TUE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1. 2, N. EREDITY ANALYSES: Dice Sees Great Demand For Counseling Services eredity counseling a e r v i c e s t analyze' "family pedigrees' ascertain the heredity of ts will soon be in demand over, nation, Prof. Emeritus Lee R. e of the zoology department i yesterday. rof. Dice, founder of the first edity clinic in the united tes, addressed the Heredity ,nseling Symposium of the erican Eugenics Society in New .k oeking forward to the time n clinics are easily available the country, he said that he- ity is a phase of public health should be treated "as are in- ious diseases." Prof. Dice, who red from the faculty last sum- , founded the human genetics artment of the school of medi- in 1940. clinic's main operating fea- will be its personnel, he said. ng with qualified geneticists, clinic will enlist services of sicians because many prob- s in heredity pertain to medi- traits. pecial training in heredity or licine is not a criterion for be- ing a successful counselor, he tioned. A person must possess broad sympathy with human lities." rawing from his own experi- e at the University, Prof. Dice Vayne State '0 Give Play ugene O'Neill's "Beyond the 'izon" will be presented by the yne State University Theatre :30 p.m. Friday, Saturday and day, Nov. 14, 15 and 16 in .roit. Beyond the Horizon," written 1920, is O'Neill's first full- gth drama. It won him his first itzer Prize and established him an imortant playwright. Tamatizing the disillusion- it and disintegration of per-, s denied the fulfillment of ir dreams, the play is a tragedy, frustration centering in the s of a farm family. his play was chosen to repre- b American drama in a three nth tour of India, beginning in uary, under the auspices of sident Dwight D. Eisenhower's cial International Program for bural Presentations. This pro- n is administered by the erican National Theatre and said that a clinic should be set up in association with a well- equipped hospital because this lo- cation "gives the staff of the clin- ic access to the hospital records, use of the clinical facilities of the hospital laboratories and freedom to ask advice from any of the members of the hospital profes- sional staff." Financial support for clinics is difficult to get, he said, since the families most in need of advice are usually unable to pay for it. The heredity clinic at the Uni- versity is part of the school: of medicine and is designed to pro- vide medical students with train- ing and material for research in human genetics. IowU/fa Game Colorcast Expensive The color telecast of today's Michigan-Iowa football game will require "three times as much of everything" as would a black-and- white program. Producer Perry Smith made, this estimate last night, as he and a crew of about 35 people prepared4 for today's big telecast. "You need about three times as much working space, three times as much power,,and your cameras are about thre ,times as large," Smith said. He added thata spe- cial power installation hasbeen hooked up in Michigan Stadium to provide the necessary electri- city. The equipment involved in- cludes two 20-ton mobile units, four 300-pound color cameras, and about two and one-half miles of cable to connect them with each other and the rest of the ap- paratus. Two of the cameras will be placed in the press deck above the 50-yd. line, while the *other two will be set on the edge of the p laying field near each 30-yard line. The .mobile units will be sta- tioned near the press deck. Smith explained that the basic problem is not movement, ,but shadows. "Trouble comes when a player moves out of the sun into a shadow," he said. This is the third Big Ten game to be televised in -color. The ori- ginal colorcast was the 1955 Uni- versity-Iowa game, and the other was the Illinois-Minnesota game two weeks ago. 'U' Station To Present TV Shows Three special television pro- grams will be shown Monday night on WPAG-TV, University television station. Tyo Ann Arbor citizens will be guests on "Dateline Ann Arbor," to be broadcast at 7:15 p.m. Municipal Judge Francis L. O'Brien will discuss the recent award presented to Traffic Court and the factors involved in achieving the award. Mrs. Kasper Enkemann, head of the Washte- naw County Girl Scout Council, will tell of recent scouting acti- vities and future council plans. On this week's "Welcome to Storytime," foreign children now attending school in Ann Arbor will sing songs in their native languages - GermaT, Hiidustani, Hungarian, Norwegian, and Span- ish and perform folk dances rep- resentative of customs and tradi- tions of their homelands. A third show, "Close-up," at 8 p.m. will feature unusual hobbies of collectors and performers from all over the country. A native Kentuckian, James F. Banks, will play his guitar in both the traditional Kentucky fashion and his own individual style. On the same program, a father- son duo will explain their spare- time activities. A large collection of license plates will be shown by Bruce Corson, 13 years old. His father, William (Buck) Dawson, author of "A Civil War Artist at The Front," will tell of hobbies which he discovered in connection with his writing. Conn To Talk In Argentina Prof. Jerome W. Conn of the internal medicine department, has been selected to deliver the open- ing address at the Fourth Pan- American Congress of Endocrin- ology in Buenos Aires, which be- gins tomorrow. The subject of his address will be: "The Diagnosis and Manage- ment of Primary Aldosteronism," an adrenal disease first discovered by Prof. Conn in 1954. During his stay in South Amer- ica, Prof. Conn will also lecture in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, Brazil, as well as Santiago, Chile. To Avoid M NORTH VERNON, Ind. OAP)- Victor W. Whitley was to be taken to the Indiana State Prison at Michigan City yesterday to start serving a life sentence for kid- naping, but he still may be tried for murder. The 26-year-old Texan, survi- vor of a pair of gunmen involved in a two-state shooting spree started near Clinton, Mich., Sept. 30, pleaded guilty to kidnaping here Thursday in an apparent move to avoid trial for murder at Scottsburg in the killing of State Trooper William R. Kellems at Scottsburgh, Ind. Conviction on a first degree murder charge could carry the death penalty. Killed Trooper At Clinton, the two gunmen fatally injured Trooper Dugald A. Pellot, 23 years old, of the Clinton post and wounded Trooper Doug- las A. Vogel, 30 years old, also of the Clinton post. Judge Fred S. Matthews, who Kidnaper Pleads Guilty urder Trial presidesover the joint Jennings- Scott circuit court, said: "There is nothing whatever to prevent his trial in Scott county if the state wants to prosecute. The man wanted to plead guilty to one crime in Jennings county and I accepted the plea. It is an entirely different case in Scott county." Judge Denies Deferment Prosecutor Harry E. McCalia in- dicated he wants to try Whitley at Scottsburg. He asked Judge Matthews to defer sentencing Whitley on the kidnaping charge so he could be tried first on the murder charge, but the judge de- nied the motion. The kidnaping charge was based on the abduction of Deputy Sheriff Clyde Perkins as Whitley and Ralph W. Taylor fled from pursuing Indiana officers. 'T'aylor was killed in the gunfight that, followed. Club Plans Illinois Trip For those students interested in travelling to Champaign, Ili., for the University's football game with Illinois next Saturday, the Wolverine Club has compiled a list of plane and train schedules. Plane reservations are. being held for students at a local travel agency, according to Louis Bus- man, '59, president of the Wolver- ine Club. Planes will leave from, Ypsilanti's Midway Airport. Trains from Ann Arbor will go to Champaign by way of Chicago. Tickets for the game are still available and may be picked up at the Athletic Administration Building. N- W(LOUQ JUGT WOKE 'UP TO T1E FACT TNAT He' IN CLASS! KEEP ALERT FOR A BETTER POINT AVERA GED Don't let -that "drowsy feel- in~g" cramp your style in clas ..or when you're ."hitting the books" . Take ,s NoDoz Awakener! In a few minutes~ you'll be your dormal best... wide awake . ,. alert! You~t doctor will tell y'on eNoDoz ,Awakener$ are safe as toffee. keep a pack~handy! 1$ TABUETS, 3S'e h handytin \9 '~ V HERE COMES THE SCOTS-Authentic Scottish costumes are worn by the Scottish Highlanders of the State University of Iowa in their performance today during halftime. The 70-girl organiza- tion wear doublets, or coats, with kilts and plaids of Royal Stewart Tartan. Half-Time Show To Feature Iowa's Scottish Highlanders Saturday 7 and 9 P.M. Sunday at 8 P.M. "THE LITTLE WORLD OF DON CAMILLO" with FERNAN DEL GINO $ERVI Also "Glazier Park Studies"-A Short ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Scotch plaid instead of the tra- ditional maize and blue will take precedence at today's football game. The Scottish Highlanders of the State University of Iowa, dressed in the Royal Stewart Tartan kilts, will share the television spotlight with the University Marching Band during the pre-game and half-time show. The 70-girl organization, under the direction of William L. Adam- Alumni Elect New Director The University Alumni Council yesterday elected Jack H. Shuler new director at its semi-annual meeting. The Council also announced the formation of twonew Univer- sity of Michigan clubs; in Pitts- field, Mass., and Colorado Springs, Colo. One of the charter members of the Colorado club is ex-varsity hockey coach Vic Heyliger. 4. V- son, is reported to be the largest, bagpipe band in the world. Featured on the program will be a Scottish 'sword dance and the Highland Fling. Icwas Scottish Highlanders were originally an all-male' group until World War II when the male population on campus was re- duced considerably. The group was then opened to girls and has remained that way since. The group has made two to'rs of Europe, ir 1952 and 1956. Ox the first trip the Highlanders had trouble with skepticism il A er- deen, Scotiar.. The toxrspeople were afraid the group "xijas merely a healf a dozen chorus girls with nothing on blowing the bagpipes." However, after the performance, Aberdeen received the girls without doubt as to their ability. U The Michigan Union Presents The keynote speaker for International Week VIVERSE ANALYSIS: Expert Cites Uses of Radio Astronomy. "Radio astronomy can play a very crucial role" in evaluating "cosmologies," or general theories of construction dofthe universe,. Prof. Fred T. Haddock of the as- tronomy department said yester- day. Prof. Maddock noted that as- tronomers hope eventually to be able to determine the merit of the "expanding universe" theory by observing radio waves from the stars. Discussing "Radio Waves from the Sun," Prof. Haddock said the discovery that radio waves eman- ate from the sun was mpade by Karl Jansky, a Bell Laboratories scientist, in 1932. While studying the radio disturbance caused by lightning, Jansky found that there was continuous background radio disturbance. The Bell scientist also discov- ered that intensity of the disturb- DIAL NO 8-6416 ENDS TONIGHT... z "A MASTERPIECE I OF COMEDY!" -Wm. K. Zinser, Herald Tribune r ALASTAIR SuIn GREEN t Added . . . 2nd in our series of travel and adventure films "Around the World in Ten Weeks." "THE DIKES" Premieres SUNDAY ance Increased when the milky way was in the antenna focus. This observation caused scientists to believe that the stars also sent out radio waves. Noting that "until after World War II," these discoveries were not followed up, Prof. Haddock added that early in the war, sci- entists feared the Germans were "jamming" allied radar. Scientists later discovered that the sun's ac- tivity was responsible for the "jamming." "In the 40's," Prof, Haddock ob- served, "more and more people got interested in measuring radio waves" from the sun and stars. To penetrate the ionosphere, a layer of charged particles sur- rounding the earth, Prof. Had- dock noted that high frequency radio waves are necessary. He noted that the wave length of these waves is about one-half inch, as compared with 10 feet for TV waves and one-half mile for' radio waves. Explaining that at the Univer- sity, "we're just getting started" with study of the sun's radio waves, Prof. Haddock noted that the astronomy department now has asradio telescope and has been making continuous observa- tions of the sun. He added that the University now plans to acquire a larger ra- dio telescope which may be used to study "distant galaxies." r Concluding his talk, Prof. Had- dock noted that there are "four or five major mysteries" about how the sun's radio waves are made. He said scientists hope to answer these problems in the next few decades. LAST NIGHT for a real DRAMATIC SHOCKER r-------------------------------------------"------------ Excerpts from Mack Woodruff's review in the Ann Arbor News, Friday, Nov. 1 1 ("A Hatful of Rain" is) a good total disintegration is well han- play-refreshing in its realistic, dIed. head-on and compassionate treat- Beverly Ogg does very well as ment of the drug addiction prob- Celia Pope, Johnny's wife, and J. lem. Henry Owens is no less effective * . * * * as his incredibly selfish father. ,Ted Heusel has done an excellent Miss Ogg ... is a good performer and manages to give her role just Ijob of casting and directing this the right balance of sweetness and dramatic case history. hardness which it needs to make I* * * * it convincing.I Don Catalina's performance as * * * *I the addict gets off to a slow and Tom Leith's vital portrayal of uneasy start, but commands our the, lonely Polo, who distractedly attention and sympathy more loves but envies his brother and forcefully as the play progresses. covets his brother's wife, is the ' His final act depiction of Pope's production's finest performance. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE'S exciting production of the "LECTRI FYI NG"-N.Y. Daily News Broadway Hit SA DBU G 4 I CA R Speaking on "Human Aspects Involved in the Relations Between Men of All Nations and Races" .r I T5usdy, ovember , 8:00 P.M. ml Get Your Tickets Now...at the Union, Main Desk I i I £ TTI I - i~tw' I ~vm&~W'7~ 11 1