScience and the Arts who have
not received their five-week progress
reports may obtain them in Room
102, Mason Hall, from 8 to 11:30
a.m. and 1:30 to 4 p.m. according to
the following schedule:
Surnames beginning R through Z,
Monday, April 5.
Surnames beginning G through Q,
Tuesday, April 6.
Surnames beginning A through F,
Wednesday, April 7.

tention of students planning to com-
pete in the Hopwood Contests is
called to the fifth paragraph on page
7 of the Hopwood bulletin:
"The contestant may obtain a
transcript of his first semester record
from the Recorder's Office and a
statement of his standing in second
semester courses from his instructors.
It is essential that such a statement
be obtained in April before the spring
vacation to avoid embarrassment to
the student. Grades for both semes-
ters should be included."
R. W. Cowden.
The George Davis Bivin Founda-
tion Prizes in The Mental Hygiene of
Childhood: The University of Michi-
gan announces the establishment,
through a gift of the George Davis
Bivin Foundation, Inc., of several
prizes for graduates and undergrad-
uate students for the encouragement
of research and study on problems
concerned with the mental hygiene
of childhood.
Awards of $20, $10 and $5 are of-
fered for papers submitted by ad-
vanced undergraduate students. A
prize of $50 is offered to graduate stu-
dents for a master's or doctor's thesis
or a comparable special study.
The following conditions govern
the awards:
1. In order to be considered for
the award for the current year, pa-
pers must reach the chairman of the
committee, 2509 University Elemen-
tary School, not later than 4 p.m.,
t June 10, 1937.
2. Copies of all prize-winning pa-
pers are to be sent to the Secretary
of the Foundation. All rights to the
manuscript, however, remain with
the writer.
3. Awards may be withheld if, in
the judgment of the committee, no
papers of sufficient merit are con-
tributed. The committee also re-
serves the right to adjust the amounts
when papers of equal merit are sub-
mitted or if such division will better
serve the purposes of the grant.
4. The following committee has
been designated by the Graduate
School to administer the award: Pro-
fessor Martha Guernsey Colby, Pro-
fessor Howard Yale McClusky, and
Professor VWillard C. Olson. (chair-
man).
C. S. Yoakum, Dean of Graduate
School.
Academic Notices
History 12: Lecture Groups I, II
and III. A make-up examination for
the midsemester in all sections of
History 12 will be given at 4 p.m.,
Wednesday, April 7, in Room B, Ha-
ven Hall.
History 48: Midsemester, today, 10
a.m., Sections 1, 2 in Room D, Haven;
sections 3, 4, 5, 6 in Room C, Haven.
Concerts
Graduation Recital: Albert Zbin-
den, pianist, will play an interesting
program in graduation recital at the
School of Music Auditorium, Wed-
nesday, April 7, at 8:15 o'clock, to
which the general public is invited.
Lectures
University Lecture: Dr. Arthur A.
Allen, Professor of Ornithology in
Cornell University, and Ornitholo-
gist in the New York State Experi-
ment Station, will lecture on "Hunt-
ing with a Microphone" on Tues-
day, April 20, in Hill Auditorium at
8 p.m. The lecture will be illustrated
with sound films. The public is cor-
dially invited.
Events Today
Junior Research Club: The April
meeting will be held this evening at
7:30 p.m. in Room 2083 Nat. Sci. Bldg.

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Love Is News
AT THE MICHIGAN
THIS is another newspaper movie
with lots of headlines, deadlines,{
smart-cracking reporters and break-
up-the-front-page orders for the
composing room. The story is a
slight, in fact very slight, variation of
the "It Happened One Night" theme,
but there are enough good gags and
enough first-rate acting by Tyrone
Power and Loretta Young to make it
a reasonably entertaining picture.
Loretta is a beautiful heiress suf-
fering from fortune hunters and.
newspaper publicity, and Power is, of
course, the ace reporter of The Daily
Express, out to get an exclusive in-
terview on her romance with the
Count de Guyon, a phoney who wants,
nothing but the heroine's dough. On
discovering the identity of the re-
porter, Loretta pulls a fast one and
tells all the other papers she is en-
gaged to newshound Power himself.
From here on the plot takes the form
of a series of fairly funny situations{
peppered with good, sometimes su-
perb dialogue, which is the really es-
sontial feature to a film of this sort.
TI~e ending you'll never possibly
guess, unless you've seen one of the 30
or 40 other pictures with the same
story..
Don Ameche, of radio fame, is ade-
quate as the city editor, shouting
orders to the staff in a convincing
staccato. Inevitably, there is a feud
between him and Power,nbut the au-
dience realizes it's all in a friendly
spirit of fun, and that they're both
real newspapermen under the skin,
ready to sell their souls for a scoop.
Slim Summerville turns in a good
slapstick performance as the hick-
town justice of the peace, and the
scenes in his jail are among the fun-
niest of the year.
But it's Power and Young who
make the picture, and within its
limitations, what they make is pleas-
ant and amusing.
There's a short Hollywood feature
in color, with a number of well-known
faces, which is all right if it doesn't
hurt your eyes. Nice to see Ben Tur-
pin and Charlie Murray again. Pete
Smith has a new novelty also, one of
his best, about how the girls make
themselves beautiful with cosmetics
a things. Paramount news.

College of Architecture, Midsemes-
ter Reports: Instructors are request-
ed to report any student whose work
is unsatisfactory. Cards for this pur-
pose may be obtained from the Of-
fice of the College' of Architecture,
Room 207 Arch., or from the Regis-
trar's Office, Room 4, U.H. These
cards should be filled in and returned
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., 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 Music not later than April
7.
School of Forestry and Conserva-
tion, Midsemester Reports: 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.
June Graduates in L. S. & A.:
Architecture, Education, Forestry and
Music should fill out grade report
cards in 4 U.H. April 5-6-7. These
grade report cards will insure an
early report from your instructors in
June. June seniors failing to fill in
these cards will run the risk of hav-
ing their grades reported too late for
the midsemester in all sections of
History 12 will be given at 4 p.m.,
Wednesday, April 7, in Room B,
Haven Hall.

Program:
Students, College of Literature, Use of Protein in the Treatment of
Science and the Arts: Except in ex- 'Some Disturbances of Carboyhdrate
traordinary circumstances, courses Metalbolism, by Dr. Jerome W. Conn,
dropped after Friday. April 9, will be Dept. of Internal Medicine.

recorded with a grade of E.
Students in the College of Litera-
ture, Science and the Arts: A meet-
ing will be held today at 4:15 p.m.
in Room 1025 Angell Hall for stu-
dents in the College of Literature,
Science and the Arts and others in-
terested in future work in nursing.
The meeting will be addressed,
by Miss Marian Durell, Director
of Nursing. The next meeting
in the vocational series, to be held on
April 22 will be addressed by Prof.
W. J. Bennett of the College of Ar-
chitecture.
Students, School of Education:1
Courses dropped after Friday, April
9, will be recorded with th grade of
E except under extarordinary cir-
cumstances. No course is considred
officially dropped unless it has been
reported in the office of the Regis-
trar, Room 4, University Hall.
Students, College of Engineering:
The final day for the removal of in-
completes will be Saturday, April 10.

Recent Experiments with the Cy-
clotron, by Dr. R. L. Thornton, Phy-
ics Dept.
Physics Colloquium: Prof. D. M.
Dennison will talk on "An Analysis
of the Rotation Spectrum of Water
Vapor" at the meeting this afternoon
at 4:15 p.m. in Room 1041 East
Physics Building.
Mathematics Club: .The regular
meeting will be held today at 8 p.m.,
in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Dr. Clay-
tor will speak on "Peanian continua
embedable in a spherical surface."
The Romance Club will meet to-
day at 4:10 p.m. in Room 108 R.L.
The program will be as follows:
Professor del Toro, National Edu-
cation Association, A report of the
Foreign Language group meeting in
New Orleans.
Mr. Gravit, Peiresc and Early Sa-
maritan and Coptic Studies.
Botanical Journal Club:
Today at 7:30 p.m., 1139 N.S. The
nr n x csil_ _ ." ka ,.4. ....

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