SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28; 1952. PAGE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY THIS I BELIEVE': SRA Announces Speaker Schedule for Fall Series Marching Maize and Blue COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Alabama Bars Two Negro Women; Illinois Cancer Drug Study Pending Speakers for the Student Reli- gious. Association's fall Lecture Series entitled "This I Believe" were announced by Lane Hall of- ficials yesterday. The series will be opened on+ Oct. 28 by Ashley Montague, Chair- man of the Rutgers University An-1 thropology Department and UNE- SCO consultant. Montague, who is] ' also writer, producer and director of the film "One World or None"+ will speak on "Man and His Uni- verse." The following week, "Ethical Problems in Public Life," will be discussed by George N. Shuster. President of Hunter College in New York and former Governor General of occupied Bavaria. Shuster is also editor of the Catholic magazine Commonweal. "A Foreign Policy for Peace" will be the subject of a talk by Vera Micheles Dean who will speak on Nov. 11. Mrs. Dean, who is Re- search Director of the Foreign Pol- icy Association and editor of the organizations publications, is also a well known lecturer who has spoken from platforms all over the world. The Very Reverend James A. Pike, Dean of the Cathedral of St. John in New York and former Chaplin of Columbia University, will end the series with a discus- sion of the "Individual and His Faith" on November 18. The series is a revision of Reli- gion in life month which has been sponsored by Lane Hall in pre- vious years. According to Grey Austin, Program Assistant of SRA the change was made because the emphasis this year is not strictly on Religion, and several of the speakers are not connected with any church. By JAN WINN The University of Alabama may have to face a court battle over its refusal to admit two Negro wo- men to its school of post graduate studies. The women, both June gradu- ates of Miles Memorial College in Birmingham, were told by the dean that Alabama laws prevent- ed their enrollment at the Uni- versity. A Birmingham lawyer, Arthur Shores is preparing to appeal directly to University president John Gallalee. Shores stated that if Gallalee will not admit the two, he will file a suit In Federal Court in Birmingham on the grounds that the Uni- versity's refusal violates consti- tutional rights. T h e Crimson-White, school newspaper, in an editorial at- tacking impending court action, stated: . . Thinking Southerners, thank God, realize that big prob- lems can't be solved by new legis- lation and force. The mighty sweep of court injunction does not make the two parties involved happier." The editorial continues: ". . . we maintain that there is no race hatred among the vast majority of Southerners. Certainly we se- gregate our schools, busses, and so- cial meeting places. It's only good sense . . . segregation does not meanthat we Southerners hate Negroes. It means that we realize we are different in our ways and' habits in general." UNIVERSITY of Illinois trus- tees are demanding the formula of Krebiozen, before allowing study of the controversial 'cancer drug' to continue at the Univer- sity. A committee, appointed to study the drug stated that they found "no acceptable evidence that any malignent tumor has been cured by Krebiozin. CORRECTION -Daily-Don Campbell MICHIGAN TAKES THE FIELD -The band is waiting to go into one of their political formations which highlighted halftime ceremonies yesterday. Student Interest Backs SL, Poll States Many people think that Ulrich's :.4' ' >.. < , <;;.,; U ::; . 3 ! : /+ L . 4 a, fi4 1 ' 5 . :'.: Book Store carries only ENGINEERING books . . . Ulrich's carry a very huge stock of used and new books for every course onf the Michigan campus. 4 Michigan Bell Welcomes FORMER OPERATORS to Ann Arbor We have immediate openings for those student wives who have had some telephone operating experience. If you are one of these girls, drop in to see our em- ployment representative. Ann Arbor has a fine group of girls and a very attractive building which is located only 212 blocks from the campus. Visit us at: Michigan Bell Telephone Co. 323 E. Washington St. By VIRGINIA VOSS Backing the Student Legislature as it begins its seventh year of operation on campus is a wide- spread student interest in the gov- erning body's activities reported in a recent representative survey. The poll revealed that SL, whose chief function was once taken care of under a group known as the Gripes Committee, is now firmly established in students' minds as a full-fledged legislative body. BUT OTHER factors not so en- couraging to SL members were al- so pointed up in the 300-student survey. Psychology-sociology stu- dents who took the poll in colla- boration with theSurveyResearch Center reported that the campus' main idea of SL was a forum for reflectingmopinion rather than a decision-making body. Questioned students indicated further that they doubted the representativeness of SL. Gener- ally skeptical as to motives which induce students to run on the campus ticket, a majortiy of those polled reported that "per- sonal prestige" was the main reason for seeking legislature positions. The source of the problem was pointed up in reports indicating that 40 per cent of students voted for friends or "names they knew" rather than platform issues. Though student interest in the six-year old governing body was nearly universal, knowledge of specific SL actions was sparse. More than 20 per cent of those questioned could not remember anything SL had done. Concerning SL influence on the University administration and the student body, the poll showed it to be increasing but still not sig- nificant. VIEWED IN historical perspec- tive, SL has come a long way in building up student interest over its six-year existence. The now firmly resolved " ques- tion of whether a representative government would work on cam- pus was in 1946 a highly debatable issue. In that year, interest in the new group ran high, according to former SL president Leonard Wilcox, '55L. The veteran era and the overcrowded campus it brought with it necessitated an organization to reflect student opinions and provide services for the University population. But the biggest interest in SL came from those who felt the gov- erning body could without reserva- tion cure all the campus' problems. Consequently, SL soon found itself mainly concerned with such mat- ters as putting up convenient pen- cil sharpeners and sponsoring pep rallies. In 1948 and 1949, apathetic students complained of SL's worthlessness and e I e c t i o n frauds, and SL took to focusing on specific issues to arouse more sincere interest. It greatly streamlined its own HST Asks End Of Aircraft Strike WASHINGTON--P)-President Truman yesterday called upon both workers and management to end the strike at the Douglas and Lockheed aircraft plants in Cali- fornia in the interest of national defense. The White House disclosed that the President had sent a telegram to the heads of both aircraft com- panies and the union officials in- volved. organization and in 1949 and 1950 it began to.emphasize safeguard- ing students rights. Action in these years and those that followed re- vived interest, as the survey indi- cated. Though skepticism on some phases of SL action is widespread, practically no one today would brand it a "worthless" organiza- tion. Engiiieers Get Special Guided MVissileWork Seven University students, en- gineering trainees, are now par- ticipating in the White Sands Proving Ground Cooperative Stu- dent Training Program where they are receiving practical training in guided misile research. The project at the rocket base in New Mexico will take six months. Then the group, all so- phomores, will return to the Uni- versity in time to register for sec- ond semester in the College of Engineering. The group will re- turn to White Sands each ensuing year until they have finished the complete training program. Four of the students have been assigned to the Flight Determina- tion Laboratory, and the rest to the Systems Test. Division. The Michigan students include James Ford, vice president of Phi Eta Sigma and holder of a varsity letter in swimming, Dale Ray, who is attending the University on a scholarship, Robert Kovacs, high school salutatorian, and Gerald Harju. 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