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May 22, 1937 - Image 4

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The Michigan Daily, 1937-05-22

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1937

'====

Our Readers Talk About Peace
And War - And A Baffling Note

Sincerity And Peace

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 republicato 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,
)4.O0; by mail, $4.50.
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1936-37
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
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Board of Editors
MANAGING EDITOR.............JOSEPH S. MATTES
IEDITORIAL DIRECTOR...........TUURE TENANDER
CITY EDITOR ....................IRVING SILVERMAN
William Spaller Robert Weeks Irvin Lisagor
Helen Douglas
NIGHT EDITORS: Harold Garn, Joseph Gies, Earl R.
Gilman, Horace Gilmore, Saul Kleiman. Edward Mag-
dol, Albert Mayo, GRobert Mitchell, Robert Perlman
and Roy Sizemore.
SPORTS DEPARTMENT: Irvin Lisagor, chairman; Betsey
Anderson. Art Baldauf, Bud Benjamin, Stewart Fitch,
Roy Heath and Ben Moorstein.
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Helen Douglas, chairman;
Betty Bonisteel, Ellen Cuthbert, Ruth Frank, Jane B.
Holden. Betty Lauer, Mary Alice MacKenzie, Phyllis
Helen Miner, Barbara Paterson, Jenny Petersen, Har-
riet Pomeroy, Marian Smith, Dorothea Staebler and
Virginia Voorhees.
Business Department
BUSINESS MANAGER ..............ERNEST A. JONES
CREDIT MANAGER ....................DON WILSHER
ADVERTISING MANAGER ....NORMAN B. STEINBERG
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......BETTY DAVY
WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES
Departmental Managers
Ed Macal, Accounts Manager; Leonard P. Siegelman. Na-
tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Philip
Duchen, Contracts Manager; Robert Lodge, Local
Advertising Manager; William Newnan, Service Man-
ager; Marshall Sampson, Publications and Classified
Advertising Manager.
NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT PERLMAN

I.

[Ii

Iie. b wn t
TOMORROW will be Swingout'
This will mark the second appear-
ance of this colorful event since its restoration
from the heap of discarded traditions. Of course,
Swingout didn't naturally fall by the wayside
because of lack of interest or enthusiasm. In
fact, the main reason for its temporary demise
was the over exuberance, and what went with
it, which the observance of Swingout occasioned.
Last year the conduct of students was all that
could be asked for. No one was seen reeling
down the diagonal in the fashion so familiar in
past years. This year we should strive to con-
tinued the good start that was made in the
direction of an orderly, enjoyable Swingout. It
is a grand affair and, as we said last year, can be
best enjoyed while conscious.
91, JusLc
What Things ...
44 QUIET! QUIET!" the man on the
street heard the man on the steps
say. But the man behind the silver badge and
the police blue with the symmetrical set of
buttons o~n his expansive front said the man
on the steps was making a noise that should have
incited to riot.
That is the picture we are given by the amaz-
ing contradiction of testimony in the case of
Joseph Bernstein who was arrested on April 8.
If we are to judge by the greater mass' of court
evidence that indicated Bernstein's efforts to
maintain quiet in a group of persons, then we
must register our objection to the verdict of the
six-man jury, convinced quite deftly by City
Attorney Laird that the University sophomore
was guilty of disorderly conduct.
To prosecute with perfect fairness members of
the community who have strayed from the
straight and narrow path, attempting to bring
the individual to justice for a crime or other
breach of law without building up and playing
on irrelevant beliefs, has been one widely accept-
ed conception of the machinery of justice. Here
in Ann Arbor the prosecuting attorney is ap-
pointed to his position and usually depends for
reappointment on the number of convictions he
can win against those who are accused of
breachesof law. Consequently we discover, as we
have in the cases of those involved in the picket-
ing of what was called "an establishment main-
taining coolie working conditions," that the pros-
ecuting attorney works zealously, even raising the
red scare (in the Neafus case) to gain a convic-
tion.
Some of the choice characterizations made
by the prosecution include the one which depicts
the former editorial director of The Daily as a
culprit who goes down to jail houses to rescue
fellow reporters. Therefore, the argument goes,
what validity can this editor's testimony have?
There is also one describing Dean Bursley as

The University demands sincerity of its stu-
dents. As a rule, students recognize this demand
and attempt to meet it fairly. This is as it
should be.
The students also demand sincerity of the
University. More than this, all people who are
wide awake and alert expect the University to
act with sincerity. They expect it to carry .
through with vigor the policies which it under-
takes to support. This is also as it should be.
What then are we to say when the University
actually cripples the anti-war movement under
the guise of aiding it? What are we to say and
do when the University throws its sincerity into
doubt? I am not arguing that the University is
against peace or anything of the sort. I but
hope that the University will go as far as it can,
and when it can go no further, it shall speak out
the reason why and speak it honestly. Here is
what I refer to.
The Peace Council was denied the use of the
library steps for staging the Peace Demonstra-
tion in April. The library is centrally located on
the campus and is the ideal place for this meet-
ing: The University refused the use of the
library steps on the ground that the speech mak-
ing would interfere with those studying in the
library. Was this the reason? With one noisy
initiation, one all-campus sing, and one band
concert all held on the library steps this spring
during library hours, it is clear that this is not
the reason.
It is not because I think the peace movement
weak that I make these remarks. I do not think
it is weak. It is strong among the college
students of this country and is growing stronger.
It can overcome the petty obstacles, it can climb
above and beyond them. But it is precisely be-
cause the peace movement is strong that it must
deal openly and be dealt with openly. There is
no place for heckling or petty sabotage of this
sort.
Away from children's pranks! Forward to sin-
cerity! -"Anti-War,"
Mysterious Missive
To the Editor:
This concerns my letter to Father Luthet
which you published in today's (Thursday, May
20) Michigan Daily. In the 9:30 a.m. mail I re-
ceived this anonymous communication from De-
troit: "STAY IN THE PRETZEL BELL YOU
CLOWNS. Don't come into Detroit again as you
did on May Day 1935 and have your pansy cream
puff faces punched."
The typewritten invective was accompanied
by a clipped editorial from the Detroit Free Press
which, under the head "THEY KNOW BETTER
NOW," lauded the Ann Arbor police and Justice
Jay H. Payne for arresting and sentencing the
"five students who thought they had a right to
speak where they liked on a public street, without
permission from the authorities."
The message is rather bewildering-I was not
aware that anyone in Detroit knew my name and
address, unless perhaps by, oh, the very faintest
chance some reactionary janitor retrieved my
letter from someone's wastebasket and was rightly
indignant at the expressions of opinion therein
contained.
I was three thousand miles from Detroit on
May 1, 1935, did not have my etcetera face
punched at that time, and, clown or no, have
been in the Pretzel Bell so fqw times that I have
conceived no such attraction for the place as
would move me to "stay" there, presumably
to cook up messes of communistic hell-brew. I
wonder who sent me that letter?
(Original of this mysterious communication is
on display at my lodgings for the inspection
of those students interested in contemporary
Americana.) -John Milton Caldwell
Lindbergh -- 10 Years
(From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch)
WHAT A DECADE this has been for Charles
Lindbergh! From the heights of triumph to
the depths of tragedy it has taken him, while the
whole world, rejoicing and admiring, then griev-
ing and sympathizing, looked on.
When he took off from New York 10 years ago

today, Lindbergh was an unknown, a young mail
pilot called "Slim" by his intimates, but equipped
with tenacity of purpose and great technical skill.
When, 3312 hours later, he landed the Spirit of
St. Louis at Le Bourget Field, Paris, he received
the first plaudits in an ovation that became
world-wide-an ovation unsurpassed in all his-
tory. It was an ordeal, but sound sense and
genuine modesty carried him through.
Lindbergh personified youth, adventure and
achievement. The remarkable trophy collection
on display at the Jefferson Memorial here tes-
tifies to the sweeping and spontaneous adulation
that was his. But throughout the hero-worsoiip
and through the dark days to come, he kept
his head. His domain was above the clouds, but
his feet were on the ground.
His purpose in life was to advance the cause
of aviation. To him a great share of the credit
is due for taking it from the realm of stunts and
sport to the field of substantial commercial en-
terprise. .Alone, and later with Anne Lindbergh,
he flew the world's airways, charted and un-
charted, "North to the Orient," over hidden pre-
historic cities, over seas and caravan routes, as
free and nwaverinn sthe e apin

'Ieating Plowshares ...'
To the Editor:
For a. long time, now, many of us have been
patiently hearing the shouting of the Peace
Council and reading its propaganda. The latest
pseudo-peacemaker, Mr. Deutsch, vented his
emotions in the Forum of May 18. First, before
any misunderstanding comes up, may I mention
that I do not advocate compulsory military train-
ing for Michigan-in fact, I was one of the
signers of the petition opposing it
Is Mr. Deutsch ashamed of his membership in
that august body, the Peace . Council? Perhaps
so, for nowhere in his letter does he mention it,
although he does devote many a fancy phrase to
the denunciation of "automatons." He bewails
these "automatons" which he feels men of the
R.O.T.C. are training to become. Typical propa-
ganda, indeed, is his message. However, sad to
state, they are not quite "automatons."
For the edification of those experts on the out-
side looking in, the R.O.T.C. does far more than
merely parade. Drill is continued solely because
it has proven to be essential to an effective
military defense organization. R.O.T.C. men do
not work hard learning how to help defend our
democratic institutions (if any survive Roosevelt)
should they ever be attacked. These men do not
prophesy war. Indeed, they sincerely hope that
they may never need to use their training. But
they are not optimistic enough to believe that
mere shouting can preventwar.
Perhaps Mr. Deutsch would feel more at home
in a progressive nation like the U.S.S.R., where
he, in common with all the progressives there,
could really be an "automaton." Besides, under
the soviet system, Russia has a real army-30
times the size of ours.
Or perhaps he would prefer to be an "auto-
maton" here at home. The CIO, with the sup-
port of "progressive" organizations, beckons in-
vitingly for the 40 million unorganized workmen
of the United States to join their regimented
brethren. Here, Mr. Deutsch, is a fertile field in
which to denounce "automatons."
A few simple statistics might enlighten the
Peace Council. Its members are probably aware
of the political and economic rank of our nation
in the world. Most Americans are. But, do they
know that 16 other countries surpass the United
States in the man power and equipment of their
armies? That fact is little known, but significant
Our army actually ranks 17th in the world, next
below that of Portugal.
Until that momentous occasion when the
pseudo-peace organizations quit venting their
idealism on the innocent atmosphere and truly
evolve a formula for peace-until then, and not
before, our only hope for peace is preparedness.
Merely because our country has not yet been
invaded does not indicate that it will never be.
No longer can we rely on the oceans for pro-
tection-nor on riches or manpower. No modern
nation can "spring to arms overnight." "Beating
plowshares into swords" takes years. A situation
as extraordinary as that of 1917 may never recur.
We cannot expect some other nation to fight
our battles for a year and a half while we get
ready to defend ourselves.
Of course, the last thing we do desire is war
-but deluding ourselves with noble gestures-
peace demonstrations-will be futile in time of
national emergency. Pitifully inadequate though
it is, the Reserve Officers' Training Corps now is,
and will continue to be our soundest measure for
the preservation of peace. --John K. Mills.
Academic Freedom
(From The Nation)
THE AMERICAN Federation of 'T'eachers i
busy harvesting its spring crop of academic-
freedom cases. Troubles in the colleges mature
at the season when appointments are made and
contracts terminated. We have already com-
mented on the dismissal of the two economics
instructors at Harvard, Alan R. Sweazy and J.
RaymondWalsh.
Meanwhile other academic plums have
dropped. The dismissal of Henry Klein from
Brooklyn College, New York, has been taken
up actively by the federation, while its special
committee on academic freedom has just issued
a full report on the dismissal of Jerome Davis
from the Yale Divinity School. The report is

based on an eight months' survey of the case, in-
cluding a study of the regulations governing
appointments, promotions, and tenure at Yale,
an analysis of the evidence, interviews with Pro-
fessor Davis's colleagues and students, and an
examination of his correspondence with the uni-
versity. On the basis of this study the committee
has arrived at certain unanimous conclusions
which are worth summarizing: (1) the budgetary
explanation of Professor Davis's dismissal offered
by the Yale administration has no validity; (2)
the contention that his scholarship and teaching
ability are inferior is not supported by the tes-
timony of students, former students, and his col-
leagues; (3) the Yale Corporation, not the per-
manent faculty of the Divinity School, is di-
rectly responsible for dropping him; (4) his
dismissal represents a clear violation of academic
freedom; (5) the procedure followed by the ad-
ministration abrogated the recognized principles
of tenure (6) " . . . Professor Davis should be
restored to his post in accordance with the rec-
ommendation for reappointment voted by the
Divinity School permanent faculty." We under-
stand that a student demonstration is planned to
coincide with a meeting of the Yale Corporation
this coming Saturday. We hope its protest
penetrates the walls of the meeting place and
serves at least to trnhl the nollective concienep

THIEATR e
By JAMES DOLL
The One Act Play MagaZine, Wiliam
Kozlenko, editor; published monthly by
Contemporary Play Publications, at 112
W st 42nd Street, New York. Subscrip-
tion pri-e: $5.00; 50 cents a copy. On
sale at George Wahr's Bookstore.
Four One-Act Plays
rHE REVIVAL of interest in the
short play has led to the pub-
lication of a new peiodical The One
Act 'Play Magazine. This revival
has brought the plays by the left-
wing playwrights, short for utilitar-
ian reasons; the three evenings of
Noel Coward plays in London and
New York. That such a series could
be successful would not have occurred
to any commercial manager a few
seasons ago. Waiting for Lefty and
Bury the Dead are not, strictly speak-
ing, one act plays. Their subject
is more extended than the single in-
cident one associates with this form
or with the short story.eThey are
I more like the longer pieces of fic-
tional narrative for which Story Mag-
azine has revived the word "novella."
But anyway they are shorter than
"full evening" and accustom audi-
ences to more than one play on an
evening's program.
In the first issue-May, 1937- The
One Act Play Magazine prints four
plays: Miss Marlowe at Play by A. A.
Milne, To Kill a Man by Gabriel Tim-
mory, Simon-Simon by Philip Freund,
and The Brave and The Blind by Mi-
chael Blankfort.
Blankfort's play is the most ambi-
tious and one that will certainly be
heard from again. It is based on the
recent seige of the Alcazar when sev-
eral hundred civilians and belliger-
ents were held in that medieval fort-
ress against the attack of the Spanish
Loyalists. Holding out against the
inevitable are found those who sym-
pathize with the established govern-
ment rather than with the military
order that control the fortress, ordi-
nary people who don't understand the
situation; they only want to get back
to their jobs and farms; aristocrats
or pseudo-aristocrats who agree with
the rebels in theory but prefer any-
thing to the present unpleasantness.
Against a panorama of well-drawn
characters representing these points
of view is the military force that must
preserve "morale" even if it means
destroying a room full of people-
many of whom are sympathetic to the
ideas of those who are destroying
them. All this is done with unusual
power. Interest and tension increases
as the action rushes on.
THE TIMMORY PLAY, To Kill a
Man was adapted from the
French by Percival Wilde and re-
sembles his own plays. It is a farce
and since to recount the plot of a
farce is a waste of time, it will have
to do to say that it has everything
one ordinarily expects in a farce that
is about nothing in particular. It
should play well and be welcome to
anyone preparing a bill of short plays
that already had some good weightier
material.
Milne's Miss Marlowe at Play is
about a popular actress." It is Re-
flected Glory in one act-but not
as good. Since Reflected Glory was
only worthwhile as a vehicle for Miss
Talullah Bankhead-and not too good
for that-it means that Miss Marlow
at Play is a total loss.
Simon-Simon is described as a
"Pragmatic Comedy." The first three
characters in the list of the cast are
The First Philosopher, The Second
Philosopher, The Third Philosopher
But an issue containing two excel-
lent, thoroughly playable one-acts i
a definite achievement. Few anthol-
ogies come anywhere near a fifty
per cent average. There are short
articles and reviews in addition to
the four plays.
The magazine has a distinguished
format and is a valuable addition tc
the very few good periodicals con-
cerned with the theatre. It should be
as welcome to writers as to readers

The editor, William Kozlenko, say,
he is interested in the work both of
unknown and known playwrights.
Nazi Secret Police
Seek Men Giving
Aid To Mundelein
BERLIN, May 21.-(AP)-The Ger-
man secret police is seeking suspect,
who may have given George Cardinal
Mundelen in Chicago information foi
his anti-Nazi speech and who under
German law could be charged with
treason.
Death from the executioner's axe is
the penalty upon conviction.
Foreign observers believed, how-
ever, that retaliation would be direct-,
ed against religious organizations ra-
ther than individuals if there is evi-
dence that information was supplied
from German sources.
Cardinal Mundelein in a Chicago
speech Tuesday said the German gov-
ernment was inspiring stories of
wholesale immorality among prieste
and lay brothers in monasteries "in
comparison with which the wartime
propaganda is almost like bedtime
stories."
The government contends open trial
and conviction of the churchmen es-
tablished proof of the immorality.
and that reports to the contrary are
falsifications.
Published accounts attributed to

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the
lsiverslty. Copy received at the omos at the AAssItant to the Preideak
untU 3:20: 2 1:00am.a Saturday.

SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1937
VOL. XLVII No. 168
Notices
To All Members of the Faculty and
Administrative Staff: If it seems cer-
tain that any telephones will not be
used during the summer months,
please notify Mr. Bergman in the
Business Office. A saving can be
effected if instruments are discon-
nected for a period of a minimum
of three months.
Herbert G. Watkins.
Student Accounts: Your attention
is called to the following rules passed
by the Regents at their meeting of
Feb. 28, 1936:
"Students shall pay all accounts
due the University not later than the
last day of classes of each semester
or Summer Session. Student loans
which fall due during any semester
or Summer Session which are not
paid or renewed are subject to this
regulation; however, student loans
not yet due are exempt. Any unpaid1
accounts at the close of business onI
the last day of classes will be report-
ed to the Cashier of the University,
and
"(a) All academic credits will be
withheld, the grades for the semes-
ter or Summer Session just completed
will not be released, and no tran-
script of credits will be issued. 3
"(b) All students owing such ac-
counts will not be allowed to register
in any subsequent semester or Sum-1
mer Session until payment has been1
made."
S. W. Smith, Vice-President
and Secretary.
First Mortgage L o a n s: The
University has a limited amount ofj
funds to loan on modern well-located
Ann Arbor property. Interest atF
current rates. Apply Investment Of-
fice, Room 100, South Wing, Univer-
sity Hall.
The Bureau of Appointments and
Occupational Information has re-
ceived notification of the following
positions:
Three interneships at the Chil-
dren's Village School. Kindergarten,
nursery and elementary through
eighth grade. Internes would be,
trained under 4 person trained in the1
Merrill-Palmer school. Position be-
gins next fall; duration one year.
Salary $400 plus maintenance.yr
For further information, please,
call at the office of the Bureau of
Appointments.E
The Bureau of Appointment and
Occupational Information has re-
ceived notification of the following
vacancies:
Qualified Chinese students for
1. Education. To experiment in
the teaching of English in middle
schools, to prepare readers that will,
give a cultural and linguistic train-a
ing required for the study of science;
may be a science man not necessarily
a specialist or trained in educational
philosophy but competent to handle
science phase of his work.
2. General Education.
3. Curriculum making.
American student for:
1. Commercial position in a Pres-
byterian mission school in Alexan-
dria, Egypt. Candidates must be
qualified to teach shorthand, type-
writing, and bookkeeping. Salary $450
per year plus room, board, and trav-
eling expenses.
Students desiring to make appli-
cation for these positions or wishing
further information,, please call at
the office of the Buieau of Appoint-
ments, 201 Mason Hall.
Girls' Cooperative House: All those
interested in living in the cooperative
house next year should: 1. Fill out an
application blank available at the
)ffice of the Dean of Women by Wed-
nesday, May 26; 2. Come to the

°nembership meeting to be held Sat-
urday noon in the League.
A cademic Notices
Qualifying Examination for Direct-
,dd Teaching: On account of numer-
us conflicts, it has been decided to
offer this examination both in the
morning and the afternoon of Sat-
urday, May 22. The student may
take his choice of times. The exam-
ination in the morning will begin at
3 a.m.; in the afternoon, at 1 p.m.
Comprehensive Examination in Ed-
ication: On account of numerous
.onflicts, it has been decided to of-
fer this examination both in the
morning and the afternoon of Sat-
urday, May 22. The student may take
his choice of times. The examina-
tion in the morning will begin at 9
a.m.; in the afternoon at 2 p.m.
Geology 11: Make-up exams (Blue-
books No. 1, 2 and 3) will be given
on May 28, in Natural Science Audi-
torium, at 11 a.m. This will be the
only opportunity to take any or all of
these exams.
Geology 12: Make-up exams (Blue-
bcoks No. 1. 2 and 3) will he genn

Mathematics 51 (Sec. 3), Math. 52
(Sec. 1), and Math. 222. Prof. W. O.
Menge will not meet these classes
Saturday morning.
Concerts
Carillon Recital: Wilmot F. Pratt,
University Carillonneur, will give a
recital on the Charles Baird Carillon
in the Burton Memorial Tower, Sun-
day afternoon, May 23, at 4:15 p.m.
Graduation Recital: Marguerite
Creighton, mezzo-soprano, St. Johns-
bury, Vt., will appear in graduation
recital Monday, May 24, at 8:15 p.m.
in the School of Music Auditorium
on Maynard Street. The general
public, with the exception of small
children, is invited.
Lectures
Chemistry Lecture: Dr. H. I.
Schlesinger of the University of
Chicago will lecture on "New De-
velopments in the Chemistry of the
Hydrides of Boron" at 4:15 p.m. on
Monday, May 24 in Room 303 of the
Chemistry Building. The lecture is
under the auspices of the American
Chemical Society, and is open to the
public.
University Lecture: "Continuity of
Style in Near Eastern Art" by Dr.
M. S. Dimand, Curator of Near East-
ern Art, Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York. Sponsored by the
Research Seminary in Islamic Art.
Monday, May 24, 4:15 p.m., Natural
Science Auditorium. The public is
cordially invited.
William S. Sadler, M.D., Chief Psy-
chiatrist and Director of the Chicago
Institute of Researchi and Diagnosis,
and author of "The Mind at Mis-
chief"; "The Physiology of Faith and
Fear," and "Theory and Pratice of
Psychiatry," will lecture in Natural
Science Auditorium at 4:15 p.m. on
Wednesday, May 26, upon: "Religion
and Mental Health."
Coming Events
Psychology Journal Club will meet
on Wednesday, May 26, at 7:45 p.m.
in Room 3126 N.S. Mrs. Mary C.
Van Tuyl will speak on "The Life
History Method."
German Table for Faculty lMIem-
ber: 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 in-
terested in speaking German are
cordially invited. There will be an in-
formal 10-minute talk by Prof. M.
Aga-Oglu.
Senior Women: Senior women and
others whg are interested in meeting
Julie Coburn of the School of Fa-
shion Careers come to Miss McCor-
mick's Office any time Monday, May
24.
Hillel Foundation: There will be a
dinner Sunday night at 6:30 at the
Union, at which the Hillel award will
be presented to Marshall D. Schul-
man and the reports of the relief
drive committees will be given. Every-
one is invited, and reservations for
the dinner which will cost 50 cents
be made by phoning the Hillel Foun-
dation or S. Leonard Kasle.
Phi Eta Sigma: There will be a
dinner meeting of Phi Eta Sigma at
the Union Sunday, May 23, at 6:30
p.m. Officers will be elected and a
tentative program adopted for the
coming year.
Scandinavian Club: The picnic is
arranged for Sunday afternoon.
Those going are to meet at 2:15 p.m.
at the East Engineers Arch.
The Bibliophiles: Faculty Women's
Club wll rieet, Tuesday, May 25,
with Mrs. Clifford C. Meloche, 2060

Dover Road.
Ann Arbor Friends: The next regu-
lar meeting of the Ann Arbor Friends
group will be held on Sunday, May
23, at the Michigan League, at 5
p.m. Meeting for worship will be
followed by a discussion on "Our
Quaker Heritage" led by Amy S.
Barton. Supper will follow in the
Russian tearoom, as usual.
It is planned to hold a meeting of
those who have expressed the desire
to be members of the Ann Arbor
Friends' Meeting, on Friday evening,
May 21, for the purpose of formally
organizing that meeting. Those who
wish to be members of the meeting
but who have not yet sent in their
mempership blanks are invited to
communicate with Arthur or Esther
S. Dunham (7830) before May 21.
Churches
Church of Christ (Disciples) Sun-
day.
10:45 a.m., Morning worship, Rev.
Fred Cowin, minister.
3;30 p.m., Meet at the church for
the trip to Saline Valley Farms. After
a tour of the farm, recreation and
nin nic... nnar, r Na rnl r flra,. ..ril

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