NEW COLUMNISTS See Page 4 -.-ww \;YI L It 4b :43A6F tt FREEZING RAIN Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LXI, No. 86 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1951 SIX PAGES U Daily Offers Opportunity To Students .Staff Issues. Call For New Tryouts Potential draftees need not face -t semester of non-participation in. campus activities just because calls from the armed services await them in .June. Unlimited opportunities in re- portlng, editorial writing, adver- tising and business methods are open for students working on the staffs of The Daily. Former staff- ers now in' the service claim that their Daily experience has often ,proved invaluable in advancing their status in the Army and Navy. * *' * WOMEN STUDENTS, males un- der 19 years of age and 4-F's as dwell as draft bait may become members of the Daily staff this semester by attending tryout .meetings tomorrow and Thursday at the2Student Publications Build- 1 ing, 420 Maynard St. Meetings to sign up new mem- bers of the editorial, sports, women's and business staffs are open to all scholastically eligible students of second semester " freshman or higher class stand- Ing. Time schedule for meetings is: editorial, sports and women's staff, 4 p.m. tomorrow and 5 p.m. Thurs- day; business staff, 5 p.m. tomor.- row and 4 p.m. Thursday. rEXTENSIVE TRAINING pro- grams to acquaint tryouts with ,reportorial and business methods have been outlined by staff mem- bers with long experience on the Daily. Editorial tryouts will begin night desk duties which includes head- line writing and proof reading after short training periods. Dur- ing the course of the semester they will learn journalistic style, straight news, feature and editori- .al writing techniques and the re- lation of the Daily to the rest of the campus. Business tryouts ill make on- tacts with local merchants for ad- vertising and will learn advertis- ing writing techniques, methods of accounting and personnel manage- -. ment. - Enrollment Shows Drop E Of0 12,000 University enrollment figures "sagged by more than 2,000 this semester, to continue a decline begun last year. Incomplete figures indicate that a total of 19,014 students have registered, including 1,847 taking extension courses. Regis- trar Ira M. Smith indicated that wY a late registrants are recorded the total figure is likely to ap- proach 20,000. ' Last year's between-semester loss was about 1,270, to begin the ,decline from the all-time peak in Fall, 1949. Although the enrollment has dropped 7.2 per cent from last fall totals, Smith pointed out that the drop is considerably less than that of certain other midwestern universities. Ohio State University showed a de- crease of 12.9 per cent, while the University of Chicago went down 12.8 per cent. The ratio between men and women here seems to be slightly .:nproved this semester, although the ancient three to one axiom is not completely outmoded. The new figures indicate that there are precisely 2.6 men to each wo- nan on this campus. 'U' Officials Changed Communists Dent Allied Defense, Seize Hoengsong Truman Defies 4 O RFC Critic WASHINGTON--(')-President Truman yesterday renominated all five members of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation board to new terms, and promptly ran into fire from his own party. Senator Douglas (D-Ill), and Senator Fulbright (D-Ark) joined in saying they would fight to block confirmation of three of the five directors of the big lending agency. "I do not believe these men are fit to serve in the RFC," Douglas told newsmen. PIERPONT .. . BRIGGS .. . +k a t * Pierpont Replaces Former controller Wilbur E. Pierpont has been appointed Univer- sity vice president in charge of business and finance to replace Robert P. Briggs. Briggs, who had been vice president here since 1945, will become vice president and director of the Jackson Consumer's Power Company and will specialize in financial matters, according to Justin R. Whiting, president of the company. * *. * * SIMILARLY, Fulbright declared: "I would not vote to confirm them." Douglas also commented that he thought Mr. Truman spoke "in a fit of temper" when the President last week sharply criticized a T 14 IN ACCEPTING Briggs' resignation, the Board of Regents ex- pressed great appreciation of his contributions to the welfare of the, University and commended 3im for "his unusual store of energy, tactfulness and good judgment." During Briggs' six-year administration many increases have been made in the property and plant of the University. A building program in excess of $20 million has been completed and a $15 million program is presently under way. After he received his bachelor's degree in 1925 and master's degree in 1928, both from the University, Briggs was acting dean of the business administration school at Kansas Wesleyan University, Salina, Kan. * * * * IN 1937 HE RETURNED to the University as an instructor and remained here until 1941. During this period he was advanced to the position of associate professor in economics and accounting. From 1941 to 1944 Briggs was on leave from the University as chief of the General Office Division of the Detroit Ordnance district. He then became president of the Standard Steel Spring Co. in St. Louis, Mo. and on May 1, 1945 he was appointed vice president of the University. Briggs, whose home is in Monroe, has been a member of the Michigan State Board of Accountancy, the Board of Examiners of the American Institute of Accountants and the American Economics Association. THE APPOINTMENT of Pierpont as .vice president has been ef- fective since Feb. 1. He received his master's degree in business ad- ministration in 1938 and, doctorate in 1938 from the University. He had been controller since 1947. During the War Pierpont served as a price analyst for the Army Ordnance department and then entered the Navy in 1944. He re- turned to the University in 1946 to become an assistant professor of accounting in the School of Business Administration and an assistant to Briggs. LansingFire Losses Cited By Williamsy LANSING--P)--Gov. Williams informed t h e legislature last night that state agencies cannot be back in the fire damaged state office building for at least six months. He told the law makers that architects and engineers recom- mended removing the top two floors and re-roofing the building at that point. S* * Loss to the state will exceed $4,500,000, the Governor bald in a lengthy report of the 45-hour blaze which struck the 28 year old building from Thursday until Saturday. Engineers estimate $2,500,000 will be needed to raze the top two floors, build the new roof and rehabilitate the remainder of the building, Williams slid. It will cost $1,500,000 to replace the space lost by the destruction of the two floors, Williams said, assuming that the space would be built elsewhere. *~ * * DAMAGE to equipment is esti- mated at $500,000 depending upon the speed with which soaked equipment can be removed and reconditioned,~ the Governor de- clared. The Governor spoke at law- makers' first session since fire damaged the office building and since a 19-year-old state highway employe, Richard C. Shay, con- fessed he set the fire. Shay is scheduled to be taken to court today on an arson charge, for which he could receive a sen- tence of one to 10 years in prison if convicted. 'Senate banking subcommittee's re- port on the RFC. He called the President's criticism "very un- just." THE SUBCOMMITTEE, headed by Fulbright, charged that three of the five RFC directors "seriously abused their authority by yielding to outside influence in granting loans.". Fulbright said he will call the Senate subcommittee together to- day or tomorrow to decide on its next move in the face of the presi- dent's insistence on renominating the same directors. * * * THE ARKANSAS lawmaker said he was "not inclined to retract" any of the statements made in the report, which specifically accused Donald Dawson, a Presidential ad- ministrative assistant, as one of those who "exercised influence" over RFC loans. Both Douglas and Fulbright named RFC directors C. Edward Rowe, William E. Willett and Walter Lee Dunham as the three they would oppose for renomina- tion. Conmmodity Curbs Lifted WASHINGTON - (AP) - In a move intended to encourage re- sumption of commodity trading' without pinching the consumer too hard, the government yesterday removed price ceilings from sugar and all raw farm products selling below parity. Eggs, milk, wheat and some tobaccos were affected by the new Office of Price Stabilization order, as well as fresh fruit and vege- tables, chickens and turkeys. It was expected here that the price of sugar to the housewife might rise one or two cents a pound, but OPS officials figured there should be little change in the prices of other products at the retail level. However, impartial observers predicted that removal of ceilings "will mean higher prices for con- sumers." "The exemption will solve the exchange problem that existed with respect to these below-parity commodities by permitting free trading on the markets," OPS stated. Fraternity Rushing To Begin Sunday Registration f or fraternity rushing will continue in the Union lobby from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. through Saturday, the IFC an- nounced yesterday. Spring rushing will get under- way Sunday, with all houses hold- ing open house from 2 to 6 p.m. -Daily--Jack Bergstrom AVALANCHE OF BOOKS-Lura Cation, '53, Is trapped In a flood of books in the IFC-sponsored Student Book Exchange. The book store sold $1618 worth of education yesterday as it' con- tinued to do a bargain-basement business. The Exchange will re- main open through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., but has al- ready topped all previous sales records. Zo-ning Law Amenaidment Checked b City Council. By VERNON EMERSON A major revision of the proposed Ann Arbor zoning law was out- lined by the city ordinance committee during the between-semesters period. At a meeting of the Common Council last week the committee de- cided to allow co-op houses to exist in the proposed A-1 zone, to extend the area to include the future site of a new sorority house, to ease regulations on nine fraternity houses outside of the new zone. T * * 'b THE GROUPS OUTSIDE of the area had previously been granted Red Resurge Endangers City of Woi Drive Threatens Troops at Seoul TOKYO-(A')-Red troops surg ing down snow-caked mountain passes today drove a dent 18 mile deep into the allied line in Central Korea. Elements of more than 100,000 Chinese and North Koreans seized the pivotal town of Hoengsong at midnight aftera 24-hour figt and pushed south almost to Wonju. WONJU is a major highway hub 10 miles south of Hoengsong. The Communist counterattack, which began Sunday night, first fell or South Koreans eight miles north of Hoengsong. The enemy assault obviously was aimed at bursting through teUS 0hcrsadmn the U.S. 10th corps and men- acing 100,000 United Nations troops of the First and Ninth Corps in the west around Seoul. Hoengsong is 55 mies east of Seoul. AP correspondent William J. Waugh reported from the western front that air observers saw a heavy small arms fight only two and a half miles west of Wonju. WONJU is the key to highways radiating to all points of South Korea. Its heroic defnse early in January by American troops thwarted a Red drive similar to the current push. 'The Reds then had tried to crack the U.N. defense line across Korea and cut in behind the main force of the U.S. Eighth Army at that time re- treating south from Seoul. A 10th corps spokesman told Waugh that allied forces gave up Hoengsong "to preserve a morE favorable defense line." But he said overrun allied groups, in breaking out of Red traps, had to leave behind artillery and ve- hicles. American troops still clung to Chipyong, 20 miles west of fallen Hoengsong. The counter-drive by elements of nine Chinese and six North Korean divisions landed with stunning force on two South Kor- ean divisions and forward Amer- ican units. The Red offensive, gaining mo- mentum all day Monday after its start late Sunday night, drove a seven-mile wedge in the allied lines. The Red hordes swarmed down from the North in their first ma- jor attack since they smashed across the 38th parallel New Year's Eve. Lincoln Day Celebrated Quietly Here Dampened University students and Ann Arbor townspeople took scanty heed of the red letter day. on the calendar yesterday mark- ing the birthday of Abraham Lin- coln. The holiday honoring the great emancipator went unheralded in Ann Arbor public schools, which remained open all day and did not have any commorative services. lMany people remembered only when they faced locked doors at local banks, trust companies and county offices. The Ann Arbor Women's Fed- eration of Republican C 1 u b s marked the day with a Lincoln Day luncheon at the Union. Young Republicans on campus dicj nothing in observation of the holiday. Dave Belin, '51, past president of the Big 10 Young Re- publican clubs, said this inactivity TO OPEN MARCH 1: Fidele Fauri Appointed Deal Of New Social work School i The new School of Social Work moved two steps closer to becom- ing a reality with the appoint- ment of a dean and the announce- ment that the date of its forma- tion in Ann Arbor has been moved up to March 1. Tle appointment of Fidele F. Fauri, a former director of the Michigan Department of Social, Welfare, as dean of the school was announced by Provost James P. Adams. First approved by the Univer- sity Board of Regents last spring, the school will in effect be a re- constitution of the present Insti- tute of Social Work, now located in Detroit. The move to Ann Ar- bor was originally scheduled for July of this year. The curriculum of the school will stress public welfare and ad- ministration. After the change to Ann Arbor is Completed in Sep- tember, a basic program will still be offered in Detroit, and work will be carried on in coordination with the social agencies of that city. OFFICER TRAINING: Marines Announce Two New Resere Pogrms World News Roundup By The Associated Press TEHRAN, IRAN-Iran's king of kings, Shah Mohammed Reza Pah- levi, who visited the University of Michigan in November, 1949, was married yesterday in a simple ceremony. CHICAGO - The government will move tomorrow to call the Brotherhood of Railroad train- men to account for the January strike of switchmen. ** * WASHINGTON-The Army dis- closed yesterday a special transfer of troops to Korea-and a rota- tion scheme for combat veterans is expected to be one result. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. - Grand jurors yesterday opened an inquiry into the Woodbridge com- muter train wreck while a federal probe ended with a New Jersey ac- the right to continue operation a. Keller Seaks On Collective Bargaining "Collective bargaining will sur- vive the emergency and merge a healthy animal," Prof. Leonard Keller of the business administra- tion school told members of the Economics Club last night. "There will be many problems' in labor-management affairs," he related, "but they will be worked out despite waste and bickering." Among the problems that may arise soon, he said, are questions of pay raises commensurate with the inflationary trend in the price level, communist agitation in la- bor organizations and proper in- centives toward high production leveis. As for the Communists prob- lem, Prof. Keller stated that the Reds can be counted on to take, advantages of any, grievances to provoke such action as wildcat walkouts. But he pointed out that they can't pull anyone out of work so long as workers are satisfied with their present re- lations with management. long as they did not leave their dwellings vacant for 90 days or more. The new amendment would ease this regulation in the case of a mobilization period. Prof. A. D. Moore, chairman of the ordinance committee, said that the exact form this amend- ment will take has not yet been worked out. Only Prof. Moore's vote in favor of allowing the co-ops to exist in the zone ended a bitter dispute over adding the amendment to the proposal. League houses were not included in the measure. * * * THE CO-OP RULING supposed- ly was adopted because of strong opposition to excluding them from tives at a public hearing last A-1, as voiced by co-op representa- semester. Another hearing will be held on the new amendments on March 5. At the previous meeting, Paul R. Kempf, president of the Board of Public Works, called for provisions in the new zon- ing law allowing for policing of fraternity and sorority houses, which he claimed are abusing state and city building codes. He said that mpany houses let their grass grow several feet high and allow rat-infested garbage to accumulate in the summer and neglect proper cleaning of their walks in wintertime. He noted that some houses have more residents than the law allows' for the amount of space they have, and are inadequately protected from fire. SMTTI announced increases] jeer last spring's totals in five of .he 16 units of the university. iowever, the increases (in dent- stry, medicine, nursing, public health, and pharmacy) did'unot nearly offset the losses sustained by other larger schools. The campusveteran population continued i t s steady decline. there are only 5,925 now, com- tared to 6,825 in the fall and 8,575 gst spring. U t M W 7 ' The Recruiting of University students for two Marine Corps Reserve programs requiring no participation during the school year will start today at North Hall. The first program, the Platoon Leader's Class, is open to fresh- men, sophomores and juniors in good standing with the Univer- sity who will be 25 years old or less.when they graduate. The second program, an Offi- both periods they will be commis- sioned second lieutenants in the Marine Reserve Corps and will be eligible to apply for arcommis- sion in the regular Corps. All those that remain in the reserve will be liable to call into active duty at the rank they hold. Seniors and graduates who are accepted in the Officer's Candidate Course will be com- missioned second lieutenants in REGENTS ELECTION SLATED: Democratic Board Nominees Named With spring elections looming up on April 2, Michigan Democrats ntrp~r~vhA ui relnted1,nominees ,for chosen at the recent Democratic state convention. * d * i City and newspaper publisher Harold Fitzgerald of Pontiac. Regepnt. Van Wagroner apparently