THURSDAY, -MRC THE ICIAN-1AI _________________________________________________________ U FACTS SOUGHT : New Committee Begins To, Investigate Prej udiee JWhat's Uip iell lc IS --_. ._ -- (F;AiI"Ylilf'.ti 1 l} 1'l;' ('m It I I I I I I I ,t'S fti t i)t't1l ! :t! i N&I Ii'~ .' The wheels are beginning to turn in the recently-formed Com- mittee to End Discrimination. Organized a few weeks ago as a non-partisan effort to investigate University and town practices re- garding prejudice the committee at present includes eleven campus organizations as official members and five other groups as non-vot- ing observers. THE FIRST project undertaken Essay Contest Entries Due The Ger manl Department has announced that all students in- terested in entering the Bronson- Thomas essay contest may register today in Rm 12 Angell Hall. The contestants will be given prescribed readings in German literature to complete. Then they must write an essay on an as- signed subject. All students in German classes on a junior or senior level who took their work in German at an American university are eligible. The amount to be awarded to tihe winner is $27. by the group will be investigation regarding general employment practices for University workers and faculty appointments. Along with this the organiza- tion is attempting to gather in- formation on whether the Uni- versity uses a system of quotas in admitting students to under- graduate and graduate schools. "The group is going ahead with plans to become officially recog- nized by the Student Affairs Com- mittee," Leon Rechtman, chair - man of the group, said. t'W rl4) Iet } ;WirlirP.) Dr. T. Z. Koo, who s poike TLRQS- dlay on the "World OutiL ook f:uj Christianity''in cooperatio nwt Religion-in-Life Week, was : dinner guest at the NewWon> Dorm Tuesday evening. Dr. Koo held an informal alter - dinner discussion on world affai:j and played Chinese a irs uiI, i' flute. AFTER-DINNER spreaker at. Lloyd House last night was Ki- yoshi Tanimoto, pastor of t, ,e Hiroshima Methodist Church, vh> was within a mile of the ev of the atomic bomb explo sion i 1945.j Tanimoto, who is appearzing as a part of the religious program jhere,}ivill speak and conduct an after -dinner discussion at Stockwell Hall this evening. Lloyd H-ouse men will have an exch)ange dinner today with the new women's dorm. Twenty-four' couples will dine in the cafeterias of the two houses. UNIT III of the newv women's .'', i1<' . l S tt4Qid, Mac1 7. [ en h't o Vm 'i n I(;1sr wil I en- 1m111,0'At. VO exp~rincnl 0 d ito c' whethe oewilir M'da k'P the IIV lat A GROUP OF cut a50":. lash! ORGANIZATIONS who haveI jointed the committee include the New Women's Dorm, American Veterans' Committee, Inter-Coop- erative Council, United World Federalists, and Americans for Democratic Action, National Law- yers Guild and Inter-Guild Coun- cil. Also in the group are the Young Progressives, Young (Democrats, Inter-Racial Associ- ation and Alpha Phi Alpha. Represented but not officially part of the committee were WVest Quad, Betsy Barbour, Jor- dan Hall, Young Socialists and AIM. PROTEST AT COMMUNITY MEETING AGCAI:N.'ITi VICE--Louis K. Soteros, a resident of Gary, Ind., 41 years old, gestures and raises his voice during city council meeting in protest of gambling and vice in C.ary, Ind., a steel producing city. More than 1,000 women touched off' the protest, demanding the council call in FBI and state police if city law enforcement officials refused to act. Women were aroused by slaying last week of it high school teacher. 7O1) N EItHBORRS: HI't roI(1B X1in1 WllSpeak On Lami. Ainriaii IlAIati-oi CLASSICAL _ _. . . _ . E ; It's, lForrnal1. Time (PLEDGE FORMALS Ii In the _past few 7eps 4"hvel 0 ecn favors for your considera-e tio th o r spring formals. Most of themareBalfour exclusives, and all of them have been fj designed for Modern Greets.V Let our sixteen years of experience help you select just the ~J right favor and program for your party.V o Phone for an appointment to see them at your own chapter D (J house, or stop at your Balfour store and browse around. Either way; threrc is no obligation. -ToN- AND MEREDITH SUCKI.ING L~G~BALFOUR Co. fJ 1319 S. U~niversity Phone 9533 " Talronriz:c your official jewecler" , .- . Dvorak Fifth, Berlioz Requiem, La Boheme, Ravel Quartet, Prokofieff Symphonies Nos. 1, 5 POPULAR Theme Songs, Danny Kaye, Ellingtoni, Duchin plays Gershwin, Sweet and Low CHI LDENS SETS PUSS In Boots, Kankie, Jack nde the Beanstalk, Mike the I ouh Little, Tugboat THE SALE everyone's talking about - for a limited time only. This group includes "musts" for every collector. Stop today where music on records is a pleasure as well as ra business. ' . IlAI ittEaioinally-known educator Harold Benjamin, Dean of the Colle ge of Education at the Uni- versity of Maryland, will speak on "Ccentemporary Education in ifLatin Amnerica" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in I-.('kl 'duAnAphith eatre. Tihe lectet' sponsor'ed by the FRomance Languages department and the education school, will be followed by a reception in the Hlendersonh Room of the League where students and faculty will have a chance to meet the speak- DEAN BENJAMIN, a specialist inl comparative education, was the first director of the Division of International Educational Rela- tions in the U.S. Office of Edut- cationi. He pjarticiliate~d in the Inter'- Amer-ican (Con1eren(T on Educa- tion held in Chile ini 1934, thes Carneg'ie Mission - to South America in 1941, the Constitu- tional Convention of UNESCO its 1945 and th(e American Coun- cil of Education mission to Jap~an in 1946. He is best known to students {Y r., ggt-b .. Jr'1Y t' S.( iL7t4s Oak for his satire on traditional edu- cational methods, "The Saber- Tooth Curriculum." His new book, the 1948 Kappa Delta Pi lecture, is "Under Their Own Command.," Ile has been selected to deliver tile 1949 Inglis .Lecture at Har- yard. Dean Benjamin is also educa- tion editor of the Handbook of Latin-Anvi'ica n Studies. Weste rn- Mr-Tpe Des peta10S HoldupTrain MARTINSBURG, W . I' Two gt nien in a mnelodraniatic holdup11 remniscen t of wild we'st (ays robbed everybody aboard a Baltimore and Ohio express train, shot one person and slugtgedI sev- eral tonight. The robbers forced the Ambas- sador, Detroit bound from Balti- more, to stop outside the small town in the eastern lpanhandle of West Virginia. THlEY WERE JOINED by two accomplices and escaped in a car they stole from a nearby night club. 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