Latest Deadline in the State :43 a i1y CLOUDY, COLDER VOL. LXVI, No. 110 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1956, FOUR PAGES Panhellenic Votes 17-2 ainst Spring Rush ing 4 President Outlines Report To Sorority Representatives' Alumnae Financial Advisors May Request Board Of Review Hearing By DICK SNYDER Panhellenic delegates yesterday voted 17-2 against a change to spring rushing as recently recommended in a majority report to Student, Government Council by the Panhel-Assembly rushing study commtitee. Collegiate Sorosis and Pi Beta Phi voted for the change. Before the vote was taken at the special meeting in the League, Panhel President Debbie Townsend, '56, presented to the assembled sorority representatives an outline of her planned report to the Coun- cil today. Miss Townsend also explained the philosophy behind and the "procedural operation of the Board of Review which has power to re- 5C Topi0 view any Council action. Alumnae Will Ask Review S. T h o u g h Panhel unanimously D iscusslon supported her stand against ask- ing the Board to review any SGC * * * * *[ * B lans hard To Discuss Censorship The controversial lecturer and writer, Paul Blanshard, '14, will talk on "Book Burning and Liter- ary Censorship" before the Uni- tarian Student Group and the public at 7:30 today in the Natural Science Auditorium. "Suppression of liberal thought in education, as pressure groups influence librarians and school boards is the most serious limita- tion of our liberties," as Blan- shard claims, will be his thesis. Blanshard directs his attack par- ticularly at the Catholic Church Board of Governors Statement Adopts 'FirlY of Implied Biases Continue Of Rushing t g It is anticipated that Student Government Council will have a full agenda at its meeting tonight with both recommendations of the Panhel-Assembly and the Inter- fraternity-Inter House Council rushing study committees up for discussion. Council President Hank Berlin- er, '56, has announced that stu- dents will be given ample oppor- tunity to express their opinions at the meeting. Controversy has been rising dur- ing the week since submission of the majority report in favor of spring rushing. Schedule of the meeting calls for presentation of and questions on the IFC-IHC recommendations calling for continuance of the pre- sent system of first and second semester rushing. Discussion and action on the tabled motio for SGc acceptance of the Panhel-Assembly majority report will then precede any action on the IFC-IHC report. The Council will also hear a motion proposing SGC support of the principle of an all-campus "community chest drive" which would encompass all bucket drives currently held at the University and possibly some national cam- paigns. Reports will be presented on the bicycle problem and Cinema Guild and student appointments will be recommended for the Committee on Student Housing and Environ- mental Health. The meeting will start at '7:30 p.m. in Rms. R and S of the Union. Bank Robbers Apprehended y City Police An Ann Arbor Police patrolman captured three Ann Arbor men Tuesday afternoon less than a half hour after they robbed the Pinck- ney branch of the McPherson State Bank of $4,400. The men were identified as James Walling, 26, 1109 S. State, Robert Davidson, 25, 316 Huron St., and Charles Howard, 24, 406 Packard St. Albert Frendenberg, manager of the bank, said two of the men en- tered the bank with guns just be- fore the regular lunch hour. The two took the money, consisting of five and one dollar bills, and es- caped in a 1951 Plymouth driven by. Davidson. The car belonged to Walling's mother and had been borrowed Tuesday morning. Ann Arbor police were alerted, and relayed the message to Patrol- man George Miller, who waited in his car at Pontiac and Dhu Varrn Rds. Miller saw a car con- taining three young men pass by and pulled the car to the curb on Pontiac at Kellog St The three men surrended without resistance and were taken-to the city police station. The money taken from the bank was inside the men's shirts. Wall- ing was also carrying a .22 caliber snub-nosed pistol. Panel Discussion vote,d the Pannel presidenia is- closed that alumnae financial ad- visors will definitely request Board hearing should spring rushing be approved by the Council. In essence, Miss Townsend, her- self an opponent of spring rush- ing, will present to the Council four main points in refutation of the study group's report and rec- r ommendation. 1) "While the study report is good, it doesn't go far enough. I have heard it said that perhaps the committee was too objective in that it didn't exactly represent some views given it and that some of the strong feelings and emo- * tions involved were apparently not f considered in the report. Contact Rule Problem "The recommendation is imprac- tical in that it does not adequately take care of the problem of con- tact rules (prohibiting dirty rush- ing). "The report does not show how the individual can get a better picture of sorority life by waiting in the dorms for a semester before rushing.- 1 "While the recommendation takes care of personal rights, the d question of property rights is left out. 2) "It is impossible to draw con- * lusions from a report which seems to be a case of six-of-one and half- a-dozen-of-another. The pros and cons in the report in balance weigh equally and the recommendation does not show how the individual will gain more from one rushing procedure than another." 3) "Two million dollars (esti- mated value of sorority proper- ties) should not be tossed around lightly on the basis of supposi- tions and 'maybes'. While there are reasons to believe that sororities will be damaged by spring rush- ing, there is not reason to believe that they will not. History shows that spring rushing has a tendency to weaken sororities. 4) "Panhel itself is strongly op- posed to'a program of spring rush- ing. Though Panhel will cooperate witl; an SGC decision favoring spring rushing, it won't be happy." Faith in SGC "When a student-made decision is reversed," Miss Townsend warn- ed, "it reverses all that we, as stu- dents, have been working toward at Michigan and everywhere else. "Suppose," the Panhel president suggested, "the Council accepts the majority report. What are you going to do? What would be the effect if Panhel requested a Board in Review meeting?" Miss Townsend added that Pan- hel's opinions and her own would be expressed "with faith in the sin- cerity of the committee and the recommendations they presented and faith in SGC." Ike, Kefauver Early Leaders MANCHESTER, N. H. (M-Sen. Estes kefauver (D-Tenn) piled up an early lead over Adlai Stevenson last night in the New Hampshire presidential primary's feature fight -a battle for control of the state's delegation to the Democratic Na- tional Convention. Sen. Kefauver also opened up a wide lead over Stevenson in the other section of the first-in-the-' nation primary-the presidential preference oll. F r w. t t r i l t. t PAUL BLANSHARD (Legion of Decency) and the American Legion. "College libraries," urges Blan- shard, "should be wide open to communist literature. We cannot meet the communist challenge un- less we understand it as expressed in its own language." Although once a Socialist, work- ing directly under Norman Thom- as, Blanshard now is an active Democrat and "not so sure" as he used to be "about complete social ownership." He rationalizes his affiliation with the Unitarian Church as "it stands for complete freedom for unorthodoxy." Bringing Blanshard to campus is viewed by many as an effort to fill an alleged controversy vacuum at the University. Tickets are available at the door. Douglas Fears South's Stand WASHINGTON (W-Sen. Paul Douglas (D-Ill.) said today he fears that public criticism of the Supreme Court's segregation de- cisions by Southern congressmen "will encourage those who will not be so meticulous about law and order." The Illinois Democrat protested the "manifesto" signed by 19 sen- ators and 81 representatives and presented Monday in both houses of Congress - He told the Senate that under our system of government the Su- preme Court determines what is "the supreme law of the land." (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec- ond in a series of stories concerned with the discriminatory (bias) clause in fraternity systems. Today's story deals with unwritten biases.) By BILL HANEY With the elimination of bias clauses from their constitutions fraternities have made a big first step in knocking out self-segrega- tion. However the severest critics of fraternities and their discrimina- tory practices question the extent to which formal changes in clauses produce real changes in fraternity practices. These critics contend the elimi- nation of the written bias merely clears away an obvious obstruction which is replaced by an equally powerful and obstructive unwritten or "underground" bias. 'Socially Accepted' One of the types of unwritten bias is exemplified by the national Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter who replaced its restrictive clause with a "socially accepted" one. The president of the Cornell University chapter explained, "The substitution was to meet technical requirements on some campuses without a modification in practi- ces." . However the president of the Michigan SAE chapter, Bill Elliot, '56E, said different chapters throughout the country interpret the clause differently and the Michigan chapter has no bias clause at all. "In our chapter we don't have a discriminatory clause in our constitution or ritual," Elliot said, "In fact we don't have any sort of a bias at all, written or unwritten." Though the Michigan SAE chap- ter has no active Jewish members at present and has not had for several years, Elliot explained this as due to the fact that "very few Jewish men rush our fraternity." Ritual Bias Another type of subterfuge of which fraternities have been ac- cused is putting a bias into fra- ternity rituals after removing it from the constitution. 'However this is a very difficult point for the critics to attack because ritu- als are not ordinarily open to in- spection. The Phi KappaPsi national sys- tem has never had a written con- stitutional or ritual discriminatory clause, but has been accused of bias recently because it expelled its Amherst chapter of "unfrater- nal conduct" after they pledged a Negro. Rob Effinger, '56BAd, president of local Phi Kappa Psi chapter said, "We do not have any sort of a bias in our chapter; we try to judge every rushee individually and to my knowledge there is never any mention made at any time of religion or race." Effinger explained there are at present no Jewish or Negro persons in the chapter because "not too many rush us." Dr. Alfred McClung Lee says Delta Upsilon is guilty of still a different sort of underground bias. Lee says, "When Delta Upsilon deleted its restrictive clause, it depended upon its members to screen the qualifications of pros- pective members." Black-Ball Privilege Lee indicated Delta Upsilon ac- complished unwritten discrimina- tion by giving life membership in their college chapters, with the power to blackball any proposed new member. Bob ' Adams '56E, president of the Michigan Delta Upsilon chap- ter said his fraternity "did not have a generally accepted unwrit- ten bias; but in every group there are always 'one or two biased members who, through the power of blackball, can keep Jewish or Negro rushees out if they wish." "This personal bias and not an unwritten one" was the reason Adams gave for the complete ab- sence of Jewish and Negro persons from the Michigan Delta Upsilon chapter. Who Responsible Fraternity men themselves are divided as to who is responsible Campaignl% s StartiToday: Today marks the official begin- ning of campaigning for the com-: ing all campus elections. Student Government Council. candidates will be seen putting up. their posters all over campus in their bids for election. Speaking engagements will not begin until tomorrow when the open-house schedule starts. There are fourteen candidates running for the seven available council positions. Yesterday saw the end of the candidate training program. Con- ducted by Jim Perkins, '58, the four meetings were held to ac- quaint candidates with the issues, to explain election procedures and to discuss informally the problems which will accompany the elec- tion. Only four candidates turned up for yesterday's final meeting. Perkins was disappointed because, "It is difficult to have a compre- hensive discussion of all the is- sues with only a small number of candidated and their views repre- sented." for the accused unwritten bias clauses. Undergraduate fraternity members seem generally to support the removal of racial and religious barriers to membership and blame alumni for developing and preserv- ing it. Professor E. Jackson Baur of University of Kansas says, "Jew- ish students are pledged and initi- ated in defiance of national rules. The national offices do not chal- lenge this practice because most of the K.U. chapters are long es- tablished." Contrarily Alumni assert that undergraduates lack the "necessary maturity to understand all the im- plications of desegregation;" and that the nations' campuses outside of the northeast are indifferent to the problem, and the southern and southwestern fraternity under- graduates strongly oppose change. U.S. Will Not Take Sides Over Cyprus WASHINGTON (M--The United States declared last night it is not taking sides in the British-Greek 'dispute over Cyprus and offered its good offices to find "a fair and just solution." State Department press officer Lincoln White issued a brief state- ment to that effect soon, after British Ambassador Sir Roger Makins, acting on 'instructions from London, telephoned the State Department to ask an ex- planation of an expression of U.S. "sympathetic concern" made to the Greek For'eign Ministry over the dispute. . White said Makins was aware that the State Department was issuing its statement. In replying he used the same phrase the British had foundob- noxious. Day's Work A policeman's life is a many splendored thing. An East Quad Coed called Ann Arbor police this week, asking if they had seen her date. The officer on duty told her, "No, we don't have him down here." "Well," s h e replied, "Thanks anyway." A few minutes later a second call came. "I found out where he is," the feminine sleuth an- nounced. "He stood me up. I'll be down in a while so that you can go and get him." The officers are still waiting. Eoka Head. Urges Fight Ine.Sified NICOSIA, Cyprus (--The mys- terious leader of Cyprus' Eoka guerrilla organization " urged his followers yesterday to intensify the fight against Britain. Eoka is the underground terror- ist army of the Greek Cypriot en- osis-union with Greece movement. In the first pamphlets secretly circulated in Nicosia since Arch- bishop Makarios was exiled to the Seychelles Islands last Friday, "Dighennis"-the name adopted by the Eoka leader-promised swift and deadly reprisal against any member of enosis who might defect to the enemy headed by "Gauleiter Harding"-Field Mar- shal SirJohn Harding, the British governor. Meanwhile virtually the entire island was gripped by a general strike which shut down shops, stores, banks, service establish- ments and newspapers for the third day. Scattered demonstrations broke out in Nicosia but they were quickly suppressed by police and riot squads. At least eight persons were arrested and one was in- jured slightly. Policy' Preferences To Be Taken Into Account Clarification Motion Defeated by Board By VERNON NARHGANG Residence Halls Board of Gover- nors yesterday adopted a "fair statement of policy" regarding the room application and roommate placement procedure. A motion by IHC President Tom Bleha, '56, to "further help to clari- fy this policy statement" was de- feated by the Board. The policy statement, which came as a result of months of study and discussion of the prob- lem, was developed from a pro- posed statement included in Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb's recent let- ter to the Residence Halls Gover- nors. Statement on Applications The revised statement, which was drawn up by a subcommittee and approved unanimously by the Residence Halls Governors, will appear attached to room applica- tion blanks in the future. The statement reads: "Students at the University of Michigan differ widely in respect to habits, preferences, and per- sonal backgrounds. Each student ordinarily chooses his own room- mate, once In residence. "If you or your parents have any such preferences, they will be respected in the Residence Halls, insofar as administratively feas- ible," Motion Asked Clarification Bleha's motion, to clarify this statement, asked for an additional recommendation to be included in the Board of Governors' minutes for the benefit of administrative personnel placing roommates. In part, the defeated motion stated that the Board of Gover- nors would recommend that: "In- formation concerning religious, racial and national background-is not considered in assigning space in residence halls and is not con- sidered in assigning roommates, except as the applicant himself (or his parents) requests that it be considered" Motion Too 'Negative' It furthe stated that "If the entering student does not express a preference in regard to one or more of these respects he might be assigned to a roommate whose background and interests are very different from his own." Residence Halls Governors found this motion too negatively stated and disagreeing with the policies of the Board of Governors in re- gard to roommate placement. Yesterday's action in approving a policy statement was instigated by Human Relations Board recom- mendation for a policy clarifica- tion along the lines of roommate assignment, Result Differs However, the final result was far from the Human Relations group's hopes that the Board would state it "considers race, re- ligion, and ethnic background ir- relevant criteria in roommate placement." In the only other business that the Residence Halls Governors took up yesterday, they approved Betsy Barbour as an upperclass house for the academic year 1956-57. Wilson Favors Nixon To Run WASHINGTON (IM - Secretary of Defense Charles E. Wilson spoke out yesterday against any move to dump Vice President Richard Nixon. He said that "doesn't seem right to me." Senate Votes Parity Sup orts on U.S. Wheat WASHINGTON (JP)-The Senate voted yesterday for 100 per cent' of parity supports on all wheat grown for human consumption in the United States but rejected a similar amendment on cotton. The wheat amendment was sponsored by Sen. Frank Carlson' (R.-Kan.) and attached to the omnibus farm bill by a 54-39 rollcall vote. It was the first setback suffered by the Eisenhower adminis- thation during Senate debate of the election-year measure. Striking while the iron was hot, Sen. Richard Russell (D-Ga.) tried to push through the same kind of a program for cotton, but his *amendment was rejected 57-33 on another rollcall. Senators Join Forces I., FRAME BUILDING RELOCA TED: Spring Brings, Signs of House Moving In Ann Arbor By ALLAN STILLWAGON Spring is coming, and that rest- less feeling shows up in the most unexpected places. Today, a two- story stucco frame house, which had stood next to the new Student Activities Building ruffled its raf- ters and ponderously rolled 10' blocks to a new location at 505 Hoover. Small boys from the University r Elementary, Literary and Erigi- - neering schools watched, stood spellbound by the wild dream that the whole caravan might tip over. Trees were fractured along the route, while telephone and elec- trical linemen scampered ahead ,w to lower power lines and stop '" ...:*.*.**.***:*. } lights. - * .' Western wheat Senators joinedj forces with a group from the southern cotton states to win ap- proval of the Carlson plan. The cotton senators were divided on Sen. Russell's proposal, how- ever, and he lost the support of some of the wheat senators. Senators from textile areas in both the North and South, which' are wary of higher domestic cot- ton prices, also opposed the Rus- sell amendment. As in the case of wheat, Sen. Russell wanted all cotton consumed in this country supported at 100 per cent of parity, with the rest of the crop being permitted to find its normal market price. Consumption: 10 Million Bales The Georgia senator said domes- tic consumption usually is around 10 million bales a year and ex- ports run to an additional three