25, 19 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 25, 1952 PAGE I _________________________________________________________________________ I Students Warned About Not Taking Extra Long Holiday ,A warning not to yield to temp- rtation and cut classes today and tomorrow in advance of the Thanksgiving holiday was issued by Student Legislature treasurer, Bob Neary, '54.. - Neary, who helped make the long proposed holiday an actual- ity last fall, cautioned that the, program is only probationary and will be reviewed in two years. "If classes are cut excessively," he said, "the chances of having the holiday renewed will not be good." * * * AFTER a two-year struggle by 1the Legislature, the plan was passed last November by the Dean's Conference. Prior to the meeting which gave -the stamp of approval, Neary and Irv Stenn, '55L, had SFederal Court Reverses N. Y. ChurchRuling WASHINGTON - (A') -- The Suprme Court yesterda oer- law under which the archbishop of the Moscow wing of the Rus- sian Orthodox Church was ousted from his cathedral. "Here. there is a transfer by statute of control over churches," Justice Reed wrote in the 8 to- 1 majority opinion. "This violates our rule of separation between a church and a state." * * * THE DECISION, to which Jus- tice Jackson took vigorous excel,- tion, applied to Archbishop Ben- jamin Fedchenkoff, who was re- moved from St. Nicholas Cathed- ral, New York City-. The litigation grew ,out sof the 1924 separation. of a North American faction from the mnother church in Russia. The New York Legislature then add- ed to the state's Religious Cor- porations Law a section which designate the Nort Amerin * America. Officials of St..Nicholas sued to 4oust. Archbishop Benjamin. The New York .Court of Appeals up- held the removal of the arcllbish- * op, the appointee of the Moscow1 heirarchy. He has since returned *to Rtussia and, a cathedral spokes- man said, now heads a diocese at Rostov-On-Don. interviewed 11 of the deans personally and sperit weeks working out a plan which would be acceptable to all the admin- istrative heads. Before last fall, legislator Dave Belin, '54L, had worked a year and a half laying the groundwork for the holiday. Complicated scheduling difficulties had to be solved before approval could be given to the plan. In sthe fall of 1950 the Dean's Conference had also considered the Thanksgiving holiday issue, but no definite action was taken at that time. If the new scheduling, which tomorrow afternoon util Mon- day morning, does not elimi-- nate the problem of class at-- tendence around Thanksgiving, Sturayases 'folloingthe holiday could be reinstated when the plan comes up for re- view. At the time the extended holiday was approved last fall, it was pointed out that both Columbia and Ohio State Universities had found 1the long-weekend plan sc had characterized classes held the day after Thanksgiving. To Give F0our One-ActPlay "Landscapes and Departures," a bill of four one-act plays, will open its two week .run at 8:30 p.m. Saturday at the Arts Theater, 209%2 E. Washington. The four play combination, built around the central theme of death, will 'include William Saroyan's "Hello Out There," Gertrude Stein's "In the Garden," ''The Man With the Flower in His Mouth," by Luigi Pirandello and "The Only Jealousy of Emer," by William Butler Yeats. The Arts Theater will also pre- sent a special new "Children's Theatre" Saturday matinee at 2:30 pam. Dec. 6 and Dec.:13. Fea- turing University students and Ann Arbor children, the cast will perform "The Clown Who Ran* Away." Tickets for the children's mati- fiee, which is open to the public, are on sale at campus bookstores for 60 cents. -Daily-Jeff Pemberton BUCKEYE TONY CURCILLO (25) HALTS "'M" BALL CARIER New Hillel Building Dedicated M1a Ian Race Policy Seen As 'Sicide Prof. Preston Slosson of the his- tory department, told a group meeting under the auspices of the- campus UNFSCO Council, that Daniel F. Malan's racial policy in the Union of Southi Africa is dis- asterous and suicidal, both to the prime minister, himself, and pos- sibly to the world. Speaking, at the International Center Sunday, Prof. Slosson went on to say that the race riots now ensuing in the Union may provoke open racial war through- out the continent of Afica. * * * "THE ISSUE in South Africa ceases to be a domestic question," he cntin e. "As a result the insisting on the constant discus- sion oft e poblem nte. United "Malan is a person scared to death," he explained. "He Is hit-- ting out with the violence of a frightened man. Prof. S1osson trcdtefare- ups in the area to the complex vaole anhlot the poor eco nomic conditions of the natives in the- country. HE POINTED OUT that six dis- tinct groups are involved in the conflict. They consist of the Brit- ish, Boers, Hindus, Erafirs and the Hottentots. Prof. Slosson hoped that the coming elections in the Union would see the defeat of Malan by. the moderate South African Par- ty composed of liberal British and Boer elemetits. He concluded by suggesting the government clean up the slums in Johannesburg, pass a good hous- ing Jaw, give a wider base of edu- cation to the entire population and include more natives under the suffrage act. Ann Arbor Police Ann Arbor police last night con- tinued to investigate the Suntday robbery at the Varsity Laundry Co., 300 5. Fifth Ave. where an es- timated $1,248 in cash and receipts were stolen by thieves who pryed open the company safe. Police Detective Claude Damron said the burglars gained entrance into the building by forcing a loose window frame. They then proceed- edf to ransack office files and desks in their search for valuables. Power Shot By The Asciae Pre e- come the latest casualties of Michigan's deer hunting sea- son. Both the Michigan Bell Tele- phone Co. and Consumers Pow- er Co. reported service disrup- tions over the weekend caused by gunfire damage to wires. Michigan Bell said 100 state long distance wires and 50 in- terstate lines were knocked out temporarily by a shotgun blast near Kalamazoo. Five Injued Five persons, three of whomn are Ann Arbor residents, were injured in a two-car collision at Spring and W. Summit Sts., this week- M1ost serioslyinjured waMrs of Saline, who suffered a frac- tured pelvis and was rushed to St Joseph's Mercy Hospital. Barber Does 59r 4 AERO SHAVE gives you richer lather instantly! No brush! No greasy scum! No razor clog! Contains 3 ear softeners for dl ohr hvsg ofr gS0J~4L iWAA~ CHICAGO - (AP) - A former state's attorney testified yesterday William Heirens was given a "truth drug" injection in jail be- fore he pleaded guilty to three murders in Chicago. Heirens, now 24 years old, is serving three consecutive life terms for the slaying of Suzanne Degnan, 6 years old, Frances Brown, 33 years old, and Mrs. Jo- sephine Ross, 43 years old, in 1945. He now is seeking his freedom on a petition filed under the Illinois Post-Conviction Review Law. * * * WILBERT F. CROWLEY, now a Superior Court judge and former- ly a first assistant state's attorney under William J. Tuohy when Heirens was arrested, gave the first legal record acknowledgment of using the drug. Crowley testified. that Dr. Francis 3. Gerty, 'a Cook.County psychiatrist, told him he thought Heirens was malingering and was faking amnesia. "I asked Dr. Gerty how this could be confirmed," Crowley re- lated, "and he said by using so- dium pentothal." The "truth"* drug. After consultation with the state's attorney and other doctors the decision was made to use the drug, Crowley said. "A LL DRY" LAUNDRY SERVICE FIRST 9 $100 Attorney Charges Heirens Given Truth Drug at Tni By HELENE SIMON Students, faculty, contributors and Hillel commissioners from all over the country 'crowded into the formal dedication of the ultra- modern new Hillel building Sunday which consummated six years of planning n bu""iding. President of Brandeis University, Abranm L. Sacher, making the main dedication address stressed the "ambassadorial service" the Hillel foundation and other or- ganizations of this sort could pro- vide in dissipating misunderstand- ing about minority groups. * * * "IT IS 1M1iORTANT to have structures like this, not because. we want grandiose buildings but be- cause Jewish students will be able to identify themselves and the val- 'ues they learn with beauty not din- giness,"' President Sacher said. He accused the present gen-- eration of "sitting on the mourn.- ers' bench because it feels trap.- ped by social, political and eco- nomic forces beyond its con- troLa Today's youth are ready to zoom into opportunism for they feel they are not masters of their own destiny," the dis- tinguished speaker continued. "We must prove that life is pur- poseful by injecting a dose of spir- itual adrenelin to stimulate the spiritual quotient to supplement the intelligence quotient," Presi-- dent Sacher concluded. * * * PRESIDEN't SACHER appeared as the- climax to 13 previous ad- dresses commending Hillel on its rambling brick and glass struc- ture. Dean Charles E. Odegaard of the literary school, representing President Harlan H. Hatcher who was unable to attend the ceremony because of other com- mitments, expressed the grati- tude of the University toward . Hillel for the part it was play- ing in spreading the spirit of brotherhood. Rabbi Herschel Lymon, director of the campus Hillel foundation, expressed his thanks to the peo- ple who had helped build the edi- fice. Reminding the assembly that their job was not completed with the end of construction, Rabbi Ar- thur J. Lelyveld, director of the National Hillel Foundation, said "there is now the obligation to complete -the, task of filling the structure with an effective pro-. gram for which It was erected." ech ONLY 9cade pound ALL OF YOUR WASHABLES white and COlored Regular SH IRTS finished Call 23-123 Corner E. Li for 17c each ditional iberty and 5th Ave. n tAo" ~'IW' a~WaY5 glad whe1 ~.ln4S*M Sheb ad arid tiot o~1~ fo cand~J, But good ci' LuCi'~3 UniversitY 0 U U FINAL WEEK of our... NOVEMBER BARGAIN FESTIVAL 0 .,~ Our Entire Stock of Men Shoes05 Choose From * Jarmon * Winthrop * Trarrpeze * Bob Smart * American Gentleman Cordovan Leathe 13 Pairs Scotch Grain -Calf Shoes to choose .Elk -Suede. SizeS in. . ,Sport Shoes -for everyone. WidthS Dress Shoes. A toE. 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