/ THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AN. 15, 1 SUNDAY, JAN. 15, UI [E MICHIGAN DAILY "Symphonic Records" -'I _ i _ ( I ~Wd*IMM5OR Edited and managed by students of the University of lichigan under the authority of the Board in Control of tudent Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the niversity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the se for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All ghts of republication of all other matters herein also served. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as 'cond class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, 1.00; by mail, $4.50. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Represent tive 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. CHICAGO BOSTON * LOS ANGELS -SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1938-39 g Ed I Dir tor Board itor ector tor itor tor ftor tor tor tor of Editors Robert D. Mitchell . , . Albert P. Mayio . . Horace W. Gilmore . . Robert 1. Fitzhenry S. R. Kleiman, . . . Robert Perlman . . . Earl Gilman William Elvin Joseph Freedman . Joseph Gies Dorothea Staebler * . Bud Benjamin ate Ec1 ate Ed] ate Edii Editor n's Edit 3Editor Business Department Business Manager. . . , Philip W. Buchen Aredit Manager . Leonard P. Siegelman Advertising Manager... William L. Newnan Women's Business Manager . . Helen Jean Dean Women's Service Manager . . . Marian A. Baxter NIGHT EDrrOR: ETHEL Q. NORBERG The editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of the Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Jusfice Where ustice Is Due .,. O RCHIDS for the most vicious propa- gandistic writing of the day go not, as usual, to Nazi Goebbels but to an anonymous American journalist writing about a fellow- American. The article, "To Hell With Lind- bergh," appears in a picture magazine just issued. Nothing turned out by the champions of totali- tarianism can surpass this for unadulterated emotionalism, for uncompromisingly portraying only the seamy side of a man's character. This is American yellow journalism at its yellowest. Fostered by Lindbergh's acceptance of a Nazi swastika, the article and the pictures that accom-' pany it present to the American public a con- glomeration of purportedly true facts designed to blacken every important event in the flyer's life. Because his recent actions have been viewed unfavorably, it is now revealed that his famous flight, his parental relations, his marriage, have their unpleasant details. No more complete assortment of insidious gossip was ever whispered at an old maid's convention. To damn Lindbergh as a btrayer of demo- cracy, to brand him with the same tools of propa- ganda usually reserved for the Nazis, however, transcends the limits of mere gossip. The photo magazine, attempting to be bold in its fomenting Of what it terms Americanism, has become more scurrilous than courageous. There is a stand to be taken against Lindbergh. Undoubtedly his acceptance of the German swas- lika must b censured. Even though he has been absent from America during the most rapid growth of the anti-Nazi spirit, he should realize that intimate hobnobbing with figures like Goer- ng and Goebbels can merit only hostility from his countrymen. His ill-advised attack on the Russian air force and his declaration that the German squadrons are superior to the combined forces of Russia, France and Great Britain could make the Nazi presentation seem little more than, V reward for services rendered. It is probable that, the Lindbergh we have stereotyped in our minds was largely a myth, a reation of mass enthusiasm. Now the myth is being dispelled because Lindbergh does not, probably cannot, live up to it. But to condemn verything he has done, every triumph in his bast, on some present pretext, is analagous t. ondemning a movie actor because he does not Barry over his acting into real life. To attempt to aunch a hysterical crusade of complete exter- nination of all that Lindbergh has achieved is in affront to average American intelligence. One annot forget that Lindbergh has increased as nuch as anyone during the last decade the nationalistic ego, the "Americanism" that the hoto magazine seeks so ardently to foster. The picture magazine, however, cannot be held .ntirely to blame for such cheap propaganda. It s simply going one step farther than the library Which banned Anne Morrow Lindbergh's books. .t is merely doing its bit toward crystallizing in he American mind a bigotry reminiscent of the Oiddle Ages. --Hervie Haufler ',1G 'FS . f-r "+- , tn. ... Y ~ _ _f By WILLIAM J. LICHTENWANGER OF THE numerous releases with which RCA Victor greeted its rapidly widening public at Christmas time, probably those of the greatest popular interest are two albums issued in obeis- ance to the current idol, Wagner. One album (VM-508, $9.00) contains the new revised version of Stokowski's "Symphonic Synthesis" of Tristan and Isolde, played of course by the Philadelphia Orchestra with the redoubtable Leopold at its helm. The other (VM-516, $4.50) is a two-record affair with three sides drawn from Parsifal and one from Lohengrin, Lauritz Melchior singing and the Philadelphia Orchestra again doing the honors, this time under Eugene Ormandy's direc- tion. It has been five years now since Mr. Stokowski first pieced together his virtual symphonic poem from the music of Wagner's Tristan. Since that time, through the enlightening genius of one Kirsten Flagstad, Wagner has risen in this coun- try from the status of just another German opera composer to the position of god both of opera and concert, and thus the Stokowski set will now undoubtedly have a much wider appeal than when its predecessor first appeared. Also, in the meantime, the energetic Leopold has performed similar feats of surgery upon other music dramas -Rheingold, Parsifal, Boris Godounov-, and evidently saw his earlier work a little differently in the light of later experience. Wagner Critics Object Frankly, we prefer the first version, which ad- heres more nearly to the sequence of the music in the original. Some critics, of course, puristic- ally raise their eyes in horror at this "butchery" of Wagner's score. With this unnecessarily strict and conservative viewpoint we disagree. Grant, as we must today in spite of violent grave-turning on the composer's part, that Wagner is vital to the concert hall as well as to the theater, and, too, that the force of his music is many times impeded by outmoded and extraneous consider- ations of philosophy and drama-then it must also be admitted that it is far more sensible to adapt his music to new age and new environment than to suffer it gradually to succumb intact to the ever-changing demands of musical progress. There is much worthy music in the operas of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries that is lost to us today because we do not care for the dramatic inanities upon which it is based and, wanting whole hog or nothing, get nothing. Cer- tainly what Stokowski does to Wagner's Tristan is no different in principle from what Wagner himself did in the case of his miniature symphon- ic poem, the Siegfried Idyll, constructed largely out of music from the Ring. No, the important thing is not whether the composer is adhered to literally, but whether his music aghieves an equal and corresponding, though not identical, effect in "synthesization" to that of its original form. In respect to Stokow- ski's new Tristan Synthesis, we feel that in some ways this goal is achieved admirably. In one great point, however, the effect of Wagner's music is distorted and lessened. As in the first version, Stokowski bases his symphonic poem principally upon the Prelude, the Love Duet from the Second Act, and the Liebestod with which the music drama closes. Here, however, the brief passages Turbulent Germany .. N A RECENT editorial, "Germany's Fourth Front," we offered evidence that all was not well in the state of Germany, and therefore in the event of a war there would ie strong likelihood of the overthrow of Hitler. We have since discovered! that there is a wide- spread contrary feeling that refuses to grant the basic premise which we felt was almost obvious. A recent letter to the editor crystallized this phil- osophy in maintaining that Chancellor Hitler is not only well-entrenched among the German people, but that he has done so much for them that his "few wrong moves" are to be overlooked. The letter revealed that the economic condi- tions in Germany are fine, unemployment has disappeared, internal anti-fascist feeling is rapid- ly vanishing, the German people are "glad and thankful for change that has come about," and there is no reason for France and England to oppose Germany, since Communism in those countries would inevitably follow Hitler's fall. This is based solely on letters from friends and relatives of the writer who live in Germany, and well-known Nazi propaganda. If conditions in Germany are tolerable,-if the wartime rations,-black bread, inedible eggs, and a lack of milk, coffee, fruit,,and sugar-the New York Times reports extant in Germany, are tolerable conditions; If putting seven million unemployed to work on highways and ditches, and munitions, under compulsory conditions readily comparable to the chain gangs, is solving the unemployment prob- lem; If the Gestapo, an organization of at least 100,000 spies, is a mere well-trained police force, maintained at tremendous expense because "there, are still some nitwits who ban not see or do not want to see the facts" (sic); If the elaborate precautions Heinrich Himm- ler is taking against "any considerable attempt at rebellion-twhich can be expected at any time" (Himmler) are indications that the people are glad and thankful for Hitler; If the violent pogroms, described by the "New York Times" as a catastrophe difficult to believe created by the deliberate action of any human will, are minor evils to be condoned because of the positive good Hitler has brought to Ger- many; If the antagonism for the Third Reich has from Scenes 4 and 5 of Act I and Scene I of Act III are omitted, and the anxious, yearning Introduction to Act II is given much more fully. So far so better. But what is inconceivable is that instead of carrying the Liebestod on to its and the opera's sublime conclusion, Stokowski breaks it off at the moment of its climax and finishes with the noisy, unimportant "tag" from the end of Act II. Thus the beauty of the Liebes- tod is irreparably marred, and the emotional h- tensity built up in the listener throughout nine record sides is left unrelieved. Stokowski Versions Rich On the other side of the ledger, there is much that is superlative about the set: the reassuring opulence and brilliance and impeccable playing of the Stokowski-directed Philadelphia Orches- tra, the excellent mechanical job of recording, and above all the indisputable intensity and pene- tration of Stokowski's performance. But for the lack of the rich, sensuous warmness of the human voice, it is the ultimate in musical passion, in the combined expression of unashamed eroticism, fatalistic devotion, and transfigured love. Of the other album of Wagnerian excerpts, the most important item is Parsifal's cry of "Amfortas! Die Wunde" from the Second Act of the "Sacred Festival Drama," a passage hith- erto lacking first-rate representation upon disks. The "Guileless Fool," heretofore unconscious of the forces of good and evil which animate the drama, is in the act of being seduced by satanic Klingsor's handmaid Kundry when he at last comes to the realization of all he has heard and seen and through the sympathetic understanding of Amfortas' agonies is able to withstand and overcome his seducer. Melchior is in fine voice and manages to mix in some singing along with the shouting; the Philadelphia, though not quite the same orchestra with Ormandy as under Stokowski, still gives able assistance, and the recording is finely executed save that the voice at times overbalances the ever-important orches- tra. The other record in the set comprises Parsi- fal's "Closing Song" of restoration of Good over Evil and proclamation of himself as King of the Grail, from Act III, and the familiar "Farewell" of Lohengrin to his new bride, who by her lack of implicit trust in him has brought about their eternal separation and also the end of the opera. The work is still high class throughout, but it is hard to see why, with so many Wagnerian pass- ages still crying vainly for attention, space should have been used for another version of the already amply recorded Lohengrin aria music Calendar SUNDAY Radio City Music Hall, Malirice Baron cond. Bizet's Patrie Overture, Dukas' Sorcer's Appren- tice, Saint-Saens' Suite Algerienne. 12-1, KDKA, WOWO. Madrigal Singers, Yella Pessl director. WWJ, 12-12:30. Milton Katims violist, Milton Kaye pianist, WOR, 2:30-3. New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Ernest Schelling pianist, John Barbirolli cond. Bee- thoven's Prometheus Overture, Paderewski's Polish Fantasie, Verklaerte Nacht (Schoenberg), Petite Suite (Debussy), Mendelssohn's "Italian" Symphony, No. 4 in A major. 3-5, WJR, WADC. New Friends of Music Orchestra, Gertrude Pitzinger soprano, Fritz Stiedry cond. Bach's First .and Third Orchestral Suites and a Solo Cantata. WJZ, WCKY. Bach Cantata Society, Alfred Wallenstein director. Christmas Oratorio, Part VI. 7-7:30, CKLW. MONDAY Curtis Institute of Music, 10th Anniversary Program. Abbey Simon and Marguerite Kuehne pianists, Donald Cooker baritone. 3-4, WADC. Rochester Civic Orchestra, Guy Fraser Har- rison cond. Norwegian Rhapsodie (Lalo), Bacch- anale from Samson (Saint-Saens). 3-4, WXYZ. Music of the Restoration, Columbia Chamber Orchestra, Bernard Herrmann cond. Quartet for Viols by Matthew Locke, Suite from The Old Bachelor by Henry Purcell. 5-5:15, WABC. WOR Symphony, Eric Delemarter cond. 9:30- 10, CKLW. WEDNESDAY t Indianapolis Symphony, Fabian Sevitzky cond. WADC, WHIO, 3-4. 'Cincinnati Symphony, Eugene Goosens cond. 8-8:30, CKLW. School of Music Student Recital, Helen Byrn pianist. Bach Partita No. II in C minor, Fresco- baldi-Respighi Toccata e Fuga, Brahns Varia- tions, OP. 21, No. 1, four preludes of Debussy. 8:15, School of Music Aud. THURSDAY Choral Union Concert, Beniamino Gigli tenor. Songs and arias by Meyerbeer, Pergolesi, Cesti, Caccini, Mendelssohn, Grieg, Hahn, Lalo, Mas- cagni, Schubert, Rachamaninoff, Flotow, et al. 8:30, Hill Aud. FRIDAY U.S. Marine Band, Taylor Branson cond. 3-4, WJR. SATURDAY Cincinnati Conservatory Orch., Alexander von Kreisler cond., Beethoven's Seventh Symphony and Suite in D minor by Milford. 11-12, WJR. Metropolitan Opera Co. in Verdi's Simon Boe- canegra. Tibbett, Martinelli, Pinza, Rethberg, d'Angelo Panizza cond. 2 p.m., WWJ. NBC Symphony, Arturo Toscanini cond. Cha- conne (Purcell), Shostakovich's Symphony No. 1, Brahms' Fourth Symphony in E minor. 10- 11:30, KDKA, WXYZ. TODAY 'i WASH INGTON -by David Lawrence- WASHINGTON, Jan. 13-No dif- ferences of opinion are to be found in Congress on the importance of an effective national defense, but the argument begins when it is sought to fix just what is adequate. President Roosevelt, as commander- in-chief of the army and navy, is in possession of the very latest infor- mation as to military or naval plans of foreign powers which might con- ceivably affect America. Such infor- mation cannot be made public, but the President went as far as he could When he permitted the two American ambassadors resident at Paris and London to communicate confidential- ly in person to joint committees of both Houses of Congress their im- pressions of the European situation as it relates to possible war.. The question really is, how soon Europe will engage in war, for it is taken for granted that, just as the United States in 1914 made an effort to keep out of the World War, en- tanglement did result. Whether this participation was justified or unijusti- fied, the fact remains that the tnited States did enter the World War and hence, from a military and naval standpoint, the high officers of the army and navy naturally make their recommendations for defense on the basis of possibility as demonstrated by a previous experience. National defense, of course, is the nation's insurance against the fire hazard of a world conflagration. A fire department is necessary even if fire doesn't occur very often. The United States has a national wealth estimated as far back as 1922 to have been $320,000,000,000. To protect that wealth, assuming it is not any higher today, costs about $1,300,000,000 per year now, or an insurance premium of less than one-half of one per cent per annum. If governments were not engaged nowadays in the business of stealing territory to get resources and raw materials, there would be little need for a bigger army and navy. The United States has the best raw mater- ial supply in the world-a heavy per- centage of the world's gold, the world's copper, the world's oil, and the world's food supply. But there are important raw materials in Pan America. The European governments which have begun their campaigns of "peaceful" penetration by the threat of force have shown a tendency to look covetously at countries with valu- able raw materials below the Rio Grande. No matter what official as- surances are given publicly, the infor- mation available is to the effect that South and Central America are not outside of the areas to which hungry eyes are turned by the so-called dic- tatorship countries. Recently, private informants from European countries have stated flat- ly to this correspondent that war in Europe within two years was almost a ten-to-one probability, and that the next World War would start through conflict between Soviet Russia and Japan, which would afford the Hitler Government an opportunity to seize the Ukraine and add to Germany's march to the East. Contradictory in- formation comes as to the strength of the anti-Chamberlain sentiment in England, but the American Gov- ernment has made up its mind that a national defense policy should be constructed on the basis of American power rather than alliances, desirable though they may become in an inter- national emergency. By NORMAN KIELL Robert Sherwood The imaginative yellow posters generously adorning the bulletin boards throughout campus advise all and sundry that Play Production is, offering Robert Sherwood's "The Pet- rified Forest" at the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre for five performances beginning this Wednesday night. There will be, apparently, a Saturday matinee. That Play Production should choose to do a play of Robert Sherwood comes at a rather significant time. At this very moment, Mr. Sherwood has a play on Broadway called "Abe Lincoln In Illinois," and it has been cited by critics as not only the best play to come from his pen, but the best play to come from the pen of an American playwright in many years. When we briefly trace the author's literary career and observe his de- velopment through such shows as "The Road to Rome," "Reunion in Vienna," "The Petrified Forest," "Idiot's Delight," and the culmination in "Abe Lincoln," it seems only natur- al to testify to his extraordinary ability and give credit to him. Play Production will alternate the two leads in this, their third presen- tation of the semester. It should prove an interesting experiment, both from (Continued from Page 2) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Pumiation in the eulltin is constructive notice to all members of the UD i'versfty, CG i eceived at the omce of tf e Aad-stfat tWthe PFesifaut utit 3;30O; 11:00 4.am. on Satirr~day. held Monday at 12:10 p.m. in the Founders' Room of the Michigan Union. All faculty members interest- ed in speaking German are cordially invited. There will be a brief infor- mal talk by Professor Hans Pick on "Absolute Musik und Programm- Musik." American Association of University Professors: There will be a dinner meeting of the Michigan Chapter of the American Association of Univer- sity Professors on Monday, Jan. 16 at 6:30 p.m. at the Michigan Union. There will be a discussion of the ques- tionnaire sent to the members. Be- cause of the nature of the meeting it will be closed to all but active mem- bers of the Association. Biological Chemistry Seminar, Mon- day, Jan. 16, 7-9 p.m., Room 319 West Medical Building. "The Chemistry of Hemoglobin and Its Derivatives-Heme Enzymes" will be discussed. All interested are in- vited.' Library Committee meeting on Jan. 19. Members of the Faculties wish- ing to lay requests before the Com- mittee are asked to have them in the hands of the Librarian by noon of Wednesday, Jan. 18. Deutscher Verein: Prof. Samuel A. Goudsmit will speak on "Land und Leute in Holland." On Jan. 17 at 8:15 p.m. in the Michigan League. This illustrated lecture is the second of the series sponsored by the Deut- scher Verein.1 American Chemical Society Lee- ture. Dr. B. L. Clarke, of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, New York, will deliver a lecture on "Microan- alysis in Communication Research," on Thursday, Jan. 19, atB4:15 p.m. in Room 303, Chemistry Bldg. Romance Language Department. Tuesday, Jan. 17, 4:10 p.m., Room 408 R.L., Professor N. S. Bement will re- port on "Foreign Language Study in Michigan High Schools and its Relation to Foreign Language Study in the University." Anatomy Research Club Meeting. Meeting Tuesday, Jan. 17 at 4:30 p.m., Room 2501 East Medical Bldg. Dr. David Bodian will report on "The Structure of the Vertebrate Synapse" illustrated with lantern slides. Tea will be served at 4:10 in Room 3502. Anyone interested is invited. Chemical Engineers; All A.I.Ch.E. members are reminded of the Ensian picture to be taken at Dey's Studio, Tuesday, Jan. 17, at 7 p.m. The meeting will follow immediately in Room 1042 East Eng. Mr. Amberg of Johns-Manville will show sound movies on the subject of Diatoms. Tb Acolytes will meet on Monday, Jan. 16, at 7:30 p.m. in the West Con- ference Room of the Rackham Bldg. Professor R. W. Sellars will talk on the "Principles of Critical Realism." Tickets for the All-Campus Boxing Show, sponsored by Congress, in bene- fit of an independent men's scholar- ship fund, are available at the Union, the League, Wahr's Book Store, Moe's Sport Shop, the Pretzel Bell, Prekete's Sugar Bowl, and Ulrich's book store. The event is scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 17, at 7:30 p.m. in Yost Field House. Transportation Club. Mr. W. M. Aldous, Senior Airport Engineer, Civil Aeronautics Authority will speak on the engineering problems en4oun-, tered in the design and construction of airports. Michigan Union, 7:30 p.M., Tuesday, Jan. 17, 1939. Open meeting. Everyone welcome. Graduate Luncheon for Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers will be on Tuesday, Jan. 17 in Room 3201 E. Ewg. Bldg. Professor Louis A. Baier, Naval Architecture and Marine En- gineering Depts., will speak on "Modern Navigation." Political Science Round Table will meet Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Room in the Rackham Building. Phi Delta Kappa, The regular monthly meeting of Omega Chapter will be hld in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building at 7:30 on Tuesday, Jan. 17. Leon S. Waskiewicz will speak on the sub- ject, "The Influence of Organized Labor on Public Instruction in Mich- igan During the Decade of the 80's." Refreshments will be served. Senior Society: There will be a regular meeting Monday, Jan. 16, at 7:30 p.m. in the League. Dormitory Board meeting Monday at 5 o'clock in the League. It will be a short meeting. Women's Fencing Club: There will be a regular meeting of the club on Monday, Jan. 16 at 4:30 p.m. in the the women's loung . A special invi- tation is given to all those who are at all interested in music. Prepara- tions will be made for the participa- tion of the group in the Civic Music Program to be held in the near fu- ture. The Michigan Dames General meet- ing will be held in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham building Tuesday at 8 p.m. Dr. Catherine Chamberlain, professor of photography at Wayne University, will present her personal collection of moving. pictures of the Colorado Mountains. Churches Disciples Guild (Church of Christ). 10:45 a.m., morning worship, Rev. Frederick' Cowin, minister. 5:30 p.m., Social hour and tea. 6:30 p.m., Miss Lucile Eberle and Foster Campbell will speak on "The Christian And The War in China." The talks will be followed by a general discussion. First Baptist Church, 10:45 a.m. Sunday. Dr. Qharles T. Goodsell of Kalamazoo College will conduct wor- ship and preach. Subject: "The Eternal Choice." Church school at 9:30. Senior B.Y.P.U. at 6 p.m. Roger Williams Guild, Sunday, 9:45 a.m. Student Class at Guild House. Dr. Chapman is leading in a series of special studies. 5:30 p.m. The social hour, with refreshments, precedes the usual program. 6:15 p.m. Dr. Charles T. Goodsell, of the History Department of Kala- imazoo College, will address the stu- dents on the topic, "Christianity and the International Crisis." This is sec- ond in series of four discussions of vital current issues. First Congregational Church, corner of State and William Streets. Dr. Leonard A. Parr, minister. 10:45 a.m. Service of worship. The subject of Dr. Parr's sermon will be "A River, an Oak and a Mountain," 4:30 p.m. Board meeting of Sigma Eta Chi in Pilgrim Hall. 6 p.m. This Sunday evening, Jan. '15, Professor Maurer Will present to the Student Fellowship an exhibi- tion and lecture on his hobby, the photography of flowers. The talk will be illustrated with technicolor slides made by the speaker as a part of the carrying on of his hobby. The Student supper will be served at six o'clock and the talk will begin at 7. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning serv- ice at 10:30. Subject: "Life." Golden text: Proverbs 12:28. Sunday school at 11:45. The Christian Student Prayer Group will meet as usual at 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon in the Michigan League Building. Please consult the bulletin board there for the room. A welcome is extended to all Christian students. The Ann Arbor Friends (Quakers) will meet at 5 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 15, at the Michigan League for their regular meeting for worship. All those interested are invited to attend. First Methodist Church. Morning worship at 10:45 o'clock. Dr. Bra- shares will preach on "Heaven-Hell." Stalker Hall.. Student class at 9:45 a.m. Mr. Kenneth Morgan will be- gin a series of discussions on "Social Action and Social Living." Wesleyan Guild meeting at the Church at 6 p.m. Rev. H. L. Pickerill will speak on "A Christian and Cooperatives." Fel- lowship Hour and supper following the meeting. First Presbyterian Church 110:45a.m., morning worship service. Sermon, "What Is God Like?" student group, will meet for a sup- per andl. fellowship hour.' At the "7 o'clock meeting the following speak- ers will lead the informal discussion groups on: (1) Racial Problems-"A Sociologist Looks at Race." Ralph M. Danhof, (2) Community Prob- lems-"The Value of the Community Center," Calvin Chamberlain, West- minster Guild representative at the DodgehCommunity House at Detroit for the summer session, 1938; (3) Worship in Modern Life- -"Emotion- al Attitudes during Worship," Miss Elizabeth Leinbach; (4) Church and State--"The Church Under Nazi Ger- many," Fred Boernor; (5) Ethics Symposium, Dr. William Frankema. Unitarian Church, State and Huron Sts. 11 a.m. "Ethics in Business" one of many simultaneous talks on this sub- ject given in the Unitarian churches of America. 7:30 p.m. Liberal Students' Union -topic to be announced tomorrow. 9 p.m. Coffee Hour. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Or- der of the Day for Sunday: 8 a.m. Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m. Junior Church; 11 a.m. Kindergarten; '11 .1 /I