IN THIS CORNER . . See Page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State ~aitr CLC )UDY, MILD VOL. LX, No. 55 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS Students Launch Phoenix Campaigi I Today - - _ _ _ I * * * Poll Reveals Y Students Like U EduCation 'Average' Student Satisfied Here By GEORGE WALKER Most students are well satis- fied with the education they're getting at the University, a Daily spot poll taken last week indicates. A team of Daily tryouts asked more than 300 students what they thought about the University, how it compared with similar schools, how well it was preparing them for jobs, and how well they thought it equipped them for life in a democracy. ANSWERS ranged from extreme dissatisfaction to enthusiastic ap- proval, but most replies revealed that the "average" student is fairly contented with his educa- tion here. Many of the students volun- teered pet gripes and sugges- tions; almost none of them re- fused to answer the questions. Here's how the 300 answered The Daily's four questions: 1. How do you describe the quality of education you are re- ceiving at the University? 1. Poor ...........6.5% 2. Fair ...........16% 3. Good...........57% 4. Excellent ......20.5% 2. Do you think the faults of the University are characteristic r of most large state supported institutions or peculiar to the University of Michigan? 1 Found in most large universities ......84% 2. Found only in the Uni- versity of Mich. . .16% 3 How well do you think the education you receive here will prepare you foryourvocation? 1. Not at all ......13% 2. Fairly well ......47% 3. Very well........40% 4. How well do you thing the University is preparing you to contribute to and enjoy the benefits of a democracy? 1. Not well .........15% 2. Fairly well ......50% 3. Very well .......35% Not designed as a scientiftc poll, The Daily's survey was meant only as a random check of student opinion. Pollsters stationed them- selves along the Diag and other, busy campus walks, interviewing students without consideration of their class, school, or sex. SOME OF THE students refused to answer the questions on the grounds that the poll was ill- timed, claiming that they couldn't give intelligent opinions so soon after mid-semesters. Many of the interviewed at- tacked bluebooks, grades, and the other traditional trappings of education. Other answers were unique. "The presentation of courses is terrible," one student commented. "They (professors) kind of scare the wits out of you-a sort of terrorism. They patrol exams to stop cheating, but the exams are so long there's no time to cheat." * * * ANOTHER: "If people think that MVIichigan is no good, they should try a few other schools I could name." Many students criticized the counseling system, suggesting that academic counselors should be given more time to spend in coun- seling. One student confessed that "it is far too easy for any ignoramous to slip through and gain a de- gree. It is my opinion that if the faculty really knew the poor atti- tude of a number of their students and what very little actual know- ledge some students were acquir- ing, there would be far less grad- uates from an institution which, in reality, has all the potentiali- ties of being a truly fine school." "The correlation between lec- tures and recitations is very poor," another student re- marked.- One student proposed that grades be only "satisfactory" or "unsatisfactory." Hasty Work. Stonas CITES PALESTINE: UN Could Settle Disputes-Bunc e Goal To Set New EVERYBODY - APPARENTLY -- DOES IT * * * * Benefit WSSF Drive Today Ticket sales will continue today for the Arts Chorale's first pre- sentation of the year, at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium, as part of the World Student Service Fund's 1949-1950 drive. Under the leadership of Prof. Maynard Klein, the 160-member student group has been rehearsing for nearly two months in prepara- tion for its first campus appearance. * * * * THE PROGRAM will feature works by Palestrina, Bach, Brahms, as well as several spirituals, including "Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho" and "Were You There." Praetorius' "Sing We Now With One Accord," Jacques Fevre's "Love Me Truly, Sheperdess," and "Rise Up My Love, My Fair One," by Helly Willan are in- cluded in other choral works to be sung.o Organized last year at the re- quest of literary college students seeking an opportunity to sing s I V standard choral works, the Arts r Chorale has grown from a group of about 40 literary students to analc all campus group, 160 strong, in- tungh ing cluding students from nint colleges and .schools of the University. By The Associated Press WITH PROCEEDS from ticket Desperate Chinese Nationalist sales going to the WSSF drive for defenders checked the Red rush funds to.aid needy students over- on Chungking less than 20 miles seas, the return from the sale of from the city gates, the Chinese six tickets could furnish an Aus- Nationalisthgovernment announc- trian student with hot breakfasts ed last night. for one month, while one month's The reprieve will give the few treatment in a Tuberculosis sani- top officials still in Chungking torium can be furnished from the time to fly tomorrow to Chengtu. returns of 60 tickets. That city, 170 miles to the north- Lending their support to the west, will be the government's promotion of the program are next stopping place. WSSF Drive Chairman Wym Price, Arts Chorale-WSSF Drive MEANWHILE a second Ameri- Chairman, Nancy Watkins, Arts can ship reported being shelled Chorale Publicity Chairman, Myra and damaged by Nationalist war- Hahn, and Ann Watermanne, ships in the Yangtse River near Usher Chairman. Communist-held Shanghai. Tickets will be on sale today . All persons aboard escaped in- until 5:00 p.m. in the Administra- jury. tion Building and in the League, As far as is known, Generalis-' priced at 50 cents. simo Chiang Kai-Shek still is in I 1 j f +7lc I Lecture .. . By ROMA LIPSKY The Palestine situation was part of a pattern of United Nations in- tervention in every trouble spot in the world, Dr. Ralph J. Bunche told a Hill Auditorium audience last night. By its action in Palestine and in other tense international incidents, the UN has given ample demon- stration that it can solve any sort of dispute, the head of the UN's Trusteeship Council and former Mediator in Palestine declared. * * * "THERE IS NO difference of any kind between states or people in the world today which cannot be settled by peaceful means," Bunche said. He called the cessation of the Palestine war and the partition agreement eventually reached "A UN effort and success-not an individual effort." At the same time, he paid high tribute to his predecessor as UN mediator in Palestine, Count Folk-Bernadotte, who was assas- sinated in the summer of 1948. * * * NEVER WAS there a more courageous o r internationally- minded man," he said. Bunche described the four- week truce negotiated by Berna- dotte in June 1948 as a "brilliant and ingenious piece of work. That four-week period effective- ly stopped a war, which if con- tinued, would have involved more than just the Jews and Arabs." In describing the peace and par- tition meetings which the United Nations sponsored at Rhodes, Bunche said the biggest problas faced by UN mediators concerned personal relations. "Questions of substance never reached the point where delegates threatened to leave, but this did happen on questions of human re- lationships between the Israeli and Arabic delegation." Stressing the importance of the UN in the world today, Bunche outlined the international organi- zations' purpose as one of pre- serving present peace by effective intervention in world trouble spots, and building a firm foundation for future peace. National Round- Up PHILADELPHIA - CIO Presi- dent Philip Murray yesterday key- noted the founding convention of the new CIO Electrical Workers Union with an hour-long blast at Communism. He pledged the full weight of the CIO to aid the new organization which officially calls itself a right wing union. The CIO president served notice that other left wing unions may be ousted from the CIO, as was the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America. * * * WASHINGTON - An engi- neering plan for a plant de- signed to create the scarce atomic materials that make the A-bomb explode has been put on paper, the Atomic Energy Commission s a i d yesterday. Lawrence Hafstad, a top AEC scientist, hailed this as "the big- gest forward step in peacetime application" of atomic energy. * *. * ALBANY, N.Y. - A New York supreme Court Justice yesterday declared unconstitutional t h e Feinberg Law prohibiting employ- ment of Communists in the state's public school system. Interview - . Dr. Ralph J. Bunche yesterday shied away from answering ques- tions concerning recent rumors that he Will soon be appointed U.S. ambassador to Russia. In an interview held at the Un- ion shortly after his arrival in Ann Arbor, Bunche, chief of the UN trusteeship Council and former UN mediator in Palestine declared: * * * . . "I READ OF SOME new disposi- tion of my body every day. The power of the press is important, but the power of appointment still rests with the executive branch of the government." (Most recent reports concern- ing a new post for Bunche have come from the Philadelphia In- quirer, which quoted "sources close to the Government" as fa- voring Bunche for the position.) Bunche sandwiched his Ann Ar- bor appearance in between com- mittee meetings at Lake Success. He arrived here by plane late in the afternoon, and flew back to New York immediately following his Hill Auditorium talk last night. * * * JUST BEFORE he left the UN headquarters yesterday, he had been attending a meeting attempt- ing to iron out the political status of South West Africa. "The present government of that territory-the only man- dated area that has not yet been given independence or placed under trusteeship-wants to be left to administer the mandate without interference," he ex- plained. Debate on the issue has been so heated that the case will probably be turned over to the International Court, Bunche said. Report Soviet Zone Disaster Kills 2,000 BERLIN-(P)--Unconfirmed re- ports of a disastrous fire and ex- plosion in a Soviet Zone uranium mine which caused up to 2,000 deaths were published yesterday in Western Berlin. The British-licensed Telegraf, with Socialist Party underground sources in the Russian Zone, said the fire broke out in the Johann- georgenstadt mine, deep in Sax- ony's Erz Mountains, 150 miles south of Berlin. A SIMILAR report was broad- cast by the American Radio Sta- tion RIAS which said it came through "reliable" channels. Its sources listed the number of dead in the "hundreds." U.S. Army intelligence sources said they had not thus far heard any report of an east zone mine disaster. The Telegraf's toll figure of 2,- 000 lives would make it the great- est mine disaster in German his- tory. A coal mine at Kamen, in the Ruhr, blew up in 1946 with a loss of 418 lives. In the Johanngeorgenstadt dis- aster only 300 miners were saved from a normal shift of something less than 2,500, the Telegraf said. The mine and nearby workings are reported to employ more than 5,- 000. The fire broke out Thursday, ac- cording to the Telegraf, when worn insulation on electric cables caused a short circuit. It spread to three uranium workings and set off an explosion of a dynamite dump. Most of the miners, the paper said, were trapped and were suffo- cated from poisonous gases and smoke or burned to death. -Daily-Alex Lmanian MARV LUBECK student Phoenix chairman Under grad Leaders Get NVIFCVoice By JAMES GREGORY An energetic group of under- graduate IFC leaders, which brought about introduction of the anti-bias resolution passed by the National Interfraternity Confer- ence last weekend, later won for undergraduates a voice and pow- er in next year's convention. This was revealed yesterday by Jake Jacobson, '50, IFC President, who attended the NIFC conven- tion in Washington, D.C. * * * THE PRIVILEGE of introducing motions was denied the under- graduates this year by unani- mous vote of the Conference's 58 voting members, representing 58 national fraternities. These repre- sentatives were all alumni. The undergraduates, with their power on the floor thus limited to discussion, weredcon- sequently forced to seek out a voting member to introduce the anti-bias resolution they draft- ed in a rump caucus. Jacobson was a member of this caucus. Alexander Goodman of Balti- more, a member of Phi Alpha fra- ternity, agreed to introduce the motion. The motion, reworded by the NIFC resolutions committee, passed by a vote of 36 to 3, with 19 fraternities abstaining. THE REWORD ED resolution recommends that member frater- nities of NIFC consider the di- crimination question in the light of prevailing opinion, and take such steps as they may elect to do away with bias clauses. It notes that many member fra- ternities have no bias clauses in their constitutions. Following official adjourn- ment of the convention, those undergraduates who had formu- lated the anti-bias motion met again and completely revised the organization of their section of the conference. The nation's local IFC's will form five districts, the undergrad- uates decided. Each district will hold a convention of its member IFC's next spring. A workshop of IFC heads will be held during next year's NIFC convention. The NIFC will allow this workshop to present resolu- tions on the flooras a group, Jacobson said. Adoption of the complete reor- ganization plan by NIFC's Execu- tive Council is certain, according to Jacobson. He pointed out that several Executive Council mem- bers were present at the reor- ganizational meeting. "I was very pleased with the action taken by the convention on the problem of discrimination, and with the plan for reorganiza- tion of the undergraduate part of the conference," Jacobson de- clared. I dent campaign. Another purpose of the stu- dent campaign, besides raising funds, is to acquaint the stu- dents with the scope of the Phoenix Project both for their own benefit and so they may ac- quaint the public at large with the Project's aims, Lubeck said. A third purpose of the drive is to serve as stimulus for the general alumnus campaign. A fine stu- dent showing will tend to increase alumni donations, Lubeck added. * * * THE MICHIGAN Memorial- Phoenix Project is a unique re- search plan into the peacetime uses of atomic energy which Pres- ident Alexander G. Ruthven has called "a project bigger than the. .University itself." It will study both scientific and social implications of atomic energy and will embrace almost every department of the Uni- versity. The total campaign fund, goal is $6,500,000. This fund will be used both to sponsor research projects over the next ten years and to construct a Phoenx Project build- ing, which will house laboratories, a library and an auditorium. * * * THE NATIONWIDE special gifts drive of the Phoenix Project drive is now under way, as are a number of Project-sponsored research projects. Structure of the student cam- paign consists of an executive committee, four special purpose committees and the solicitation committees. Heading the executive commit- tee is Lubeck, drive chairman. The executive committee also consists of the drive's vice-chairman and three members-at-large. The four committees are pubci- ty, features, personnel and speak- ers. * * * LUBECK WAS appointed early this semester to his post by the Phoenix Project National Execu- tive Committee, but the other members of the executive commit- tee and the four special purpose committees will be selected from students who petition for them. The publicity committee will handle all publicity and the fea- ture committee all special events, Lubeck revealed. The personnel committee will take charge of getting student so- licitors and handling other per- sonnel problems, Lubeck said. The speakers committee will send student speakers to student groups and other groups, Lubeck added. Men Needed For Michioras Michigras needs men. Michigras is the traditional big- time carnival which springs up on campus from time to time in the spring. It was last presented in 1948, and will appearragain on April 21 and 22 at Yost Field House, complete with a myriad of booths, shows, rides and concessions. * * * BUT RIGHT NOW, men are needed to plan the details of the mammoth spectacle. Nine important positions are open to male students, accord- ing to Jan Olivier, '50, and Bill Petersen, '50, co-chairmen for High forCampus Personal Soliciting To Begin Next Fall by 1,500 Volunteer Workers By JOHN DAVIES The student campaign of the Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project, termsd by its chairman, Mary Lubeck, '51, "the greatest responsibility ever given the students of the University" opens today. The goal of the campaign will be between $100,000 and $200,000 which is several times greater than the largest previous student drive. An army of 1,500 student campaign workers will personally solicit every University student next fall, Lubeck said. First STEP in the drive is the announcement by Lubeck of the opening of petitioning today for 12 leadership positions in the stu- ** * Petitioning For. Phoenix Drive Starts Petitioning for 12 leadership po- sitions in the student campaign of the Michigan Memorial-Phoenix Project opens today, Campaign Chairman Mary Lubeck, '51, re- vealed. Petitioning closes Saturday. Pe- titions may be obtained at th Of- fice of Student Affairs, 1020 Ad- ministration Bldg., where they are to be returned when completed. ONLY STUDENTS who expect to be enrolled at the University next year-1950-1951-are eligible to petition, Lubeck said, because the drive continues through the spring of 1951. Positions will be awarded by a committee consisting of Lubeck, Mary Riggs, chairman of the. Women's Judiciary .Commttee and Robert Shepler, member of the Men's Judiciary Committee. Basis for selection, according t Lubeck, are organizational expe- rience, leadership ability and in- terest. * * * ANNOUNCEMENT of positior winners will be made public at aT undetermined future date. The following are the 12 lead- ership positions and their duties. They, plus campaign chairman Lubeck, form the Student Exec- utive Committee of the student campaign 1) Vice-chairman-Assists the chairman in his executive duties. 2) Chairman of the publicity committee-Supervise the e:ten- sive publicity of the campaign. 3) Chairman of the features committee-supervise the plan- ning of the several special events to raise funds and publicize the campaign 4) Chairman of the Personnel Committee-Supervise the selec- tion of solicitors and other per- sonnel , 5) Chairman of the speakers committee-Supervises a commit- tee of student speakers who will speak on the Phoenix Project to various student and adult groups THE FOLLOWING four mem- bers - 6) - 9) - supervise the planning and enactment of solici- tation of the students within their respective areas. 6) Chairman of men's dorms 7) Chairman of women's dorms 8) Chairman of fraternities (also includes sororities) 9) Chairman of other students 10) to 12) Members at large- to take on special assignments and generally participate in the Exec- utive Committee's work. Committee chairmen-numbers 2) to 9) above-are both members of the committee they head and the Executive Committee. MSC Accepts 'CarnegieGiftr EAST LANSING-(-P)-Mlchi gan State College yesterday ac- cepted a gift of $32,500 from th Carnegie Corporation of New Yor toS. ~v-iin nan a.pn. vngmm rcpnfl B ig 3 Begins Mapping West Defense 'Are' PARIS - (A') - The Big Three soldiers of the West yesterday started mapping a 3,500-mile de- fense arc across Europe from the Norwegian Arctic to the Aegean Sea. The chiefs of staff of the United States, Britain and France met in the first of a series of sessions to complete a unified defense plan for the 12 nations of the North Atlan- tic Pact. SIMULTANEOUSLY, it was an- nounced from Frankfurt, Ger- many, that U.S. Gen. Thomas T. Handy, 58-year-old veteran war planner, will be chief of the billion dollar American arms aid program in Europe. He is now commander of U.S. forces in Europe with head- quarters at Heidelberg. At the same time U.S. Defense Secretary Louis Johnson declar- ed on arriving in London that U.S. forces in Germany are "ready for any emergency that might be thrust upon them." Gen. Omar N. Bradley, chair- man of the U.S. joint Chiefs of Staff, presided at the meeting of the chiefs of staff. THE ACT OF Congress setting up the military aid program saidl Chungking directing the city's defenses. Planes wait at the air- port to take him and other lead- ers away. High quarters predicted Chiang would resume the presidency in Nationalist China's bleak hour if acting President Li Tsung-Jen re- fuses to return. Li, who has split with Chiang, is in Hong Kong. Chiang sent two emissaries to Hong Kong to talk with Li. BEFORE THE government re- portedly checked the Communists, reports reaching here said the Nationalist defenses had been smashed. (An Associated Press dispatch from Formosa said in this con- nection that the Communists fought into the suburb of South Springs, 12 miles from the city proper, but were driven out.) Confusion spread through this wartime capital at the news the Communists were near. Roads were black with refugees fleeing the city. Most shops were boarded. Own- ers feared looting by civilian mobs or by Nationalist troops. Soldiers moved in and out of the city. There was a crush of military traf- fic in the streets. NATIONWIDE PHONO RETURNS: Billboard Poll Shows RCA Sales Rising Steadily By ROZ VIRSHUP cate by any means that the 45 sys- I for the week of November 10 rep-I were 219 three-speed phonographs,