[C AN DAIL SAN DAILY Au I-, I. Edited and rnanaged by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Sludent 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 newspaer.. All rghts of republication of all other matter hrein also rerved. 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, $4.50. iember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONA. ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, nc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADIsON AvE. Nw YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO - BcSTON - AN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELS -. PORTLANbA FSEAMSL Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ...............ELSIE A. PIERCE ITORIAL DIRECTOR. MAIRSHALL D. SI ULMAN eorgt Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins" GHT EDITORS: Joseph Mattes, William E. Shackleton, Irving Silverman, William Spaller,-Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks..'. ~PORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, chairman; Fred DeLano, 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 BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ......JEAN KEINATH *YSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Robert Lodge, Bi Newnan, Leonard Seigelman. Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layne, Russ. Cole, Henry Homes, Women's Business Assistants: Margaret FerriesVJane '.. "- Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, arion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty Davy,rHelen Purdy, MarthaHankey, Betsy. Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Mlchlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers J. Cameron Hall, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore, National Advertising and Circuplation 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: WILLIAM SPALLER A Petition Against The Hill-Sheppard Bill... 4( LUEPRINTS" for an American U" brand of fascism are pending be- fore the Senate and House this session in the form of the Hill-Sheppard Bill 'which embodies the Industrial Mobilization Plan of the War De- partment . The storm of protest that arose when the Nyye Committee report exposed the military-in- dustrial dictatorship the original Plan sought to establish in time of war has forced its "re- vision and its reintroduction in two identical bills by the chairmen of the House and Senate Military Affairs Committees..- But the revision has been one almost entirely of phrasing; the main threats to democracy in the bill remain intact. Petitions to be sent to Congress demanding the defeat of these bills will be taken before, after, and during the Peace Meeting Thursday morn- ing on the mall between the School of Architec- ture and the University High School. It is our purpose today to discuss briefly these bills and rip off the false slogans that hide the dangerous features from the public eye. The slogans are two. The first is "to take the profits out of war." It is under these colors that the bill masquerades in most news- paper reports. The second is "to equalize the burdens of war." In this role the bills pur- port to draft capital, industry and man-power with equal service for all should the United states go to war. The objections are these. The bill will be unable to "draft" capital and industry; it will fal to take the profits out of war; it automa- tically permits the drafting of four million men ,by the President at the outbreak of war, regard- less of whether the war would justify this wide- spread conscription; it provides what would amount to a draft of labor; it wquld scrap social legislation; it would result in the replacement of the Cabinet by a special "war ministry"; and it leaves the way open for the censorship of the press. The bill attempts to take the profits out of war by assessing a 95 per cent tax-on all profits above the previous three year average. What effect this tax would have becomes visible when we realize that if it had been in effect in 1917 and 1918 the DuPont Company would not have paid a penny to the government. The reason is siriply that in the three-year periqd before America entered the war, the DuPonts built their production up to capacity by trading with the belligerents in Europe. Thus when America entered the war its average profit for the three_. ,previous years had been boosted so high that ourt addition to the arena had little effect. The bills provide that "Whenever Congress shall declare war or the existence of an emer- gency due to the imminence of war" the PredL.? dent, without any further legislation can draft the several millions of men between the ages of 21 and 31. Farther down in the bill it says that T E 'FORUM Letters published in this column should not be construed as eXpressing 'the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will bew disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brif, 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. yoacabre Flea To the Editor: I have always been of the opinion that there is a touch of the macabre in the sight of a flea imitating a monster, and a recent news story in the Ann Arbor News has helped me a great deal in the proof of this thesis. The story wasin the April 9th issue, and the head- line read thusly: SEVN ARRESTED IN DEM- ONSTRATION, Students Sing Communist Song In Labor Dispute. Aout a third of the way down the page I read: The trouble started when about 50 stu- dents, including 10 women, gathered in front of the bowling alley shortly before 7 o'clock last night, carrying picket posters and sing- ing the Communist Internationale. To anyone who was there this is an obvious distortion of fact. I am quite sure that the Student Workers' Fedration can furnish any interested party with enough affidavits to keep a notary public busy for several hours-to the effect that the Internationale was not sung, and that, on the contrary, the following songs were sung-"America, America," "On the Picket Line," "Solidarity 'orever," and "The Star- Spangled Banner. , It is a fundamental tactic of the Hearst press to tag as Reds anyone whose actions they dis- approve; we expect it from the monster, we are annoyed at the flea. Now, of course, it is con- ceivable that the reporter, or even the re-write man didn't hear correctly. Maybe Mrs. Dilling really believes Mrs. Roosevelt is a Communist. Maybe the depression was planned in the Mos- cow offices of the Communist Internationale. Who knows? It is my conviction, however, that raising the red scare in this connection was a deliberate attempt to prejudice the reading public against the picketers. The bad taste in which it was done by the Ann Arbor News is shown by the fact that the Detroit Times reported the affair accurately. The Ann Arbor News owes the Student Worker's Federation an apology, which they probably will not get. -L.K. 4 Call To Liberals To the Editor: On Saturday afternoon a most encouraging event took place. Abut fifty students met and decided to form a broad progressive organization which would aim to improve the position of the student on the campus. But the encouraging factor is not that a new organization is to be formed, but that this organization seems to be avoiding the weaknesses of similar groups in the past. In recent years there have been many liberal groups functioning on the campus. They have been of all shades of opinion and of a greatly varied composition. However, none of them has included more than a mere fraction of the for- ward-looking students in the University. Each group has been too narrow to be representative, and the progressive movement has therefore been of a rather haphazard nature. In view of this, the meeting Saturday seems a real step forward. It included members or rep- resentatives of almost all the socially aware groups on campus. And these people were not merely attending another meeting; they came with the idea of forming an organization which woud be truy representative of the iberal tradi- tion of Michigan. The first step toward ac- complishing this goal has already been achieved inasmuch as all elements were present. A pro- gram of five main points was adopted: peace, security, equality, academic freedom and the broadening of student social life. In addition, the structure of the organization is to be flexible in order to make it thoroughly responsive to changing needs. Throughout a serious and real- istic approach was evident. The group plans to have its first membership meeting on April 27. It is inviting all those who feel the need for such a broad organization to attend. - Let us help so promising a group by supporting it. -L.S. The People's Land To the Editor: The editorial in your issue of April 7th en- titled "No Man's Land" presents the view that because decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States deny to both the Federal Govern- ment and to the States the right to exercise certain governmental powers it follows that there exists a peculiar domain within which these powers are to be deemed as impossible of exercise. Therefore, it is apparently assumed that these decisions of the Supreme Court must be deemed as anomalous if not utterly absurd. This erron- eous view has recently been strenuously pro- claimed by those who desire to undermine the Supreme Court as a co-ordinate and independent branch of our form of government and the ready acceptance of such view by many well- meaning persons can only be explained by reason of their entire disregard of Article 10 of the Bill of Rights, which expressly provides that, "the powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." Having this provision in mind it follows that the decision of the Supreme Court creating what the editorial terms "No Man's Land" means simply that the denied governmental powers are included in those re- served "to the people." Apcordingly the correct term defining this domain of reserve powers is "The People's Land." The exercise of these BENEATH **** 4+#+ IT ALL w u By Bonth Wlliams --- ( JELL, having missed the opening. ball game for the first time since I was twelve years old, I guess the next best thing is to take in the second and hope that the Tiges can pull a pitcher out of the bag and make it two straight over the men from across the lake. And speaking of baseball, yesterday was a phenomenal record-breaker in at least one way. Up until game time both Philadelphia clubs were leading their respective leagues- probably for the last time in the next ten years. BOB EWELL and Fred DeLano who toured the south with the Michigan ball team throughout the spring holidays, pulled into Charlottesville, seat of the lore steeped Univer- sity of Virginia, ohe afternoon and sought the Sigma Nu House. Directed by a couple of southerners to the 'large home on the cornah' Ewell wheeled the car up the spacious drive and ground to a halt before a beautiful old colonial mansion. "Some house," DeLano opined. "Great fraternity, Sigma Nu," Bob added as, they bounded up the front steps and into the open door. Within all was a drowsy darkness. The broth1 ers from afar wandered from room to room with outstretched hands and the pass word on their lips. "Orderly place, must be a Southern trait, lots of darkies," Ewell remarked. "Where the hell do you suppose everybody is?" DeLano was about to answer when he was suddenly confronted by an efficient appearing female who emerged out of the gloom. "And what would you gentlemen be wanting?" she almost barked as the two Michiganders stepped back in surprise. "We're with the Michigan ball team, we're Sigma Nu's, and we thought we'd stop in and pay the boys a call. I suppose they're all in class now. Are you the house mother?" The woman unbent slightly at this last. "No," she smiled slowly, I'm not the house mother, I'm the maid, and this is the home of Mr. Newcomb, the president of the University." * . THE DELTA GAMMAS promise to feature the Michigras parade Friday afternoon with a float which may well captivate the passers-by into following the procession for blocks. The idea is a ship (to get in the Delta Gamma An- chor) fixed up with the pulchritudinest in the House to amuse and fascinate the spectators. Lee Bush, local wood dealer, has agreed to donate his '29 Ford Truck for purposes of loco- motion. If the Hill Street girls really want to go to town in the biggest sort of a way the best thing they could do would be to adorn the ship with a life size enlargement of the picture this month's Gargoyle is running of Marion Fitz- gerald. Gil Tillles asked Fitz to pose for the monthly fashion plate because, as he said, he felt guilty about leaving her off his Ten Most Beautiful list. Just blind luck on Tilles' part, of course, but the Monroe Flash's display pf one of those swag- ger coats is the best by far ever to grace the monthly funny book. * *: *~ * Few people will probably get to see the picture of Miss Fitzgerald, however, for this month's Gargoyle is so stupendous (it contains almost 48 pages) that little Grant Barnes decided to sell it for a quarter. Unfortunately, however, he failed to notify anybody of this brain storm, not even the printer. The results will probably be disastrous wgen Thursday morning his corps of demon salesman try to peddle for a quarter a book which states in plain letters on the cover, PRICE TEN CENTS. BENEATH IT ALL: Colonel Henoch, my handi- capping partner is just back from Hot Springs, Ark., where he spent a week with the ponies at Oaklawn. The Colonel reports that he was in fine fettle and in another two days would have had the bookies trying to buy him off . There is a very strong probability that when the senior class squire their respective dates into the Union Ballroom for the annual ball Commence- ment Week, they'll slide into the rhythm of Swing Vjaster Benny Goodman-in which case each swain will have parted with some five bucks for the privilege-Dick Trusdell, my ace con- tributor, will write for this column his reactions to the recent triple execution -in Chicago's County Building in the near future. Dick was one of a hundred privileged spectators who watched the State take its revenge on the slay- ers of a metropolitan policeman. The worst thing about it was the fat man in the back .row, according to Dick. He kept yelling to those in front, "For Keerist sake sit down, you saw the foist two burn" . . . Senior class leader Al Dewey spent the week-end in the Windy City seeking employment, but refused an offer because he didn't want to start work until the middle of, October. I need a long rest after my arduous term of office," Dewey explained . . . Few people know that Harriet Shackleton's father is an ar- dent Beta and holds the mortgage on the sump- tuous Beta menage at Old Purdue ... And whilet we're in that area, I might note that The Purdue Exponent's student scandal columnist spent half his space refuting the charge that his column wasn't in very, good taste at times-and proved that Michigan did not have a very good foot- ball team last year . . . Fred Warner Neal came rushing into the Publications Building yesterday with the Annaday News and the startling an- nouncement that the Northville Bank had been held up to the tune of ten thousand iron men. AS OTHERS SEE IT --Parod y- W HEN the student of French at Co lumbia University published a review entitled Chimere recently, the Columbia Spectator, -in its column The Off-Hour, issued an amusing parody of their efforts, part of which we reproduce here. CHEMISE Ewnee Enclifree Agazinemee OU EST JOS Monsieur le Jos a disparu Il avait went away Mais tout a coup, je vous promets TI r-x~~n ra mmdrax VOL. XLVII No. 141 WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1937 Notices To Members of the Faculty and Officers of the University: Notice is hereby given that at their meeting of March 26 the Regents officially adopted a standard of nomenclature applying to all titles of individual po- sitions and divisions of the Univer- sity, as follows: Resolved, That 'the nomenclature of divisions of the University and titles of members of the faculty and staff as printed in the annual Regis- ter be, and it hereby is, adopted as ii i vieiiuiasome clay. y the official standard of the Univer- AVANT: M. Jos etait tres malheu- sity, and that no changes in such reaux. Il had B. O. Les babes ne 1'- nomenclature be made except as the aimaient nicht. On laugh like hell Regents may specifically direct. If quand ii s'assied at the piano. On changes of title or nomenclature are .move for three rows quand it va aux made at the time of the adoption of inoom pitchers, parce qu'il n'avait the budget or at other times in con- pas sculement B. O. mais il aimait nection with appointments, promo- les oignons. Pauvre Jos! Quel Im- tions, and other actions affecting passe! Was zu tun! Er konnte nicht faculty and staff members, it is uh-1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the AssiAtant to the Preu des* untUl 3:30; 11:00 a~m. on Sat'urday. alle aux dances, personne ne se ferait pas blotto avec lui. Was konnte er tun? Toujours it achetait son Film Fun et allait chez lui. ARES: Mais that was then! Main- tenant il est la vie de the party. Comme il est brave homme! Il goes broke tous les semaines dating les babes. Il est bon vivant. Il est manna bout ville, et comment! Et pourquoi? Parce que tous les matins ii mange les crispie, crunchie wheat-I ies pour le petit dejeuner. "Les C ispie, crunchie wheaties sontI peachie," dit Jos. "Comme elles sontl magnifiques!" dit-il. derstood that such changes separately and specifically mended and acted upon. will be recom- Attention Seniors: Orders for Com- mencement Invitations will be taken by the committees in all the depart- ments beginning this afternoon and extending through Friday. Unless otherwise specified in notices on bul- letin boards in the various schools, the sale will extend from 2 to 5 p.m. on Wednesday, Thursday and Fri- day. All seniors are urged to place their orders promptly and to watch their departmental bulletin boards for notices. i Peace Meeting: In accordance with -T.o hnp rovC' T Racegcustom and with the consent of the Deans of the several schools and From The Mhinesota Daily colleges, 11 o'clock classes on Thurs- With. the attention of the Univer- day, April 22, will be dismissed in sity so centered on peace, one must order to permit attendance at the avoid the bigoted attitude that war student peace meeting. Laboratories,' is an unmitigated horror. libraries, and clinics will remain Major Erich Suchsland of the Ger- open: man aviation corps has published a serious study in the social significance The Library Committee will meet )f the air bombing of large cities. In on the afternoon of Thursday, April bombing cities, he points out, the 22. Members of the faculty having aviator directs the largest part of his requests to lay before the Committee attention to the heavily crowded should have them in the hands of areas, which are the slums. The the Librarian if possible by this after- bombing of this district has the noon. same effect as natural selection, for, -~ m eefc asnt rlslci fowith the destruction of these lower Students in the College of Litera- lasses-carried on systematically, of ture, Science and the;Arts: Ameet- -icurse, there comes a definite im- ing will be held on Thursday, April provement of the human race. Fur- 22, at 4:15 p.m. in Room 207 Archi- thermore, the terror of the air raid tecture Bldg., for students in the Col- causes persons with mental weakness- lege of Literature, Science, and the es which remain latent in ordinary Arts and others interested in future. life to crack under the strain, making work in architecture. Prof. W. I. , it possible to segregate such persons Bennett will be available for indi- and so save the next generation from vidual conferences. The final meet- their hereditary traits. Again, after ing in the vocational series, to be an air raid there is pillaging by anti- held on April 27, will be addressed Fascists and other such vermin. In by Dean C. S. Yoakum. the fighting over the spoils many of' these will be shot and killed, a further The University Bureau of Appoint- cause for great rejoicing. ments and Occupational Information Of course, being only an air officer, has received announcements of Major Suchsland has not seen the United States Civil Service Examina- full benefits of his theory. Under tions for Associate Physicist (Electro- his theory of air raid selection, the encephalography), U. S. Public waging of war becomes a 'form of Health' Service, Treasury Depart- unselfish cooperationmbetween na- ment, salary, $3,200; and for Endoc- tions, a point he overlooks. The rinologist, Bureau of Dairy Industry, Nazis, in bombing French or Russian Department of Agriculture, salary, cities, are working to produce in their $3,800. For further information enemies a race of supermen. Germany concerning these examinations, call i Herself would receive no immediate at 201 Mas'on Hall, office hours, 9 benefit. In time. though, the rejuv- to 12 and 2 to 4 o'clock. Junior Entomologist (Physiology and Toxicology), Junior Horticulturist (Transportation and Storage), Junior Pathologist, Junior Plant Quarantine Inspector, Junior Plant Propagator Junior Pomologist Olericultuurist (Fruit Breeding), Junior Soil survey- or, Junior Soil Technologist, and Junior Olericulturist, Departmentof Agriculture, salaries, $2,000. For further information concerning these examinations, call at 201 Mason Hall, office hours, 9 to 12 and 2 to 4 o'clock. The Bureau of Appointments and Occulpational Information has re- ceived the following notification: A limited number of scholarships and fellowships ranging from $150 to $500 are being offered by the Grad- uate School for Jewish Social Work, 71 West 47th St., New York City. These scholarships and fellowships are available to especially qualified students for the next academic year. The school offers courses of study in preparation for Jewish Social Work, leading to the Master's and Doctor's degrees. Applications for admission to fellowship examinations must be in before April 30. For further infor- mation andcatalogue, those interest- ed may address Dr. M. J. Karpf, Di- rector. Life Saving, Women Students: All women students interested in taking the American Red Cross Examiner's course are asked to sign up in Bar- bour Gymnasium, office 15, as soon as possible. Date for the Hopwood Contests: All manuscripts must be in the Eng- lish Office, 3221 Angell Hall, by 4:30 p.m. today. R. W. Cowden. A4cademic Notices English 102, Make-up examination will be 'held Thursday evening, April 22, at 7 o'clock, in 1025 Angell Hall. J. L. Davis Zoology 32 (Heredity): The ques- tions to be handed in Friday are 19 to 21 inclusive,.instead of the larger group indicated in lecture. Concerts Graduation Recital: Marion Bry- ant Dickson, pianist, a graduate of the School of Music with the degree of Bachelor of Music, will give a graduation recital as partial fulfill- ment of the requirement for the Mas- ter of Music degree this evening at 8:15 p.m., in the School of Music Building on Maynard St., to which the general public is invited. May Festival Season Tickets: Now on sale "over the counter" at School of Music office, Maynard St., $6, $7, and $8 each. If Choral Union "Fes- tival coupon" is exchanged, the prices are $3, $4 and $5. "Festival cou- pons" are not good after April 24. Lecture University Lecture: Prof. Reginald A. Daly, of the Department of Geol- ogy and Geography, Harvard Univer-, sity, will lecture on "Land and Sea in the Ice Age" on Tuesday, April 27, at 4:15 p.m. in Natural Science Audi- torium. The lecture will be 'illustrat- ed. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture: A collection of Modern Dress and Drapery Textiles created by the tu- reau of Style and Design of Marshall Field & Co., Manufacturing Division, is being shown in the third floor ex- hibition room of the Architectural Building. Open daily 9 to 5 through April 27. The public is cordially in- vited. Events Today Research Club, Junior Research Club, Women's Research Club::The annual memorial"meeting of the Re- search Club, to which all members of the Junior and Women's Research Clubs are invited, will be held in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League Building today at 8 p.m. The following program will be presented: I. Edward Gibbon (born 1737): 1. "His Life and His Place Among English Historical Writers," Prof. Arthur L. Cross. 2. "An Estimate of His Contribu- tion to the Study of Byzantine His- tory," by Prof. Arthur E. R. Boak: both of the Department of History. II. Father Jacques P. Marquette (born 1637): Prof. Verner W. Crane, Department of History. Phi Tau Alpha: There will be a meeting this evening, 8 p.m., at the League. Mr. Fred Dunham of the Latin department will lecture on his recent visit to Italy and Rome. All members are urged to attehd. A glass-blowing demonstration for students of the College of Pharmacy will be given today at 7:45 p.m. in Room 165 Chem. by Mr. H. J. Hill un- der sponsorship of Rho Chi. v. . a . .a aa , v u a , t. 1, A Enated French and Russians, in grati- tuide, would bomb German cities, and Germany in her turn will become strong and virile. Given enough air- planes and enough bombs, the world could be made a veritable Utopia in generation. All thisgoes to prove that would-be reformers are stupid in their short- sighted views of the problem. The thing they should be doing at the present time is agitating for another' war, instead of against it. With the1 attendant improvement in the race, the time will come when there are no unfit to be eliminated, and all wars will be unnecessary. Plainly the reformer is working against war for selfish reasons. He knows that he will perhaps be weeded out by air bomb eugenics. Weap"ons In Grudgte Tilt Are Parachutes From 1,500 Feet Up Parachutes at 1500 feet will be the weapons in a "grudge" fight be- tween Gene Richardson and Charles Jacobus of Ann Arbor and Stanley Prescott of Detroit Sunday afternoon at the Ann Arbor Airport. The conditions laid down by Pres- cott, who was challenged, are simple. Each man must bail out at above 1500 feetand the one landing closest to a twenty-five foot circle will be the winner. The match developed when Pres- cott almost landed on the roof of the hangar at the airport a few weeks ago. Richardson, who has made only one jump, stated that he could do better than that with his eyes closed. He later retracted that statement' but still claimed that he could beat Prescott who has made about one hundred leaps. Prescott bet him Undergraduates interested in Sales for this Sumimer: The Forbes Busi- ness Magazine is arranging for this l summer an undergraduate organiza- tion for sales of ,their magazine and business service to executives. For further information call at 201 Ma- son Hall. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational In- formation. Summer Camp Counsellors: The Bureau' has been notified that the Lake of the Woods Camp for Girls will receive applications from ex- perienced counsellors; Carhp Martin- Johnson in Northern Michigan has a vacancy for a man who has had good forestry and camping exper- ience (should be a junior, available for at least a two-year period 'at camp), salary, $125 plus room and board and expenses from and to Chi- cago; The Abraham Lincoln Centre Camp, Chicago, has vacancies for colored and white men and women with at least two years of college, for group work, teaching, education- recreation, social case work, $5 a month, maintenance, and transpor- tation expenses. For further infor- mation concerning these positions call at 201 Mason Hall, office hours, 9 to 12 and 2 to 4 o'clock. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has' received announcements of Unit- ed States Civil Service Examinations for Psychologist (Public Relations), Forest Service, Department of Agri- culture, salary, $3,800; for assistant Chief, Mechanical Section, ;Social Security Board, Salary, $3,200; for Principal, Senior, Associate and Ac- tuarial Mathematician (Pensions), Railroad Retirement Board, salaries, $3,200 to $5,600; for Cost Accountant, Air Corps, War Department, salary,