THEMICHIGANDAILY W~nNE SDAT, Mississippi School Gets Financial Aid Discriminatory OfferRejected Five and 10 dollar bills are pour- ing in from the "little people" all over the country to help finan- cially stricken Jefferson Military College, the little school in Nat- chez, Miss., that turned down a $50,000,000 grant rather than bar Jewish students. The fabulous endowment offer was made two weeks ago by George Armstrong, Fort Worth, Texas oil man with the following stipulations: * * * "A. THAT THE charter of Jef- ferson Military College be amend- ed reducing the number of trus- tees to five (from twelve) and giving the directors of the Judge Armstrong Foundation power to appoint three of them. "B. That the charter be fur- ther amended to provide that the school shall be primarily for white Christians, with the stipulation that no African or Asiatic or person of African or Asiatic descent be admitted as a student or in the faculty." Persons of "African" descent were already barred from white schools by the laws of the State of Mississippi but when the Jeffer- son trustees learned that the word "Asiatic" would exclude Jews, they balked at Armstrong's offer. * * * SINCE THAT TIME dozens of small contributions totalling more than $1,000 have flooded the col- lege trustees who are facing a desperate financial situation. In addition, the New York Times reported Sunday that a Natchez citizens' committee has been formed to raise funds for the 50-student academy. No goal has been set for the drive. Paul Schiling of Natchez, Mis- sissippi, radio station chain man- ager and a representative for the Jefferson trustees, told the Times that one check for $100 had been received by the college from a Ne- gro chamber of commerce in Chi- cago. It wastaccompanied by a note saying that although Negroes could not attend the school, the stand of the trustees against one form of discrimination deserved nation-wide support. Robert's Rules To BeTaught First of a series of three classes in parliamentary procedure will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3RS of the Union. Prof. Robert Brackett of the en- gineering English department will conduct the classes based on Rob- ert's Rules of Order. Mimeo- graphed material will be avail- able to students to supplement Prof. Brackett's talks. Succeeding classes in the course will be given on Nov. 16 and 30. Primarily designed for students who conduct meetings, the course is open to all interested students, according to Callison. Today's Pro grams MYSTERY-9 p.m. WHRV. Boris Karloff. 9:30 p.m. WHRV. The Croupier. MUSIC-7 p.m. WWJ. Frank Sin- atra, Dorothy Kirsten. 7:30 p.m. WJR. Club 15. 11:30 p.m. CKLW. Deems Tay- lor Concert. BON VOYAGE-President Truman (left) wishes Secretary of State Dean Acheson a good journey at national airport as Acheson prepares to board a plane for Paris. There he will meet with For- eign Ministers Bevin of Britain and Schuman of France. FOR MEN ONLY: Scalp And Blade Fraternity Comes Back to Campus Life Posts pen For Engine Committees Written applications are now being accepted for five engineer- ing senior class committees, ac- cording to Bill Upthegrove, en- gineering senior class president. Positions are open on the Re- union, Cap and Gown, Commence- ment Announcements, Publicity and Special Activities Committees " . and the more people we get, the better job we can do," Upthegrove said. * * * "THE REUNION committee will be the core of this year's class in the future, and the Special Acti- vities group will investigate the possibilities of a senior class cruise, collect class dues, and plan the Senior Ball," Upthegrove said. "This would be a good chance for senior engineering students who haven't participated in many activities outside of class to get in some extra-curricular fun before they leave the Uni- versity," Upthegrove concluded.' Applications may be suomitted to Arnold Gowan, senior engineer- ing class secretary, in care of the Secretary's office in the College of Engineering. K. of C. Calls Minstrel Men Men skilled in the art of black- face may try out for the third annual Knights of Columbus min- strel show at 7:30 today at the K. of C. clubhouse, Steve Filipiak, director of the revue, has an- nounced. A,20-voice chorus composed of students and townsmen will be selected at the meeting. Proceeds of the show will be used to support a statewide Knights of Columbus project. The group is financing the maintenance of Boysville School in Macon, Mich. The year-old institution is run on a plan comparable to that in effect at Boys Town, Neb. Will Parry, Grad. SM, will as- sist Filipiak in the production of the program. What A Hangover Eighty-six per cent of Green- land is covered by an ice cap. " --- Students a n d Ann Arbor- ites are enthusiastic football fans. but they are flops at pre-game pigskin prediction. Exactly 1038 postal cards were sent to a local theatre last week in response to a Daily advertise- ment which offered two free tick- ets to "The Red Shoes" for a pre- diction of the final score of the Michigan-Purdue game. * * * NONE OF THE CARDS gave, the proper 20 to 12 score. Some students apparently wanted to see the movie a great deal. Abe Medweek, '51, sent in 25 post cards with a different score on each--none right. And Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Meech- am, of the Veterans Housing Pro- ject, sent in 22 wrong entries be- tween them. MEDWECK AND the Meechams VA Agrees On Sewa__Plan Veterans Administration has given the green light to a proposed contract with Ann Arbor allowing extension of sewer and water fa- cilities to the $7,000,000 500-bed Veterans Hospital, now under con- struction at Glacier Way and Ful- ler Rd. City Council members were in- formed by Mayor William Brown, Jr., that the VA's proposed agree- ment is "substantially the same" as that reached by councilmen in August. Minor changes involve worker payments and water main distances. At a special meeting Monday night, the Council plans to study the suggestions. will receive passes to the show as a reward for their mass guessing, according to Jack Helm, field re- presentative for "The Red Shoes." Eighty-five persons predicted a 21-7 score. "Had the game ended this way, I would have fled the country," Helm declared. * * * THE PREDICTIONS were more or less centered around the 21-7 figure, with 75 cards guessing a 20-7 score and 51 others predict- ing 27-7 as the final result of the game. Local fans are apparently quite loyal to the Wolverines. Only three people predicted a Purdue victory. Predictions were entered in a variety of ways. One came on a colored post card showing the Cunard-White Star liner "Maure- tania," while another card pic- tured the interior of a flashy New York City Hungarian restaurant. * * ,* THIS WAS Helm's first experi- ence at running such a contest to promote "Red Shoes" interest. He indicated that it will be his last, too. "I could never stand the strain," he moaned. NO MOVIE TONIGHT: Pigskin Predictors Fail To Pick Purdue Score The Scalp and Blade fraternity is back. The group of Buffalo and Erie County students whose active cam- pus career was interrupted by the war has been reorganized and is now recruiting new members. ONLY REQUIREMENTS for membership are' residence in Buf- falo or Erie County plus willing- Faculty Men Give Recitals Two faculty recitals, piano and organ, will highlight musical events at the University today. Robert Noehren, Universityor-' ganist, will give the first in a series of four November recitals at 4:15 p.m. in Hill Auditorium.. Benning Dexter, of the School of Music, will play a program of piano music at 8:30 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. * * * NOEHREN WILL PLAY works by four composers, incuding Bach's "Toccata, Adagio -ate Fu- gue in C major," Franck's Choral in E major, and "Stele pour un enfant defunt" by Vierne.