MARRIAGE LECTURES Li 4IOr 4.Aitr t an 1 *4*44bprr :43 a t I ly SNOW AND COLDER See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LIX, No. 90 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEB. 13, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS I I I '111' Ctgers Top Indiana, 54-47 '4> Suprunowiez Paces Quintet' With 23 Hits Wolverines Take Fifth Straight By SY SONKIN (Special to The Daily) BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Mich- igan's rapidly improving cage squad extended their Conference winning streak to five games last night as they dropped an unim- pressive Indiana quintet, 54-47, to stay in third place in Big Nine play. The Wolverines lead was never less than' the final seven-point difference, as they dumped in eight quick points before the Hoosiers were able to swish a free throw in the opening minutes. * * * MACK SUPRUNOWICZ, after his cold night against Wisconsin in Ann Arbor last week, turned on the steam and racked up 23 points for Michigan, The score at half- time was 24-17 with Supe ac- counting for 17 of the Wolverine total. The first half was slow and cautious with Michigan match- ing its methodical offense with. the fast break of the Hoosiers. In the second half the party be- gan to get rough with the sell out crowd joining in to add vocal support. For the major part of the second half the fans made things difficult for the. referees who were literally marching the two teams back and forth between the foul lines. THE GAME was held up for five minutes when the spectators refused to quiet down to let Bob Harrison take a foul shot. They showed their ire even more by showering the floor with pennies and it took the combined efforts of the cheerleaders and the loud speaker to settle things down. Throughout most of the game Indiana was pressing Michigan. The Htoosiers sent their two forwards down the floor to try to make things difficult for Harrison and Pete Elliott when they took the ball out from the sidelines. Michigan's defense was func- tioning well throughout the game, but especially in the opening min- utes of the game. It wasn't until seven and a half minutes of play had elapsed that the Hoosiers fi- nally netted a point. FROM THIS POINT ON with Michigan possessing a seven' point lead each team lust matched each other basket for basket. The Wolverines started to use their controversial stall with about four and a half minutes left to play, but Indiana's for- wards .were too speedy to let either larrison or Elliott get by them, and Michigan just concentrated on passing the ball back and forth. Indiana scored eight points and the Maize and Blue six in this last few minutes of play. Michigan's accuracy from the foul line again accounted for the margin of victory, in fact in tils game the Wolverines were out- shot from the field 19-15. The Maize and Blue collected 24 points on fouls while the Hoosiers made only nine. However, Michigan's percentage from the floor was slightly better than Indiana's, the Wolverines having a 24.2 average and the Hoosier's 22.8. See SUMMARIES, Page 6 Play Tickets Still Available BUMPER TO BUMPER IN DOWNTOWN PHILADELPHIA-- Automobiles, riding bumper to bumper, in downtown Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa., as motorists use cars to get to work because of the city-wide transit strike. The walkout, affecting all transportation lines in the city, started when 11,09 ,Philadelphia Transportation Company workers walked off their jobs. KEEP 'EM ROLLING: City Council Demands End Of Philadelphia Transit Strike 'U' Regents Favor Talk With Students Seven of Eight Meibers on Board Praise Plan for Student Contact By CRAIG WILSON The Regents favor attending a "Meet Your Regents" get-together on campus. Opinions on the Student Legislature's proposed meeting ranged from "interested" to almost unqualified support, on the part of seven members of the eight-man board whom The Daily was able to contact by phone. ALL THOSE CONTACTED praised the purpose of the meeting- to bring members of the Board in closer contact with students. Many said they were ready to accept individually if invita- tions are sent them and all were ready to consider the meeting if a blanket invitation is placed on their February agenda, (Although SL has not yet made arrangements with the Univer- sity administration for a meeting time and place, or written invita- tions, Al Harris, chairman, Campus Action Committee, predicted that individual invitations would be sent each Board member.) I' 4 * THREE OF THE FOUR probable candidates for the two Regents' posts to be voted on this Spring are willing to accept personal invita- tions. Exception was Mrs. Vera Bates, Republican incumbent fron Grosse Pointe, who said she was "very interested" but would give no answer until it was decided whether or not the Regents would consider the meeting at their February session. Mrs. Bates, who comes up for nomination at the Republican Con- vention Saturday, said her decision "would depend on her colleagues." ALFRED B. CONNABLE, Jr.Republican incumbent seeking re- nomination, "would be very happy to attend." "If the invitation is to be sent each member, I am ready to accept now," he said. Both Democratic nominees were not available for commienL. How- ever, SL member Tom Walsh, author of the "Meet Your Regents" reso- lution, said Mrs. Rosa Faulke, Detroit; and Joseph Arsulewicz, Grand Rapids, were "committed to attending such a meeting" at the recent Democratic state convention. OTHER COMMENTS BY MEMBERS of the Board approved the proposal. "Such a meeting would be very fine, if a time can be ar- ranged," Regent Ralph A. Hayward, of Parchment, said. J. ,Joseph Herbert, member from Manistique, called the proposal "fine" and said he would be "happy to meet students" at a "Know Your Regents" meeting. REGENT KENNETH M. STEVENS, Detroit, said he had no per- sonal objections to the meeting and commented that "something con- structive may come out of it." Members Otto E. Eckert, of Lansing; and Charles S. Kennedy, of Detroit, both commented that they would be "glad to attend the meeting." The Daily was unable to contact Board Member Roscoe 0. Boni- steel, of Ann Arbor, who is out of town. Del Publication Editor To Talk In Journalism Lecture Series FREE-FOR-ALL-RIOTING at the gates of the International Har- vester Co. plants in East Moline, Ill., resulted in the CIO-UAW obtaining warrants charging 21 rival farm equipment workers with iciting the riot pictured above. 21 persons were injured when the UAW attempted to distribute union literature to the farm equipment workers. The FE, also a CIO union, has refused to merge with the UAW. The merger was ordered at the Portland, Ore., CIO Convention last fall. Crisler Announces'U'Plans For Vast Athletic Ex-pansion - I PHILADELPHIA )- (1P)- City Council demanded quick settle- ment of Philadelphia's transit strike today while Uncle Sam tried his hand at peacemaking. Federal mediators got Philadel- phia Transportation Company and CIO Transport Workers Union to- gether in a second negotiating ses- sion but there was no indication of any progress. Union spokesmen said no settlement is in. sight. LIGHT SATURDAY traffic eased transportation problems somewhat on the second day of the strike by 11,000 subway, trol- .ley and bus workers. But the wage dispute is costing business and industry an estimated $10,000,000 daily. Stores and night spots are being hit. City Council told PTC and the union to arbitrate their dif- ferences-they're 17 cents apart now-or it will ask Mayor Ber- nard Samuel to declare a state o' emergency "with all thuat that means." City Solicitor Frank W. Trus- 'Ensian Business Tryouts To Meet 'Ensian business tryouts will mieet at 5 p.m. Tuesday in the student Publications Bldg. to learn training opportunities in ad- vertising, selling and sales promo- tions. Tryouts will learn about the 'Ensian during a semester-long orientation program conducted by Dave Shuart, and will participate in the general sales campaign the next four weeks. cott said a declaration of a state of emergency will involve extra powers to maintain law and or- der "but does not extend to the operation of trolley cars." "IT DOES," he added, "author- ize the use of police powers to facilitate peaceful operation of the cars." Mayor- Samuel said he is not disposed to calling a state of emergency. Sell Marriagre Series Tickets Ticket sales for the "Marriage and Family Relations Lecture Ser- ics" will open tomorrw for sen- iors, graduates and married stu- dents. Tickets, at $1.50 for the series which begins Feb. 22, will be on sale to single men from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday at the ticket booth near the main desk in the Union. * * SINGLE WOMEN may pur- chase tickets from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the main desk in the League lobby. Married students may obtain their tickets at the same hours in the lobby of Lane Hall. Sales will be opened to all stu- dents Wednesday. I. D. cards must be presented at the time of pur- chase. Price of tickets includes tax and the cost of the entire five-lecture series. By BUD WEIDENTHAL Associate Sports Editor Amidst a bevy of accusations hurled-his way by several publica- tions, Michigan's athletic director H. O. (Fritz) Crisler yesterday an- nounced a series of proposals which would greatly expand the athletic facilities of the Univer- sity. - Among the plans being consid- ered by the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics are im- proved facilities for both intra- mural and intercollegiate sports. CRISLER HAS engaged in an exhaustive review of Michigan's athletic facilities, with an eye to- wards providing adequate facili- tis for a student body that has almost doubled in the past decade. le pointed out that the re- sults of the "exploratory" sur- vey have already been presented to the University Regents. Among needs outlined by the Wolverine director is a basketball court seating approximately 15,- 000 spectators, and enlarged hockey and ice skating facilities. UNDER consideration is a com- bined basketball and hockey arena, plus the possibility of an additional balcony in the field house and maintaining the pres- ent hockey rink by expanding the north side of the building to in- crease the spectator space. Replacement of the present Ferry Field baseball stands and, a new recreational clubhouse for the golf course were also listed among the improvements under consideration. For women a new swimming pool and gymnasium are urgent necessities. A proposal for expansion of the football stadium is also a definite possibility, Crisler added. * * * CONCERNING costs he pointed out that heretofore Wolverine physical education and athletic programs have been financed without cost to the Michigan tax- payers. In the past fifty years only two projects have been fi- nanced by other than funds from athletic receipts. " Outlining the tentative program Crisler said: "First you consider the desirable and entire program -obviously impossible immed- iately-then you consider what part of it is now in the realm of possibility, and the ability and means of financing it." Economist To DiscussEp Harvard Professor Will Give Two Talks "European Recovery-the Out- look for the Marshall Plan" is the topic of the guest lecture by Dr. John H. Williams, professor of Political Economy at Harvard University at 4:15 p.m .Tuesday at Rackham Amphitheatre. Williams will precede his public lecture with a talk at 7:45 p.m. Monday, at Rackham, on "Re- flections on Keynesian Econo- mics" before the Economics Club, * * * THE FIFTH SPEAKER in a se- ries of 12 lectures by eminent economists, Williams is here under the sponsorship of the economics department. As an authority on interna- tional economic relations, Wil- liams assisted in recent nego- tiations on the Marshall Plan in Paris. He is economic ad- visor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and was vice- president of that bank from 1936 to 1947. Williams was a U.S. delegate to the World Monetary and 3Econo- mic Conference in 1932-3, He is author of "Postwar Monetary Plans" as well as manay articles and pamphlets. M' Cia rette Cases To Be Given Free A well-known cigarette manu- facturer will distribute free to students plastic cigarette cases en- closing free samples of their pro- duct. The packs will be distributed Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the Union and the League. Each case will bear the inscrip- tion "University of Michigan" in yellow and blue. Students will be required to pre- sent their ID cards to get the samples. U.S. Minister Leaves After Red Request Pope Condemns Cardinal's Foes By The Associated Press Hungary asked yesterday that the United States recall U.S. Min- ister Selden Chapin, the U.S. State Department said he will be order- ed home "for consultation," and Pope Pius XII called on Catholics to pray for the removal of world evils. A Hungarian under-secretary of state said the recall was asked in connection with the activities of Josef Cardinal Mindszenty, un- der life sentence on charges of treason, espionage and illegal money dealings. AUTHORITATIVE sources in Budapest said, however, a diplo- matic break between Hungary and the U.S. is not intended. In the midst of these exchans Hungarian Foreign Minister Lasz- lo Rajk accused President Tru- man, Secretary of State Acheson and British Foreign Secretary Be- vin of taking part in a "war of slander against Hungary." Friday the State Department ordered the expulsion of the first secretary of the Hungar- ian legation in retaliation for earlier ejections from Hungary of two secretaries at the U.S. legation. Pope Pius XII called on Roman Catholics for united prayers- April 3 to remove world evils which he said are especially bad in "those countries where a conspiracy has been formed against the Lord and against his Christ." THE VATICAN soon afterward announced excommunication of "all those who dared raise their hands" against Mindszenty and threatened the same for those who would become involved in fu- ture such crimes. The Hungarian Foreign Minis- try also suggested that the 'U.S. legation consider removing an American officer attached to the American Military Attache's staff. Local Clergy Decry USSR Church Policy Ann Arbor churchmen pointed to evidence indicating additional Communist attacks on religion, last night, and one expressed hope that the U. S. would do something about it, Rev. S. M. Sophocles, Greek Orthodox pastor in Ann Arbor, urged a strong government stand, "implying condemnation." * * * HE TOLD of a letter received from his uncle, the Bishop of Cy- prus, in which the burning of schools and monastaries by the Communist Party were related. "An Encyclical from Arch- bishop Demoskinos of Greece, reported 300 priests killed and a number of churches burned by the Guerrila forces in Greece," Rev. Sophocles said. Rev. Henry D. Yoder, Lutheran Pastor, pointed to the trial of Lutheran Bishop Lajos Ordass, "The first Hungarian churchman to be falsely accused on black market charges and of disloyalty to the state." * * * "THE CHIEF REASON for such persecutions has been the loyalty manifested for the church instead of the state. In the case of the rbishop, the direct; reason for his imprisonment was his resistance in submitting to the closing of SLutheran schools." Father Bradley, of St. Mary Student Chapel, said that, "for some time many people felt Communism ws mprVTan si- Carmena Freeman, '39, editorI of Dell Publications, will open theI University Journalism Lecture se- ries at 3 p.m. tomorrow, Rm. B Haven Hall. "Adventures in Writing for American Magazines" is the topic of the speech which will be given, to journalism concentrates and all interested persons. BEFORE ENTERING the mag- azine writing field, Miss Freeman specialized in women's news and photographic work on the Ypsi- lanti Daily Press and the Pontiac Press. In 1942 she entered the mag- azine field as associate editor of Fawcett Publications. Miss Freeman is now writing a novel as well as editing Dell Publica- tions. A coffee hour and question pe- riod will follow the lecture. Leland Stowe, prominent foreign correspondent will deliver the sec- ond journalism lecture at 3 p.m. Wednesday, Rm. B, Haven Hall on "Foreign News and Our Interna- tional Relations." C OOPERPA TsION ON )EFILA TION:l __ NSA Prchase Cards May Cut Local Prices A price nose-dive is coming to campus shortly if present plans of the Student Legislature's NSA .. n .,r- .a ,,.r' , 7 fih n.I n,,,1* Houston. (The price reductions established by NSA elsewhere run from 10 to 25 percent.) SALE OF THE Purchase Cards to students will begin "in the near future," Miss Houston said. "The price will be $1; 70 cents ants may be added if she said. possible,I Park Junior College and Mercy College are also opening PSC cam- paigns, Weisberg said. THE SYSTEM, which NSAers'I