PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1953 ________________________________________________________________________________ U womm Athletes Win Honors -Daily-Don Campbell YOST AWARD DINNER-Don Hurst and Ray Maugh chat with Mrs. Fielding S. Yost at last night's dinner honoring 14 recipients of the annual Yost Honor Awards. Yost Honor Awards Go To Fourteen Lettermen Fourteen lettermen received the coveted Yost Honor Awards for athletes excelling in scholarship at a dinner last night in the Union. On hand to present the awards' was Mrs. Fielding S. Yost, widow of the famed Michigan coach. WINNERS of the award include:, John Chase, '54, swimming; George Dutter, '54BAd., foot- ball; Don. Hurst, '53Ed., gym- nastics; Wally Jeffries, '53, swimming; Miles Lee, '54, wrest- Senior Lists, Name Cards On SaleToday Seniors who want to immortal- ize their years at the University} will have an opportunity to buy booklets, containing lists of their; classmates, from 10 a.m. until 4:30 p.m. from today through April 17. at the Acministration Bldg. At the same time, they will be able to order commencement an- nouncements and personal cards. Prices for the booklets range according to the type of cover. The booklet for non-profession- al schools may be purchased for 60, 40 or 30 cents. Law, dentistry and medical, school booklets vary from 70 cents to 50 or 35 cents. The graduate school booklet is available at 85, 65 or 50 cents. Commencement announcements, costing 10 cents each, and per- sonal cards, at $2.50 for the first 100 and $1.50 for each additional 100, are also being sold at the booth. Anthropologist Gives Lecture Mechanisms of group or ethnic assimilation were enumerated yes- terday to the anthropology club by Prof. Wilhelm E. Miihlmann of the sociology department of the University of Mainz, Germany. According to Prof. Miihlmann primitive groups do not accept new members without a formal ceremony. This ceremony may in- clude anything from formal adop- tion of the individual or group, to forceful incorporation into the tribe. As an example, he cited the Iro- quois Indians who took prisoners of other tribes and incorporated them into their own group. Much ethnical assimilation is carried on through intermarriage which is a forced practice among many groups, Prof. Miihlmann said. ling; Ronald Martinson, '53E, hockey, and Roger Maugh, '54E, track. Others honored were Milt Mead, '54, track and basketball; Wayne Melchiori, '53Ed., football; Bern- hardt Pederson, '53E, football; Joe Scandura, '53Ec., wrestling; Thad Stanford, '54, footb'all; Dave Tinkham, '53BAd., football, and Robert Timm, '53E, football. Hurst, Jeffries, Pederson and Scandura received similar awards last year. Dean of Students Erich A. Walter noted yesterday that of the 54 candidates who applied for Yost Awards, only nine have scholastic averages of less than 2.5, and 11 have averages of 3.0 or better. Lowest scholastic average among the winners is 2.8, and the high- est is 3.4. "These figures are particularly important in light of comment which is often heard that extra- curricular activities which are time-consuming and of a mean- ingful character must obviously be accompanied by mediocre schol- arship records," Dean Walter com- mented. Lights Out Classes meeting in the Busi- ness Administration Bldg., An. gell Hall and other nearby buildings at 9:15 a.m. yesterday were rudely interrupted when room lights went off "on sched- ule." Electricity was turned off to facilitate a repair in the Uni- versity power plant, Plant De- partment head Walter Roth said yesterday. "The break in power was quite anticipated and lasted less than 10 min- utes," Roth said. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Action Begun On Obscene Publications Washtenaw county newsstands will soon be hit by a countywide campaign against obscene litera- ture, Prosecutor Edmond F. De- Vine revealed yesterday. DeVine said the campaign is the beginning of an action to keep obsceneumagazines and pocket no- vels out of the hands of minors in the county. * * * A LIST, containing the names of publicationos banned by the Detroit police censorship bureau .and others found obscene by Washtenaw county law enforce- ment agents, will be in the hands of distributors and retail dealers in a few days. The prosecutor said removal of the literature will be left to the sellers who have promised cooperation. However, if they fail to comply, court action will be started, DeVine added. If an action is started against a dealer, he said, it will be left to a jury to determine whether the literature is obscene. The action to remove the pub- lications from the newsstands followed a recent county-wide sur- vey to determine the extent of sales of the obscene literature, De-' Vine commented. "We are going to do what we can to keep it out of the county," he said. 'UT' Called Too Commercial Members of state trade associa- tions accused the University of being "too. commercial" in a State House Ways and Means Commit- tee meeting yesterday in Lansing. The Union was specifically mentioned by Anthony N. Pre- ketes, Ann Arbor restauranteur and head of the local Restaurant Association. Preketes said "many owners of local restaurants have complained about the University's competition." In answer to Preketes' charges, director of University relations, Arthur L. Brandon, said, "The Michigan Union is for its mem- bers-alumni and students. Little of its service is available to an outsider, and only when the out- sider is sponsored by a member." ' f prove the Gabardine style leadership of Local Gro n steps To 71 MVake Hawaii A 19th State * * * * * * With a Senate vote on Hawaiian statehood expected this month, the University Hawaiian Club has intensified its efforts to sell state- hood for the island territory to students and local residents. Paul Ng, '53, chairman of the club's statehood committee, reported group members have spoken to three sororities, the Young Republican Club, the University High School's class in modern social problems and Wayne Memorial High School students since the semester's start. * * * * HAWAII WAS ANNEXED to the United States in 1898 by a joint resolution of Congress and incorporated as a territory under the Organic Act of 1900. Since then, numerous Congressional committees have studied repeated statehood requests by the Islanders. Favorable committee and presidential recommendations have sent the bill to Congress three times in the past but twice the House has passed it only to have the bill die in the Senate. Actually, however, suggestions that Hawaii be made a state go as far back as 1849. In May of that year, a Lowville, New York newspaper, the "North- ern Journal," published a two-column editorial advocating annexa- tion and statehood for the Hawaian Islands. And a few years later at a post-election Democratic Party cele- bration a toast was offered to "The Sandwich Islands-may they soon be added to the galaxy of ' states." Statehood supporters feel Ha- A waii has satisfied all the- require- mentsfor becoming a state and DA I LY that it is unfair for Hawaiians to be prevented from exercising the PHOTO voting privileges of other Ameri- can citizens. FEATURE Recent objections to making Hawaii a state, as outlined in a 1950 Senate committee report, were Story by based on its great distance from MI KE WOLFF the mainland, the racial composi- tion of Hawaii's population and charges of large Communist politi- Pictures Courtesy o cal and economic power in the Hawaii Visitors Bureau Territory.,I SENATE TO VOTE SOON: i Up Dive 9 STUDENTS TAKE A BREAK FROM CLASSES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII t i THE HONOLULU CITY HALL TYPICAL ISLAND SCHOOL OFFERS GOOD RECREATIONAL FACILITIES i I i ' it i jw at .la Caja I for the best $PAGHETT I and RAVIOLI in town. Ia C~ 122 W. Washington BEER 0 WINE SANDWICHES _D"- l VULCANS TRAINS Ticket Holders-You MUST pick up your Tickets Today or Tomorrow Administration Bldg. 1-4:30 P.M. r1 Ya r .,s . . . ( ' ..; .