FEPC BILL- ONE FOR THE BOOKS See Page 4 icj:4r Latest Deadl 4, nla- * g14 * 1_ i~_t sr.yk.rr f z VOL. LXIV, No. 106 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, Ohio State Swimmers R Mann-Men Next 4' In Tank Contest Buckeyes Score 125.103 Triumph; Four Records Set at Varsity Pool By DON LINDMAN Ohio State won its sixth straight Western Conference swimming title last 'night, outscoring second-place Michigan, 125-103. Only four points short of the Big Ten team record, the Buckeyes were pushed to the limit by a Wolverine squad which was trying desperately to take the meet as a gift for retiring coach Matt Mann. FOUR RECORD-BREAKING performances highlighted the final night of action in Michigan's Varsity Pool. One American record, two NCAA marks, four conference standards, and three pool marks fell before the greatest collection of swimmers in Big Ten history. Ohio State's distance freestyle star, Ford Konno, added the 440-yard freestyle to the two victories he had won during the two previous evenings to become the meet's only triple winner. ine in the State CLOUDY, WARMER SUNDAY, MARCH 7, 1954 SIX PAGES eatas igTen Champs * * * * * * Stevens on't Qi __In-McCarthy Fight DTO AID RELATIONS: A Clims Meet Moved 'U' MSC Meet To Talk Stevens Did To Thursday Over Mutual Problems Not Get Help By FRAN SHELDON By GENE HARTWIG Special To The Daily Ves To Resign; The date for the Residence Halls EAST LANSING-A new step was taken yesterday in inter-col- Board of Governors meeting has legiate relations between the University and Michigan State College Not Due to Row been shifted from March 16 to as representatives of both institutions met here to discuss mutual Thursday of this week it was interests and problems. WASHINGTON-f)-Robert T. learned yesterday. The group decided to hold similar gatherings semi-annually Stevens formally announced yes- The Board is reportedly sched- from now on. terday he intends to remain Sec- uled to tackle the complicated: Eleven student and administration representatives traveled to retary of the Army and not resign problem of more women's houses MSC to attend the meeting, second to be held. Last fall the series because of "some stormy weather" in the quadrangles which has was initiated at the University. with Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.) drawn considerable d is c u s s io n]* * * Stevens said ."nothing could be fromstuent ovenmet inres- 'further from the truth" than re- from student government in resi- AFTER A RECEPTION and dinner in the Kellogg Building, hotel ports he intended to follow the dence halls the past two weeks. administration laboratory, the --olead of one of his key assistants MEANWHILE it was also learn- group discussed pron commo and turn in his resignation a's an ed that a meeting of University o both institutions. University outgrowth of his scrap with Me- administrators was held Fridayt representatives rigidly avoided ieL IOIIS Carthy. d Fritopics such as the name change afternoon to discuss problems controversy, appropriations cut Petitions for 22 Student Leg- THE ASSISTANT was John F. policy i eiec al n a-adMCPeietJh .Hn ticularly the question of conver- and MSC President John A. Han- silature seats and other offices Kane, an Army employe for seven ing more men's housing for wom- nah. to be filled in all-campus elec- years. He quit his $10,000-a-year en. Of majoroconcernwererig r tions, March 30 and 31, may job Friday. Manager of Service Enter- both of the pre-football exhub- s picked up from 1 to 5 p.m. ily through Friday in the SL Kane said he .hoped Stevens prises Francis C. Shiel declined erance type and the spring fever Bldg. would stay on although he con- comment as to whether any de- panty raid variety. Deadline for returning all tended some of the secretary's cisions had been taken which Giant pep rallies were cited by completed petitions to the SL superiors had failed to offer "full would affect housing in men's!Ginperaleweectdb copeepeiintoteS sueishdfiedoofr"ul residence halls next year. the Michigan State representatives Bldg. is Saturday, March 13. fighting support" in. the "gal- A i Dean of Students Wl r as having been influential in keep- lant battle you are trying to put ActingDenf udnsWteigprgmeatiytoase up for the Army." B. Rea and University Vice-Pres- ing pre-game activity to a safe ident Wilbur K. Pierpont also de- low. At the rally held before tne Wj sSen. Mundt (R-SD) told a re- r dined comment on the outcome, Michigan-MSC game last fall a r/ -' - ,, porter yesterday Stevens had plan- of the meeting.t 8,000 atendanctdofmore thanned to resign, and he talked the t* * 8, was reported. -oundup secretary out of it, at the height CAMPUS and residence halls Concerning panty raids. theof the hassle with McCarthy. I Illi*ni Snare Conference Track Title By DAVE LIVINGSTON A Special to The Daily CHAMPAIGN-Illinois grab seven individual titles here in Champaign Armory yesterday ernoon to walk off with its fou straight Big Ten Indoor Tr Championship. Michigan finished a disappoi ing third, % of a point behind diana and well behind the winn Illini total of 55. THE SURPRISING H o o s i nipped the Wolverines by a h of a- step in the concluding n relay to assure themselves o: runner-up trophy. Only two of coach Don Ca ham's Michigan Wolverin could win Individual crown miler John Ross and shot pu ter Fritz Nilsson each defen Ing their titles. Except for these two events the 60 yard dash, where Illin Willie Williams took the lau for the second straight year; champions were crowned in ery event. * - f WILLIAMS lost his low hu] title to teammate Abe Wood as the Illini swept the first, ond, and fourth places in the l and the first two spots in highs, with Willard Thomson w ning the latter in :08.6. MICHIGAN'S Jim Love t fifth in the highs, but didn't past the semi-finals in the lo With the exception of t three new events, where recor were set automatically since r was the first time the 300, 600, 1000 have been run, only t Conference marks were broke Illinois' Ron Mitchell hit 6' 7 to crack his own high jump rec by % inch. Michigan's ent both placed in the event, M Booth tying for second at 6' 1 Indiana's crack relay te smashed the mark for the r with a 3:17.6 time. ILLINOIS' great middle tance ace Gene Maynard hi back until the final lap of 1000 and then sprinted past Mi igan's pace-setting Pete Gray win by five yards in 2:10.7. Maynard pulled the sar trick to cross the finish line w ahead in the 880, but was lat disqualified for having chang lanes too quickly at the start The judges decision gave Mi igan State's John Cook the r and shoved Michigan's only try. Ross, into the fifth slot. Wolverine Jack Carroll, year's 440 champ, switched to 500 yesterday and finished a tant fifth as Iowa's Leroy Et captured the title in 1:11.4. Grant Scruggs fared a little b ter in the quarter, but got beat j as he did two weeks ago w mini Ralph Fessenden fou his way cut of a box on the lap to cl-tch Scruggs and hit tape a couple of steps ahead t he Wolverine. His winning ti was :49.3. One of the oddest races of days was the two mile, which v The Hawaiian speedster broke the NCAA, Big Ten, and Varsity Pool records for the event, win- ning it in 4:28.8. Michigan's Jack Wardrop also broke the NCAA and conference records but had to settle for a second place. The Scotch sopho- more made a determined bid to overtake Konno in the last 40 yards, but the diminutive Hawai- ian outlasted him to win by about four feet. -Daily-Dean Morton AN ERA ENDS AS COACH MATT MANN BIDS FAREWELL TO THE MICHIGAN SWIM SCENE BACK TO NINTH: lVi, (.auagers vump Wolverines, 76-61 the BUMPY JONES, Michigan's all the around swimming star, set the aft- other NCAA mark while also shat-1 rth tering the American and Big Ten ack standards for the 150-yard indi- vidual medley. Jones covered the int- distance in 1:29.5 to erase his own In- NCAA and American records of{ ing 1:29.8 and the conference mark of 1:31.2. Set by Keith Carter of Purdue in 1949, the record wasa e r s the oldest one on the Big Ten half books. nile The other two record-break. f a ers of the evening were Dick' Cleveland of OSU and John n- Dudeck of Michigan State. Wes Cleveland erased the Big Ten ns, and pool marks in the 100-yard t- freestyle, swimming it in :49.5. d- Dudeck proved to be the only swimmer in the conference cap-1 and able of breaking the Ohio State ois' and Michigan stranglehold on first rels place. The defending champion new won the 100-yard breaststroke in ev- :59.7, setting a new conference standard as he edged Bob Clem- ons of Illinois for the win. rdle oJones, a double winner during son the three-day swimming cham- sec- pionships, was the only Wolver- ows ine to grab a victory in last night's the races. vin- * * * CLEVELAND, Morley Shapiro, and Yoshi Oyakawa, all double ook winners, were the Buckeyes who get were crowned conference cham- aws pions during the final night of he racing. ds One of a trio of Ohio State it point-getters in the one-meter or and three-meter diving, Shapiro wo added the three meter crown en. last night to the one-meter title 1" he had won the night before. ord Wolverine star Jim Walters ries pressed Shapiro to the limit ark both nights, but the Buckeye 2". diver put on brilliant finishes to aam edge Walters. nile One of the smallest backstrok- ers in the conference, Oyakawa had a much harder time defend- dis- ing his 100-yard title last night ung than he did in winning the 200- the yard crown in Friday's finals. In ch- third place, four feet behind, with1 to only 25 yards remaining, thet Buckeye star came up with a me spectacular finish to catch John: ay Hoaglund, of Wisconsin, ten yards ter from the finish line and won go- ed ing away. . * * * ch- OHIO STATE'S Ben Ledger,l ace See JONES, Page 3 en- last S eiZ Cam pos the iubert P erto Rico et- By The Associated Press just Police seized the chief of Puerto hen Rico's Nationalist Party, Pedro Al- ght bizu Campos, and five of his aides last in a two-hour gun battle yester- the day, five hours after Gov. Luiz of Munoz Marin ordered the arrest of ime 38 party leaders. Gov. Marin pledged all-out ef- the forts to "stamp out this poisonous In- snake in our midst" as a result of I-the hontin- of fivU TT S. onarVP- By AL EISENBERG Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - A smooth working Michigan State quintet clicked on all gears as it humbled the Michigan cagers, 76-61, before 8,379 appreciative fans at Jenison Field House last night. Leading during all but the open- ing minutes of the game and out- scoring the Wolverines in every quarter, the Spartans gave a bril- liant demonstration of passing, rebounding, and shooting. * * * THE VICTORY gave Michigan State a final Big Ten -record of 4-10 and enabled it to capture sole possession of eighth place. Michi- gan finished the season tied with Purdue for ninth place with three wins in 14 contests. Julius McCoy led the Spartan scoring attack with 24 points. The lanky 6-2 forward, racking up most of his tallies on deadly one-handed jump shots, ended the year with 409 markers-- the first MSC cager to score more than 400 in a season. Center Duane Peterson and guard Bob Devenny, connecting for 18 and 14 respectively, also hit in double figures for Pete Newell's outfit. Tom Jorgensen who sparkled particularly in the second half, and Jim Barron shared pointmak- ing honors for the Maize and Blue with 17 tallies each. Poor shooting and inadequate rebounding brought about Michi-1 gan's defeat. The Wolverines made only 26.6 percent of their floor shots and usually had to be sat- isfied with one attempt at a timne. BAD PASSING also hurt the' Wolverines. Tinie and time again a Michigan cager would work him- self clear only to have any hope for a field goal spoiled by a slop- py pass. The Wolverines were forced to do most of their shooting from outside as State's excellent de- fense kept the center bottled up. The Spartans, on the oth- er hand, were able to work in for close shots. Using a deliberate style offense and setting up their plays nicely the Spartans broke McCoy, Pe- terson and Devenny loose for scores. The winners were success- The End MICHIGAN G F P T Groffsky, f ..........0 4 5 4 Jorgensen, f ........8 1 .' 17 Codwell, -...........1 3 5 Mead, c...........1 3 4 5 Allen, c............0 0 1 0 Williams, c .........0 1 2 1 Eaddy,g...........5 1 3 11 Barron, g.........5 4 17 Pavichevich, g ......0 1 1 1 Totals...........21 19 26 61 MICHIGAN STATE G F P ' McCoy, f.............7 10 3 24 Ferrari, f..,.........2 2 3 6 Hartman, f ........1 0 3 2 Hinkin, f..........0 0 0 0 Harris, f..0 1 0 1 Peterson, c.........6 6 3 18 Armstrong, c........0 8 0 0 Devenny, g .........6 2 2 14 Stackhouse, g. 0 4 3 4 Schlatter, g ........3 1 0 7 Raymond, g ........0 0 1 0 Corbit, g ...........0 0 1 0 Totals............25 26 19 76 ful with 25 of 81 field goal at- tempts, good for 30.9 percent. The Michigan State dribblers grabbed an 8-7 lead midway through the first period and the Maize and Blue could never again I draw even. student government has urged the Board of Governors to carefullys consider the ramifications of con-1 verting additional housing forr women and the effect it would! have on the Michigan House Plan{ in a number of statements and letters recently. Inter-House Council Thurs- day passed a resolution flatly opposing "any changes in the existing men's Residence Halls system" that would involve con- version of more men's housing for women. Shiel and Dean Rea, both mem- bers of the Board of Governors, have said that student opinion will1 be considered in making any de-r cision. Historic Letters t Letters from the Revolutionary War collection in Clements Li-t brary will be displayed on "Omni- bus" over WJBK-TV at 5 p.m. to-f day. The script, based on correspond-1 ence between Benedict Arnold and John Andre contained in the li-Y brary was written by historian1 James F. Flevner., University representatives offered suggestions covering the areas of leadership and orientation. "The novelty has worn off by now for1 all but new freshmen" it was pointed out. RAIN AT 4:32! Weatherman Sees No 'Ifs' WASHINGTON -- P) - Imagine, picking up your morning paper, reading and believing: "Rain willI start at 4:32 p.m. and end at 10:46 p.m." This will be possible "certainly within 10 years, possibly within five," predicted Capt. Howard T. Orville, chairman of the U. S. Ad- visory Committee on Weather Con- trol, in a CBS public affairs radio program yesterday. Orville said development of a national "electronic network" will take the guesswork out of weather forecasting. I By The Associated Press NEW YORK - The governmentf worked overtime this weekend to blow life into the port of New York, slowly strangling in the grip of a defiant, wildcat dock strike. In two days' time, the strikers, reputedly incensed at having been singled out in a court injunction,. have tied up all piers on the sprawling Manhattan and Staten Island waterfronts. ZAGREB, Yugoslavia - Pres- ident Marshal Tito told a group of touring United States editors and publishers yesterday that Sen. McCarthy (R-Wis.) is "en- dangering American prestige abroad." * *,* NEW YORK - A man describ- ed as the "apparent successor" to the late Irving (Waxey) Gor- don was held in stiff bail Satur- day after what a top official call- ed the biggest narcotics raid in, more than 30 years. WASHINGTON -- Sen. Byrd (D-Va.) said yesterday the Ei- senhower administration's esti- mate of the deficit in the next financial year is so optimistic that the red ink figure easily could be doubled or tripled. WASHINGTON -- The nation had a population of about 161,?- 100;000 at the beginning of 1954, a gain of nearly 10 million since the last census April 1, 1950, the Census Bureau estimated yester- day. VATICAN CITY - Pope Pius XII was given somedsoup yester- day. and was reported to be slowly recovering from an abdominal ail- ment which had its onset Jan. 25. Adlai Charges GOP Slanders By The Associated Press Adlai E. Stevenson asserted last night that the Republican party- "divided against itself, half Mc- Carthy and half Eisenhower- has deliberately embarked on a campaign of "slander, dissension and deception" in an effort to re- main in power. THERE WAS one top echelon resignation at the Pentagon yes- terday. Deputy Secretary of De- fense Roger M. Kyes is quitting May 1. A -former General Motors official, Kyes had agreed to serve only a year, and the year ended Feb. 2. Both the White House and Pentagon said his 'resignation had no relation to the Stevens- McCarthy ruckus. Stevens said he intends to stay on at the pleasure of Secretary of Defense Wilson and President Ei- senhower. "From every part of the country and, in fact, from all over the world, I have received messages of loyal support from military per- sonnel both in and out of uniform. My support of the Army has been apparent throughout my term of service and I do not intend to stop my efforts to uphold the prestige, character and intergrity of that outstanding group of people who constitute , the United States Army." Stevens said Kane's resignation was a complete surprise. The secretary said, too that "At no time since I took office have I ever considered the matter of sub- mitting my resignation." Michigan One Of Top Eight Jobless States By The Associated Press Michigan was named yesterday by a Labor Department survey as being one of eight states having half the nation's unemployment within their borders. Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Wis- consin and Illinois with five per cent of available workers unem- ployed were slightly better off than New York, New Jersey and Penn- sylvania with six per cent unem- ployed. The figures were announced by the department's Bureau of Employment Security. They are based on 'unemployment among workers insured under the un- employment compensation pro- gram. RARE SCORES FEATURED: David To Conduct Handel Concert By BEA NEUFELD "Six Concerto Crossi, Op. 3," a set of practically unknown works by Handel will be performed at 8:30 p.m. today in Auditorium A, Angell Hall by the Collegium Musicum. Directed by Prof. Hans David of the music school, the specially gathered chamber orchestra composed of both faculty members and students will play the "Grossi" using the original score of the com- poser's time. PROF. DAVID, who always wanted to play originals, bought the sets from an English catalog last year. The "urtext" or original editions were published in the 1730's. In 1780, the second edition was published from the same plate as the first. These are ,the sets which will be used in the concert, instead of the usual edited ones which involve modernized additions. Special feature of the concert will be the first appearance here in a public performance of the spinettino, a small harpsichord originally built in Italy about 1600. The instrument was renovated by John Callis of Detroit for the University in 1950 and is now one of the treasures of the Stearns Collection of musical instruments housed in Hill Auditorium, J M : :.::'U ~ I I I