PAGE SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1952 I ONE IN FOUR ENROLLED: ROTC Claims College Men By MARV STEVENS Better than one in every four American college. students now sport the Army's olive drab, the Navy's dark blue or the Air Force's light blue uniform. At the University, almost 1400 students are enrolled in some branch of the ROTC, with the Air Force predominant, followed by the Army and Navy respectively. Enrollment in the ROTC has in- creased at a rapid rate to 46 per- cent of the male freshman class registered in the officer candidate program. THE PERCENTAGE tapers down to 22 percent of the sopho- more male populations, 16 percent of the junior class and only ten percent of the senior class in the programs. With future college en- Two Ann Arbor Business Firms 'Cited by OPS Requests for injunctions against two Ann Arbor business places for failure to comply with OPS ceil- ing price regulations have been filed in Federal court here. It marked the first such action against Ann Arbor establishments. Special Assistant U. S. Attorney Forest W. Gilmore filed the re- quests on behalf of the Office of Price Stabilization's Detroit dis- trict office. TARGETS of the proposed in- junctions are the Shea Service Co. at 211 N. Main St., an appli- ance repair shop owned by John T. Shea, and the Bob Westerman Hi-Speed Service Station at 1100 S. University Ave., owned by Rob- ert H. Westerman. "Both Ann Arbor places have been repeatedly notified of the provisions of CPR-34, reqdiring a statement of ceiling prices to be filed with the OPS district office, but neither has complied," Gilmore said. John J. Frank, director of en- forcement for the OPS district, termed the two actions "only the opening gun in a campaign of strict enforcement of OPS regula- tions throughout Michigan." Hearings on the injunctions will be held on April 14. In a January survey of seven Michigan cities by the -OPS, Ann Arbor and Jackson were reported to have the smallest percentage of compliance with the law gov- erning service-type establishments. The survey indicated some 98 violators of CPR-34 in Ann Arbor. rollments anticipated to continue at the present rate, about half of the male students in the Uni- versity in a few years will probably be receiving military instruction. Col: Clarence E. Lovejoy, Edu- cational consultant and author of "Lovejoy's College Guide", says that more than 300,008 college men are in some branch of the ROTC. Lovejoy indicated that the reserve program has be- come an integral part of Amer- ican college life, with high school boys and their parents thumbing through college cat- alogues to see whether ROTC is offered. This tendency raises the ques- tion of whether the increasing tempo of military science in higher education poses a threat to liberal arts programs and the general orientation of college life. Commenting on this issue, President Harlan H. Hatcher said yesterday: "The principle and general approach is a sound one. On the whole the ROTC program has been conceived and carried out on a sound philosophy and a sound pro- procedure, based on the theory that in our democracy we must depend upon citizen-soldiers for the defense of the nation." President Hatcher felt "there is no conflict between military and academic training," explaining Campus Calendar Events Today RECREATION INSTITUTE - The first session of a training in- stitute for .summer recreation leaders in smaller communities will be held at 10 a. m. today in Rm. 3A of the Union under the auspices of the University Exten- sion Service. *, * * TRAVEL SERVICE - Repre- sentatives of the National Student Association Travel Department and Scandinavian and French student travel representatives will be in the League Lobby from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. today to advise students interested in summer trips to Europe. * * . GUEST SPEAKER - N. W. Mc- Lachlan, visiting professor from the University of Illinois will speak, in the first of two lectures, on the "Subharmonic Oscillations in Electrical and Mechanical Sys- tems" at 4:15 p. m. today in Em. 1400 of the Chemistry Bldg. that "The number of hours in- volved in ROTC training are not so excessive as to interfere ser- iously with general education." To the question of whether mil- itary training might make stu- dents more prone to believe in war as a social means, the president replied, "All evidence is to the con- trary. By no stretch of the imagi- nation can I see ROTC making our boys military-minded." * * * THROUGHOUT the nation, the effect of ROTC on college life has been discussed, with college ad- ministrators taking many different views. Typical of one side is Colum- bia College Dean Lawrence H. Chamberlain's comment: "ROTC does not interfere with our curriculum. In most cases, military science is substituted for physical education or. an elective course. Short of all-out war, we do not propose to mod- ify our liberal arts program." Officials of Colgate University take an opposite view. With 90 per cent of the Freshman class enrolled in ROTC, "a significant addition to the prewar college curriculum has been made in which neither the selection, in- structors nor the content of the courses is under the direct control of- the college faculty or admin- istration," according to President Everett Case. President James B. Conant of Harvard views ROTC as a threat to graduate schools. "If a 'high percentage of able college students graduate as officers three years from now and then are on active service for two or three years, the flow of men into the profes- sional graduate schools will almost cease." The Army, earliest in the ROTC picture, now is in 230 colleges with an estimated 178,000 college stu- dents enrolled in 16 branches of service. The Air Force is in 187 colleges with an estimated 107,- 500 students. The Navy has units in 52 colleges with about 15,500 students enrolled. Pollock Hits Washington Duplication Special to The Daily DETROIT - Prof. James K. Pollock, chairman of the Univer- sity's political science department, yesterday attacked "duplication and waste" in the Federal Govern- ment and urged renewed citizen action in demanding reorganiza- tion: Speaking before the state con- ference of the Federation of Women's Clubs, Prof. Pollock said: "While nearly half of the Hoover Commission's recommen- dations have been adopted, many of the major extravagant and wasteful government practices continue while the suggested changes are ignored." "SCANDALOUS handling of the medical services of the federal government" is the result of 35 agencies attempting to give med- ical care to the people in 35 dif- ferent ways, the, former member of the Hoover Commission added. "The Department of Agricul- ture - a loose federation of autonomous 'bureaus, each with its own field force-- needs re- organization," he contiued. The political scientist pointed out that in one county in Illinois, 178 persons were telling the 2500 resident farmers what to do and what not to do at a cost of $86,000 in tax money. Integration of the military serv- ices into the Defense Department has also been ineffective, Prof- Pollock declared. "All three of the military services are vying with each other for appropriations which are full of duplications." Reorganization of the State De- partment personnel services, De- fense Department, Post Office, Veterans Administration and elim- ination of duplication between the Bureau of Reclamation and the Corps of Engineers are still not accomplished, he added. kStudents' Frolics Tme On * f* * A weekend comes in Ann Arbor-and some students abandon their books for other things. Braver souls will grab a date and move in mixed circles. But the stag and hag contingent fills the coffee shops and movie houses, reveling in a half-hearted sort of way. Still others, like the couple on the right, effect a compromise with that weird Michigan tradition, the "study date." x i * * * 'Typical' Weekend SOME PEOPLE NEVER GIVE UP r REMINDER!! Tickets on the VULCAN Spring Vacation Trip MUST be picked up TO5AY. Administration Bldg. Lobby - 2:00 - 4:30 P.M. P.S. We have a limited number of tickets left for Syracuse, Rochester, and Buffalo. SOCIALITES GRAVITATE TO THE FORMALS I'VE MORE IMPORTANT THINGS TO DO ... r ,I Oljecive es14~~s q~14~ -rngg rea~lty thoeLOS Bu on atmy9s u dfiruw ass of iat Be Happy- i O o ldl hars} and worries aU5S ,bus smke' s°altintae" peter C. rhora9n DagtinOUthcol" In a cigarette, taste makes the difference- and Luckies taste better! The difference between "just smoking" and really enjoying your smoke is the taste of a cigarette. You can taste the difference in the smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a Lucky .. . for two important reasons. First, L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco ... fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second, Luckies are made to taste better ... proved best- made of all five principal brands. So reach for a Lucky. Enjoy the cigarette that tastes better! Be Happy-Go Lucky! Buy a carton today! LS./M FT Lucky Strike Means Rne Tobacco COUPLES CAN ALWAYS SLIP ACROSS THE LITTLE CLUB DANCE FLOOR yS N (t s N', av i feTS Q0eS, °Vod o~c1Sha 't~c rend ,0o S 0n u u ies -9? e Before gur t)oc: las GeY portlaod I