TE IMICHICGAN DAILY - V BORROWED TIME': olleges Failing to Integrate leligion with Other Programs By failing to integrate religion vith the rest of their program niversities and colleges are cut- ing themselves off from their outs and living on "borrowed ine" according to Dr. Leonard A. itidley of Oberlin College. Four Millionth Iostwar Car Rolls Monday DE['ROIT, July 3- (AP) -Two ears ago today the first postwar automobile was rolled off the as- embly lines of the Ford Motor ;o. at nearby River Rouge; next donday the four-millionth pass- nger car to be produced since the ear's end will be made in one of he nation's car factories. In announcing the results of an ndustry-wide survey George Rom- ey, managing director of.the Au- omobile Manuafcturers' Associa- Ion, said today that in addition o the passenger vehicle output he automotive plants also will lave made 2,200,000 motor trucks :nd coaches since July 3, 1945. The total of 6,200,000 vehicles s only a little more than the mo- orcar producers had hoped to as- emble in the first full year of eacetime operation. In 1946 the nation's automo- Ale plants produced 3,090,000 cars nd trucks. They were handicap- xd by labor disputes and -mater- als shortage. The materials scar- ities, chiefly sheet steel, and some abor differences continued to iarass the industry through the irst six months of this year, and ield production far below capa- ity. Industry officials, however, have ointed out that the rate of pro- Luction maintained through the irst half of 1947 reflected an an- iual rate of 4,600,000 cars and rucks. Edmonson Reports Peak Enrollment Enrollment in the education chool has increased 100 over lst uummer's registration and is the iighest since the summer of 1940 ccording to Dean J. B. Edmon- ;o'h. Better salary schedules f o r eachers, which make it possible or them to spend the summer in school instead of working, and ;he increased emphasis being laced on advanced degrees are robably respon.§ible for the in- rease in enrollment Dean Ed- nonson said. Religion is not ecclesiasticism or secularism but "respect for peo- ple and the realitGy that makes for unification of life's higher val- ues," Dr. Stidley asserted. Uni- versities were originally founded on this belief and by ignoring it they fail to create the force that created them and will eventually loose out, he said. Necessary Blending Scientific method without re- ligious integration has left us without values and led to the problem"v/e now face with the atomic bomb, he said. Religion can give usathe necessary blending of science and values in a cosmic setting, Dr. Stidley commented. "Whether we have time enough, skill enough and good will enough to develop a peaceful substitute for the atomic bomb may determ- ine the life or death of democ- racy," he asserted. Discussing the problem of what form religious integration should take, Dr. Stidley said that it is impossible to give one answer that will fit all schools. "If the Uni- versity will trace back and analyze its real purpose, sooner or later it will have to find a place for re- ligion," he said. Other School's Work He mentioned the work other schools have done in attempting to integrate religion with other work. Princeton has made cours- es in religion, history and plhiloso- phy compulsory during the first two years. At the University ofj Kentucky a concentration pro- gram in "Religious Aspects of Cul- ture" has been developed. If colleges and universities .will consider existing plans in conjunc- tion with their own needs they will find the answer to their problem Dr. Stidley said. Phone V ision.. (Continued Trom Page 1) dard television and "pay-as-*you- see" feature programs. It works equally well with color television, projection receivers, or black and white. McDonald said that arrange- ments will be worked out with major film producers, television broadcasters and the telephone company. Phone Vision produc- tion will take from six months to a year and will probably become available first in such key cities as New York, Chicago, Washington and Los Angeles which now have television transmitters in opera- tion. Existing television trans- mitters can be easily altered to handle Phone Vision. The price of Phone Vision receivers will be no greater than ordinary television receivers now on the market. New Taxation Studies Seen By Prof. Gault Survey Being Made 1'f TaxImprovement A uique 1"ro edui-e in taxation studies may devtlop from a sur- vey of the attitude of Michigan citizens toward taxation now be- ing conducted, according to Prof. E. H. Gault, director of Univer- sity Bureau of Business Research. The survey is being made by the Michigan Industrial Conference Committee, assisted by the bur- eau. It will cover sources and distribution of revenue and the caliber of services citizens receive from it, and should be of yalue in helping shape future tax poli- cies, Prof. Gault said. The conference committee and the research bureau plan to con- sult representatives of labor and consumers before recommenda- tions are drafted. Special con- sideration will be given to the problems of the small taxpayers according to Prof. Gault. The committee has set no time limit on the study since any rec- ommendations must be based on comprehensive research but it is hoped that a report can be made by the first of the year, Prof. Gault said. The Industrial Conference Com- mittee is composed of W. F. Doyle, chairman, director of the Michi- gan Chain Store Bureau; J. L. Lovett, general manager of the Michigan Manufacturer's Associ- ation: and A. J. Phillips, executive ' secretary of the Michigan Educa- tion Association. AVC Committee The AVC has recently author- ized a committe'.P t.n f I tiilU1~L JOSEPH KNITZER ...to give concert * * * Recital Offers Brahms Music An all Brahms program will be presented by Oliver Edel, cellist; Joseph Brinkman, pianist; and Joseph Knitzer, violinist, at 8:30 p.m. Monday at Rackham Assem- bly Hall in the second of the Monday series of concerts spon- sored by the music school. Knitzer appeared July 1 at Hill Auditorium in the first concert of the series. Announcing 0 147 Students (Continued from Page 1) Stanley H.; Sheets, Ted C,; Spence, George B.; Steinhagen, Wm. K.; Stubbs, Harry E.; Vehn, Robert E.; Wagner, Rich- ard E,; Wahr, John C.; and Will- iams, Reade. Public health school - Bach, Jean E. B.; Barrett, Harold S.; Board, Leonard M.; Borgman, An- na B.; Culbertson, Mary E.; Fish- er, Marion G.; Seeman, Isadore; Slee, Vergil N.; and Welge, Mar- cella L. Music school-Albright, Mary- jane; Baker, Joanne J.; Bell, Dig- by B.; English, Constance D. C.; Penn, Marshall M.; and Wolfe, James B. Business administration school --DeBoer, James; Ford, John: A.;, LaBaw, William D.; and Roberts, Reed. Forestry school-Halbach, James L.; Kohrt, Richard J.; and Sproull, Seibert S. Pharmacy college--Godt, Henry C. Jr.; and Oxenger, Robert J. Architecture school - Villman, Richard G. Education school - Gerrish, Howard H. Nursing school-Elliott, Jo E. 4' I I LEWIS TALKS WITH NEWSMEN AFTER CONFERENCE-John L. Lewis, (left) talks with news- men after secret conference in Washington, at which an all-out coal strike apparently was averted. Lewis and negotiators for a large part of the bituminous industry reached a tentative agreement granting big concessjons to the union. IRA Speaker Hits Violence, Killing inSouth Violence, part of a conscious plan to short-circuit the militancy of returning veterans and wipe out recent political gains, must be stopped if we are going to have the South as part of a growing political movement, according to Louis Burnham executive secretary of the Southern Negro Youth Con- gress. Speaking at a meeting sponsored by the Inter-Racial Association, Burnham said that lynching is a national problem, not merely a southern question. What happens in the 1948 elections, concerns ev- eryone, he explained. Killings in the South are designed to further strain Negro-white relations in order to make it impossible for them to get together for the com- mon good, he said., Political gains in the South since 1944, including 100,000 Ne- gro votes in Georgia (and a new total of one million Georgian votes), 150,000 registered Negro voters in Texas, 25,000 Negro votes in Arkansas, and organization of the Progressive Democratic Party in South Carolina were strength- ened by the return of Negro vet- erans, Burnham said. Because they have lost some of their form- er inhibitions, he said, a wave of terror, lynchings and mob violence has been set off against them. 'EAST OR WEST?':I New Developments in Europe Mean' Ideological' Shoedown ur Store Hours F1 for the Summer By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. AP Foreign Affairs Analyst A swift succession of well coor- dinated allied diplomatic thrusts since Secretary Marshall's "Euro- peanhPlan" speech just a month ago has brought the countries of Europe to the greatest hour of de- cision since the war. By the same token, Russia has reached a crisis in her expansion- ist program which may well prove climactic. The doors which have cor'nect- ed "two worlds", are now being closed, if not yet bolted. In the Directory Sale Is Announced Morris Reports Date Set for Wednesday The Student Directory, contain- ing names, addresses and tele- phone numbers of students and faculty members, will go on sale Wednesday, editor John Morris announced yesterday. Emphasizing t h e permanent value of the Directory, he said that it contains the only record of home addresses available to students. Equally important, Morris said, is the Directory's value as a sum - mer "date-book", containing stu- dents' Ann Arbor adresses and telephone numbers. Other features of the Directory include a listing of houses and dormitories operating during the summer, a map of the campus, and a listing of names and address- es of University faculty. The Directory will sell for one dollar on campus, in local book- stores, the Union, the League and at the Student Publications Build- ing. Will Attend Meeting Dean J. B. Edmonson of the ed- ucatiop school will attend a meet- ing of the National Education As- sociation this weekend at Cincin- natti, O. Sunday Dean Edmonson will preside at a meeting of the Na- tional Horace Mann League. --- countries which are nearest the dividing line-at least in- those which still have some hope of self- determination-the question is which way? In the others, what will be the effect on the dictators if (heir hungry peoples are forced to watch from the outside while their neigh- bors sit down to dine in America's cooperative restaurant? Russia will have to tighten the belt of her own inadequate econ- omy and make some concessions to these peoples or else risk a pop- ular revulsion. Some of them, Bo- hemians, Poles, Magyars, Serbs, Albanians, Czechs and others, have behind them a centuries- long tradition of a usually-losing but never-abandoned fight for in- dependence. If the economic lev- el of Western Europe begins tc rise as a result of the reconstruc- tion conference to which the na- tions have now been invited, Rus- sia will come under increasing pressure to let her satellites par- ticipate. Unless she can feec them, as she now cannot, they are bound, one day or another, tc make a break for the table. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 Saturdays from 9:00-1:00 Weekdays from 9:00-6:00 Mondays 9:00 till 9:00 a 5 T 7 Dr a I I .t:u 4U11111Ueuo iormuiate plans for aiding the Civil Liber- ties League in the circulation of its petitions for a referendum on the Callahan Bill. The signatures of 5 percent of the voters in the last gubernator- ial election are required on the pe- titions. Purchase Radio & Camera Shop Phone 8696 W8RP W8WOJ 605 CHURCH ST. II '4 L' DAIY OFICALBULLETIN f' INI 11 (Continued from Page 2) series of Monday evening' recitals sponsored by the School of Music, will be presented at 8:30 July 7, in the Rackham Lecture Hall, when Joseph Knitzer, violinist, Ol- iver Edel, cellist, and Joseph Brinkman, pianist, will appear in a program of chamber nusic by Brahms. i.It will consist of Trio in C major, Op. 87, for Violin, Cello, and Piano, and Trio in C minor, Op. 101, for Violin, Cello, and Pi- ano. ATTENTION SUMMER STUDENTS For Food That Satisfies TRY MILLER'S BOX LUNCH and DELICATESSEN Call 2-7171 We Deliver Anywhere, Anyti rhe The general public is cordially invited.- Student Recital: Robert Gordon Waltz, Tenor, will present a pro- gram in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Wednes- day evening, July 9, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall. The recital will include compositions by Schu- bert, Duparc, Tremisot, Franck, Poldowski, Recli, Donaudy, Cim- ara, and Sibella, and will be open to the general public. Exhibitions The Museum of Art: Exhibition of Prints-Vanguard Group, Ann Arbor Art Association Collection, and from the Permanent Collec- tion. July 1-28. Alumni Memor- ial Hall, daily, except Monday, 10- 12 and 2-5; Sundays, 2-5. The public is cordially invited. Events Today Attention Sailing Club. Sailing Jamboree. Racing and party on Friday, July 4th at 12:00, Whit- more Lake. Old members and all new members cordially invited. The second Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held on Friday, July 4, 1947. Discussions begin at 8 p.m. in the Main Lodge of the Fresh Air Camp located on Pat- terson Lake. Any University stu- dent interested in problems of in- dividual and group therapy is in-I vited to attend. The discussant will be Dr. Wilma T. Donahue, Di- rector of the Bureau of Psycholog- ical Services. University Community Center: 1045 Midway Place, 'Willow Run Village. Thurs., July 3: 8 p.m., Studio Work Shop, beginning drawing class in black and white. Friday, July 4: 8 p.m., Dupli- cate bridge tournament. > Dance Friday and Saturday nights at the Michigan League Casbah, 9:00-12:00 with Al Chase and his Band. All students are invited to come stag or in couples. Those girls interested in being hostesses for Friday or Saturday meet in the Social Director's Of- fice of the League at 8:30 before the dance for which they prefer to be hostess. MICHTGRNL\ENSIf4N offers ca limited number ATOMJC SUNDAE SPECIAL Calkins-Fletcher Soda Fountain 324 South State C 11 J/ ARISTOCRAT PRINTING ij 0/ 1i' 1 QUALITY PRINTING GOETZCRAFT is not just ordinary printing-it's a family COOL RIR circulated to every corner of your room. & MTCHC NN~i 1111 1111 I'll)