x. xrx THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1957 45p'i;4 01 OT AN IRON HAND LEADER: Warrick Leads Organizations with Diplomacy, Tact Chairmen Morton Winls I I By DAVID TARR When Robert Warrick, '57E, was handed the Inter-House Council presidential gavel on his election a year ago, he smiled shy- ly dnd began to make the appro- priate remarks of thanks and pro- mises of better things to come. He spoke in °a. quiet voice, one often difficult to hear distinctly in a large room, choosing his words slowly and carefully. The next few meetings were tur- bulent in wake of a Residence Hall room and board rate increase. Ois- cussion was vigorous and the meetings, at times, disorganized. Had Warrick chosen to bang the gavel harder and more frequently, those and other meetings might have run smoother, might have seen more accomplished. Subtly Persuasive That he did not choose to run the meetings with an iron hand is indicative of the subtly persuasive person that is Warrick. It is most unlikely he has ever wanted to run things with an iron hand. Many of his cblleagues say he is not an outwardly dynamic person. They prefer to call him diplomatic. Warrick stepped down from his position as IHC president about a month ago leaving an organization he describes ap "in a good position to grow." IHC began the year with a. com- pletely revamped structure and a new constitution. "These changes have made operation difficult at times this year," he said, "but overall we've been able to develop IHC fairly well." Requires Patience People conjkected with IHC re- port this year has been one of trial and error. They say the diffi- culty in making a new organiza- tion work has required a certain amount of patience, flexability and caution from the top officials. When Warrick came to office in IHC,. he did not lack back- ground in student government and Residence Halls affairs. It all started back in the fresh- man year, the only year he was not president of some organization. He did get elected to Strauss House Council and moved up to be its president the following year. Folklore Society Begins Rehearsals The University Polklore Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union to rehearse for next Thurs- day's concert. Pictures will be *aken for pub- licity relations.. V w Announce Cooley Prize Committee For- Essay should remark "I wouldn't .have taken the IHC presidency if I didn't believe it and student gov- ernment has a good future. There must be progress - much of it slow and tedious - in many areas, but the potential is there." Still on student government, he' continued, "In the Residence Halls (he tries to avoid 'dormitory') governments can help counteract the great apathy on campus that impregnates everything. Views Student Government "Someday Residence Hall gov- ernment may be second only to SOC in strength, position and re- sponsibility on campus. I think women's and men's governments will someday be combined," he said. As an engineer, Warrick is somewhat an unusual phenome- non in student activities. He thinks the main reason there are not more engineers in student activities is only a lack of time. "An engine student is not so dif- ferent from the literary school student and he's not always in- clined to go so far off on cloud nine."- Returns in Fall On a four and one-half -year course, he will be back next fall for more academic work. He won't-come back to the neat- ly cluttered desk in the IHC of- fices, he may let up on smoking (he said he did very little of it be- fore becoming IC president), he won't have to contend with food demonstrations or room and board increases. But he won't be done with Residence Halls - one close friend' predicts he will be back pushing forward with some of his long-range ideas and plans. I Gerry Wise, '59, and Brian Hig- gins, '59, General Co-chairmen of Homecoming announced central committee members yesterday. Those chosen are: William Leh- man, '58E, alumni relations; Mort Kaplan, '58, band; Susan Brace, '60, and Herbert Appel, '59, book- let; James Spolyar, '60, building and grounds; Judy Kolk, '60, Neil Grey, '60, decorations; Sally Ste- ketee, '59, and Michael Camras, '59, displays; John Denton, '58, finance; Gretchen Burgie, '60, pro- grams and patrons; Joanne Ort- wein, '60, and John Kirkendahl, '60, publicity; Arline Harris, '59, secretary and Phyllis Levine, '59 and John Kemp, '60, tickets. Plans for Homecoming, Oct. 19, will begin this semester and con- tinue through the fall. YR's To Hear Talk on GOP By Lindemere. Lawrence B. Lindemere, the new chairman of the Republican state central committee, will speak to the Young Republican Club at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Rm. 3510 of the Student Activities Building. His speech will be entitled "What the GOP Must Do to Win in 1958." After his speech, the club will hold a special election for presi- dent. Charles Morton, '57E, was the $400 first prize winner in the engineering college's Cooley Essay Contest, Walter J. Emmons, assist- ant dean of the college announced yesterday. Peter Vail, '60E, and Anthony Plutynski, '59E, the second and third place winners, were recip- ients of $200 and $100 respectively. Subject of this year's essay was "The Effect of Automation in Our Society." The contest, established through the will of Mortimer E. Cooley, former dean of - the engineering college, is designed to help "de- velop, broaden and enrich the engineer's education." m t COLLEGE DAZE* 4 I%- Most studies of studerits at college disclose That boys and girls aim at quite different things. The boys learn new angles-add strings to their bows; The co-eds would rather add beaus to their stringst, MORAL: Why be high-strung? Relax with the BIG, BIG pleasure of Chesterfield King! More full. flavored satisfaction from the world's best tobaccos. PLUS King-size filter action .., a better tobacco filter because it's packed more smoothly by ACCU.RAYI 0 K=N Chesterfield King has everything! '$50 goes to Bob Arakn cht, Dartmouth College, for his Chester Field poem. $50 for evey philo ophic al verse accepted for publi- .,.,.. ,p cation. Chesterfield, P.O. Box 21, New York 46, N.Y. 0 Lkg.Ut & Wan T*U~emCo . - t. I The I -Daily-David Tarr ACTIVE ENGINEER - Robert Warrick, retiring Inter-House Council president, is one of the small clan of engineering students that find time to participate in student government. From there, the next step -- in his junior year - was the presi- dency of East Quadrangle. Every- thing was climaxed this year with the IHC post which carries an ex- of ficio seat on Student Govern- ment Council. "Now I'm taking it a little easi- er," the slightly-built engineering student said. "working at the En- gineering Research Institute and as a laboratory assistant." If Warrick has any distinctive characteristic it probably is the jargon °he uses profusely. Those who know him have come to ex- pect an emphatic "Right .. .!" to precede many of his sentences. What follows is usually in a monotone , and frequently exten- sive, including many involved de- tails. Views Problems This characteristic is also seen in his tendency to view a problem from a long-range perspective.' Frequently, Warrick has called for a long-range study that will probe all the possible areas connected with a problem. It was characteristic that he Insurance- Trend iTold The current United States in- surance trend "is full protection for all of the people," Dr. Nathan Sinai, director of the University Bureau of Public Health Econo- mics, said recently. Speaking at the 25th annual Adult Education Institute. Dr. Si- nai told of how a group of Baylor University employees in 1932 pooled part of their funds to cov- er individual hospital expenses. BROWN JUG, .1204 South University SPAGHETTI AND MEALS OUR SPECIALTY ~1 Subscribe to The, Michigan Daily 3. CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY r U U U.S. KOYLON U.S. KOYLON FOAMRUBBER friCres ?Teed Sloppy down or sagging spring furniture Cushions can be converted to Solid One-Piece FOAM-RUBBER NOW! ALL STANDARD SIZES We Fabricate Special Sizes or Shapes. Pick-up& Delivery 1-Day Service PHONE NO 2-4706 RENDEL'S UPHOLSTERY FOAM-RUBBER SUPPLY DEPOT, 731 Lakeview, Ann Arbor PARTY FAVORS for ALL OCCASIONS Ball Office Supply 213 E. Washington Ph. 3-1161 _r i, ~i -~' err ' t -' -n? -- x' I Ww T ough, Durable "P LAST IM AYD" FISHERS - HUNTERS IT'S HERE! Handled by retail stores in Ann Arbor-Pontiac--St. Clair Shores area: No organized retail sales in other areas. Delrwilwa GET YOURS HERE Dealr wll rapand arrange shipment to your home. The only rigid, row pressure float on the market. A brand new concept in high-bouyancy Life-Gard is a versatile fishing erafl that lg tweight floats. can be set atloat easily and quickly in any stream or lake not accessible by boat uer - aatr fsee LARGE SIZE 8-ft. long, 8-in. thick, 27-in, wide, s50-. lift in water . .* It's the perfect beach companion for youngsters and grown- BOATERS ups alike! So soft you can sleep on it as an air mattress, yet so revo- lutionary in design that a 200 pound man can stand in the center and the Life-Gard will still remain flat on the water! And, so important, too . . . Life-Gord is the safest thing afloat ! Constructed with three individual buoyancy compartments, it cra- dles your body so perfectly that even in rough water a 40-degree Now, for the first time, Lfe-Gard gives tl iln tsily uO t Olg t eg ta d Sf h ty u ei i you a soft, low pressure itot that still tl ilntsilyuot olgtegtadsf htyueii a"",0-o".n load "at te cetr-thu " nate all possibility of injury present in old fashioned wooden pad- doubing p at.theendsdie boards. Guaranteed against weld separation, and permanently SWIMMERS repairable. - - w~ith the new Life-Gard float you can swim A PROFI TA BLE SUMMER JOB S to 10 feet at a stroke, or dive fiat for a iin ideuof tor 40 fesieit, Swim for IF YOU LIVE IN A WATER RECREATION AREA ISHECRtwHTEReinAn "Ab Pntisaoet f Shresare: Noorgnizd reailsals inothr aeas {IlIE~~~~ l~T i . , t a ' I