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January 17, 1940 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1940-01-17

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I

-I,

TI

n[ Mr- r '2Ur +r mr m UN rc__'Za*9Kyu,
ed and managed by students of the University of
gan under the authority of the Board in Control of
nt Publications.
dished every morning except Monday during the
rsity year and Summer Session.
Member of the Associated Press
Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
r republication of all news dispatches credited to
not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All
of republication of all other matters herein also
ed.
red at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as
class mail matter.
criptions during regular school year by carrier,
by mail, $4.50.
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVEk-,SNG BY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publishers Representative
420 MIADISON4 AVE. NEW YORK, NQ. Y.'
CHICAGO BOSTON ' Los ANGELES -SAN PRARCISCO
ber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1939-40
Editorial Staff

sen

w
ter
(ior

Flanagan . . .
Canavan .
cary . .
berg .
Business Stafff
sManager.
siness Mgr., Credit Manager
s Business Manager
s Advertising Manager
ions Manager

Managing Editor
Editorial Director.
. . City Editor'
Associate Editor
. Associate Editor
. Associate Editor
*Associate Editor,
Women's Editor
* Sports Editor
-Paul R. Park
Ganson P. Taggart,
Zenovia Skoratko
. Jane Mowers
*Harriet S. Levy

IXT EDITOR: HOWARD A. GOLDMAN
The editorials published in The Michigan
aily are written by members of The Daily
:aff and represent the views of the writers
'nly.
,newaI Of Japanese
ade Agreement **
T HE UNITED STATES trade agree-
met with Japan expires this
th. The question of its renewal seems of
mount importance to both countries-and
cially important, at this time, to Japan.
our State Department has been singularly
t lately in providing public information
nent to current negotiations. Why?
any and more important problems underlie
question of a trade agreement, problems
bich the ordinary layman is totally unaware
problems which he would be unable to
with anyway; and until these are ironed
our State Department wants to keep perti-
factual information out of the headlines.
regard to the trade pact itself, two general
:ls-of thought exist in the United States.
group favors a complete trade embargo
ist Japan, hoping by this plan to force
o to abandon its Chinese venture. The
r group opposes such action for reasons
ti seem sound and convincing.
e pro-embargo forces offer this argument:
United States recently has been selling
n 55 p'er cent of all her munitions. From
ther nation can Japan purchase iron, steel
petroleum in such quantities as she hasl
buying from us.
dependent, indeed, has Japan become on
country that the proposed embargo might
cause economic collapse in that Far-Eastern
re. The embargo proponents thus main-
that through their pet measure Japan will
rced to evacuate China.1
ti-embargoists reply along this line: Grant-
at we can force Japan into economic col-
, what lies beyond that? The immediate
i would seem to be the emergence of Soviet
La as the dominant power in the Far-East.
this serious question can be raised: Does
gtate Department want a powerful Russia
e Far-East? -
other question can be raised: Deprived of
nited States as a source of raw materials
war necessities, where could Japan go?
e answer is the negotiation of a treaty with
.a. In the light of recent events in Europe,
a pact seems not at all impossible.
e other possible answer has an even more
rtant bearing on our interests in that re-
Japan's other alternative would be to,
southward. Between Japan and Australia
he entire East Indian archipelago, rich in
naterials, and especially productive in high-
ized petroleum. The Dutch govern most
is region, and have been supported in their
by the French and British fleets. Now,
ver, these warfleets are occupied in far-off
pe, so Japan has an easy and tempting
within her reach.
is possibility seems even more "close-to-
" when we remember that the Philippine
ds are in this general region-closer to
o, indeed, than most of the other East In-
islands.
>anese domination of southeastern Asia
nts an even more serious problem to the
4d States. We are sorely dependent on that
n as almost all of our rubber, tin, quinine,
'anese and Manila hemp comes from there.
a more powerful Japan in the East Indies,
.s a stronger Japanese influence on this
;ry.
>-embargo enthusiasts counter with the
i door" argument of the actual trade ques-
Japan, they claim, has openly violated her

pertinent fact can also be cited: that our trade
with Japan is normally about three times the
amount of our trade with China. The "invest-
ments" argument can be almost brushed aside
when it is realized that United States invest-
ments in China constitute only a small fraction
of similar British investments.
Clfton M. Utley, writer on world affairs and
president of the Chicago Council on Foreign Re-
lations, points to the growing public support
of the embargo plan as evidenced in recent
Gallup polls, and expresses the opinion that
this sentiment will keep growing. This may or
may not be true.
Meanwhile, the American public is being kept
in ignorance of the real implications of the trade
pact problem with Japan, and can not be ex-
pected to render thoughtful judgment without
adequate and official information.
- oward A. Goldman.
At The Ringside
Of History .
T HESE ARE DARK DAYS for the
people who read newspapers. The
Franco-British war against Hitler and the Rus-
sian invasion of Finland make Mr. Average
Reader's job a difficult one.
It is more than a problem of censorship and
propaganda. Both can be recognized and, if
some amount of concentration is employed, one
will not be harmed by them. The main problem
these days is to get the proper long-distance
view of the news we read.
The English ship which was torpedoed in the
morning edition docks at a neutral port in time
for the evening papers. Troops mass for battle
over the wires of a reliable press service, but the
battle never comes off. A Russian army is wiped
out in the Detroit Times and resurrected the
following day in the Daily Worker. Revolutions
which seem world-shaking on Monday turn out
to be street-fights on Thursday.
And Mr. A. Citizen becomes increaingly be--
wildered. So he turns to the comic strips, and to
the Broadway and Hollywood gossip columns
where everything is easier to understand and
a man can decipher logically the "inside story."
If the blood-business pauses for one day, he
says that this is a "phoney" war, not realizing
that the histories of past wars cover many years.
Misled once, he condemns all newspapers as
propaganda, finds censorship in the most harm-
iless of dispatches and resolves to get his news
from the radio commentators hereafter.
Publishers have offered the weekly news maga-
zines, newspaper "review" sections and syndi-
cated .interpretive" columns as helpmeets for
obtaining the objective view. Announcement was
made yesterday in New York City of the estab-
lishment of a new evening newspaper-tabloid
in size, with departmentalized news columns and
articles containing, in addition to last-minute
news, background material and non-political
interpretation by experts. This may be the
newspaper of tomorrow, or it may be only a tem-
porary innovation until the ideal format for the
day's news is invented. We cannot be certain.
But we are certain of one fact. The amazing
errors in reporting the news in 1914 must not
occur again. For example:
"When the fall of Antwerp became known, the
church bells were rung throughout Germany."
- Koenische Zeitung
"A cording to the, Koelnische Zeitung, the
clerg of Antwerp were compelled to ring the
church bells when the city was taken."
-Le Matin
"According to what Le Matin has heard from
Cologne, the Belgian priests who refused to ring
the church bells when Antwerp was taken haveP
been driven away from their places."
-London Times
"According to what the London Times has
heard from Cologne via Paris, the unfortunate
Belgian priests who refused to ring the church
bells when Antwerp was taken have been sen-
tenced to hard labor."
- Corriere della Sera
"According to information to the Corriere della
Sera from Cologne via London, it is confirmed
that the barbaric conquerors of Antwerp pun-
ished the unfortunate Belgian priests for their
heroic refusal to ring the church bells by hang-

ing them as living clappers to the bells with
their heads down."
-Le Matin
It is hard to believe in these enlightened days
that the above tales, like those about Belgian
babies with bayoneted hands and German sol-
diers shackled to/machine-guns, were once pub-
lished as genuine news. Yet they were-but the
newspapers shouldn't get all the blame. Some
of it should be directed toward Mr. Average
Reader himself who forgets that three cents
worth of newsprint doesn't include the ability
to evaluate events calmly.
- Leonard Schleider.

Of ALL Things..,
...norty ....
AWYERS ARE FUNNY PEOPLE. Not all
lawyers, of course, but most of them. Mr. Q.
has wondered for a long time what made .them
so funny--or perhaps, he should say peculiar
rather than funny. Anyhow, sometimes he
thought it must be the fact that they were al-
ways talking and not only just plain talking. but
talking confidentially. You know, on the side.
And then, at other times, he thought it must be
the fact that they are always involved in argu-
ments so that they never know just where any-
thing stands. Or maybe because they were al-
ways objecting and getting themselves over-
ruled or sustained. Or again perhaps because
they were always appealing. But no, not this,
because Mr. Q.' can think of quite, a few who
aren't very appealing. Then what is the trouble?
Why are all lawyers funny-r peculiar?
Well, it's because at one time or another they
were law students and law students are ex-
ceedingly peculiar. Exceedingly. For one thing,
they are always "briefing" something or other.
No matter when you see them or where, they're
always either on their way to or from "briefing"
something. Now it has -always been a constant
source of amazement and no end of mystery as
to whatinhell this briefing business is. At least
to Mr. Q. there has. So yesterday he determined
to find out once and for all and'thereby perhaps
discover why law students are peculiar. So he
went over to the Law Quad 'and stood in the
center, waiting for a likely subject for investi-
gation. Finally one shrewd-looking chap came
along and he was patted on the shoulder, gently.
"I beg your pardon, but ...
"What's your trouble, bud, what's your
trouble?"I
"Well, I have no real trouble, it's just that I
am a little puzzled and . .
"Oh, you want to know about some point of
law? Well, you've certainly come to the right
man." And he drew back his coat, patted his
lapels with both palms, hooking the fingers in-
side Lincolnstyle.
Mr. Q. for a moment feared there might be a
fee involved. but he went ahead.
"I was just wondering what you fellows mean
when you say you are "briefing" a case or what-
ever it is you brief. And why do you do it?"
The hands dropped from the lapels and the
boy-barrister gaped. That's just what he did:t
gaped. He looked at Mr. Q. kind of funny-like
and frowned. "Well, briefing a case means to
nake sort of a synopsis of the thing putting
down the important points. It's the outline
of the case. That's all it is."
"And why do you do it?"
"Well, it's . . . well, you just . . . the professors
. . . well, everybody does it. It's just gotta be
done, that's all. It's part of the work."F
"I know, but do you brief all of th;s time?
Don't you ever do anything else?" I mean,Y
like reading texts or going to class or writing
papers or anything like that?"t
"Sure, we do all that, and . . . say, is that
the right time? Excuse me, I gotta go and
dash off a brief for con law .., .
Mr. Q. quizzed at least 20 fellows there, all
fairly intelligent looking guys, except one chaps
named Cohen or Quinn or something like thatr
' who looked as if he might be the object of the b
law rather than an interpreter. And they alli
were on their way to brief this or brief that. Mr.
Q. still doesn't know why they do it, but he is stillv
convinced they are very peculiar.

For, though he would have found
'n it (at long last) a technique for
Fighting the New Deal, it is a tech-
nique which canot be applied by
every Tom, Dick and Girdler. The
Endicott-Johnson workers did, it is
rue, vote 12,693 for no union at all,
1,612 for the AFL, 1,079 for the CIO.
this, admittedly, was a vote of con-
eidence in Mr. George F. Johnson,
'Zead of the shoe company. Mr.
Tohnson obviously becomes the logi-
,al champion of the anti-New Deal
'orces. He proves he knows how to
'freak a . union organizer's heart.
Those who are opposed to unions
must at once accept the leadership
-f Mr. George F. Johnson, for his
.ay has worked. But the trouble is,
-hey have to take all of him.
Let us assume that Mr. George F.
Tohnson, on the basis of his victory,
gets up in business as the chief op-
onent of the New Deal. He is nom-
'nated for President by the Republi-
'an Party. Here is his acceptance
,peech, which I have assembled from
Zis ow nstatements, every word taken
lirect from a recent Johnson quote:
"Ladies and gentlemen: Any man
vho dies rich, dies disgraced . . . I
like the idea-of big inheritance taxes;
t means that money is being turned
"ack to the people who made it ...
Most owners of wealth don't know
what to do with their money outside
)f spending it on'rthemselves. That's
why I think it's a good idea for gov-
rnment to take it away from them'
'n the form of taxes ...
"The Government today has the
enormous problem of giving employ-
.nent to those who need work. Money
will do it, and that money must come
out of the pockets of those who have
it ..
"Labor conditions have improved.
But they have not improved because
)f the willingness of capital. Labor
has had to fight and fight hard for
?werything it has secured. That is,
the reason I am and always have
been in sympathy with labor unions.
rf it had not been for them I don't
know where labor would be today. I
have always believed in them where
needed, and they have been needed
almost everywhere . . . Even if I do
not think that strikes can settle
abor differences our position here is
clear. We were offered an order not
ong ago for shoes from a concern
whose workers were on strike. We
refused it. We will not take orders
from any organization whose work-
ers are not treated fairly and who
are simply trying in their own way
o get a square deal for themselves."

I'd Rather
Be RIGHT!
- y Suel Grafton -
"The New Deal has lost decisively,"
says a conservative newspaper, com-
menting on the curious employe elec-
tion in the Endicott-Johnson Shoe
Corporation plant. The workers vot-
ed against both labor federations,
bringing a sad kind of unity to the
labor movement at last.
* * * *
Since New Deal defeats are rather.
scarce, it is natural for conservatives
to hug this one to their bosoms. They
had better go easy. This may turn
out to be the fox that bites when it
thaws. A really cagy reactionary
might even be upset by the results of
this particular labor board poll.

(Continued from Page 2)
Directed ,Teaching: Students expect-
ing to do directed teaching the second
semester are requested to secure
assignments in Room 2442 University1
Elementary School on Thursday and
Friday, Jan. 18 and 19, according to1
the following schedule: -
Thursday, Jan. 18, at 8:00 a.m.,
English.
Thursday, Jan. 18, at 1:30 p.m.,a
So:ial Studies.
Friday, Jan. 19, at 8:00 a.m. French1
and German; 9:00 a.m. Latin and
mathematics; 10:00 a.m. Science;
11:00 a.m. Commercial, fine arts,
speech.
The University Bureau of Appoint-f
ments and Occupational Information
has received notice of the announce-
ment by Radcliffe College of two
$600 fellowships for Graduate Train-
ing in Personnel Administration for
the year 1940-41. Any graduate wo-
men or senior women interested may
secure further information at the'
Bureau, 201 Mason Hall, office hours:1
9-12 and 2-4.c

The Robert Owen Cooperative
House, 922 S. State Street, is accept-
ing applications for boarding mem-
berships, which may be obtained from
the Dean of Students Office or at the
House. Applications must be returned
to the House by Thursday evening,
Jan. 18, For information, call 7211.
Academic Notices
Psychology 103, Practice in Indi-
vidual Testing: Applications for ad-
mission to this course for the second
semester should be made before the
close of the first semester.
Botany 36 (Systematic Botany):
Lectures in this course will be given
on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1
o'clock in Room 2042 NS instead of
as now scheduled in the announce-
ment of the College of Literature,
Science, and the Arts. The labora-
tory and field work will follow imme-
diately after the lecture, in Room
3004 NS.
Exhi bit otns
Exhibits of the University's Arch-
eological Research in the Philippines,
Great Lakes Region, Ceramic Types
of the Eastern United States and of
Ceramic Technology and Ethnobo-
tany are being shown in the Mezza-'
nine floor Exhibit rooms of the1
Rackham Building. Also exhibited
are antiquities from the University'
excavations at Seleucia-on-Tigris and
from Karanis. Open daily from 2:30
to 5:30 and from 7:30 to 9:30, ex-f
cept Sunday.-
Exhibition, paintings by John Pap-l
pas and a collection of German prints
from the Detroit Art Institute, Alum--l
ni Memorial Hall, 2 to 5 p.m.t

Sigma ,Eta Chi meeting tonight at
7:30 at the-home of Mrs. A. W. Smith,
1008 Oakland Ave. Election of offi-
1cers.
JGP Central Committee Meeting
at the League at 4:30 p.m. today.
International Center Music Pro-
gram this evening is as follows: (1)
Mascagni-Intermezzo from Caval-
leria Rusticana. (2) Schubert-Sym-
phony No. 8 in B Minor ("Unfin-
ished"). (3) Schumann-Concerto
in A Minor.
Hillel class in Jewish History Will
meet this evening at 7:15 p.m. at
the Foundation.
Garden Section, Faculty Women's
Club will meet at 2:30 today at the
home of Mrs. E. L. Ericksen, 1221
Baldwin Ave.
Michigan Dames: The Bridge
Group will meet in the League to-
night at 8:00. All Michigan Dames
are invited.
Coming Events
Engineering Mechanics Colloquim
on Thursday, Jan. 18, at 4:00 p.m. in
314 Engineering Annex. Refresh-
ments will precede the talk by Mr.
A. G. Standhagen on "A New Method
for Treating the Buckling of Slender
Columns."
Economics Club: Dean C. E. Grif-
fin will speak on "The Nature 'of
Competition" in the East Lecture
Room of the Rackham Building on
Monday, Jan. 22, at 7:45 p.m. Staff
members and graduate studentsin
Economics and Business Administ'ra-
tion are cordially invited.
Psychological Journal Club will
meet Thursday, Jan. 18, at: 7:30 p.m.
in the East Conference Room of the
Rackham Bldg. "A Review of 'Re-
cent Research on the Analyses of the
Effects of Practice on Standar'd
Tests" will be discussed by H. Long,
A. Muller, and E. B. Greene.
Aero. Eng. 25, Advanced Airbane
Performance: On Friday, Jan, 19,
Mr. Ralph H. Upson will present a
discussion of the relation between air-
plane performance and design, in
Room 1217 East Engineering Build-
ing. All Aeronautical Engineering
students are invited to attend these
meetings.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI

students are invited to attend these
meetings.
Research Club will meet tonight at
8:00 in the Amphitheatre of the Rack-
ham Building. Professor J. W. Eaton
will speak on "Heine, Political Pro-
phet," and Professor A. E. White on
"Metals for High Temperature Serv-
ice." We will vote on two candidates
for membership. Council meeting in
Assembly Hall at 7:30 p.m.
Anatomy Research Club Meeting
today at 4:30 p.m. in Room 2501 East
Medical Building. Papers: "Trichi-
nosis: Incidence, . Lesions and some
Aspects of Resistance to Reinfesta-
tion," by Dr. L. F. Catron. "A Basis
for a Natural Classification of Fixing
Fluids," by Dr. W. F. Dempster. Tea
in Room 3502 at 4:00 p.m. All inter-
ested are invited,
Scabbard and Blade: F-4 meeting
at 7:30 tonight in the Union, Certi-
ficates for new members have arrived
as well as the latest issue of the Jour-
nal. Rifle match plans will be dis-
cussed. All members come. NO
UNIFORMS.

* * * *
J)NE THING he did get from his little inter-
view was a story about a Mr. Dawson in the
Law School. Now this Mr. Dawson seems to be
a swell chap, at least all the "briefers" seemed
to think so. And it seems that he is a card
sharp or something because they all call him
Blackjack Dawson. Anyhow, last week in one
of his classes someone happened to mention that
a proper place for a future meeting would be a
beer joint, so this week he is convening the
class "on the other side of the street."
*. *: * *
NOW THAT CLARK SHAUGHNESSY, erst-
while Chicago football coach who was ma-
rooned without a football team, has been ap-
pointed head mentor at Stanford, someone wants
to know if he will have to stop reading Milton
to his boys between halves.
* * * *
ONE OF THE local sorority, houses is having
no end of trouble. Not for the usual rea-
sons either. But it seems that three of the gents
who spend more time there than some of the
sisters formed a men's auxiliary and could not
decide which should be president. So they
finally agreed it would be decided by the number
of hours put in at the house. Latest reports
have one of those peculiar lawyers leading; with
a doctor and a columnist not far'-behind.
5* * *
TODAY'S MAILBAG:
MORTY,
Morty,
Reconsider.
If you suppress Free Press you may cut off our
supply of such gems as-
"I've always had the feeling life is more
than food and drink.
In a great mysterious pattern each of
us must be a chink," ...
Someone writing in the current Harpers says.
that, in seeking our poetic pasture, we of the
great average range all the way from Edgar
Guest with his utter clarity to intense young
modern poets who carry the burden of all Chaos.
Let us choose and take the consequences.
That's what freedom is.
Sincerely yours,
J. Rutherford Ovoid.

n
t

Exhibition, College of Architecture'
and Design: A series of 14 fine in-'
teriors rendered in color represent-
ing work of the New York School of
Fine and Applied Art is being shown
in the first floor exhibition cases,
January 13 to January 27. Open
daily, except Sunday, 9 to 5. The,
public is invited..

At this point I begin to perspire
and wonder how that radical got into
this column. Mr. Roosevelt has never
said: "Any man who dies rich, dies
disgraced." George F. Johnson has
given away $5,000,000 of his $7,000,-
000 fortune, paid the best wages in
his industry, provided his workers
with low-cost housing, given them
bonuses of as much as $300 annually;
taken complete care of their medical
needs. There has been some bicker-
ing about his paternalism and dis-
content when in bad years wage cuts
replaced bonuses. But he has - given
his workers at least three days work
per week, in a "sick" industry, dur-
ing the worst of the depression.
* * * * s
It took an employer who is a freak
of history to ,beat the New Deal idea
of collective bargaining. A freak of
history makes a piece of chifd com-
fort. There is a profound meaning
hidden in this employe vote. If only
a freak of history can beat the New
Deal idea, which side is all of history
on?
Labor Board Decision'
Ours is a government, under the,
federal Constitution, of separate and
:limited powers. This means that the
executive, legislative and judicial
branches must each keep to its own
field, without infringing on the oth-
ers, but also without shifting its own
responsibility to others.
Under the New Deal, with its doc-
trine of continuous emergency, there
was grave danger, for a time, that
Congress would. simply defer in all
things to the President trusting
thereafter to the upreme Court to
make sure that the President would
not go too far. Since the elections
of 1938, the Congress itself has been
trying to right the situation, and, in
the session now opening, will doubt-
less continue to do so.
This is well. For in a series of
notable decisions, of which thesone
upholding the broad powers of the
National Labor Relations Board is
merely the latest, the Supremd Court

i
I

Parking In The DarkI
THE DECISION of Chief of Police Lyman L.
Parks of Elizabeth, N.J., to permit parking
on the dimly lighted road of Union County's
parks appears deserving of more comment by
the press than it has been given.
Chief Parks has explained that his order, list-
ing only three restrictions, was made in the
interests of matrimony. The romantically in-
clined must keep lights on, stay where daytime
parking is permitted, and go home by 11 o'clock.
"It seems that the only place left for court-
ing is in a car," the police chief said. "Since
courting is a natural prelude to marriage, night
parking is permitted."
No less than momentous is the decision. So-
ciologically it is of immense significance in as
much- as it is a frank recognition of the break-
down of the family wherein courting once took
place. Politically it is equally important be-
cause it is a candid admission that the horse and
buggy days have, after all, been superseded by

Lectures
University Lecture: Captain R. A.
(Bob) Bartlett, Peary's great lieuten-
ant and one of the most famous of
arctic explorers, will lecture with
colored moving pictures on "The Arc-
tic in Color," under the auspices of
the Department of Geology, at 8:00
p.m. on Tuesday, January 23, in the
Auditorium of the Rackham Build-
ing. The public is cordially , vited.
French Lecture: Mr. Clifford H.
Prator will give the second lecture
on the Cercle Francais program:
"Quelques vedettes du music hall
francais" (illustrated with popular
records) today at 4:15 p.m., Room
103, Romance Languages Bldg.
Tickets for the series of lectures
and play may be procured at the door
at the time of the lecture.
Today's Events
Botanical Seminar will meet to-
day at 4:30 p.m. in Room 1139 N.S.
Bldg. Paper by B. M. Davis: "An
amphidiploid from a cross in Oeno-
thera, its cytology and its progeny."
Algebra Seminar today at 4 o'clock
in 3201 A.H. Dr. Nesbitt will con-
clude his talk on "Ideals in Alge-
bras," and Dr. Thrall will speak on
"Polynomial Ideals."
Chemical and Metallurgical Engi-
neering Seminar today at 4 o'clock in
Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. Mr. C. F.
Weinaug will talk on "Surface Ten-
sion as a Criterion for Critical Tem-
perature."
Chemistry Colloquim today in
Room 303 Chemistry Building at 4:15
p.m. Mr. Hale Cowling will speak
on "The Dispersion of Cellulose in the

U.S. Naval Reserve: Lieuterant
Forrest A. Roby, of the United States
Naval Reserve Aviation Base -at
Grosse Ile, Michigan, will talk to
students interested in flight training,
Thursday, Jan. 18, at 7:30 p.m. -in
Room 1042 East Engineering Build-
ing.
Institute of the Aeronautical Sci-
ences: The group photograph for the
Michiganensian will be taken Friday,
Jan. 1.9, at 5:30 p.m. at Rentschler's
Studio, 319 East Huron Street. All
members are urged to be present.
1940 Mechanical Engineers: Repre-
sentatives of the Babcock and Wilcox
Company will be here on Friday, Jan.
19, for interviews. For further infor-
mation, see bulletin board.
Physical Education for Wdmen-
Individual skill tests will be given in
the following activites:
Badminton: Friday, Jan. 20, 4:00 to
6:00, Barbour Gymnasium.
Ice Skating: Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday, Jan. 15, f6,
17, 18, 3:30 to 4:30, University Coli-
seum.
Fencing: Wednesday, Thursday,
Jan. 17, 18, 2:30 to 4:10, Barbour
Gym.
Swimming: Tuesday and Thursday
evenings, Jan. 16, 18, 7:30 to 8:30,
Union Pool.
This notice is particularly imiper-
tant for those women with irceom-
pletes in physical education.

will be interesting to learn the results. Statistics
should be kept for the information of more timid

I

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