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June 01, 1939 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1939-06-01

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1939

--
"iw

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

IEI

- R

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
Oniversity year and Summi c 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 matters 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, $4.50.
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publisbers Representative
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y.
CHICAGO * BOSTON ' Los ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1938-39
Editorial Staff

A Dose
Of Fascist Medicine .. .
A T LAST the United States has decid-
ed that the best cure for fascist
expansion in South America is a heaping spoon-
ful of the, fascists' own medicine. Germany has
long realized that the way to a nation's heart
is through its pocketbook. And that the second
best way is through government heads who
eagerly lap up any flattery tossed them by
greater nations.
Hitler used tactic number two last week in
inviting Gen. Pedro Aurelio Goes Monteiro,
Brazilian Chief of Staff, to visit Berlin where,
among other honors, he would be allowed to re-
view a crack regiment of the Fuhrer's Nazi
troops. But, displaying diplomatic technique,
incredible for a United States official, Under
Secretary of State Sumner Welles immediately
parried by sending Brigadier General George
Catlett Marshall, soon to become United States
Army Chief of Staff, to entice General Monteiro
to return with him aboard the cruiser Nashville
for a visit to the United States.
Undoubtedly taken aback by so much atten-
tion, the Brazilian general confessed his great
desire to visit the States and added that he had
never expected to be summoned by the United
States Chief of Staff in person and transported
on a United States battleship. It's the old game
of two rival merchants trying to pull a poor cus-
tomer into their respective stores, but Merchant
Hitler hasn't a chance unless he uses a black-
jack.
In reaching Hitler's heart through the pocket-
book the United States once again pours fascist
castor oil down Hitler's throat. Both the United
States and Germany exchange manufactured
goods for Brazilian raw materials, but the United
States can encourage trade with something Ger-
many does not have-good, solid gold. In 1937,
after cutting tariffs on Brazilian raw materials,
the United States engineered a transaction that
placed $60,000,000 worth of United States gold in
Brazilian banks. This year a $50,000,000 loan hasm
been made through the Export-Import Bank
and a $20,000,000 short-term credit has been
given. The use of gold as an incentive to trade
leaves Germany standing out on the back porch
as far as Brazilian trade is concerned.
The march of trade competition goes on, both
democrats and fascists knowing the inseparabil-
ity of economic and political power. To the
United States this competition is the peaceful
enforcement of the Monroe Doctrine. To the
fascists it is a peaceful battle for profitable
colonies. Only by keeping a vigilant eye open and
a big bottle of bitter fascist medicine handy can
the United States make the Western Hemisphere
safe for democracy-our democracy.
--Enmle Gele
THEFATREr

1
Ogi V

J/ feemr lo Me
Heywood Broun
STAMFORD, Conn., May 29.-It'has long been
my notion that when Nature puts on a smiling
face it should be easy for all of us to snap into

the same disposition. The
theory advanced by some
astronomer that wars and
threats of wars are caused
chiefly by sun spots seems to
me a shade too dogmatic. I
have small knowledge of the
nature of sun spots or their
effect upon our existence,
save for the fact that they
sometimes make it difficult

Managing Editor
City Editor
Editorial Director
Associate Editor
Associate Editor
Associate Editor
Associate Editor
Associate Editor
Sports Editor .
Women's Editor

Business Staff

. Carl Petersen
Stan M. Swinton.
Elliott Maraniss
. Jack Canavan
Dennis Flanagan
Morton Linder
Norman Schorr
Ethel Norberg
. Mel Fineberg
. Ann Vicary
Paul R. Park
Ganson Taggart
Zenovia Skoratko
Jane Mowers
. Harriet Levy

Business Manager
Credits Manager . .
Women's Business 'Manager
Women's Advertising Manager.
Publication Manager

.
.
.
.

NIGHT EDITOR: HOWARD A. GOLDMAN
The editorials published in The Michigan.
Daily are written by members of the Daily
staff and represent the views of the
writers only.
Washington's Fight
For Public Welfare.. ..
W HEN political boss Thomas J. Pen-
dergast stepped down from the
throne of power in Kansas City last week to enter
Leavenworth Penitentiary, the Federal Govern-
ment had defined its position still more clearly
as a crusader against crime and oppression.
This governmental paternalism is something
new for America. It would not have been possible
a decade or so ago, when state governments were
still militant about Federal encroachment on
"states' rights." The depression, however, high-
lighted the weaknesses of state government,
forced the states to cling more closely to the
financial apron-strings of Washington.
With its increasing control over industry,
commerce and agriculture, the Federal Govern-
ment naturally began to be looked upon by the
people as the agent to head them out of the
wilderness of insecurity. The National Govern-
ment took the attitude that if the states could
not provide for the public welfare, then the
Government must bridge the gap.
The G-men early became Government crusad-
ers. They were necessitated by the growth of
crime from a local snatch-and-hide affair to a
national business. The popular idolization they
gained for tracking down "public enemies" stifled
any objections the states raised against Federal
incursions of power.
Another big step was taken when the Govern-
ment shipped Chicago's czar, Al Capone, off to
Alcatraz. Chicago couldn't do it; Illinois couldn't
do it; Washington succeeded.
Capone was brought to earth by a new weapon
of the Government-the income tax law. This is
a fool-proof gadget that snares public privateers-
men going or coming. If the crook reports all
his income, the Government has a chance to con-
vict him of racketeering; if he does not report
his illegally obtained funds, he is, like Capone
and Pendergast, sued for tax dodging.
And what is the NLRB but a Government in-
strument to bolster labor's resistance against
capital? Believing that labor is the underdog of
our economic system, Federal leaders have added
their strength to make the struggle more equal.
A concrete example was the Department of Jus-
tice's attempt last summer to convict Harlan
County coal operators for restricting their labor-
ers' civil rights-more specifically, their rights
to organize.
Perhaps the biggest set-back to this growth of
power was the Southern opposition to the Federal
anti-lynching law. The measure had an excellent
purpose; Northerners refused to see how South-
erners could apologize their fight against it. But
philanthropic or not, the law would have carried
the Federal Government's powers into the states'
backyards. Filibustering Southern Senators read
recipes on home cooking to the Legislature until
the measure was abandoned.-i
For every defeat, however, the Federal Gov-
ernment has won a score of victories. It has be-
come the champion of the underdog, of humani-
tarianism, of the oppressed and crime-ridden.
The new role has not been assumed; it has largely
been accepted as a necessity. Circumstances have
caused us to embark willy-nilly on an era of
benevolent centralization.
-ervie Haufler
Don't change horses in the middle of the

By NORnAN KIELL
O! Welcome Pegasus!
THE WHITE STEED, by Paul Vincent Car-
roll. Directed by Agnes Morgan; settings by
Emiline Clark Roche. The third presenta-
tion of the Ann Arbor Dramatic Season. At
the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
Canon Matt Lavelle........Whitford Kane
Rosieanne ................ Ethel Morrison
Father Shaugnessy .......... Philip Tonge
Phelim Fintry ............. John Carmody
Nora Fintry ................ Joanna Roos
Patrick Hearty .............. Edgar Kent -
Sarah Hearty ................ Mary Morris
Bridgid Brodigan............Donna Earl
Denis Dillon ................ Wesley Addy
Inspector Toomey ...... Staats Coatsworth
Meg Magee .............. Hathaway Kale
Michael Shivers ............ Clancy Cooper
-At long last, The Ann Arbor Dramatic Season
is offering this week a play which we can recom-
niend with full heart and soul, Paul Vincent
Carroll's prize-winning "The White Steed," which
opened Tuesday night at the Lydia Mendelssohn
Theatre. After sitting through two plays that
were either badly written or badly produced, or
both, "The White Steed" comes to us as welcome
as Pegasus came to Bellerophon.
It is a tale of the conflict between two men
of God in an Irish village that Mr. Carroll is
telling, of Father Shaugnessy who has the spirit
of the Inquisition in him, and of paralytic Canon
Lavelle who loves his God and his parishioners
according to the spirit and not the letter.
Mr. Carroll has pitted these two characters
together superbly. Father Shaugnessy has taken
over the duties of the crippled old canon in this
seacoast town with the zeal of a clerical fascist,
turning the village topsy-turvy with his fanatical
moralism. He is a priest as cruel as Nero, a zealot
who can not rest until his mathematical exacti-
tudes are substituted for the spiritual. He or-
ganizes a vigilante committee which tries to take'
over the civil as well as the spiritual authority
of the village.
The crochety canon, age-wise in the service of
God and his flock, with the taste of the earth and
human beings and good food ever with him,
warns the Father not to become a clerical hound'
But Father Shaugnessy almost succeeds in his
machinations and almost causes blood to be shed
until the old man rises from his wheel-chair
and, in his vernacular, tells the intolerant Fathe
where the blankety-blank to get off at, reassert-
ing the benevolent authority of a shepherd who
knows and truly loves his flock.
And Mr. Carroll knows the people he is writing
about and he gives them juicy things to say.
His characters are full-bodied and full-born,
uttering words that come direct from the heart
and that sing with the pureness and the poetry
that comes from an Irishman who has lived with
and loved his people. He writes racily. humnr-

to get Charlie McCarthy as clear as he should be.
But there appears to be much testimony in sup-
port of the hypothesis that humankind is meaner
than usual in bleak or humid weather. The
breakdown in the moral fiber of the missionary
in "Rain" I always attributed to the heavy pre-
cipitation rather than to the shallow allure of
the character directly identified as the cause of
his fall. Tempers grow shorter as the days move
in the same direction, and groups snowed in get
to snarling at each other.
After every Polar expedition north or south
the brave explorers come home not speaking to
each other. Men, with a few shining exceptions,
are not rejuvenated by any long stay on the ice
but come back to civilization as forbidding and
truculent as cold-storage eggs. But concerning
yesterday there could be no complaint along
this side road. A brisk breeze tempered the
friendly sun. The pond was gay with ripples;
flowers, the names of which escape me, were
sticking their heads up all along the lanes and
lawns.
And we had three Young girls of high-school
age as weekend guests. "It will be a pleasure," I
thought, "to see these youngsters who have been
immersed all week in their studies get out under
the blue sky and frisk like lambs." I assumed that
they would want to go over and feed the chickens
or watch the ducks who swim constantly in flo-
tilla. They could play tennis, or swim or weed
the garden. But they did not care to do any of
these things. No sooner were they greeted with
the tang of country air than all three of then\
decided that they wanted to go to the movies. It
seems there is a rival of a film called "Hot Lips'
at one of the tenth-run houses in a neighborhood
township.
After several hours the young girls got back
and the sun was still glorious, and so they came
indoors to listen to the radio. As a parent I am
on the easy-going side, and so I did not suggest
to my daughter that she and her friends oight
to have sense enough to go out in the rare atmos-
phere. And presently I was overjoyed to find all
three in country clothes, and seated on a mossy
bank intent upon literature. These old eyes are
not what they used to be at a hundred paces.
I had no idea whether the little dears were brush-
ing up on their homework or reading Dickens,
Scott, Thackeray or some other improving author
for the sheer fun of it. And so quietly, galumph!
galumph! I stole up on them. "And what are you
reading aloud to your dear little friends?" I asked
the eldest girl, who was acting as interlocutor.
She blushed prettily, and said, "It's a motion
picture magazine." That should have been enough
to warn me, but like any bullheaded inquiring
reporter I persisted and said, "And may I ask
the nature of the article or essay which holds
your rapt attention?" "The thing I'm readin
now, sir," she said, "is called, 'Has Shearer Grown
Afraid of Love?' I've just finished, 'Hilarious
Hollywood, or Fun at Parties'." There ought to
be a law.
Those Reticent British
American reporters, used to wideopen publicity
methods, have sometimes complained of the
reticence of other nations, and particularly of
the British. There has been a lot of this talk in
Washington lately. Well, there's another side to
this reticence, as was shown in a little Associated
Press dispatch from London about the motor
accident involving Queen Mary. The owner of
the lorry which struck the royal car "refused
to disclose the driver's name to newspaper men,"
and the man came into the news only when he
appeared with a bouquet of flowers at the Queen's
residence.
In times of key-hole journalism, of "bus-driv-
er's-own-story" exhibitionism, isn't it refreshing
to find a driver, an employer, and a press which
respects the individual's right to privacy, to per-
sonal dignity, and to a useful future career?
-Christian Science Monitor
crackling humor. Mr. Kane revelled in the role
and the audience enjoyed it with him. Philip
Tonge, as the clerical dictator, was not upto Mr.
Kane's winning performance. There were times
when it was difficult to hear Mr. Tonge. How-
ever, in an actor-proof part, he plays Father
Shaugnessy with a clear-cut interpretation,
though a bit weakly.
The other people Mr. Carroll brings into the

conflict kick up a grand row for him. Nora is a
village girl who rebels against the tyranny of the
priest; she has a hot temper and a bitter tongue
and she speaks up when she finds her freedom
shackled. Denis Dillon, the village schoolmaster,
is a sniveling coward who needs some of Nora's
courage and eventually asserts it when Father
Shaugnessy tries to cow him. Joanna Roos as
the rebellious firebrand drunk with dreams and
Wesley Addy as the contemptible schoolmaster
drunk with whiskey gave body and substance to
their roles. Ethel Morrison, as the canon's house-
keeper, was utterly satisfactory as was John
Carmody's portrayal of Nora's father who
knows the futility of arguing with the genre
Shomnev Staats Coatsworth. who ha n-

AS OTMRS
Vandenberg Is Willing
Senator Vandenberg's announce-
ment that he is a receptive candidate
for his party's Presidential nomina-
tion in 1940 is something more than
the routine statement which is often
made on such occasions. It is particu-
larly interesting for two reasons: for
its emphasis, at this time, on what
Mr. Vandenberg believes to be the
desirability of electing "a pre-pledged,
one-term President" and for its well-
taken position that the Republican
party ought first to decide what it
really stands for, and then nominate
a candidate to fit that choice.
As Mr. Vandenberg's supporters see
it, the argument to be made in be-
half of the "pre-pledged, one-term"
candidate is shaped by the exigencies
of the present situation. The next
President, even in the event of Mr.
Roosevelt's renomination and reelec-
tion, will have to undertake an enor-
mous job of financial retrenchment
in Washington, in order to bring the
national budget into balance at long
last. The next President, if he is a
Republican, will have to work with a
Senate which seems certain to re-
main Democratic at least during his
first two years in office. On both
these grounds it can be argued that
a "one-term" Republican President
would have a better chance of success
than a Republican President whose
position on this point remained in
doubt; that he could stand up with
great strength against the demands
of the insatiable "pressure groups" if
he were not seeking reelection and,
at the same time, having pledged
himself to a single term, find it pos-
sible to work more effectively with an
adverse majority in the Senate.
In any case, it is certainly desir-
able for Mr. Vandenberg's party to
act on the second part of his advice
and to shape, if it can, those "clean-
cut, constructive, courageous prin-
ciples" whose adoption he believes
should precede the choice of a candi-
date. One thing is certain. If the next
President is a Republican, he will
have an unhappy time in office if he
is elected on a platform so vaguely
drawn, in the supposed interest of
political expediency, that it means all
things to all men. He will need all
the help that he can get from the
fact, if it proves to be a fact, that
his party is committed to an honest
and plain-spoken program.
-New York Times
Amending Neutrality
Secretary Hull's recommendations
to Congress in the matter of amend-
ing the Neutrality Act constitute a
late effort to salvage something of
value from a situation which has
reached a deadlock in both houses
The recommendations which he has
made are limited in scope. There is
nothing in them which gives expres-
sion to the belief inherent in the
President's Chicago speech of 1937
and in his message to Congress in
January of this year that the time
has come when the United States, a
a great world Power, must, in its own
interest, take a more active part in
the preservation of world peace
Nevertheless, there is one importan
point in Mr. Hull's proposals which
could be expected to contribute to thi
end, even though it is not adovcated
as a measure to curb the aggresso
nations. This is the recommendation
for the repeal of the automatic em
bargo now contained in Section 1 o
the Neutrality Act on the export o:
arms and munitions in time of war.
Mr. Hull favors this repeal on th
ground that it is no longer possibl
to distinguish successfully betwee
exports of arms and muntions an

export sof other kinds of goods. "Mod-
ern warfare is no longer warfare be
tween armed forces only; it is war
fare between nations in every phas(
of their national life." Lists of con
traband include every item useful ir
the life of an enemy nation. A coun
try at war is no less anxious to keel
cotton and oil and copper, and indee
every other useful product, fron
reaching an enemy nation than it i
to keep guns and airplanes fron
reaching thatsenemy's armed forces
The old distinction between differen
categories of exports has disappeare
under the conditions of modern war
And since a complete embargo on al
exports "would obviously be ruinou
to our economic life," Mr. Hull there
fore believes that we should have "n<
general and automatic embargo in
flexibly and rigidly imposed on an
class or group of exports."
His reasoning is sound and hi
recommendations should be adopted
The practical effect of this adoption
in the circumstances which now pre
vail, would be to make American arm
and munitions available to Britaii
and France in time of war, on a cast
basis, since these nations would hay
command of the high seas. Our in.
fluence would thus be thrown agains
the outbreak of a general war it
Europe, since the assurance of Ameri
can supplies for Britain and Franc
would tend to create a still greate
preponderance of strength on th
part of those nations which wish t'
keep the peace.
-New York Times

(Continued from Page 3)
meeting of May 1, 1939, which have
been distributed by campus mail.
2. Discussion of reports submitted
with this call to the meeting.
a. Executive Committee, prepared
by Professor Joseph R. Hayden.
b. University Council, prepared by
Professor George R. La Rue.
c. Executive Board of the Gradu-
ate School, prepared by Professor
Floyd E. Bartell.
d. Senate Advisory Committee on
University Affairs, to be presented
orally by Professor Arthur S. Aiton.
e. Deans' Conference, prepared by
Dean Edward H. Kraus.
3. New Business.
a. Election of five members of the
University Council and two members
of the Administrative Board. Nom-
inating Committee: Professors Rob-
ert C. Angell, Chairman, and Neil H.
Williams, and Associate Professor
James E. Dunlap.
b. Recommendation on a Naval
R.O.T.C.-Professor Joseph R. Hay-
den.
c. Recommendations of the Ad-
minmistrative Board and of the Con-
centration Advisors-Professor Jo-
seph R. Hayden.
The University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Information
has received notice of the following
United States Civil Service Examina-
tions. Last date fo r filing applica-
tion will be June 26, 1939.
Horizontal Sorting Machine Opera-
tor, Salary: $1,260.
Associate Household Equipment
Specialist, Salary: $3,200.
(Bureau of Home Economics, Dept
of Agriculture).
Assistant Household Equipment
Specialist, Salary: $2,600.
(Bureau of Home Economics, Dept
of Agriculture).
Complete announcements are on
file at the University Bureau of Ap-
pointments and Occupational Infor-
mation, 201 Mascn Hall; office hours:
9-12 and 2-4.
Teachers: I would like to meet al
students who are receiving a teaching
certificate either in June or August
in Room 205 Mason Hall, today, a
4:15 p.m.
T. Luther Purdom, Director
University Bureau of Appoint-
ments and Occupational Infor-
mation.
Life Membership in the Union: Lif
memberships in the Union are avail
able at the Business Office of th
Union to men who have been enrolle
in the University for eight semesters.
All contestants for Hopwoo
awards are requested to call for thei
manuscripts at the Hopwood Room
on Monday, June 5. The room wil
be open from 8 to 12 and from 2 t
5:30. Copies of the judges' comment
on individual manuscripts may be ob
Stained at the desk.
s All students who have competed i
the Hopwood contests, includin
those in the freshman contest, ar
invited to the Grand Rapids Roo
t of the League for an informal meet
ing with Carl Van Doren at 8:15 pm
Friday, June 2.
r Senior Literary Commencemen
2 Announcements will be distribute
- at Alumni Memorial Hall on Thurs
f day, June 1, between the hours of:
f and 5.
e Education School Seniors: All Edu
e cation Seniors who . ordered Com
n mencement Announcements a r
d asked to call for them on Thursda
- from 7 to 4, or on Friday from 9 to 1
- on the first floor of University Hig
- School.
e
Senior Engineers: Commencemen
n Announcements will be distributed i
- West Engineering Building (abov
p arch) on Thursday and Friday, fro
d 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Payments must b
n completed and receipts presented i

s order to secure announcements.
n Seniors: Official Senior Clas
Commencement Booklets and Fol
d Announcements are now on sale a
Burr, Patterson and Aud Co., 6(
.1 Church Street.
s The Student Book Exchange will b
o open to receive used textbooks fron
all schools on June 7, in the Nort
y Lounge of the Union. Students ca
set their own prices on the book
which will be re-sold at the Boc
. Exchange next fall.
- Academic Notices
is Final doctoral examination of M
n Rudolph H. Nichols, Jr., will be he:
e on Thursday, June 1, at 2 p.m., i
e the West Council Room, Rackha
t Building. Mr. Nichols' field of spe
n cialization is Physics. The titleo
- his thesis is "An Investigation of Au
e ditory Fatigue, with Special Refe
r ence to Subjective Harmonics."
e Prof. F. A. Firestone, as chai
o man of the committee, will condu
the examination. By direction of th
Executive Board, the chairman ha

bach's field of specialization is Po-
litical Science. The title of his thes-
is is "Federal Cooperation with the
States under the Commerce Clause.
Professor J. S. Reeves, as chair-
man of the committee, will conduct
the examination. By direction of the
Executive Board, the chairman has
the privilege of inviting members of
the faculty and advanced doctoral
candidates to attend the examination
and to grant permission to others
who might wish to be present.
C. S. Yoakum.
Final Doctoral Examination of
James Raymond Lawson will be held
on Thursday, June 1 at 3 p.m. in the
East Council Room, Rackham Bldg.
Mr. Lawson's field of specialization
is Physics. The title of his thesis
is "The Infrared Absorption Spectra
of a Number of Heavy Tetrahedral
Molecules with Substituted Groups
and a Study of Hindered Rotation in
Methyl Alcohol."
Professor H. M. Randall, as chair-
man of the committee, will conduct
the examination. By direction of the
Executive Board, the chairman has
the privilege of inviting members of
the faculty and advanced doctoral
candidates to attend the examination
and to grant permission to others who
might wish to be present.
C. S. Yoakuni.
Registration Material: Colleges of
L.S.&A., and Architecture, Schools
of Education, Forestry and Music:
Summer Session registration ma-
terial may be obtained in Room 4 U.H.
Please see your adviser and secure all
necessary signatres before June 24.
Architect classifiers will post a not-
ice when they are ready to confer.
Robert L. Williams,
Assistant Registrar
All Students, Colleges of L.S.&A.,
Architecture; Schools of Education,
Forestry and Music: File change of
address card in Room 4 U.H. before
June 1. Blue prints of records and
other information will be sent im-
j mediately after examinations to you
g at the address given in February un-
less change of address is filed. Failure
t to receive your blue print because of
faulty address will necessitate a
charge of $1 for the second copy.
R. L. Williams,
Assistant Registrar.
English II: Final Examination
e Schedule, Tuesday, June 6, 2-5 p.m.
Bader 6 A.H.
e Baum 103 R.L.
d Bertram 103 R.L.
Cassidy 1020 A.H.
d Chang 201 U.H.
r Dean 205 M.H.
Eisinger2205 M.H.
11 Ford 1209 A.H.
o Green 229 A.H.
Greenhut 35 A.H.
s Haines 302 M.H.
Hart 18 A.H.
n Helm 16 A.H.
g Helmers 35 A.H.
e Knode W.Phys.Lect.
m Martin 203 U.H.
- McCormick 103 R.L.
. Ogden 3209 A.H.
O'Neill 202 W. Phys.
Robertson W.Phys.Lect.
t Schroder W.Phys.Lect.
d Walker 2054 N.S.
Weimer 202 W.Phys.
3 Weisinger W.Phys.Lect.
Wells 3231 A.H.
Williams 1018 A.H.
- English 1:
1- Arthos 215 A.H.
e Hathaway E H.H.
Ly
2 Botany I, final examination Sat-
h urday, June 10, 9-12 a.m. Room As-
signment:
A-L, Room 25, Angell Hall.
M-Z, Room 1025 Angell Hall.
in
re Zoology I Final Examination: Sat-
m urday, June 10, 9-12 a.m. Alpha-
e betical group A to L, Room B, Haven
n Hall. Alphabetical group M to Z,
Room C, Haven Hall.

Ss Sociology 51, Final Examination will
Id be given Tuesday, June 6, 2-5 p.m.
at Students will be divided alphabeti-
cally, A through K meeting in 1025
Angell Hall; K through Z in Room
e C, Haven Hall.
n E.E. 7a, Building Illumination final
h examination will be held on Thurs-
n day, June 8, from 8 to 12, in Rooms
ks 246 and 247 West Engineering Bldg.,
k the regular lecture room and the
room across the corridor from it.
Astronomy 32, Section III, Curtis.
The final examination will be held in
r. Room 35 Angell Hall, 9-12 a.m. Mon-
Ld day, June 12.
in
m Final Examination in Aeronautical
e- Engineering:
of Aero. 1, General Aeronautics, Mon-
1- day, June 5, from 2-6, in Room 1042
r- East Engineering Building.
Aero. 2, Sec. I, Theory of Aviation,
r- Tuesday, June 6, from 8-12, in Room
ct 2300 East Engineering Building.
le Aero. 2, Sec. II, Theory of Aviation,
as Tuesday, June 6, from 2-6, in Room

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University.
Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30 P.M.;
11:00 A.M. on Saturday.

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