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October 10, 1937 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1937-10-10

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SAN DAILY

'I

. -;

I/If

'

raised from $5.00 to $6.50. It is mandatory that
all students buy the new edition.
Campus squirrels: Little animals that frisk
about the lawns and in the trees. Students may
feed them nuts and other delicacies if they (the
students) are careful to keep off the grass.
Big Man On Campus: A young man who takes
good care that business keeps a respectful dis-
tance from his pleasure.
Campus journalist: (To be filled in by you
on the pccasion of your next letter to The
Editor).

T)

FVAsa1K 1#ik'AslIonnA~ e K CoNe*'" i "N -' - - - *
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 Suiner 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,
$4.00; by mail, $4.50.
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVE.Ian a .WY
National Advertising Service, Inc.
Colleg Jublsdw~s eresentalive
420 MADISON Ave. NEW YORK, N. Y.
CHICAGO - BOSTON - LOS ANGELES S-SAR FRANCISCO
Board of Editors
sIANAGING EDITOR ............ .JOSEPH S. MATTES
EDITORIAL 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, S. R. Kleiman, Edward Mag-
dol, Albert Mayio, Robert Mitchell, Robert Perlman
and Roy Sizemore.
.SPORTS DEPARTMENT; Irvin Lisagor. chairman; Betsy
Anderson, Art Baldauf, Bud Benjamin Stewart Fitch,
Roy Heath and Ben Moorstein.
WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT: Helen Douglas, chairman,
Betty Bonisteel, Ellen Cuthvert, Ruth Frank, Jane B.
Holden, Mary Alice MacKenzie, Phyllis Helen Miner
Barbara Paterson, Jenny Petersen, Harriet Pomeroy,
Marian Smith, Dorothea Staebler and Virginia Voor-
hees.
Business Department
,BUSINESS MANAGER ..............ERNEST A. JONES
CREDIT MANAGER....................DON WILSHER
ADVERTISING MANAGER .... NORMAN B. STEINBERG
WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER........BETTY DAVY
WOMEN'SSERVICE MANAGER .. MARGARET FERRIES
Departmental Managers
Ed Macal, Accounts Manager; Leonard P. Siegelman,
Local Advertising Manager; Philip Buchen, Contracts
Manager; William New nan, Service Manager; Mar-
shall Sampson, Publications and Classified Advertis-
ing Manager; Richard H. Knowe, National Advertising
and Circulation Manager.
NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT E. FRYER
- - -
Squirrels Too: It's The
Natural Thing To Do . .
C AMPUS DEFINITIONS from the
album of a case-hardened alum-
nus who glances back on the literary college
(after two years Out In The World) with a
slightly jaundiced eye:
Intellectual: An earnest young. man who
marches through the campus with an unseeing
eye, the while he inhales only chemically pure
ozone; his right hand clutching a moss-encrust-
ed brief-case; his left hand enfolding a volume
of untranslated Hegel and a batch of inspired
(and mimeographed) sheets to be posted on
campus bulletin boards.
Reserve Officers Training Corps student: The
fellow who five minutes later will happen along
and strip the aforementioned mimeographed
chef d'oeuvre from the bulletin boards, on the
slightly erroneous grounds that it advocates im-
mediate and violent social revolution.
Beautiful Co-ed:
Every dove ...
Has Its Heart ...
Set On Love ..'
And you know . '
A woodchuck would.. ..
The Plain co-ed: The one who raises the
class average sky-high by whacking off a 99 in
her astronomy bluebook, thus making your 48
look uncommonly bad.
Literary college lecture section: An assemblage
of from 150 to 400 students who congregate in
a room about two feet shorter than the Hall of
Mirrors at Versailles, and strain their ears in an
echo-filled atmosphere that they may copy in
their notebooks thoughts which could be printed,
sold in the bookstores, and read and digested in
comfort at home.
Class skipper: The fellow who would rather
burn midnight tallow in a bull session on politics,
athletics and sex (listed in inverse order of im-
portance) than bend an ear towards less stim-
ulating but more academically important duties
in Angell Hall. He has already quite forgotten
the letter from home (received two days ago)

in which Mother pointed out to him that she
and Dad would have to skimp quite a bit to
muster that initiation cash and the next semes-
ter's tuition. Before the bull session began The
Young Man had taken two girls to an afternoon
movie and.to dinner; then they were joined by
"a few others" for an evening over the flowing
bowl west of Division Street.
Nature's noblemen: Those all-too-few profes-
sors you will never forget, because two happy
things come in concert: The professors imbued
you with an actual desire to learn, and the
classes were so small and select that you were
not held back by the fringe of doltish hangers-on
that makes most literary- college work weari-
some.
State street "coffee shop," Grade A: A rendez-
vous for well-dressed, well-mannered young men
and women who sit, and sit, and sit, and chat:
The young men will become vice-presidents of
fairish large industries some day, and the young
ladies will be their wives.
Hours for women: The authorities' tacit as-
sumption that co-eds are too young to be here
and tend to their own knitting.
_ L . -- f7 ....t. .+.r.;- + - ,l ..

MUSIC

By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER
Marcel Dupre
The Duke and Duchess of Windsor, we hear,
are coming to America. So is the English parson
who dared all to marry the half-royal pair. And
so, to complete the story, is Marcel Dupre, the
distinguished French organist who provided the
music for the ceremony.
The latter's visit. however, has nothing to
do with the Windsors. As a matter of fact, Mr.
Dupre arrived in this country over a week ago
to begin the two-month recital tour which will
bring him to Ann Arbor next Wednesday. At
8:30 p.m. he will appear in recital at Hill Audi-
torium, assisted by his pianist-daughter Mar-
guerite. ' Admission is complimentary to the
public, but tickets must be secured through ap-
plication to the School of Music Business Office.
Few virtuosi of the past or present have had
a more brilliant career than Marcel Dupre. Born
in 1886 at Rouen, the scion of a family which
had already yielded three organists of note, at
the age of ten young Marcel was soloist at the
Rouen Exhibition of 1896, playing from memory
preludes and fugues of Bach (how the legs of
a ten-year-old could reach the pedals is not
recorded). At 12 Dupre was appointed organist
of St. Vincent's Church in Rouen, and at 15 his
first important composition, a biblical oratorio
The Dream of Jacob, was performed.
WINS PIANO, ORGAN
AND COUNTERPOINT PRIZES
Then the youth attended the Paris Conserva-
toire and at 19 won first prize in piano, at 21
that in counteroint, at 23 in organ, and at 28
the Grand Prix de Rome, the most famous of all
musical awards. In 1906 Dupre was appointed
to assist his master, Charles Marie Widor, as
organist of St. Sulpice in Paris, where he him-
self is now in command, and from 1916 to 1922
he held the organistship of Notre Dame. At
present he also holds professorships at the Con-
servatoire and other Paris institutions.
But it is as a concert artist and composer
for the organ that Dupre has achieved his great-
est fame. In 1920 he accomplished the well-
nigh incredible feat of playing from memory, in
ten monumental recitals at the Conservatoire,
the entire organ works of Johann Sebastian
Bach. -
It was in that same year that he inaugurated
his recital tours through England and America,
which elicited the most extravagant praise the
press and public could bestow. He was called in
turn the "Paderewski," the "Caruso," the "Ca-
sals," and the "Paganini" of the organ. Now
the name Dupre itself is as significant a term
as could be used.
In the creative field Marcel Dupre is recog-
nized as a highly gifted and facile composer
for the organ and other instruments as well,
although his works are hardly all of equal qual-
ity.
WILL PLAY THREE
OF HIS OWN PIECES
In his Ann Arbor recital he will play three
of his most recent compositions. One is a Prelude
and Fugue in C major, described as "exuberant
and high-spirited," leaching a "climax of daz-
zling brilliancy." Two short pieces termed "Ele-
vations" are from a group of three completed
last year, and are of a rather mystic nature.
The third work is unusual in several respects:
it is a Variation on Two Themes for Piano and
Organ, dedicated to the composer's daughter,
Marguerite, who will join him in its performance,
and composed especially for the present tour to
take the place of a Ballade in the same form
which the pair have performed frequently in Eu-
rope. Unlike the ordinary single Theme and Var-
iations, this work is constructed around two dis-
tinct and contrasting themes which are presented
successfully in various keys and combinations.
Besides his own compositions, Mr. Dupre will
perform here seven works of other composers,
including a descriptive piece "Up the Saguenay"
from Russell's St. Lawrence Sketches, the Inter-
mezzo from the First Symphony of Gilles (a
talented young pupil of Dupre), and the Allegro
from the tenth of Handel's twelve concertos foi
organ and orchestra..
Bach is represented by the famous C mino

Passacaglia and Fugue, a magnificent contra-
puntal masterpiece based on a four measure
theme in the rhythm of an old Italian or Spanish
dance.
GUILMANT, VIERNE,
WIDOR COMPOSITIONS
The first three numbers on the program are
to be played in memory of their respective
composers. The first is the Finale from the Fifth
Sonata of Felix Guilmant, renowned French or-
ganist and teacher of Dupre's father. Second
is the Cantilene from the Third Organ S'ym-
phony of Louis Vierne, the great organist of
Notre Dame who died suddenly last June 2nd in
the midst of a recital he was giving in Paris.
Next is the Toccata from the Fifth Symphony
of Charles Marie Widor, Dupre's teacher and
predecessor at St. Sulpice and probably the
greatest composer for the organ since Bach.
A c .,ha nnirinp, nr-tin f hie vo,ital oiM'v

IT SEEMS
TO ME
By Heywood Broun
If Woodrow Wilson were alive today he would
be entitled to smile broadly though grimly over
a new item originating from Boise, Idaho. After
reading Mr. Roosevelt's Chicago speech, Senator
Borah gave out a statement in which he said,
"Every American will support the President in
that policy."
But this was a speech in which Franklin
Roosevelt declared for concerted effort by the
peace-loving nations of the world. Has the Idaho
Lion so soon forgotten that he put the knife into
the ribs of the League of Nations and became
the father and founder of American isolation?
World's Concerns Are Ours
Indeed, when the League had been killed by
the diehards of the Senate all the victors proudly
proclaimed that the issue had been settled for
all time as far as America was concerned and
that never again would we so much as touch the
hem of our garment to any entangling alliance.
And just to make it certain, the World Court was
ruled out with just as much violence as the
League. Europe, and, indeed, all the other na-
tions beyond our borders, were to stew in their
own juice. What happened in any, other corner
of the earth was no concern of ours. Behind a
high board fence we were to play in our own
backyard and pay no heed to any groans and
mutterings which came from beyond the wall.
I am not a passionate partisan of Woodrow
Wilson. It seems to me that he fumbled in
entering in the war and erred again most griev-
ously in the terms of settlement to which he
agreed. But at least he had more foresight
about the future than the men who said, "Let
them stew in their own juice." The fumes of
that devil's brew bring contagion on the wind
and there is no wall high enough to keep the
poison from the very air we breathe.
Peace cannot be regarded as wholly a local
issue. It will be said truthfully enough that the
League has been a feeble thing with a record
of failure in every crisis. It will be said, but
it should not be said by any of the men or forces
in this country which doomed it to defeat by
driving home their daggers.
* * * *
League Of Peoples In Order
The old League is dead. Of that there can be
little doubt, but it now becomes the duty of the
nations of the world to build a better one on a
more democratic basis. In fact, it must be a
leagueof peoples, for there can be no great hope
for anything which a little group of diplomats
may achieve in secret session.
President Roosevelt has spoken of "quaran-
tine," and the word will suffice, since it is an
epidemic disease against which the democracies
of the world must guard themselves. But the
President has already said too much or too little
unless he has in mind the development of some
definite program of effort by which the plague
of Fascism can be effectively localized. We must
be quick and frank in recognizing the forces
in Europe which are sincerely devoted to peace
and those which are committed to war as the
last toss of the dice in maintaining their system.
America Must Play Her Part
It is sound to say that Fascism is actually a
synonym for war. The Italians have a right to tie
form of government which they want, and the
same is true of the Germans. Although, for that
matter, so have the Chinese and the duly consti-
tuted loyalist republic of Spain. But the fact we
must face is that Mussolini and Hitler press for
world conquest. We ought to play our part in
establishing an economic boycott. It is a small
world and we are not alone.
11 _

hourRADIO j
TED WEEMS leads his charges through the
script at 1:30 p.m. via CKLW. A nice half
hour of music but tha.t Varady of Vienna does
plenty to spoil things . . . Frank Black conducts
the symphony, Jean Sablon sings, and Milton
Cross announces on the Magic Key of RCA
show at 2 p.m. by WLW . . . CBS's Everybody's
Music airing takes place at 3 p.m. Howard Bar-
low waves the baton. A WJR musical . . . 4:30
p.m. is the time of Irving Conn to take the
Mutual air with his band--CKLW . . . Rosalind
Russell and Jimmy Stewart are the stars on the
Silver Theatre Show at 5 p.m. through WJR.
Conrad Nagel, formerly a cinema actor, directs
this new CBS feature . . . Also at 5 p.m. are the
songs of Marion Talley; Joseph Koestnre's or-
chestra and the fine vocals of the Paul Taylor
Chorus. An NBC show going out over WWJ ...
Guy Lombardo and his pastry-crew do the Bond
Bread tea hour affair at 5:30 p.m. Joe Penner,
minus the duck, and Jimmie Grier's band air at 6
p.m. via WJR . . . Bunny Berigan, white king
of the trumpet, is stuck with those very sad,
make-believe comics, Tim and Irene at 6:30 p.m.
-CKLW. The Berigan band is strictly fine and
should be on a better commercial . . . 7 p.m. is
the time. WWJ the station. Jell-o the sponsor-
Jack Benny, Mary Livingstone, Andy Devine,
Kenny Baker, and the music of Phil Harris the
attractions. Sunday evening's best radio show.
7:30 p.m. brings Ozzie Nelson, and Harriet Hil-
liard to the NBC mikes - carried by WLS and
WJZ. . . Chase and Sanborn are spending plenty
to bring Nelson Eddy, Don Ameche, W. C. Fields,
and Dorothy Lamour to the air, plus the orches-
tra of Armbruster at 8 o.m. and through WW.T ..

If 14

Continued fromPage 2)I
last term of attendance (viz., semes-
ter or summer session) will receive
a grade of E in the course unless this
work is made up by Oct. 27. Students
wishing an extension of time should1
file a petition addressed to the ap-
propriate official in their school with(
Room 4 U.H. where it will be trans-l
mitted.
Robert L. Williams, I
Asst. Registrar.
N.Y.A. Applicants: All students who
have filed applications for NYA aid
and have not yet filled out their per-
sonnel cards, should do so at once.
Committee on Student ReliefI
Employment.
Notice. There is undelivered mail
in the Mathematics Office, 3012 An-
gell Hall, for Donald Western.
Department of Mathematics: There
will be a meeting of staff members
of the Department of Mathematics
on Wednesday, October 13, at 4:15
p.m., 'in Room 3201 Angell Hall.
Students, College of Literature,
Science and the Arts: No course may
be elected for credit after the end
of the third week. Saturday, Oc-
tober 16. is therefore the last date
on which new elections may be ap-
proved. The willingness of an indi-
vidual instructor to admit a student
later would not affect the operation
of this rule.
All Candidates for the Teacher's
Certificate to be granted on recom-
mendation of the Faculty of the
School of Education by June 1938
are requested to call immediately at
he office of the Recorder of the
School of Education, 1437 U.E.S., to
fill out application blanks for the
Certificate. (This notice does not in-
clude School of Music students.)
German Table for Faculty Mem-
bers: The regular luncheon meeting
will be held Monday at 12:10 in the
Founders' Room of the Michigan
Union. All faculty members interest-
ed in speaking German are cordially
invited.
.Union Coffee Hour: Men students
and faculty members are cordially in-
vited to visit the coffee hour held each
day starting Monday, Oct. 11, from
4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in .the small ball-
room of the Union.
Phillips Scholarships: The exami-
nations for these scholarships, which
are open to all freshmen in the Col-
lege of Literature, Science and the
Arts, will be held on Tuesday, October
12, at 4:00 p.m. in 2016 Angell Hall.
Candidates will be examined on four
units of Latin or four units of Latin
and two of Greek. Freshmen who
wish to participate should register
with Professor Blake, 2024 Angell
Hall, or Dr. Copley, 2026 Angell Hall.
Institute of the Aeronautical Sci-
ences. It is necessary that all mem-
bers of the Institute fill out member-
ship forms. These forms must be
sent to the parent organization, thus
entitling the members to a year's
subscription to the Institute journal.
These forms will be placed on the bul-
letin board in the Aeronautical Engi-
neering department or may be ob-
tained from the officers of the organi-
zation. Members are urged to fill out
the blanks as soon as possible in order
to obtain the forthcoming issues of
the journal.
A.A.U.W. Mempership: Women in-
terested in joining the American As-
sociation of University Women are
urged to call the memberhsip chair-
men, Mrs. William G. Dow of the
Major Group (Dial 7187) or Miss
Hannah Lennon of the Junior Group
(Dial 7794).
Crop and Saddle: All women in-

terested in trying out for membership
:n this riding club will please sign
the lists posted on the Barbour Gym-
nasium and Women's Athletic Build-
ing bulletin boards as soon as pos-
sible. Those wishing to try out will
meet at Barbour Gymnasium at 3:30
p.m., Oct. 11. Transportation will
be arranged. For further information,
call Dorothy White at 2-2591.
University Girls' Glee Club: There
will be tryouts for membership in the
club at the' League on Monday and
Tuesday, Oct. 11 and 12, respectively,
from 3 to 5 o'clock. We urge all wom-
en who are at all interested to be at
the tryouts. We expect a large, well-
organized group this year.
Choral Union Concert Tickets. The
"over-the counter" sale of season
tickets for the 59th Annual Choral
Union Concert series, consisting of
10 numbers, will begin Monday morn-
ing, Oct. 11, at 8:30 o'clock at the
School of Music Business Office on
Maynard St. A limited number of
season tickets at $12, $10 and $8 will
be available.
Academic Notices
R.O.T.C.: Monday and Tuesday
sections in M.S. 3 will not meet on'
October 11 or 12. These sections will
assemble in the auditorium of Natural
Sciene Bunildling at -2n n m_ vThir_

Room 4000 University High School at 1
once.
Concerts
Twilight Organ Recital. MarcelI
Dupre, distinguished French organist,I
will appear in recital Wednesday ev-I
ening, October 13, at 8:30 o'clock in
Hill Audtiorium. There will be no
admission charge, but admission will
be by tickets which may be obtained
so long as they last, at the office of
the School of Music on Maynard
Street.
Carillon Recital. Wilmot F. Pratt,,
University Carillonneur, will give a1
recital on the Charles Baird Carillon
in the Burton Memorial Tower, Sun- !
day evening, Oct. 10, from 7:30 to,
8:30 o'clock.
Lectures
Chemistry Lecture: Dr. Donald D.
Van Slyke of the Rockefeller Insti-
tute for Medical Research will speak
on "The Physiology of the Amino
Acids" in the Chemistry Amphi-
theatre at 4:15 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct.
12. The lecture is under the auspices
of the University and the American
Chemical Society. It is open to the
public.
Events Of Today
The Hillel Foundation extends a
cordial invitation to all members of
the Freshman Class to attend a tea
in their honor at the Foundation on
Sunday afternoon from 4 to 6 p.m.
The Foundation is located on the
corners of Oakland and East Univer-
sity.
Vulcans: Important meeting to-
night at the Union at 6:15 p.m.
Varsity Glee Club: Rehearsal and
additional try-outs for old and pros-
pective members, Michigan Union, at
4:30 p.m. today.
Corning Events
Varsity Debaters, Attention There
will be a meeting of all men interested
in varsity debate in Room 4020, An-
gell Hall. Tuesday, October 12, 4:00
p.m.
Contemporary: There will be a
meeting of the committee chairmen
Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock, in
the Publications Building.
Scalp and Blade members will
please get in touch with the secretary
-phone 8407- at their earliest op-
portunity in preparation for the next
meeting.
Polonia Literary Circle will hold its
first meeting of this year, Thursday,
October 14, at 7:30 in the League.
The room will be posted on the bulle-
tin board. All students of Polish ex-
traction are urged to attend. Plans
for future meetings will be discussed.
Mathematics Club will meet Tues-
day evening, October 12, at 8 p.m., in
Room 3201 Angell Hall. Professor
L. C. Karpinksi will speak on "Descar-
tes and the Modern World." This
is a paper delivered at the Interna-
tional Congress of Philosophy in Paris
in August, 1937, at the Descartes Ter-
centenary.
Quadrangle: Wednesday, October
13, 8:15 p.m. "The Present Crisis in
China's Affairs," Arno L. Bader. Not-
ices have been sent to all members
whose addresses are unchanged from
last year. Student members should
consider this notice as an invitation.
Mechanical Engineers: First, meet-'
ing of A.S.M.E. Wednesday, October
13, at 7:30 in the Michigan Union.
Dean H. C. Anderson will speak, and
the aims of the Society will be ex-
plained All mechanical students are
welcime -likewise the faculty!
Cider and doughnuts will be served
to all attending --let's have a big
turnout.

All Freshman Engineers are invit-
ed to the annual Freshman *moker
held by SigmaRho Tau, Honorary
Engineering Speech Society, at the
Michigan Union, rooms 321-3, this
Tuesday evening, October 12, at 7:30
p.m. Prof. F. N. Menefee, formerly
national president, will be the prin-
cipal speaker. Refreshhents will be
served.
Security Committee of Progressive
Club will meet Monday evening at
8:00 at the Union.
Foreign Student Tour to the Ford'
Factory: Because of the fact that the
Ford Factory is closed Saturdays, it
has been necessary to schedule the
trip to the factory for Thursday, Oct.
14. These tours, while primarily in-
tended for the foreign students of the
University, are open also to a limited
number of Americans interested in
meeting the international groups. The
bus will leave Angell Hall at 1 o'lock.
The fare will be $1.10.
Faculty Women's Club: Mrs. R. D.
T. Hollister will entertain the mem-
bers of the Book Shelf and Stage Sec-
tion at her home on South State
Road,aat a pot-luck luncheon, on
Tuesday, Oct. 12 at 12:30.
Junior A.A.U.W. Dinner Meeting:
Pronf (hpstpr R .Slawsnn orf +t M n-

by calling the League (Dial 23251) be-
fore Tuesday night.
Women Graduate 'Students: Any
woman graduate student wishing to
play hockey with the Ann Arbor Field
Hockey Club is invited to come out on
Sunday morning at 9:30 a.m. Meet at
the Women's Athletic Building.
University of Michigan Glider Club.
The first meeting of the University of
Michigan Glider Club will be held at
7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 12, in Room
348, West Engineering Building. All
old members, and those who are in-
terested in gliding and soaring are
invited. Membership is open to any-
body in the University. No previous
experience is required .
Churches
First Congregational Church Wil-
liam and State.
10:45 service of worship. Sermon
by Rev. Leonard A. Parr.
6:00 Student Fellowship. Prof. H.
Y. McClusky will speak on "Social
Opportunities of Student Life." Sup-
per and fellowship hour is planned.
Church of Christ (Disciples): 10:45
a.m., Morning Worship, Rev. Fred
Cowin, Minister.
12:00 noon, Student Bible Class,
H. L. Pickerill, leader.
5:30 p.m., Social Hour and Tea.
6:30 p.m., Program, "Campus Re-
sources for Personal Enrichment."
The program will be a continuation
of last Sunday's discussion aind will
deal with the contribution of music
and the intellectual interests of the
campus.
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
409 S. Division St.
Sunday morning service at 10:30.
Subject, "Are Sin, Disease and
Death Rel?"
Golde Text: Romans 8:2.
Sunday School 11:45, after the
morning service.
First Baptist Church, 10:45 a.m.
worship. Sermon by Rev. R. Edward
Sayles, Minister. Subject, "Onlook-
krs." Church School at 9:30, Dr.
A. J. Logan, Supt.
Roger Williams Guild (Baptist Stu-
dent Organization), 12 noon, follow-
ing church worship, student class
meets with Mr. Chapman, University
pastor, in Guild House, closing hour
12:40.
At six o'clock big evening gathering
of students for special program on
"The Church in the Life of Youth."
Four student speakers: The Misses
Mary Jane Lange and Primitiva De-
mandante, together with Arthur
Kratzman and Frank Rideout. Free
conference on this subject specially
invited. After the program refresh-
ments will be served during an hour of
social acquaintance.
First Presbyterian Church: Meet-
ing at the Masonic Temple, .327 S.
Fourth Ave.:
10:45 a.m. "The World Unseen" is
the subject of IDr. W. P. Lemon's
sermon at the Morning Worship Serv-
ice. Music by the student choir under
the direction of Prof. E. W. Doty of
the School of Music. The musical
numbers will be as follows: Organ
Prelude, Partita "Von Himmel Af"
by Bach; Anthem, "Credo" Tradi-
tional; Solo, "Eye Hath Not Seen"
from The Holy City by Gaul.
5:30 p.m. Westminster Guild, stu-
dent group, supper and fellowship
hour. At the meeting which follows
Dr. W. P. Lemon will speak on the
subject "Why Religion?" A cordial
invitation is extended to all students
of Presbyterian affiliation and their
friends.
Harris Hall: Prof. Randolph Adams
will speak on "Opportunities I

Missed" at the Student Fellowship
meeting at Harris Hall tomorrow eve-
ning at 7 p.m. All Episcopal stu-
dents and their friends are cordially
invited.
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church.
Services of worship Sunday, Oct. 10
are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion, 9:30
Church School, 11 a.m. Kindergarten,
11 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon
by The Reverend Frederick W. Leech.
Lutheran Student Club will meet
in Zion Parish Hall corner of Fifth
Ave. and Washington St. Sunday at
5:30 p.m. Supper will be served at
6 p.m. Prof. Paul Kauper of the Law
Faculty and former president of the
Club will be the speaker. All Lu-
theran Students and their friends are
cordially invited to attend.
Trinity Lutheran Church, corner of
Fifth Ave and East Williams St. Serv-
ices will be held at 10:30 a.m. Sermon
by the pastor on "Be True To What
You Know of Christ."
Unitarian Church: Sunday morn-
ing service 11 a.m. Mr.rMarley will
speak on "Religion, Here or Here-
after"-The- Private Life of a Fra-
ternity Man.
Liberal Students' Union, 9 o'clock
socia hl nrPain, ma'tivnanngt-

11

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University.
Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday.

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