THE MICHIGAN DAILY. SATURDAY, MARCH 31,>? -Daily-Malcolm Shatz HORNS APLENTY--A trombone quartet consisting of (left to right) Charles Rhodes, '54, Ted Workman, 54, Burton Barnes, Grad. and Joseph Moore, '54, members of the University Varsity Band will play Bach's "Four Chorales" and Johnson's "Viking Saga" in a concert at 8 p.m. tomor- row. * * * * * * Band To Play Local Citizen's March Union Board To Review Co-edPolicy Union policy on co-ed use of the mens club's facilities will get a general review at the Tuesday Board of Directors meeting, Union President Gerald Mehlman, '51, announced yesterday. At the Board's session, Mehlman said, Union Vice-President Wil- liam Bates will ready a letter from John Duffey, '51L, proposing that the Union request a referendum on the spring election ballot to test male opinion on co-ed use of the front door and the cafeteria. Duffey's letter, parts of which appeared in Wednesday's Daily, was originally addressed to the Student Legislature, Mehlman ex- plained-. However, u p o n consultation with Duffey and the SL, it was decided that Bates, Law School representative on t h e Board, should first bring the Duffey pro- posal before the Directors be- cause, Mehlman pointed o u t, "Duffey is one of Bates' constitu- ents." Duffey's suggested questions for the referendum were these: 1. Should the Union policy of denying women the use of the front door be eliminated? 2. Should the Union cafeteria be open full time to escorted wo- men? Union co-ed policy has already' undergone a major revision this year on the recommendation of the Union Liaison Committee with the approval by the Board. How- ever these changes, which are on a trial basis, still limit the hours during which women can use Un- ion facilities and leave the front door rule intact although not rig- idly enforced. Union officers will also reveal the results of an extensive poll of members' reaction to the ten- tative revisions. Top Translators Win Cash Awards Winners of the annual Kothe- Hildner translation contest have been decided by the Kothe-Hild- ner committee of the German de- partment. Top honors and a prize of $45 have been received by Albert Kal- jee, '53. Carolyn C. von Voight- lander, '54,-placed second and was awarded $30. The contest is sponsored for the purpose of stimulating and en- couraging the study of German. Wishful Thinkers Demoeracy Flaws Cited By Speaker LANSING-The University was lashed yesterday for its "mutila- tion of the Judge Dexter House" in an official resolution of the Michigan Historical Commission. The commission referred to the University's conversion of a 110- year-old mansion in Dexter, Mich- igan, to an apartment building for faculty members. The resolution stated that the University had "evidenced no con* cern" for a "structure having great historical and cultural val- ues." The University received the house as a grant from Mrs. Cath- erine McCormick, granddaughter of Judge Samuel Dexter who built the house in 1841. Mrs. McCor- mick stipulated in the grant that the house be used for faculty apartments. Fet Prof. Valerio Prof. Alexander M. Valerio of the College of Architecture and Design has been elected to asso- ciate membership in the National Academy of Design. Hetwas one of 26 artists voted into the academy. m. sions. The first American Jam- boree was held in 1938. Also included on the Varsity Band program will be "Proces- sion of Nobles" by Rimsky-Kor- sakov, "Dance Intermezzo" by Sibelius, "Scottish Rhapsody" by Leidzen and a\ trombone quartet playing Bach's "Four Chorales" and Johnson's "Vik- ing .Saga." The "Valley Forge March" will then be presented.. Following intermission Tarver's march, "El Charro," Shadwell's Speculation Mounts in Choice Of Engineering College Dean By FLOYD THOMAS Announcement of the new dean Speculation is mounting about is expected soon because a com- 1o will succeed retiring Dean mittee of faculty members and* an Crawford, of the engineer- college officials is considering the g college. appointment. In fact a top-ranking engineer- Ini n Ssing college official said the choice already may have been made. He also said the' new dean would lore )D rivers probably be a present faculty member of the college. Presumably t h e committee With Spring vacation looming wants a man who can serve for in the near future, the Union 10 or 15 years. Therefore the new avel Service is issuing another dean probably will be under 55 11 fpr drivers who want to cut years old and it is very doubt- penses and have company on ful he will be over 60 years old. e homeward trip. Several candidates have been. The driver response has been interviewed by the committee but od, so far, Union staff men say, their names are a tight secret. t drivers are especially needed However, 'the names of two possi- New York, Chicago, Boston and bilities recur in engineering col- ashington, D.C. lege rumors. Interested students may sign up One is Prof. George Brown, calling the Union's student of- chairman of the chemical and es between 3 and 5 p.m. daily, metallurgical engineering depart- by leaving their name and des- ment. Prof. Brown is 54 years old' iation in the Union lobby Travel and therefore would probably be rvice Box. able to hold the dean's job for the Names of people desiring rides desired 15 years. d willing to share expenses are The other is Prof. Orlan Bos- ten .to drivers headed in their ton, 59 years old and chairman ection, and the two make their of the metal processing depart- n arrangements about 'time of rnent since 1922. The long-time parture and costs., Michigan man graduated from the University in 1914 and began aW Teams Gain teaching here in 1917. But the names of Prof. Brown ase Club Finals and Prof. Boston have been men- tioned only in rumors. College of- ficials are keeping mum until the Teams representing Cooley and decision is made or until they are y Case Clubs have argued their ready to announce the new dean. y into the final round of the se Club's annual competition Housing ResearCh . the Henry M. Campbell 'ards. tC To Meet Pha tunm +on'm nm a 2 cCe f "Slavonic Serenade," Vaughan Williams' "Folk Song Suite," Dol- by's "Headlines" and Sousa's "High School Cadets" will' be heard. * * * JACK LEE will conduct. Lee is assistant director of the Univer- sity Bands which includes the Symphony Band and the March- ing Band as well as the Varsity Band. "Actually the Varsity Band is a secondary band and its re- quirements are not as high as those of the Symphony Band," Lee said yesterday. He pointed out that the Varsity Band handles the overflow of musicians who cannot be placed in the ;Symphony band, which is limited to 110 people, and also acts as a "feeder" for that group. OPEN TO ALL students on campus, two-thirds of the Varsity Band members are enrolled chief- ly in the literary or engineering colleges. Lee also explained that a large number of the men in the March- ing Band which becomes inactive' at the end of the football season join the Varsity Band in order to continue organized playing. "In fact, 48 students in the 56- members group were members of the Marching Band last fall," Lee added. 'Romeo and Juliet' Will EndToday The speech department's pro- duction of "Romeo and Jufliet" will be performed for the last time at 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets will be on sale in the theatre box office from 10 a.m. until curtain time. They are pric- ed at $1.20, 90 and 60 cents. "Otis Hardy ReVeals Rent Board Control Decision" HARDY'S COLUMN appears exclusively) in THE WASHTENAW POST-TRIBUNE IL A PENNY A WISH-Trying their luck before the "Wishing Well Ball" which will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight today in the Union ballroom, Sondra Diamond, '53, Norman Zilber and Frances Hirschman, '53, toss the first pennies into the dance's namesake. 4 } * .Read and Use Daily Classifieds * 1~ it A 'C I / Complaints of Irate Citizens Give City Clerk Steady Job Y ._.._._ Although it's only one of his jobs, sorting Ann Arbor's fan mail is probably one of the stead- iest tasks that City Clerk Fred J. Looker has. There doesn't seem to be seasonal fluctuation in the ber of people who trip on much num- loose Schools Will Hold Festival The Michigan High School Solo and Ensemble Festival will be held here today with approximately 1,500 junior and senior high school music students from all over the state participating. "The purpose of the Festival is to provide an opportunity for stu- dents to compare their musical progress and proficiency with that of other students of like experi- ence and training," Prof. William D. Revelli, chairman of the Fes- tival, said. The contests will last from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and will be held in the League, Union, Bur- ton# Tower, Music School, Hill Auditorium, Ann A r b o r High School, University High School and Harris Hall. sidewalk, get into an iccident with a public vehicle, have their basements flooded or want an excavation filled and feel that the city is responsible. * * * SOME OF the complainants are vociferous in their denunciations of the city's condition. Others merely add their name to a pe- tition. A few letters seem to deal with trivia. One man was irate because the police department did not answer phone calls soon enough. Others -- such as the one from a person who dis- covered that he had been pay- ing overtax for years - seem more important. "We don't get too many letters from crackpots," Looker said. "Most are claims against the city for payment of some sort or re- quests for city improvements." * * * AFTER HE checks through the letters, Looker assigns them to a spot on the city council's agenda. Generally they are then assigned to the proper council committee or administrative office to be ful- ly investigated. To Looker the mail is a never ending business-he gets about 30 communications for every meeting. MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) , Hill at Tappan Street Rev. Joseph M. Smith, Minister Howard Farrar, Choir Director Frances Farrar, Organist 9:30 A.M.: Church School-College Age Class. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship (nursery for chil- dren). Sermon: "Can God Trust Us?" GUILD HOUSE, 438 Maynard Street H. L. Pickerill, Director Jean Goree Bradley, Associate STUDENT GUILD: 6:00 Supper at the Congrega- tional Church, State & Witlham Sts., followed by a panel and discussion of avenues of Chris- tian growth. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services. Subject-"Reality." 9:30 A.M.: Sunday School. 11:00 A.M.: Primary Sunday School during the morning service. 8:00 P.M.: Wednesday: Testimonial Service, A free reading room is maintained at 339 South Main Street where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, bor- rowed, or purchased. Ths room is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11 A.M. to 5 P.M. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 504 E. Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister and Student Counselor Crystal Cuthbert, Assistant Student Counselor 10:00 A.M.: Bible Study. 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship, "More Light Please." 4:30 P.M.: The choir will present Mendelssohn's Oratorio "Elijah" in the church. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State & Williams Minister: Rev. Leonard A. Parr D.D. Student Ministry: Rev. H-. L. Pickerill; Mrs. George Bradley Director of Music: Wayne Dunlap Organist: Howard P. Chase Service at 10:45: The Guest Minister this week is Rev. Harold F. Hanlin. The subject of his sermon will be "God's Poem." Student Guild at 6:00 at the First Congregational Church. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION (National Lutheran Council) STUDENT CENTER 1304 Hill Street Dr. Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor Sunday- 9:10 A.M.: Bible Class at the Center. 10:30 A.M.: Services in Zion & Trinity Churches. 5:30 P.M.: LSA Meeting in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Program at 7:00. Speaker-Prof. Ger- hard Lenski on "The Church and Social Prob- lems." Tuesday- 7:30 P.M.: Discussion Group at the Center. Thursday- 7:25-7:50 A.M.: Morning Devotions at the Center. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenow Avenue (The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Sunday at 10:30: Worship Service, with sermon by the pastor, "The Changing World and the Church." Sunday at 4:45: Bible Study. Ephesians 1. Suriday at 5:30: Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club, Supper and Meeting. Election of offi- cers and business meeting. Tuesday at 9:15: Social Hour. *t THE VILLAGE CHURCH FELLOWSHIP (Interdenominational) University Community Center Chapel Willow Run Reverend Blaise Levai, Pastor Sunday, April 1st, 1951 10:45 A.M.: Divine Worship. Sermon - "The Great Teacher." 10:45 A.M.: Church School;and Nursery. 4:30 P.M.: Study and Discussion Group Topic-- "The Salvation of Jesus." 7:30 P.M.: Executive Committee Meeting., FRIENDS MEETING Lane Hall Lbrary 11:00 A.M.: Sundays. Visitors welcome. Housing and building research representatives from universities, industrial concerns and govern- ment agencies will gather for a two day meeting of the Housing Research Council beginning Tues- day. The University Engineering Re- search Institute and the College of Architecture and Design, joint sponsors of the meeting, will play host to approximately 40 mem- bers of the Council. Tuesday afternoon the group will tour Engineering Research Institute project laboratories. P. ,--- I- E r 1 1 taking a TR IP 11 We carry a full line of PASSOVER FOOD ~iI~ CORNED BEEF PASTRAMER When traveling, travel in comfort without worrying about the safety of money. Convert, your cash into Traveler's Cheques. Get them FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Street Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wangdahf, Joe A. Porter, Ministers 10:45 A.M : Worship, "The Christian Faith in a World of Conflict," Congressman Walter H. Judd speaking. 5:30 P.M.: Student supper and social hour. 7:00 P.M.: Henry Martin Loud lecture, "The WEINERS SMOKED FISH CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) i11 1111 i 11