STRATEGY Se Page I Latest Deadline in the State "it RAIN AN ISNOWI t: v lt4 /" 1 " ;.1 V0L. LIX, No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY MINAR{II 7, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS God Essential InOneWorld Seeger Says Asserts Peace Made, Not Bought "'One world, which is the broth- erhood of man, is not possible without the fatherhood of God," said Dr. Raymond Seeger, profes- sor of physics at George Washing- ton University yesterday at Rack- ham Assembly Hall. Dr. Seeger told a group of stu- dents and townspeople that you can't buy peace, you must make it. God must come down into the hearts of men, then they will have the power to make it, he said. ,* * IT TAKES three basic steps to make peace, he explained. But we must have God in us before our EVENTS TODAY 4:14i p.m.: Seminars: "World Outlook for Chris- tianity," Dr. T. Z. Koo, East Conference Room, Rackham Building. "World Race Relations," Her- rick B. Young, International venter. "Christian Campus Life," Mrs. Vera Lowrie, Hussey Room, League. first step, which is humility, he said. "We must recognize that there must be two to make peace arid each must concede a little. These two, whether they be nations or men, must make an agreement, Dr. Seeger added. "If you can agree on some higher level than your original- agreement, don't stop there; go on agreeing on levels higher than the one before; that is the straight road to peace." Peace is essentially a spiritual agreement, he said. Then to keep the peace, all you have to do is to keep that agreement, he added. Men must practice peace in- side themselves, Dr. Seeger em- phasized. "You as students must practice it in your motives. You can start today-make an agree- mnent with your roommate, with your family or with your teachers. Give into them a little, and as you practice peace you will grow tre- mendously in understanding." Triple Aspect Of Bible Study Hit by Sittler I Committee Okays Full ECA Funds Chairman Objects to Amendment Calling for Eiuropean Unification WASHINGTON-UP)-The full $5,580,000,000 the administration asked for the second installment of the Marshall plan was approved last night by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 13 to 0. The committee added an amendment encouraging the "unifica- tion of Europe," despite objections from Chairman Connally (D-Tex.) chat it would give a "hollering point" to Russia, which charges the U.S. with dictating to foreign nations. THE COMMITTEE decided against making any cuts at this time in the $5,580,000,000, which is designed to speed recovery of Western Europe. Price fluctuations are too uncertain, committee leaders felt, to warrant a cut now, but several Senators reserved the right to ask one later. "If there should be a great price reduction, then ECA will be able to save its dollars," Connally said. The committee made a significant decision not to turn ECA into an instrument for supporting the domestic commodity markets. * * * * ECA CHIEF Paul Hoffman was directed by a statement in the record to "give sympathetic consideration" to the U.S. economy in commodity purchases. But this was not made mandatory. Wherever possible, Hoffman is to purchase surplus American farm products. But the only mandatory provision on commodity buying is that 15 per cent of the wheat shipped to Europe must be in the form of flour. The fund authorized in the measure is the second installment of the Marshall plan. To become law, the bill must be passed by Senate and House' and signed by the President. Then an actual appropriation bill to carry out the program must be passed by Congress. * * CHAIRMAN CONNALLY (D-Tex.) said after the committee session: "Several members made reservations that they may change their vote when the bill goes to the Appropriations Committee." Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich.) said the members decided they could make no cut at this time with the commodity market fluctuating as it is. Connally said he will take the authorization bill to the Senate for a vote as soon as the "log jam" created by a Southern filibuster is ended. Allocate Unused ECA Funds For Chinese Students in U.S. A "substantial sum" of unused ECA funds will be made available to aid Chinese students in the United States who are unable to get money from home, according to Dr. Esson M. Gale, director of the International Center. The Economic Cooperation Commission for China Aid will allocate the money from suspended ECA funds originally slated for the Chi- nese government. STATE DEPARTMENT agreement, to the move was secured by the action of the National Association of Foreign Student Advisers which recently met in Syracuse4 Senate Gag Michigan Is Threat to ,a Cagers Humble Reet LawsI Taft Backs Fight To Enud Filibnsier WASHINGTON-(IP)-The Sen- ate filibuster threatened last night to kill federal rent controls March 31. Three Senators, Lucas (D-Ill.), Taft (R-Ohio) and Sparkman (D- Ala.) agreed the law could not be revived if this happens. THERE WAS another danger to the rent act which expires unless extended beyond this month. Hearings on it aren't complete. There was a hint they may be interrupted. Sparkman, chairman of a Senate Banking Subcommittee studying the bill, had hoped to complete it by March 17 or 18 with a view of agreement be- tween the two Houses before the March 31 deadline. But an administration decision to throw the Senate into night session today in an attempt to smash the filibuster, led Spark- man to shake his head over the rent control timetable. He said he would leave it to the subcommittee whether to work day and night. * Y :k M MEANWIULE Senator Taft, (Rep,. Ohio) threw his weight behind a crumbling administra- tion effort to break a Southern Democratic filibuster in the Sen- ate. Taft, who heads tht Senate GOP policy committee, told re- porters that if Vice President Barkley rules that debate can be limited on a motion to take up a proposed Senate rules change he will support that ruling. ADMINISTRATION forces have made a motion to take up a pro- posed rules change under which debate could be curbed at any time that two-thirds of those present so decided. The proposed rule was of- fered as a prelude to an attempt to pass civil rights Ieaislatior*. and Southerners are filibuster- ing against the motion. Last year Senator Vandenberg (Rep., Mich.), as presiding officer, decided that there is nothing in the Senate's rulebook which per-I mits any kind of debate limits on a motion. ADMINISTRATION forces have been counting on Vice President Barkley to reverse that ruling, if the question again is raised. They1 believe he will decide that under the rules, a two-thirds majority can limit debate. But if Barkley should so de-I Big Nine Champs, MOLOTOV AND SUCESSOR-Vyacheslav M. Molotov (right) was removed from his post as Russian Foreign Minister to step into Josef Stalin's shoes as Soviet Prime Minister, according to high British diplomats. Andrei Y. Vishinsky (left) has been promoted from his deputy foreign minister job to succeed Molotov. WITH STALIN AT TOP: Somie British Official's See Molotov as Minis ter LONDON-(,P)-Senior British diplomats believe Vyacheslav M.1 Molotov is being groomed to step into Stalin's shoes as Soviet Prime Minister, reliable sources reported yesterday. These informants said the opinion apparently is based on reports which British ambassador Sir Maurice Peterson has sent from Mos- cow. They said Peterson warned against expecting any basic change in Russian foreign policy as a result of Molotov's release as foreign minister. S * * * TJE SAME views were expressed here privately by a high rank- ink diplomat of one of the Eastern European Communist countries. Big Steel! DETROIT-RP)-Police were on the lookout for a thief who stole 17 manhole covers, each weighing about 190 pounds, over the weekend. The covers, valued at $9.90 each, were reported missing from all parts of the city. ConferenceI HeeIDenie Zaritchny By BUDDY ARONSON James Zarichny, ousted Michi- gan State College student recent- ly denied permission to speak on campus by the University Lecture Committee, was refused a confer- ence yesterday with Prof. Carl Brandt, head of the committee, Zarichny, in Ann Arbor "to ex- plain the facts of the case to as many students as possible," said that Brandt had first agreed to meet with him provided that he appeared alone, but that Brandt withdrew the acceptance when Zarichny asked why he must ap- pear by himself. * * * BRANDT, WHEN queried by The Daily about the report, re- plied only, "No comment." "It is unfortunate that the University of Michigan is the first place to deny me permis- sion to speak, but this-reflects the increasing infringements upon academic freedom all over the country," Zarichny declared. "However, I have the greatest confidence that the students, when made aware of the issues involved, will act decisively to save academic freedom on a national level," he asserted. * * * SINCE HIS expulsion from MSC, Zarichny has presented his case to students on a number of midwestern campuses, including Northwestern, Chicago, Minneso- ta, Wisconsin, Indiana and Wes- tern Reserve. Released concurrently with Zarichny's arrival in Ann Ar- bor was the text of a letter to Pres. Ruthven from Ernest Goodman, 1948 Progressive Par- ty candidate for State Attorney General, whose appearance here with Zarichny was also turned down by the Lecture Conunittee. Referring to the committee's statement that "no educational purpose will be served by the use of University facilities for an at- tack of this kind on a sister insti- tution," Goodman said, "The ba- sis of the objection appears to be that one's right to discuss an in- justice decreases with its prox- imity." * * * "IT SEEMS to me that when thc pursuit of knowledge, whether . of events of the present or the past, beomes circumscribed by geographical boundaries, estab- lished by University authorities, academic freedom has been lost," he concluded. Meanwhile the Young Progres- sives, sponsors of the proposed 70-53 Suprunowiekz Paces Rout of Illinois Five M' Win Cinches Third Place Spot By SY SONKIN Michigan's cagers ran rings around a highly-favored Illinois quintet to upset the new Confer- ence champs, 70-53, at Yost Field House last night before more than 9,000 screaming fans. The game was the last of the season for the Wolverines and gives them a record of seven Con- ference triumphs against five losses, in addition to sole posses- sion of third place in the Big Nine. The overall mark is 16 wins out of 22 starts. * * * THE ILLINI were handed the title Saturday night when Wis- consin surprised the basketball world with a 45-43 win over sec- ond-place Minnesota, but it was still up to the invaders to prove that they really merited the crown by beating the defending title- holders. Coach Harry Combes' outfit, confident and fast at the out- set, weren't equal to the task. Three times they managed to pull into a tie with the Maize and Blue squad in the first half, and once pulled into an 18-17 lead at the midpoint. WHEN THE Wolverines walked off the court at halftime on the long end of a 32-27 count, the issue was still in doubt. But within four and a half minutes after ther stad of next stanza, the Maize and Blue had pulled away to a 48- 29 lead, and Illinois had slowed down to a walk. Forward Mack Suprunowiez, who started out the winter at a slow pace, climaxed his late-sea- son scoring rush with an 18-point effort, 16 of them in the second half, and jumped from sixth to third place in the final standings of the Big Nine scoring race. HE CLOSES the season with 178 points, four behind Minne- sota's Jim McIntyre. Center Fred Green and for- ward Dwight "Dike" Eddleman scored 14 and 10 points, respec- tively, to lead the visitors' efforts M *k * IN WHIPPING the Illini, the Maize and Blue showed more speed than at any time previously this year, except, perhaps, against See "SECOND," Page 6 * Black Will Be First Speaker Since Ban End The "Future of the Republican Party in Michigan" will be dis- cussed by former State Attorney General Eugene Black at an open meeting of the Young Republicans at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Henderson Room of the League. Black will be the first political speaker to appear on campus since the removal of the Speakers Ban. The Young Republicans will hold a business meeting at 7:30 p.m. preceeding his talk. Black, who served as Attorney General under Kim Sigler, was responsible for exposing corrupt political practices in the state or- ganizations of both the Democrat and Republican parties in 1946. He is a very controversial figure in GOP circles, according to Howard Johnson, vice-president of the Young Republicans. "But he is respected for his honesty and integrity," Johnson, added. Seniors May Pay Dues Until Friday i N.Y. Funds will be administered "In academic circles we study either by the Institute of In- the Bible from the historical, so- ternationat Education or the ciological and literary aspects- China Institute, Dr. Gale said. every aspect except that which Foreign counselors at various motivated its writing," said the colleges and universities will ob- Rev. Joseph Sittler, of the Chi- tam grants according to the needs cago Theological Seminary, yes- of Chinese students at their re- terday.! fChnsstdnsathire evy. itrspective institutions, he added. Rev. Sittlcr directed one of the j opening seminars for the Univer- sity's Religion in Life Week at THIRTY OF THE approximate- Lane Hall. ly 200 Chinese students at the University applied for tuition THE INSTRUCTOR of roman- loans at the beginning of this se- tic literatures tries to put the stu- mester, Dr. Gale said. He believes dent in the moral, spiritual feeling that there are probably more Chi- of that period of writing, he point- nese students on campus in need ed out in comparing the study of of financial aid. the Bible and other literature. Administration of the funds The Bible scholar outlined Adisrair fheuns two approaches to Bible study: are expected to start within the twoeapproachbe s to Bble sd next* fCe days, Dr. Gale said. treat the Bible as a body of re- The action is regarded as a ligious literature and study the temporary measure to tide Chi- spiritual and historical back- e studesr o financil ground of the writer.nese students over financial Rev. Sittler gave the Epistles of crises until the Chinese govern- St. Paul as a key to the New Testa- ment reaches stabilization, he ment. added. Rep. Bloom Of Newv York Dies Suddenly WASHINGTON-(Al)-Rep. Sol Bloom (Dem:, N.Y.), chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Com- mittee, died unexpectedly last night of a heart attack. He would have been 79 the day after tomorrow. His death occurred at 8:50 p.m. in the Naval Hospital at nearby Bethesda, Md. The veteran Congressman, wide- ly known for his philosophical manner, and his beribboned pince-nez, had entered the hospi- tal on March 4. Bloom's death was the second to strike Congress within the last. 24 hours. Senator Melville Broughton (Dem., N.C.) succumbed to a heart attack Sunday morning. Advised of Bloom's death, his long time associate, Speaker Ray - burn (Dem., Tex.) said: "I think Sol Bloom was one of the finest men I ever know and one of the best friends I ever had. All expressed the opinion that Stalin would remain No. 1 man in Russia even if he should quit the post f Prime Minister. His supreme position would be safe- guarded, they speculated, by his personal prestige and his posts as Communist Party Secretary General and Politburo member. cide, his ruling would be ap- They did not exclude the possi-' pealed to the Senate as a whole. bility, however, that the release of And an administration lieuten- Molotov and the Foreign Trade ant, who asked not to be quot- Minister, A. L. Mikoyan, followed ed by name, said today that personal or political differences. leaders have become convinced But they pointed out that policy- they can't muster enough votes making remains in the hands of to make Barkley's ruling stick. I the Politburo. Only a majority would be nec- essary to uphold such a ruling. Playe Prof. Davison calfor Tryouts With one successful production T Speak on behind them, The Student Play- iers are calling for tryouts inter- Poe ested in taking part in another P t _dplay this semester. Prof. Edward Davison, chair- They plan to present "Boy Meets man of the Washington and Jef- I Girl" and are having a meeting for ferson College English Depart- potential members of -the cast at' ment, will give the second of two 7:30 p.m. today in the League. lectures on poetry, 4:15 p.m. to- "Time of Your Life" was their first day in Rackham Amphitheatre. performance. The subject of his second talk In addition to actors, Cetta said will be "The Poet in Any World." the player's group needs a piano Prof. Davison has a wide back- player and a singer. ground in the literary field. He attended St. John's College, Cam- bridge, where he edited "The Cam-D bridge Review" as an undergrad- uate. After graduation he edited "The Southerners Challenge" in London until he came to this country in 1925.