iit'I 4 aiI WEATHER Fair and Warmer VOL. LV, No. 148 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS - Keniston Speaks at Honor Installation Says Liberal Education Will Supply Abilities Needed To Build World Peace Expressing the hope that the broadest concept of the liberal arts ediication would serge as a basis for the peace in the world of tomorrow, Dean Hayward Keniston addressed the 'initiates of Phi Kappa Phi last night in the annual initiation ceremony held in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. Dean Keniston in his discussion of "The Liberal Arts in the Post War World," pointed out the abilities and attitudes which leaders of tomorrow would need in building the peace and asserted the efficacy of the liberal arts in supplying these fundamentals. Yanks Fix Bayonets in Savage Fight with Japs American Troops Free Most of Mindanao; Heavy Fighting Still Continues on Okinawa All Nations'Bill of Rights Based on Four reedoms Is Proposed by Stettinius Grand March Will Be Held Senior Ball To Feature Duke Ellington's Band Senior Grand March will be one of the highlights of the all-campus Sen- ior Ball to be held June 1 in the Sports Building. Duke Ellington, "America's genius of jazz", will be on hand to furnish music for the colorful march in which all seniors and their guests may participate. The dance is not limited to seniors, however, but is open to all students of all schools. Tickets for the dance will be on sale from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. EWT (9 a.m to noon CWT) today, to- morrow and Friday and from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. EWT (4 p.m. to 6 p.m. CWT) tomorrow and Friday at the Union Travel Desk. Sales will also be conducted from 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. EWT (10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. CWT) today and from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. EWT (10 a.m. to noon CWT)' tomorrow in the lobby of the East Medical Building. Den- tistry students may purchase tickets from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. EWT (10 a.m. to noon CWT) tomorrow and Friday in the lobby of the Dental Clinic. Navy V-12 trainees have been granted 2 a.m. EWT (1 p.m. CWT) in order to attend the dance. Senior Ball is a revival of a pre-war tradi- tion which seniors o.f the literary and engineering schools 'will bring back to the campus. Decorations will be restricted -to wartime limiitations. Programs will be designed especially for the oc- casion, however. They will be pocket-sized magazines filled with pictures and stories of college life. They will be dedicated to the class of '45. Ellington and his orchestra will be' appropriately clad in gowns and mortar boards. The orchestra has also offered to enter into the spirit of the Ball through playing the songs that University students select as their favorites. A song contest i being conducted through the sale of tickets. Each purchaser is entitled to vote for the number he would like most to hear Ellington play. Adult Education' Group To Meet Provost Adams, OtIer Professors To Speak The 13th Annual Adult Education Institute, sponsored by the Univer- sity Extension Service, will be held at Detroit's Rackham Educational Memorial today and tomorrow. Following the 9 a. m. EWT reg- istration today, University provost James P. Adams will open the Insti- tute with an address, "Standards of Thinking." Other Institute speakers include: Prof. James K. Pollock of the Uni- versity political science department, Prof. Hans Leonhardt of the Michi- gan State College history and politi- cal science department, and Rev. W. Eugene Shiels, S. J,, of the Univer- sity of Detroit. Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the University history department will address the Institute on "What To Do with the Japanese Empire." l CAMPUS EVENTS Today Lane Hall Music Hour at Lane Hall at 7:30 p. m. EWT (6:30 p. m. CWT) Today Sphinx Club Meeting in the lounge of the West Quad at 7:30 p. m. EWT. May 17 Dr. Edward H. Kraus will deliver the annual Henry Russel Lecture in the Rackham AmPhitheatre Essentials For Leadership Some of the essentials, Dean Ken- iston said, are marked by the flexible mind, tolerance, compassion, and the subjection of personal considerations for the good of the larger community, a concept which also must be applied to international problems. After tracing the development of the liberalcarts from the Middle Ages to the present, Dean Keniston discussed the curriculum of the pres- ent liberal arts college which con- tains all major fields of intellectual experience. This intellectual experi- ence, according to DeantKeniston, can best be supplied by the liberl arts which contributes a balance of living, the ability to weigh and judge abstractions, and the. most import- ant, a liberal understanding which makes it possible for peoples of the world to find common grounds and thus to achieve "a world of decent harmony." Concludes With Challenge Dean Keniston concluded his ad- dress with a challenge to the initi- ates to "pledge devotion in your seV- eral careers to the broad liberal edu- cation essential to the peace of our own land and to the peace of the world." Prof. Clifford Woody, accepted the 134 initiatesas members of the Mich- igan chapter of Phi Kappa' Phi, na- tional honor society, upon presenta- tion by Prof. Samue T. Dana, vice- president of the chapter and Dean of the Forestry school.; The annual Phi Kappa Phi scho- lastic award of $100 was made to Evelyn Phillips, '45, by Dean Alice Lloyd. 'Miss Phillips, initiated into Phi Kappa Phi last night, is Manag- ing Editor of The Daily. Faculty Members Initiated The initiates were honored at a reception following the ceremony and address. The elections to Phi Kappa Phi for 1944-45 include, from the faculty, Professors Werner E. Bachmann, Floyd A. Firestone, Thomas Franice, Merwin H. Water- man and Haymond L. Wilder. Seniors and graduate students elected were: Betty Anderson, Allen Armstrong, Lucille Barber, Tom Bat- tin, Thomas Bliska, Carolyn Bock, Sally Ann Boim, Edmund S. Botch, Gerald Bouwkamp, Phyllis Bresler, Faye Bronstein, Agnes Brown, Mary Brown, William Brown, Margaret Carlisle, George Carr, Norman Car- son, Merton Church, John Clifford, Donald Coates, Ruth Collins. Fran- cis Covitt, Harry Daum, Lois Davis, Shelby Dietrich, Fraklin Essenburg, Monroe Fink, Elizabeth Follin, Alan Frane, Robert Gaukler, Nancy Gro- berg, Marie Grant, Cornelia Groef- sma, Thomas Hagan, John Hamaker, Elizabeth Harrison, Clare Herald, George Hess, Robert Hess, Mary Hood, Elizabeth Horner, Jerry Jac- obson, Elizabeth Jalosky, Harriet Jameson, Warren Jessop, Barbara Johnson, George Johnson, Myron Kaufman, Maurice Kimelman, Don- See KENISTON, Page 2 Quotas Filled Because the Detroit area blood plasma quotas have been oversub- scribed, there will be no more Blood Bank activities on campus until the fall term, a Union spokesman announced. By The Associated Press MANILA, Wednesday, May 16.- Fighting so savage that Americans attacked Japanese with bayonets, knives and their fists, with at least two Yanks drowning enemy troops by holding their heads below wa- ter on a river, raged west of Davao city on Mindanao island today. American ground troops and naval fliers have scored heavily against the Japanese on bloody Okinawa Island, on Mindanao in the Philippines and within the Nippon Empire itself. Official U.S. communiques and front line reports late Tuesday from roaring battle areas were highlighted by these developments: American troops have freed most of Mindanao island, Philippines. Heavy fighting continued en Ok- inawa. The Yanks beat off fanati- cal counterattacks and stopped the Japanese dead in hand-to-hand PEP JALLY: Frosh Class Prepares for Games Classic. Spirit was the keynote otthe fresh- man meeting last night at the Union in preparation for the first wartime edition of the Class Games classic to :.be held May 26 at Ferry Field. .Vic Heyliger, hockey mentor. and Earl Riskey, of the intra-mural de- partment, addressed a group of over 50 freshman in an attempt to- build up still more spirit. "If 'the games are successful this year, they my well be a natural. carry over in f- ture years," Heyliger said. Proclamation Drawn Up Dick Mixer of the Union staff handed out proclamations to those atten'ding to be passed 'out to soph- omores. "You are doomed! Victory will be ours! Back where thou cam- est, o lowly ones. Our success will be'" easy!" were among the strong- worded oaths in the proclamation, keeping in tradition with previous proclamations. A large copy of the proclamation will be placed on the pole in the center of the diagonal. "It's up to you boys to defend it," said Mixer. Varied Games Among the games pianned are a tug-of-war, volleyball, using a-high net and a ball of extra-large size, graveyard, in which the classes will attempt to throw opponents to a large mat, and a leap frog relay. The two classes will line up and pass the lightest man in the class to the rear in the human forward pass. It was also decided that Freshmen will wear white shirts next week to distinguish themselves. "The two classes are of about equal number," Heyliger said, "so get out and fight!" Movies of the 1944 Ohio State foot- ball game were shown following the rally. Hille CIooses Student Cou ueiI Members of the Hillel Foundation elected a new student council for the coming college year yesterday in the t'oundation. Students elected from a prepared nomination slate include Helen Al- pert, Judith Chayes, Allene Colinkin, Elaine Greenbaum, Rita Hyman. Benson Jaffee, Betty Korash, Arthur Kraft, Barbara Levin, Channing Lip- son, Dorothy Raskind, Sheldon Seles- nick, Reva Sendler, Marshall Wal- lace, and Shirley Weinstein. fighting, inflicting major losses on1 them. Marines won in close combat on the edge of Naha, Okinawa's capital city. Doughboys were victors in the five-day battle for "Chocolate Drop" hill. Tcrpedo planes, dive bombers and fighters from a speedy U.S. Pacific Fleet task force hit Japan's southernmost airfields May 12, 13 and 14. They destroyed or dam- aged 284 Japanese planes on Kyu- shu and Shikoku islands. Of these 83 were shot down and 93 destroyed on the ground. Damaged or de- stroyed were 108 grounded aircraft. Another 73 grounded planes were bombed and strafed with unobserved results. Preliminary reports said "about ten" American planes were lost. Gen. Douglas McArthur'stcom- munique reported fierce fighting on Mindanao, Lut added that 90 per cent of the islands 36,906i square miles of territory has been freed by the Yanks and 95 per cent cif its population liberated. Strong Japanese forces still on Mindanao have been driven into the rugged central part of the island, with American troops squeezing them from north, south and east. The roar of battle increased on two Mindanao fronts. Yanks bound south from the Del Monte airfield center were in a stiff fight while to the South Ameri- can troops locked in close combat with the retreating Japanese. Mutual Defense Treaty Planned By Unitedl States SAN FRANCISCO, May 15.-(A)3- Secretary of State Stettinius an- nounced tonight the United States plans to invite other American re- publics to join in a mutual defense treaty arrangement under supervi- sion of a proposed world peace-keep- ing organization. In a statement proposing regional arrangement amendments to the Dumbarton Oaks formula, Stettin- ius said this government would ask its western hemisphere neighbors to join in negotiating a treaty "consis- tcnt with the. ch arter of the world organization." He said this action would be taken at the conclusion of the United Na- tions Conference iere. Stettifts' announcement implied approval by the Latin-Americani nations of a formula under which - the wartime Inter-Amierican De- fense Agreement would be placed in operation under the proposed world organization. Future treaty agreements of the same nature would be carried out under the wing of the International League. The charter amendment to be offered with the unanimous support of the American delegation would provide that nothing in the_ new league's charter should impair "the inherent right of self defense, either individual or collective, in the event that the security council (of the world organization) does not ain- tain international peace and security and armed attack against a member state occurs." Measures to be taken under this self-defense authority would be re- ported immediately to the council and would "not in any way affect the authority and responsibility of charter to take at any time such action as it may deem necessary in order to maintain or restore international peace and security." It was not made clear immediately whether this proposed ameindment has the support of others of the Big Five powers. 'Issue May Well Be Most Imporltant Raised at Conference,' Secretary Says By The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO, May 15-Secretary of State Stettinius proposed today that drafting of an International Bill of Rights based on the Four Freedoms become the first task of a new world organization of United Nations. At a news conference, the leader of the American delegation declared that the issue of human rights may well be the most important raised in the San Francisco Conference. It was the first pronouncement since Soviet Foreign Commissar Molotov spoke of this question more than a we 4) Truman Hopes For Early Big Three Meeting Cautions Against Axis Rearmament 'Again' By The Associated PressK WASHINGTON, May 15.--Presi- dent Truman expressed the hope to-1 day that a meeting with Prime Min-1 ister Churchill and Marshal Stalin1 could be arranged in the not far. distant future to discuss the coming peace program. He was not ready, however, to talk about the time orz place. The chief executive made the state- ment in reply to a news conference question. On the foreign news front,1 he also: 1. D_,clared that the prime objec-t tive in working out a reparations policy is "absolute insurance against1 German or Japanese rearmament- ever again."' 2. Said General Dwight D. Eisen-. hower favored, with the President's support, a "free press and a free flowE of information and ideas" in Ger- many consistent with military secur- ity. 3. Favored repeal of the Johnsonl Act which bars loans to nations in default on their first World War debts to this country. Domestically, the President spoke out emphatically against any reduc- tion of taxes until Japan is defeated. He also asserted the country is going to have anthracite coal by whatever steps are needed Ito get it, and said the veterans administration is going to be modernized and expanded, but that no immediate discharges of personnel are in sight. eek ago. Stettinius voiced the opin- ion that the Economic and Social Council of the new league should act to establish standards for free- dom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from want and freedom from fear. Propose Code Explaining that the Big Four had agreed that the enumeration of indi- vidual and collective human rights could not be attempted at this con- ference, Stettinius said a "Commis- sion on Human Rights" under a So- cial and Economic Council should draft a code which could be accepted by member nations and made "an in- tegral part of their own systems of law.". Stettinius simultaneously reaffirm- ed the American position in favor of giving dependent peoples self-govern- ment when they are ready for it. Discuss Trusteeship The secretary of state met the press as the big five powers-Russia, Britain, China, France and the Unit- ed States-tried off-stage for agree- ments that would cross the trustee- ship and regional security issues off the list of conference problems. But they had to wait for guidance from London and Moscow for the British and Soviet delegations. Stettinius used the interval for an- other consultation with Latin Amer- ican foreign ministers on the ques- tion of blending a Pan-American Security Plan into a world peace- keeping organization. Conference committees, clogged with scores of proposed amendments to a world charter for peace, contin- ued a fast pace of day and, night ses- sions. Some were debating issues on which they had argued for days. Some were near votes on important segments of a charter. Committee decisions now coming up will show how far little nations are going to get in wangling more authority for themselves in charting the course of the postwar world. Prof. Kraus Will Deliver Special Talk Russel Prize To Be Given Tomorrow Dr. Edward H. Kraus, Professor of Crystallography and Mineralogy an former Dean of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts, will de- liver the annual Henry Russel Le- ture at 4:15 p.m. EWVT (3:15 P.m. CWT) tomorrow in the Rackham Amphitheater. Dr. Kraus' subject will be "The Unfolding Crystal". Public announce- ment of the Henry Russel Award will also be made at this time. The Henry Russel Lectureship is presented each year to the member of the University faculty above the rank of assistant professor whose work is judged most outstanding by the University Research Club. Car- rying a stipend for research in the particular field in which it is award- sd, the lectureship comes from a be- quest left by the late Henry Russel, a graduate of this University and its law school. The Regents of the University con- verted the bequest into the Henry Russel Lectureship and the. Henry Russel. Award, -the latter .going to faculty members below the rank of issociate professor who are annually ;elected for the Award by a specal, board. ' Grad Gets Hodgson Appointed to London Commission Newly appointed U.S. Commis- 4ioner to the United Nations War Crimes Commission in London, to iucceed Herbert C. Pell, Lt.-Col. Jo- "eph V. Hodgson is a graduate of the University, the Law School and the Judge Advocate General's School. Col. Hodgson, who was appointed Saturday by President Truman, had been serving as Acting Commissioner ,f the U.S. delegation since Jan. 1, and held the position of Deputy Com- :mslioner since shortly after is "raduation with the 12th Officer "lass of the JAG School in Novem- iter, 1943. Previously, he had served r. Attorney-General for the Terri- tory of Hawaii. After graduating Ann Arbor High in 1917, Col. Hodgson studied in the College of L.S.andA., graduating with an A.B. in 1921. He received his LL.B. from the Law School in 1925. Prizes Awarded ~ByArt Group Four first place awards and an honorable mention were presented in the Twenty-Second Annual Ehi- bition of the Ann Arbor Art Associa- Cron, which will continue in the Gal- 'cries of the Rackham Building until May 18. Sh-urileff Presents Three C's Of Metropolitan Planng "The great significance of modern city planning is in the three C's of Completeness, Coordination, and Continuity," declared Prof. Flavel Shurtleff, of the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, yesterday at the Rackham Building in his lecture "The Field of Town Planning" spon- sored by the School of Architecture and Design. Prof. Shurtleff stressed that plan- ning must be done with the whole city in view and that planners must be continually on the alert to change the plans to keep up with the times. "It is also important," he said, "for planners to keep in mind the -rela- tionship of parts of the community to the whole." "Too often," he pointed out, "schools are built with no room for playgrounds or at a busy intersec- tion." He said that the basic con- ception of city planning is that it is for the people and must be ade- quate for the people's needs. Public Participation Success in town planning depends upon public understanding and par- ticipation, Prof. Shurtleff declared. "The more public interest, the bet- ter the project," he said. Hetold how Boston aroused public interest in its city planning by offering a $5,000 prize for the best city plan. Over 92 teams sent in entries, he said. While the first prize plan will probably not be carried out in one- fourth of its detail, he said, the con- test was successful for its aroused public interest. Prof. Shurtleff stress- ed the importance of having sociolo- gists, lawyers, and businessmen in- t.rctPr in nannin~ fr iti a no+t are responsible to the city council or mayor. Too often city planning boards are created but are given no appropria- tion to work with, Prof. Shurtleff pointed out. Lip service is not enough, he said, and boards must be voted appropriations to have a fair chance to succeed. New Grad Outing Club To Meet Today The recently - revived Graduate Outing Club will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. EWT (6:30 p.m. CWT) to- day in the Outing Club Room at the Rackhain Building. An organization which has been allowed to lapse during the past year, the Outing Club has been set up again to include graduate stu- dents, alumni, faculty members and some undergraduates. There will be no dues for membership this term. Persons interested in joining the club will be welcomed at the meet- ing, where activities for the remain- der of the semester will be planned. SEVENTY-SIX NEW LIEUTENANTS: JAG School G radation1 To Be Held Ftiday First place awards went to Aarre K. Lahti for an oil painting, "The Sixth Day of Creation", to Walter J. Gores for a blue ceramic bowl, to Albert Decker for a water color, "Keep 'Em Rolling", and to Emil Weddige for a color lithograph, "Ice Fisherman". The honorable mention was received by Minnie Douglas for her water color, "The Bunch Quit- ter". Maj.-Gen. Myron C. Cramer, Judge advocate General of the U.S. Army, will arrive here Friday to participate n the graduation of 76 officers and Ifficer candidates from the JAG School. Forty-seven members of '11th Officer-Candidate class will be commissioned as officers of the Judge Advocate General's Depart- ment at the conclusion of a parade to be held at 4:15 p.m. EWT (3:15 Dr. E. Blythe Stason, Dean of the Law School, Prof. James K. Pollock of the Department of Political Sci- ence, Dr. T. Hawley Tapping, Gen- eral Secretary of the Alumni Service, Arthur Stace, editor, and Eck Stan- ger, photographer, of the Ann Arbor News. Other guests will be Orville U. Foster, Jr., vice-president of the Detroit Bar Association and Capt. e,. -_ ,_._ r, PROFESSOR RETIRES: Reception in Honor of Wagner To Be Held by Spanish Club in honor 'of Prof. Charles Wagner, retiirin manager of the Romance Under the general chairmanship of Ali Pm.fnp . T 1antn-Amrivan pron- A-sammai