TEXTBOOK LENDING LIBRARY see Pale 4 - Y Latest Deadline in the State :43att CLOUDY LX, No. 16 i9 ANN ARSON, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1950 FTnHT PA(SFC ' ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, JUNE 2. 1950 1~'Td.iU'I T~ A £~'d A r." au 5 tadium Will Be ite of Graduation Senior Class To Break Old Ferry Field Commencement Tradition An old tradition may be shattered at 5 p.m. June 17 when a ible 4,645 students take part in the 106th University Commence- t Exercises in the Michigan Stadium. Ferry Field has been the traditional site for Commencement cere- .ies, but this year because of the large number of graduating ents the Stadium will be used for the first time. . * . .* AT 4:30 P.M., through the tunnel ordinarily reserved for members he football squad, the graduates will march across the green turf Billio11ollar Ar-,S Aid liur doc lit s r -A Uwo Opoo 4 * * * * * * * * * * * Seventeen u idensGtid 0 Dorm ard Posts f the Stadium to their seats. Sir Oliver Franks, British Am- bassador to the United States, will then deliver the Commence- nent address. If bad weather prevents use of he Stadium, the Commencement xercises will be conducted in Yost ield House. The University fire siren will be own between 3:30 p.m. and 3:40 .m. if this change is necessary. * * * Two students will be non-voting members of the Board of Gover- nors of Residence Halls next year for the first time in University history, Dean Eric A. Walter re- vealed yesterday. They are Nan Holman, '51, pres- ident of Stockwell Hall and Bob Baker, '52, former president of Anderson House, East Quad. * * * BAKER WAS elected at a spe- cial meeting of the East and West Quad councils, plus representatives of Fletcher Hall and Vaughan House. Miss Holman was appointed by Assembly President Adele Ha- ger, subject to the approval of the women's house presidents. The request for student mem- bers was made to the Board last April by five representatives of the men's dorms who had been invited to appear before the Board to discuss problems facing the new South Quadrangle. * * * THE BOARD notified the rep- resentatives of its approval of the suggestion the middle of last month. The student membership has been approved by the Board of Regents. The student members will hold their office for one school year. They are to visit one council meet- ing of each of the Quads and other dorms each month to determine student opinion. Selection of the members and regulations concerning their duties were set up by the special meeting of men's dorm leaders which se- lected Baker, in cooperation with Assembly leaders. Typical reaction to the move was expressed by Ray Litt, '52, East Quad Council president who said "by . admitting student members, the Board of Governors has taken a great step forward towards mak- ing a residence halls policy which will more closely reflect student opinion." STUDENTS of the various school STUDENTS OF THE various schools .and colleges will meet at 4:15 p.m. on the paved roadway east of the East Gate of the Sta- dium. They will form five columns of twos. Two buses will provide trans- portation for faculty members and University officials who will assemble on the campus. Members of the faculties will assemble at 3:45 p.m., in Rm. 1223, Angell Hall. Regents, ex-Regents and Deans will meet at 3:45 p.m. in Rm. 2549 in the Administration Building. * * * Senior'Class Gift Revealed* The senior class has decided on its class gift, Wally Teninga, liter- ary school class president revealed last night. Pending approval of the Board of Regents, a'-$500 trust fund will be set up in the class name.- The fund will be administered by the Regents, and, approximately 25 years from now, the class will pre- sent the accumulated money to the University to spend on an un- decided project, Teninga explained. * * * BUT WHILE class project activ- ities have been completed, individ- ual seniors of all schools still have last minute commencement ar- rangemepts to tend to, according to Mary Ann Harris, class publicity chairman. Today is the last day to order caps and gowns from a North University shop, Miss Harris warned. Anyone who is not sure of their status should order the robes anyway, Miss Harris said. She emphasized that there is no obligation to pay if the gown is not used. Although graduation tickets will not be needed unless it rains, sen- iors must pick them up before noon Friday, June 16 in the ad- ministration building, according to Miss Harris. Each student is en- titled to two tickets, and must pre- sent his student ID card at the window, she said. in Writing Competition Annual Awards Total $6,000 Floyd Murdock, Grad., took top honors in the Hopwood contest yesterday by winning two major fiction and drama awards. Murdock, of Lynchburg, Va., won $600 for his novel, "Ketti Shalom," and $500 for a play, "The Shadow and the Rock." * * * THE 20th ANNUAL Avery Hop- wood and Jule Hopwood Awards in Creative Writing were pre- sented to 17 students in Rackham Lecture Hall by Prof. Roy Cow- den, of the English department. The nine major and nine minor awards totaled $6,600. John Wilson, '51, of Ann Ar- bor, was awarded $800, the larg- est single prize, for "The Dark and the Damp," in the major es- say division. In the major fiction division, "The Fiercer Land" brought $600 to Thomas Cassidy, Grad., of Washington, D. C. "While the Earth Remains" won $600 for Leo Young, Grad., of Detroit. * * THOMAS DANELLI, Grad., of Rochester, N. Y., took a major drama award of $500 with "Han- lon Won't Go" and Rogers Ber- mond, of Hinsdale, Ill, won $500 for "The Eyes Have It." Major prize-winners in poetry were Donald Reaser, '50, of Bat- tle Creek, who won $700 for "The Toy Soldier;" and Charles Campbell, '50, of Jackson, who won $500 with "A White Stone." Asked 'New' Draft Law Urged ByJohnson President Seeks Power Increase WASHINGTON --(P)-P r e s i- dent Truman asked Congress yes- terday for a new $1,222,500,000 for- eign arms aid program coupled with sweeping powers to sell or give military weapons to Commu- nist threatened countries around the world. "The need and urgency for pro- tecting the ramparts of freedom has never been more plain," Tru- man said in an arms aid report to Senate and House. ON THE same theme, at about the same time, Defense Secretary Johnson appealed to the Senate to give the President automatic authority to induct men into the Armed Services in an emergency. "If trouble comes, there should be in the commander in chief the power to act immediately without waiting to reassemble Congress," Johnson told the Senate Armed Services Commit- tee. He urged a three-year exten- sion of the Selective Service Act s'{ without a House-approved limita- tion under which Congress would have to give an OK before induc- tions could start. I . 1 LEO YOUNG THOMAS CASSIDY JOHN WILSON FLOYD MURDOCK I * * * I CHARLES CAMPBELL DONALD REASER ROGERS BERMOND THOMAS DANELLI i * * * * 4.i The Hopwood major are open to seniors and students. Minor divisions to all undergraduates. * * * divisions graduate are open Last Issue The Daily ceases publication for this semester with this issue. The first issue of the summer Daily will be out June 28. "I PRE-EXAM FEVER: / Students Flood Library For Books, Old Exams NINE MINOR awards were pre- sented, two for $200, four for $150 and three for $100. 4 Minor poetry prizes went to Edward Lanning, '52, of North- ville, for "Miscellany;" and William Trousdale, '52, of Grosse Pointe, for "The Other Worlds." "Postwar Laughter" won a fic- tion award for Lyle Nelson, '50, of Ann Arbor. Robert Wagner, Jr., '50, of Ann Arbor, placed with "Knife Without Ether." * * * AWARDS in the essay division went to: George Walker, '50, of Highland Park, for "Kafka's Cas- tle and Other Essays;" Susan Si- ris, '50, of New York City, for "An American's Europe;" and Allison Shumsky, '52, of Traverse City, for "Five Personal Essays." Berton London, '51, of Detroit, won a drama award for "Three One-Act Plays." Saul Gottlieb, '53, of Willow Run Village, won with "What's Holding Us Back." Judges in the poetry divisions were Robert Hillyer and Marianne Moore, poets; and Peter Viereck, Pulitzer prize poet. * * * ESSAY JUDGES were Catherine Bowen, author; Howard Peckham, director of the Indiana Historical Bureau; and Prof. George Whi- cher, of Amherst College, author. Evaluating the dramatic en- tries were John Chapman, of the New York News; Margaret Mayor- ga, editor of the "Best One-Act Plays" series; and Betty Smith, novelist and playwright. Carl Carmer, author; James Hil- ton, author of "Lost Horizon;" and Prof. Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.. of Harvard University, were judges in the fiction division. I World News1 Roundup By The Associated Press Twelve servicemen were killed yesterday in two plane crashes in the country. At Quonset, R. I. a twin-engine patrol plane burst afire in an emergency landing killing the nine navy men aboard. At Roswell, N. M. a B-29 bomber crashed and burned killing three of its crew of seven. * * * . TOKYO - The Communists yesterday called for an anti- U.S. "general strike" tomorrow, and occupation and Japanese forces were geared to cope swift- ly with any violence. BERLIN - Russia slowed down eastern motor traffic yesterday in reported retaliation for "mis- treatment" of German Commu- nist youngsters at Luebeck on their return from the Soviet East Ber- lin red rally Wednesday. WASHINGTON - President Truman gave the Senate Crime Investigating Committee a sharp new tool yesterday: the right to inspect the income tax return of big-shot gamblers and racke- teers. * * * LAKE SUCCESS - The United Nations Trusteeship Council voted down a new Russian demand yes- terday to expel Nationalist China. The Russian delegation then stag- ed another walkout. Cousins Heaps Scorn On 'Hard-Boiled' writers I By JAMES GREGORY Charging that the "hard-boiled" school of writing has "made a counterfeit of realism by ignoring the deeper and more meaningful aspects of human existence," Nor- man Cousins yesterday asserted that America badly needs new writers - "although production is still several light years ahead of consumption." He added that one of the best ways to "fashion a key to the literary kingdom" is through writ- ing and study units like that in the University. * * * COUSINS, EDITOR of the Sat- urday Review of Literature, spoke Botany Head T'o Leave U' Dean Hayward Keniston of the literary college announced yester- day that Prof. William C. Steere will resign his position as chair- man of the botany department at the end of this semester. Prof. Steere, one of the nation's foremost bryologists, will go to Stanford University next fall to take the place of the eminent botanist, Prof. G. MI Smith, who will retire. "In Defense of a Writing Career" before an audience which included student writers nervously await- ing news of the Hopwood awards. The literary prizes were presented after Cousins' talk in Rackham Lecture Hall by Prof. Roy W. Cow- den,. of the English department. "Instead of reaching for the ' grand themes that can give lit- erature the epic quality it de- serves, ' too many writers have been trying to cut the novel down to the size of psychiatric case histories," Cousins said. He also scored writers who "make a fashion of' their con- tempt for the reading audience" and indulge in mutual backslap- ping. "All this leads to inbreeding and literary anemia," he warned. * * * COUSINS' NEEDLING meta- phors and calculatedly flip re- marks brought frequent outbursts of laughter from the audience. Referring to unsolicited manu- script departments as "the or- phans of the publishing industry," he yet maintained that "the dif- ificulties of a writing career are not insuperable - if the writer has patience of the order gener- ally associated with camel drivers." The speaker praised "first-rate writing courses at the university level" but doubted that there are more than a dozen such courses in the country. Blazing Fuel Hits Business, Section of Ypsi Blazing fuel threatened down- town Ypsilanti yesterday when more than 4,000 gallons of gaso- line fro ma tank truck burst into flames in the center of the city's business district. The gasoline, part of a load of 9,890 gallons, ignited when a double wheel of one of the truck's. two tank trailers broke off, drop- ping the tank to the ground and rupturing it. A heavy blast followed the initial fire, bursting the tank and smash- ing automobile show windows. In the early stages of the blaze, burning gasoline leaped to more than 100 feet, and a col- umn of oily smoke crept nearly 2,000 feet into the sky. For several minutes muffled ex- plosions caused by gasoline trap- ped in the street's storm sewer echoed for two blocks beneath the street. Manhole covers at three points were lifted several feet from their mountings from the blasts. No one was injured, but the to- tal damage was estimated at about $21,000. IFC Calls Clerks Students wishing to clerk in the Interfraternity Council book ex- change next fall may contact Tony Palermo, '51, today, Palermo said yesterday. ly I. TOMO1fROW Secretary of State Acheson will carry the Adminis- ration's rearmament derive be- fore a joint session of the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Ser- vices Committees. His theme will be that the United States must lead the coalition of western po- wers in the development of wat he calls "balanced collective forces." The military aid program which the President proposed would be for the fiscal year be- ginning July 1. This year the United States has a program in operation, mainly to rearm Western Europe, totaling $1,- 314,010,000. In addition, Truman asked for two new powers of potentially great importance. These are: 1. Authority to divert "a small portion" of the arms aid funds from nations designated by Con- gress to any other nation whose "ability to defend itself against aggression is clearly vital to the security of the United States." 2, The right to sell arms to na- tions outside the arms aid pro- 'rm whose increased ability to sdefendthemselves against aggres- sion is important to the security, of the United Nations." Memorial Will Be Unveiled A huge bronze eagle will be un- veiled at a public ceremony at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the stadium as a memorial honoring the Univer- sity men and women who have given their lives in war. The memorial, designed. by sculptor Marshall Fredericks, is the gift to the University from the Board in Control of Intercol- legiate Athletics. IT WILL BE presented by Ath- letic Director H. O. (Fritz) Cris- ler and formally accepted by Uni- versity President Alexander G. Ruthven. The eagle which has a wing spread of 24 feet and weighs one and one half tons will rest on a granite column in the southwest area of the Stadium grounds. In explaining the sculpture's de- sign, Fredericks said that he tried to convey two thoughts: first, the monumental American e a g l e grasping in its talons the laurel wreath symbolizing the eternal protection of the honored mem- ory of the war dead; and second- By NANCY BYLAN Pre-exam madness has once again descended upon the Univer- sity. With the approach of E-day at 9 p.m. tomorrow, students are flooding the libraries with book request slips and trying to finish their semester's reading. * * * ' CIRCULATION in the Main Floor Study Hall of the General Library has skyrocketed as stu- dents pour through the exam files for a quick solution to their prob- lems,. From an average day's cir- culation of 200, figures have jump- ed to 276 Monday and 398 Wed- nesday. The biggest demand is for exams in Anthropology 152 and serious faces have replaced the usual light-hearted look. Not only the library has been' harder hit by studying students, but the green benches all over campus are marked by book- buried heads. Walking to and from classes, students vie with each other for sympathy and try to outdue their companions with mournful tales of inhuman exam schedules. From all the State Street book stores comes the report: the blue book rush is on. Biggest seller is the five-cent-16-page edition. An- PHOENIX PROJECT: Atom's Cultural Effects To Be Studied other noticeable trend has been a last minute purchase of text- ArM Game Trip books, and an even more pro- nounced increase in the sales of Tickets Sold Out outline books, especially in bot- any. (EDITOR'S NOTE - This is the last in a series of articles designed to acquaint Daily readers wit hpre- sent and future plans for the use of Phoenix Project funds.) By VERNON EMERSON When the Michigan Memorial- Phoenix Project begins its full' scale study of the peaceful uses of atomic energy, the physical will effect the American econo- my, see its consequences and problems and provide solutions to therm," Prof. Philip Wernette, of the school of business admini- stration, declared in proposing a study of the atom and econo- mics. Contradicting the economic growth, labor and government and private enterprize activity. R. A. Tybout, of the economics department, has suggested a similar study, stressing the re- lationship of the government to atomic product industries. University political scientists implications of the present Atom- ic Energy Commission and future administrative organizatons. Prof. A. H. Hawley, of the sociology department, has re- quested that funds be set aside to finance an investigation of the effectiveness of community