PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1955 IAEFU iEM~IA AL HRDY ERAY1,15 EDITOR'S NOTE DR EW PEARSON: Monopoly Probe Slated "Hello -- Ike?" By GENE HARTWIG Daily Managing Editor THINGS HAVE reached a sad state when Michigan State College must point the way for the University. But such is the case with the driving situation. MSC allows everyone to drive and handles parking and other traffic violations in an adult manner. Meanwhile the University perfects its technique of detecting student violators by checking license numbers taken down by that ubiquitous officer in the black Ford. There is a solution to the problem for those realistic enough to realize that the automo- bile as well as television is here to stay. The present restriction on student driven automobiles should be removed. In its place the University should require all students bring- ing cars to campus to register them with the Office of Student Affairs upon payment of a two or three dollar fee at the beginning of each semester. This could be handled as part of the general registration procedure. The student would have to sign a statement indicating that he had adequate liability in- surance coverage on his automobile and that the car was in good mechanical order. As a check on this the University could require a mechanical check of the automobile at the stu- dent's expense in questionable cases. The stu- dent would also have to indicate that he is able to provide over-night off-the-street park- ing for his car. In return the student would be given a regis- tration sticker which he would be required to display on his car. Thus the University would have an exact check on just who has a car on campus and enforceable standards would be laid down restricting the number of student- owned cars brought to Ann Arbor. The restriction on numbers would come through a revised set of parking regulations enforced by a University or city officer paid from the drivers' registration fee. In the im- mediate campus area curb parking could be restricted to 45 minutes or an hour to prevent students from driving to campus and parking their cars all day while in classes. To provide for the student coming from a long distance who must park on campus, special parking permits could be issued and a parking lot or possibly one or more parking structures set aside to accommodate them. Faculty members would continue to use existing lots with the possible addition of other facilities. The controlling factor under this arrange- ment would be the restriction on parking. Al- though there might be an influ automobiles at first a strict enf the parking regulations would disc of those who really don't need a c Suggestions for changing the defensible regulation are being ma step is for the president to sum mittee of administrators, faculty x officials and students to attack th a manner worthy of the Universit FRATERNITY RUSHING is in again and the crowds are mi the doors of Michigan's 40 or mo timely word to the wide-eyed rus "Beware of Greeks bearing gifts.' Life within the portals of the c or lodge can be great for the ma accept the restrictions of living knit group. The present writer c three years of warm friendships able experiences which have grey college life. Fortunately all men who come t not of the same stamp and it b rushee to examine himself well be step that will demand much ofh possibly something of his indiv: everyone is made for fraternity spite of what you will be hearin two weeks there are thousands of nity men who have managed to gr the University better off for hav their natural habitat was in the d ate room. The fraternity man who benefit his life as an affiliate is the one u his own mind thoroughly before a pledge pin. GLANCING THROUGH the bas dule we note that the Wolver Minnesota Saturday in a nationa game at the Field House. One c marks against these so-called spo past weeks has been the decided] manlike conduct ofthe crowdso0 of the floor. The national pastime of booing the luckless referee has infected e posedly more mature college crow rooters will do well to remember1 nate spectacle Ohio State fans ma selves at the football game last fa urge to let go with a boo seems1 control. Michigan fans can do theirt great service by their performan day's game. x of student forcement of ourage many ar. present in- DRAMATIC POSSIBILITIES: Little Plot, Much Scenery Highlight Cinerama II At the Music Hall Theater in Detroit, CINERAMA HOLIDAY. ESSENTIALLY "Cinerama Holiday" like its predecessor "This Is Cinerama" is a travelogue. The audience is treated to very little story line but rather to a series of pictorial images that are often quite lovely, as well as spine tingling. This is not to say that the producers have foresaken the effects that "put you into the picture" in favor of a more static portrayal. Rather they have managed by transporting their wonderous tri-dimen- sional camera from the Swiss Alps to the Arizona desert, to capture familiar scenes in a most unfamiliar way. The action of the story concerns the visit of John and Betty Marsh of Kansas City to Europe and Fred and Beatrice Toller of Zurich, f, SIT DOWN, YOU LOOK PALE: Greetings Overlooked as Out For Originality, Lifemanshif de. The next WASHINGTON-It was exactly mon a com- twenty years ago that the members, city, high-powered public relations firm ne problem in of Carl Byoir was hired by the big . p e chain stores to try to offset the 'yn quietdetermination of a young Congressman from Texarkana, n full swing Tex., to pass legislation to protect lling through independent retailers. re houses. A The young Congressman was hee might be Wright Patman, and the legisla- tion he passed, despite the care- hapter house fully organized opposition, was the a willingo Patman-Robinson act. Sen. Joe in a closely Robinson of Arkansas, the other in atcosly t author of that act, is dead now, an testify to but Wright Patman, a little older, and memor- though just as determined, is get- atly enriched ting ready to launch another bat- tle against monopoly. to college are The House of Representatives is behooves the cutting down on its probes this fore taking a year, but one probe which Speaker his time and Sam Rayburn is determined should iduality. Not go through is an investigation of the current wave of mergers and life, and in discrimination against small busi- tg these next ness. Congressman Patman will f non-frater- head that committee. raduate from SENATE LAGS ving realized ORIGINALLY it was expected orm or priv-V that the Senate would stage the big monopoly probe. Now it s most from doesn't look that way. who searched Senator Langer, the North Da- ccepting the kota Republican who staged the sensational Dixon-Yates probe with no money, has been shunted ketball sche- aside by his own fellow Republi- cans. The Democrats were willing ines take on tohappoint Langer as Chairman of ally televised the new monopoly committee, but of the black fellow-Republican Wiley of Wis- rts events in consin stepped in to block him. lly unsports- Wiley has more seniority than n both sides Langer, and Wiley insisted that he come first on the monopoly com- and hissing mittee. :ven the sup- That left Senator Kefauver, d. Wolverine Democrat, as the next man in line the unfortu- to handle the monopoly investi- gation, and jealous fellow Demo- ade of them- crats are wary about letting the all when the long, lean Tennesseean get into too great to the limelight with another probe. They remember the headlines he University a got when he investigated crime. ce at Satur- So, though they were willing to let Langer, a Republican, head the monopoly committee, they were - - --- - not willing to give the job to Ke- fauver. Instead, hard-working, over- worked Senator Kilgore of West Virginia will probe monopoly. e t But while the Senators have been sparring for the position, Congressman Patman has already 1started getting up investigative steam. PATMAN DOESN'T LAG brighten our "THEY SAY we are entering a condition of new period of business expan- ie Diag. sion," says Patman, "but what we are not told is that small business our comrades is not sharing as it should in that orite color?", expansion. Instead, giant corpor- pause to an- ations are becoming more profit- able, while the smaller corpora- tions are becoming less profitable, orning-Pah- drying up, and selling out. eeting be ig- "We cannot expect anything but student com- eventual ruin to free enterprise if tation might all business becomes a privileged thought and monopoly and opportunity for in- dependent business disappears. It is the duty of Congress to help all , murmuring business, large and small. Didn't you "We are not out to destroy big hing rapidly business," says Patman, "but we to muse all must not let it destroy our way of er his eyes-- life either." ig them bet- Among other things, Patman plans a searching inquiry into the declare, from role that lobbying and large-scale Ln from any advertising play in fostering mon- ,, fropoly. About $7,000,000,000 a year is ne Howard spent o advertising in this coun- try, mostly by big business," the Texan estimates. "This is almost equal to the cost of all the civilian functions of the government. Stag- gering sums are also spent for lob- bying, here in Washington and at the grass-roots level, to protect the selfish interests of monopolies. My he character committee is not against adver- o explain, in tising, but we think the American e has begun people are entitled to know to er's duty de- what extent advertising and lob- bying contribute to the growth of monopoly." y's father, A. SENATE'S CHAMP WRESTLER e tore across IF YOU want to live to be 100, re-and-dam- take a tip from the oldest mem- ber of the Senate, Theodore Fran- cis Green of Rhode, Island. He many plaud- doesn't brag about it, but if you he did as di- pin him down, he'll give you his a well-known own formula for keeping young. rather than It is: moderate exercise, no taining a de- smoking, one drink before dinner, none after dinner, and plenty of Yet this pro- work. Also he keeps his weight p and Heusel down. paces well. "I don't diet particularly unless I've gained a pound or two," says early all the Green, "then I'm careful to take iandsome set it off. I've kept my weight at 137 1 furnishings for the last thirty years. Once in a while I get up to 140, but that's the limit. I never go above." nd laughs, a The Senator walks to work every thwhile. (For morning-a two-and-a-half-mile play still has trip from the University Club to rmer.) the Capitol. It takes him 45 min- 7 IS uSdt t-kEF~ps, - .. *ws m grmrac. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR + Q} MgTS ° .ANDS -; -, '. a ; . ,, ° iA G Wrong Text .. . To the Editor: I SHOULD like to join your edi- torial writer, Louise Tyor, in deploring the action of the Mi- ami hotel keeper who expelled the Negroes from a Lincoln Day din- ner in his dining room. This clum- sy bit of evil doing, a contraven- tion of all the principles with which Abraham Lincoln is asso- ciated in our minds, rightfully de- serves the condemnati4n of all Americans. As a Southerner, however, I am distressed to find Miami used as the text for a sermon on the South. Miami is not part of the South; it is a suburb of New York City. Much fuzzy editorializing might be avoided by keeping this in mind. I should hardly wish to maintain that the South itself is above reproach, but does it seem unfair to ask that the South not be pilloried for ugly incidents which take place in such remote corners of the earth as Chicago or Los Angeles or Miami? -C. F. Brown Jet Trailer . . To the Editor: ONE OF the local theaters re- cently ran a short ,trailer on Air Force flying training which concluded on the theme of per- sonal security in flying jet air- craft. This was greeted by the. colle- giate audience with certain audible signs of disbelief. I think it might therefore be appropriate to men- tion some facts bearing on the case. For the first nine months of 1954 (latest available figures) the Air Force suffered one fatal ac- cident for each 10,000 hours flown in jet fighters in training and op- erations world-wide. This would be one fatal accident for approxi- mately each 5,000,000 miles flown. I believe this would show some rather tangible "security" if com- pared, say, with the normal haz- ards of drivinghan automobile. Realize, too, that this flying was done under all possible conditions in all parts of the world. Pilots and mechanics were confronted with brittle sub-zero conditions at such arctic bases as Thule and Fair- banks; they battle oppressive heat in Saudi Arabia, Philippines and North Africa; and they were on a virtual war alert in Hokkaido, West Germany, Korea, and Oki- nawa, not to mention along our own northern frontier right here in Michigan. Some accidents are an unfortu- nate parallel to the Air Force res- ponsibility to be on constant alert, to the need to be ready to fly in any weather, anytime and any- place in the world. No one re- grets accidents more than those of us in the Air Force. But it's a small price to pay for nationalsur- vival in a hostile world. While jet flying is definitely not a job for the timid, it is, in my estimaton, ridiculous to overestimate the dan- gers involved. -William H. Parkhill Colonel, USAF Professor of Air Science DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN PRESENTING a brief vignette of campus life. Scene: practically anyplace. Time: probably morning. Dramatis personae: anybody-unfor- tunately, we're all guilty. Enter two students, rushing in opposite di- rections. Noticing each other, they pause, and the dialogue begins: Student S: "Hi-how're ya?" Student Q: (Obviously overwhelmed with his friend's solicitous concern.) "Gee, thanks for asking! I'm fine!. How are you?" Student S: "That's great! I'm fine too" (Walks away.) Student Q: (Shouting at other, as he has nearly passed from hearing range.) "Good!" (Failure to express gladness that the state of a fellow student's health is normal enough to merit a "fine" would be a blasphemy of blas- phemies.) It's not, of course, that our conversations have become stereotyped or hypocritical - certainly each of us is acutely concerned with every other. But possibly we might hit upon other salutations, to color and 1 the exact physical and spiritual encounters in corridors and on th WE MIGHT, for instance, hail c with a "Hi! What's your favi leaving quickly before they may1 swer. Nor may the approach of "G'm levi borders the Caspian Sea!" gr .nored in any anthology of inter-s ments: confusing as such a salu be, it would offer food for intent broadened horizons. Or we might try another angle with great concern, "Hi, there! get any sleep last night?" Marc away, we could leave the other day on the state of the bags und kicking himself for not concealin ter. At least he wouldn't have to c sheer force of habit rather tha truthful basis, that he was "fine. -Jar CURRENT MOVIES Switzerland to the United States. Since the production professes little plot it compensates by throw- ing a wealth of beauty on the huge screen. The travels of these four people during two and one- half hours of screen time are so varied that one leaves the the- ater remembering only a small amount of the projected idagery. THROUGH SUCH devices as strapping the camera onto the front of a bobsled at St. Moritz and placing it in the nose of a jet landing on a carrier, the producers have achieved effects that would be impossible with the ordinary camera. Many people complained after viewing the first Cinerama pro- duction that it was just this vast- ness of scope that would prevent the medium from effectively pre- senting dramatic works. Yet, though the story in this film is slim, the excitement of the travellers seems to convey itself even across the big screen. The awe of the Americans as they visit the Arc de Triomphe and hear a French family's story of the men they have lost during the war is beautifully done. The audience quickly senses the bewilderment of the Swiss couple as they view "The Jolly Bunch and Social Club," strutting as they re- turn from a funeral in New Or- leans. The floor show at the Lido in Paris is made more realistic by having the audience surrounding the bistros floor instead of mere- ly looking into it. Above all, it is the very size of the screen itself that makes the action believable. Until this film we have had to be content with one dimensional views of the world. In "Cinerama Holiday" we are in a Parisian taxi viewing Paris as realistically as any visiting fire- man. We are at the "Top Of The Mark" seeing San Francisco Bay as it should be seen. When the image is on the screen, we too are in the picture. --Michael Braun tI e" i i i i DRAMA REVIEW LIVELY production of "The Moon Is Blue" A LIVELY production of "The MVoon Is Blue" by the Ann Arbor Civic Theater is now on view at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. Though a successful movie version of the F. Hugh Herbert comedy was made, last night's players showed that there are still lots of laughs in the play. The story of the outspoken young lady who catches her man is not unusual. But, as it is generally known, the play's merits are in the dialogue. Heroine Patty O'Neill manages to proclaim her virtue and her knowledge though not in a bawdy way. IN HER Civil Theater debut, Carolee Dickie as Patty is as full of vitality as the role de- mands. While somewhat heavy in her stage movements, her facial expressions lend a great deal to the charm that is inherent in the role. James Briley as the young man whom Patty catches atop the Empire State Building under. plays to the uninhibited Patty competently. Most effective is Joel Rowley as the suave, middle-aged -roue who completes the triangle. And he showed he really knew t he was portraying when trying t his own debauched way, 'that h training his daughter as a fathe mands. In his brief appearance as Patt B. Crandell got many laughs as h the stage as indignant as the "fi nation" Irish cop should be. DIRECTOR Ted Heusel deservesz its for the very creditable job1 rector. Any play that is not onlya play, but one that relies on lines plot or theme, has difficulty in att gree of freshness or originality. Y duction is kept going at a fast clir has put the actors through theirI The living-room scene where n action takes place was a very h with the modern furniture and tastefully chosen. For an evening of enjoyment a visit to "The Moon Is Blue" is wor even if you saw the movie, the p lots of lines that weren't in the for it Architecture Aud..a. THE BLUE ANGEL, with Emil Jannings and Marlene Diet- rich. THE strange irony which sur- rounds The Blue Angel is that the film was conceived to give much-needed rejuvenation to the career of silent-screen actor Emil ,Jannings. Jannings had retired from the Hollywood cinema with the arrival of talkies; critics and fans eagerly awaited the release of his first sound effort, The Blue Angel, a German film directed by Josef von Sternberg, then one of the most famous film directors. Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigar under the authority of the Board In Control of Student Publications Editorial Staff Eugene Hartwig ......Managing Editor Dorothy Myers ............City Editor Jon Sobeloff ........Editorial Director Pat Roelofs ......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 Janet Smith Associate Wonen's Editor John Hirtzei.......Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak. ....Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise.....Advertising Manager Mary lean Monkoski Finance Manager lelehont NO 2;-24-1 mA mh." Today Jannings is almost un- known; but one of the featured players who worked with him in The Blue Angel, and who almost went unnoticed initially, has be- come a legend: Marlene Dietrich, the eternally desirable and beau- tiful woman. Perhaps more than anything else, The Blue Angel has supplied the source and material, for that legend. It is a story of a professor (Jan- nings) who falls in love with a cafe singer, Lola Lola (Miss Diet- rich). The professor gives up his work to follow Lola and is even- tually dragged down to a point of complete personal degradation, and finally insanity. JANNINGS' performance now seems a little overdone, often because his broad acting technique is no longer popular; the opening schoolroom sequences are some- times unintentionally funny, al- though they help delineate the non-humorous, stern nature of the professor; and the sound, consid- ered sensational in 1930, is at best audible. But the film still has great power in that' it is a personal tragedy presented in personal terms. The dark, thirtist photog- raphy helps establish the tragic overtones and gives the right mood to Miss Dietrich's cafe numbers, done on a smoke-filled little stage with cheap scenery and a chorus of beer-guzzling females. Ultimately, however, the major attraction which The Blue Angel holds is Dietrich: to watch her walk with a sureness and confi- dence which no other actress has ever quite matched; to watch her sit astride a chair, throw her hands on her hips, and throatily murmur, "Falling in Love Again.'" Dietrich's screen personality was deliheratlv coneived hv her a.. (Continued from Page 2) other representative for Personnel & Industrial Relations. For appointments contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, 3528 Ad. Bldg. PERSONNEL REQUESTS Radio Station WKZO, Kalamazoo, Mich.-Sports reporter to canvass Kala- mazoo for sports information, and re- port on TV shows. Michigan Civil Service Commission- announces examinations for Corrections Department Trainees (age 21-40), Li-. quor Enforcement Trainee (age 23-35), & Property Appraiser Trainee (not over 45). Must graduate by June, 1955. Ap- plicttions must be received by March 9. Evans International, Inc., Acton, Mass. --Young man with general sales experi- ence to represent this Importing Com- pany in southern Michigan. Mead Sales Company, Dayton, Ohio- young men for Sales Training Program; company is the S$ples Organization for all of the white paper manufactured by The Mead Corporation. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, 3528 Admin. Bldg. Academic Notices Seminar in Mathematical Statistics: Thurs., Feb. 17, at 3:30 ;:.m. in Room 3011 Angell Hall. Miss Irene Hess will complete the discussion of Chapter V and Mr. Howard Reinhardt will begin Chapter 7 in Cochran's "Sampling Techniques." Seminar in Applied Mathematics-A series of talks will be given this seme- ter as a background for the Symposium in Electromagnetic Wave Theory which is sponsored by the International Scien- tific Radio Union, to be held here June 20-25. Topics included in the symposi- um: wave guides, boundary value prob- lems of diffraction and scattering, an- tenna theory, forward and multiple scattering. First speaker, Thurs., Feb. 17, at 4:30 p.m. in Room 247 West Engi- neering. Prof. H. William Welch on "Some Physical Problems Involving Electromagnetic Theory. 402 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science will meet Thurs., Feb. 17, in Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. C. H. Coombs and R. C. Kao will speak on "Non-Metric Factor Analysis." Seminar in Organic Chemistry. Thurs., Feb. 17, 7:30 p.m. in Room 1300 Chemis- try. Julian Lakritz will speak on "Some Aspects of Nitramine Chemistry." Seminar in Analytical - Inorganic - Physical Chemistry. Thurs., Feb. 17, 7:30 p.m. in Room 3005 Chemistry. Prof. Philip J. Elving will speak on "Meas- urenent of Reaction Rates Using Mega- cycle Frequency Oscillators." Law School Admission Test: Candi- dates taking the Law School Admission Test Sat., Feb. 19 are requested to re- port to Room 100, Hutchins Hll at 8:45 j.m. Aeronautical Engineering Colloquium -Fri., Feb. 18, 4:00 p.m., in Room 1504 East Engineering Bldg. Eugene Turner will discuss "The Theory of Luminous Shock Wave." Feb. 25, Mr. Turner will give a second colloquium on "The Experimental Results Obtained on the Luminous Shock Wave." Biological Chemistry Seminar. "Some Metaloflavoprotein Enzymes, under the direction of Dr. C. R. Noll, Jr.; Room 319 West Medical Building, Sat., Feb. 19, 10:00 a.m. Fri., Feb. 18 is the last day for stu- dents in the College of Architecture and Design to add courses to their elec- tions. Logic seminar will meet Fri., Feb. 18 at 4:00 p.m. in 3010 Angell Hall. Dr. Buchi will continue to discuss "Defina- bility in Formal Systems." The Extension Services announces that there are still openings in the fol- loinm iclae to ha hal'rid.ral-, n.a Registration for these classes may be made in Room 4501 of the Administra- tion Building on State Street during University office hours, or in Room 164 of the School of Business Administra- tion on Monroe Street, 6:30-9:30 p.m. this evening. Graduate Students expecting to re- ceive the master's degree in June, 1955, must file a diploma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., Feb. 25. A student will not be rec- ommended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the office of the Graduate School. Doctoral Candidates who expect to re- ceive degrees in June, 1955, must have three bound copies of their disserta- tions in the office of the Graduate School by Fri., April 29. The report of the doctoral committee n the final oral examination must be filed with the Recorder of the Graduate School to- gether with two copies of the thesis, which isready in all respects for pub- cation, not later than Mon., May 23. Actuarial Seminar will meet Thurs, Feb. 17, at 4:00 pm.in 3212 A.H. Prof. Nesbitt will continue the discussion of "Interpulation in Terms of Operators." The Budapest String Quartet-Josef Roismann and Alexander Schneider, vi- olins; Boris Kroyt, viola ,and Mischa Schneider, cello;- will perform in the three concerts of the 15th Annual Chamber Music Festival Fri. and Sat. nights, and Sun. afternoon, Feb. 18, 19, 20. At the Sun. afternoon concert the group will be assisted by Robert Courte, violist in two quintets. The programs to be heard are as fol- lows: Fri., Feb. 18, 8:30 p.m.-Haydn Quar- tet in G, No. 1; Lees Quartet No. 1; and the Schubert in A minor, Op. 29. Sat., Feb. 19, 8:30 p.m.-Mozart Quar- tet in D, K. 499; William Denny's Quar- tet No. 2; and the Quartet in B minor, No. 2 by Beethoven. Sun., Feb. 20, 2:30 p.m.-Beethoven Quintet in C major; Bartok Quartet No. 1; and the Brahms Quintet in G major, Op. 111. Tickets are on sale at the offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Tower; and will also be on sale an hour before each concert in the lobby of the Rackham Building. Exhibitions Exhibitions, Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall: Fantastic Landscape, Michigan Wa- ter Color Society, Mexican Arts and Crafts, through March 6. Hours: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. weekdays, 2:00-5:00 p.m. Sundays. The public is invited. Events Today Social Seminar Thurs., Feb. 17, at 7:45 p.m. in the Assembly Hall, Rack- ham Building. William W. Parsons, President of the American Society for Public Administration, will speak on, "Departmental Management in a Large Federal Agency." Refreshments, The Congregational - Disciples Guild: 7:00 a.m., Thurs., Feb. 17. Breakfast meditation group meeting in Guild House chapel, 438 Maynard Street. Sign up for the cost breakfast by Wed. aft- ernoon at Guild House. Christian Science Organization Testi- monial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea. Thurs., Feb. 17, 4:30-6:00 p.m., Rackham Building. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House, Thurs., Feb. 17, after the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion. La P'tite Causette meets Thurs., Feb. 17, 3:30-5:00 p.m. in the Michigan Union Cafeteria. ici on peut parler francais; venez tout le monde. Mid-Wek .Vespers .sponsored by the Westminster Student Fellowship at the Stient Clhanel of the Prhvterian 4! I t' L