______IC___________4THE MICHIGAN DAI LY " MICHIGAN DAILY I, fag was amusing to the jury no doubt, but had we net so high an opinion of his integrity, we might suspect that he was not so much interested in illustrating city ordinances as in wafting gentle scents of; red herrings under the noses of the jurors. A new interpretation of the Peace Demonstra- tion was also included in the polemic (City At- torney Laird is an education in himself). "Ir calling a mass meeting here they are going over their depth," he said. "The University didn't let their peace meeting take place on the Librar:, Steps. They sent them down in an alley be- hind the high school so people would think they. were high school pupils." Except for the fact that City Attorney Laird is wrong, he really is very entertaining. What a pity that his faith in youth must be destroyed because they now protest coolie wages instead ofoverturning trolley cars, but then, there aren't any more trolleys in Ann Arbor. Edited and managed by students of the University of ichigan under the authoity of the Board in Control of tudent Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the Tniversity year and .Summer Session Member of the Associated Press The Associatted Press is exclusively entitled to- the so for repubaicton of all news dispatches tcredited to t o. not otherwise credted in this newspaper.: AU fghts of republication of all other matter herein. also served. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as ecod4 class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school. year by carrii', .00; by mail, $4.50. fember, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37 R'PREENTED FOR NATIONAL AOVERTIS1NG BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College~ Publishers ReIpresentatiae 420MADisoN Ave, NEW YORK, N.Y. CHICAGO oPgTON -. SAN FfRANCiSCO .o0 ANGELES . PORTLANO - SEATTLE Board of Editors :ANAGING EDITOR ....... .....ELSIE A. PIEHCE DITORIAL DIRECTOR..MARSHALL D. SHULMAN eorge Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W, Hurd Robert Cummins [IGHT EDITORS: Joseph Mattes, William E. Shackletori, Irving Silverman, William Spaller, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. PORTS DEPARTMENT: George J. Andros, chairman; Fred DeLano, Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman, Carl G3erstacker. OMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Jewel Wuerfel. chairman; Elizabeth M. Anderson, Elizab~eth, Bingham, Helen Douglas, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Bety Strickroot. Business Departrent USINESS MANAGER .......... .. .. ...JOHN R. ,PARK SSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER. WILLIAM BARNDT OMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .....JEAN EEINATH USINESS ASSISTANTS: Ed Macal, Phil Buchen, Tracy Buckwalter, Marshall Sampson, Robert Lodge, Bill Newnaxi}, Leonw~rci Sefgelrian, Richard Knowe, Charles Colemati, W. Layne, Russ Cole, Henry Homes, 'omen's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries. Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet, Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crowford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy, Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, Dodie Day, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinsk, Eva-yn Tripp,, Departmental Managers 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: IRVING S, SILVERMAN From The Outsid 'Em Eat treetcars.: * * HE ROMANS gave them circuses, T Marie Antoinette let them .eat cake, but City Attorney Laird offers streetcars. "When I was a student here," said City At- torney Laird in his eloquent-nay, magniloquent -address to the jury yesterday afternoon- in the trial of Ralph Neafus for loitering, "when I was a student here," he said, "we used to give vent to our enthusiasm by upsetting trolley cars .. . Now, instead, they hold mass meetings and make all this disturbance." On April 8, a group of students publicly pro- tested against one Herbert Cassell, a manager of the Ann Arbor Recreation Center, who they say pays his pin boys some 16 cents an hour and broke an agreement which he made to pay them four cents more an hour. In the course of the demonstration, seven persons were arrested, some for speaking without a license. After an assid- uous search of the ordinances failed to reveal any law requiring a license to speak in public, he was found guilty of loitering instead, by a jury of six, after eight policemen testified that traffic was blocked, that people couldn't pass on the sidewalk, and that they had to help cus- tdmers enter and leave the bowling alley. Of course, said City Attorney Laird, "the police don't attempt to stop picketing. As long as they keep walking, aren't loitering, and don't interfere with business the cops are going to keep away from them," was his reassurance to the labor move- mont. "It seems to me," said City Attorney Laird, with his customary skill for summing things up in a pithy way, even though irrelevant, "there is only one thing in this case: whether or not we are going to be subservient to the rule of a group of people who have taken it upon them- selves to hold meetings of this kind, or whether Ann Arbor is going to run along in the same even tenor as it has in the past." If "the same even tenor of the past" means that Cassell will still be able to pay his coolies- 16 cents an hour, and that no one dare protest; if it rieans that persons in a labor demonstration may be sentenced to 15 days in jail for "loiter- ing," then let us hope that the rest of the quartet is realistic while City Attorney Laird sings an even tenor by himself.' For the issue is this: Will people who demon- strate against unfair labor policies continue-to be picked up by Ann Arbor policemen for "loi- tering?" Shall there be labor organization in Ann Arbor, or not? A lesser man might have seen the issue, but not City Attorney Laird. Instead this master of the innuendo artfully suggested that Neafus might be misappropriating the'funds of the Stu- dent Workers Federation. "You can contribute to the strike fund!" he read from the leaflet issued by the S.W.F., and then observed: "After this they are apparently able tc, retire." Again: "Let's see what the facts show. If any one was ever guilty of disorderly conduct, -Neafus ; wxran Pr i , with the Studeant Workers AT 11 A.M. TODAY the University will pay tribute at the Honors Convocation to more than 808 students who have distinguished themsves in their studies. They are the unsung heroes of university life. Few of them were heralded in the B.M:O.C. Bluebook, not many of them direct the destinies of dances, committees or useless boards, or warm the seats of that local bohemia, the Parrot. But though they dwell among the untrodden ways of books, they have secured from their University days something more lasting than pins and keys -something of an education. _ That the University should have functioned Successfully in some cases-at least to the extent that such success is indicated by high grades- is a cause for celebration. Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of 'ihe Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The namyes ou ommunicants wil, however, berregarded as confidetial upon request. Contributors are asked to bebrief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or rejct letters upon the criteria of general editorial inmport~n, and interest to thze camptus. Who's WQO To the Editor: The letter by the irate young gentleman, who so fears that his natural self-expression will be hampered by the Jordan "censorship," has evoked the righteous wrath of several Jordanites. His assertion that the worst that one sees on walking into the room is a kiss, is gross under- statement. Can it be that his love has blinded him? If believers in public necking would know the embarrassment, and worse, amusement, they cause in their onlookers, they would confine their activities to a more secluded rendezvous. Even Jean Harlow and Robert Taylor "pitching the woo" would become monotonous, if seen on the same sofa, twice a day, every day in the week. And certainly, Jordanites and their respective swains haven't got a thing on those two. O-f course, we =recognize the necessity of sex and the "beauty of it all," but we definitely dislike it with our meals. Although we are not in complete agreement with the vigilante system, extreme circumstances require extreme remedies. Furthermore, this so- lution was not tried until milder measures had failed. As a word of consolation to those suppressed millions, we give you Spring and the Arboretum, which are just around the corner. And if warm dayshare too long in coming, there's always the lobby of Angell Hall. -Six Jordanites. ueans Of Praise To the Editor: Believing that civilization functions at its best only when people are in positions for which they are best qualified, might I suggest upon the basis of the communications in The Daily that Will Canter, janitor, and Pat Conger, reporter, ex- change jobs? It is obvious that Mr. Canter could well earn his livelihood as a writer and although we ar not acquainted with Mr. Conger, his general thought process seems to indicate that he has the reso- luteness and tenacity to cope with the manifold problems of broom-pushing. -E. Pluriius Unun. Sweet Vulgaicity To the Editor: We don't know whether the author of the letter entitled "All For Love" has witnessed some of the scenes in the parlors or whether his opinion is based upon personal experiences. We who live in the dormitories are constantly faced with this vulgar display of "sweet and lovely virtues" as Mr. Thompson calls them. It was not being shocked at the sight of necking, as being disgusted that made us vote upon the new rules. It is inconceivable that anyone should be so vulgar and show such com- pletely bad taste as to "neck" in public. It is very embarrassing when you walk into the dormitory with a blind date. Your date looks at you inquiringly as if to say-"well-?" you look at him and think "I hope not." After all one doesn't neck on a blind date. You both laugh a little sickly, turn slightly green, and wander hopelessly around unable to fing a refuge from the couples clinging together in "affec- tionate embraces." Out of five hundred girls very few could or would want to, say to their fathers "Here, Father, is where we spoon." The erv has been that they have no other ~BENEATH **** -- -- --By Bonth Williams-._.____ W HEN JIM DOLL slit open his morning mail a day or so ago he almost fainted dead away. On a neatly engraved invitation he read with faltering eyes the words "invited . . honors convocation. .because of high scholastic attain- ment." Doll put the invitation tenderly back in his pocket and heaved a sigh. Then he reluctantly sat down and called the Registrar's Office. "No," came the reply, "there is no mistake. The invitation was mailed to James Doll and our records show that it was officially designated for him." Doll turned half way around in his chair, his tal, lean body bent sideways and sighed again. This time it was a sigh of triumph. To the ordinary person there is nothing so preposterous about an invitation to the honors convocation, but to poll it represents a milestone in his career. James Doll probably holds the record for lit school students. He, enrolled at Michigan the same year Angell Hall was first opened; it took him practically ten years to get an A.B., and his Unliversity record looks like an Egyptian scroll. Dol, who now is the drama editor for The Daily, topped oft his astonishing literary ac- complishments last June when he needed just three hours of science to graduate. He elected an astronomy course with which he had experienced some difficulty eight years be- fore and planted his hopes for the much-coveted sheepskin with the generosity of the instructor-. He rushed in all his lab work the day before the final and then borrowing a book, spent the entire night in pursuit of facts pertaining to the course. So diligently did Doll study that he became over fatigued as dawn crept close, with the re- sult that he slept through the exam, got an "E" in the course, and had to cap off his lengthy scholastic sessions with a summer term before he was finally adjudged a Bachelor of Arts. Though this year devoting himself to the stage and its concerns, and the winner of a Hop- wood Award, Doll still couldn't believe his eyes when he saw the invitation to the Honors Con- vocation "for high scholastic attainment." It didn't seem to fit in with the past somehow. OCAL NEWS SNOOPS are boasting a picture which may or may not run in the Sunday papers showing Dean Alice Lloyd in a prominent beer establishment with a glass of brew near by. Now I don't know whether Miss Lloyd was drinking the beer or not, but certainly in an age when liberalism is the watchword of the government and Universities the educators of the liberals, there can be nothing out of the ordinary in the Dean of Women drinIing a glass of beer if she likes. Most students drink beer, and no one thinks anything about it. Is there any reason why the same privilege should be denied to those whose business it is to watch over the students? Ob- viously not. The trouble lies in the cheap publicity given by newspapers in general to such commonplace occurrences because they happen t involve people who the uninformed element assumes to be straight liced and puritanical pedagogues who abhor the word 'alcohol' and sit in the parlor all day Sunday. BENEATH IT ALL: With Betty Gatward's elevation to the presidency of Mortarboard, it would appear that the Dannemiller-Gatward Corporation controlled a holding company with practically unlimited power. . . Is there anything which stamps the ordinary student as "different" quite like a brief case? . . . The committee on dusting off the seats in the ball park will do well to get busy before the girls get their spring dresses dirty when they troop down to watch Michigan play Ohio State on Ferry Field Satur- day . . . Chester Fairbanks, lawyer who took poison during Spring . Vacation, apparently changed his mind after he had swallowed enough strychnine to kill a dozen men. He called his landlady who phoned a doctor, but Fairbanks gasped and died almost before the call was com- pleted . . . Ty Tyson is working his head off at present. He is on the- air three and four times a day, including of course, his baseball broadcast from Navin Field. . . Harvey Patton, former track star and Ann Arbor correspondent, is now cover- ing the suburbs for the Detroit News .. . Saturday should be a great occasion for real sports fans. Track at 1:30, baseball at 2:30 and the annual Spring Football Game at 4:15 will give sports followers all the excitement and variety' they could ask for. ment would gently or perhaps not so gently re- quest you to leave. Then why should you be per- mitted to do this in what is, when you examine it, not your own private home, but a dormitory housing a large number of girls almost under precise hotel conditions. Mr. Thomson says a kiss is a symbol of affec- tion. It becomes a pretty tawdry and stupid symbol when over-worked and used indiscrim- inately. Everyone in the dormitory knows that the rule is aimed at a very small percentage of the group and that they are the ones who usually entertain many different men a week. As for the "steadies," has an engagement ring ever sanc- tioned over-affectionate display in such public places as, let us say, theatre lobbies or stock- brokers offices-? Our dormitory living rooms. are no less public. -Mosher-Jordan '38 and '40. To learn about the health habits of the black AS OTHWE RS Prince And Poet (From the New York Times) FEW POETS can be more out of fashion than Swinburne. Sing- ing has gone out. The homely and naked word, the harsh construction, ire preferred. If there is an ecstasy, it is metaphysical rather than lyric. Phe new school has its geniuses and is cruel to the old. So the centenary on April 5 was a bit chilly. One (ieasant note, howeverhas come from it. After Tennyson's death in '92 Swinburne was the chief sur- viving English poet. It was natural ;o think that he ought to succeed to the laureateship. had he not been morally and politically out of the run- ning. He was a republicatl. He re- garded "slaves and kings" with equal fervor of distate. He had written that first series of "Poems and Ballads" that shocked the Victorians so in- tensely. He had been nasty to some respec- table sovereigns. He was a sort of confounded foreigner and exotic. Yet he had his backers. A correspondent of The Times of London has raked up in the "Private Diaries" of Sir Algernon West some curious conver- sations. There was talk about the laureateship at a dinner given in '91 by Mr. Asquith and Mr. Haldane. Mr. Asquith hoped that "it would be held in suspense on Tenniyson's death." Mr. Balfour said "Swinburne should have it." Mr. John Morley, whose nonconformist conscience had yelled so angrily in The Saturday Review against "Poems and Ballads," won- dered what that conscience "would say to Swinburne's 'Epithalamium.'" In October, 1892, shortly before Tennyson's death on the 6th, West was told my Sir George Murray, Mr. Gladstone's private secretary, that "he had visited British Museum and discovered that Swinburne had never withdrawn a word of his poems and ballads, but on the contrary had pub- lished a pamphlet in defense of them and had circulated a poem against the execution of the Manchester Feln- ians." That dished his chances, West thought. Visiting the Tennants he found that "Swinburne, had he been possible, appeared the favorite, from the.Prince of Wales downward; but it was impossible. Mr. Gladstone is. however, I fear, in correspondence with Her Majesty, and suggests Rus- kin, who, as Spencer Lyttleton says. is 73, nearly out of his mind and never wrote a poem that any one ever read." William and Lewis Morris were mentioned. James Bryce said the former wouldn't accept. He probably thought that the latter was unfit. He recommended Coventry Patmore. At the end of October the Prince of Wales gave up his favorite. He wrote West his willingness that the lau- reateship should remain in abeyance. He yielded unwillingly: "I should have thought "that the name of Swinburne might be duly considered." It seems unlikely that the Prince had ever read any of Swinburne's poem. One wonders if some mischievous friend had put forward Swinburne in the hope of antagonizing the "middle- Mlass" queen. Schoolmaster Group Opens 51st Session (Continued from Page 2) then told of the advantages of the recently passed legislation, which re- quires the certification of all teach- ers. Mr, Elliott, speaking before a gen- eral session of the Schoolmasters. Club at 12:30 p.m. yesterday in the Union, expressed disatisfaction with the present chaotic conditior, of sec- ondary schools, and said that he de- sired a state wide movement to ef- fectively remedy it. A picture of high school adminis- trators perplexed by the lack of a basis upon which to choose students! to recomend for higher education arose from the talks and discussion at the general sessin of the School-I masters Club yesterday afternoon. The session discussed "the types of techniques which give largest prom- ise of usefulness in the promotion of better articulation between secon- day schools and institutions of high- er education." Professor George Carrothers of the education school in his introductory speech said that the University had been working with the high schools of the state since 1871 when they al- lowed the students of Ann Arbor High School to enter without exam- ination upon recommendation of the principal of the school. Both J. H. Adams, principal of Central High School of Bay City, and O. A. Emmons, principal of Cooley High School of Detroit, expressed the difficulty involved in judging wheth- er or not individual students are to be recommended for college educa- tion Mr. Adams suggested the adoption of a form of collee entrance exm- Notice to Seniors, June Graduates,1 and Graduate Students: Please file application for degrees or any spe7 cial certificates (i.e. Geology Certifi-1 cate, Journalism Certificate, etc.) atc once if you expect to receive a de- gree or certificate at commencement in June. We cannot guarantee that the University will confer a degree or1 certificate at commencement upon any student who fails to file such ap- plication before the close of business] on Wednesday; May 19. If applica-t tion is received later than May 19, your degree or certificate may not be awarded until next fall.a Candidates for degrees or certifi-1 cates may fill out card at once at of- fice of the secretary or recorder of their own school or college (students enrolled in the College of Literature, Science, and' the Arts, College of Architecture, School of Music, School of Education, and School of Forestry, and Conservation, please note that application blank may be obtained and filed in the Registrar's Office, Room 4, University Hall). All appli-, cations for the Teacher's Certificate should be made at the office of the School of Education. Please do 'not delay until the last1 day, as more than 2,500 diplomas and] certificates must be lettered, signed,, and sealed and we shall be greatly helped in this work by the early filing of applications and the resulting longer period for preparation. The filing of these applications1 does not involve the payment of any' fee whatsoever. Shirley W. Smith, Commencement Invitations: The Invitations Committee in the various schools have closed their orders as of' 5 p.m. Wednesday afternoon. Begin-' ning today and continuing until fur- ther notice the sale of these official class booklets and folders will be handled by Burr, Patterson & Auld Company, 603 Church St. Samples will be provided by this company and orders for any of the Senior class booklets will be taken. All Seniors who have not ordered are urged to do so without delay. W. B. Rea. Faculty, College of Engineering: There will be a meeting of the Fac- ulty of this College on Monday, May 3, at 4:15 p.m., in Room 348 West Engineering Building. Agendum: consideration of panel procedure for election of member to Executive Committee; report on new statement of Nontechnical Electives; routine business. A. I. Lovel, Secretary. Faculty, School of Education: The regular monthly luncheon meeting of the Faculty will be held on Mon- day, May 3, at 12 o'clock, Michigan Union The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Infermtation has received announcements of Unit- ed States Civil Service Examinations for Senior 1M4arine Engineer, Quarter- master Corps, War Department, sal- ary, $4,600; for examiner, estate tax tinternal revenue agent), treasury department, salary, $3,200; also for marketing specialist and production adviser (Indian Arts and Crafts,) De- partment of the Interior, salary, $2,- 600 to $3,200. For further informa- tion concerning these examinations call at 201 Mason Hall, office hours, 9 to 12 and 2 to 4 p.m. Senior Engineers: Caps and Gowns will be available in the Game Room Second Floo, Michigan League Thursday 9-3:30 and Friday 9-11:00. Rental and deposit charges are neces- sary. IThey may be kept through Commencement. Engineering Council Engineers, Sophomores: Riggs will be purchased this year instead of the usual class jackets. Three designs have been submitted and are on dis- play on 2nd floor bulletin board, West Engineering Bldg., near Library. Please inspect designs and the one selected by vote will be adopted. (Continued from Page 2) of Geology and geography, University of Cincinnati, will lecture on "The Hartz Mountain Overthrust" on Tuesday, May 11, at 4:15 p m., in Natural Science Auditorium.' Illus- trated. The public is Qordially invit- ed. Theosophical Lecture: Dr. B. Jim- enez will speak on "Reincarnation in the Light of Heredity." The lecture deals with reincarnation in a new way and shows its relationship to heredity. It is sponsored by the Student Theo- sophical Club and the local branch of The Theosophical Society in America. The lecture will be given at the Michigan League Chapel, 8 p.m., today Exhibiion. 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. Events Today English Journal Club meets to- day at 4 p.m. in the Union. The program, open to the public at 4:20 p.m., will be a colloquium on the study of American Literature. Mr. Charles -Walcutt will discuss "Recent Scholarship on American Fiction." Mr. Charles Peake will talk on the subject, "American Literature in the English Curriculum." General dis- cussion will follow. J. L. Davis, French Plays: Tonight at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, at 8:30 p.m. the Cercle Francais presents three one-act plays in French. Box office open. Phi Lambda Upsilon: Informal spring initiation this evening, at 7 p.m in Room 303, Chemistry Bldg. Banquet on Saturday, May 1, at 6:15 p.m. Michigan Union. All members are requested to purchase tickets im- mediately. Esperanto: The Esperanto Class will meet in Room 1035 Angell Hall from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today. Lutheran Student Choir: Special rehearsal this evening, 7:30 p.m.,~ at Trinity Lutheran Church, 5th and William Regular rehearsal Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. at Zion Parish Hall. League Social Committee: There will be a meeting today at 4:15 pi.m in the League Council Room of the Undergraduate Office for all mem- bers of the social committee who are interested in acting as guides for University Day on May 1. All those members already contacted will please attend. Very important. Coming Everts Economcs Club:; Mr. Robert R. Horner of the Economics Department will speak to the Club on ":rban Milk Distribution Casts" at 7:45, p m. in Room 305 of the Union on Monday, MViay 3. Members of thde staffs in Economics and Business Adminis- tration, and graduate students in these departments, are cordially in- vited. Mr. C. M. Goodrich, chief engineer of the Canadian Bridge Company, will talk on the design of Transmis- sion Towers before the class in E.M. 18 on Saturday, May 1, at 2 p.m. in Room 406i West Engineer.ing Build- ing, All interested are invited to at- tend Graduate Outing Club: Bird trip on Sunday morning at 6 a.m., Group will meet in the park east of the Museum Building. Breakfast will be served at the Island at 9 a.m. All graduate students cordially invited. Acolyte Meeting Monday, May 2, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 202 S.W. Dr Morris Lazerowitz ill read a paper entitled "The Pringple of Verifiabil- ity." Anyone interested in philo- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication n the Bulletin is constructive notice to all memb'rs of tla 1Unversity. Copy received at the ofL rs or the A si tapt to the Prm Id41 iu~Jl 3 3i G ; :0 .mf. 01 An Satrday.t These rings, with will be available engineers. suitable numerals,! sophical debate may attend. for all classes af- sDance for Graduate Students and -- Public Health Club on Saturday eve- . - ,;H , 4/Fn<, . , +U . i T....,..... , A' AcademcNoti.s Speech 31: Mr. Shoberg's 9 o'clock and 10 o'clock sections of Speech 31 will not meet today. Geology 11: There will be a field trip as usual this Saturday morning,' May 1, at 8 o'clock. Sociology 132 (Poverty and Depen- dency): Bus leaves on field trip to Ypsilanti State Hospital at 2 p.m. - uomfun u . agg aukI aae pog Chemistry 47: Sections will meet together in Room 1042 today. Short Courses in Mathematics: The third of the series of short courses in mathematics will be given 'by Dr. Sumner B. Myers on the subject of "Caiclus of Variations in the T. ae" ning, May 1, at the Women's Ath- letic Building from 9 until 12 o'clock. Also bowling and ping-pong. Lutheran Student Club: An outing will be held on Sunday, May 2, if the weather is favorable. The first group will meet at the Parish Hall at 4 p.m. For the members of the A Capella Chorus and others the sec- ond group wilt"leave at 5:30 p.m. If the weather is not favorable there will be a program at the Parish Hall and devotional services will be held in the evening. All students are in- vited to attend oiir meetings. An election of officers for the next year will be held on Sunday ;We urge all members of the club to at- tend this meeting. Pan Concert: The third in the