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January 11, 1936 - Image 4

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PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY JANUARY 11, 1936

PAGE FOUR SATURDAY JANUARY 11, 1936

THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Publisned every morning except Monday during the
University year and Summer Session by the Board in
Control of Student Publications.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use
for repub~lication of all news dispatches credited to it or
not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of
rep ublication 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, $4.00;
by mail, $4.50.
Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420
Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, Ill.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Telephone 4925
BOARD OF EDITORS
MANAGING EDITOR.............THOMAS H. KLEENE
ASSOCIATE EDITOR ...............JOHN J. FLAH~ERTY
ASCATE EDITOR............. THOMAS E. GROEHN
Dorothy" S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed
DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS
P~ublcation Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman;
Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, Ralph W.
Hurd, Freds Warner Neal, Bernard Weissman.
Reportorial Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman;
Elsie A. Pierce, Guy M. Whipple, Jr.
Editorial Department : John J. Flaherty, Chairman; Robert
A. Cummins, Marshall D. Shulman.
Sports Department: William R. Reed, Chairman; George
Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred Delano, Raymond Good-
man.
Woolen's Department: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman;
Dlorothy Briscoe, Josephine M. Cavanagh, Florence H.
Davies, Marion T. Holden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W.
Wuerfel.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Telephone 2-1214
BUJSINESS MANAGER.........GEORGE H. ATHERTON
CREDIT 'MANAGER ............ JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD
WOME'S USINESS MANAGER .. . .MARGARET COWIE
WOENS SERVICE MANAGER .. .ELIZABETH SIMONDS
DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS
Local Advertising, William Barndt; Service Department,
Willis TQminson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts,
Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Adver-
tising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica-
tions, Lyman Bittman.
NIGHT EDITOR : FRED WARNER NEAL

miracles wrought on life processes by the hormones
and the vitamins.
In commenting editorially on Dr. Riddle's dis-
closures, the New York Times of Jan. 5th said:
"We are as far as ever from realizing what life is.
Even Dr. W. M. Stanley's startling crystals of
the mosaic disease of tobacco are as inanimate
as bricks in their glass containers. Before they
spring into life they must touch living cells. So
the old doctrine that life comes only from life
still holds. The mechanist is in the position of
the man who argues that because a symphony can
be played on a phonograph the Beethoven who
composed it must have been an automaton him-
self."
Life remains a mystery despite the efforts of
scientists over thousands of years to define it. It
may yet turn out that life is as eternal as matter
and the answer to how it began, if it had a
beginning, may tear the veil from all knowledge.

THE FORUM

Letters published in this column should not be
construedsas expressing the editorial opinion of The
Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded.
The names of communicants will, however, be regarded
as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked
to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense
all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject
letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance
and interest to the campus.
HmSo...
To the Editor:
Your timely interview with Dean Bates of the
Lawyers School was a fine thing. Action by the
Supreme Court is highly technical and complicated
at. best. One of the ways which the Daily best
serves its readers is through such articles as the
one written by your Mr. Fred Warner Neal, having
authorities explain, in simple and ordinary lan-
guage, governmental action, political, economic
and sociological.
But as fine as the legal interpretation was, I
saw little sense in the remarks of the economists
on the effects of the court's decision on the AAA
It is utterly ridiculous, it seems to me, to think
that any one act could have any more than a tem-
porary effect on either the stock market or food
prices. At its best the AAA made food prices but
slightly higher anyway. As for its so-called "polit-
ical effects," I fail to see how they can amount to
much, butt would like to see further interviews
on the subject.
Any talk of a constitutional amendment in the
next year, with a Presidential Election coming up,
is ridiculous. - M.K.
As Others See It_

'It Can't
Happen Here'.
WE COMMEND to every American
man and women Sinclair Lewis'
new novel, "It Can't Happen Here." We speak
not here of the literary merits of the book, al-
though they are given praiseworthy mention by
Prof. O. J. Campbell of the English department,
but rather of the philosophy that Mr. Lewis
expounds therein.
With vivid description that is all too real, the
author points out that the reaction may lead to
dictatorship. He pictures the election to the presi-
dency of a hair-brained demagogue of the Huey
Long type, indorsed by a clergyman of the type
of Father Coughlin. The new president institutes
what amounts to a Fascist dictatorship, having
the support of a majority of the people at first and
ruthlessly putting down those who dared to criti-
cize.
And yet with our Land of the Free turned into
anything but that, Mr. Lewis' hero, a true liberal,
still refuses to turn to Communism. He recognizes
that that is but a dictatorship of another sort. He
persistently fights for the return of true consti-
tutional democracy, and even amid the oppression
of the extreme right, he sees the truth and recog-
nizes that the oppression of the left is just as bad.
Mr. Lewis, we feel sure, would agree with the
Christian Science Monitor when it said: The
struggle in the world-today is not, as the Com-
munists would have us believe, one between
Fascism and Communism. But instead between
both Communism and Fascism on the one hand,
and freedom and democracy on the other.
M. Lewis' book is timely. There are on every
hand today evidences of growing reactionary ten-
dencies and failures of intrenched groups to face
the facts. And if there is anything that tends to
destroy a free constitutional democracy that is it.
It is extremely significant that the accession to
power of the fictitipus characters of "It Can't
Happen Here" takes place in this very year -
1936.
There is a crisis at hand today, and denouncing
every new idea as "Communist" will not bring us
out of it. The only real solution to our multitudi-
nous and perplexing problems is calm thinking
and recognition of the facts; it is the point Presi-
dent Roosevelt made in his Jackson Day address,
whether or not it was for political purposes, when
he advised every American man and woman to
constitute a committee of one with one purpose:
To Seek the Truth.
The Mystery
Of Life . .
S PONTANEOUS GENERATIONS of
life held the center of biological,
discussion long before men had heard of hor-
mones, genes, or vitamins. Did life originate all
by itself? Scientists of the last century decided
that life must always spring from life. Recently
the validity of this doctrine has been doubted.
Professor Donnan, one of the ablest of English
organic chemists, believes that all we need to
create life in the laboratory is more definite knowl-
edge of "physico-chemical relations." The most
recent defense of this position was offered by Dr.
Oscar Riddle, who is firmly convinced that evolu-
tion begins not with the living protoplasm, as

John Bull's Problem,...
jOHN BULL, his nostrils blowing, is pawing the
ground. He is troubled. News from Egypt has
an ominous ring. In Cairo, students are rioting,
police stations are being attacked, the police are
killing and shooting -the object of their resent-
ment in the British Administration.
The Egyptians are being incited by Mussolini's
countrymen, who outnumber the British in Egypt.
This trouble ordinarily would not bother Eng-
land much, but its relation to other problems
makes it important. Britain realizes that its naval
base at Malta is too close to Italy if war breaks
out. The Maltese population is almost all anti-
British, and pro-Italian.
For this reason the British fleet has been con-
centrated in. Alexandria, which is not British ter-
ritory any more than the suez Canal. Although
Egypt is technically independent, the British dic-
tate Egyptian policies.
Britain controls the Suez Canal because she
possesses the largest single block of canal stock
-the strongest fleet. But if Italian airplanes
should bombard the British fleet in Malta, and the
Egyptians make things too hot in Alexandria,
Britain might find it difficult to keep her decks
above the water anywhere in the Mediterranean.
Il Duce is after the hide of the British Lion.
Mussolini has let out several hints that it is not
impossible that some time in the future the Brit-
ish Isles may once again be a dependency of a
Roman Caesar. Whatever the rest of the world
may think of Mussolini, the Italian people are
solidly behind him. The Senate in Rome declared
its confidence in Il Duce, when he announced that
Italy's interest in Africa and Europe would be
strenuously defended. The Italians have not
shown the least indication of turning back.
Britain must either choose to abandon the East,
make compromises with Italy - or fight. The
latest gesture Britain made of placating Italy
was the blundering Anglo-French treaty, between
Hoare and Laval. World opinion blew it up.
The danger lies in the fact that England as a
great industrial power, needs the Suez Canal as ac-
cess to the markets of India, Malaya, Hongkong,
China and Japan. Unless she can profitably com-
promise with Mussolini, her shipping, rubber and
textile industrialists probably will counsel war. It
is not a question of reason; it is a question of in-
dustrialists afraid of the unreasoning power-lust
of Europe's new Napoleon - Mussolini and his po-
tential fascist lieutenant, Hitler.
The Children March On.
(From the Oklahoma Daily)
"ARE WE about to hear the tramping feet of
thousands of children along the paths that
lead to industry's door?" asks the National Child
Labor committee in its annual report.
The report discloses that in September of this
year in New York City 1,428 permits for full time
work were granted to children 14 and 15 years old,
compared with only 390 in 1934. The Indiana
Industrial board reports a "noticeable increase"
in children's age certificates and in industrial
injuries to minors.

The ConningTower]
CEMETERY
Here, too, a solemn stillness shrouds the dead
And Gray's sad spirit hovers o'er the stones -
A swarming, yet a solitary, bed
For mortal flesh upon immortal bones.
And now again the elegiac line
Comes to the thought of one lone passerby;
Here memory and portents intertwine:
Here he shall rest, his glory, too, must die.
He sees them, mute, inglorious, but alive,
Loving and loved, in human form again,
Just as in fancy parted friends survive -
Children and sires, mothers and wives of men.
There stands a company before a grave,
Its headstone curtained by a cotton sheath.
The monument is large and new and brave.
He hearkens -'tis their father rests beneath.
"His children still remain the father's staff;
His virtues now are theirs, through life to
share" -
As one lays bare the graven epitaph,
A parson speaks his part, and says a prayer.
The preacher goes - and silence reigns no more.
These two are off for cards; this to a show;
No word that savors of parental lore;
"We're through; we've done our duty!"-all
they know.
All this the stranger marks--his revery
Of Gray is shattered, and his troubled mind
Plans, in the stead of that great threnody,
An elegy for those who stay behind.
A. BURSTEIN
A jury at Long Island City has decided that
the blizzard of January 23, 1933, which caused
delays on the Long Island Railroad, was not the
fault of negligence on the part of the company.
The blizzard, the jury decided, was an act of
God. It may be pointed out that the blizzard
occurred before the New Deal's inauguration, so
the act cannot be called unconstitutional.
Not included in the Morgan testimony was
this: The late Henry P. Davidson was a pas-
senger -he was then traveling in behalf of the
American Red Cross - on the second eastern trip
of the Leviathan. From the deck he threw a
cigar into the water. "Hey," said a soldier on
watch, "you can't do that. Stop throwing any-
thing in there. Want to be blown up by a sub-
marine?"
If Mr. Walter Millis wants to write a sequel
to his "Road to War" he can photostat the testi-
mony at Washington. Title: "One-Way High-
way to War."
Forty-tight members attended the luncheon.
-Danbury News-Times.
Probably stopped in somewhere on the way.
Somebody is about to write a biography of
Sir Anthony Eden. How about Viola Paradise?
THE NON-READING WRITERS
Sir: I am glad your neighbor, Mr. Lewis Gan-
nett, has resumed his Good Reading series, for I
began last June to collect the names of non-red-
ing writers and his column was my only source.
Here is the testimony of a few:
"I have been too busy to read much lately and
Pareto lies on my side table, threatening." - Abbe
Ernest Dimnet, author of "My Old World."
"For the past year and a half I have not read
many books, mainly because I was busy writing
and re-writing my own"-Grace Lumpkin, author
of a "Sign for Cain."
"I read very little - just ten minutes a night
before I go to sleep." --Enid Bagnold, author of
"National Velvet."
"I don't read much fiction." - Humphrey Cobb,
author of "Paths of Glory."
"I read few books -don't like fiction much." -
John Stein beck, author of "Tortilla Flat."
"I have done considerable professional writing
during the last two years, with the result that I
have done very little general reading." - Robert

H. Lowie, author of "Crow Indians."
Following which, each lists from five to fifteen
books he has read and enjoyed lately. I mentioned'
all this to Lawrence, who recalls "Ben Hur" as the
best, and perhaps the only, book he ever read.
"Whew," whewed he, "if some of those boys and
girls just had a little time, I'll bet any one of them
could knock off a book a week"
ORSON WAGON
By Section 16 a floor tax is imposed upon the
sale or other disposition of any article processed
wholly or in chief value from any commodity
with respect to which a processing tax is to be
levied in amount equivalent to that of the proces-
sing tax which would be payable with respect
to the commodity from which the article is
processed if the processing tax had occurred on the
date when the processing tax becomes effective.
-From the Supreme Court's prevailing opinion,
And still Stone, Brandeis, and Cordozo dis-
sented.j
"A hundred or more persons saw the former
President in the terminal," said yesterday's Sun
on the story headed "Hoover Arrives Here," and
some of them applauded him." The Lit Dige
should have covered the story. What everybody
wants to know is whether fifty-one or more per-
sons applauded him.
Casper Milquetoast explained - to Richie - that
he had just bought these new spats he had on
because he was wearing high shoes and he wanted
people to think he was wearing low shoes.

Ten Years Ago
From The Daily Files
Jan. 10, 1926
Michigan's Varsity basketball five,
still is in the experimental stage, but
showing considerable improvement,
opened the home conference sched-
ule by defeating the strong Iowa
quintet 22-16 last night at the Yost
field house.
Crystalizing claims of student
members of the Oratorical board that
they are not at present enjoying all
the rights and privileges guaranteed
to them by the constitution and by-
laws of the organization, William C.
Dixon, '28L, appointed a committee
of four students and one faculty
member to investigate conditions and
affect a reorganization of the Ora-
torical Association if necessary.
Support of President Clarence C.
Little's ideas concerning prohibition
as one definite stand for Panhellenic
Intersorority association was urged
by Elizabeth Parrot, '26, president.
With the opening of the interfra-
ternity basketball tournamen to-
night, 32 teams will meet in the first
round of the qualifying series. Wit-
in the first three days all of the
teams scheduled to play will meet at
least one opponent while some will
meet two.
Vital rate reducing provisions o
the House revenue bill, including the
important income tax schedules. were
accepted today by the Senate finance
committee in rejecting the Demo-
cratic program calling for a total tax
reduction of $500,000,000.
Marking the first production with
a mixed cast ever to be presented in
the Mimes theatre, final dress re-
hearsals for Bernard Shaw's "Great
Catherine," which Comedy Club is
presenting tonight and tomorrow,
were held last evening in the Mimes
theatre under the :supervision of
Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, of the engi-
neering English department.
Feminine witticisms, accompanied
by illustrations drawn by feminine
artists from all parts of the country,
as well as the Michigan campus, are
contained in the annual Girl's num-
ber of Gargoyle, campus humor mag-
azine.
Captains of two teams to lead the
"Clean-up" squads in the last three
days of the Student Christian associ-
ation drive, were appointed by Harry
G. Messer '26, chairman of the cam-
paign. These teams will endeavor
to canvass every student who has
not already been solicited by a mem-
ber of the committee.
Debate on whether Peter Nye is
to be seated as a senator from Sorth
Dakota by appointment of the gov-
ernor got out of the hands of Senate
leaders today and developed into a
fiee-for-all argument.
Pianist, Singer
Will Give Next
Faculty Concert
Miss Thelma Lewis, soprano, and
Mrs. Maud Okkelberg, pianist, will
present another in the series of fac-
ulty concerts at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow
in Hill Auditorium.-
Miss Lewis has won distinction in
many important concert activites in
the Middle West and has sung fre-

quently in Ann Arbor, several times
in the annual May Festival. On this
occasion she will be accompanied by
Prof. Joseph Brinkman of the Music
School.
Mrs. Okkelberg will occupy two
spots on the program, one before
and one after Miss Lewis' group.
Her first group will include Three
Sonatas by Scarlatti, and Sonata,
Op. 109 by Beethoven. Miss Lewis
will then sing Spiagge Amate, Gluck;
O del mio dolce ardor, Gluck; Char-
mant papillon, Campra; and Bru-
nette,, Rameau-Wekerlin. The pro-
gram will be concluded by Mrs. Ok-
kelberg playing La Puerta del Vino,
Debussy; La Tterasse des audiences
du clair de lune, Debussy; Le Vent
dans la plaine, Debussy; Chanson
Tcherepnine; Prelude, Op. 23, Rach-
maninoff; and Etude, Op. 7, Stravin-
sky.
Greenman Builds
Model Indian Pen
A three-foot reproduction of an
ancient Indian inclosure, evidence
of which was found last year on a
farm in Lapeer County by members
of a University field expedition, has
been constructed by Dr. Emerson F.
Greenman, research associate in ar-
chaeology of the Museum of Anthro-
pology who was in charge of the ex-
pedition.
The miniature shows the features
of the enclosures that were indi-

SATURDAY, JAN. 11, 1936
VOL. XLVI No. 73
Notices
To the Members of the University
Council: There will be a meeting of
the University Council on Monday,
Jan. 13, 4:15 p.m., in Room 1009 An-
gell Hall.
Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary.
The University Bureau of Ap-
pointments and Occupational Infor-
mation has received announcement
of United States Civil Service Ex-
aminations for Senior Geneticist
(Horticulture) Cytologist (Horticul-
ture), Morphologist (Horticulture)
Physiologist and Assistant (Horticul-
ture), Associate Pathologist (Horti-
culture), salaries, $2600 to $4600. For
further information concerning these
examinations call at 201 Mason Hall,
office hours, 9:00-12:00 and 2:00-
4:00.
Dormitory Residents who are plan-
ning to move from the dormitory or
to change from one hall of residence
to another the second semester are
requested to register in this office at
once, if they have not already done
so.
Jeannette Perry, Assistant Dean
of Women.
Mixed Swimming and badminton
at the Intramural Building for stu-
dents and faculty members every
Saturday evening, 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
The charge will be 15c. Towel fur-
nished; bring your own suit and
athletic card. Groups and parties
invited.
Academic Notices
Graduate Students in History: The
language examination for the Mas-
ter's Degree in History will be given
at 4 p.m., Friday, Jan. 17, in B Hav-
en.
Geology 11: The last bluebook for
the semester will be given Friday,
Jan. 17, 9:00 a.m. Please go to the
same rooms as before.
Economics 171: Mimeograph XXV,
line 1, should read "December 1,
1935" instead of "December 1, 1936."
Notice to Students Planning to do
Directed Teaching: No assignments
in directed teaching for the second
semester will be made until Thurs-
day afternoon, Jan. 30. A schedule
of hours for conferences with Pro-
fessor Schorling will be given at a
later date in the D.O.B.
Directed Teaching - Qualifying
Examination: All students expecting
to do directed teaching next semes-
ter are required to pass a Qualify-
ing Examination in the subject which
they expect to teach. This examin-
ation will be held in 1022 U.H.S. on
Saturday morning, Jan. 11, starting
sharply at 8 o'clock. The examina-
tion in English will be given also in
the afternoon for those students who
have Saturday morning classes. The
examination will consume about four
hour's time; promptness is therefore
essential.
Comprehensive Examination in Ed-
ucation: All candidates for the
Teacher's Certificate are required to
pass a Comperhensive Professional
Examination covering the prescribed
courses in Education. The next ex-
amination of this kind will be held
in 2432 U.E.S. on Saturday, Jan. 11,
at 9 o'clock. For those students hav-
ing Saturday morning classes the
examination will be given at 1 o'clock
in 3203 U.H.S.; students wishing to
take the afternoon examination
should report this fact at the School
of Education office, 1437 U.E.S. Any
student who will have completed all
of the required courses in Education
by the end of the present semester

is eligible to take the examination
at this time. Graduate students who
will have received an advanced de-
gree by February are exempted from
this examination.
Reading Examinations in French:
Candidates for the degree of Ph.D.
in the departments listed below who
wish to satisfy the requirement of a
reading knowledge during the current
academic year, 1935-36, are informed
that examinations will be offered in
Room 108, Romance Language Build-
ing, from 9 to 12, on Saturday morn-
ing, Jan. 18. It will be necessary to
register at the office of the Depart-
ment of Romance Languages (112
R.L.) at least one week in advance.
Lists of books recommended bythe
various departments are obtainable
at this office.
It is desirable that candidates for
the doctorate prepare to satisfy this
requirement at the earliest possible
date. A brief statement of the na-
ture of the requirement, which will
be found helpful, may be obtained
at the office of the Department, and
further inquiries may be addressed
to Mr. L. F. Dow (100 R.L., Saturdays
at 10:00 and by appointment).
This annou~n'cement nnlies nly to~

first Ann Arbor concert in the sixth
Choral Union concert, Tuesday eve-
ning, Jan. 14 at 8:15 o'clock, when
the following program will be offered.
The public is requested to come suf-
ficiently early as to be seated on
time.
Overture to "Oberon" . ..von Weber
Symphony No. 7 in A major, Op. 92
..Beethoven
Poco sostenuto: Vivace
Allegretto
Scherzo: Presto
Allegro con brio
Tone Poem, "Tod und Verklarung,"
(Death and Transfiguration) Op.
24 ......................Strauss
Symphonic Fragments from the Bal-
let "Daphnis and Chloe" (Second
Suite No. 2)...............Ravel
a.tLever de Jour (Daybreak).
b. Pantomime.
c. Danse Generale.
Exhibitions
Isochromatic Exhibition of Paint-
ings, Memorial Hall, Jan. 9 through
19. Open daily including Sundays
from 2 to 5.
Events Of Today
Women Students: There will be a
skiing and toboganning party at 2:00
leaving the Women's Athletic Build-
ing.
Graduate Outing Club will go for
a Skiing and Tobagganing Party
through Huron Hills, starting from
Lane Hall at 3:00 p.m. In case there
is no snow there will be a hike in-
stead. Supper will be served at Lane
Hall about 6:00 for an approximate
cost of $.25. All Graduate Students
are cordially invited to attend.
Coming Events
Men Debaters: The tryouts for the
Varsity Men's Debate Squad will b
held Wednesday, Jan. 15, at 4:00
o'clock, Room 4203 A.H.
Twenty-eight debates have been
scheduled for this squad.
Hillel Players: Open meeting at
Union Sunday at 8:00 p.m., Room
316. There will be an informal pre-
sentation of three one-act plays. The
public is cordially invited to attend.
Hillel Independents: The sleigh
ride planned at the'last meeting will
be held Sunday. Please report
prompty at 7 p.m. to the Foundation
from where the ride will begin. Re-
freshments will be served at the
Foundation after the ride.
'Harris Hall: The student meetings
at Harris Hall will be resumed Sun-
day night at seven o'clock. Mr. Donal
Haines of the Department of Jour-
nalism will be the speaker. All stu-
dents and their friends are cordially
invited.
Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church:
Services of worship are: 8:00 a.m.
Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Church
School; 11:00 a.m., Kindergarten;
11:00 a.m., Morning Prayer and Ser-
mon by the Reverend Henry Lewis.
Stalker Hall, Sunday:
12 noon, Class for students under
the leadership of Rev. L. LaVerne
Finch. 6 p.m., Prof. Leroy Water-
man will speak on "The Challenge
to Christianity."
7 p.m., Fellowship Hour and sup-
per.
First Methodist Church: At 10:45
a.m. Sunday:
Dr. Charles W. Brashares will
preach on "Einstein and Eternity or
Fourth Dimension."
Congregational Church, Sunday:
10:30 a.m., Service of worship and
religious education. Mr. Heaps will
give the second sermon in the series,
"Portraits of Paul."
Prof. Preston Slosson will lecture
on "The Saint as Soldier - Garibaldi,

Gordon, Lawrence." In the series,
"European Men of Action."
Student Fellowship at 6:00. Fol-
lowing supper, Prof. Henry M. Ken-
dall will speak on "The Italian-
Ethiopian Situation."
First Presbyterian Church, Sunday:
Meeting in the Masonic Temple,
327 South Fourth. Ministers: Wil-
liam P. Lemon and Norman W. Kun-
kel.
9:45, Westminster Forum. The
leader will be Mr. Kunkel who will
introduce the subject "Religion and
I Right to Personal Success." Next
Sunday Professor Bennett Weaver
will begin a series of discussions on
the theme, "Literature and the
Abundant Life."
10:45, Worship Service with sermon
by the minister on the subject, "The
Divine 'Yes' ".
5:30, Westminster Guild Fellow-
ship Hour with a cost supper.
6:30, "Three Thousand Youth in
Convention -What About It?" will
be the general theme when the dele-
gates to the S.V.M. Convention at
Indianapolis will report. All students
are invited.
Chnreh of Christ Ifiscinies ,nn-

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin I co!- r t1 e nte to all members of the
University. Copy received at the owier of the Assistant to the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.

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