PAGE 8 THE MCMGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH' 20,1955 WAGE 8!~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 20, 1955 BUSINESS TO LAW TO HI STORY: Leslie 'Backed Into' Academic Career College Roundup _---< By PHYLLIS LIPSKY An academic career that began as the first step toward becoming a business man as led William R. Leslie to a professorship in his- tory and an interest in 19th cen- tury America. Prof. Leslie, who says he "back- ed into" his field of study, is cur- rently doing research while on sabbatical leave from the Uni- - versity. / Before getting hi. doctorate in history here in 1945 he had worked for a wall board company in Se- attle, practiced law in Oakland County, Mich., and studied econo- mics and sociology. He attributes his eventual de- cision to study history partly to its being the only social science in which "you can successfully and completely dissipate a life. "Ev- ery other field offers substantial limitations -history offers none." Came to 'M' in 1926 A native of Shelvyville, Ind., Prof. Leslie came to the University as an undergraduate in 1926. He took mostly social science, courses -- "they recognized then that a major was unnecessary," he says-played the trumpet for var- sity band and occasionally joined the other students in razing soap box orators. "The student body then had much less guidance in all forms of extra - curricular activities," Prof. Leslie said. "There is much less student responsibility today, but whether the students or the administration is to blame is hard to say." Law Degree A short period with a wall board company had interested him in a business career. After graduation Prof. Leslie went on for a law de- gree as background for the com- mercial world. He came out of Law School in the middle of the depression when "there wasn't any business. It was so hard to get a decent job that I started practicing law." Five years in the field confirmed an earlier decision not to be a lawyer. "The law has so little to do with what you know is right," the his- tory professor said. "What is le- gally right is something different." Research on Story During his current five month leave Prof. Leslie's research will center on the doctrines of an early 19th century figure, Supreme Court Associate Justice Joseph Story. A close f'iend of Chief Jus- tice John Marshall, Story worked closely with Marshall on many of his constitutional doctrines, Prof. Leslie said. Prof. Leslie's interest in Story By BETTY SCHOMER According to a check made by the University of Colorado Daily, the fire department has neglected inspection of housing there. Numerous st u d e n t rooming house proprietors and sorority and fraternity housemothers reported that, to their k.nowledge, inspectors have never or have infrequently investigated fire conditions. How- ever, the fire department chief blames understaffing and lack of a rooming house list for proper inspection of legal requirements. * * * University of North Carolina student legislators charged that the university newspaper is a "second Daily Worker." Accusations also included that the paper is guilty of "pseudoin- tellectualism" and that the editor and the managing editor are "lazy." "The implicit policy of The Dai- ly Tar Heel seems to be that no- tices of the activities of organiza- tions of Carolina students are not important enough to merit full and adequate coverage . . ., said one legislator. A committee has been appoint- ed by the legislature to investigate the quality and circulation prob- lem of the paper. The Ohio Historical Museum has Ohio's last extinct pigeon. According to the Ohio State Lantern, a publication of a study of the extinct species revealed that the bird is "the last passenger pigeon killed in Ohio, as far as known." "Naturally, all of us are elated that our bird has been officially recognized," said the director of the Ohio Historical Society. * * * A strange robot-type monster spitting baseballs has invaded the campus of the University of Cali- fornia. However, the monster is noth- ing more than a streamlined pitch- ing machine used by the baseball team. At present, the coach of the team is sponsoring a name-the-' robot contest with the lucky win- ner receiving an autographed base- ball. * * * Students at the University of Alabama will vote in April on a campus honor system. A steering committee, set up by the Student Government Associa- tion is now laying the groundwork for the forthcoming student vote. The honor system will cover schol- astic matters, pertaining only to cheating in class. PROF. WILLIAM LESLIE ... no limits in history -' Restaurant and Pizzeria PIZZA IS OUR SPECIALTY 104 South Universitv I began when he started looking into civil rights doctrines for his doc- toral thesis. His studies led him back to the pre-Civil War period and Story's theories. Strained Interpretation "If Story's doctrines of consti- tutional interpretation had pre- vailed after the Civil War there would have been no need for the strained interpretation of the 14th amendment we have today," he said. "This interpretation of con- stitutional history," he added,' "has never been explored before. "Present day doctrines incorpor- ate the Bill of Rights into state law in a round about way," he ex- plained. The history professor, who has been teaching at the University since 1945, gives courses in British Constitutional History and Church and State in Anglo-American So- ciety. He begar teaching Church and State courses in 1952, he said, because students requested it. "I've never been able to formu- late a theory of education," Prof. Leslie said. None of them seem to be inclusive enough." Seltzer Wood-cut In National Show A color woodcut by Phyllis Selt- zer of the College of Architecture and Design is now on display through March 25 at a national show of the American Color Print Society in Philadelphia. Mrs. Seltzer has received a Tif- fany Fellowship in graphic arts. Several of her works are on dis- play throughout the country. Stevenson Sees Trend To Conform, NEW YORK (IP)-Adlai Steven-' son says this country has recent- ly seen "a multiplication of the presures toward conformity" and cited the Reece committee report on foundations as an example. Stevenson took part in a round table dicussion of "The Noncon- forming American," recorded here several weeks ago and heard last night on NBC's radio program, "Conversation." The 1952 Democratic presiden- tial candidate said the demand for conformity is particularly strong in politics and is "one of the perils of it." Statesman Should Be Teacher "A statesman or a politician in my judgment should be a teach- er," he said, "This is the purpose of politics in our scheme of things and in government by consent. "You have to .understand what you are consenting to, and that means it has to be explained to you by the politician, who is the spokesman of democracy in ac- tion . . "If you were to depart too far from the norm, then you become an eccentric, or then you become a fellow of questionable and doubtful wisdom, and certainly not too relibale. Can't Teach If Conform "On the other hand, if you do conform too rigidly, you can't teach, because you can't express new ideas bravely and courageous- ly." Stevenson quoted as "very sig- nificant" in the discussion of non- conformity a sentence from the report of the House committee headed by Rep. Carroll Reece (R- Tenn) which investigated tax-ex- empt foundations. He said the report stated that "the trustees of the tax exempt foundations should be very chary of promoting ideas, concepts, and opinion-forming material which run contrary to what the public currently wishes, approves and likes." Saying this was tantamount to saying "don't develop any new ideas," Stevenson added that de- velopment of new ideas was "the very purpose for which founda- tions in large measure exist." Carroll To Lecture on Seven Deadly Virtues' of Journalism Closed Saturdays 10:30AM toll PM. Mi i If you want to learn how, A.M. Night is all free Wallace Carroll, executive news editor of North Carolina's Win- ston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, will deliver a lecture at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphi- theatre. The talk, "Seven Deadly Virtues of American Journalism," is part of the journalism department's public lecture series. As a veteran foreign correspond-. ent, Carroll covered Britain's first two years in the war and the "blitz" against London for the United Press. He was a correspondent in Rus- sia covering the German offensive against Moscow in 1941. For his excellent dispatches from the front, he won the National Head- liners medal. In 1942 Carroll was Director of the U.S. Office of War Informa- tion in London. His experiences in UN Film Showing, Set for Tuesday "World Witho'ut End," a film produced by UNESCO will be shown Tuesday at 4:15 p.m. in Auditorium A, Angell Hall. The United Nations film por- trays the problems important to men attacked by the collaboration of technical and material assist- ance from other lands. Professor Claude Eggertsen of the educa- tion school will lead a brief discus- sion concerning the film. The film is being sponsored by the Department of History and Principles of Education. psychological warfare in the Eu- ropFan theater gav.) him back- ground for his book," "Persuade or Perish." Carroll has also been a lecturer in the National War College, and consultant for the United States Army, the State Department, the Psychological Strategy Board, and the Ford Foundation. Three Films On Forestry TO Be Shown A series of three film entitled "Living Forest" will be .shown at 16:45 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. 2054 of the Natural Science Building. Conservation from indiscrimi- nate cutting, fire, insects and mis- management will the subject of one film. 'Description of federal and state research departments will be shown. A second film will deal with how a . forest grows and what condi- tions affect and are necessary to forest growth. Timber production, the water- shed's vast underground reservoir and the recreation value of for- ests will be the topic of the re- maining film. Including production of sand and gravel, Michigan has mineral industries in all but 4 of its 83 counties. tory's language examination for the M.A. are nw posted in the office of the department, 3601 Haven Hall. ; Biophysics Colloquium. 4:00 p.m. 'Tues., March i, in Room 1041, Randall Physics Laboratory. Dr. J. Watson of California Institute of Technology will speak on "The Structure of Tobaccoi Mosaic virus including the Ribonucleic, Acid." Seminar in Complex Variables will meet Tues., March 15, at 2:00 p.m. in 247 West Engr. Prof. Wilfred Kaplan will speak on "Some Classical ResultsI of Vitali." Mathematics Colloquium. T u e s., March 15, at 4:10 p.m. in Room 225 An- gell Hall. Prof. Nicolas Rashevsky, of the University of Chicago, will speak on "Topoly and Life: In Search of Gen- eral Mathematical Principles in Biolo- gy and Sociology." Concerts Organ Recital. Robert Noehren, Uni- versity Organist, In the second of a se- ries of Sunday afternoon organ recitals at 4:15 p.m., March 13, In Hill Audi- torium. Compositions by DuMage, Clerjmbault, Couperin, Daquin, Bach, and Franck. Open to the public without charge. Program of American Music will be presented by the Alpha Chapter of Sig- ma Alpha Iota, honorary music society, at 8:30 p.m. Sun.. March 13, In Audi- torium A, Angell Hall. Compositions by Piston, Finney, Barber, Mueller, Ka- gen, Dello Joio, Friedman, Hanson, Hendl and Youse will be performed by the following students: Justine Votyp- ka, Nancy Bartholomew, Linda Reck, Phyllis Stringham, piano; Linn Bevis, contralto; Elizabeth Fischer, soprano; Patricia Stenberg, oboe; Sylvia Sher- man, English horn; Virginia Catanese, clarinet; Beverly Green, French horn; Eleanor Becker, bassoon. Open to the public. The Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra will give the ninth concert n the Chor- al Union Series, Tues., March 15, at 8:30 p.m., in Hill Auditorium. Mozart's Symphony No. 35 in D major, (Haffner); Wagner's Prelude and Love-Death from "Tristan and Isolde"; and the Brahms Symphony No. 1 in C minor. Exhibitions Muteum of Art. Alumni Memorial Hall: Contemporary American Drawings, George Braque-Prints. Through April 3. Hours: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. weekdays, 2:00-5:00 p.m. Sundays. Public invited. Events Today Sailing Club. Work party Sun., Mar. 13, 2:00 p.m. meet at 1512 Geddes. Peo- ple going to Lake meet at 10:00 a.m. & 1:00 p.m. at Lydia Mendelssohn. Blue Team Central Committee meet- ing Sun., 7:30 p.m. Women's League. Wesleyan Guild. Sun., March 13, 9:30 a.m. Discussion, "Concerned and Un- concerned"; 5:30 p.m. Fellowship Sup- per; 6:45 p.m. Worship Service and Program. Panel discussion on "Does Christ Challenge the World's Great Re- ligions?" First Baptist Church. Sun., March 13. 9:45 a.m. Student class studies John; 11:00 a.m. Sermon "Christian Dimen- sions;" 6:00 p.m. Cabinet Meetings; 6:45 p.m. Rev. Ralferd Freytag, Assist- ant Pastor of Zion Lutheran Church, will speak on "Lutheran Contributions to Contemporary Christianity." Michigan Christian Fellowship. Dr. Arthur F. Holmes, Department of Bi- ble and Philosophy, Wheaton College, will speak on "Miracles (Real or Appar- ent)?" Lane Hall, at 4:00 p.m. Gilbert & Sullivan. Rehearsal Sun., March 13 at 7:00 p.m. in the League for principals and chorus. Newman Club. Communion Breakfast at the Father Richard Center Run., March 13, following 9:30 a.m. mass. Speaker. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Sun., 6:00 p.m., cost supper at the Con- gregational Church. Paul Rahmeier, Na- tional Student Work Associate, will speak on; "The Nature of My Role and Position as a College Student." Episcopal Student Foundation. Can- terbury House breakfasts following both the 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. services Sun., March 13. "Faith of the Church" lec- ture series, 4:30 p.m., Sun., March 13, at Canterbury House. Canterbury Sup- per Hour at 5:45 p.m., Sun., March 13, at Canterbury House, followed by Miss Marguerite Smith, Director of Christian Education, who will discuss "The Sac- rament of the Holy Spirit." Coffee Hour at Canterbury House following the 8:00 p.m. Evensong Sun., March 13. Basic Bible seminar sponsored by Westminster Student Fellowship in the Student Center of the Presbyterian Church, 9:15 a.m., Sun., March 13. Dis- cussion will be on the Gospel of St. John. Advanced Bible seminar, 10:45 a.m., Sun., March 13. Westminster Student Fellowship sup- per at the Student Center of the Pres- byterian Church, 5:30 p.m., Sun., March 13. Cost, SOc. WSF Guild meeting at 6:45 p.m. in the Student Center. Benjamin w. wheeler, professor of history, will speak on "The Early Church," Hillel. Chorus Rehearsal Sun., Mar. 13, 4:30 p.m. in the main chapel. Sup- per Club Sun., 6:00 p.m. Study Group to read the Five Books of Moses spon- sored by the Religious Committee will meet Sun. after Supper Club. Sun., 8:00-10:30 p.m. "The King and I," Hillel's Annual Purim Dance featur- ing Paul Brody and His Band. Refresh- ments. 35 for Non-members and 250 for Members. Graduate Outing Club will meet Sun., Mar. 13 at 2:00 p.m. ome in old clothes to the northwest corner entrance of Rackham Building, Lutheran Student Association. Sun., Mar. 13, :00 p.m. To sign up for the supper, call the Center. Program at 7:00 p.m. A. Saunders, a missionary to China, will speak on China. Corner of Hill St. and Forest Ave. South Quadrangle-Sunday Musicales. Second program in the spring series will be given In the West Lounge of the quadrangle Sun., March 13, at 1:30 p.m. ThomasLoewy, baritone, Sylvan Kal- tak, accordionist, Raymond Young. baritone horn, and a Brass Ensemble, These afternoons are given by mem- bers of South Quadrangle and students in the Music School. Public invited. Informal Folk Sing at Lester Co-op, 900 Oakland, Sun., March 13,' at 8:00 p.m. Coming Events Foreign Service officers L. T. Stull and P. H. Trezise of the Department of State will speak on "Opportunities in the American Foreign Service," Mon., March 14 at 4:00 p.m. In Angell Hall, Auditorium C. They will Interview In- terested candidates the following day. Russky Kruzhok will mneet Mon., March 14 at 8:00 p.m. in the Interna- tional Center. Student talk on Russian music. Refreshments. Women's Research Club will meet Mon., March 14, in the East Lecture Room of the Rackham Building at 800 p.m. Dr. Elnr :usselman will speak on "The Village House in Graeco-o- man Egypt" Lane Hall Folk Dance Group will meet Mon., Mar. 14, 7:30-10:00 p.m. in the recreation room. Instruction for every dance, beginners welcome. Blue Team floor show tryouts. Mon. Tues., March 14, 15. Women's League 7:00 p.m. No talent required. Gilbert & Sullivan. Principalse only rehearsal Mon., March 14 in the League, at 7:00 p.m. La Petite Causette will meet Mon., Mar. 14 from 3:30-5:00 p.m. in the left room of the Union cafeteria. Scrabble en francais. Generation poetry staff wl meet Tues., Mar. 15 at 7:30 p.m. The Film Forum on International Ed- ucation, sponsored by the Dept. of His- tory and Principles of Education, will present a UNESCO flm, "World With- out End," Mar. 15 at 4:15 p.m., Aud. A., Angell Hall. Claude Rains, star of stage and screen, will be presented Wed., Mar. 16, 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium, as the sixth number on the 1954-55 Lecture Course. Program of readings, with piano ac- companiment, from classical and mod- ern literature, "Great Words to Great Music." Tickets are on sale at theAu. ditorium box office tomorrow through Wed. Hillel: Hillelrepoppin' Sat., Mar. 26. 7:15 p.m. at Tappan Junior High School. Tickets may be ordered by sending cash or check made payable to Hillel1Student Community, along with a stamped self- addressed envelope to: Jan Schuster, 826 Tappan, Ann Arbor, Mich. ,Tickets are $1.50 and $1.75 and include free bus transportation. Please indicate on mail order if free transportation is desired. Tickets also on sale at Mason Hall Mar. 14-18 and Mar. 21-25 from 11:00-12:00 a.m. and from 1-2 p.m. A.* F a 'sl .................. Y ~ i~54M~ ' : . . J . e.. ..'i ... ..LL .. . .. .rYrrG....... . .... "- ...r.....1 .."....... .f. ..:Jt"':{:: ::~ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN rS" '4 ......0*1 newest spring styles! Blouses in Pima , , Cott on andIsh L inen SI4.00 The World welcomes a new (Continued from Page 4) low. Cash award of $100. Open to jun- iors .nd seniors in the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts. Term papers dealing with relevant topics may be entered in the contest. Such papers should be submitted through the instructor of the course for which the paper was written. Other entries should be submitted to the Secretary of the Department of Sociol- ogy (5601 Haven Hall). Papers may be submitted any time up to March 25, 1955. They will be judged by a depart- mental committee by April 1, 1955. All entries should be typewritten and be between 2,500 and 8,000 words in length. The papers must deal with top- ics which fall within the following cat- egories: 1. The analysis of a Social Group 2. The Analysis of a Sociological Hy- pothesis 3. A Case Study of Social Change 4. The Analysis of a Social Institu- tion 5. The Study of a Community or Community Segment 6. The Analysis of a Social Process The results of the Department of His- S i I z 1 " 1 e . "' J - beauty 0 ( N\ N . left, Flip-tab collar, two ways won- derful . . . open or buttoned up! Graceful roll-up sleeves. Silky- washable pima broadcloth in white, shell pastels, smart vivids. Sizes 30 to 38. right, The lovely linen sleeveless with club collar, soft-set on a self- banded cardigan front, fine pearl buttons. White, pink, blue, beige, ebony black. All washable! Sizes 30 to 38.' SPORT SHOP -- THIRD FLOOR .~ r '. j ~ ' IyY~Yj .',. '.r- 1 ~vi '.. I' hI A beautifully shaped elastic bandeau that never rides up, always stays in place because it's cut lower in back. Engineering representatives of aI zI A IRCRAFT will be on the campus PRATT & WHITNEY MARCH 15 '2'. ' " I to interview *1 AERONAUTICAL ELECTRICAL CHEMICAL METALLURGICIAL MECHANICAL PHYSICISTS ENGINEERING GRADUATES f