THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, I School OK's Fund Grant From. Bigot Trustees of tiny Piedmont Col- lege in Demorest, Ga., have an- nounced that they will continue to accept grants from the Texas Education Association financed by a millionaire who is avowedly an- ti-Jewish and anti-Negro. The board, meeting in Atlanta, voted in favor of the $500 per month gifts supported by Texas cattle and oil magnate George Armstrong. A. T. CINE, chairman of the trustees, explained that the school is in financial difficulties and the board could see no reason why the grants should not be accepted since no strings are attached to them." One trustee, Miss Josephine Wilkins, former president of the Georgia League of Women Vot- ers, resigned after the board took action in a closed session. She claimed that Armstrong's definition of "constitutional gov- ernment embraces doctrines of race and creed that resemble closely those of Hitler." THREE YEARS ago Jefferson Military College of Natchez, Miss., turned down a $50,000,000 endow- ment offered by Armstrong on the condition that the school imit its enrollment to "white Christians." Armstrong once distributed pamphlets urging that voting be limited to "white Americans." In 1949 he wrote that certain pro- minent Jewish financiers should be "prosecuted and tried as traitors and, if found guilty, should be executed." The action at Piedmot was the latest in a series of controversies over the grants that have divided the 300 students and faculty members of the college in recent months. SRA To Hold Conference The Second Michigan Confer- ence on Christian Values in Higher Education will be held to- morrow at the Union. About 75 faculty members, ad- ministrators and graduate stu- dents of colleges and universities throughout the state will attend the meeting, which will be jointly sponsored by state religious groups and the Student Religious Asso- ciation. The conference is designed to examine the position of the Chris- 1 tian faith in relation to Univer- sity activities. " Prof. Werner A. Bohnstedt of -Michigan State College will be the moderator of a panel discussion at 10:30 a.m. The group will con- sider "The Task of the Christian in the University." Main conference speaker will be Prof. Edwin E. Aubrey of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. He will speak at a luncheon at 12:45 on r "Adequate Resources for the Christian Teacher." You Should Know What's Coming'1 1 i r , . _ _, ° " - - - -,==cam:.:: -- --_ _ -. . . 1 T ,." i a , i l ' ' 1'y \ " \ f r ' :II 1/1/I Oft. (f t E , , , ,; '.... I A{ 1 Final George Washington's Veracity, Seen Product of Environment The survey showed that, of .500 schools, 39 prohibit driving and 162 have no regulations whatever. Other school's rules range from edicts governing registration of the vehicles to parking and speed regulations on campus only. The University driving ban was put into effect in 1927 when the Regents ruled , that no student "shall operate any motorvehicle." The purpose of the act was to reduce the number of traffic acci- dents. 'Lorraine' Tickets A limited number of tickets are still available for "Joan of Lor- raine", which will be presented again at 8 p.m. today and tomor- row at Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. ? The tickets, which can be ob- tained at the theatre box office, are priced at $1 and 75 cents. Government Asks Aid from Lederle The Senate Elections ,Commit- tee announced yesterday that it had decided to hire Prof. John W. Lederle, of the political science department, to help draft legisla- tion to revise the election laws. Prof. Lederle, who is the direc- tor of the University's Institute of Public Administration has not in- dicated whether he will accept the job. The committee is studying re- vision of the laws in an attempt to reduce campaign abuses and excessive expenditures. J. McKeachie of the psychology department. "People lie because it is the easiest way out of a conflict situ- ation," he commented. Probably anyone, even the most sterling character, would resort to false- hoods if his predicament were tense enough. And, of course, a person's early training has a lot to do with it." Lying, according to Prof. Mc- Keachie, is a product of a speci- fic set of circumstances. It is diffi- cult to say how a person will react to any given situation. "Whether lying is permitted in in any case is an ethical question, not a psychological one," he said. "The problem of 'white lies' or 'black lies' could better be settled by religion." At any rate, if the man who was first - in the hearts of his countrymen was able fo avoid lies, he was certainly a man with few peers, he commented. * * * *t QUIET ON SOUTHERN FRONT: Peace Reigns in Subdued Huber House .. ... Buy Now tt $5.050 By DIANE DECKER Civil War has been averted in South Quadrangle's Huber House -atleast for a little while. The hotly disputed question of "unconstitutional assessment" was brought to a vote last night at dinner, and, although a majority of Huber House residents favored sin a wnrn Anaan-1aln14oe a ipA.ac. claimed, their representatives had not asked their opinion on the assessment and because the leveling of such dues violated the house constitution. The constitution states that dues shall be collected at the be- ginning of the fall semester and maesno provis~io~n fn,asse sant strongly that the men would favor the assessment. How- ever, President Jerry Strauch, '54, has stated, "We of the Council feel sorry not only for ourselves but also for the men in the house who wanted the thingsthat money would have bought." At the Student Publications Building Any Afternoon. '.. I