MATTER OF FACT See Page 4 Yl r e Latest Deadline in the State Dait1v COLDER., SHOWERS VOL. LXIII, No. 131 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1953 EIGHT PAGES SL Opposes New xam Schedule Asks Return to Past Plan, Creation Of Student-Faculty Study Group Student Legislature opposition to the revised exam schedule was registered with no dissent last night in approval of a two-fold petition to President Harlan H. Hatcher and the Deans' Conference asking immediate reconsideration of the move. \By authority of the easily passed motion, SL will ask President Hatcher and the Conference for "at least a temporary return" to the schedule followed in 1950-51 and 1951-52. If accepted, the SL request would begin this semester's exams Monday, June 1, instead of Friday, May 29, as the present schedule provides. TO DETERMINE future exam scheduling, SL will ask appoint- ment of a student-faculty committee to reconsider the entire ques- Campus YP Organization Closes Shop Fails To Submit Membership List By MIKE WOLFF It's the end of the road for the 'Young Progressives. After a turbulent five-year ca- reer, the local YP chapter hasj quietly allowed itself to die by not turning in a membership list# to the Office of Student Affairs, it was learned yesterday. This automatically costs the club recognition as an active stu- dent group fcr the semester. YP PRESIDENT Marge Buck- ley, '5, said she believed the only cam'pus now left with a YP chap- ter i's the University of Wisconsin. The group failed to submit its membership list because only a few people were willing to sign up, Miss Buckley said. She added that there are people on campus who are interested in the YP's but are afraid to have their names on the lists which were declared permanentwand open University records by the Student Affairs Committee in October. Re To s se Shield Allied Prisoners Supply Convoys 4 Manpower EAST LANSING, Mich. - (O) -The nation will exhaust its reserve pool of manpower for military service by the end of 1955, John A. Hannah, assistant Secretary of Defense in charge of manpower, said yesterday. Addressing members of the Michigan legislature at a Mich- igan State College dinner, Han- nah said: "We started drafting men at the 25 year level and now we are down to the 19-year-olds. We are using men faster than they turn 18' 2. By the end of 1955, the pool will be gone." Organization Committee EndsStudy No Great Change Advised for SL By VIRGINIA VOSS The four-month old Committee to Study Campus Organizations closed up shop yesterday without proposing any major change in student government structure. Agreeing to submit to the Stu- Observing tion as it affects commencement ' exercises. Faculty representatives would be those who have already investigated the exam-commence- ment conflict and students would be chosen by SL and the Senior Board. The Senior Board two weeks ago voiced its discontent with the schedule revamping in a letter to the Commencement Committee. In presenting his motion to the first SL meeting following spring elections, SL president Howard Willens, '53, cited the exam change as an "addition of a burden on students, faculty and certain administrative offi- cials without any particular so- lution to the problem." Willens claimed the change does not make Commencement Day "more meaningful"- the purpose See EXAM SCHEDULE, Page 41 for which the Regents and Pres- ident Hatcher suggested a revision. SENIORS who support the change, he said, are those who plan to leave immediately follow- ing exams and will not be on hand for commencement ceremonies. Willens indicated there was considerable faculty sentiment that pressure to get senior grades recorded faster will result in more "objective" exans, which are felt to be educationally faul- ty for certain courses. Petitions approved last night will be submitted today to Pres- ident Hatcher, Willens said. I Other exam schedule develop- ments included reports that exec- utive committees of the several schools and colleges have em- powered their respective deans to work with the registrar in assign- ing final senior grades in case faculty members fail to meet the grade deadline. In further Legislature action last night,hSL unanimously ap- proved the appointment of Leah Marks, '55L, as student represen- tation coordinator. 0 Straits Bridge Decision Due At the fifth annual Concrete Conference held here yesterday, Lawrence A. Rubin, secretary of the Mackinaw BridgeAuthority, set May 15 as the deadline for Michigan's decision on whether to .. bridge the Straits of Mackinaw. He told the 250 person confer- ence that he felt that the steadily declining bond market would pro- hibit investment after that date. Wyvern Taps 20 New Members Singing the traditional "Damn, Damn, Damn to Michigamua" members of Wyvern, junior honor- ary for women, wound through the halls of women's residences last night tapping 20 new members. Those tapped were Lorraine Baldwin, Sue Beebe, Mimi Buck, Jill Coleman, Becky Conrad, Dor- othy Fink, Margaret Guenther, Donna Hoffman, Joan Hyman, Connie Jackson, Lois Klein, Lucy Landers, Sally Lorber, Margaret Lord, Joan Merrill\Margery Milks, Dorothy Myers, Chris Reifel, Janet Reinstein and Robin Renfrew. Life Cards Now Available at Union All Union members who will New Legal .Plan Stirs Local Scene By FRAN SHELDON Sharply divided opinion con- cerning the need in Washtenaw County for a second circuit judge highlighted the local legal scene yesterday. The SAC ruling was a reversal In a Daily survey of 26 local at- of a secrecy regulation passed in torneys, 17 of the men interviewed May 1948 at the request of the were opposed to the passing of a YP's. The '48 rule stated that bill scheduledttohappearbefore membership in political groups the State House of Representatives shall not be released except by next week. specific request of the individual * *student concerned." THIS BILL will provide for an r. : * election to be scheduled some time Y P M EM B ER S denied the later in the year so that a second group's folding had any connec- circuit judge might be elected for tion with a rumored- scrapping of the county. the national Progressive Party. As Proposed by Senator George announced in the Daily Worker ofj Higgins (R-Ann Arbor) the bill Dec. 28, 1952, the U. S. Commun- was passed in the Senate earlier ist Party has ordered Party work- thiw sek.eers to center their efforts solely Dub'edk. on infiltration of firmly establish- ed political and social groups and silanti attorney, a "sneak attack" to abandon the Progressive Party. on the county judiciary system, the bill if passed by the House will YP member Ed Shaffer, Grad., provide Washtenaw county with charged "threats of Congres- two circuit judges in place of the sional investigations, fear of ad- present one man set-up. verse newspaper publicity by '"* 0 ensation-seekin sheets and dent Legislature an objective re- A. P'iu robe'mme ru asdamto port of its fact findings, the 30- member group passed a motion y ] I stating that it "has been unable H its to develop any proposals which would meet with the approval of a majority of committee mem- WASHINGTON - ( -- Sen. bers." Byrd. (D-Va.) said yesterday that * * * former Defense Secretary George PROPOSED by Union represen-? C. Marshall issued a "slowdown tative Bill Jentes, '55L, the mo- order" late in 1950 that was "al- tion also recognized that "the re- most a directive not to prepare" lationships between students and for the Korean War that had be- the University administration, stu- gun three months earlier. dent organizations and the ad- Byrd made the statement after ministration and student organi- the Army's top budget officer tes- zations themselves should be im- tified that six days after Marshall proved." took the top defense post the for- 1 mer general issued an order de- Jentes' motion, along with claring that "for budgetary pur- the group's four months' find- poses only it will be assumed that ings will be submitted to SL at combat operations will be complet- its meeting April 29.I ed June 30, 1951." Earlier in the meeting, a straw Byrd said that Marshall's direc- vt Eied the moeoing brak Live might have been responsible vte indicated thfloig beak- tivemigt hve eenresonsbledown in group sentiment regard- for the shortage of aircraft as ing campus organization: three well. in favor of the status quo, five in The Virginia Senator's remarks Ifavor of a plan to seat voting or- followed the testimony of a parade of Pentagon generals who tried to ganizational representatives on SL explain why various factors kept and nine in favor of setting up an the army pinched for some types administrative council of organi- of ammunition in the Far East zational representatives in an ad- conflict. visory capacity to SL. 1 I -Daily-Don Campbell LLOYD EVANS, '54SM, TOUCHES UP MAKE-UP AND COSTUME OF JOAN ROSSI * * * * i Lloyd Evans Redesigns Puccini Opera Cos tumes When the "Madame Butterfly' costumes from a New York firm arrived "looking too ragged to put on," Lloyd Evans, '54SM, costume supervisor for the Puccini opera had the job of redesigning for the speech department-music school production opening at 8 p.m. today in Tappan Junior High School. Several weeks ago the company sent the wrong colors, makeshift kimonos and Japanese coolie costumes that were unfit for use be- cause "there weren't enough of them to be decent" according to Evans. --__ _ But with the help of the five + ,j , ALTHOUGH only six of the men contacted professed to be unques- tionably in favor of the bill as it now stands, eight of the 17 men who were opposed to it indicated that there was a definite need in the county for a second judge to assist present judge James R., Breakey. Their objection to present leg- islation was to the method used in passing it and to the fact that members of the Board of Supervisors, the local Bar As- sociation, and Judge Breakey himself had not been consulted in this move. Only two of the attorneys in- terviewed had no opinion on the matter. Another one refused to comment. Opinion ran high among the other 23 men and ranged from wholehearted support of the pro- posed measure to the complete denial of the need for any such ac- tion on the part of nine of the men. One local attorney in opposing the bill pointed out that "this should be a move that the judge himself institutes, not one that is started without his knowledge." other such factors are respon- sible for the folding of YP." Unfair Union Prof. John Shepard+ chology department, advisor, said he had conference with the some time and knew its demise. of the psy-) YP faculty not had a group .for nothing of SINCE ITS inception in March, 1948 as the Wallace Progressives, YP has been notable for speaker troubles and entanglements with the student affairs office and the SAC. During the 1948 election, in- terest in the group hit a peak that has not been reached since. After the national Progressive defeat the membership of 300 dropped to about 30. With con- siderable recruiting it had re- mained in that vicinity until this semester. The YP's had their first serious run-in with the SAC in the sum- mer of 1950 when a membership list of 31 was turned in-of which only six were enrolled in the sum- See TURBULENT, Page 3 World News Roundup t By the Associated Press BUENOS AIRES, Argentina- Bombs hurled during a fighting mass meeting speech by President Juan D. Peron yesterday killed five spectators and injured others in the Plaza de Mayo. Peron was unhurt but obviously shaken. *, * * PRETORIA. South Africa- Prime Minister Daniel F. Malan's Nationalist party, winning four key parliamentary seats early to- day appeared headed for victory in the crucial South African gen- eral election. WASHINGTON-The Eisenhow- er administration renewed before a lukewarm House committee yes- terday its plea that general rent controls be extended until Oct. 1. Parking Meter Clue Heightens Treasure Hunt Hampered by persistent rains yesterday afternoon and last night, local treasure hunters ran into complications in finding the $100 hidden somewhere underground in Ann Arbor. Meanwhile, the latest clue re- vealed today reads "A parking meter I can see from beneath my shady lea." * * * ENTERING its fourth day, the search has been heightened by daily clues which thus far have said the $100 certificate is located in a small metal container about a foot below the ground near a busy street. Meters are found around cam- pus on State St. near Maynard St. and N. University. Several NEITHER of the two however, had been workedr detail to the satisfaction majority of the members. plans, out in of a Reasons voiced by committee members for the group's failure to arrive at a decision to change the campus structure were gen- erally that the diversity of opin- ion among organizational rep- resentatives was too great to expect agreement. I SL president Howard Willens, '53, noted that the factual report would be acceptable to SL, which set up the study group in Novem- ber. The fact that no major change was agreed upon is perhaps proof that the present situation is liv- able, Willens said. The now defunct committee in- cluded representatives from SL, the League, the Union, The Daily, Interfraternity Council, Panhellen- ic, Assembly, Inter-House Coun- cil, Joint Judiciary and Interna- tional Students Association as well as members from the campus at large. Strikers Return DETROIT--(P)-The bulk of the approximately once - idle 80,000 workers at Ford and Chrysler fac- tories returned to jobs yesterday, restoring car production to near normalcy. Ford early yesterday reached agreement with the CIO United Auto Workers on terms to settle the 14-day-old strike of 2,200 em- ployes at the Monroe parts plant. Acts Blasted By Professor Prof. Joseph E. Maddy of the music school, founder and presi- dent of the National Music Camp at Interlochen, has asked Congress to tighten up the Taft-Hartley law to give courts the right to review labor union "unfair" list- ings and restrain unions from un- just decisions. Prof. Maddy, in a report to the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, now considering revision of the controversial labor law, charged musicians' union chief James C. Petrillo with im- plementing 12 "restrictive prac- tices" which have "seriously im- paired the operation of the Na- tional Music Camp" and "curtailed the education opportunities of mil- lions of American children . . Main grievance listed was Petril- lo's placing the music camp on the American Federation of Musicians' "unfair" list in 1945, preventing any union member from teaching at the camp. Prof. Maddy was later expelled for remaining at Inter- lochen. "I was ousted for my criticism of Petrillo," the professor stated. "Union laws have nothing to do with teaching. This is the only time I know that they have ex- tended their rules to education." and ten and his own ingenuity Evans succeeded in outfitting the singers for "Madame Butterfly" which will continue performances tomorrow, Monday and Tuesday. Known for his interpretation of Icepick Sadie in this year's Union opera, the versatile vocal music education major first be- came interested in costuming when he took a speech depart- ment course in costume history in summer school last year. With his interest in costuming and experience in the chorus of "Faust" and "Madame Butterfly" and singing the tenor lead Fair- fax in the Gilbert and Sullivan production of "Yeoman of the Guard," Evans is undecided whether to make the theater or music his career. MUSICAL DIRECTOR for the opera Josef Blatt of the music school translated the libretto into English. Prof. Valentine B. Windt of the speech department is stage di- rector for the show. The five principal roles, double- cast for the four day run, will be sung tonight by Robert McGrath, '54SM, in the role of Goro, Charles Greene, as Lt. B. F. Pinkerton, Robert Kerns, '54SM, cast as U. S. Consul Sharpless, Vivien Mi- lan, SM, as Suzuki, and Dolores Lowry, '53SM, in the role of Mad- ame Butterfly. Tickets for the performances are on sale in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater box offices for $1.50, $1.20 and $.90. Student tickets are priced at $.75. LT Planes DrivenOff Clark Receives Truce Orders By the Associated Press The Communists usedsconvoys of disabled Allied prisoners head- ing southward yesterday to shield huge military supply movements and drove off U. S. spotter planes with furious anti-aircraft fire. The first convoy of sick and wounded Allied prisoners was due to reach Kaesong, Red armistice headquarters, today for exchange beginning Monday. Two other con- voys were en route over roads jam- med with Red military traffic. * * * U. S. RECONNISSANCE pilots spotted two of the convoys yester- day and the third today, the U. S. Fifth Air Force said. The third convoy was seen rolling down a main supply route between Huichon and Kanu, 70 air miles east of Pyongyang, the Red Korean capital. Circling low to take a close look and to photograph the prisoner convoys, pilots said they were driv- en off by savage antiaircraft fire., One flier said he had never before seen so many Communist vehicles on the move over Korean roads, * * * MEANWHILE the United States has instructed Gen. Mark Clark, the UN Far Eastern commander, what reply to give the Commun- ists on their proposal to resumeI negotiations for a Korean armis- tice, Washington officials said yes- terday. While the officials did not say what the instructions were, it was assumed generally that Clark would accept the Red offer. But there was no immediate hint as to when he might suggest areopen- ing of talks or what conditions he would lay down. The State Department had said earlier yesterday that instructions were still being drafted and it denied reports that Switzerland had been asked as a neutral to screen war prisoners unwilling to return to their homeland. A spokesman conceded, however, that information approaches might have been made to the Swiss. In the United Nations, the Unit- ed States and Russia, in rare agreement, lined up yesterday be- hind a Brazilian resolution which expresses the hope that further negotiations at Panmunjom wTll achieve an early armistice in Korea.. The unusual teamwork between U. S. Ambassador Ernest A. Gross and Russia's Andrei Y. Vishin- sky came in the UN Political Committee after Vishinsky lam- basted the United States, charg- ing it was slow to answer Com- munist appeals for resumption of truce talks. In thekair over Korea Allied warplanes yesterday hit the Com- munists all across North Korea- except for the attack-free corri- dor along the route the Reds say they were using to convoy Allied sick and wounded prisoners toward repatriation. Devine To Speak On Law, Politics Prof. Edmond F. DeVine of the Law School, Washtenaw County's prosecuting attorney, will speak on "Politics and Law" at a public meeting of the Michigan Crib, pre- law society, at 8 p.m. today in Rm. 3-D of the Wnion. Chief assistant prosecutor until his election to the prosecutor's post in 1952 and currently a Law School lecturer on criminal law, Prof. DeVine will present his views on how to prepare for a career in law and politics. 1- .+.......-- -rt- N'Y1f . HITS LEFT-WINGERS: NAM Leader Supports Colleges in Red Probes By ALICE BOGDONOFF Colleges and universities were given a vote of confidence this week by the National Association of Manufacturers in reference to the current investigations by Con- gress of Communism in education. Charles R. Sligh, Jr., NAM president, defended higher educa- tion against "wholesale indict- ment" involving Communism in a speech Monday before an Educa- tion-Industry Conference in Phila- delphia. UPHOLDING the "principles of free enterprise and the American way," Sligh expressed the opinion that there have been and "prob- ably still are professors and in- str11tAov iwith Communist. lean- slap at what he termed "left wingE educators" who are opposed to "freedom of enterprise." How- ever, he called the "left-wingers" a small segment of the education community and appealed to the "majority of educators" who, "like every other patriot want to rid our educational system of those who would undermine the Ameri- can ideal of freedom." * * * SLIGH CALLED for stronger business support of the private in- stitutions of higher learning. He said that increased business sup- port is the "positive approach to the left-wing problem." , Sligh also gave University ad- ministrations a pat on the back I PERPLEXING PROBLEM: ,SAC Makes Big Ten Driving Survey (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a series of articles on the student driving problem at the University. Today's article deals with the situa- tion at other Big Ten schools. Fu- ture articles will cover the prob- lem at the University and solutions advanced by various campus groups.) 1THE QUESTIONS asked by the Student Affairs office aimed at information as to what regula- tions existed, whether they have been changed in recent years, the accident rate and how misconduct was affected by student driving. Misconduct, accidents and drinking incidents have been on the downgrade 'since the rules were 'put into effect. Tight restric- tions are also imposed on parking and driving on the campus proper.,