E 'Cr l14ui, 43a" i "' WARMER See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State INo. 89 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1947 PRICE FIVE ISLER DECIDES TO RE I T ICH 11 VCNames Committee To Investigate Sigler's'PublicityCai npaiig Report on y Threats Freedom ek R uthven 's n. 6 Statement Y STU FINLAYSON imittee to investigate Gov. gler's "current publicity n" for anything "subver- the American freedoms ited in the Bill of Rights" ,pointed, by the campus of the American Veterans tee last night. ommittee, which will work Committee for Aademic , will be headed by Lorine ampus AVC chairman. I. Vote on Party System Tabled by Legislature Group Approves Single Centralized Polling Place Under Constant Supervision by APO Lobbyists Open Battle Over Sigler Proposal Administration, School Men in Stiff Fight To Swing Two Necessary Senate Votes 7 vent of the com- oved in a dgeneral ng with academic ext of the resolu- The party system question split the Student Legislature neatly in half last night as a motion to eliminate parties from election campaigns was tabled because of lack of agreement among the Legislators. The motion was offered as a substitute for a proposed by-law, providing for regulation of parties, Attlee Invokes War Powers 0 * In Fuel Cnsts Special Committee To Attack Problems By The Associated Press LONDON, Feb. 12-Prime Min- ister Attlee placed Britain on a virtual war basis tonight, issuing an order under war-time defense regulations that decreed fines or prison sentences for any of the nation's 49,000,000 people who dis- regard a new island-wide limita- tion on household electricity. Acting after nearly 72 hours of scheming against threatened dis- aster to his war-weakened nation in the coal crisis, Attlee also es- tablished an emergency commit- tee of nine-peace-time equivalent of the war cabinet-to deal with what he called a "dangerously )lved. That the' campus of the AVC endorse the re- .tement of President Ruth- that this chapter support ommittee for Academic n. ccomplish this end, a com- is to be appointed to ac- >operate with the Commit- Academic Freedom. This tee is further instructed to 'ate the implications, both ic and political, of the cur- iblicity campaign of the r. If the campaign is by the committee to be .ve of the American free- niumerated in the Bill of or to. the welfare of the which was- presented after the setting up of an election system designed "to eliminate dlirty work from student elections." One Centralized Polling Place The Legislature voted for a sin- gle centralized polling place under the constant supervision of Legt'- lators and members of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, but balked at the by-law, which would have set up an election commission to approve parties, be- cause of a provision limiting mem- bership of any one party to eight members. The party issue, which was pre- sented' to the Legislature during the last campus election because Of the charge that the University Committee and the All-Campus Slate had aligned themselves on a fraternity- in(epend'ent basis, broke out during last night's meet- ing because of disagreement over the "inevitability" of coalitions during student elections. Senior Class Elections The Legislature will conduct senior class elections Mar. 5 and elections for approximately 27 new Legislators, as well as student members of the Board in Control of Collegiate Athletics, Mar. 18 and 19. Approving a constitution which in effect separates the Men's Ju- diciary Council from the super- vision of the Legislature, the Leg- islature officially set up a seven- man body~to be composed of male undegraduate students with at le'a'st 6credit hours. The Council, which will be appointed by the Legislature's Cabinet, will assume' the duty of investigating cases of student conduct referred to it by the Office of Student Affairs, as well as dispute between campus groups such as dance committees and election frauds. Student Vets The statement of President uthven endorsed by AVC was is- Led Feb. 6 and declared that the niversity had "no evidence of ibversive or illegal activities on ie part of University students or nyone connected with the Uni- rsity." The statement added that if it ere indicated that the activities student organizations "are in ay way .in violation of federal or ate law or of University regula- ons, appropriate action will be ,ken and, if necessary, assistance ill be asked of the proper au- iorities." dew Cut Set .n Subsistence Student veterans who carry less an 12 hours work will have their ibsistence allowance reduced by ie Veterans Administration, obert S. Waldrop, director of the eterans Service Bureau, said yes- rday. This ruling also applies to vet- ans who are forced to drop a urse, for any reason, and thus op below 12 credit hours of work, aldrop said. Subsistence for ese veterans. will be adjusted on pro-rated basis. A recent interpretation of the A also states that the cost of reg- arly established refresher, non-- edit, auditor courses will be paid ' the VA. Payment of subsistence lowances and charges against gibility time will be made on a mester hour basis for such urses. lean Lloyd Will rive Talk in Ohio Dean of Women Alice C. Lloyd aves Ann Arbor today for Co- mbus, 0., where she will deliver eo keynote address at a voca- nal conference for women stu- nts at Ohio State University. The topic of Dean Lloyd's ad- ess will be "Personal Integrity -d Democratic Leadership." Miss Lloyd, who will be absent im Ann Arbor four days, will so go to Washington, D. C. alties to industrialists who do not comply with a blackout order shut- ting all but essential plants in 38 of the 64 counties in England and Wales. Earlier, the Government ordered the five-hour cut off of electricity to householders extended to the entire island-all of Britain ex- cept Northern Ireland-and di- rected nation-wide street lighting reductions amounting almost to a war-time blackout. The emergency committee or- dered cancellation of all railway passenger services in every in- stance where it would clear tracks or free locomotives for coal trains. These steps were taken as the Board of Trade announced that 5,000,000 to 6,000,000 men were out of work Because of industrial shut- downs, and that the crisis threat- ened to be felt in every phase of the economy. Library Opens Check Room The General Library has rein- stituted the pre-war service of providing students with a conven- ient check room for wraps, S. W. McAllister, Associate Director, an- nounced yesterday. The check room is located on the first floor directly to the left of the main entrance and there is no charge made to students wish- ing to check their wraps while in the library. It is open during the regular library hours Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.; it will not be available, how- ever, during the Sunday hours. McAllister stated that he hoped that this action will alleviate the crowded conditions experienced in the reading room caused by stu- dents throwing their wraps over chairs. PROF. MOSES GOMBERG * * * Heart Ailment Causes Death Of U' Chemist Gomberg Renowned For Research Work Prof. Moses Gomberg, chairman of the Department of Chemistry from 1927 to 1936 and world-fa- mous chemical pathfinder, died at 12:36 a.m. yesterday at Univer- sity Hospital.-, Death was brought on by a heart condition which had forced Prof. Gomberg to enter the hospi- tal Jan. 22. ' His discovery of trivalent car- bon and the propounding of the theory of free radicals, among many other findings, brought him fame in the field of organic cheri istry. Prof. Gomberg first became a member of the University faculty in 1893, and in 1904 he became a professor of organic chemistry, rising to the chairmanship of the department in 1927. He retired on his 70th birthday, Feb. 8, 1936, and devoted his life to research with the elements he loved so well, con- tinuing to use his office and lab- oratory in the chemistry building. He was born in 1866 in Elizabet- grad, Russia, and began his edu- cation there. When he was 18, he was forced to flee for his life from his native Russia because his father had been accused of po- litical conspiracy. He came to the (Continued on Page 2) MYDA Holds First Meeting Michigan Youth for Democratic Action, local affiliate of American Youth for Democracy, will hold its first meeting of the semester at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. Bob Cummins and Irma Hen- derson of the state AYD council will discuss the recent events at Michigan State College, where Governor Sigler began his probe of "subversive" activities in Michi- gan colleges. Cummins, a Spanish Civil War and World War II vet- eran and former editor on The Daily, is now executive secretary of the Michigan AYD. Plans for the semester will also be made at the meeting, and nomi- nations will be accepted for presi- dent of the chapter. MYDA was organized early in 1944, and became affiliated with AYD at the end of 1945. Its pres- ent membership, according to Har- riet Ratner, membership chair- Hostile To VA Absence Plan By FRED SCHOTT Man-on-the-street reaction among veterans yesterday to the new weekly absence report order by the Veterans Administration was in general sharply critical. Ernest Collins, '47L, thinks that the order is "an unnecessary waste of administrative effort on a pro- ject that isn't important." Bob Leopold, '48E, said that "this is the first time. I've felt like doing something violent since I got out of the Navy." Army veterans Irving Kalin, '48L, and John Trezise, '49L, think that the VA should be more con- cerned with grades than with absences. "The order is unnecessary be- cause you have to maintain your average so you can stay in school -if the University js satisfied, why shouldn't the VA be satisfied?" said Trezise. The only dissenting note to the other opinions came from Navy veteran. Ben Zwerling: "I think .maybe the VA has the right idea behind the order. There are too many going along for the ride. But I don't like the methods they've used. Once a semester should be often enough for us to report." By The Associated Press LANSING,'Feb. 12. - Amnstration and school lobbyists open- ed a bitter hotel room battle over Senate votes tonight with Gover- nor Sigler's proposal for repeal of the sales tax diversion the stake. The administration won the first round to put the repeal on the April 7 ballot by pushing the re- pealer through the House of Rep- resentatives this morning by a 71 to 24 vote. Test Lacked Two Votes . In the Senate, however, Sigler's cohorts found on a test vote that they lacked two votes of the nec- essary two-thirds vote to adopt the House resolution and stalled a final vote until later. The "Front Office Hot Ankle Club"-legislator's slang for xec- utive office aides-went into ac- tion tonight to swing those two additional votes, but they were meeting stiff competition from a horde of school men who moved into the capitol to beat back the repeal proposal. Fight Planned in Detroit In Detroit, the Common Council planned a fight against Sigler's repeal move if it passes the Senate. Council President George Ed- wards said of the sales tax amend- ment, "The only logical and de- cent thing to do is to try it out first, then report on how it works. The state has enough money to do U, Canad Set Continent Security Plans WASHINGTON, Feb. 12-(P)- The United States and Canada announced today they will con- tinue in peacetime their close war- time collaboration for the military security of North America. Without entering into a formal treaty or binding agreements, the two governments proclaimed a five-point program for unifying training, standardizing arms, and using each other's military, naval and air facilities. Anything to do with the atomic bomb was excluded from the gen- eral understanding, it was made clear, since both governments have separate channels for development and administration of atomic en- ergy. Both stressed too, in formal an- nouncements made simultaneously in Ottawa and Washington, that the' charter of the United Nations "remains the cornerstone of the foreign policy of each." The two governments said that their collaboration for "peace time joint security purposes" would be limited to the extent authorized by law of each. World News Roundup McDONOUGH, Ga., Feb. 12-A superior (circuit) court upheld Herman Talmadge today in his claim to the governorship of Geor- gia, but final decision rested with the state supreme court which al- ready has one diametrically-op- posite decision of another judge awaiting review. * * * NEW YORK, Feb. 12-Harld E. Stassen, avowed candidate for the 1948 Repubican presidential nomination, tonight called on his party to abandon "al rem- nants of a policy of economic isolation" and assume "leader- ship of America in a new policy of world-wide economic partici- pation." CHARLESTON, W. Va., Feb. 12 -Senator Taft (Rep., Ohio) dif- fering with some of his GOP col- . 8 all the things it can do within the next year." Mayon Edward J. Jeffries told the council the Michigan Educa- tion Association had notified all school boards in the state to get into the anti-repeal fight. No House Debate There was, surprisingly, no de- bate as the House passed the re- peal amendment resolution, and in the Senate members also were silent as it came to the floor. The Republican caucus had battled over the measure for two one-and- a-half hour sessions Tuesday and Wednesday without reaching a common agreement. The test vote-on a motion to suspend the rules and put the repealer to an immediate vote, showed 21 Senators in favor and three-all Detroiters-against it, and seven not voting. Teacher Pay Hinges on Tax Controversy Until the current sales tax amendment controversy is settled, no decision on raising the level of teachers' salaries can be made, Walter Springer,.,chairman of the Ann Arbor Board of Education an- nounced at an open meeting of the board last night. scaled demands of the American Federation of Teachers, Springer said that the budget for Ann Ar- bor .schools cannot be established until the board knows whether any funds will be received through the amendment. The salary rate scale proposed by Elma Jeffries, president of the Ann Arbor chapter of the Ameri- can Federation of Teachers, calls for a $2,500 minimum, and a $4,- 500 maximum, salary for teachers. Other proposals of the Federa- tion were for a cost-of-living ad- justment of $50 a month, equali- zation of salary rates for men and women teachers, a yearly imple- ment of $20Q and strict adherence to a new salary schedule. IRA Protests Sigler Probe The Inter-Racial Association yesterday passed a resolution p- posing the "threat" to freedom posed by Governor Sigler's inves- tigation of "subversive" activities. The statement reads: "Resolved, that the Inter-Racial Association of the University of Michigan strongly opposes the threat to aca- demic and political freedom as recently manifested by the attack on the American Youth for De- mocracy organization at Michigan State College under the guise of alleged and unsubstantiated claims of communist activities. "We go on record as favoring employing every means necessary to combat the current propensity of certain groups to discredit the so-called liberal movements by at- taching un-American labels to their programs." H. O. (FRITZ) CRISEER UN Approves Disarmament Comnmission Will Cover All Arms Except Atom Bomb LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Feb. 12. ---{)-The United Nations Secur- ity Council voted by 9 to 0 tonight to create an 11-nation commission to study the reduction of all arm- aments except those already being examined by the UN atomic Energy Commission. Russia and Poland abstained from voting. The Council's action was a sweeping- victory for the United States, which had insisted that a:. m .,"eoHis ion Qeated17b the United Nations must be limited to the field not covered by the atomic commission. Soviet delegate Andrei A. Gro- myko fought the U.S. proposals until the end, but when the show- down came he declined to invoke the big power veto with which he could have killed the plan at this point. TU' Suspends Two Students Two University students have been indefinitely suspended> for violation of the University's rules of conduct, Erich A. Walter, Direc- tor of the Office of Student Af- fairs, announced yesterday. The two students were Patricia Brighton, of Dearborn, and Glenn Whittle, of Chicago. The two were suspended by or- der of the University's discipline committee under the terms of Sec- tion 11 of the University Regula- tions Concerning Student Affairs, Conduct and Discipline. The regulation reads: "Enroll- ment in the University carries with it obligations in regard to conduct, not only inside but also outside the classroom, and stu- dents are expected to conduct themselves in such manner as to be a credit to themselves and to the University. "Whenever a student . . . con- ducts himself.. . in such a man- ner as to make it apparent that he .. . is not a desirable member or part of the University, he ... shall be liable to disciplinary ac- tion by the proper University au- thorities." Grid Mentoi Turns Dow Berkeley Bi< Confirms Repot From West Coa By JACK MARTIN and. ARCHIE PARSONS Coach Herbert o. "Fritz" C ler is not going to California. At 1:20 a.m. this morning confirmed an Associated F bulletin from Berkeley saying the Michigan football coach athletic director had wthdr his name from consideration the position of head gridiron c of the University of Californi The news was released in fornia by Norrie West, head of News Bureau of the Associ Students. According to the dispatch, West said, "Mr.Cr called Brutus Hamilton, gradi manager of California, this ning and requested his name withdrawn from further con eration for the coaching job. Crisler is out," When informed of the bull the Wolverine coach said, statement is correct." Crisler will formally anno this decision in a press confer to be held at 10:15 a.m. toda3 The sudden climax came on heels of a series of rapid-fire velopments which occurred f terday. They were: 1. A meeting between Pres( Alexander G. Ruthven and Cr; yesterday morning; 2. Two hurried meetings yes rector with the full Mich coaching staff and the Boar Control of Intercollegiate 4 letics; 3. An indirect admission I University of California offici a telephone conversation with Daily last night that the sc: had made Crisler an offer, a i ter of mere conjecture up i now. Last night The Daily c Dean Brutus Hamilton, ac manager of athletics at the 1 versity of California, and inqu if he had "received a reply fi Mr. Crisler concerning accepti of your offer." He replied, "No, we have We are expecting to hear # him." When asked what Cris4 position was when he left C fornia, Hamilton said, "He, somewhat interested. We also waiting to hear from him connection with several ot thipgs." Crisler talked with Presi4 Ruthven yesterday morning, neither the Athletic Director the President would discuss talk. Dr. Ruthven could noi reached for further comment night, after the call to Califoi Following a meeting of the coaching staff early in the a noon, Crisler met with mem of the Board in Control of Ir collegiate Athletics at 4:30 yesterday. Again he would say what had taken place. The Wolverine football co of the past nine years called Board together in order to el ify the events of the past I weeks and discuss his pres position. He explained his r sons for making his recent I to California, exactly what t4 place while he was there, a the matters which he has ui consideration at present. Before this meeting, mem of the Board appeared uneez as to what to expect. Profe Ralph W. Aigler, Michigan's W ern Conference representative a member of the Board, see: hopeful that Crisler could stil persuaded to remain at Michi Following this conference Athletic Publicity Office n the announcement about Cris press conference to be held morning. CtinodaQTiqrin.m ill man, is 36, STUDENT AT 'U' OF ROME: Coed Surveys Italian Colleges, Soeiety FORGET IT, MEN: White Shirt Shortage Acute;' Local Stores See Little Relief By PHYLLIS KAYE Students who have difficulty meeting tuition expenses here should try the University of Rome where it costs only 25 American cents to enroll. Elinor Moxness, a TTniversity student who recently since I had to use an interpreter," Miss Moxness pointed out. The university buildings are big and modern, she indicated, and were probably built by Mussolini. The campus "seemed bigger to me than Michigan. but that might rants and hotels it has become customary to tip with cigarettes. Even children attempt to buy or barter theit on the street. Even though two and one-half years have elapsed since Italy's surrender, bomb craters can still If you're looking for white shirts men, forget it. A Daily survey of Ann Arbor's men's clothing stores revealed an acute shortage of men's white shirts, with no immediate or near- future prospects for a better sit- uation. Numerous store owners said Ringing a different tone, one store owner said that he had a, few white shirts in all sizes. An- other one said he had white shirts in "most of the usual sizes." By and large, however, the owners indicated that they had fpwrr if n ,r ,r,1, c h i . ..a .,..,