GUZOWSKI'S AMENDMENT See Editorial Page Seventy-Two Years of Editorial Freedom A6F 471 4ir a t ty MUCH COLDER High-17 Low-3 Considerable cloudiness today, continued cold tomorrow .Wr7W r vr . wr.r , n __ I VUL .L.XXJI, No0. 95 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8.1963 SEVENC ENTS EmuIRT PA[ __ __ _.. an1,a.CL a.t W REVEAL FAILURES: Table Move To Dissolve IQC By MICHA19L ZWEIG , Interquadrangle Council last night debated a motion to dis- solve itself,but took no action and postponed further discussion until its next meeting. West Quadrangle president Cur- tis Huntington, '64, speaking in defense of his own motion, argued that IQC "no longer serves a use- ful function in academics, ath- letics, social programs or sp'ecial events for the houses and resi- dents of the system." Huntington said later that he introduced the motion "to wake up the members of the IQC, to make explicit the failures of IQC and evolve discussion of the prob- lems. I would not have voted for the motion in its present form at this time." Out of Order An attempt by IQC president Robert Geary, '63, to rule the. motion out of order on the grounds that it did not fall within the agendized item of "operating procedures of IQC" was overruled by the body in a move to appeal the decision of the chair. In other business IQC approved a motion to reconsider action taken last week advising the Resi- GovenorMoves To Solve Unemployment Problems By The Associated Press LANSING-Gov. George Romney began an all-out effort Wednes- day to solve the four-year battle over unemployment compensation paid to workers out of a job because of strikes within their companies but in plants other than their own. Auto executives, labor leaders, legislators and university labor experts will meet today in Lansing to draw up acceptable legislation, Romney said. Prof. William Haber of the economics department will join other leading educators from Wayne State University and Michigan State " University at Romney's meeting. WILLIAM N. HUBBARD ... no grades Dean Reveals New Midyear Grading Plan Medical students will not re- ceive midyear grades this year, Dean William Hubbard of the Medical School announced yes- terday. "The undergraduate approach is inappropriate to Medical School," Dean Hubbard explained. He said that the important question was whether, at the end of the year, the student has .successfully com- pleted his work and is ready to advance to the next level. Thus the half-year judgment of work is somewhat premature. Dean Hubbard noted that the grading change did not reflect any change in Medical School policy. The action mainly affects fresh- man and sophomore medical stu- dents,, some of whose unit of work ends 'at half year. 'hey are being informed of the change. .However, students in academic difficulties will be warned of their deficiencies. Representatives Confer Representatives from the United Auto Workers and the state AFL- CIO will also be present at the conference, Romney noted. These men will have a report of work already done by Romney staff members on the problem at their disposal. Romney said this study is more liberal than bills pushed through the Legislature by past Republican lawmakers, but yet is stricter than existing pro- cedures. The difficulty evolved from a' State Supreme Court decision to award compensation to Ford Motor Co. workers who were laid off because of a strike at another Ford plant in Canton, Ohio. Employer's Complaints Employers voiced complaints that the Court's decision forced them to pay for strikes against themselves with taxes paid into the State Unemployment Compen- sation fund. Two bills have since been passed by Republican-controlled legis- latures to overthrow the Court's decision but former Gov. John B. Swainson vetoed both of them. Romney agreed that the Repub- lican bills went ftoo far the other way" in refusing aid to workers who should be entitled to com- pensation. The governor said his idea would be to authorize un- employment compensation for workers laid off by a strike in an- other plant of the same company "if .they were not involved in the strike and would not benefit from it." Need New Businesses Romney cited the need for solving the problem soon so that it would not tend to "discourage new employer investment in Mich- igan, especially at a time when the state so badly needs new economic life." Separate legislation to intro- duce a "cost-of-living" increase in unemployment compensation may also be introduced with the other bill, Romney concluded. dence Hall Board of Governors to abolish the IQC-Assembly Co-ed Housing Committee. The committee still must recom- mend a structure for co-ed resi- dence student government and proposals for staffing co-ed hous- ing. It must also decide the ques- tions of room priorities which go to men and women presently liv- ing in houses which will be occu- pied by the opposite sex in Sep- tember. Decision by March Assistant to the director of housing John Hale said that the committee must come to some de- cision by March "especially on the room priority question," or else the decision must be made solely by the administration. "We would like to see student participation in these decisions, but they must be made before room applications for next semester are open," Hale noted. Huntington's motion of disso- lution drew attack from council members who stressed the im- portance of IQC as a co-ordinator of quadrangle policy' and a uni- fied voice for the administration. East Quadrangle p r e s i d e n t Thomas Smithson, '64, argued that any failure of IQC must be remed- died in a constructive manner, not by abolishing the council alto- gether. Smithson said that no student government organization ought to dissolve itself unless it must rub-_ ber-stamp administration policy. After the meeting, Geary said, that "Huntington's motion con- tains several valid criticisms of the organization. However, it fails to present a clear picture of the actual state of IQC." Give Hopwoods For Writing Ten University freshmen were selected yesterday to receive Hop- wood creative writing awards. An essay by Robert E. Burt, '66, "On the Possibility of Writing Greek Tragedy Today" placed firstj in the essay division. "A Change of Seasons," by Jud- ith A. Delk, '66, won the $50 first-t place award .in the fiction divi- sion. Topping the poetry division, "Run as Rain" by Judith La Rue Snider, '66, also won $50. Other winners were: Essay di- vision-second places, James C.t Hestand, '66 A&D, and Alvin K.c Averbach, '66; third places, Rutht Kuchel, '66, and Kaylyn Spez-c zano, '66 A&D; Fiction division- second place, Miss Kuchel; thirde place, Theodore D. Hall, '66 NR;c Poetry division - second place,Y Barbara Otto, '66; third place, Elizabeth Friedman, '66.C PRESIDENT HARLAN HATCHER ... cites 'U's advantages STRATEGY: Party Plan For Future OTTAWA WP) - Conservative leaders met yesterday and drew up campaign strategy in line with Prime Minister John Diefenbaker's pledge for made-in-Canada poli- cies if he returns to power in the April election. While there were assertions from the Conservatives and the opposing Liberals that the cam- paign will not be used to kick the United States around, Diefen- baker made clear his nuclear wea- pons argument with Washington still rankled. "We have a plan for the next several years, an economic plan, a political plan, a plan to increase the economy, a plan to round out confederation, to assure a strong Canada economically and politi- cally, whose security will be pro- tected without the loss of sover- eignty and without the domination of any other country or countries," he said in a television statement. "Our policies will be made in Canada," he continued. Consider SGC Role In Regents Election By GLORIA BOWLES Favorable comment on Wednesday night's Student Government Council decision to participate in the April Regents elections came from several candidates seeking election to the board and from one Regent. The Council, acting on a motion presented by The Daily Editor Michael Olinick, '63, will draft a statement outlining major Uni- versity problems, and present the statement to the Republican nom- inating convention and to Democrats, who have already met to select candidates for the spring vote. According to a motion passed by a 12-3 vote, the Council will invite candidates to speak on campus and conduct individual interviews