'U' EXTENSION CLASS See Page 4 4tAIrtai 41tl RAIN COLDER VOL. LVI, No. 64 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1946 PRICE FIVE CENTS University Coed To Continue in Role Of Campus 'Cinderella, Health, Crowded Living Conditions Necessitate Present Hours for Women Health and crowded housing conditions will not permit any alter- ation in the present hours for women, Miss Alice Lloyd, Dean of Women, declared yesterday. In a written reply to a Daily editorial which described Michigan women as "Cinderellas," Dean Lloyd said that the high percentage of women reporting to the Health Service for reasons of fatigue is "al- ready a matter of concern." Later hours for women would Lloyd said. Hockey Teamt Easily Defeats Visting Sextet McMaster on Short End of 13-6 Decision By DES HOWARTH In a wild-scoring hockey game that established a new total goals record for the Coliseum ice, Michigan easily defeated McMaster University's un- dermanned sextet last night, 13-6, for the Wolverine's 12th win of the sea- son. Coach Vic Heyliger's squad obvi- ously was not going all out for last 'night's game as it warmed up for this week's big two game series with Min- nesota, and the contest failed to pro- duce the brand of hockey seen in the past few games. However, after a listless first period the game turned out to be a crowd pleaser, with plenty of goals and rough play. Grant, McMillan Score Three Wally Grant and Gord McMillan each turned the hat-trick again for the Wolverines, but high-scoring honors went to the visitor's center Gerald Wagar, who tallied four goals. Chet Kuznier and Wally Gacek each added two markers to the Michigan cause. After a slow opening five minutes Heyliger's squad finally scored with Bill Jacobson shooting the puck past McMaster's goalie, Bob Chittick. Bob Marshall got his first of three assists on the play. Wagar Tied Count Wagar tied the count for Cana- dians, but Wally Grant again put the Wolverines in the lead a moment later, after stick-handling his way from his own blue-line. Kuznier pushed the puck into the nets after almost muffing his chance for Michigan's third goal. Jack Birthelmer got this one back for Mc- Master's however, as the period ended. Connie Hill knocked in a rebound at 3:07 of the second frame, and Gord McMillan fllicked the puck past Chittick half a minute later. Wagar. assisted by Larry Folliott, banged in two more goals to cut the Michigan lead to one goal. T:Chen Michigan's See TWO PUCKSTERS, Page 3 Student Opinion Ballots Will Be Collected 1 nlay Ballots for the Alpha Phi Omega poll of student opinion will be col lected today on the diagonal, in the Union, the League, and at the engi- neering arch. They will be provided at the places of collection for those students who were not contacted through the dis- tribution yesterday and Monday. William DeGrace, who is in charge of the project, has announced th t the filled-out forms will be collected from dormitories, fraternities and so- rorities tomorrow. By asking the student body about certain phases of proposed and ex- isting activities, the service fraternity hopes to obtain information which will be useful to campus organiza- tions. DeGrace pointed out that favor- able response to such proposed ac- tivities as mixed swimming parties and a swing concert featuring a top- name band would probably prompt these organizations to sponsor them. Provision is made on the ballot, DeGrace said, for students to indi- cate whether or not they would like to have more polls. Students may submit questions for future polls. Campus ftitudes as revealed by the poll will be published in the Daily. Piano instriicto 'To Present Recital not alleviate this condition, Dean Noting the problems faced by her office in finding rooms for increas- ing numbers of women students, Dean Lloyd said "some of the League houses would not continue to take college girls if women's hours were extended." Dean Lloyd said The Daily editor- ial's comparison of Michigan and other colleges was "not valid unless the critic is in a position to say that social conditions, academic achieve- ments and student morale are better on the campuses where he feels more liberal hours prevail." The text of , Dean Lloyd's state- ment follows: "The Michigan Daily has asked me to comment on the editorial which appeared in Saturday's Daily on the general subject of women's hours. The author of the article had obviously not read carefully the house rules for women at the University of Michigan and has not presented the situation clearly. Each university or college has the responsibility and obligation to de- termine what seems best in the opin- ion of the authorities to insure the health and welfare of its students and to protect the purpose for which the institution was founded. The Of- fice of the Dean of Women is charg- ed by the Regents with the respon- sibility of fixing the regulations for the women students. The women's hours have always been established in close cooperation with the women's student government. There are several reasons why the present hours for women are desirable at this time and should not be changed. The housing con- ditions for women are crowded this term and are going to be much more so for some time to come. It is going to be necessary to safe- guard more carefully than ever the need for proper study and for ade- quate sleep. Later hours for women would not do this. It is already a matter of con- cern to this office and to the Health Service that far too high a percent- age of the students who report to the Health Service are there because of excessive fatigue. Even with our present hours, the fatigue is especial-1 ly noticeable on Mondays when the dormitory nurses report more meals served upstairs than on any other day in the week. At the present time there is an added problem to face, a problem in which women's hours are involv- ed. Because of the increase in en- rollment of women (an increase of 1 in the past three years) it has been necessary to find new housing for them. We have found reluctance on the part of house owners to take women because of the late hours involved in supervising the house. Some of the league houses which we now have would not continue to take college girls if the women's hours were ex- tended. This at a time when we are turning girls away in large numbers See DEAN LLOYD, Page 4 I iialit' To CGo 111 Sale) Sunda "The Student: Guinea Pig or Can- pus Citizen?" This question is asked in the new magazine "Insight," edited by the Student Religious Association to be on sale Sunday. Articles in the magazine will dis- cuss "University in the Modern World," "Student Government a Con- tinuing Experiment, The Nuclei of the Student Body, and The Campus a Laboratory for Democracy." "Insight" is under the editorship of Joyce Siegan, president of Lane Hall, Jean Kilpatrick is assistant edi- tor, Keitha Harman, business man- ager. Publicity is being handled by Beverly Ketcik and Barbara White. Says Dean 'Hubba, Hubba'... Conversation overheard in Haven Hall between a history professor and a Latin-Ameri- can student: Student: I have much diffi- culty with the English language. Can you help me? Professor: Why don't you get a dictionary? Student: I have one, but it does not help. The students say, "Hubba, hubba, but I no can find in dictionary." JAG Classes Will Review Todaty in Quad The traditional graduation parade for 78 members of the 27th Officer Class and 21 members of the 15th Officer Candidate Class of the Judge Advocate General's School will be at 4 p.m. today in the Law Quad- rangle. Guests To Review Parade Maj. Gen. Thomas H. Green, Judge Advocate General of the Army, and Maj. Gen. Henry S. Aurand, com- manding general of the Sixth Ser- vice Command, will be the special guests reviewing the parade with Col. Reginald Miller, commandant of the Army forces on campus. Following the parade a banquet will be held for members of the classes and several guests. Included will be Col. William McCarty, assist- ant Chief of Staff for Michigan Af- fairs of the Sixth Service Command; the honorable O. Z. Ide, judgetof the Common Pleas Court, Detroit; Or- ville Foster, president of the Detroit Bar Association; George M. Burke, Ann Arbor attorney, Prof. F. L. Hunt- ley, of the political science and Eng- lish departments; Burke Shartel, pro- fessor of law, and Dean Blythe Sta- son of the University Law School. Graduation Tomorrow Graduation exercises will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Hutchins Hall. Gen Green will give the main address and present certificates to the men of the Officer Class and to the newly-commissioned second lieutenants of the Officer ,Candi- date Class. A bronze plaque will be given the Law School by Gen. Green on behalf of members of the Judge Advocate General's Department. It will be mounted near the east entry of the Law and Lawyers Club. Club To Give Party with All Nations The me The Faculty Women's Club will present an all-nations program at 3 pnm.'today in the TRackham Asscm- bly Ilall. Included on the program will be Korean songs sung by Charles Kim, songs by a group from Mrs. Lila Pargment's Russian class, tinder the direction of Wilma Miron, an Indian dance by Bhaniu Parikh, songs by Gib berto Oliver of Puerto Rico, accom- panied by Mrs. Estelle Titiev, and a Philippine dance presented by Lucille Martelina and Lourdes Segunda. Tea will follow the program, and Mrs. E. Blythe Stason, Mrs. Esson Gale, Mrs. Howard B. Lewis, and Mrs. R. A. Stevenson will pour. Mrs. Ches- er Sctoepfle and Mrs. Donald Mat- thews are to be the assistant host- esses. All women studets frOM foreign countries are invited, and a special invitation is extended to those from Russia, India, Korea, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines. Prof. Rundull Stewurt Will SPuik at RqCINxw', Toda y Speaking under the ,uspices of the English department, Prof. Randall Stewart of Brown University will lec- ture at 4.15 p.m. today in Rackham Amphitheatre on the subject "The Literature of Early New England," The lecture is open to the public. Kaiser-razer Backs New v ghhCoa City Planners Submit Maps Of Community 1I'ernanent Facilities Will Be Established Active participation iy the Kaiser- Frazier Corporation in plans to con- vert Willow Village into a model town was taken yesterday when a repre- sentative of the corporation became a formal member of the directors of the Washtenaw Area Planning Com- mission. The Kaiser representative replaces a resigning representative of the Ford Motor C. A progress report on a section of Willow Run town site was given by Saarinsen and Swanson of Bir- mingham, Mich., internationally famous town planners who are drafting plans for the Commission. Experimental plotting by the firm was submitted to the Commission for comments and suggestions, in the form of detailed maps and plans. Faced with the problem of provid- ing permanent living facilities on a site where there are almost no exist- ing permanent improvements to be considered, the Planning Commission is preparing an ideal community. Provisions for roads, homes, a busi- ness district, schools and green belts or parks are being made. The completed plans will event- ually be submitted to the people in an educational program and then voted on by city, township and county electorates in the form of zoning ordinances and other con- trols molding private construction in the town to fit a pattern. Since the present buildings are predomi- nantly temporary, it is possible to plan on a grand scale that would be impossible in a place such as Detroit, Dr. Otto K. Engelke, a member of the commission said. Plans for buildings which were given a public hearing about six weeks ago include all sizes of single and multiple dwellings to fit different economic levels, but without marked differentiation between levels. Dr. Engelke described them as "in ac- cordance with common sense." Plans for the town would utilize existing permanent facilities such as water and gas lines, sewage dis- posal facilities and, in some cases, roads. Existing temporary build- ings such as the dormtories now in use by University students will be demolished completely, to be re- placed by permanent buildings ac- cerding to the Commission's pat- tern. Iatt e To Discuss Asia Was Political Advsor i'o Chiang Ka-Sick Owent Lattimrore, leading author- ity on Asiatic problems, will speak o the topic "Solution in Asia" at 8:30 pin. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium, uni- der the sponsorsfp of the Oratorical Association, Director of the School of Inter- national Relations at Johns Hopkins University, he has spent most of his life working and studying in the East. During the war he was called upon to act as political advisor to Chiang- Kai-Shek and was director of Pa- cific Operations for the OWI. In 1944 he accompanied Vice-President Wal- lace on his tour through Siberia and China. He is known for his contributions to the "Atlantic Monthly," "National Geographic," "Asia" and other peri- odicals and for his latest book "Solu- tion in Asia." Eighth Choral Union Concert To Be Given Wilson, Thomas To Attend First In Series of New Discussions By I'lie Associated Press DETROIT, Jan. 29-General Motors Corp. and the CIO United Automo- bile Workers will renew negotiations-probably tomorrow afternoon-in the wage dispute that has kept 175,000 production workers idle since last Nov. 21. This was announced late today by James F. Dewey, specially assigned federal labor conciliator, after a series of conferences with GM President Charles E. Wilson and top officials of the UAW-CIO. Dewey, who helped end the 42-day GM sit-down strike in 1937, met first with Wilson, then with R. J. Thomas and Walter P. Reuther, president and vice-president of the union, and again with both parties before disclosing he had succeeded in arranging a resumption of the negotiations. " Both Wilson and Thomas will at- tend the first session, Dewey said. v B i His objective, Dewey said, was to get the two parties together "and ForAi *p rt5' keep them together." o u r o~ i After the meeting with Dewey, Reuther said "the union is agreeable Well Received to meet again with GM." There was no statement from General Motors following the Wil- Briggs Tells of SPA son-Dewey meeting, but Dewey said his talk with the GM president was Conference in Capitol "very satisfactory." General Motors CIO Auto Union Will Resume Wage Negotiations; Town I, Defauw Will Direct Orchestra Tomorrow Opening their program with Han- del's "Concerto Grosso, No, 10, in D minor," the Chicago Symphony Or- chestra under the direction of Desire Defauw, will present the eighth' Choral Union concert at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium. The Suite from Faure's "Pelleas et Melisande," the Strauss tone poem, "Thus Spake Zarathustra" and Cesar Franck's popular "Symphony in D minor," will complete the program. Music for the "Pelleas et Melisande" suite was adapted from the Belgian- French symbolist, Maurice Maeter- linck's realistic play. Now in its fifty-fifth season, the orchestra devotes most of its time to home city concerts, engagements in Milwaukee and nearby cities. The owner of its own Orchestra Hall in Chicago, the symphony also operates a School of Music Civic Orchestra for the purpose of training perform- ers for symphony orchestras. Popular concerts for industrial plant workers and social settlement houses, as well as Young People's Concerts are an annual function of the orchestra. PAINTING: Picasso's Work Interpreted byl Former Stuadent "You can understand Picasso best by thinking of him as a Spaniard; it is the key to his work and his per- sonality," Miss Harriet Adams said last night at a lecture sponsored by the All Nations Club in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Art Curator, Instructor Miss Adams received her bachelor's degree at this university and worked at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, before taking over her present posit on at the Museum at the Cranbrook Academy of Art. "In 1934 Picasso stopped painting almost entirely due to the emotional upset from the breakup of his mar- riage", she said. And- it is very evi- dent since 1937 that there has been a "levelling off of intensity and scope, for that year can be regarded as a climax", she added. Lecture Illustrated Slides were shown to emphasize the main points of her lecture. Not- able among these were: "The Bull- fight", which exemplifies the ex- pressionistic qualities of Picasso's work-"his harsh and virulent treat- ment",--Miss Adams called it; "The Dreams and Lives of Franco", which is a series of etchings she compared to Goya's "Disaster of War"; "Guer- nica", a symbolic black and white painting that summed up Picasso's expressions of deep emotion about the Spanish revolution which started A2 1937, "He has not reached a final syn- thesis," she said. "Picasso has not found a means to express himself so that the man in the street can under- stand him. But man is his sole center of interest and we can always depend on this artist to be a storm center, The corporation has said on several occasions that it was ready to meet with the union "at any time on any pertinent issues." The fact Dewey went directly to Wilson in beginning his mediation efforts led to speculation that the General Motors president might take part in the renewed negotiating ses- sions for the first time since the dis- cussions began. GM's negotiating group has been headed by Harry W. Anderson, vice president in charge of industrial relations, while Reuther has led the union negotiators. Taylor Elected CLA President; Panel Planned Robert Taylor, '47, was elected president of the Committee for Lib- eral Action for the spring term at a meeting last night. Formerly vice-president of the or- ganization, he will be succeeded _in that office by Wayne Saari. Judy Jacobs was re-elected recording sec- retary. Other officers include Char- lotte Bobrecker, corresponding sec- retary, and Rona Eskin, treasurer. A panal discussion by two faculty members of the economics and politi- cal science departments on the topic of Big Three Control and Sovereignty vs. Cooperation in the United Nations Organization will be sponsored by CLA early next week, Bob Taylor an- nounced. A student moderator will also participate in the panel which is planned to rally organized campus opinion on these and related aspects of the current UNO meetings in London. The Committee voted to support a one-term student council (if it is elected this spring) during the stu- dent government constitution cam- paign scheduled for next term. A de- bate on international control of atomic energy and subsequent drive for a series of lectures on this sub- ject will be conducted by CLA at the beginning of the spring term. Replies from Michigan representa= tives Albert Engel, Bartel Jonkman (Committee on Foreign Affairs), George D. O'Brien, and Earl C. Michener (Judiciary, Rules commit- tees) and from a faculty member, supporting CLA's recent FEPC cam- paign and progressive national pol- icy, were received by the group. Spanish FiII To Be Slhown1 "Dona Barbara." a Spanish film with English subtitles, will be shown at 8:30 pim. tomorrow, Friday, and Saturday in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Starring Maria Felix and Julian Soler, the film is being presented un- der the auspices of the Art Cinema League and La Sociedad Hispanica. Tickets go on sale today at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Mem- bers of La Sociedad will be admitted upon payment of the federal tax. Wm- - in.nrn.farl .,nia r ,n 0+ in The University's request for Willow Run Airport has been "favorably" re- ceived by officials of the Surplus Property Administration, University Vice-president Robert P. Briggs said yesterday following his return from Washington. But "a lot of work" remains to be done before transfer of the huge air base can be accomplished, Briggs said. The SPA will survey the airport be- fore acting on the University's re- quest, he said. The SPA is believed to be willing to hand over Willow Run to the Uni- versity if Detroit and Wayne County agree to the proposal. Under the plan submitted by the University, revenue for operating the airport wouldbe gainedfrom lease of operating rights to 11 commercial lines now serving Detroit. The University would acquire the airport without cost and with the sin- gle stipulation that facilities for tem- porary military use - be provided in case of another national emergency. The Reconstruction Finance Corp., after receiving the University's re- quest, announced that it would give the University priority for the 1,450 acre field. Finral Draft of constitution ZTo. Be Discussed The final corrected constitution for reformed student government will be read and discussed at the Town Hall meeting at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in Lane Hall. Th1iis final draft, which will be read by Sanford Perlis, president of the Union, includes changes recom- mended by the Committee on Student Affairs. The meeting will start at 7:15 in order 'to allow persons who wish to attend tle concert a chance to hear the new constitution and con- tribute to the first hour of discussion. Wayne Saari, chairman of the Pub- lic Affairs Committee of SRA, who will assist in explaining various pas- sages of the proposal, urges everyone to attend this meeting. "Especially those people who have expressed in- terest in the new constitution in let- ters to The Daily should come," Saari said. The constitution is expected to be submitted to the student body for ratification in the next all-campus election. It has already been ap- proved by the Committee on Student Affairs. National News At*a Glance. WASHINGTON, Jan. 29-()-This government may let foreign observers watch the forthcoming atomic bomb naval tests, but ma~y bar them from learning any technicalfacts obtained. WASHINGTON, Jan. 29,-(A_ Secretary of State Rvrnae isaid .t GargoyleT o Appear Febiuary Ily PERRY LOGAN Aa there, Joe Walker: I see you," Bill Goldstein, general manager of the Gargoyle, called merrily, trying sea for me. Back to tolling waves again. If only I knew someone who could take my place here," Walker polished his fingernails on mg a accusing finger at Goldstein's name. "There is no place for that sort of thing in the Daily." "But Bob," I began, when his