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May 11, 1946 - Image 4

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1946-05-11

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PAGR FOUL

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

5- AT U£tPAY, MAV 11,

1_:"!

FA*E FOUR SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1~46

-Student-Co unselox is S U j)lement
Classwork inlHumani Behavior

(Continued from Page 1)
students to have actual observance of
human behavior as supplement to
laboratory and text-book work, the
University, in January of this year.
made the camp a subsidiary of the
Institute for Human Adjustment.
Fifty students may now act as
counselors each summer, earning six
hours of academic credit.
With the duo-puropse of guiding
the children and gaining experience
Big 'Take' of Local
Gayimbler Disclosed
Affadavits of three employes of
Wilson Haight's city cigar store testi-
fy that Haight did from a quarter-of-
a-million to half-a-million dollars
worth of business annually in placing
horse racing bets, Special Prosecutor
William Brusstar said yesterday.
Brusstar, who is assisting Circuit
Judge James R. Breakey, Jr., as
one-man grand jury investigation of
Washtenaw County's alleged million
dollar gambling racket, said he will
use the affidavits in asking Gov.
Kelly to have Haight extradited from
Ohio, early next week.

in their fields, the student-counsel-
ors attend school for half the session
serving as co-counselors and work as
full-fledged counselors for the re-
mainder of the period.
Clinics are conducted on a multiple
basis with sociologists, psychologists
and psychiatrists all contributing to
discussion from their aspect of a
specific problem.
In addition to receiving instruction
in the various fields concerned with
human adjustment, each student is
required, under supervision of tutor-
ial staff members, to write up case
reports on the children for which he
is responsible.
(Tomorrow's article will deal with
the daily life of a boy in camp and
some of the problems with which he
is confronted.)
Sheriff.'s Trial Delayed
Sheriff John Osborn's trial for as-
sault and battery on a grand jury wit-
ness was delayed for the third time
when the prosecution failed to appear
Thursday.
A recent letter from Asst. Gen. Har-
ry W. Jackson filed with Municipal
Judge Jay H. Payne said he would be
unable to clear the case for at
least two weeks.

HIGHLIGHTS ON CAMPUS
Childr ens T ea * * . . . * (*ilIt;(I0,l CI!. * * PWrto Rico " atl7:30 p.m tornoirow
in Flans. 31G-.320 of the Union.
The adventures of Raggedy Ann, (,,nuna lDelta, Lot hcnri studnt IThe program, one of the Interna-
as dramatized in the Children's club, still hold a work-hoiday to get tional Center Sunday night series,
Theatre production of "The Camel picnic facilities ready for use at 1:30 will be concluded with community
with the Wrinkled Knees," will be p.m. today at the Student Center. singing and refreshments in the
presented for the last times at 1:30 Ceniter.
and 3:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Sprji 'g IIre(it r fPlanned . ..
Mendelssohn Theatre. .heoger Williams Guild will , a;
'l'h Bo'er lilzais Guld ill ItnidgIBIyV /JrgjljIst .-
Is htPcis911 d Ihold its annual spring retreat to-
In gh - * day and tomorrow at Pinelrook Virgina Solomon, violinist, will
Members of the Insight policy, Farms. present a recital including coin-
business and publicity staffs, Board The program will include an positions by Bach, Tartini and Sib-
of Cooperation, salesmen and au- evaluation of work done by the elius at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in
thors of articles will meet at 2:30 Guild this year and a discussion of Lydia Mendelssohn Theater.
today at Lane Iall for a picnic. next year's plans under the direr- Miss Solomon who is a pupil of
Reservations for the picnic may . tion of Garrett Grahan, retiring Prof. Gilbert Ross, will be assisted
be made at Lane hall. president, and hiaskell ()iilin, by Marilyn Mason, pianist.
In case of rain, the picnic will be president for 1946-47. Frances * *
held inside. Goodfellow will be in charge of the ClubSehed ides {hain .
Sunday Morning Worship Service.
Childfs To fiscu-tssB ok,. .. Members will leave the Guild An afternoon of outdoor sports
house at 1:34 p.m. today. is planned by the Graduate Outing
Bard Childs will discuss "Germany I 4 Club for tomorrow's program.
Is Our Problem," by Henry J, Mor- .,Persons interested should pay th
ganthau, during the Lane Hall Sat- 1(0;* supper fee at the checkroom desk its
r T ,Lunrlch n at, nn t<da cl in Prof'D Vh Baxer of ih f rI t )hp R khm Tildin brfore noon

S
;
n

LAGUARDIA LISTENS - UNRIA Director-General Fiorello H. La-
Guardia (right), with hand on his hips and glasses pushed up on his
head, listens to Norwegian Ambassador Wilhelm Munthe De Morgen-
stierne (left) during a conversation before LaGuardia addressed UN-
RRA's 48-government council. (AP Wirephoto).

i.

11

;

Women's News

CLASSIFIED ADVEIITISING

11 11

11'

it 4

411

HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED: Fountain help, top
pay, hours to your convenience,
Apply in person to Mr. Lombard or
Mr. Benden. Witham's Drug Store,
corner of S. University and Forest.
WANTED
APARTMENT or room with cooking
facilities beginning summer or fall
session. Vet and wife. Both stu-
dents. References. Call Mr. Fed-
erman, 6829 or Mitzi 2-1293 eve-
nings.
APARTMENT: for couple, near cam-
pus. Veteran attending University.
Phone 2-4401, Room 415, Lloyd
House. Refer to advertisement.
WANTED -- Apartment or house. 2-
bedroom, furnished or unfur'nished.
Veteran. Graduate student making
Ann Arbor permanent home. Wife,
daughter, no pets, smoking, or
drinking. Best references. Call 9641,
Captain Otto.
MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib-
erty. We have rebuilt used bikes
for sale. Your bike can be expertly
repaired also.
WANTED: Veteran's widow, student,
with schoolage child. Wants apart-
ment within three months. Phone
Ypsilanti 3597 J4, reverse charges.
VETERAN and wife would like to
sublet apartment for this summer
session only. Call Mr. Rosen 3557.
WANTED: APARTMENT URGENT-
LY NEEDED. Graduate student
desperately in need of an apart-
ment for self, wife and 3-year-old
son. Will have to discontinue
studying if unable to find place to
live. Willing to sign lease. Refer-
ences offered. Call 3734 between
7 and 10 p.m. daily.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Between Angell Hall and
Marshall's. Silver and Black Park-
er 51 pen with gold engraving,
Barbara Cohen. Phone 2-4143.
LOST: Bicycle, blue and white bal-
loon tired, wire basket, Oberlin li-
cense No. 688. Missed from League
Wed. night. Reward. Call 4546.

LOST: Boy's bicycle, cream colored
with red trim; Ann Arbor 1946 Li-
cense No. 629, from rear of 6550
Washtenaw Ave. Phone Fred Com-
lossy, 7157.
LOST: Black cape, short shoulder
style. May 8 between State Theatre
and Hill St. Reward. Phone days,
2-5628, night 2-6446.
LOST: Friday evening. Three keys
on chain. Vicinity Williams Street
or Hill Auditorium. Call 4121, Ext.
314. Daytime. Reward.
LOST: Will gentleman who acci-
dentally took my gray covert top-
coat from the table in the Union
basement, Saturday, May 4, please
return same to George Roberts, Jr.,
923 Olivia, Phone 2-1465.
MISCELLANEOUS
INTERESTED in living in co-ops this
summer? Contact, Zips Kiske, 2-
2218 or Hank Kassis, 6284 immedi-
ately.
GO TO THE RAINEY HOTEL Dining
Room formerly The Colonade, for
your noon day hard to get lunches.
Same policy prevails as at Col-
onade. Except we do open on Sun-
days from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. We'll
be welcoming you. Mr. and Mrs.
J. H. Rainey, corner Ann St. and
Fifth Ave. 1 block north east of
Court House, phone 5670 for south-
ern fried chicken dinner.
MYSTERIES of the Great Operas by
Max Heindel. Faust, Parsifal, The
Ring of the Niebelunz, Tannhauser,
Lohengrin.
Folk Lore and its interpretation
through music has much to offer
to the general reader as well as the
musician and occultist. Read the
books through the Rosicrucian
Study Group Lending Library. Ph.
2-1507.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE: Studio couch at Willow
Village. $25.00. 1497 Sudbury Ct.

Golf Club Play-Day...
The WAA Golf Club will hold an
all-club play-day from 10:30 a.m. to
3 p.m. today at the University Golf
Course.
In the main contest of the day, club,
members will try to lower their bestj
previous score, with the winner to be
the coed who shows the greatest im-
provement. A putting contest will
be held continuously from 10:30 a.m.
to 3 p.m. on the green, and a prize
is to be awarded the woman making
the lowest score during the day.
A "bingo-bango-bungo" contest will
be held by each foursome, with a
prize for the winner in each group.
Barbara Dewey, club manager, urged
all members to participate
Table Tennis Matchles **
Matches in the first round of the
WAA. table tennis tournament must

be played off by today. All parti-
cipants in the competition should
consult the chart posted in Bar-
hour Gymnasium.
, N .
Suotayn it a.Mixer
Suomynona, an independent wo-
men's organization, will sponsor a
mixer open to all men to be held from
2 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Grand
Rapids Room of the League.
Only coeds who are members of
Suomynona may attend. The affair
will feature dancing and refresh-
ments will be served.
Pat Hall was recently elected presi-
dent of the organization, which was
eorganized this semester. The mixer
wall be the first of a group of activ-
ties to be sponsored by the group.
buomynona consists of indepen-
denc women who do not live in dorm-
itories or league houses.

urt ay iululu t uu ud'ty ti
Lane Hall.
Fhtml Contcert 1 Qdliy . .
A program of massed choirs, in-
eluding 2,400 voices, will close the
first post-war festival of the Michi-
gan School Vocal Association at 4
p.m. today in IHill Auditorium.
Choirs from 39 schools will par-
ticipate in the program. The con-
cert will be open to the public and
will be broadcast over station
WKAR.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____- - --_________________
lDauia Icoutei
For IRegioiiaI I ost
Dean Samuel T. Dana. of the
School of Forestry and Conservation,
has been recommended as Washte-
naw County representative on the
Detroit-Huron-Clinton Authority by
the Huron-Clinton Improvement
Association.
The recommendation to the chair-
man of the Board of Supervisors
committee pointed out that Dean
Dana's long service in the promo-
tion of the project. The vacancy was
caused by the resignation of Harry
B. Earhart.

T- I J . J>. LN, Ul tl 0 -
estry school, will give an illustrated
lecture entitled "My Recent Trip to

today. The group will meet at 2:30
in the club rooms.

I hc latest issue of " Ties" revives the primeval theologi-
cal question whether man is innately sinful or innately
good. Calvin's name is associated with the doctrine of the
total depravity of iman. But to say no more is to mis-
represent the great Genevan s anthropology: for he taught
emphatically that the man whom we experience is never
wholly bad, thanks to the restraints of grace, common
grace, promiscuous grace - a grace of another category
than that of redemption. More than his contemporaries
Calvin appreciated the virtues of unredeenmed man- only
he ascribed them to the common grace of God rather than
to any native goodness of man.
S'UDIENT EVANGELICAL CHAPEL
218 North Division Street

I Ill

Jul

I

{

r

,e.,.

Scaturday

Banlking

Hours

9:00 A.M.
to 12:00 Noon
ANN ARBOR BANK

11

KODAK MONITOR: 620 size Sup-
ermatic shutter, 1/400 sec. Kodak
anastigmat special f:4.5 lens, self-
timer; automatic counter, case,
lens attachments. New condition.
$50.00. Call 4592.

101 SOUTH MAIN

330 SouTH STATE

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

i

qtr *

**

i

meet the S itwtlqartet

ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Division at Catherine
The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector
8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion
9:45 A.M.: 8th-10th grade class, Page Hall.
11:00 A.M.: Junior Church.
11:00 A.M.: Morning Prayer. Sermon by Dr.
Lewis.
6:00 P.M.: Canterbury Supper and Meeting,
Student Center. Discussion led by Dr. Lewis.
I)uring the Week--
Tuesday, 10:00 A.M.: Holy Communion.
Wednesday, 7:15 A.M.: Holy Communion (fol-
lowed by breakfast at Student Center. Reser-
vations, 5790.)
Friday, 4:00-6:00 P.M.: Canterbury Club Open
House, Student Center.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
State and William Streets
Minister, Rev. Leonard A. Parr, D.D.
Director of Student Work, Rev. 1. L. Pieke'rill
Ass't Director of Student Work, Miss Patricia
Kelly
Director of Music, Howard B. Farrar
Organist, Howard R. Chase
9:15 A.M.: Church School annual May Break-
fast.
10:45 A.M.: Primary and Kindergarten, Also
public worship. The sermon will be "They
Maintain the Fabric of the World."
5:00 P.M.: Ariston League. Supper and program'
at Pilgrim Hall. Mothers are guests. Dr. Parr
will address the group on "Books for Young
People."
6:00 P.M.: Congregational-Disciples Guild will
meet at the Memorial Christian Church, Hill
and Tappan, for a cost supper and program,
Rev. R. H. Jongeward, assistant minister of
the First Methodist Church, will speak on
"God as the Infinite Law and Order of the
Universe." Rev. Joseph Bogle of the First
Methodist Church, Royal Oak, will speak on
"A Personal God." Jane Hoffman will lead
the worship service.
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
Lane Hall -- State and Washington Streets
Rev. Edward H. Redman, Minister
Mr. Ernest Larson, Choir Director
Mrs. Claude Winder, Church School Supt.
10:00 A.M.: Unitarian-Friends' Church School,
Pre-Nursery through Second Grade at 110 N.
State. Third Grade through High School at
Lane Hall basement.
10:00 A.M.: Adult Study Group,
Adult study group. Mrs. Harriton will speak on
"Primitive Faith."
11:00 A.M.: Service of worship at Lane Hall.
Edward H. Redman will preach on Theodore
Dreiser's novel, "The Bulwark."
6:30 P.M.: Unitarian student group buffet sup-
per at 110 N. State, with Prof. William Haber
speaking on "Labor's Aims."
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
409 S. Division St,
10:40 A.M.: Sundav 1es on t:ermon, Subject for
May 12FAdstoand j',Ilert Mani.
11 :45 A.M.: Sit d,,y, ';,f ool.
8:00 P.M.: Wednesday evening testimonial
meeting.
't'his clurch maintains a free Reading Room
at 706 Wolverine Building, Washington at 4th,
which is open daily except Sundays and holidays
from 11:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Here the Bible and

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
120 South State
Ministers--James Brett Kenna and Robert H.
Jongeward.
Music--Hardin A. Van Deursen, Director
Mary McCall Stubbins, Organist.
9:30 A.M.: Student Seminar.
10:40 A.M.: Worship Service.
Sermon: "The Mother of Jesus and our
Mothers," Dr. Kenna preaching.
Wesleyan Guild. Panel discussion on "The
Church Educates for World Peace."
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw
W. P. Lemon and James.Van Pernis, Ministers
Frieda qp't Holt Vogan, Director of Music
and Oiganist.
9:30 A.M.: Church School Intermediate, Senior,
and Adult department.
10:45 A.M.: Nursery, Beginner and Primary de-
partments.
10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Mother's Day
sermon by Dr. Lemon, "Indoor Exposure."
6:00 P.M.: Westminster Guild supper hour
Dean Alice C. Lloyd will speak on "Students
Look Toward Marriage."
LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION
For National Lutheran Council Students
Henry O. Yoder, Pastor
1304 Hill Street
Lutheran Student Association'
9:15 A.M.: Bible Hour at the Coner, 1304 1r111.
5:30 P.M.: Meeting at the Zion Lutheran Parish
Hall, 309 E. Washington. Mr. Clifford Berg,
former LSAer and now doing graduate work
in the University, will tell of his experiences
while with the Navy in the Pacific.
Zion Lutheran Church
'East Washington St. at S. Fifth Ave.
E. C. Stellhorn, Pastor
10:30 A.M.: Worship Service
7:30 P.M.: Communion Service.
Trinity Lutheran Church
East William St., at S. Fifth Ave.
Walter Brandt. Pastor
10:30 A.M.: Worship Service.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
AND STUDENT CENTER
1511 Washtenaw Avenue
Rev. Alfred Scheips, Pastor
(Missouri Synod)
11:00 A.M.: Regular Service, with sermon by the
pastor, "Always Ready to Give an Answer."
This sermon on Luther's Large and Small
Catechisms is the third in a series of five
sermons on the Symbolical Books of the
Litlheran Church.
4:00 P.M.: Meeting of Gamma Delta, Lutheran
Student Club, at the Center for a period of
outdoor sports, to be followed at 5:15 by sup-
per at the outdoor fireplace.
Wednesday at 7:30 P.M.: Bible Class.
GRACE BIBLE CHURCH
Stt-e and Hu1Lron+Stlreets
Harold J. DeVries, Pastor, Phone 21121
10:00 A.M.: Bible School. University class.
11:00 A.M.: Morning service will be broadcast
over WPAG.
12:45 P.M.: "The Bible Hour" over WPAG.
6:30 P.M.: Youth groups. We welcome you to
etiioy this time.

Produced anal(1 iire ldd y
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