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January 13, 1946 - Image 8

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1946-01-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAG~EIMGMT

TIE MICHIGAN DAILY

Michigan Pastors' Conference
Will Hear Professor Tillich
Seventh Annual Convention Will Feature
Symposium Monday on Industrial Conflicts
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Prof. Paul -Tillich of Union Theo-
logical Seminary will be principal
speaker at the seventh annual
Michigan Pastor's Conference to be
held Jan. 21, 22, 23 under the joint
sponsorship of the Michigan Coun-
cil of Churches and Christian Edu-
cation and the University Extension
Service.
Prof. Tillich will give a series of
four lectures during the conference
on the subject of "Protestant Prin-
ciples", their history and their re-
lation to collectivistic trends, con-
Brashares Will
Preach Today
On CBS Hookup
Bishop Charles Brashares, former
minister of the First Methodist
Church in Ann Arbor, and currently
administrator for 1,157 Methodist
churches of the Des Moines area,
will preach to the nation-wide con-
gregation of Columbia Broadcasting
System's Church of the Air at 9 a.m.
today.
The service will originate in the
studios of station KSO of Des
Moines. Bishop Brashares' subject
will be "A New Commandment", the
sermon being planned to fit into
the New Life program which the
denomination is currently launch-
ing in the four annual conferences
under Bishop Brashares' supervision.
Music for the service will be fur-
nished by the quartet of the First
Methodist Church, Des Moines, of
which Dean Frank Jordan, of the
School of Fine Arts of Drake Uni-
versity, is the director and organist.
Filipino Padre
Will Visit U'
A former chaplain of the Philip-
pine Islands will visit the University
as a member of a team from the In-
ternational. Seminar of the Con-
gregational Church.
Dr. Laxamana, with Dr. Ralph
Hyslop, National Student Work Di-
rector of the Congregational Church
and Dr. Kulendran of Ceylon, has
been touring the country in the in-
terest of foreign relief, student ex-
change and postwar problems of
the international student.

formist trends and the transforma-
tion of the churches.
Educated Abroad
Educated at the universities of
Berlin, Tulungen, Halle and Bres-
law, Prof. Tillich taught at Leipzig
and Frankfurt-am-Main bejfore
coming to the Union Theological
Seminary in 1933. He is the author
of "The Religious Situation" and
"Interpretation of History".
The attending pastors will be wel-
comed to the University at the
opening session by Provost James
P. Adams. Presiding over this ses-
sion will be Harold N. Skidmore,
superintendent of the Michigan
Congregational Conference, who will
introdube conference ch a irm an
Clyde C. Gibson.
Symposium and Discussion
At the Monday evening meeting,
a symposium and discussion titled
"The Church and Industrial Con-
flicts" will be held. Prof. Howard Y.
McClusky, consultant in adult edu-
cation and president of the Michi-
gan Council of Churches, will pre-
side. Participating in the discussion
will be George Romney, represent-
ing automobile manufacturers, Vic-
tor Reuther, representing the Unit-
'U' Needs Rooms
For State Pastors
The University Extension Serv-
ice has issued an urgent appeal to
all persons having rooms which
they would be willing to rent to
Michigan ministers attending the
Pastors' Conference Jan. 21, 22 and
23., to call the Extension Service
Office, 4121, extension 354, as soon
as possible.
Approximately 300 pastors will
be attending the conference. Al-
though rooms for about 75 will be
provided at the Union, provisions
for= the others are badly needed.
ed Auto Workers, Paul Heath, pas-
tor of the First Presbyterian Church
in Kalamazoo, representing the
church, and Prof. William Haber of
the economics department, as re-
source consultant.
Devotional exercises at the con-
ference will be given by Jonathan A.
Dames, pastor of Bethel A. M. E.
Church in Detroit. Three simultane-
ous conferences will be held, dis-
cussing "The Educational Program
of the Church", "The Evangelistic
Program of the Church" and "The
Social Action Program of the
Church".

Flying Chit) To
Recei've Phaie
January 23
Second Plane Will
Arrive in February
The two place tandem Aeronca ex-
pected by the University of Michigan
Flying Club Jan. 10 will not arrive
until Jan. 23 it was announced yester-
day by Evan Frandenburgh, '46E,
vice-president of the organization
The meeting will be held at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in Rm. 1042 East
Engineering Building. Warren Curry,
president, announced that an invita-
tion to attend the next club meeting
has been extended to everyone inter-
ested in flying whether they are mem-
bers or not.
A second plane ordered by the club,
a two place, deluxe, side by side Aer-
onca, is expected to arrive sometime
in February. Through expansion in
club membership the club hopes to
purchase additional planes in the near
future.
The club which has not functioned
for the past two years, has been reor-
ganized by Curry and Grandenburgh
in order to give students and faculty
interested in flying practical experi-
ence and to provide aeronautical en-
gineering students with an oppor-
tunity for "familiarizing themselves
with aircraft in general."
Hiohli ohts
On Campus
Rabbi Cohen To Lecture
The opening lecture of a series en-
titled "Judaism in Transit" will be
given at 7:45 p.m. tomorrow at B'nai
B'rith Hillel Foundation by Rabbi Je-
hudah M. Cohen.
The lecture will deal with the na-
ture of Judaism at the time of the rise
of Christianity. Succeeding lectures,
to be given by Dr. Cohen on consecu-
tive Mondays, will deal with Jewish
life in the middle ages and at the time
of the emancipation, religious divi-
sions in Judaism, and contemporary
problems.
Scholarships Available .. .
Engineering scholarships and fel-
lowships totaling $2900 and avail-
able to junior, senior and graduate
students in the College of Engineer-
ing, have not yet been allocated be-
cause of lack of applications.
The consolidated scholarship and
fellowships are open to all engineering
students, and the Sheehan scholar-
ship is open to students taking aero-
nautical engineering.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
PDC TURE NEWS

I D E A L-- American hosiery
designers chose Peggy Knudsen,
(above) film actress, as their
favorite model.

I N T E R 1 O R O F H U T-view from the living room toward the
one of the Army Quonset huts converted for civilian use at Port H,

Inter-Guild Tea

Tuesday

l

I' .-

i
<,

/

An international seminar, and a tea
sponsored by Inter-Guild and ar-
ranged by the Congregational Disci-
ples Guild, will be held at 4:15 p.m.
Tuesday in Lane Hall.
Members of the panel will be a
speaker from the Philippine Islands,
one from India, and Ralph Hyslop,
national minister of student life for
the Congregational Church.
All students are invited.
Psychology Club Meeting
Prof. Mischa Titiev, of the an-
thrcpology department, will speak
on "Culture and Personality" at the
meeting of the Psychology Club
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Rack-
ham Amphitheatre.
Chinese Civil
War Is Ended
CHUNGKING, Jan. 12-(A')-The
guns of China's civil conflict were or-
dered silenced throughout the na-
tion by midnight Sunday, a govern-
ment spokesman announced today.
The cease fire order, halting five
months of sporadic gunplay since Ja-
pan's fall, was issued as the govern-.
ment shaped new compromise offers
to lay before China's unity confer-
ence now in session.
Gen. Chang Chun, the govern-
ment's trucehnegotiator, said Gen-
eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek advised,
his armies Thursday they must cease
fire before midnight Sunday, grant-
ing leeway so that the orders could
reach the most remote points.
Chou En-Lai, the Communist ne-
gotiator, announced that similar or-
ders had been issued by the Commul-
ist headquarters at Yenan.
General Chang made his an-
nouncement before the unity session,
known as the olitical Consultative
Conference, and said the three-man
commission to enforce terms of the
truce would reach Peiping Sunday.
The conference selected a commis-
sion of eight to visit the former fronts
to observe conditions.
The givernment delegation to the
unity conference was at work on its
plan to broaden the present one-

M I N E H U N T E R-This former Liberty ship, the SS Pratt Victory, is being used by the Navy to hunt for pressure mines sown
by the U. S. in Jap waters during the war. The mines are geared to explode only when a heavy vessel passes over them.

HEAD MAN-- Gen. 'Sir
Padma Shumshere Junobahadur
Rana (above) commands Nepa,
lese forces in India«,-

IA
Three Colors for triple charm. Black rayon
crepe with royal blue and red in the blouse;
brown with chartreuse and red. Pockets you'll
adore! Typical of Ellen Kaye's ingenuity. In

S N 0 W P L 0 W F O R P L A N E-At the U. S. Naval air station, Atlantic City,:an~ Army
hospital plane follows a plow as it taxis out to the runway through a deep fall of snow.

*

junior sizes 7 to 15.

$j79

I I

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