SL Rushing Blind To Spend$5,000 See Page 2 C, r Sdirtx ~IaiA1 .,' l , ! " I Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXV, No. 93 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1955 TV CAGE GAME OF DAY: TitBgOneforGophers i S i~y.. O.O W .F By HAP ATHERTON With the Big Ten lead at stake, Minnesota pits its height and ~back, thanks to the efforts of center Ron Kramer. In two successive vYscoring potential against Michigan's advancing cagers at 3 p.m. this attegames the 63" sophomore has tied Michigan's all-time individual afternoon at Yost Field House before the eyes of millions in a nation- scoring record. ally televised contest. MICHIGAN Gopher Coach Ozzie Cowles has two of what he calls, "the finest\ A capacity crowd of upwards to 9,000 persons is expected to fill the Paul Groffsky (6-3) F college basketball players in the entire country," in co-captains w Field House to witness Michigan's first televised home cage battle. Jerry Stern (6-2) F Dick Garmaker and Chuck Mencel. Garmaker is currently leading - Minnesota's precarious lead in the Big Ten could be lost to Iowa Ron Kramer (6-3) C the league in scoring, after Michigan knocked NU's Frank Ehrman RON KRAMER, who has proh- Don Eaddy (5-1l G out of the running. Last year Garmaker was selected to the coaches BIG TEN SCORING leader Dic eIntelsthegaethtthis week-end if Michigan and Iowa win In its bid for the league Tom JorgensonTE-N)SCOAl-Confereceeteam he can capably handle his as- crown, the Gophers have dropped only two contests, a 74-72 defeat MINNESOTA Aec-Ccnabrennletesm. Garmaker, who stands a formid signment as "big man," will to Northwestern, and an 87-75 drubbing administered by MSC. Dick Garmaker (6-3) F Due to television coverage of the contest by the Columbia Broad- able 6'4", is currently averagin again get the nod from Coach Things haven't been as golden as the Golden Gophers might have Douglas Bolsdorff (6-5) F casting System, two rules will be enforced. The half time will be 26.3 points per game in Confer Bill Perigo to start in the cen- wished. They topped second place Iowa by only one point, wining Bill Simonoih (6-11) C fifteen minutes in length, instead of the customary ten, and the2.e ter slot in today's game against 81-80, and last place Purdue managed to tie the score through five Chuck Mencel (6-0) G time outs will have to be a full minute in length. The Men's Glee ence competition. He is the Go Minnesota. Kramer is current- overtimes before losing in the sixth, 59-56. Gerald Lindsley (6-0) G Club and band music supplied by the Wolverine band will feature pher co-captain along wit ly averaging 14.5 points a game. The Wolverines, on the other hand, have been staging a come- Ithe half-time show. teammate Chuck Mencel. CLOUbY, RAIN FOUR PAGES theBgTescrn acefrh -league leading visitors. He speu Lg cializes in a deadly outside shot, -Coach Ozzie Cowles claims that inr Garmaker and Mencel he has -"two of the finest college basket-. h ball players in the entire coun- try." Hatcher Sees No ndto Car Ban Change in Tuitioni, Fees Questioned; MSC Name Change Viewed Doubtful. By WALLY EBERHARD No changes in driving regulations are planned for the near future, University President Harlan H. Hatcher said yesterday. "I don't sense any eagerness on the part of the Board of Regents to modify the rules," he said. "Spot opinion I have picked up seems more against rather than in favor of any drastic change in the situa- tion." f nPresident Hatcher indicated that other colleges are studying tightening their driving regulations, rather than relaxing them. MSC May Begin Ban r ONLY SHOWER PROBLEM: 'Soc Psi' Home for 17 House Democrats Pusli Passage of Ike Foreign PROGRESS: wIHC Moves Into Second Year Work (EDITOR'S NOTE-This is the fourth in a series of interpretive articles dealing with the services, history and future of the Inter-House Council.) By JOEL BERGER Since September, 1953, the In- ter-House Council has been rap- idly moving into the position it now occupies in campus life. One of the first moves after school started in 1953 was to have financing done by collection of dues from individual house coun- cils. The money came from the house treasuries at the rate of 10E cents per man. Upon the request of the IHC early in October, Dean of Men Walter B. Rea explained to a meeting the situation surround- ing the removal of men from Chi- cago House, with the house being turned over to women. Chicago House Problem At the time Dean Rea said "the present use of Chicago House by women students is on a one-year basis." One of the IHC officers' current dilemmas is what stand to take on the use of the house, During the same meeting the which is still occupied by women. IHC ratified the constitution of the Campus Broadcasting Net- work. The three quadrangle sta- tions had previously been working together for a year under an in- formal agreement. On December 4 the IHC unan- imously voted to tackle the big- gest project in its short history- Operation Inquiry, an evaluation of how well the men's residence halls system is working. This re- port is currently in its final stages and will be released March 1. Begin Series of Workshops January 6, 1954, marked the date enabling legislation for the IHC Judiciary was given by the Residence Halls Board of Gover- nors. The Judiciary was given ap- pellate jurisdiction in all cases brought before house and quad- rangle judicial councils. One month later the IHC be- gan a series of workshops with Assembly. During the first such session, the place of residence halls in the University communi- ty was discussed. In March last year the IHC went on record as opposing "any Michigan State College, he said, is considering a rule to prevent freshmen from driving next year. Ohio State University is studying their regulations, he continued, to see how they can adapt them to cope with the driving and park- ing pi oblem on their campus. Speaking at a press conference in the Administration Building, President Hatcher said revision of tuition and fees is under study in terms of operating costs, although nothing formal has been decided. "Fees and dormitory rates at the University have not responded to the rise in the cost of living throughout the nation at large," he commented. "Services should be kept at as low a cost as pos- sible and we have responded re- luctantly when necessary." Commenting on a proposal in the State Legislature to change the name of Michigan State College to include the word "university," President Hatcher said the Re- gents' attitude against such a move has not changed. Might Be :Confusing The Regents are not concerned about the concept of a university but about a possible confusion in names, President Hatcher-added. Discussions on the senior col- lege of the University at Flint are continuing, the president com- mented, although no formal ac- tion has come out of the discus- sion yet. He said other cities have ex- pressed interest in the plan, under which the University will operate the last two years of a four year college in Flint. He indicated there are no formal proposals yet for similar colleges in other Mich- igan cities. Commenting on the missing Paul Bunyan trophy, 'President Hatcher said, "Whoever has it-- I wish they'd bring it back." The trophy was c in good faith, he commentea. and it is in- cumbent on us to treat it with re- spect. World News Roundup By The Associated Press Sea Victory ... TAIPEI, Formosa -- The Na- tionalists claimed yesterday their biggest victory since being forced off the mainland-a submarine and 21 ships of a Chinese Red troopcarrying convoy sunk yester- day by warships and planes. Possible loss of more than 1,600 Red soldiers was implied in the claim that eight Communist land- By MURRY FRYMER Jven though the showers don't work too well, and the bed mat- tiresses could be softer, the 17 men of Soc Psi' call themselves "a pretty happy bunch of guys." In University records the house at 927 S. Forest is officially call- ed 'Forest House,' and the scene of social-psychology group studies. Under Prof. Theodore Newcomb, the men of Forest House were united to study howa group forms, its development and the methods it uses to meet its problems. However, there have been some changes this semester. According to research assistant Harry Bur- dick, the study couldn't get the representative group it wanted, so it is not running at full scale. Out in the Woods Secondly, the men tired of the name "Forest House" which "sounded out in the woods" and chose "Old Forester" as having a little more "kick." But it seems the University and the telephone com- pany rebelled so. "Soc Psi," phort for Social Psychology, was adopt- ed. Life at Soc Psi is still pretty much the same as it was when the study was in full swing. The only difference is that men are paying their own rent ($100 a semester) whereas this was paid by the University when the study was on. Half the residents were parti- Icers Score cipants in last semester's study. The others are new. Pete Nordlie and Merle Johnson, research as- sistants in the, study, and their wives are acting as house mothers and fathers. Fraternities Rules Still under University regula- tions, the men have the same Trade Bill by -Daily-Lynn Wallas HOMEBODIES--Jay Colen dismayed to find there's no room for the dishes in the canned-foods closet returns them to fellow 'Soc Psier' Ron Piotter for further exploration. 4 3 in First, Win5to2 Special to The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - Michigan's hockey squad came alive here yes- terday with three blistering fast goals at the end of the first pe- riod to set the pace for a vitally important 5-2 win over Minnesota in the first game of a weekendI series. A sellout crowd of 6,090 was on hand to watch the Gophers crura- ble before a spirited Wolverine sextet that is trying desperately to remain in the running for a playoff berth in the Western In- ter-Collegiate Hockey League. The two'teams square off again tonightj in an equally, important game. 1 Team Effort It was a team effort with five different Wolverines taking a part in the scoring. Defenseman Bob Schiller broke the ice late in the first period at 13:52 when he took a pass from high-scoring Bill MacFarland at the blue line and whizzed a bullet screen shot past Minnesota goalie Jim Mattson. The gates opened further sec- onds later. A goal mouth mix-up with the puck being pushed into the nets by wing Jerry Karpinka gave Michigan a sudden 2-0 lead. New defenseman Mike Buchanan came through with the first goal of his varsity career on a beauti- ful, long shot from outside the blue line. Michigan continued to check well. Goalie Lorne Howes, who made 32 saves as compared to Mattson's 21, was in his best form throughout the hectic second and third stanzas. Rendall Scores An unassisted tally by Tom Ren- dall late in the second period in- creased the lead to 4-0. The scrap- py sophomore was able to slam the puck past the lunging Mattson even though he was pulled down hard from behind as he was shoot- ing. See KARPINKA, Page 3 No Use Anyway PORTERVILLE, Calif. (AP)- J. E. McCowen, a rancher in this area, reported a month ago that thieves had stolen his tele- vision set. Yesterday he reported the thieves returned and stole the antenna. hours aid rules generally appliedi to fraternities. A hired cook pre- 1 pares the meals but the rest of the house is managed by its resi- ' dents.-1 All races and religions are rep-3 resented in the group and the men are proud of this democratic set- ting.- "There's usually a religious dis- cussion around the house some- where," H o u s e Vice-President Charles (Pete) Johnson, '56, says.! Chess seems to be the other main' pastime. There's a committee in charges of pretty much everything but House President Joe Fischer, '58, beams, "We don't really have to , assign people to anything. If someone comes home and sees snow piled high on the walk, he'll clear it." All Transfer Students most tested group of people in the annals of social psychology." Last semester men spent three to five hours a week answering tests about the living, but at pres- ent this part of the study is not in effect. Also missing is one of the more prominent of the last semester's residents, a coccer spaniel belong- ing to one of the men. All the resi- dents had code numbers, so they adopted one for the pooch, too. "K-9.t" Need New Resident But K-9 proved too much of a problem and had to leave the study. The problem of the shower, which because of low water pres- sure, turns on and off unexpected- ly is still with the group. The new difficulty facing the Soc Psiers is that of finding an- other resident. The house has room for 18, and one more would help cut costs. Four students board in the house now, and Soc Psiers indicated that they could use more boarders, too, who "don't have to wash the dishes." 'U' Housing Inadequate: .dean Fuller By PHYLLIS LIPSKY University housing authorities are faced with the fact that the women's dormitory building pro- gram is not keeping pace with the increase in enrollment. This was the problem presented yesterday by Assistant Dean of Women Elsie R. Fuller to an As- sembly Association committee on women's housing. The particular problem which the committee will take up is how to fit next semester's larger wom- en student population into pres- ent dormitory facilities, with the least amount of discomfort. While the committee cannot deal with the problem of cutting down enrollment, Dean Fuller ex- plained that "the minute you put a ceiling on the number of wom-' en attending that would be dis-' crimination." 28 Still in Temporary Housing Even with the usual spring drop in size there are 28 women in temporary housing this semester, Dean Fuller said. The problem is further complicated by the fact that Couzen's Hall addition will not be completed by fall. Freshmen bear the brunt of over-crowding since a Regents rule requires them to live in dorms and returning upperclassmen and sophomores get first choice in room selection. Last year the Dean's office had to arrange to house the freshmen population after room choices had been made. As a result Dean Ful- ler explained some of the remain- ing rooms converted into doubles and triples were not necessarily the ones best suited, Student Opinion : Ad Therefore dormitory women are being asked for their suggestions early in the semester, she said. Student representatives, who came from every dorm on campus, pointed out that among the worst problems faced by residents are temporary housing arrangements in study halls and ping pong rooms, and the conversion of rooms not well suited for an ex- tra person. N95-110 Rolleall Vote Climaxes Bitter Fight Defeat of Reed Plan Test of Legislation WASHINGTON (P)-President Dwight D. Eisenhower's tariff-cut- ting foreign trade program was pushed through the House late yesterday with a big assist from its Democratic majority. After a bitter- two-day fight, the bill was passed on a rolicall vote of 295-110. But the lack of the opposition, led in part by members of Pres. Eisenhower's own party, was bro- ken when the House defeated by seven votes an amendment by Rep. Daniel A. Reed (R-NY) which would have deprived the President of much of his power to override recommendations of the Tariff Commission for higher trade barriers. Vote--206 to 199 In this key test of the legislation, the vote was 206-199. Rep. Reed's amendment was supported by 119 Republicans and 80 Democrats, but opposed by 140 Democrats and 66 Republicans. Voting for passage of the bill were 186 Democrats and 109 Re- publicans. Opposing it to the end were 75 Republicans and 35 Dem- ocrats. The bill now goes to the Senate. Soon after the House action, Pres. Eisenhower expressed his gratification in a statement in which he said: "This program is of tremendous significance to the economic health and security of the United States and our friends in the free world." He did not mention the refusal of House Republicans to unite behind the measure. Major Part of Program The bill, a major part of the ad-' ministration's program for this session of Congress, extends the reciprocal trade program for three years from June 12 and gives the President authority to cut tariffs up to 15 per cent during that pe- riod in return for similar conces- sions in foreign markets. Democrats carried the major share of the fight throughout the hot debate, and House Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex) once left the chair to speak for the program on the floor. Reed's amendment was opposed as a "crippling" and "devastating" addition to the bill, although it still would have permitted the President to override recommenda- tions of the Tariff Commission when national security required it. 'Dear Joe' Letter Eisenhower made a last minute appeal for support of the program in a "Dear Joe" letter to the mi- nority leader, Joseph Martin (R- I' All residents of Soc Psi are' transfer students, and claim homes from Connecticut to Missouri. The "old" residents who were around to take part in the study last se- mester say they were called: "the ---Daly-Lynn Wallas SOME SERVICE-Joe Fischer, Soc Psi President, is served cof- fee by Don Newell-a service both men say is not usually rendered. String Quartet To Perform Beginning with the Mozart Quartet in D, K 499, the Budapest String Quartet will play the sec- o nd concert in the three concert Chamber Music Festival at 8:30 tonight in Rackham Auditorium. Sponsored by the University WESLEY GROUP OPINION: Immigration Changes Requested Rv _ By MARY ANN THOMAS i AfLter tudyn the rpot of the the Act's national origins quota After studying the repor ofthe system to be invalid, the group President's Commission on Immi- recommended that it be replaced gration and Naturalization, the by a unified quota system with Social AionCommittee of t preference given the following 'U' Wesley Foundation recom- mended that the McCarran-Walter peoples: n Act 1 Relatives of American citizens Immigration and Nationality and of alien resident, of the Unit- of 1952 be revised or replaced. ed States 2) Specially skilled per- Stating its views in a special sons 3) Refugees, escapees and ex- worksheet, the committee said, pellees 4) Immigrants from over- that this country "has always been populated countries 5) Displaced a place where the homeless and persons 6) Immigrants to satisfy oppressed have been welcome to needs in the United States. nor crime to deportation or deny them re-entry. Tha committee called for greater flexibility in the law and charged that its grounds for deportation of aliens "do not always bear reasonable relation- ship to national security and are often technical and excessive." In its recommendations the com- mittee said the definition of to- talitarianism should be clarified and affiliation to totalitarian groups should involve only those ,E I I ! 1; .gin -1, ,, 1._. --4-,,,,., --A rs..vA- -+ 1 l - -- _. Rv - f t " I