T HE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1947 4 4 E heAlkagau ati Fifty-Seventh Year t I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Bad Timing DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN - _ _ _ -, I' Edited and managed by students of the Uni- versity of Michigan underthe withovtt of the Board in Control of, Student Publicgtionll ,A Editorial Staff Managing Editors ... John Campbell, Clyde Recht Associate Editor ................... Eunice Mintz Sports Editor................... Archie Parsons Business Staff General Manager.................Edwin Schneider Advertising Manager ..........William Rohrbach Circulation Manager...............Melvin Tick Tele phone 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 republication of all other matters 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, $5.00, by mail, $6.00, Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1946-47 :Eitorials pitblished in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: LIDA DAILES By SAMUEL GRAFTON ONE OF THE POINTS on which we often go wrong is timing. We have picked a moment when Europe depends on us for a reconstruction plan to pass the Taft-Hart- ley bill. In other words, we have let our- selves in for a long period of unrest just at the time when we are about to launch a pro- gram to curb unrest in Europe. We are going to pacify Europe with what- ever energy we have left over from making low growling sounds at each other, deep down in our own throats. With everybody and Herbert Hoover admitting that we are going to need all our production capacity to save ourselves and Europe, too, we have thrown our ca- pacity into doubt by passing this charter of uneasiness. But the campaign to curb the unions was twelve years old, and long-denied, and roar- ON WORLD AFFAIRS: Poll Tax REPUBLICAN LEADERS have scheduled an anti-poll tax bill for passage by the House this session. Hearings on the measure are to begin next week, and there is suf- ficient time for action before the session ends. Perhaps many Americans who have long been denied their rights as citizens by the obviously unconstitutional poll tax are once again voicing hope. They can save their breath. The gentlemen in Washington are playing the same old political football -with southern Negroes and "poor white" persons as the football. The bill is a colos- sal joke. Even if, after untold wrangling, the House should pass it, the bill would stand no chance of getting by the filibustering South- erners in the Senate before the session ends. If the sponsors of this bill had been sincere, they would have started their campaign earlier, and without the untactful declara- tion that they are trying to "put some Southerners on the spot" because some of the Southerners fought income tax reduc- tions. The prize comment on the measure comes from Rep. Gerald W. Landis (Rep., Ind.). He has this to say: "If the Senate had not over-ridden the labor bill veto, we would probably have got out an anti-lynch bill." And so, while Southern mobs go about their business of lynching Negroes with impunity, the anti-lynch bill continues to function po- litically with the anti-poll tax-just a double threat to recalcitrant Southerners. The un-divine comedy in Washington is unceasing. -James N. Rhei ted HE CALLAHAN BILL, requiring organi- zations influenced or dominated by for- eign powers to register, has been signed into law by Governor Sigler. An Associated Press dispatch informs us that legislative sponsors of the new law ad- mit that it is aimed at groups allegedly dominated by the Communist Party. Governor Sigler says that he feels that "this is a good bill. It affords the tools by which those who attempt to undermine or government and our institutions may be biought out in the open." Replying to charges made against the liw by religious, racial, labor and minority groups that, in the hands of a prejudiced attorney general, the bill could be used to discriminate against them, the governor said: "I don't believe it will be used to per- secute people because that could be applied to any-bill," We wonder how the new law is going to bring "foreign dominated" groups into the open. Groups that are "foreign dominated" ,will not rush to get into line to tell Sigler so. The statement that the law will not be used "to persecute people because that could be applied to any bill' sounds like a new version of double talk. It means precisely nothing. Fishing out the "Reds" is good political publicity. Labeling something "Red" is a good way of dispensing with opposition. But when something like this gets started we wonder, and fear, where the line will be drawn. -Eunice Mintz Pravda By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER AMERICAN LABOR leaders should take enough time off from damning Congress to read Pravda. In fact, if I thought they read Russian, I would dig up a bunch of rubles I brought out some years ago and buy some of them subscriptions to that un- intentionally informative sheet. Pravda, nev- er forget, means "Truth" and the paper bears that name because it expresses what the Kremlin wishes the Russians to believe. American labor leaders should know what Pravda wants the Russians to believe. If they would read the latest AP quota- tion from Pravda, they might admit that, whatever the merits and demerits of the Taft-Hartley Labor Bill, an attempt todays by organized American labor to defy it (I believe the expression is "test it") by a series of wildcat or other strikes would be detri- mental to all Americans including those who work with their hands. I cannot believe that this is the aim of American labor. Pravda's latest discovery (as reported by the AP), announced by the Soviet econo- mist, M. Marinin, is that the United States is heading toward another terrific depress- ion. "Alarm in American business circles is growing," writes Mr. Marinin. "Interpre- tations and predictions by many economists on immediate economic prospects are paint- ed in gloomy, pessimistic tones." Quite obviously Mr. Marinin is a disciple of Henry Wallace and that school of Amer- ican economists who have allowed the great depression of the early 30s to color all thei subsequent thinking and planning. So far, nothing peculiar about Mr. Marinin. The difference is, whereas the American econo- mists and Mr. Wallace fear a new American depression, Mr. Marinin obviously hopes for it. The wish is father to the article. And for excellent reasons. There are several obstacles to the Soviet domination of Europe and Asia. Of them all, the strong- est is that giant, American industrial and agricultural production. The Truman-Mar- shall scheme for saving Europe is founded on our ability to supply the world with quantities of goods, mostly on credit, until Europe can get going. Despite Mr. Molotov's acceptance of con- sultation with France and Britain about such reconstruction, successful American large-scale support of Europe is the last thing the Kremlin wants. For the same reason, keeping American production high should be a chief aim of all patriotic Americans. It is so important that it ought, temporarily at least, take pre- cedence over most-if not all-other person- al and domestic aims. Unless American pro- duction remains high, World War II will not stay won., Too many American workers and labor leaders seem not to see this-they are far too patriotic not to care. Otherwise, they would not be picking the present crucial months for a test of the Taft-Hartley law. During a recent trip to the Middle West, several manufacturers and lawyers talked to me about the situation. What they com- plained about was not primarily high wages or even labor privilege. They complained of an "organized slump" in labor produc- tivity. "The farmers," one of them states, "are' profiteering like a bunch of buccaneers. But at least they are producing food-piles of it. Labor is demanding high wages-and lying down on the job." People tell of less work being done in numerous fields-less type being set, fewer bricks being laid, more deliberate "acci- dents" that slow output than in 1939. Some manufacturers are convinced there is a sort of "Communist" conspiracy to keep produc- tion down. "What the Taft-Hartley bill should have done," a Mid-Western lawyer explained, "is to tie high wages and labor privileges to increased production and ruthlessly to elim- inate not only formal feather-bedding but all types of slow-down and loafing." From the point of view of preserving a non-Communist world, this view can be justified. Unpleasant as it must sound to many workers, they would undoubtedly ad- mit its validity once they took time off to understand that the world is writhing in as ing, and it was not going to pause for any- thing so small as a world dilemma. And so the labor problem has been solved", by being torn out of this context, like an organ torn from the body, and treated without regard to its functional relationships with everything else. Now the rest of the world can wait while we settle our lawsuits. On the home front, too, our timing has not been inspired. Only last week we began to be thrillingly aware that perhaps we were goingto dodge the expected recession. No- body knows quite what happened, but sud- denly demand firmed up, stores began buy- ing more liberally, commodities stiffened. It looked, all last week, as if we were going to level off, at a pretty good elevation. The only thing that could stop us would be a period of unrest. .And so the confusion-breeding Taft-Hart ley bill was passed, and now, in the words of a Wall Street Journal report: "Both ad- vocates and opponents of the new law con- cede that a year of labor unrest and un- certainity lies ahead." This frantic pursuit of labor,-regardless of all circumstances, makes' one think, for some reason, of a chase after a but- terfly, in which the agitated pursuer steps into picnic lunch. plates, rolls through bushes, tears his pants on barbed wire, annoys irritable bulls, but keeps going, up over the sides of walls, straight across roofs, down into wells and out again, but never stopping. It is a truly terrifying single-mindedness, this passion for a solitary end, which can disregard the world and all. So far as I know, no Congressman during the entire Taft-Hartley debate ever raised the formal question: "What does this bill mean to world recovery and American pros- perity?" The bill was debated on its own, like a set topic arbitrarily offered to a class in public speaking.1 This almost total lack of sophistication, this lust to have what one wants when one wants it, remains in the memory as the mood of the whole affair, as an illustration of our habit of making our political parties vehicles for achieving short-range goals, rather than instruments for digesting com- plexity and taming it into order. One of the marks of a third party, should one ever come up here, might be, not radi- calism, not even leftism, but just the kind of sophistication that can peer further ahead than a short nose-length. A party which would add two and two together might make both the older ones seem, at moments, quite primitive. (Copyright 1947, New York Post Corporation Labor Bell IT IS STILL early to say what the exact effect of the Taft-Hartley labor bill will have upon labor-management relations throughout the country. Much will depend upon the interpretation given to the various provisions of the law by the federal courts. That there will be test cases, and soon, to determine the application of the law is a foregone conclusion. Not until the' courts had handed down their decisions after the passage of labor's forte, the Wagner Act, in 1934 did anyone know what the law provided. As expected, management and labor's pre- dictions regarding future relations are op- posite. Industrial spokesmen generally fore- cast a period of peace on the labor front in the neiv atmosphere of "fairness." Labor leaders, on the other hand, wrathfully at- tacked the bill, branding it a "step toward totalitarianism" and due cause for forming a new political party. Further, they warn the law will result in immediate industrial chaos-evidently viewing conditions in the past as something less than chaos. It is difficult to imagine any semblence of labor peace until the scope of the law has been set forth. After a number of easy rounds, labor has taken a one-two punch and may be expected to fight back for all the points it can get. Labor won't be floored by the jolt. Its confidence is too great, nor was the blow intended to be a knock- out punch. Those with America's best interest at heart seek an even balance between tabor and management. Before 1934, the exploi- tation of labor was widespread and deserv- ing of condemnation. The Wagner Bill, however, in correcting these injustices, gave labor weapons that more than offset the employers' advantages. A natural result was frequent irresponsible use of that power. Employees became almost immune from pen- alties for their actions, while employers were saddled with many "unfair practices." The most vital reason for a new labor law was the need for restricting strikes whose effects were nation-wide and immediately dangerous to the well-being of millions. Un- ions have found it necessary to ignore vast multitudes of people to achieve their de- mands. Obviously this situation endangers the welfare of the people and the safety of the nation and must be corrected. The Taft-Hartley Bill is Congress' answer to this serious problem. It may not be the complete solution, but it is a step toward restoring the balance which the past has proved is so necessary to our economy, -Ted Miller Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all1 members of the University. Notices1 for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Summer Session, Room 1213 Angell1 Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day pre-'1 ceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). VOL. LVII, No. 5 SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1947 Notices Saturday morning following July 4: With the approval of the1 Conference of the Deans, all busi- ness administrative offices of the University will be closed on Satur- day morning July 5. Herbert G. Watkins, Secretary Summer Symposium in Nuclear Physics: Three courses of lectures on Nu- clear Physics will be given this summer. Prof. Victor F. Weisskopf of M. T.T. will speak on the Statistical Theory of Hevy Nuclei. His first lecture will be on Tuesday, July 1, at 11 a.m. in the Rackham Auditorium. Following this first time his lectures will be MWF at 11. Dr. A. Pais, Inst. for Advanced Study, Princeton will speak on Elementary Particle Problems, on MWF at 10 a.m., Rackham Audi- torium, starting Monday, June 30. Dr.iJames L. Lawson, General Electric Co., will speak on Produc- tion andMeasurements of High Energy Radiation, TThS., at 10 a.m., Rackham Ailitorium, start- ing Tuesday, July 8. Summer Registration will be held Tuesday, July 1, at 4:05 in Room 205 Mason Hall, as previous- ly announced. However, attention is called to the fact that office hours for students are Tuesdays. Thursdays and Fridays, 9 to 12 a.m, and 2 to 4 p.m. and blanks will be given out only during those hours. Students should secure reg- istration blanks at their earliest convenience following this meet- ing. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information Deutscher Verein: An organiza- tion meeting of the Deutscher Verein will be held on Tuesday, July 1, at 2 p.m. in the office of Dr. F. Andrew Brown,306 Univer- sity Hall. Plans for the summer activities of the German Club will be formulated. All interested stu- dents of German are cordially in- vited. Graduate students seeking de- grees are reminded that the Grad- uate Examination Program will be offered on July 1 at 6:30 p.m. in the Rackham Building. Women students on campus this summer who have not yet applied for fall housing should call at the Office of the Dean of Women at once if their admission applies to the fall semester as well as to the summer session. Teacher Placement: The United States Military Academy, West Point, New York is accepting applications for posi- tions of Instructor-History, In- structor-Mathematics, Instructor- English, and Instructor-in-Charge, English. Further information and application blanks may be obtain- ed at the Bureau of Appointments. Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in French and Ger- man for the doctorate will be held on Friday, July 11, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building. Dictionaries may be used. F. W. Peterson Examiner in Foreign Languages Graduate Students in English planning to take the preliminary examinations for the doctorate this summer should notify Pro- fessor Marckwardt of their inten- tions before July 3. Married Veterans of World War II Terrace Apartments Opportunity will be provided Monday, Tuesday, and Wednes- day, June 30, July 1, and July 2 for students in the above group to file application for residence in the Terrace Apartments, No apartments available for the summer session, but these appli- cations will be considered for fu- ture vacancies. Student applications for resi- dence in these apartments will be considered according to the fol- lowing qualifications. 1. Only married Veterans of World War II may apply. 2. Michigan residents will be given first consideration. How- ever, out-of-state students may also register at this time. See Regents' ruling on definition of Michigan resident. "No one shall be deemed a resident of Michi- gan for the purpose of registra- tion in the University unless he or she has resided in this state six months next preceeding the date of proposed enrollment.") 3. Veterans who have incurred physical disability of a serious na- ture will be given first consider- ation. (A written statement from Dr. Forsythe of the University Health Service concerning such disability should be included in the application.) 4. Only students who have com- pleted two terms in this Univer- sity may apply. (Summer Session is considered as one-half term.) 5. Students who are admitted to these apartments may in no case occupy them for a period longer than two years. 6. Length of oversease service will be an important determining factor. 7. In considering an applicant's total length of service, A.S.T.P., V-12, and similar programs will be discounted. 8. If both man and. wife are Veterans of World War II and the husband is a Michigan resident and both are enrolled in the Uni- versity their combined application will be given special consideration. 9. Each applicant must file with his application his Military Rec- ord andReport of Separation. Married Veterans of World War II, who have filed applications for the Terrace Apartments prior to June 30, 1947 should not apply again, since their applications are being processed in terms of the above qualifications. Office of Student Affairs' Room 2, University Hall College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Schools of Educa- tion, Forestry, and Public Health: Students who received marks of I, X or 'no report' at the close of their last semester or summer session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by July 23. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition ad- dressed to the appropriate official in their school with Room 4 U.H-. where it will be transmitted. Edward G. Groesbeck, Assistant Registrar Automobile Regulation, summer session: All students not qualified for exemption from the Automo- bile Regulation may receive driv- ing permission only upon appli- cation at Rm. 2 University Hall. Those exempted are: (1) Those who are 26 years of age or over; (2) Those who have a faculty ranking of Teaching Fellow or its equivalent; (3) Those who during the pre- ceding academic year were en- gaged in professional pursuits; eg, teachers, lawyers, physicians, den- tists, nurses, etc. All other students desiring to drive must make personal applica- tion for driving privileges. Com- pletion of the Automobile Regula- tion section of the registration card does not fulfill this obliga- tion. Summer Registration will be held Tuesday, July 1, at 4:05 in Room 205 Mason Hall. This reg- istration with the Bureau of Ap- pointments and Occupational In- formation has to do with all types of positions. It is very essential that anyone interested in a po- sition in the immediate future at- tend this meeting. Registration blanks will be available on Wed- nesday and Thursday, July 2 and 3, and Monday and Tuesday, July 7 and 8. University Radio Programs: Wednesday, July 2, 1947 2:30 p.m., WKAR-The School of Education- "A Fairer Chance for Every Child by Overcoming Reading Habits." Prof. Irving H; Anderson. 2:45 p.m., WKAR-The School of Music-The University of Mich- igan Concert Band. 5:45 p.m., WPAG-Stcries for Cr ildren. La p'tite causette meets every Tuesday and Wednesday at 3:30 in the Grill Room of the Michigan League, every Thursday at 4 at the International Center. Eligibility certificates should be secured immediately by those stu- dents participating or planning to participate in extra-curricular ac- tivities during the summer term. Requirements for a certificate are: 1. Second semester Freshmen : 15 hours or more of work com- pleted with (1) at least one mark of A or B and with no mark of less than C, or (2). at least 22 times as many honor points as hours and with no mark of E. 2. Sophomores, juniors, seniors: 11 hours or more of academic credit in the preceding semester with an average of at least C, and at least a C average for the entire academic career.I No certificate will be issued to a student on warning or proba- tion. Office of Student Affairs Room 2, University Hall Lectures Opening address of the Summer Session Lecture Series entitled "The United States in World Af- fairs." Stanley K. Hornbeck, "The United States and the Netherlands East Indies." Wednesday, July 2, at 8:10 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr; Hornbeck v'as recently American ambassador to the Net- herlands. A booklet coveing all of the lectures in this series is available in the Summer Session Office, Room 1213 Angell Hall. Open to the public. Professor Preston W. Slosson, Professor of History, will give a lecture entiled "The Big Five and the Little Fifty-five", Monday, .June 30, 4:10 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheatre. Open to the public. Academic Notices Seminars in Mathematics - Summer Session 1947-Differen- tial Geometry, 3001 A;H, Tuesday 3 p.m., Prof. Rainich; Statistics, 3201 AH, Tuesday, 3 p.m., Prof. Craig; Misc. Algebra, 3201 AH, Wednesday, 3:15 p.m., P r o f. Thrall; Applied Mathematics, 317 WE, Wednesday, 4 p.m., Prof. Hay; Non-Euclidean Geometry, 3010 AH, Wednesday, 7 p.m., Dr. Leisenring; Representation Theo- ry, 3201 AH, Thursday, 3:15 p.m.. Prof Brauer. Mathematics 1 3 5: Beginning Tuesday, July 1, will meet in 204 South Wing (instead of 3011 An- gell Hall.) Mathematics 1 9 5: Beginning Tuesday, July 1, will meet in 204 South Wing (instead of 3011 An- gell Hall.) Mathematics 13, section 3: Be- ginning Tuesday, July 1, will meet in 3011 Angell Hall (instead of 204 South Wing). Seminar in Mathematics statis- tics. First meeting will be Tues- day at 3 p.m. in 3201 Angell Hall. Professor C. C. Craig will speak on "Sequential Analysis." Seminar in Differential Geome- try. The first meeting of the Dif- ferential Geometry Seminar will be held Tuesday, July 1 at 3 p.m. in 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. Faulk- ner will speak on Twisting of Con- tours. History 180s, Roosevelt to Roos- evelt: Class will meet in Room 231 Angell Hall instead of 101 Eco- nomics Building. Sports Tornaments, Women Stu- dents: Tournaments in archery, badminton, golf, and tennis are being sponsored by the womens' Department of Physical Educa- tion. A small entry fee is charged, Register at Women's Athletic Building or Barbour Gymnasium. - * * * Riding Classes: Horseback riding classes for men and women stu- dents are scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays at 4 p.m. and Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4 p.m. A nominal fee is charged. Regis- ter at Barbour Gymnasium by Tuesday noon, July 1. Concerts Carillon Recital: Percival Price, University carillonneur, will be heard in another of his current series of programs at 3 p.m. Sun- day, June 29, on the Baird Carillon in Burton Memorial Tower. Prof. Price has arranged a program to include compositions by Van den Gheyn, Chopin, a, group of 'Welsh Airs, and Selections from Gilbert and Sullivan's Mikado. Student Recital: Virginia Den- yer, Organist, will be heard in a program of compositions by Bach, Reger, Karg-Elert, Sowerby, and Farnam, at 4:15 Sunday after- noon, June 29, in Hill Auditorium. Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, the recital will be open to the general public. * Lecture-Recital: by Lee Patti- son, Pianist, Monday evening, June 30, 8:30, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. This is the first in a series of Monday programs spon-l sored by theSchool of Music. Mr. Pattison's first lecture-recital is entitled "Youth and the Bright Medusa," and covers Brahms' Son- ata in F minor, Op. 5, and Schu- mann's Papillons, and Toccata. The public is cordially invited. Faculty Recital: Joseph Knitzer, Violinist, will present a recital in Hill Auditorium at 8:30 Tuesday, July 1. Head of the Violin Depart- ment of the Cleveland Institute of Musical Art, Mr. Knitzer is a member of -the summer session faculty in the School of Music. gis program for Tuesday evening will include Sonata in D major by Vi- valdi, Chaconne for Violin Alone by Bach, Sonata for Violin and Piano by Herbert Elwell, uncome County, N.C. by Ernst Bacon, Hoe- down, from "Roedo" by Aaron Copland, and Ruralia Hungarica by Ernst von Dohnanyi. He will be accompanied by Marian Owen, Pianist. The general public is invited. Exhibitions Ehibit: Through June. Rotun- da of University Museums Build- ing. "Michigan Fungi" Events Today The opening Assembly of the Summer Session will be held Sun- day, June 29, 8:00 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Dr. Louis A. Hop- kins, Director of the Summer Ses- sion will preside. The address will be given by Dr. James P. Adams, Provost of the University. Stu- dents, faculty, and townspeople are invited to attend. Students going on the work par- ty for the University of Michigan Sailing Club. meet at the side door of the Union Saturday at 10 a.m. or 1 p.m. and Sunday at 9 a.m. Coming Events The Modern Poetry Club, open to all interested in discussing mod- ern poetry, will meet in Room 3217 Angell Hall at 8 p.m. Mon- day evening. Russky Kruzhok (Russian Cir- cle) will hold its first' summer meeting at 8 p.m., Monday, June 30, in the International Center. All students in Russian and their friends are invited to attend. Elec- tion of officers for the summer will take place, and a tea and social hour will follow. The French Club will hold its second meeting Wednesday, July 2, at 8 p.m. in the second floor Terrace Room of the Michigan Union. Prof. Albert J. Salvan will give an informal talk on "L'exis- tentialisme." Social hour, games, group singirg, refreshmens. All students interested in hearing, speaking the French language and in learning French songs, are wel- come to our weekly meeting. No charge. University Community Center: 1045 Midway Place, Willow Run Village. Tues., July 1: 8 p.m., Wies f Student Veterans Club. Thurs., July, 3: 8 p.m., Studio Work Shop, beginning drawing class in black and white. Friday, July 4: 8 p.m., Dupli- cate bridge tournament. The Christian Science Organ- ization will hold its regular Tues- day meeting at 7:30 p.m., July 1, in the upper room of Lane Hall. All students, faculty members, and alumni are cordially invited. A joint meeting of Pi Lambda Theta and Women in Education will be held Tuesday, July 1, 1947 at 7 p.m. The speaker for the meeting will be Professor Charfes C. Fries who will talk on the English Language Institute. Churches First Congregational Church 10:45 a.m.-Dr. Parr's subject is "A Faith Big Enough." 6:00 p.m.-Student Guild. Cost Supper. Dr. E. F. Barker will speak on "Philosophy, Religion and the New Physics." University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw: Service at 11:00 a.m. Sunday, with sermon by the Rev. Prof. W. C. Kitzerow of Concordia College, Ft. Wayne, Indiana. Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club: Supper Social Sunday at 5:15 at the Center. The Lutheran Student Associa- tion will meet Sunday at 5:30 hold open house Saturday, June 309 East Washington Street. Prof. Paul Kauper of the University of Michigan Law Faculty will be the speaker. ' Sunday morning Bible Hour will beheld at the center, 1304 Hill Street at 9:15. Worship services in Zion Trinity Luther- an Churches will be held at the usual hour of 10:30 p.m. Memorial Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets Morning Worship 10:56 6,.m., Sermon by Rev. Zendt. Nursery for children during the service, The Congregational - Disciples Guild will meet for supper at 6:00 4 . . f * ,41 I BARNABY... A #1 ifm sure Bornaby's heart was I sn't th o blue t I 'Bornoby mut avetied~ I'm af raid he feels , - AW..