SFOUR THE ZI=C_ II, . AII. SATriTRI3A '. Al'giIl, 24, 1937 THEMCHIGAsDAIL SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Letters Ask For Action By Labor; Cementing Of Wail Against War A r. ."- . Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authoilty of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning exceptMonday 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 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, $400; by matil, $450. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37 REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Puiblishes Representative' 420 MADISON AVE."NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO . BOSTON - SAN FRANCISCO LOs ANGELES. PORTLAND SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR ..........ELSIE A. PIERCE 'DITORIAI4 DIRECTOR.M. IVARSHALL D. SHULMAN Cieorge Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey RalphW. Hurd Robert Cummins . NIGHT EDITORS: Joseph Mattes, William E. Shackleton, rving Silverman, William Spaler, Tuure Tenander, IRobert 'Weeks. SPORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, cliairman; FredreLano, Fred Buesser, aymond Goodman, Carl tG rstacker WOMENS DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wuerfel chairman; Elizabeth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bl'ngham, Helen Douglas, Barbara J. Lovel, Katherine Moare, Betty trickroot. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER ..................JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGR . WILAAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER...JEAN KEINATH BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy Buckwater, 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 Davy, Helen Purdy Martha Hankey Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Mlchlnski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers J. Cameron Hall, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore, National Advrt~sing andCirculationManager; Don. Wilsher Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service rManager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified Adlvertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: JOSEPH S. MATTES Laor n1on Indeendece. .. L!ABOR'S PECISIVE VICTORY in the National Labor Relations Law Case was not more than a day old when out of the offices of finance 'and industry emergedI plans for blocking its forward march. Foremost on the emasculation of labor list drawn up by the National Association of Manufacturers and its ilk is the demand for incorporation of labor unions. Resembling to a great degree a sullen child who has lost a game, organized big business is pouting about the "irresponsibiity" of unions" which, it fears, will continue to win rights which have been the aim of America's laboring me women, and children, for more than a hectic quarter of a century. Because of this "irrespon- sibility" of organized labor, because of its claim that it has no redress against labor unions, and because it also holds that unions have tyran- nical leaderships organized big business plays on the anti-union sentiment of certain sections of the ,population to facilitate the inco-poration of labor unions. This is exactly the kind of proedure that led German and Italian labor and progressives, to- gether with well-meaning liberals, into the arms of fascism. The method is one by which the thunder strikes against the Left, moves over to knock downall the protection built by labor for itself, then storms away over fascism's more innocuous enemies and critics. At this stage la- bor unions face sevei'e court attacks and a denial of freedom only if they are incorporated. That labor unions are by and large irrespon- sible, as it is charged by business and industry, is not a general truth. Employers in the rail- road, printing, and garment industries, where unions are strong and where there have been long contractual relations have found their un- ionized workers, capable, consistent and respon- sible persons. And that distinction for their in- dividuals charcterizes the major part of or- ganized labor. According to the Coronado Case of 1922 in which the Supreme Court ruled that unions were suable in federal courts for injunctions and money damages, employers may allay their, fear of no redress. Paul Ward of the Nation points out that in that case $27,500 was paid. After the reams of evidence which have flowed from the LaFollette Civil Liberties and Labor Committee attesting to the racketeering methods of organized big business, a chronic duplicity can be discerned in its attitude toward labor. Business charges labor with maintaining dic- tatorial leadership, imposing high fees on its members, and racketeering in general. Actually, on closer examination, the new form of labor organization, the industrial union is a demo- cratically controlled means for protecting the right to work for decent conditions. Strict rec- ording and accounting of the low dues paying in- dustrial union is a salient feature of the CIO, Wanted: Backbone To the Editor: Yesterday at 11 a.m. the University called off all classes, took its students by the hand, led them demurely over to the mall of the architec- ture building, served them pink tea in a 45-min- ute outing, patted them lovingly on the head, and sent them home. Yesterday at 11:30 a.m. it had become ap- parent that at least as far as the Univeristy of Michigan is concerned the 1937 peace movement had gone neatly pfffft. True, there were 1500 students standing around, mildly interested by the noise. True, there were hundreds of contagious "Yeas!" of- 'ered up in response to the resolutions express- ing unity with other demonstrators throughout the nation. True, the speakers denounced the war-makers, worried about the Hill-Sheppard Bill, and commended the Nye-Kvale bill to the good graces of our liberal Congressmen. But there is only one test of the worth of yes- terday's deronstration: will it in any way con- tribute to the prevention of our entry into an- other war? And I think the answer is no. When those who have an interest in the promotion of such a war start their war-whooping-when the newspapers and the magazines start their systematic glorification of war-when preacher and professor join hands as they did in the last time they were put to the test to extol the virtues of conflict of man against man-then the sort of anti-war spirit displayed on the mall yesterday won't mean a blessed thing. There isn't any sense in telling the world that f1500students in the University of Michigan 1 are against war. Anyone who is old enough to eat his own porridge knows that probably 95 per cent of the student body-just like 95 per cent of the people-at-large-are against war. The only excuse peace demonstrations can have for existence lies in the preparation they can furnish for'some sort of effective opposition to war when the emergency requiring such op- position shall arise. And preparation like the peace meeting yesterday furnished is not only utterly negative, it's downright disheartening. Can any of you who were there picture the president of a corporation with its talons deep in the wells and mines of the Orient gazing with frantic eye upon the gathering and saying to.:himself, "VWell, I guess it's no dice this time. This war racket works just so long and then the suckers catch on. We'd never get this bunch to fight our battles for us." If you think we overwhelmed the war-mongers with awe for our do-or-die determination not to fight, you're -to be frank-balmy. What was inissing? Was it that essential spark that makes the difference between a sleepy po- liteness to sone orators and a heartfelt resolve to cooperate in a common cause, an inward glow of unity with a group of our fellows who can be counted on to pitch in with us, shoulder to shoulder when the going is rougher than it is now? There are various elements that may, in a particular instance, supply that added fillip to give meaning and value to the meeting. But the opportunity that was fumbled by those in charge of yesterday's demonstration was a prize. Out of four meetings which have been held on the campus on April 22 in the past three years, only one was a true success. That meeting was held two years ago,.on the steps of the library, and thefactors which contributed to its success were threefold: (1.) The University officially frowned on the meeting and the leaders weren't sure until afterwards that they wouldn't be dis- ciplined. (2.) The Oxford peace oath was ad- ministered, also contrary to the University's wishes. (3.) Classes were not dismissed for the meetirig, the University sponsoring instead a rival afternoon neeting in Hill Auditorium with a speaker brought from the University of Chicago on University funds. Those were the only significant differences between that meeting and three others held under the wing of the University. And they teach one important lesson: there must be bar- riers to overcome-there must be something hard for the demonstrators to do-there must be some effort expended in behalf of their beliefs. For if there is nothing in the way of inconvenience -and hazard in demonstrating, then there is noth- ing comparable to the test to which those dem- onstrators will some way be put. Of course I am not advocating the peace-lovers go about picking fights to show they're sincere. But this year's group went to the opposite ex- treme and made a shambles of a fine idea. There was at least four specific examplesI know about which show that it was the weak-kneed, kowtowing, bending-over-backward-not-to-of- fend spirit that robbed our peace meeting of sig- nificance: . (1.) The leaders asked permission of the Uni- versity to hold the meeting on the library steps and agreed not to meet there when the Univer- sity said it would disturb those who were study- ing. (And the carillon?) (2.) The leaders asked permission of the Uni- versity to pass resolutions at the meeting and wouldn't plan on doing so until permission had been granted. (Resolutions? of all the nerve!) (3.) The original resolution, beginning "'We, students of the University," was at the Univer- sity's suggestion changed to "We here assem- bled," (Thereby saving our face before the Lith- uanian ambassador to Madagascar). (4.) The leaders carefully announced that the meeting should not be considered a "strike" but a "demonstration." (Tsk, tsk; sech lang- Labor I tsel To the Editor: What has happened to the promises for far- reaching social legislation that swept President Roosevelt to victory last fall? On his own in- itiative, the President is cutting the heart out of the program which elected him. Slashing away $135,000,000 from farm tenancy legislation, $100,000,000 from education, $30,000.000 from low cost housing, $100,000,000 from crop insur- ance, $550;000,000 from flood control, reducing the WPA budget so that there will be 500,000 fewer workers on its rolls, abolishing the RA, the President is carrying out in effect the provisions of the Republican platform. Bad enough as this is, Senate majority leader Robinson slaps the other cheek by placing the 'burden of government on the shoulders of those who are going to be most seriously affected by the economy measures. Lamenting the high tax rates placed n the rich, he declares that the in- come tax will have to be carried to the lower brackets. As though this were not enough, ad- ministration leaders Byrnes and Harrison are urging that the WPA appropriation be reduced from $1,500,000,000 to $1,000,000,000. President Roosevelt estimates that federal ex- penditures will be $7,324,000,000 for the next fiscal year. Where is this money going to? With the cut in social legislation, what else is being done with these huge funds? One indication is the $953,000,000,000 for the army and navy, an amount almost the equivalent of the economies enumerated above.- If the government were actually taking steps to preserve world peace, the military expendi- tures might at least be made palatable, but the failure of international democracy to stop fas- cist aggression in China, Ethiopia, middle Eu- rope and Spain is a blot which no presumably peace-loving government can ever hope to live down. Indeed, it would seem that as far as Eng- lish democracy is concerned it has completely capitulated to the Spanish insurgents; a picture in today's Ann Arbor News shows English mer- chantmen prevented by British destroyers from sailing into Spanish waters because General Fraanc'o has declared a blockade of England's sis- ter democracy. "Britain will not protect its commercial vessels within the rebel line," reads the caption. Mistress of the seas! Mistress of fascism would be a better title. The anxious liberals who so zealously urged the election of Roosevelt lest Landon be elected and refused to support a national farmer-labor party, lest Roosevelt's election be imperiled, should be happy with their choice. The sole result of their efforts is the effective deadening of any independent political sentiment which might have existed before the last election. Look to 1940, they said; there is so much enlightened political consciousness in 1937 and so infamous a measure as the conscription bill has met with practically no opposition. The charter for labor has been won, but it has been won by labor itself in the face of the stiffest opposition from the same 'party which the liberals helped put in power by supporting Roosevelt. How it will be possible to organize a na- tional party for 1940 when no effort is made to educate its potential supporters in the day to day struggles against reactionary measures, which, heaven knows, are plentiful enough, is a ques- tion which the liberals will have to answer be- fore too long, and there is no indication at all that they even realize the existence of the di- lemma. Nor is there anyereason to think that the CIO will overnight become the mass base for a farmer-labor party; success in the economic arena is no guarantee of political sophistication., Democracy in this country will be in danger so long as Roosevelt is not revealed for what he is, the liberal defender of capitalism, so long as it is not realized that when the liberal glove wears thin, the iron gauntlet of fascism is drawn on. Who is going to provide this education? -R. S. have seriously crippled our chances of peace by our anaemic anti-war demonstration. But with the experience of the past three years in mind I cannot help but think that if the meet- ing had been forthrightly publicized as a strike, if the leaders of the movement had disregarded the University's disapproval of a meeting on the library steps, and its hand-picking of what the students should resolve and what they should not resolve-that then and only then should we have done our bit for peace. And these details are more important even than in their effect on yesterday's congregation. They indicate a basically futile attitude toward war-prevention. They indicate that on this campus we have not yet begun to fight for peace., And they indicate that we must change our course and our tactics if we dare hope than when the war-crisis comes there will be thou- sands of students who, relying on us as we will be relying on them, will meet under their Uni- versity's horrified nose and proclaim in resound- ing tones that they don't intend to fight. The key to war propaganda lies in the fear of each individual that if he protests he will be alone, apart from the mob, friendless and hope- less in his opposition. And the key to peace propaganda is exactly the same from the' other end; instilling confidence and courage in the multitudes of individuals who know they don't want to fight by proving to them that they are not outside the mob, not hopeless, not alone, not friendless. I hope we have learned our lesson. I hope we can, build a backbone into our peace movement J. T._Farrell -A 70rld I Never Made- By ELLIOT MARANISS The Chicago West Side of 1911 was a dirty, poverty-ridden district, in- habited by hard-working and hard- drinking Irishmen. James T. Farrell was born into that abyss of human degradation in 1904, so this story of little Danny O'Neill, the first of an- other trilogy dealing with the same locale, may be regarded as partly autobiographical. "A World I Never Made" is a tragic, gripping picture of American ugli- ness, and Farrell depicts that ugli- ness as he experienced it. If he iin- ;ers longest upon the srdid and sinister it is because he found that world sordid and sinister-he had no part in its making. The wretched- ness of the district he writes about is satisfactory justification for the apparent coarseness of the book. Danny O'Neill was a normal seven year old boy. Ty Cobb and Big Ed Walsh were his gods; his trip to the downtown department store where he gloried among electric trains, bi- cycles, and baseball bats and balls affected him as it would any seven- year-old. But Danny never had a chance- that is the thesis of the book, unmis- takably apparent from the first ref- erence to the O'Neill household, which was supported by the $16 week- ly pay envelope of Jim O'Neill, an earnest and hard-working, but ig- norant, man who was driven to drink by the filth and the fervid, hypocrit- ical piety of his wife Lizz. Nor were Danny's chances of emerging from the despondency of his environment enhanced when he went to live with the O'Flaherty's, his grandmother, aunt, and uncle. Uncle Al was a shoe salesman whose efforts to make Danny a gentleman consist- ed of praising Lord Chesterfield's let- ters and mailing them to the boy from the third-rate drummers' hotel he was stopping at as the ripened fruits of his own sagacity. But- to Dan Lord Chesterfield was a stuffy old gent, even in the whizz- bang translations of Uncle Al, while these things brother Billy was telling him about smoking Melachrino cig- arettes, or fighting with the niggers across the tracks--now that was something.,. "A World I Never Made" is written in sharp, hard prose, full of apt col- loquialisms, and is best when the author is wallowing in the psycholog- ical complexities of his superb, ac- curately-drawn characterizations. Hepburn Wins (From the Herald Tribune) THE WILLINGNESS of the local officers of the UAWA in Ontario to renounce allegiance to the CIO in negotiating a settlement of the Osh- awa strike is a distinct victory for Premier Hepburn. His passionate re- fusal to recognize Lewis or his "hire- lings" as spokesmen for Canadian labor, now that it has been acquisced in by the Oshawa strikers, has set an important precedent which, one must believe, will henceforth govern Canadian response to Lewis's ambi- tions. As a condition of extending; their organization across the border his unions will have to grant their, Canadian branches more or less com- plete autonomy. This successful resistance to the Lewis absolutism is an extremely3 healthy development from which the labor movement should benefit here as well as in Canada. Indeed, we should not forget that our own auto- mobile workers were an invaluable aid to Hepburn in achieving his ob- jective. This very evident resent- ment of the suggestion that they stage a strike against General Mo- tors on this side in sympathy with the Oshaway walkout was in itself notice to Lewis that his autocracy was in disfavor and, incidentally, a plain intimation to the Oshawa strik- ers that their CIO affiliation was of no practical advantake. The latter now talk of having been "let down" by Lewis. Lewis didn't let them down. His following in Michigan let him down so that he and his henchmen found it convenient to re- tire in silence to Washington. Is it too much to hope that the demonstration means the beginning of the end of the Lewis tyranny, that Canadian resistance to Lewis will do for -us industrially what our resist- ance to George III did for Canada politically? If so, we have much for which to thank Premier Hepburn. 'Campaign To Protect Lawns Is Announced A campaign to protect the campus Jawns and shrubbery for the Univer- sity Centennial in June has been put under way this week by a committee representing members of the staff of the Fresh Air Camp, it was an- nounced yesterday by Walter Luszki, '37, chairman. As a first move in the Fresh Air Camp campaign, Luszki said, peti- tionsedoin ach student to :sPP SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1937 VOL. XLVII No. 144 Notices Senior and Graduate Students: Those senior and graduate students who have been invited to be guests of honor at the Fourteenth Annual Honors Convocation of the Univer- sity of Michigan should order caps and gowns immediately at the Moe Sport Shop or Van Boven Inc. It is necessary to place these orders at once in order that the caps and gowns may be deliveredhin time for the Convocation, April 30. Joseph A. Bursley Chairman Committee on Honors Convocation. Summrner Session Students: Any woman student desiring residence in the University dormitories for the Summer Session should make appli- cation as soon as possible at the Office of the Dean of Women. t o Users of the Daily Official Bul- letin: The attention of users of The Daily Official Bulletin is respectfully called to the following: (1) Notice submitted for publica- tion must be Typewritten and must be signed. (2) Ordinarily notices are pub- lished but once. Repetition is at the Editor's discretion. (3) Notices must be handed to the Assistant to the President, as Editor of the Daily Official:Bulletin, Room 1021 A.H., before 3:30 p.m. 11:00, Saturdays). Hoauseheads: Having rooms for light housekeeping, furnished and unfurnished apartments suitable for graduate women students for the Summer Session are lrequested to call the Office of the Dean of Women as soon as possible. Oriental Women: Mrs. Elizabeth Cotton, Foreign Division, Y.W.C.A., will be in Ann Arbor this afternoon and tomorrow morning to interview Oriental women concerning summer vacatiots, opportunities for learning summer camp methods in Y.W.C.A. camps, and opportunities for visiting local Y.W.C.A.'s while they are liv- ing in this country. Oriental stu- dents who are returning home ,via Europe are usually interested in re- ceiving introductions to the Wfld's Y.W.C.A. in Geneva and the national Yuen movements in other countries. All Oriental women students are in- vited to talk with Mrs. Cotton. Her headquarters will be in the Office of the. Dean of Women. A cademic Notices; Playwriting (English 150) will meet; Tuesday night, April 27, instead of Monday, in Room 3212 A.H. instead' of 3217 A.H. Kenneth Rowe. Philosophy 31: Sections 3, 5, and 6; midsemester next Thursday.Section- al; midsemester next Wednesday. Churches Twilight Organ Recital: Palmer Christian, University organist, will give an all Bach program of organ nusic Sunday afternoon at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium. The gen- eral public, with the exception of small children, is invited without ad- mission charge. May Festival Tickets: The sale of individual tickets for May Festival concerts will begin at 8:30 o'clock Monday morning, April 26. The sale of season tickets will also continue. Individual concerts, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50; season tickets, $6.00, $7.00 and $8.00, at School of Music office, Maynard Street. 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. Chemistry Lecture: Dr. James B. Sumner, of the department of bio- chemistry, Cornell University, will lecture on the topic "The Chemical Nature of Enzymes' 'in the Chemistry, Amphitheater at 4:15 p.m., Tues- day April 27. The lecture is under the auspices of the University and the American Chemical Society. The public is cordially invited. Engineering Lecture: Monday and Tuesday nights, April 26 and 27, at 7 p.m. at the Michigan Union, Prof. Richard S. Kirby will deliver two illustrated lectures on Early En- gineers and Early Engineering. The members of the faculty of the University, and students, as well as all other interested parties are cor- dially invited to attend. Professor Kirby is a professor at Yale University. He is an outstand- in -a.>tnrityn ta. ntma ofan_- Baha'i Group Sunday afternoon at 4:30 p m. at the Michigan League. er subject will be, "This Challeng- ing Hour." The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture: A collection of Modern Dress and Drapery Textiles created by the Bu- reau of Style and Design of Marshall F"ield & Co.,Manufacturing Diision, 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. An exhibition of paintings by Mar- garet Bradfield and Mina Winslow is being held in Alumni Memorial Hall through May 5, 2 to 5 p.m. Sun- days, under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art Association. Events Today Catholic Studeits Hiking Club: There will be a group of students leaving at 2 p.n. today from St. Mary's Student Chapel for the first hike of the year. They will return not later than 5 p.m. All Catholic students and their friends are invit- ed. Comnitig'Events German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michi- gan Union. All faculty members interested in speaking German are cordially invited. There will be an informal 10-minute talk by Mr: Wer- ner F. Striedieck. Chemistry Motion Pictures: Mr. Shuster of the DuPont Company will show several sound films covering the manufacture of important chemical products. The pictures will be shown Monday, April 26, at 4:30 p.m. in the Chemistry Amphitheatre. Suomi Club will hold an outing at the "island" tomorrow. We leave from Lane Hall at 2:30 p.m. Re- freshments will be served, and a group picture taken. Hillel Players: There will be a meeting at the Hillel Foundation Tuesday, April 27, at 7:30 p.m. Elec- tion of officers will be held and plans discussed for the presentation of three one-act plays. The Home Making Group of the Michigan Dames will meet Tuesday evening at 8:15 p.m. at the home of Mrs. C. F. Behrens, 1101 Olivia Ave. The demonstrator for Charles of the Ritz cosmetics will be the speaker of the evening. All Dames are cordially invited. The Bibliophiles of the .Faculty Women's Club will meet with Mrs. Carl E. Burklund, 1561 Marlboro Drive, Tuesday, April 27, at 2:30 p.m. Faculty Women's Club: The Tues- day Afternoon Play-Reading. Sec- tion will meet on Tuesday afternoon April 27, at 2:15 p.m. in the Alunnae Room of the Michigan League. SUNDAY, APRIL 25, 1937 First Baptist Church: 10:45 a.m. Rev. R. Edward Sayles, minister, will preach on "The Perils of Privileges." Church School at 9:30 a.m. High School young people at 5:30 p.m. Roger Williams Guild: 12 noon. Student Group at Guild House. 6:15 p.m. the Guild's regular meeting. Election of officers. The program will be "Impressions of the State Youth Conference at Battle Creek," given by Stanley Wheater, Grad., and Howard R Chapman. Sulker Hall: 9:45 a.m. Student Class led by Professor Carrothers on "The Peril of Uselessness." 6 p.m. Wesleyan Guild meeting. Miss Gertrude Muxen will speak on "Friends-Our Greatest Investnient." This will also be election of officers. Fellowship hour following the meet- ing. First Methodist Church: Morning worship at 10:30 a.m. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "We or They?' First 'Presbyterian Church: Meet- ing at the Masonic Temple, 327 So. Fourth Ave. At the Morning Worship Service at 10:45 a.m., Dr. Kenneth D. Miller, executive secretary of the Presbytery of Detroit, will preach on the sub- ject "The Perils of Civilized Life." Special music by the student choir and double quartette. Mr. John M. Trytten will be the guest speaker at the regular mneet- ing of the Westminster Gulid at 6:30 p.m. His topic will be "Criteria for Choosing a Vocation." A supper and social hour will nrecede this DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI Publication n the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of thd Vaitvarsity. Copy. received..at tine omc. a the Astent to thu PreeidMn uati 3:30: 11:00 a.m. ou Saturday. 4