T H E M IC HIG A N D AILY UNDAY, Ai r, IE MICHIGAN DAILY A ".. 1ii Jtl. if i Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session 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, 64.0; by mail, $4.50. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37 REPRESENTED OR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representatves 420 MADISONv AE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO -BOSTON SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES PORTLAND SEATTLE Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR .................ELSIE A. PIERCE EDITORIAL DIRECTOR ......MARSHALL D. SHULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd Robert Cummins NIGHT EDITORS: Joseph Mattes, William E. Shackleton, Irving Silverman, Wiliam Spaller, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks.' SPOR'TS DEPARTMENT: George 3. Andros, chairman; Fred DeLano Fred Buesser, RaymQ d Goodman, Carl Gerstacker. t WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wuerfel chairman; Elizabeth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER.......... .....JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER .WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER...JEAN KEINATH BUSINESS ASSISTANT'S: Ed Maca!, Phil Buchen, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Robert Lodge, Bill Newnan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layne, Russ Cole, Henry Homes, Women's Business Assistants : Margaret Ferries, Jane Sthiner, Nancy -Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, -Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty Davy, Hielen Purdy, Martha Hankey; Betsy .Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers J. Cameron Hall, Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore, National Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher. Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WEEKS The Next Spai n , under the leadership of Nazi Konrad Henlein is becoming increasingly active in Czechoslo- vakian affairs. The task of preserving Spanish democracy may soon be interrupted by Czechoslovakia's cries' for help. Little, if anything, more than that is needed to bring general war. IRADIO I By TUURE TENANDER A REHEARSAL for the coming May Festival will take place tonight on the Ford Sunday Evening Hour at 8 p.m. today when Kirsten Flag- stad, soprano, will be featured soloist with Eu- gene Ormandy, guest conductor. CBS. Paul Whiteman's Rhythmic Concert at 7:30 p.m. 'today will be an all-Gershwin presenta- tion. Roy Bargy will be featured at the piano in a complete Whiteman arrangement of "Rhap- sody in Blue." * * * * The Poe's Tales program tomorrow night will present "The Purloined Letter." The program originates from Philadelphia and can be heard locally over CKLW. * A NEW PROGRAM will make its debut ove' NBC at 3 this afternoon when the an- nouncer broadcasts from an airplane the beau- ties of the canyons and rugged country that he is flying over. "A Trip to Our National Parks" can be heard over WWJ * * * * The semi-finals of the international mouse singing contest will be on the air at 2:45 p.m. today. The United States representatives are Mickey Brown, described as "an attractive, six weeks old, gray haired mouse of Bloomington, Ill., and Minnie, "the silver-lunged camembert warbler of Woodstock, Ill. The foreign opposi- tion today will consist of another Mickey, cham- pion of England, and a dark horse from Tor- onto. The listeners will be urged 'to send in their votes to determine the winners. WENR is about the best outlet here since no Detroit station is scheduled to carry the broadcast. * * * * THE BOYS in the dance orchestras delight tn a chance to exercise whenever they can. Recently in Boston for a theatre engagement, Tommy Dorsey and practically all the members of his band were up on the old Boston Common, kicking a soccer ball around for an entire after- noon. On another occasion we chanced to be on a subway in the above-mentioned city at 7:30 a.m. when who should climb aboard the relic but Saxie Mansfield, at that time the featured tenor man with Isham Jones. Saxie had a tennis racquet and a pair of old sneakers under his arm, whistling happily while the early-morning crowd shoved him about the place. Tommy Dor- sey, incidentally, is such a handball enthusiast that he would probably shriek for joy should h see the Intramural Sports Building. M * * * Hammerstein's Music Hall promises to be an especially good attraction this week, what with Blanche Yurka, Reinald Werrenrath and Joey Nash appearing. Blanche Yurka is a veteran of the stage and screen who appeared here during the Dramatic Season a year ago. Wer- ranrath is a Metropolitan star who needs no further introduction, and Joey Nash is the stone deaf vocalist who was with RichardsHimber until the latter snagged the Studebaker commercial. Joey's last name presented a problem to the sponsors and Nash was let go. GEORGE FISCHER, whose "Hollywood Whis- lT pers" program has obtained a great fol- lowing on the West Coast, gets a chance to show his stuff before a microphone that will send the broadcast over the entire country start- ing Saturday. Gene Raymond will be Fisch- er's first guest star. CKLW at 8:15 p.m. Rudy Vallee himself will be absent from his variety hour this week.. He will be en route to London, whence his next two broadcasts will originate. Edgar Bergen will step into the breach and act as master of ceremonies. S * ,* Carmella Ponselle will be among the guest stars on the Broadway Varieties show this Fri- day. CBS at 7 p.m. TH ESRE History Is Made At Night AT THE MAJESTIC History, as made at night by Charles Boyer and Jean Arthur, is one of the most enter- taining things that has occurred in an Ann Arbor theatre for some time. Boyer seems destined to fill the Chevalier gap so conspicuous in Hollywood since "The Merry Widow." The story concerns the desperate, murderous jealousy of steamship-line-owner husband Colin Clive for blonde and tortured Miss Arthur, whose divorce from himself he is willing to go to every length to prevent. M. Boyer's accidental and dramatic appearance on the scene which Clive has prepared to compromise Miss Arthur starts the ball of comedy-death-and-romance rolling, and the funny part is, it doesn't stop when you think it's getting ready to. If it were not for the superbly Parisian Boyer, whose finesse makes his profession of head waiter appear the most glamorous and inspir- ing of the world, his bon ami, Leo Carillo, the greatest chef in France, would steal the show. Carillo's accent runs a shade on the Parky- karkas side at times for an orthodox French- man, but this only seems to add to the hilarity. Capable acting by every member of the cast, [THE FORfUMI Peace, Security.. . To the Editor: Here in Ann Arbor big things have been hap- pening. A number of students have been work- ing for many weeks to organize a giant liberal student group. So far, with respect to students and faculty already contacted, support has been tremendous. There's no reason why it shouldn't be. The program of the organization is one of vital interest to every intelligent, open-minded person of today. The aim and purpose of the organization is to coordinate all liberal forces on this campus to make a unified group in an effort to put through various individual projects, such as the Consumers' Cooperative, the Student Workers' Federation, the Union Coffee Hour, and the S.C.A. dances, much more effectively by means of the great support behind them. The program is at once very broad and at the same time limited to the scope of the student. The five cardinal objectives are for peace, for se- curity, against war and fascism, for academic freedom, and for a broader student life. In view of the fact that the group aims for broad campus support, a student need accept but one of these points to join the organization and he will work on that point alone if he so desires. What the original members of the group worked for was to learn what sort of reception an organization of this nature would get from individual students, student groups, and faculty members. Having been received practically unanimously with favor, they have decided at last to appeal to the entire campus for support. It's an organization intended for the campus as a body, and it is the campus as a body that it calls to convention. On Tuesday, April 27, a giant membership meeting is being held at the Union. Any and every student at all interested in such a group, called for the time being, the Students' Union, should make it his business to come to this meet- ing. Come to the Union Tuesday, April 27, to hear what is being done and to make your suggestions, lend your cooperation. Come, and bring as your guests all whom you know to be interested in any of the five points: peace, security, agaiinst war and fascism, academic freedom and a broader student life. -M.H.L., '39. Heil Andres To the Editor: As I read Mr. Conger's letter in The Daily of April 6, I was deeply stirred by a sense of gratitude to a beneficient Providence for pre- serving in Washtenaw County an oasis of sanity in this great, boundless desert of maniacal un- rest. On second thought, however, I decided that all of the honor and glory was not the due of Je- hovah but that some of our genuflections should be made to Jacob Andres. I realize, regardless of who deserves the credit, that the contented laborers of this favored spot are being protected in a very blessed manner from the insidious pay increases being felt in other sections. May the good Sheriff Andres und Gott continue to ward off all prosperity from the workers of this com- munity so that we may be delivered from the temptation of profligacy. What would I, for instance, do with a further pay increase? I might buy some new clothes; but if I should, what could I do with that per- fectly good suit that I bought only nine years ago last Christmas? Then, I might buy clothes for my family, although in that case I don't know what my more extravagant friends would do with their cast-offs. Again, my children might undergo the tonsilectomy which our un- paid physician declares essential to their health or they might have the dental care which the school dentist prescribes, but the operations probably would prove painful, and, anyway,, it is doubtful whether such misfits as janitors should be allowed to preserve their progeny. I know the difficulties and problems that beset a laborer with a pay increase as I have recently had a raise of one cent per hour and that forty7 eight cents has been piling up on me every week since.- And while we are singing paens we should not forget those knights of idealism who, by their efforts two decades ago, were able to make this old world so safe for democracy and who are willing to make one more great sacrifice to keep Ann Arbor's income in the hands of those who know how to spend it. Therefore, my comrades, when our Dragon Slayer No. 1 marches boldly down Main Street followed by his army of gallant, but somewhat pot-bellied, heroes with the exalted banner of the Swastika floating proudly over all, let us all be lining the curb with our right arms held stiff- ly at approximately forty-five degrees and let our vocal organs bellow forth an adoring "Heil Andres." -Will Cater, ja ritor Cow Paths To the Editor: In a few weeks this University will be cele- brating the Centennial of its founding in Ann Arbor. The Campus and the City of Ann Arbor will be thronged by people from all over the world. In preparation for the Centennial, the com- mittee in charge of the grounds have put forth special effort to beautify the campus. By re- setting shrubbery and trees in various places on campus, they give the campus a neater appear- ance. Yet we see paths where students have taken short-cuts past the Law Library, in front of the Romance Languages Building, besind the museum and in numerous other places. , It would probably take not more than ten seconds to go around even the longest of these "cut- Mostly About The Noel Coward Bills By JAMES DOLL ONE df the chief topics for spec- ulation among people in Ann Ar- bor interested in the theatre has been the possibilities for this year's spring dramatic season. Now that the plays have been announced interest centers on the plays themselves. Four of the five bills are comedies from thetpresent Broadway season. Two of them are made up of six one-act plays from the nine that Noel Coward wrote and played under the title Tonight at 8:30. This ex- periment of playing short plays in groups is one not made recently-or ever very often-in the commercial theatre. Frank Gillmore, president of Actor's Equity, congratulated Mr. Coward in a recent article in the Sunday drama section of the New York Times for again proving that sweeping generalities about what can or cannot be done in the theatre are almost more apt to be untrue than true. The first bill to be played here >pens with Ways and Means.. This is the sort of thing so often described as "typically Noel Coward" and would be true if one remembered only Pri- vate Lives and Hay Fever. It's about a couple in great distress as they find their welcome well worn out at a house in the Riviera where they have been guests for some time. They have no money to pay their railway fare to their next invitation and don't dare admit it to their hostess. A friendly burglar helps them out of the difficulty. Now, surely, this kind of slender plot wouldn't be much un- less it was touched all along with charm and wit. John Mason Brown in The New York Post said of the plays: "The playlets in Tonight a 8:30 continue to be trifles-amusing and suave trifles. They are vaude- ville sketches of the type you used to dream of seeing, but never saw. when vaudeville was in its heyday. Their themes are older than the oldest B. F. Keith Theatre. Yet they are made to seem as new as the latest restaurant or the most recent night club by touches which are un- mistakably Cowardian." 'STILL LIFE' IS SERIOUS PLAY Each of the Coward bills has one serious item. In this it is Still Life. It is an every-Thursday romance between a doctor and a suburban housewife-bothtmarried. It has a quiet intensity and every-day quality pleasant by contrast. There is de- lightful and realistic comedy in the background of the provincial rail- road station restaurant in which this sketch is set. The third play Family Album is pure delight. It is laid in the Feath- erways home in Kent in the year 1880 just after the funeral of old father Featherways. His memory is sacred until just a bit too much sherry has been drunk and then we really find out-with incidental mu- sic-what the old man was really like. It is the sort of delicate com- edy that would make an evening worthwhile even if you didn't have Ways and Means and Still Life." The second bill here opens with Hands Across the Sea. It is he favorite of at least one critic, Rob- ert Benchley of The New Yorker: "And speaking of the Coward plays, which I intend to do from time to time, they actually improve on sec- ond visiting. Hands Across the Sea, the more you hear it, becomes one of the major delights of modern times, next to Sex. There is hardly a line in it which, taken in its con- text, is not a gem of confusion." SUBURBAN REALITIES, SONG AND DANCE "Fumed Oak is the joint-piece," said Brooks Atkinson in the New York Times, that stamps the second bill, with distinction. It is the familiar yarn of a middle-aged husband in a cheap South London home who was tricked into marriage a good many years ago and has never ceased resenting it." You will enjoy seeing the actors jump from youth and Mayfair to the trickery of a made- up Casper Milquetoast and his nag- ging wife. Shadow Play closed the bill with the customary song and dance. °In the playing it ,reminds one of The Room with a View number in This Year of Grace or of some of the acts in Mr. Coward's more recent Words and Music. There is a bit of plot but more music and a lot of dancing. In commenting on the series in the preface to the published plays the author said : "A short play having a great advantage over a long one in that it can sustain a mood without technical creaking or overpadding, deserves a better fate, and if, by care- ful writing, acting and producing I can do a little towards reinstating it in its rightful pride, I shall have achieved one of my more sentimental ambitions." Mist ress Gwynn's Players THERE will be a private perform- ance tomorrow night of a play that you won't have a chance to see again very soon. Although in- vitations are sent out I don't think (Continued from Page 2) gineers and Early Engineering. D AIL Y OF FICIALBU LLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of th. Ikiverslty. Copy received at the omo.a te h Asitaat to e PresId.a. .t a 3:30; 11:00 a.m. a. Saturday. The HE CONVERSATIONS - between T Mussolini and Schuschnigg of Austria, and those apparently to follow between Mussolini and Hitler at Berchtesgaden early in May, bring to the foreground the whole problem of Eastern Europe, but most sharply Austria and Czechoslovakia. Fascism is not an international movement. The "Rome-Berlin axis" is not the outgrowth of -common aims of Italy and Germany, but the in- strument by which each hopes to gain its unique desires. It has often been pointed out that Italy and Germany, despite their present en- tente, have points of conflicting interests. The most important of these is Austria. The story of the Austrian conflict is a fa- miliar one. Hitler's hopes of anschluss have been blocked by Mussolini's insistence that Austria remain as a buffer state between Italy and her powerful northern neighbor. The Austrian .na- tionalists hope to gain a measure of freedom from both Germany and Italy by a Hapsburg restoration. But it is quite apparent that Austria is not the mistress of her own fate. Reports of Schuschnigg's frightened threats to seek France as a friend indicate, moreover, that the long- standing impasse over Austria is going to be broken. This means, if it is true, that Austria is to be released by Mussolini to Germany. The strong belief that Hitler and Mussolini will meet at Berchtesgaden in a few days is a confirmation of this interpretation. What will Mussolini get in return? The log- ical answer to this question is not hard to find. Defeated and humiliated in Spain, with control of the Mediterranean and control of his own do- mestic preeminence far less sure than for many months, Mussolini is perhaps seeking greater aid from Germany for his Spanish invasion. Hitler can hardly be expected to refuse such a bargain. The possibility of a change in the status of Austria brings to attention the changing Balkan scene. Only a few years ago the Balkan states were tightly bound together in a system that was based on the independence of German and Italy. The Little Entente of Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Rumania was perhaps the most solid grouping on the continent. These three were joined with Turkey and Greece in the Bal- kan ntente. Today Germany has gained great ascendency over dictator-ruled Greece. Jugoslavia has re- cently concluded a pact with Italy which sent President Benes of Czechoslovakia immediately to the Jugoslavian capital anxious for the very life of the Eentente. In Rumania Premier Titu- lescu, Benes' great collaborator in the Little Een- tente, has been overthrown and supplanted by the rightest Premier Tatarescu. Here the fas- cist Iron Guard is a major political force, encouraged by official and unofficial representa- tives of Germany. Reactionary Hungary stands unequivocally with the two big fascist powers. Poland, under a barbarous regime, wavers cau- tiously between France and Germany. members of the faculty of the University, and students, as well asF all other interested parties are cor-t dially invited to attend. Professor Kirby is a professor at Yale University. He is an outstand- ing authority on a number of en-< gineering subjects and has beent deeply interested in engineering his- tory. These facts are a guarantee1 of the high quality of the address. The lectures will be for only one hour so as not to interfere with prep-t aration for the classes of the follow- ing day.1 John S. Worley. Public Lecture: Mrs. Grace Ober of Eliot, Maine, will be the speaker at a public meeting arranged by the Baha'i Group this afternoon at' 4:30 p.m. at the Michigan League. Her subject will be, "This Challeng-+ ing Hour." The public is cordially' invited. Events Today Varsity Glee Club: There will b ae a full rehearsal today at 4:30 p.m. to prepare for our appearance in the May Festival and also our remaining concerts. Every man is expected to be present, due to the importance of these coming engagements. Suomi Club will hold an outing at the "island" today. We have from Lane Hall at 2:30 p.m. Re- freshments will be served, and a group picture taken. Exhibitions Exhibition, College of Architecture: A collection of Modern Dress and Drapery Textiles created by the Bu- reau of Style and Design of Marshall Field & Co., Manufacturing Division, is being shown in the third floor ex- hibition room of the Architectural Building. Open daily 9 to 5 through April 27. The public is cordially in- vited. - An exhibition of paintings by Mar- garet Bradfield and Mina Winslow is being held in Alumni Memorial Hall through May 5, 2 to 5 p.m. Sun- days, under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Art Association. , Coming Events Botanical Seminar meets Wednes- day, April 28, at 4:30rp.m., Room 1139, N.S. Bldg. Paper by E. U. 'Clover "Studies on cacti from Col- orado." (illustrated). German Table for Faculty Mem- bers: The regular luncheon meeting will be held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michi- gan Union. All faculty members interested in speaking German are cordially invited. There will be an informal 10-minute talk by Mr. Wer- ner F. Striedieck. Chemistry Motion Pictures: Mr. Shuster of the DuPont Company will show several sound films covering the manufacture of important chemical products. The pictures will be shown Monday, April 26, at 4:30 p.m. in the Chemistry Amphitheatre. A.S.M.E. Members: There will be a meeting of the Student Branch Wednesday evening, April 28, at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan Union. Mr. C. L. Bibber of the Carnegie-Illinois Steel Company will present an illustrated talk on "Some Practical "Aspects of Welding." A dinner meeting is to be held at 6 p.m. before the regular meeting for Mr. Bibber. All members ae invited to attend. Canoeing, Women Students: All women students interested in joining a class in canoeing to meet on Mon- day and Wednesday at 3:20 p.m. are asked to report at the Women's Ath- letic Building on Monday, April 26, at 3:20 p.m. The Deutscher Verein meets Tues- day evening, April 27, at 8 p.1. in Room 304 of the Michigan Union. Members of the Verein are urgently requested to be present. Archery Club, Women Students: The first meeting of the Archery Club will be held at the Women's Athletic Building on Wednesday, April 28, at 4:30 p.m. A club shoot will be held to determine the club flights. Fr eshmen Women: There will be an important mass meeting at 4 p.m. Monday in the League. Plans for Freshman Project will be discussed and try-outs will begin. All women of the class of '40 are urged to at- tend. Zeta Phi Eta: There will be a short meeting at 4:30 p.m. on Monday, April 26, in the League. Room will be posted. Mrs. Marcelline Hemingway Sanford will be with us again. Please be prompt. evening at 8:15 p.m. at the home of Mrs. C. F. Behrens, 1101 Olivia Ave. The demonstrator for Charles of the Ritz cosmetics will be the speaker of the evening. All Dames are cordially invited. Faculty Women's Club: The Tues- day Afternoon Play-Reading Sec- tion will meet on Tuesday afternoon April 27, at 2:15 p.m. in the Alumnae Room of the Michigan League. Michigan Dames Book Group will meet Wednesday, April 28, at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. There will be election of group officers. Churches First Baptist Church: 10:45 a.m. Rev. R. Edward Sayles, minister, will preach on "The Perils of Privileges." Church School at 9:30 a.m. High °School young people at 5:30 p.m. Roger Williams Guild: 12 noon. Student Group at Guild House. 6:15 p.m. the Guild's regular meeting. Election of officers. The program will be "Impressions of the State Youth Conference at Battle Creek," given by Stanley Wheater, Grad., and Howard R. Chapman. Stalker Hall: 9:45 a.m. Student Class led by Professor Carrothers on "The Peril of Uselessness." 6 p.m. Wesleyan Guild meeting. Miss Gertrude Muxen will speak on "Friends-Our Greatest Investment." This will also be election of officers Fellowship hour following the meet- ing. First Methodist Church: Morning worship at 10:30 a.m. Dr. C. W. Brashares will preach on "We or They?" First Presbyterian Church: Meet- ing at the Masonic Temple, 327 So. Fourth Ave. At the Morning Worship Service at 10:45 a.m., Dr. Kenneth D. Miller, executive secretary of the Presbytery of Detroit, will preach on the sub- ject "The Perils of Civilized Life." Special music by the student choir and double quartette. Mr. John M. Trytten will be the guest speaker at the regular meet- ing of the Westminster Gulid at 6:30 p.m. His topic will be "Criteria for Choosing a Vocation." A supper and social hour will precede this meeting at 5:30 pm. Harris Hall: The student meeting Sunday night will be held at the home of The Reverend and Mrs. Henry Lewis, 725 Oxford Road, at 7 p.m. The program for the evening will be informal: discussion and recreation. All Episcopal students and friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship are: 8 a.m., Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m., Church School; 11 a.m., Kindergarten; 11 a.m., Morning Prayer and Sermon by The Reverend Henry Lewis. Trinity Lutheran Church will stress Christian Higher Education in its regular 10:30 service. A Lutheran Student Quartette will sing Kos- chat's arrangement of the Twenty- Third Psalm and a suitable response after the general prayer. The choir of Trinity will render "Like as a Heart." The pastor, Rev. Henry O. Yoder, will use as his theme "In School with Christ." All students are cordially welcome to the service. Lutheran students are asked to re- I member this service. 4 The Lutheran Student Club will meet in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall at 5:30 p.m. Student fellowship supper will be served at 6 p.m. and the forum hour with speaker and discussion will follow at 6:45 p.m. First Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m. Service of worship, sermon by Rev. R. H. Ferris. His subject will be "The Widow's Mite." 6 p.m., Student Fellowship. Fel- lowship hour and supper together. Following the supper there will be musical program under the direction of Mr. Henry Bruinsma and Mr, Kenneth Bean. Church of Christ (Disciples): 10:45 a.m., Morning worship, Rev. Fred Cowin, minister. 12 o'clock, Students' Bible Class. H. L. Pickerill, leader. 5:30 p.m., Social hour and tea. 6:30 p.m., Discussion program-- Subject, "The World Outreach of Christianity." The program will consist of a brief summary of the motives and achievements of Chris- tianity in its world mission, and will be followed by a general discussion. Unitarian Church, 11 a.m.: Mr. Marley will speak on "Dialogue Ec- clesia-a minister talks with his church." Cello solo by Miss Gratia Harrington. 6:30 p.m., church supper, annual ,ircic , min c mi ,, na ,r.grv .m ,