Residence Hall Integration Low Survey Reveals (Editor's Note: This Is_ the first of three articles discussing residence halls integration in the assignment of roommates. Today's article pre- sents results of a sociological survey. Future articles will deal with the University's policies and methods.) By DAVID TARR Nearly three out of four students living in residence halls room with someone of the same race, religion and nationality. The remaining one-fourth almost always room with someone of the same race, although they are mixed religiously, according to a recent random-sample survey. To put it more exactly, 97 per cent of the dorm residents room with someone of the same race while 72 per cent live with roommates alike racially, religiously and nationally. Random Sample Survey The figures are based on a random sampling of 109 students from the residence halls. The Daily conducted the survey in conjunction with a project of an undergraduate sociology major. Random samples provide the best method for determining char- acteristics of a large population based on interviews with a compara- tively small number of people. Results of the survey are statistically reliable within a small possible margin of error. Roommate applications for both men and Women provide spaces for the students to indicate if they want or do not want to room with someone different than themselves. Quarter of Requests Not Met The survey shows that, in assigning roommates to students who gave specific preferences regarding religion, race or nationality, more than 24 per cent of the requests were not met. Sixty-three per cent of the men and 52 per cent of the women made such requests. For the men 16 per cent of the requests were not met-for the women the percentage of requests not met was 27. The difference may be attributed to more crowded conditions in women's dorms. Questions regarding roommate preference differ for men and women. The men are asked "Are you interested in a roommate of a nationality, or race other than your own. Only 56 per cent of the men answered "no" to the question. (Some administrators have estimated that as many as 80-90 per cent of the men indicate they do not want roommates of another race or religion.) Two Men Asked Racial Mixing In all but one case those answering "no" to the question were not mixed racially. Two were mixed religiously. Two men in the sample answered the question "yes." Neither was granted his request. Of the men with "no preference," (27 per cent) nearly two-thirds were mixed religiously (or 17 per cent of the whole group). One man was racially mixed. The women's question is broader. It reads: "Specify any prefer- ences or qualifications you have regarding a roommate." Half of Women Given No Preference Fifty per cent of the women assigned roommates said they had no preference (compared with 27 per cent for the men). Of these, half were mixed racially or religiously-mostly the latter. Three women said they would be interested in rooming with some- one of a different nationality. Their requests were not met. There were no specific requests from women for a roommate of another race. Seventeen per cent of the women said they wanted a roommate of the same religion and race. Nineteen per cent requested only "same religion." About 10 per cent requested just "same race." With one exception, these women were not mixed in any way. Few Foreign Students, Non-Caucasians There were no replies to the random sample from foreign students and no reports of mixing with foieign students, so no conclusions can be drawn about integration of people from different countries. Of the 109 replies, only one was from a Negro. One inference which can be drawn from the lack of replies from non-Caucasian and foreign students is that there are few of them in the dormitories to be integrated. There is a three per cent difference between religious mixing in men's dorms and religious mixing for the coeds. Although the overall figure is one-fourth, the breakdown is 23 per cent for men and 26 per cent for women. The difference is surprisingly small because: 1) no attention is given to religion specifically in the women's application, and 2) the men's application requires students to give their religion. More Mixing by Administration Not all students are assigned roommates by the administration however. About one-third choose their own roommates. There is slightly less mixing, religiously or racially, among those that choose their own roommates than among those assigned by the administration. Jewish students accounted for one-fifth of the total replies to the sample. Nearly half of these asked for Jewish roommates. Of the half that did not, all but two were assigned Jewish roommates. Less Objection to Religious Mixing The survey also questioned students on changes in their attitude towards mixed living-and the replies were interesting. Before coming to college 58 per cent said they would have objected to being racially mixed, 39 per cent didn't care and three per cent wanted racial mixing. After coming to college there was a 12 per cent switch from "objecting" to rooming with a person of another race to "not caring," with a corresponding switch the opposite way. The "prefer mixed" group stayed the same. Trend in Religious Attitudes There was a larger trend in religious attitudes. Before college 12 per cent would have "objected" to a roommate of another religion while 86 per cent didn't care. But after college two-thirds of those who "objected" switched to "don't care" while only five per cent went the other way. There was no change in the two per cent that preferred to room with someone of another religion. Most of the switching was done by students living with roommates of the same race and religion. Questioned as to the effect of mixed living on adjusting to college life, students who were mixed religiously reported easier adjustment, on the whole, than those not mixed. Also, fewer of those who were mixed religiously found it "quite difficult" to adjust. Get Along with Roommates Well However, students rooming with unmixed roommates tended to get along better with their roommates than did those mixed religiously. Seventy per cent of the unmixed students said they get along with their roommates "very well" as compared with 63 per cent in the religiously mixed group. And only six per cent of the unmixed group got along with their roommates "not very well" as compared with 11 per cent for the religiously mixed group. Although students can choose their roommates after the first semester, the survey showed that almost half either stay with their previous roommate or are assigned new ones by the administration. I I Y 41tr t an i iatj lft--J&mdld Latest Deadline in the State PARTLY CLOUDY, FLURRIES W ., VOL. LXVII, No. 114 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1957 EIGHT PAGE EIGHT PAGES IHC Seeks Study Of Residence Halls Proposed Committee To Investigate Dorm Doubling Up, Price Increases By RICHARD TAIB Inter-House Council Praesidium last night voted to request Vice- Presidbnt for Student Affairs James A. Lewis to set up a committee to study residence halls. The committee would be comprised of three faculty members, three residence hall counselors and three students. Investigation would include the effect of doubling and tripling in residence halls, effects of room and board raises, and an evalua- tion of the breakdown of upper-class residents. Bob Warrick, '57E, IHC president, complained of the lack of upperclassmen in the dorms, and the apparent increasing dropoff. In one house alone, the number of upperclassmen retained has dropped from 120 to 70 and still seems to be declining. Final Okay Given Suez Doctrine WASHINGTON (P)--The House wrapped up President Dwight D. Eis'enhower's Middle East resolu- tion in a 350-60 roll-call vote of approval yesterday and sent it to the White House. The House action was swift, shortcutting usual procedures. The vote was on whether to agree to the Senate version of this reso- lution, which warns the Commu- nists against aggression in the Middle East. President Eisenhower had al- ready called the Senate language agreeable to him, and he saidyes- terday "I was definitely pleased" at the 72-19 vote of approval re- corded by the Senate Tuesday night." United States Prepared The Senate version, which is now that of the whole Congress, says that if the President consid- ers it necessary, "the United States is prepared" to use armed forces to protect any Middle East- ern nations requesting assistance against overt Communist aggres- sion. The House version, approved 355-61 on Jan. 30, would have "au- thorized" the President to use trops if the need arose. Some in the Senate had con- tended that the President already had the authority, as commander in chief. At Democratic urging, the Senate made the change in the resolution accordingly. Israeli Troops Destroy Egyptian Installations As Withdrawal Begins Warrick' explained this drop student government. At one time SGC: Evaluation >J Committee Forum Set Student Government Council's evaluation committee decided yes- terday to open its next meeting to any member of the student body wishing to express views on SGC. Committee chairman Prof. Lio- nel Laing, of the political science dept. said the meeting is sched- uled for 3 p.m. next Thursday in Rm. 3003, Student Activities Building. At yesterday's meeting, com- mittee members received an eval- uation letter from former SGC president Hank Berliner, '56, and heard him declare they were "pre- sumptuous to go beyond their ori- ginal charge." He said the committee's first obligation is in answering Vice- President Lewis' question, "Has SGC been effective and has it functioned as anticipated?" If the committee wants to go further than fulfilling this charge, it should be reappointed. Berlin- er said. Priest Calls Faith 7N otion Of Wholeness' Catholicism is "the notion of wholeness" according to The Rev- erend Father John F. Bradley of St. Mary's Student Chapel in Ann Arbor. Father Bradley spoke in the last of three symposia sponsored by the Inter-House Council. He said, "The Catholic church truths of religion, not just a few notions." was having dangerous effects on house presidents were all upper- *classmen. Now they are predom- inantly sophomores and second semester freshmen. Multiple Menus Jack Hale, senior resident. di- rector of men's residence halls, told the praesidium multiple menus which begin next Wednes- day may cause special problems until the system has been com- pletely worked out. One problem will be the slow- er rate at which meal lines may move. Because people are making choices, this is inevitable, het said. Another difficulty will be caused by lack of experience in deter- mining relative ,popularity of dif- ferent foods. It may be, Hale ex- plained, some foods will run out before the line closes, until a body of statistics can be built up. Students sInformed He suggested these problems be carefully explained to residence hall members- because although he felt it was a big step in improv- ing the food situation, it could go the other way if students aren't informed. Hale also explained to the group the establishment of a summer orientation program. Tentatively, it calls for freshman to visit the University during the summer to take care of "the mechanics of registration." This includes testing, ID cards, counseling and r e g is t r a t io n. Freshmen will then return to school two days before classes be- gin to stgrt orientation to the University, student government and general college life. State of Flux Those freshmen who don't come during the summer will ar- rive at the University three days earlier in September. He suggested IHC study this area and make proposals since the plan is still in "a state of flux." Drake Duane, '57, Administra- tive Vice-President, told the body, all three quads need scholarship chairmen. Former heads had to resign because of grades. .Board Plans Union Senate POLITICAL COMEBACK: Irish Parliament Swept SBy de Valera Victories DUBLIN, Ireland E')- Eamon de Calera regained control of Parliament yesterday in a smashing political comeback for the 74- year-old New York-born Irish patriot. He will become prime minister for a third time amid simmerings of a new armed revolt against British rule in Northern Ireland and in a time of economic stress. But now the nearly blind though still physically active "Dev," the last surviving comandant of the outlawed Irish Republican Army, is an advocate of peaceful negotiation as the best means of uniting the country. Parliament to Meet The newly chosen Parliament will meet March 20 for the formal -Daily-Norm Jacobs RELIGIOUS CONFERENCE-Prof. Arnold Nash of the University of North Carolina history department included football for the students and objectivity for the faculty as among "campus gods."j Nash Discusses Campus Gods in Conference Talk By JOHN WEICHER Football was listed yesterday as one campus god by Prof. Arnold Nash, of the history department of the University of North Carolina. Prof. Nash, speaking at the ,All-Campus Conference on Religion, also included the beliefs that man is just a higher animal or that he. can achieve the "ultimate" by "narrying someone like Marilyn Mon- roe or Jayne Mansfield."' election of De Valera as prime miinster - a post in which he served for atotal of 18 years. Het has Objectivity as a God Middle East Situation He called objectivity the god of the typical professor. "He be- T lieves that the farther from an issue he can get, the better equipped he bThe Middle East situation has "is to study it. Actually, true objec- conflict, by Egypt's seizure of the Faculty Group tivity realizes that it is impossible Suez Canal, by the Anglo-French Facu ty ~ oup to be objective at one point unless invasion of the. Suez area, and one committed to something at eneral ferment. A commonly ex- P a s Study anther." e t oetiga pressed fear has been that Russi Pohe.Ndwould move in dangerously; the Prof. Nash defined a 'god' as resolution is designed to tell Mos- Of i ie cy "whatsoever a man believes to be cow to keep hands off. ultimate," and religion as his res- In addition to setting up the com- ponse to this god. warning, the resolution grants A literary college faculty cm "Thus it is possible to make a PeietEsnoe ewyi mittee seeking- better use of cal- Tu ti osil omk President Eisenhower leeway in - study of comparative religion spending 200 million dollars in lege professors' time hopes to have without going to Africa or Asia," military and economic aid in the some tentative areas of study out- he said. "One can make compari- Middle East region between now lined this Spring. , sons on any campus." and July 1. Prof. Donald G. Marquis, chair- Football and Religion In yesterday's final voting, 186. man of the psychology department Prof. Nash drew several paral- Democrats and 164 Republicans and of the committee, said it is lels between football and religion voted for and 33 Democrats and to illustrate this point. He noted 27 Republicans voted against. "still in an undecided state. It that at football games there are The Senate had taken two would be premature now, even to rituals in cheers, while priests will months exactly, from the time say what their task is." do everything but "gash them- President Eisenhower asked for The committee's general aim, he selves to achieve their god's favor." the resolution, to vote on it, explained, is to see how "those things for which professors are NSA PRESIDENT: best suited can be maximized" as _ demandston their time. Work be- gan last October. aB k e p a so td i Each member of the committee has contacted several other facul- ty members to get suggestions on By MARGARET MOORE how better to supply services, as- The future of the student movement lies in its contributions to sistant Prof. Marquis added, how- current problems of higher education, Harold Bakken, president of ever, that additional staff and me- the National Student Association, said yesterday. chanical help "is not necessarily In Ann Arbor to make arrangements for the NSA Congress here our main ar, of inquiry." next summer, Bakken pointed out that "with rising enrollment, univer- Dean Charles E. Odegaard of the sities must draw on every resource they have. literary college, who set up the Neglected Resource committee, said he did so in res- "The most neglected resource is the student," he said. "Yet, as has been on the sidelines as op- position leader for the last three years. With all the results in, De Val- era's Fianna Fail - Men of Des- tiny - party had won 78 of the 147 seats in the Dail-lower house. This gave him an absolute ma- jority of nine even if the Sinn Feiners should unexpectedly take their four seats. The standing of the other parties was: former Prime Minister John A. Costello's Fine Gael 40, Labor 12, Independ- ent 9, Clann na Talmhan - Far- mers 3, Clann na Poblachta - Re- publicans 1. Sinn Feiners The four elected, but rebellious, Sinn Feiners have said they will boycott the Parliament. De Val- era can count on three and per- haps four Independents to sup- port him. De Valera has made plain he intends to become prime minister and personally lead his Fianna Fail. Of the four Sinn Fein candi- dates elected, two are still in jail for revolutionist activities. Anoth- er is the brother of an under- ground raider killed in attacking a British army camp in Northern Ireland only four months ago. Biographer Comments By TAMMY MORRISON Eamon de Valera's policies in his forthcoming term as Irish Prime Minister probably won't be radically different from those of present leader John A. Costello, de Valera's biographer said last night. SMary C. Bromage, University instructor in business writing and author of the recently-published "De Valera", commented, "It's a matter of change of leadership and one-party government in- stead of coalition. The two major parties (de Val- era's Fianna Fail and Costello's Fine Gael) have grown much closer. It would be risky to say one is more conservative or radi- cal than the other." Unemployment, Violence According to Mrs. Bromage, the aging statesman faces two major problems in his coming term: un- employment and the recurrence of violence. At present, Ireland has 100,000 jobless-one in ten-and its youth is emigrating at the rate of 1,000 per, month. To help solve this problem, de Valera will probably encourage the development of na- tive industry, something he has al- ways sought. "Although recent uprisings of the Irish Republican Army seem very striking to us, they're actually the work of a small minority of ex- tremists. The IRA has been out- lawed by both de Valera and Cos- tello." Friendlier Relations Of late, friendlier relations have been established by tle South with both England and the North of Ireland - M r ma sa- Vacate Gaza, UN Forces Take Over Administration Of Disputed Area Handed to UN TEL AVIV, Israel W)-Israell troops blew up Egyptian military works at the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba yesterday in'preparation for withdrawal today. Other Israeli forces completed their exit from the Gaza Strip and handed United Nations forces the burden of administering that hot- ly disputed area. The company-strength unit at Sharm el Sheikh was expected to take only a few hours to vacate and United Nations troops stood by ready to fill the vacuum. Dem- olition teams wrecked concrete pillboxes, a munitions depot and two six-inch gun positions which formerly closed the Gulf to Israeli ships. Egyptian Fortifications The Israelis did not want the Egyptians to find the fortifica- tions intact in case UN occupa- " tion proves to be only temporary. Similar destruction of roads and installations was carried out by the Israelis in their long retreat out of the Sinai Desert a few weeks ago. Tanks, guns and vehicles-- much of it captured Egyptian equipment - already had been loaded aboard ships, and lighter material was flown out by planes. Raise UN Flag Finnish units of the United Na- tions Emergency Force were ready to- raise the UN flag overlooking the narrow coral-dotted strait as soon as the Israelis pull out. Israel's withdrawal from the 26- mile Gaza Strip on the Mediter- ranean after 125 days of occupa- tion was swiftly completed before dawn, except for a tiny working party which did not leave until afternoon. Appropriation Request Leads To Squabble The. University, finding itself caught in the crossfire between the Republican state legislature and Democratic administration, is waiting for a truce settlement to determine where it will m th + it Movement ...........