PACE STS , THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11,1938 ' ; " AG tTlEMHIGAN AIL SAC Passes Regulations For Freedom Program (Continued from Page 1) lations thereof will be dealt with accordingly. Originally, SL had sponsored the week under the "ad hoc" committee provisions of Univer- sity regulations which merely give the Leglislature a co-ordi- nating function in such situa- tions. The Academic Freedom Week Committee is formed of a group of interested students and organi- zations and falls in the "ad hoc" category, but SAC members felt SL should take additional respon- sibilities for the activities since resolutions purporting to repre- sent University student opinion might emerge from next week's meetings. * * * IN OTHER discussion, SAC cleared 'up a jurisdictional differ- ence relating to withdrawal of recognition from student groups. Under the clarified provisions all action based solely or princi- pally on an organization's fail- ure to meet SAC requirements will be taken by SAC. Charges involving social miscon- duct which might result in with- drawal of recognition will be han- dled by the Joint Judiciary Coun- cil, however. SAC also approved an SL request to invite the National Student As- sociation here for its annual con- gress next summer, provided the Board of Governors of the Resi- dence Halls grants final approval. Official recognition was given the Journalism Club, a proposed addition was approved for the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house and the Union Opera road show schedule was ok'd in other SAC business. - E Plan Student Bar Election Elections for freshman and jun- ior class officers to represent their classes on the Board of Student Bar Commissioners of the Student Bar Association of the law school will be held from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. today on the first floor of Hutch- ins Hall. Running for freshman offices are president: Bill Coxon, John McDermott and Louis Woolery; vice-president: George Abel and Ray Lesscher; secretary-treasur- er: Shirley Armstrong and student bar commissioner: Harry Aid. Candidates for junior positions include president: Jim McCrory and Bob Schuur; vice-president: John Bauknecht and Don Stubbs and student bar commissioner: Doug Cutler and Howard Thiele. Prof. Gram Dies at 76 Prof. Emeritus Lewis M. Grai, '76 years 'of age, former chairman of the civil engineering depart- ment, died here Monday after a long illness. The professor, who retired from the University faculty in 1946 af- ter 33 years of service, directed the construction of 20 million dol- lars worth of University buildings, including the Rackham Bldg., East and West Quadrangles, Vic- tor Vaughn House, the school of public health, Kellog Institute, Burton Tower and Hutchins Hall. He was graduated from the University in 1901 with a bache- lor's regree in civil engineering and returned to the engineer- ing school in 1912 as professor of structural engineering. While at the University he was chief marshall for commencement exercises, a member of the board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics for 20 years, chairman of an administrative committee for federal aid projects at the Univer- sity and a member of the Univer- sity War Board. Surviving are his wife, a daugh- ter, a son and two grandsons. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Muehlig chapel, with the Rev. G. Leslie French officiating. Burial will be in Forest Hill cemetery. SL Agenda Student Legislature will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Strauss Dining Room, East Quadrangle to discuss the following topics: Motion to request informal meetings between SL and the Board of Regents. Motion for three changes in SL By-Laws Final Exam Committee Re- port Announcement of Cinema Guild Sponsors SL President's Message Motion to appoint two stu- 'dents to the University Com- mitee in charge of granting Re- gents Alumni Scholarships to incoming freshmen student. Kinsey Report Discussion Set Is Kinsey right? Three sociologists will discuss this question, with an emphasis on the researcher's findings about premartial petting and sex rela- tions, at 4 p.m. today in Auditor- ium C, Angell Hall. GM Buys Willow Run Plant for $26,000,000 DETROIT -P03)- General Mo- tors yesterday bought from Kai- ser Motors the giant former bomb- er plant at Willow Run, near De- troit at a price of 26 million dol- lars. Kaiser will move all its opera- tions to Toledo and the Willys- Overland plant there. Kaiser bought Willys - Overland earlier this year. * * * UNTIL THE MOVE to Toledo can be completed, General Motors will lease to Kaiser the space now occupied by Kaiser Motors for a period not to exceed 12 months. General Motors had been leas- ing 11% million square feet of the Willow Run plant since Au- gust for the production of Hy- dra-Matic transmissions. Trans- mission output was halted when fire destroyed the GM transmis- sion division plant at Livonia Aug. 12. Kaiser paid an estimated 15 mil- lions when it bought the big bomb- er plant from the government in 1948. Loss to General Motors in the Livonia fire has been estimated at as high as 80 millions. APPROXIMATELY 7,000 Gen- eral Motors workers now are em- ployed at Willow Run. When GM reaches full-scale output of trans- missions there it is expected all the 8,000 workers idled by the Li- vonia fire will have been recalled. The sprawling Willow Run property has some 62 acres un- der roof. General Motors' pur- chase of the plant marks the second time it has changed hands since the government built it during World War II. Its cost at that time has been variously estimated at from 60 to 90 million dollars. Willow Run was operated dur- ing the war by Ford Motor Co. Ford turned out more than 8,500 of the big four-engined Liberator bombers. When the bomber job was com- pleted Henry Ford was offered first opportunity to bid on the proper- ty. He said, however, that he had no use for it. -Daily-Chuck Keisey TRANSFORMATION-From plywood to palace, in preparation for 'Elizabeth the Queen" which opens tomorrow at Lydia Men- delssohn. Elizabeth' Stage Set For Opening Thursday .. .a Set construction for "Elizabeth the Queen" has just been complet- ed in a "two-days-before-opening" burst of energy. The stage crew has had a diffi- cult job with $his play because of unusual technical and time diffi- culties. After work on "The Heir- ess" was completed there remain- ed barely two weeks to produce the sets needed for "Elizabeth," a play which requires extensive scene changes. Jack Bender, in charge of stage design, says that "Eliza- beth the Queen" offers a won- derful challenge. Because of the dramatic effect, scenes must be changed rapidly and smoothly. A revolving stage was, isedin the 1930 Theatre Guild Pro- duction, but unfortunately the speech department does not have such professional facilities. In this present production an effort has been made to preserve the changing atmosphere of the play and yet compensate for tech- nical deficiencies. Bender has solved the problem by using a unit set in which various parts are shifted into position. Even the monotony that might result from constant use of the same scenery has been eliminated by using draperies to give the au- dience the impression that the stage crew is actually practicing black magic, according to Bender. Speakers Plan Contest Finals Twelve finalists in the Speech 31 contest will participate in a pub- lie speaking demonstration at 4 p.m. today in Auditorium A, An- gell Hall. The program will consist of five- minute speeches by six students and one-minute introductions. The students were chosen through in- dividual sections, and finalists were determined in a preliminary contest. All Speech 31 students were el- igible for the contest, and elec- tions were held in each section. Steiner Plans Newman Talk The Rev. Fr. Celestin J. Steiner, president of the University of De- troit, will be the featured speaker at the Newman Club Communion Breakfast Sunday at the Gabriel Richard Center. Tickets priced at 50 cents may be obtained at the Center during nthe week. The Largest Display of CHRISTMAS, CARDS . in the city 40 for $1.75 and upW MPRINTED WITH Remember C-DAY! Telephone Number Change Day N .; X $ ,, > ' a: t dJ ,.y, . 4 //jj1 r ^I ii1 rill nB6'3 KW) Wi .11 !14 At Midnight I Saturday, Nov. 14 I New telephone numbers will have these central office names: NO rmandy for Ann Arbor. GR eenwood for Chelsea. HA milton for Dexter. GA rden for Manchester. HI ckory for Whitmore Lake. You'll just dial TWO LETTERS and five numerals ... to make local calls . . to call between Ann Arbor and the other four communities ... and to call between Chelsea and Manchester. To call an Ann Arbor number, NO rmanrT 9.1100 fnr vmrn1n _n i'11 LETTER DEF B GHI 3 .5 3 2- ,...< 1199 M NO' PRs0 7 U EWX NUMERAL Tryouts and all those who would like to- tryout for the 'Ensian Bus- iness Staff are asked to attend the meeting that will be held at 4:15 today in the Conference I r-14 QilAetr-4 4