*PAGE FOUR 'U' Delegates Will Propost Amendment (EDITOR'S NOTE: Students from every corner of the nation will at- tend the Third Annual National Stu- dent Congress, Aug. 23-31, at the Uni- versity. This is the fourth article in a series which will present many of the issues they will face.) Delegates representing the Uni versity, appointed by Student Leg islature (SL), will propose al amendment to the Michigan Re gion stand on Student Rights, a the Third Annual National Stu dent Congress, which will be helc Aug. 23-31, here. They hope to alter the Regiona stand on substituting a "state ment of Conditions" for the thre year old Student Bill of Rights, o the U.S. National Student Associ- ation (NSA). THE SL PROPOSAL would give the "college or university commun- ity" the responsibility of provid ing thb conditions essential tc training for citizenship in a demo. cratic society. "Our criticism of the Regional proposal is that it does not state upon whom the responsibility for providing the conditions shall rest," Tom Walsh, '51L, SL dele- gation member stated. "ALL OF THE conditions giver in the Regional statement cover areas which have been a source of campus conflict in the past and would clearly define the obliga- tions of the institution in its task of training students for citizen- ship. We believe that the docu- ment would provide a basis for re- ducing the tensions which arise between the three campus groups,' Walsh said. Basis for the University dele- gation stand, according to Walsh, will be an SL policy statement defining the role and function of a state institution of higher learniig in a democratic society. - The statement was passed April 19, 1950, following the off-campus debate between Herbert J. Phillips, fired University of Washington professor, and Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the history department. THE STATEMENT is as follows: "We believe that one of the ma- jor responsibilities of the educa- tional institution in our democra- tic society is to provide the oppor- tunity necessary to help its stu- dents develop into useful and ma- ture citizens and leaders in our so- ciety. "We believe that the citizens of Michigan have accepted the bur- den of state-supported higher edu- cation on the democratic premise that the higher education of some' of its citizens through their con- tributions to the community, both in leadership and in technical knowledge, will in turn aid the en- tire society through increasing its standards of living and culture. "We insist that the University's responsibility to make available the opportunity for this training for citizenship and leadership must include providing the following: "1. The formal or technical knowledge gained through instruc- tion in the classroom. "2. The opportunity for students to participate in freely chosen stu- dent activities on the campus where the student can experience the techniques of democratic acti- vity as a means of training him- self for active participation in the life of his community. "While the student is acquiring an advanced education through these two channels, the Univer- sity has the responsibility of act- ing affirmatively to insure each student an adequate opportunity to gain a knowledge and under- standing of the issues which face America and the world today. "This opportunity for free in- quiry and discussion is essential if the University is to fulfill its func- tion of developing its students in- to well informed and qualified citizens and leaders who can make that additional contribution to our democratic community which the people of the state' have a right to expect of them." THE Mi liM GAIN' TI:ATTV -QAwrll*lAv vrrrv " A P~W~W'~W~ A 'U7 WVI'W - ~.. ~ .m. .A ZN. .U ~ £3. ~ Jut,: THE MTCT-TTCA1%T IiATTV U I ~ X Z, 1950I Actors Gesticulate To Air 'Washing Machine' ASSOCIATED PRESS TAG-DAY-Skippers and crew, all members of the University Sailing Club, guide their small craft in a fast game of tag on the windy waters of Whitmore Lake. 'U' Sailors Skipper Rowboats with Masts By WENDY OWEN Putting a "Washing Machine" on tape is all in a day's work in the Angell Hall radio studios. This feat took place yesterday when a group of speech depart- ment members performed Bessie F. Collins blank verse drama, "The Washing Machine" over the fa- cilities of WUOM and WKAR, East Lansing. ' , ) " BLANK VERSE is difficult to read with any feeling, the actors commented, and to get emotion in- to their lines they resorted to all manner of facial expressions and fist-closed gestures. In between their miscrophone Ypsilani Plans 'To Annex 21 Square Miles Ypsilanti city authorities out- lined a wholesale annexation plan to the township negotiating com- mittee which would remove almost 90 percent of the township's as- sessed value. About 21 square miles of town- ship land are included in the pro- posal which if added to Ypsilanti would increase its area eight times and more than double its present population. It would include Willow Run Village which previously had threatened to incorporate a large* portion of Ypsilanti township un- less annexed to the city. The tract of land is valued at approximately $31,500,000 com- pared to the $22,000,000 present assessment value of Ypsilanti. Willow Run Village promised support of the plan. Research Center To StudyHousing The Survey Research Center of the University has a new project- finding out why a person buys a! home and how he goes about get- ting it after he's made the deci- sion. Contracted by the Federal Hous- ing and Home Finance Agency, the Center is to determine the relative importance of factors which induce the buyer to pur- chase the house he buys and the relation of the kind of house he has purchased to his financial, demographic and attitudinal char- acteristics. George Katona, program direc- tor of the Survey Research Center will supervise the housing study. sessions they would wander around the well-carpeted floor, usually coughing violently, but silently so as not to disturb the broadcast. Then their cue would come and they'd take up sta- tions around the mike. One inquisitive character spent his free time going to look in the control room, peer at the clock and make faces at the director, William Steggath of the speech department. * * * IN THE MIDST of all these maneuvers the actors "on mike" were emoting the problems of atomic, pushbutton warfare, but no one paid much attention to chem. The control room was quiet except during the period of greatest conflict in the script when the director commented that they were "right on time" when the heroine described the button that would set the world ablaze. The show ended in a gust of rain and a hurried announcement of just who had participated. Hero of the affair was an auto- matic type washer which was only heard from once in a muffled un- dertone from a sound-effects re- cording. Australian To Discuss Flu Virus F. M. Burnet, director of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourn, Aus- tralia, will speak here at 4 p.m. Monday. He will talk on "The Genetic Approach to Variation in Influ- enza Virus." The lecture is open to the public. PU TURE NEW nS I N T -S I Z E H E R C U L E S - Willy Gallacher, 5-foot, 6-inch, 147-pound Glasgow strong man, demonstrates strength by towing a sixteen-ton bus with his teeth at Frankfurt, Germany. By CAL SAMRA Anyone who might dare brave the turbulence of Michigan watersj has a perfect outlet for his nauti- cal ambitions in the University's Sailing Club. This club, commanded by Com- modore (Miss) Renate Oppen- heimer this summer, has enjoyed a manifold number of Conradian escapades on Michigan lakes. *.* NEARLY EVERY day nearby Whitmore Lake is the scene of sailing experiments of the 40 club- members. The usual season for the club's activities is the summer. when 10 sailboats contend with the wind and waters of the lake. Members of the club have reached such proficiency in the past three year* that they have managed to walk off with the Mid West Regatta championship at each meet. The "club, which is a member Afthe Intercollegiate Yatch Rac- ing Association of North America, also competes in nationwide races. Numerous trophies have been awarded it for outstanding sailing in racing events. * * * EACH BOAT, usually a glorified rowboat with a 20-foot mast, is manned by two persons, one the skipper who steers the boat's course, the other a one-man "crew," Who takes orders and manipulates the center-board-a heavy metal board projected into the water. The boats themselves are made of spruce wood, while the sails are made of Egyptian cotton. To the members, sailing is an art and must be studied as such. Practice in maneuvering is a necessity, and one of the ways in which skill is attained is the so-called "tag" game. In this game, certain imaginary limits are drawn up, the boat be- ing unable to pass beyond these boundaries. The pursuer, armed with a tennis ball, begins the chase. Object of the game is to out-maneuver the other boat and to drop the tennis ball into its hull. OUT IN OPEN WATERS, sailing requires finesse in outwitting the wind. By re-setting the sail, the boat can glide with the wind, or at a 45 degree angle into the wind. However, the boat can't sail against the wind. Maneuvering from one position to another by turning with the wind at the stern is called "jibing." Careless maneuvering, howev- er, frequently causes a capsizing. The sailboats won't sink but they will capsize, especially when a thoughtless person climbs into the bow. The club has a 25 cent fee for capsizing, and anyone who com- mits this misdemeanor is award- ed a diploma-"Order of the Wet Pants"-with a pair of rubber pants attached. For those who, on account of their weight, fear sail- ing, it is noteworthy that heavy sailors have an advantage, espec- ially in heavy, windy weather. Sel- dom does a heavy crew tip over. Many tricks of the trade are employed in team racing. For in- stance, several boats may gang up on the leader and attempt to hin- der his progress in order that another may take his place. At any rate, those who long for the sea can have an excellent sub- stitute and an, enjoyable recrea- tion in fresh water sailing. rm. - -S 3-UmiON. C "Hooray! The kitchen is burn- ing! Now we'll have to eat at the Allenel Dining Room." THE ALLENEL 126 East Huron :RE L I V I N G FESTIVITY O F 1475 - Armored knights ride down a street of Landshut, Bavaria. in a traditional fete celebrating a royal wedding which took place in 1475. 4 .PO.PE' S C U A R D M A RKS CE N T E N N IAL Officers of the Palatine Guard renew oath of allegiance to Pope Pius XII at centennial ceremony of the unit founded in 1850. _______________ I ART CINEMA LEAGUE and THE CHESS CLUB present HENRY FONDA "Young Mr. Lincoln" Fri. and Sat.. July 21.22 AE . ......,_ ia. .-- :, :".::..tea.. -'-- -:: ::. k.<-.-.,--- ;:;":......: .rr ..:.:- ""... ...:S.cti .. ..t .