d SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1951 ORDAN'S TESTIMONY: Harvard Grid Coach Defends College Sports WASHINGTON-(P)-College sports-and the men who play hem-were staunchly defended yesterday by Lloyd P. Jordan, football Dach at Harvard. Jordan, who is president of the National Football Coaches Asso- ation, was here to testify before the college presidents named by the merican Council on Education to find out what is wrong with sports. THE MEETING was closed, but Jordan met with reporters later. SL Socializes Bias Survey Helps Change Greek Ideas (Continued from Page 1) After dividing the houses into three groups, "admit," "don't ad- mit," and "no single opinion," it was found that more changes took place in the houses that had no single opinion than in those with a definite opinion to begin with. * * * THE TURNOUT for the meet- ings, which were held during the spring of 1951, varied greatly as did the amount of discussion in each house, but members general- ly showed a keen interest in the Information. Questionnaires were passed out about a week before and about two weeks after the feed- backs. Fortunately, from the scientific standpoint, about one- fifth of the men missed these pmeetings. Therefore the staff was able to compare the men who were present with those who were absent and get an idea whether attending the meeting had helped to change the man's :opinion. Members expressed surprise at finding out that there is as much sentiment in their house towards changing membership policy as was indicated. This suggested that before the feedbacks they hadn't discussed the problem much among themselves. (NEXT-The Attitudes of the Jew- sh Fraternity members.) Cooke To Tall At Convocation Alistair Cooke, chief American' correspondent of the Manchester Guardian, will be the main speak- er at the University's Twenty- ninth Annual Honors Convocation to be held April 25, it was announ- ced yesterday. British-born, Cooke acts as com- mentator for the British Broad- casting Company and also broad- casts the weekly program, "Letter to America." Dean of Students Erich A. Wal- ter, chairman of the convocation committee, revealed the appoint- ment. Military Course Excuse Granted Robert O. Winder, an Ann Ar- bor High School senior who last month refused to take the school's required military orientation pro- gram was virtually excused from taking the course last night. Provided Winder's parents re- quest formally that their son be excused from the disputed course, Winder will be allowed to make up the required hour in another sub- ject, the Board of Education decid- ed. When askel if college sports needed "cleaning up," Jordan said: "Not necessarily. There are some corrections needed, of course. I don't think it's as bad as it's made out to be." AS FOR the boys who play the sports, Jordan said: "There are a lot of good ath- letes who are fine boys. I don't mean fine athletes; I mean fine boys. It's a shame to have the criticisms heaped on these fine boys because of a few." Jordan's views of what should be done.on college sports: Bowl games-a matter for indi- vidual schools to decide, the coaches think. (Speaking for him- self, though, he's against them.) Spring practice-controlled but not abolished altogether. Recruiting-coaches feel there's no reason why they can't sell their institution to a youngster in the same 'Way that any other teacher can. "I think each institution must work out its own salvation," Jordan said. Athletes-they should be treat- ed like any other students; they should take the same courses, and keep up with their classes. s* * * Badgers Hit Head Coach's SalaryHike The Wisconsin Board of Regents came under fire Tuesday from the University of Wisconsin Daily Car- d~nal for giving head footbal coach Ivy Williamson a salary hike which will put him in a bracket second only to Wisconsin's Presi- dent E. B. Fred. Scoring the hike as a "gross dis- tortion of values," the student paper noted that Williamson's new $14,000 salary, effective Jan. 1, "may well be the only sum which will keep a highly competent coach, as Williamson certainly is, at the university." "If the choice must be made between either evaluating the football . coach at a level second only to the university president or taking the chance of losing a high- calibre coaching staff and with it Wisconsin's hopes for athletic ac- claim, we had hoped the university would have chosen the latter," the editorial said. Assessing Course The Institute of Public Admin- istration and the Extension Serv- ice will continue their sixth annual Short Course for Assessing Offi- cers at 9:30 a.m. today in the Un- ion. The sessions, attended yesterday by 125 state and municipal assess- ors, will end tomorrow. 'U' TV Hour Rated High By Detroiters Education via television is more popular than entertainment in Detroit, according to the latest Pulse Survey. The University Television Hour on WWJ-TV is rated ahead of al other programs telecast in Detroit between 1 to 2 p.m. on Sundays, their latest research shows. Pulse Survey is a nation-wide radio and television research organization. Competing with programs on sports and an adventure series, the Telecourse has an average rating of 8.7. The second most popular program is three points behind. Telecourse viewing audi- ence is estimated at between 80,000 and 100,000. These statistics refute the opin- ion originally expressed by Prof. Wilbert J. McKeachie of the psy- chology department, who teaches the telecourse on human behavior. When the educational series was instigated, he predicted, "There will be a conflict between educa- tion and art, and I believe enter- tainment will win out." By Order of the Federal Authorities A --M ST BE ISCONTIN UE D -Daily-Bruce Knoll SL PUNCH-Phyllis Kaufman, SL secretary, pours a cup of punch for Dean of Students Erich A. Walter who has just com- pleted a tour of the newly decorated SL Building with president Len Wilcox. More than 60 faculty members and student leaders attended the Legislature's first open house yesterday at their quarters at 122 S. Forrest. DEMANDS ATOM BAN: Vishinshy Avows Russians WillJoin in Disarmament i Id I PARIS-(IP)-Andrei Y. Vishin- sky gave implicit assurances yes- terday that Russia will take part in the work of a new 12-nation disarmament commission expected SL Advisory ServiceOpen Student experts under SL's stu- dent advisory program will be on hand from 3 to 5 p.m. today in Rm. 1209 Angell Hall to help any student wanting information on courses for next semester. Representatives from every de- partment in the literary college, the School of Business Adminis- tration and education school wlil be on hand to give information. Experts in pre-professional cours- es will also be present. This is the last time the student experts will hold advisory sessjons until after Christmas vacation. to 'be created by the UN General Assembly. At the same time the Soviet for- eign minister demanded that the UN ban atomic weapons forthwith and charged the United States was rejecting Russian disarmament proposals in order to gain time for stockpiling bombs. "Who has atomic weapons?" Vishinsky asked in a 75-minute speech to the Assembly's political committee. "The United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. You (the United States and the West) do not want to ac- cept our proposals because you want to gain time to stockpile, stockpile and stockpile atomic bombs. "We can also stockpile atom bombs, but we do not want to do this as we have no aggressive in- tentions against anyone, not against the United States or any other country." CHICAGO COLLEGE of OPTOMETRY (Nationally Accredited) An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students enter- ing with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. 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