AND AFTER TOJO Y A6F Air 4J4 .t an t r ~uit1 I CLOUDY WARMER see Pace 4 .1 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LIX, No. 48 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1948 PRICE FIVE C Disqualify AP Gives VI All Candidates for Senior Offices tip Wide Edge Total Shows Notre Dame Poor Second Army, California Follow Leaders NEW YORK - (P)-Michigan's mighty Wolverines continued to lead the nation's football teams in the weekly Associated Press poll of sports writers, bettering their first place margin of last week consid- erably. Whereas they trailed Notre Dame by three first place ballots in the previous poll, the Big Nine 1hampions gobbled up 130 of the 8 top spots. The other 78 No. 1 picks were divided among nine teams with Notre Dame on 27 first place ballots. * * * IN POINT SCORING, the de- termining factor, Michigan re- ceived 1,952 to 1,721 for the Fight- ing Irish. No doubt, last Satur- day's results influenced a lot of voters. The Wolverines trampled Indiana under a 54-0 score while Notre Dame barely squeezed out a 12-7 triumph over Northwestern. 12-otre Dame previously had beaten Indiana 42-6 and Mich- igan had swept past Northwest- ern 28-0. Although they received only three first place votes to 16 for California, Army's Cadets took third place over the Golden Bears, 1,426 points to 1,288. That was ?the way the two teams stood a week ago. ** * , NORTH CAROLINA, by vrtue of its 49-20 romp over Maryland, moved up a peg into fifth place with 1,034 points as 11 voters tabbed the Tar Heels, as their No. 1 team. Despite its 47-0 massacre of Temple, Penn State dropped down a notch to sixth place with 1883 points and three first place ballots. Northwestern, on its great show- See POLL, Page 3 Thomas Says He's Innocent Of Conspiracy WASHINGTON - (RI) - Rep. J. Parnell Thomas pleaded inno- cent to charges of conspiracy growing out of alleged padding of his office payrolls. Thomas, the retiring chairman of the House Un-American Activi- ties Committee, was released on $1,000 bond after being finger- printed at the United States Mar- shal's office. THE CONGRESSMAN, re-elect- ed Nov. 2, was indicted a week ago on charges of fraud and conspir- acy involving accusations of salary 'kickbacks" from office employes. He was arraigned before Judge Richmond B. Keech in Federal District Court a day ahead of schedule. His attorney, William H. Collins, said the shift was made because Thomas wished to return to his home in Allendale, N. J. Thomas' co-defendant and for- mer secretary, Helen Campbell, will be arraigned tomorrow. 'U' Senate Asks For Study of Ban The University Senate yesterday voted for appointment of a faculty committee to study the Regents' rule on political speakers. President Alexander G. Ruthven, chairman of the Senate, will appoint .the committee, which will report back at the next Senate meeting Dec. 6. (The faculty Senate is composed of all those with the rank of assistant professor or above, and is the main policy-making body of the University below the Board of Regents.) MEANWHILE, other groups u Assembly Told Israel Won't Give Up Negev UN Debate Continues On Peace Proposals PARIS- 03) -Israel told the United Nations it would put up fierce resistance against loss of the Negev desert in southern Palestine. Moshe Shertok, Israeli Foreign Minister, spoke before the Gen- eral Assembly's 58-nation Politi- cal Committee as that body began debate on the peace plan of Count Folke Bernadotte, slain Palestine mediator. - * * * THiE NEGEV, scene of recent bitter fighting between Israeli and Egyptian forces, was given to Israel under the Palestine. parti- tion plan 'adopted by the Assem- bly Nov. 29, 1947. Under the Ber- nadotte plan it would be given to the Arabs. Shertok said any Arab state trying to annex the Negev "should have to overcome, in bloody battles, the fiercest re- sistance that the Jews have yet offered anywhere to the Arab invaders." The Palestine question also oc- cupied the Security Council which considered a new Canadian pro- posal to replace the shaky Holy Land truce with an armistice. The Canadian measure was similar to a draft resolution offered last week by acting mediator Ralph Bunche. *, * * U. S. DELEGATE Philip C. Jessup said he would support the Canadian resolution, which Cana- dian sources said was drawn up after talks with the American, British, French and Belgian dele- gations. Jessup called it a step forward toward a final peace set- tlement. Russia's Jacob A. Malik, how- ever, said he believed the coun- cil should order the Jews and Arabs not to negotiate an armis- tice but a formal peace. The council meets again at 10, a.m. (3 a.m., CST) tomorrow io continue debate on the Capvdian proposal. In the midst of the two-pronged Palestine discussions, Shertok said Israel felt the time had come to ask for UN membership. were also swinging into action to ?recommend modification or repeal of the speakers' ban. The Student Legislature cab- inet met to block out plans for its written recommendations to the Regents, which will be ready "at least- a week" before the Re- gents' regular monthly meeting in December, according to SL president Blair Moody. But the faculty Senate's action raises the possibility of consulta- tion between students and faculty before recommendations are made, Moody said. He added that he hopes a cooperative arrangement can be worked out. THE MATTER "is in a state of flux," Moody said. But he predict-1 ed that consultations and commit- tee-work will be carried on inten- sively this week. The Committee to Abolish the Ban, though still functioning, has yielded most of its work to the Student Legislature, accord- ing to Buddy Aronson, CAB spokesman. The CAB has already "done a fine job" in calling the Regents' attention to student protests over the speakers ban, Moody said. Student Groups Back Series On Marriage It looks as though the marriage relations lecture series will be back this year. Representatives from five stu- dent groups, conferring yesterday with Ivan W. Parker, lecture com- mittee chairman, put their seal of approval on continuing the series. * * * - BUT BEFORE definite plans for the series can be launched, one or two of the groups which include the Student Legislature, the League, the Union, Student Re- ligious Association and The Daily -must officially agree to under- write expenses of the lectues. The delegates wil! take back to their organizations the pro- posal. If the-y agree to under- write financial expenses, plans can e launched at once for the sanual lectures. The lectures if continued will follow the same general plan that they have in past years, Parker said. Financial difficulties had made it impossible for the committee to continue sponsoring the lectures without definite support. Add Train To Handle OSU Crowd; Wolverine Special Gets Supplement Special train accommodations have been arranged to handle an overflow throng of students ex- pected to make the trip to Colum- bus for the OSU-Wolverine grid tilt this weekend. In addition to the special train sponsored by the Wolverine Club another special train will be on hand to handle students wishing to retulrn to Ann Arbor immedi- ately after the game. ANY STUDENT wishing to re- turn to Ann Arbor immediately after the game may purchase spe- cial round trip train tickets at $9.50 each which will be on sale all week at Rm. 2 University Hall. These students will travel to Columbus on the Wolverine Club's special train. But they will return to Ann Arbor on an- other train which will leave Co- lumbus at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. The marching band will also travel on this train. The Wolverine Club's special train will leave Ann Arbor at 6:30 a.m. Saturday and arrive in Co- lumbus at 12:30 p.m. It will leav'e Columbus at 10:05 a.m. Sunday and arrive in Ann Arbor at 5:26 p.m. HOWEVER STUDENTS,- who wish to return to Ann Arbor im- mediately after the football battle may take the band special train which leaves Columbus at 5:30 p.m. Saturday. Students who haa already made plans to take the Wolver- ine Club's special train may also take this band special. Wolverine Club train tickets will be exchanged for tickets on the band special and a $5 refund will be given. Tickets and refunds may be se- cured at Rm. 2 University Hall all this week. ASSOCIATE DEAN of Students Walter B. Rae said that any stu- dents having game tickets who wishto take the special train may get round trip tickets for $9.50 each all this week at Rm. 2 Uni- versity Hall. Dean Rae said that the special train will also be open to alum- nii and townspeople. The train leaving Ann Arbor' early Saturday morning has been enlarged to eight coaches, a din- ner and snack car in order to han- dle the 130 bandsmen who will be making the trek. Judic Finds Irregularities In Petitions Other Applicants Still Under Study All seventeen candidates for Senior Class Officers and one Stu- dent Legislature candidate were disqualified last night because of irregularities in their petitions. The petitions of three other SL candidates and two for the Board in Control of Student Publications are under further investigation by the Men's Judiciary Council, ac- cording to president Ev Ellin. * * * HE WOULD NOT divulge the names of the candidates whose pe- titions were being investigated. Ellin said that all the Senior Class petitions contained signa- tures of students who were in- eligible to vote. "Only students in the literary college, music, forestry and architectural schools can sign Senior Class pe- titions," Ellin said. The disqualified Senior Class candidates may re-petition if they desire, Ellin said. Petitions will be available for them in Rm. 2, Uni- versity Hall at noon today and are due in by 4 p.m. Friday. ELLIN SAID the Men's Judi- ciary would meet Friday to review these petitions. The SL candidate, Walter L. Hansen, was disqualified be- cause ,his petitions contained a duplication of signatures, Ellin said. He stated that Senior Class peti- tions had been rejected because of failure to comply with official standards. ** * PETITIONS FOR A place on the ballot are required in order to guarantee the voters that the cn- didate is truly representative," I- lin said. The Senior Class petition states that 150 signatures must be obtained 'from members of the candidate's own class and college. "Failure to meet standards of petitioning indicates a lack of interest on the part of candi- dates to comply with procedure," Ellin said. Board in Control of Student Publications petitions and those for J-Hop Committee will be re- viewed today in Rm. 2, University Hall. * * * HALLOWEEN HANGOVER-Ex-'Ensian photographer Lee Williams arrived on the scene just in time to snap this picture of the latest addition to the University's building program. A "U" dump truck soon destroyed the pranksters' work. * * e* 4 NOW IT CAN BE TOLD: Halloween Pranksters Barricade Engine Arch By GEORGE WALKER and LEON JAROFF "Stone walls do not a prison make," but, in case you're interested, there's no better way of blocking up the Engine Arch. Yes, now it can be told-the strange story of the first successful attempt to barricade the vital passageway through the West Engi- neering Building. For years, students had dreamed of accomplishing this monu- mental feat. But police, campus cops, janitors, and fire hoses con- tinuously foiled their efforts. *, * * * THEN, A YEAR AGO, a small group of determined men, stung by previous failures, began work on a' closely coordinated, fool - proof plan. Their idea was based on N oro Issue Commando tactics-months of ex- tensive preparation climaxed by aC few minutes of swift, decisive ac- osts arter tion. r Neutral Six i OSU To Se Concrete blocks, mortar, steel cables and radium-dialed stop watches were painstakingly ac- cumulated. These they carefully cached in a secluded warehouse. The night watchmen's rounds were checked to the split second and, after studied consideration, Halloween night was picked as the time of greatest opportunity. * 4' IN THE WEE hours of the chosen night, a small group of hand-picked men gathered on the University High playground, mixed their mortar, and slinked through the darkness to the Arch. The months of training paid dividends. Working swiftly and efficiently, they constructed a four-foot barricade reinforced with one-inch steel cable, a structure which would have brought praise from any civil engineer. Then, like the proverbial Arabs, they folded their blueprints and stole silently into the night. WHEN THE project was discov- ered at 5 a.m., University officials had to act fast, for in three hours a stream of humanity would be battering helplessly against the cold stone. They procured a dump truck and rammed it time and again against the wall-but to no avail. A much larger truck finally did the job, but Just in time for the 8 a.m. rush. Next Halloween night will un- doubtedly see the University pre- pared for another attempt. F orFraternity The Amherst chapter of Phi Kappa Psi has had its charter re- voked by the national fraternity in a dispute arising out of that chapter's decision to initiate a Negro. Dewey Tennent, president of the Michigan chapter of Phi Psi, said that in view of the fact that the fraternity system as it is estab- lished at Michigan provides for all races and groups, his chapter was in agreement with the action of the national organization. * * . ACCORDING TO Tennent in April of this year the Amherst group announced that it was go- ing to pledge Thomas Gibbs, 19, a Negro Sophomore from Evanston, Ill. The Phi Psi Executive Coun- cil then issued a temporary direc- tive holding up Gibbs' pledging until the fraternity's national con- vention which was held last sum- mer. Amherst chapter attended this meeting where unanimous agreement was reached by which the Amherst group voluntarily promised not to initiate Gibbs. According to Tennent, the Am- herst Chapter went back on its promise and repledged Gibbs and announced its intention to initiate him. Gibbs is a member of the Student Council and the Fresh- man Orientation Committee. HOWARD L. Hamilton, Presi- dent of the National organization, notified the local that its charter had been revoked. Call for Berlin Compromise Plan To Be Pressed If Mediation Fails PARIS-(P)-The six "neutral" nations of the United Nations Se- curity Council completed a new compromise proposal on the Berlin crisis calling for concessions from both sides. A reliable informant who, dis- closed this said the six nations were prepared to present the pro- posal if current mediation efforts by top U.N. officials fail. THESE EFFORTS came last week in the form of an appeal for direct negotiations on the Berlin question by Trygve Lie, U.N. sec- retary general, and Dr. Herbert V. Evatt of Australia, President of the General Assembly. The foreign ministers of the three big Western Powers--the United States, Britain and France-were scheduled to meet tomorrow to draft answers to the I appeal. Their reply was expected to amount to a rejection of the plea, which called for negotiations be- tween Russia and the Western Powers to end the Soviet blockade of Berlin. S * * * THE NEW COMPROMISE pro- posed by Argentina, Belgium, Can- ada, China, Colombia and Syria would call on Russia to modify its demand for a simultaneous lifting of the Soviet blockade and a settle- ment of the currency question. The Western Nations would be asked to negotiate while the blockade was still partly in effect. An entirely new factor would be a proposal to have the Security Council name a special committee to supervise lifting the blockade. U' Quota Met In Fund Drive The University has met its quota of $25,500 in the Community Fund Campaign, according to Prof. John Arthos, chairman of the campus division of the drive. However, some pledges are stil outstanding, Prof. Arthos said. He requested those who have not re- turned their contributions to do so in the very near future. t t eL - World News At A Glance By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The Supreme Court decided in effect that Con- gress acted legally when it voided workers' claims for some $6,000,000,- 000 in retroactive "portal-to-portal" pay. Gala Show By'M' Band The University Marching Band will roll into Columbus Saturday with a show that would make even Barnum blush, present plans indicate." "We're going down there loaded on Saturday," Prof. William D. Revelli, band director said yester- day, after thanking contributors to the drive to send the "band- wagon" to Ohio State University. SUPPORT PLEDGES of $2,157 from virtually every campus or- ganization, as well as local mer- chants, townspeople and alumni collected by The Daily will back the unscheduled band trip this Saturday. The Band is planning to pull all the tricks out of their well- stocked bag for Saturday's per- formance. During the half-time ceremonies they will salute the home team by forming the word "Ohio" to the SENIOR CLASS presidential candidates who were disqualified are Pete Elliott and Val Johnson. Vice - Presidential aspirants were Audry Buttery, Marilyn Howell, John Kampmeler, Ar- lynn Rosen and Mary Wright. Candidates for secretary who. have been disqualified are Betty Cole, Nancy Culligan, Margaret El- lingwood, Jo Kitchen, Ginny Nick- las, Ruth Parsons and Elinor Ab- rahamson. Treasurer candidates were Ann Griffin, William Marcoux, and Eu- genia McCallum. Lecturer To' eb DiscussERP "European Views of the Euro- pean Recovery Program" will be the theme of a lecture and discus- sion program presented by the Club Europa at 8 p.m. today at the Rackham Building. Prof. John P. Dawson of the law school who supervised export and import controls in Greece last year will speak together with Zorae Organschi of Italy and Roelf Pas- toor of the Netherlands. Pastoor, a business administra- tion student, will discuss the eco- nomic aspects of the ERP while Organschi analyses the political aspects as they affect Europeans. This program is the first in a series to be presented by the speakers bureau of Club Europa, its president Eino Kainlauri of Finland said. The 120 students from 23 European countries are planning an intensive mrogram to acquaint each other and the American students with their countries. What's in a Purse? Because a University coed had a WE LIKE DELIVERY GRIPES --- IF OTTAWA - William Lyon MacKenzie King resigned as Prime Minister after having headed the Canadian govern- ment for more than 21 years. Mie was succeeded by Louis Stephen St. Laurent, a French Canadian lawyer. CINCINNATI - Secretary of Labor Maurice J. Tobin, prom- ised the American Federation of Labor to help build a vigorous, expanded labor department. That, he said, would undo work of what he called "The Whiffen- poof 80th Congress." --- YOU aren't getting 7:45 A.M. delivery, YOUR Daily is not on your porch YOUR Daily delivery serv- ice is in any way un- SPECIAL PROGRAMS PLANNED: Campus To Honor Foreign Students NANKING-The Chinese Communist armies were reported flow- ing toward the Yangtze River today, leaving in their backwash a swirling, inconclusive battle for Suchow. Suchow, on the north-central China plains, is 200 railroad miles northwest of this nervous capital-which lies on the big river's south International Students Day will be observed tomorrow separately ter-Guild and the NSA Committee of the Student Legislature. collection drive for the students at the University of Yunnan in