THE -IIICIIt6A.N DAIIILV TUESDAY, JUNE 25. 1957 . TUE MIEliut~Ai~ hAul TUESDAY, JUNE 25, 1~57. A. SPECIAL ELECTION SET: Seven Candidates Seek Wisconsin Senate Seat Two Democrats and five Repub-J licans have announced intentions June 8. the delegates from the to run for the Wisconsin Senate state's 71 counties voted by more seat vacated by the death of form- er Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy in May. Ret. Clement J. Zabocki an- nounced in Washington last week that he was an "active candidate" for the Democratic nomination. William Proxmire, threetime can- didate for the Governorship. will also seek the Democratic nomina- tion. No Convention The Wisconsin Democratic Par- ty announced it will not hold a convention before the primary, election, set for July 30, or before the special August 27 election. At the Wisconsin Republican convention, held in La Crosse, than. 3 to 1 to withhold official party approval of any one man until the results of the primary. Onty One Critic Seeking the Republican nomina- tion are: former Gov. Walter J. Kohler, Lieut. Gov. Warren Knowles, former Rep. Glenn R. Davis, Rep. Alvin E. O'Konski, and former State Supreme Court Jus- tice Henry P. Hughes. Of the five Republican hopefuls, only Davis is an outspoken criticI of President Eisenhower and his program. Kohler announced last week that he would run as a straight supporter of the Eisen- hower Administration, I Dawson Takes Post At Harvard The University's law school suf- fered a loss this year when Prof. John P. Dawson resigned his posi- tin for a professorship at Harvard University's law school. This past year, Prof. DawsonF had been absent on leave from Michigan as a visiting professor at Harvard, where he pursued special interests in comparative law. There he made many new con- tacts, and found stimulation for additional work in his field, which compares foreign law to that of the United States. Prof. Dawson is said not to havea been dissatisfied with his position at Michigan, but enjoys the fresh slant and different viewpoint he found at Harvard. Dean of the Law School E. Blyth Stason said the school was very sorry to lose him. Prof. Dawson has served on the Michigan faculty since 1927. Last year he was one of the five Uni- versity professors to receive Dis- tinguished Faculty Achievement Awards for service to the Univer- sity. He will be replaced by Prof. Spencer Kimball from the Univer- sity of Utah. Prof. Kimball is also an Oxford graduate. -p "a J +f RESEARCH DONE ABROAD: Books by 'U' Professors Published in Ann Arbor \4+ I A Touch of Indian Lore mo EES BY BELGRADE Subscribe to The Mic iligan Daily NOWIV The University of Michigan Press has published three new books, two of them authored by Univer- sity professors. Prof. Walter A. Reichart of Ger-f man department has written "Washington Irving and Ger- many," a book telling of Irving's travels through Germany in search' of a "rich mine of German litera- tures." While in Germany, Irving, America's first literary ambassa-' dor to the Old World, became a friend of the Royal family, falling in love with a beautiful English, girl residing in Dresden and writ- ing "Tales of a Traveller," his German Sketchbook. Followed Route The author, born in Austria and educated at the University, travel- ed his subject's exact route through Europe, enabling him to recount in detail this "neglected" chapter in literary history. Prof. Reichart has been a mem- ber of the executive board of the Horace H. Rackham School off Graduate Studies since 1950, and in 1951 served as president of theI American Association of Teachers of German. Another volume dealing wIth Germany, "The Allied Blockade of Germany, 1914-1916," is th° work' of Prof. Marion C. Siney of the history denartment at Western Reserve University in Cleveland. The book, which traces develop- ments to the point where all hope for a negotiated peace hai ended, tells how the Pritish and French sought to starve the German people and disabled their economic life, pleted a book. "Mammals of the Great Lakes Region," which con- cerns itself primarily with the little-known good points of trou- blesome animals. For example, Prof. Burt, cura- tor of mammals in the University's zoolo:y museum, defends the in- famous wolf by writing: "To be sure, they take a few deer, but there are usually too many deer for available winter food. "It is my opinion," he continues, "that this magnificent carnivore should be protected, I doubt if it will ever come back in sufficient numbers to be a problem." State Schools Mustd Prodluce, More Tutors It will be imperative for Michi- gan colleges and universities to produce 35,000 teachers over and 'above their present rate of output in the next 10 years, if "minimum standards" are to be met." This figure was reached by a subcommittee on teacher educa- tion of the Michigan Council of State College Presidents in a re- cent report "Teacher Demand and Supply in Michigan-1954-1970." Dean Charles Odegaard of the literary college served as chair- man of the group, while Dean Willard Olson of the School of Education was also a member. The present number of 4,050 teachers educated each year will have to be increased by 86 per cent in order to reach this new figure. The great demand is the result of the heavy enrollments in elemen- tary schools brought on by a high birth rate during World War II, which has continued to the pres- ent. Phone NO 2-3241 I I I f Campus 619 E. Liberty St. AST'S Phone Shop NO 2-0266 U r ( . _ I li --11 II I