TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY EATTJRD.AY, DECEMBTER -8,1945 - - - - - _m CAMPUS HIGHLIGHTS_ CHURCH ACTIVITIES: Sermons Discussions, Open Houses Plan4/ned for Students' becture on Argentina .,.. Jaime Perriaux, graduate student of law, will be the first speaker in the lecture series sponsored by the Latin American Society beginning Wednes- day in the Rackham Building. Mr. Perriaux, a native of Argentina, US Government Is Investigating General Motors UAW and CIO Call Recess Over Deadlock By The Associated Press DETROIT, Dec. 7-- A Government investigation of General Motors Corp. under anti-trust laws was disclosed today while the corporation and the CIO United Auto Workers wrangled in their wage dispute. The Department of 'Justice in Washington confirmed a Union an- nouncement that it was inquiring into operations of the Corporation, which has been crippled for 17 days by a strike. The Union had asked such a probe. Representatives of the corporation and Union meanwhile recessed a bar- gaining session until Monday, report- ing little progress in the attempt to settle the UAW-CIO's demand for a 30 per cent wage rate increase within General Motors' present price struc- ture. GM officials said there would be no Company statement on today's ne- gotiating session, but Walter Reuther, UAW vice-president, told a press con- ference: "The 131/2 cent an hour offer is only the beginning. The Corporation will give more and more and more and finally will wrap it up and we'll. all go back to work." He referred to GM's Thursday of- fer to reinstate the 131/2 cent increase, which the UAW rejected shortly be- fore the strike was called at GM plants in 20 states. Tillich To Be Ch ieof Speaker At Conference will illustrate his talk with represent- ative Argentine films. All friends of Latin America are invited. Justin Kline To Speak.. . Justin Kline, director of the Youth Hostel Movement in Wash- kington, D. C., will be guest speakerI at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the In- ternational Center. Illustrating his talk with movies, Kline will emphasize hosteling op- portunities in Mexico, South Amer- ica and Canada. Professors To Speak .. . Prof. Warner F. Patterson and Prof. Charles N. Staubach will speak at the first meeting of the Romance Lan- guage Journal Club at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Prof. Patterson will give "Some Im- ressions of French Canada." Prof. Staubach will speak on "Teaching and Learning in Bogota", and will discuss professional, literary and cul- lural activities in that city. Faculty and graduate students are invited. Latin American Society. . All members and prospective members of the Latin American Society are required to attend a general assembly at 2:45 p.m. to- morrow in Rm. 316 of the Union Business of the meeting will be revision, amendment and final. ratification of the constitution. Swing Band Concert .. . A swing concert featuring Skip Covington and his band will be pre- 3ented January 6 at Ann Arbor High School Auditorium. Seats are reserved for the concert which is being given under the aus- Dices of the Disabled American Vet- erans. Tickets may be obtained at Grinnell Bros., the Chamber of Com- inerce, the Welfare Building, and the Uriiln. MWth Club Plans Party . . The Mathematics Club will hold a Cristmas party and potluck din- ner at 6 p.m. Thursday in the halls and library . of the Unitarian Church. Members and their fam- iliet have been invited. Hillel Tournaments . . . Persons interested in entering the Hillel bridge and ping pong tourna- ments should sign up before Monday at Hillel Foundation. The contests will begin next week. Prizes will be awarded the winning contestants. Stevenson Tells Banker's Place SHORT AND KIMMEL HEAR GEN. MARSHALL T STIFY-Maj. Gen. Walter B. Short (No. 1), Army Com- mander in Hawaiian Area where Japs Struck, and Adm. Husband Kimmel (No. 2), Naval Commander at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, listen as Gen. George C. Marshall (No. 3), former Army Chief of Staff and now envoy to China, testifies before Senate-House Pearl Harbor Investigating committee in Washington. MUM WAS THE WORD: ewey ept Quet on C Cracking ecret v - Worship services, student meetings and open houses are included in to- morrow's church activities. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church will hold Holy Communion at 8 a.m., and morning prayer with Rev. Lawrence Pearson delivering the sermon will be held at 11 a.m. The Canterbury Club will meet at 6 p.m. in the student center, 408 Lawrence Ave. Rev. Pearson will lead a discussion group, Prayer services will be held at 8 p.m. in the Church. In observance of Universal Bible Sunday, Rev. Alfred Scheips will de- liver a sermon on the topic "The Scriptures Cannot Be Broken" at 11 a.m. in the University Lutheran Chapel. Gamma Delta, student Lutheran group, will hold a supper meeting at 5 p.m. in the student center, 1511 Washtenaw Ave. New officers will be elected at this time., Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. in the Zion Lutheran Parish with Vicar Clyde Showalter delivering a sermon on the topic "Your Hope Lies In Jesus Christ." A panel discussion of "Race Rela- tions" will be held at 5 p.m. in the Parish Hall. Supper will be- served at 6 p.m., and a communion, led by Rev. E. C. Stellhorn will take place at 7:30 p.m. * * * Rev. W. P. Lemon will speak on "God's Oldest Bible" during services at 10:45 a.m. in the Presbyterian Church. The Westminster Guild will hold a discussion on the topic "Must Russia Remain Unknown" at 5 p.m. in the social hall. * * Dr. J. B. Kenna will speak on the topic "God Sent His Son" at 10:40 a.m. in the Methodist Church. Franklin Littell, director of the Student Religious Association will address the Wesleyan Guild on "An Aggressive Faith" during a supper and social hour beginning at 6 p.m. Day of Obligation masses will be held at 6:30, 7, 8, and 9 a.m. today in St. Mary's Student Chapel. Tomorrow's masses will be held at 8, 10 and 11:30 a.m. with a com- munion breakfast taking place from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the chapel club rooms. Monseignor Babcock will be the guest speaker at the breakfast. "God's Good Faith' is the topic of Rev. Edward H. Redman for services at 11 a.m. in the Unitarian Church. A movie, "Price Unlimited" will be Group meeting at 7:30 p.m. in Lane Hall. Dr. Leonard A. Parr will deliver a sermon on "The Supieme Transition of History" during services at 10:45 a.m. in the Congregational Church. The Annual Church open house and family gathering will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. The entire church will be open and Christmas carols will be sung and tea served. The Congregational Disciples Guild will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the Memorial Christ Church. A cost supper will be followed by a program of Christmas music and a vorship service. Army Releases George Forbes Captain George Forbes, Jr., former public relations officer for the J.A.G. School and editor of the school pa- per, "The Advocate," was released from duty Wednesday, and is now on terminal leave in Ann Arbor. Navy Bombers Still Missing; No Clues MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 7 --/P-- A dawn to dusk search of a vast Atlantic area by a rescue armada failed to turn up a single clue today to the disappear- ance of a formation of five Navy tor- pedo bombers and a big FBM that went out to hunt them. A third day's search with the same forces was ordered for tomorrow. Prof. Paul Tillich of the Union Theological Seminary, New York City, will be the chief speaker at the sev- enth annual Michigan Pastors' Con- ference, to be. held Jan. 21 through 23, according to Dr. Charles A. Fish- er, director of the University Exten- sion Service. Dr. Tillich will deliver a series of four lectures during the conference, which is held each year under the joint auspices of the Michigan Coun- cil of Churches and Religious Edu- cation and the Extension Service. The general topic of the lectures will be "Protestant Principles", or the func- tion of dissent, with their history, their relation to collective trends and to the mystic trend, and their effect on transformation of the church to be discussed in the individual talks. Dr. Edward Blakeman, Counsellor in Religious Education, says of Dr. Tillich, "No scholar in America knows pre-war Germany better, or speaks more fluently upon the religious and philosophical issues of our era." A minister of the Evangelical Re- formed Church, Dr. Tillich is the author of "The Religious Situation" and "The Interpretation of History." He attended the universities of Berlin, Tulungen, Halle and Breslau, where he received his Ph.D. in- 1911, and taught at Leipzig,;and Frankfurt-am- Main before coming to the Union Theological Seminary. He was one of the first to openly disagree with Hitler, and was forced to leave the country. By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 - Gen. George C. Marshall told today how Gov. Thomas E. Dewey complied with his fervent plea to soft pedal the 1944 campaign debate that might have informed the Japanese the United States had cracked their code. The retired Chief of Staff told the joint committee investigating Pearl Harbor that he informed the Repub- lican nominee of the "utterly tragic consequences" that might flow from any revelation of the code-cracking secret in the campaign arguments over the Pearl Harbor disaster. Dewey, he said, not only held his own silence but offered, after the election to help still Congressional debate. The late President Roosevelt, Marshall testified, did not know he had made his appeal to the New Yorker and added: Holiday Party Is Planned by All-Nations Club Displaying an unmitigated individ- ualism, members of the All-Nations Club will hold a Christmas party on Jan. 4. At a recent meeting, the foreign students made plans for the coming year. An en masse trip to Michigan State College to meet with the Inter- national Club there was agreed upon for the near future. The annual International Ball will be held Jan. 11 in the Union ball- room, the proceeds to go to the Emergency Fund for. Foreign Stu- dents. An all-campus dance, the af- fair will be semi-formal. Also on the meeting's agenda was an address by Prof. Harley N. Bart- lett of the botany department who spoke on the Indonesian situation. Montana Legion Aids Rae Plea Continuing their support of Prose- cutor John W. Rae's action to extra- dite Julia May Ward, veteran's wife wanted in Michigan for perjury in obtaining a divorce, the Department of Montana American Legion yes- terday sent a telegram to Rae urging a second request for Mrs. Ward's ex- tradition. Signed by Ed Orleman of the Mon- tana group, the telegram asked Rae to continue his demands to obtain for "this veteran of World War II the fullest consideration, justice, and his legal rights. "I think he died without know- ing it." Marshall's two letters to Dewey were introduced in evidence, and Marshall in oral testimony told the investigators of the circumstances. There were two letters because Dewey, declining to be bound by a stipulation that he must not reveal: its contents to anyone, returned the first one unread to the Army officer who took it to him. The second, practically identical, was read by Dewey under an agree- ment that he might have one ad- viser present and keep one copy. The missives, one dated Sept. 25 and the other Sept. 27, 1944, men- tioned a speech in Congress. by Rep. Harness (R-Ind) on the question of a Pearl Harbor investigation. Mar- shall wrote that although Harness might not so interpret it, the speech would mean to the Japanese that their codes were being deciphered here. The General outlined some of the benefits of that secret tosthe Ameri- can fighting forces: the Japanese dis- aster at Midway where we knew their location and strength; the amazing American submarine successes be- .Play Tickets Go On Sale Monday Students Get Special Rate for 'What A Life' A special student rate for Thurs- day and Friday's performances of Play Production's "What a Life," has been announced by the Speech De- partment. The Clifford Goldsmith comedy, which centers around the high school life of Henry Aldrich will be pre- sented at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Tickets may be purchased at the theatre box office starting Monday. Henry, the problem child of Cen- tral High, is seen, throughout three acts of the play, enduring one di- lemma after another. With the sym- pathetic assistant principal on his side, he finally manages to get out of his scrapes but only after a series of woeful mishaps that afford side- splitting comedy. Mr. Goldsmith's genuine fondness for a joke is evidenced in this play, but a touch of pathos in Henry's life shows that the author is not lacking in sympathy for his character. Mr. Goldsmith spent some time lecturing in Philadelphia High Schools where he came in close contact with the life of the adolescent. cause we knew where their shipping would be; Admiral Halsey's great raids on ship concentrations. The General, under committee questioning, said later that he did not actually know at the time of his first letter that Dewey had specific knowledge of code breaking. Dental School Review Course Begins onday A refresher course in child's den- tistry will start' with five members Monday at the W. K. Kellogg Foun- dation Institute. Several of the men who have en- rolled in the courses are ex-service- men who are preparing to resume civilian practice. Prof. Kenneth Eas- lick, head of the children's dentistry department, will conduct thecourse, which will run for two weeks. Prof. Easlick explained the need for special work in this field because dentistry for children brings up problems differing from general adult dentistry. These include managing the patients, especially when they are of pre-school age, and care of the growing and developing teeth arches and bite, which are formed during childhood. Another problem arises because young teeth are not com- pletely calcified and require special operative procedures. Six more two-week courses are scheduled this term. These are oper- ative dentistry, oral pathology, den- tal caries control, operative and in- terpretative radiodontics, root canal surgery and periodontics. These will respectively start Jan. 7, Jan. 21, Jan. 21, Feb. 4, Feb. 11 and Feb. 11. Music Group Elects Officers Murthum Named Head Of Kappa Kappa Psi The Michigan Chapter of Kappa Kappa Psi, national honorary music fraternity, yesterday announced its new officers for the coming year. Elected , were George Murthum, '47SM, president; Allen Chase, '48SM, vice-president; Nathan Anderson, '48SM, secretary and Harold Fischer, Grad.SM, treasurer. Kappa Kappa Psi was founded in 1919 at Oklahoma A. & M. The Nu Chapter was founded in 1925 here at the University. Due to a lack of mem- bers, its activities were curtailed dur- ing the war and were renewed last year. The Nu Chapter is one of 42 chapters throughout the United States. HELP WANTED WANTED: Assistant cook. Experience not necessary if capable and willing to learn. Meals furnished, six-day week, vacation with pay. Apply Miss Tomlinson, University Health Ser- vice-2453 1. PERSONALS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 'U' At Alumnus Speaks Conference Session Lieral roup Plans Election An election of officers, discussion of finances and student government committee reports will head the agenda of a meeting of the newly or- ganized Committee for Liberal Ac- tion at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union. The meeting date has been changed because of Madame Per- kins' speech Tuesday night. The organization approved a re- vised constitution and elected a tem- porary steering committee at a meet- ing last week. Membership is open to all eligible students, including vet- erans, Army and Navy personnel, on campus. Organized by members of the Post-War Council to promote con- structive action on campus, local, na- tional and international post-war problems, the Committee plans to correlate the local and campus situ- ations with national nroblems as a Closing the seventh annual Bank Study Conference, William H. Stev- enson of Chicago discussed the banker's position in a balanced econ- omy yesterday at a luncheon meet- ing in the League. In the bankers' morning session, Raymond T. Perring, vice-president of the Detroit Bank and a University, alumnus, said, "It is far better for banks to take the initiative (in im- proving bank reporting) than to run the risk of being forced to action by legislation or some other manifesta- tion of popular demand." Following Perring's speech, Ar- thur S. Greiner of Detroit praised job relations training for bank per- sonnel work. Speaking at the trust division ieeting, Profs. Lewis M. Simes and Paul G. Kauper, both of the Univer- sity law school, spoke about wills and inheritance tax laws. Approximately 200 bankers and trust men assembled Thursday and yesterday for the conference spon- sored by -the Michigan Bankers As- sociation and the School of Business Administration. British Bombs Hit Indonesian Positions BATAVIA, Dec. 7 - (P) - Twelve British planes dumped three tons of bombs today on Indonesian gun posi- tions on a lake shore south of Am- barawa, and gunned and bombed buildings in a densely wooded hideout area on the opposite side of the lake. Clashes continued at scattered points in Java, as British and Neth- erlands leaders returned to Batavia after attending a conference in Singa- pore yesterday called by Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten, allied Southeast Asia commander. Sergeant Pardee To MALE ESCORTS for hire, for all oc- casions. Reasonable rates. Write c/o Escort Service, 1107 Willard Street, Ann Arbor. B. T. O.: Smooth, youthful lad de- sires date for Union Formal. Call 4145-ask for Jimmie Riggs. WANTED WANTED: Army Officer's blouse, size 37 or 38; also pink or green trousers, 32 waist. Write PFC R. L. Watson, 3650 S.U., Det. 1, or visit. 316 Hinsdale House, East Quad, after 9 p. m. FOR SALE VALUED VIOLINS, very reasonable. Mr. Coon, 315 N. State St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. Telephone 6109. FOR SALE: Diamond solitaire in gold setting. Never worn. A bargain at $160. John Abbott. 2-4481. FOR SALE: 1938 Chevrolet convert- ible cheap. Call after six at 422 Hamilton Place, ask for Glenn. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Tuesday, Dec. 4 on or near campus, valuable keys in black morocco case. Finder please leave at Daily office. Reward. LOST: Silver military wristwatch- green cloth band, on Nov. 30. Call Jacke Theriault, 24481. LOST on Nov. 17 in Arcade or Uni- versity High School, large black leather purse containing valuable papers, child's mittens. Return to Michigan Daily Office. Reward. LOST: Post trig slide rule between League and Mosher. Name Robert Schoenfeld on case. Call 23297. LOST: Brown Shaefer lifetime foun- tain pen. Inscribed Elsa Fisher. Reward. Call 8239. LOST: Wedding band, 5 chip dia- monds, yellow gold setting. Campus Drug, 5:30-5:40, Dec. 3. Reward. LOST: Black and red billfold belong- ing to Laurene Pickford. Call 7695. LOST: S.A.M. fraternity pin on De- cember 5, between Education School and Health Service. Initials G.D.K. Sentimental value. Reward. Phone 2-6986. LOST-Silver earring between SAE house and Jordon Hall. Finder call 2-4561, Jordan 583. LOST: Pair of Harlequin glasses in brown case on campus last Thurs- day, December 6. Finder call 9388. Kathleen Johnson. MISCELLANEOUS VETERANS desiring free complete information on GI insurance from a veteran, write or call C. L. Carter, 512 S. Washington, Ypsilanti. Victory Bonds Issued Here! Continuous from 1 P.M. -mmEfmr AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG I SAT., DEC. 8, 1945 8:00-News. 8:10-Music. 8:15-Meet the Band. 8:25-Outdoor Brevities. 8:30-Sleepyhead Serenade. 9:00-Music Box. 9:30-Popular Music. 9:40-News. 9:45-Moments of Melodies. 10:00-News. 10:05-What's New Today? 10:15-What Do You Know? 10:30-Broadway Melodies. 10:40-Community Calendar. 10:45--Waltz Time. 11:00-News. 11:05-Kiddies Party. 11:30-Farm & Home Hour. 11:55-Hit Tunes. 12:00-News. 12:15-Jesse Crawford. 12:20-Spike Jones. 12:30-Along the Sports Sidelines. 12:45-Man on the Street. 1:00-News. 1:05-Salon Music. 1:10-Organ Music. 1:15-Ray Bloch Presents. 1:30-Front Page Drama. 1:45-Phil Hanna. 2:00-News. 2:05-John Kirby. 2:15-Melody on Parade. 3:00-News. 3:05-vincent Ross. 3:15-Bob Crosby. 3:30-Flashes from Life. 3:40-It Actually Happened. 3:45-Mystery Melodies. 4:00-News. 4:15-Dear Santa. 4:30-Meet Me at Morays. 4:45-Dixie Quiz. r You're Sure To Find "PACKS OF H EALTHFUL VALUE" Last Times Today I I h. Playing Through M ICHIGAN Saturday! IItaI III '> ALLDCUIuN /IIlkMk 1 IA-MN. '~d III I 1n ®