ACADEMIC FREEDOM S; Page 4 1Lil(' si Iheaidlhie in th e ShIe ii CLOUDY, RAIN VOL. LVII, No. 141 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL, 25, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Bi FourEmd Peace Talks In Stalemate New Conference Set fors November By The Associated Press MOSCOW, April 24-The For- eign Ministers Conference ended tonight with Secretary Marshall expressing "disappointment" over failure to reach agreement on an Austrian peace treaty and a four- power pact against Germany. But Marshall, before leaving to attend a farewell banquet at the Kremlin given by Prime Mipjister Stalin for the top diplomats who had met in the Soviet capital for six weeks and four days, told newsmen they, should regard the conference as "the first round." The ministers of the United States, Britain, France and Rus- sia, who had been unable to reach agreement in 44 meetings since March 10 on any of the major is- sues in the writing of German and 9ustrian peace pacts, ended their session onl a note of amity. In a last minute decision they agreed to limit the number of Al- Jied troops in Germany and to ap- point a special commission to study the areas of disagreement on the Austrian peace treaty. The ministers themselves will meet again, in London in Novem- ber, unless all of them show up for the United Nations Assem- bly in New York in September. In that event a brief session will be held in New York. Marshall will leave Moscow for Washington via Paris and Berlin at 9 a.m. midnight tonight cen- tral standard time )tomorrow by plane . He was reported planning a report to the American people presumably by radio on the con- ference. He said that if he ar- rives on Saturday, as he expects, he will make the report on Sun- day, or Monday at the latest. Schoolmasters To Hold First Session T"oday Labor Relations SOt As Discussion Topic "Labor-Management Relations" will be the topic of the first gen- eral program session of the Mich- igan Schoolmasters Club to be held at 9 a.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. Provost James P. Adams will address the first session. John Airey, president of King-Seeley Corporation and director of the National Association of Manufac- turers, Ann Arbor, will speak on "The Educator's Job in Our In- dustrial Civilization." James P. All program sessions of the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club will be open to students upon presentation of identification cards. Carey, secretary-treasurer of the CIO, Washington, D.C., will talk on. "What Education Can Do to Promote Harmony in Labor Rela- tions." President Alexander G. Ruthven will act as chairman. Ruthven To Offer Greeting President Ruthven will greet the estimated 2,500 elementary school, high school and college teachers attending the conferences at the University today and tomorrow. The first session will be preced- ed by the annual business meet- ing. Second general program session of the Schoolmasters will be held at 7:45 p.m. today in the Ann Ar- bor High School Auditorium on the topic "Minority Problems." Speakers for the second general session will be Prof. Theodore See SCHOOLMASTERS, Page 2 Rent Increase Is Voted Down House Group Erases Prospects of Raise WASHINGTON, April 24--()- The House Banking Committee voted 14 to 10 today against a 10 per cent general increase in rents. A month ago, the committee voted 9 to 4 to put the 10 per cent A adenIeu Freednil T i0e IVIYDA Ban Student own Hall Topic iDaws More GM Workers Accept 11.5 Cent Campus Forum Is fxpeeted To Consider President Ruthvcen's Blan on AYD4 Affiliate Academic freedom will be in the local spotlight today when Stu- dent Town all takes over Hill Auditorium at 4:30 p.m. for an all- campus forum. The forum will be the first gathering of its kind since President Alexander G. Ruthven withdrew recognition from Michigan Youth for Democratic Action. Although Bette Hamilton, Town Hall chairman, reiterated last night that the forum was not called because of the banning action, it is generally expected that the subject will ,figure in the proceedings. - (Miss Hamilton said earlier this 1,000 Students T O Be Honored At Convocation Columbia English Professor To Speak The University will halt its regular routine of classes and studying for an hour this morn- ing to recognize 1,000 outstanding scholars at the 24th annual Hon- ors Convocation at 11 a.m. in Hill' Auditorium. Marjorie Hope Nicolson, Profes- sor of English in the Columbia University graduate school, will be the principle speaker. Topic of her address is "Merchants of Light." Classes will be dismissed at 10:45 a.m. to permit student attendance at the convocation. Reserved Seats Seats will be reserved on the main floor for students being hon- ored and their parents. Prof. Nicolson, a University graduate, received her B.A. degree here in 1914, her M.A. in 1918 and has also received honorary degrees from the University. She earned a Ph.D. at Yale University and holds honorary degrees from Mt. Holyoke College, Goucher Col- lege, Smith College, Elmira Col- lege and Middlebury College. Prof. Nicolson is author of the Conway Letters and has written several other books. In addition to contributing to The Atlantic Monthly, Yale Review and similar magazines, she has edited a large number of scholarly publications. A member of the advisory board of the Guggenheim Memorial Foun- dation, she was awarded a Gug- genheim Fellowship in 1926. Undergraduate students in the 14 schools and colleges of the University who have attained an average equivalent to at least half 'A' and half 'B' will be honored. Graduate students are selected for outstanding achievement in special fields. Fellowship and scholarship holders and the reci- pients of special awards are like- wise honored for outstanding work in particular fields. Honor Societies Members of the following hon- oraries will be recognized: Alpha Kappa Delta, Alpha Lambda Delta, Alpha Omega Alpha, Beta Gamma Sigma, Delta Omega, Eta Kappa Nu, Kappa Tau Alpha, Omicron Kappa Upsilon, Order of the Coif, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Kappa, Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Lambda Upsilon, Phi Sigma, Pi Kappa Lambda, Pi Lambda Theta, Rho Chi, Sigma Xi, Tau Beta Pi, Tau Sigma Delta. Social events planned for the day include a luncheon in honor of Prof. Nicolson, given by the Of- fice of Student Affairs at 1 p.m. in the Union, and a tea at 4 p.m. in Martha Cook for residents of the dormitory and members of the English department faculty. week that the petition to hold the forum was submitted to the Student Affairs Committee four days before President Ruthven an- nounced that MYDA had been banned.) The forum today will open with 10-minute speeches on "The Broad Issue of Academic Free- dom" by Prof. Louis Karpinski, of the mathematics department; Prof. John L. Brumm, of the jour- nalism department and the Com- mittee for Academic Freedom; Rev. Edward Redman, of the First Unitarian Church; and George Mupnick, of the University chap- ter of the Lawyers' Guild. The panel will include Prof. John P. Dawson, of the law school; Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department and members of the Student Legisla- ture, MYDA the campus chapter of AVC, the Lawyers' Guild, The Daily and the Karl Marx Society. University administrators were obliged to refuse invitations to speak at the forum because their presence is required at the Re- gents meeting beginning at 2 p.m. today, Miss Hamilton said. Wallace., Says U.S. After Oil In Middle East PARI, April 24--Pm)-Henry A. Wallace told the Anglo-American Press Association today the United States was "in the Middle East to get the oil of Saudi Arabia." "We are going to get that oil and I am a good enough American to want to see the United States get the oil," he said. "But I would like to use the United Nations so it would not seem so utterly damn imperialistic." He explained that by using the United Nations he meant the Unit- ed States should observe the UN charter which provides that nat-.I ural resources of the world be made available to all on a "fair and equitable basis." I Uni on Merger Discussion Set WASHINGTON, April 24-The AFL tonight agreed to meet with the CIO May 1 to discuss merger of the two organizations in the midst of congressional moves to restrict union activities. The date for the session, first in about five years between the two organizations on the question of consolidation, was suggested in Pittsburgh by CO President Phil- ip Murray. The AFL had proposed a meet- ing today but Murray informed the organization that he and oth- er members of the five-man CIO committee were tied up in bar- gaining negotiations and could not get to the capital. Student Fire iu [hven Receives SttidenitPetitions Student protests against the banning of Michigan Youth for Democratic Action continued to mount yesterday as 24 students declared in a statement to Presi- dent Ruthven that recognition was withdrawn from the organization by "arbitrary edict." The students, who said they were not affiliated with MYDA, de- scribed the action as being "not in keeping with the democratic principles ofacademic freedom." They added: "The fact that this organization was banned from the University by an artitrary edict might be indi- cative of similar action against the right of free expression. "As a democratic institution, the University of Michigan should pledge itself to uphold the rights of minorities rather than to sup- press them." Meanwhile, Harriet Ratner, '48, president of the now un- recognized MYDA, invited "any official spokesman of the Uni- versity" to speak on the radio simultaneously with p spokes- man of MYDA. Following up its decision to poll the campus for an opinion on President Ruthven's action in ban- ning MYDA, the Student Legisla- ture announced it will conduct a referendum from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday at four campus voting booths. The student body will be asked to approve or disapprove t h e Legislature's resoluition passed Wednesday night. Passed by a 29 to 3 vote, the resolution declares: "We, as the elected representa- tives of the students of the Uni- versity of Michigan,-adopt in its entirety the definitive statement on academic freedom set forth by the Committee for Academic Free- dom. "We therefore oppose the action taken by President Ruthven in arbitrarily withdrawing recogni- tion of a campus organization, thereby bypassing the Committee on Student Affairs, which is the traditionally and logically consti- tuted group maintained to handle such matters, in the belief that it is a threat to the free activity of every campus organization. "We deeply regret that the pressure brought to bear upon the administration of this Uni- versity should force that ad- ministration to act in such an undemocratic fashion. "We believe that no student group should be banned unless regulations have been clearly stated in advance governing con- duct of student organizations, spe- cific charges have been brought against the group in an official SAC meeting, and it is proved to the satisfaction of the SAC that there are adequate grounds on the basis of existing regulations for banning the group. "We request a public review of the situation before an open meef- ing of the SAC, with student and faculty representatives of the Committee for Academic Freedom present, and a clear statement of the general grounds for banning any group and the specific charges brought against Michigan Youth for Democratic Action in this in- sta nce."' A majority of the 10-member executive committee of the Stu- dent League for Industrial De- mocracy last night joined in the protest against the banning of MYDA. The committee, in a statement, said it was supporting "the Stu- dent Legislature's call for an open hearing on this vital issue" and urged that MYDA "be given a chance to learn the charges lev- elled against it and to answer these charges in an orderly meeting at which both sides be given a chance to speak." The Student League for Indus- trial Democracy was recently ap- proved as a campus organiza- tion by the Student Affairs Com- mittee. Lawyers Polled On Rental Boost Residents of the Lawyers' Club were polled by their student coun- cil yesterday on whether to re- Hourly age To Industry-Wide Pay Pattern Daily-Wake MICHIGRAS QUARTET-Pictured above is the quartet which has been visiting campus dances and parties to publicize the two-day Michigras, which opens at 7:30 p.m. today in Yost Field House. Left to right are: Lyons Howland, Audrey Buttery, Doty Johnson and Dick Housten. __________YT___________-'* *J*a Raise, Pointing Debaters Meet In Final Match At TU' Today High Schools Seek State Championship This is Forensic Day at the Uni- versity and over 500 high school debaters are expected to attend the annual event, which will be climaxed by the championship high school debate beginning at 8 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The two contestants, Lansing Eastern High School and Flint Central High School, are the sur- viving teams in a field of 125 schools which began elimination See PICTURES, Page 6 contests last fall. The topic of the debate will be the same as the one that has been used thus far throughout the contest: "Resolved, that the Federal Government should provide a system of com- plete medical care available to all citizens at public expense." The visitors will find a full day's program planned for them by the Forensic Association, which is a part of the University Exten- sion Service. First event on the program is the Honors Convoca- tion, which begins at 11 a.m. in Hill Auditorium. University debaters will act as guides for the visitors during a tour of the campus beginning at 2 p.m. today. This tour will end at Ferry Field at 3:30 p.m. where students will be guests of honor at a specially scheduled baseball game between Michigan and Illi- nois. The evening program will begin at 7:30 p.m. with a concert in Rackham Auditorium featuring the Ann Arbor High School A Ca- pella Choir, under the direction of Prof. Geneva Nelson, of the music. school, the Madrigal Singers from Flint Central High School and the Lansing Eastern High School Choir. The Flint Central team, coached See HIGH SCHOOL, Page 6 1 REVIVE FESTIVAL: Mchi gras Carnival Begis Tonight In Yost Field House Preceded by the traditional Michigras parade at 4:15 p.m. today, the first postwar Michigras carnival will be held from 7:30 p.m. to midnight today and tomorrow in Yost Field House. The parade will assemble on E. Ann St. at Fifth, and proceed from Fifth to Huron, Huron to Main, Main to Liberty, Liberty to State, State to South University and South University to East Uni- versity. Judges for the parade are to be stationed In front of Angell Hall. The judging committee includes Director of Bands Harold Ferguson, Dr. Margaret Bell and Mayor William Brown. Prizes will be awarded Reuther Says Union's Gain Is ~Substantial' Employees Also Get Six Paid Holidays By The Associated Press DETROIT, April 24-The wage dispute involving 220,000 General Motors workers was settled to- night on the basis of an 11/2 cent hourly increase as the way was pointed to the auto industry's new pay pattern for 1947. General Motors and the CIO United Auto Workers came to an agreement with dramatic sud- denness after an hours-long ne- gotiation session from which emerged the likely wage structure for a half million men in the nation's car factories. Three major points covered the agreement as announced by UAW President Walter P. Reu- ther, chief negotiator for \the union, and Louis G. Seaton, di- rector of labor relations for the corporation. These were: 1. An 11-/2-cent hourly increase to take effect as of today, subject to the union's ratification by May 5. The UAW-CIO's GM confer- ence, a 200-man rank and file representative group, voted later tonight to recommend ratification to the UAW's approximately 00 locals. Ratification thus was seen as a mere formality. 2. Six paid holidays for "sen- iority employes"-those with six months seniority on the job. This represents the 32 cents an hour by the company esti- mate which General Motors said makes the tota increase the. "equivalent" of 15 cents an hour. 3. An improved vacation pro- gram and a liberalized "call-in pay" system, Reuther characterized the gains as "substantial." The union had never asked for paid holidays and said it preferred to use part of any 15-cent in- crease for social security and re- tirement measures for, its mem- hers in 90 General Motors plants. General Motors termed its of- fer the equivalent of a 15 cent an hour pay increase but pointed out that "at no time" had it of- fered a flat 15-cent increase to the UAW-CIO "nor to any other union." Shaw Drama To Be Given Judy Greengard Plays Lead in 'Saint Joan' First Nighters filled Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre to capacity yes- terday for the first performance of Shaw's drama "Saint Joan," presented by members of the speech department's play produc- tion classes. Called the finest drama written .About the life of the French Saint, Shaw's play deals with the impor- tant incidents in Joan's life an their relation to the medieval con- flicts between feudalism and na- tionalism and between Catholicism -and Protestantism. Judy Greengard, student in the speech department, plays the role 3f Saint Joan with James Holmes as Cauchon, the Archbishop who betrays Joan to her enemies. Tickets are still available for ,he performance at 2:30 p.m. Sat- arday but night performances to- day through Saturday are "sold out." Hillelzapoppin To Play Tomorrow Competing for originality and hmn r . hnnnrcz, ot iticnf ' , an4 rn.. for outstanding floats and the best bicycle or motorbike decora- tion. In case of rain, the parade will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow. The two-day carnival in Yost Field House will offer entertain- ment, games of skill and refresh- ment to those attending. Three carnival rides, including a ferris wheel, will be set up inside the Field House, with 39 booths ar- ranged in sections in the center and sides of the building. Tickets will be sold at the Field House during carnival hours, with the admittance price including six concession tickets. Additional concession tickets may be pur- chased at ticket booths inside. This year's affair has been planned and directed by a com- mittee of 20, made up of WAA Board and Union staff members, chairmaned by Collee Ide and Al Farnsworth. A partial list of houses spon- soring booths include Sigma Chi, Jordan, Martha Qook, Theta Chi, Zeta Beta Tau, Delta Delta Delta, Theta Xi, Mosher, Alpha Omicron Pi, Phi Gamma Delta, Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Sigma Phi, Helen Newberry and Gamma Phi Beta. Other campus residences having Michigras booths include Alpha Xi Delta and Sigma Nu, Alpha Eta, Theta Delta Chi, Chi Psi, Alpha Phi, Sorosis, Kappa Alpha Theta, Adelia Cheever, Pi Beta Phi, Pray's League House, Willcox League House and Delta Gamma. All students, faculty and Ann Arbor residents are invited to at- tend the carnival by the commit- tee. UN Delegate Favors World Government Effectiveness of the United Na- tions will depend upon the willing- ness of member nations to sacrifice their sovereignty in a manner com- parable to that between the fed- eral and state governments of the United States, Samarindraneth Sen, delegate to the United Na- tions from India said last night before an audience of 300 at the International Banquet in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Stressing that his opinions were personal and not necessarily those of the Indian government, Sen urged that the "traditional demo- cratic countries" join together in a unit as strongly cohesive as that of Russia and her satellites. He said that the Truman policy of Greek-Tirkish aid hats npt frightened small nations nor weakened the influence of the United Nations because of the Vandenberg amendment, provid- ing for its approval by the Security Council. The banquet was sponsored jointly by the International Cen- ter and the Junior Chamber of Commerce of Ann Arbor as part of "International Week." The fes- ivities will be concluded tonight with the International Ball. World News at a Glance ! By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 24-John L. Lewis got back $2,800,000 of the $3,500,000 contempt fine against his United Mine Workers union today, and with a dramatic flourish sent a check for $100,000 to sup- port the nationwide telephone strike. DETROIT, April 24-Thousands upon thousands of Detroit area workers converged on downtown Cadillac Square today to protest pending Congressional labor legislation in a five-hour rally sponsored by the CIO-United Auto Workers. * * * * NEW YORK, April 24-Willa Cather, 70, one of the nation's fore- most novelists, died today. Cause of death was reported as cerebral hemorrhage. *-* * * WASHINGTON, April 24-A threat of a 1944 campaign fund expose "involving high Democratic party officials" came today from the defense at the war fraud trial of Andrew J. May, former House Military Committee chairman. Sawyer Smith, an attorney for the ex-congressman from RETURN ENGAGEMENT: SMovie Actor Plays Role Of Patient Here By ANNETTE RICHI Edmund Gwenn, recently seen here on the screen in "Of Human night stands to Theatres Royal in England, Scotland, Wales, Aus- tralia, New Zealand and Tasmania, Lyceum Theatre in London, had decided upon acting for his ca- reer. Al-f frtzf ( r nn ranaivAarl nl