Campus Organizations and Secrets See Page 4 Latest Deadline in the State &ti at4 U BALMY (40 degrees), SHOWERS VOL. LXV, No. 92 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1955 I.__________________________. SIX PAGES IHC'Reluctantly' o to Fee Hike Residence Hall Fee Increases Approved With Five Conditions By MURRY FRYMER A proposed increase of $50 in residence halls room and board rates was "reluctantly accepted" by the Inter-House Council yesterday, but with the provision that five conditions are met. The motion by IHC executive vice-president Tom Bleha, '56, asking conditional acceptance was passed 30 to 13 after a two and a half hour discussion. "Reluctantly accepting the proposed room and board raise," Ble- ha's motion specified "if, and only if, the following conditions are met: Five Conditions Set "1) IHC be given a choice in planning.. . any new residence unit contemplated; "2) The salary of staff assistants be increased from $25 to $40 per month and the IHC be given a voice in selecting staff personnel ... Cominittee Sees Driving Referendum By DAVE BAAD Possibility that a driving ban referendum will be brought before students at the all-campus elec- tions March 15 and 16 was reveal- ed yesterday at Student Govern- ment Council's steering committee meeting. Daily Managing Editor Gene Hartwig, '55, favoring the refer- endum for the March elections, asked the steering committee for a definition of referendum proced- ure. Follow SL Rules Although several steering com- mittee members opposed another driving ban referendum at this time, the committee voted to fol- low present Student Legislature rules for preparing referenda. Under SL rules referenda need 600 signatures or majority sup- port in the Student Legislature to get on the ballot.. A driving ban referndum went before the students in the fall of 1952. Students heavily favored remov- ing driving restrictions but Univer- sity Regents have taken no action. Opposes Ban Hartwig said yesterday although there was indication at one time that some Regents were sympa- thetic to the students' vote, the Board seems to have reverted to its original opposition to removing the ban. "It's time to bring it to the Re- gents' attention again," he said. SL President Ned Simon, '55, against a March driving ban ref- erendum, thought more could be accomplished by working quietly with the Regents. "A few of the Regents can see need for a change already," he said, adding he hopes SGC will work with the Regents for a solu- tion after it takes office. Meeting Tuesday Babs Hillman, '55Ed, SGC can- didates training director reported to the steering committee yester- day. The first candidates training meeting will be held Tuesday. Confusion over petition circula- tion practices caused the steering committee to emphasize yesterday all petitions must be given to sign- ers by the petitioner. The petitioner is responsible for certifying validity of all signa- tures. Petitioners can only be cer- tain of signature validity if they see the persons who sign. The steering committee also vot- ed yesterday to establish an SGC account with the auditor of stu- dent organizations, Maurice M. Rinkel.j Administrative Secretary Ruth Callahan will handle the account until SGC elects a secretary. , DAC's Eliot Play Ends Run Sunday T. S. E1iot's "The Cocktail Par- ty" will complete its current run at the Dramatic Arts Center todayi through Sunday, with all perform- ances beginning at 8:15 p.m. ex-; cept a Sunday matinee beginning at 2:30 p.m. A comedy with moral under- tones, the productior features Paul Carr, James Coco, Ralph "3) The contract termination policy .. . be re-evaluated; "4) A differential rate scale be- tween freshmen and upper class- men be. considered; .5) (Examine) possibility of alumni and Development Council for aid in the financing ... Bleha, speaking in support of his motion, said that "given the increased enrollment and given the rule that freshmen must live in the dorms, we must accept the in- crease or sophomores, juniors and seniors will be forced out." "Entire Campus Should Share" Opposition centered around the belief that the entire campus should share in the proposed in- crease. Buck Bebeau, '57, asked that tui- tion be increased to share part of the financial burden. Larry Levine, '56, proposed that "if everybody in school paid $15" the same amount would be reached. Levine asked that a committee be formulated to work with the University on a bond issue. Pointing to a residence hall fi- nancial report, Bernie Berman, '58M, said that at present 20 per cent of dorm finances are being used to pay off debts. "We're paying $750 for $600 worth of services," he said. "We're paying for somebody else's dormi- tory to be put up in later years." Levy Supports Motion IHC President Stan Levy, '55, commented that IHC opposition to the raise would probably accom- plish nothing. In favor of the Bleha motion he said, "the University does not ex- pect us to accept the raise. But which will help us get some of our needs, accepting reluctantly or op- posing? "Let's take advantage of the sit- uation and get some good out of it," he said. Reasons given for the raise by the University are wage increases and social security ($12) and re- serves for a new residence hall ($38). Bare Facts LANSING (A') -- The House today scheduled an open hear- ing for Thursday on a bill to ban nudist colonies in Michi- gan. Previously, Whinery had said he feared an open hearingwould "transform the floor of the House into a circus." Dr. Braxton Sawyer of Fort Smith, Ark., a. clergyman who has crusaded against nudist colonies, has been invited to attend the hearing. Represent- atives of nudist organizations also have been invited to at- tend. The bill proposes penalties on nudists, operators of nudist camps and publishers of nudist magazines. IFC Seeks Agreement On Peddlers By WALLY EBERHARD Interfraternity Council took steps yesterday to protect their m e m b e r s against unscrupu- lous salesmen and peddlers. At a meeting with representa- tives of the local Chamber of Com- merce, proposals were made to set up a system for issuing credentials to individuals wishing to sell at affiliated housing groups. Must Post Bond Although no definite agreement was reached, the plan would prob- ably require salesmen to post a bond at the local Chamber of Commerce office before selling at such housing groups. Robert L. Gage, Chamber of Commerce secretary, emphasized in an interview last night that any agreement between the IFC and Chamber was not an attempt to keep people from selling at frater- nity houses. However, he continued, the Chamber of Commerce will be "happy to cooperate" with the IFC In setting up a system of issuing credentials for persons wishing to sell merchandise at fraternity or sorority houses. Issue Will Be Discussed Keith Coates, '56E, IFC frater- nity service committee chairman, said the issue would be discussed with Pan Hellenic Council and at IFC House Presidents Assembly. If an agreement were drawn up, fraternity members probably would refer prospective salesmen to the Chamber of Commerce before ad- mitting them to their house. The salesmen would post a bond with the Chamber of Commerce and be issued credentials stating the bond had been posted. The bond would be returned to the salesman within a specified pe- riod of time if no complaints had been turned in on the salesman's methods, promises or merchandise. In Violent Gunboat Encounter NAVIDZADEH HEARING : IEx-Iranian Off icial Speaks for Student By PHYLLIS LIPSKY Former Iranian government official N. Saifpour Fatemi testified in favor of Buick Navidzadeh's petition for political asylum at final deportation hearings for the University graduate student in Detroit yesterday.! Navidzadeh claims that if forced to return to his native Iran he faces prosecution by his enemies and almost certain execution. Fatemi described the military Budapest Quartet trial and events leading up to the assassination of his brother, for- mer Iranian foreign minister Hus- 'sein Fatemi, as an example of the kind of treatment Navidzadeh is likely to meet with in Iran. A minister in Mohammed Mos- sedegh's government, Hussein Fa- temi was arrested and tried when a military coup d'etat brought Foz-j liollah Zahedi to political power in 1953. According to Fatemi's four-page' statement, his brother was assas- sinated in his bed. While he was publisher of an Iranian magazine for a period of four years Navidzadeh exposed cor- ruption among army officers who are currently out to "get him," the student claims. He was accused last October of being connected with Communist activities in Iran, and immediate- ly afterwards his passport was cancelled. If his appeal for politi- cal asylum is rejected Navidzadeh faces immediate deportation. Information compiled at the de- portation hearings will be relayed to the Immigration Service in Washington where a final deci- sion will be made within the next three weeks. Ire's Tariff Policy Passes House Vote. WASHINGTON (IP-The House waged a nip-and-tuck opening battle over President Dwight D. Eisenhower's lower tariff foreign trade program yesterday and Ad- piinistration backers wound up the day with a one-vote prelimi- nary victory. Protective tariff forces showed such surprising strength that they may be able to impose restrictions on the President's program when the final voting takes place today. Pres. Eisenhower was reported to have made a last-minute move to bolster his support. Informed sources said he had written Re- publican Leader Joseph Martin of Massachusetts that he would not use requested tariff-cutting powers to injure American industries. Yesterday's skirmishing dealt only with the rules under which the House would consider the leg- islation. On the third successive Nationalists Battle With Reds TN ewsimen Discuss ±4 Safe Plan By JIM DYGERT Members of the press, radio and television in Washtenaw County were formally initiated into an energetic traffic safety program last night at a local hotel. Representatives of the com- munication media form one of four groups that the Traffic and Safety Committee of the Ann Arbor Division of the Automobile Club of Michigan is coordinating. The Committee had already met with educators and law enforce- ment officers in attempting to develop a program to make Wash- tenaw county safer for drivers.. The committee plans to meet next with safety Tngineers. Groups Will Continue Work Under the program, a smaller committee is drawn from each of the four groups to work further on developing an effective safety program. As chairman of last/ night's meeting, Otto W. Haisly, chairman of the Traffic and Safety Com- mittee, asked newsman, radio and television people what they thought they could do to push the program. With emphasis on the positive approach (such as rewarding cour- tesy on the road), discussion brought out three levels on which communication media might ef- fectively promote safety within the new program. Disseminate Data First, the media could serve in its ordinary capacity of dissemi- nating information on accidents, accident prevention and programs for safety. Secondly, they could as the Traffic and Safety Committee es- pecially ask help in finding the solutions of safety problems and forming policies and programs for more safety. Finally, they could use their in- fluence on public opinion to create some pressure towards the adop- tion of policies and programs agreed upon. General feeling at the meeting was that the media had done as much as it could with available material, but that perhaps they should also take the initiative in creating material to educate driv- ers both as to attitude and mech- anical ability.. Appearing at 8:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Auditorium is the Budapest Quartet who will present the first of three concerts in the annual Chamber Music Festival. Since making their debut in the United States in 1930, the quartet has grown more and more popular each year with American audiences. Famous especially for the way they play the quartets of Mozart, Beethoven and Brahms, critics have asserted that the Quartet's suave tonal balance and telepathic sense of ensemble is unmatched. Featured in tonight's concert will be the Quartet in G, Op. 77, No. 1 by Haydn, the String Quartet, No. 1 by Lees, and the Quartet in A minor Op. 29 by Schubert. COMMON MAN SUPPORT: Republican Party Must Reduce Bigness: Martin By MARY ANN THOMAS "The Republican Party will not exist as a major party if it is a party of General Motors or Unit- ed States Steel, or ifthe notion gets out that the GOP is a party of the "big boys," Homer Martin said in an address to the campus Young Republican Club yesterday. Speaking on "The Future of La- bor in Politics," the founding president of the United' Auto Workers said that the Republican Party "must be supported by the common man. We must do some- thing for the com.. on man with- out enslaving him," he explained. Must Be Fair "We are never going to win the confidence of American labor," Martin emphasized, "until we are fair and square with it. We must have a specific program dealing with labor, labor organizations and small business," he continued. "The Republican Party must come out with definite ideas on the Taft-Hartley Law and we must make it stick," Martin warned. Commenting on present - day work of organized labor, the labor leader explained "industries have no one to blame for strong labor tactics but themselves. If indus- trialists had been good Americans in supporting free speech and the right of assembly when labor was organizing," he added, "we would not have socialists and racketeers in labor today." Reid Gives Views Former state lieutenant-gover- nor of Michigan Clarence Reid presented his views on labor in politics. "The common man is en- titled to a home, television set and security," he said. "There are a great number of people neither Democrats nor Re- publicans to whom you can sell a proposition if it has merit," he continued. "This need can very easily be met if a party has a platform answering its needs." "Democrats had terrific sales- manship in the last election and we must do likewise," Reid added. Program Attacked WASHINGTON (A') -President Dwight D. Eisenhower's school building program bumped into strong opposition yesterday from the National Education Assn. and some other professional educators. Some Republicans indicated they may favor drastic modification of the program. Sink Seven Conmuist Sea Vessels 71 Chiang's Planes Enter Into Fracus TAIPEH, Formosa (P)-The De- fense Ministry said Nationalist warcraft sank seven Communist landing craft in a sea battle early yesterday between Nanchishan and Matsu islands northwest of Formo- sa. The ministry said Nationalist warships shot up a Communist convoy. Three Gunboats Sunk Three Red gunboats were set on fire and "possibly sunk," the min- istry added. It said the gunboats were between 200 and 300 tons each. Landing craft were 300 to 400 tons, it added. Nationalist warplanes roared off Formosa bases to join in the bat- tle. Nanchishan Is Anchor With the Tachens abandoned to the Reds, the Nationalists now consider Nanchishan their north- ern anchor. It lies 22 miles off the Red China coast, about 12 miles north of For- mosa. Matsu is a Nationalist-held is- land blocking Foochow p or t northwest of the northern tip of Formosa. Sea action followed on the heels of an artillery exchange tQ the south in the Quemoy area. Chi- nese Red guns shelled Quemqy off the mainland port of Amoy but fell silent when Nationalist artil- lery roared out in answer, the min- istry said. No Damage Ministry reported Red artillery poured in about 90 shells from Ta- teng, an island close to Quemoy, and from Lienho, on the mainland 10 miles northeast of Quemoy. It claimed the Red fire caused no damage. Political quarters welcomed the statement by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles rejecting the idea of the Nationalists surrender- ing Quemoy, a c r o s s Formosa Sttrait, and the Matsus, 100 miles northwest of Formosa. Vice-President Chen Cheng told a news conference the Nationalists were determined to defend Que- moy and the Matsus even if they were denied air support. British Solve H-Bomb Riddle By The Associated Press Britain announced yesterday in London she has solved the secret of the hydrogen bomb and Is pro- ceeding immediately to become the third nation producing H- Bombs. England may be only one of an increasing number of nations, not all of them necessarily major pow- ers, to enter the hydrogen weapon field during the years immediately ahead. There have been predictions that it soon will be possible to make thermonuclear weapons with comparative simplicity and in comparative abundance. A possible beginning of such a trend was seen in the London announce- ment. Prime Minister Churchill's gov- ernment disclosed Britain has the H-bomb know-how along with the United States and. presumably Russia. The disclosure came in an almost casual reference buried in a white paper on defense. Britain also reported that less money would be appropriated for defense and armed forces man- power would be reduced slightly. Defense Minister Harold Mac- Millan, in explaining the white paper, told a news conference, "We have now developed the power to produce a thermonuclear wea- pon and we will now proceed." Pledges inDorms Unable To Leave By JOEL BERGER At present there is no University rule allowing fraternity pledges to move from quadrangles into fraternities during the school year if the quadrangles are not operating above capacity, residence hall business manager Leonard A. Schaadt asserted yesterday. Assistant to the Dean of Men William S. Zerman said that earlier this semester 13 fraternity members, none of whom were freshmen, were denied permission to leave the quadrangles and move into fra- ternity houses. Meeting Held Zerman told of a meeting he had with Schaadt during which it was decided fraternities operating at less than capacity could have members move from dormitories if the quadrangles were op- erating over capacity. Fraternities eligible at the time, according to Zerman, were those which would have empty beds left if all and non-dormitory members living outside the house moved back in. Nine fraternities were in this position, the Interfraternity Coun- cillor said. Letters were then sent to residence hall officials by the nine house presidents requesting permission for 13 students to leave the quadrangles and move into their fraternities. Couldn't Be Released After classes started last week, however, circumstances made it impossible for the fraternity men to be released from the quad- rangles, Zerman continued. While 104 men were living in temporary quadrangle housing on Feb. 4, three days later. 87 quadrangle resi- dents had left school. In the next few days more quadrangle residents dropped from school, Zerman said. When this happened the quadrangles were op- erating at or slightly under capacity, so the 13 fraternity members were not allowed to move. While men may leave the quadrangles for personal reasons after the first semester, he explained, at the time of petitioning the dtgi on. +nnvRinfn r+tarfti- m ac "nf - nn ieara- laifmfa- - For background article, see IKE, Page 2 roll call within 2%V/ hours,' the members voted 193 to 192 to take up the Administration bill under procedure limiting opponents to just one amendment. Th.is rule was backed by spon- sors of the program and by both Democratic and Republican floor leaders. But at one time it ap- peared that a coalition of protec- tive tariff insurgents, who de- nounced this procedure as "gag rule" and "un-American," would succeed in opening the bill to a flood of amendments. SGC Petitioners' Two-Day Rush 1rings Total to 33 A sudden burst of activity during the past two days has sent the to- tal of potential Student Govern- ment Council candidates soaring to 33. Eleven students picked up SGC petitions from 1020 Administration Bldg. yesterday and Wednesday. Nar nHti-v I 1iiai ddthnse of INITIAL PROBLEMS: IHC Has Hectic Beginning. (EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the third in a series of interpretive articles dealing with the services, history and future of the Inter-House Council.) By ERNEST THEODOSSIN One of the major problems fac- ing the Inter-House Council after its organization in the spring of 1952 was acceptance by quad resi- dents. The Association of Independ- ent Men, an organization com- posed of all non-fraternity men, at first refused to surrender its hegemony. It claimed that an in- ter-quadrangle council concerned only with quad problems was too narrow an approach to the prob- lems of non-affiliated men. Rv th n o ca a fP1- - h Prior to the formation of the IHC, circulars had been sent to all quad men for suggestions and ideas. These were then incorpo- rated into the 1HC constitution. The IHC was given official Uni- versity recognition in the fall with permanent recognition due to come in the spring of 1953, at which time it was to submit its consti- tution. Troubles with IFC Initial controversy arose between IHC and the Inter-Fraternity Council over fraternity men en- tering the quads during rushing for the purposes of contract agree- ment with students. 'rhrn ,hlpm n.c fi Cn. lit, eni, place on the IHC. After some six months of c h a r g e s and counter-charges, Braun was given a statement of apology from the ,st Quad Council. Quad Judiciary On March 31, 1953, the Resi- dence Halls Board of Governors gave its stamp of approval to a quad judiciary system, the sub- ject of a long debate. However, the quad judiciary system was given no jurisdiction over non-residents who violate quad rules. A good deal of criticism was di- rected against the I1C when it refused to take a position in the .zA,.f n ch nrn A 1,ntg, n,.no -