THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 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 republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. perity of the mushrooming "war babies" and, the investigating committee charges, were the prin- cipal factor in pushing the United States into the European conflict two years later. These are the material causes, the real reason for the direct change in policy of the Wilson administration. And now the Senate, with these findings, is endeavoring to show that a mandatory, automatic neutrality law is the only method of keeping the nation from embroiling itself in any future conflicts. Not only is this entirely absurd, but it is also childish to expect the citizens of this country to accept any such proposal as an ultimate and all inclusive solution to this complicated problem. It is in the testimony with which the Senate seeks to prove its contention that we find the direct refutation of why any such law would be inadequate and useless. Woodrow Wilson was elected to the presidency on a platform to keep the United States out of the World War. William Jennings Bryan, his first secretary of state, made Wilson's neutrality policy specific declaring that the making of loans to a belligerant was an "unneutral act." The President himself expressed his wish that loans of this character should not be made. In the face of this evidence, it is clearly seen that the United States could have wished for no stronger neutrality than it already had. Yet Woodrow Wilson, the avowed apostle of American neutrality, completely reversed his stand. We went to war two years later "to save democracy." If Wilson could not keep this nation neutral, and he had the support of the majority of the citizens behind him in this policy, how could Congress, which is elected largely through money donated by vested interests, ever hope to disregard the demands of their powerful lobbies? A neutrality act is only a temporary measure, and to consider it a permanent check would be the height of asininity. A final and thorough solution will be reached only when it is realized that the economic interests of this country are bound up inextricably with those of all the other nations of the world. When it is understood that we have an international economy and not a national economy; when it is understood that we must think in terms of inter- nationalism and not in terms of seventeenth cen- tury mercantilism, then, and only then, can a first step be made in the right direction in keeping the United States out of another world war. The Canining lotrer To An Unknown Man Who Sits By A Gramercy Park Window At Midnight (With apologies to Frances Cornford) Oh, why do you sit all night with your books Learning so much, so much. Oh, nice lean man with dark good looks Why do you spend your hours with books When love's to be had in cozy nooks And shivering sweet to the touch Oh, why do you spend all your hours with books Missing so much, so much. C.M.T. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Telephone 4925 BOARD OF EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR.............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR..............JOHN J. FLAHERTY ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............. THOMAS E. GROEHN Dorothy S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS C'ublication Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman; Clinton B. Conger, Richard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, Bernard Weissman. Reportorial Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman; E'lsie A. Pierce, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. Oditorial Department: John J. Flaherty, Chairman; Robert A. Cummins, Marshall D. Shulman. 3ports Department: William R. Reed, Chairman; George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred DeLano, Raymond Good- man. Women's Departmemi: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman; Dorothy Briscoe, Josephine M. Cavanagh, Florence H. Davies, Marior T. Holden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER ...........JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ....MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ... ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS Local Advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohlgemnuth; Circulation and National Adver- tising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica- tions, Lyman Bittman. NIGHT EDITOR: RALPH W. HURD THE FORUM Again We Fail.. T HE DAILY has already spoken edi- torially on one occasion about the theatre conduct of our campus cutups. The reason this comment: has not been continued from time to time is that we have no editorial writers who can treat the. subject without becoming so mad they wreck the office typewriters. This commentator will try to maintain a calm outlook until he fin- ishes. First of all it must be admitted that some of the juvenile antics we see and hear with our movies are funny --most of them are not. When a movie Is admittedly poor, which so many of them are, it s amusing to hear a subtle comment or a weirdl sound effect from the audience. However, in a movie that is as well-produced and as serious as "A Tale of Two Cities," there is no excuse for participation in the play by members of the audi-J ence. The producers have already employed a sufficient number of extras. Yesterday afternoon when several overgrown children laughed at one of the most serious sequences in this movie, the intelligent portion of the audience froze in their seats and became more tolerant of persons who commit mayhem.7 Another habit that our smart college boys have, one equally disgusting, is that of shouting fake at every obviously painted building or background' seen on the screen. These mental giants should' be told that many things happen on the screen which are not real; the actors are really not there on the stage, the story is fiction, but it is enter- taining. They might also like to learn that the scenery used on the legitimate stage is painted. Those are not real buildings you see in the back- ground over at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. But again we fail, even this writer got mad. American Neutrality .. . W ITH THE NATION again facing the problem of determining how strict a neutrality policy to pursue in the present Italo-Ethiopian conflict, the revelations made by J. P. Morgan in the Senate investigation add several heretofore concealed chapters in American World War history. The particular phase of the investigation in which Morga ngave his testimony is an effort to show the congress that a mandatory, automatic neutrality law is needed to keep the United States out of future wars. Morgan told Senator Champ Clark (Dem., Mo.), son of the late Senator Champ Clark who probably would have been elected to the presidency as the leading Democratic nomi- nee had it not been for the Republican split which lifted Woodrow Wilson to the chief execu- tive's chair, that the huge loans were floated by his company for the Allies in 1915 had been given the secret approval of Wilson in advance. Moreover, the President said in a letter to Secre- tary of State McAdoo that this approval "should be orally conveyed, so far as we are concerned, and not put in writing." Other testimony given by the aged financier showed that the reason for President Wilson's approval of the loans lay in Great Britain's tremendous imports from this country, the many "war baby" industries that leaped into existence overnight and in the plight of the American farmers whose overexpanded agricultural enter- prises would incur heavy losses were they to lose Letters published in this column should not be construed as 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 etters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Karl Schurz Foundation To the Editor: Karl Schurz left Germany for the United States in 1848 for the reason that he abhorred tyranny and despotism rampant at that time in the Father- land. Now, in the name of that great man who loved liberty more than all else, the Karl Schurz Foundation of Philadelphia is making propaganda (under the guise of showing German architecture and scenery) in the American universities in favor of the present shameless tyranny - and this for the purpose of helping a tyrant with the money of American tourists so that he may be able to continue his re-armament for the next world war that will set the world on fire. If Karl Schurz knew about this propaganda for tyranny, he would turn over in his grave. The Karl Schurz Foundation is said to dissem- inate German culture. One wonders whether this1 means Hitler culture - the only kind of culture allowed in Nazi Germany today. Did not Hitler cause the buring of some 20,000 great books in the public market place, thus showing how much he loves culture? M. Levi, Professor-emeritus Inglorious Obsession To the Editor: The article on Magnificent Obsession in the Jan. 16 Daily shows that at least one person still retains a spark of critical and moral judgment. Mr. Campbell expressed the reaction of any think- ing person toward an obsession which by no stretch of conscience can be termed magnificent. It is a sad commentary on the flimsy foundation of present-day Christianity that the presentation of natural virtue motivated by the assurance of immediate material reward, could be mistaken by several reviewers for mysticism. The whole phi- losophy of the picture is absurd in essence and is, as Mr. Campbell puts it, a "vulgarization of Chris- tianity" which no mature Christian can tolerate. Grad. '28 As OthersSee It] Farmers Hit R.O.T.C. (From the Daily Cardinal) AN INTERESTING poll taken by the Capper publications and editorialized by Ray Moley in Today is significant in its indication of the farmers' attitude toward war. The poll indicated about a 100 to 1 sentiment against the United States' participation in an European war. Taking the profits out of war and a popular vote on a decision to go to war also received overwhelming support. But one of the most interesting results of the poll - at least to us as students - was the senti- ment against compulsory military training in the universities. This attitude on the part of traditionally the ___.t , . ., ... ,. ,.,{ .f - t ~ l in i i The Limited Editions Club is sending out al questionnaire pamphlet. The Club wants to knowl how people feel about type, paper, format, etc. The pamphlet's title page is good; it says: "What do you like? What do you like?" None of the ques- tions is rhetorical; if the Literary Digest were polling popular preferences it would add NOW to each of those questions. "Any up-to-date psychologist," writes A. R. W. an up-to-date psychologist, "can tell you what's the matter with the Supreme Court. Here are nine old men constituting a century-old traditio suddenly moved into a new grandiose, ultra mod- ern building. Newspapers have played it up big; people are talking about it. Of course, defense mechanism starts going. Didn't you ever see a fellow in a spick-and-span ew office insisting on hammering out his stuff on a battered old type- writer? Or an elderly husband in a grand new house insisting on having his old slippers? Hence the AAA decision." There is, alas, no poets' union or guild. The broadcasting companies have to pay authors and composers of published and copyrighted songs; there is a restraint against the broadcasting of news; but broadcasters evidently may recite any- body's verse without even asking permission, let alone paying a fee, to either the author or the publisher. Historians' Peekly-Weekly Our Own World Almanac for 1936, '37 and '38. HOW TO GET TO FIRST BASE: Take Lexington Avenue subway to 161 Street (Yankee Stadium) and ask for Mr. Gehrig. STANDARD TIME DIFFERENCES: When it is 12 o'clock noon in New York, N. Y., it is 5:00 p.m. in Macy's October 18 in Gimbel's, and time to go down and around in Middle Valve, Yo-o-o-ho-o-o-o, here. ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATIONS: The Demo- cratic National Convention ($200,000) will be declared unconstitutional on June 21, the day the sun enters the sign of the crab, Indepen- dence Hall, Philadelphia. The Braves will clinch the National League pennant on December 22 as winter is icumen in. COPYRIGHT LAWS: Books, periodicals, musical compositions, drawings, photographs, and wise- cracks must be copyrighted before being plagi- arized. Books, borrowed from their rightful owners, may be returned on all days except the second and last Saturday of Lent unless otherwise lost, destroyed, defaced, stolen, placed in hock, turned over to Sailors' Snug Harbor, or exchanged for a copy of "It Can't Happen Here." PRINCIPAL POLITICAL PARTIES IN U. S.: The Democraps, the Republicliques, the Six-o'-Ones, the Eggnogues, the Anti-Eggnogues, the Fan- dancers' Socialist - Federalist - Farmer - Labor- Cocktail Party, the Free Thinkers, the Ten- Cents-To-Cover-Postage Thinkers, the Non- the Make-Mine-the-Same-ists, the Old Dealers, Partisan Party, the Whig-Radio-Keith-Orph- eum-Tories,athe Beer-in-Streamlined-Cans-by- Christmas-or-Bust Pacifists, the Anti-Hyphen- ates, the Left-right-left Wing of the March-of- Time Party, the Make-Mine-the-Same-ists, the Old Dealers, the Pretty Old Dealers, and the Farmer-Labor Old Dealers with Hollandaise Sauce. TABLES OF WEIGHTS & MEASURES: 12 inches equal 1 foot; 3 feet, 1 yard; 10 yards, first down. Penatly for offside, 1 cubic mile. MEMORABLE DATES: 2243 B. C. - Ninevehan Congress investigates munitions manufacturers. J. P. Morguchadnezzar testifies that Allies pur- chased only $6.00 worth of pop-guns from pri- vate collection of Sir Basil Zaroff. 1184 B. C.- Salary lists released by Trojan Congress show that Postmaster General James A. Paris earned only $4.83 last year and spent $4.82 philatelizin' around. 1492 A. D.- Columbus arrives ten months too late to get in on the January white sales. ("Better luck next time, Chris," the merchants tell him.) 1620 A. D. -Pilgrims land at Plymouth and organize a Jackson Day Diner. Coast-to-Coast network does the rest. PRINCIPAL RIVERS OF U. S.: Suwanee, Old Man, Wabash (Banks of, only), Deep, Beauti- ful Ohio, Beautiful Blue Danube (U. S. Branch) Don' Stay Away From My Shannon (Mother Machree rights reserved), and of Time And The YE OULDE AL GRAHAM. Only the selection of a title has been keeping us from the publication of a book of verse. Now we have it, taken from "The Yeomen of the Guard.' "The Melancholy Lute." IN HEAVEN YCLEPT In the chilliest winter we ever did see, I froze an ankle ans Euphrosyne. VIOLA PARADISE. Jaeckle and Ives Get Together to End Dispute. -Herald Tribune headline. Now let Currier and Hyde get together. We note with pride that our representative, the unr Qonip Arorif. (,nn R )v a gnist Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE ERNEST DURIG, the internation- ally known Swiss sculptor, wasI having a time trying to see President Roosevelt. Finally, he decided he was getting nowhere rapidly at the state department, so he trotted across thel street to the White House executive offices. He had been there three minutes when the President asked to see him. He knew Durig's work. Durig tried another method when he couldn't see Mussolini. He carved i a snow statue of the Italian ruler in a park in Rome. That evening at 9 p.m., dressed in tails, he was be- ing announced to Il Duce.h s T HE well-known actress stubbed her toe, conversationally, on one of the most confusing facts concern-' ing the capital. Tourists never seem to digest the fact that Washington is a small, federal district. "I'm going out to see Washington," announced the actress after her first, show. "He's dead," quipped a friend. "Oh, not George! I know that," said the actress. "I mean the STATE, it- self." Mrs. Homer Cummings, wife of the attorney general, was cor- nered by one of those pests who want to know which of the "capi- tal's rare opportunities" she would say, after three years, she enjoys the most. "Listening to Honer Cum- mings,"esaid the gentleman's wife. ROOSEVELTISMS: When the President proposes a toast it is always the same one, "To the United States." Anna Roosevelt Boettiger, the President's daughter, is a disconcert- ing opponent at bridge. She usually wins. Sunday night scrambled eggs at the White House are still being served in the family's old, silver chafing dish, the new kitchen notwithstanding. The President maintains the eggs taste best out from the old dish. O NE day Representative Sol Bloom of New York received a phone call from the White House to ask if he would like a new bust of George Washington, since he was chairman of the Washington bicentennial com- mittee. "Sure," said Bloom, "I'll send right over for it." Bloom sent a taxi. The statue stood seven feet high and weighed two tons. W HEN Representative Paul J. Kvale of Minnesota was home this fall he stopped to see an old storekeeper who sold him candy as a boy.kThe storekeeper wanted to know about Kvale's work in Washing- ton. Kvale enthusiastically told about the rush: early at the office, morn- ing committee battles, afternoon ses- sions, the late hour answering mail, and evenings spent in reading new bills and preparing for the next day. "Well, son," grinned the storekeep- er, "I certainly hope you never have to work for your living." (Continued from Page 3) ing. Prof. Heber D. Curtis will speak on "Science and Religion." 7:00 p.m., Fellowship Hour and Supper. First Methodist Church: Mornihg worship Service at 10:45, Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "My Life-How Find It?" (Palmis- try? Numerology? Astrology?) First Presbyterian Church, meeting in the Masonic Temple, 327 S. Fourth Ave., William P. Lemon, and Norman W. Kunkel, Ministers. 9:45 - Professor Bennett Weaver speaks to the Westminster Forum for Youth on "Literature and the Abun- dant Life." Students are invited. 10:45-Sermon by Dr. Lemon on "Life's Detours." 5:45 -Mr. Walter ("Pat") Jen- kins of Detroit, Secretary for young people's work for the Synod of Mich- igan speaks at a student dinner hon- oring the new affiliate church mem- bers. Students wishing to attend are requested to make reservations for the dinner. A number of faculty men and their wives will be guests. Harris Hall: The regular student meeting will be held this evening at seven o'clock in Harris Hall. The Right Reverend Herman Page, D.D., Bishop of Michigan will speak on, "The Relation of the College Student to Public Life." All students and their friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Church: Services of worship today are: 8:00 A.M., Holy Communion; 9:30 A.M. C h u r c h School; 11:00 A.M., Kindergarten; 11:00 A.M., Morning Prayer and Ser- mon by The Reverend Henry Lewis. Congregational Church: 10:30, Service of Worship and Re- ligious Education. Mr. Heaps will give the third in the series on "Por- traits of Paul." Prof. Slosson will lecture on "The Saint as Patriot- Mazzini," third in the series on "Eur- opean Men of Action." 5:00, Discussion group led by Stu- THE SCREEN ..RADIO V Dramatic programs on the air seem to be getting better as time goes on. Excellent bits have been staged on the Fleischmann variety hour during the past few weeks, the one last Thursday night featuring Lupe Velez and Joseph Schildkraut being of the first order. Leslie Howard's dramatic programs, heard at 2 p.m. Sunday afternoons, over WJR, have been very good to date. Incidentally, Les- lie Howard will not be on today because of the broadcasting of Pres- ident Roosevelt's address at the Theo- dore Roosevelt Memorial dedication. And another indication of the im- provement in radiodramatics is Helen Hayes' appearances in the serial, "The New Penny," every Tues- day night at 9:30 p.m. over WXYZ. At 3 p.m. this afternoon will be your last opportunity to hear the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Sir Thomas Beecham, one of the best known figures in the musical circles of England. Sir Thomas plans to spend one week with the Philadelphia Orchestra before he sails back to England. If you can tear yourself away from Jack Benny this evening, you have a chance to find out just how this 'round and around business got started. Eddie Cantor will have as his guests tonight Mike Reilly and Eddie Farley, the boys to whom credit for the latest brainstorm is given. For those of you who like to listen to good dance music, even though most of it comes quite late at night, here are some of the better bands on the air: Isham Jones plays on DAILY OFFICIAL BLJIIT IN Publication In the Bollit in s c t ' i'i iv ice t(o all Hem rs of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday AT THE MAJESTIC "A TALE OF TWO CITIES" A Mro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture star- ring Ronald Colman, with Elizabeth Allen, Edna May Oliver, Reginald Owen, Basil Rathbone, Blanche Yiirka, Henry B. Walthall, Donald Woods, Walter Cartiett and 109 others in speaking parts. The transposing of Charles Dick- ens' "A Tale of Two Cities" to the screen has been accomplished with surprising accuracy and impressive success, considering the enormity of the task. With 18 months of research behind the production, the great story, fine direction, and a cast with- out a single weak character, tlhe re- sult couldn't have been anything but the picture of the year. Individual acting honors are hard to award because of the perfection of the entire cast. Certainly Ron- ald Colman as Sydney Carton sur- passes anything else he has ever done; Blanche Yurka as Madame DeFarge is a character that will long be remem- bered; Edna May Oliver is as funny as ever, and more couldn't be said; beautiful Elizabeth Allen fills her role with appealing grace and tender- ness. In the smallerdroles E. . Clive as the judge in "Old Bailey" does a fine bit, and Billy Bevan as Cruncher, "resurrectionist," is very real. All felt the fear and confusion of the little seamstress, Isabel Jewell. The storming of the Bastille is one of the most impressive scenes, and the opening and closing shots are ar- tistically done. The familiar story relates the events in London and Paris at the time of the French revolution. Car- ton is an English advocate whose life has been wasted away in drinking, while he might have been a truly great lawyer. When he meets Lucie Manette he falls in love with her and is on the point of rebuilding his life in order to please her when she marriesrCharles Darnay (Donald Woods) a French aristocrat who has left his country because of the ty- ranny and blindness of the upper class towards the needs of the pea- sants. Carton remains a friend of the fam- ily and Lucie's best friend, but he is again obsessed with the way in which his life has been wasted and the fact that there isn't a single person in whose heart he can find sanctuary. His chance for greatness comes when Darnay is sentenced to die as an aristocrat, for then Carton proves to Lucie that he was sincere when he told her he would give his life for the life of one she loved. The continued unrest among the French peasants and their eventual revolt for liberty, equality, and fra- ternity, which they promptly forget, lent Volunteer Convention Delegates, or the Student Fellowship. 6:00, Student Fellowship. Follow- ng a light supper Prof. Duffendack vill speak on "Youth in Germany." There will be special music. Roger Williams Guild: 12:00 noon, Students will meet as pecial group at Guild House. Dis- ussion, "Achievements of the Church n America." Rev. Howard R. Chap- man, minister of students, will be in harge. 6:00 p.m. (prompt), Mrs. E. R. Hardenbrook, who has traveled widely in the near and Far East, will give a moving picture travelogue on China, using reels personally taken. Pictures shown of eastern part of China from Peiping and the Great Wall to Canton and Hong Kong. First Baptist Church: 10:45 a.m., Rev. R. E. Sayles, min- ister, will preach on "The Uplook on Life." 9:30, Church School in Church. :45, Dr. Leroy Waterman's class in Biblical literature, at Guild House. Church of Christ (Disciples) 10:45 a.m., Morning worship, Rev. Fred Cowin, Minister. 12:00 noon, Students' Bible Class, H. L. Pickerill, Leader. A continuation of the study of the Life and Significance of Jesus. 5:30 p.m., Social Hour. Fifteen cert supper served. 6:30 p.m., George Abernathy, counselor for the Student Christian Association, will bring a report of the Student Volunteer Convention held during the holidays at Indianapolis, Indiana. The report will be followed by a forum on student movements as revealed through various gatherings of students during the holidays. Lutheran Student Club: Members of the Baptist Student Group who attended the Student Volunteer Con- vention in Indianapolis during Christmas vacation will report on the meetings at the Lutheran Student Club Sunday evening, Jan. 19. The meeting will be in the parish hall of the Zion Lutheran Church on East Washington Street at 5:30 o'clock. Unitarian Church - 5:30 Twilight service, "A Battle Yet to be Won" by Dr. A. P. Reccord. 7:30 Liberal Stu- dents Union. Dr. A. P. Reccord on "Rethinking Religion." Phi Tau Alpha meeting, 3 p.m., in the Michigan League. Moving pic- tures of France and Italy will be shown by Miss Gertrude Gilman. All students and faculty of the classical department are cordially invited. Phi Eta Sigma: Freshman honora- ry fraternity will have a supper at the Michigan Union. Mr. A. D. Moore, of the Engineering College, will be the guest of honor. Members are requested to sign at the Union before the meeting. The cost is 35c, and the time 6:30 p.m. The time for taking the 'Ensian picture will be chosen. Scalp and Blade meeting in the Union at 5:15 p.m. All members are requested to be present. Room will be posted. Genesee Club meeting at the Union at 4:30. Election of officers. Coming Events Sigma Xi: The second meeting of Sigma Xi for the curent academic year will be held in Room 2528, East Medical Building on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 7:30 p.m. Professor Leonard L. Watkins will speak on Recent Devel- opments in the MonetarySituation. Refreshments will be served. Economics Club: Mr. Sume Carlson (Stockholm, Chicago) will address the Club Tuesday, Jan. 21, 7:30 p.m., 302 Union, on "Some Problems in the Theory of Production." Mathematical Club will meet on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 3201 Angell Hall, th pem.r. D. K. Kazarinoff will be the speaker. Graduate Education Club meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday, an. 22 in the Elementary School Library. Mr. Leonard O. Andrews will talk on the subject: "Pupils' Social Needs As a Basis for the Curriculum." Varsity Women Debaters: The Women's Debate Squad will meet Monday eveningat 8:00 o'clock, 4206 Angell Hall. Luncheon for graduate students on Wednesday, Jan. 22, at 12 o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the Michi- gan League bldg. Professor Bennett Weaver of the English department will speak informally on "Students and Scholars." Commission on Social Study and Action of the Student Christian Asso- ciation: Meeting at 5:00 Monday in Lane Hall, Upper Room, to discuss questions to be asked Reinhold Nie- buhr at the supper meeting with him Tuesday in the Russian Tea Room of the League. Everyone attending this supper please come. Interior Decorating Group of the 'L .1 r -- ,_ 1 _li.. gril....Z