. THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Altruism' Will Be Subject Of Church Sermon Topic Will Be Discussed By Reverend Marley At Unitarian Church (Continued from Page 1) campus minister, will lead the stu- dent's Bible class at noon. The study of "Immortality" will be continued. At 6:30 p.m. is the discussion hour with "The Parley-What Did We Get From It?" as the subject of discus-j sion. At 10:45 a.m. the regular morn-j ing service of St. Paul's Lutheran Church the Rev. C. A. Brauer will speak on the subject, "The Goodj Shepherd." "A Question and a Commission" is the topic of the sermon of the Rev. Henry O. Yoder at 10:30 a.m. at the Trinity Lutheran Church. The Stu- dent Walther League of this church will attend the Zone Rally at Trinity Church, Wyandotte, at 1:30 p.m. Cars will leave the church. The Lutheran Student Club will meet at 5:30 p.m. at Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Walter Beitila, a member of the American Olympic skiing team, will speak. The regular morning service of the First Baptist Church is at 10:45 a.m. The Rev. Mrs. Sayles will speak on the subject, "Revenge For Life." At 9:30 a.m. a service in German will be held at the St. Paul's Lutheran Church. The regular morning wor- ship and sermon is at 10:45 a.m. The Rev. C. A. Brauer will speak on the subject, "The Good Shepherd." Sigma Rho Tau Is To Sponsor Debate Tuesday Family Island Ta Be home For Charles Christian DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SUNDAY, APRIL 26, 1936 VOL. XLVI No. 143 Notices President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to the students on Wednes- day, April 29, from 4 to 6 o'clock. Students of the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: On Tues- day, April 28, there will be an exhibit of decorative design, drawing and painting in the Architecture Building for students in the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts and others interested in future work in archi- tecture. Those who wish to may con- sult Prof. Emil Lorch, Director of the College of Architecture, in Room 207, Arch. Bldg. at 4:15 p.m. Marsh and Mandlebaum Scholar- View Cooperatives In Third Journalist The rapid growth of the coopera- tive movement in the United States in recent years is reviewed in the third issue of The Michigan Jour- nalist, laboratory newspaper of the Department of Journalism, which was issued Friday. Statistics on the 6,500 consumer's cooperatives in the country were printed along with an entire page de- voted to the increasing number and influence of Michigan cooperatives. ships: The following applicants for Marsh and Mandlebaum Scholarships are requested to meet the committee in Room 1220 Angell Hall, on Tues- day afternoon, April 28, at the times indicated. 4:30, Pecherer. B. 4:40, Raiford, A. M. 4:50, Seeley, A. L. 5:00, Swan, D. H. Literary Seniors Orders for Senior Literary Commencement Invitations 1:30, 1:40, 1:50, 2:00, 2:10, 2:20, 2:30, 2:40, 2:50, 3:00, 3:10, 3:20, 3:30, 3:40, 3:50, 4:00, 4:10, 4:20, Bond, F. A. Cranmure, M. Dunlap, G. L. Edgar, E. G. Gram, H. J. Grimes, W. V. V. Hahn, W. A. Hay, J. Jensen, M. Johnson, F. H. Kanter, B. B. Kaplan, S. Kresin, C. E. Krieg, L. E. Lovenheim, E. P. McIntyre, W. E. McKenzie, B. Moore, W. O. will be taken in the lobby of Angell Hall on Friday: 1 to 5 p.m., Monday, 1 to 5 p.m., Tuesday, 9 to 12 a.m. R.O.T.C. Advanced course checks will be disbursed from headquarters Monday, April 27, between the hours of 1:30 and 4:30. (Continued on Page 4) R[S[RVATIONS Any Steamer or Adyedti,,J r ~~M~T RIP¢TOM -RU ilIS! CCOMPLETED FREE . WERE -,=7 - ' EU RO P E) BERMUDA, CALIFORNIA, CHINA, ETC. BOOK NOWT nxi.r Advim.. Lieensed Since 1417. Reference-Any Local..Ba KUEBLER TRAVEL BUREAU ANh ABOR1 Wherever You Go . . whether it's to the Olympic games, Hollywood, New York or just to a neighboring city, you really need a good travel case. The case illustrated contains all the necessary essentials. We have many different and unique travel cases on display, all sizes and all prices. You're right if you get yours at WILKINSON'S. F. W. Wilkinson & Son 325 South Main "Always buy leather goods at a leather goods store" Pitcairn Island, home of his forefathers for five generations, soon will welcome Charles Christian, 35, and his dog. His great-great-grandfather was Fletcher Christian of Bounty fame. The scene at the right shows the landing place on Bounty Bay with the boathouses where the islanders keep their long boats and fishing dugouts. Charles' mother plans to take ashore a pianl on this rock-bound little beach. The village where they live is a quarter of a mile away atop the cliff. (Island picture from "Heritage of the Bounty" by Dr. Henry L. Shapiro, published by Simon and Schuster). Kin Of 'Bounty' Mutineer Plans To Clamr Island 'Inheritance' Diabetic Health Wand Youth Will Seek I Ancesors' Refluge Prominent Detroiters Consider 'Engineers Relation To Labor' To In A platform debate by three promi- nent Detroiters on the subject, "The relation of engineers to labor," will be held Tuesday night, in the Union, it was announced yesterday by Prof. Robert D. Brackett of the engineering English department, sponsor of Sigma Rho Tau. The debate, which will be open to the public, has been called, for the purpose of discussing the feasibility of an organized labor union for grad- uate engineers and the exclusive hir- ing by engineers of organized skilled labor. These problems wil be viewed in three aspects: Frank Martel, organ- ized labor leader, will present the advantages of an organized system of labor; Lloyd Blackmore, patent attorney in the legal department of the General Motors Corporation, will outline the policies adopted by his firm in dealing with scientific and skilled labor; and a personnel man- ager from Detroit, as yet unnamed, will speak on the attitude of "big business" toward organized labor in general. Prominent features of the discus- sion will be the "open shop," "closed shop," and "black-list"systems of em- ployment. A wide divergence of opin- ion among the speakers regarding these systems promises much lively altercation," according to Professor Brackett. BRIDE IN EVERY PORT NEW ORLEANS, April 25. - (A') - Lieut. R. H. Hambert, U.S.N., of Low- ell, Mass., boasts that he has had a bride in every port. Arriving here aboard the U.S.S. Pheps, he explained that Mrs. Hambert, to whom he was married in Boston, March 28, has followed the ship by automobile along the coast to greet him whenever the boat docks. There's No One Like Mother'' SHOW your love for her with a beautiful SAN FRANCISCO, April 26. - (/P) - Five-year-old Charles J. B. Chris- tian, great-great-grandson of Fletch- er Christian who led the mutiny on the Bounty, will sail in May for the south Pacific to clain his inheritance on lonely Pitcairn island. With Charles will go his mother, Mrs. Edna Christian, his red, rubber- tired wagon, his brown and white pup, his father's ashes, several pounds of nails and hinges, a piano, perhaps a set of bedsprings and a few sacks of cement-and a supply of insulin. "Charles is a diabetic," Mrs. Chris- tian explains. "and the doctors say that if we let him run wild on the island it may be the salvation of his health. My father will send more in- sulin by each boat. Aside from that, his treatment is up to nature." A Farm And Two Lots Immediate occasion for their de- parture is settlement of Charles' fa- ther's estate which leaves them a farm and two village lots on Pitcairn island where Charles' ancestor settled with his 26 mutineer mates in 1789 after casting their notorious Captain Bligh adrift in a small boat. "We are carrying out the plans my husband made before his death last year," Mrs. Christian says. "My hus- band -he was named Fletcher, after the mutineer -lived on the island until he was 17. He worked here as a longshoreman but always wanted to go back to Pitcairn. His ashes are going with us. "We understand there is enough property to keep us the rest of our lives," adds Mrs. Christian, daugh- ter of an eastern evanglist. "We've been on relief here, and Charles' health has not been good; so we are willing to try the change. We are going determined to like it." Must Take Own Metal Mrs. Christian has corresponded with two of Charles' relativeson Pit- cairn, Mrs. Mabel Warren, Fletcher's sister, and Sidney Christian, a bro- ther. "They tell me they will build a house for me," she says, "but that I must bring my own metal, such as nails and hinges, and the window glass. If I want a cistern, I must |bring cement. And bedsprings if Ij want them. The island supplies every other necessity." On Pitcairn Mrs. Christian and Charles will have 198 neighbors, near- ly all blood relatives ,ruied by a Brit- ish-appointed magistrate. All live in one community, she says, and go out daily to farm and fish. Chance To Hunt And Fish Charles will have some opportuni- ty to attend school, but most of his time will be spent fishing, working the ancestral farm and hunting chickens and goats that are so pro- fuse on the island there is no need to domesticate them. Of the mutiny that led to founding of the colony on Pitcairn she says: "But after all, that event was a long time ago. The people are kind- ly and well behaved now. Why, they have no liquor whatever on the island and only three people use to- bacco." Band1Concert Will Be Given On Wednesday The University Concert Band will present its first concert of the spring season at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, April 29, in Hill Auditorium under the batonC of William D. Revelli, directing his first concert since he assumed the leadership of the band last fall. A varied program of both sym- phonic and novelty 'umbers \has been arranged, featuring many com- positions newly introduced to band literature. "Headlines" by Carleton Colby, a rhapsody of modern newspaper life will be offered which, according to Director Revelli is "one of the best of the recent compositions written expressly for concert band." A cornet trio composed of William M. Jones, Ernest A. Jones, and Owen Reed will play Walter M. Smith's "Bo- lero," an intricate technical study for the cornet. The Concert Band of 85 members will also play the finale of the B Flat Symphony for band by Paul Fauchet. Other numbers will be the "Ariane Overture" by Louis Boyer, the "London Suite" by Eric Coates, and "Cabins" by James Gillette, an American tone poem depicting life in the South. The general public as well as stu- Table Of Prime Numbers Being Developed Here Major Maihematical Work Being Directed By Dr. J. D. Elder Of major importance to the math- ematical world is the set of tables that will result from the work of Dr. J. O. Elder of the mathematics department. The aim of Dr. Elder and the group of students working under him is to make a more accurate set of prime numbers for better tables, to be used in factoring very large numbers. The most complete set of primes to date, that of Dr. D. H. Lehmer of the University of California, goes as far as ten million numbers, but be- cause of mechanical difficulties in finding the primes, and the natural encroachment of errors into any such work, it was the belief of Dr. Elder that errors did exist in the tables and in the stencils used in the re- search work. Such, even in the early stages of experiment with the stencils he has made, he has found to be the case. A method of finding a prime num- ber, that is, one that has no rational factors, beyond a certain limit, is considered one of the most difficult problems in the theory of numbers and has engaged the attention of some of the ablest mathematicians of modern times. For the first tables of primes there was practically no way but the good old caveman method of brute force in factoring large numbers. This method was practicable for numbers like 55, or 48, but when faced with a number like 97332819111, even the best mathematician might take as much as 25 hours to find a factor. That number, being a prime, and having no factors, would even be a more difficult proposition. With a convenient set of tables this could have been ascertained quickly. dents are invited and no admission will be charged. Tuesday night prior to its concert here, the band will play at Hartland, Mich. We are well stocked with Fertilizer and Seeds for your Spring planting . Put nam's NATURE FIELD fBOOJKS A series of non-technical but admirably specific books designed for the Nature Lover and made in form suitable for field work. Alexander: BIRDS OF THE OCEAN........................ . .... $3.50 Anthony: NORTH AMERICAN MAMMALS............ . .........$5.00 Armstrong: WESTERN WILD FLOWERS..........................$3.50 Durand: WILD FLOWERS IN THEIR HOMES AND IN OUR GARDENS $3.50 Eliot: BIRDS OF THE PACIFIC COAST ........................... $3.50 Longyear: TREES AND SHRUBS OF ROCKY MOUNTAINS........$3.50 Loomis: COMMON ROCKS AND MINERALS..................... $3.50 Lutz: FIELDBOOK OF INSECTS.................................. $3.50 Mathews: AMERICAN WILD FLOWERS. .......................$3.50 Mathews: AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS...................... $3.50 Mathews: WILD BIRDS AND THEIR MUSIC ...................... $3.50 Morgan : FIELDBOOK .OF PONDS AND STREAMS................ $3.50 Olcott and Putnam: FIELDBOOK OF THE SKIES...............$3.50 Sturgis: BIRDS OF PANAMA CANAL ZONE ....................... $3.50 Thomas: COMMON GILLED MUSHROOMS .......................$3.50 Olcott: BOOK OF STARS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.................... $3.00 Mathews: THE BOOK OF BIRDS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE ........... $3.00 Mathews: THE BOOK OF WILD FLOWERS................... .$3.00 Also a Complete Stock of Garden Books at WAHR'VS BOOKSTOR-M. 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