EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 'Ji X Latest Deadline in the State Da ii4 . - kr . f CLOUDY, COLDER VOL. LXV, No. 62 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1954 TEN PAGES Hatcher Praises IHC Conference Residence Halls Group Discusses Student Government, Dorm Morale By DAVE BARD Discussing problems ranging from student government to dormi- tory morale, students and University officials met yesterday for Inter- House Council's second annual Residence Halls Conference. University President Harlan H. Hatcher expressed the general sentiment by terming the conference an excellent opportunity for students to talk with the administration about mutual problems. More than 120 people attended the five hour conference, including excellent representation from the Residence Halls. Only nine of the invited 92 were not at the conference. Both President Hatcher and Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis attended discussions on the topic of student govern- ment and its relationship to the dormitory system. Administration Represented In addition to President Hatcher and Vice-President Lewis, Uni- versity VicePresident Wilbur K. Forum Tuesday's aft-campus forum on Student Government Coun- cil will be held at 8 p m. in Natural Science Auditorium. The meeting is planned as a pro and con evaluation debate of the basic issues involved in the SGC plan to be voted on in the Wednesday and Thurs- day all-campus elections. Taking the side favoring SGC will be Prof. Earl W. Britton of te engineering college and League President Lucy Landers '55. Lining up on the con side of the discussion will be Prof. Roger Heyns, of the psychology department and Student Leg- islature President Steve Jeli, '55. A question and answer per- iod will follow. Democrats Piek Butler As Chairman NEW ORLEANS, La. (/P)-Paul M. Butler, Indiana committeeman yesterday was elected chairman of the Democratic National Com- mittee succeeding Stephen A. Mitchell. Butler's election climaxed a controversy among party leaders. Rep. Sam Rayburn of Texas, in- coming speaker of the House, wanted to postpone action until early next year. Adlai E. Stevenson. 1952 presi- dential nominee opposed delay and the committee decided to go ahead. Mitchell resigned effective Jan. 1 to re-enter private law prac- tice. Uanimous UN Vote Supports Ike' s A toms For Peac Plar 1 committee Henry Takes Illinois U Presidency NEW YORK (M -- A noted American educator, who has play- ed a pioneer role in educational television, will become president of the University of Illinois next Sept. 1. An offer of th epost was accept- ed today by Dr. David Dodds Henry, 49-year-old vice chancellor of New York University. A group of officials connected with the Illinois institution had come here yesterday in an effort to persuade him to take the pre- sidency, and stood by him as he announced acceptance today. Dr. Henry read to newsmen a statement saying in part: "The unanimity of the board of trustees and the support of its advisory committees in inviting me to the presidency augur well for the effectiveness of the new administration. "The University of Illinois is one of America's greatest, and the opportunities for its future are unexcelled." Succeeds Morey Dr. Henry will succees Lloyd Morey, 68-year-old administrator, who has held the presidency tem- porarily since July, 1953. At that, time trustees ousted Dr. George; G. Stoddard for lack of confidence1 in him. Dr. Henry will be the 12th pre- sident at Illinois, which now hash nearly 25,000 students, mostly on the main campus at Champaign- Urbana. Morey has been receiving a salary of $25,000 annually, but the new president's pay was not disclosed. Neither was his presentI salary at NYU.< Pierpont, Assistant to the Dean of Men Ivan Parker, Assistant to the Dean of Men John Bingley, Busi- ness Manager of Residence Halls Leonard A. Schaadt and Manager of Service Enterprises Francis C. Shiel represented the administra- tion. During a summary session fol- lowing the twelve regular discus- sions, President Hatcher told dele- gates he enjoyed the conference and called such events as the IHC Conference a remarkable develop- ment in the record of student par- ticipation and conduct. "Thirty years ago an IHC Con- ference would have been unthink- able," he said. "A situation where students sit with the president and his colleagues and discuss mutual problems wouldn't have occurred." Hatcher Praises IHC -Daily-Dean Morton 1XICIlIGAN HOOPS'TERS, ICERS ROMP-At left Wolverine Goalie Lorne Michigan handed the Redmen their second consecutive loss, 7 to 2. At Wolverine cagers coast 101 to 71. -Daily-Dean Morton Howes makes a stop on an oncoming McGill player, as right, 'M' center Harvey Williams lays one up, as the Wolverines Sweep IcCage Tilts j: ... TT l rip President Hatcher also IHC because it wasn't an zation that tried to force ministration to do things. praised' organi- the ad-I IHC instead believes the student- administration relationship is one of two people meeting to find a mutually satisfactory answer to a problem, he said.j He asked for patience and coop-i eration all along the line and pleaded for human decency and respect for motives in the attemptsE to promote the welfare of Univer- sity institutions. ejn ; "The administration wants to help the student get the most edu- 1 Win for Stevenson Wing oc el y earn The choice of Butler, represent- 'e ed a victory for the Stevenson- Takes Second Mitchell wing of the party, al- though Stevenson had said two From McGill other leading candidates-Michael V. DiSalle, former Toledo, Ohio, mayor and price administrator. By DAVE GREY and President James Finnegan of The Michigan hockey team ex- the Philadelphia City Council- ploded with two goals in the open- were equally acceptable to him. ing two and a quarter minutes of Butler was the first member of play last night to set the pace for the committee to be promoted a rough and exciting 7-2 win over from the ranks to the chairman- McGill University, thus sweeping ship in a decade, and the first the weekend series at the Coliseum. to be chosen in a contested election Before either team even had time inj nhn.4n vAA r Hoopsters Set New Scoring Mark, 101-71 By ALAN EISENBERG The University of Michigan bas- ketball team started off its 1954- 55 season in excellent style as it trounced a beleagured Pittsburgh in auuuL %u years. cation out of his four years at te The election came on the first University as possible, he contin- roll call. Unofficially, Butler had ued. He expressed amusement over 70 votes of the 105 cast Only 53 attributions that the administra- were required for election. tion had other motives. Report To Be Issued A full report of the Residence' Halls' Conference discussions will be issued this week. All delegates will receive sum-+ maries for reports to their ownj residence halls.I IHC President Stan Levy, '55, asked representatives to furtherl discuss the topics during house meetings. He emphasized that the success of the meeting depended on the dissemination of the ideas discussed yesterday throughout the three Quadrangles. DiSalle was second with 18. Finnegan received 16 and Jos- eph F. Donahue of the District of Columbia one. Election by Acclamation After the vote, George Rock, Colorado committeeman who nominated DiSalle, moved the election be made unanimous. Mayor David Lawrence of Pitts- burgh who had nominated Fin- negan, seconded the motion and Butler was elected by acclamation. The official vote was not an- nounced. Butler entered politics in 1927 and has held nearly every organ-. World News Roundup Pope Improving ... VATICAN CITY - A new course of treatment brought fresh im- provement to ailing Pope Pius XII today. Tonight he was resting more easily than since his collapse Thursday. Doctors said the rally, begun after 48 hours of desperate illness, would continue if food can be given the 78-year-old Pontiff. Watkins Praised WASHINGTON - Sen. Arthur Watkins (R-Utah) received Presi- dent Eisenhower's accolade Satur- day for a "splendid job" as chair- man of the special committee which recommended censure of Sen. McCarthy. Stevenson Speaks . . . NEW ORLEANS, La. Adlai E. Stevenson yesterday cast the Democratic party in the role of the "loyal opposition" to the Ei- senhower administration and called for "elimination of domestic poli- tics" from foreign affairs. McCarthy Ill? .,. WASHINGTON-Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) failed to keep to "scrape up the ice" Michigan's sophomore center Tom Rendall had the first of his two goals at 0.51 via a pass from right wing Jay Goold. Rendall took the fast-break pass at the goal mouth, reaching out with his stick to push the puck past helpless McGill goalie Bernie Wong. Michigan Captain Bill MacFar- land was quick to follow up at 2:25, when, after sharing a Dick Dun- nigan pass at mid-ice, he skated down the left board, faked Wong out of position, and slammed the disc into the right hand corner of the nets. The first period was "all Michi- gan." Tihe spirited Wolverines showed the same explosive offense that helped win Friday's contest, 4-2. Backed by fine defensive work of not only the defensemen but also the fast backskating of forward line, Michigan goalie Lorne Howes was able to squelch any Redmen scoring threats. The white-jerseyed victors, mean-, while, added two more quick tal- lies at the end of the first period. Sophomore wing Jerry Karpinka capitalized on the inability of ther McGill defense to clear the puck when they were one man down by scoring on a 15-footer from the leftz See MacFARLAND, Page 3 4 During the "What Should Our ! ization post in the party-precinct Durng he Wha ShuldOurcommitteeman, county chairman, New Residence Halls be Like?" , and district chairman, but never discussion, students favored hoi- served asstate chairman. zontal type Quadrangles with a se _d ___t ___amn house capacity of between 75 and T al 100. cwartz TTa lk They also favored private phones At Hill Tuesday and movable furniture. In other discussions a wish was Harry Schwartz, author and expressed for student assistance in New York Times' expert on Rus- selection of staff members and the sia, will speak on "The Men Who need for house distinction to help Rule Communism," at 8 p. m. build morale. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. MESSIAH SOLOIST: If -Daily-Lynn Wallas WORKED WITH BIIAVE-Former 'U' Student Pat McMahon reads article about Indian leader Vinoba Bhave. Fortmer Student Tells Of Land-Gift Movement By JIM DYGERTI Pat McMahon is like her description of Vinoba Bhave, the man with whom she toiled for a year and a half in India. She was with him in spirit more than in person. She rarely saw or spoke to the man whom she describes as quiet, and sincere to the point that no one dares be insincere to his face, But Miss McMahon, now 26 years old, helped carry on his work in the villages of India, probably in the same quiet and sincere manner in which she talks about her experiences with the Bhoodan movement in India. Having gone to India to study the Hindi language, she learned of Bhave's land-gift movement, which is now in its third year. "It seemed too immense," she comments now, "I couldn't under- five, 101-71, before a crowd of 3,100 at Yost Field House last night. By going over the century mark, the Wolverines established a new Michigan and field house scoring' record. The old mak of 100 points was set against Valpariso in last year's home opener. A flurry of baskets in the last two minutes of play enabled the- Maize and Blue to reach and pass the centu~ry mark. Don Eaddy re- ceived two perfect passes from his teammates, went in for easy lay- ups, and with 1:52 remaining in the contest, Michigan had 95 points. Two fouls by Tom Jorgen- son and a field goal by the Wol- verine captain, Paul Groffsky put' Michigan only one point away from tying a record. Maentz Connects With the seconds quickly tick- ing away the roar of the crowd in- creased in volume. When there were only 28 seconds left in the tilt Michigan fulfilled the desires of its fans. Tom Maentz, a star for the Maize and Blue on the gridiron, flipped in a push shot from' 15 feet out, his only basket of the night. Six Wolverine cagers scored in double figures. Eaddy, a fleet 5-10 guard, was the high scorer of the game as he whipped in nine field goals out of 17 attempts and two fouls, good for 20 points. Sophomore Jim Shearon lived up to his advance notices as he notched 17 points on five field goals and seven foul throws. Shearon, who clicked on 62 per cent of his tries from the field, was deadly with a one-handed jump shot. Jim Barron and Tom Jorgen- son notched 16 tallies, Harvey Wil- liams picked up 14 and Groffsky 12 points. See WOLVERINES, Page 3 SGC Q1 Question: Since SGC will u election now used for SL, and duction of election seats, is i groups could elect representat elections provide for minority t E J To Hear U.S ' Flier Claim Red Loss Brings Rare Agreement By The Associated Press The United Nations yesterday endorsed President Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace program by a rare unanimous vote and agreed to hear the United States com- plaint on American prisoners in Red China. For the second time in the ninth General Assembly, the United States and Russia voted together -but only after Russia had lost a fight to link President Eisen- hower's program with the Security Council and the big' power veto. Only the five Soviet bloc coun- tries favored this link; the West firmly opposed it. Vote Hailed Eelco N. Van Kleffens, Assembly president, hailed the unanimous vote and said the entire world will rejoice that the Assembly has pav- ed the way for achievemens on a' question that claims the inter est in all countries "of citizens who hold the general welfare at heart." One month ago the United States and Russia joined the 58 other UN members in a vote giv- ing the UN Disarmament Com mission a fresh start on work on a project for regulation and limi- tation of conventional armaments and prohibition of atomic wea- pons with adequate controls4 One year ago on Dec. 8, Pre- siTent Eisenhowei electrified the Assembly with a dramatic plan for peace. By its action yesterday the Assembly pushed the plan ahead. The resolution gave final UN approval, noted that negotiations are in progress for the establish- ment of an international atomic energy agency "to facilitate the use by the entire world of atomic energy for peaceful purposes" and expressed the hope the agency "will be established without de- lay." Knowland Asks Action In Washington, the GOP ma- jority leader, Sen. William Know- land of California, said that the UN Assembly should remain in session to press efforts to free the prisoners if they are not released by Christmas, After receiving an official mem- orandum from the United States attacking Chinese Communist ac- tion in holding 11 American fliers and other UN prisoners, UN exe- cutives scheduled a steering coml- mittee meeting for Monday after- noon to consider the demands., The memorandum called the re- tention of the prisoners "a clear- cut violation of the Korean arm- istice agreement." Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., chief U. S. delegate, presented the re- quest for quick action to Secre- tary Generale Dag Hammarskjold and Assembly President Dr. Eelco N. Van Kleffens, of the Nether- lands. The United States and its 15 al- lies in Korea carefully discussed the step before Lodge came in with his letter approved by the other countries, asking the Assembly t make a special agenda item of the "complaint of detention and im- prisonment of United Nations mil- itary personnel in violation of the Korean armistice agreement." m____"stand how any one man could go about collecting land." Gets World Attention Curiosity Starts Harpsichord Career By DAVID KAPLAN Curiosity and fascination started the career of Detroit harpsi- chordist Alice Lungerhausen, '26SM. Appearing in this weekend's performances of Handel's "Messiah," Mrs. Lungerhausen was graduated from Michigan as a piano major, receiving a master's degree in music in 1931. After a year's work in Vienna, studying piano, she went to Chicago to study harpsichord with Philip Manuel. "I tried the harp- sichord out of curiosity and was so fascinated by the instrument that I pursued it."- She has performed in solo recitals and concerts in Detroit, Ann Arbor and Toledo. Previous to her last appearance at the 1950 May Festival, Mrs. Lungerhausen accompanied a School of Music pres- entation of Haydn's "Creation." Bhave's movement received in- ternational attention soon after it began; and he was featured on the cover of Time in May, 1953. His idea of how to reform India's economic plight was getting at- tention in the world, and getting results in India. A devoted follower of Mahatma Gandhi, Bhave walked, and to this day walks, from village to village persuading landowners to give up their land for distribution to the landless. There is enough land to sup- port all of India," Miss McMahon believes. But it goes to waste in the hands of a few. Bhave is dem- onstrating that there is enough land to go around. Opposition At First Liestionls use the same method of campus there will be a 75 per cent re- t likely that minority opinion ives to SGC? Do present SL opinion groups' representation? A student population, if every Answer: Given the curren student on campus voted, it wo