THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1936 Mae= THE MICHIGAN DAILY The Wisconsin News Strike. . . The Conning Tower 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 #or, 1epublication of all -news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of repulication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan as second class mal matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. ,-Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 M>diiion Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. E}ITORIAL DEPARTMENT Telephone 4925 BOARD OF EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR......... ....THOMAS -H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR.............THOMAS E. GROEHN Dorlothy S. Glos Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS Publication Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman; Clinton B. Conger, Robert Cummins, Richard G. Her- shey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal. Repor ori Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman; Elsie .Piefrce, Joseph S. "Mattes. Editorial Department: Arnold S. Daniels, Marshall D. Shulnan. sports .Department: William R. rcced Chairman; George Andros, Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman. Wumen's Departmen,,: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman; Je ephine M. Cavanag, Florence H. Davies, Marion T. PIolden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. BUS.NESS DEPARTMENT Telephone 2-1214 131I0S MANAGER........GQE GE H. ATRTON W ~lEN'SBUSINESS NAAiER .... MARGARET COWIE WOlEN'S SERVICE IANAE ...ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS b =alAdvertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohgemuth; Circulation and National Adver- ng,L John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica- tlpns, L.yman Bittman. NIQHT EDITOR: CLINTON B. CONGER Bil r own On Tuesday MorniAg... A LITTLE over a year ago, The Daily published aneditorial which told of young Bill Brown, who, after seeing All Quiet On the Western Front, "walked out of the dark au- ditorium hating war --hating war and vowing bitterly that he'd never march off to all that ghast- ly and beastly bloodiness, march off to kill and be killed, for no reason." Despite his passionate desire to do something, young Bill Brown, after a survey of what he regarded to be the causes of war, was bewildered. Political, economic, social aild psychological causes of war seemed to be beyondanythng he as an in- dividual could do to remedy them. Thus, blocked and apparently helpless, Bill Brown, his rage gradually dissipated, did nothing. Today, Bill Brown, still feeling war 'to be a personal tragedy and a social calamity, may still be bewildered about the international scene, but he is not helpless, and he is not going to do nothing. He cannot stop the bloody masscre of natives in Ethiopia. He cannot ease the tension along the Rhine, nor stop the dread machipery of eco- nomic forces. He cannot, alone, make.the League more effective. Not only is the helpless to avert a conflict abroad, but he annot be sure that his own nation may not be involved, for neutrality legislation was not passed without effective clauses being removed. There is something he ien do. He can, together with the thousands of us 'Bill Browns, hake it known. that there is.aIpowerful niajority of United States citizens who, not one whit less loyal than the American Legion, hate war and are willing to support statesmen who will foster programs cal- culated to eliminate war as an instrument of in- ternational settlement. It will inform the world that we are aware of the instruments of propa- gandizing war hysteria, and that we are no longer responsive to them; that we are aware of selfish interests which precipitated us into the last war, and that we shall be suspicious of their influence in international or national events in the future. Perhaps this in itself won't stop war, but when representatives at disarmament conferences and arbitration meetings know that they have an active constituency behind them who regard humanity as of more importance than national boundaries or markets, we will not repeat the vindictiveness in foreign diplomacy of the Versailles settlements. When this is an international reality (for there are Bill Browns in every nation) world-wide disarma- ment will be removed from the realm of the dream world. In the meantime, Bill does not believe in com- plete disarmament of the United States, nor does he, on the other hand, believe in exorbitant army and navy appropriations. He does not believe that Americans should refuse to fight in self-defense. He does not believe that peace demonstrations' alone can stop war. But he does believe that when he, together with a half million other young men and women, announces his interest in peace, his willingness to support effective legislation, and his repudiation of war in the modern world, he is not only not being a hopeless idealist, but he is doing something practical and necessary for the elimina- tion of this barbarous instrument some time in the future. For these reasons, The Daily is supporting the University Peace Meeting Tuesday morning, April 21st on the mall between the Architecture School and the University High School. The Daily prom- ises that it will, together- with President Ruthven, Professor Slosson and the group of respected stu- dents sponsoring the meeting, help to see that the meeting will suggest snecific roads to action. Tf OUT IN MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin, that famous home of good beer and a socialist mayor, about 30 men, ignored by the world of publicity, are making history. Those 30 men are reporters, members of the youthful Amer- ican Newspaper Guild and they are striking against Hearst's Wisconsin News for a better wage and a closed shop. All through the nation, - newspapermen are sympathetically watching the progress of the strike. For this is the first time in years a group of reporters have challenged a major publisher. And they have chosen a tarter, yea HEARST him- self. Naturally, this strike is "not news" as far as the wire services are concerned. The story of 2,000 sympathizers parading in an endless chain around a building in sub-zero weather does not hold any interest for the nation. The Associated Press and United Press carried short stories the day the strike began, February 17, but there has been only one story since. Other papers have ignored the event or else relegated it to a one-inch story on the last page. And so, in the main the public is ignor- ant of what is going on. But why is it that newspapers all over the coun- try have been so uninterested and so completely oblivious to what has been going on? Is it be- cause the Wisconsin News, like all William Ran- dolph Hearst's papers, is so small, quiet and unas- suming that the episode is passing by "unnoticed"? Or is it because there really is not a labor strike in Milwaukee at al' Anyway, "journalists" are professional men (the NRA thought differently but the NRA is unconstitutional). And who ever heard of professional men striking? It must be a false "rumor." However this is not the significant fact. What is important - pathetic monument to American in- difference and apathy -is that so far neither the circulation nor advertising of the Wisconsin News have diminished appreciably. Moreover, this is the only path along which any modicum of success can be gained. For, until Mr. Hearst is hit, and hit hard, where for him, it hurts most - in the pocket - he will never let drop even a crumb. And so in Milwaukee the American Newspaper Guild fights on. But how long can it last? Unless national support is soon forthcoming, unless an aroused public opinion militantly demands settle- ment, the strikers will through lack of funds and final disgust succumb. Yet, it will be a long time before the American public is sufficiently interested in such vital matters as to influence a Mr. Hearst. Moreover, the mogul of San Simeon could probably "starve out" (in a lockout if necessary) the report- ers on half the newspapers he publishes without too much difficulty. But to those who realize how much winning this strike would strengthen the American News- paper Guild, and how much a strong Guild could do for the elimination of "yellow" journalism, falsifying and editorializing the news, growing il- liberalism and fascist tendencies of the Hearstian kind, losing in this walkout though disheartening would not be too much so. For, even if this try should fail (and we sin- cerely hope it does not), then the next, perhaps somewhere else, or the one after that will succeed. And that day, when it comes, will be one well worth waiting for. DRAMAI k SEASON ADVANCE P1vOGRAM f OR OUR READERS' convenience we print the exact schedule of performances for the 1936 Dramatic Season, to be presented for five weeks from May 18 through June 20 in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre.1 The repertory is as follows: Sunday, May 17, at 4:15 - Reginald Pole lec- ture, Hamlet -The Prophecy of Modern Man. Monday, May 18 through Friday, May 22 (Mat- inee: Wednesday and Friday) - Libel, with Ken- neth MacKenna, Doris Dalton, Nancy Sheridan, and Whitford Kane. Saturday (Matinee and Night), May 23 -Party, with Estelle Winwood, Eddie Garr, Frances Mad, dux and Doris Dalton. Sunday, 24 at 4:15 - Reginald Pole lecture, Hamlet -The Prophecy of Modern Man. Monday, May 25 through Friday, May 29 (Mat- inee: Tuesday and Wednesday) -Party (cast as above). Saturday, May 30 through Wednesday, June 31 (Matinee: Saturday and Wednesday) - Hamlet with Ian Keith, Estelle Winwood, Whitford Kane, George Somnes, Doris Dalton. Thursday, June 4 through Tuesday, June 9 (ex- cept Sunday) -The Distaff Side with Blanche Yurka, Estelle Winwood, Margallo Gilmore and, Effie Shannon (Matinee: Friday and Saturday). Sunday, June 7, at 4:15 - Reginald Pole lecture,{ Beethoven and Shakespeare - Analogies in thej Creative Genius. Wednesday, June 10 through Monday, June 15 (except Sunday) - Parnell, with Margalo Gilmore, Effie Shannon and Nancy Sheridan (Matinee:; Wednesday and Saturday). Sunday, June 14, at 4:15 - Reginald Pole lec- ture, Ibsen, Chekov and the Modern Theatre. c Tuesday, June 16 through Saturday, June 20j (Matinee: Wednesday, Friday and Saturday) - Night of Jan. 16 with Margalo Gilmore, RobertI Ross, Whitford Kane and Ainsworth Arnold. The Saturday matinee performance, June 20, of Night of Jan. 16 is scheduled for 2 p.m. sharp1 because of the Commencement Exercises at 5 p.m.j "A middle-aged individual has less chance to reach the age of eighty than his grandparents Weary and spent, the earth at autmun's end Tasted the acrid bitterness of frost And breathed a final cry upon the wind: Despaired; gave up its green and fruitful ghost. Then in a tomb of silence and of cold The stricken world lay doomed; till none dare say: Now winter's three long days of death are told,, O who will roll this heavy stone away? But yesterday I heard a blackbird sing Against the rising sun. Toward dusk a fox Came warily from the wood. The mountain spring, Unbridled in the night, thundered down rocks. This morning fields are green; and from the skies Warm radiance shouts: Awake! Awake! Arise! IRVING FINEMAN We are in agreement with Mr. Walter Lipp- mann in his yesterday's article on the Haupt- mann case. "It will be necessary," he says, "for the reputable press to treat judges and lawyers and others who make the show or permit it as incompetent.'' There is one trouble about all this. Newspaper reputability is a local issue; a matter of definition. Does the editor or owner of what we think, or what Mr. Lippmann thinks, a disreputable newspaper consider the newspaper disreputable? Maybe when he communes with himself he does, but we never have seen or heard of a newspaper owner or editor who considers his paper one of ill repute. If he is what we think a disreputable newspaper editor, his esti- mate of what we think a reputable paper is a dull, old-fashioned, conservative sheet. Some day somebody with a great deal of candor and curi- osity, as well as a gift for the figures obtainable only after research and verification, will write a piece on Journalism and the Circulation Mania. To mention names, there are those who con- sider Mr. Hearst a disreputable journalist; Mr. Hearst, we feel certain, thinks of himself as not only reputable, but as the only fearless and re- proachless knight in the journalistic lists. In the honesty of Mr. Leopold Stokowski we have complete trust. Upon his courage we have less reliance. He said that the stiff shirt is an unwanted heritage from the eighteenth century, and that the soft collar is a boon to music and comfort. This observation, however, was based upon the notion that the orchestra plays better at rehearsals than at concerts, largely because they are dressed informally at rehearsals. At last night's concert of the Philadelphia Orchestra Mr. Stokowski conducted in tails and a high stiff collar; the members of the orchestra were formally dressed. How about audiences, Mr. S.? At last night's concert a majority of the men were dressed in the garb associated with grateful evening. Why? It is easier to listen to music comfortably dressed; the ideal way to listen is lying on a sofa, smok- ing; possibly also reading a book or a newspaper. When the music grows boresome, or even if you are suddenly weary, you walk out in the middle of the piece, and in two minutes you are in bed. Alice in Might-as-Weli-Have- Said Land "You might as well say," a one-time president of this then free and unregimented country was might-as-well-saying out of the loudspeaker on Saturday. "that there aren't enough coffins for all if we died at once." "I get it," said one listener back into the now silent set. "You might as well say that there aren't enough seats in the subway trains for all; nor enough trains to ride in; nor stairs wide enough to climb, nor enough subways even if it comes down to that." "You might as well say," said Alice, who must have been listening too, "that there aren't enough Presidential seats in the White House to go around, either." As though to end the discussion, the loud- speaker suddenly began again, which was well enough. For the things that Alice and I might as well have said threatened to reach all the way to Fort Wayne, Ind. F.A.S.. Jr. It is Dr. William Lyon Phelps himself, 110 Whitney Avenue, New Haven, who says that the street his house is in or on was named in honor of Eli Whitney. "I asked the daughters of the great Professor Whitney whether this ave. was named after him or after Eli. They, said Eli, 'Which shows,' I rejoined, 'he writes the superi- ority of gin over Sanscrit.' , . . I haven't used the word 'rejoined' since 1883 -high time to bring it back." Our rejoinder is "Leave it lay." The Reeders Sir: The observant fellow contrib's discovery that the title of Rebecca West's new novel is de- scriptive of its readers has left me a little super- sensitive. When I asked my bookseller for a copy of "The Hollow Reed," by Mary J. J. Wrinn, I felt like adding, "And do you want to make something out of it?" N. D. PLUME The Department of Parks has issued its 1936 schedule for golf and tennis. To play golf all season the price of a permit is $10; for tennis it is $1 for players under seventeen, and $3 for older persons. When will the Police Department issue a rate card saying how much it costs to park a car on a side street for twelve hours; how much for twenty-four hours or longer? The only one we know who pronounces it tornahdo is our old friend Katisha, who rhymes it with "bravado" and "gambado," and, if not interrupted, with "Mikado." Superintendent Harold G. Campbell thinks that "This Is The Resurrection" . THE STAGE NEW YORK HOLIDAY By C. HART SCIIAAF AT least five top-notch plays have opened in Manhattan since this department made its last recom- mendations. Students and faculty members who intend to spend next week's vacation in New York may be directed to see any or all of them. More than five good plays have been offered, of course, since thehbetween- semester holiday, and it is character- istic of the best season Broadway has had for several years that it is no easy task to name the best. But the function of this column is not to list all productions; we must pick and choose. And here are the five plays of our choice: Idiot's Delight. Last year Robert Sherwood examined, in symbolistic terms, civilization's current problem of psychological degeneration. This year, in direct terms, he looks at civilization's problem of War. The principals are Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne; the producer, The Theatre Guild. The show is enjoying typical Sherwood popularity, and should by all means be on the must list of everyone spending any of next week in New York. Saint Joan. When Actress Kath- erine Cornell, Author George Ber- nard Shaw, and Director Guthrie McClintic get together you can ex- pect a good show, the truth of which proposition would seem to be elo- quently illustrated in this play. It has always been something of a mys- tery to this department, although a mystery pleasant to contemplate, that both Mark Twain and Shaw, men devoted chiefly to eliciting laughter, should have chosen this same sub- ject of the Maid of Orleans for one of their few serious efforts-and with it succeeded so very well. However difficult it may be to understand, they nevertheless did it. And in "Saint Joan" you can see one of the finest plays yet written by G.B.S., Bitter Stream. This play, produced by the Theatre Union, is important as the first attempt in this country to present in dramatic terms the in- dignity and horror of life under dictatorship, the dictatorship in this case being Fascist Italy. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance they seek to awaken. Love On The Dole comes from England, where it was adapted by Walter Greenwood and Ronald Gow from a novel by Greenwood, a young man who knows all about the dole because he has had to live on it, and who has combined the fresh emotions of first-hand experience with first- rate theatre technique to produce a play that has the critics raving and audiences stirred both to feeling and thought. The play presents no doc- trinaire solution or analysis. Its protagonists are vehemently if inar- ticulately opposed to Communism. But spectators leave the theatre feel- ing that something is wrong with the system-something that is wreak- ing sad and real damage in pulsing, human terms. End of Summer is similar to the preceding play in that its approach is subtle rather than doctrinaire, but is different from it in that it presents a picture of unhappiness caused by too much rather than too little mon- ey. Thus, it and "Love on the Dole" should together give a very good pic- ture of the unhealthiness of a sys- tem which operates to place great, stagnating accumulations of wealth in a few hands, and plunges consid- erable numbers of persons at the op- posite end of the scale into dire pov- erty. "End of Summer" is written by very literate S. N. Behrman, consist- ently the author of brilliant theatre. Among its dramatis personnae are Ina Claire and Osgood Perkins. Ina Claire has never yet acted in any- thing less than a hit-and the indi- cations are that her record will not be broken in her current show. The following of our February rec- ommendations are still running: Sid- ney Kingsley's "Dead End"; Law- rence Hausman's "Victoria Regina,"' with Helen Hayes; "Ethan Frome"; G. S. Kaufman's "First Lady" with Jane Cowl; Lynn Riggs' "Russet Mantle"; and "Jubilee." These all seemed to be excellent shows when we first picked them; and they now have proven themselves in two ad- ditional months' time testing. TW E SCREEN AT THE MICHIGAN Double Feature S.2 'THE BOHEMIAN GIRL' and FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1936 1 VOL. XLVI No. 137 Notices To the Members of the University Council: The next meeting of thef University Council will be held on Monday, April 20, 4:15 p.m., in Room 1009 Angell Hall. The Lost and Found Department int the Business Office, Room 3, Uni- versity Hall, has lots of gloves, scarfs, hats, pens. pencils and books that< have been turned in in the past fewp months. Many of these things will1 have to be disposed of during vaca- tion period and we would appreciatel it if anyone who has lost anything would kindly report the loss to the office before leaving for vacation. Library Hours, April 11-20: Duringl the spring recess the General Library will be open as usual from 7:45 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily, with the excep- tion of the Study Halls in the Library building and the Graduate Readingt Rooms, which will be open only from 10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m. The hours of opening of the De- partmental Libraries will also bet 10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m.l Sunday service will be discontinuedt during this period. Win. W. Bishop, Librarian. I Faculty, College of Literature, Science and the Arts: Midsemester reports are due today. E. A. Walter, Acting Assistant Dean, Graduate School Students: Stu- dents enrolled in the Graduate Schoolt will not be permitted to drop courses1 after Friday, April 10. A course is not officially dropped until it is re- ported in the office of the Graduate School, 1006 Angell Hall. Students who have made any changes in courses since submitting their election cards should report the corrections in the Graduate SchoolM office. Changes of address should al- so be reported. C. S. Yoakum. Students, School of Education:t Courses dropped after Friday, April 10, will be recorded with the grade of "E" except under extraordinary cir- cumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Regis- trar, Room 4, University Hall. Students, College of Literature, Sci- ence and the Arts: Except under extraordinary circumstances, courses1 dropped after Friday, April 10, willE be recorded with a grade of E. Alice Martin Scholarships for Women: Four $100 scholarships aret available for women students who1 have maintained a B average or bet- ter for the past two semesters, and are contemplating residence in Adelia Cheever dormitory. Applications may be filed in the office of the Dean of Women before May 1. Byrl Fox Bacher, Assistant Dean of Women. Applications for Alumnae Council Awards, a Graduate Fellowship of of $500, two Senior Scholarships of $100 each, should be on file in the; office of the Dean of Women by, April 15. Awards will be made by April 30. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received announcement of De-, troit Civil Service examinations for Posting Machine Operator (Female), Seasonal employment only, minimum salary, $5.52 per day; assistant Me-a chanical Engineer (Mechanical Equipment Design), minimum salary, $3600 per year; Assistant Electrical Engineer (Pumping Plant Design), minimum salary, $3600; Associate Sanitary Engineer, (Plumbing In- spection), minimum salary, $4200 (residence rule waived;) City Plan- ner, minimum salary, $5100. Appli- cations must be filed in Detroit by April 17, 20, 22, 24, and 27 respective- ly. For further information con- cerning these examinations call at 201 Mason Hall, office hours, 9:00 to 12:00 and 2:00 to 4:00. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received announcement of United States Civil Service examinations for Farm Loan Registrar for Third Land Bank District (North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida) dis- tributed only by those four states. Certification to fill these positions will be made of the highest eligibles, while bottling wine, and Mr. Hardy of the abundant physique iz not funny at all. "Paddy 0' Day," which stars Mist- ress Jane Withers as a little Irish im- migrant who sneaks into the country with her dog in a milk can and be- comes a bother to two wealthy old maiden ladies, their bird-fancying nephew, and a group of Russian night club owners, is a slow-moving insignificant, and most of the time DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is con;r cti 1 Pnotice to all members of the Viversity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President vatg 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. residing in the Land Bank District, who do not express unwillingness to accept appointment where the vacan- cy exists. For further information concerning these examinations, call at 201 Mason Hall, office hours 9:00 to 12:00 and 2:00 to 4:00. Varsity Glee Club: The following is the up-to-date list of those men who will take the Easter vacation tour: J. Cole, P. Robinson, L. Swenson, I. Burnstein, H. Goldsworthy, B. Samuels, E. Kewalka, P. Wolff, R. Moore, R. Williams, F. Epstein, R. Matthews, E. Haapa, J. Czajkowski, H. Roberts, W. Sawyer, A. Swann, T. Draper. L. Hall, P. Kent, D. Nichols, K. Tustison, A. Koljenen, D. Swann, R. Gillis, R. Clark, R. Claflin, S. Hirsh- berg, J. Strayer, E. H. Williams, P. Taylor, R. Montgomery, H. Dunks, T. Jensen, P. Yergens, E. Sinclair, R. Harris. H. Carrothers. R. Lodge, Shirrel Kasle, L. Luskin. Rehearsal at 7:30 p.m. today; Sat- urday at 4:30 p.m. Trip to the Ford Plant: Students who have signed up for the trip to the Ford Plant and the Ford Museum, Monday, April 13, will assemble in the lobby of Angell Hall not later than 8 o'clock. The special bus will leave from the front of Angell Hall promptly at 8 a.m. Further reserva- tions can not be accepted as the quota has been filled. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Foreign Students: If any foreign student desires to share expenses for an automobile trip to Chicago during the spring vacation with a party planning such a trip, he should get in touch with my office at once, Room 9, University Hall. Phone 303. J. Raleigh Nelson, Counselor to Foreign Students. Commencement Invitations: Com- mencement Invitations will be sold by the Senior Committees in the va- rious schools and colleges during the week following the spring vacation. Definite dates will be announced by eachcommittee,ratbwhich time samples and order blanks will be available. Seniors are urged to an- ticipate this sale and promptly place their orders with their respective committees. W. B. Rea, Auditor of Student Organizations. Lecture University Lecture: Dr. Raymond E. Priestley, Geologist on Shackleton and Scott Expeditions, will give an il- lustrated lecture on "Antarctic Ex- ploration with Shackleton and Scott," on Monday, April 20 at 8:00 p.m., in the Natural Science Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. Events Of Today Saint Andrew's Church: Today in the church from 12 noon to 3 p.m. there will be a service of worship in St. Andrew's Church. Coming Events Romance Journal Club will meet Tuesday, April 21, at 4:15 p.m., Room 108, Romance Language Building. Two papers will be read: "Notes on Translation in France in the 16th Century" by Prof. William A. Mc- Laughlin and "French Canadian Lit- erature of the Soil" by Prof. An- thony J. Jobin. Graduate students are cordially in- vited. a . t Tau Beta Pi: The annual formal dance for all members will be held on Friday, April 24. Invitations will be mailed next week. The Transportation Club will hold its annual banquet on April 22, in the Union. Mr. Otis will be the speaker and will show moving pic- tures of the research work conducted by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad. These pictures were taken by a newly developed high- speed camera. Tickets will be 75 cents and will be available' April 20 at the Transportation Library. Saint Andrew's Church: Services of worship for Easter Sunday are: 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion, choral; 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion, choral; 11:00 a.m. Festival Morning Prayer and sermon by The Reverend Henry Lewis and Holy Communion. St. Andrew's Choirs will sing special Easter music at each of the morning services. At 4:00 p.m. there will be a Festival Church School Service and Pageant. Congregational Church, Sunday: 10:30 Easter Service of worship. The choir will sing "Unfold Ye Portals" by Gounod, and "As it Began to Dawn" by Harker. Guest soloists will be Burnette Bradley Staebler who will sing "Come Ye Blessed" by Scott, and Prof. Arthur Hackett who will sing "Open the Gates of the Temple" by Knapp. Mr. Heaps' sermon subject is "In the Place was a Garden." 12 The brings 'PADDY O' DAY' current Michigan program to mind the old saying theit two wrongs don't make a right. In other words, two very mediocre pic- tures on one program do not make the equivalent of one good one. Laurel and Hardy, in their comic version of "The Bohemian Girl," spend most of their time listening to gypsy songs and getting into trouble in their customary manner, toying now and then with a very flimsy plot