Parades, Booths, Rides-Michi-Weekend Arrives By MICHIPETE ECKSTEIN 'today is Michiday. The 1956 Michigras balloon, long foreshadowed by skits, posters, ticket hawksers and a Michiclef will burst open today. Out will pour floats, celebrities, rides, shows, refreshments and skill booths. "Tempos Through Time" will begin at 3:30 p.m. today when some 80 parade units assemble at the intersection of Detroit and 5th Streets. The floats, marching bands, new automobiles and "novelty units"-clowns, horses, giraffe heads and an old-fashioned calliope-- will then begin their three mile, hour-and-one-half trek through the streets of Ann Arbor. Art and Football Judges for the 40 student-sponsored floats in the parade were announced yesterday. Assistant Dean of Men William Zerman will represent the Universty and Mayor William Brown, Jr., the city. From Detroit will come Elizabeth Payne of the Institute of Arts and Jug Girard of the Lions football team. And from New York, as special guest of Michigras, will come Carole Bennett, professional singer. Judges of. the 11 marching bands entered will be Prof. Maynard Klein and Prof. Joseph Maddy of the music school. With time out for dinner's sake Michigras will resume again from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m., turning part of the University's huge athletic plant into a colorful, noisy and fast-moving Midway. In Yost Fieldhouse 35 booths, most of them sponsored individually or jointly by housing groups, will compete for the "Grasgoer's" tickets with shows, skill contests and refreshments. Spin, Fly and Tilt And outside, 16 rides, with such intriguing names as "Flyoplane," "Spineroo" and "Tiltawhirl," will make the carnival atmosphere of the 1956 Michigras complete. Between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. tomorrow, Michigras will shower its wonders o nthe children (ages six to sixteen) of Ann Arbor in a special Kiddly Carnival. And tomorrow evening booths and rides will again be open for the final round of Michigras. But Michigras itself lay in the future for General Co-Chairman Paula Strong. '56, yesterday. "You can't even walk two steps," she said on her way to the fleldhouse, "without something happening Michigraswise." She didn't even twitch when she passed a co-ed coming from the fleldhouse with a convincing dagger going in one ear and out the other. "We've been on TV a lot this week. We beat the Ann Arbor Civic Theater the other day-i.e. in Charades." Asked about Michiclef, she said he had been dismissing several classes. His name is Larry Fried. Pressed on the matter, she ad- mitted, "There are a few others who do it too, but we're only men- tioning the one. We want the kiddies to believe that-just like Santa Claus-there's only one Michiclef." Gone For the Wind An independent with a straw hat planted squarely on his head and a handlebar mustache drawn carefully on his face passed by, carrying a hammer and ladder. "They even wear their Michigras hats while they work. Isn't that amazing?" Driving back to the Union she pointed out the window and frowned. "People aren't wearing their hats at this point. I'm con- cerned. Oh, well, it's probably too windy." The judges stand was finished. But "that, that, that banner. It's not on the Union anymore." Another victim of the wind, the Michigras banner hung limp from the building. "Well, goodbye." She waved. "And notice all the landmarks on your way to The Daily." -Daily-John Hirtzel THEY WEREN'T DOING THE MAMBO-Dancing girls for Col- legiate Sorosis-Sigma Nu booth warm up for the big two nights of Michigras in Yost Fleldhouse last night. Whatever the name of the dance was, it didn't seem to bother the spectators. -Daily-John Hirtzel GUNG HO STUDENTS-Students at fleldhouse raise theater marquee for Evans Scholars "Michivision." A few grunts and groans and it was up, for two days only. Two Talks At Advertising Conference see rage 4 Latest Deadline in the State ~Iaii4P PARTLY CLOUDY, COOL VOL. LXVI No. 134 ANN ARBOR, MICffIGAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1956 SIX PAGES New Egypt-Israel Truce Reached JERUSAt M (P)-Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold of the United Nations announced yesterday Egypt and Israel had put into effect a new and unconditional cease-fire on their strife-torn border. It was his first big accomplishment on a two-week-old Middle East peace mission for the Security Council. He said both govern- ments told him they had ordered their forces not to shoot across or pass over the armistice demarcation line after 6 p.m. Wednesday. Fire in Self-Defense Both sides agreed to the cease-fire more than a week ago but New WCBN Constitu tion Considered. A new constitution was reviewed yesterday by the South Quad- rangle studios of WCBN. The constitution, presented to. the staff members of South Quad's WCBN Station Manager Noralea Paselk, '57, features a definition of the studio's purposes. According to Article 1, the pur- pose of the studio is "to provide radio entertainment and news to students in the residence halls." The secondary purpose listed in the proposed constitution is "to provide experience in/ radio work for qualified and interested stu- dents." According to Miss Paselk, this is a reversal of the previous aims of the South Quad studio, which stressed the experience gained by the individual in radio work. M i s s Paselk explained the change as a part of the proposed constitution's purpose in allowing for WCBN's expansion in the Uni- versity. Further changes in the consti- tution would allow the Station Manager to take office four weeks before the end of the semester in which he is elected. Other provisions attempt to eliminate "overlapping duties" of offices, establish simpler means for removing incapable person- nel, and provide for a representa- tive in the studio from the South Quadrangle Council. Astronomy Visitor's Night Tonight at 8 p.m. the University Astronomy department will hold a Visitor's Night, which will be open to the public, adults and children, without charge. The speaker of the evening will be Professor D. B. McLaughlin, of the Astronomy dept., who will de- liver a 20 to 30 minute talk on "The Planet Mars." The group will meet in Rm. 2003 Angell Hall for Prof. McLaughlin's talk, and later move to the As- tronomy laboratory on the fifth floor, where there will be a num- 4had reserved the right toy fire in self-defense. Hammarskjoldheld two private meetings with Israeli Premier Da- vid Ben-Gurion yesterday on how to maintain the cease-fire. This made six such conferences be- tween the two since Tuesday. Hammarskjold had conferred with Egyptian Premier Gamal Ab- del Nasser in Cairo and with Leb- anese officials in Beirut before coming here. He will return today, to his Beirut temporary head- quarters. His assignment is to secure compliance with the 1949 armi- stice agreements of Israel with Egypt; Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. and reduce tensions along the de- marcation lines fixed by those agreements. He is to report to the Council by May 4. Automatics Used Shortly before the cease-fire an- nouncement, an Egyptian military spokesman in Cairo said an Israeli patrol fired with automatic weapons for 15 minutes yesterday morning on an Egyptian post near Deir el Ballah in Egypt's Gaza strip. The strip's frontier was the scene of major clashes two weeks ago. The spokesman said Egypt suffered no casualties yesterday, did not fire back but complained to the Egypt-Israel-UN Mixed Ar- mistice Commission that Israel had violated the armistice. Sources in Cairo close to the UN said Hammarskjold's next big job would be to perpetuate the Egyptian-Israeli cease-fire. Eliminate Friction He aims to do this, they ex- plained, first by eliminating points of friction and second by setting up a system whereby UN observ- ers might unquestionably identify the guilty party in any violation. Two things he hopes to achieve, they said, are a pullback of troops from the frontier and an increase in the number of observers. The border around the Gaza strip flared up April 4, the very day the Security Council voted unanimously at UN headquarters to send Hammarskjold on his trip. Three Israeli soldiers were killed. The following day, 64 Arabs were killed and 102 wounded, by Egyptian count, in an artillery ex- change in which the Gaza city marketplace was hit. 'White Elephants' A truck from Detroit Goodwill U..Pledges Five-Nation Alliance Promises Moral, Material Support TEHRAN, Iran (M)-The United States promised Thursday to give both moral and material support to the five-nation Baghdad Alli- ance created to protect the Mid- dle East from possible Commu- nist aggression. This undertaking, announced by US Undersecretary of State Loy Henderson, appeared to tie the United States as closely as pos- sible to the pact without actually signing and ratifying the Bagh- dad Treaty. Henderson made his announce- ment at the close of the four-day conference here of Ministers- of the Baghdad Pact governments- Britain, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Pakistan. He was the chief U.S. observer at the meeting. Egypt leads a bloc of Arab na- tions which has denounced the Alliance and objected especially to membership of .Iraq, the only Arab nation among the five. Dele- gates of other pact nations have assumed Washington holds back from full membership because it seeks to avoid offending Egypt and Saudi Arabia. However, they re- gard the US participation an- nounced by Henderson as a defi- nite rebuff to leaders of those countries. Michirain? In case of rain, the parade will be postponed until 10:30 a.m. tomorrow, Libby Garland, parade co-chairman, announc- ed. She said ,that housing units will be notified at noon today if the parade is to be postponed. They will be told where and when to assemble tomorrow. House Billion For Soil Bank Plan Walt Kelly To Indicate P Start Pogo is coming to Ann Arbor. More specifically, Pogo's cre- ator, Walt Kelly, will be in Ann Arbor to lecture at 10 a.m. in Rackham Auditorium, in the an- nual Sigma Delta Chi-sponsored Michigan Interscholastic Press Association Convention. Kelly has indicated he will tell how he found Pogo. Pogo claims HE found Kelly. Regardless of who found whom, Kelly is going to disregard Pogo's oft-insistent pleas and tell the truth about the comic oppossum. The lecture is appropriately en- titled "Inside Pogo." Pogo's Origin Pogo originated as a spear car- rier in a Kelly comic book feature in 1943. at the same time as the New York Star was featuring Kel- ly Art. The comic book eventually fold- ed-reason: "It didn't have no ac- tion in it. Nobody shot nobody. It was full of mice in red and blue pants." But Pogo reappeared two years later, this time as main character in a Star comic strip. When the Star folded, Kelly tried to peddle Pogo to several comic syndicates. All refused him until he looked up the Hall Syndi- cate. At any rate, we overheard the following conversation on campus. Pogo was being discussed by two co-eds. "I go Pogo-you go Pogo?" "Sure, I go Pogo - everybody goes Pogo." Committee Assigns -Courtesty of University News Service ATTENDING ADVERTISING CONFERENCE yesterday were (left to right) University president Harlan Hatcher; Conference Chairman, Prof. Donald Gooch; Anthropologist Margaret Mead; Luce- paperman C. D. Jackson; and Prof. Reuel Denney of the University of Chicago Department of Social Sciences. FI3A Gains New House* Fraternity Buyers AssociationI Margaret Mead Angers Ad Conference Optimists By TED FRIEDMAN . Prof. Margaret Mead struck a discordant note at the University's 1956 annual Advertising Conference here yesterday. Speakers at the conference of some of America's leading adver- tising men praised modern advertising for its fundamental respect for the people, its upgrading of popular culture and its remarkable vitality-but Prof. Mead dissented from the general optimistic tone. "You have a feedback system and you don't know where it's go- ing," she said. She explained that modern Americans, with the help of advertising, have abandoned - B enson Calls Farm Action 'Gold Brick' Operation Needs New Legislation WASHINGTON (AP)-The House Appropriations Committee voted $1,200,000,000 for a soil bank prow gram yesterday but Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson called it a "gold brick" that can't be used to help farmers. . "They put the cart before the horse," Benson said. "Appropriat- ing $1,200,000,000 for the soil bank recommended by the President without giving us the authority to spend it for the soil bank certain- ly won't help our farmers." "Obviously," he added, "appro- priating money that can't be spent won't give our farmers the soil bank they want. Needs New Legislation Benson issued his f statement after testifying before the Senate Agriculture Committee that "we cannot put the soil bank program into operation without new legis- lation." "The President called for a comprehensive soil bank program for farmers including several hun- dred million dollars for advance payments this year," he said. "The House committee action does not authorize this. So the proposed appropriation turns out to be a gold brick." Action in the Appropriations Committee came with a rush and was the latest move in a confused struggle over farm relief program in this important election year. Big Fund Favored The committee voted 36-7 in favor of the big fund for "acreage reserve and soil conservation pay- ments." It was not immediately explain- ed how the committee expected the Agriculture Department to put the program into operation on a broad scale this year, since many Southern crops have already been planted and seeding is under way in the North. Presumably many farmers would. have to plow up some of their .plantings in order to benefit. The soil bank plan was 'the only major administration recommen- dation in the farm bill President Dwight D. Eisenhower vetoed Monday. It contemplated pay- ments un to $1.200.000.000 a year gained its fortieth member last night: Theta Delta Chi. The board of directors also voted to initiate a deposit account sys- tem on May 1. Arrangements will be made .with each house for pay- ments. REVISION IN QUADS PROPOSED: IHC Committee Suggests Changes' (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the third in a series of f ur articles explaining the proposals change the structure of the Inter-House council.) By JIM BOW In addition to its work on the proposed constitution, the Inter- House Council u Structure Study Committee has made several recommendations concerning the Quadrangles and the Houses. The first of these recommenda- tions was a proposal to include Victor Vaughan and Fletcher Houses in the IHC, "at such time plied in the Study Committee's constitution, when it stated that the House Presidents would serve on both quad and IHC levels of government in order that "a dupli- cation of effort will be at a mini- mum." The same people servmg on both bodies would be aware of, and could prevent actions of. a dupli- cating nature on the two levels of above-the-house government." The Study Committee suggested that the additional representative handle most of the Quadrangle committee responsibilities, leaving Tuesdays commencing the first Tuesday of each semester." On the alternate weeks, then, the IHC would meet, so that the burden of above-the-house level meetings for a. House President should be limited to one each week." Related to this recommendation was the proposal that "the duties of the Quadrangle President should be lightened." Shift Duties The Study Committee suggested that some of the Quadrangle Pres- ident's duties be shifted to the Vice-President or other officers so modeling themselves after heroes and ideals and become reflexive." Dozen Walk Out About a dozen of the advertising men walked out during the an- thropologist's speech. Comments such as "She ought to stick to her own subject," "Hor- rible stuff," and "She seems aw- fully simple," were heard from the advertising men. Prof. Mead pointed out that in the other speeches no one had mentioned the atom bomb or the modern shift of power. "What they talked about was taste: the way in which more See PROF., Page 6 Brown Criticized Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., was blasted yesterday by John W. IHC's Faculty Symposium Topic: 'God' "The Existence of God?" will be the topic of Inter-House Council's second of a faculty symposium series, it was announced yesterday. Prof. Kenneth E. Boulding, of the economics department, Prof. Charles L. Stevenson, of the philo- sophy department and Prof. Wil- liam B. Willcox, of the history de- partment will take part in the discussion, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, in Dining Room One, South Quad. At the conclusion of the sym-