'U' FCULY MEETING See column one Y * wi iiF Da~i4 CLOUDY AND SLIGHTLY WARMER VOL. LVI, No. 10 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Navy Eleven Swamps Michigan 33-7 University May Alter Curriculum L Faculty To Discuss .Lit SchoolPlan Proposed changes in the curriculum r of the literary college will be the sub- ject of a special meeting of the col- lege's faculty members' at 4:10 p.m. tomorrow. The faculty will consider the re- port of the Joint Committee on the Curriculum, which has been study- ing revision of the University's lib- eral arts curriculum for over two years, The Daily learned yesterday. Harvard, Yale Plans Unknown is the relation of the committee's report to the educatonal plans recently brought forward by Harvard and Yale. The committee may recommend changes similar to those incorporated in the Harvard and Yale plans or may submit entire- ly different proposals. The Harvard Plan, released last June in the publication, "General Education in a Free Society," recently attracted wide attention. The pro- duct of two years effort by a Harvard faculty committee, it advanced the theory that education "rather than shutting itself off in cellules for the particular use of specialists, should fit students for common spheres of interest which they must share with others in a democratic world." Basic Courses The committee recommended that Harvard inaugurate a system of basic courses in humanities, social sciences and natural sciences. The program adopted by the Harvard faculty last week. provides for not less than two nor more than four "alternative" basic general courses in each of these areas. A program similar to the commit- tee's had been proposed by the Har- vard Student Council in 1939-40. The Harvard Plan will begin on an optional basis in September, 1946, and will continue in the experimental stage "until teaching and curricular methods have been so perfected as to justify extending the system to all students." General Education Idea Yale University announced recently that it had adopted two plans em- bodying the general education idea. The Standard Plan has a requirement entitled "relationships of learning," to be fulfilled by "broad courses which will relate several fields of study in terms of contemporary life in Amer- ica." In the Experimental Plan the junior-senior curriculum is divided into five major areas, in which studies will be "carefully distributed between courses in interpretation, concentra- tion and relationships to other fields." Yale students will have a choice of these two plans beginning with the fall term, 1946. Also unknown is the relation of the committee's report to the general education plan which the University of Chicago adopted in 1930. Chicago divided its freshman-sophomore cur- riculum into four areas-humanities and social, physical and biological sciences-in which instruction is giv- en by no particular department. Rae Warns Cyclists, Walkers-Be Careful Prosecutor John W. Rae issued a special Nyarning to pedestrians and bicyclists today as a result of six fatal accidents that have occurred here during the past three weeks. "Bicyclists are charged with the same responsibilities as a motor oper- ator," Rae said. "In the event that there is any question of criminal neg- ligence in an accident, a warrant will be issued and prosecution will ensue," he announced. Rally, Varsity Program Included In, Homecoming Weekend Plans Wolverines Tire After Ha Against Middie TAflacks By BILL MULLENDORE, Daily Sports Editor (Special to The Daily) BALTIMORE, Md. Stadium, Nov. 10-Navy's long subdued steamroller finally unwound itself against a gal- lant but badly outplayed Michigan eleven here today and the long-expected burst of Middie power resulted in a crushing 33-7 victory. There was no hint of the rumored squad dissension among the men of the Naval Academy as they took advan- tage of almost every opportunity to cross the goal line five times. The lighter and younger Wolverines managed to make a fight of it for the first half and went into the dressing room at intermission behind only 13-7. But they tired badly in the second half and were no match for Navy's explosive T attack and stonewall defense. U Nov. 23-24 Festivities Will Feature Harmon, Joe Gentile, Carter's Band v> Offering an unprecedented line- up of all-round entertainment, this year's Homecoming Week-end, Nov. 23 and 24, will represent a revolutionary trend in campus shows. Departing from traditional pre-war celebrations, the 1945 Homecoming program includes personalities rang- ing from grid hero Tom Harmon to radio's emcee Joe Gentile. Initiating the week-end's festivi- ties will be a Pep Rally starting at 7 pm. Friday, Nov. 23 at Ferry Field. The 100 piece University marching Band will lead a torch- light parade from the Union steps to the field, followed by members of the four men's honor societies, Werntz Talks To CPA Group At Conference Trends in Accounting Is Topic Discussed Pointing out that investors would "unquestionably" find detailed infor- mation, usually not listed on corpora- tion income statements, "immeasur- ably more useful than the aggregate figures customarily given at present," William W. Werntz, chief account- ant of the Securities and Exchange Commission of Philadelphia, address- ed the 20th Annual Michigan Ac- counting Conference yesterday in the Rackham Building. In his talk on "Trends in Account- ing," Mr. Werntz said that according to a study made by the Commission's staff, inconsistant accounting prac- tices in making some charges or cred- its directly to earned surplus suggests the possibility that "the situation is susceptible to abuse and may operate to the detriment of investors." The conference is sponsored joint- ly by the Michigan Association of Cer- tified Public Accountants and the School of Business Administration. Unrest Spreads Through Orient British Attack in Java; Chinese War Unabated BATAVIA, Java, Sunday, Nov. 11- (M~-Indonesian reports said today that Soerabaja and vicinity had been "devastated" and "thousands" of In- donesian soldiers and civilians killed by "continued British attacks from the air, sea and land." CHUNGKING, Nov. 10-()-Ar- tillery and mortars thundered today along the coastal end of China's great wall, where the Chinese Communists' best divisions blocked the path of thousands of nationalist troops into industrially-rich Manchuria. A Shanghai despatch states that reports from an area 165 miles south- east of Peiping told of the defeat of the Chinese Nationalist 40th Army by a Communist force which outnum- bered the government troops 10 to 1. SHANGHAI, Nov. 10-R)P-Head- quarters of the Chinese 94th National army at Tientsin today reported that some of the Japanese troops at Tangshan, 60 miles northeast of Tientsin, had joined Chinese com- munist forces. * SAIGON, Indochina, Nov. 10-0 P) -Sniping and sabotage broke out anew in the Saigon area today as strong French forces, armed with American lend-lease equipment, con- tinued to clean up newly captured Tay Ninh, Annamese resistance cen- ter 58 miles northwest of here. Sphinx, Druids, Triangles, and Vul- cans. Bill McGowan, head cheer- leader will lead the rally. Following the Pep Rally, the first Varsity Night since 1942 will be held at 8:15 in Hill Auditorium. Emceeing the show will be Joe Gentile and Ralph Bingay who will interview Tom Harmon, Bob Westfall and Hal New- houser. A special program of appro- priate music is being arranged by William D. Revelli, director of the University Band. Tentative plans also include a professional vaudeville act from Detroit, an all-girl trumpeting quartet, and two or three acts fea- turing campus talent. Students in- terested in appearing on the pro- gram should contact Ruth McMor- is at 2-2547. Auditors will be held the latter part of this week. Joe Gentile will broadcast his "Happy Joe's Early Morning Frolic" from the Union Ballroom. The pro- gram is a regular feature of station CKLW in Detroit and Windsor. Highlight of the week-end will be the Michigan-Ohio State game Miner To Join Sociology lDept. Next Semester Courses in race relations and in Latin-American culture, applying a new comparative method to com- munity studies, will be taught next semester in the Department of So- ciology by Horace Miner, whose ap- pointment as assistant professor has been announced by Prof. Robert An- gell, chairman of the department. Recent Release from Army Prof. Miner's appointment follows his recent release from the Army. He served as a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Counter-Intelligence Corps in Africa, Italy, France, and Germany and was awarded the Legion of Merit and the Bronze Star. A graduate of the University of Kentucky in 1933, Prof. Miner receiv- ed his Ph. D. from the University of Chicago in 1937 as a result of his community study of a Quebec village. On the basis of this study, Prof. Miner published "St. Denis, a French- Canadian Parish," which, according to Prof. Angell, is a landmark in the newly developed field of comparative sociology and a most important study illustrating how the essentially primi- tive and modern may emerge in a single society. Prof. Miner also has published magazine articles on this subject. Instruction at Wayne Following an instructorship at Wayne University, Prof. Miner be- came a member of the Rural Research Division of the Department of Agri- culture, studying an Iowa community with emphasis on culture, reactions and effect of the AAA program. He continued his research in primitive culture on a post-doctoral fellowship, studying the urban aspects of the primitive city of Timbuctoo in French West Africa. at 2 p.m. Saturday in the newly christened Michigan Stadium. An extraordinary half-time show has been promised by Prof. Revelli who will put the maize and blue uni- formed marching Band through their paces in an unusual demon- stration. Winding up the gala week-end, Benny Carter and his orchestra will play at an informal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Intra- mural Building. Between sets a trio of professional vocalists from Detroit will provide entertainment. Judgement of the traditional Homecoming Display competition will be made before the game on Saturday. Every organized house on campus is eligible to participate, and expenses for the displays have been limited to ten dollars. Men's and women's residences make up the two competitive classes, and fraternity and sorority houses will be judged with independent resi- dences. Representatives of the School of Architecture and Design, the Dean's offices, the League and the Union will comprise the staff of judges. Tickets for the various events will go on sale this week at booths conveniently situated on the cam- pus. Since Ohio State will not hold classes Friday, many requests for tickets have been received from the Buckeye supporters, but sufficient numbers are being reserved for University students. Paul1John, assisted by Dick Roeder, is chairman of the Homecoming Weekend. Art DerDerian, who re- cently transferred from Minnesota, will serve as co-ordinator of the va- rious events. Would all presidents of organ- izations desiring space in the 1946 Michiganensian contact the En- sian office at 2-3241 between 2 and 5 p. m. as soon as possible. City Offices Will Close for Day Observe Armiiistice Holiday Tomorrow City offices in Ann Arbor, with the exception of the Police Department and Fire Department, will be closed Monday in observance of Armistice Day (today, Nov. 11). In the Nation's capital, President Truman, accompanied by Prime Min- ister Clement Attlee and MacKenzie King, will lead the city in observance of the day according to Associated Press reports. The three leaders will lay wreaths on the tomb of the un- known soldier in Arlington Cemetery, and on the grave of Sir John Dill, British representative on the com- bined chiefs of staff who died last year. * * * Along a 30 mile front in Nagasaki originally designated for the invasion of Japan, Marines will gather today to observe Armistice Day and to give thanks that peaceful occupation made battle unnecessary. 59,000 fans saw Coach Oscar Hagberg's white shirted lads score six points in the first period, seven in the second, 14 in the third and seven in the fourth to win going away. Michigan had an edge only in the second quarter, when it scored its lone touchdown. Breaks Play Big Part Breaks, many of which were made by the hard-driving sons of the Navy, played a large part in the game. A recovered fumble led to Navy's first touchdown, and a short Michigan punt helped produce the second. A blocked kick, a pass interception, and a fumble played key roles in all the second half tallies. Despite the lop-sidedness of the score, Michigan apparently was going to make a game of it as the first half ended, losing two golden chances to tie the score late in the second period. The second half, however was all Navy, as Michigan made only one$ serious threat. Statistically the Middies enjoyed a wide edge with 15 first downs to 7 for the Wolverines. Michigan had a slight edge in passing, but that was more than made up by Navy's big margin in rushing totals-235 yards to 75. Total offense figures gave Navy 310 yards to Michigan's 181. Here's how it all happened. Bob Nussbaumer brought back Jim Carrington's opening kickoff from the 10 to the 40. Two line plays lost three and a complete pass was just short of a first down, forcing Michi- gan to punt. Navy Scores Early On the first Middie play from scrimmage, Tony Minisi skirted his own left end from the 21 to the 37 for a first down, but Navy could not sustain the drive and had to kick. Starting on their own 20, the Wolver- ines again could not gain and kicked back to the Navy 46, the Middies picking up 26 yards on the exchange of punts. Michigan got that back on the very next play as Walt Ten- inga intercepted Bruce Smith's pass on his own 15 and came back to mid- field. The Wolverines managed to pick up one first down on a pass and two running plays, penetrating to the Navy 40 before (All-American Bobby) Jenkins intercepted Pete Elliott's pass at the 38. The Middies then began the drive that led to their first score. With Minisi doing most of the ball carrying, Navy roared all the way to the Mich- igan 31 before losing the ball on downs. On the next play, a Wolverine lat- eral went awry and Navy Captain Dick Duden pushed the ball out of bounds. Minisi then passed to Leon Bramlett, all alone along the side- lines, for the score. Jack Currence's kick was wide. Another Michigan miscue gave Navy its second touchdown shortly after the second period opened. After the Wolverines failed to gain follow- ing the kickoff, Jack Weisenburger sliced an eight-yard boot out of bounds on the Michigan 31. Scott Scores on Pass Bruce Smith first passed to Capt. Dick Duden to the 15 and then to Clyde Scott for the score. Scott took the touchdown heave on the 10 and ran right through two Wolverines to the goal. Currence, place kicker extraordinary, converted this time, making the score 13-0. Michigan was not disheartened, ap- parently, and came right back to count its first tally. After an ex- change of punts following the kickoff, See Middies Page 7 Erich Leinsdorf Is To Conduct Concert Tonight Making its eighth appearance on the Choral Union Concert Series, the Cleveland orchestra, under the direc- tion of Erich Leinsdorf, will present its program at 7 p.m. in Hill Audi- torium. Leinsdorf, who has recently re- turned from service in the Army, had previously been with the Cleveland orchestra for two years. Before that time, he was associated with the Met- ropolitan Opera House where he con- ducted performances of scores by Wagner and Mozart. The orchestra has presented net- work broadcasts and short-wave pro- grams. A total of approximately, 43 concerts are given during annual tours by the group, and as many as 147 concerts are given in its 28-week season. The Bruckner "Symprony No. 7 in E major" will be the opening number, on tonight's program. Other numbers to be included are the suite from Copland's ballet, "Appalachian Spring" and Ravel's "Bolero." Sidney Small Elected IFC Alumni Head Fraternity Regulations Discussed by Group Sidney R. Small, Psi Upsilon, was elected president of the University's Interfraternity Alumni Conference at a meeting of the board of directors yesterday. Other officers elected by the board were Robert W. Sinclair, Delta Tau Delta, vice-president and H. Seger Slifer, Chi Psi, secretary-treasurer. With representatives of 17 campus fraternities attending, the Confer- ence selected thet following direct- ors: Small, Sinclair, and Paul R. Kempf, Phi Kappa Psi, three year terms; John Cooper, Sigma Phi, John R. Pear, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sli- fer, two year terms; and Arthur S. Aiton, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Thurlow E. Coon, Sigma Chi and Clarenc T. Fishleigh, Kappa Sigma, one year terms. The board appointed Kempf, Sli- fer and Edward B. Ham, Alpha Delta Phi, to serve on an advisory board to Dean of Students, Joseph Bursley. The status of a set of fraternity regulations, "Post War Plans for Fra- ternities,"'was discussed with special emphasis being given to the inter- pretation of a clause urging the hir- ing of housemothers by fraternities. Dean Bursley stated that a fra- ternity could either hire a house- mother for full-time service, or it could get together with five or six oth- er fraternities tp hire a roving house- mother who would visit each house about once a week. Kempf told the conference how necessary it was for the alumni groups to exercise an active control over the fraternity situation. Truman, Attlee Begin Confab Leaders Will Discuss Atom Bomb, Palestine WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 - (W) - President Truman and Prime Mini- sters Attlee and MacKenzie King be- gan discussions this morning on what to do with the atomic bomb. Mr. Truman has called for "outlaw- ing" the bomb and Attlee has talked about putting it in the custody of the United Nations, but neither has out- lined yet a specific course for its fu- ture. It is expected that the question of Jewish immigration .into Palestine will also be taken up. In the mean- time the Pan Arab League reached a secret decision on the Palestine prob- lem at a meeting yesterday but de- clined to announce any details. Reliable sources in London said to- night that Great Britain and the United States had agreed upon crea- tion of a joint committee to deal with the question of Jewish immigration into Palestine. Rev. Long To Give Two Talks Here Rev. Loy L. Long, traveling secre- tary of the Student Volunteer Move- ment who is visiting Ann Arbor this week, will give two talks and be avail- able for conferences on Christian See- vice work during his stay here. Addressing his first audience at 4:30 p. m. today in the Congregational Disciples Guild, Rev. Long will speak TO ELIMINATE IMPERIALISM: CAMPUS EVENTS sisten tuaill of th thro realiz to pr which mode Dr. H H gove f . 1 Huntley Urges Freedom for Liberal Japs By PHYLLIS KAYE If we allow the democratic forces in Japan as much freedom as is con- in so far as we do not endanger it with our basic security, I believe the people themselves will even- our ptisatoover the concluded,"eventual y do away with the outmoded imperial system," Dr. Frank L. Huntley amoptimstic ver ial gven- e political science and English departments stated yesterday. naet andthe estabishmentovef 'When I first heard of the proposal to keep the Emperor on the democracy. It will take years; it ne, I was chagrined. However, after the full situation was known, I may even take a revolution, but I zed we were not binding ourselves am confident that it will be done otect a way of life and worship cratic government on any country. if we allow Japan to recover from h is completelyinconsistentwith We must not allow them to associate the intellectual myopia she has rn science and living,"'continuedWemusuffered under the suppression of [untley. democracy with the taste of defeat, the imperial government." e contends that the imperial They will only value it if they must Dr. Huntley, who is at present ernment has remained in power fight for it," Dr. Huntley said. teaching one political science and -,-- f_--. ,-I .- r n ih fThff h f hq ndneV __. - .. . To Direct Cleveland Orchestra -.' ERIC LEINSDORF Student Earns Navy Award In an anniversary celebration held at the University on the 170th birth- day of the United States Marine Corps, Pfc. Dennis E. Youngblood, USMCR was presented the N'avy Cross, for "extraordinary heroism" on Saipan. The award was made by Major Harry Calcutt,, USMCR after an an- niversary speech. Following the pre- sentation Youngblood reviewed the University's Marine detachment. Attending the ceremony were the 20-year old hero's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis C. Youngblood of Rochester, Michigan, Need Price Controls Says Martha Sawyer "If price control does not work, the dam will burst and the flood tide of ;_in~"," tril _1T-r nl r u1 mnllr Today Second Choral Union Con- cert with the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra at 7 p. m. in Hill Auditorium. Nov. 12 Community War Chest canvass of all University residences begins. Nov. 12 Russky Kruzhok, Russianx Circl, meeting at 8 n. im. q