ARMY-NAVY FOOTBALL See page 3 Li Lw A Dalir CLOUDY, CONTINUED COOL VOL. LVI, No. 24 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Stickmen, Cagers PlayHere Tonight Basketballers Clash Sextet Faces Strong With Michigan State Win dsor Spitfires ampus Poll Postponed Till Friday * * * t * * * * *' aim * * * * Criticism of 'U' on Housing Denied By HANK KEISER Michigan's 1945-46 basketball squad, shooting for its second win of the season, will meet Michigan State at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Yost Field House. Head Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, Wolverine cage tutor, failed to an- nounce his starting team, but named seven candidates from which the var- sity would be picked. Feinberg or Harrison at Pivot Either Marty Feinberg or Bob Har- rison will step into the center berth tonight, accordingto Barclay. Harri- son also doubles at forward, and may possibly be seen at that spot. Glen Selbo, Dave Strack, and Bill Walton make up the roster of for- ward candidates. Selbo scored 14 points in the tilt with Central Michi- gan earlier this season, while Strack and Walton garnered seven and four points, respectively, against the Chip- pewas. Lettermen at Guards Top men on the list of guard.hope- fuls are Walt Kell and John Mul- laney, both lettermen from last sea- son's squad. Kell and Mullaney han- dled first string assignments on the '44 crew and are well acquainted with the Michigan system of play. Facing the Wolverines tonite will be a team composed entirely of letter- winners, all of whom have had ex- perience in Spartan varsity basket- See BASKETBALLERS, Page 3 Vincent Sheean Listed as Third Series Speaker The third speaker in the Oratorical Lecture series, appearing Wednesday at Hill Auditorium, will be Vincent Sheean, war correspondent, author and lecturer. Sheean, author of "Not Peace But a Sword" and "Personal History," has chosen as his topic "Personal Opin- ions." He has recently returned from Europe, where he spent five months with General Patton's Third Army. One of Sheean's first assignments after he graduated from the Univer- sity of Chicago was the Arab-Jewish hostilities in Jerusalem in 1928. Other events he observed in his early years were the occupation of the Ruhr, the Lausanne conference, the Fascist march on Rome and the overthrow of the monarchists in Spain. After a period of fiction writing, when he produced "San Felice", "The Day of Battle" and "Piece of a Fan", he went to Spain in 1938, then to Austria and later to Germany, where he covered the march into the Su- detenland. Richard Wright Postpones Talk Richard Wright, Negro author and lecturer scheduled to speak here on Dec. 11, has postponed his lecture be- cause of illness, and Madame Francis Perkins has agreed to appear here on that date. Mr. Wright's lecture will be post- poned for only a short time. Its new date will be announced as soon as possible, the Oratorical Association said today. "The Destiny of Labor in America" will be Miss Perkins' topic. She re- turned to the United States just two days ago after attending the Inter- national Labor Conference in Eng- land. The season-ticket coupon for her lecture scheduled for Jan. 16 will be honored for her lecture on Dec. 11. The Oratorical Association urges purchasers of single admission tickets for the Richard Wright lecture to keep them until the new date is an- nounced. Directors Discuss Summer Sessions Provisions for greatly increased en- rollments next summer were dis- cussed at the national meeting of the Association of Deans and Directors of Summer Sessions yesterday in the Horace H. Rackham Building. President A. G. Ruthven will at- tend today's session and enter the By DES HOWARTH It will be a battle of youth tonight when the Wolverine puckmen clash with the powerful Windsor Spitfires in the season's opener at the Coli- seum. Coach Vic Heyliger announced that he will have three lines and two sets of defensemen ready for tonight's encounter. The starting line will be composed of Gordon MacMillian at center, with Bill Jacobson and Al Renfrew at the Wings. On defense will be Connie Hill and Clem Cos- salter, and Jack MacInnes tending the nets. Hill will be acting captain for tonight's contest. Second Line Set A second line of Wally Gacek, Neil Celley and Walt Grant will alternate with the starting combination. Coach Heyliger rates both lines equally strong. The Wolverines will also send a third line into action against the Spitfires. Operating at center ice, Bob See SEXTET, Page 3 Hagen Urges Short German Military Rule Claims Withdrawal Will Aid Democracy Advocating a short military occu- pation of Germany, Paul Hagen, for- mer German and Austrian trade un- ion leader, pointed out in an inter- view yesterday that only if German democratic forces are allowed to fight for their existence, without foreign protection, can they avoid collapse when such aid is withdrawn. Temporary occupation is necessary to disarm Germany and destroy conditions conducive to the develop- ment of democracy. B'ut, he pointed out, Allied forces should be with- drawn as soon as possible to permit the democratic potential in Germany to come forth spontaneously. Democratic Leaders Exist 'This potential, according to Hagen, exists in the willingness of the people to accept something new and in the existence of good, local democratic leaders. Discussing the economic aspect of military occupation in his speech yes- terday, Hagen stressed the fact that the three different economic systems of the occupying powers tend to di- vide Germany into three separate economic groups. In the inteview, Hagen said that the German labor movement has been the main group in Germany with democratic aims for the last 50 or 60 years. For this reason, it must pro- vide the basis of a democratic Ger- man government. Two-thirds of Ger- many's population belong to this la- bor group. Socialism Predicted A democratically controlled social- ist form of government can be ex- pected to develop under the leader- ship of this group, he explained. No free capitalism will be possible for a while in Germany, but emergency re- construction can be carried on in a socialist way with democratic con- trol. Hagen also considers the re-estab- lishment of Germany as a national economic unit as a prerequisite to the development of democracy. Cossacks Will Sing Monday Chorus To Present Selections by Russians The Don Cossack Chorus, under the direction of Serge Jaroff, will make its first appearance on the Choral Un- ion series since the fall of 1943 at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. Now on its fifteenth American tour, the Chorus will highlight its concert with selections by Gretchaninoff, Ssvedoff, Dobrovein and Tschesnikoff. The original Don Cossack Chorus was organized twenty-five years ago when the Tom Thumb-like Lieut. Jaroff, sitting around the campfire with his homesick troops, conceived the idea of a choir. The rigid 'self-discipline of their cavalry regiment in Czarist Russia is' vA Lt. Col. Pack Meeting withl Misunderstanding Claimed by Akers William Akers, president of the Veterans' Organization, and Victor Baum, president of the local Ameri- can Veterans' Committee chapter, de- nied last night that their organiza- tions had criticized the University's Veterans' housing policies in conver- sations with Lt. Col. Philip C. Pack, director of the State Office of Veter- ans Affairs. An Associated Press report earlier yesterday, which provoked their clari- fication of their organizations' posi- tions, stated that Col. Pack would meet with a delegation of vet- erans from the University who con- tend that the University is not pre- pared for an expected increase of veteran enrolles next term. Misunderstanding Reported Akers explained that any conno- tation of criticisms by the organiza- tion in the announcement must have been the result of misunderstanding of his conversation with Cl. Pack Wednesday either by Col. Pack or by the press service. "We have arranged a meeting with Col. Pack to discuss veterans' af- fairs, including the housing situa- tion here," Akers said. Delegates of VO and AVC will meet with Col. Pack Thursday in Lansing. Housing Surveys Conducted Robert P. Briggs, vice-president of the University, said in a statement to The Daily last night: "At present we see no reason for alarm about the housing situation for next semester." The Universityhas recently obtained permission to use 572 housing units at Willow Run and expects other facili- ties to be available. Meanwhile, VO and AVC are con- ducting surveys of the housing situa- tion and the cost of living for veter- ans. VO's aim, according to Secretary Warren Wayne, is to help provide sufficient space for veterans who want to enter the University next term. UNO Cannot Effect Solution Carr Speaks Before Sociological Society EAST LANSING, Nov. 30 - "The United Nations Organization cannot be the ultimate answer for a world now struggling to control the use of force," Dr. Lowell J. Carr declared yesterday in a speech before the Michigan Sociological Society at Michigan State College. Speaking on "A Situational Ap- proach to Conflict and War," Dr. Carr was one of a number of profes- sors who addressed the all day meet- ing. Latest trends in technological ad- vancement and atomic bomb research plus the fact that member nations still retain their sovereignty make it apparent that the UNO as it now stands will be ineffective. From a situational viewpoint, it is also ap- parent that when the state is in con- trol, it can only use force to readjust situations which heighten friction and tension. By destroying opposing gov- ernments, Dr. Carr continued, mili- tary power may bring a new level of equilibrium among nations, but on a See CARR, Page 2 Ident Card Issuance Causes Delay; Candidates Announced Because identification cards will not be issued until Wednesday, the all- campus election has been postponed to Friday, Charles Walton, Men's Judiciary Council president, announced yesterday. Originally set for Wednesday, postponement of the election will allow students to pick up their identification cards before voting. Identification cards or cashier's receipts will determine voting eligibility. In addition to presenting their identificaton, students wll be required to sign a tabulation sheet. P DISCHARGED SOLDIERS IN WARD PICKET LINE-Two discharged soldiers, Stanley Tallen (left) and Alvin Heaps (right) hold signs in front of Montgomery Ward and Company retail store in Chicago. Heaps is CIO local 15 business manager. Tallen worked at the store for two months, he said. GM Proposes Work Resumption In Parts, Accessories Division. Union May Make Reply Tomorrow DETROIT, Nov. 30 - () -- The strike-idle General Motors Corp, pro- posed to the CIO's United. Auto Work- ers tonight that work in GM's parts and accessories division be resumed for the benefit of other automobile manufacturers. The proposal was made in a letter from President C. E. Wilson, ofRGen- eral Motors, to President R. J. Thomas, of the striking union, which has tied up GM production since Nov. 21 in a strike affecting 225,000 workers. Auto Parts Needed Wilson said the proposal, for which he suggested "acceptance by your un- ion," was made with the thought of restoring the flow of auto parts and accessories from GM's factories for other reconverting plants of the in- dustry. The union was notified informally of General Motors' proposal but made no comment. A spokesman at UAW- 'Voice in the Wind' To End Run Today The last performance of "Voice in the Wind," a motion picture starring Francis Lederer, will be at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. The film, presented under the aus- pices of the Art Cinema League, re- lates the story of a Czechoslovakian pianist who defied the Germans after the occupation of his country, and depicts the suffering he endured from the Germans who tried to crush the arts as they crushed their conquests. CIO headquarters said a reply proba- bly would not be forthcoming before tomorrow. Will Continue Shipping "We are willing," Wilson said, "to ship materials which are ready for shipment to other manufacturers. We also are willing and offer to operate all of our parts and accessory divi- sions during the period of this strike exclusively on outside work-that is, on material required by manufactur- ers other than General Motors car, truck and body divisions." If the union accepts, Wilson said, men would be called back to work with the understanding that no work would be done except for outside manufacturers. * *. * Stalemate Ends Labor Session Truman's Conference Closes after 25 Days WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 - (R) - President Truman's labor-manage- ment conference adjourned at 6:25 p. m., EST tonight without setting up the hoped-for machinery to han- dle postwar labor disputes. The conferees were in complete dis- agreement on such major issues as wages and collective bargaining, but leaders asserted the meeting attained "substantial advances toward indus- trial peace." The closing session of the 25-day meeting called by Mr. Truman to de- vise ways and means of curbing in- dustrial strife, flared in open attacks on management by ranking labor leaders and a vigorous exchange be- tween the heads of the rival CIO and AFL unions. At the same time, Walton released the names of the candidates for the campus positions. Board in Control of Student Pub- lications: Carsten Orberg, Harvey Frank, Paul Sislin, Kenneth Bissell, Monroe Fink and Evelyn Phillips. Union vice-presidents: Combined schools (business administration, music, forestry, architecture and pharmacology) candidates: Charles Cooper, John Blank, John Johnson, Frank Ruck and Fred Comlossy. Uncontested candidate from the Medical School is Ross Hume. Liter- ary college candidates are Curly Wal- ters, Richard Bailhe, Glenn White, Max Weil and Paul John. Senior class officers of the engi- neering college: Henry Fonde, How- ard Yerges and Donald Snider. The candidate polling the greatest vote will be president, the second highest will be vice-president and the third candidate will be secretary-treasurer. Senior class officers of the literary college: Patricia Barrett, Patricia Pic- ard, Emily (Liz) Knapp, Margaret Carroll, Betty Vaughan, Greta Lee Kranz, Jean Athay, Sam Emmons, Glenn White, Paul John and Bliss Bowman. Voting will be by preferen-. tial ballot -with a president, vice- president, secretary and treasurer to be selected. J-Hop Dance committee: Candi- dates from the literary college are Arthur DerDerian, Lynne Sperber, Candidates who wish to have written statements appear in The Daily's special election section, should submit these statements for publication before Wednesday. Statements may not exceed 250 words and should state the candi- dates' qualifications and his plans for the office. Statements should be mailed to The Michigan Daily, c/o Arthur Gronik, Student Public at ons Building. Joan Wilk, H. Thomas, Lois K. Iver- son, Pat Hayes, Joan Buckmaster, Connie Essig, Janice Ward, Collee Ide, Janet Young, Gilbert Iser, William Lambert, Estelle Klein, Bettyann Lar- sen, Richard Roeder, Lynne Ford, Charlotte Bobrecker, Ethel Isenberg and Marge Kohlhaas. Engineering college candidates for the committee are Morrie Rochlin, Charles Helmick, Harold Walters, George Spaulding and Henry Horldt. Combined school candidates are Joan Schlee, Jerry Comer, Jeanne Busch and Roberta Ames. Betty Smith is the uncontested candidate from the architecture college. Five members of the committee will be elected by the literary college, three by the engineering college, one by the combined schools and one by the architecture college. Foreign university candidates for the SOIC adoption: Philippines, Strasbourg, Tsing Hia and Warsaw universities. All candidates must obtain eligi- bility cards and only those candidates will appear on the ballots who have obtained these cards. e gents Accept Gifts; Approve U Expenditures Promotions Are Listed; Building Repairs OK'd A total of $48,185 in donations and $39,610 in expenditures for building improvements and research contracts was approved by the Board of Re- gents at a monthly meeting yester- day. The gifts included $27,500 for the Kellogg Dental Postgraduate Fund for 1945-46 donated by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation and $10,000 from Difco Laboratories of Detroit for studies under the direction of Dr. Reuben L. Kahn in the serology of syphilis. Improvement Approved The Regents approved expenditure of $7,410 for improvements in the Pharmacology Building, including structural and equipment alterna- tions and new equipment. The Department of Engineering Research received approval for spending $6,500 in new contracts, one for a study of spectrographic analysis of steels. Extensions and additions to present research projects, approved by the Regents, totalled $25,700. The title of Arthur L. Brandon Was changed by the Regents yesterday to Director of Information Services. Brandon's office was originally called that of the Vice-President in Charge of Public Relations. He will assume his post Jan. 1, 1946. New Faculty Appointments New appointments to the faculty are Arnot B. Epple as assistant pro- fessor of mechanical engineering be- ginning Dec. 1 and Dr. Sanford A. Mosk as visting associate professor of economics for the academic year 1945-46. The appointment of Prof. Epple fills the vacancy left by the transfer of Prof. C. W. Spooner to the Depart- ment of Naval Architecture and Ma- rine Engineering. Dr. Mask will give instruction in Latin American studies to the mili- tary ataches sent to the University by the Army. The Regents also appointed Herb- ert P. Wagner business manager of the University Hospital, and Waldo W. Buss and Ernest C. Laetz were named assistant business managers. To replace Wagner, former Chief Ac- countant of the University, the Board named Raymond B. Garlough. The return of Prof. Arthur W. See REGENTS, Page 2 Building Trends Are Discussed People Considered as A Unit, Hudnut Says "The laws of architecture are not final; they are but indications that show the process of development in architectural design," Dean Joseph Hudnut from the School of Design of Harvard University, said yester- day in his speech entitled "Contem- porary Trends in Architecture." Dean Hudnut spoke of the future of architecture, particularly of that which has been called modern archi- tecture. "The first trend shows a tendency toward the plastic relationship of building materials. It is new, daring, exciting and in many cases useful," he stated. An interest in the sociological im- port of architecture, he remarked, is CHINESE UNIVERSITY NEEDS HELP: Quarters Used by Japs; Students Studied in Caves, Temples (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a series of articles on the foreign uni- versities slated in the campus election Wednesday. Information for this article was supplied by Hsu Lo, a student in the University engineering school.) Once the University of Tsing Hua was located in Peiping, having been established there in 1912 with the indemnity returned by the United States from the Boxer Rebellion Fund. But it was at Peiping where the war broke out in 1937, and it was the At first, Jap planes came in the night to drop bombs oil the self-styled school buildings. Each morning the students would go out to clear away the rubble and bury the dead. One day the United States Army Air Forces came to Kunming and based its planes there. And the Japs flew overhead no more. For four years the students took notes and passed blue books with 'Riri+ rinriPc inn1rinonr n ctartler h this neusrt of wnrshin in their