DEFEAT OF THE CAPEHART PROPOSAL See Page 2 Y 0 Latest Deadline in the State Ar a t t CLOUDY, WARMER VOL. LXIII, No. 163 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 23, 1953 FOUR PAGES Faculty Openings Filled by Regents Summer Session Acting Chairmen Appointed for Three Departments Four faculty members were named acting department heads and ten faculty appointments approved by the Board of Regents at its monthly meeting yesterday. Prof. Paul Henle of the philosophy department, Prof. Edward B. Ham of the Romance Languages department and Prof. Ronald Freed- men of the sociology department were named acting heads of their departments for the summer session in the absence of the regular chairmen. * * * * IN ADDITION, Prof. Horace M. Miner of the sociology and anthro- * * * - U' Receives Gifts, Grants Of $86,714 I: pology departments was named acting head of the sociology de- partment for the 1953-54 academic year. The Board also appointed Prof. Charles Dunbar Broad, of Trinity College, Cambridge, England, visiting professor of philosophy for the coming fall semester. R. Faye McCain of San Francis- co College for Women was appoint- Wolverines Romp Over BadgerNine Corbett Pitches 'M' to 7-2 Win By DAVE LIVINGSTON Coach Ray Fisher's Wolverine diamond crew pounded out a 7-2 decision over Wisconsin yester- day at Ferry Field tokeep its Big Ten title hopes flickering. Righthander Jack Corbett scat- tered eight Badger hits to pick up his fourth conference win against a single defeat, while his mates racked Wisconsin's previously un- beaten ace, Ron Unke, for ten safeties, including four extra-base blows. MICHIGAN closes out the Big Ten season this afternoon when it meets invading Northwestern in a doubleheader. The Wolverines will send southpaw Marv Wisniewski and either Jack Ritter or Dick Yir- kosky to the mound against the Wildcats, with victories in both contests a "must" if they are to retain any possibility of keep- ing at least a share of the championship they held jointly with Illinois last year. Right now Michigan rests in third place, with an 8-3 record, behind the Illini at 8-2 and Iowa at 7-2. Both of the leaders .: idle yesterday, but face tough twin bills today with Illinois meet- ing Minnesota and Iowa playing host to Ohio State.I * *~ * { , ,v Y'$ AZ v.4 -- * *4 { .S., Topped by a $25,000 grant from ed assistant professor in the School the Ford Foundation of New York, of Nursing from July 1, 1953 grants and gifts amounting to through June 30, 1954 and a super- $86,714.42 were accepted yester- visor of medical nursing at the day by the Board of Regents at University Hospital beginning Sept. their meeting in Midland. 7, 1953. Interdisciplinary research be- The Regents also named Prof. tween the behavioral sciences and Chase Baromeo of the University the humanities will benefit from of Texas visiting professor in 4 the Ford grant. Dean Charles E. the Music school voice depart- Odegaard of the literary college is ment for the 1953-54 year. heading a committee which will Other appointments include: work out the details of the pro- Prof. Sydney Chapman of posed research project. Queens College, England and the * * * University of Alaska, as visiting i Port Huron Area Gets Red Cross Emergency Help Speial To The Daily By TOM LADENDORF PORT HURON - Grim, tired men walk the streets of this tornado-torn city trying to cope with the destruction left in the wake of a three-minute twister which struck here at 4:30 p.m. Thursday. Cots, mobile units of the Red Cross, and administrative help are being rushed to the area to aid the homeless. Roads are crowded with silently moving cars. National Guardsmen stand along the highways directing the steady flow of traffic. IN THE SOUTH section of Port Huron houes have been levelled. The streets are littered with trees which lie askew blocking the movement of cars. Red Cross workers have set up a center in the heart of the devastated area in the Naval Reserve Training Center. People, slightly dazed and in need of G- help are flocking here. They ask for candles to light their homes S v n F e which are without electricity. Some, the homeless, are being fed. The cost in life is miraculous- ly small. One is reported dead here, thirty-nine injured. Seven- ty-five cots have been rushed fromSd.eOCt aght Selfridge Airfield. Plc o~ e C u h Outside the andteP__ic__an Civil Defense Workers continue to MARQUETTE-(R)-One of the clear away the debris. Telephone seven convicts who overpowered lines dangle aimlessly from their prison guards with knives and- moorings making the job more broke out of Marquette State Pris- difficult. on yesterday was captured last * * *n gh THE RED CROSS works around night. the clock caring for rescue work- He was apprehended shortly after Warden Emery Jacques ers and the 300 families whosei eeric her has faie. warned all residents in the area electric power has failed. that the fugitives were "armed and The Blue Water Bridge, con- dangerous." necting Port Huron and Sarnia, An unarmed citizen captured the the harder-hit Canadian city, fugitive, Lloyd Burgdurf, 61-years- is closed to all but emergency old, last night near the city dump traffic. Sarnia is under martial on the southern edge of Marquette. law. The police there have or- Burgdurf was sentenced from Kal- ders to shoot looters on sight, amazoo to life imprisonment. In Port Huron 83 homes are de- THE CIVILIAN, Jack Messeng- stroyed and 202 damaged. The er, 48, a school bus driver, was cost is estimated at a million dol- driving near the dump when he lars. Three fourths of Sarnia is spotted a man on the side of the ruined. - road. ]Messenger's springer span- Gov. G. Mennen Williams flew iel began to bark. Messenger st- over the area yesterday and de- ped his car and tookafter the man clared an emergency to make fed- who hid behind a stump. Messeng- eral loans possible. er put his hands in his pockets * * * as if he had a gun. The fugitive IN SARNIA rehabilitation is surrendered to him without resist- well underway. Bulldozers are ance. clearing the wrecked areas and citizens are pitching in with finan- All the men were "escape ar- cial assistance to put their city tists" including Lloyd Russell, back on its feet. 31, serving time for assaulting a Sarnia radio station, CHOK, Michigan state trooper in 1950 which went off the air shortly after escaping from the London, after the storm, is broadcasting Ohio, prison farm. The group in- again and telling of rooms avail- eluded killers and robbers. able for the city's.1,000 homeless State Police set up roadblocks victims. .around Marquette and the U. S. The danger of disease has been Coast Guard sent a helicopter here minimized by officials but .a close to aid in the search. check is being made of the sup- e * * ply of water which was temporari- WARDEN Jacques gave this ac- ly cut off when electric power count of the escape: failed.The convicts had been assined -Daily-Frank Barter TORNADO'S FURY CONVERTS TWO DWELLINGS INTO DUPLEX Sy M--- UA GM-4W Ems - -w ~ TWENTY THOUSAND dollars was received from the estate of the late Professor Emeritus Wil- liam H. Hobbs to be used for a Fellowship for a graduate geology student to be awarded annually. Two grants totalling $8,150 were accepted from the Michi- gan Gas Association, Grand Ra- pids; $4,100 for the association's equipment purchase fund and $4,050 for its fellowship fund. The Institute for-Human Ad- justment Social Science Research * Fund received $5,000 from the A. G. Bishop Charitable Trust, Flint. s s, * TWO GRANTS amounting to $3,500 were accepted from the Wenner-Gren Foundation for An- thropological Research. Prof. Reu- ben Kahn of the medical school t will receive $2,000 to cover ex- penses for his travel to European medical centers and $1,500 will be used to assist the cost of the Mich- igan Aleutian Expeditions. ' The Elsa U. Pardee Founda- . tion Cancer Research Fund re- ceived $3,000 from the Pardee Foundation. The Regents ac- cepted $2,800 from General Mot- ors Corporation for a graduate fellowship in electro-chemistry. A chemistry fellowship was re- newed by the Monsanto Chemical Company, St. Louis. Two scholar- ships of $1,200 were given by Smith, Hichman and Cryllis, Inc. of Detroit for architecture students majoring in building equipment. Two thousand dollars was re- ceived from the Field Founda- tion of New York for research on the principal types of ther- apy in overcoming reading dis- abilities in children; $2,000 from the Parke Davis and Company, Detroit for research in hyper- tension and $1,350 from the Fund for Adult Education, Pa- sadena, for a project in adult leadership training. Prof. James H. Zumberge of the geology department will direct the use of $1,200 given by the Geolo- gical Society of America for glacial studies. The Regents also accepted other gifts and grants totalling $8,704.42. A gift of a collection of orchids was given to the Botanical Gar- dens by Dr. Charles W. Newton of Ann Arbor. Legislature Stalls Passage of Budget LANSING - )-- Bitterly, the Senate gave in to the House yes- terday and agreed to stall pass- age of 337 million dollars of bud- get bills for next year while they wait to learn whether Gov. Wil- liams will sign the business re- ceipts tax. ,professor of solar and terrestrial THE Wolverines got to Unke, e .1 ( e nt physics in the astronomy depart- who had been leading the confer-S Sment from Sept. 15 to Dec. 15, ence in pitching with three vic- 1953. tories, for all the runs they need- W Prof. Edward Charles Roeber of ed in the second inning in yester- a the University of Missouri as as- day's tilt. sociate professor of education for With one out, leftfielder Paul the 1953-54 year. Lepley blasted the first of his DETROIT-(P)-General Motors Harlan W. Gilmore of Tulane two triples into deep right field. Corp. and the CIO United Auto University as visiting associate Gil Sabuco slapped a ground Workers yesterday agreed to professor of sociology for the ball at shortstop Ron Pavlik and changes in their current five-year 1953-54 year. was safe at first when Pavlik's contract to provide pay raises and William Byrom Dickens, Grad., throw pulled the first baseman other benefits for 350,000 workers as assistant professor of English off the bag, with Lepley scoring throughout the nation. in the engineering college for the on the play. Agreement was reached as sep- 1953-54 year. Dan Cline, the next batter, arate strikes in four Midwestern Warren Andrew Ketcham of walked, and then catcher Dick parts plants idled 135,650 workers Ferndale as assistant professor of Leach sent both base runners in the automotive industry. education for the 1953-54 year. across the plate with a double UAW PRESIDENT Walter P. John Bardach of Iowa State into left-center. UA r SID T Wld Teachers College as assistant pro-* * * . Reuther said the union would fessor of fisheries in the School THAT ENDED the Maize and "pressimmediately for similar of Natural Resources for three Blue scoring for that inning, but concessions from other major years from September, 1953, to Fisher's men came back in the tr contracts with the union.g- June, 1956. See BASEBALLERS, Page 3 Shortly after the GM-UAW Norma E. Kirkconnell of West- announcement, James B. Carey,j em Reserve University as assist Dulles Call Talks president of the CIO Electrical ant professor of nursing from Aug. T ls'WresUnosidG n 17, 1953 to Jun 30, 1954. ' Workers Union, said GM and Sune , . With Reds Futile his union had reached a similar RE-APPOINTMENTS included ,agreement. Prof. John W. Reed of the law NEW DELHI UP).S This is what the UAW and GM school and Herbert W. Clark of NEW D - ecre- contract modifications are: San Francisco to the Board of day he doubted aes saod eo 1. The annual improvement fac- Governors of the Lawyers Club. dame obte fas would tor was raised to five cents an, Leaves of absence were granted come of big power talks with So- hour. The 1950 contract-a his-! to Prof. Robert Eugene Yoss, i leaders unless the Commu- torifc five-year pact-provided that Robert B. Kugel and Prof. George nist bloc stopped its aggression hourly-rated workers should get a R. Lowery, all of the medical in Korea and Indochina and four-cent hourly pay hike during school, for military service; Prof. agreed on independence for Aus- each year of the contract. Jerome W. Conn of the medical tria. 2. GM granted a changeover school; Prof. Chet LaMore of theDules told a news conference from the "old" to the "new" schol; rof Cht L~or ofthethe United States thinks the pres- Bureau of Lar Statistics price architecture college; Prof. Louise ent "stalemate of distrust" can be I ureas E. Cuyler of the music school and broken. But he added that dis- dex. Angus Campbell, director of the r e a th 3. Nineteen of the 24 cents an Angu Cambel, diectr ofthetrust will continue as long as the hour cost of livig allowance which Survey Research Center. Korean War goes on. hu s of r mg flownc ich * * * -the workers aainedl thus far under -Daily-Frank Barger CANDLES FOR THE VICTIMS-RED CROSS fWorld News Roundup ,I ,. By The Associated Press SEOUL-Allied troops killed or wounded more than 100 Reds; yesterday, fighting in rain that drenched the 155-mile front all dayI and grounded Allied aircraft. In the early darkness an American raiding party went after a Chinese *Red company in the Chorwon Valley of Central Korea.! While both sides poured in artillery and mortar fire, the raiders killedk or wounded 83 Reds during a three-hour action. TO MEET COED NEEDS: gj b'-'-' 11. 4t the contract, will be added to base wage rates as of June 1. This means that the amount of wages Ti subject to downward revision from ss s D eaob present levels is limited to five cents an hour, no matter how much the cost of living goes down. To Gertrude Mulhollan 4.-Mgranted 40,000ski trades workers across the na- WASHINGTON-The Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday approved President Eisenhower's nomination of Fred M. Alger Jr., Detroit industrial- ist, to be ambassador to Belgium. PARIS - President Vincent Auriol consulted steadily yester- day with familiar figures of French politics as he sought a new Premier to form the na- tion's 19th government since the liberation of 1944. Gov. Williams said yesterday that the Michigan Bell Tele- phone Company and the Detroit Edison Company had done an excellent job in restoring serv- ices but said in general the en- tire disaster operation showed a lack of centralized command. In stark contrast the country- side is quiet and undisturbed. A Red Cross nurse perhaps summar- ized the situation when she said, "The people have their backs against the wall. They are turn- ing to us for help." Dewey Appointed To Opera Board Prof. Philip E. Duey of the mu- sic school was named faculty rep- resentative to the Union Opera Committee at the Union Board of as plumbers to work on a radiator repair project in cellblock C. They overpowered at knifepoint two guards. Sgt. Joe Butala and Offi- cer John Osterburg, and locked them in cells along with several inmates they thought might inter- fere with the break. Then they used a blow torch to cut through bars and reach the prison-yard. On their way out they struck an attendant at a pumping station over the head and left him uncon- scious. When he came to, he sounded an alarm. By this time thb fugitives had hidden out in a woded area. Rushing Ends; IFC Discloses t *t %} Gertrude Mulhollan, a sociology department teaching fellow was appointed Assistant Dean of Wo- men yesterday by the Board of Re- gents. President Harlan Hatcher said the appointment was made to en- large the administrative person- nel of the Dean's office to keep pace with the increase in the number of women students. MISS MULHOLLAN, who willj take over her new job in August, will be a general counselor of wo- men students in academic, finan- cial and personal matters. In an interview yesterday Miss Mulhollan said, "I don't believe in comparmentalizing things." "If you are interested in admin- istrative things, you have to con- sider the academic, too. And if tion an hourly increase of 10 cents. Meanwhile, four strikes involv-! ing 16,750 workers at parts plants, and layoffs of 118,900, accounted; for the idling of more than 135,- 000 auto industry workers. At Ford's Canton. O.. forge plant WASHINGTON-The CIO hit out at a series of proposed amend- ments to the Taft-Hartley law yesterday, saying they run "directly counter" to President Eisenhower's campaign pledges. WASHINGTON-House leaders indicated yesterday the lid is on any further investigations into the field of obscene literature. Bottled up in the House Rules Committee is a bill to renew the probe of pornographic books and magazines held last year. U1 .1n. T ; Directors meeting Thursday, not U.1 U 1A l to the road show post; as was prw~nv u±inncl nnr+®u-.^ previously reportea. C~~t, 1 VII +7 A-CL11UV1~, V., 1J U i l ,1 - lv avc u a the month-old strike of 1,450 idled --------~-- 57,900 Ford workers in the na- ~' A Y tion. A two-day strike callednb; GERMANY WARY: 8,000 Budd Co. workers in Detroit laid off 44,200 Chrysler employes.'W Willys, Kaiser-Frazer, Nash, and Er p International Harvester sent work- ers home as a result of the two- months-old walkout at the Borg- 'By ARLENE LISS Warner gear plant in Muncie, Ind. Europe reacted to the proposed' - . Big Three meeting at Bermuda Secrecy Sugmes s enthusiastically yesterday with r .I one exception--Germany. New T r H11ope Reports from England indicate; that the House of Commons? TOKYO - U0) - An unusual seemed pleased when Prime Min- degree of secrecy shielding work ister Churchill ainounced the aaw w«aa a..,v aa.,, aat aaaa< J... a,.a. ilcomes Big Three Talks for a meeting with Russia. Un- level talks that would have the til yesterday she complained effect of lessening international she was being left out in the tension.. cold in the game of power poli- Feeling among the German For- tics. eign Ministry is, however, that The reassuring news France's since the conference will inevitably opinion is still being considered discuss the solution to the German was greeted with cheers in the As- problem, they should be repre- sembly. sented. This semester's informal frater- nity rushing program ended yes- terday with 20 fraternities pledg- ing 64 students. The list of campus fraternities and their pledges is as follows: Alpha Phi Alpha : Joseph A. Pierce, '56; Benjamin D. Rambeau, 55; Arthur D. Walker, '55; Isaac Gardner, Jr., '56.. Alpha Sigma Phi: James F. Pett, '56E; James D. Barber, '56; William W. Weber, '56E. Alpha Tau Omega: James A. j Douglass, '54; Robert D. Milligan, '55E; Walter J. Woods, '56E. Delta Chi: Eugene C. Holcombe, '56; David W. Stipe, '56; Marvin -Daily-Matty Kessler GERTRUDE MULHOLLAN .. . assistant dean