U PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JAN. 9, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY F -" ans. .. ~t . _.:e 1936 Member 1937 Assocded Colle6de Press Distributors of Qfle6ale Diest Published every morning except Monday during the University yearrand 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 seond class mail matter.- Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.5G. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING SY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MAOISON AVE. NEW YORK N.Y. CHICAGO - BOSTON - SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES PORTLAND - SEATTLE Board of Editors ILANAGING EDITOR .................ELSIE A. PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR ............FRED WARNER NEAL ASSOCIATE EDITOR ........MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins Departmental Boards Publication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; JamesBoozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver- man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. iditorial Department: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert Cummins, Mary Sage Montague.- Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman; Fred DeLano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymond Good- .man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Marca. Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas. Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Departmet BUSINESS MANAGER................JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JEAN KEINATH Business Assistants: Robert Martin, Ed Macal, Phil Bu- chen, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Newton Ketcham, Robert Lodge, Ralph -Shelton, Bill New- nan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layhe, J. D. Haas, Russ Cole. Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crawford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy. Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, DodleDay, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers Sack Staple. Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; HerbertFalender, Publications and Class- itied Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: IRVING S. SILVERMAN Housewives, A Farmer, A Mill Hand, Lawyers. . W HEN GOVERNOR LA FOLLETTE wrote to President Conant of Har- vard University asking him to head a separate in- quiry to determine whether there was a case for the Regents of the University of Wisconsin to consider against Glenn Frank, Dr. Conant replied: "The question before the Board (of. Regents) is whether they have confidence in the president, the question before the educational worl and the people of your state is whether they have confidence in the Board of Regents. "Clsely connected with this question of the ability and independence of this particular Board is the question of the proper relation of such a Board to the whole structure of state government. "I cannot help feeling that the arrangements in the State of Wisconsin are not particularly happy in this regard ..." This, it seems to us, is the central issue. Not academic freedom, not the competence of Glenn Frank, not the precise nature of the political situation in Wisconsin, but why that political situation should have been allowed at all to affect an educational institution. Mark Sullivan asks: "Who shall control and manage our educational institutions; who shall determine what is to be taught?" In colleges and universities, he says, "as to' what is taught and what views expressed; the faculty should be the judge. The faculty are scholars, devoted to disinterested search for ab- solute truth; it is indefensible that they should be interfered with by persons or groulIs less in- formed or having bias, whether these be politi- cians controlling state universities, or boards of trustees controlling private ones. To this immu- nity college teachers are clearly entitled so far as they remain within their function of teaching, and within the subjects in which they are spe- cialists. If they go outside their fields, other considerations arise. "For if we grant to faculties complete aca- demic freedom, these in turn should practice self-imposed restraint . .." Mr. Sullivan is concerned with more than one question-the control of universities, and the function of teachers as citizens. The first of these is, we believe, the primary issue, but the second was the cause of Dr. Frank's dismissal. For Dr. Frank was a public figure as well as a college president. He was hired in 1925, it has been said, to bring publicity and prestige to the university. He has become a political figure of the second magnitude in the ranks of the pro- gressive Republicans, and as such a potent com- open hearing demonstrated that a large factor in the action of the Regents was the political hostility between the man who hadhappointed ten of them and Dr. Frank. That this factor should have entered at all into the matter is the most unfortunate aspect of the Frank case. The people who now determine the educational policies of the University of Wisconsin are not the faculty housewives, but a physician, a labor leader, the business manager of a newspaper, a farmer, a mill hand, a Lutheran Fundamental- ist clergyman, a paper manufacturer, lawyers, the president of the Wisconsin Farmers' Equity Union, and, ex-officio, the State Superintendent of Public Education. They are the Regents, ap- pointed by the Governor. ITHEPORIU 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 more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Mr. Player's Letter To the Editor: I hesitate to dignify with a reply the the com- munication of one Willis Player in Friday's Fo- rum. Professor Levi needs no defense against such puerile attacks. To the entire faculty, to some of the less provincial in the student body, and especially to those who know him per- sonally, Professor Levi's intellect, culture, hon- esty and courage are well known. Lest some readers be misled by Mr. Player's eloquent infantility, however, I should like to remind them that Professor-Emeritus Moritz Levi taught French language and literature during a long and honorable career on the uni- versity faculty; that he has been a professor- emeritus for some years; that he is an assiduous student of many literatures, of human problems, and of contemporary affairs. Unbiased readers will recall that Professor Levi's contributions to The Daily have consisted usually of literal quo- tations, fully documented with page and line, from authentic publications, including Hitler's "Mein Kampf" and representative German news- papers of the day. Professor Levi has given us much important information from genuine sources which most of us do not have the leisure examine. Usually Professor Levi adds little or no comment of his own. While he na- tually presents facts favorable to his views, be it noted that he presents facts, not opinions; facts, moreover, which have been played down or ignored by the press at large. As to Mr. Player, I have no idea who he is, though he tells us he has been on the campus for over three years. His letter, in contrast to those of the gentleman he criticizes, is so obviously void of facts and pregnant with opin- ion that it refutes itself. To me as a teacher it is saddening to witness so obvious an example of our failure to educate. The most rudimentary sort of courtesy, even if not embellished by culture and an open mind, should dictate a more tempered expression of a difference of opinion. -Charles N. Staubach. (Instructor in Spanish) Mysterious Nazi CultureI To the Editor: I do not know whether Mr. Player's letter was consciously or unconsciously humorous, but certainly ever line reads like one of the topsy- turvy bits from one of Gilbert's or Lewis Carroll's extravaganzas. Take this excerpt for instance: "Levi seems to think that National Socialist Ger- many has driven out the cream of the German intellectual crop. There are two things con- cerning this. First, the best of Germany's rotted, hesitating, feminized, democratic intellectuals was pretty bad. Second, the National Socialists have found living, vital substitutes." Republican Germany during fourteen years of freedom produced the masterpieces of Thomas Mann, Erich Remarque, Hans Fallada and Franz Werfel; a literature probably superior in quality to anything produced during the same period by' England, France, Russia, the United States or any other nation. We are all agog to learn from Mr. Player the longer and better list of great masterpieces pz oduced by National Social- ist authors during four years of servitude under the dictatorship. Certainly, if he knows who these "living, vital substitutes" for Germany's "pretty bad" intellectuals are he should tell us, for no one else has ever heard of them! Or perhaps these superior productions are in art, rather than literature. The great pic- tures, statues and so forth produced since 1933 in Germany are-what? Or music? Or science? All those new and greater physicists that have superseded the primitive blunderings of Ein- stein? Or history? Or philosophy? Or perhaps he refers to the great increase in the attendance at the German universities and their increased scholarly reputation throughout the whole civ- ilized world? Or the wider circulation and more interesting character of the German press? No doubt, the eight German Nobel prize winners now in exile can be matched by a still longer list of German Nobel prize winners who are actively supporting the present dictatorship. I thirst for their names! It is my job to keep informed on current European events, and to learn that there has been a whole "living, vital" renaissance of German culture kept as a secret from me and from the rest of the world is most humiliating. Enlighten my ignorance, not with generalities but with specific names and facts. -Preston Slosson. Angered And Puzzled BENEATH **** #~##&~ITCALL DIRTY DISHES must fill half the sinks in Ann Arbor these days unless the host of avid housewives who jam the overflowing courtroom of the County Court House from dawn to dark' for the details of the murder trial of Mrs. Betty Baker, take care of their household chores at very unusual hours. Wild horses could not pull many of these portly dames from their places. They arrive almost an hour before court is scheduled to openf in the morning, hold their places through both the short recesses of the morning and the after- noon, and do not budge even during the long two-1 hour noon recess when they vary the monotony by unwrapping sandwiches and munching them1 contentedly while gossiping of the latest de-f velopments of the trial. Aside from the intimate nature of the testi- mony, there is a certain joy spectators at this murder trial seem to derive from the proceedings. *'- * * AS I SAT in the old court room with its typical mahogany woodwork, and with the1 somewhat grimy American flag stretched ove( the 14 elderly jurors-all men-and watched th proceedings, I couldn't help feeling that I was witnessing a high powered and highly spectacu lar stage play. Then, with a sudden snap back to reality, the significance of the whole picture -a woman on trial for murder. The atmosphere is electric with tension. Mrs. Baker, calm while replying with carefully chosen words to the accusing questions of Prosecutor Rapp, bends forward slightly in the witness chair to make her answers. The cross examination of the defendant is punctuated from time to time as defense attor- ney Devine rises without excitement and moves objections to the question. Rapp, a commanding personality at perfect ease, sits in a chair facing Mrs. Baker, and plies her with questions concerning the triangle which involved her policeman husband, her lover 'Cub' Schneider, and herself. The, dead man's brother, Harold sat next to me at yesterday morning's proceedings, and mumbled under his breath when Mrs. Baker called her relationship with "Cub" a "beautiful friendship." Two seats away was Al Baker, sitting quietly in a good-looking blue suit and intent onthe proceedings while his wife testified to her love for another man. Al Baker has mortgaged his home to provide funds for his wife's defense. IN THE FRONT ROW of the court room are 22 seats, and 18 of the occupants were women. Ranged in a semi-circle in front of the raised bench of Judge Sample who granted or refused the objections of the defense in low, modulated tones, is the press, including two women corre- spondents for Detroit papers. High over the door leading to the judge's pri- vate office just behind the bench the worn face of Abraham Lincoln looks unwaveringly down as the trial progresses. Mrs. Baker, whose defense rests upon the fact that the shooting of 'Cub' was entirely accidental, was on the stand for almost two days under the gruelling examination of Rapp. The only food that she took for the first 24 hours was a single glass of milk, according to the matron of the jail. Rapp, who boasts a record of having triga over 400 cases without an acquittal in the last six months, admitted yesterday that he was com- pletely fatigued and that he planned a vacation trip to Florida following the conclusion of this case. old American sock in the nose, that is, if they're not too big and husky. It seems that Willis objects to the writings of Levi in the Forum, which he has been reading for 31 /2,years. I don't know why Willis has been reading something he doesn't like for 312 years, unless it took him that long to find out that he doesn't like it. I know a very stupid fellow who bought a book which he didn't like after the first day of the semester and he never looked at it again. -Art Settle. Horse Sense To the Editor: I should'like to comment upon your obvious freedom from prejudice in the matter of how you run The Daily. This freedom is conspicuous by its absence and is beginning to amuse us of the unaffiliated unfortunates. Twice now, the humble League House in which I live has submitted notices of affairs to your charming social editor who claims that all such notices are welcome. But we have yet to cast our feverish eyes upon an account of our affair in the celestial sheets of The Daily. Why? Upon inquiry, we discover that there was no room for our notice. Of course we realize that it's important to insert a column stating what Mary Belle X wore to the party last night or a feature story about the love-sick pilot circling, Mosher-Jordan-but then -we're conceited too, we like to see our names in print also. By the way, Mr. Editor, you might suggest to the women's social editor that she read "The Marks of An Educated Man." This is a book, the principles of which may be applied to women who have the intelligence to understand it- quite an inspiring book. -Mrs. Vanderbilt's Horse. In 1935 pecan growers around Nowata, Okla., shipped 50 carloads. In 1936 there weren't enouh necans-because of drought-to meet THEATRE By JAMES DOLL It is satisfying for once to be able to speak in superlatives about any- thing in connection with the theatre. In the case of Nazimova's perfor- mances in two of Ibsen's plays next week it is imperative to do so. She will play the name part in Hedda Gabler at the Cass in Detroit Mon- day through Wednesday night with a matinee Wednesday, Ghosts, the rest of the week, matinee Saturday. People who write about the theatre are often accused by other playgoers of dealing too harshly with perform- ers and plays, to set too high a standard. While I do not agree with these accusations, I can understand them. Although the theatre is flourishing today in spite of the real estate deal- ers and gamblers who control almost all of it, it is so much less good than it might if it were more efficiently organized. In New York on Jan. 1 about 32 legitimate theatres were open, yet only a half dozen of them housed attractions in the "impera- tive" class and not all of those could by any means be called superb. Oth- er ventures worthy of attention were great plays with mediocre casts or lukewarm plays superbly acted. The most satisfactory of all is John Gielgud's Hamlet, which has just passed the record for number of con- secutive performances of the part in New York. It does compare with the performances of Nazimova as Mrs. Alving in Ghosts mentioned above. Only two other performances in my playgoing experience compare with the emotional power of these two. They are Julia Marlowe's Juliet and the late Alexander Moissi's Fedya in Tolstoy's The Living Corpse. Nazimova like John Gielgud has the ability, the genius to take a great part in a play that is also a literary masterpiece and make it come to life in the theatre; to do what evey in- terpretative artist must do-make the interpreted work seem the natural and inevitable expression of inner emotions and thoughts. By her play- ing she conveys a realization of the stature of Mrs. Alving and an im- pression of intense feeling which the audience feels emphatecially. She be- gins the play quietly, realistically, then grips the audience almost una- wares as she tells Pastor Manders about her past life. She never re- laxes this hold but carries the au- dience through to the, terrifically powerful climax at the end of the play. There has been a tendency lately to slight Ibsen. Commentators say his work is dated--can no longer have meaning except as a vehicle for star performers. It is true that inferior plays can be made into thrilling theatre by fine acting but in Nazi- mova's Ghosts as in Gielgud's Ham- let, actor collaborates with play- wright to form the final emotional experience. In importance to the modern theatre Ibsen stands as Shakespeare does to the Elizabethan with the dif- ference that he was the initiator of a new form of drama, the founder of a school. So great has his influence on the modern theatre been that George Jean Nathan has said there has been but one original playwright -Pirandello-since Ibsen wrote his "social dramas." When he first wrote he was thought by many of his most ardent support- ers to be primarily a social reformer. But in the light of the historical per- spective of half a century he seems to be a dramatist interested in the in- dividual and his problems. These problems do relate closely, of course, to the individual's environment, but the plays depend primarily on char- acterization, poetic feeling, sometimes on mysticism, on dramatic structure. To say that Ghosts is dated because the central problem could no longer occur is equivalent to saying that The Merchant of Venice is dated be- cause a case like Shylock's could not be brought before any court today. Ghosts, one of his earliest prose plays may lack the mysticism of later plays like The Master Builder, or the subtlety of characterization of Hedda Gabler, or the irony of An Enemy of the People and The Wild Duck but it does have more tragic simplicity relate more closely to true tragedy than these later plays. Nazimova's Hedda Gabler I have not seen but according to critics she brings to the more theatric character of Hedda the same emotional under- standing that she brings to Mrs. Al- ving. Unlike her Mrs. Alving, which she played for the first time during the season when she played it here in 1935; Hedda Gabler was in her rep- ertory when she first played in Eng- lish in this country. Probably no one else in the theatre today has both the background of tradition and th ability to recreate Ibsen's women as she has. Standing on tip-toe and screaming may not be the best way to call at tention to something one admires bu nothing less startling seems possibl in the case of Nazimova's peiform- ance of Mrs. Alving. It is an ex- perience not to be missed at an cost-that is by anyone who can be thrilled by superlative theatre. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m.on Saturday. SATURDAY, JAN. 9, 1937 VOL. XLVII No. 75 Notices President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students on Wednesday, Jan. 13, from 4 to 6 p.m. University Women: Students who plan to change residence the second semester must notify their household or dormitory director not later than Saturday noon, Jan.16. Jeannette Perry. Assistant Dean of Women. Comprehensive Examination in Education: Will be given today at 9 and at 2 p.m., in 4009 U.H.S. Directed Teaching, Qualifying Ex- amination: Will be given today at 8 and at 2 p.m. in the auditorium of the University High School. Notice to Presidents and Treasur- ers of Student Organizations: Ar- rangements with a photographer for your organization group picture or any other pictures which you desire to appear on your page in the 1937 Michiganensian should be taken care of at once. All organization pictures for the 'Ensian must be submitted before Jan. 24. Your immediate co- operation in this matter will be nec- essary in order to avoid the last minute rush. Notice to Presidents and Treasur- ers of Student Organizations: The 1937 Michiganensian cannot accepi any page contracts for space in thi year's annual after Jan. 24. All con- tracts and page copy, (names o members and officers to appear or the page) must be received by the 'Ensian office before Jan. 24. The 1937 Michiganensian. Academic Notices Criminology Field Trip: Bus -fo trip to Detroit courts, etc., for Crim- inology students leaves Michigan Un- ion at 8:30 this morning. Saturda3 quiz sections will not meet. Reading Examinations in French Candidates for the degree of Ph.D in the departments listed below wh wish to satisfy the requirement of a reading knoweldge during the cur- rent academic year, 1936-37, ar informed that examinations will b offered in Room 108, Romance Lan- guage Building, from 2 to 5, on Sat- urday afternoon, Jan. 23, May 22 and August 7. It will be necessar to register at the office of the De- partment of Romance Language (112. R.L.) at least one week in ad- vance. Lists of books recommende by the various departments are ob- tainable at this office. It is desirable that candidates fo the doctorate prepare to satisfy thi requirement at the earliest possibl date. A brief statement of the na- ture of the requirement, which will b found helpful, may be obtained a the office of the Department, an further inquiries may be addresse to Mr. L. F. Dow (100 R.L., Satur- days at 10 a.m. and by appointment. This announcement applies only t candidates in the following depart ments: Ancient and Modern Lan guages and Literatures, History, Ec onomics, Sociology, Political Sci ence, Philosophy, Education, Speech Journalism. Concerts Carillon Recitals: Until furthe notice, the carillon will be played i 30 minute programs, every Thursctaa afternoon and Sunday afternoo except when concerts are given i Hill Auditorium) at 4:15 p.m. b Wilmot Pratt, carillonneur. Organ Recitals: The followin schedule of organ recitals is an nounced for the balance of the yea to be given in Hill Auditorium a 4:15 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 31: S Palmer Christian (Bach Recital). Wednesday, Feb. 17: Arthur Poister (University of Red lands). ' Wednesday, March 3: E. William Doty. Wednesday, March 10: Palmer Christian. Wednesday, March 17: Palmer Christian. Friday, March 26: Palmer Christian (Good Frida Sunday, April 25: Palmer Christian (Bach Recital) - Exhibitions a Exhibitions of Prints by America a Artists and Paintings by the Chapi e Family, Alumni Memorial Hall, af s ternoons, 2-5, through Jan. 19. Events Of Today Graduate Outing Club: A Splas t Party will be held tonight at the Ir e tramural Building. Meet at Lane Ha - at 7:30 p.m. or at the Pool. All grac - uate students are cordially invited. yC e CanigEvet Teaching of Cooperation." There will be an opportunity provided for ques- tions and discussion after Mr. Heise's talk. Students taking work in edu- cation, their friends, and those in- terested, are cordially invited to at- tend. 1937 Mechanical Engineers: Mr. T. W. Prior of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company will be here Mon- day, January 11, for the purpose of interviewing men for positions. A group discussion will open the in- terviews. This will be at 10:30' a.m. in room 348. Literature and blanks may be obtainec in room 221. Program). Suomi Club: A meeting will' held Sunday, Jan. 10, at 2:30 p.m., the Upper Room, Lane Hall. be in League Publicity Committee: There will be a meeting Monday, Jan, 11, at 4 p.m. in the undergraduate office of the League. Please bring your cou- pon books. The Nell Gwyn performance of Fielding's "Tom Thumb" to be given on Tuesday, Jan. 12, in Sarah Case- well Angell Hall. will begin at 9 and not at 8:30 as was previously an- nounced. Michigan Dames: The Music Group of the Michigan Dames will meet Monday evening, Jan. 11, at the home of Mrs. John LaMb, 715 Forest Ave. at 8 p.m. Anyone interested is cor- dially invited to attend the meeting. The Monday Evening Drama Sec- tion of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Monday, Jan. 11, at the Michigan Union, at 7:30 p.m. Les Miserables: Tuesday and Wed- nesday, January 12-13, Matinees both days at 3:15. The box office will open Monday at 10:00 a.m. Sunday Forum: Prof. Lawrence Preuss will lead the Union Sunday Forum at 4:30 p.m. on the subject of "American Neutrality." Members of the student body and faculty are urged to attend. The Second Inter-Faith SymnPo- sium will be held Sunday, Jan. 10, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Grand Rap- ids Room of the Michigan League. Representatives of the three trai- tions: Oriental, Jewish, Christian, will lead the discussion, "Can Wright and Wrong be Abolished?" Everyone is in- vited. Ann Arbor Friends' Group: The Ann Arbor Friends will meet Sunday, Jan. 10, at 5 p.m. in the Michigan League. Meeting for worship will be followed by a talk by Dr. Francis S. Onderdonk: "Tolstoi vs. the Dic- tators." Everyone interested is cor- dially invited. Harris Hall, Sunday: The regular student meeting will be held at 7 p.m. The Rev. Henry Lewis will be the speaker. All students and their friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church, Sunday: Services are: 8 a.h., Holy Com- munion; 9:30 a.m., Church School. 11 a.m., Morning- prayer and sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. 11 a.m., Kindergarten. Stalker Hall, Sunday: 9:45 a.m., Student class led by Prof. Geo. Carrothers on the theme: "Certain Shifts in Religious Em- hphasis." 6 p.m. at the church. Union meet- ing with the Hi-Alpha Deltas. Fel- lowship hour and supper followed by Dr. Harold Carr of Flint, speaking on the subject: "Some Personalities I Have Known." All Methodist stu- dents and their friends are cordially t invited. - First Methodist Church, Sunday: Morning worship service at 10:45 a.m. Dr. Harold F.' Carr will speak on "By 'Beautiful Larden'." St. Paul's Lutheran Church: Carl A. Brauer, Minister. The morning service will be held at 10:45 a.m. The Student Club has re- quested Bible students on two Suh- day evening each month for the rest of the school year. The "Book of Genesis" will be discussed this Sun- day evening at 6:30 p.m. at the first in the series of "A Survey of the Books of the Bible." The pastor will lead these discussions and the public i s invited to attend the entire series. n The Lutheran Student Club will hold its regular Sunday evening meeting in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30 p.m. A student discussion on h"The Contribution of the Lutheran - Church to the World" will follow the l. supper hour. All students are wel- come. Trinity Lutheran Church, Sunday: Church services will' be held at 10:30 a.m. Rev. Henry Yoder will