-4 A I s S I * * * McIntyre, Friedman, -Belln Get Board Posts Neumann, Hillman Gain Senior Engineering Positions; Clarke Heads Sophomore Class By SALLY GOULDTHORPE Dave Belin, '54L, Bill McIntyre, '52, and Al Friedman, '52, swept into student posts on the Board in Control of Student Publications setting a new all-time record for the number of votes cast in a Board election. Class officer posts of the engineering college left vacant by the ineligibility of three students were copped by Harvey Neumann, senior, class president, and Harry Hillman, senior secretary. Chuck Clarke won the presidency of the sophomore class, receiving 71 of the 135 votes cast. * * * * BELIN, HIGH MAN IN the four-man race for Board in Control of Student Publications, received 4,667 votes, more than a 1,000 over the record set last year by B. S. * * * Brown., McIntyre, a close second cop-= ped 4,637 votes, while Friedman received 3,569. The fourth can- { didate for the position, Al Blum- rosen, '53L, received 3,228 votes. The three new members of the Board will serve only until the end: of the school year when they will be replaced by members elected ..:s;:: < r: :::>-: .:: ::::>:.::,.; : this spring.' * * * * * * * 4 J y 1 E F f { 1 i i 1 BELIN IS NO new name on the election ballot, having served as a member of the Student Legisla- Wiggled Out A wiggly feminine dance act was withdrawn from the second showing of the Duke Ellington revue in Hill Auditorium last night, because the sponsors thought someone in the audience "might" object. ture, senior class treasurer and president of AIM during his un- dergraduate years. McIntyre has also been active in campus affairs. He was on SL last year, and is now a mem- ber of IFC and Joint Judiciary. The third new Board member, Friedman is president of Hillel and has served as an interim mem- ber of the Board since September. s s s THE NEW SENIOR president of the engineering college, Neumann, has served as chairman of the col- lege's open houses and as a form- er member of ASME. The sophomore president, Clarke is secretary of West Quad, and. treasurer of Sigma Theta Epsilon, engineering college honorary. * * * * TOTEM POLE-The three new representatives elected to the Board in Control of Student Publications are (from top to bottom) Al Friedman, '52, Bill McIntyre, '52, and Dave Belin, '54L. -Daily-Roger Reinke BIG COUNT-SL members and students who turned out last night to- help in tabulating the election results are pictured in the gruel- ing ordeal. Inserted in the top right hand corner is Bob Baker, '52, who was elected on the first ballot with the record number of 330 first place votes. Phil Berry, '52 was also selected on the first ballot as the counting was finished in record time. About 200 on-lookers viewed the proceedings in the smoke-filled room. HARVEY NEUMANN YI e 4 it~g Dat Latest Deadline in the State .L, SL Race These candidates were elect- ed to Student Legislature last night in the following order: Bob Baker Phil Berry Fred Horwitz Karin Fagerburg Wally Pearson Bob Perry Lisa Kurcz Joe White Ruedi Gingrass Jack Des Jardins Bob Steinberg Keith Beers C. A. Mitts Rog Wilkins Shirley Cox Lee Fiber Gene Mossner Louis Massarella Mike McNerney Valerie Cowen Audie Murphy Jerry Gleich Ellie Haar Jim Smead Tom Ricketts (The last four of these newly elected student legislators will serve ifor a half-year term, the rest for a full year.) VOL. LXII, No. 46 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1951 EIGHT PAGES HTPegsFiEric Johnston Resigns Qud ue Deal Plank in I952 ." o nti" As Economic S'tabilizer Pep Rally KEY WEST-(P)-President Truman guaranteed yesterday the Democrats will have a "Fair Deal" platform in 1952 and brushed aside A "clash of arms" between the suggestions of a "Big Four" conference on world peace. WASHINGTON-(P)-President Truman accepted the resignation men of Kelsey House, South Quad, And he gave ground for renewed political speculation by return- R ed s Ins st of Eric Johnston as head of the Economic Stabilization Agency and" West Quad Williams House ing a flat no comment to a question whether he has any intention of , yesterday "with real regret" and "extreme reluctance." residents will Set the stage for the supporting General Dwight D. Eisenhower for the Democratic Presi- N- * Johnston, who has been trying to get back to his job as President pre-Northwestern game pep rally dential nomination. T ruceof the Motion Picture Association, will now leave the government tonight. " * * - November 30. Reviving the spirit of a medie- THE PRESIDENT told a news conference that dometsic politics * va tourney, the opposing chai- was not even mentioned at his I-Co II THE ACCEPTANCE of the resignation was announced at Mr. Tru- pions of their respective quads will man's vacation headquarters in Key West, Fla. In ha ngeof heaUgioum cent Washington conference letters, Mr. Truman thanked John- the Union. with Eisenhower. MUneAeeKorea - - Com- ston for building ESA-the gov- AT 7:15 p.m., a torchlight par- Correspondents who pitched munist negotiators denied yester- ernment's chief agency in the ade of students, cheerleaders and U.N o o ve him their questions were divided day that they sought a cease-fire 1 10o R1 fight against iflation-into an the Michigan Marchg band will as to the possible significance of in Korea before the formal sign- . "efficient and going concern to make its wy to Ferry Field, where S. Z Te roods the Eisenhower question, but ing of an armistice, but continued Ro n dupcope with the problems that lie a program of highly diversified Mr. Truman left no doubt he to insist that the United Nations ahead." talent is planned. will demand that the party go agree to a provisional stop-shoot- TPJohnston's departure sped up J. Fred Lawton, composer of PARIS--()- Yugoslavia asked down the line for civil rights, la- ing line now. By The Associate Press efforts that were already under- t h e University's well-known the United Nations yesterday to bor and other controversial do- The apparently paradoxical WASHINGTON - The United way to find a successor. Seven "Varsity," will lead the list of order off Soviet satellite troops mestic legislation which has met Communist stand was pointed up States government, according to or eight persons have been ap- featured entertainers for the stationed along her borders and a cool reception in Congress. sharply in a United Nations Com- sources here, is standing firm proached, it was learned here, evening. restore calm to the Balkans. reported no against using atomic weapons in but the wage-price-rent policy Something original in the line Edvard Kardelj, Yugoslav For- Mr. Truman, however, stuck by munique last night. Itree o Korea, despite the successful de- job has found no takers. - of Emcee's will highlight the rally. progressyetrainatrehu veopments of smaller A-bombs Accrigt heDtotF e ai of professional comedians, eign Minister, told the UN Assem- his refusal to say whether he will 20-minute subcommittee session at foment opsile field, According to The Detroit FreesidentmcompoedfossLanry iked'5 nsn bly that Hungary, Romania and be a candidate in 1952, but he Panmunjom. fBr use against troops in the field Press, Joseph M. Dodge, president composed of Larry Pike, 54 and, Bulgaria are keeping 25 divisions ±- A*of the 'Detroit Bank, may be the Bob Pike and Bert Fink of Detroit, -almost half their total of 53 di- said that the State of the Unio AND the luckless truce talks WASHINGTON - President new head of ESA. will take over the emcee duties. visions-in, frontier positions men- message he is working on here will continued at a stodgy stalemate. Truman named a three-man Dodge, a renowned expert on The slap-stick comedians will acing this independent Communist include new demands for his A meeting scheduled at 9 p.m. board yesterday to investigate a banking and economics is con- present a take-off on the football nation, whole "Fair Deal" program. (Ann Arbor time) last night at unions are asking for union shop idered one ot topcandidatesteleisonT andras aean It became known as the gen- * * * I Panmunjom failed to bring about case ain g the r ntra s idfor the opost. otelevision and radio appearances. eral debate continued that See- THE PRESIDENT also: a reconciliation. x< e The Detroit banker now is in retary General Trygve Lie plan- WASHINGTON-The Govern- Japan as financial adviser to the Hatchers To Hold ned to wind up the talk-fest with 1) Expressed hope of ultimate "We're just about where we'v yee Supreme Allied Command. an appeal for representatives of acceptance by Russia of a U.S.- always been," reported an acting wentbyesterday again cut the e m manirst Open House France, Britain, the United sponsored proposal for reduction UN spokesman, Lt. Col. Howard available supply of metal for non- Johnston sent Mr. Truman no- of his desire to S. Levie. "We're still talking." defense products, including the tc nSpebro i eiet States and Russia to meet dur- of armies and arms, including ato- steel plate auto manufacturers leave the job. He had obtained a President and Mrs. Harlan H. ing the assembly and seek an The Communist Peiping Radio, had planned to use in 1952. nine-month leave from his motion Hatcher are extending an invita- agreement. Lie may speak today, - weapons under a system o, quoting a Korean front dispatch, ' . . picture post. tion to all members of the faculty, or perhaps tomorrow. constant inspection. complained that recent confer- DETROIT-Senator Moody (D- When difficulty was met in find- University staff and townspeople Kardelj said the Cominform 2) Said he intends to get to the ence talks have been "held under Mich.) charged here last night .ing a successor, Johnston agreed to their first open house of the fall neighbors are constantly strength- bottom of any malfeasance or mis- the menace of heavy enemy gun that "the dominant faction of the to stay on for a few more weeks. season. ening their forces on Yugoslavia's fire." Republican Party has repudiated Yesterday's announcement indi- The open house will be held at borders. The divisions have in- conduct by government employes, Thick mud bogged down the war the principles of Vandenberg," at cated he feels he can delay no the president's residence from 3 creased from 14 to 25 in two years, but defended the vast majority of yesterday as an inch of cold rain a convention of Sigma Delta Chi longer, even if the ESA post re- to 6 p.m. and from 8 to 10 p.m., he said. Federal workers as honorable. swept the Korean battlefront. journalistic fraternity. mains unfilled for a time. Sunday. NCAA MEETING MONDAY: Crisler May Defend Spring Practice, Bowl Games Baker First AgainToWi SL Position Berry, lorwitz Cop Early Wins By CRAWFORD YOUNG A record-smashing 330 first- place vote tally for Bob Baker '52BAd, highlighted a fast count of Student Legislature ballots last night. A total of 6,582 students went to the polls in the two-day all-cam- pus elections, the smallest turnout since the spring of 1948. However, percentage-wise, the drop was re- latively small over last spring's 6,818 vote. - -* * FOR BAKER, there was the added honor of becoming the first candidate to come in at the top twice in a row. He also was first to be elected a year ago. This is his second term. Baker,a man from Missouri --Independance at that-crack- ed Bill McIntyre's two-year-old record of 317. Also elected on the first ballot was Phil Berry, '52 with 276 votes. This will be his fourth term. THE BALLOT-counting pro- ceeded with record dispatch, as the first ballot was completed at 8:50 p.m. This marked the first time in the memory the counting, which was completed at 1 a.m. to- day, had not extended into the wee hours. Last year, both semesters the tally was not completed til after 4 a.m. The turnout drop was disap- pointing to legislators, in lieu of recent achievements on Thanks- giving holiday and the library settlement. Thirty-eight per cent of the total enrollment marched up to the polls, a slight decline from last year. The percentage vote has never risen much above 40. THE FIRST election quota was established at 246. Fred Horwitz, '54, followed Baker and Beirry into the elite circle on the second ballot, then. nq one else reached the quota till Karen Fagerburg turned the trick on the tenth. The canine candidate, Major, ran strongly, amassing an esti- mated vote of almost 200. How- ever, Men's Judiciary ruled that the massive mutt was not a stu- dent, and hence lacked one of the/ qualifications for member- ship on SL. The votes were redistributed to the second-place candidates on the ballots. It had been previously' intimated that all Major's votes Major Victory? See Page 7 for a shot of dis- gruntled Major, just after dis- covering his votes were not be- ing counted. would be thrown out on the grounds that they were irrespon- sible votes. But it was felt this would be unfair to the candidates who were :selected brow the dog BY 9 P.i1., A CROWD of about 200 had Fathered in the Uniqn ballroom to watch the tabulations. Bright white lights beamed down on the counters, lending an im- pressive atmosphere to the cere- monies. Former president of the De- troit City Council George Ed- wards dropped in for a quick look at the counting. "This looks just like the Wayne Coun- ty recount tables in last year's Williams-Kelly marathon elec- tion," he observed. Beside the counting tables, typewriters clacked as two local stations ground out copy for radio coverage of the event. WHRV and WEQN kept listeners up-to-the- minute on election results. * * * THE OLD BUG-a-boo of block voting remained mostly out of the picture till the 22nd and last bal- lot, when Ellie Haar, of Sigma Delta Tau sorority picked up 45 votes from Phil Barad of Phi Sig- ma Kappa fraternity to nose into office. Louis Mazzerella became the Ifirst new freshman to make the Legislature, as he became the 18th candidate elected. Ballot foul-ups appeared rela- tively small in number - only about 200 were thrown out for a variety of reasons by the Judiciary. Last time, most of the Union vice- 'Druids Brew -MagicPotion From the Stonehenge circle Aided by the witches cauldron Mystic plans were brewed in dark- ness. Many twigs were examined Many rocks were overturned Subjected to heat from blazing torches Observed by men of knowledge and magic. Most decayed, were burned, were destroyed. Finally from the murky grove From the cave where Fingal ling- ered The Order of the Mighty Oak emerged Causing the earth to shake and shiver By CAL SAMRA All indications are that Athletic Director Fritz Crisler is ready to defend the two-platoon system. spring practice, and bowl games at the of athletes and recruiting practices are the main problems to be have system faced, the others being on the "fringe." omy over a Th Tiniversitv's renresentative to the Big Ten Conference. Prof. I WFA ms in which the athletic department enjoys complete auton- thletic funds. E THE TRENDtwards m e-emnhasizin'- college