LOYALTY LIST Lw uau Daii4mwwb NOT TOO COLD TO VOTE Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 67 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Voters Will Choose Student Legislature In Election Today IRA's Questionnaire Will Survey Campus Opinion on Discrimination Campaigning reached its climax yesterday, as candidates put forth a last minute effort to win votes in today's election, to be held from 8:45 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Voters will select 32 members of the Student Legislature and will express opinions in a survey prepared by Inter-racial Association, on the barbershop discrimination issue. Students must bring identification cards in order to vote, Dick Kelly, chairman of a special Student Legislature elections commit- tee, re-emphasized yesterday. He also reminded students that "strong" action will be taken against vinitors nf election rules' - ttg''alliou Y1V.Lavmla Va Gac. . avaa au- , which include the prohibition o: campaigning within 50 feet of th< polls. Election procedure will be as follows: Students will be handec a ballot and, at the same time, the IRA questionnaire. They will cast their votes, and submit the bal- lot and questionnaire, with their identification to the official at the polling booth. The ID card will be punched and returned to the voter. Ballots and questionnaires will be stamped and dropped into the bal- lot box by the poll official. A survey showing candidates' opinions on various controver- sial campus issues will be dis- tributed today by members of Young Progressive Citizens of Michigan, who prepared it. Located in front of Angell and Alumni Memorial Halls, behind Haven Hall, on the Diagonal, at the Willow Run bus stop, in the Engine Arch and in Hutchins Hall, polling booths will be manned by volunteers and proctored by mem- bers of several campus organiza- tions. The election will be conducted according to the Hare plan of pro- portional representation under which voters must number their selections in order of preference. The quota of ballots needed to elect a candidate is approximately the total number of ballots cast, divided by the number of posi- tions to be filled. Today Is Last Chance To Get Ticket Refunds This is the last day refunds on Rose Bowl tickets may be secured and Ticket Manager Don Weir has strongly urged all students not, planning to use the Pasadena - pasteboards to turn them in. Weir warns that identification cards and receipts will be closely checked when presented for tick- ets on the West Coast. If the stringent check of credentials dis- closes that they are not being pre- sented by a University student the tickets will not be issued. Weir and members of the Uni- versity ticket staff will be doing the checking. The regulations have -been tightened up because of rumors that many students were sending identification cards to friends on the coast, It has also been announced that tickets may be picked up one day earlier than previously announced to prevent congestion. Weir and his staff will be on hand at the Edison Building, Grand Ave. and Fifth St. in downtown Los Angeles Dec. 30 all day to distribute tickets to University students, faculty and staff members. As previously announced the tickets will also be distributed at the Huntington Hotel in Pasadena Dec. 31 and the morning of the game. Identification cards must t be presented and receipts counter- signed in the presence of the ticket officials in order to pick tap the pasteboards. Meeting of AA UP Campus chapter of the Amer- ican Association of University Professors will hear Dean Erich A. Walter discuss "The Office of Student Affairs" at 6 p.m. tomor- rowu in the Ulnion. Fritz Crisler Given. 'Coach Of Year' Title Fellow Grid Mentors Choose 'M' Strategist By BEV BUSSEY Fritz Crisler, dean of the Mich- igan coaching staff and master strategist, has been chosen "coach of the year" in the annual New York-Telegram's poll of the na- tion's football coaches, ag.ording to an Associated Press dis atch. Receiving 68 first place votes, Crisler was followed by Matty Bell of SMU, Lynn Waldorf of California, and Notre Dame's 1Frank Leahy. For the first time during, his ten year reign at the University, the grey-thatched coach pijoted the Wolverines through an undefeated campaign to sole possession of the Big Nine championship. "Very Pleased" This fact seemed to give him more satisfaction, because as Cris- ler stated, he was "very pleased in being selected, but there are others more deserving of the honor than I." The Michigan tutor was noted as one of the few coaches who knew how to make the "free sub- s.titution" rule work successfully. With alternating offensive and defensive units, he turned out football specialistswho knew their assignments for every situation. Figures Don't Lie Statistics bear out the value of the Crisler plan. The Maize and Blue headed the Western Confer- ence in total offense and defense. Exploding one of the most po- tent attacks since the "point-a- minute" teams of Fielding H. Yost, Michigan has scored 345 points in nine ganes, more than six times the number of its opponents.. Behind the cold facts exists a' personal relationship betweei, Crisler and the team members, which sprang up after last year's Illinois game when he said, ac- cording to end Dick Rifenburg, "Okay, boys, let's make these practice sessions fun." Now he shows a dry type of humor at daily drills, but he com- mands even more respect from the gridders by "belonging." Still to them, he is still "Mr. Crisler." Lecture Is Cancelled Lennox Robinson, Irish play- wright scheduled to lecture here today, will not be able to appear because of illness, the speech de- partment has announced. i BigNames To Provide J-Hop Music Tommy Dorsey, Dunham To Play Students will dance to the music df Tommy Dorsey and Sonny Dun- ham at the annual J-Hop to be presented Feb. 6 and 7 in the Intramural Building, the central committee announced yesterday. The hop will be presented from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. both nights and coeds attending will receive 4 a.m. permission. Can Make Application Juniors, seniors and graduate students may submit applications for J-Hop tickets from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and Friday and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday at the ticket booth in University Hall. Only individual applications will be accepted and students are re- quired to bring their I.D. cards and a one cent stamp to the booth. The I.D. cards will be punched and stamps will cover reply postage. Can State Preference New postcard applications will be used this year, according to Bruce Lockwood, ticket chair- man. The postcard forms are available at the ticket booth. Ap- plicants will indicate the night they prefer to attend the dance on half of the card and the other part will be sent back to the stu- dents later to inform them wheth- er or not their preferences have been approved. Juniors will receive first pref- erence on tickets, then seniors and third, graduate students. If not, all tickets are applied for or if some students who applied do not purchase the tickets allotted to them there will be 4n open sale in January to all classes. Grc Loss Estimated at $75,000 as Blaze Guts Local Store (city Firemen Overcome Stubborn Fire After Steady Six-Hour Battle By PHIL DAWSON and HAROLD JACKSON, JR. Thick clouds of choking smoke blanketed the campus yesterday morning as one of the most devastating fires in Ann Arbor's history gutted Wild's clothing store on State Street, causing an unofficially estimated $75,000 damage. With thousands of shivering students watching from behind po- ice ines, city firemen battled steadily for over six hours to bring the stubborn blaze under control and prevent it from ravishing adjacent buildings. * * * JEWS MOVE BELONGINGS-Guarded by members of Haganah, the Jewish underground organiza- tion, Jews in Jerusalem move property which has b een partially destroyed by Arab mobs. B tt Policy Will Replace IRA Picketing A five point program rec- ommending the withdrawal of picketing and the establishment of an immediate boycott against the barbershops picketed was out- lined yesterday at a meeting of interested students, called at IRA initiative, to determine student support for such a boycott. In view of the group's decision to promote an immediate boycott, Lee Salk, education director of IRA announced that IRA will cease its picketing of barbershops. shops. The group reflected a broad cross-section of student interests, as the 28 individuals there includ- NEEDS CONTINUITY: Dean Walter Tells Problems Facing Student Government To Forgetful The telephone company will al- low approximately a fortnight for absent-minded professors - and students-to realize that it's 3-1511 or nothing. The change in the University's telephone number will be painless at first. Calls made to the old ex- change, 4121, will be silently transferred to the new one, but after the indoctrination period, you're on your own. Every time you let the old habit get the better of you, it may not cost you a nickel, but it won't get you anywhere, either. A polite voice will inform you that "that number has been changed to 3-1511," and will ask you to put the call through again. Despite the inconvenience of having to remember a new num- ber, anyone who has tried to get the University on weekday after- noons recently, will vouch for the necessity of the change. Increased enrollment has overtaxed the lines, and the most frequent result of dialing 4121 has been a busy signal. New equipment, enabling the University to accept more incom- ing calls has been installed in the telephone building. A new num- ber, providing increased service and some headaches, is the result. A statement that the Inter- fraternity Council was fully in accord with the principle be- hind IRA's "Operation Hair- cut," was unanimously passed at an I F C house-president's meeting. Present were 37 of the 38 houses. ed members of 22 campus organi- zations. Keitha Harmon, presi- dent of SRA, presided. Expression of opinion at the polls today for the principle be- hind "Operation Haircut" was an- other point which the group sup- ported. The individuals at the meeting also voted to promote the court case on the issue which will short- ly be introduced. The final point agreed on was the suspension- of patronage from the four barber- shops until they have ceased their discriminatory practices. Messiah Will Be Broadcast Sunday's performance of "The Messiah" will mark the first time that the oratorio has been broad- cast from Hill Auditorium. The production, featuring Fran- cis Yeend, lyric soprano, Mary Van Kirk, contralto, Harold Haugh, tenor, and Mark Love, bass, as soloists, will be presented by the University Broadcasting Service over both the AM and FM facilities of WPAG. Arrangements for the broadcast, which will present the 300 voice Choral Union Chorushand a spe- cial 60 piece orchestra directed by Lester McCoy, associate con- ductor of the University Musical Society, wvere made by Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the Society. The first performance of Han- del's famous Christmas oratorio will be presented at 8:30 p.m. Sat- urday. Two performances are ne- cessitated by the populaiity of the work according to Dr. Sink. Candidates' Statements The names of Jeannie Johnson and Richard Burton were mis- The failure of students to ade- quately establish student govern- ment on a continuing basis is probably the basic reason for its lack of success, Erich A. Walter, dean of students, said yesterday. Although the problem reflects the same sort of situation found in many cities and municipalities, Dean Walter said, it is less adjust- able here. In such communities, ideals and projects can be passed from father to son through many generations, as obviously cannot be done in the university com- munity. The place for student govern- ment, then, lies in the accomplish- ment of projects which can be completed in a short time, Dean Walter declared, adding that an effort must be made to interest and teach lower classmen to pro- vide for some transmission of Open Mikado' Stand Today The sparkling songs, music and comedy of Gilbert and Sullivan's famed "Mikado" will invade Ann Arbor at 8:30 p.m. today as the all-student operetta opens a two night stand in the Pattengill Au- ditorium of Ann Arbor High School. Directed by Prof. Harry Allen, veteran of many productions in- cluding the "Lux Radio Theatre," the "Mikado will feature in addi- tion to its principals a 40 voiced chorus and a 25 piece symphony orchestra under the baton of Rex Wilder, graduate students in the music school. Gilbert and Sullivan Society production faces the footlights to- night after seven weeks of inten- sive rehearsals. "The cast has be- come so used to the pseudo-Japari- ese names, they'll probably never stop calling each other Pooh-Bah, Yum-Yum, Pish-Tush, and Pitti- Sing," according to Hal Feldman, Society publicity director. Ticket sales will be available all day today and tomorrow outside Rm. 2, University hall as well as at the Pattengill Box office before each performance. student government goals through student generations. Citing the problems involved when a. new legislature takes over "cold," Dean Walter used as an example the football distribution study made by the Student Leg- islature last year. He explained that while thetentire investigation was carried through with effi- See DEAN- WALTER, Page 6 World INews At aGlanceI By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Dec. 9-Con- gress today received the adminis- tration's anti-inflation blueprint specifiically requesting power to ration meat, gasoline and other commodities as needed, as well as authority to buy up the entire wheat crop and to allocate steel and other scarce items. PARIS, Dec. 9-Russia and France expelled each other's reparation commissions today and Moscow broke off trade negotiations ruining France's chances for 300,000 tons of bad- ly needed Soviet wheat. A sharp Russian note broadcast by the Moscow radio also contained a threat to terminate the 1944 French-Russian alliance. PARIS, Dec. 9-The Commu- nist-ledGeneral Confederation of Labor (CGT) accepted tonight the Government's terms for end- ing the month-long strike wave which has paralyzed the French economy. tt directed idle workers to retu'n to their jobs tomorrow. * *I * ROME, Dec. 9-Rome's Com- munist-led Chamber of Labor lifted its midnight deadline for Government acquiesence to its ul- timatum today and the threat of a general strike in the capital and province lessened. ** * SOFIA, Bulgaria, Dec. 9-Pre- mier Georgi Dimitrov submitted his resignation and that of his government to the Bulgarian Par- liament tonight. The fire was discovered at ap- proximately 8:30 a.m. by a store employe who noticed smoke pouring up from the basement. His alarm was an- swered by all available fire- fighting equipment, including fog apparatus, two pumpers, two hook-and-ladder units and 23 firemen led by Fire Chief Ben Zahn. Dense smoke from smoldering cloth hindered firemen's attempts to locate and extinguish the flames. The fire spread rapidly to the main floor when flames were sucked up a dumb-waiter shaft in the rear of the store. Thousands of gallons of water were poured into the building as holiday-swelled 'clothing stocks were utterly destroyed. Several firemen narrowly es- caped injury when the first floor collapsed into the base- ment. One fireman was over- come by smoke and another suf- fered two fractured ribs. Outside, other firemen laid down a heavy barrage of water to prevent spread of the flames to nearby stores and offices. Al- though the blaze was brought un- der control by 1 p.m., firemen con- tinued mopping up operations the rest of the afternoon.. Smoke and water caused ex- tensive damage in both the Dil- lon Gown Shop and the Gran- ada Cafe. Smoke also caused other adjoining establishments to close their doors. A minor fire elsewhere in the city added to the fire department's woes. It was extinguished by a skeleton crew of off-duty firemen, called for stand-by service at the station during the State Street blaze. Wells Movie To Play Here "Things To Come," a movie adapted from the book by H. G. Wells, will be presented by the Art Cinema League at 8:30 p.m. to- morrow, Friday and Saturday in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. A conception of what may be expected from another World War is presented in the film. John Cabal, an aeronautical en- gineer played by Raymond Massey, is reading of the possibility of a new war as the picture opens. Then comes an unexpected air at- tack. Subsequently the film presents a picture of the near-destruction of civilization and of the labors of rebuilding it. Super-powered bombs, bacteri- ological warfare, and futuristic machines are foreshadowed in the movie, which stars Sir Cedric Hardwicke and Margaretta Scott. Tickets go on sale at the theatre box office at 2 p.m. today. Smoke Brings 'U' Students To Watch Fire Sidewalk Firemen Tell 'How To Do It' By MARY STEIN Thousands of "sidewalk fire- men" braved Ann Arbor's icy weather yesterday morning to lend their moral support to the real hook and ladder brigade. As smoke from the men's store blaze made campus look like Lon- don in a pea-soup fog, students and faculty members were lured down to State Street. There they cheered as firemen leaped from shiny red trucks and set to work with hose and hatchet. Kid's Field Day The mental fire-fighters even directed their active brethren in maneuvering a ladder beneath a high wire and over to the store's roof. Some of the more eager on- lookers kept local police busy by edging too close to the billowing smoke. Small fry had a field day romping around the fire truck. Several even made so bold as to turn water pistols on the harassed police. Reluctant Students Spectator shifts changed as students reluctantly trudged off to ten and eleven o'clocks, and othbrs arrived on the scene. Ann Arbor High School students came equipped with lunch boxes and thermos jugs. With eyes raptly fixed on what they called the town's "best" fire in years, students discussed pros- pects of big fire sale bargains. A few expressed fear that the fire might spread to University build- ings, preventing class attendance. "There goes my tuxedo-the only 37 long in the Middle West," one bystander wailed. To Ask United Aid to Europe World Federalists Will Survey Campus A united foreign policy program of economic aid to Europe will be the goal of a United World Fed- eralist Resolution to be circulated on campus today, tomorrow and Friday. "More than 15,000 copies of the Federalist Resolution will be cir- culated in the three day drive, for studentss to read and sign 'yes' or 'no'," Debby Rabinowitz, chair- man of the survey committee said. "This is 'a poll on the issue of aid to Europe; not on world gov- -mient," Miss Rabinowiz said. "We must decide on U. S. help or no help at all." According to the Resolution, the government has two alternatives: "1. Shape and administrate ?conomic aid tonsecure allegiance :f the countries helped, and im- rove the strategic position of the . S. in its struggle for power with :'ussia. "2. Make economic help the first step to achieve peace by halting olarization of nations, contribut- mg to their independent political strength and inducing their par- icipation in a stronger United Na- UNPACK THE TINSEL: Ann Arbor Receives Varied Choice of Christmas Trees INTERNATIONAL TOPIC: DuBois Discusses Negro Oppression By FRED SCHOTT By trainrand by truck Christmas trees are r'olling into Ann Arbor and there's a pretty good selec- tion available now at just about any price you want to pay. Buyers may choose from an as- sortment of spruce, both blue and ordinary spruce, shipped in from as far away as Nova Scotia. Prices are up somewhat this season, but you can still get a tree for less than a dollar. Or you can pay up to $20. A number of blue, and blue-and- green spruce ate$1aand up. A gas station on Packard of- fers a variety of smaller trees ranging from $2 to $6. The own- ers also have a stock of wreaths and miscellaneous boughs. Prices' are up from last year. If you're in the market for something different, a Huron market has miniature trees espe- ciallly invigorated by a kind of sap, in their standards. "Cut under the supervision of Forest Rang- By MALCOLM WRIGHT Negro oppression in the United States is of international, not merely domestic, concern, Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, rsearch director of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, declared yesterday, at a meeting in Rackham Lecture Hall spon- sored by the Inter-Racial Associa- U tional culture, as the American Negro does, without becoming a menace to the nation, Dr. DuBois said, the American race problem' concerns the world. The petition presented to the UN Human Rights Commission in October by the NAACP, he said, followed not only earlier Negro efforts abroad through the League chattel slavery, attainment of con- siderable economic independence, social security and advance in cul- ture, he asserted, this is not enough. That the NAACP petition was neither prejudiced nor overstated the case, Dr. DuBoise explained was shown when the report of President Truman's Commission I .I . I I I :I i I '.,1