THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDA, OBM U~, 14 UJ! lr td$gutaitg MATTER OF FACT: Mr.lowles and Mr. Porter FiftyEighth Year 77- Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff John Campbell...................Managing Editor Clyde Recht .......................City Editor Stuart Finlayson...............Editorial Director Eunice Mintz..................Associate Editor Lida Dailes .......................Associate Editor Dick Kraus ..........................Sports Editor Bob Lent ..................Associate Sports Editor Joyce Johnson.................. Women's Editor Betty Steward.........Associate Women's Editor Joan de Carvajal ..................Library Director Business Stafff Nancy Helmick ...................General Manager Jeanne Swendeman......... Advertising Manager Edwin Schneider................Finance Manager Melvin Tick ..................Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this news- paper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, as second class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member, Assoc. Collegiate Press, 1947-48 Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. ii , NIGHT EDITOR: NAOMI STERN THENavy Day THE FIGHTING U.S.S. Sennet pictured on page three today and the formations of Navy F6F fighter planes that flew over Michigan Stadium yesterday are a reminder of Navy Day tomorrow. Our subs, our planes-all our fighting units-helped to win World War H. With- out them, we would not now be a free nation. The Navy was an integral part of our defense; it is still that today. Now it is hard at work on the task of maintaining and guarding the peace that we won at such a dear price. New scientific instruments that it is using will be part of the Navy Day display at Grosse Isle Naval Air Station. Visitors will see how naval radar operates and learn of the new Ground Controlled Approach Sys- tem. Many of the planes will be flown by naval reserve officers now students at the University. Navy Day will help acquaint the aver- age John Doe wth the Navy's work in order that they may understand its value and why it must be maintained. The lesson of Pearl Harbor must not become vague in our minds. That swift and savage Japanese attack caught us ill pre- pared. But with a strong armed force that cannot happen again. Our ability to defend our shores and offer retaliation will sober the would-be attacker. Let Navy Day serve as another reminder that attack is never impossible. The next possible Pearl Harbor cannot be pro- phesied. Until the U.N. becomes strong enough to take over world sovereignty, a strong armed force is the only safeguard against attack. -Craig H. Wilson. 12an~ted Pei WITH THE HOUSE COMMITTEE on un- American Activities on a front page rampage again, most newspapers are too busy with the under-the-bed-hunting for what the more profound Hollywood thinkers call "Communists" to pay attention to what the neighbors are thinking. It seems worthwhile to quote the Lon- don News-Chronicle's statement on what it callIs "the most un-American feature of United States' life." The Chronicle declares that "by tolerat- ing its (the committee's) methods and its aims, and by loosing the heresy-hunted hounds to bay at frightened civil servants, by restricting the movements of the Com- munists journalists in the United States, Americans themselves are practicing those very evils of which they accuse the Kremlin and its satellites." The Inquisition to which the Chronicle refers is certainly nothing original in our country's political life. Whenever the boys in Washington get scared, investigations on the nature of "subversive" activities push their ugly heads out from the dirt, and burst into unromantic bloom. The haby were seared during the thirties, for By STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-President Harry Truman, with an obvious reluctance, is at last facing up to the facts. He has faced up,, not only to the absolute necessity of action on foreign aid, but to the almost equal necessity of doing something about domestic prices. The two subjects are, in a sense, one and indivisible, simply because there is no use lending dollars to halt economic [BOOKS GRENADINE ETCHING. By Robert C. Ruark. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. 1947. 270 pages. ALTHOUGH nothing was probably further from his mind, Robert Ruark might well have done to the twentieth century "historical novel" what Miguel de Cervantes did to the sixteenth century chivalresque romance. But perhaps that is too much to ask of a writer whose principal aim in life seems to be throwing rocks, indiscriminately and unsubtly, just for the laughs. The pur- pose is clear-the result is open to ques- tion. Instead of the kind of satire full of hu- man understanding and compassion which immortalized Cervantes, however, Ruark has produced a blunt burlesque which too often approaches the cheap vulgarity of off-color jokes which aren't very funny anyway. It may be that this method is the most effective means of attack against the current lush, sex-ridden genre which Ruark is lampooning, but it has much more the character of momentary deflation that of final devastation. A glance at the chapter 'headings of the book, which has everything, will indicate most quickly both its content and treat- ' ent. Picking them out at random, we find such titles as "Darkness on the Delta," "Everybody Comes to Cuba," "An Empire Begins," "Death of the Soul," "Farewell to All That," "Grenadine Was There," "Mattress Poisoning," and "Twen- tieth Century-Fox?" At least a mild slump of discouragement, if not amazement, should beset the Kathleen Winsors, Nancy Buffs, et al, when they en- counter the imagination run riot and given expression in this book. All the now sacro- sanct characteristics of the object of attack are easily recognizable and prominently and redundantly exploited. Description is at its most fabulous-of liquor, food, people, liquor, places, clothes and liquor. This is the kind of book Gargoyle staff members have always wanted to write, un- doubtedly. In other words, if you like the Gargoyle (and why not?) you'll like this book. -Natalie Bagrow. * * * MORE INTERESTING PEOPLE. By Rob- ert Casey. New York: Bobbs-Merrill. 1947. 349 pages. MOST OF THE STORIES in this book have been batting around Chicago bars and city rooms for years-tales of the fab- ulous characters who inhabit the city with the toughest newspaper competition in the world. Bob Casey turns the gossip into well- written humor, and in the process, ex- poses the foibles of both the tough report- er and the typical newspaper reader. As in his earlier book, Such Interesting People, Casey points out that newspapermen lead fascinating lives because they meet such interesting 'people, but the interesting people are their fellow newspapermen. Best tales in the lot are those about the good old days, when the "big stick" school of Walter Howey, at the old Ex- aminer, was triumphant, and when "get that story" meant sending out squads of reporters with complete wire tapping and safe cracking equipment. The humorous angles of Casey's war-ex- perience as a correspondent never quite make the high grade of his Chicago tales, but his backhanded slaps at modern jour- nalism should hit the mark. In a way, the book is a lament for the days when writers worked the angles and then hit the public with an immortal lead. There is a note of nostalgia for the time when newspapers operated without asterisks, or women. Casey closes one chapter with the words: "Life has become a little easier in the newspaper business . . . There is something to be said for a condition in which a re- porter can go out on a job without a trunk- load of electrical equipment and a brigade of safecrackers. But somehow, nowadays, the news doesn't seem so interesting as it did in the days when editors were willing to go without sleep for days and take their chances on jail or assassination to get it. I wonder if there's any connection." -Harriett Friedman. * * * General Library Book List ... Aldanov, Mark-Before the Deluge. New deterioration abroad if there is little or nothing the dollars can buy. The question remains whether anything really effective can be done about the bulging domestic price line. Certainly the task of clamping back controls on the careening American economy is not an appetizing one. There are those who gravely doubt that the job can be done at all even if--and this is a big if-the President is determined to do it, and if- this is a bigger if-the Eightieth Congress will grant him the necessary authority to do it. In this connection, it is worth considering the views of two ghosts from the price- control past. Mr. Paul Porter and Mr. Ches- ter Bowles could now, if they wished, indulge in the hollow pleasures of crying "I told you so." Indeed, the only trouble with their dire predictions of what would happen if price control were dropped is that these predictions were insufficiently dire. At any rate, both Mr. Porter and Mr. Bowles are convinced that the job of getting prices under control again can be done, and that it must be done, if catastrophe is to be avoided. Since both men know something of the horrible headaches involved, their views are interesting. Here, specifically, is how the two former O.P.A. chiefs think the job could be done: Both agree that to attempt to revive the whole complicated business of price prices for everything from diapers to oboes-would be futile. Both believe that the first step necessary is to freeze, rather than to attempt to roll back, prices on a few basic commodities-wheat, corn, cot- ton, steel, copper, fats and oils. To this list Mr. Bowles adds livestock. Mr. Porter does not. His dreadful experiences with the moribund O.P.A. when he was, in his own words, "trying to prevent an orderly retreat from becoming an obscene rout," have convinced him that it is impossible to control meat prices without rationing. And he agrees with other observers that it would take many months to restore any kind of effective rationing. Moreover, effective control of even a few basic commodities, Mr. Porter believes, re- quires two conditions. One is that the con- trol authority be granted for two years, so that producers would not hold back goods in the hope that control would soon end. The other is wide allocation powers, and the willingness to use them. He also believes that some form of wage control would be necessary. Given all this Mr. Porter beieves that the necessary controls would be func- tioning reasonably effectively within two months. He acknowledges that the results would be far from perfect and "plenty rough on some people." But he believes that the present emergency demands some sicth ac- tion. Mr. Porter's predecessor at the O.P.A. helm, Mr. Bowles, would go further. In the first place, he wants rationing. He agrees that it would be half a year before rationing were fully effective. But he thinks it could be made seventy per cent effective in three months, "if we really went to work at it,"-and he is convinced the effort is worth making. He has, moreover, an ingenious scheme to discourage over-feeding of livestock and thus make the necessary grains available for Europe. Vast quantities of grain are wasted by over-fattening hogs and cattle for choice cats. He would therefore use price control to penalize over-fed livestock. He suggests that price controls be frozen at the current level for livestock at a certain weight, the maximum legal price would actually be lower than for their slimmer brethren. Mr. Bowles claims that this scheme is perfectly practical, and that by eliminating over- feeding, it would save at least 170 million bushels of grain for the hungry world. He has another idea. He agrees with Mr. Porter that some sort of wage con- trol-conspicuously absent from the CIO program-will be necessary if the national economy is to get again on an even keel. But he believes that wage control should be balanced off against an excess profits tax. He therefore suggests that the best profit year in the last ten years should be selected as the profit maximum in all businesses, and that profits above this maximum should be taxed away. He argues that this arrangement would be eminently fair, and that it would have two results-revenue would be provided for the foreign aid program, and producers would plow back profits into lower prices, thus bringing down the price level. It takes no great political sophistication to sense that both programs, and particu- larly the Bowles program, are hardly polit- ically practical at the moment. Such meas- ures would seem to have rather less than no chance of passing the Eightieth Congress. Perhaps Mr. Bowles and Mr. Porter are wrong in thinking that such measures are neded to avert catastrophe. Perhaps such softer expedients as the President is likely to propose will suffice. But it is necessary to keep one's fingers crossed. (Copyright 1947, New York Herald Tribune) ON WORLD AFFAIRS: Our New Allies' By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER T HE MUNICIPAL elections in France, Norway and Italy show that the Communists have become the most effective allies of the free enterprise system. Not deliberately. But just as surely. It works like this. The free peoples of Europe have been flirting with "planned econ- omy." All of them except Swit- zerland have adopted some so- cialist measures. But these free peoples are determined not to have socialism loaded on them by a tyrannical and violent mi- nority subservient to a for- eign government. In their reac- tion against Communism they are turning aaginst planning. So long as the Communist wolves could disguise themselves as harmless sheep, they attracted a good many people. By the use of apparently unlimited propa- ganda funds, they managed to draw a veil over their role as Hit- ler's allies in the period from Sept. 1939 to June, 1941. Once their Soviet fatherland was in danger, they displayed great cour- age in resisting the Nazi invad- ers of their native countries. Af- ter liberation, they posed as pa- triots, even nationalists. During this period the French communist poet, Aragon, informed me that Franco-German difficulties were due primarily to the fact that the Germans "are not sufficiently na- tionalistic." My view was just the opposite. Recent Russian deeds and ac- tions have made this patriotic role a farce. As my friend Raul, the headwaiter at the Hotel Al- gonquin in New York City, puts it, "The Soviet Union selling democracy, prosperity and peace is about as convincing as a bald barber trying to induce his clients to buy expensive hair tonic. Gradually but surely, the free peoples of Europe have learned that Communists play the demo- cratic game only until they feel strong enough to put an end to democracy, that they are indeed patriots, but of the Soviet Union rather than of their own countries and that their present game is to block economic recovery in order to erect a world dictatorship on the ruins. As these peoples react against the Communist swindle, they react against the totally planned economy, socialism, that the Communists stand for. This, I believe, is the explan- ation why socialism is being tried in Britain at the momentrthe French are swinging away from it. For in Britain there is no Communist party worth mention- ing and only a few influential dupes who make common cause with the Russians against the United States. When the people of Britain vot- ed to try socialism, they knew that they were not renouncing their basic civil liberties or the demo- cratic process. They were not put- ting loyalty to Russia ahead of loyalty to Britain. And above all they knew that if socialism turned out badly, they could always get rid of the socialists. But where the Communists are strong, people fear that if they accept socialism, they will find in the same market basket, terror, subservience to Moscow and a permanent dictatorship. As a result, they are buying less socialism and planned economy is on the decline. The American Administration could profit immensely by this fact. Now that the Russians have come out flatly against European reconstruction, their innermost de- signs are exposed to all the world.. The cards to win the political war are in our hands. But this war cannot be successfully waged by a Congressional Com- mittee on un-American Activ- ities. For the antics of these gentlemen are in themselves un- American. In this country, un- til recently, crime was crime and everything else was licit. Now the Congress and the State Department have, on what I consider deficient authority, set up a third category of actions and attitudes which, without being criminal, are none the less subject to persecution. This is, in my judgment, un- American. It flouts the funda- mental principles upon which the United States was founded. It makes the United States ridiculous if not objectionable in the eyes of real liberals (not Russia-First- ers) throughout the world. To win the political war with Russia, the war which if won will make a shooting war un- necessary, we need to strengthen democracy and freedom at home and to attack tyranny and in- tolerance abroad. But havewe the wisdom to profit by the opportunity so un- willingly offered by the Commu- nist parties abroad? (Copyright 1947, Press Alliance, Inc.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1947 VOL. LVI, No. 30 Notices A Special Convocation of the University will be held in Hill Auditorium at 11 o'clock, Monday morning, November 3, in com- memoration of the centenary of Dutch settlement in Michigan. The Honorable Arthur H. Vandenberg, United States Senator from Mich- igan,' President of the Senate and Chairman of the Foreign Rel- tions Committee of the Senate, and Dr. Eelco Van Kleffens, Am- bassador of the Netherlands to the United States, will deliver ad- dresses. All University classes will be dismissed at 10:30 a.m. in order that faculty members and stu- dents may attend. Members of the faculties will assemble immediately after 10:30 a.m. in the Ballroom of the Mich-- igan League for the academic pro- cession to the stage. Academic costume will be worn. The pro- 2ession will move at 10:50 a.m. and the exercises will begin promptly at 11:00 a.m. If the weather is rainy, the academic procession will be omit- ted and faculty members will robe in the second floor rooms at the rear of Hill Auditorium and take their places on the stage individ- ually. Regents, Deans, and other mem- )ers of the Honor Section will robe n the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League and take part n the academic procession. If the weather is rainy and the proces- sion is omitted, this group will as- semble in the dressing rooms on the wvest side of the first floor, rear, of Hill Auditorium, and pro- -eed as directed by the marshals to their places. A large attendance of faculty members is desired. Theseats reserved for invited guests, on the main floor, will be held until 10:50 a.m. All other seats are available for students of the University and other citi-. zens. Notice of Regents' Meeting: No- vember 22, at 8:30 a.m. Com- munications for consideration at this meeting must be in the Pres- ident's hands not later than No- vember 13. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Principal-Freshman Conference: The annual Principal-Freshman Conference will take place on Thursday, Nov. 13. Instructors of classes which include freshmen are requested not to schedule blue- books for the morning of Nov. 13 in order that freshmen may be available for conferences with their high school principals. School of Business Administra- tion Assembly: Seniors in the School (both BBA and MBA can- didates) are invited to attend an assembly to be held in West Gal- lery, Alumni Memorial Hall, Tues- day, Oct. 28, 3 p.m. Dean Steven- son and Professor Jamison will discuss procedures for placement. Community Chest Contributions: All University employees who have not yet turned in their Commun- ity Fund pledge cards to their building or department represen- tative are urged to do so by Wed- nesday, Oct. 29. At the end of the first week of the drive, the University has attained only 13 per cent of its quota of $22,000. Headquarters, Campus Commun- ity Fund ,Committee, Ext. 2134, 3103 Natural Science Bldg. Choral Union Ushers: Report at Hill Auditorium at 6:15 p.m. for the concert Sunday, Oct. 26. Seniors and Graduate Students in Mechanical & Industrial-Me- chanical Engineering are invited to attend a meeting in Rm. 348 W Engineering Bldg., Wed., Oct. 29 5 p.m. Members of the Mechani- cal Engineering Staff willoexplain placement methods employed by this Department for positions in industry. Veterans who paid their tuition this fall semester because they lacked sufficient eligibility time are asked to come to the Veterans Service Bureau, Rm. 1514, Rack- ham Building, at their earliest convenience. Attention February Graduates Detroit Civil Service will have a representative at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall, orl Thursday, Oct. 30, to interview men graduating in February who are interested in the Technical Aid Examination, Specialties - Gen- eral, Business Administration, En- gineering. Other students who are graduating in February and are interested in Detroit Civil Serv- ice will be able to talk to him if time permits. Call extension 371 for an appointment. Miss Olive Walser, Personnel Bureau, Leadership Services De- partment, YWCA, will be at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Ma-, son Hall, Oct. 29 and 30, to inter- view women interested in Health Education and Group Work. Peo- ple interested in Group Work must have some knowledge of Group Work through part-time or sum- mer work. Call extension 371 for complete information. Women students now living at Willow Run who wish to move for the spring semester should call at the Office of the Dean of Women beginning November 1 to apply for other accommodations. University Community Center: Willow Run Village. Mon., Oct. 27, 8 p.m., Sewing Club. New members invited. Tues., Oct. 28, 8 p.m., Creative Writers' Group. Mrs. Mary Kull- berg, chairman. New members in- vited. Wed., Oct. 29, 8 p.m., "You - International Problems - and Atomic Energy," Prof. Wilfred Kaplan. Thurs., Oct. 30, 8 p.m., The New Art Group. West Lodge: Sun., Oct. 26, 4:30-6:30 p.m., Coffee hour; 6:45 p.m., Pictures Michigan-Northwestern game. Mon., Oct. 27, 6:45 p.m., West Lodge League Bowling, Willow Run Bowling Alley. Tues., Oct. 28, 8 p.m., Volleyball League. Wed., Oct. 29, 7 p.m., Duplicate Bridge Tournament. Academic Notices Graduate Students in English intending to take the Preliminary Examinations in English literaturE this fall should notify Professo Marckwardt before October 30. Physical Chemistry Seminar: Mon., Oct. 27, 4:15 p.m., Rm. 303. Chemistry Bldg. Prof. A. L. Fer- guson will speak on 'Electrode Po- tentials, Polarization and Over- voltage." All interested are in- vited. Classical Representations Sem- inar: Mon.,. 4 p.m., 3010 Angell Hall. Mr. Arnold Shapiro will speak on Group Algebras. Orientation Seminar in Mathe- matics: Mon., 7 p.m., Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. St. Clair will dis- cuss Pohlke's Theorem. Seminar on Stochastic Proces- ses: Mon., Oct. 30, 7:15 p.m., Rm 3001, Angell Hall. Prof. C. L Dolph will speak on Generalizec Harmonic Analysis. Seminar in Engineering Me- chanics: The Engineering Mie- chanics Department is sponsoring a series of discussions on appliec mechanics. The next seminar will be at 4 p.m. Wed., Oct. 29, Rm 406, W. Engineering Bldg. Prof H. M.* Hansen will discuss th distribution of energy in vibrat- ing systems. SConcerts The University Musical Society will present the Chicago Sym- phony Orchestra, Artur Rodzinski conductor, in the second program of the Choral Union Concert Se- ries, Sunday, Oct. 26, 7 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Program : Toccata and Fugue in D minor. rBach; Symphony No. 1 in C minor. Op. 68, Brahms; Suite from th Ballet, "Appalachian Spring,' Copland; Three Dances fro' "Gaynne," Khatchaturian. String Orchestra Concert: 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 11, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Gilbert SRoss, Conductor; soloist: Norma Swinney Heyde, soprano, anc Oliver Edel, cellist; compositions by Purcell, Stamitz, Legrenzi, Boc- cherini, and Mozart. Open to the general public without charge. s Exhibitions Modern American Houses, cir t culated by the Museum of Modern Art, Architecture Bldg., through Oct. 27. MUSEUM OF ART: FINE ARTS f UNDER FIRE, LIFE MAGAZINE Photographic Show, through Oct e ttei TO THE EDITOR EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daly prints every letter to the editor re- ceived (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and in good taste) we remind our readers that the views expressed in letters are those of the writers only. Letters of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. * " 0 Righteous Iuignation To the Editor: THIS IS WRITTEN in righteous indignation! Being a resident of Ann Arbor and a student at the University, I resent Fred Schott's slurring remarks made in connec- tion with his report of so-called "night life" in our fair city. In the first place, he refers to our esteemed rathskellers as be- ing ".. ..of the type parents us- ually don't like their sons and daughters to patronize, twenty- one or not, although students themselves seem to enjoy them." Surely, this rash condemnation cannot be tolerated by the suds- loving citizens of greater Ann Arbor. Next he laments the fact that a minimum of variety is offered in the way of entertainment. Be- sides offering chips, pretzels, hard-boiled eggs, pop-corn, juke- box symphonies (to say nothing of a wide selection of beverages- with or without foam), the estab- lishments in question present ample opportunities for convivial interchange of ideas. .Let's be more tolerant of our tradition-laden institutions. -Richard J. Murphy. One Question To the Editor: IN THE DISCUSSION following the debate Thursday night at Hill Auditorium between Mr. Du- ranty and Mr. Knickerbocker on the subject "Can Russia be part of one world?" some one should have asked this question: "Mr, Duranty, do you think Mr. Knickerbocker is competent to discuss this question without hav- ing read the ex-Marine veteran Gord Meyer's "What Price Pre- paredness?" in the June Atlantic, and also the same author's "Peace Is Still Possible," in the October issue?" Ifsit developed that Mr. Knick- erbocker had not read the two articles, it certainly would have reflected on his competence. If it developed that neither Mr. Duranty nor Mr. Knickerbocker had read the articles in question, it would have shown that neither was competent to debate the question. -R. McAlister. * * * High Price of Water To the Editor: THINK that it should be brought to the attention of the students and faculty that two days ago in the Womans' League, a friend of mine, was charged ten cents, 10 cents, for a cup of boil- ing water. That's correct, 10 cents' for a cup of plain boiling water. At first we thought the cashier was joking but she informed us that the charge for boiling water had always been 10 cents. If the state of affairs in this Democratic country have come to the paying for a cup of water then it's time to act. After all, my friend did' not want to buy the cup but, merely the water which it con- tained. --J. A. LaRue. -C. J. Woodruff. -E. M. Masson. 30. Alumni Memorial Hall: Daily, except Monday, 10-12 and 2-5; Sunday, 2-5; Wednesday evening, 7-9. The public is invited. Exhibit of Living: Fall Fungi of Washtenaw County, Michigan. Department of Botany, 2nd floor, Natural Science Building, through November 1st. "Natural History Studies at the Edwin S. George Reserve, Uni- versity of Michigan." October through December, Museums Bldg. Rotunda. Events Today Carillon Recital: The program to be presented Sunday at 3 o'clock will be played by Professor Percival Price, and will consist en- tirely of his compositions for caril- - lon: Preludes 1, 2, 3; Fugue for q Carillon; Andantes 1, 5, 7; Varia- h tions on an Air for Bells by Sibe- lius; Fantaisie 1 (Kermis Day); Ballet for Carillon. First Methodist Church: . Sunday Church Service, 10:45 - a.m. Dr. Kenna will preach on "Finding the Stars." Wesley Foundationfor Method- ist students and their friends. 602 E Huirnn Street. 4 4 4 4 4 I BARNABY... '4 7l.,....,.~ ~J. 14 nfi -;n,. nrj,%lnvman* '~ - zr A brochure ... Photos of a lot of machinery and No. The oreat Pixie Nation of Sylvania I 1 1 I