f TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1951. ____________________.. Welcome Students Hamburgers, Sandwiches, Salads, etc. Also Complete Fountain Service CLARK 'L Student Prints Still Available Tomorrow will be the last day that over 800 framed prints of fa- mous paintings and drawings will be on display at the Rackham Building and also available for student rental. Since the beginning of orienta- tion week, these prints have been on exhibit from 8-12 a.m. and 1-5 p.m. every day, for the benefit of those students who wish to rent one for the decoration of their room. The charge for the print is fifty cents per semester. During this exhibition period, students may reserve the prints of their choice. 1950-'51 Rose Bowl, Draft Jitters Mark. Year Hatcher Replaces Rutiven at Helm The year 1950-51 was a signifi- cant milestone in campus history. After 22 years of service to the' University, President Alexander G. Ruthven retired and Harlan H.: Hatcher was named to take his 3' place. * * *, The News in * * * * * 'j, IL S- a,.. Retrospect 17 Observatory Across from Jordan Hall ___.__ .. r _ ., SAVE when you SELL and 6 SAVE when you BUY USED BOOKS at the / ' ..STU E 7T BO0*K E THE DEADLINE for enrollment under the GI Bill passed and the veteran's sobering influence gave way to an attempt to rehabilitate the old "rah-rah" spirit. Student enthusiasm strongly backed a Rose .Bowl football team and the Phoenix Project for atomic research. The issues were tossed around: academic freedom and discrimina- tion. And Korea was close-to- home as male students took phy- sicals, aptitude exams and prayed. This is a year at tne University: Sept. 25. University Registrar Ira M. Smith blamed the Korean situation and "unsettled world conditions" for the first big de- cline in enrollment since the end of World War II. Enrollment fig- ures showed a ten percent decrease in resident students since the fall of 1949 with only 18,527 students on campus. Sept. 26. In a sudden reversal of policy, the Student Affairs Com- mittee granted the Men's and Wo- men's Glee Clubs exemption from the eligibility ban of freshmen. Sept. 27. Official figures showed students had raised the campus grade average a mere .01 during the previous year. Sept. 30. An aggressive, confident Michigan State team out-maneuv- ered the disappointing Wolverines in registering a 14-7 victory over their traditional rivals. Oct. 2. Atom Day was proclaimed throughout the state by Gov. G. Mennen Williams, giving official recognition to the start of the na- tion-wide fund-raising campaign for the University's Memorial Phoenix Project. Oct. 3 The Daily held a reunion in celebration of its 60th anniver- .};,.} ":vry}c,}4.^..... . r.f.;w.[ W&r ,.Crr ROUSING FAREWELL-A wildly cheering crowd of close to 3,000 students gathered in front of the President's Residence May 22 to pay tribute to retiring University chief Alexander G. Ruthven and Mrs. Ruthven. A slight drizzle failed to dampen spirits as serenading continued into the night. * * n * , . U said would be an integral part of. the Phoenix Project. Dec. 11. Pledges to the student Phoenix drive totalled $100,000. Dec. 15. Gargoyle returned to, the roster of official student pub-. lications as the Board in'Controf of Student Publications condition- ally okayed a reinstatement peti- tion. More than 6,000 University facu- ty and non-academic employes re- ceived salary and wage ,adjust- ments amounting to approximate- ly a 10 percent increase. Dec. 16. Robert H. Stacy sat, quietly as he heard a Circuit Court jury return a verdict of guilty against him in the Haven Hall arson trial. Dec. 18. A silver streamliner glided over the midwestern plains carrying the Michigan squad on its way to the classic Rose Bowl grid battle on New Year's Day with the Golden Bears of Califor- nia. Dec. 19. The student Phoenix drive closed with $131,079 pledged. Dec. 20. Thomas Rowe was ap- pointed as Dean of the College of" Pharmacy to replace retiring Dean Charles Stocking. With an eye to a possible shor - age of rushees in the future, te Inter-Fraternity Council house presidents clamped down on "dir- ty rushing" with a erie of new regulations. Jan. 1. Michigi ( die-hard gridiron greats ea ned 13 first- downs and 14 points in the second half of the 1951 Rose Bowl game to hand the Big Ten its fifth suc- cessive victory by beating Califor- nia, 14-6. Jan. 6. Wined, dined and a trifle travel-weary, .Michigan's .R o s e Bowl champions received a warm homecoming welcome from a crowd of 5,000 townspeople and students as their special train ar- rived at the Ann Arbor depot. Jan. 11. Regent Ralph A. Hay- ward, prominent Michigan busi- ness and educational leader, died in University Hospital following a brain operation. Jan. 12. Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams slashed a $2,637,000 chunk out of the University's $16,337,00a (Continued on Page 3) WHAT: WHERE: WHEN: a non-profit book store run BY and FOR STUDENTS rooms 3 L NM,N Michigan Union Tues., Sept. 25 and Thurs., Sept. 27, 11-12 A.M. and 1-4 P.M. and Wed., Sept. 26, 10-11 A.M. and 2-4 P.M. S S A ! CB *:. . . . ..A : . :. . . . . . . . . . . . --------------- - m 1 TH IVI SWR ABOU BI 11 OLEGE OOTALL s'#f ,;,; ;>" at? s;>:< .,., 'I' ' <' >t >r >'' i?:y 3 :?: f,.S° o ., ,M ... ........ .......... .., THE SCREEN performs a public serv- ice with this story of one boy who heat the body-buying Sys* tem--and of the girl who made him a man! THE LOWDOWN on the "kept men" of that Saturday Afternoon Racket, where bodies are bought and hearts are broken so a mob can cheer! I/ From the celebrated COSMOPOLITAN serial! s 7&14~7, M ,a 5 r~l V.r lj hS: ^{i "" L } i 2g fr J f K h C L"". w Ak " }Y. Y' Y yif J: f J l.' s 1y f " . rr .4 Yh sary as the campus student news- paper. Oct. 7. Michigan's gridiron ma- chine began rolling in high gear+ using a long-range ground and aerial attack to whip the Dart- mouth Indians, 27-7. Oct. 10. An all-campus campaign for signatures for the Crusade of Freedom scroll got underway. In a dual move, the Student Af- fairs Committee granted the Arts Chorale exemption from the eli- gibility ban on first-semester freshmen and gave the group res- ponsibility for the academic grades of its freshmen members. More than 150 Pan-Hellenic members gathered in the Jeague to protest a new Dean's office rule changing the sorority rushing per- iod to the three weeks following the fall semester final exam period. Oct. 11. Robert N. Stacy, thirty- year-old University graduate stu- dent and teaching fellow, was charged with arson after admit- ting to police that he set the dis- astrous $3,000,000 Haven Hall fire, which destroyed the ancient lime- stone classroom building during the 1950 final exam period. Oct. 12. Stacy admitted he set fires in two other University build- ings just before the Haven Hall disaster of June 6. Oct. 17. The University Confer- ence of Deans vetoed a Student Legislature plan for elimination of Friday classes during the an- nual Thanksgiving holiday. Oct. 18. David Lilienthal opened the 1950-51 lecture series by ri- diculing the Atomic Energy Com- mission's policy of keeping all ato- mic information top-secret. Oct. 20. University officials an- nounced the acquisition of $4,000,- 000 worth of theatre stock, on a pay-as-you-go basis. The move was seen as an attempt to increase shrunken endowment revenues. Oct. 21. The passing and run- ning brilliance of Charlie Ortmann and a bounce-back gang of Michi- gan Wolverines made it a happy Homecoming Day in the Michigan Stadium with a convincing 26-13 conquest of the Wisconsin Badgers. Ann Arbor police picked up 26 students at the game for selling ten cent football programs. Oct. 28. A spirited crew of Min- nesota Gophers put a big dent in the Wolverines' Rose Bowl hopes when they came from behind in the final minutes to deadlock the highly-favored Maize and Blue squad, 7-7. ' Nov. 2. Gargoyle, suspended campus humor magazine operating from a subterranean stronghold, was barred from distribution on campus. Nov. 4. Snow and an inert Mi- chigan offense combined to give the Fighting Illini a 7-0 win in the worst game for spectators in Ann Arbor in a decade. Nov. 5. Students favored the re-election of Gov. Williams, Sen. Taft and Gov. Dewey, according to a Daily poll. The University moved into the television field in the first attempt ever made to pipe college-sponsor- ed courses into thousands of homes by video. Nov. 7. Prof. John P. Dawson of the Law School was defeated by his former student George Meader for the Second District Congres- sional seat. Nov. 8. University politichl sci- entists attributed GOP election wins to the Administration's Far East policy and the McCarthy probes. The Daily exposed student-run football pools on campus, unnotic- ed previously by both city and University officials. Nov. 9. Ann Arbor police and the county prosecutor's officebe- gan a joint investigation of cam- pus bookies following The Daily article. Nov. 11. Michigan's football team abandoned their previously indis- pensable pass offense in effecting a 20-7 win over underdog Indiana. Nov. 13. The Student Phoenix fund-raising drive got off to a quick start as four house groups hit 80% membership contributions on 'the first day of the campaign. Nov. 15. The Student Legislature voted to ask the Student Affairs Committee to clamp a six-year time limit on fraternities for get- ting rid of discriminatory clauses in their constitutions. Psi Upsilon fraternity was fined $2,000 and put on social probation till June for holding "a drinking party. Nov. 17. With the first week of the student Phoenix fund-raising drive nearly over, Phoenix officials were able to total up pledges ambunting to $16,000. Nov. 18. Michigan's improving Wolverines parlayed a crisp run- ning attack and a hard-charging defense into a 34-23 win over Northwestern's stubborn Wildcats. Nov. 22. University regulations, professors' instructions and blue books to the contrary, thousands of students tossed textbooks aside and headed home a day early for the Thanksgiving holiday. Nov. 25. The relentless Wolver- A HEARTY WELCOME IS EXTENDED TO THE CLASS OF 1955 WHEN DOWNTOWN, DROP IN AND VISIT OUR STORE. IT'S ALWAYS A PLEASURE TO SHOW OUR MERCHANDISE. WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF NATIONALLY KNOWN MERCHANDISE i. Van Heusen &, Hyde Park and Mallory Hats Manhattan Shirts, Neckwear, Pajamas McGregor Sportswear Alligator Rainwear Winston Suits, Topcoats and Overcoats Interwoven Hosiery - Wembly Ties Stradivari Sport Shirts THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN "We Serve to &Serve agdL 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET r ' F::? ee s; ; '; : w i .:.< ; +"" f . ; SS F$i S ines plowed through a foot of snow which blanketed the Columbus playing field to upset the Ohio State Buckeyes, 9-3, winning the Big Ten championship and a trip to the Rose Bowl. Nov. 28. Police arrested two stu- dents as the brains behind the football pools which operated on campus for five weeks during the fall semester. Dec. 8. With 1,200 Rose Bowl tickets distributed to students and faculty, weary athletic ticket office workers turned to the gigantic task of splitting up the remaining ducats among thousands of alum- ni. Dec. 9. General Motors granted the University $1,500,000 to estab- lish an Institute of Industrial Health which President Ruthven COLUMBIA PICTURES presents yAy yr ti51}' :G , i Jy iY \ yB':'; r ru' ' ra! rf J. r: %i 4'. fib r !$ '. ir: .S STUDENTS_- solve your LAUNDRY PROBLEM Do your entire laundry in half on hour at our store. Wash, rinse, and damp- dry clothes automatically in Westing- house Laundromat automatic washers. DRYERS AVAILABLE TO DRY CLOTHES COMPLETELY SHIRTS - QUICK SERVICED on our :....' ,,t;,t, r " nothing clannish about Arrow Plaids ...they're the best-liked i sports shirts on campus! Senator J. William FULBRIGHT Says: "A graphic portrayal of shocking practices as I know thrn." I i . t 3 starring r- ., i I I