'GENERATION" See Page 4 Ita~ 4:3 att, CLOUDY, SNOW Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LX, No. 113 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1950 SIX PAGES Search Ends' For Missing Jeri Lou Ely Brief Rest Found In Chicago Visit A three-day state wide search for an 18 year-old University coed came to an end yesterday as Jeri Lou Ely, '53, returned to her home in Berrien Springs, Mich., in her parents' automobile. She was found in a Chicago YMCA men's and women's hotel from where she had phoned her 14 year-old brother Larry at the family home at 11 a.m. yesterday to tell of her whereabouts. * * * ACCORDING TO Associated Press dispatches, her brother im- mediately contacted his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Ely, here in Ann Arbor. The Elys were aiding police in conducting the search which started Monday night after Miss Ely had failed to return to her dormitory at the 10:30 sign-in time. Mr. and Mrs. Ely immediately left for Chicago where they con- tacted their daughter shortly after 6 p.m. yesterday. Miss Ely told reporters that she had been studying too hard at the University and had come to Chi- cago "to get a good rest. She chose Chicago because "here I would be close to relatives and friends." The small, dark-haired girl said that she hadn't thought her ab- sence from school would worry anyone. "I didn't think about any- thing," she added. * * * . DESPITE the fact that she had posted a 2.8 average in her first semester at the University and had done well in recent examinations, including a 96 in history, Miss Ely indicated that it was worry over her studies that had caused her to leave school. "I left school because I was distraught and overworked in preparing for school examina- tios,. she as quted asaying. One reason she had to study so hard, Miss Ely said, was to make up for time that she had lost dur- ing the two week sorority rushing period. She pledged Delta Delta Delta. A decision on whether Miss Ely will return to school this term will be made later, her parents de- cared. SL To Renew xFigrht, rAgainst H ih Rents Student Legislature will renew its battle against Ann Arbor land- lords who are reportedly charging students rents above OPA ceilings today. Legislator Cal Klyman, '51, who is handling the campaign, urged all students who feel they are be- ing overcharged to report their suspicions to a Detroit OPA in- vestigator from 9 to 3 a.m. today in the City Council Chambers of the City Hall. STUDENTS who are unable to reach the investigator should con- tact the SL office in the Office of Student Affairs from 1 to 3 p.m. These complaints will be relayed to the investigator by Klyman and other campus action committee members. The campaign, launched two weeks ago, was renewed when the OPA investigator teported that he has received adthoriza- tion from Washington to initiate a "compliance survey" to deter- mine whether students are being charged excessive rents. Although the maximum rates vary with the size and quality of the individual rooms, the inves- tigator said that each complaint will be studied carefully as part of the survey. KLYMAN pointed out that his committee has received reports that students are being charged as much as $5 above the ceilings established by the Fair Rent Act during the war. "We feel that in many instances students realize they are paying aYhritn. rpmntq hit simnio have State Department, McCarthyClash Senator Also Attacks U.S. Civil Service Loyalty Review Board WASHINGTON-(jP)-Senator McCarthy and the State Depart- ment fired angry charges and counter charges yesterday in a running battle over McCarthy's allegations of Reds in the department. McCarthy also turned his guns on the U.S. Civil Service loyalty review board, accusing the board of more than a year's delay in re- viewing the case of one of his alleged pro-Communist suspects. * * * * JOHN E. Peurifoy, deputy Undersecretary of State, opened the day's crossfire by charging McCarthy with reviving "dead, discredited, disproven charges" in his attacks on'the department. Union Meet Discusses Constitution By BOB KEITH Proposed changes to the Michi- gan Union constitution were hashed over last night at a heter- ogeneous gathering of Union coun- cilmen, members of the Union Board of Directors and students interested in the changes. No definite decisions were reached at the meeting, but, as chairman Jim Smith put it, "views both for and against the proposals were brought up and many points were clarified." **s IN ESSENCE, the changes call for elections atlarge of the Union president and recording secretary by Union members, instead of the present system of appointment by a seven man "selections commit- tee." However, Herb Leiman, '50, who circulated a petition calling for the changes, noted after the meeting that "a second issue has inadvertently crept in." Leiman referred to the actual mechan- isnm under which the projected changes would operate. Although pros and cons were hurled about at the meeting re- garding the general desirability of opening the offices to election, much of the conversation hinged on the "mechanism" with special regard to how candidates for the two posts would be nominated. GENERAL agreemenwas voiced on all sides that safeguards should be attached to methods of choos- ing candidates. Leman's petitionstipulates that a student nominating committee approve the candidates, but a Board member advanced a coun- ter-proposal that the present se- lections committee do the Job. This committee is composed of faculty and alumni men as well as students. Union Seeks Bidders For Veep'_Posts A call for potential vice-presi- dents of the Michigan Union was issued yesterday by Union secre- tary Robert Seeber, '50 BAd. Seeber said the Union nominat- ing committee will accept peti- tions from candidates for the six "veep" posts until the end of next week. Eligible candidates will be placed on the ballot at all-campus elections in April and will serve during the following school year. According to the Union consti- tution, the officers must respec- tively represent the literary col- lege and the graduate school, the architecture and engineering col- leges, the Medical School, the Law School, the School of Dentistry, and the remaining schools and colleges. Seeber asked that candidates file a petition listing their name, school and year, and telling their previous connections with the Union. "Candidates should show a sincere interest in the Union and should set forth any ideas or pro- grams they might have," he said. Petitions may be mailed to the Union secretary, in care of the Union Student Offices, or they may be left at the Student Offices, Seeber added. Colorado Upsets The Wisconsin senator re- torted that Peurifoy was seeking to "cover up and confuse the issue."3 "It would be amusing," McCar- thy said, "if the situation were not so fraught with danger." Meanwhile, Chairman Tydings (D-Md) said his special Senate; investigating committee will hear the State Department's roving am- bassador Phillip C. Jessup at a public session on Monday. * * * McCARTHY has accused Jessup of showing "an unusual affinity for Communist causes" and said he once sponsored a subversive Communist-front organization. Jessup, newly returned from the Orient, has denounced Mc- Carthy's charges as having "no substance at all." Peurifoy, in a 400-word state- ment, said McCarthy's "tech- niques" have harmed the "con- duct of the foreign relations of the U.S. government." Peurifoy strongly defended John Stewart Service, U.S. career diplo- mat whom McCarthy had accused of being pro-Communist. Peurifoy declared:, "It's a shame and a disgrace that he (Service) and his family should have to face, once again, such humiliation. McCarthy Red Cry Blasted By Professors By VERNON EMERSON Sen. McCarthy's implication that Prof. Harlow Shapley is playing along with the "enemy" is utterly ridiculous, Prof. Leo Gold- berg, chairman of the astronomy department, and long-time friend of Prof. Shapley, charged yester- day. At the same time Prof. Lawrence Preuss, of the political science de- partment, declared that Mrs. Es- ther Caukin Brunauer, who was associated with him in the State Department, is above reproach as far as her loyalty to the United States is concerned. * * * THE Wisconsin Senator listed both Prof. Shapley and Mrs. Brunauer as having Communist sympathies earlier this week be- fore a Senate foreign relations subcommittee. "Having worked with Prof. Shapley as a fellow scientist and friend during the past 17 years, I feel there is no question of his personal integrity and loyalty to this country," Prof. Goldberg said. He described the Harvard as- tronomer as a man who believes that only by working with Russia can peace and civilization be pre- served. * * * PROF. PREUSS termed Sen. McCarthy's action toward Mrs. Brunauer incomprehensible. "I worked with Mrs. Brunauer during 1944 and 1945. I saw in her work only the most rigid political orthodoxy, a complete loyalty and utter official disgression." Sen. McCarthy's whole list of former State Department affiliates was deemed a bid for re-election in the 1952 balloting by Prof. Mor- gan Thomas of the political science department. Discussions End Religion In LifeWeek Program Said To Be Success Religion in Life Week was brought to a 'successful' close yes- terday when the relationship of Christian faith to world social problems was discussed in two lecture groups. The Rev. Dr. Perry Gresham tackled the complex topic "Can Christian Faith Build World Com- munity" while in an afternoon seminar, The Rev. Dr. John S. Everton probed into "The Hydro- gen Bomb and World Peace." S* * * DR. GRESHAM pointed out that religion would seem from its history to be the cause of blood- shed and torture rather than an agent of peace. But, he continued, "this is only a surface view." Christianity has a unifying prin- ciple which other ideologies such as Communism and even democ- racy lack-it has an object of de- votion which can command the respect of everyone on earth," he explained. "To have a world community, it is the individuals who must be changed," he declared. He feels Christianity, working through face to face contact in small groups, is the only force power- ful enough to change a war- accepting populace into true peace-lovers. "Christianity is a great creative minority, which can easily direct its efforts toward a world com- munity," he concluded. DR. EVERTON presented a con- troversial issue from a new point of view. "When you confront the prob- lem of the H-Bomb, you face two vying ideologies," he claimed. The' individual's social role as inter- preted in Russia and the U.S., is vastly different, he said. "But there is no good reason to assume that two idealogies or two different culture patterns cannot live together," he de- clared. Since the H-Bomb may make modern military techniques both impractical and obsolete, Dr. Ev- erton pointed out that its inven- tion may mean the end of all wars. "The second University Reli- gion in Life week was particularly satisfying and successful in the strength that came from the truly inter-faith work which was done," the Rev. DeWitt C. Baldwin, direc- tor of Lane Hall, said yesterday, in summing up the results of a busy week. Curb College Unioln Rolits EAST LANSING - (') - The State Attorney General's office gave unofficial backitig yesterday to Michigan State College's claim that a union has no legal right to bargain for college workers. Deputy Attorney General Gray- don G. Withey said a 1949 ruling prohibited any government agency from contracting with a union. Settling wage rates, he added, was "a legislative matter." Withey's statement followed a claim of the United Government Workers (CIO) that more than 150 MSC employes had joined the union. The college replied that it wasn't against unions, but that college workers couldn't bargain through them. "I can't see that they could benefit from it," James Dennison, administrative assistant to Presi- dent John A. Hannah, said. "State law prohibits any governmental agency from recognizing a labor union as the exclusive bargaining agent for any of its employes." - : : 1 Acheson Demands Of Soviet Peace II 11 Proof esires Offers Russia Seven Point Security Plan States U.S. Won't Be World Sucker BERKaELEY, Cal.,-{AP)-Secre- tary of State Acheson said yes- terday the United States won't be an "international sucker" and challenged Soviet Russia to prove her desire for peace by accepting a seven-point program. Completing a two-day round of foreign policy speeches in this area, Acheson declared: "We must not, in our yearning for peace, allow ourselves to be betrayed by vague generalities or beguiling proffers of peace which are unsubstantiated by good faith solidly demonstrated in daily be- havior. We are always ready to discuss, to negotiate, to agree, but we are understandably loath to play the role of international sucker." i -Dailv-Ed Kozma MAGAZINE MEN-Three top-ranking "Generation" staff members admire first copies of the arts magazine which goes on sale today. Left to right they are Norm Gottlieb, business manager; Larry Kosnett, circulation manager and Don Greenfield, advertising and promotions manager. 'Generation' Will Make Debut Today Making its first appearance on campus in conjunction with the opening of the Inter-Arts Festi- val, "Generation," the news arts magazine "of, by, and for the, student body" will go on sale to- day. A non-profit "new and inter- esting" addition to the roster of Board in Control of Student Pub- lications, "Generation," while not "as extravagant as the new na- tional magazine 'Flair,' contains creative material and articles on all the arts of interest to all stu- dents," according to Don Green- field, promotions manager. "WITH THE size of the maga- zine in almost a three-to-one ratio to the price," Greenfield noted, " 'Generation' compares favorably in volume with any other student publication." "The quality of the material was proven to the editors," he continued, "when writer Donald Hope later sold a short story to 'Flair,' and the original of Jus- tine Enss' lithograph was chosen for national display in a prize- winning touring art show. Other contributors had already won Hopwoods," he noted. The magazine,forwhich copy and ads were made up by art stu- dents, contains Alfred Slote's one- act "The Flag's Out There" in special treatment, and Will Wieg- and's "For They Shall Inherit the Earth." * * * PRINTS of student-created in- formative designs, architectural, interior and industrial designs are also distributed throughout the magazine. The 96 page magazine will be sold for 35 cents on the Diag,in the League, Union, Angell Hall and Architecture school, Student Work Highlights Today's Arts Festival With the click of a motion pic-' ture machine, the artistic undu- lations of a baton and the sonor- ous verbiage of a philosophy pro- fessor, the second annual Student Arts Festival will get under way at 8:00 p.m. today in Alumni Memorial Hall. Among the more sparkling at- tractions to greet first nighters will be the world premiere of a completely original movie, "The Well-Wrought Ern," based on the life of Ern Malley, a one-time Uni- versity student. * * * . WRITTEN and filmed in Ann Arbor by a group, of students and instructors, the picture used many of the more familiar facilities (in- cluding a local beer dispensary) of the University and city for sets and backgrounds. Although the film was orig- inally done in pantomine, sound was later dubbed in. The inaugural address of the festival, which is open to the pub- lic without charge, will be given by Prof. Charles L. Stevenson. Prof. Stevenson will consider the problem "What's the Good of Art, Anyway?" S * * * ANOTHER of the opening fea- tures of the three day festival will be the performance of "Concerto for Chamber Orchestra" by Ed Chudacoff, Grad. The Concerto will be played under the direction of Edward Troupin, Grad. SM. "It is called a concerto," Chudacoff explained, "because it is written in the style of a Bach Italian Concerto, with pas- sages for solo instruments, com- plete orchestral sections and some for full orchestra. "The entire composition is, I feel, quite tonal," he added. * * * HITTING another highspot of the festival, sponsored by Inter- Arts Union, will be a student art exhibition display in the north and . south galleries of Alumni Memorial Hall. The exhibit, which will continue through next week, will contain creative wick in the fields of painting, sculpture, cer- amics and photography. HE SPELLED out the points of greatest difference which he said must be reconciled between Soviet Russia and the non-Communist world "if the two systems are to live together, if not in mutual re- spect, at least ,n reasonable se- curity." He held out little hope that the Russians would comply, but listed these things Russia could do; 1. Work with the West on Peace treaties for Germany, Japan, and Austria which won't turn them into Soviet satellites. 2. Stop using force or its threat on existing satellites. Let them be countries in their own right. 3. Stop obstructing the United Nations and let it become, in Prime Minister's Stalin's words, a serious instrument for build- ing international peace and se- curity. 4. Join in seeking "realistic and effective" controls for atomic wea- pons and general arms limita- tions. "We believe," Acheson haid, "that an authority could be es- tablished which would not be con- trolled or subject to control by either ourselves or the Soviet Union." 5. Stop trying to undermine other countries through Commun- ism. 6. Quit treating diplomats as "sinister," and "criminals." 7. Let the Russian people know what goes on outside Russia. THESE ARE the things, Ache- son said, "'which, while leaving much yet to do, would give the world new confidence in the pos- sibility of peaceful change." Yesterday's address followed one Wednesday in San Francisco. Dealing with policy toward Asia, Acheson told his audience then that Red China would embark upon "adventures" beyond her own border at her own peril. He renewed administration assur- ances of limited aid to non-Com- munist countries in Asia. Spring Vote Petitions Must Be File -today World News Roundup By The Associated Pres LONDON-Negro and Indian blockade of Britain yesterday for white queen from Bechuanland. * * * NORFOLK-Three top offi- cers on the battleship Missouri when she ran aground will be tried by General Courts Martial, the Navy announced yesterday, while another has received a letter of reprimand. * * * colonial leaders threatened a trade banishing Seretse Khama and his * -* * PITTSBURGH-A first Violin- ist, in the Pittsburgh Symphony, Max Mandel, lost his job yester- day because he was named as a Communist by former FBI un- dercover agent Matt Cvetic. * * * GENEVA-Leopold III, exiled king of the Belgians, interpreted the Sunday referendum of his people as a call to duty and asked Belgium's Parliament yesterday to make him king in fact or declare he should abdicate. SHAMROCK SHENA NIGA NS: Petitions for -this spring's all- campus elections must be filed from 3 to 5 p.m. today at the Stu- dent Legislature Office in the Of- fice of Student Affairs, according to Dave Belin, '51, chairman of the citizenship committee. All SL petitions must be ac- companied by a 25 word state- ment of the candidate's reasons for seeking election and a 75 word statement of the present purposes of SL and what the candidate feels they should be. In addition, candidates must submit a three-inch picture of themselves which will later be used for a Diag display during election week. Irish' to Celebrate With Green Suds and Duds By PETER HOTTON Drag out the green duds, a Lib- erty Street tavern is using the old ing, but everyone will have to fare for themselves," he said. "First come, first served." just a vegetable dye like that used on cakes, Caspor explained. * * * In the dime stores you could buy paper carnations (made in Czecho- slovakia,) in the florist shops green Irish, though one suds parlor hoped to offer green hats and beer.