FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGZ FE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG PTV~ 70-YEAR TRADITION BROKEN: Prnf4 ,g&~f F "I/i orr;I~c eprrJkio~m c I Il . 44JltV YYV L. Ca J-Hop Will Brighten RegistrationM By ELEANOR GOLDBERG F______Ms__w_ II 3I I IJCJ 1 VkJIC IIla 's Leaders Today J-Hop will take place during registration for the first time in its 70-year history due to the lack of a semester break in the new cal- endar. The dance will be held from 9:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. Monday, Feb. 4. Previously the University's latest weekend, the dance was held be- tween semesters. A calendar change does away with the usual inter-semester period by having the first semester end Feb. 2 and the second start Feb. 4. Change Was 'Shocking' Stevan Simich, J-Hop general chairman, said, "the idea of hav- irg J-Hop on a Monday and Tues- day was initially shocking, but the J-Hop Central Committee feels that the advantages of hav- ing it at this time outweigh the disadvantages of the other avail- able times." An alternate solution would have been to have the dance the Friday and Saturday following the start of second semester classes. This would have interfered not only with classes, but also with the traditional customs of J-Hop, he explained. With the present schedule, the "dead week" that occurred at the time the dance was previously held, will be eliminated. 1957 J-Hop will not interfere, with the academic proceedings, Marilyn Houck, publicity chair- man said. Students will not have to cut their vacations short to come back early, she added. Bands will be available during the week. Miss Houck mentioned several other advantages to the new date. First, residence halls will be open. Since they were originally closed, coeds formerly stayed at the men's houses. Off campus women will still be accomodated. Coeds may again stay at fraternities. Second, special late permissions of 4:00 a.m., Monday and 2:30 a.m. Tuesday will be issued. No I Nor By ROSE PERLBERG j "Soviet leadership in Commu- nism is suffering its greatest post- war setback," Prof. Leland ,StoweE of the journalism department said yesterday. Addressing a group of students and faculty, the foreign war cor- respondent and Pulitzer Prize winner discussed nine aspects of Moscow's crisis, events that have led to the "biggest Communist split since World War II, 1. Rebellion in the satellites. "Poland," he said, "poses as a tough problem for the men in the politburo.' For the first time in 10 years. the "wholesale robbery of a satellite's economy" has been halted. Reverse Policy in Poland Moscow had to cancel Poland's war debts and send her grain. "That must have really hurt the Soviets . . . who have never given anything except for a purpose," Prof. Stowe continued. 2. The 'rape of Hungary has re- vealed that Soviet-trained armies are not reliable after 10 years of training." "Greatest Mass Murder ..." No one knows, he continued, how many millions of people in Soviet satellites have been loaded into boxcars and shipped to Si- beria to be worked to death. "So- viet boxcar transportation" has resulted in the "greatest mass murders in all history."j 3. Marshall Tito of Yugoslavia "has emerged with adamant de- fiance of Moscow-" Tito is ac- cused of sowing disunity in the Communist world by denouncing Soviet policies, Prof. Stowe said, but Moscow is tendering him the olive branch. 4. Naked imperialism has been unmasked after the Kruschev- Bulganin pretense of good fel- lowship. Split in Politburo 5. There has been a split among the men in the Politburo. Krus- chev, Prof. Stowe commented, lost face with his colleagues when he exposed Stalin last spring. Now' the Soviets will keep him in top place as a "useful window dress- ing," but the leadership probleni still remains. 6. Soviet economy, strength and future progresss has been dealt a grave blow. "Moscow has been milking her satellites for years," Prof. Stowe said. "Now she has to reverse her tactics." A permanent non-stop crisis in underproduction for her own pop- ulation exists, he added. Moscow-Peiping Strain 7. Moscow-Peiping relationships are straining. Communist China's premier supports nationalist com- munism in Poland, Prof. Stowe said. 8. Moscow has committed her- self to risky intervention in theI Middle East. "The temptation for the Soviets to move into the Mid- dle East before they are ready is high," the professor remarked. 9. Incredible and shattering failure of Soviets and the Com- munist party to indoctrinate youth to be reliable Communists. . . SANTA SAYS c . '"Give Her Practical fGts This Chris .:.. W hite g] 2. A,,\ . elegant f to any a ~ '~. ~- perfi anytime. . 0 . Pretty, stmas" Moves .A. .. the finishing touch fternoon outfit ect anywhere, Of double woven, smooth cotton and nylon by Wear-right. Priced from $2.00. Or, if it's finger toasters she wants, we've warm wool gloves and mittens . . . from $2.00. CAMPUS TOGS 1111 South University and MAIN SHOP on Forest off South University 'I COULD HAVE DANCED ALL NIGHT'-Students take a break at the 1956 J-Hop. This year's two-day formal dance festivities will be held from 9:30 p.m. to 4 a.m., Monday and 9:30 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., Tuesday, Feb. 4 and 5. A calendar change breaks the 70-year-old tradition of a J-Hop weekend. ...........- .. such late pers could be given dur- ing the academic year, when 1:30 is the limit. The driving ban will also be lifted for J-Hop days. "If we had J-Hop during the school year we would lose the tradition of women staying in fraternity houses and the special late permissions that really make the dance," Miss Houck summar- ized. Tickets for the dance will be sold at the Administration Build- ing and through junior represen- tatives in each house. Reservations for tickets may be made Wednes- day through Friday, Dec. 12, 13, and, 14. By MARY BETH GODFROY Winter is off to a fast start both weather-wise and party-wise as snow covers the ground and a full slate of activities is scheduled for the weekend. Pledge formals dominate the scene. Tonight "Sons of the Stars" will attend the Beta Theta Pi pledge formal with Bill Bottomley and his band providing the music. A dark blue false ceiling and gold stars will decorate the dance room. Alpha Omicron Pi honors pledges at a dinner and dance this evening in the Veteran of Foreign Wars Hall, while the pledges of Zeta Tau Alpha are honored at the White Violet Ball in the Hussey Rm. of the League. 'Street of Dreams' Couples will dance on the "Street of Dreams" at the Alpha Xi Delta pledge formal. "Easy" street decorations will provide atmos- phere. Blue, white and red will prevail at Kappa Delta's pledge for- mal this evening. (Blue and white are the predominating colors in the decorations and Red Johnson and his band will play.) Piles of snow, artificial of course, will help decorate the Zeta Psi house for their pledge formal tomorrow evening. Entitled "Winter Wonderland,' the dance will feature the music of Paul Brodie. An old-fashioned Christmas will be the theme of Delta Gamma's pledge formal this evening. The Dearborn Country Club will be the scene of Kappa Sigma's pledge formal also being held tonight. To- morrow evening the chapter will attend a dinner-dance at the Mich- igan State chapte'r. 'Americans In Paris' The Americans visiting Paris tomorrow evening will be men of Strauss house and their dates. A combo and a house calypso band will entertain in a Parisian setting and the staff will put on a skit during intermission. A magic show and a twirling exhibition will also be held during intermission. To "turn the trick", pledges of Sigma Alpha Epsilon are hold- ing a dance for their actives tomorrow but under the guise of se- crecy they won't reveal its nature. U U: AROUND TOWN Places for You and Your Date To Go This Weekend CINE~lA GUILD - Cinema Guild selection to be shown at 7 and 9:20 p.m. tonight in the Ar- chitecture Auditorium will be "All About Eve," starring Bette Davis, Ann Baxter and Celeste Holme. CAREER CONFERENCE - A Career Conference aimed at help- ing undergraduate women decide their future field of endeavor will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow on the second floor of theLeague. RECORD DANCE - An infor- mal record dance at the Union from 8 to 10 p.m., Sunday will top the weekend activities. " k CHARM BRACELETS in Sterling or Gold Pennants in College Colors - ~any college -___ HARD ENAMELED ON SILVER OR GOLD ORDER NOW FOR XMAS sterling Cold Bracelet...........$2.75 $29.00 College Pennant . 2 00 8.00 including tax and postage CHARM HOUSE 3019 F ette Roa d Kensingtfon, Maryland SPECIAL SHIRT DRESSES by our Favorite Haberdasher 1/2 Price PURCHASE! Reg. price $30.00 Sale price $15.00 The luxury fabrics in this special purchase include: Lanella stripe (50% wool, 50% cotton -Guaranteed washable) Lightweight English wool stripe. Imported flannel in medium or charcoal.grey. Excellent assortment. .. in sizes 8 to 78 a The r.t 329-531 F. 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