TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1951 °d FOR SALE INTRAMURAL SPORTS: Basketball Competition Approaches Play-off 11 I-M Scores A a i BASKETBALL MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure 5 average words to a line, Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M, Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. ROOMS FOR RENT DOUBLE FRONT ROOM to share with graduate student. Also triple, or will rent double to married couple. Pri- vate baths. 1316 Hill, Ph. 3-0601. )30R SINGLE ROOM with private lavatory and toilet for faculty or male grad- uate student. Washtenaw area. Call 2-3868. )29R MEN STUDENTS Excellent single or double room adja- cent to campus. Call in evening after six. Ph. 6466. )25R MARRIED couple accommodated, dou- ble furnished room close to campus, union. Shower, continuous hot water. Reasonable. 509 S. Division near Jef- ferson. )27R CAMPUS Tourist Home. Rooms by day or week. Bath, shower, television. 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )1R BUSINESS OR GRADUATE GIRL-Large pleasant single room near campus in private home, downstairs parlor for entertaining, laundry privileges. 829 Tappan, Ph. 8321. ) 23R ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMS FOR GIRLS-We have two va- cancies in the Women's League House at 312 S. Thayer. )21R 2 VACANCIES FOR MEN. Share double suite, also %/2 double study. Separate sleeping quarters. Near campus. Rea- sonable rent. 518 S. Division. )20R ROOMS FOR MALE STUDENTS-One double and one single near Law Club and Bus. Ad. School. Continuous hot water, showers. 808 Oakland. Ph. 22858. )12R 2 LARGE SINGLES and 1 double; show- er, gas heat. 1125 Michigan. 3-1791 3-& p.m. )18R DOUBLE-ROOM; part of double suite, working man or student near Cam- pus Union. Shower; rent reasonable. 509 S. Division near Jefferson. )11R E. LIBERTY furnished singles, doubles, kitchen privileges, linens. Phone 5224. ) 14R BUSINESS SERVICES ATTENTION MARRIED STUDENTS Guarantee your child's college educa- tion! Call Lincoln Life, 2-3249. )12B TYPEWRITERS and FOUNTAIN PENS. Sales, rentals and service. Morrill's, 314 S. State St. )4B VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist, 513 E. Williams (new location as of Wed., Feb. 21). Legal, Master, Doctor's dis- sertations, foreign manuscripts, etc., 2-9848. )2B GOOD RENTAL TYPEWRITERS now available at Office Equipment Serv- ice Company, 215 E. Liberty. Guar- anteed repair service on all makes of typewriters. )6B BUSINESS SERVICES KIDDIE KARE RELIABLE SITTERS available. Phone 3-1121. )10B AL CHASE and his ORCHESTRA - For the Best in Dance Music - Phone Ypsi 4427 )21R WASHING-Finished work and hand ironing preferred. Also rough dry and wet washing. Free pick-up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. ) lB FOR SALE SINGLE BREASTED TUX - Size 37. Phone 3-8139 after 5. )12 50 BLACK ACADEMIC ROBES in good condition for choir or commence- ment for immediate possession. Sale price $3.00. Phone 5555, Methodist Church office. )15 DIAMOND Engagement and Wedding Rings. Registered and guaranteed. Wholesale prices. Call Lee Anger, 2-3481. ) FOR SALE-1946 Ford convertible, can't be topped for Spring. Ph. 2-9396. )13 TWO TUXEDOES-Excellent condition. Size 37 & 38, $20 each. Phone 2-9472 or 6849. )15 U.S. Army, Navy type oxfords, leather soles, rubber heels, well made. Sizes 6 to 12, B to F widths. Special $6.88. Open until 6 p.m. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington Street. )5 TUXEDO, size 38, pants 30 inch waist, 32 inch in-seam $10.00; summer for- mal cream coat, black pants, all silk, same size, never worn $20.00. Call 6204. )10 J. H. COUSINS On State Street CLOSE OUT SALE DANCE FORMALS Ask Us To Show You A group of Formals We Are Closing Out for 5.00 Each Some of These Gowns Will Need Dry Cleaning ) TWO ART METAL, 2 drawer 3 by 5 card files, $5.00 each. Call 6204. )11 CANARIES-Beautiful orange warblers. Parakeets, love birds and finches. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 SI 7th. )2B FOR SALE-Superbly lined Oldsmobile business coupe, 1940. Pre-war quality. Help fight inflation. Pay less for more. Call David Bull, 3-4145. )8 PERSONAL MEN TO EAT at Fraternity House. Breakfast, lunch and dinner or any combination. Two blocks from East Quad, 1319 Cambridge, Ph. 2-8312. ) 13P DON'T BATCH-DANCE WITH HATCH - And catch a Match - RAY~ HATCH DANCE STUDIO 209 S. State Ph. 5083 )4P NOTICE!! CLUB 211 Meal tickets don't expire until com- pletely punched. )3P PROFESSORS! Lithoprint your class textbook, laboratory manual, or book- lets. Call us for free estimate. Braum- Brumfield Inc. Ph. 3-8243. )1P LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 122 E. Liberty . Phone 8161 )2P LOST AND FOUND LOST-Orange Parker pen about Jan. 18. Reward. Ph. 2-3839. Call mornings. )11L WANTED TO BUY Competition continued this week in Fraternity, Residence Hall and Independent leagues as division championships were decided to determine positions in the coming playoffs., Fraternity . . With first place play-off posi- tions decided, the eleven surviving fraternity cage fives will enter competition next wepx to deter- mine who will be the I-M basket- ball champ in 1951. Phi Delta Theta, wno has nla. - e i n the finals the last three years an.i is this year's dsnr'1ing cham- pion, nltets Sigma Chi in its first plo -off game. Both the Phi Delts and S.-ma Chi are ireseated with fij,3 r(- und byes. THE PHI DELTS had a compar- atively easy evening of it when they handed previously undefeat- ed Kappa Sigma a 52-30 set-back. Farl Yeim, who lacked but four points of matching the com- bined scoring efforts of the Kap- pa Sig five, is the main reason his house has an opportunity to defend its crown. Another reason for Phi Delt's success is guard Tom Kelsey of football fame. Kelsey contributed 10 points and did moe than his share in controlling the back- boards. Phi Delta Theta's first op- ponent, Sigma Chi, had a rather difficult task in taking top hon- ors in its league. Led by guard Fred Thompson and center Bill Ammerman the victors had to tie up the game in the closing seconds and send it into a 28-28 overtime period. In the sudden-death extra period it was Thompson who hit the field- goal and gave his team a 30-28 victory. * * . * Residence Halls.. . Free from fix investigations, for the time being at least, I-M Resi- dence Hall basketball squads cap- italized on their good fortune to run through a routine eight-gameI schedule Monday night. In the "B" division two tilts were comparatively close, while the other two were walkaways for Ty- ler and Fletcher. BRUCE THORTON tallied 10 points in Adams' 25-23 defeat of Williams. Herbie Eibler paced the losers with 10 also. Fletcher ran roughshod over Allen-Rumsey, 68-22. Stan Tu- binis racked up 23 and Art Schu- ltz scored 20 to pace the Flet- cher powerhouse. Tyler doubled the score on Coo- ley, 30-15, as Slim Blackwell ac- counted for 12 of the Tyler total. The winners held a seven point, 10- 3 margin at the half. Eight "A" outfits also saw action Monday night. HIGH SCORING Jerry Rienstra dumped in 16 points to show the way for Winchell's 42-41 triumph over Allen-Rumsey. Ken Shields was high for the losers with 16. Vince Schoeck was the hero of Anderson's 30-28 conquest of Adams. Schoeck scored the win- ning basket in addition-to lead- ing Anderson's attack with 11 counters. Referee Bob Agre called an as- sortment of 31 perrsonal and tech- nical fouls, 24 against Strauss, as Cooley outscored Strauss, 32- 28. Al Wolin and Kelly Tarachas were high for Strauss with 14 and 10, respectively, while Ken Carl- son's 12 were tops for the winners. * * . * Independent.. . Two division leaders and a lead- ing contender pounded out con, vincing wins this week to remain in the mad scramble forrInde- pendent League basketball playoff berths. An undefeated Ghouls quintet continued in its winning way by running an impotent Club 518 squad into the boards to the tune of 48 to 17. DEL HYDE SET the tempo in the bucket parade cashing in 14 markers to pace the division V leaders to victory. In an important league VI en- counter the pacesetting Jimoes five downed Contingencies by a 39 to 23 margin. Northernites 40, Club 518 15 Reed's Raiders 34, Wesleyan Guild 15 Jimoes 75, Hawaiians "B" 16 Cooley 32, Strauss 28 Winchell 42, Allen-Rumsey 41 Chicago 26, Vaughn 21 Anderson 30, Adams 28 Michigan 26, Hayden 23 Winchell 64, Lloyd 30 Prescott 22, Vaughn 20 Michigan 35, Chicago 20 Hayden 34, Wenley 21 Tyler 30, Cooley 15 Fletcher 68, Allen-Rumsey 22 Adams 25, Williams 23 Greene 24, Strauss 21 Sigma Phi Epsilon 2, Tau Kappa Ep- silon 0 Zeta Beta Tau 32, Sigma Pi 17 Lambda Chi Alpha 34, Pi Lambda Phi 24 Phi. Delta Theta 52, Kappa Sigma 30 Delta Sigma Delta 51, Phi Rho Sigma 13 Phi Alpha Kappa 44, Tau Epsilon Rho 21 Alpha Kappa Kappa 34, Phi Delta Chi 24 Phi Chi 23, Psi Omega 14 Mealmarters 40, Newman Club 'B' 15 Phi Delta Phi 45, Air Force 34 Mugwumps 35, Hawaiians 17 Ghouls 40, Eskymos 16 Presbyterians 35, Roger Williams. 33 Foresters 34,ANakamura 24 PADDLEBALL. Alpha Epsilon Pi 3, Chi Phi 0 Psi Upsilon 3, Trigon 0 Zeta Psi 3, Phi Sigma Delta 0 Delta Upsilon 3, Alpha Phi Alpha 0 Sigma Alpha Mu 2, Chi Psi 0 Theta Chi 3, Phi Kappa Tau 0 ;Acacia 2, Phi Sigma Kappa 1 Theta Xi 3, Triangle 0 Alpha Sigma Phi 2, Sigma Alpha Ep- silon 1 Sigma Phi Epsilon 3, Alpha Delta Phi 0 Alpha Tau Omega 3, Zeta Beta Tau 0 Sigma Phi 3, Kappa Nu 0 HANDBALL Sigma Phi Epsilon 2, Phi Delta Theta 1 Tan Delta Phi 3, Tau Kappa Epsilon 0 Kappa Sigma 3, Omega Psi Phi 0 PAIR SKIS - 62 Phone 3-8139 after ft., 5. with binders. )10X U. OF M. STUDENT PLAYERS present TOM DANELLIS HOPW OOD AWARD WINNER Han i'on tWon't Go LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE FEB. 22, 23, 24 8:00 P.M. s Tickets 1.00 - 75c at Box Office ONE NIGHT ONLY Wed, March 7 -11, 1 . THEATRRF BOX OFFICE NEXT MON. 10 A.M. Orch. $3.60 - $3.00 - $2.40 Bal. $2.40 - $1.80 - $1.20 .,swan Lake" "Blue Bird" "Paquita" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an. official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11 a.- m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 95 Notices LS & A STUDENTS: I I I ulations concerning student affairs, conduct, and discipline available in the Office of Student Affairs. Elizabeth Sargent Lee Medical His- tory Prize: Established in 1939 by bequest of Professor Alfred O. Lee, a member of the faculty of the University from 1908 until his death in 1938. The income from the bequest is to be awarded an- nually to a junior and senior pre- medical student in the College of Lit- erature, Science, and the Arts for writ- ing the best essay on some topic con- cerning t h e history of medicine. Freshmen in the Medical School who are on the Combined Curriculum In Letters and Medicine are eligible to compete in the contest. The following committee has been appointed to judge the contest: Asso. Prof. John Arthos, chairman, Asso. Prof. Raymond L. Garner, and Asso. Prof. Frederick H. Test. The Committee has announced that essays may deal with any subject in the history of medicine, the history of medicine in industry, the history of military medical units, etc. Prospective contestants may consult committee members, by appointment, for advice on preparing papers for the competition. (1) A first prize of $75 and a second prize of $40 are being offered; (2) manuscripts should be 3,000 to 5,000 words in length; (3) the manuscripts should be typed, double spaced, on one side of the paper only; (4) contestants must submit two copies of their man- uscripts; and (5) all manuscripts should be handed in at Room 1010, An- gell Hallby May 15, 1951. Social chairmen and program chair- men of student organizations are re- quested to calendar activities so as to avoid falling within the ten days prior to a final examination period. (Com- mittee on Student Affairs, May 1950.) The final examination period for the' current semester begins June 2. List of approved social events for the coming weekend: February 23- No courses may be added original elections after today. Hinsdale House Lambda Chi Alpha Phi Delta Phi Phi Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa Tan Phi Sigma Delta Psi Omega Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Alpha Mu Sigma Chi Sigma Nu Sigma Phi Epsilon Theta Chi Theta Delta Chi Theta Xi Triangle Fraternity February 25- Delta Delta Delta Phi Delta Phi ,:' .4 to yourl Student Organizations planning to be active during the second semester must register in the Office of Student Af- fairs not later than March 3. Forms for registration are available not later for registration are available in the Of- fice of Student Affairs, Room 1020, Ad- ministration Bldg. With official recognition a student organization assumes the responsibil- ity of (1) submitting a list of officers and members, at the beginning of each semester within which recognition is desired, promptly reporting additions to membership during the term; (2) securing the acceptance of a member of the faculty who is willing to serve as adviser, (3) maintaining organiza- tion finances in a manner satisfactory to the Auditor of Student Organiza- tions, (4) presenting to the Committee on Student Affairs for consideration any changes in organizational struc- ture, objectives, activities, bases of membership, or affiliations with other organizations, either local or national. Upon the request of a student or- ganization, its membership rooster will be treated as confidential by the Of- fice of Student Affairs (membership in the organization will not be posted as an activity on the student record cards) and will be open only to Uni- versity authorities and duly consti- tuted governmental security agencies. For procedures and regulations re- lating to student sponsored activities, officers are referred to University Reg- IA Art Print Loan Collection. All stu- dents who have not called for their prints, please do so today. Room 510, Administration ,Bldg. 8-12, 1-5. There, are still some prints available. for those who missed signing for one last week i. or for anyone desiring a second choice. Late permission f o r women students who attended the Cincinnati Symphony Orshectra concert on Feb. 20 ill be no later than 11:05 p.m. Women Students: Because of the Caduceus Ball, all women students have a 1:30 a.m. late permission on Fri., Feb. 23. Rules Governing Participation in Non-Athletic Extracurricular Activities: Any regularly enrolled student above the rank of first term freshman is eligible' to participate in non-athletic k extracurricular activities provided he is not on academic discipline. Responsibility. Responsibility for ob- servance of the eligibility statement is placed directly upon the student. In case of doubt of status, students should inquire at the Office of Student Affairs. -Participation in an extracurricular ac- tivity in violation of the requirements may subject a student to disciplinary action. Restrictions. In interpretation of the above eligibility statement, the follow- ing are specifically forbidden to par- ticipate in extra-curricular activities: (a) First term freshmen. (Exception: first term freshmen are authorized to participate in the Marching Band.) (b) Students on academic discipline, i.e., notification, warning, 1robation, action pending. (c) Part time and special students carrying less than 12 hours. Activities. The eligibility require- ments must be met by students par- ticipating in such activities as are list- ed below. The list is not exhaustive but k is intended to indicate the kinds of extracurricular activities for participa- tion in which eligibility is necessary. (a) Participation in public perform- ances which are sponsored by student organizations and which require group rehearsals. Examples: Union Opera, Jun- ior Girls' Play, productions of Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Student Players, Inter Arts Union; performances of Arts A. Chorale, Michigan Singers, Glee Clubs, (Continued on Page 3) -i Alpha Omicron Pi Phi Rho Sigma Robert Owen Co-op February 24- Acacia Alpha Chi Sigma Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Epsilon P1 Anderson House Beta Theta Pi Chi Phi Delta Chi Delta Kappa .Epsilon Delta Tau Delta I p WN Starts NOW! TODAY 44c until 5 P.M. 9 ,'S I I IN i: I I I # RI no I U m o I.,0 d , I ll-