IND THE LINES See page 4 Y Latest Deadline in the State Dai4b M6i1 'Y '"'> p :8. r t ,I CLOUDY L. LXIII, No. 83 reshmen Show nrollment ain By ERIC VETTER Freshman enrollment continued its upward trend despite increased ft pressure on men and higher tuition rates, University enrollment res for the spring semester show. Registrar Ira M. Smith revealed that freshmen starting blasses erday totaled 230 as compared to 214 last year. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1953 EIGHT PA 'ryout Spots pen on All 'anly Staffs Journalist hopefuls will have an cpportunity to align themselves with The Daily and obtain exper- ieace in either writing, business techniques or news photography at any of the four tryout meetings to be held tomorrow and Thursday at the Student Publications Build-' ing. Any student who is scholastical- ly eligible, including first semest- er freshmen, may become part of either the editorial, sports, wo- men's, business staffs, or photogra- phy staffs, by signing up at the meetings which will be held at 4:15 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. both days. No previous experience is neces- sary. * * * THOSE WHO come out for the writing staffs will begin a com- plete training program which wil include the essentials of headline writing, proof reading, news, fea- ture and editorial writing. After one semester on the staff they will become reporters assigned to any one of the Daily's fifty beats, and may eventually work themselves up into paying editors' jobs. Business enthusiasts will en- ter a program which provides its trainees with the essentials in advertising, selling, writing, and layout, as well as practice in the fields of finance, circulation and general business management, Business staffers have the op- portunity to become paid sec- tion managers after a semester or a year on the staff. Photographers who offer their services will become a member of the select photography staff. They as .well as other Daily workers, will have the chance to work for pay after their initial entrance at The Daily. Those who come out to the Try- out meetings will be joining a 63 year old organization with the, longest continuous publication rec- ord in college journalism, and will become members of a group of Daily workers which includes such notables as Gov. John Dewey of New York (see page 4), Arthur Mil- ler, and scores of other Daily alums who have gained recognition in all fields of endeavor. World News Roundup THE INCREASE failed to aid men in their search for a more equitable man-woman ratio, how- ever. The latest figures show that each woman resident enrolled has 2.24 males to chase her, whereas in the fall the ratio was slightly less. Men can take consolation in the fact that last spring there was an extra quarter male for every woman; or two and one half males for every woman. The freshman increase was more sharply evident last fall when 2,406 newcomers enrolled in com- parison to 1,868 for the fall of 1951. It was in September that the man-woman ratio dropped. * * * TOTAL ENROLLMENT in cred- it courses is up 22 over last spring with the total hitting 17,764. The rise in credit courses enrollment was attributed to an increase of almost 400 more students in Uni- versity extension courses, Smith reported. Final figures are expected to round off at about 18,500, how- ever, as compared with 19,035 for last year. The nation-wide demand for en- gineers appears to have caused a 157 man rise in engineering school enrollment. A total of 1,623 are enrolled this spring as compared to 1,466 for last year. Other schools and colleges of resident credit courses showing increases are the School of Den- tistry, Medical School, School of Nursing, School of Public Health and School of Social Work. The biggest enrollment drops were. found in graduate school and the literary college. High Court Rejects Appeal Of 4 Negroes WASHINGTON-(MP)-The Su- preme Court yesterday rejected the claim of four North Carolina Negroes that unlawful racial dis- crimination was used in the pick- ing of juries which doomed them to death. The high court poured forth ap- proximately 40,000 words in dis- posing of the cases. JUSTICE REED wrote the 6-3 majority opinion, which upheld the constitutionality of North Car- olina's system of selecting jury panels composed of property own- ers and poll tax payers. Two of the death sentences which the court refused to over- turn are for murder, the other two for the rape of white women. "Our duty to protect the federal constitutional rights of all does not mean we must or should im- pose on the states our conception of the proper source of jury lists, so long as the source reasonably reflects a cross-section of the pop- ulation suitable in character and intelligence for that civic duty," Justice Reed wrote. LMOC A very superior Michigan State College student, renown- ed for his stupidity, wil be making his debut on the edi- torial page of The Daily this morning. Worthal is his name, and his creator, Dick Bibler, has been putting him through his an- tics for seven years in the cele- brated cartoon, "Little Man on Campus." Bibler draws exclusively for college newspapers, and claims a patronage of 100 such dupes. The Daily, which accepted Bib- ler at the point of a gun, is the 101st college newspaper deluded by this cartoonist. Memento mor. Income Tax T'o Remain High ! Taft' WASHINGTON (P) - President Eisenhower's legislative program took shape at a White House con- ference yesterday, with increasing indications that tax reductions must await a more nearly balanced budget. When Sen. Taft of Ohio, Repub- lican floor leader in the Senate, emerged from the conference he made it clear he agreed with the President that income and other taxes should not be cut until the brake has been pulled on spend- ing. * * * TAFT ALSO said the excess profits tax should be collected through 1953, and he predicted the tax would not be permitted to die on July 1, as scheduled under pres- ent law. "I am confident that in the end we shall reduce taxes," the GOP leader told reporters, "but just how and then it shall be done was left or future consid- eration." Taft outlined a broad legislative program and said he is certain all the goals will be reached. Here is' what may be expected to happen in the next five months: 1-All appropriation bills will be out of the House and ready for Senate action by May 15. 2-Hawaii will be admitted to statehood. 3.-Several executive depart- ments and agedcies will be re- organized under powers granted to the White House by Con- gress last week. 4-The Taft-Hartley labor law will be amended to meet some of the objections of management and labor unions. 5-Some controls, like rents, and some allocations of scarce materials will be extended on a limited basis to meet critical situations. 6-The reciprocal trade act will be extended. 7-A "tidelands" oil ownership law will be passed, probably giv- ing the states title to the rich off- shore oil deposits. SPA Schedules Meeting for Today The Society for Peaceful Alter- natives will meet at 7:30 p.m. to- day in the Union. Plans for the forthcoming Peace Conference will be discussed and new officers elected. British To Resisi ina Blockade U.S. May Invoke Measures Other Than All-out Korea Offensive-Ta By The Associated Press A Foreign Office spokesman made it clear at a news confere yesterday that Britain would resist any American proposal to ble ade Red China. Commenting on the growing discussion of a blockade in Wa ington, the spokesman indicated the British view is that such a me would be dangerous, ineffective, politically unwise and possibly n harmful to the Western Allies than to the Chinese Communists. * * * * MEANWHILE Sen. Taft (R-Ohio) hinted yesterday the Eis hower administration is weighing methods of putting pressure Red China other than by launch- ing an all-out offensive in Korea. Taft suggested alternate movesR egents might include a naval blockade against the Chinese mainland. At the same time informed offA c cials reported British opposition to one point in. President Eisen- hower's foreign policy said to have been disclosed to them by Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles on his recent visit there._ _- -Daily-Don Campbell BRUCE ALLEN (12) AND DON EADDY FIGHT FOR REBOUND WITH ILLINI BOB- PETERSON F A . " e ere Fighting Illini Humble Wolverines By DICK LEWIS Power-laden Illinois raced to its second consecutive 30-point vic- tory over Michigan's hapless cag- ers, drubbing the Wolverines by a decisive 92-62 margin at Yost Field House last night. Coach Harry Combes' sure- shooting Illini put on an exhibi- tion of court finesse and alertness that turned the contest into a rout early in the second period and paved the way for the eighth triumph in ten conference starts for the Champaign quintet. IT WAS the bony frame of 6'-9" Illinois center John Kerr that sent the visitors off and run- ning. Kerr entered the game with two minutes remaining in the first period and the Fighting Illini on top by a scant two points, 16-14. The elongated red-head pro- ceeded to reel off three quick field goals in the waning sec- onds of the opening quarter, and added three more hook shots in the early moments of the next stanza. Kerr opened with a hook and guard Irv Bemoras followed with a one-hander to make it 20-14. After Michigan center Paul Groff- sky countered with a hook shot of his own, the roof fell in. s * * ILLINOIS CHALKED up six straight points to extend its ad- vantage to 26-16 at the quarter, and came roaring back in the sec- ond round with six more tallies to open the gap to 32-16. A host of Illinois second- stringers hit from all over the court as the tally mounted to a 50-28 figure at the halfway point. Groffsky initiated the second MODERN DRESS: Arts Theater Presents ShakespeareanComedy The "modern woman" crops up in the oddest places. This time she can be found in the current Arts Theatre produc- tion of William Shakespeare's comedy, "Much Ado About Nothing." p e M l half with another hook, but that was a's close as the Wolverines got in the one-sided fight. Michigan outscored the Illi- nois reserves in the final ten minutes, 20-15, to close the de- ficit to 30 points. The Illini five had previously defeated the Wolverines at Champaign, 96-66. Guard John Codwell notched three field goals in the last session to run his game-high total to 19. Groffsky followed the converted forward with' a 15-point output. The Orange and Black, scoring its fifth consecutive verdict over a Michigan squad since 1949, put four men in double figures. *' * * MICHIGAN coach Bill Perigo fielded a different lineup from the one that lost a 66-64 heartbreak- er to Michigan State between se- mesters, and also unveiled a 6-8 center who looked impressive in spots. Milt Mead and Ray Paviche- vich, an erstwhile guard, cavort- ed at the forwards, Groffsky See CODWELL, Page 6 Union-League Calendar Out Union-League calendars for the spring semester are available for distribution beginning today. The blue covered timetables of campus events can be picked up in the Union lobby, the League undergraduate offices, the infor- mation desk of the Administra- tion Bldg., and the main desks of the Social Science, Law, Business Administration and General Li- braries. V4 1V4 G. DULLES was reported to have explained that the President was referring in part to the Yalta Agreement to let Russia take over Japan's Kurile Islands and South Sakhalin, when he declared in his State of the Union message that the United States would not recognize secret wartime agree- ments which permitted "enslave- ment" of peoples. The view of the Foreign Office, it was reported, was that any one-sided repudiation of an in- ternational agreement by a major Western Power would establish a bad precedent which the Russians might easily copy, particularly in the case of Berlin. COMMENTING on the blockade discussion, the spokesman told questioners: 1. Britain's policy remains as it was laid down five days ago by Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden who told Parliament, "We think it would be a mistake to have a pol- icy of blockade." 2. Britain "expects to be con- sulted" on any such policy and believes she would be. 3. Britain has made her obje- ban~s known quite plainly when the idea has come up in the past two years. While major attention focused on the Far East, Secretary of State Dulles returned from Eur- ope with 'word that he is "en- couraged" about the prospect for European unity. Chairman Wiley (R-Wis.) of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said Duiles will appear before the committee Tuesday for a quiz on the international situa- tion. Wiley told newsmen he doesn't believe the Eisenhower adminis- tration has reached a decision yet on the possibility of blockading Red China. In another development, Gen. Omar N. Bradley reportedly told the Senate Armed Services Com- mittee he believes ships bound for Communist. China could be stop- ped and forced to unload contra- band material without touching off a war. IFC Meeting The Interfraternity Council House Presidents Assembly will meet at 7:30 p.m. today at Phi Delta Theta fraternity, 1437 Wash- tenaw Ave. Topped by a grant of $73,239 from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, the Board of Regents accepted a total of $183,- 461 in gifts and grants at its Jan- uary meeting. The March of Dimes money will be used for the operation of the Respirator Center at University Hospital and will be supplement- ed by funds from local chapters for treatment of patients from their areas. Designed to enable patients to leave their iron lungs as soon M possible, the center trains pa- tients and members oftheir fai- lies in the use of chest respira- tors, rocking beds and other polio treatment methods which can be carried on at home. * * * ANOTHER LARGE gift, that of $40,000, was given the Regents by Myron and Mildred Steinberg of Detroit for the establishment of a scholarship fund in their name. Details of the administration of the fund have not yet been worked out. The Regents also accepted two grants from the E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company totaling $15,400. A $10,000 grant-I-aid to the chemistry department for research comprised the bulk of the grant. The company also re- newed its postgraduate fellow- ships in chemistry and chemical engineering for the 1953-54 school year. A $10,000 gift by the National Science Foundation was given the Regents for research on protozoa under the direction of Prof. David L. Nanney, of the zoology depart- ment, for a three year period, PROF. REUliEN L. Kahn, of the Medical School, was given $6,500 from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for work in serological research. Two grants totaling $3,900 were accepted for research work in the school of dentistry. Parke, Davis & Company gave $3,750 in two grants for research work and for the company's'fel- lowship in chemistry and the Detroit District Dental Society gave $2,500 for support of a Workshop in Practice Admini- See 'U' RECEIVES, Page 8 County GO]1 Chooses State Delegation Regent Roscoe O. Bonsteel, Prof. J. Louis York, of the chemical engineering department, aiid Dave Cargo, Grad., were among those chosen as delegates at the Wash- tenaw County Republican Conven- tion to the State Republican Con- vention last night at the Masonic Temple. Owen J. Cleary of Y silanti, was appointed as alternate to the State Convention which. will be held in Detroit on February 21. The County Convention chose 39 delegates and 39 alternates to the State Convention and named Leonard Tappey of Ann Arbor delegate at large and chairman of the delegation. Addressing the first formal meeting of Washtenaw County Republicans since the campaign, Prof. Bennet Weaver, of the Eng- By the Associated Press LONDON - Snow, cold and storm spread across Europe yes- terday, snarling communications and threatening a new influenza wave. * * * MIAMI BEACH, Fla. -- The AFL Executive Council an- nounced yesterday it will fight for a score of "major changes" in the Taft-Hartley labor law, then adjourned its seaside ses- sions in this winter resort town. WASHINGTON - The Senate elections subcommittee said yes- terday forged documents were ap- parently used against Vice-Presi- dent Nixon in the 1952 election campaign and the FBI has been asked to step in with a view to criminal prosecution. LANSING - Funeral services for Dr. Robert S. Shaw, presi- dent-emeritus of Michigan State College are set for Tuesday. 4'* * TEL AVIV, Israel - A mystery blast last night rocked the Soviet legation here, injuring three per- sons reported to be members of the legation staff. A Jewish child in a neighboring building also was reported hurt. * * * lit wi THE GIRL, BEATRICE, is the independent woman who has tle regard for the opposite sex-that is, until she becomes involved ith a perennial bachelor in the person of Benedick. Shakespeare adds to this the contrasting love of the roman- ticists, Claudio and Hero. When the gay foursome get together the result is a merry confusion. Beatrice is played by Beth-Sheva Laiken and the rambler, Bene- " dick by veteran performer Len Ro- senson. John Devoe portrays Clau- dio and Nancy Born, Hero. , CITY BEAT ROUNDUP: Charter Revision Put OnApriliBallot City charter revision, a million dollar school bond issue and the proposed Maynard St. carport fig- ured in local news during the be- tween terms vacation. Ann Arbor voters will get a chance at the April 6 election to say whetherhor not they want re- vision of the city's 60 year old charter. ' * * * IF REVISION is approved a nine-memberhcommission will be selected in the June 2 election to study the problem and determine recommendations. Numerous attempts to alter the ancient charter, originally adopted in 1889, have failed in the past. However, powerful sup- CITY VOTERS will decide in a special Feb. 24 election whether they want to approve a $7,650,000 bond issue which is being pro- posed to expand school facilities. Board of Education member Albert E. Blashfield estimated last week that the building pro- gram would cost city home own- ers about three dollars per $1,000 of assessed valuation. The bond issue will be used to build a high school, northwest ele- mentary school, addition to Slau- son and Northside schools and to buy a southeast site for a future school. Meanwhile, the city Board of Realtors Friday unanimously ask- mission approved a city proposal to borrow $465,000. Construction of the carport, designed to hold about 350 cars, may begin early in the spring. The local March of Dimes drive went over its unofficial $50,000 goal with reports of incomplete collections totaling $54,692.86. Slightly less than $31,000 was rais- ed in Ann Arbor. Funds are split evenly between the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis and the Washtenaw County pro- gram. A former Department of Social' Welfare employee was arrested Friday after confessing that she embezzled $100 of the department's funds. The employee, Mrs. Helen Following this evening's per- formance Prof. Kenneth Rowe of the English department, Prof. Claribel Baird of the speech de- partment and Wiley Hitchcock of the School of Music will participate in a panel discussion. The play will be performed at 8 p.m. today, tomorrow and Thurs- day and at 8:30 p.m. Fri., Sat., and Sun. in the theater at 209 /2 E. Washington. * , * MORE NEEDED: SL Exchange Handles 'Record Total of Books 4' The non-profit Student Legisla- ture Book Exchange yesterday re- ported out a record-doubling sale of books with four days of opera- tion and 1,700 books remaining. Yesterday's sales brought the semester total to more than $6,000 as compared with last semester's' record of $3,300, Exchange man- ager Keith Beers, Grad., said. BUT ACCORDING to Beers, the Exchange still has shelf space and requests for books that aren't until Friday, Beers noted that the sooner they are on the shelves, the better the chance of sale. All "second semester" books, especially those for Eng- lish 2, History 12, Speech 32, and beginning physics and economics courses, are in demand. A non-profit project, the Ex- change charges a 10 per cent ser- vice fee to cover state sales tax, bank service charges, service charges to the University, publi- I I I I ~ ~ I I I -