.CREi'jS FREEDOM See Page 4 i Li It gu iiis FAIR 1.11OLERi)V VOL. LVI, No. 124 ANN ARBOR, MICIHGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1946 .. . .. . PRICE FIVE CENTS Honor Plan In Arts To Be Offered Degree Program Will Resume in Fall The degree program for "Honors in Liberal Arts" will be resumed in the fall of 1946, according to an an- nouncement by Prof. Stanley D. Dodge, of the geography department. Instituted in the College of Liter- ature, Science, and the Arts of the University in September, 1939, for a trial period of five years, the pro- gram will once more be in effect after a lapse of four years, Prof. Dodge ex- plained. "Honors in Liberal Arts," he said, "is a concentration program open to juniors, who are admitted on the basis of their academic record, ordi- narily requiring a "B" average, and upon completion of their group re- quirements. The program offers qual- ifled students an opportunity of de- veloping their individual talents fully, through reading, writing, and discussion. Application For Admission Application for admission, he ex- plained, may be made in his office or Dean Erich A. Walters' office. The Board of Tutors, he added, has full authority over the admission of stu- dents to the Honors Program as well as over their schedule of courses. Further information may be obtained from consultations with Professors John Arthos of the English depart- ment, Palmer A. Throop of the his- tory department, Burton D. Thuma of the psychology department, Mischa Titiev of the anthropology depart- ment, and Dodge. Prof. Dodge continued, "After ad- mission to the Honors Program each student is assigned to the tutorial group in which he is to work. Per- mitting the student to follow his spe- cial interest within the limits of the field of study of his particular group, the tutor has freedom to design pro- grams peculiarly suited to the indi- vidual's needs, and which will evoke his best efforts." Senior Essay Prof. Dodge added that in the sen- ior year each student is expected to write an essay upon a subject selected by him in consultation with his tutor, which will be judged by members of the Board of Tutors and faculty members whom the board may invite to help judge. "The student," he said, "is also re- quired to write final comprehensive examinations in his field of concen- trated study and collateral fields. Students who demonstrate superior ability in these various tests of com- petence are recommended for honors at graduation." The Program will include courses in study based on the "Great Books" program pursued at St. John's Col- lege, as well as others to be decided when it is known who will be able to take part in the program. Kingsbury Is Reappointed 'Ensian Head Florence Kingsbury, '47, was reap- pointed 'Ensian managing editor for the coning year by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications yester day. Ann Wallerstein, '47, and Lorelei Nierman, '47, were made associate editors and MaryrLou Rookus, '47, was appointedbusiness manager. Miss Kingsbury is from Detroit and is a member of Gamma Phi Beta. In addition to being managing editor this year, she served as junior editor for three semesters. She is junior cap- tain of the League merit tutorial committee and historian of SOIC. Miss Wallerstein is from Richmond, Va., has had experience on the 'En- sian as asociate editor and junior editor of schools and colleges. She is WAA dormitories manager and a member of Wyvern. Miss Nierman comes from Chicago, Ill., is a member of Sigma Delta Tau and has been both a senior and junior editor on the 'Ensian staff. Miss Rookus is from Detroit and is a member of Kappa Kappa Gam- ma. She has been "'Ensian sales man- ager and advertising manager. Paris Peace Talks Begin PARIS, April 25 -- (RI) - Foreign ministers of the United States, Russia, Great Britain, and France met today , Local Greek Letter Groups State Views On Pledging Fracas By ANITA FRANZ With the Alpha Xi Deltas still maintaining silence, 12 local sororities and fraternities expressed diverse comments last night on the stand taken by the Vermont Chapter of Alpha Xi Delta against the national sorority's one year rushing ban. While the question of whether or not there is a national Alpha Xi Delta ordinance against pledging Negroes remained unanswered, four University Greek letter organizations admitted that their national constitutions carry such a ruling. Rushing privileges of the Ver- mont chapter were revoked follow- ing the pledging of Crystol Malone, Negro student from Washington, D. C. The national sorority claimed "unanswered letters" as reason for the order, but the local chapter re- fused to comment on this subject. The Vermont girls declared that though they would abide by the rushing ban, they would not de- pledge Miss Malone. Thirty-one of the University's forty- three fraternal groups declined com- ment. Panhellenic Association, inter- sorority organization, also refused to make a statement. The Executive Council of IFC agreed at a meeting yesterday afternoon that a frater- Cand id ates Will State Plans at Rally Monday Platform Talks Will Be Held to 2 'Minutes Candidates for seats in the Univer- sity's post-war Student Congress will discuss their platform at a pre-elec- tion rally at 7:30 p.m. Monday at Waterman Gymnasium. Each of the 63 students running for office under theCongress-Cabi- net constitution will present a two- Candidates for Student - Con- gress must give their radio scripts to Dorothy Murcek before 2 p.m. today, Miss Murcek said last night. minute statement of his intentions and experience at the rally, which is sponsored by Men's Judiciary Coun- cil. Campaign Rules Council spokesman repeated yes- terday that all sorts of campaigning will be permitted with one restric- tion: the University rule barring elec- tioneering on campus must be ob- served. The Council yesterday imposed an eligibility requirement on Student Congress candidates, but all the can- didates who have so far reported have passed the requirement. Names of candidates who fail to meet the eligi- bility standards will be stricken from the ballot, the Council ruled. Eligibility cards must be secured from the Dean of Student's office, Rm. 4 University Hall, and be signed by a member of Men's Judiciary be- fore noon, Saturday according to the new decision. Dollar Fee Required The Council also requires that pe- titioners pay a dollar at the time eli- gibility cards are signed in order to defray expenses of a special election bulletin to be printed late this week which will carry the names and plat- forms of all eligible candidates. Members of Men's Judiciary will be at the Union student offices from 3 to 5 p.m. today for the purpose of signing the certificates of eligibility. nity's national headquarters is re- sponsible for determining regulations -and that the local chapter is bound to abide by its orders. Taking the stand for national authority were two fraternities, while only one sided with local au- tonomy. Digressing comments on racial equality varied from the two statements adamantly against admittance of Negroes to two ap- pealing to higher democracy. Favoring final national authority, Fred Kalinko, social chairman of Delta Upsilon, speaking as an indi- vidual, asserted that "if the local chapter oversteps the boundaries set up by the national organization, then the local chapter should stand the punishment. It is a let-down on the reputation of the other chapters' names to pledge Negroes. We would not consider pledging a Negro here:" Theta Chi's president, Raymond Glasser, also taking national's side, See LOCAL, Page 2 Work Continues On Construction Of U' Buildings While University officials refuse to comment on the status of the build- ing program with the Civilian Pro- duction Administration, work con- tinues on several of the University's construction projects. In preparation for the new General Service Building, several houses and Morris Hall have been razed and work is underway to fit sewer con- nections under Jefferson Street. A power-shovel on the site of the new building is starting ground-grading work. Several excavations have been made around the foundation at the east side of the Chemistry Building in preliminary work for its new ex- tension. Construction guide-marks have been made on the building and several truck-loads of lumber have been accumulated nearby on cam- pus. Sport Schedule Baseball is the only sport sched- uled for home play this week-end when the Wolverines face Chicago University'si nine in two games slated for today and tomorrow afternoons on the Ferry Field dia- mond. Today's tilt is set for 3:30 p.m. and tomorrow's contest will begin at 2:00 p.m. Coach Bill Barclay will take his link squad to Columbus, Ohio to- night for their initial Big Ten match with Ohio State, and the Wolverine Tennis team will start their Conference schedule tomor- row when they face the Indiana and Purdue net squads at Lafay- ette, Ind. Classes To Be Let Out Before 11 Dawson To Speak At Convocation Classes will be dismissed from 10:45 a.m to noon today so that stu- dents and faculty members may at- tend the 23rd annual Honors Con- vocation to be held at 11 a.m. in Hill Auditorium. Prof. John P. Dawson of the Law School will address the convocation, at which 723 students will be recog- nized for outstanding scholastic achievement. Prof. Daws6n, who came back to the University this se- mester after a leave of absence, will discuss America's responsibility in world affairs. Recently returned to this country from Cairo, Egypt, where he served as director of the Near East division of the Foreign Economics Adminis- tration, Dr. Dawson also held a po- sition as acting regional economics counselor for the Middle East in the :tate Department. At the beginning of the war he also held a position in the rent section of the OPA in Wash- ington. Seniors with at least a "B" average who rank in the upper 10 per cent of their class will be honored this morning, as well as underclassmen who have attained a 3.5 average or higher. Graduate students selected for outstanding achievement in spe- cial fields and receipts of special awards for merit will also be recog- nized. Visiting educators from throughout the state convening here for the an- nual meeting of the Michigan School- masters Club are expected to attend the convocation. Names of the honor students and the program of the convocation ap- pear on pages 6 and 7 of today's Daily. Nationalists Admit Major( Chintese Defeat CHUNKINQ, April 25-(P)-The Chinese government acknowledged today its second major defeat in Manchuria within a week, conced- ing that Communists were seizing the northern metropolis rf Harbin. Minister of Information K. C. Wu said Harbin, city of 520,000, was given up as ,lost to the Communists "who already are in the city." The last Russian soldier was due to leave by nightfall. Resistance Expected A Communist spokesman declared he believed Communist troops occu- pying Harbin and Changchun would resist all outside pressure to "sur- render these cities to the central gov- ernment." Changchun, Manchuria's capital, fell to overwhelming Communist forces after a savage, four-day battle ending last Thursday. Settlement Wanted A dispatch from Nanking quoted Lt. Gen. Chao Chia-Hsiang, govern- ment chief of staff in Manchuria, as saying a few days ago he would tell Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek that his generals were losing their stomach for the Manchurian fighting and wanted a settlement. Wu said that under the Red Army schedule for quitting all Manchuria by Tuesday, the Russians were sup- posed to be out of Harbin by night- fall, but that the government was without late word. Gromyko 's Opposition to UN Investigation of Spain Stalls Security Council UAW HEADS CONFER. . . R. ' Thomas (right), President of the CO United Auto Workers Union from 1938 until his defeat by Walter Reuth- er (left) last month confers with his successor at the union's executive board meeting in Chicago. Thomas says Reuther is seeking to estab- lish "dictatorship" in the big union. 3 500 Teachers Attend Meeting;. Schoolmasters Debate Draft Law . Miller Favors .Trainling ro Improve Health Compulsory military training was the topic debated by members of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club yes- terday at the Eleventh Annual Con- ference on Problems in School and College Cooperation. Prof. Henry W. Miller, chairman of the Department of Mechanical and Engineering Drawing, stressed that the health of America is not up to modern standards, and warned that we are not through with wars. He ad- vocated a type of military training which would be aimed at correcting defects and would make men more physically fit if war comes again within the next ten years. The negative viewpoint was taken by Virgil M. Rogers, superintendent of Schools in Battle Creek, who de- clared that compulsory military training is un-American in character and the military must remain the servant, not the master of the people. As effective alternatives to military training, which Rogers believes has been made obsolete by the atomic bomb, he urged that we make the United Nations a strong police force. Petitions Due in June for Volker Fellowships Applications of seniors interested in the Volker Fellowships offered by the National Training School for Public Service are due by June 1 the Committee of Fellowships in Detroit! announced. Fellowships of $1200 are outright grants and are in addition to any rights under the G.I. Bill. They are available to current seniors. The National Training School for Public Service is an independent foundation incorporated to provide means to train men and women for professional services with citizen agencies, for effective participation in community leadership, and for ad- ministrative positions in the public service. Academic instruction is provided by the School of Public Affairs and So- cial Work of Wayne University, De- troit. Students interested may write to Lent. D. Upson, 5229 Cass Avenue, De- troit, 2, Michigan for application blanks and further information. Beethoven's Life To Be Shown in Movie Starring Harry Baur, a motion pic- ture based on the life of Beethoven Six Speeches Planned In Educators' Program "Education for One World," will be discussed by Philip C. Nash, president of the University of Toledo, at 9:15 a.m. today in Rackham Auditorium at the general assembly of the 59th Annual Schoolmasters Club meeting. Approximately 3,500 educators from grade schools, high schools and colleges throughout the state are at- tending the three day conference. Highlighting today's program will be a reception and annual dinner for members at 5:30 p.m. in the First Methodist Church with an address by W. Norwood Brigance, president of the Speech Association of America on "The Teacher's Heritage." Prof. Dora V. Smith, of the educa- tion department at the University of Minnesota, will speak on "Out of a Hundred Visions," at 2:15 p.m. today in Pattengill Auditorium, Ann Arbor High School. Delta Kappa Gamma and Pi Lambda Theta are giving a tea in honor of Prof. Smith at 4 p.m. today in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. T. Luther Purdom, director, Bureau of Appointments and Occupation In- formation, is chairman of the Fifth Annual Conference on Teacher Sup- ply, Demand and Placement, which will open with a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. Topics to be discussed include the reasons for teachers leaving the pro- See SCHOOLMASTERS, Page 2 MCF Prizes Are Awarded Didier, Taylor Explain Views on Christianity Prizes were awarded to ten win- ners of the Michigan Christian Fel- lowship essay contest at an open forum meeting in Lane Hall last night. Subjects for the contest were "Why I Am a Christian" and "Why I Am Not a Christian." First prize winners, Calvin W. Didier and Robert L. Tay- lor, read their papers. Didier stated that "the historic Christian faith can be fully accepted without negating or denying any known fact of science or history. None of the beliefs in this definition of Christian are untenable in view of modern scientific and historic re- search." Taking the negative side of the topic, Taylor said, "I cannot believe that anything very significant is ac- complished by deciding that this or Delegates Are Bewildered by Amend ments Russia Says Civil War Is Not Always Bad By The Associated Press NEW YORK, April 25-A blunt Russian stand against any investiga- tion of Franco Spain by a United Nations Security Council commission stalled the council today and caused a 3'2-hour confused debate which ended without a decision. The council adjourned until 11 a.m. tomorrow after arguing in vain over a rapid succession of resolutions and amendments which had council members thoroughly bewildered at times. Andrei A. Gromyko, the Russian delegate, summed up a long speech in Russian early in the session with the declaration that evidence already put before the council left "no doubt that the Fascist regime of Franco, as it exists at present in Spain, is indeed a serious danger for inter- national peace and security." Hodgson Proposal He remained unshaken in his stand againstea proposal by the Australian delegate, Lt. Col. W. R. Hodgson, for a commission to inquire into the af- fairs of the Madrid government des- pite a direct appeal by Sir Alexander Cadogen, British delegate. Poland, whose delegate, Dr. Oscar Lange, precipitated the Spanish con- troversy by offering a resolution de- manding a complete diplomatic break with Franco Spain by the United Nations, added to the confusion late in the session by offering a resolu- tion which would appoint a sub-com- mittee of five members to study the basis for a unanimous decision by the council and to draft a resolution con- taning recommendations for "prac- tical steps to be taken." Civil War Danger Gromyko, who spoke after Stettin- ius and Hodgson had joined in sup- porting appointment of a commission to investigate the Franco regime, re- ferred to Stettinius' statement that the United States wanted to avoid civil war in Spain. He declared that "inaction" by the United Nations "would increase the threat to peace which is at present" coming from Spain. Insight's April Issue To Have More Pages The April issue of Insight will have not only more pages and larger di- mensions, but also more comprehen- sive subject matter, according to Joyce Siegan, editor. Insight's first issue was concerned entirely with student government on the campus. The April issue, which will be on sale Monday and Tuesday, will further develop the magazine's policy of presenting articles of stu- dent interest on campus, national and international subjects. This month's magazine will in- clude an article on "Racial Democ- racy in the Navy." In his discussion of the relations between Negroes and whites in the service, Phil Westbrook describes the introduction of Negro workers into an office force which had never included Negroes. There will also be an interview of Hendrie Theunissen, a student from the Union of South Africa, which compares college life in the United States and in South Africa. AVC Endorses OPA Extension The Willow Village chapter of the American Veterans Committee an- nounced yesterday that it had sent a night letter to the Senate Banking Committee endorsing the extension of the existing OPA law for at least another year. "As members of the fixed income PEACETIME CONSCRIPTION: High Schools o Hold Debate Finals a " e ' * * Ann Kontas and Robert Carson of Lansing Sexton High School will de- bate the negative and Harvey Moes and Nelson Stegeman of Hudsonville High School will uphold the affirma- tive of the question of compulsory peacetime military training at 8 p.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall in the championship debates of the Michigan High School Forensic As- sociation. The Lansing and Hudsonville teams are the finalists in a debate tourna- ment in which 125 high schools in the Lower Peninsula have taken part. The semi-finalists were Hamtramck High School and Royal Oak High School. Two preliminary tournaments and one elimination tournament were held in each of eight districts, and the eight winning teams competed in fur-