THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FOV1~ SATURDAY, MARCH ~1, 19~3 International Mundanities By The Associated Press DURBAN, South Africa-A Dur- ban voter being questioned in a pre-election canvass yesterda$' pro- posed "this man Eisenhower every- one has been talking about" as a candidate for the South African Parliament. He was somewhat surprised to learn that "this man Eisenhower", Is busy just now as President of the United States. * * * LIMOUSIN, France - Leonce Chabernaud, a wine merchant in South-Central France, was buried yesterday in a 2,600-gallon stone wine cask he had built especially for the purpose in 1930. The strange tomb, empty un- til yesterday, has been a tourist attraction for 23 years. Guests at the funeral following Chabernaud's last wishes, left the cemetery to crowd into cafes and drink a last toast of wine to him. GOSLAR, Germany-A fir tree, rooted in West, Germany, fell across the Soviet Zone border re- cently. No iminor matter, it re-. sulted in East-West negotiations on the question: Who owns the tree? Yesterday, eight West German frontier guards and eight Com- munist policemen, all armed, lined up at the fallen tree. One Communist and one West Ger- man sawed the tree exactly along the border. The Communists lugged off the top half, thie West Germans took away the bottom. Read Daily Classifieds N EW SCRE E N NEW SOUND N EW PROJECTORS Cine-nSL quild TON IG HT and T omorrow Night 2/4 CHERCHEZ LA FEMME! Ann Arbor Police Hunt for Female 4> By JOEL BERGER Wanted: one woman.,. This is the plea of Ann Arbor Police Chief Casper M. Enkemann, who desperately seeks a policewo- man to augment his regular staff. Fot over a year, there has only been one policewoman on the force, and another is needed to help in juvenile cases and for searching women prisoners, ac- The police have encountered much trouble during their search. Most of this is due to the low sal- ary which the position pays, about ,$2,760 annually, $1,000 below a ~patrolman's salary. This may be raised eventually, Enkemann said. "The four or five women Who have applied have been scared away by the salary," Enkemann maintained. "They have come in, looked at the salary, and left." * * * ANOTHER drawback is the lack of space to accommodate women on the force. Enkemnann stated the police have asked for use of the city hall basement, but haven't gotten it so far. The one police- woman now employed has to work out of the detective bureau office. The few applicants for the job have been about 30 years old, Enkemann said. The police commissioners prefer an appli- cant to be between 21 and 3 years of age. Enkemann pointed out that a few years of college education is almost mandatory. However, he will hire any woman who's had a fairly good education. "An under- standing of the problems of juve- niles would help, too," Enkemann added. In Ypsilanti, a clerk in the li- cense bureau searches women pri- soners during the day. After she leaves at 5 p.m., however, women are taken to the county jail in Ann Arbor for searching by the matron. sAT. ONLY Continuous fo sm 11 AM. 1 P.M.) Thog -- - - - - -- ou A New Aeluieveanent in M & neWakD - S --Daily-Betsy smi VIE (EEKEN. V.. -r Ils ~~A.N LO S Mea supureemnsofpoogah adte riin f goermeta srvceprsnnl il hghigtth Uivrstys el- vision tchdul toa n tmro ~rs___ . Evly R.Zeko heUivriy' rndRpisxenin Mevc et ldscue elements of photography an thetraning o Our World" at 1 p.m. today over WOOD-TV. 1 * * * LATER TODAY, Prof. Ferrel Heady, assistant director of the Uni- versity's Institute of Public Administration and John H. Huss, director of the Mchigan Municipal League, will discuss the Institute's training of persons for government service on "Michigan Report" at 6 p.m. on WWJ-TV. They will also explain the work of a similar institute at the University of the Philippines. A sculptor's change from realistic work in clay to abstract models in steel will be considered on the University Television Hour at 1 p.m. tomorrow to be broadcast over WWJ-TV. Prof. Thomas F. McClure will explain some examples of his clay figures as well as the mechanical process of using shears and a welder's torch in steel sculpture, ~~~ ~Matnee S w e Today 74c Tonight and On Atomic Eneroy - - - , Sunday 1.00 O Sabbatical Announced By Regents (Continued from Page 1) tion Fund, Flint, for the Mott Lec- ture Fund and $5,000 from an anonymous donordfor a medicine Uion Opera proceeds in Lan- sing resulted in the Regents ac- ceptance of $2,450 from the Lan- sing alumni club for the Lansing University of Michigan Scholar- ship Fund. The club also gave $400 for a Union Opera Assistance Fund. The Detroit Edison Company gave the Regents $2,000 for ten scholarships from areas served by the company. The awards, for the 1953-54 school year, will be based on scholastic ability, character and personality, citizenship and extra-curricularaactivity,ciserious- Other gifts included $100 from the University Gilbert and Sulli- van Society for a Gilbert anid Suli- van Scholarship Fund for society members needing financial as- sistance. * * * GIVEN sabbatical leaves for all or part of the 1953-54 school year by the Regents were Pro- fessors Albert H. Marckwartad department, George H. Forsyth, of fine arts, and Wilfred Kaplan, Arthur H. Copeland and Maxwell 0. Reade of the mathematics de- partment. Continuing the list are Pro- fessors E. William Heinrich of mineralogy, Arthur W. Burks of philosophy, Wayne E. Hazen of physics and Lawrence B. Kiddle and Enrique Anderson Imbert of the Spanish department. Others given leaves were Pro- MONDAY CONCERT: Arthur Fiedler T o Lead Bos ton Pops Orchestra P' Ann Arbor fire chief, Ben Zahn will follow the example of his counterparts in Boston, New York, and San Francisco by making Ar- thur Fiedler an honorary' fire chief in a short ceremony before Monday night's concert. Arthur Fiedler who is an avid fire follower h as his own car equip- ped with a short wave radio and a siren so that he won't miss out on any fires. * * * HOWEVER, Monday night he will leave fire fighting to the pro- fessionals and will conduct the Boston Pops Tour Orchestra in the last concert of the Choral Un- ion Extra Concert Series at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium. The program of light classi- cal music includes Thomas' Ov- erture to "Mignon," Chabrier's "Espana" Rhapsody, Ravel's "Bolero," Leroy Anderson's "Fid- die-Faddle," and Strauss' "Bahn Frei Galop, Op. 45." Tickets for the concert will be on sale in the offices of the Uni- versity Musical Society from 9 to 11:45 am. today and Monday and from 1 to 4:45 p.m. Monday. To Convene Here The 11th annual Southeastern IMichigan Guidance Conference will meet tomorrow to discuss the newest techniques and methods of antdRaids Director ofPupil Personnel, Douglas D. Blocksma, will1address the opening session on "Some Forces Behind Vocational Level and Choice." 'U' To Be Host To Engineers At Convocation The University has been chosen as the site for a week-long inter- national meeting of the Amnerican Institute of Chemical Engineers. Experts from all over the world will take part in the conivocation which plans to meet here the-week of June 20-24, 1954. Prof. D. L. Katz, head of the University's Cmentis chairman of the tech- nical program which will explore the chemical engineering aspects of nuclear processes. Dean George G. Brown of the College of Engineering is a mem- ber of the Institute Committee on Nuclear Energy, which is plan- ning the meeting, under the chair- manship of Prof. Donald L. Katz. Old Jade Exhibit To Be Displayed A loan exhibition of 144 exam- ples of early Chinese jades will open tomorrow afternoon at the Alumni Memorial Hall and will continue through April 22. Prof; Max Loehr of the fine arts department assembled the items from nearly ten different museums and has compiled a 34 page illus- trated catalog. This is the second major exhi- bition of oriental art to be ex- hibited in these galleries this year. .9 wecinesdayJ *Ion Picture Entertahament! isne~s ~ U'hA~T 1'IAi~K EAt TECHNICOLOR yright Walt Oisay Producticos * lust, b~stod by IKO Rad o P ctu es Inc. ~ ~ ~td AN~HEI~ GREAT T~I UMPH1 SEAR COUNTRYS~ A flW[4I~ ADVUflJRE ~)W~i9t ~ii.y ~ -- - - - - - - - - -- Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the School of Graduate Studies .will talk on "Atomic Energy: Its In- dustrial and Social Aspects" at the final Evening of Science meet- in anch of the Dtroit Pbi Library. Hisr t alk will be pesented in co Phoenix Project, which is dedi- cated to the development of peace- time uses of atomic energy. DELICIOUS Hamburgers ad CH EESEBURGERS B EE R - W IN E TV - SHUFFLEBOARD Dinners 4:30 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. ZIEGSERS Restaurant 1 20 West Liberty CLOSED MONDAYS ENDING TODAY SUNDAY! Innocent or Guilty! fessors Ralph W. Hammett of the architecture school, James E. Dun- lap of classical studies Max L. Hutt and E. Lowell Kelly of psy- cholgy Anton J. Jobi of the French department and William G. Merhab of modern languages. Fred G. Walcott, Glenn M. Win-- go and Byron 0. Hughes of the education school, William B. Pal- mer of economics, Hide Shorara of Japanese, Alfred M. Elliott of zoology, Charles N. Davissoxi and Leo A. Schmidt of the business administration schiool and Winton H. Beaven of the speech depart- ment were also given leaves. S * * REGENTS approval of a con- tract was given for the University Bands to make at least one record alubum during the year with the RCA-Victor Company. TODAY! 44c until 5 P.M. 65c after 5 ARTHUR FIEDLER . . . plays a siren too Fight Planned On Trichinosis A group of 12 representatives of medical, veterinary and public healthn grops, met yes terday a against trichinosis. The group, the Continuing Comn- mittee of the National Conference on Trichinosis, discussed plans for a second national conference to be held in the spring of 1954 at Chi- cago or Ann Arbor. Dr. S. E. Gould, Chief Patho- logist at Wayne County General Hospital and a University research associate was elected chairman of the group; Prof. A. D. Moore of the engineering college was elected vice-chairman. Rotary To Meet F o r t y Rotary International clubs from Michigan and Ontario will hold a district conference to- morrow and Monday at the Union. Following an afternoon recep- tion of the district governor, Alan P. Brander of Ontario, University Vice-President Wilbur K. Pier- pont and Dean Willard Olson of the education school will address the assembly. LD$'Ph CINEM- Today 1 30 P.M. ''Droll, dry, witty, wonderful! --N. Y. Post "'Expertly fashioned! Biting, witty dialogue! -N. Y. Times ''S0 hilarious in spots that many of the silken lines are lost!" -Herald Trib.r OSCAR WILDE'S CQOr by TECHNICOL OR A) ARThUR RANK ORGANIZATION PRESENTATIO a 1,' I 3* 1 ( A wonderful story *.aI' hs ~ of how an amateur ' ~ ~ 'Singin' in the Rai photographer got ......... ** sweethearts his girl's picturenth rbg n W I on the cover ofihi i e LOOK i-- Magazine!ms~l I6 M.- EICTUERSTRRIN DO NII fl 'PONIMOD *BrnniERRVElI 11 *1 "A gay, urbane, and brilliantly funny comedy"-N.Y. Times Extra! Walt Disney's "HISTORY OF AVIATION" Added DONALD DUCK CARTOON Both i Technicolor TONIH T