BEHIND THE HEADLINES See Page 4 Yl r e Latest Deadline in the State 4Iaitii _ ... _ r" .i.. 1 , , i t Yrii _ i PARTLY CLOUDY VOL. LXIII, No. 94 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1953 SIX PAGES Pucksters Trounce North Dakota, 8-3 £ Mullen, Mooney, Matchefis Each Net Two Goals in Crucial Contest By PAUL GREENBERG Michigan's stock in the Midwest Hockey League soared last night as the Wolverines blasted to an 8-3 win over North Dakota at the Coliseum. The Maize and Blue jumped out to an 8-0 lead before the Sioux from Grand Forks were able to put the puck in the goal at the halfway mark in the third period. CAPTAIN Johnny Matchefts, Doug Mullen and Pat Cooney each scored a pair of goals, with George Chin and Jim Haas getting the one apiece. Cooney led the scorers with five points, while his line-mate Incumbent Regents Win Nominations Kennedy, Eckert To Run in April Special to The Daily DETROIT-Regents Charles S. Kennedy, of Detroit, and Otto E. Eckert, of Lansing, were handed the GOP nominations yesterday for another eight-year term. Dr. Kennedy and Eckert, who were named by acclamation on the floor of the Republican spring convention will face Democrats Thomas N. Robinson, of Benton Harbor, and Hazen L. Hatch, of Marshall, in the April 6 elections. Gulantics Performers Exchange of Sick Prisoners Asked Gen. Clark Urges Chinese Reds To Carry Out Repatriation Program TOKYO-()-Gen. Mark Clark yesterday asked the Communists to exchange sick and wounded prisoners of the Korean War with the UN. The UN Supreme Commander, in a letter to North Korean and Chinese Red bosses in Korea, said the UN is prepared "To carry out the provisions of The Geneva Convention" and exchange sick and wounded prisoners. * * * * I WISH TO be informed whether you are prepared for your part to proceed immediately with the repatriation of seriously sick and wounded captured personnel off Pro.. 414 A Chin was second with four, boi Unity 'Cited As Solving Race issue By LARRY SUKENIC "The rampaging race problem ir South Africa can only be solve through the co-operative efforts of both blacks and whites," Rev Homer A. Jack, Unitarian Minis- ter said yesterday at the day long seminar on South Africa held a the First Methodist Church. Sponsored by thirteen churcl and civic groups the seminar was opened with an address by Prof Gerald S. Brown, of the history department. He spoke on the his- torical background of South Africa and the problems which beset it today. REV. JACK, minister of the Unitarian Church of Evanston Illinois, is a noted writer and lec- turer on racial problems and civi] liberties. He spent five weeks in 1952 visiting the Union of South Africa as part of a thirteen week tour of Africa. In his morning address Rev. Jack discussed the race problem of South Africa and the discrim- inatory policies and segretorial practices which have led up to the present outbreak of racial strife in South Africa. "Any solution acceptable to the problem for non-Europeans and to the world must be based on the highest tenets of democracy and the Judeo-Christine tradition," Rev. Jack said. In his second address of the day Rev. Jack praised the South Af- rican Africans and the Indians in their joint action of banning to- gether to form the defiance move- ment. He called this the most powerful and significant action yet taken in their struggle against white supremacy and domination. Playbill Ticket Sale To Begin Tickets for all productions of the Spring Playbill to be presented by the Department of Speech in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater will go on sale at the theater box- office tomorrow. Gounod's opera "Faust" is the first scheduled production and will be done in conjunction with the School of Music. The opera will begin Friday and will run through March, except for Sundays. Other offerings this season in- clude, Pirandello's "Right You Are If You Think You Are." March 25 to 28; Puccini's opera "Madame Butterfly," April 16, 17, 20 and 21; and the recent Broaday drama, "Deep Are The Roots," April 22 to 25. The box office will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Union Holds Local Bridge Playoffs 4 The 1953 National Intercolle- giate Bridge Tournament local play-offs will take place at 2 p.m. today in the Union. The play-off will consist of playing 16 hands of bridge which have been prepared and mailed to thecampus by the national com- mittee. Scores in the tournament will be determined by mail by Geoffry Mott-Smith, author and a leading nth wings getting three assists. For the fine Nodak club it was a bitter end to their season, which they opened . by winning 12 straight. Minnesota and Michigan combined to beat them five times and put Coach Cliff Purpurs squad in a precarious spot in the Midwest standings. * * * NORTH DAKOTA remains in first place, although tied yester- day by Minnesota. The Gophers ran their point total up to 17 by inflicting a 10-0 defeat on Denver. The Pioneers, who also com- pleted their loop ,season last evening are still in third with 15 points. Michigan with 14 points and Minnesota are the only top teams with league games remaining. Minnesota has a pair of one- pointers with cellar-dwelling Mich- igan State and the Wolverines have two two-point games with lowly Michigan Tech and one one- point contest with the Spartans. THE WOLVERINES clutch vic- tory last night thus puts them in excellent position for sharing the top spot with Minnesota, provid- ing the two clubs win all of their remaining games. Coach Vic Heyliger's club was in top form against North Da- kota, combining a blistering of- fense with an air-tight defense to beat the Sioux. Michigan opened the scaring at 4:43 in the first period when Jim Haas smacked in Doug Mullen's re- bound from in close on the right side. The contest remained tightly played throughout the first frame but Johnny Matchefts managed to stickhandle his way through the North Dakota defense to score at 17:39 and give Michigan a 2-0 ead at the first intermission. S * THE WOLVERINES broke the contest wide open in the middle period with three tallies, the first coming at 3:08 when Red Mullen licked in a pretty backhander from the blue line. Chin then pulled a spectacu- lar play, skating down the right boards, behind the Nodak nets and passing out in front to Cooney who blasted into the twines at 7:00. Just under four minutes later, the same com- bination got together for Mich- igan's fifth goal with Cooney again getting the score, this time on a blue-line screamer, The Wolverines left the ice at See MICHIGAN, Page 3 HIGHLIGHTING other devolep- ments at yesterday's convention was the naming of the first GOP state chairman from Wayne Coun- ty in 40 years. He is John Feik- ens, Detroit attorney who spear- headed the Michigan Eisenhower drive early last year. Party harmony ruled the Re- publican gathering despite ear- aily-DoA Campbell Tier reports of a threatened bolt THE WINNER, by the powerful 17th Congres- ED RIBENSCROFT ... sional District organization from the Wayne County delegation. Possible opposition to Feikensy and the. incumbent regents were rooms Friday night. Moves to bring All local banks and post ol- in a compromise candidate be- fices will be closed tomorrow tween Feikens and Norman Des in observance of Washington's Jardins, of Owosso, and Detroiter birthday, a legal holiday. John Tope were also doomed in There will be the usual spe- the pre-convention caucuses. cial delivery service and holi- , day collection schedule but the FEIKENS WAS nominated by Ann Arbor office of the Bureau Dean Charles H. King of the De- of Internal Revenue will be troit College of Law who was head- closed. ing the Michigan Taft Committee at the same time Feikens was stumping the state for Eisenhower. D ea T akes ialized yesterday. In one, Clair Taylor defeated William J. Em- y " erson for state superintendent; of public instruction. The other contest saw Arthur K. Rouse, former MSC baseball player, beat out Howard E. Beattie, Saginaw teacher, for one-of two s_ the United Nations Command who are in your hands," Clark's letter said. The UN Chief said the League of Red Cross Societies in Geneva on Dec. 13, 1952, adopted a reso- lution urging both sides in the Korean conflict to take immed- iate action exchanging sick and wounded prisoners "In accord- ance with appropriate articles of the Geneva Convention." The UN repeatedly had urged the Communists at Panmunjom to exchange sick and wounded POWs, Clark said. * * * HE STATED the UNC "remains ready immediately to repatriate those seriously sick and seriously dnlrlr d tlO "rl" ,0 Sh Reds Name Sokolovsky ArmyChief. MOSCOW-(A)-Marshal Vas- sily D. Sokolovsky, captor of Ber- lin in World War II, has been made chief of staff of the armed forces of the Soviet Union, succeeding Gen. M. Shtemenko. This was disclosed yesterday when Sokolovsky sent out invita- tions for the annual celebration of the anniversary of the Soviet -Daily-Don Campbell EVERYONE GOT INTO THE 4CT-HERE. PROF. PRESTON SLOSSON (with Suitcase) AND DEAN JAMES H. ROBERTSON 'Drummer Awarded TOP ,Prize in Gulantics Revuel wounh e capure personnel wor V. are fit to traVel in accordance Army. The celebration takes place By ROZ SHLIMOVITZ with provisions of Article 109 of tomorrow at the Central House of Ed Rabenscroft, '56A, drummed his way to first place and $100 the Geneva Convention." the Army. in the fifth annual Gulantics revue last night before a capacity aud- UNC liaison officers, the Gen- I*EANWHILE also behind the ience in Hill Auditorium. eral noted, were ready to meet Iron Curtain in the Soviet satel- Second prize of $50 went to the Vaughan Shadows, a vocal trio Red liaison officers to make ar- lite, Hungary, thirty top Jewish composed of Evie Challis, '53M, Nora Granito, '55, and Donna West- rangements for impartial yer- Communists were reported last erlund, '54, who delighted the audience with clever renditions. fication of the condition and night either to have committed * .x . * mutual exchange of such ser- suicide or otherwise fallen victim A PERFORMER AT last year's Gulantics show, singer Robin iously sick and wounded." o a purg dtated by a visiting Renfew,'55coped hir plceiMeanwhile B-29 Superforts roar-' Russian group. Renfrew, 55 copped third place. ed through Red anti-aircraft fire While appearing last in the l and searchlight beams before The advices came from dip- program, the surprise faculty Peitions O utjdawn today in their second lomai an usually reliabe u act composed of Dean of Women straight night attack on the Com- o sources, who presented Deborah Bacon, Prof. Preston munist west coast supply line from them as not fully confirmed but Slosson of the history depart- Fo Cam pus Manchuria to the front. the best available iformation ment and Dean James H. Rob- They pitched 170 tons of ex- from the neighboring Commun- erts of the literary college scor- " ;plosives into a 135-acre target of is nation. ed a hit with their "We're not IJE-k-I- single-story buildings and supply Across the world in Washington, Predicting" routine. 1stockpiles 10 miles west of Chong- Charlos E. Bohlen's nomination Sparked by the antics of the '_ju on the main rail line from as U. S. ambassador to Moscow two emcees, Lee Miller, '56, and Sinuiju through Sinanju to Py- was reportedly accepted by the Howard Nemerovski, '54Eng., seven Petitioning for more than 40 ongyang and the front lines. Soviet Union yesterday and is ex- other non-competing acts perform- positions at stake in the sprg -pected to be announced shortly by ed. all-campus elections will open to- e President Eisenhower. Petitimorrowns mutc Rei fIf the Senate approves the nom- THE FIRST portion of the,pro- Petitions must be in by March ination, Bohlen will replace Am- gram featured the "Psurfs" 6 for the March 31 and April 1P anned bassador George F. Kennan, who singing law students; Witham ss- elections, according to Jim Young- sgsu , h has not carried out his duties since ters, harmonizing on three popu- blood, '54, Student Legislature the Soviet declared him personally ter, hrmoizig o thee opu ,Committee chairman. Applications !ncetbels c.3,fv lar songs and McClellan Emshwil- February has been proclaimed unacceptable last Oct. 31, five her, Grad., and Vera Simon, can be picked up at the SL Bldg. by Gov. G. Mennen Williams as months after he took over the post. '53PhH, doing a humorous modern THE Dutch Flood Relief Month and the dance number. campus is not ignoring it. a it seats on the State Board of Agri- culture, Michigan State's rulingj body. Nominated for his fifth term on the Board was Clark J. Brody, manager of the Michigan Farm Bureau. Catherine Gibson; of Monroe, won election for vice-chairman of the GOP State Committee, replac- ing Detroiter Mary Streit. Nominated at the convention by acclamation: incumbent State Highway Commissioner Charles M. Ziegler, Chief Justice John R. Dethmers and former governor Harry F. Kelly for State Supreme Court justices; Walter F. Gries, former warden of Marquette Pris- on, for a seat on the State Board of Education. 'Grapes of Wrath' To Close Today The final showing of "Grapes of Wrath," Academy Award winning film depicting migrant workers of the 1930's, will be held at 8 p.m. today in Architecture. Prof. Clarence F. Kessler, a member of the engineering college faculty for 33 years, died suddenly yesterday morning of coronary thrombosis. The 54 year old mechanical en- gineering professor received a ba- chelor's degree here in 1920 and became an instructor in the same year. He received his master's de- gree in 1924 and was made an as- sistant professor in 1924. In 1943 Last year's Gulantic's winner, the Novelaires, once again prov- ed their popularity when sing- ing, "Once in a While," "The Day Isn't Long Enough," and "It's a Blue World." In another competing act Aud- rey McIntyre, '54Ed., accompan- ied by the Hawaiian Club, showed the development of the Hula. Two pianists, Lorraine Falberg, '56SM, and Carol Leybourn, '555M. gave the audience two different interpretations of Liszt's Hungar- ian Rhapsody Number 12. oe ue resasonhi coa ing to the present system of rep- resentation which allows one legis- lator for every 800 students, ap- proximately 22 SL positions are open. Seven Union vice-presidents will also be elected in the spring balloting. Under the revised Un- ion constitution, five vice-pres- idents are elected at large, one by the combined schools of med- icine and dentistry and one by the Law School. SL PROJECT: Enthusiasm Registered Over Citizenship Plan By VIRGINIA VOSS < ; - I Student Legislature's up-coming Student Citizenship Program has drawn enthusiastic comment from an administration official and a faculty member. - "Any techniques we can devolop to pull students out of their in- dividual eddies into the bigger stream are certainly valuable," Dean of Students Erich A. Walter noted. THE COMPREHENSIVE Citi- zenship Program, scheduled to open at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Auditorium B. Mason Hall, is at- tempting to do just that. With a nine-session program of panels, speeches and discus- sions encompassing a multitude of problems faced by the educa- tional community, the SL project will try to promote understand- an analysis of the problems of campus organizations currently being conducted by a special stu- dent group set up by SL. Dean Walter said he hoped com- mittee members would contribute their ideas to the citizenship pro- ject and give the rest of the cam- pus a chance to participate in the reevaluation move. ONE OF THE program's sched- uled speakers, Prof. Algo D. Hen- derson of the education school, cit- ed the importance of "group acti- vity" in a college education. He felt that besides increasing students' awareness of community problems, the citizenship program would increase the know-how of participation in activities. SL's project will devote three meetings to an analysis of the structure and functions of cam- nnct nrP.C i7l fi 0-,nnc.in vnn Pffnrf 4fn PROF. CLARENCE KESSLER he was named an associate pro- fessor, the rank he held at the time of his death. Prof. Kessler served as a mem- ber of the College of Engineering committee on military science. "Prof. Kessler was highly re- garded as a teacher and was very active in student affairs," Dean George G. Brown of the engineer- ing college said. "His loss will be felt very keenly." Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Muehlig Chapel. Cremation will follow. World News Roundup "Slaughter on Tenth Avenue, Literary college juniors will pick a modern dance number featur- four students-president, vice- ing Ann Albert and Tony Geor- president, secretary and treasurer gilas climaxed the conpetive por- .frsenior class officers. gilas climaxedepr corampEngineers will elect four officers tion of the program, for corresponding posts. Nine positions on next year's J- Banquet To Open Hop Committee are available to sophomores. B ot herh ood Week For those interested in repre- senting the student body on joint The Student Religious Associa- student - faculty - administration tion will begin Brotherhood Week groups, one post is open on the with the Annual Brotherhood Board in Control of Intercollegiate Banquet at 6 p.m. tomorrow in Athletics and three on the Board Lane Hall. in Control of Student Publications. Twelve campus organizations have joined forces to promote an all-campus bucket drive to collect funds for the stricken Netherlands country. They will go to work Wednesday. Informed by members of the Dutch Consul that "what we need now is money, not clothing or food," the Student Legislature Campus Action Committee which will manage the drive is asking only monetary contributions. Enoineers Receive Oil Scholarships Two scholarships in the engi- neering college have been award- ed to James A. Leacock, '54E, and Jack M. Van den Bogaerde, '53E, it was announced yesterday. The scholarships for the current semester are from a fund recently established by the Universal Oil Products Company of Des Plaines, Ill. They are granted to senior students in chemical engineering. Of CIO Dies E At Convention WILKES-BARRE, Pa. - 0- Allan Haywood, who rose from a coal mining pit in England to the second ranking job in this coun- try's Congress of Industrial dr- ganizations, died last night. Haywood, CIO executive vice president, collapsed while ad- dressing a union meeting here and died after being rushed to a hospital. THE 64-YEAR-OLD union of- ficial was widely known in CIO and union circles in general as "Mr. CIO." Haywood had come to Wil- kes-Barre yesterday from Wash- ington to address a regional CIO meeting and collapsed while on the speakers platform. Firemen were summoned and attempted without success to revive him. He was rushed to Wilkes-Barre hospital but died without re- gaining consciousness. CIO President Walter Reuther, in a statement issued here by the CIO said: "The CIOand the en- tire nation have suffered, in the death of Allan Haywood, a griev- ous loss. His entire life was identi- fied with the promotion of wel- fare of workers." He was born in Yorkshire, Eng- land, Oct. 9, 1888, one of 10 chil- dren and the son df a coal miner. He entered British labor activities at the age of 13 as a member of the British Miners' Federation. Quaritet Concert LOW HOURLY INCOME: Berlin Workers Stru le To Survive' Z7 C7 (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of articles by Phil Nielsen, Grad., who last' year attended the Free University in West Berlin as an exchange student under the sponsor ship of the U.S. State Department. He is now studying for his master's degree in business administration at By The Associated Press the University.) MEXICO CITY-The Mexican Red Cross reported yesterday that By PHIL R. NIELSE Wih23 persons were killed and more With an average income of less than 60 injured when two subur- than ten cents an hour, the typical ban trolleyu cas crashed headonIBerlin workman and his wife have West Germany, although the con- trary is true in East Germany. In his daily diet, the West Ber- liner receives more than 2,000 calories, despite the fact that all Viands must be imported from West Germany by land or water through the Russian Zone. All shipments of goods must be accompanied by a complicated and detailed statement of contents and within West Germany. Every day between 600 and 700 ship- ment applications are handed in to the Soviet military admin- istration in Berlin-Karlshorst. A number of these applications are always refused. Most often the reason given for not granting ap- proval is that the products alleg- edly contain scrap metal from East Germany which cannot be ex- I