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January 15, 1947 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1947-01-15

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PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNE :O4Y, JANUARY 15, 1947

Integrated Education

THIS IS an era of record-breaking college
enrollments. The State of Michigan is
keeping pace with the nation-wide move-
ment toward more higher education for
more people, but many Michigan residents
may still be deprived of a college education.
The educational institutions involved are
aware of this unhappy situation, as are the
state legislators.
The University of Michigan has done an
incredibly good job of stretching its facili-
ties to accommodate over 18,000 students,
but its administrators must be shaking their
heads over the prospect of an increase of
1,600 more seekers after higher learning.
Every college administrator in the state is
in the same quandary, wondering just how
wide the doors to higher learning can be
opened without pulling them off their hing-
es, so that quantity supersedes quality.
State legislators will soon have the op-
portunity of taking another constructive
step toward solution of the problem. A
seven-man board appointed by the State
Legislature last year to consider the ques-
tion of accomplishing a better integration
of the state-supported system of higher
education has recommended that experts be
employed to make a survey of the situation
calling for an appropriation of from $25,000
to $50,000.
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: EUNICE MINTZ

This board, composed of representatives,
of seven institutions maintained by Michi-
gan which are all now proposing extensive
programs of expansion, was appointed to
consider the trend toward the basic college
curriculum as pioneered by Michigan State
College and the demand for close-to-home
education illustrated by the establishment
of junior colleges supported by local tax-
ation.
Subjects which might receive attention
in the survey proposed by the committee
of educators include the following:
1. The geographical availability of higher
education to Michigan students;
2. The cost at various institutions to both
themselves and the students;
3. Possible duplication of educational ac-
tivities in the state, such as in the study
of forestry;
4. The adequacy of the physical plants
at the various institutions;
5. The role of junior colleges.
It has also been suggested that the place
of the University of Michigan in the whole
scheme of education in the state be care-
fully considered. Many persons, for example,
believe that the University should become
a transfer institution specializing in ad-
vanced and professional work, while others
suggest that the enrollment be limited.
With the Legislature placed "on a spot"
financially by the sales tax amendment, it
is to be hoped that this very necessary study
will not be stymied for lack of the needed
appropriation.
-Natalie Ragrow

Columnists
COMPETITION is now open to editorial
columnists, music, book and record
reviewers who wish to write for The
Daily this spring.
Articulate students representing every
shade of opinion are urged to submit
sample columns.
Opinions of columnists will be judged
on the criteria of clear-thinking and
eloquence. They will not be selected to
represent the personal views of The Daily
staff or editors. From those samples
submitted which are satisfactorily writ-
ten, columnists will be selected to repre-
sent more than one major section of
campus opinion.
Student columns will appear either
two or three times weekly.
Columns should deal with 1-issues
on this campus; 2--issues of direct
interest to students.
Three sample columns must be sub-
mitted by each applicant, in the editors'
office (second floor, Student Publications
Building) before Monday, Feb. 10. Be-
tween semesters, mail samples "To the
Editor, Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor."
--Milt Freudenheim
(editorial director)

BILL MAULDIN
/3 - 3 "ri-
I!x LEF1

To THE EDITOR
EDITOR'S NOTE: No letter to the
editor will be printed unless signed
and written in good taste. Letters
over 300 words in length will be
shortened or omitted; in speciM in-
stances, they will be printed, :tt lie
discretion of the editorial director.
Spanish Question
To the Editor:
1lISTORY and Democracy have
one quality in common: both
sides of a question must be pre-
sented in order that the people
may get nearer to the truth, al-
though they may never know the
absolute truth. For this reason
I hope that you will publish this
letter in your paper, as an answer
to the statements by Professor
Arthur S. Aiton on Franco Spain,
reported in the Ann Arbor News.
1, Professor Aiton makes an ac-
cusation, but does not prove it:
the Communist Party domination
of the Republican government.
We would be nearer the truth, if
Professor Aiton would state: a)
how many Communist deputies
(representatives) were elected to
the Cortes in the February, 1936
elections. b) how many Commun-

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"Ver a menace to the people. It's me duty
the boat."

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to sink your end of

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For

Faculty Grading

THE theory that students are in a unique
position to' contribute constructive sug- I
gestions to their instructors regarding the
improvement of their courses and teaching
techniques has been gaining ground in re-
cent years.
Men like Prof. Pollock in the political-
science department have long been asking
their students to fill out questionnaires at
the end of each semester to provide them 1
with the "consumer's" viewpoint which they
can use to improve their own effectiveness.-
The Student Legislature Academic Com-
mittee's faculty grading questionnaire, which
includes an evaluation of the instructor's
presentation, his organization of the ma-
terial, his ability to arouse interest in the
subject, his fairness in tests and class dis-
cussion, his integration of the course with
other fields of study, and the general effect
that he produces on his classes, has met
with considerable student support on the
campus.
Psychology 31 students, on whom the ques-
tionnaire has been tested, indicated that
I'D RATHER BE RIGHT:

they do have constructive suggestions to
make concerning their classes.
Although this method of presenting the
instructor with a constructive criticism of
his teaching has met with the approval of
many faculty members, it could not be put
into effect in the literary college this se-
mester.
This should not deter any faculty mem-
bers who are personally interested in im-
proving their classes on the basis of such
student suggestions and criticisms.
Sample copies of the student questionnaire
can be obtained from Mary Benson or Mar-
ion Riegal, or the individual instructor can
make out his own or simply ask the class
for their anonymous criticisms.
This procedure can have the dual ad-
vantage of both strengthening the instruc-
tor's position by pointing out to him the
weaknesses of his class and of improving
the educational standard of that class for
students in succeeding years.
--Tom Walsh

Conservative Program

By SAMUEI GRAFTON
AMERICAN conservatives, like American
liberals, have a unity problem. The right
doesn't constitute a single happy family,
any more than the left does. It is perhaps
symbolic that the first event in the new
Senate session was a quarrel among con-
servatives. The issue of whether to seat
Bilbo arose during the opening hour, and
it split the conservative bloc down the mid-
dle, with Northern and Southeri wings
shooting hate looks at each other. It is
perhaps also symbolic that American con-
servatism couldn't settle the matter, but
left the issue open, saved by Bilbo's cancer.
There will be other quarrels. House Re-
publican leaders, mostly pro-Dewey, are re-
ported to be preparing a "party bill" on
labor, to curb unions and limit strikes; its
passage will be made a matter of high party
strategy, and every Republican member of
the House Labor Committee will be ex-
pected to sign it. This is said to be a tactic
aimed against Senator Taft, who is con-
sidered by some pro-Dewey Republicans to
have got his own name too closely and ad-
vantageously linked with the labor issue.
They fear, perhaps, that Taft may benefit,
as a candidate, by receiving credit from the
right for any new labor restrictions, and
credit, also, from labor for any possible
amelioration or softening of the blow. To
put through a "party" bill would take the
play away from Taft, as an individual, and
yet it would not pile the onus for anti-
labor activity on Dewey, who is, convenient-
ly, in Albany.
Meanwhile Taft's Senate Labor Commit-
tee itself has said little so far but "ahem!";
the committee is known to be sharply di-
vided on what to do about unions; and in
all this elephantine maneuvering one senses
the tensions, pulls and fears mounting in
conservative ranks, as the hard grapple with
reality replaces the easy smoking-car con-
versations of yesteryear.
AND, in Albany, Governor Dewey reads
the Republican legislature a sermon on
the need for publicly-subsidized low-cost
housing. That is a strange word, indeed, to
come from the Titular head of the party to
the conservative faithful. The GOP, as a

the contradictions and, divisions set up
among political men as they try to square
the narrow conservative dream with the
abiding and vote-generating realities.
It seemed so easy, not so long ago, in
discussions in parlor and bar-room, for a
victorious conservative party to fall upon
Washington in force, to de-welfarize gov-
ernment, cramp the unions, and then spend
a happy year banging liberal heads against
nearest walls.
During the first week there has been
rather-more banging of conservative heads;
and suddenly it is an open question as to
whether the shoutings, hootings and jokes
of a year ago really do make up a program.
The conservatives were perhaps lucky not
to have had power during the years of de-
pression and war; a thought which will
never be uttered in a speech, but may per-
haps pop up in the private minds of men
of the right, as they face each other and
try to strike an obscure balance among
what they want, what is valid, and what
is opportune.
(Copyright, 1947, NY. Post Syndicate)
THE American Government is sponsoring
at an international conference now
meeting in London a suggested Charter for
an International Trade Organization. This
proposal is the outcome of sustained search-
ing by American and foreign experts for an
agreed statement of principles to govern
the trade policy of nations. Its terms ex-
press a stubborn will to draw countries into
a joint program for the reduction of trade
restrictions; and they reflect a dogged judg-
ment that the most satisfactory basis for
trade is world-wide and unmanaged com-
petition.
It is impossible to condense the detailed
prescriptions of the many articles of this
Charter satisfactorily. But the basic eco-
nomic conceptions which shaped them are
easily identified. They are: (1) that gov-
ernments should reduce all types of restric-
tion imposed on imports and exports; (2)
that each should abstain from actions which
would cause products produced within their
territories to be offered in foreign markets
-ahnrioQ r tof nr.rncnnnd~n,- xvnfli ln-

THE PRESENT exhibition in the galleries
of Alumni Memorial Hall sets forth the
work of Le Corbusier, French architect,
painter and philosopher. His writings on
functionalism in architecture have had
world-wide circulation and acclaim.
Le Corbusier is always classified with such
contemporary architects as Walter Gropius
of Germany (now Professor of Architecture
at Harvard) and the Austrian, Mies Van
der Rohe (now of Chicago). These three
more than any others are pioneers of the
functional style. They believe in pure func-
tionalism, and their search has been for
the simplest, most efficient and most starkly
expressive solution of an architectural prob-
lem.
Opposite this triumvirate is a group of
American, Scandinavian and Dutch archi-
tects headed by Frank Lloyd Wright, Eliel
Saarinen and Dudoc, who have a more
esthetic approach to their architectural
problems. They are more romantic, at
least their work reflects an alertness to
questions of harmony of surroundings;
i.e. spirit of place or country, as well as
an alertness to texture of materials. They
preach functionalism, but as the proof is
in the pudding, this latter group might
be classified as romantic-modernists to
differentiate them from the more austere
modernists of the Corbusier-Gropius
brand.
However, when one views the current
showing of Le Corbusier, it is realized that
his work is riot as starkly cold and mechan-
ical as his preachings would make us believe.
He is an artist, and the fact that a room
full of his paintings is part of the current
show greatly aids the visitor in appraising
the quality of the man. True, said draw-
ings are not romantic compositions, they
are human little sketches as well as ab-
stractions.
However, Le Corbusier's fame is due to
his activities as architect and city planner,
and this exlibition shows photographs and
reproductions of drawings of his work. They
include the Swiss Dormitory of the Uni-
versity of Paris, Villa Savoye near Paris,
drawings for the League of Nations Build-
ings at Geneva, and a city plan for Nemours
in North Africa. The visitor soon becomes
aware of his versatility and is told again
and again of his genius. It is a first rate
piece of advertising for one of our great
contemporaries in architecture. Perhaps it
is over-done and the visitor inay feel that
there should ,be more photographs and ad-
ditional views of his work, not quite so
much bally-hoo.
Nevertheless, it is an excellent show, and
Michigan should be proud to be on the list
of institutions that have an opportunity to
view it. Here is a phase of modern art that
is a true reflection of our mechanical age.
It can be seen in a few spare minutes with-
out going to New York or Chicago. Eyery
student should see it; not merely Fine Arts
student and Architects but Engineers and
students in the Humanities.
Here is the architect that not only France
and England, but all the Latin Americas
are talking about.
-Ralph W. Hammett
ONE AMERICAN in every six harbors
trichinae, the wicked little worms that
may get into us if we eat undercooked pork
and bore through our muscles, giving us
pains like rheumatism and perhaps even
killing us. Most well-raised, well-cured pork
is free from these parasites, but the meat
of hogs that have been fed on uncooked
garbage is very likely to contain them,
stated Dr. Norman R. Stoll of the Rocke-
feller Institute for Medical Research, in
the course of his address as retiring presi-
dent of the American Society of Parasitol-
ogists.
-Science News Letter

(Co(l 11ud hurom P : )
Ec; Lean, 18 AH; Madden, 1007
AH; Maliche, B Haven; MeCen-
nen, 1025 AlH; McKean, C Haven;
McLarty, D Haven, Merriman, D.
Haven; Moon, 1018 All; Muelhi,
206 U H; Norton 2029 Al l; 01Don-
ohoe. 101 Eu:
Perkins, 2003 All; Phillips, 4208
AH; Plumer, 2203 AT-I; Puglisi,
1025 AH; D. Riepe, 3209 AH; P.
Riepe, 215 Ec; Randall, 2082 NS;
Rock, 101 Ec.; J. Shedd. 1035 AH;
Sparrow, 2219 AH: Stacy, 2003
NS; Stevenson, 3116 NS: Stocking,
207 Ec; Swarthout, 102 Ec; Tag-
gart. 2013 AH; Thornbury, 229 AH;
Waggener, 3011 AH; C. Weaver, C
Haven; Wells. 2225 All;. Whan,
2054 NS; Wolfinger, 203 UH;
Wunsch, 104 Ec.
English 2-Final Examination
Schedule:
Wed., Jan. 22, 2-5 p.m.
Allen, NS Aud; Boys, NS Aud;
J. Bradshaw, NS Aud; J. Culbert,
NS Aud; T. Culbert, 3017 AH; Ed-
wards, NS Aud; Engel, G. Haven;
Everett, 3011 AlH; Gram, NS Aud;
Johnston, E Haven; Jones 1121
NS; Murry, NS Aud; Needham,
2231 AlH; Perkins, 2003 AH; Rich,
225 AH; Savage, 2231 A-H; R.
Shedd, W. Gallery, AMH; E. Stan-
lis, 4003 AH; P. Stanlis, W Gal-
lery, AMH; Swift, W Gallery,,
AMH; Wolfson, W Gallery, AMH.
History 11, Lecture Sectitnil:
Final examination Monday, Janu-
ary 20, 2-5 p.m. Hyma's and Mc-
Culloch's sections, Rm. G-, Haven
Hall; Slosson's, Rm. E, Haven
Hall; all other sections in Water-
man Gymnasium. Make-up for
those unable tb come at this
hour, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2-5
p.m., Rm. 322 Haven Hall.
Doctoral Famination for Henry
Levinstein, h:Ysics; t is: "A
Study of the Growth and structure
of Thin Metallic Films." at 3 p.m.,
Thurs., Jan. 16. East Council Rm.,
Rackhanm. Chairman, H. R. Crane.
Doctoral Examination for Wil-
liam Walsh 1agrty, Engineering
Mechanics; thesis: "A Study of
the Motion of a Viscous Fluid in
a Bounded Annulus of Variable
Length," at 4 p.m., Thurs., Jan.
16, Rm. 406, W. Engineering Bldg.
Chairman, R. A. Dodge.
Sociology 90: The hours listed
for this course in the Time Sched-
ule for the second semester are in-
correct. Section 1 will meet MF
at 8 in M07 H.H. and W at 8 in
3003 A.H. Section 2 will meet TTh
at 8 in 307 HH and S at 8 in 3003
A.H.

rials. Second discussion of series
at 7:30 p.m., Wed., Jan. 15, Rm.
402, W. Engineering Bldg.
Attention Institute of Public
Administration students: Meeting
of Social Seminar, 7:30 p.m., Jan.
16, West Conference Room, Rack-
ham Bldg. Mr. George E. Bean,
city manager of Pontiac, will speak
on the subject of Difficulties in
Assuming the Management of a
New City.
Zoology Seminar: 7:15 p.m.,
Thurs., Jan. 16, Rackham Amphi-
theater. Mr. Richard Manville
will speak on "A study of Small
Mammal Populations in Northern
Michigan." Mr. Sidney Shapiro
will speak on "Variation and Dif-
ferentiation, as Correlated with
Distribution, in the Fish 'undu-
ls diaphanus."
Concerts
Concert: Vladmr Horowitz, Pi-
anist, will give the seventh con-
cert in the Choral Union Series,
Friday, January 17, at 8:30, in
Hill Auditorium. Mr. Horowitz
will play the following program:
Mozart Sonata in A major; Kab-
alevsky Sonata No. 2; Variations
on a Theme by Clara Wieck, Schu-
mann; Chopin Impromptu in A-
flat major and Four Etudes, Op.
10; and Legend: St. Francis of
Paola Walking on the Waters by
Liszt.
A limited number of standing
room tickets are available at the
offices of the University Musical
Society, Burton Memorial Tower.
Universitiy of Michigan Concert
band, William D. Revelli, Con-
ductor, and The University of
Michigan Choir,' Hardin Van
Deursen, Conductor, will be heard
at 8:30 Saturday evening, Jan. 18,
Hill Auditorium. Richard Franko
Goldman, Guest Conductor. Open
to the general public.
Student Recital Cancelled: Bet-
ty Jean Hill, soprano, whose re-
cital was scheduled to be present-
ed Monday, Jaii. 20, Lydia Men-
delssohn Theater, has postponed
her program until the Spring
Semester.
Events Today
Gargoyle: Students interested in
working on the Gargoyle literary
staff next semester reported be-
tween 1 and 4 p.m., Gargoyle of-
fice.

Ski Club: Open meeting,
p.m., Rm. 308, Union.

7:15

Michigan Dames': bridge group,
8 p.m., Henderson Room, Michigan
League. 1
Coming Events
The Regular Thursday Evening
Concert sponsored by the Gradu-
ate School will include Mozart's
Sonatas for Organ and Orchestra
Brahams' Liebeslieder Waltzes
Bizet's Symphony in C, Beethov-
an's Sonata in C minor for violin
and piano:
Prof. T. S. Lovering, Geology
will speak on the subject, "New De-
velopments in Prospecting," at
4:15 p.m., Thurs., Jan. 16, Rm
2054, Natural Science Building;
auspices of Sigma Gamma Epsilon
Those interested in geology are
cordially invited.
Epsilon Chapter, Alpha Phi Al-
pha Fraternity: 7 p.m., Thurs.
Jan. 16, Rm. 302, Union.
Sigma Gamma Epsilon: last
meeting of semester, 12 noon,
Thurs., Jan. 16,m. 3055, Natura
Science Bldg. Election of officers
for next semester. All members
are urged to attend.
John Mason Brown, eminent
dramatic and literary critic, wil
be presented tomorrow evening a
8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium, as th
fifth number on the 1946-47 Lec
ture Course. His subject, "Seeing
Things," will cover theatre situa-
tions and Broadway plays during
the past decade. Tickets may be
purchased today and tomorrow a
the auditorium box office, which
will be open today from 10-1, 2-5
and tomorrow from 10-1, 2-8:30
p.m.
"The Truth," comedy by Clyd
Fitch, will open tonight in Lydia
Mendelssohn Theatre for a run of
four -performances. Presented by
Play Production of the depart
ment of speech, it will be given to
night, Friday and Saturday night
with a matinee Saturday at 2:3
p.m. Tickets are now on sale at th
theatre box office, phone 6300.

A.1.M.E.: A plant visit to the
Hoover Ball Bearing Company
here in Ann Arbor is planned for
today. Meet in front of East
Engineering Bldg., 12:15 ; p.m.;
there will be no fee. Others inter-
ested are invited.
Student Branch of the Ameri-
can Pharmaceutical Association:
Special meeting, 7:30 p.m. Rm.
151, Chemistry Bldg. Mr. C.
Bundt and Mr. R. IIeupen-
becker of the C. . Bundt Company
of Toledo, Ohio, will discuss "To-
morrow's Professional Presc'ip-
tion Store-Today," and "Manu-
facturing, an asset to Professional
Pharmacy." Slides and colored
motion pictures will be shown.
Quarterdeck initiation banquet:
6:30 p.m., Union.. Professor Riegal
will be the guest speaker.
Pi Lambda Theta: 8 p.m. Ele-
mentary School Library. Mrs.
Chungnim Han will talk about her
recent experiences in Korea.

F IAULTIN

ists were chosen to the cabinet
after these elections. c) hrow many?
Commu isi. ormed the cabinet
after the political reshuffling fol-
lowing July 18, 1936. d) how
many Communists headed the
different cabints since then. e)
how many Communists are rep-
resented in the present Republi-
can government in egile
2. Professor Aiton does pot
say that: before 1936, the Union
General de Trabajadores (so-
cialist, with a little over a mil-
lion paid members) and the
Confederacion Nacional d e
Trabajo (anareho-syndicalists,
with about a million and a half
paid members) formed a pact,
to which the Communist Party
(about fifty thousand members)
was no party; that in 1937 an-
other pact was formed without
the said Communist Party; that
on July 18, 1945, the Allianza
de Fuerzas Democraticas (Alli-
ance of Democratic Forces) was
formed WITHOUT the Com-
munist Party.
3. Professor Aiton has not told
the whole truth about Franco's
aid to Nazi Germany: he is care-
ful not to say that there was a
whole division of Spanish-Fascist
soldiers (the Blue Division) fight-
ing our ally, Russia. He does not
mention that from December 7,
1941 till shortly after Mr. Hayes
arrived in Spain, Franco and his
Phalanx was blatantly pro-Nazi,
or that articles were published in
Arriba, the Phalanx news-organ,
against the United States and in
favor of Nazi Germany and Fas--
cist Italy .
4. Professor Aiton lauds the
program of Christian Socialism in
process of realization. It is not
Christian: it is a dictatorship of
the Catholic Church. If it were
Christian, it would separate state
from Church, allowing Christian
to live in harmony with the dic
tates of their own consciences.
Franco assassinated many Pro-
testants and Masons; and those
still alive are either in jail or
live in exile, or are practising
hypocrisy. Since 1941, Franco has
decreed that all teaching, espe-
cially in the universities, must be
according to the teachings of St.
Thomas Aquinas. It behooves me
to ask Professor Aiton, the K. of
C. or the Heirarchy of the Cath-
olic Church, or the Pope himself,
what they would think if the
U.S. government should make it
a law to teach our young men
and women only according to the'
ideas of Martin Luther, or per-
haps to be really American, ac-
cording to 'the teachings of Mrs.
Mary Baker Eddy. The Franco
building program, the social se-
curity, the health insurance, etc.,
are patterned after the Nazi and
Fascist regimes. And they are
all under the supervision of the
Catholic Church and dominatd
by this religious institution .
6. The program of the Spanih
Republic -is superior to. thatof
Franco's government. Global. un
ity and peace depend on the num-
ber of nations whose respective
governments are more akin to
each other. The Constitution of
the Spanish Republic is very much
like our Constitution, while Fran-
co's day-by-day government is
very different from ours .
7. I agree with , Professor
Aiton on only one point: that
Spaniards do not want any-
body to interfere in their af-
fairs. If that day should ever
come, and our government and
the British government prom-
ise not to interfere de jure and
de facto in the ensuing civil war,
so that no one is allowed to
enter Spain, and also promise
that no American and/or Brit-
ish troops will be sent to Spain
"to protect the lives of Ameri-
can citizens or British subjects,"
Franco would not last one week.

----Fi a ProessoE ribano
Asocate Profesor of

--- Society of Automotive Engi-
Seminar in Applied Mathe- neers: 7:30 p.m., Rm. 318, Michi-
matics 3 p.m., Wed., Jan. 15, 317 igan Union. Electon of officers.
W. Engineering. Mr. C. L. P-riY Messrs. David Apps and Paul
continues on "-An outlin- of etlH- Huber of General Motors Proving
ods of Solving Nonlinear Differen- Ground will speak on "Automo-
tial Equations." tive Road Testing at the Proving
Ground." All engineers are cor-
Botanical Seminar, 4 p.m., Wed.. dially invited.

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Spanish
t Dai
Fifty-Seventh Year
Edited an, managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board in Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Robert Goldman .....Managing Editor
Clayton Dickey ..... ......City Editor
MiltonFreucenheim .Editorial Director
Mary Brush ...........Associate Editor
Ann Kutz ............Associate Editor
Paul Marsha,..........Associate Editor
Clark Baker............Sports Editor
Des Hiowarth . .Associate Sports Editor
Jack Martin . .Associate Sports Editor
Joan wik.........Women's Editor
Lynne Ford .Associate Women's Editor
Business Staff

Jan. 15, Rm. 1139, Natural Sci-
ence Bldg. Paper: "The Vegetation
of the Region of Rio de Bavispe in
Northeastern Sonora, Mexico" by
S. S. White. Open meeting,
Semri ar in Engineering Me-
cha.,,: The Engineering Me-
lani _ Depanrtment is sponso iug
a .is of discussions on the
Pi ',lti iiy of Engineering Mate-

A.S.M.E.: 'Ensian picture taken at
7 p.m., Union. Wear a suit coat.
7:30 p.m., election of officers
followed by an address and a
short, sound film on "Magnesium
Today" by Mr. C. H. Kuthe of Re-
vere Copper and Brass.
Graduating seniors should make
application for ASME Junior
Membership at this meeting.

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