W eather Considerable cloudiness today; tomorrow snow and colder L git Iga kzt VOL. XLIX No. 67 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, DEC. 13, 1938 PRICE, IVE CENTS Pan-American Meet Prepares1 To Consolidate WesternWorld Venezuela Proffers Treaty For Concerted Defense Against $ Foreign Attack To Study Arbitration Of Spanish Civil War LIMA, Dec. 12 /IP) - Executive Committees of the Ei hth Pan-Amer- ican Conference cleared the decks today for swift consideration of im- portant projects for consolidation of the Western Hemisphere. Alfranio De Mello Franco, former Foreign Minister of Brazil, was chosen chairman of the Committee for the Organization of Peace which will dis- cuss continental defense and unifi- cation of existing peace treaties. Delegates placed much significance in the choice of the Brazilian since his country is one of the foremost of the American Republics favoring strong organization of the Western Hemi- sphere against outside aggression. With Mello Franco presiding, the xchances for reaching a strong resolu- tion or possibly an agreement for con- tinental defense were believed appre- ciably improved. The Brazilian did not want the chairmanship but ac- cepted on the insistence of Central American nations and Peru and Col- ombia. Delegates said this meeting should be the most business-like Pan-Ameri- can conference yet held, owing to the determination of delegations to con- clude everything by Dec. 23 and pos- sibly even by Dec. 20. Alf k. Landon, former Governor of Kansas and 1936 Republican presi- dential candidate, is the chief United Stattes representative on the Com- mittee for Organization of Peace. A sweeping project offered by Ven-. ezuela, calling for immediate consul- tation and common action by the American republics in event of ag- giession by a non-American nation, was among measures before the com- mittee. r It was added that Argentine and Mexican representatives.were making progress on a plan for declaration calling for the end of the Spanish Civil War and proferring mediation. Diogenes Escalante, Venezuelan Minister to Washington, was chosen chairman of the second most im- portant conmmittee of the Confer- ence-the one on economic problems. Senor Voting For Class Posts Is Tomorrow Four Officers And Dance Committee Members Are Chosen At Campus Polls Seniors will go to the polls on the campus tomorrow to choose four permanent officers of their class and 13 members of the Senior Ball com- mittee. This will be the third election of the school year under the regula- tions of the recently adopted revision of student government. Voting places will be open from 2 to 5 p.m. in Room 231 Angell Hall and Room 311 West Engineering Building, Fred Luebke, '39E, President of Men's\ Council announced, while architecture school balloting will be conducted from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the lobby. Four who are elected in each school to lead the class, automatically go down in the history of the Uni- versity as official Alumni president, vice-president, secretary and treas- urer of the class of 1939. The composition of the Ball com- mittee is as follows: three men and two women from the literary college, three men from the engineering col- lege, one each from the nursing, edu- cation, architecture and music schools, and one from the combined senior classes of the pharmacy and forestry schools. 'Elijah' To Be Given By School Of Music Student-Body Is 'Cleaned' By Army Of Goodfellows { J 33 Engineers To Seek Posts In Poll Today Two Men Will Be Chosen From Each Class Under Changed Petition System Students Will Vote In Engineering Arch Thirty-three engineers will com- pete today for the eight Engineering Council Representatives posts, in the first election conducted according to the petition system, Wesley Warren, 39, announced yesterday. Voting in the freshman, sophomore, junior and senior classes will be conducted from 1 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. in the lobby of the Engineering Arch. Official List Of Candidates The official list of candidtes, pre- pared by the Council, is as follows: iqreshmen: Robert Coapman, Ran- del Smith, Jack Carpenter, Robert G. W. Brown, Tom Schuler, Grant Allen, 'Carl Wolfston, Richard Un- gar, Robert Thomas, Richard Ebbets, Vance Crawford, Bud Cowles and Robert Pasch. Sophomores: Merril, Frank Mor- ton, Edward King, Dave Sutherland and Charles Brown. Juniors: Gordon Arnold, Cruzen Alexander, Ted Zurhorst, John Cal- louette, Donald Diem, Art Brandt, Herbert Blumberg, Nat Siegel, Ben Jones and Hugh Estes. Seniors: John Fechnay, William Ritcheske, John Parker, Bill Walters and Robert Hartwell. Two Men From Each Class Two men will be elected from each class and will serve as sole represen- tatives of their respective classes on the Council. Enthusiasm displayed in the new system thus far, as evi- denced by the 33 petitions submitted, has been most gratifying, Warren said. He urged all engineers to turn out to the polls. Nomination to the ballot printed above was secured by petitioning the Engineering Council. The reorganized election system has more recently been used as a model by Men's Coun- cil, in its revision of the class voting set-up for all schools. Poll Will Begin Today To Choose J-Hop Band -Daily Photo by Sheeline W- Faculty Hawkers Capture Plaintiff Litzenberg is attempting a Lead In Successful Push wide end run around Defendant Burs- ley. For Ann Arbor Needy Litzenberg: Get out from be- hind that Goodfellow apron, Joe, By ROBERT L FITZHENRY I know you. With returns from the outlying dis- Bursley: Come here, Litz. tricts still incomplete the Goodfellow Litzenberg: Can't, Joe, gotta campaign last night gave full prom- rush. ise of cracking the $1,100 mark as Bursley: (basso profundo) receipts were still rolling in from the (Continued on Page 6) record sale of more than 8,000 spe- cial editions. Sales were especially heavy duringS r eme Court the morning hours as 'the huge army AC of Goodfellows armed with special Ch c s T L editions and sporting sales talks cut WC'IS. to fit, went to work on the student 'a body and picked it as clean as a herr- In Seam an ing bone. Selling peak of the drive was at- tained during the noon hour when the Tribunal Forbids Missouri powerful faculty platoon threw its "name"* men into the breach and Law School To Deny blocked off every known exit from Admittance Of Negroes campus. Complaints from hungry students were as fruitless as post- blue-bok exuses.WASHINGTON, D.C., Dec. 12.-0(3) blue-book excuses.' President Ruthven from his office -The Supreme Court today thwart- in the center of. the diagonal was ed an effort of the National Labor heard threatening prospective grad- Relations Board to reinstate 145 sea- uates with unsigned diplomas. A impenetrable cordon of academic hu- men who were discharged after two manity, meanwhile, was thrown ships had been seized in sit-down across the sidewalk under the en- strikes.t gineering arch as Professors Charles Without explaining its action, the' Spooneg, James H. Cissel, Roy Swin- court refused a board request that it ton arf Edward L. Eriksen stood review a decision of the Fifth Fed- shoulder to shoulder in their de- eral Circuit Court, which set aside a mands. board order requiring reinstatement Observers are still touting the cir- of the men. cus that went on in front of the The order had been directed Union where Dean Bursley flourishedagainst the Pensular and Occiden as a one-man monopoly with no re- tag ainsh inslaadCcidn bates.Competitors, however, charge tal Steamship Co. the enthusiastic dean with unfair In its only formal decision today, methods. They cite as evidence the the High Court ruled that the Univer- case of Litzenberg vs. Bursley, where- sity of Missouri should admit Lloyd, in Plaintiff Litzenberg, claims Burs- Gaines, a Negro, to its school of law. ley, who is alleged to have been act- (In Lansing, where he is employed ing under false pretenses. Evidence on a WPA-sponsored survey, Gaines is based on the following approximate declined to say whether he would conversation. . enter the school, which previously, Scene: Front steps of the Union. had refused to admit him). - - Missouri provides separate schools for Negroes,. including Lincoln Gargoyle On Sale Today University at Jefferson City. In ad- dition, it provides for payment of The Gargoyle will go on sale today tuition at schools in adjacent states on campus and at local newsdalers, $ for Negroes who wish to study sub- John Mitchell, '39, business manager jects provided at schools for whites announced yesterday. but not at the Negro institution. Reporters Interview Cabmen On What Students Do In Taxis Entertainment For All Given ByFraternitiesi The features planned for the fra- ternity children's Christmas party to be held at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Hill Auditorium will be designed to enter- tain both the children and students attending, it was announced yester- day by Robert Goodyear, '40E; enter- tainment director for the party. The principal burden of the enter- tainment will be assumed by the Uni- versity Band and Glee Club. The for- mer will play a number of well known selections, including the numbers "Heigh-ho" and "Whistle While You Work" from the movie "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." The latter will also render a number of popular Christmas and school songs. A magician, Charles Forbes, will aid in the entertainment with a demonstration of legerdemain and sleight-of-hand. The party will prob- ably be concluded by the presentation of an animated cartoon, furnished by ( the Michigan Theatre. ASU To Hear Lash On Youth Issues Today National Secretary's Talk At Union Brings To End MembershipCampaign Climaxing an American Student Union membership drive that doubled the local chapter's enrollment, Joseph Lash, executive secretary of the ASU, will speak at 8 -p.m. today in the North Lounge of the Union on the issues facing the student union Christmas .convention in New York. Lash will preside at the conven- tion, where 20,000 ASU members will be represented. Opening in Madison Square Garden, the Congress has as its theme "Keep Democracy Work- ing by Keeping It Moving." Convention problems to be discus- sed today by Lash include "The University We Want To Study In," "The America We Want To Live In" and "The World That Will Give Us Peace.' One year ago Lash, one of the founders of theASU, spoke here on his experiences in Spain where he spent two months in research work for the Government Ministry of Edu- cation and one month in the ranks of the MacKenzie-Papeneau Battalion. He took part in an expedition to study civil liberties in Harlan County,. Kentucky in 1932. The ASU was formed from various national student organizations after the expedition was forcibly prevented from examin- ing conditions in Harlan County. Co-author of "War Our Heritage," vice-president of the United Stu- dent Peace Committee and of the American Youth Congress and con- tributor to liberal publications, Lash is credited with initiating the first an- nual student strike against war. 'Dancing Men' Translators Win Tickets For Ice Show Translators of the recent "dancing men" cryptograms that appeared on trees and bulletin boards on the cam- pus, will be rewarded with free admis- sions to the forthcoming Union Ice Carnival, it was announced yesterday by Hadley Smith, '40E, chairman of arrangements for the Carnival. Those who solved the messages were: G. P. Smith, Grad., John H. Moehlman, '41, J. R. Platt, Grad., Kay sKing, '40,,and James W. Norris, '40. A poll torascertain student prefer- ences in orchestras for the forth- coming J-Hop will begin today,,it was announced yesterday by James V. Halligan, 40F&C, publicity chair- man for the dance. The poll, which will continue until Friday, will becused to indicatere- cent trends in dance music popular- ity, as well as to show the most fa- vored orchestra for the J-Hop. Stu- dents will be asked to place the names of their two favorite bands on a slip of paper and to place the slip in a ballot box, which will be provided in the !obby of the Union, the Angell Hall, lobby and in the engineering school. Halligan requested that stu- dents place their names on their bal- lots to avoid double voting. Italy Censors Native Scribes Forbids Cortesi To Write For New York Times ROME, Dec. 12-P)-The Italian Government today notified Italian newspapermen, estimated to number 200, they must cease serving foreign newspapers by Jan. 1. Among them were Arnaldo Cortesi, veteran correspondent for the New~ York Times. The Ministry ofaPopular Cultur held that as Italian citizens they came under provisions of a Dec. 3 or- der forbidding Italian newspapermer to write for foreign -iewspapers or news services. Seventeen newspapers of Italian nationality are listed in the member- ship of the Foreign Press Association, an organization made up of corres- pondents for foreign newspapers and news services. In addition, there are many Italian journalists in Italian provincial cen- ters who serve foreign newspapers and services. Union Will Hold Weekly Coffee Hour Dance Today I Guests at today's Union informs: By MORTON L. LINDER and HARRY L. SONNEBORN Your reporters, infuriated by cer- tain statements made by a certain Marian Phillips in Sunday's Perspec- tives, and determined to get to the bottom of certain quite brash state- ments made by Miss Phillips, went joy riding yesterday in a special fleet of taxicabs. But we meant business. As we rode we chatted with our charioteers, get- ting the unexpurgated objective truth about the momentous questions Miss Phillips dismissed so lightly and with such obviously little thought. The results of our findings are here, in the interests of decency. The taxi bill will be sent to Miss Phillips. THE QUESTION: What is your general impression of campus life +1. ....ia ..p..- w ,,i.r,.9 Stanley Cottrell: "In the last two years I don't thinklI have ever heard! students talk to me about anything but the weather. Among themselves they talk about their dates and the holidays, almost never about studies, or anything like that. They drink a! lot on Friday nights, but not so much other times." R. L. Markwell: "All the students talk about is their work. They are very serious-minded, I think. There is not so much drinking nowadays except among certain classes of stu- dents who always drink. Huh? No, all I can ever see in the rear-view mirror is another taxi." Jay Garkey: "Most students act a lot different here than they do when they're at home. They have different attitudes in their spending and drink- i ., v e n: i, l A.S.M.E. Roast To Determine Professor 'Who Can Take It' By STAN M. SWINTON Six engineering professors are go- ing to face a barrage of embarrassing questions tomorrow night until those in attendance at the annual A.S.M.E. Roast Banquet have classified the pedagogues according to their C.C.'s (Cranial Capacities) and have decid- ed which is "The Man Who Can Take It." The traditional banquet, which will be held at 6:15 p.m. in the Union, af- fords engineering students an oppor- tunity to get back at their professors without fear of retribution. The man who survives the elimination is awarded the famed "Spoofuncup," symbolic of the fact he is the most "popular unpopular" instructor in the engineering college. Last year Dean Henry C. Anderson was the winner. The School of Music will present as! its annual pre-Christmas oatorio Mendelssohn's "Elijah", at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. The pro- Aii fi .m tillh ,frsa n .h - - - ir