PAGZ SM% THE M BIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. JUNE 27. 1957 PAGE SiX TIlE MIChIGAN DAILY TIWRSDAY, Jt~'E 27, i~7 Ron's Newest Teammate Hoad Seeks Wimbledon Tennis Title WIMBLEDON, England (/P) ---- Lew Hoad blew over another op- ponent yesterday in his rush to- ward a second straight Wimble- don championship. He defeated Trevor Fancutt of South Africa in the second round, 6-4, 6-2, 6-1. As the 71st Wimbledon Cham- pionships moved through the third day without a major upset, another all-Australian final ap- peared shaping up with Hoad and Ashley Cooper as the principals. Cooper Impressive The second-seeded Cooper had everything-power, finesse, speed, positioning, rejuvenated forehand and the other shots - in his 6-1, 6-3, 6-3 victory over aging Jaro- slav Drobny, the 1954 champion. . Vic Seixas of Philadelphia, the 1953 winner who is seeded sixth, and seventh-seeded Herbie Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., defeated a pair of upset-obsessed Indians to keep America's standard flying. Two of America's most promis- ing youngsters, Miami's Mike Green and Myron Franks of Los Angeles, and three comparative old-timers - 1950 Wimbledon winner Budge Patty, Gardnar Mulloy and Hugh Stewart-picked up second-round victories to prove the American game still is second only to Australia's in world class. Mrs. Knode Wins Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode of Forest Hills, N.Y., seeded fourth in the women's division, won her second-round match from Chris- tiane Mercelis of Belgium, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. Karol Fageros of Miami, the "pinup girl" of the tournament, rallied to defeat Ilse Buding of Germany, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5, in a sec- ond-round match. Read and Use Daily Classifieds 'SUB-STANDARD' VIOLATIONS DOWN: AA Housing Undergoes Changes Within a two-year period beginning in 1056,there have been 2,200 edicts issued by the Building Safety departfment of Ann Arbor to land- lords violating Michigan housing lawcs. These violations were found in 800 single and multiple dwelling structures located in the heavily populated area around the Univer- sity campus which is gounded by Fifth Ave., Forest, Kingsley and Packard. John E. Ryan, director of Building and Engineering for Ann Arbor, said about 75 per cent of the violations have already been corrected. He added that the continued strict application of housing laws would make the problem negligible in two or three years. Frequent Violations Ryan listed six regulations which were the cause of most hous- ing violations. In their order of frequency they are egress (accessible exits in a dwelling), electric wiring, sharing of bath, storage of com- bustibles, unenclosed stairway KRAMER AND WIFE - Ron Kramer, Michigan's All-American end, and his new bride leave Jackson's First Methodist Church after their wedding June 22. Kramer recently signed an estimated $15,000 coptract witl the Green Bay Packers. The brilliant ath- lete, who earned nine letters at Michigan - three each in foot- ball, basketball, and track - would also like to play pro basketball with the Detroit Pistons, from whom he has received offers. Mrs. Kramer is the former Nancy Cook of Jackson. O'MALLEY'S CLAIM: Dodgers Would Re11i If1Plant Were Developed TED WILLIAMS ... testifies before Senate Williams Says Clause Needed BOSTON ()-"If you can show me how baseball can get along without the reserve clause, you're dealing in miracles." Ted Williams, slugging Boston Red Sox outfielder, thus touched on the congressional investigation into professional baseball yester- day. Since the Supreme Court deci- sion that professional football comes within the scope of the antitrust laws, Congress has been looking into the baseball picture. A newsman asked Williams if he thought baseball should con- tinue to handle its own affairs without interference. "Well, it's done all right for over a hundred years," he replied. "Look, who is against it? Talk to any of the players. None of them are unhappy with it." CLOSET OR ROOM?-This room measures approximately 8x10x- 81/2. A single window opens out into the street. The bed doubles for a desk when not being slept in. Closet space is unavailable. approaches (in a building more than two stories in height) and cellar rooms or apartments. As defined in thq housing law Act 127 provision 2488 Sec. 2 (la). a "'Sub-standard dwelling' is a dwelling of any class which is not' so equipped as to have each of the following items: running water, inside toilets; or a dwelling which has either inadequate cellar drain- age, defective plumbing, an in- side room having no windows therein, impropersexits orde- fective stairways so as to make such dwelling a fire hazard." Poor Conditions It has been estimated by ob- servers that the above conditions exist, in varying degrees, in at least 25 per cent of the rooming houses. The same observers attribute this laxity of conforming to reg- ulations to the housing shortage which has existed periodically in Ann Arbor since World War I. They claim landlords are negli- gent in repairing their buildings since they know they can always get tenants during the fall rush. Over half of the University's students presently live in private dwellings of one kind or another. These dwellings range from room- ing houses to cooperatives. Not listed in this grouping are resi- dence halls, fraternities and sor- orities. This Old House One roomer complained that af- ter walking into "this old, run- down rooming house" the first thing striking the sense of the visitor is a peculiar "musty odor, reminiscent of an Egyptian tomb." After the eyes have become ac- quainted with the "dim lighting," one can see a "rickety staircase" leading up to a "narrow hall with a single, naked lightbulb at the far end." The doors, sporadically located along the walls of the hall, open into "dingy, over-crowded gar- rets" whose depressive atmos- phere cannot help but "affect a guy's outlook," the roomer sighed in describing his temporary resi- dence. Stark Reality To at least 25 per cent of the total number of students living outside of residence halls, fra- ternities or sororities, conditions similar to the above are a stark reality. Next fall, the student enrollment at the University is expected to reach 24,100, an increase of more than 2,000 over this fall. By 1960, enrollment is expected to soar to 30,000 and by 1970 to 40,000. 'U' Plans Ahead Anticipating this swelling, Uni- versity administrators have made long-range plans intended to ab- sorg the future influx. In No- vember, 1956, ground was broken for a new women's residence hall on campus which will accommo- date 1,200 students. The huge North Campus pro- ject calls for shifting certain Uni- versity schools and colleges, as well as establishing new residence facilities, in that area. Four' hun- dred apartments are now in use for married studenta. Fraternities and sororities are making room for part of their share of the increase by building annexes to the main houses. How- ever, their greatest period of ex- pansion is expected to occur be- tween 1961-1970 when many chap- ters will shift their residences to North Campus. Increase Looms The Ann Arbor community, an- ticipating the tide of enrollment, will provide space for 1,100 more students before 1961. Construc- tion work on four apartment buildings, the largest of which will accommodate 300 residents, is scheduled to begin this summer. Cooperative housing a r o u n d campus is also on the up-swing, In the last five years three houses were added to the co-op system, bringing their total number to eight, Daily Photo Feature Story by RONALD KOTULAK Pictures by RICHARD GASKILL WASHINdTON (A) - The Brooklyn Dodgers would stay in, Brooklyn if they could develop the right kind of physical plantl quickly, President Walter O'Mal- ley told investigating congressmen yesterday. Seeks Site O'Malley testified he would be satisfied if New York City would provide him with a site on which he could build a 50,000-seat Stadi- um for his National League base- ball team. Ebbets Field, present home of the Dodgers, holds about 32,000.j Another "must,' he made clear, is a parking facility for 4,000 cars at Atlantic and Flatbush avenues. where there are good subway con. nections. National League club owners last month gave the Dodgers per- mission to move their franchise to the West Coast. Rep. Celler (D-NY), chairman of the inquiry group, asked the Dodger boss whether he would re- main in Brooklyn if all that were available, even though he has in- vested two million dollars in the Los Angeles ball park. "Yes," O'Malley said. But he quickly added: "Time is definitely running out on that." O'Malley's lease on Ebbets Field expires at the end of the 1959 sea- son. O'Malley appeared before the House Anti-trust subcommittee, which is studying the legal status of professional team sports. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily NTOW! Phone NO 2-3241 3 t' . The Universityi of Michigan Summer SessionG Go Presents inG C TA DA LN CE ECITALEEl 3v D11A~R~flandA§Jj- Internationally .Famous India .Dance Team0 IN A SERIES OF I Authcqitic Dances of their Native India +F'A MICHIGAN HOUSING LAW ACT 127-Article IV provision 2556 Sec. 68, "No room in the cellar of any dwelling ... shall be occu- pied for living purposes." 1 DANGER AHEAD - Unlighted and unmarked stairways pre- sent continual hazards. This one, in addition, has no railing. CROWDED BUT COMPACT-A three-room apartment for two people with a total floor area of approximately 152 square feet. The kitchen, consisting of a hotplate, is located in a converted closet. The rent, however, is low. ,; long= :r::: -------- ----- -/