SUNDAY, AFRIL 26, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Attend Church Today Friends Church 10:00. Sunday school. 11:00. Morning worship. This service will honor our boys and girls. 8:00. Evening worship. Ninth Street Baptist Church 9:30. Sunday school. 11:00. Morning worship. 7:30. Sunday night service. Church of God 9:45. Sunday school. 10:45. Morning worship and sermon by the pastor. 8:00. Evening service. North Lawrence Christian Church 10:00. Sunday school. No morning nor evening preaching. Christian Endeavor. Vinland Presbyterian Church 10:00. Sunday school. Immanuel Lutheran Church 10:00. Sunday school and Bible class. 11:00. Morning worship with sermon: "God is Love." Forums Board Plans Radio 'Bull Session' North Lawrence Baptist Church The Forums Board will hold a KU Bull Session of the Air Wednesday evening at 9:30 over station KFKU. The general subject will be, "Your Liberties in War Times." This session will be conducted much on the same principle as the program, People's Platform. The group will start its discussion before it goes on the air and the microphone will pick up the speeches later. No audience will be allowed in the studio. North Lawrence Baptist Church 10:45. Devotional by deacons. 11:00. Morning worship by Rev. G. N. Jackson. 12:30. Sunday school. Evening worship. Stull Evangelical Church The members of the group are John Waggoner, college junior, Jim Surface, college senior, Russell Baker, business senior, and Merrill Peterson, college junior. Stinl Evangelical Church Services will be dismissed for April 26, in favor of the district Sunday school convention at Clinton. Plymouth Congregational Church 9:45. Church school. 11:60. Morning worship and sermon. Church of the Nazarene 10:00. Sunday Bible school. 11:00. Morning worship. Sermon. "Youth Time is Church Time." First Church of Christ, Scientist 9:45. Sunday School. 11:00. Subject: "Probation After Death." Church of Christ 10:00. Bible school. 11:00. C. E. McClelland, elder of College and Huntoon church, in Topeka, will be the guest speaker. McCord Lectures On As Smoke Fills Room Smoke pouring in from the basement corridor of Frank Strong hall failed to halt a morning's lecture by Fletcher McCord, assistant professor of psychology, who calmly closed the door of the room and proceeded with his discussion. Impatient students, when they were dismissed from class about three minutes later, found no evidences of a conflagration other than a few lingering clouds of smoke and several rivulets of water trickling down the hallways. Co-eds at the University of Vermont sewed white uniforms for ski troops in the university's ROTC unit. Centenary Methodist Church 9:45. Church school 9:45. Church school. 10:30. Morning worship. Choral Anthem. Sermon by the minister: "Youth and Religion." First Evangelical Church 9:45. Sunday school. 11:00. Worship: "Do You Want To Come?" 7:45. Evening worship. Wesleyan Methodist Church 10:00. Sunday school. 11:00. Morning worship and sermon: "Riches of Christ." Trinity Lutheran Church 9:45. Church school. 11:00. Church service: "An Ap- proved Christian Workman." United Brethren Church 9:45 Sunday school United Brethren Church 9:45. Sunday school. 10:45. Morning worship: Rev. Emerson D. Bragg, of Hamilton, Ohio, will be guest speaker and evangelist. First Baptist Church 9:45. Church school. 11:00. Morning service with sermon by minister; "Learning Through Suffering." First Methodist Church 9:45. Church school. 10:50. Worship service and sermon. 7:30. Evening worship. First Christian Church 9:30. Sunday school. 10:45. Worship and communion. Youth service for the beginning of Youth week. Sermon: "If God Be For Us." WANT ADS EARN money while in school by owning a K. C. Star route. For particulars call 778R. 682-128 LOST: Brown leather billfold, with zipper. Contains activity ticket, social security number, and driver's license. Also about seven dollars. Reward. Harlan Cope. Phone 234. 681-126 THE POST WAR WORLD Nations are gaining valuable experience in pooling their resources and removing barriers. Indeed it would be tragic to assume that we will turn back to the chaotic conditions of commerce and currency which prevailed in the 1930's. During these years the world was literally filled with a maze of restrictions on international commerce in the form of unprecedented customs duties, import quotas, import licenses, embargoes, blocked currencies and devalued currencies resulting in chaos. Out of that chaos, by the inexorable sequence of events this world war came. If we are surprised that we are at war our surprise is unjustifiable. Sixty so-called sovereign governments have been attempting individually to regulate the same thing, the commerce of the world. Surely we have learned the futility of economic nationalism. It is the absolutely sure road to war. This policy lowers the standard of living everywhere because it greatly enhances the cost of production of nearly all manufacturers and forces the use of very inferior materials. It flies in the face of natural conditions and ignores the advantages of specialization and mass production for world markets. Economic nationalism is an attempted reversion to the primitive condition of society when men eked out a simple existence by use of materials close at hand. Modern society is geared to global commerce. Modern means of transportation, travel, and communication have brought that about. Why not be practical and face these facts instead of dreaming dreams about the simple pastoral society in the Continued from page 6 days of President Washington and King Solomon? The men of the Third Continental Congress in 1776 were not afraid to plan for their post-war period. That body appointed a committee to perpare articles of confederation, and another committee to draw up a declaration of independence. Have you heard of their work? The fifty-five men who met in Convention at Philadelphia in 1787 were not visionaries but they looked far ahead. They weren't afraid to plan great plans. They were unwilling to try to make their obsolete and ineffective governmental procedures longer serve them. They vested the regulation of commerce and currency in a new organization continental in scope. They were practical men. They knew exactly what their common problems were and they joined in the solution of them and solved them. It is easy to see what the principal world problems are today and it is not impossible to know how to solve them. The solution is not entirely herculean. What we need is the will to make a start in that solution. Indeed we have made a start. We have an organization called the United Nations geared to the fundamental principles of the Atlantic Charter. We will keep that organization and develop it. The problems of the thirteen states in 1787 were continental in scope and were as difficult as the global problems of today. They can be solved. Are men of the twentieth century less practical and courageous than those of the eighteenth? Robert McNair Davis KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS K.U.66 Having just spent the night in jail as the result of contempt of court, Frank Morgan is greeted by his wife and daughter with mixed emotions. The scene is from "The Vanishing Virginian," M-G-M's filmization of the Rebecca Yancey Williams' best-seller novel, now playing at the Granada theatre for 3 days. Spring Byington is cast as Morgan's flighty wife, with Kathryn Grayson as his daughter. Vicker's Gift Shop 1011 1/2 Mass. Wits End Stationery Frames for Graduation Pictures Thumbs Up Dolls CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. (Opposite Granada Theater) Thesis Supplies Phone 1051 ROBERTS "It Pays To Look Well" HOTEL ELDRIDGE BARBER SHOP Jewelry and Gifts for Heisey Crystal 833 Mass. Marion Rice Dance Studio Private Lessons in Ballroom Dancing 927 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St. Latest Used Phonograph Records — Reasonable JOHNNY'S GRILL 017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 96 1017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 961 TENNIS RACKETS RESTRUNG Bicycles Repaired Lock and Key Service RUTTER'S SHOP 4 Mass. Phone 319 Money Loaned on Valuables Unredeemed Guns, Clothing for Sale WOLFSONS 743 Mass. Phone 675 TAXI Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Shoe Service 1113 Mass. St. Phone 141 BURGERT'S Webster Collegiate Dictionaries $3.50 KEELER'S BOOK STORE Phone 33 939 Mass. Glasses Fitted Eyes Examined Broken Lenses Duplicated NOLL OPTICAL CO. 839 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Over Royal Shoe Store Res. Ph. 761 Office Phone 979 ROCK CHALK 12th & Oread Meals Sandwiches Fountain Service Under Student Management STENOGRAPHIC BUREAU Typing Mimeographing Journalism Building HIXON'S 721 Mass. HEADQUARTERS FOR Cameras & Supplies. Moving Picture Cameras — Projectors For Sale or Rent Expert KODAK FINISHING