P~AG~E FP "T"'HE MICUlGAN DAILY -, SUNDAY, A U'OU 3 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ._U. hI , a U(...UST 3. . 19.4..',. Fifty-Seventh Year ~~ Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan under the authority of the Hoard in Control of Student Publications Editorial Staff Managing Editors ... John Campbell, Clyde Recht Associate EdItor .................... Eunice Mintz Sports Editor ..................... Archie Parsons Business Staff 1eneral Manager ...............t Edwin Schneider Advertising Manager .......... William Rohrbach Circulation Manager ................ Melvin Tick Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to Lie use for re-publication of all news dispatches redited to it or otherwise credited in this news- >aper. All rights of republication of all other .natters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, as second class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $500, by mail, $.00. Re mber, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff n'd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: LIDA DAILES VD RATHER BE RIGHT: Budget Cuts By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE REPUBLICANS have been receiving an elaborate lesson in sophistication, which they badly needed. It hurts, as all growing up hurts. They entered upon the recent session of Congress swearing that they were going to cut the budget anywhere from 6 to 12 billions of dollars. Now the session is over, and the net savings could be put into a Senator's eye without seriously discommoding him. The best estimates are that current sav- ings total about 2 billions, but that most of this amount will be eaten up by little items the Republicans are not counting, such as the speeded-up use of the American loan by the British, the need for stockpiling ma- terials, aid to Greece, etc. In the end the budget may not run much, if anything, under Mr. Truman's estimate of 37.5 bil- lions. That is not the Republicans' fault. A Congress made up of 535 Representative Tabers (and that is not a thought with which I lull myself to sleep) could have done little better. The Republican are all right. It's just that the world is wrong. In a world in which it is necessary to stockpile stra- aid former allies, etc., it just isn't pos- tegic materials, to help the veterans, to sible to cut government costs very much. It is even more humiliating than losing a game to show up in the wrong stadium, on the wrong night, with the wrong equip- ment, prepared to put on a whale of a battle against a team playing something else. And the Republican "Economy!" slo- gan of this last session was about as perti- nent as "Fifty-four Forty or Fight!" Some of the Republicans are miserable that they have failed to carry out a promise. But that they misjudged the world, that they never should have made the promise, is a far more serious charge. Larger than this issue, an illumination by it, is the gen- eral issue of Republican naivete, that yearn- ing for spurious simplicities, which is so out of place at a time when we are going to need the most consummate sophistication in order to stay alive in this world. That the Republicans were honest and sincere in their belief that 6 to 12 billions could be trimmed off the budget doesn't excuse them. It merely makes the original error in judgment seem deeper, and harder to cure. It isn't a sprain, it's a fracture. For it goes with other manifestations; It goes, for example, all too well, too harmoniously, with the way the Repub- licans flatly refused to ease the displaced persons problem this year by letting some refugees enter the country, though that move would have done us the widest pos- sible good at a critical moment in foreign affairs. "Keep Immigration Down!" like "Economy!" is one of those simplicities which changing times have rendered wildly inappropriate, but to which the party clings. These slogans, taken to- gether, are the way the party says stub- bornly to itself that very little has changed, and is changing. In a more remote way, one senses a sim- ilar spirit in that curious, 1928ish kind of campaign which the leading Republican candidate, Mr. Dewey, is waging by making himself charmingly available and conspic- uous, while keeping silent on the issues. Nothing could be more old hat than this Coming Recession LAST YEAR about this time, government economists were making cautious pre- dictions about the coming "recession." President Truman, in his own inimitable manner, delicately agreed that the United States was about due for the syclical bust but the terminology of Mr. Truman also involved the word "slight." The economists predicted that the "reces- sion" would edge in about the fall of 1946 and that it would be in full swing in the fall of this year. Up to date, no one has been concerned with the dire prophecies of the left-over Brain Trust, because produc- tion figures have been reassuring (for the manufacturers) and American businessmen have been busily sinking dollars in the newly-opened European field. Buried on the fifth page of a New York paper and practically non-existent in the local papers is an Associated Press dis- ALpuiA&ea Ca patch which should make those people relying on European puchases sit up and take notice. American exports in June slipped 13 per cent below May's record. The/Census Bureau calls this slump "the first substantial interruption in the recent rising trend of exports." President Truman, in an economic report last Monday, had classed the "extraordinary excess of ex- ports over imports" as one of the three "temporary props" beneath the nation's high employment and production levels. Some goiernment foreign trade experts privately called the export decline a "prob- able turning point," the beginning of a downward trend in a 16 billion dollar-a- year business. These experts agreed that the causes.. were the rapid shrinking of foreign hold- ings of gold and American dollars, the only kinds of money that will pay for American goods, and the tightening up by foreign countries on their purchases to conserve buying power while the need for it grows. This decline in the "temporary prop" should bring back the word "recession" into the United States' vocabulary. -Lida Dailes. " S NOT the central issue constantly evad- ed?" asked a young pastor as we came away from a brilliant lecture upon the Near East. The dynamite is in that central issue, brother, and diplomats keep far from ex- plosives. Religious convictions, aspirations, formulations, practices, and vested interests are central. Not until a mental and spiritual therapy can diagnose whole populations, get to the bottom of deep pockets of misery, and drain off centuries of prejudice, and expose truth for its own sake will peace come. There are signs to indicate that reli- gion may soon be taken seriously by the scholars. That is the first step. After ten centuries of Christianity in vast mysterious Russia, it took an atheistic materialism to rid that people of a reli- gion gone wrong. Gemans with better textual criticism and more profound the- ores of Christian philosophy than any sister people started two world wars in a single generation. It is methods common to the religions of the world which must be restudied. It is the Gods of mistaken leaders who must be' dethroned. It is the ideologies of whole peoples which must be unmasked. Only a scrutiny of religious mentors can promise progress. That is the second step. The scholars dare not longer talk politics and omit the fates, faiths, fears, and frus- trations classed as Religion. "On earth peace," the Christian function of Jesus, supposedly, and Ahimsa, "Thou shalt not kill," a commanding thesis alike of the Hindu, the Jew, and the Confusian follower must be made a definite goal by all think- ers. That is the third step. The tragedy of youth gathered at Oslo, on a budget of nickels while the Truman Doctrine gets four hundred million for an ideological jam at the Dardanelles and the Dutch strafing the natives come awake to their human rights, should arrest every mind. The fact of a quarrel about coal in Germany with steel in France halting every tribunal when that coal and steel united across that imaginary line of twc nations can feed Europe, is part and parcel of the religious debacle. The words German and France in this atomic age are fictions. Their real meanings have escaped. When we can see, feel, and taste that change in the status of man and his brotherhood, we will begin to get well emotionally. There is little leadership and less inter- pretation by the Religious leaders. Each sectarian compartment or faith has its own falling structure to guard. The vati- can must look to its political relationships and the welfare of its "nationals" in var- ious countries. The Jews must maintain coherency in order to carve out a "home- land" nationally. The Orthodox with patriarchates jammed between eastern and western Europe can scarcely contrib- ute to the interpretation of ideologies due to political distress and self preservation. Protestantism stretched so thinly around the globe and without political significance can be ignored by the men in political science and national affairs. Here are some great weaknesses. If the world structure could be made more solid quickly by the sure functioning of the United Nations, then these masters of ideological theory, the Religious, could add to the will to peace a subtle wisdom adequate for human cooperation and moral life. It is the solid United Nations which is immediately essential. Yet our competitive economy uniting with our hazy notions of world unity and ugly indifference to mercy when a Presidential campaign is afoot, certainly unite to "sell down the river" our war victory. All of this came to mind when that young pastor sincerely asked us if the lecturer on the Near East who evaded Religion had not missed the point. Not until we of the cloth, the spokesmen for Religion, put our houses in order will the fetishes political, fetishes economic, fetishes education, fet- ishes financial be possible of elimination. This means that we at the University and we in the school leadership of cities and BOOKS THE AGE OF REASON. By Jean-Paul Sartre. Translated from the French by Eric Sutton. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 1947. 397 pp. W HILE I WAS READING the book in preparation for this week's review, two of my fellow-students felt called upon to remark on my choice. One of them declared, "I hear it's rotten all the way through." The other suggested, "He doesn't say much, does he?" I learned that neither of them had read the book in question, yet their curt comments, besides indicating the interest which this book is bound to provoke, hap- pened to fall directly on the two main points which must be considered in a discussion of this novel. First of all, the "rotten-ness" my friend spoke about refers, . presumably, to the matter of the story and the way it is pre- sented. But what makes a book "rotten"? This book's emphasis on the abnormal, the ugly, the miserable, is unpleasant, to be sure; a strong stomach is required to get through the pages of sordid, often vulgar detail, such as the description of a drunken' young girl's nausea. The characters are alll sufferers, there is not one who is really' happy or good or what we call "normal." If they are meant to typify the kind of people who will eventually find their way to Existentialism, the novel cannot make much appeal other than to a sort of cold disinterestedness. There is a complete ab- sence of beauty, of light, of joy, even of humor, but does that make the book rotten, if such material is the only kind which can be used to fulfill the author's legitimate purpose? It should be remembered that the story is a partial interpretation of a philosophical system. It is a book written with that purpose. Unfortunately, this constitutes its basic defect as a literary work: the characters and the over- emphasis on certain aspects of life to the neglect of others, seem to be contrived to serve the author's aims. Contrast and variety are present only as degrees of difference, perhaps because the author has intended that the reader's mind shall not be distracted or diverted for a single- instant from the main theme of the book. The extreme limitations in character and incident weaken the book's literary value, but the central theme is never lost sight of. And what is that theme? Does Sartre have much to say? He does, indeed. Existentialist philosophy glimmers darkly throughout the pages of his book. Its theme is a man's realization of his essence, which, according to the Existentialist - in - Chief, comes through one's own creation, existence pre- ceding essence. When Mathieu decides that "this life had been given him for nothing, he was nothing and yet he would not change: he was as he was made," he has reached the "age of reason," the first stage in the Existenialist's apostolate, and he probably has not much further to go. But there is only a part of the philosophi- cal system of Existentialism in this book. There are the familiar "action" and "an- guish" which Sartre uses to epitomize his theories, there is the concern with man's freedom, which Sartre calls the ability to choose, to accept one's fate with resignation or to rebel against it. He has insisted that heroism, nobility, generosity and self-sac- rifice are "ultimately the very meaning of human action," yet his characters come nowhere near to realizing this ultimate. Perhaps they will, on the next turn in Sartre's series on "The Roads to Freedom." as this book is only the first in a projected triology on ghat theme. -Natalie Bagrow. MATTER OF FACT: Rio Conference By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP THE LAST of the Congressional grandees to leave the Capitol was Senator Arthur H. Vanden- berg of Michigan. He went neither home to mend fences, nor intothe country to hunt delegates, but merely to Atlantic City for a well- earned rest before the Pan-Amer- ican conference at Rio De Janeiro. His parting words, as reported by those close to him, were brief and to the point: "The problem is here. By this the Senator meant that against the dark, gigantic back- ground of the world drama, the indifference still widely prevailing in this country stands out in sharp and very worrying relief. If the Senator himself is worried, it is not surprising. For it is he who must pilot through the next Con- gress the Marshall plan - the American sponsored program for averting the onset of chaos -- for which the Congress is as yet un- prepared. The first thing that is obvi- ously needed is a clear state- ment of the Administration's purposes. Thus far, the country has heard only a kind of gen- eral hint from Marshall at Har- vard. The hint has thrown all Europe into turmoil and activi- ty. Already, by responding to the hint, the leaders of the western European democracies have bravely bet their futures, and perhaps even their personal safeties upon Secretary Mar- shall. But Marshall's hint was to unclear, too much aimed at European ears, to be understood completely by the mass of peo- ple in the United States, whose support for Marshall is so es- sential. The State Department is as aware as Vandenberg of the need to elaborate upon Marshall's hint. A major foreign policy speech has been under discussion for some weeks among Marshall's staff. It is even possible that Marshall may speak before going to Rio. What- ever may be the chosen timing, it already is fairly apparent what Marshall must say. First, this country cannot afford to carry the relief burden of a world on the verge of starvation. Second, this country is equally unable to af- ford the certain cost of sustaining its prosperity and assuring its de- fense in a world which has plunged into ultimate chaos. Therefore, sound business dic- tates American support for gen- uine, businesslike, cooperative, and above all, permanent Euro- pean reconstruction. The British and European na- tions must join to help one an- other, with American aid to un- derwrite their deficits. This is the cheapest way out, and soundest. If Marshall says this plainly to the country, and adds that the Administration means to offer a program for the pur- pose to the next Congress, what is happening here and abroad will become understandable to everyone. If Marshall says this, moreover, it will be one more instance of the equal collaboration between such wise Republicans as Vandenberg, and such Administration leaders as Marshall. The Republican iso- lationists are now trying to pre- tend that this equal collaboration does not exist. It is being whis- peredthat Vandenberg is a "rub- ber stamp." In a recent shrill little speech, approved by the fat- uous Brazilla Carroll Reece's Re- publican National Committee, Representative Charles Halleck took this line. For Vandenberg, the facts an- swer Halleck. Vandenberg him- self suggested the Four-Power pact against renewed German aggression, which is now the basis of United States German policy. He and John Foster Dulles were personally respon- sible for several of the most significant provisions of the United Nations charter. Van- denberg has direct responsibil- ity for recent developments in United States policy in. China and South America. He struck the note of resistance to Soviet aggression even before Secre- tary Byrnes. He rescued the Greek-Turkey aid program, al- most single-handed, by correct- ing President Truman's previous neglect of the United Nations. And it was he who demanded an Aiierican "balance sheet" before he would consider the Marshall plan. This is not the record of a rubber stamp, as the Republican snipers hint. It is the record of a man who has done, is doing and will continue to do a great and constructive job. (copyright 1947, N. Y. Tribune Inc.) (Continued from Page 3) gree in Psychology with some ex- perience. Call at the Bureau for further information. Deadline for Veterans' Book and supply Requisitions. August 22, 1947 has been set at the dead- line for the approval of Veterans' Book and Supply Requisitions for the Summer Session-1947. Re- quisitions will be accepted by the book stores through August 23, 1947. Power Shovel Film. A new film prepared by the Crane and Shov- el Association and showing the op- eration of the most modern power' grading equipment will be shown in Room 1042 East Engineering Building, from 10:00 to 12:00 a.m. on Wednesday, August 6. Open to the public. Civil and Mechanical Engineering students are especial- ly invited. Meetings of the University of Michigan Section of the American Chemical Society will be held on August 7 and August 8, 1947, at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Am- phitheatre. Dr. L. E. Sutton, Uni- versity of Oxford, Englapd, will speak Aug. 7 on "The Heats of Formation of Some Bonds," and Aug. 8 on "The Occurrence of the Dative Link." The public is in- vited. The Russian Circle will meet for the last time this semester on Monday evening at the Interna- tional Center at 7:45 p.m. The theme of the program will be Russian music. Piano selections will be played supplemented with a lecture. The program will close with tea served from the samovar during which time there will be Russian conversation and singing. The Christian Science Organ- ization will hold its regular Tues- day meeting at 7:30 p.m., August 5, in the upper room of Lane Hall. All students, faculty members, and alumni are cordially invited. The Modern Poetry Club will meet Tuesday evening in 3217 An- gell Hall at 8 p.m. The poets of the two wars will be discussed. The last event of the Deutscher Verein summer program will be a Picnic at Portage Lake on Wed- nesday, August 6th. Cars will leave University Hall parking lot at 5 p.m. All students of German are cordially invited. La Sociedad Hispanica will hold its last meeting of the summer session on Wednesday, August 6 at 8:00 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Theprogram will consist of Latin American folk dances, songs, music, and poetry. A group of Latin American students from the English Institute will cooperate with La Sociedad Hispanica in the preparation of the program. All members and all those inter- ested are invited to spend a most enjoyable evening. Refreshments will be served after the program. La p'tite causette meets every Tuesda yand Wednesday at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Michi- gan League and on Thursdays at 4:00 at the International Center. All students interested in inform- al French conversation are cor- dially invited to join the group. The French Club will hold its last meeting on Thursday August 7, at 8 p.m. in the second floor Terrace Room of the Michigan Union. Mr. Bertrand Coblentz, a visiting doctor from Paris, will talk informally on: "Paris au- jourd'hui". Miss Elizabeth Moore will sing some French songs. Group singing, games, refresh- ments. Lectures Dr. George Wythe, Chief of the American Republics Division, Of- fice of International Trade, De- partment of Commerce, will lec- ture on "The Industrialization of Latin America-a Re-appraisal," Monday, August 4, at 4:10 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. This is a lecture in the Summer Session Lecture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." The public is invited. Dr. Laurence M. Gould, Presi- dent of Carleton College and former Chief of the Arctic Section, Arctic, Desert, and Tropic Inform- ation Center, U.S. Army Air Forc- es, will give an illustrated lecture on "Startegy and Politics in the Polar Areas," Monday, August 4, at 8:10 p.m., Rackham Amphithe- atre. This is a lecture in the Summer Session Lecture Series, "The United States in World Af- fairs." The public is invited. i' 1 DAILY, OFFICIAL BULLETIN Professor Adelaide Hahn of Hunter College will speak at the seventh weekly conference of the Linguistic Institute on Tuesday, August fifth at 1:00 in room 308 Michigan Union. The conference will be preceded by a luncheon at 12:10 in the Anderson room of the Union. Both luncheon and con- ference will be open to members of the Linguistic Institute and the Linguistic Society. The sub- ject of the conference will be "Hittite-za." Professor Hahn is a former president of the Linguistic Society, and a leading Hittite scholar. Dr. O. Benjamin .Gerig, Deputy Representative of the United States in the Trusteeship Council of the United Nations and Chief of the Division of Dependent Area Affairs, Department of State, will lecture on "The Relation of the Trusteeship System to the Ob- jectives of the United Nations," Tuesday, August 5, at 4:10 p.m., Kellog Auditorium. This is .a lec- ture in the Summer Session Lec- ture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." The public is invited. Mr. L. C. Hill, L.L.D., C.B.E., former Executive Secretary of the National Association of Local Gov- ernment Officers in Great Britain and Lecturer at the University of Exeter will lecture on "Trends in Public Administration: The Fu- ture of Local Government in Great Britain," Tuesday, August 5, at 4:10 p.m, Rackham Amphithea- tre. The public is invited. Dr. Elbert D. Thomas, U.S. Sen- ator from Utah and a ranking member of the Committee on For- eign Relations, United States Sen- ate, will lecture on "Leadership in Asia under a New Japan," Tues- day, August 5, at 8:10 p.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. This is a lec- ture in the Summer Session Lec- ture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." The public is in- vited. The thirteenth public lecture of the Linguistic Institute will be held at 7:30 August sixth in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. The speaker will be Professor Bernard Bloch of Yale University, and the subject will be "Principles of Phonemic Analysis." Professor Bloch is the editor of Language, the journal of the Linguistic Society of America, and is a prominent scholar in descrip- tive linguistics. James L. Jarrett, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Utah, will give a lecture, "Veri- fication and Exploration in Poe- tky," to the Acolytes, Tuesday, August 5, at 7:30 p.m., East Cn- ference Room, Rackham Build- ing. Open to the public. The fourteenth public lecture of the Linguistic Institute will be held at 7:30 August seventh in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. The subject will be "Nasal Consonant Phonemes in the Western Romance Languages," and the speaker will be Professor Ernest F. Haden of the Univer- sity of Texas. Professor Haden is a well known scholar in Ro- mance linguistic, and is active in the study of French dialects in the United States and Canada. Academic Notices Differential Geometry Seminar: meets at 3 p.m. Tuesday, August 5, 3001 AH. Mr. Conte will speak on Generalized Lines of Striction. Zoology Seminar: Thursday, August 7, 7:30 p.m., East Lecture Room, Rackham Building. Miss B .Elizabeth Horner will speak on "Arboreal Adaptions of Peromys- cus." Concerts Summer Session Chorus: The University of Michigan Summer Session Chorus, Mary Muldowney, Conductor, will present its annual summer concert at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, August 3, in Hill Audi- torium. The first part of the program includes songs by the Chorus, and two organ selections played by Grayson Brottmiller and Elizabeth Powell. Elizabeth Green, violinist, and Celia Chao and El- izabeth Powell, pianists, assist the Chorus in Brahms' "Love Songs," followed by Barber's "D o v e r Beach" played by the String Quar- tet, with Howard Hatton, Bari- tone, as soloist, and a selection by the Vocal Quartet. The public is cordially invited. Faculty Concert: Monday, Aug- ust 4, at 8:30 p.m.. a program of Chamber Music of Brahms will be presented by Oliver Edel, cellist, Lee Pattison, Pianist, and Joseph Knitzer, violinist, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The program will include Sonata in F major, Op. 99 for Cello and Piano, and the Trio in B major. Op. 8 for Violin, Cello, and Piano. The public is cor- dially invited. Student Recital: Anthony De- siderio, Clarinetist, assisted by Mildred Minneman Andrews, pi- anist, and Mary Oyer, cellist, will be heard in a recital 4:15 Tuesday 4 afternoon, August 5, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall. Mr. Desider- io, a student of Albert Luconi, will play compositions by Brahms, Bach, Albeniz, Andre-Bloch, and Beethoven. The program present- ed in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master's De- gree in Music Education, will be open to the public. Student Recital: Elise Cambon, organist, will present a program Tuesday evening, August 5, 8:30 p.m., in the Hill Auditorium. Miss Cambon, a student of the late Palmer Christian, and presently studying with Robert Baker, will present a recital including compo- sitions by Marcello-Dubois, Fres-7 cobaldi, Daquin, Corelli-Guilmant, Bach, Dupre, Peeters, and Alain.: The public is cordially invited. Student Recital: James Mearns, Pianist, will present a program 8:30 Wednesday evening, August 6, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Mr. Mearns, a student of Joseph Brinkman, will play compositions by Mozart, J. S. Bach, Beethoven, Schubert and Chopin. The recital is being given in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the Master of Music, and is open to the public. Exhibitions Photographs of Summer FungI of Michigan, Rotunda Museums Building. July and August. The Museum of Art: Elements of Design, and What is Modern Painting? Alumni -Memorial Hall; daily, except Monday, 10-12 and 2-5; Sundays, 2-5. The public is cordially invited. A I Museum of Archaeology. Cur- rent Exhibit, "Life in a. Roman Town in Egypt from 30 B.C. to 400 A.D." Tuesday through Fri- day, 9-12, 2-5; Saturday, 9-12; Friday evening, 7:30-9:30; Sun- day 3-5. Exhibit of American Photo- graphy, Daily. July 28 to August 8, Ground Floor, Exhibition Hall, Architecture Building. Events Today "Arrowsmith," the Sam Gold- wyn production of Sinclair Lewis' Pulitzer Prize novel, starring Ron- ald Colman, Helen Hayes, and Myrna Loy, will be shown tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m. under the sponsorship of the Interco- operative Council. Box office opens at 5:30. Hill Auditorium. Coming Events Dr. Yuen-li Liang will hold the last of four conferences on the United Nations, Tuesday, August 5, at 3:10 p.m., East Conference Room, Rackham Building. These # conferences are part of the Sum- mer Lecture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." Dr. Robin A. Humphreys will hold the last of four conferences on Latin America, Wednesday, August 6, at 4:10 p.m., East Con- j ference Room, Rackham Build- ing. These conferences are part of the Summer Lecture Series, "The United States in World Af- fairs." Dr. Gottfired S. Delatour will hold the last of four conferences on European Affairs, Thursday. August 7, at 3:10 p.m., East C* ference Room, Rackahm Building. L, These conferences are part of the Summer Lecture Series, "The United States in World Affairs." Churches First Baptist Church 502-512 East Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister 10:00-Church School for all ages. Student .Class studies "Job" in the Guild House. 11:00-Church Worship. Ser- mon-"I Corinthians 13". (Small 4 children cared for in the kinder- garten.) 4:30-Students will leave from the Guild House for a Picnic with the Congregational-Disciples Guild, at Riverside Park. Another group will leave at 6:00 o'clock. First Congregational Church State and William Sts. 10:45 a.m.-Public Worship. Reverend Legette's subject is "In- visible Resources." 4:30 p.m.-Congregational-Dis- BARNABY...