0 PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN bAILY WEDESDY, AN. 6,193 WEDNESDAY, JAN. 6, 1937 I THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. . "....,. . .....- ^ . 16 Member 1r37 Rssociaed CoUe6icie Press Distributors of Cade6dae Di6est Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as Second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.5:. REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY - National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N.Y. CHICAGO , OSTON . SAN FRANCISCO Los ANGELES PORTLAND S SEATTLE Board of Editors MLANAGING EDITOR ........... .ELSIE A. PIERCE ASSOCIATE EDITOR .......FRED WARNAIR INEAL ASSOCIATE EDITORV......MARSHALL D. S$ULMAN George Andros Jewel Wuerfel Richard Hershey Ralph W. Hurd - Robert Cummins Departmental Boards Publication Department: Elsie A. Pierce, Chairman; James Boozer, Arnold S. Daniels, Joseph Mattes, Tuure Tenander, Robert Weeks. Reportorial Department: Fred Warner Neal, Chairman; Ralph Hurd, William E. Shackleton, Irving S. Silver- man, William Spaller, Richard G. Hershey. 9ditorial Depsrtment: Marshall D. Shulman, Chairman; Robert' Cummins, Mary Sage Montague.,w Sports Department: George J. Andros, Chairman; Fred DeLano and Fred Buesser, associates, Raymiond Good- man, Carl Gerstacker, Clayton Hepler, Richard La- Marca. Women's Department: Jewel Wuerfel, Chairman: Eliza- beth M. Anderson, Elizabeth Bingham, Helen Douglas, Margaret Hamilton, Barbara J. Lovell, Katherine Moore, Betty Strickroot, Theresa Swab. Business Department BUSINESS MANAGER .......... JOHN R. PARK ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGER . WILLIAM BARNDT WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JEAN KEINATH Business Assistants: Robert Martin, Ed Macal, Phil Bu- chen, Tracy BuckWalter, Marshall Sampson, Newton Ketcham. Robert Lodge, Ralph Shelton, Bill New- nan, Leonard Seigelman, Richard Knowe, Charles Coleman, W. Layhe, J. D. Haas, Russ Cole. Women's Business Assistants: Margaret Ferries, Jane Steiner, Nancy Cassidy, Stephanie Parfet. Marion Baxter, L. Adasko, G. Lehman, Betsy Crawford, Betty Davy, Helen Purdy. Martha Hankey, Betsy Baxter, Jean Rheinfrank, DodTieDay, Florence Levy, Florence Michlinski, Evalyn Tripp. Departmental Managers Jack Staple. Accounts Manager; Richard Croushore. Na- tional Advertising and Circulation Manager; Don J. Wilsher, Contracts Manager; Ernest A. Jones, Local Advertising Manager; Norman Steinberg, Service Manager; Herbert Falender, Publications and Class- ified Advertising Manager. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT WEEKS monetary experts fearing a credit boom, the re- newal or cancellation of this power may prove of the greatest importance. On -Feb. 1 expires the lending authority of the RFC and of the Electric Farm and Home Authority. On March 31, the appropriation of the CCC is ended as is, on April 1 the power of the FHA to insure modernization loans. May 1 writes finis on the President's neutrality powers under the present act. and June 12 sees the end of the state department power to conclude re- ciprocal trade 'agreements. And, equally impor- tant, the relief agencies expire on June 30. So far we have not mentioned Mr. Roosevelt's aims for agriculture, for housing for relief and for banking and monetary regulation. Many of these, we hope, will be made clearer after his speech to Congress today on the State of the Union. All are of vital importance, and the nation awaits with interest the actions of its rep- resentatives. ,9- THE FORUM Problems Before The 75th Congress . . . HE 75TH CONGRESS that con- vened yesterday has before it a session of the gravest import, to the United States and to the world as a whole. Foremost is the need for legislation dealing with vital problems of neutrality and labor, and many New Deal enactments qnd authorizations of Pres- idential power expire before spring. President Roosevelt himself has indicated that the pro- gram he will submit to Congress will be as broad if not broader than the legislation of his first administration. With the tremendous Democratic majorities in both houses, there would seem to be little doubt of the President's power but already on the neutrality and labor questions party lines are being transcended. The neutrality controversy, for example, in- volves much more than the question of whether or not the President should be given discretionary powers. Senator Vandenberg wants mandatory legislation prohibiting American trade with bel- ligerent nations and fears that the President, if given leeway might use his power to ally the United States with one or the other warring country. But the President, more than wanting author- ity to prohibit commerce with specific nations, has in mind, it would seem, discretion in add- ing to or subtracting from the list of goods which. it would be unlawful to ship. To prevent the shipping of war materials he feels is not suffi- cient.- Either concept of neutrality, it should be pointed out, would be valueless in a case like Spain involving a civil war unless discretionary power is with regard, to a choice of nations or specific provision for civil war is made. In labor and industry the aims of the President are the abolition of child labor and sweatshops, shorter hours and higher wages and the pro- motion of, collective bargaining. Also he favors limitation of monopolies, unfair competition and disreputable trade practices. Is a Constitutional amendment necessary to obtain these objectives? Certainly otherwise there can be no NRA codes. But if an amend- ment, what kind: broad and sweeping, such as the proposal to allow the Federal .government power to regulate intra-state commerce as well as inter-state commerce? Or, on the other hand a clause prohibiting certain practices and allowing Congress or some other agency to decide when the unlawful occurrence has taken place? Or, again, a provision for the Federal licensing of all corporations? Some claim, however that a constitutional Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of more than 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria ofageneral editorial importance and Interest to the campus. For Christian Refugees To the Editor: A few days ago I received a letter from the American Christian Committee for German Ref- ugees, 287 Fourth Avenue, New York City, ask- ing for contributions to help the unfortunate victims of Nazi persecution to reestablish them- selves in South America. The letter reads in oart as follows: "There seems to be an epidemic of suicide mood going through the ranks of the refugees." This poignant statement comes to the American Christian Committee for German Ref- ugees in a letter from the International Center of Paris, which is caring for German emigres. "It is difficult for us who live in comfort to realize how tragic and hopeless the future looks to these men and women who are separated from their friends and living, practically des- titute, in a strange land. Frequently they have families who need food and clothing and shelter .. . "Since they are of Christian faith and prac- tice, the responsibility for their survival and care rests with Christians who resent the destruction of religious liberty and freedom of thought now going on in Germany. These refugees are among the finest representatives of democratic Ger- many--teachers, journalists, artists, doctors and the like. The need of these refugees must be met immediately. "This is no mere begging letter. It is rather a call to the compassion of the American people to come to the aid of hundreds of their fellow- Christians who, through no fault of their own, have been cast adrift into the world, bereft of state, home and hope." In a supplement to the letter there is this statement: "America has been deluded into thinking that the German refugee problem is a Jewish one, whereas already three times as many Christians have been placed under the same ban as have the Jews. Over 1,300,000 per- sons in Germany of Christian faith are ex- cluded from public life by the Nazi laws against non-Aryans." Many of these are already in forced exile. The Jews of the world have responded; they are even helping Christians. We appeal to American Christians to contribute to- wvard this relief work for our fellow-Christians who are suffering abroad." I consider it the duty of every American re- gardless of race or religion to respond generous- ly to the appeal of the Christian Committee. -M. Levi. Censorship Farce -End Of 'Red Rider' Demanded- (From the Minneapolis Trib.une) A MEASURE which calls for the outright repeal of the so-called "red rider" passed by Con- gress last year has been prepared by Represen- tative Kennedy of Maryland and will be intro- duced at the forthcoming session. If the measure is passed, teachers of the District of Columbia will again be permitted to present certain non- controversial facts about Soviet Russia in their classrooms, instead of crimsoning with embar rassment when some young mind exhibits a husky curicsity in the land of the Dnieper and the Volga. It is Mr. Kennedy's idea, since Russia is a geographical and governmental entity which maintains diplomatic and commercial relation- ships with the United States, that school children of the District of Columbia should be privileged to know that it exists. He does not like the idea of pretending that Russia is simply a cartographical error on the world map because this country has no use for communism or of treating it as some sort of Never-Never land which is inhabited by fictional characters fan- tastically remote from everyday realties. Mr. Kennedy, in short wants to grant Soviet Russia academic recognition in the District of Columbia, at least to the point where teachers are permittd to confess in their classrooms, that i? is a country situated in the Eastern hemisphere and lying roughly somewhere East of Berlin and West of China and Nippon. Whether the representative from Maryland successfully champions his repeal measure or not, the United States is going to survive and so is Russia. Compared with other matters which will confront Congress, the question of what shall be taught in the District of Colum- bia schools seems highly unimportant. Never- theless, we believe that the country would be well BENEATH **** ******IT ALL « By Bonth Williams BACK IN THE 'SWING after two weeks of in- vigorating slumber ,good Scotch and infer- ior weather, I re-assemble my forces to face the great conflict once again. Morituri, te, salu- tamus. Everywhere the talk is of Margaret Mitt- chell's "Gone With the Wind." Apparently all males have now adopted the magnificent cynical indifference of Rhett Butler, and the female of the species has decided to grab life by the whiskers and mould it to suit the green-eyed daughter of Gerald O'Hara. Reper- cussions should shortly be felt. THIS IS THE TALE of the Beaver. The story of Victor Heyliger, captain of the Michigan hockey team. holder of the Varsity scoring rec- ord, resident of historic Concord, Mass., and now full owner of an alligator shipped from balmy Florida by one of Victor's ardent admir- ers. Heyliger, whose specialty is getting goals and a great sweep check, has been momentarily stymied by the arrival of the denizen of the Everglades who keeps the Beaver constantly on the watch for hardy flies that have thus far endured the rigors Of winter. When there are no flies Vic is obliged to dig deep in his new Esquire trou and content the carnivorous beast with tasty chunks of delicious hamburger.- Having now become accustomed to the routine feeding, both Heyliger and alligator have decided to settle down-the alligator to a period of more or less suspended hiberna- tion, and Vic to the business of playing hockey. And hockey may very well be a b.usiness with Heyliger. Jack Adams, chubby man- ager of the world champion Detroit Red Wings, has promised him a trial with the Stanley Cup titleholders providing that he has a good year at Michigan. As a sophomore Heyliger scored 33 points in collegiate competition when he teamed with Johnny Sherf who moved up to the Detroit Olympics the next'season. Last year Heyliger broke the Varsity scoring record set by Sherf in his senior year with a grand total of 44 points. Thus, for Heyliger to have a good year this year means that he will have to break his own record of last season. He is off to a flying start. Last year in a 16-game season the Con- cord Flash averaged 2.75 goals per game. This season with only four tilts of an 18-game sched- ule yet played, Heyliger has rammed home eleven goals and been credited with five assists for a total of 16 points or an average of 4 points per game, The interesting thing about the hockey career of the Beaver is that when he stepped out on the Colseum ice as a freshman he looked like a finished performer I can see him now, the same black thatched head flying by a bunch of game but outclassed yearlings as he skated rings around the whole bunch of us and scored goal after goal. Vic was good then, not nearly as finished a performer as he is now, but even a blind man could see that he was a born hockey player. The strange part of the thing was that Vie never plaved hockey in high school, simply because the high school didn't have a hockey team. His puck chasing was pretty much confined to a neighborhood pond in back of the house, and it was there that the present Wolverine captain learned to skate and handle a stick. Without coaching and without any hockey heritage in his family, Vic picked up the game and kept playing it. The result was that when he came to Michigan in 1933, he was a better hockey player by far than menwho had starred on prep and high school teams under regular coaches. There are times when Vic would like to see that pond once again. The Beaver has been home only three times in the four years that he has spent at Michigan and sometimes it's a little lonely. The last time he made the pilgrim- mage back east was a year ago Xmas, and that was his first return then in almost two years. Most of the time it doesn't bother Victor much. He spends his summers working at Ford's and major domos at the German-American during the school year. He supplements his hockey with classes in the school of education. Possessed of an inimitable sense of humor and all the qualities of a gentleman, Vic is a credit to Michigan athletics as well as an in- spirational captain and leader. My. hat to the Beaver, one swell gent. BENEATH IT ALL: Frank Bissell, captain of the wrestling team and well-known gridder plans to give up further use of his left arm per- manently. Just how well Frank will be able to grapple with the grunt and groan specialists without the use of one arm is a matter of pure conjecture. The great leap is scheduled for the very immediate future according to Bud Benjamin, Daily wrestling expert, and will unite in holy/matrimony the future destinies of Mich- igan and Vassar . . . Three Alpha Delts, including Clark Bower and Horace Gilmore, en route back to Ann Arbor Sunday stopped off at the Com- modore in Toledo for dinner. Upon entering the dining room they were escorted to a table and dinner magically appeared. "Can't we order," they asked, but the waiters only smiled and brought in the main course. Halfway through, and wondering what it was all about, one of the mystified diners paused long enough to ask, "What is this anyway?" Questions and answers followed and all three THEATRE Leslie Howard's Hamlet Leslie Howard in HAMLET. PRINCE OF DENMARK by William Shake- speare. Directed by Leslie Howard, in collaboration with John Houseman. Settings and costumes designed by Stewart Chaney. The version pre- pared oy Schuyler Watts. By JAMES DOLL H AMLET is so profound a play, so complicated a study of psychol- ogy, has such a complex a character at its center that anything less than genius in the performance of this central character is hardly accept- able. That is the principal trouble with Mr. Leslie Howard's production of the play. He brings a certain competence to the part but not, I'm afraid, genuine fire. He attacks the lines with spirit, reads the verse well but it is so often just reading. The soliloquies seem shouted, mannered. The final vowels in lines are drawn out in an effected and sing-song man- ner. His Hamlet starts out with an "antic disposition" and keeps it for about three quarters of the play with very little variation in his method of attack. It is a fundamental that an inter- pretative artist should always be the master of the material he is re- creating. It must seem to be the log- ical and inevitable outcome of his inner feelings. In the strongest emo- tional scenes, in the early antic scenes, Mr. Howard seems to be drag- ging hopelessly after the play-seems to be running after a train he can- nct quite catch. He is best in the last. scenes of the play -- in the churchyard and in the duel scenes. But they do not move us as they should because the character has not been lifted high enough in the prev- ious climaxes. Hamlet is so many things in so many different scenes that it is the duty of the actor playing the part to blend them into a unified whole which will be his conception of the part. This Mr. Howard does not do. We cannot learn what he considers Hamlet to be, can see no development or consistent presentation or change of character. The general effect of the whole play is that of an animated reading due no doubt to this ineffectiveness of the playing of the name part. Al- though much of the production fol- lows the usual conventions in a rou- tine way, there are many fine things in it. Some of it is superior, even. to most productions of the Shake- speare in the present-day American theatre. The Laertes of Clifford Evans, for example, is especially mov- ing. His early scenes with Ophelia. the scene with Hamlet in the church- yard, and his acting in the last scene are among the most satisfying things in the production. Denis Green's Horatio is also sincere, straightfor- ward, and has a weight and presence so necessary but so often lacking in the part. The Claudius of Wilfred Walter is an arch villain, Aubrey Ma- ther's Polonius more than usually comic, Mary Servoss's Gertrude state- ly but rather negative. But these players might have seemed better if they had had a more powerful Ham- let to play against. Stewart Chaney's settings are im- pressive. They provide a suitable background and adequate playing space. They moves; very slowly the opening nightatvthe Cass but this would seem to be due to new stage hands and an unfamiliar stage rather than any fault in their construction. These waits are especially destructive of continuity between scenes so close- ly connected in the writing as the scene of Hamlet's first meeting with the ghost and the scene following. The use of the "Royal crypt" for this scene and the consequent loss of time for change of setting seemed hardly justifiable. Mr. Chamey's costumes are very handsome and original in conception and in detail but the barbaric style of medieval court costume seems for- eign to the Renaissance flavor of the play and its outlook. Because of the superiority of John Gielgud's performance in Guthrie McClintic's production of the play it is difficult to have the proper ap- proach to a mediocre performance. It is most unfortunate for Mr. How- ard that he did not produce the play last spring as he originally in- tended. It would then have been at least passably acceptable. Now it cannot stand comparison at any point with the excitement, intelligence and fine analysis of the values of the play and part that Mr. Gielgud and Mr. McClintic have brought to their productionIn fact it is almost im- possible to make a comparison at all. If you want to hear Hamlet effec- tiv-ly read-with, however some un- fortunate cuts and rearrangement of scenes-and transferred to the stage with pictorial effectiveness, seeing Mr. Howard's production is probably as good a way as any to become familiar with the externals of the text of the great tragedy It's greatest fault is that the audience is never moved emotionally by what is happening on the stage. Group Pictures Due Jan. 24 For 'Ensian (Continued from Page 2) Room 3211 A.H. on or before Wednes- day, Jan. 13. Notice to Presidents and Treasur- ers of Student Organizations: Page contract cards for space in the 1937 Michiganensian should be signed immediately and mailed into the 'En- sian office. Copy blanks, (names of officers and members and pictures desired for the page), should also be sent in with the contract. We are asking your immediate cooperation in this matter as we need this informa- tion in order to meet our deadlines. The 1937 Michiganensian. Notice to All Social and Profes- sional Fraternity and Sorority Presi- dents and Treasurers: Fraternities and sororities which have not as yet sent in their page contract cards for the 1937 Michiganensian should do so at once to guarantee space for their organization in this year's an- nual. Copy blanks, (names of offi- cers and members), should also be sent in with the contract. Your im- mediate cooperation in this matter is requested as the 'Ensian needs this information to meet deadlines. The 1937 Michiganensian. Naval Flying Course: Information concerning the opportunities to take the naval flying course at Pensacola, Fla., has been received and may be consulted by those interested at the office of the Department of Aero- nautical Engineering, B47 East En- gineering Building. Phi Kappa Phi Graduate Fellow- ships: Three graduate fellowships, each with a stipend of $500 for one Year, have been established by the Honorary Scholastic Society of Phi Kappa Phi. These fellowships will be administered in accordance with the following regulations: 1. The fellowships shall be awarded to three members of Phi Kappa Phi, each of whom wishes to enroll as a candidate for an ad- vanced degree in a graduate school in some American college or university. Within these requirements no re- striction shall be placed upon the field of work. 2. The requirements of recipients f these fellowships shall be: Those eligible to apply for one of these fellowships shall include mem- bers of Phi Kappa Phi who, during the year preceding the proposed ;raduate study, were elected to mem- bership in the society as seniors. To be eligible for consideration, applications for these fellowships shall be filed on orbefore the 15th of March with the secretary of the Society Chapter in which the appli- cant was elected to membership, on blanks prepared for the purpose, which blanks shall be available for distribution from the office of each chapter secretary. In selecting the most worthy ap- plicant, each chapter as well as the National Committee of Award, shall give primary consideration to the ap- plicant's promsie of success in grad-, uate work as revealed by previous scholastic record, testimonials from teachers and merit or excellence of proposed plan of graduate study. The final awards shall be made by the committee and the successful ap- plicants shall be notified by the Sec- retary General of the Society not later than June 1. It is expected that those accepting these fellowships will devote their full time to graduate study through- out the academic year and will not at the same time hold other re- munerative scholarships or fellow- ships, nor any salaried position. R. S. Swinton, Secretary. Bowling: The bowling alleys at thej Women's Athletic Building will be closed until further notice. Lectures University Lecture: Prof. C. Cara-, theodory, of the University of Mu- nich, will lecture on the subject 'Functions of Bounded Variation and Stieltjes Lebesgue Integrals," to- day at 4:15 p.m., in Room 3017 An- gell Hall. University Lecture: Dr. Alfred Sal- mony, of Mills College, California, will lecture on the subject "Eastern Animal Style," dealing with the an- cient art of Siberia and its influence on Far Eastern and European art, in Natural Science Auditorium, at 4:15 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 7. The lecture. will be illustrated with slides. The, public is cordially invited. University Lecture: Prof. Fernand Baldensperger, professor of compara- tive literature at Harvard University, will lecture on the subject, "Une crise du roman: Balzac ou Proust" on Friday, Jan. 8, at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Auditorium. The public is cordially invited. Chemistry Lecture: Dr. L. O. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all mrnbers of th. University. Copy received at the office at the Assistant to V% Presids until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. Oratorical Association Lecture Course: Bruce Bliven, editor of The New Republic, will speak in Hill auditorium on Thursday, Jan. 14, at 8:15 p.m. on the subject, "The Press -Truth, News, or Propaganda?" Tickets are now available at Wahr's. Events Of Today Chemistry Colloquium will meet today at 4 p.m. in Room 303, Chem- istry Building. Mr. M. C. Kloetzel will speak on "Hexaarylethanes Con- taining the Phenanthryl Group." Luncheon for Graduate Students today in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League. Prof. John H. Muyskens, Director of the Labor- atory of Speech and General Lin- guistics, will speak informally on "The Framework of Science." Chemical and Metallurgical En- gineering Seminar: Mr. E. Kirken- dall will be the speaker at the Sem- inar for Chemical and Metallurgical Engineers today at 4 p.m. in Room 3201 E. Engineering Bldg. His sub- ject will be "Diffusion in Solid Met- als." Phi Kappa Phi: The initiation banquet for 49 students and faculty members will be held at the Michi- gan League at 6:30 p.m. today. Pro- fessor Hobbs will give an illustrated lecture entitled "Looking Beyond the Horizon." Members desiring to at- tend should make reservations with the secretary, R. S. Swinton, phone University 649. Freshman Glee Club: Regular re- hearsal today at 4:30 p.m.' Stanley Chorus: Our first meet- ing this year will be held in the Glee Club room of the League, tonight, at 7:15 p.m. Everyone please be prompt. Phi Sigma: Dr. James T. Brad- bury will speak on "Some of the re- cent developments in Endocrinology," today at 8 p.m. in Room 2116 N.S. Initiation of new members, Jan. 20. Transportation Club: There will be a meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. Alpha Nu will hold a regular meet- ing tonight at 7:30 p.m. in its meet- ing room on the fourth floor of An- gell Hall. Everyone please be present. U. of M. Public Health Club: An important meeting will be held today at 7:30 p.m. at Michigan Union, Room 318-20. Mr. Mitchell, editor of Journal of Health and Physical Edu- cation, will be the speaker. Please bring money for pins and keys. Sphinx: There will be a luncheon meeting at 12:15 p.m. today in the Union. The regular Wednesday evening dancing classes, which have been in- terrupted for several weeks, will meet as usual this evening for the last lesson in the series. The intermediate class will meet from 7 to 8 and the advanced class from 8 to 9. League Publicity Committee: There will be a meeting today at 4 p.m. in the Undergraduate Office of the League. The Study Group of the Michigan Dames will meet this evening at 8 p.m. at the Michigan League. All Dames are invited to attend. Coming Events Zoology Club: Dx. J. Van Tyne will discuss and demonstrate the work of the Bird Division, Museum of Zool- ogy, on Thursday, Jan. 7, at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3024 Museums Building. kWeekly Readng Hour: The pro- gram for Thursday afternoon, Jan. 7, at 4 p.m. in Room 205 Mason Hall, will consist of readings from miscel- laneous poetry to be given by the following students: Henry H. Adams, Dorothy A. Barrett, Joseph E. Biller, Rowland Bolton, Miriam Brous, D. Philip Clark, Henry T. Conlin, Nancy J. Hulwick, Mary K. Lavan, Karl Kauser, Jr., Stanley A. Komarek, and Chares F. Payton. The public is cordially invited to hear this program. Women's Varsity Debating Team: The second tryout will bc held- on Thursday, Jan. 7, at 4 p.m., Room 4203 A.H. Each person will be ex- pected to give a three-minute speech, either affirmative or negative, on the question: Resolved: That the essen- tials of the N.Y.A. should be made permanent. Stanley Chorus: More tryouts will be held for women (not freshmen) wishing to join the chorus, on Thursday and Friday, from 4 to 6 p.m. Everyone is urged to try out, as we are now preparing for our spring program. All officers to be present at the tryouts.