/ MICHIGAN ROYALTY See Page 4 A6r A6F ,I ! 414tr :43 ti49 RAIN, MiILD Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVII. No. 112 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TIUIIRUSDAY, MARCH 13, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Petitions ror Elections To BeDueToday Candidates Will Write Statenmen ts Petitions from individual candi- dates and parties for the Student Legislature election will be due at 4 p.m. today in the Union Stu- dent Offices. Withdrawals from parties after the deadline will constitute with- drawal from the election. Petitions, which must be signed by 150 students, will be accepted by the Men's Judiciary Council from 3 to 4 p.m. Eighteen petitions were turned in yesterday. Qualification Statements All candidates for the 23 posi- tions to be filled in the March 18 and 19 -elections will be required to submit 50 word qualification statements, either individually or as part of a party platform, to be sed for publicity purposes. Each candidate must submit his petition, eligibility card and $1 registration fee in person. Party Lists Candidates desirig to run in parties must declare the name of their party when they register. The chairman of the party, who must be chosen by the entire membership of the group, will be required to register the party's platform and membership. Party designations will not be printed on the ballots. Election rules limit campaign expenditures to $5 per candidate. Candidates may not distribute campaign literature on the cam- pus, defined as the area bounded by N. University, S. University, E. University and S. State. No slan- derous or libelous literature may be distributed. Russia Voies New Attitude Of Coneliation MOSCOW, March 12 - tom? - A spirited counter-attack by Ern- est Belin evoked surprisingly con- ciliatrry concessions tonight from V. M. Molotov in the Council of Foreign Ministers just as news of President Truman's declaratin of support to Greece and Turkey reached Moscow. It was not believed that the softening of the Russian foreign minister's position was due to Mr. Truman's statement of policy on the two Mediterranean countries, however, the return of the Russian ambassadors from Washington and London was taken as an indi- cation that the Russians knew that the Preident's move was in the offing. There was no official explana- tion on the return of the ambas- sadors. American correspondents who have lived in Russia for sev- eral years pointed out, however, that since the foreign secretaries of Bitain and the United States already were in Moscow, it might only be natu4al for the ambassa- dors to those countries to be sum- moned home. The third session of the minis- ters, at which Molotov agreed to disclose the number of German prisoners of war held in Russia and to fix a date for the destruc- tion of certain Russian-held Ger- man ships, reflected no increase in tension, despite the new United States policy and the recall of the ambassadors. There seemed to be no doubt, however, that the development of a much tougher United States pol- icy would influence future ses- sions. Molotov agreed to disclose to the conference the number of Ger- man prisoners held in Russia, on condition that other powers do *likewise. Faculty Exceeds ReI Cross Quota The University faculty has al- ready exceeded its quota in the Red Cross campaign by 20 per cent, Robert L. Williams, admin- istrative assistant in the Pire- vost's office and coordinator of the drive, said yesterday. Incomplete returns from the 86 departmental solicitors now total $3,000, Williams reported. The f-milt~r' n- f Vic hpp qt sit Students Reject Royalty; Coed Beauties Praised Campus Leaders IUphold SAC Ban By JOAN KATZ and NAOMI STERN Royalty has no place on the University campus, student lead- ers agreed in interviews yester- day, thus upholding the Student Affairs Committee decision to bar the selection of a king and queen for the Michigras carnival. "I don't see how a nineteenth century institution can be demo- cratically adapted to the Univer- sity campus atmosphere," Haskell Coplin, president of the Student Legislature, declared. Hard To Select "Besides, it's a p r e t t y hard proposition to elect one person to fulfill what will at best be an ar- bitrary standard of beauty," he said. Coplin added that "once royalty was rolling" the campus would be besieged with requests to sponsor com ercial products. "It is beneath the dignity of the University to sponsor royalty contests," Ellen Hill, president of the League Council, said. Miss Hill explained that she felt such events tend to degenerate into fads and to split into factions over a trivial matter. No harm if Impartial Richard Roeder, president of the Union, said that he could see 'no harm in a campus king and queen if the selection were based on the impartial judgment of Uni- versity officials without the inter- ference of the student body." "I wouldn't want to see royalty on the campus," Jean Louise Hole, president of the Women's Judici- ary Council, asserted. "It is my personal opinion that distasteful politics and poor publicity dis- crediting a place of higher learn- irg would result," she said. Too Much Attention "If tradition and student opin- ion could be reconciled in the best interests of the University, such contests might be worked out," Harry Jackson, Inter-Praternity Council president, declared. He added, however, that the issue does not merit such attention. Jeanne Clare, Assembly presi- dent, said that from what she knew of other campuses, royalty contests unnecessarily split the student body. Miss Clare added that the issue is "much too insig- nificant for the furor it has ar- roused." House Seeks Threat Probe WASHINGTON, March 12-(P) -Aroused and alarmed, the House Labor Committee asked FBI in- vestigations today of a telephoned threat against one of its members and the killing of George P. Mc- Near, Jr., who was a witness be- fore the committee 10 days ago. Chairman Hartley (Rep., N.J.) laid both cases before the justice department in a letter to Attorney General Clark. The threat was reported by Rep. Kearns (Rep., Pa.). He told the committee it came last night in an anonymous telephone call. "The caller," Kearns related, "said I'd been seen dining with McNear and I'd better change my ideas about labor." Old Adage Refuted By Photographer Contradicting the adage that "four out of five girls are beauti- ful and the fifth one goes to Mich- igan," Phillipe Halsmai, Life pho- tographer who is on campus this week taking pictures of represen- tative coeds, said yesterday that "coeds seem to have more natural charm than Paulette Goddard." Halsman, who made his first stop here on an assignment to do a "straight glamor story in color on pretty American college girls," was shooting pictures yesterday in the Martha Cook Building of Jacqueline Ward, '50, Camille Ayo, '48, and Jeanne Thorn, '48, attired in formal gowns. Other coeds selected for the pictures are Eve Galt, '50, Pat Matheson, '48, Helen Stegman, '48, and Barbara Rogers, '49. Halsman said that the story is not to be considered a "beauty contest." Some of the coeds were picked "by a researcher who interviewed several students and chose them." "Others," Halsman said, "I picked, trying to get girls who were wholesome and pretty. Accord- ing to Halsman, one of the coeds was picked during a meal, "even though women look least attrac- tive when they are eating." Halsman, who has photographed numerous movie stars, commented that "movie stars compare favor- ably with coeds." Labor Holds Real Control, Clark Asserts Organized labor now has the power to get whatever it might seriously want, including a social- ist government, Prof. John Mau- rice Clark of the Columbia Uni- versity e c o n o m i c s department said in the third Cook Lecture yesterday. Labor holds its future in its own hands, Prof. Clark said. It "almost certainly" could vote a socialist government if it decided to, he declared. "A shift in the balance of pow- er has left labor in a position to make excellent terms with govern- ment and business," Prof. Clark asserted. The position is so strong that labor can afford to indulge a preference for free enteprise without endangering its own pow- eis, he declared. Prof. Clark said business will have to continue learning to find its own way through a changing social landscape. "The best that can be hoped for is a conviction on all sides that necessary changes will be made in a spirit of reasonable consid- eration for the genuine needs of the interests affected." he said.- "This feeling of underlying con- fidence in the reasonable charac- ter ofaother parties'dattitudes is probably the best definition of the kind of security' which our system needs for the generation that is ahead." t Prof. Clark . will deliver the fourth in the series entitled "Al- ternative to Serfdom" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphi- theatre on the subject "Revolu- tion in Economics-After Keynes, What?" Senate Votes Tenure Limit Amendment y 'I'The AS*6ACd I'ress WASHINGTON, March 1 2-The Senate voted 59 to 23 tonight to submit to the states a constitu- tional amendment limiting the maximum service of future presi- dents to 10 years. The decision came late in an unusual night session after the leadership once had decided to delay action after a long argu- ment about Franklin D. Roose- velt. Also more than half an hour was devoted to discussion*- of whether to take up the nomina- tion of David E. Lilienthal to head the Atomic Eenergy Commission. The final tally provided the nec- essary twotlirds,;margin. A voice vote in the al ernoon set Ithe lini- tation terms. In an unusual night session, Senator Pepper (Dem., FlaJ pro- tested that any limit on future presidents would be a slur on the Roosevelt record. Pepper talked -with interrup- tions--for nearly two hours' and the leadership decided to drop the presidential tenure hill for the present. Senator Ilickenmuoper (Rep.. Iowa) told Pepper that Mr. Roose- velt won a third term by promis- ing that American boys would not be sent to fight on foreign soil. Pepper said the late President had added, "unless we are at- tacked," but Hickenlooper disput- ed this. The decision to set the limit on White House tenure was reached on a voice vote during the after- noon. Newcornb Is IRA Speaker Says A giSation Nlimi Have Pullie Support To break the "vicious circle" of prejudice and discrimination, we must find and penetrate its weak- est points, Prof. Theodore M. New- comb, of the sociology depart- ment, said yesterday. Speaking before a meeting of the Inter-Racial Association on the subject "Prejudice vs. Dis- crimination," Prof. Newcomb said that legislation wi tout public opinion behind it is unenforce- able. Attitudes cannot be chang- ed by legislation, he explained, on the assumption that discrimina- tion follows prejudice, for the re- verse, that prejudice can follow discrimination, is also true. Attitudes of prejudice are learn- ed, not instinctive, he declared, as we generalize in accordance with experience. Existing atti- tudes are enforced by contact with prejudiced people rather than contacts with those against whom the prejudice exists, he concluded. Tickets Gone For 'Figaro' Late comers desiring tickets to "The Marriage of Figaro" met with a cold "Sold Out" sign at the Lydia Mendelssohnin Theatre box-office yesterday. Following the well received opening night performance the theatre was deluged with requests and all remaining tickets were sold. The opera, presented by stu- dents from the music school and the speech department's play pro- duction classes will be given at 8:30 p.m. todaydthrough Saturday at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. U.S. To Sign Pact With Philippines MANILA, Thursday, March 13- ,,)-A long-pending 99-year mili- tary base agreement between the United States and the Philippines, along with a broad military as- sistance pact, will be signed to- morrow, a government spokesman said today. The ceremony will take place on the eve of the departure ofj ruman Calls on Nation To Halt orld March of Communism'; Requests Money, Military Skill Daily-Wake iSLIflE ittLE BALL COMMITTEE - Members of the Michigan Technic staff who form the general committee for the Slide Rule Ball to be held April 18 in Waterman Gym. SEATED, left to right: Marilyn Marsh, programs; Jack Kelso and Milt David, general chairmen; and Mary Pat King, pa- trcns. STANDING, left to right: C. Philip Stemmer, band; Robert Ware, decorations; Ifenry Kam- inski, business; John Campbell, publicity; and Don Skilliter, tickets. Famine Group Seeks Support it Heifer Drive Final plans for a "Heifers for Europe" drive to begin March 24 were made at a meeting yester- day of the University Fanine Comm ite, Seymour S. Goldstein, presientsaid. The committee will ask campus groups for donations to buy either a wh ,ole or a part of a heifer dur- ing the diive, which is part of a national movement sponsored by Brethren Service Committee. The cost of a heifer is $160, and groups or individuals may choose to what country or specific per- son they want their heifer sent. Farmers in France, Greece, Czecclaslovakia, Poland and Bel- giim have already received ani- mals from the national - organi- zation. The European farmers pledge to give the dairy products, especial- ly milk, to needy children, and the calves which their heifers produce to other farmers. Pictures of the farmers receiving their heifers can be taken and sent to the sponsoring group. Speakers from the bureau which has been est:.4blished will visit campus organizations and speak on behalf of the drive, if the groups request, Goldstein said. The drive has been sanctioned by the Student Legislature and is a part of the Drives Committee activity. Truiai iSignature Will Finish OPA WASHINGTON, March 12-(P) ---Legislation to close out OPA by June 30 cleared Congress today and only the signature of Presi- de nt Truman is necessary to schedule the end of the wartime rationing and price control agen- cy. Actually. OPA may cease oper- ations well before June 30, for agency officials claim the slightly more than $14,000,000 finally pro- vided for its liquidation will last at most through April. That sum is all available for operation be- tween now and July 1. HEAVILY CHAINED: Engineers To Present Annual 'Slide Rule Ball' Next Month With mammoth heavily- chained slide-rules hanging over- head, Waterman Gymnasium will be the scene of the traditional an- nual Slide Rule Ball to be held fror 9 pin. to 1 a.m. Friday, April 18. Sponsored by the Michigan Technic, engineering college mag- azine, the dance will be optionally formal for men and, in conjunc- tion with the Engineering Open House to be held the same day, VA Conduets Check Survey The local Veterans' Administra- tion Office is conducting a survey of veterans in training at the Uni- versity and other schools in this area who are reporting non-re- ceipt of subsistence allowances due them. All veterans are urged to re- port before noon tomorrow at Rm. 100 Rackham Building to make their reports, H. M. Hakken, act- ing training supervisor for the local Veterans' Guidance Center, said. Hakken explained that coopera- tion of all veterans will assist the' Veterans' Administration Regional Office in Detroit in reviewing and adjusting all delinquent subsist- ence accounts. Cook Is Reelected Chairman of A VC Lorne Cook was reelected chair- man of the campus chapter of the American Veterans Commit- tee last night. Other leaders chosen by the AVC are as follows: vice-chairman, George Antonofsky; recordingj secretary, Gladys Hammond; treasurer, Leon Kelly, and Lee Hunn, corresponding secretary. Members-at-large of the execu- tive committee are Leo Sacarny, Sanford Williams, Al Mayerson and Robert Wagner. it will be open to all students on campus. Tickets for the dance will go on sale Monday, March 24. The tickets will be sold exclusively to engineers for two days in order to insure that all engineers desiring to attend the dance may secure tickets. Tickets will then be placed on general campus sale. The name of the band is ex- pected to be announced within a few days. In recent years Orrin Tucker, Jan Savitt and Louis Prima have played for, the Slide Rule Ball. Late buses will be scheduled for Willow Run Village for the con- venience of veterans residing there who wish to attend the dance. In addition the dance commit- tee will provide a special service for married couples with children who live in Willow Village or Ann Arbor and desire to attend the dance. Students desiring the serv- ices of a baby-sitter will be re- quested to leave their name and address with the committee when they purchase their tickets. The committee will supply them with the name and address of a baby- sitter who will be available for the evening. General chairmen for the dance are Milt David and Jack Kelso. They will be assisted by C. Philip Stemmer, band; Robert Ware, decorations; Henry Kaminski, business; Don Skilliter, tickets; Marilyn Marsh, programs; Mary Pat King, patrons; and John Campbell, publicity. Three Fraternities Admitted by IFC The Inter-Fraternity Council has admitted three new fraterni- ties, two of which were previously on campus, Harry Jackson, presi- dent, announced yesterday. They are: Phi Kappa Tau, inac- tive since the war, Delta Sigma Psi, inactive since 1932, and Kap- pa Alpha Psi, a Negro fraternity new on campus. Aid to Greece, Turkey .Asked By President Says U.S. Must Not Falter in Leadership By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 12 - President Truman, in a fateful speech to Congress, grimly caller, on America today to halt the world march of communism with money, material and military skill. Proposing a new and historic foreign policy, the President specifically asked $400,000,000 to aid Greece and Turkey, hard- pressed Mediterranean bulwarks against the totalitarian tide. Moreover, he served notice he would not hesitate to ask addi- tional sums if necessary 'to help free peoples to maintain their free institutions and their national in- tegrity against aggressive move- ments that seek to impose upon them totalitarian regimes." Speaking to a joint session of Senate and House, he said: "If we falter in our leader- ship, we may endanger the peace of the world-and we shall sure- ly endanger the welfare of our, 'own nation." Before his taut-faced, tense and anxious audience, he laid a re- quest for: 1. Permission to spend $400,- 000,000 in Greece and Turkey for the period ending June 30, 1948. 2. The right to send civilian personnel and military men to the two countries to assist in recon- struction and to supervise use of the aid. 3. Legislation giving the ad- ministration scope in making the KEY WEST, Fla., March 12 --(AP)-President Truman ar- rived here at 6:55 p.m. after a non-stop flight from Washing- ton for a four day rest. Mr. Truman's plane, the Sac- red Cow, landed at Doa Chica Naval Air Station, five miles out of Key West, after a five hour trip fro mWashington. The President left the na- tion's capital a few minutes af- ter delivering a momentous ad- dress before Congress on for- eign affairs. He came to Florida for a rest on orders of his personal physi- cian, Brig. Gen. Wallace H. Graham. "speediest and most effective use" of the funds in terms of "needed commodities, supplies and equip- ment." 4. Authority to provide for the instruction and training of "se- lected" Greek and Turkish per- sonnel. In the absence of more specific information, this could mean military training in the United States such as was provid- ed during the war for British avi- ators. See TRUMAN, Page 2 UTN Silent on Truman Tall LAKE SUCCESS. N.Y., March 12-(AP)-President Truman's ap- peal to Congress today for Ameri- can aid to Greece and Turkey was considered "too hot" for comment by top United Nations authorities and was met here by what one informed quarter described as 'apprehensive" silence. The attention of UN Secretariat leaders was centered particularly on one paragraph in which Mr. Truman said : "We have considered how the United Nations might assist in this and the United Nations and its related organizations are not in a position to extend help of the kind that is required." In Washington, some members of Congress said UN prestige and usefulness suffered a damaging blow. Rep. Owens (Rep.-Ill.) went so far as to tell renorters: World News at a Glance By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 12-Senator McCarthy (Rep., Wis.) said today a Republican "fresh start" on rent control legislation will be un- dertaken. A bill which he and Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) are writing would avoid a blanket increase in rents which has been rejected by the Sen- ate Banking Committee. Rent adjustments would be handled by a board whose members are not identified with the OPA. LONDON, March 12-An overwhelming labor majority in the House of Commons smothered Winston Churchill's "no confi- dence" motion against the government, 374 to 198, tonight after a three-day debate on economic affairs of the nation. LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., March 12-The United Nations Security Council today delayed approval of an2American plan to take over the Japanese-mandated islands in the Pacific under a strategic area trus- teeship when New Zealand and India asked for a direct voice in the debate. * * * ASCUNCION, Paraguay, March 12-The Paraguayan govern-I ment announced tonight that the rebel stronghold of Concepcion ALL1 C~AM1PUSiISN UPROAR: Various Dignitaries Hail New Gargoyle By PERRY LOGAN Citing the Kellogg-Allbran pact of 1922, six professors of the po- litical science department yester- i . .r v *rrv..fl c : ..r Yr-t Si l fi . i First Reader, an exclusive feature with this issue, poured into the Garg office yesterday. "Lord bless me. sir, I like the Gargoyle," TrihinnsR C r. o n Inenoiniv these exotic charms of female beauty 'round the world," Lar- ceny R. Paramoor, itinerant en- trepreneur, urged yesterday as he