rxGz L MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMEBER 9, 1054 1i~*GE STX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMEBER 9~ 195<4 a . I'M INNOCENT': Student Reveals Life as Famous 'Pope' By ERNEST THEODOSSIN "Hearing confessions of Univer- sity coeds is so tiring," according to Russell A. Brown, '56, self- styled Pope Innocent III, reincar- nate. "Just this morning I had a convocation of the bishops. And this afternoon I'm expecting a call from Paris," the "Pope" said. "Pope Innocent's Little Vatican," located in an Ann Arbor rooming house, was bathed in a soft amber light which came from huge searchlights upon a tall bookcase. The "Pope" paced back and forth across the room. Cheesecloth Robes Dressed in flowing robes of black cheesecloth and a white shirt worn backwards, the "Pope" began to relate his miracles. "That quad judiciary council didn't be- lieve that the fire was a miracle," he snorted. "But it was." The "miraculous" fire occurred outside the door of an East Quad room last spring. Taken before the house council for trial, he an- nounced, "I'm Innocent. I can- not be tried by a temporal body. If you want to see me you'll have to request an audience." Judged guilty, "Pope Innocent III" was fined $10 for starting a fire and $5 for "contempt of the Judiciary Council." Lecture 'Miracle' "Then there was the lecture miracle," the "Pope" said. "They wouldn't invite me to the discus- sion on God. So I sent the house mother a Papal bull, demanding her presence at an audience. When she refused to come I was forced to place the house under inter- dict." Members of the house; concern- ,A with the "interdict," sent a I .egation to question the "Pope" abit removing the sentence. "In- nocenta" announced that "that house mother must do penance. She must walk outside in the snow beneath my window." Since the month was May, skep- tics laughed at this command. The next day, it snowed. "But that house mother wouldn't obey my command. I put a curse on her." Today she is being treated at University hospital," he reported. First Revelation The self-assumed Pope declared his first revelation occurred in the fall of 1953. "When I was asleep, a very bright light fell on the bed. Suddenly, its brilliance Taggart To Speak Assistant Dean Herbert F. Tag- gart of the School of Business Ad- ministration will address the monthly meeting of the National Association of Cost Accountants Thursday, in Chicago. Dean Taggart will speak on "Planning Gross Profit Margins." He is a certified public accountant for the state and holds a Ph.D de- gree from the University. "POPE INNOCENT III" . * Gregorian chants and pop bottle caps UNSOLVED: Still Argue Bias .issues At Colleges By DAVE BAAD Although the Supreme Court de- cision of last May officially de- cided the issue in public schools, the segregation question still rages unsolved among the nation's Uni- versities. Reports of various disputes range from the problem of fra- ternity bias clauses to segregated housing for Negro football play- ers. Although Delta Chi, Zeta Beta Tau, Lambda Chi Alpha and Pi Kappa Phi deleted bias clauses last summer, fraternities includ- ing Acacia, Theta Chi, Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Tau Delta and Sig- ma Nu still retain their restric- tions. Chapter Quits in Protest While Phi Delta Theta awaits possible final approval of its bias clause removal at the 1956 Na- tional Convention, its chapter at Williams College in Williamstown, Mass. turned local in protest to objections of its pledging a Negro student. Indignation over separate ac- commodations necessary for Negro halfback Dick Jackson when Cor- nell played in Houston earlier this year, caused the school to sched- ule no future games where segre- gated housing would be necessary. Two Negro graduate students have been segregated in one sec- tion of a dormitory at the Univer- sity of North Carolina. 'U' of Texas Rejects Negro The first Negro applicant for the University of Texas under- graduate school was refused en- trance this fall. He was told to ap- ply at Prairie View A&M, a state supported Negro college. Five Negroes who tried to enter Memphis State College were in- formed their entrance in the col- lege would break a state law. Meanwhile five junior colleges and a Jesuit institution in the South opened their doors to Ne- groes for the first time. The five junior colleges all in Texas are located in Victor, Odessa, Borger, Edinburg, and Wharton. Spring Hill College at Mobile, the Jesuit school, admitted Negroes for the first time in its 124 years of existence. Generation To Be Sold Fall issue of Generation, inter- arts magazine, will go on sale to- morrow at busy points around cam- pus. "The Day the House Went Wild," a children's story written by Larry Pike, '54, and illustrated by Stu Ross, '55A, and an article by Wil- liam Wiegand, Grad., "Arthur Miller and the Man Who Knows" will be featured. Work in several media, includ- ing lithographs and pen and ink, by Sally Angell, Grad., Anne Good- year, '55A, Kathryn Kitson, '55A, Mary Kuizenga, '56A, Barbara Mc- Naught, '57A, and William Sea- bright, '57A, will be printed. Fiction by Lilia P. Amansec, Grad., Henry Van Dyke and Mark Weingart, '55, will be included in this issue. Generation will also pub- lish several poems. This year marks the first time Generation has scheduled three is- sues. Copies will be sold for 35 Week Named For Education This week has been designated American Education Week by its sponsors, the National Education Association and other national groups. Under the theme, "Good Schools Are Your Responsibility," the sponsors are encouraging the Amer- ican public to visit schools and classrooms, and to re-examine the educational program of each com- munity. In an official announcement, the sponsoring committee stated that "wishing for good schools is not enough ETHICS- BY GOD OR MAN Skeptics Corner: 4:15 P.M. League SPECIAL GUEST: PROF. O'NIELL s A,. -Daily-Dean Morton FOSTER L. CROSS INSPECTS UNDERGROUND TUNNEL SYSTEM Cross Terms Heating Tunnel System U' Breathing Organ overwhelmed me. I awoke to see a choir of twelve shining angels dressed in gold coming down a long gold staircase, descended from heaven. "Grouped in a semi-circle about my bed, the angels sang a six-part a capella oratorio. I learned I had been all the Pope Innocents at one time or another. Because of my sins as Pope Innocent VIII during the Inquisition, I must repent by destroying the church." Pop Bottle Caps In his so-called "Little Vatican," the "Pope" strolled to and fro, gesturing broadly with his right hand. In his left hand, he rolled two pop bottle caps, an imitation of Captain Queeg of "The Caine Mutiny." Decorated with blue drapes and flowers made from feathers, the "Little Vatican" holds a bed, a bookcase, and a radio set. There is also a small table "from one of my other lives" upon which the "Pope" keeps his glasses. Barrymore Idol On top of the bookcase is a copy of a theatrical book, opened to a page of John Barrymore stills. "Barrymore is one of my favorites," the "Pope" explained. "He drank 40 barrels of liquor a week. But I'm sure he blessed them first." On the floor are scattered rec- ord albums, arrayed like a depart- ment store window display. Most of the albums are of John Barry- more readings. A Few Gregorian Chants A "Brigadoon" album and a Tschaikovsky s y m p h o n y, the "Pope" claimed, were just tempo- ral disguises for "some Gregorian chants." "You know, this Dave Brubeck seems to be employing some of these chants in his work. It's so refreshing to hear songs popular during my youth back on the hit parade." The "Pope" grew rather violent and laughed heartily when quer- ied about a bottle of shaving lo- tion. "Non-believers. You will all burn," he said, pounding on the wall. "That is really holy oil which I pour on the heads of my converts. It turns their skulls black and then I can tell my friends." , r Reluctant to reveal many de- tails of his temporal existence, the so-called Pope said he was forced to assume the identity of Russell Brown to "fool the non- believers." As Brown he is a speech major. He also plays in the Michigan Marching Band and gives performances as a magician at South Quad. The "Pope" said he was against religion because it was "ambigu- ous, contradictory, and the great- est spreader of propaganda." "I have come to establish a new to- talitarian order," he said. "Re- ligion and democracy cannot ex- ist together. The Christian reli- gion is the most deadly enemy of peace and morality in our modern world," the "Pope" laughed. A regular hierarchy has been set up by the "Pope." "I have a head abbess at Martha Cook, three or four superior nuns at local sorori- ties, and an extension-bishop at Harvard." "Pope Innocent III" then recit- ed a Latin chant and retired "for meditation." Outside his door, above his tem- poral name, was a cross turned upside-down. By MARY LEE DINGLER Beneath the acres of land which compose the University campus runs a system of tunnels which has been called "the breathing system of the University." This description was given by Foster L. Cross, plant department senior engineer, to the vast net- work of tunnels containing numer- ous pipes and extending for ap- proximately four miles. Beginning at the main power plant, located on Forest and N. University, the tunnels branch out supplying all campus buildings with steam heat and hot water. The remotest unit serviced by the sys- tem is South Quadrangle. Unlikely Site for Parties While the underground network has never been used as a back- ground for a Hollywood suspense scene, there are rumors that stu- dents hold drinking parties in its recesses. Cross did not think this likely since the entrances are locked. "I guess it would be possible to enter through a manhole though," he commented. Temperature in one section, it does not take one long to discover, remains at 100 degrees. Efficient-Despite Complaints Although the system is an effi- cient one, Cross said that there are always complaints "from peo- ple who claim it's too hot or too cold." He pointed out however that there have been no drastic breakdowns or failures in the pipes for over twen- ty years, only occasional leaks. When the need for a repair job arises, it is quickly and expertly handled. Twenty foot sections of pipe are taken into the tunnel through one of the manholes, spaced about three hundred feet apart. It has not yet been decided whether the tunnels will be en- larged to accommodate the build- ings on the North Campus. "It would be more economical to use the present system than to heat the units individually," Cross said. New Actors Join Arts Center Cast Two new actors have been hired by the Dramatic Arts Center and a change has been made in the season's playbill. Peter Breck and Paul W. Carr will both appear in "The Moon and the Yellow River" by Denis Johns- ton, opening Nov. 18. The play will take the spot on the season's program originally scheduled for George Lillo's "The London Mer- chant." Breck, who will play the role of Darrell Blake in the Johnston play, started in show business as a drum- mer and has since written and di- rected musicals and pageants. He was a member of the "Alley The- ater" in Houston, Tex., and has appeared in stock productions. Most recently Carr has appeared on television dramas. The actor, who will be seen as Commandant Lanigan in "The Moon and the Yellow River," has worked with several theater groups in New Or- leans. cents. I I1 JEWELRY - CERAMICS - TRICKS GREETING CARDS - MINIATURES - TOYS ~ Yanflyes 213 East Liberty NO 3-1319 (Mailing and FREE Gift Wrapping) e1 ETHICS ~GO~oM~t a At ! a South Directs New Vigilante Movement Towards Negroes w JACKSON, Miss., A new type of anti-Negro vigilante movement - using boycotts instead of bullwhips -has arisen in at least one state in the South. In the wake of last spring's Su- preme Coure decision declaring segregation in public schools un- constitutional, new organizations have appeared elsewhere in Dixie to sound the call for "preservation of our Southern heritage," the old rallying cry of the Ku Klux Klan. At present these various groups operate independently of one an- other. Most are weak, capable of drawing crowds of only several hundred even when appealing for mass protest meetings. The two with muscle are the American States Rights Associa- tion headquartered in Birmingham, Ala., and a network of Citizens Councils in Mississippi. It is the Citizens Councils which have ad- vocated, and apparently already put in use, the idea of substituting economic pressure for physical force, Citizens Councils have been or- ganized in 22 of Mississippi's 82 counties and are spreading. Their purpose is to apply economic pres- sures to "troublemakers" who would upset the "Southern way of life." Ire of the councils is directed against "outside agitators" in gen- eral and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored people in particular. The only or- ganized opposition to the move- ment, and hence its chief target, is the handful of NAACP members inside Mississippi. fi N ?':??..mr, ; ;r,. al:',.yr.; ": rr. ": ,.r::; ;aY:_ r; s Y : : ' c.;::. 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