Weather Partly cloudy; possible showers L E Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication Blaiti Editorial Convoys Are Next Step . VOL. LI. No. 149 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Packing' Of Publications Board Is Seen 39 Contestants WillVie Today For Student Sen ate Posts Voting Places Established Throughout Campus; Open 9:15_To- 5:30 Eleetion Will Fill 18 Vacant Spots Students will vote today in the semi-annual election for 18 Student Senate positions. Six voting posts have been pro- vided at six convenient locations and balloting will continue from 9:15 a m. to 5:30 p.m. Thirty-nine names will appear on the ballot. Fourteen will run under the Michigan party title, 13 under the University Progressive designation, four under Inter-Guild sponsorship, and one under the American Stu- dent Union label. Two contestants are running as dormitory representatives, three oth- ers are running as independents, while one of the group uses the designation, non-partisan. Still carrying the ban- ner of Wendell Willkie is Robert Grekin, '43, who is running under a "Win With Willkie" slogan. On page six appears tie schedule for ballot box officials. In a statement on the importance of the election Ellman declared, "I POLLING PLACES Union from 9:15 to 5:30 League from 9:15 to 5:30 University Hall from 9:15 to 5:30 Engineering Arch from 9:15 to 5:30 Library from 9:15 to 5:30 Hutchins Hall (law) from 12 to 2 consider this election for the Student Senate the most important of its career. This year the Senate insti- tuted many projects. It conducted a labor survey for those who must earn or supplement their expenses, sched- uled several parleys with faculty par- ticipation, and endeavored to obtain scholarships for those who deserve rd need them. This election is decis- ive because it must put over con- scientious and representative candi- dates, who are vitally interested in furthering its functions and extend its influences." The election will be conducted un- der the Hare System of choice voting, sometimes known as the Single Transferable Vote, the voter making the figure "1" in front of his first choice of student senator, the figure "2" in front of his second choice and so on for as many choices as h- wishes. Petitions Due ForJudiciary Men's Council Sets 5 P.M. As Application Deadline Eligible Junior men students who are seeking positions on the Men's Judiciary Council have until tomor- row to submit sealed petitions to the student offices of the Michigan Union. The petitions were not due yester- day, as erroneously reported in The Daily. No signatures will be needed, Ward Quaal, president of the Cqpncil, said. The Men's Judiciary Council is a seven-man board which conducts all campus elections and acts as a disci- plinary board in disputes involving men students.' Selections for the next year's board will be made by Hervie Haufler, man- aging editor of The Daily; President of the Union, Doug Gould; Jim Har- rison, acting for the Interfraternity Council; Quaal and Dean of Students Joseph A. Bursley. Reduction In Rates Given Engine Seniors On Gowns Michilodeon Will Feature Skits, Dancing, Five-Cent Concessions Changes Made In Procedure O eferment Studenits M st Send Letter To Local Draft Board To Seek Postponement Prof. Hopkins TeMs University Function A new procedure for deferment and postponement of military service, ef- fective May 5, makes it mandatory for every student who desires either of these to compose a letter to his draft board, according to an an- nouncement made yesterday by Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, Chairman of the University Committee on National Defense. A statement of the individual's re- quest should be made up in affadav- it form, addressed to his draft board and then presented to his faculty ad- visor. The University, before forwarding the letter to the particular draft board, will prepare a statement of its The full text of Professor Hop- kins' statement regarding the new procedure, complete with specific instructions and a list of faculty advisers, is to be found in The Daily Official Bulletin on page 2. All students and faculty members Getting ready for Michilodeon at final practice last night were Shirley Hassard, '44, and Barbara Clark, '43, who are among the star partici- pants of the Pi Phi Bathing Beauty Contest. Getting a laugh out of their old-fashioned swim suits and helping them out at the same time is Doris Slack, '41 PhysEd. By WILL SAPP Collegiana will reach its height today and tomorrow when an expected 4,000 Michigan students crowd their way into Waterman and Barbour Gyms for Michilodeon, the 1941 five-cent festival which promises to be the biggest held on campus since the turn of the century. The show opens at 7:30 p.m. and will continue to midnight, Charles Heinen, '41E, general chairman said. A hundred dancing hostesses, fraternity and sorority skits, contests, prizes, a doggy derby, circus acts--all these are in store for Michilodeon customers. Forty dancing girls and fellows-the Whirly-Girlie Chorus-hand picked by Heinen himself, will present what is billed as the most daring show everj presented on campus. Woody Mack and his orchestra will provide dancing in Barbour Gym.- nasium both nights. Base tickets price is five cents, but five ticketsi are required for admission-these a will entitle the bearer to five conces- h sions.IAre Revealed An Editorial.. By HERVIE HAUFLER and ALVIN SARASOHN LAST NOVEMBER we editors of The Daily leaned over backvards in our attempt to work along with the University administration. After we had apologized and taken without protest a week's suspension from the staff for a deed of whose wrongness we are still not fully convinced, we felt that we had acted in good faith with them and had done what we could to improve relations with the University. We do not believe that the University, now that its tuin'for fair play has come, has acted in good faith with us in the present issue of"packing" the Board in Control of Student Publications. Although the Regents approved the "packing" measure on December 13, 1940, the press was not informed in any manner, and our subsequent appeals for information have been met with vague generalities and pleas of ignorance. Nobody knew-for publication. THE UNIVERSITY has known for five months that two alumni members and two faculty Senate members would be added to the Board in Control of Student Publications. Yet it has waited until just before appointments-a period marked by the confusion and disorganization of changing staffs-to allow word of the "packing" plan to go before the public. No time was left for any sort of discussion or protest. No chance has been left for supporters of the present set-up of The Daily to marshal the support of alumni, students and faculty. Even now, the plan has been learned of only through the piecing together of many small bits of ixifor- mation. In a word, the Administration has not kept faith with us. THE TLAN itself is not a good one. Our protest against it does not lie in any blind wish, to have complete student control of The Daily. We have always realized that this is not justified. We still think-although. now we nay be foolish and dumb-that faculty men, and alumni, know things that are good for us to know, and that older men can help us to put out a better newspaper. And so we have always thought that the present organization of the Board was a good one, for the ratio of representation is now four faculty member to three students. This means that, when there is complete faculty agreement ox} any issue, the faculty can vote the action' in the way it wishes. For example, it voted solidly for the suspension. But, under this set-up, when the opinion of the students is so thought- ful and reliable that one or more of the faculty members decides to vote along with the students, then, and then only, do the students have control of the Board. It is incorrect, therefore, to claim that a student-controlled Board will do silly and irresponsible things, for the simplej]reason that, to get a majority, it is always necessary for at least one faculty man to feel that the cause of the students is just and sensible. Under the new set-up, the students would be snowed under by numbers. THIS ALSO MEANS that the action of "packing" the Board with more faculty men and alumni members is directed not only against the stu- dents and their control of the paper, but also against the faculty man who will dare to side with students in deciding a controversial issue. The Daily, we feel, in its best years has been the organ of the students. Edited and managed by students, it has risen to ,a high place in college journaliF.m. This action will take it out of the hands of the students who have worked it un into what it is today and-we have every fear--twill make of it little more than a glorified house organ, singing emptily the praises of its masters. But no one will listen. No one will look. No one will want to read. That is the greatest tragedy, we feel. A Daily that is not the paper of students will be looked upon as a great Daily Official Bulletin. And that is what, in fact, it will be. EVEN THOUGH the new appointees have the greatest interests of the -A University and the paper at heart, the very presence of an overwhelm- ing representation of faculty men will kill the initiative, the independence, the -fervor of the staff-the qualities that have made for The Daily's progress. Even though the new appointees may be liberal men, staff members will henceforth be afraid to strike out on their own roads of thought. They will shy away from the progressive, from the provocative the best characteristics of an advanced educational institution like the University of Michigan. The Daily will lose, and the University will lose if the paper is taken from the students. T HAS BEEN SAID that freedom of thought iaiid expression have been ,stifled on this campus during the past year. The Daily is the only, 1 1 Members' Sarah Caswell Angell Theatre, above Barbour Gym, has been opened for the first time in a decade and will be the setting for a continuous program of skits. There the Theta's will Can-Can, the Sigma Chi barber- shop quartet will sing, and there the Betas are reviving the hit of the 1939 Michigras celebration, the Beta Fol- lies Beserk, starring Strip-Teaser Bob Bush. Pi Beta Phi is going "all-out" pre- senting a bathing beauty contest and a "Guess His Weight and Douse Your Date" concession. Over 40 organi- zations have entered either skits or booths. Prizes, Jack Grady promised, will vary from hams to radios to shav- ing soaps. Fraternity mascots are going to compete in the Doggy Derby. One of the prizes offered 'is a ribbon for "The Dog I'd Like Most to be Strand- ed on an Iland With." Sponsored jointly by the WAA and 1he Michigan Union, .Michilodeon. proceeds will go toward the proposed women's swimming pool fund, ac- cording to Anna Jean Williams, '41, assistant chairman. Although plans to exhibit Gargan- tua, the world's largest ape, fell through, each person who attends thc show will receive what the spon- sors call "a personalized menagerie" -a box of animal crackers. By Woodbiirne Over $2,000 Is Awarded To Eleven Students; Hope For More Funds Winners of the 1941-42 Literary own as regards the student in an attempt' to facilitate the decision of the board. A recommendation for de- ferment may or may not be made in each case. "The better the scholarship, the shorter the time before receiving a degree for which the student is regis- tered and the closer his work is to the needs of the National Defense program, the stronger will be the rec- ommendation of the University au- thority to the local draft board," Professor Hopkins declared. National Headquarters of the Se- lective Service System has announced a list of occupations in which there is a shortage of prepared men as follows: chemistry, engineering, den- tistry, pharmacy, physics, medicine, biology and bacteriology, geology, geo- phyics, meteorology, hydrology and cartography. Students in these fields will probably reccive special consid- eration. Students H.old Peace Strike In Feich Park Approval Is Sought Prof. Sunderland States In Letter That Regents Have Approved Measure Ruthven To Meet With Board Today By PAUL CHANDLER (The Daily City Editor) President Ruthven will nake public in the near future a new plan, ap proved already by the Board of Re- gents, that will "pack" the Board in Control of Student Publications with more faculty members. This information was learned from well-informed sources by The Daily Editors yesterday. An official an-. nouncement of the action is expected to be given to the Board itself at a meeting with President Ruthven to- night. Meeting Planned For Saturday According to these sources, the re- organization plan is only part of a sweeping revision of the Regents' by- laws, and has not been announced pending approval of the entire set of by-laws. Members of the present Board in Control have already received a let- ter from Prof. Edson R. Sunderland, secretary, however, announcing a meeting Saturday morning wherein the board will be asked to consider "a resolution for changing the arti- cles of incorporation of the Board to conform with the action of the Board of Regents taken on December, 1940, changing the membership." This would indicate that the re- vision has already been approved by the Board of Regents, and will be put in force when the by-laws' are approved in their entirety. Board To Have Six From Faculty The new Board will be composed of six faculty members, two alumni members, and three students, all with a single vote, it was learned. At the present time the Board has four faculty members, each with one vote, three students members, each with one vote, and two alumni mem- bers, who act in an advisory capacity without vote. This will necessitate the appoint- ment of two more faculty members and t\he granting of voting power to Lee A White and Webb McCall. the alumni members. President Ruthven has called a meeting of some of the Board mem- bers for Friday night, but he has not indicated what subject will be dis- cussed. The Daily's informants as- sume, however, that it will be de- voted to a consideration of thp re- organization plan. Students Not Invited hAparently the student members of the Board have not been invited to the meeting with the President to- night. James Tobin, '41, Phillip West- -brook, '42L, and Albert Mayio, Grad., said last night that they had not been asked to attend any such con- ference. It is known that a change in the administration of The Daily was dis- cussed by the Board of Regents a year ago. Shortly thereafter the Uni- versity Council appointed a commit- tee, to investigate the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications and to make recommendations for improve- ment, Prof. Axel Marin, of the engineer- ing college, Prof. Shirley W. Allen, of the forestry school, and Prof. Ora S. Duffendack were members of that committee, and they submitted their findings to the Council last fall. Measure Adopted In December Their report, which contained the "packing" suggestion; was adopted by the Council and forwarded to the Board of Regents, Presumably the Regents, at their regular December meeting, adopted the Council's recommendation as a part of the by-laws, which have been undergoing revision for many months. Professor Sunderland's letter to the individual board members reads: "At a meeting of the Board in College scholarships, which have a combined value of more than $2,000, were announced yesterday by Dean Lloyd S. Woodburne. The Simon Mandelbaum awards, each valued at approximately $320, were given to Leonard J. Eyges, '42; William H. Hogan, '43, and Leon Madanisky, 'A,3. Olga J. Fedko, '41, and Arthur M'. Rude won an estimat... ed $200 each and Arnold H. Reck- nagel, '43, was granted nearly $1501 from the James R. and Charles J. Hunt and Margaret Smith scholar- ship funds. The John Pitt Marsh scholarships, estimated at $80, were given to Edgar C. Morrison and Virginia Graham, '43. The Fanny Ransom Marsh awards, approximately $80 each, were presented to Michael Kassa and Elizabeth A. Burkheiser, '42. Richard S, Kelley, '42, was the sole winner of the Martha Robinson Hawkins scholarship, valued at nearly $250. Senator Wheeler' To Keyi ote Campus Peace Rally Monday Outstanding opponent of Presi- dent Roosevelt's eight years of ad- ministration is the keynoter of next Mondays peace rally -- Senator Bur- ton K. Wheeler of Montana - who, strangely enough, was the first mem- ber of the Congress to plug for FDRs candidacy back in 1932. Perhaps his tradition of individ- ualism, partly the heritage of his Massachusetts' Yankee blood and the rought life in Montana shortly after the turn of the century, is responsi- ble. But whatever the reason be, Wheel- er - nominally a Democrat - has broken party lines whenever he thought the issues involved were deeper and more worthy than smooth With the slogan, ."Stop the slide toward war," as their battle-cry ap- proximately 300 students gatheredt yesterday in Felch Park to strike for peace. The crowd I iard Edward Strong, secretary of the 'Southern Negro Youth Congress, appeal for a "people'sa peace . . . for there is nothing to choose between English imperialism rand German fascism." Sha ring the platform with Strong were Roy Lancaster, International Representative of the Fur and Leath- er Workers Union (CIO), and Rev. Owen Knox, chairman of the Nation- at League for Constitutional Rights. The former brought "greetings from the millions of men and women in the labor movement who are with you in your fight for peace and d cmocracy." Reverend Knox point- ed out "the anti-democratic trend in this country at the same time our youth are being asked to fight for the ideals of democracy." 'Crvl( j( Give- "Le Jeu de LAmour et d' Hasrad" the 35th annual French play will be given at 8:30 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by French stu- dents chosen for excellence in the language and dramatics under the Glenn Miller ToI For the second year it Glenn Miller, who has rece voted the favorite band college students, has been s furnish music for the annu Ball, it was announced late by a member of the dance c The dance will be held froz to 3 a.m. Friday, June 20 a Niie To Face Ohio Sute Today-; NyiGENEoGvaB ONetters Defeat Lansing Squad Byv GENE GRIBB IEli (Secia to The Daily) -- -- r organ in which all types of opin- ion have been expressible to a P y large audience-whether by editor- ni ~a row, ial, column, guest editorial, or a ntly been large-sized letter column which leader of has always welcomed every intelli- leno gent contribution 'If Michigan is last night'to remain an institution where we omnittee. are to gather some of the richness ,m 10 p.m. of the real University, The Daily t the I-M, must remain a student paper. been subverting the vested interests of the copper trust and others. It was the issue of the "court pack- ing" that saw Wheeler gain promi- nence as the leader of the Republi- can and Dbmocratic Congressmen who succeeded in defeating the Pres- ident's plan. Today he is once more at the head of a Congressional coali- tion which has been bucking the lease-lend bill and the Administra- tion's foreign policy in general. So far they have been on the short end of the battles in Congress, but it is Wheelers' conviction that the peo- ple of the U.S. feel differently, and he and other Administration op- ponent's are now engaged in a na- tion-wide appeal to the American Michigan and Ohio State, two clubs who'll have a big say in -the Big Ten baseball chase before the season is over, meet today at Colum- bus in the first of a two-game series. Coach Ray Fisher will send four- game winner Mickey Stoddard -to the mound to oppose the Buckeyes' Jim Sexton in today's contest, saving Cliff Wise, his sophomore sensation, for tomorrow's game, Michigan will be favored to take the series and maintain their hold on the Conference lead, which they share with Iowa at present. The Hawkeyes tangle with Minnesota at Minneapolis this week-end. The basis for giving the Wolver- ines the edge over Ohio State rests mainly on the hitting power they EAST LANSING, May 1.-The Uni- versity of Michigan tennis' team took three doubles matches and four of six singles tilts to down Michigan State's netters here today, 7-2. As expected, the Michigan attack wag paced by the number one doubles team of Capt. Jim Tobin and Lawton Hammett, which completely out- classed the first Spartan combination of Morris Brilling and Fred Perkins. Just how good Michigan's top doubles entry is is indicated by the fact that Tobin took three sets to down Drilling in their singles match and Hammett likewise was forced to go the limit to beat Perkins. The only two Michigan State points came in the third and fourth brack- et singles matches. Ambidextrous