1 nJtut. xytit %W iwr 1.i ju A WUDNEWAY. NOVEMBER S. 1954 .kXXi ~_ ..~iei, ~IwIIDEBV ~IIR..21~ diF4 8I?.lldFii L / I ill iJlAJiY N iJU7 WARMER RESPONSE NEEDED: Fire Survivors Need More Than $8.92 EIGHT DOLLARS and ninety-two cents. That's not much money when it's practi- cally the only source of revenue for a student who has lost everything he possesses in an Ann Arbor rooming house fire. Yet this insignificant sum, when multiplied by 14, the number of roomers in the Monroe rooming house fire which killed a graduate student and her landlady Thursday, is all that has been collected by The Daily Fire Relief Fund. This is not nearly sufficient to furnish clothing, books and other essentials to the stu- dents and their wives who were made tempor- arily homeless by the disaster. Up to yesterday, only three housing groups on the University campus-a campus contain- ing more than 18,000 students-had sent in monetary contributions to the Fund. While Pi Lambda Phi fraternity along with Alpha Gam- ma Delta and Pi Beta Phi sororities have brought in checks totaling $50, other housing groups on campus so far have simply turned the other cheek when it came to contributing to this worthy cause. There has been a singu- lar lack of interest shown in the Fund by the men's residence halls, one of which faces the' ruins of the rooming house. RESIDENTS of two South Quadrangle hous- es eat meals in a dining hall directly facing the gutted building, which is now partly boarded up. They occasionally discuss the fire over their meals. But still nothing concrete in the form of donations to help the evacuees of the home has been forthcoming. It does seem rather remarkable that the only housing groups which have contributed thus far have been three Greek- letter groups. Four men living in the basement of the home who barely escaped yhen the house flared up around them are "ex-quadders." Especially in this case, the various units of the "Michigan House Plan" should' take an interest, since these men were once "one of their own." Yet absolutely no in- terest has been shown by the quadmen, in- eluding South Quadders who got out of bed in the wee hours of the night to watch the spec- tacle of a house burning down. ALTHOUGH MANY articles of clothing have been turned into the collection being taken in Rm. 100 of the Student Publications Bldg., not all of the former residents of the home can be helped in this way. In at least one case, one of the students wears unusually-large clothes, Nothing which might fit him has been receiv- ed. In a case such as this, only money can help. What good is the $8.92 per person given by sympathetic students and other Ann Arborites? It might buy one book. But in itself this is practically useless when it is considered that some of the students lost large, expensive sets of encyclopedias. In addition, in almost evewtr case the 14 roomers in the ruined dwelling lost~ everything they owned-clothes, books and ev- erything else that a college student or instruc- tor keeps with him when in quest of knowledge DEAN OF MEN Walter B. Rea said yesterday some grants would be made available for these students. However, not too many are available at the present, many have already been given out at the beginning of the school year and many must be kept in reserve for other use later in the year. It is also possible that the Student Legisla- ture's Cinema Guild may give the proceeds from one of their movies to the Daily Fund so the Office of Student Affairs can distribute them to the 14 people. Whether or not this will be done will be decided during a meeting of the SL Cinema Guild committee tomorrow. So what hope do these students have of get- ting the essentials of college back? Just this- the hope that students in the University will come out of their introspective shells and do something to help them. From more than 18,- 000 students, not to mention the faculty and administration members, $125 as a total con- tribution is shameful. -Joel Berger NOBODY'S FAULT: Flu Test Fizzle Just 'One of Those Things' ALTHOUGH THE proposed flu vaccine tests have been abandoned, the cooperative spir- it displayed by student groups should not be overlooked. At first glance, the fact that tests had to be cancelled because of a lack of student partici- pation might make it look as though the old devil, student apathy, was to blame. This was not the case-far from it. In the words of Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, di- rector of Health Service, "Students were most cooperative. The group leaders worked hard and did a good job. Students are generally to be commended." Dr. Forsythe went on to point out even though the tests were cancelled, student efforts were not wasted. "This has broken the ice for later trials and helped establish a liaison with stu- dents," the director said. From the time of their inception until they were finally dropped, the proposed tests re- ceived vigorous cooperation from student or- ganizations. WHEN THE flu tests were first proposed, final operating procedures had not been deter- mined. Interfraternity Council was the first student group to volunteer to assist Health Service. Inter-Cooperative Council, Panhellenic Association, Assembly Association,and Inter- House Council joined in immediately. However, wnen plans for the tests were jell- ed, restrictions not originally counted on were included. Student groups still continued their efforts to cooperate. One requirement in particular made it impossible to secure the 2,000 needed' students-that calling for 100 per cent parti- cipation by individual house units. Nonetheless, every attempt was made to meet test needs. That the flu vaccine study was not held is no reflection on student groups or test directors. The demands of medical science are restricting,; rigidly controlled experimhents must meet cer- tain standards if they are to be accurate. Stu- dents did everything they could to meet these standards. It was just one of those things. -Lee Marks DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go- Round WASHINGTON. - Election-Go- Round-Don't blame the secret service for the beating given the San Mateo heckler who asked Nixon: "Tell us a dog story, Dick." The secret service keeps out of such brawls. Nixon has car- ried his own goon squad with him for some time ... Governor Dewey ghost-wrote most of Sena- tor Ives' speeches. At first Ives wanted to keep Dewey on the side lines, in the end hardly made a move without calling Tom ... Labor leaders claim Ike got his re- employment figure of 400,000 from the fact that students have now gone back to college ... Bay State politicos say there was much more knifing of Foster Furcolo by fellow-Democrat Sen. Jack Ken- nedy and family than met the eye. They attributed the barrage against Furcolo by The New Bed- ford Standard-Times to the young senator's father, ex-Ambassador Joe Kennedy. The newspaper, in an effort to discourage the Italian vote, claimed Furcolo was not born of immigrant parents. Probe Of Business Mergers Here's the inside story behind the Federal Trade Commission's sudden move to investigate busi- ness mergers and combines. Actually, chairman "Wild Bill" Langer of the Senate Judiciary Committee is responsible. He wrote a sharp letter to Attorney General Brownell threatening to investigate mergers. Alarmed over the way mergers always seemed to come just before a depression, Langer pointed out that in 1920 the number of mergers jumped from 411 to 749-just before the depression following World War I. Again, in 1928 and 1929,, the num- ber of mergers shot up to the highest in history-more than a thousand each year. The big de- pression followed. In recent years, mergers jumped from 200 in 1950 to 822 in 1952. Last year was another high year with 793 mergers. So, when Langer asked Brownell the reason why so many mergers were being permitted, the attorney general got worried. He decided that if Langer was going to probe mergers he had better cut the ground out from under Langer by getting the trade commission to start an investigation first. Washington Pipeline Stanley Barnes, the justice de- partment's antitrust chief, has flatly refused to waivecthe anti- trust laws so manufacturers can exchange information on how to make guided missiles. This has made Secretary of Defense Wilson so mad he has threatened to take it up in cabinet meeting . . . The big aircraft companies are rush- ing to get special tax write-offs for building their new plants in labor surplus areas. Curtiss- Wright, Boeing, Glenn Martin, Rohr Aircraft and Aviation have already applied for big tax write- offs . . . A drastic speed-up has been ordered to produce an atom- ic-powered bombing plane. Five companies have been assigned to push the bomber - General Elec- tric, Consolidated Vultee, Boeing, Lockheed, and Pratt & Whitney. Meanwhile, Russia has gone all out to put the first atomic-pow- ered plane in the sky. Merry-Go-Round Columnist Joe Alsop, a bachelor, passes out the best "treats," ac- cording to halloween youngsters ... Speaking of halloween, Am- bassadress Clare Boothe Luce swears she saw a flying saucer over Rome . . . not phantom, but a dream come true, is the new uranium strike by the Penn- Texas Corporation in Arizona. Big- gest so far in that state . . . Con- gratulations to George Delacorte for publishing the largest number of comics in the U.S. and keeping them all out of the horror class.. Judge Charles F. Murphy, the new comic-book czar, looks like he real- ly means business. Senators prob- ing juvenile delinquency are im- pressed .Al u so congratulations to the nonsked airlines for carry- ing supplies to hurricane-stricken Haiti so efficiently. They got 1 2,- 000 pounds of rice, 21,300 pounds of dried milk, 2,000 pounds of pa- per bags (to distribute the food in) to Haiti in no time . . . Na- tional citizens for educational tele- vision are now doing a real job. After a slow start they have seven TV stations on the air and five more scheduled to open this year The Diplomatic Pouch Secretary of Defense Wilson has ordered a complete blackout on all news stories about joint American- & Canadian defense plans. Reason for this is not so much security as politics. (Too many Canadians think we are interfering too much with their sovereignty.) ... Maj. Gen. Herb Powell, who com- manded the only American outfit that fought its way up to the Man- churian border in Korea, will be sent to Hawaii to takeo ver the ZONE G° ' "Not Yet! LETTERS Tainted Rose LEE MARKS' article on the front page of Sunday's Daily may well have been a fine literary ef- fort,ebut it left something to be desired in the way of journalistic accuracy. Specifically, I refer to the last sentence, "So students realized they'd go home for Christ- mas, leaving Pasadena for another year and old grads ambled out mumbling about powerhouses of yesteryear." Ohio State may currently be riding along on the top of the heap, but as Wes Fesler and the people down in Columbus know only too well, Ohio State has often,.. been in a similar midseason posi- tion with quite a different out- come at the end. Our friends from OSU still must meet a red-hot Purdue team and the finest Mich- igan team in five or six years be- fore packing their bags-they may well be smelling roses during the Christmas holidays, but if they do I doubt very much that they'll be the California variety. -Louis Zako * * * Anti-Discrimination . . f SHOULD LIKE to urge anyone interested in the problem of discrimination (racial or religious) as it affects this campus, to con- tact the Anti-Discrimination Board about specific cases or areas to be investigated. Last spring after much work by the Human Rela- tions Committee, Student Legisla- ture voted to set up a board to work to remove discriminatory practices in hiring and serving of University students in the Ann Ar- bor business community. There have been and are other worth- while groups working on this prob- lem. This group will be attempt- ing to add to the work by provid- ing (1) a group which will be com- posed of representatives of all fac- tions which are dealing with dis- crimination and which also, by vir- tue of community position, can be most influential in removing dis- criminatory practices (five stu- dents, two campus businessmen, one member of University admin- istration, and gone member of Ann Arbor Civic Forum,-this last a city group working on a number of problems one of which is discrim- inatory practices in the Ann Arbor Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff EugeneHartwig. Managing Editor Dorothy Myers ......... . . City Editor Jon Sobeloff........Editorial Director Pat Roeofs........ .Associate City Editor Becky Conrad........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart........Associate Editor Dave Livingston...........Sports Editor Hanley Gurwin.....Assoc. Sports Editor Warren Wertheimer .Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz .... Women's Editor Joy Squires .. Associate Women's Editor Janet Smith..Assocate women's Editor Dean Morton.......Chief Photographer Business Staf Lois Pollak._ . . Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise..........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski. Finance Manager Telehhne NO 23-24-1 business community.) The Board will-attempt to provide (2) a con- tinuing group working over the years on long range goals-work- ing for closer understanding among its members as well as for changes in the attitudes of some factions of the business community. The board will work primarily at gathering facts about and im- plementing action on cases of dis- crimination which are brought to its attentioniby any interested per- son or group. If over the year you have any information for the group, call any of the student members: Leah Marks (3-2804), Edward Reifel (2-4283), Roger Wil- kins (2-4591), Paul Dormont (2- 3219). -Diana Hewitt (2-3225) Chairman, Anti-Discrimination Board Not Yet!" POt NOT OPEN. TILL, CNR t srmA 7J Interpreting the News By WALTER LIPPMANN PARIS AN OBSERVER returning to Western Europe will soon feel tlat dur- ing the past year there has been a big change in the European attitude toward the United, States. A year ago America was the sub- ject of intense interest. It was difficult to have any conversation that did not begin or end wih a cross examination about McCarthyism, massive retaliation, agonized reappraisal, liberation, the, unleashing of Chiang, etc., etc. All that has now passed away. If, as all the reports say, the American voters are apathetic about American issues and the American election, the apathy is. even greater in Europe. One can easily conclude that in Europe there is not at the moment much popular interest in American political affairs, and that even in responsible quarters there is no strong interest. There is no doubt that the connections between Europe and America have become much 'looser than they were. An American observer can be of two minds about that. There are many aspects of this change which are unattractive and embarrassing, most par- ticularly where there is a lass of confidence resulting from the contrast between big talk and small deeds. But the fundamental readjustment of relations between the two continents is, I believe, a good development. Indeed it is evidence that the fundamental purpose of American postwar policy is being achieved. For whatever the figure we cut, thanks to our talkative Senators and speech writers and television experts and admirals, the great underlying fact is that Western Europe, which was prostrate in 1946, is again the seat of great powers able to play their part in the world. 1HE LOOSENING of the connections during the past year has been promoted by two great events. One is that while the United States is having a small recession, Western Europe has been booming. This overthrows the whole theory of postwar era; which was always that even a small setback in the American economy meant serious trouble in Europe. Events in the past year have discredited the notion that, as we used to say, when the American economy has a cold Europe has pneumonia. In 1954 the American economy does have a cold. But Europe has never been in better health since the end of the war. This is an experience which makes for a feeling of independence in Europe. What happened before and then during the Geneva conference sshowed that interests are stronger than rhetoric. They showed that beyond the region of American vital interests-and Southeast 'Asia is beyond it--the United States is not willing-or able to play the dominant and decisive role, WESTERN EUROPE has very nearly lost the fear, which was serious a year ago, that the United States is intending to precipitate a preventive war, or a war of liberation, or a war to unseat the Peking' under Eisenhower are not so different from most Europeans themselves, What the Europeans would like is our firm support of the Atlantic Alliance, and less direct intervention in their internal affairs. They would like us to make the maintenance of the Alliance the great obi ject of our policy, and leave it more to them to determine how to do propaganda and psychological warfare with their own Communists. T DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i (Continued from Page 2) + .... CURRENT MOVIES ..e_ .. AT THE STATE .. . FRANCIS JOINS THE WACS with Don- ald O'Connor, Julia Adams, Mamie Van Dor- en, Zazu Pitts, Lynn Bari, and Chill Wills. NOTICED little difference between Francis Joins the WACs and previous films of this series. This repetition of scenes and dialogue of such low calibre as the Francis series offers is that series' undoing. So then, Francis and friends will join the ranks of discontinued film series. I will not mourn him. It seems that through an error on the part of those Pentagon calculating machines that always "pick the right man for the right job," the protagonist of this epic, Lt. Peter Sterling, is assigned to a WAC training camp. It was the right camp but the wrong Sterling. Sup- posedly, they had wanted a female Lt. Sterling who was an expert on the subject of camou- flage. It was the Sterling of the so-called fair sex that should have made the trek but you know what happens when Hollywood starts manhandling the Pentagon's IBMs. IN ORDER TO maintain their standard of implausability, the low standard that films of this ilk commonly boast, the scenario writers have arranged that Francis is on hand, too, The loquacious animal is to be a guinea pig in the army's medical research program, ap- parently in the same camp as Lt. Sterling and the little women. ' A general and a nurse who were part of the initial Francis misadventure are on hand in the current opus to lend their contribution to the monotony of the proceedings. The aforementioned general believes that a WAC's place is behind a typewriter and not handling camouflage. He has planned special maneuvers which pit the gals against seasoned combat veterans of the opposing gender. Man and Mule lend a hand on the side of the women. In this film, the gimmick boys employ the greatest nurpber of over-worked situations that have ever b'een assembled in one film. Sterling nearly drowns his commanding officer, finds an unwanted bunkmate; gets accused of spy- ing, falls into a mud-hole, and manages to bore the audience in sundry other ways throughout the course of this movie. THE ACTING IS abominable. For Donald O'Connor, his performance as Sterling is quite poor. Julia Adams and Lynn Bari lend little color to the parts of the two WAC officers while Zazu Pitts is at her worst as the nurse. Chill Wills is boring both as the general and as the mule's voice. In this film, only Mamie Van- Doren really stands out. This latest Francis picture epitomizes a bad trait in Hollywood movie-making. I don't know how they do it, but every time that Hollywood has a good comedy idea they manage to run it into the ground, usually by repeating the same idea so often that it becomes unpalatable to the buying public. THEY DID this with the Andy Hardy series, with various animal series; and, more recently, with the Ma and Pa Kettle movies. In fact, the only thing that seemed to save the Martin and Lewis pictures was the joint advent of techni- color and the alluring Sheree North. Now, B.S. & M.S. in Chem., Ind., & Mech. E. for Production and Supervision. Wed., Nov. 10 Continental Oil Co., Houston, Texas & Ponca City, Okla.-AiI degrees of Civil, Elect., Ind., Mech., (plus Automo- tive option), Chem. E., Chemists, Phys- icists, Math., and Bus. Ad. for ite- search, Devel., Design, Manufacturing, and Marketing. New York Central Railroad, New York, N.Y.-B.S. in Elect., Ind., Mech. E., E. Mechanics for Equipment Main- tenance. Wed. & Thurs., Nov. 10 & 11 Convair, Div.. of General Dynamics Corp., Fort Worth, Texas-All degrees in Elect., Aero., Civil. & Mech. E., and M.S., MA, & PhD in Math. and Phys- ics for Research, Devel., Design, and Testing. Standard Oil Co. of Calif., San Fran- cisco, Calif.-B.S., M.S. & PhD in Chem. E., M.S. & PhD in Geology, & PhD in Chemistry for Research, DV- vel., Tech, Service, Field Operation, Process and Plant Design. Students wishing to make appoint- ments for interviews with any of the above should contact the Engineering Placement Office, ext. 2182, room 248 W. Engrg. Representatives from the following companies will interview at the Bu- reau of Appointments: Mon., Nov. 8 Proctor & Bamble Co., Cincinnati, Ohio-Men in LS & A and BusAd with basic Accounting courses for Training Program in the Comptroller's Division. This interview will be in the morning only. Tues., Nov. 9 Canada Life Assurance Co., Jack- son. Mich.-LS & A and Bus Ad men for Life Insurance Sales. Thurs., Nov. 11 Atlantic Refining Co., Dallas, Texas -in the afternoon at the Bureau for Math. -students for Geological Seismic Explorations Division. Thurs. & Fri., Nov. 11 & 12 Michigan Bel Telephone-Men in any field for Management Training Pro- gram. Students wishing to interview with any of the above shsould contact the Bureau of Appointments, ext. 371, room 3528 Admin. Bldg. PERSONNEL REQUEST: An organization in the Ann Arbor ay"ea desires a Male Clerk Typist. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, ext. 371, 3528 Admin. Bldg. Academic Notices Orientation Seminar in Mathematics. Wed., Nov. 3, 2:00 p.m. Room 3001 A.H. Miss Neeb will speak on the History of Pi. Sociology Department Coffee Hour-- The fifth in a series of Union student- faculty coffee hours will be held in the Terrace Room of the Michigan Union from 4:00-5:00 p in., Nov. 3, and will feature members of the Sociology dept. as special guests. The public is invited to meet the faculty informally, and sociology students are especially urged to attend, Refreshments will be served. Sports and Dance Instruction - Electives-Women students who have completed their physical education re- quirement may register for classes Tues., Nov. 23; and American Litera- ture, Sat., Nov. 27. The examination will be given in Room 71, School of Business Administration, from 9:00 a.m, to 12:00 noon. 401 Interdisciplinary Seminar in Ap- plication of Mathematics to Social Sci- ence will meet Thurs., Nov. 4, Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. S. Fliege will speak on "Recent Studies of Psychological Probabilities." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Nov. 4, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Mr. Richard P. Jerrard. Topic:"Deflec- tion of Thick Rings under Radial Load." Engineering Mechanics Seminar. Prof. D. J. Peery will speak on "Vibrations of a Suspension Bridge" at 4:00 p.m. Thurs., Nov. 4 in Room 111, West En-- gineering Building. # teometry Seminar will meet at 7:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 3, in Room 3001 A.H. Mr. William Smoke will discuss generic points and other topics in algebraic geometry. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will be held Thurs., Nov. 4, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 3021 Angell, Hall. Mr. Reinhardt will begin discussion of Chapter V of Cochran's "Sampling Techniques." Exhibitions Styles in Chinese Painting, Nov. 3-23; Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall, 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. on weekdays, 2:00 -5:00 p.m. on Suns. The public is in- vited. Events Today Ia Sociedad Hispanica will meet Wed., Nov. 3, in the League at 8:00 p.m. Spanish films will be shown, with comments by Prof. Sanchez y Escri- bano. Dancing, singing, and refresh- ments will follow. Vegan todos! First Baptist Church: Wed., Nov. 3, 4:30-6:00 p.m. Midweek chat with Rev, Basil Williams of South Chicago Neigh- borhood house as guest. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent-Faculty Tea Wed., Nov. 3 will not be held at Canterbury House. All Can- terbury tea hounds are expected at the Sceptic's Corner at the Union. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Wed., 7:00 p.m., Discussion Group at the Guild House. The S.R.A. Seminar on Comparative Religions will meet Wed., 7:15 p.m., in the Library of Lane Hall. Senior Society will meet Wed., Nov. 3, 12:00 M., at Music School. Sophomore Engineering Class Board will meet Wed., Nov. 3, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1300, East Engineering Bldg. All members are urged to attend. Recogni- tion for the Board within the College of Engineering will be discussed. The meeting is open to the public, Hillel: Reg. for Hililel Courses Nov. 3-5. At Hillel 7:00-10:00 p.m. Courses Offered: Introduction to American Jewish Society, Introduction to the History of the Jews of Spain, Seminar in the Methods of American Jewish person. Thurs., the "Skeptics Corner" will be at 439 Mason Hall with Prof. Wilbert McKeachie as the leader. American Society of Mechanical En- g will meet today at 7:15npnm., in Room 3-5 of the Union. Movie and discussion on the Chrysler Proving Grounds. Refreshments. Movies. Free movie, "Eskimo Hunt- ers," through Nov. 8. 4th floor Exhibit. Hall, Museums Building. Films are shown daily at 3:00. and 4:00 p.m., in- cluding Sat., and Sun., with an ex- tra showing Wed. at 12:30. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: 7:00 p.m., Discussion Group at the Guild House. 8:20 p.m., Meet at the Guild House to attend the "This I' Believe" lecture at Angell Hall Audi- torium. Westminster Student Fellowship Bi ble study meets at 7:00 p.m. in the Presbyterian student center. Attention All Pershing Riflemen. Reg- ular company 'drill will be held Nov. 3. Report to TCB in uniform at 1930 hours. Bring gym shoes. Wesleyan Guild. Wed., Nov. 3. Mid- week Worship, 5:15 p.m. in the chapel. Mid-week tea in the lounge, 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. If you are interested in Israeli folk dancing, we'll see you at 9:00 p.m., Wed., Nov. 3, at the Hillel Foundation. at which time the new Israeli Dance group will meet. The Student Zionist Group will meet Wed., Nov. 3, 8:00 p.m., at the Hillel Foundation. Lutheran Student Association-Wed., 4:00 to 5:30 p"m. Remember the cof- fee break at the Center, corner of Hilt St. and Forest Ave. Coming Events Christian Science Organization Testi- inonial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. All are cordially invited. International Center Tea. 4:30-6:00 p.m., Thurs., Nov. 4, Rackham Build- ing. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House, Thurs., Nov. 4, after the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion. La P'tite Causette will meet Wed., Nov. 3 from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the left wing of the Michigan Union caf e- teria. All are welcome to join us in in- formal French conversation. Le Cercle Francals. There will be a French discussion group Thurs. at 7:30 p.m. in the Michigan League. The top- ic will be the political situation in France. Everyone is welcome to come and participate in the discussion which will be led by two Frenchmen, Mr. Garduner and Mr. Clignet. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Thurs. 7:00-8:00 p.m., Bible Class at the Guild House. "Great Ideas of the Bible . . . their development and un- derlying relationships to political, eco- nomical, social values." Phi Sigma Society. Drs. S. A. Cain, M. Bates, D. C. Pelz, F. Wyatt, and ,-f .; w