30, 1 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ---- W Quiz Kids Highly-Touted Faculty Brains To Meet I Famed Quiz Kids In Challenge Match! Craig To Shaw Color Movies Maurice Evans Will Perform Great Shakespearean Scenes <° _v' RICHARD WILLIAMS-11 JOAN BISHOP-14 Hilarity and good fun, and lots of it, are in store Nov. 24 when the famed Quiz Kids meet five prominent faculty men who have accepted their challenge to match wits with them. Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour- nalism department will serve as mas- ter-of-ceremonies. The audience is warned to expect the worst fkom their mentors, for this will not be the first time that the ,Quiz Kids *have challenged their eld- ers and beaten them decisively. Touted brains of the University of Chicago faculty were pitted against the youthful brains of the Kids and the touted brains went down, 275 points to 140. President Robert Maynard Hutch- in- forecast they result, having said t fore the event, "I stippose you all came to Mandel Hall to see the profs showed up by the Kids." The stately professors wore black caps and gowns, and later on, some red blushes. Is the same in store for Michigan? The Quiz Kids are all "little gen- iuses." Their "anchor man" is Ger- ard Darrow, age 8, who answers, it' is said, questions on ornithology, biol- ogy and mythology, one after the other, slap-bang. As an example of their ability, here is one of the questions asked at the University of Chicago. "Miss Gilson (faculty member) this is cur last question and it seems to be in your field, economics. Would it be more economical to buy a fur coat Pulitzer Winner Will Give Talk Anne O'Hare McCormick To Present Opiions A woman's views on the present situation and its possible outcome will be piesented by journalist Anne O'Hare McCormick in the se'cond lec- ture of the series, to be given Nov. 13. Subject of the lecture wil be "After the War, What?" Mis McCormick has recently re- turned from Europe, where she served for many years as a foreign corres- pondent. Her travels have given lier first-hand iniformation on the diplo- matic intrigues of the nations of the Continent. She was the first woman to receive the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished work in the field of foreign corres- pondence. At present she is a member of the editorial board of the New York Times and is engaged in an extensive lecture tour. Tickets For Series To Go On Sale Today Season tickets for the series are priced at $4.00 for the main floor, $3.00 for the first balcony, and $2.00 for the second balcony, which is re- served for students only. Single admissions will be $1.00, 75c and 50c. The Hill Auditorium box office will open this morning for the sale of tickets. mHours will be from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. daily through October 10. The office will be closed Saturday afternoons and Sundays. Single admission tickets may be se- cured at the Hill Auditorium box of, fice the day before and the day of each lecture. Tickets for the Maur- ice Evans recital will not be avail- able until Oct. 9.1 at one store for $300, or a second coat just like it at another store, if there were $40 between the price of the sec- ond coat and the price of a third coat, three-fourths of the cost of the sec- ond coat being equal to two-thirds the cost of the second?" While the professors floundered hopelessly, Richard Williams the A bassdor Hugh Gibson To Speak Herq Well versed in the field of inter- national politics is Hon. Hugh Gib- son of the United States Diplomatic Service, who will speak here on the international situation Feb. 17. Ambassador to Belgium shortly be- fore the recent war, Gibson will bring to his Ann Arbor audience a fresh memory of Europe as it was be- fore the Nazi machine began to sweep the small countries of the Continent out of existence. Gibson has been in the diplomatic service almost continuously since his first appointinent as secretary of the American legation at Tegucigalpa, Honduras, in 1908, a year after his graduation from the Ecole Libre des Sciences Politiques, Paris. , Sii in s one of his fe personal appearances head mathmetician of the Quiz Kids, IPcn th lecture platform. gave the solution: 'Shakespeare in the News",will be Danger is his business. "If three-fourths of the second is Ee d . gillustrated by Evans' readings of eqaltotw-tirs f hethrd Explorer, deep-sea diver, photogra- equal to two-thirds of the third pher of unusual places and adventur- many of the greatest scenes Shake- icat, then one-forth of the second ous action--this is Capt. John D speare ever wrote. is two-ninths ef the third. So one- Craig. who will make his third Ann Happily for both American and third of the third minus two-ninths Arbor appearance March 12 in the T:Bitish audiences. the commercial ef itself (the same as one-fourth of final lecture of the series, a timely . wE the second) leaves one-ninth, the tcareer for w ich Maurice Evans difference between the cost of the address on "The Philippines Today, difrnebtentecs ftedocumented with his own full-color seemed destined. never materialized. Etcand and third coats, in relation dm ted with his nd fl-co N Had it done so, the high standards set motion pictures of scenes and life of N~~ to the third. Thus, if $40 is the dif- bhat remote possession of this coun- by him in "Twelfth Night," "Ham- thre nt cf st, rie 4svisotychich today, more than ever, is -let' and other plays would have been fcrczie in ost, time 40wgiish todatyas onthe stengthofehipir; #priced carded a vital key to international, tte oen opefu eams $360, and the second cat would be rel ationstin theewesternoPacific.r- 320. Threforietter buy the first nlaetionn in the western Pacific.don's one." Pliiic. industry, agriculture, edu- .ranren"Hetd an atn nd srocietyof the Philippines, rdiin- nceeOdV cide Whew! No wonder, those kids are e usd and woven together utre M intic decided cno th aibringbimtoAecao play Ro- cn the radio. into a colorful panorama of life in meo to Katherine Cornell's Juliet. Joe Kelly, who was chosen after the islands by the young adventurer, MAURICE EVANS Encouraged by the reception accord- long searching to act as chief quiz- whose past assignments have taken * * ed him on Broadway for his appear- zer, has admittedly a very meager him into 43 countries and across five Portraying his famous theatrical ances in "Romeo and Juliet," "Saint educational background. But he was Continents with his equipment and Joan""St. Helena" and "Richard the best-liked by the children and staff of technicians. roles in a dramatic recital, Maurice I Maurice Evans returned to Times he seemed to get the most from them In addition to his vivid photogra-- Evans, acclaimed as "the greatest' aure Evan r nd tuTies in etra ommnt aterSquare after a long and successful in extra comment after the questions phy, Captain Craig's story-telling has Shakespearean actor of our day," tour of "Richard" in the guise of themselves had been answered. _-een praised wherever he goes. will honor Ann Arbor on Oct. 10 with actor-manager. r Diplomatic posts which he has held have carried him to London, Havana, CLAUDE BRENNER-13 * * * GERARD DARROW-9 / * * * HON. HJGH GIBSON Santo Domingo, BuenOs Aires, Lux- emburg, Paris, and Geneva. He was the first American minister appoint- el to Poland, in 1919, and followed that term with a three-year ministry in Switzerland beginning in 1924. Between the years 1927 and 1933 he was envoy extraordinary and min- ister plentipotentiary to Luxemburg, followed by an ambassadorship to Brazil until 1987, after which he re- turned to Luxemburg. - }Gibsorn has been a membr of a number of American delegations sent on various diplomatic missions. In 19 7 he' was chairman of the Ameri- cai delegation to the Conference for the Limitation of Naval Armament, later being chosen chaifman of the conference. He was acting chairman of the American delegation at the Geneva Disarmamrent conference in 1932. In 1935 he was sent to Buenos Aires as representative on the Mediatory Group to'end the Chaco War, and remained there later that year as delegate to the United States at the Chaco Peace Conference. 1 JACK LUCAL-14 Ii I" TWO ILLUSTRATED LECTURES 1941-42 Lecture Course 3%N MARCH 12 Capt. John3eI. Craig "THIE PHILIPPINES TODAY" with Color Motion Pictures JANUARY 14 Ii l awrence Thaw explorer :