PAGE SIX THE MICIIHIGAN DAILY ------------ Army Gripes To Be Heard in Secret Session Inquiry To Consider Caste System Reform By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 27-Secret hearings into complaints about the Army's alleged "caste system" were decided upon today, as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower took the position that "certain reforms" were in order. Eisenhower, Army Chief of Staff, asserted that distinctions of rank "must never imply or condone any assumption of human superiority." Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle, chair- man of a six-man board named to in- quire into the GI gripes, announced that the hearings opening tomorrow would be behind closed doors. He told reporters the board felt that wit- nesses would speak more freely that way than if the sessions were pub- lic. Gripes Permitted The witnesses have full consent from the Army's highest brass to unload their chests. The inquiry was ordered by Secretary of War Patter- son and Eisenhower, who acknow- ledged that there were "definite grounds for the type of complaint" that the board would' explore. Eisenhower's comment was con- tained in a letter to Rep. Francis Case (Rep.,S.D.) which the Congress- man made public today. Case had forwarded to the Chief of Staff a let- ter from Earl A. Hausle, an enlisted man stationed at Fort Benning, Ga. Case said that he also had heard other enlisted men's complaints about the "caste" system. Ike Upholds 'Humanity' "While we must make some dis- tinction based upon professional at- tainment andupon weight of respon- sibility," Eisenhower wrote Case, "these distinctions must never imply nor condone any assumption of hu- man superiority, which is not only unAmerican and unethical, but is in- effective in developing the kind of unit that is necessary to battle suc- cess." Religious Educator Will Lecture ~ere Prof. Ernest J. Chave, head of the department of religious education at the University of Chicago, will speak on "Factors in Religious Growth" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphi- theater. According to Dr. Edward W. Blake- man, Counselor. in Religious Educa- tion, Prof. Chave is an outstanding religious educator and a brilliant dis- cussion leader. He has served as presi- dent of the Religious Education As- sociation of the United States for four years, conducted experiments in public schools, and directed studies on a national scale for the Inter- national Council of Religious Educa- tion. WAR PROJECT: Prof. Menefee Discloses 'U' Tested Navy's Bomb Racks ASSOCIATED PRESS Navy bomb racks were tested at the University under conditions sim- ulating actual flying and bombing situations during the war, accord- ing an announcement released yes- terday. Prof. Ferdinand N. Menefee of the School of Engineering, who directed the project, said the teszs were car- .. GM Continues To gall Men. Back to Work DETROIT, March 27-(1P)-The back-to-work parade at General Mo- tors gained momentum today as the company continued to recall thous- ands of production workers. In 18 of.GM's 75 plans, a company spokesman said, local issues remain unsettled. Negotiations are continu- ing at these places. Largest local still having unsettled grievances is Flint Buick Local 599. Union officials there announced a membership vote has been scheduled for next Monday on a return to work pending a complete settlement. Al- fred Federico, local vice president, said, eight of 21 original grievances still are unsettled. Meantime, GM recalled workers in its plants scattered throughout the country on a progressive basis. A complete recall of all workers in a single plant requires about 10 days. The Chevrolet gear and axle plant in Detroit instructed 6,000 of its em- ployes to return to work tomorrow. At Lansing, a general menibership meeting of Local 602 ratified a re- turn to work at Oldsmobile and Fish- er Body plants. Lindsay To Lecture Here About China Michael Lindsay, one of the two foreigners living in the Chinese Com- munist area during the war, will lec- ture here on April 1 and 2. The lectures will be sponsored by the committee in charge of the De- gree Program in Oriental Languages. They are entitled, "The Problems of Chinese Unity" and "The Chinese Communist Area." Lindsay held the unique position of first hand observer of the Chinese communist movement during the war. He was teaching at the Yench- ing University, Peking, on Dec. 7, 1941, and upon the outbreak of the war left immediately for the Yenan region where he served as technical advisor for the 18th Army Radio De- partment. It was he who fixed the Yenan transmitter for foreign news service. PUCTURE NEWS ried on to insure that the bomb rak met Navy requirements for ever conceivable take-off, flying or land- ing condition which a bomber might encounter. Four of every 1,000 racks manu- factured were sent to the University for testing, Prof. Menefee said. If the four from each group of 1,00 with- stood the tests, it was assumed that the remaining 996 met specifications. Although each bomb rack weighed only 12 pounds, it had to be able to hold and release bombs weigiting from 100 to 2,000 pounds. The racks sent to the University were checked in seventeen tests. Some of the most severe of these in- cluded spraying the mechanism with sand to simulate a sand storm, a condensation test in which the rack was operated at high temperatures and then used after being cooled to low temperatures, and impact tests representative of conditions set up when a plane is forced to land with its bombs unreleased. Aid, for Local Health Needed) Vaughan Says The State of Michigan needs "a well organized public health agency at the community level," Dean Harry F. Vaughan, of the School of Public Health, declared yesterday at the opening session of the Conference for Public Officials. All local officials have a common responsibility in health promotion, Dean Vaughan said, and urged the construction of much-needed hospi- tals and community health cent er. located in accordance with a ~Ia e- wide plan. Officials Report The Conference also heard these reports by public health officials: Dr. William De Kleine, commis- sioner of the Michigan Department of Health, said that delay in public health measures has been costly to the community in terms of lost pro- duction time; Dr. Bruce H. Douglas, Detroit Health Commissioner, declared that Michigan was "weak" in following up arrested cases of tuberculosis and said that there are still some areas in the state which do not have ade- quate facilities for tuberculosis treat- ments; Tourist Problems Gilbert J. Russell, chairman of the District Health Committee at Petos- key, said that the "earnest coopera- tion of all tourist associations in Michigan is necessary if the health needs of thousands of vacationers are to be met." Provost James P. Adams, in ex- tending the greetings of the Univer- sity, declared that "each year edu- cation must accept larger responsi- bilities, and the University, dedicated to serving the people of Michigan, will make available new facts and new relationships in h lah . pob- lems." The Conference will hold its final sessions today. Payne Agrees To Postpone Rae Trial Justice Jay Payne agreed today to a postponement of the trial of Prose- cutor John W. Rae until May 3. Defense attorneys of the county prosecutor, who is charged with dis- orderly conduct, said that business pressure would forbid their appear- ance scheduled for Friday. The County Board of Supervisors have investigated Rae and charged him with being drunk Jan. 12. PRINTING PROGRAMS . CARDS . STATIONERY HANDBILLS, ETC. Downtown: 308 NORTH MAIN ATHENS PRESS S I N C E R-Pretty Margie Hughes, daughter of Frankie Carle, is a featured singer with "her dad's band., 1 9 4 6 S W I M S U I T S -Marking the return of two-way stretch swim suits, these Los Angeles models demonstrated some of the newest styles, Left to right, Robin Wood, Phyllis Young, Marjorie Saunderson, Angela Foster, Mary Lou Bennett, Betty Maire, Sylvia Morrison, Jean Chester, Connie Cezon, Mary Talent, Linda Cornell and Shirley Bright. S T Y L I S H - Judy Thorntonl (above) New York model,- was chosen one of America's 10 best dressed women in a fashion pol. P ( R A C Y P A T R 0 L--A British high-speed launch (left) passes a Chinese junk as it volnes into Kowloon Bay in the Hone onz area where the Roval Naiv v warrin mon iracY. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) all foreign students and their Ameri- can friends. Hillel Foundation: mass meeting at 7:30 tonight at the Foundation for all those interested in participating in the production of "Hillelzapoppin." Committees will be set up, and plans explained. All are invited. Coming Events The Graduate Education Club will meet on Tuesday, April 2, at 7:30 p. m. in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. A panel dis- cussion will be held with Drs. Clif- ford Woody and Max Wingo as par- ticipants. All graduate students in Education and faculty members are invited. The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065 at 12:15 p.m. on Friday, March 29. Dr. V. E. Monnett, Dean of the Graduate School of the University of Oklahoma, will speak. All interested are invited. The Graduate Outing Club is planning a bicycle hike on Sunday, Mar. 31. Those interested should pay the supper fee at the checkroom desk in the Rackham Building before noon Saturday and should meet (with bicycles) at the north-west en- trance of Rackham at 2:30 p.m. Sun- day. Sphinx Meeting at 7:15 p.m. Sun- day, March 31, In the lobby of the Union. All members on campus, both active and inactive, are urgently re- quested to attend to discuss reor- ganizational matters. Wesleyan Guild will go roller. skat- ing Saturday night, leaving the church at 9:00. All Methodist stu- dents and their friends are invited to come to the Guild Lounge at 8:45 to obtain guild identification neces- sary to stay overtime at the rink. The lounge will be open Friday night for those who wish to stay at the Guild Lounge. The annual presentation of dances choral singing, and vocal and piano solos offered by the girls of Martha Cook Residence Hall for foreign stu- dents and their friends will be held on Sunday, March 31, at 7:30 p.m. in Rooms 316 to 320 of the Michigan Union. The program is under the aus- pices of the International Center. Re- freshments and a social hour will be held in the Center following the pro- gram. Students of Polish descent who would like to attend the Polonia Club picnic Saturday, March 30, should call Edward Mazurkiewicz, 2-3073, before Saturday. R 0 C K H 0 U N D S - Preparing for a meeting of the Rocky Mountain Federation of Mineral Societies in Phoenix, Ariz., are (left to right) Jane Reed, Catherine Eastburn, Sandi; Barclay and Nancy Jennings, all of Phoenix,f Y 0 U N G T R A V E L E R S- Two little natives of Bikini atoll, among those removed to safety from the atomic bombing \site, sit on a dugout canoe.f ".They speak for themselve s" Linguaphone language sets NOW AVAILABLE in twenty-nine languages. 1_LS C E [t V I C C 0 N B I K I N I - Natives gather in the open for the last church services on Bikini atoll, atom bomb- r-