THE SPEAKERS AND THE COMMITTEE See Page 4 Y Sir 43F :4Iaii4t 0" 0 0I Latest Deadline in the State ca VOL. LXH, No. 105 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1952 )LDER WITH LIGHT SNOW SIX PAGES Committee OK's M arriage Series New Decision Provides for Four Talks Following Spring Vacation By RON WATTS Daily Associate Editor The Marriage Lecture Series was given new life yesterday at a meeting of the Marriage Lecture Series Committee. The new plan, following a decision of the Committee three weeks ago to suspend the Series, calls for four lectures in the period fol- lowing Spring vacation. * * . * THE DECISION was made at a special meeting, called at the request of committee member Bob Baker, 52 BAd, .who is also vice - president of the Student Legisla- Checked" NEW YORK - (P) - Miss Michigan of 1947 yesterday won a new beauty title, Miss Police Lineup of 1952. "The best looking woman in the lineup in years," said ad- miring detectives as beautiful Peggy Ellsworth answered a federal charge of cashing stolen government checks. Sheis wanted in Michigan and agreed to go there when summoned. On that pledge, the willowy 24-year-old brunette was freed in $500 bond. World News Roundup By The Associated Press Earthquake Hits Japan .Inmmense Tidal Waves Cause Heavy Damage TOKYO-(AP)-Snow and bitter cold heaped misery on homeless thousands in Northern Japan last night and early today in the wake of one of the heaviest earthquakes of the twentieth century. Despite a terrifying pattern of huge tidal waves, collpsing homes, derailed trains, great earth cracks, and swamped fishing villages, it appeared the death toll would be amazingly light. THE LATEST official U.S. Ar- my estimatt of dead stood at 31 Japanese. Twenty dead and 170 injured were reported by Japanese police. There were no American casualties. The almost complete collapse of communications in the hard- est hit areas some 550 miles north of Tokyo delayed an ac- curate count of dead, injured and missing. However, the area is relatively lightly populated, citizens are wise to the ways of earthquakes. And a warning service spread the tidal t. wave alarm. Most Japanese along the coast took to theirheels at the first violent shock yesterday morn- ing; believing that tidal waves soon would come sweeping in. They were right. U' Calendar Change Aired At LitMeeting By DIANE DECKER The University Calendar got a thorough going-over by students and faculty last night at the fourth literary college conference, as the group launched into a heat- ed discussion of the Huntley- Crary plan. The Huntley-Crary calendar, which is co-sponsored by Prof. Frank Huntley and Prof. Douglas Crary, proposes to eliminate the "lame duck" teaching session be- tween Christmas vacation and final exams. IT CALLS for starting the se- mester several weeks earlier in the fall, which would bring final ex- aminations before Christmas. A five-week vacation would be given at Christmas-time and the second semester would also be- gin slightly earlier, permitting the dismissal of classes at an ad- vanced date in the spring. Various objections were raised against the plan. Several students complained that the five-week period after Christmas was a dif- ficult time to find jobs and pre- ferred the additional time at the end of the summer. Another student posed the question of summer school. Ac- cording to Frank E. Robbins, as- sistant to the president and chairman of the calendar com- mittee, the dates for summer school could not be juggled be- cause of the conflict which would be presented to the large number of teachers from other schools who attend the Univer- sity summer session. See 'U', Page 6 Hatcher To Give Lecture on Bible President Harlan H. Hatcher will be filling his first role as a ture. Baker, expressing the views of the SL, felt that the Series HST Peace Plea . . . could be made a success, provid- WASHINGTON - President ing certain changes were made. Truman broadcast a fervent peace Baker's suggestions inclued- plea yesterday to the hundreds of ed a reduction in the number of millions who live under Commun- lectures, a change in the ticket ist rule in an unprecedented ad- sale procedure and a revamping dress from the deck of the Voice of the Lecture topics. of America's new floating radio transmitter. The Committe decided that the * * * Series should be focused toward students at all levels in the Uni- Turkey Likes Ike . . versity. As Dean of Women Deb- A orah Bacon pointed out, "The ANKARA, Turkey - Turkey Series in the past have mainly pledged to Gen. Dwight D. Ei- been directed toward the seniors senhower in person yesterday and graduate students Now, more the supoprt of her big land, sea and more, women are being mar- and air forces and told him of ried at earlie periods during their plans to make them stil bigger. career." lTurkey has 400,000 men under arms. Ticket sales will be open to all students, and will sell at $1.50 Attempted Suicide per ticket. .-*. CINCINNATI - A troubled IT WAS THOUGHT that one young Negro perched perilously on lecture each would be given on a 47-floor ledge yesterday, threat- the sociological and psychological ening to jump in a real life drama that horrified thousands of televi- problems of marriage and two sion viewers. Finally, a priest and other lectures on the medical the man's father dragged Robert problems. M. Jones Jr., 24, to safety after 120 spine-tingling minutes. Four of the campus - groups a: represented on the Committee agreed to underwrite the Series. CP's In Civil Defense .. . They were the Union, the Stu- dent Religious Association, SL DETROIT - Detroit's Civil and The Daily. Although no de- Defense Director disclosed yes- finite promises were made, it terday the FBI had nipped an appeared that the fifth student attemte ibCommunotor City's organization, the League, might Civil Defense Program. Brig. also be able to accept part of the Gen. Clyde E. Dougherty said financial responsibility. that 156 of the first 5,000 appli- During the 14 year history of the cants for the Auxiliary Police Series, nationally recognized psy- Force were stamped "subver- chologists, sociologists and medical sive" after careful screening by men have spoken before the group. the FBL 'The Series had always been popular until 1947, when a declin- Red Subs Sighted .. ing interest set In. The situation CIUDAD TRUJILLO, Domini- culminated in a $491 deficit last can Republic - The Dominican year. Republic's Secretary of War said Three weeks ago the Commit- yesterday his country will com- tee had decided to suspend the plain to the UN Security Council Series for one year because of ap- that Russian submarines have vio- parent lack of student interest. lated Dominican territorial waters Critic of American Education To Speak in religion Series Renowned for his sharp criti- into a "religiously illiterate" na- cism of American education, tion. Canon Bernard Iddings Bell of the Two years ago the critical Episcopal Church Cathedral of churchman raised a great deal of Chicago will speak at 8:30 p.m. to- controversy by writing an article day at Rackham Lecture Hall. in Life Magazine in which he The second. lecturer in the Re- assailed American schools for em- ligion in Life series, Canon Bell phasizing the "know how" while is expected to attack the anti- completely ignoring the "know religious belief: "Education - why." training specialists to handle spe- American schools, he has charg- cial problems-is the way out of ed, give the impression that the our social and economic confu- student may have his cake and sion." eat it, too. He is taught "thai The eminent churchman has there can be reward without quest, accused the schools of turning wages without work, marriage out "a nation of Henry Al- without fidelity." driches." The main difficulty, After the lecture a public re- as he sees it, is that religion is ception will be held for Canon Bel] ignored, thus turning America at Lane Hall. e t f i l t f r t P s 1 E 1 Fierce Air. Battle Rages In Yalu Area UN Jets Down Five Red MIGs SEOUL, Wednesday, March 5- ()-Allied Sabre jet pilots pounc- ed on a flight of 70 MIGs crossing the Yalu River late last night and the Fifth Air Force said they shot downfive in a wild 30 minute bat- tle. Not since Jan. 25 have Allied pilots claimed such a bag of the fleet Russian-type jets. They de- stroyed 10 Communists Jets that day. THE FIFTH Air Force said its Sabres probably destroyed another MIG but it held up a definite claim pending a gun camera check. Allied losses, if any, were withheld. "We caught them by surprise and bounced the whole forma- tion," an air officer said. MEANWHILE, on the talking front, Communist truce negotia- tors insisted yesterday that 50,000 unaccounted for South Korean prisoners "do not exist" but Red propaganda .loudspeakers on the front lines flatly contradicted them. The Red loudspeakers boasted that captured South Korean troops now were fighting against the United Nations and blared this invitation to other Republi- can troops: "Come to us." The UN command again de- manded the Communists supply data on the missing 50,000 South- ern Korean troops end include them in any prisoner exchange. Negotiators scheduled more talks at Panmujom yesterday on the major stumbling blocks to an armistice, but no progress was made. The Reds refused to give up their insistence on Rus sia as a neutral truce inspector, The Allies were equally firm in insisting on voluntary repatria- tion 'of war prisoners and said they would not send back to the Reds any prisoners who did not wish to go. SDA Attacks. Speaker Ban; ElectsChiefs The Students for Democratic Action went on record last night as condemning the action taken Monday by the Lecture Conmmittee in temporarily banning speeches by Abner Greene and Arthur Mc- Phaul. The group also voted to deplore the existence of the Lecture Com- mittee. Action to coordinate the activities of campus groups who condemn the committee is being considered by the executive board. In a discussion of the SDA constitution, a strong majority voted to uphold a standing pro- vision under which the SDA re- jects any association with Com- munists, Fascists, or other to- talitarians. SDA members also unanimously elected temporary chairman Ted Friedman, '53, as president. Other newly elected officers of the group are: Paul Marx, '52, vice-president; Francine Leffler, recording secretary; Libby Gold- stein, '54, liaison secretary; Dave Kornbluh, '54, treasurer; Mark Reader, '55, and Leonard Sand- weiss, '53, two executive officers at large. Shelved by Hse Fraternity Pledge, Lists ShowDrop Nine Houses Fail To Get Pledges By JERRY HELMAN Results of the spring fraternity rushing, which ended last Satur- day, show a drop in the number of men rushing and pledging, with nine fraternities failing to pledge a single man. Beta Theta Pi, Zeta Psi, Trigon, Sigma Pi. and Kappa Nu were the social fraternities failing to turn in pledge lists. Of the remaining four, two, Kappa Alpha Psi and Omega Psi Phi, did not hold rush- ing this semester. Those remain- ing, Phi Iota Alpha and Delta Ep- silon Pi, are not social fraternities. NO SPECIFIC reasons were giv- en by the presidents of the five fraternities to explain the dearth of pledges. The general attitude was one of "It's one of those things," as one man expressed it. A back check over past pledge lists showed that in the past year and a half, three of the or- ganizations in question have had consistently low classes- Trigon totaled nine, Kappa Nu, 16; and Sigma Pi, four-indi- eating that each of them may be in some danger. However, other factors must be considered in determining-.a fra- ternity's "strength," according to Pete Thorpe, IFC Rushing Com- mittee Chairman, 'among them alumni support and the number of men the house budgets for. The results of rushing as a whole showed a drop in the number of rushees fro, 393 last spring to 317, and a decrease in the number pledged, from 375 to 274, with the percentage pledged dropping from a sur- prising 95 per cent last year to a more normal 87 per cent (for the spring semester). The total decline is just slightly lower than the drop in University male, enrollment this year as com- pared to last. Also the figure of 274 pledged is close to the num- ber the EFC, using a poll of in- dividual fraternities, estimated as necessary for all houses to open next year. SL To Discuss Coed Referendum A referendum asking student opinion on a new coeducational Union wil be debated at tonight's meeting of the Student Legislature at 7:30 p.m. at the Alpha Tau Omega House, 1415 Cambridge. SL will also take up the Lecture Committee issue for debate. It is hoped that the long delayed vote on women's representation on the athletic board will also be realized. -Daily-Welling Squier HAWAIIAN HULA-Mosa Kushi, '53L, "hulas" to a tune strummed out by Kiyo Taira, Grad. (left) and Roy Takushi, '53L, in a re- hearsal for the Pint Size Review, a free show which will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Hill Auditorium. Spectacular Talent Show To e KeyvnoteBlod Drive By MARGE SHEPHERD As plans for a spectacular Pint-Size Revue blood drive show swung into gear last night, the campus was being flooded with thousands of blood pledge cards. A galaxy of campus stars will appear in a free program of singing, dancing and dramatic routines at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Hill Auditorium, keynoting a drive for 3,0000 pledges. MEANWHILE, an "under the door" campaign is being staged by student drive workers, who guarantee that every student will have 01a pledge card in his possession be- .*T-1- fore the end of the week. PERMANENT KILLING? Truman-Proposed UMT Vote '52 Passage Hield Unlikely By Sponsors GOP Maneuvers Foil Democrats WASHINGTON -- (P) - The House voted 236 to 162 last night to send the Administration-backed Universal Military Training bill back to committee - just abbut wiping out any chance that the hotly controversial measure can Tbe passed this year. The bill would have made able- bodied youths liable to six months of military training as soon as they reached the age of 18. In ad- dition, it would have kept them in the reserves, and subject to recall, for seven and one-half years af- ter their training was finished. * * * PRESIDENT Truman and most military leaders, including Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, endorsed the bill. A number of church, farm, educational and other or- ganizations waged a strong cam- paign against it. Yesterday's final vot came after six hours of often stormy debate and complex parliamen- tary maneuvering. While the House Armed Ser vices Committee still can bring the measure to the floor for another vote at this session, Administra- tion leaders conceded in advaNca that a vote to recommit would probably , ll the bill forthe re- mainder of this year and perhaps for several years to come. THE VOTE likewise was expect- ed to sidetrack Senate considera, tion of similar UMT legislation. Voting-to, send the House bil back to committee were 155 Re- publicans and 8 Democrats. Against the motion were 131 Democrats, 30 Republicans and' one independent. In a final effort to get the mea- sure through, Administration forces agreed to put a six-year limit on UMT-supposing it had been finally approved by Congress -and also to forbid any start of the program so long as young men were being drafted through Selec- tive Service. In thesubsequentdrive toward final action, opponents threw a preliminary scare into UMT back- ers by pushing through, 160 to 145, a substitute measure calling only' for compulsory military training in high schools. End Case Club Semi-Finals Two teams of lawyers, the Champlin Club and the Woodward Club emerged last night as the winners of the semi-finals of the Henry M. Campbell Case Clubs Competition. Members of the Champlin Club were Al Blumrosen, '53L, and Al- bert Feldman, '53L, while the Woodward team was made up of Alan Kidson, '53L, and Hyman Berman, '53L. These two teams will come together in the finals, which are generally held in early May. Last night's cases, Involving Wage Stabilization Act regulations and their, relations to the consti- tution, common law, and the Taft Hartley Act, were each heard by a court composed of two practicing- lawyers in the field of labor law and one member of the Law School faculty. April Draft To Call 2,260 Micigan Men LANSING-( P)-Michigan draft Lower Prices WASHINGTON-(AP)-Mobiliza- tion chief Charles E. Wilson re- ported yesterday. an encouraging down-trend in a number of prices, and said he sees no need for fur- ther cutbacks in the supply of civilian goods. Nevertheless, Wilson said, the Administration's wage-price and other economic controls should be continued for another two years and in some respects strengthened. The Mobilization Director told the Senate Banking Committee that the nation's defense build- up is designed to run through 1954 and "we ought to have tie protection of the Defense Pro- duction Act through that pe- riod." Wilson was the first of about 75 witnesses the committee plans to call in its hearings on extension of the basic economic controls law; which expires June 30. In an attempt to facilitate collection of completed pledge cards, the main desk of every dormitory has been designated as a collection point. In the departmental competi- tion, the dentistry schol is still ahead withd127 pledge cards. The Law Schol is second with 89. Stockwell dormitory leads the way in the women's dorm race with 27 pledges. An inter-corri- dor competition has been set up within the dorm with the results being displayed on a huge poster in the main lobby. Martha Cook dormitory is sec- ond in the women's division with 27. Tri-Delt still leads the sorority -race with 23; Kappa Alpha Theta reports 13 and Alpha Delta Pi, 10. A cup to be awarded to the highest women's organization and a trophy for the men's group will be displayed at the Pint Size Re- vue tomorrow where several addi- tional prizes will also be an- nounced. TO CONSIDER THREE BASIC CHANGES: Union Plans To Amend 48 Year Old Constitution By MIKE SCHERER An attempt to amend the 48 year old Union constitution will be made Saturday, March 15, at a special constitutional meeting of Union members. Often attempted but seldom accomplished, the latest "reform" action will coincide with the Union's annual open house to gather the necessary quorum of 400 members. THREE BASIC CHANGES will be considered, according to Union President John Kathe, '52P. One amendment would alter the method of representation in presidents elected to seven and alter the system of representation and election. If the amendment passes, one vice-president will be elected from the combined schools of medicine and dentistry and one from the Law School by straight vote, while five will be elected at large by the Hare system of proportional representation from the re- maining schools and colleges. Chief reason for electing five members-at-large rather than by college representation is that more candidates of the necessary quali- fications and expecience could be elected, according to Kathe. Past experience has shown that often there are several, highly nalified candidates running from one eollege groun. while there Since that time, Union Board members believe that Men's Judi- ciary has been replaced by Student Legislature as the most represen- tative of student government on campus. Another reason for the change is the hope that SL-Union relations would be strengthened by SL representation on the Union Board, Kathe said. THE THIRD proposed amendment would simplify the method of making further amendments to the Union Constitution. Under the present laws, the constitution can be amended only bk three-fourths vote of a quorum of 400 Union members assembled together. The new amendment would allow the Constitution to be