__ __ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ THE MICHIGAN DAILY siJN USUN t HIGAN DAILY I1 ., ,, =l F1 - - - -'g.ars - n -' " Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Studen* Publications. Pubiisled every morning except Monday during the niversity year and Bummer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fr republicatione6fall news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. En'veed at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as Second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, 4.00; by mail, $4.50. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38 REPRESENTED POR NATIONAL. ADVERTISING Y NationalAdvertisingService, Inc. oAllege Publishers Re esetative c 420 MADISON AvE. NEw YORK N. Y CHICAGO - BOSTON - LOS ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors MANAGING EDITOR .............JOSEPH S. MATTES ASSOCIATE EDITOR................ TUURE TENANDER ASSOCIATE EDITOR.. .. .. .IRVING SILVERMAN ASSOCIATE EDITOR..............WILLIAM C. SPALLER ASOIAEEDITOR.............ROBERT -P. WEEKS WOMEN'S EDITOR...............HELEN DOUGLAS PORTS EDITOR.. ..................IRVIN LISAGOR Business Department OUSINESS MANAGER..............ERNEST A. JONES CREDIT MANAGER...... ..... .......DON WILSHER ADVERTISING MANAGER . . ..NORMAN B. STEINBERG WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGERR........BETTY DAVY WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ..MARGARET FERRIES NIGHT EDITOR: ALBERT MAYIO It is important for society to avoid the neglect of adults, but positively dangerous for it to thwart the ambition of youth to reform the world. Only the schools which act on this belief are ed- ucational institutions in the best mean- ing of the term. Alexander G. Ruthven.r The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. The Double Standard And T1he Triple Standard ... IT IS STYLISH TODAY to consider askance the alleged double standard .existent in America. Actually, the standard is not double. It is triple! Somewhere far below the freedoms of the American white males and females there languish the privileges of the Amer- ican Negro whose present de facto existence riddles with bald-faced hypocrisy our heritage of equality and liberty. It is a platitude that the Civil War and the resultant legislation designed for the freedom of the Negro, were at best abortive attempts to help the black man. And perhaps during the recon- struction days, it was better that way. Carpet- baggers and the Republican party, armed with the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments, we know, descended like hungry vultures on the southland and gorged themselves with offices of 'public trust through the medium of the Negro vote. It Was natural that the crippled southern states Mhould take drastic measures to cleanse them- selves of this choking malignancy. The grand- father clauses, the Ku Klux Klan and the Union League were militant, ruthless and vindictive, but natural reactions, nonetheless, against the North's attempted rape of the South. Today, however, there is nothing natural, nothing logical, nothing reasonable, nothing just about the swashbuckling discrimination flouted everywhere in the face of the black man. The charges against the New York Bell Telephone Company last week are only a single incident in a weary list of race discriminations. Thus, South, Carolina follows an old Southern custom when it expends $60.06 a year for the education of a white child and $7.60 a year for the education of a Negro child. The importation of Negroes as Gcabs in strikes and the dual wage scale are facts far more than twice told, but facts, nonethe- less, that we do little to turn into fiction. Efforts to prove the black man inferior intel- lectually have fallen before the cold evidence of army Alpha tests, which found the Alabama whites rating inferior to the.Harlem Negro. Ef-. forts to prove the black man more disposed to :rime have fallen before the penetrating inves- igation of criminologists and the dubious impar- tiality of judges, juries and police. Vague ef- forts to prove the black man inferior by virtue f his color alone have fallen before biologic, inquiry which found black a decidedly superior color for torrid temperatures. The heritage of the Negro in America is a :roud one. The negro piloted Columbus across he unknown Atlantic. The Negro fought and found with Balboa. The Negro mustered out ,000 strong for the War of Independence. The Negro was instrumental in Jackson's splendid defense of New Orleans. The Negro swelled he ranks of the A.E.F. with 400,000 doughboys., As a contributor to the general tenor and pat- ern of American civilization we cannot deny the aegro his place. On the stage there has been he immortal Bert Williams, Charles Gilpin of The Emperor Jones," Frank Wilson of "Porgy," he "Lawd" Richard B. Harrison and All-Amer- :an Paul Robeson of Phi Beta Kappa and "Show 3oat." In literature: Booker T. Washington, Paul awrence Dunbar, William E. B. DuBois, William 1918 America's Negro youth returned from battle with a new sense of freedom. They had fought shoulder to shoulder with the American whites and they had acquitted themselves admirably. But the country and the South in particular, was fearful. The Southern white visioned a repe- tition of the recoistruction days, days whose horrors were just now fading after more than 60 years. Aggravating conditions were dema- gogues of the Heflin variety who ranged the rural southern sections with the diligence of a dog on a slop roite, touching off the fires of racial hatred. The Ku Klux Klan rose from its grave while Kleagles and Klailiffs reigned in terror. Lynch- mgs went up like Chrysler stock and the motion picture "The Birth of a Nation" crystallized the burning racial feeling. Inter-racial committees, criminologists and philanthropists are functioning effectively, but the help of the Negroes and the whites them- selves must be enlisted. Booker-T. Washington once said that the two races talked "too much about each other and not enough to each other." Too true. On our modern university campuses we see Negro men and women who do credit to any race. Let's talk to them. Robert I. Fitzhenry. Salsburg . . Arturo Toscanini is perhaps the only prac- ticing musician alive whose activities may be said to have an international political signifi- cance. This does not arise from politcal am- bition or from any detailed interest in political phenomena as such, but from his instantaneous reaction to situations that are politically caused. When Mussolini made the party line a con- / ditioning influence on the sort of music he performed, Toscanini withdrew as an active force in the musical life of Italy. If he had to perform the artistically puerile marching song of the Fascisti, he wouldn't perform anything. When Hitler drove the Jewish musicians of Germany from their posts, he promptly resigned as a director of the Bayreuth Festival. And now that he has announced his intention of staying away from the 1938 Salzburg Festival, it fol- lows that he no longer considers Austria-with its possible incipient Nazi-ism--an appropriate background for the free practice of his art. Needless to say, his decision is a serious blow to the Salzburg Festival. Those who attended the Festival in the last four years always found that tickets for the Toscanini operas and con- certs were almost impossible to obtain, while there were 'plenty of seats for all other at- tractions. They also found that this difference in demand was a"fairly accurate reflection of the differing quality of the various performances. .From the artistic view, his decision c n be only a matter of the deepest regret. Evp so, one cannot help being moved by such con- spicuous integrity and by the implied belief that what is degrading to a people must in- evitably be degrading to their arts. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Journalism, Public Service And Charm... Dr. Robert M. Hutchins, the young and provocative president of the University of Chi- cago, made a speech the other day to the Inland Daily Press Association which contained much sound sense. He may have been putting it a bit strong when} he said that "the shadiest educational ventures under respectable aus- pices are the schools of journalism," but he surely was on firm ground when he said that "what education cannot do is to prepare men and women for specific jobs." People can be taught how to run a linotype machine, they can be taught taxidermy, cattle judging, tree planting, dam building and a mil- lion other things, but the suspicion still re- mains that our educational system is mis- directed when it attempts to prepare a man directly for either journalism or public lifej It is somehow as pointless as trying to turn' an oaf into a gentleman in twelve easy lessons. After decrying the fact-and it is a fact- that "there is a ldt of loose talk going around in educational circles about the public service," Dr. Hutchins said that "public life" is con- cerned with action adapted to immediate con- crete situations, and that it is imposisble to learn how to deal with these situations "except by dealing with them." All this may sound obvious, but it isn't. Our colleges are even trying to teach people how to be happy. They try to teach them how to be big business executives. They try to give them an equip- ment which will enable them to take the seats of Dana, Greeley and Pulitzer. They even try to teach them how to administer public' offices, which is on par with trying to tell a man how, on some immediate tomorrow, he can be a LaGuardia or a Robert Moses. And while all this is going on, we live in a world where the fobs are few. Some of the schools of journalism have turned out competent and even distinguished news- paper men. The Harvard School of Business Administration likewise has turned out some good busines sexecutives. And so on. But we venture, to surmise that in almost every such instance the result was due not so much to the training received in such schools as to the qualities inherent in the individual-that, and the breaks of circumstances. The ability to operate a typewriter, to arrange an attractive typographical layout, or to make up a balanced front page 'are all admirable enough in a journalist. But the other things, the sound background, the inquiring and skep- tical mind, the awareness of what is happening in the world, the feeling for what is good and what is bad, would seem to be among the more important things which should be the partic- ular business of an educational system. Which is another way of saying that the concern of a college is the education of men and women, and not of jobholders. They will get the jobs, if there are any jobs to be had. And they may even turn out to be charming without any one having to tell them how to be. x:..femwfz'o Me H-eywood Broun In addition to a desire for rest and healthful living and early hours, I went to Florida chiefly to see "Snow White." After standing outside the Rockefellers' Music Hall for an hour or so I said to myself, "It can't be as good as all that." And I was wrong. It is. The Disney picture is a creation of great charm, high wit and much imag- ination. I have only one slight suggestion to make. I think it should be played under the strict rule that it is for adults only. I don't mean that chil- dren won't like it. Most of them enjoy it enormously. But that's the trouble. The tots and kiddies are enor- mously cruel and they are also extremely cur- ious about horrors and very receptive to sug- gestion. As a matter of fact I know a lot of little toddlers who would be just fascinated with Jim Cain's new novel, "Serenade." Just the same, I would try to keep it away from them, even if they didn't altogether get the idea. Fun For Aunt Clara Old Aunt Clara, yes, indeed! ,-Auit Clara doesn't have much fun these days and she will enjoy seeing the witch rolled around. I even suspect that the fine old gentlewoman may make an identification with the character. But I think little Mildred ought to stay home. She already has the habit of waking in the middle of the night and screaming that some- body is chasing her with a knife. Her parents erred, I believe, in letting her read the tabloids quiteso freely at the time of the bathtub murders. Still, they had a reasonable excuse. "What's the point of trying to keep the murder stories and photographs away from Mildred?" they said. "After all, she does listen to the kiddies' programs on the radio, and there always is something on them about spooks and hands coming through the wall to throttle people. And if it isn't the radio it's the funnies, where all the people get knocked about. The Case Of Little Mildred "Even school isn't always encouraging. Only last Friday Mildred came home from kinder- garten weeping her eyes ot about a nice little fairy story which the teacher had read. It was something of Hans Christian Andersen's about a little match girl who gets out into a blizzard and freezes to death. You know, Mil- dred is very precocious. She had heard pap say something at dinner about the depression and she figured that maybe pretty soon she'd be out selling matches herself, and freezing her ears off.-. "And papa says that if somebody doesn't turn those crazy Congressmen out maybe she will. So we've agreed not to try and stop Mildred from seeing anything or hearing anything. Our rule is to let her scare the life out of herself and then thump the breath out of her when she wakes up in the middle of the night and hollers." Now, certainly there is something to be said for this system, but it seems to me too harsh and too punishing for 'both parents and pro- geny. I would try to keep the little ones away from disturbing thoughts simply to make them sleep better at night. It may be selfish on my part. But there isn't much sense in filling a child with spinach for, his health and then letting him get stuffed with pictures of horrible old witches. Three Forms Of Conquest .. . The world in recent months has seen three conquerors in action, adding to their realms and their power by three distinctly different methods. In Ethiopia, Mussolini pursued= the ancient way of raw and naked force. The invaders bombed and blasted a sovereign people into submission, then supplanted their Government with military administrators from across the sea. Japan's militarists, too, use force and terror in the war on China, but adopt the fiction of puppet states -nominally headed by apostate Chinese, but actually dominated by Japanese "advisers"-to control the conquered areas. Hitler uses the more subtle technique of boring from within. He has accomplished the virtual annexation of Austria without firing a shot, without crossing a border, by merely insisting upon a Cabinet shuffle which puts his own adherents in places of power. There is no bloodshed, for the moment at least, in the Nazi method, but it is the most difficult one to combat. Austrian patriots sud- denly found that the brown-shirted enemy had captured their Government. Against foreign protests, Hitler can say that the Austrian coup is purely a domestic matter, and this is super- ficially true. The Austrian Nazis owe allegiance to Hitler and run to him for orders, to be sure, but their Cabinet appointments are in good order. This situation causes Britain and France, guarantors of Austrian independence, to hesi- tate as to protest or interference. Infiltration as a method of conquest is a sub- tle and dangerous device. It menaces all the nations that are within the orbit of the Nazi propaganda machine. The Austrian success, whose scope will not be fully known until Hitler delivers his Reichstag speech tomorrow, will doubtless stimulate the alert propagandists of the Third Reich to further efforts. Hitler can safely reiterate his avowed opposition to war. MUSIC SWillAM LICHTE'NWANlER iLile Symphony Concert (Sunday, 8 p.m., Michigan League) SONATA NO. 5 IN C MINOR -LOELLIET Every dog has its day, and every nation has its era of supremacy - in art as well as politics. Today, the lowland countries of Belgium and Holland have almost no musical in- dividualityor prestige, but there was a time, in the fifteenth and early six- teenth centuries, when even Mother Italy herself took a few lessons from the contrapuntal masters of the Netherlands School. With the pass- ing of the Reformation century, how- ever, also passed the musical ascen- dency of the Netherlands, to be suc- ceeded by the equally remarkable Dutch and Flemish printing of the seventeenth century. Then came music's period of ado- lescence in the eighteenth century, and from the low countries emanated a small group of minor composers headed by Jean Baptiste Loelliet which settled in other countries and thus lost its significance as artists in their native land. Lolliet was born at Ghent in 1653, but in 1705 went to London, where he became flutist in the orchestra at the Haymarket The- ater and thus probably took part in the performances of Handel's early operas. It was while he was in Lon- don that Loelliet's "Sonate a trois,' of which the C minor is the fifth were published by Walsh, who also published many of Handel's composi- tions. Rescored for chamber orches- tra by Thor Johnson, the C mino Sonata is in two movements, Grave and Andante. 'CONCERTO AND SYMPHONY ALONG DIFFERENT LINES Concerto in B minor for Viola and Orchestra - Handel. Because we think of the concerto as being very much a "symphony" for solo instru- ment and orchestra, and theref or as an offshoot of the symphonic form it is interesting to recall that the two forms were evolved along somewha different lines and that the concerto was the earlier of the two to be te- veloped. It must be remembered however, that the eighteenth cen- tury concerto was usually of the "gr osso" type, contrasting the tone colors and technical possibilities o a solo group of instruments with those of the orchestral tutti instead of "showing off" a single solo instru- mentasedoes the nineteenth cen- tury concerto. This Viola Concerto, nevertheless is of the latter type, and in the com- plexity of some of its rhythms, the warmly lyrical nature of its slow movement, and its comparative har- monic freedom, it appears quite ad- vanced for Handel. According to the score, the complete harmonigation and orchestration are the work of Henri Casadesus, brother of the bril- liant French pianist, but the original form of the music is not indicated It is definitely not a part of any of the concertos or other instrumental pieces contained in the complete col- lection of Handel's works, and if it really originated with Handel must have been completed from some un- published sketch. THREE PRINCIPAL FORMS OF HARPSICHORD COMPOSITIONS Solos for Harpsichord Alone. Here exemplified are the three principal forms in which eighteenth century harpsichord compositions were cast. From Handel's fifth Suite pour le Clavecin the Theme and Variations- long known popularly as "The Har- monious Blacksmith" from the erro- neous legend that it was suggested by the anvil-accompanied song of a blacksmith with whom the composer once took refuge from a storm - is a simple though melodious example of the variations form in which the theme is varied each time through the ornamental and pianistic elabora- tions suggested by a fluent keyboard technique. The "sonatas" (A, G, and D minor) of Domenico Scarlatti are not so called from their form but simply to distinguish them as instru- mental rather than vocal pieces; to- day they would be termed "etudes," for they usually were based on some problem of execution, and as such are elegant and scintillating rather than profound. The two preludes (D and E-flat minor) of Bach are from the famous "Well-Tempered Key- board," which served both to estab-. lish the practicability of the tempered tuning of keyboard instruments and as studies of great interest and musi- cal worth. ..Adagio, Opus 3 - Lekeu. For the second time within a week Ann Arbor will hear a work by Guillaume Lekeu, a Belgian like Loelliet, but separated from him by two centuries which were practically barren as far as Bel- gian music is concerned. Like the Violin Sonata played by Enesco, the Adagio is warmly romantic in char- acter, but with a touch of the elegiac, and even more rhapsodic in form. It could almost be called an orchestral recitative. Some slight literary hint as to the precise feelings of the com- poser in creating it is furnished by the quotation from Georges Vanor found on the title page: "Les Fleurs pales du Souvenir . . .." SCHUBERT FOLLOWED HIS INSTINCTS AND ROMANTICISM Symphony No. 5 in B-flat - Schu- bert. Though but nineteen at the (Continued from Page 2) Room 304 of the Union. Staff mem- bers and graduate students in Eco- nomics and Business Administration are invited to attend. Michigan Dames. The music group will meet Monday, March 7, 8:00 p.m. -at the Michigan League. New mem- bers cordially invited. Lt__ Bibliophiles. The Bibliophile sec- tion of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Tuesday, March 8, 2:30 p.m., at the home of Mrs. Lars Thomassen, - 2115 Woodside Road. Luncheon for Graduate Students on Wednesday, March 9, at 12 noon, in the Russian Tea Room of the Michi- gan League. Cafeteria Service. Prof. Carl Guthe, Director of the University Museums and Museum of Anthropol- ogy, and Chairman of the Division of Social Sciences, will speak informally on "The Chronological Records of the Maya Indians." Phi Tau Alpha. There will be a meeting of the Phi Tau Alpha, Tues- day, March 8, at 8:00 p.m. at the 9 Michigan League. Iota Sigma Pi: An important busi- ness meeting will be held on Tues- day, March 8, at University House at 7:30 p.m. At the close ofthe business meeting, the president will give a short talk on her research ework. Please attend. Acolytes: Prof. Paul Henle, of the philosophy department, will read a paper on "Verification" Monday eve- ning, March 7 at 7:45 in Room 202 S.W. Those interested in philoso- phical discussion are invited to.a- e tend. ' Intramural Fencing Tournaent: 0 t The entries for the Intramural Fen- cing Championship will be taken on Monday, March 7, in the small gym- nasium of the Itramural Building. Entries will be accepted for foil, sabre and epee. The first round will be f fought at 4:30 on Wednesday, March 9. Members of Scimitar will act as judges. No entries will be accepted after March 9. Congress: All district officers-both presidents and secretaries - are to meet Monday March 7, in the Con- gress office, Room 306, of the Union, at 7:30 p.m. The Educational Colloquy Club. We wish to announce to the student body the beginning of a new club for the f discussion of the problems and meth- ods of education. Our first meeting is open to all those interested in edu- cation and will be held in Lane Hall, . on Monday, March 7, at 8:00. There will be an open forum on the question, Are Our Modern Universi- ties Efficient? The discussion will be based on the views of Robert May- nard Hutchins as presented in his book "The Higher Learning" in Amer- ica. Congress: The Assembly-Congress Tea Dance Committee and Chairman will meet at 4:00 p.m. Monday in the League. Motion Pictures of scenic and recre- ational attractions of Wyoming, . Monday afternoon at 4:15, Natural Science Auditorium. The public is invited. Women's Swimming Class: The 7:30 p.m. swimming class for women will not meet on 'Tuesday evening, March 8th. Scandinavian Club: There will be a meeting in the "Upper Room" at Lane Hall, Wednesday, March 9, at 8:00 p.m. Professor Willey of the German Department will speak on the Early Scandinavian ,Literature and Folk Lore. Churches Disciples' Guild (Church of Christ) 10:45 a.m., Morning Worship. Rev. Fred Cowin, minister. 7 .5:30 p.m., Social hour and tea. 7 6:30 p.m., Mrs. Rosa Page, a prom-; inent Negro musician of Chicago, will speak on Spirituals. Mrs. Welch will sing a number of solos and will also lead the group in singing many of the best known Spirituals. All stu-t dents are welcome. First Baptist Church, Sunday, 10:45 a.m. Mr. Sayles, Minister of Church, will speak on "The Mastery of Self." This is the second in a series of Lenten sermons. Church School at 9:30, Dr. Logan, superintendent. Junior High at 4:30 p.m. Senior Hight at 6:00 p.m. Roger Williams Guild, Students,. both his own instincts and the ideals of the new romanticism whicht gripped his era by trying, with ama- teurish success, to color the restraintt and objectivity of the classic sym-c phony with warm and subjectivec emotions. In the fifth of his symphonies, how- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETI N P-.iiiatinn In th~e BEiItizi Is constructive notie to all mmn oer*t3th UniVersity C'OPYreceived at the Offte orf itbPf4Cnt to th E re~jlaeit unatii 2130~, 11:00 Ja. non lSatiirday. 12:00 noon, student group meets Mr. Chapman at Guild ,House for forty minute discussion o n "Efficient Churches." 6:15 p.m. Dr. Waterman will give the second talk on "The Religious In- heritance of Jesus, and What He did with it." First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:30; Subject, "Man." Golden Text: Romans 8:14. Sunday School at 11:45 after the morning service. First Congregational Church, cor- ner of State and William. 10:45 a.m., Service of worship. Beginning his Lenten sermons on the theme "What Is This Christian- ity?" Dr. Leonard A. Parr will preach on "An Event." The music will in- clude selections from Gounod's Motet "Gallia" by the choir under the di- rection of Mr. Henry Bruinsma; a so- prano solo by Miss Lois Greig; and Karg-Elert's "Clair de Lune" and "Choral Improvisation" by Miss Mary Porter, organist. 6 p.m. Professor Bennett Weaver whose talks to students have been so popular and inspiring, has consented to address the Student Fellowship for the next three Sunday evenings with talks that will contain the challenge of the Lenten season. The first of these addresses will be on "Reality Itself" and will follow the supper at 6. First Methodist Church: Morning Worship Service at 10:45 o'clock. Dr. Brashares will preach on "War and Peace." Service will be held in the Michigan Theatre. Stalker Hall. Student Class at 9:45 a.m. Prof. Carrothers will lead the discussion on "Serving With What We Have." Wsleyan Guild meeting !at 6 p.m. Kappa Phi will present a play, "Horizons of the Church." Fel- lowship Hour at 7, p.m. This is to be candid camera night. If you have a camera or kodak bring it with you. Mr. Ivory of the Calkins-Fletcher Co. will speak on some phase of photography. All Methodist stu- dents and their friends are cordially invited. FirstnPresbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. 10:45 a.m., "Creative Living" is the subject of Dr. W. P. Lemon's first Lenten sermon of a series on "Mod- erns and Miracles" at the Morning ,Worship Service. The student chir directed by Prof. E. W. Doty and the children's choir under the lead- ership of Mrs. Fred Morns will take part in the service. The musical numbers will include: Organ Pre- lude, "O Sacred Head Once Wound- ed" byKarg-Elert; Anthem, "Surely He Hath Borne Our Griefs" by .Lot- ti; Solo, "O Jesus, Lord of Mercy Great" by Sowerby, Burnette Brad- ley Staebler. 5:30 p.m., The Westminster Guild supper and meeting. The discussion groups on The Principles of Chris- tian Living-In Interpreting Events of Today; In Getting Along With People; In Men and Women Rela- tions, and In Business' and Profes- sions will be continued. The fifth group on Basic Principles of Chris- tianity will also meet. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship Sunday are: . 8:00 a.m., Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Church School; 11:00 a.m. Kin- dergarten; 11:00 a.m. Holy Commun- ion and Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. Harris Hall: There will be a cele- bration of .the Holy Communion in the Chapel at 9 a.m. Sunday morn- ing, followed by breakfast. The speaker Sunday evening will 'be Rab- bi Bernard Heller. His topic is "The Enduring Influence of the Hebrew Prophets," and his address will begin at seven o'clock. We are fortunate to have Rabbi Heller with us as he is not only a student of the Old Testa- ment, but is noted for a liberal out- look on present day problems. All Episcopal students and their* friends are cordially invited. Trinity Lutheran Church, corner of Williams St. and Fifth Ave. Pastor: Rev. H. O. Yoder. The sermon by the pastor will be on "Sin-With A Sinless Christ." Lutheran Student Club: 5:30 Zion Parish Hall. Marshall Levy from Ann Arbor Youth Guidance Project will be the speaker. His talk will in- clude case histories in connection with the Youth guidance project. The choir will meet as usual at 4 p.m. Unitarian Church, State and Huron Streets. This Sunday marks the re- turn to the morning services at 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m.. Morning Service. Rev. H. P. Marley will speak on "Shangri-La," man's search for his Lost Horizons. 7:30 p.m. Liberal Student's Union. Student discussion of war and peace with emphasis up- on the question of Collective Security and Isolationist points of view.