', "T N F 1,1 1 C IT ? it A N T1 A: T t v r it ' MTX .:acITA % ~Ti .L A A' I. . t) PIN 'I k1 .j1 Y AUDAY'NOVEMI cl ,. -2 - A"I i i !Studeut (choir To Broadcast Through WJR Regular Sunday Program To Feature Latin Motet By 16thCentury Italian' The University Choir, under the direction of Prof. Hardin A. Van Deursen of the School of Music, will present its regular Sunday morning broadcast at 9 a.m. tomorrow over station WJR, Detroit. The program will feature an un- accompanied motet, in Latin, written by the 16th century Italian composer, Giovanni Peirluigi da Palestrin and titled "0 bone Jesu." Also featured will be Margaret Martin, '42SM, so- prano, Donna Baisch, '42SM, con- tralto, Robert Holland, '43SM, tenor, and Donald Plott, '44SM, bass. "Abide With Me" by William Monk will be sung by a quintet of Marjorie Gould, '44SM, Barbara Pierson, '44SM, Paul Converso, '44SM, Kenneth Rhoades, '43SM, and Richard Breach, '44SM. -, A quartet of Homer Marple, '45, ' James Conti, '42F&C, Leo Imperi, '42SM, and John Redfield, '45, will sing "Keller's American Hymn." Other students participating in the program are Lois Clinton, Grad., Jean Gilman, '45SM, Carol Camp- bell, '43SM, and Marillyn Schultz, '44SM. I ..- Library Head Will Present Talk Tuesday Arundell Esdaile, president of the British Library Association, will de- liver a University Lecture on "Dr. Johnson and the Young" at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Mr. Esdaile will also deliver lec- tures at 4 p.m. Monday and Wednes- day in Room 110, General Library, under the sponsorship of the Depart- ment of Library Science. He will speak on various phases of the li- brary of the British Museum. For 37 years a member of the Brit- ish Museum staff, Esdaile retired in 1940. He was editor of the British Library Association Record from 1923 to 1935, and has been a leader in in- ternational library activities. He has published several books on bibliography, including "A Student's Manual of Bibliography," "The World's Great Libraries," and "Auto- clycus' Pack." The University Lecture Tuesday I and the two library science depart- ment lectures will be open to the, general public. Palmer To Speak At Naval Lecture "The Submarine" will be discuseedl by Lt. R. E. Palmer, U.S.N., Associate Professor of Naval Science and Tac- tics, in a lecture at 7:15 p.m. next Tuesday in the West Engineering Building. Lt. Palmer, Executive Officer of the Michigan NROTC unit, is well quali- fied to discuss his subject. Before coming to Michigan he commanded a submarine, and it is in that field that his interests lie. The lecture Wednesday will be the fifth of a series of fifteen sponsored this semester by the Departnient of Naval Science and Tactics. { DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I (Continued from Page 4) Discussion, "A Student Appraisal of the World Today." 9:00 p.m. Social Hour. Playing of records of old folk tunes and melodies. Comments by Mary Coate, '45SM. First Baptist Church: 10:15 a.m. Graduate class with Prof. Leroy Wat- erman will meet in the church. Un- dergraduate class with' Rev. C. H. Loucks will meet in the Guild House, 503 E. Huron. 11:00 a.m. The Church at Worship. Communion Meditation, "The Path to Peace." 6:15 p.m. Roger Williams Guild meeting at the Guild House. "The Church Serves the World-A Motion Picture." First Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m. Services of public worship, held in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dr. Leonard A. Parr, minister, will preach on "The Things That Remain." 5:30 p.m. Ariston League, high school group, will meet in Pilgrim Hall to hear a discussion ox "Paci- fism and the Present Crisis," led by Col. Henry W. Miller. Supp'er. 7:15 p.m. Student Fellowship in church parlors. Discussion will be led by Dr. E. J. Abbott, on the sub- ject, "The Transmission of Con- cepts Between Human Intellects." __ ._._ PDCTUR°E NEWS N ASSOCIATED PRESS ' Miller Speaks At Sturgis Col. Henry W. Miller, chairman of the Departmnent of Mechanism and Engineering Drawing, gave a speech' Thursday night before the University. of Michigan Club of Sturgis on "The Present State of the War and Our Progess in Preparedness." He was accompanied by Robert O. Morgan, Council Secretary and Assistant Gen- eral Secretary of the Alumni Asso- ciation. Films Of Gopher Tilt To Be Shown At Union s_.. Complete action football movies the Michigan-Minnesota game will1 shown at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in t main ballroom of the Michigan Uni The show will begin "on time," wi 750 non-reserved seats installe More than 200 persons were turn away from last week's Northweste pictures. __ _ _. _ -_A... __ Ar a CHURCH DIRECTORY FIRST METHODIST CHURCH State Street between Washington and Huron Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and J. Edward Lantz Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director Mary Eleanor Porter, organist 9:30 A.M. University Student Class. Wesley Foundation Assembly Room. Robert S. Wald- rop, leader. 10:40 A.M. Church School for Nursery, Begin- ners,, and Primary Departments. Young chil- dren may be left in these departments during Worship Service., 10:40 A.M. WorshipService. Dr. Georgia Hark- ness will speak on "The Church and World Community." She is brought to this pulpit by the Henry Martin Loud Lectureship. 6 00 P.M. Wesleyan ,Guild for University Stu- dents and their friends, Wesley Foundation Assembly Room. Prof. Wesley Maurer with pictures and talkies on the "Work of the Community Fund." Fellowship hour and sup-' per following. CHURCH OF CHRIST YMCA Bldg., 110 N. 4th Ave., The Church of Christ in Ann Arbor will meet for Scripture study at 10:00 a.m., Lord's Day, November 2. The place of assembly will be on the second floor of the Y.M.C.A. Building, 110 N. Fourth Ave! At 11:00 a.m. the morning worship will begin, which, in, addition to congregational singing, prayer, and the Lord's Supper, will include a sermon entitled "Perfecting Holiness in the Fear of God," to be delivered by Garvin M. Toms, minister. At the - evening service, beginning at 7:30 p.m., the theme for the sermon will be "Making Your Calling and Election Sure." The lesson for the Lord's Day morning Bible school will be on "Sin and Its Consequences." The text for the Scripture study on Wednes- day evening will be Matthew 2:3-12: the time 7:30 p.m. "He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved." (Christ in Mark 16:16.) Let everyone interested in his soul's eternal good, come. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Location: State and William Streets Minister: Rev. Leonard A. Parr Director of Music and Organist: Mrs. Mary McCall Stubbins 10:45 A.M. Services of public worship, held in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Dr. Parr will preach the sermon on the subject, "The Things that Remain." 5:30 P.M. Ariston League, high school group, will meet in Pilgrim Hall for a discussion on "Pacifism and the Present Crisis," led by Col. Henry W. Miller. Supper will be served. 7:15 P.M. Student Fellowship in church parlors. Discussion on "The Transmission of Concepts between Human Intellects," led by Dr. E. J. Abbott. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister Mrs. Geil Orcutt, Associate Student Counselor 10:15 A.M. The Church at Study. Graduate class with Prof. Leroy Waterman, meeting in the church. Undergraduate class with Mr. Loucks, meeting in the Guild House, 503 E. Huron. 11:00 A.M. The Church at Worship. Communion Meditation, "The Path to Peace." 6:15 P.M. Roger Williams Guild meeting at the Guild House. "The Church Serves the World -A Motion Picture." LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION sponsored jointly by Zion and Trinity Lutheran Chui-ches Zion Lutheran Church, E. Washington St. at S. Fifth Ave. 10:30 A.M. Church Worship Service. Sermon, "Ovr Refcrmaticn Heritage" by Rev. E: C. S&ellhorn. Trinity Lutheran Church, E. William St. at S. Fifth Ave. 10:"' A,7r Church Worshin Service. Sermon, "The Source of Spiritual Power." Lutheran Student Association in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington St. 4:30 P.M. A Cappella Choir practice at Parish Hall. 5:30 P.M. Association Meeting with supper. : P-x.vt.t. ,uy .i ir with iMr. Melvin Ander- son of Grand Rapids as spxaker. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Washtenaw William P. Lemon, D.D., Ministjer 9:30 A.M. Church School. Classes for all age groups. 10:45' A.M. Morning Worship. "Two Men and God," sermon by Dr. Lemon. 10:45 A.M. Nursery during morning worship. 4:30 P.M. Westminister Guild Cabinet Meeting. 4:30 P.M. Tuxis Society will meet for social hour, refreshments at 6:00; business meet- ing and worship service led by John Gault. 6:00 P.M. Westminister Student Guild, supper and fellowship hour at 6:00 p.m. At 7:00 Dean Alice Lloyd will speak on "Religious Conflicts." You are cordially invited. 8:00 P.M. Sunday Evening Club. Dr. Lemon will speak on "World Religion in the Present Crisis." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division at Catherine The Rev. Henry Lewis. Rector The Rev. Frederick W. Leech, Student Chaplain The Rev. John G. Dahl, Curate George Faxon, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion. 10:00 A.M. High School Class. 11:00 A.M. Kindergarten, Harris Hall. 11:00 A.M. Junior Church. 11:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Sermon by the Rev. Henry Lewis. 4:00 P.M. H2 Club Meeting, Harris Hall. t1 1 of be he on ith ed. ed rn. I p I II I' E S C A P E-In this 134-foot- high escape training tank at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, U.S. submarine men learn how to escape through water while using the navy's "artificial lung." ON PLANE LIST - Bernice Bowers (above) of Welcome, Minn., was listed by Northwest Airlines as stewardess aboard the Chicago to Seattle plane which crashed near Moorhead, Minn., killing 14 of the 15 per- sons aboard. BLAST-TORN PLATES ON KEARNY - This official U.S. Signal Corps photograph shows dam- aged plates on the U.S.S. Kearny after a torpedo struck her during a battle with a submarine in the Atlantic Ocean the night of October 16-17. The navy revealed that "the force of the explosion breached the side of the ship well under the wate r line . . . The force of the explosion was upward and forward. The deck above the fire room was ruptured . ." STRIKE ENDS UNDER TRUCE-: A four-day strike of 53,000 captive coal miners was terminated today under a 17-day truce accepted by John L. Lewis, United Mine Workers president, and Myron C. Taylor, director and former board chairman of United States Steel Corporation. B R I T O N--England's criti- cism-beset Minister of Informa- tion is Brendan Bracken (above), 40, formerly Churchill's parlia- mentary private secretary. He succeeds Alfred Duff Cooper, who was sent to the Far East on a war mission. WRECKAGE OF PLANE CRASH - This airview shows the body of the Northwest Airlines plane after it crashed and burned, killing 14 persons near Moorhead, Minn. Officials had placed a barrier around the plane. The only survivor was Capt. Clarence Bates, pilot. I I, ..; . : + +... ,. r. . : ......: .. ..:":: . -:::. : : :.:.n......: : :: :.-:. : .. .:..-.