WAGE M. THE MICHIGAN DAIEI SATITEMAY. APRIL 1;, 195.1 i PAG!~ SIX TIlE MTCJITGAI' DAILI SATURDAY. APRIL 17, 1954 'VOICE OF AMERICA' WUOM Receives Award For Series on Freedom WUOM received three awards from the American Institute for Education by Radio-Television at1 its annual convention last week and was also informed that one of its series will be included on fu- ture Voice of America broadcastst overseas. The University Broadcastingt Service won first place in the field of programs dealing with the ba- Two 'U' Seniors Win Fellowships Tom Arp, '54, and Thomas Jack- son, '54, are among 144 students to receive the National Woodrow Wilson Fellowships for one year of graduate study. Arp will enter Stanford Univers- ity and Long plans to attend Har- vard University. Elected President Prof. Horace Miner, acting chair- man of the sociology department,a has been named president of the Society for Applied Anthropology. Previously regional vice-presi- dent of the organization, Prof. Mi-I ner has been a member for sixl years. sic freedoms for this current ser- ies, entitled "They Fought Alone." Honorable mention was given for "Michigan, 2000 A.D." in the area of social problems. A special cita- tion in the field of school broad- casts was awarded the radio sta- tion for "Sky Trails." * * * AT THE Institute's meeting in Columbus, Ohio, Theodore C. Streibert, director of the United States Information Agency made one of the major addresses, speak- ing on the subject "World Air Waves to Peace and Freedom." Stating that the Voice of Am- erica is working on a plan to provide programs such as "They Fought Alone" to foreign-owned radio stations and networks, he added that it will ultimately be shipped abroad as a package program for placement on local stations. WUOM officials attending the conference were Prof. Waldo Ab- bott, broadcasting director, Wil- liam B. Stegath and William Ben- der, Jr. Although the University has been given similar awards in the past, this is the first time that it has received three awards in one season from the IER. ROTC Gets New Oath Since the accusations made by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) against Maj. Irving Peress, an Army dentist whom the Senator accused of being a "Fifth Amend- ment Communist," the Armed Forces have taken renewed pre- cautions to check the loyalty of their personnel. A new loyalty oath for all per- sonnel of the armed forces was is- sued Feb. 1, to replace an older form of December, 1950. .* * * MAJOR CHANGE in the new form is the inclusion of about 60 organizations, added to the At- torney General's list of subversive organizations since 1950. Those added ranged from the American Peace Crusade to the Committee for Constitutional and Political Freedom and Peo- ple's Drama, Inc. If any armed force personnel has attended any meeting of the or- ganizations, or engaged in activi- ties sponsored by them, or has been in any way asociated with them, he must write a full statement of the nature of the association on tlhe Armed Forces oath. HOW MANY PEDESTRIANS HAVE YOU BAGGED? * Na Saturday Night Driving Cale Most Hazardous IN EVE ON (4 F ~You've se you to g iv them wit over you fabulous lines. Fine COT lastex sunny col medium-- i. - +r RY SWIMMING POOL EVERY BEACH - lI be wearing t SWVIM SITS Locally the new forms have been distributed to ROTC personnel since Spring Recess. No local ROTC students were reported as refusing to answer the question. naire. III We're proud to have taken part, inbuilding the Women's Athletic Pool By LEE MARKS Will you be out in a car this evening on a date? If so, you will be driving at the most dangerous time of the week, according to "The Passing Scene," a pamphlet released by the Trav- elers Insurance Company of Hart- ford, Conn. * * * APPROXIMATELY one-fourth of all traffic deaths in 1953 camge on Saturdays, with close to 50 per cent occurring on weekends, the pamphlet reported. With 38,500 deaths (900 more than in 1952), and 2,140,000 in- juries (highest in history), the traffic picture in 1953 "is not a pleasant one," according to the booklet. Speed was by far the biggest killer, accounting for 46.4 per cent of all deaths, and more than 680,- 000 casualties. In 91.1 per cent of the deaths, a man was at the wheel, and in 88.8 per cent of the non-fatal accidents, men drove. The insurance company's pamph- let pointed out, however, that these figures do not necessarliy indicate that women make better drivers, since too many other factors are involved. While commenting that in 1953 auto accidents killed one person every 14 minutes and injured an- other every 15 seconds, "The Pass- ing Scene" pointed out that driv- ers under the age of 25 are "in vloved in far more than their pro- portionate share of accidents." "When a driver puts the blame on his car, it's nine to one he's wrong," claimed the pamphlet. Statistics showed that 98 per cent of all cars involved in accidents were in good condition. Further, the majority of accidents occured on clear days and on straight, dry roads. "Although it is not our function to moralize, the conclusion is ob- vious. In most accidents, the guil- ty party is man and not machine, mind and not motor, reflex and not roadway," declared "The Passing Scene." Gamma Globulin Limits Removed All restrictions have been re- ~moved in permitting the use of gamma globulin to modify the se- verity of measles accordingto County Health Department direc- tor, Dr. Otto K. 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