THEMICHIGANDAILY Youth, Says He Set 1944 'C Fircus Fire Tells of 4 Killings Plus Other Fires COLUMBUS, O-W)-A husky circus roustabout, 20, by his own words a killer and arsonist sinec the age of six, has confessed to ,touching off the blaze that took 68 lives as it swept through the Ringling Bros. Circus six years ago. Although not formally charged with the circus fire, Robert Dale Segee, of nearby Circleville, was named today by Ohio Fire Marsh- ill Harry J. Callan as the man who put the torch to the circus in Hart- ford, Conn., July 6, 1944. In addi- tion to the huge death toll, 412 p ersons were injured. ~ CALLAN SAID Segee had signed a statement admitting the circus f ire, four slayings "by his own Vands," and more than a score of major fires in Ohio, New Hamp- shire and Maine. Segee's long statement, ob- tained after days of questioning by fire marshal investigators and psychiatrists, told a wierd story of. a nightmare red Indian riding a flaming horse. Prosecutor Guy B. Cline of n eighboring Pickaway C o u n t y, where two arson indictments were returned by a grand jury today, told this story of Segee's phantom rider. 'r HE INDIAN appeared to Segee at night, urging him to set fires. Segee's mind then went blank. Up- o n coming to, a fire had been set. At this point, the phantom rider wdismounted, tacnted and sneered t Segee so that he ran from the Scene. Investigators said this fact prevented capture of S e g e e through his years of setting fires., A tip from a convicted arsonist led to Segee's arrest last May 17 at the farm of a relative near mast St. Louis, Ill. * * * CALLAN SAID weeks of inves- tigation and questioning convinced 'im Segee committed the alleged crimes despite his youth. "The record speaks for itself," :he observed in discussing wheth- er the husky Segee is a pyro- mania%, a person who gets a sexual thrill from setting fires. Callan said Segee definitely worked for the circus from June to July 13, 1944. The state offi- M1al's statement said.: * * * "HE JOINED the circus on June 30 at Portland, Me., and the day -he joined the circus there was a fire on the tent ropes which was extinguished without loss. BusAd Prof. jWlaver Dies { Prof. Earl S. Wolaver, of the b u s i n e s s administration school, died of a heart attack early yes- terday in St. Joseph's Mercy hos- pital. He was 63 years old, and a{ member of the business adminis- gration faculty since 1920. HE HAD BEEN professor of business law since 1940 after serv- ing since 1920 as instructor and; assistant aId associate professor. Prof. Wolaver graduated from the Univerity in 1912 and re- ceived his LLB in 1914 and JD in 1922. He practiced law for six years before coming tothe University. An authority on business law, he wrote a textbook, "Treatise on Business Law," and a study of "Trade Barriers in Interstate Commerce," the second published by the U.S. Department of Com- merce. HE WAS A MEMBER of the MiL chigan Bar Association and the American Business Law Associa- tion, of which he served as presi- dent in 1930-31.' He is survived by his wife and one son. SAWING WOOD: 'U' Lumberjack Class Thrives on Own Forest From the Near East By PERSHING LIN In addition to running a var- iety of enterprises from a Food Service to an electric power plant, the University also operates a saw- mill. The mill, a part of the Forestry School, is located on Portage Pinchney Road 16 miles outside of Ann Arbor on University property. Stinch Field, as the property is named, encompasses 800 acres of Land on which the University ob- servatory and the WUOM broad- casting tower are also located. * * * FRANK MURRAY, Forest Man- ager, who has been working for the University since 1935, is in charge of operations at the saw- mill. "The main objective in run- ning the mill," Murray said, "is to Bartley Sees Remodeling of U.S. EducationI MYSTERY-A burned-out electric light bulb in the basement of a downtown appliance store was found to contain a large dead spider. How the insect got inside the airtight bulb is a mystery. MOONLIGHT, CRUISES: TWarm' Weather Gives Boost To Summer Outing Clubs Says Must Public Interest Be Considered The opportunities of summer weather are beckoning students on swimming parties, canoe trips and long hikes. * * * TWO GROUPS are particularly devoted to furthering the students "outside" activities - The Hostel Club and the Graduate Outing Club. A moonlight canoe cruise is being offered by the Hostel Club Close Locks to Passengers SAULTE STE. MARIE, Mich.- (P)-Security measures at the stra- tegic Sault Locks were strengthen- ed yesterday with an order clos- ing the American locks to all pas- senger ships. Previously, the Government had ordered all visitors banned from the locks, the gateway between Lake Huron and Lake Superior. The action followed the interna- tional crisis in Korea. Passenger ships, however, will still be able to use the canal on the Canadian side in plying the Great Lakes. There is only one lock on the Canadian side. On the American side, there are four locks with facilities able to handle the largest ships on the Great Lakes. The latest order will prevent cruise ships, ordinary pas- senger ships and the sightseeing ships based at the Sault from us- ing the American locks. Play Pro Tickets Go on Sale Today Single tickets for all summer plays to be presented by the speech department will go on sale at 10 a.m. today at the Lydia Mendel- sohn box office. The series gegins next Wednes- day with "The Corn Is Green' by Emlyn Williams and will include "Antigone and the Tyrant" by JeannAnouilh, "The Time of Your Life" by Saroyan, the opera "Han- sel and Gretel" and "The Great Adventure" by Arnold Bennett. Supplementing this bill will be two plays by the Oxford University Players, an English company making their first tour. They will perform in two classics, "The Al- chemist" and "King Lear." The box office will be open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. except July 4 and Sundays. Single admissions cost $1.20, 90 and 50 cents. Reser- vations may be made by calling 6300. Read and Use Daily Classifieds TEACHERS WANTED Universities and Colleges Engineering Department Heads $8000; Pharmocology. Science. Young Ph. D's needed in ol fields. Librarians. Home Ec. to $6500. Coast to Coast Cover- age. today on Barton Pond. Members and other interested students will meet at 5:30 p.m. in the League. The cruise will start from the Huron River canoe livery. Non-members will be charged a slight fee. Other activities of the Hostel Club include Wednesday swims, hikes and overnight cycle and ca- noe trips. Students interested in joining the Club can contact Helen Davis, 5011. * * * THE GRADUATE OUTING Club will offer graduate students relief from their studies on the Fourth of July with the attraction of all- day and overnight canoe trips. Those interested in joining the canoe trips should meet with the club at 2:15 p.m. tomorrow at the northwest corner of the Rackham Building, when the Club will go on its weekly Sunday outing. Club activites in the summer consist of afternoons spent swim- ming in one of the various lakes near Ann Arbor or canoeing up the Huron River. An evening pic- nic supper and group singing us- ually round up the day. ''Art Course ExhibitOpens The first summer art exhibit, one of the supplementary offerings of the University's three-week course in Contemporary Arts and Society, opened in the Rackham Galleries last night. The lectures and panel discus- sions of the arts course will begin next week and registration will remain open today. The exhibit is a two part com- bination of Contemporary Visual Arts and Post-War American Painting. The former includes ex- amples of ceramics, product de- sign, sculpture and architecture; the latter comprises paintings by such moderns as Kuniyoshi, Eve Tanguy, Zerber and John Marin. Frederick White, visiting pro- fessor in .the fine arts department who is regularly with the Boston Institute of Contemporary Art, ar- ranged the exhibit on modern painting, while Prof. Emil Weddige of the architecture school was in charge of the contemporary visual arts display. The exhibit will be open to the public during the next three weeks. YD's Decry MSC News Suspension The Young Democrats have passed a resolution condemning the officials of Michigan State College "for curbing freedom of speech and thought" through the suspension of the MSC student newspaper. They also endorsed President Truman and the State Depart- ment's Near Eastern Policy. "We believe the State Department is .doing a fine job," Mrs. Frances Wagmen, '52L, YD President, as- serted. The YD's, discussing campaign strategy for the forthcoming Con- gressional race, will all do ward American education is now in a process of being remodeled in ac- cord with public interest, accord- ing to E. Ross Bartley, director of public relations at Indiana Uni- versity and outgoing president of the American College Public Re- lations Association. Bartley spoke last night at the final meeting of the Association, which has been in session for three days at the University. * * * "POSTWAR educational struc- ture can no more ignor the public interest than American industry could follow the 'public ge damn- ed' philosophy of William H. Van- derbilt," Bartley declared. At least in part because of our efforts, the public is interested in what goes on in our class- rooms and laboratories, in our business offices, in our dormi- tories, fraternities and sorori- ties, and in many other aspects of academic and campus life, he said. "The public is interested in whether we are turning out a good product and at what cost." * * * THE PUBLIC, RELATIONS re- presentatives of colleges and uni- versities, must, therefore, travel a two-way street, Bartley continued. In one direction goes the inter- pretation of education to the pub- lic and in the other comes the in- terpretation of public interest to individual colleges and to higher education generally, he explained. Some pertinent educational topics having a public interest cited, by Bartley were: (1) who should go to college; (2) removal of barriers to educational op- portunity; (3) financial aid to students; (4) responsibility for the welfare of the student; (5) education for the professions; (6) education for citizenship; and (7) religion in higher edu- cation. Stewart Harral, director of pub- lic relations at the University of Oklahoma, was inaugerated last night as new president of the As- sociation for 1950-51. Other business handled at the final meeting was a voted decision of the Association to hold its 1951 conference at the University of Miami. give the forestry students exper- ience in the management and op- eration of a regular mill. "Other colleges have been maintaining similar mills for the same purpose," he added, "but most of them are run by hired hands rather than by students." The history of the sawmill goes back to 1941 when a group of Forestry School alumni began col- lecting funds for its construction. CONSTRUCTION started in the spring of 1947, and the mill began operation in 1949. Erection of the building and installation of the machinery were done entirely by student labor. "The mill operates only three or four weeks each spring and fall; it is not a commercial en- terprise," Murray said. The rest of the year it is main- tained by a University alumnus who lives near the property. * * . * WHEN the mill is running, stu- dents usually saw a few hundred feet of lumber a day. The annual output is about 20,000 board feet, according to Murray. Logs for the mill are cut from Stinch Field and nearby Uni- versity forests. Lately the For- estry School has been using the lumber to improve some Univer- sity property in Ringwood For- est, 90 miles north of Ann Arbor. Murray instructs an average of 60 students each semester in the techniques of logging and milling. Classes are held each Thursday and Friday. Students are taken out to Stinch Field at 1 p.m. in the afternoon and are usually back about 5 p.m. Campus Cop Life Not All Beer, Pretzels The life of a campus cops is not all beer and pretzels. In fact it's hardly concerned with beer at all. The real cam- pus cops actually have very little to do with students and leave such activities as party-raiding and driving investigations to their brothers on the University police. * * * JURISDICTION of the campus cops does not go beyond the cam- pus grounds where they act prin- cipally as night watchmen, keep- ing a practiced eye peeled for fire, theft or pranksters' skullduggery. Under the genial direction of Floyd Ames, a 10-man night crew checks the entire campus making sure that all is secure and shipshape. Ames holds forth at his office in 101 West Engineering Annex every day from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. passing the time with an occa- sional visitor and keeping track of the members of his crew who call in every so often to report on their progress. Once in a while, according to Ames, someone calls to complain about a noisy student party, but his police never go beyond the edge of the campus, and he refers the caller elsewhere. Ames, who has been with the campus cops for 10 years has "no kicks against the students." Says he 'with a smile: "sometimes they sort of clutter up the campus on a fine summer night but I guess we can overlook that." COLOSSI OF MEMNON-Egypt's famed giant twin statues, at Luxor, are to undergo a two-year restoration program to efface the ravages of 3,000 years. * * * Institute on Near East Offers Variety of Instruction, Facilities 74 Spring 'A' Students Announced Seventy-four students received all A's for the spring semester, 1950, according 'to a list of names released yesterday by the Regis- trar's Office. The all-A students, listed ac- cording to schools are: Literary College: Elizabeth F. Ainslie, Esther N. Arroyo, Florence S. Baron, Joel J. Baron, Marilyn O. Bates, Anne J. Beck, Herbert Boothroyd, Jr., George V. Boucher, Lyle A., Carr, Yun Ching Liu Chou, Russell M. Church, James G. Degnan, John C. Fontaine. Jerome N. Goldman, Barbara Ann Grimm, Gloria J. Hile, John F. Huntley, David P. Johsman, Kathleen E. Keely, Edward L. Kendall, Jerome L. Knittle, Law- rence B. Krause, Alethea Kubbler, Marvin J. Labes, Virginia Leader, Kalman B. Lifson, Thomas J. Ma- letta. James R. McReynolds, William H. Matheson, Charles E. Mays, John I. Meyers, Joanne Patterson. Maureen Patterson, Allan M. Paul, Phyllis J. Peterson, Edward H. Poindexter, Jerome K. Porter, Nancy J. Porter, Gladys R. Quale, Richard M. Rappley. Frank C. Richardson, Marshall D. Sahlins, Eleanor J. Scott, And- rew E. Segal, Joan A. Sieber, Sarah Slocum, Jerold S. Solovy, James E. Sullivan, Nancy K. Watkins, Paul L. Weinmann, Arthur N. Wright, Lester Zeff. * * * Architecture college: Leonard G. Siegal. Education school: Shurly J. Ash, Jack W. Rose. Forestry school: Bruce R. Jones, Raymond L. Sarles. Musiceschool: Warren T. Bellis, James D. Berry, Jr., Sheldon W. Henry, John L. Iltis, Joan Bullen Lewis, Carol M. Neilson, Wanda Lou Pitman, Jesse 0. Sanderson, John E. Williams. Pharmacy school: Jerome F. Mancewicz, Henry C. Godt, Jr. School of Public Health: John R. Fleming, George A. Hall, Rhoda M. Michaels, William J. Morrow, Henry J. Ongerth, Jane B. Taylor. Speeders' Demise DETROIT - (R) - Watch your speed over the July 4th weekend- or you might end up in jail. That was the warning today a, the Automobile Club of Michigan. Police in some cities plan to ex- periment with electronic speedo- meters which permit them to cal- culate a motorist's speed without pacing him on the road. In Detroit reckless speeders get automatic jail sentences. One of the University's more in- formative and timely summer pro- grams is the Institute on the Near East, which combines a resident faculty, visiting faculty, and week- ly guest lecturers in its summer instructional program. Offering courses as part of both the literary college and graduate school credit plan, the Institute features instruction in "the mo- dern Near East," modern and an- cient languages and modern and ancient history and civilizations. * * * UNIVERSITY FACULTY mem- bers participating in the program are: Prof. George D. Cameron of the Near Eastern Studies depart- ment; Prof. Douglas D. Crary of the geography department; N. Marbury Efimenco of the political science department; Prof. Clark Hopkins of the classical studies de- partment; Prof. Roger A. Pack of, the Latin department; and Prof. Mischa Titiev of the anthropology department. Among'institutions of learning represented by visiting professors are the College of France, Oxford, Yale, UCLA, Chicago, and Illinois. Institute faculty members are also present from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the British Broad- casting Corporation, the Rand Corporation and the U.S.. State and Agriculture Departments. Resident scholars and Near Easttern authorities invited by the University give weekly lectures in the Rackham Amphitheatere to Institute students and the public. Next speaker in the series will be Prof. Carry, who will lecture Wed- nesday on the geography and ect nomic development in the Near East. Enrollment Open For Health Plan University students can enroll in the Blue Cross Blue Shield non- group health plans by making ap- plication before July 20. Requests for applications and folders to be mailed to interested persons can be made at any hos- pital or doctor's office. No one wil call upon the applicant since all folders are mailed directly to the Blue Cross. There is no physi- cal examination or health history required. Leslie S. Moon, Blue Cross dis- trict manager, said that the local program is in co-operation with the Michigan State Medical So- ciety 'and the Michigan Hospital' Association in their state-wide program of extending Blue Cross- Blue Shield protection to Michigan people.. 4 . " DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I (Continued from Page 2) the summer program of the De- partment of Speech and the Speech Clinic at Purdue Univer- sity under the direction of Dr. Mack Steer. Saturday, July 1: Institute on the Law and Labor-Management Relations. Subject: Pensions for Workers. Sessions at 9:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., 100 Hutchins Hall. ..Dr. Leon Brillouin, Director of Education for the International Business Machines Corporation, will give a lecture on "Statistcal Thermodynamics, in Relation to the Theory of Information, as de- veloped by C. E. Shannon and N. Wiener," at 4:00 p.m., Thursday, July 6, in Room 1400, Chemistry Building. Open to those interested. Lecture in the Near East Insti- tute Series: Professor Douglas D. Crary will speak at 4:15 p.m., July Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. Contemporary literature and art (June 26-July 26). Museum of Archaeology. From Tombs and Towns of Ancient Egypt. Museums Building. Rotunda exhibit, American Indian stimu- lants. Exhibition halls, "Trees Past and Present." Fridays, 7:00- 9:00 p.m. Law Library. History of Law School (basement); classics for collectors (reading room). Michigan Historical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. A Century of Commencements. Clements Library. One Hundred Michigan Rarities (June 26-July 5). Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- ial Hall: Modern Graphic Art; Oriental Ceramics: through July DALLER'S REPAIRS OUR WATCH * Watches, Clocks repaired * Watches modernized with brand new cases nnd watch bands I I