EIGE 'aneGANvDANLY onlV ) emocrats Gain Sweeping Overall National V )JNLSDAY, NOVEMBER 5,155 ictry Indiana, Mar Republicans i (Continued from Page 1) Rep. Robert C. Byrd, making his first bid for statewide office defeated Republican incumben Chapman Revercomb for a six- year term and former Democrati Congressman Jennings Randolph ousted Republican appointee Johr 'D. Hoblitzell, Jr., in the other race. Kennedy Easy Winner Sen. John F. Kennedy (D) wor reelection by a whopping margin which should give impetus to hi chances for the presidential nom- ination in 1960. Early returns indicated Ken Principals, U' S tudents To Confer The University Admissions Of fice will sponsor the 30th annua Principal-Freshmen-Junior Col lege talks to be held today an tomorrow. The first general session at 7:3t p.m. today will include a pane discussion on "How Can We Bes Assess Students Aptitudes ant Proficiencies and Use the Infor mation to Help the Student," t4 be chaired by Clyde Vroman, di rector of University Admission office. Participating on the panel wil be Associate Dean of Engineering College Walter Emmons, Principa W. Earl Halman of Jackson Higi School, John E. Milholland of the Bureau of Psychological Services Assistant Dean of the Literar College James H. Robertson, Prin cipal Nicholas Schreiber of Anr Arbor High School and Principa Ross A. Wagner of Birminghair High School. Attending the conference wil be high school principals ant junior college representative from different areas in the coun try. High school principals an junior college representatives wil interview students attending th University for the first time thi year tomorrow morning. Follow ing the interviews will be depart mental open houses. Vice-President for Student Af fair James A..Lewis will speak t the group on "What Makes fo Student Success in the Universit of Michigan," during a luncheo] meeting. A panel discussion on "Hov Can We Increase the Studen Probability of Success in the Uni versity" will follow. Overstreets To Give Talk Authors Harry and Bonar Overstreet will address the 20t] annual Parent Education Insti tute convening at 10 a.m. today it Rackham Auditorium. The Overstreets will discus "Maturing the Husband and Wif Relationship" to the expecte audience of 600 persons. The con ference is being sponsored by th University Extension Service an the Michigan Congress of Parent and Teachers. j Discussions will be hel yland Replace SENATE' S.At 4 a.m. today, the followin in Senate United States Senate: John C. Stennis (D) Mississip Albert Gore (D) Tennessee-i nedy swamped his Republican op- John F. Kennedy (D) Massac ponent. Vincent J. Celeste, by a Thomas J. Dodd (D) Connect wide margin. Stuart Symington (D) Mssou , But in Nebraska, Republican Robert V. Byrd (D) West Virg t incumbent Sen. Roman Hruska Jennings Randolph (D) West - led Democratic challenger Frank Vance Hartke (D) Indigna-l c Morrison in early returns. Spessard I. Holland (D) Flori h And a strong Republican tide B. Everett Jordan (D) North in Arizona carried Sen. Barry Winston L. Prouty (R) Vermo Goldwater to a second term. Harry Flood Byrd (D) Virgini r As the vote counting passed the Ralph W. Yarborough (D) Te halfway mark, it became appar- John 0. Pastore (D) Rhode ent that Goldwater's margin was William Proxmire (D) Wis n too much for Democratic Gov. Barry Goldwater (R) Arizon , Ernest W. McFarland to overcome. Kenneth B. Keating (R) N s The 64-year-old McFarland - was unseated by Goldwater in Harrison A. Williams (D) N 1952 when he was Senate ma- J. Glenn Beall (R) Marylan - jority leader. Mike Mansfield (D) Monta Symington Victor Dennis Chavez (D) New Mex In Missouri. Democratic Presi- John J. Williams (R) Delaw dential hopeful Stuart Symington Roman L. Hruska (R) Nebra won an easy victory. Symington Howard Cannon (D) Nevada doubled the total received by Re- William Langer (R) North D publican Hazel Palmer. Philip Hart (D) Michigan-- Tennessee's Albert Gore, also Frank E. Moss (D) Utah-I mentioned as Democratic presi- Hugh Scott (R) Pennsylvania dential timber, won as expected Following are the 4 a.m. tot over Hobart Atkins, the Republi- California: Goodwin Knight can candidate.38,4 The only Republican incumbent 384,742 to win easily was Winston R. Minnesota: Eugene McCarthy l Prouty, of traditionally Republi- 189,000 can Vermont. He defeated Demo- Ohio: Stephen Young (D) 89 crat Frederick J. Lafayette. Washington: Henry Jackson Beall Wins 183,000 1 Maryland's Republican incum- Wyoming: Frank Barrett (R) l bent J. Glenn Beall had amore d difficult time of it, handling Balti- dmore mayor Thomas D'Alesandro IW 1~ m the first defeat of his political s 'e ea career by a narrow margin. S ix t 1erm - Democrats Mike Mansfield of Unj s Montana, William Proxmire of Wisconsin, Dennis Chavez of New (Continued on Page 2) l Mexico and John Pastore of Rhode- g Island rolled to easy wins over on h their Republican opponents. your sixth term. My people and n oters in Florida returned I were at the polls and more will e Democrat Spessard I. Holland to be there, I'm sure." It was signed , the senate by a wide margin. Other by "The King of the Gypsies." y Democratic Southerners winning Adding machines, coffee and - easily were Mississippi's John musig the offe mn- n Stennis, Texas' Ralph Yarborough, music were the order of the morn- d and Virginia's Harry Byrd. ing at Republican headquarters. n The 49th state, Alaska, does not Emotions running from cautious vote until Nov. 25. At that time, optimism to dogged determinism l favored Democrat E. L. Bartlett showed on Paul D. Bagwell's face d will oppose Republican R. E. Rob- as he at one point told The Daily s ertson for a full term. that he would run for re-election - Republican candidate Mike Step- in 1960 to later in the morning ovich is favored over Democrat when he waved a finger at the d Ernest Gruening for the partial assembled reporters and declared, 1 term. "I'm not going to give up." e s ByNA MRKLCollege I y ByNAN ARKE prospective employers about stu- n IOWA CITY, Ia. - The Un- dents' views and beliefs expressed versiy gablin crakdow in the classroom. tt brought quick precautionary ac- It asyeearhvngwhattesi -tion last week at the State Uni- ma erhvn-wa hysyi versity of Iowa. class discussions about politics, As soon as he heard about it, religion and other matters used Iowa athletic director Paul Brech- against them when they seek Jobs. er tld he ail Ioan,"I ent According to a committee re- aeretodueoDail oan,"Ihentport, the move was prompted by coaches, asking them to take pre- tegetnme flyly cautions to see that nothing like security inquiries calling for evi- that ited at "our school." dence "that a university should RESULTS q persons had been elected to the p1-no change. no change husetts-no change. icut-Democratic gain. ri-no change. inia-Democratic gain Virginia-Democratic gain Democratic gain ida--no change Carolina-no change nt--no change a--no change xas-no change Island-no change consin--no change a-no change ew York-no change ew Jersey-Democratic gain d-no change na-no change ico-no change are-no change ska-no change -Democratic gain Dakota-no change Democratic gain Democratic gain a-no change als of undecided Senate races. (R) 309,797; Clair Engle (D) (D) 258,000; Edward.Thye (R) 5,744; John Bricker (R) 874,074 (1) 324,000; William Lantz (R) 12,702; Gale McGee (D) 10,857 Ohio Elects Democratic Governor (Continued from Page 1) point challenged the Democratic surge. Returns from 5.698 of 26.898 precincts gave Brown 345,394, Knowland 235,658. DiSalle Wins Democrat Michael V. DiSalle was elected Ohio governor, unseat- ing first-term Republican Gov. C, William O'Neill. Republican Sen. John W. Bricker appeared headed for defeat. A Democratic sweep of the Ohio statehouse, now solidly Republi- can, seemed in the making. Ove one Republican, Secretary of State Ted W. Brown, appeared to have a chance to weather the storm. DiSalle, former Toledo mayor and United States Price Adminis- trator late in the Truman admin- istration, will be Ohio's first four- year governor. All state offices start four-year-instead of two- year-terms in January. Lawrence Victor Democrat David L. Lawrence was elected governor of Pennsyl- vania. Republican Hugh Scott took the lead over Lawrence's running mate, George M. Leader in a nip and tuck battle for the United States Senate. Lawrence in becoming the Key- stone State's 102nd governor de- feated Republican Arthur T. Mc- Gonigle, Reading. pretzel manu- facturer making his first try for public office. McGonigle conceded defeat an hour after midnight at a time when he was trailing Lawrence. now serving his fourth term as Pittsburgh's mayor, 'by nearly 120,000 votes. With 7,598 of the 8,914 precincts reported this was the vote: Gov- ernor: Lawrence 1,728,495, Mc- Gonigle 1,610,284. Other winning northern Demo- crats included incumbents Abra- ham Ribicoff, Connecticut; Foster Furcolo, Massachusetts; Orville Freeman, Minnesota; George Docking, Kansas; and Herschel Loveless, Iowa. Ribicoff, after a second term in the Connecticut race, won over Fred Zeller, state controller for the past 14 years. I I its Bagwell; precedented .s At this point he was trailing Gov. G. Mennen Williams by 93,000 votes. Around the room a small group were speculating among them- selves as to how long he wouldI hold out. The crowd cheered the combo entertaining the guests with "Autumn in New York" as the returns from Nelson Rocke- feller's gubernatorial victory were announced. The adding machine tapes grew longer. Bagwell circulated among groups of friends and smiled, but not as optimistically as earlier in the evening. toundup I eral viewing theaters complete with microfilms, slides, tape re- cordings and sound film projec- tors. EVANSTON, Ill. - Northwest- ern University's human relations board recently voted to conduct a survey among landlords operating housing for foreign students in order to get their general opinions and reactions on integrated hous- ing. Information will then be turned over to the Evanston human rela- tions council. The council is cur- rently working on a measure to enforce integrated, non-discrim- inatory city. housing for the entire * * s NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Yale University will receive a $120,000 grant from the Carnegie Corpora- tion. The grant will support the first of a series of steps to strengthen and consolidate the school's ef- forts to recruit and train candi- dates for the teaching profession. It will enable Yale to seek out as many as ten such students, assign them annually to teaching duties in different departments at Yale. o The Big Ten has been making a h determined effort against this - sort of thing, he said. What hap- n pened at Michigan could happen anywhere, he added, "and I'm s sure that Michigan has tried as e hard as any school could." d* * * - BERKELEY, Calif. - A move e was taken last week by a legis- d lative body representing faculties s of the University of California in the northern part of the state to d ensure "free enquiry" in the class- Ii throughout the day including a room. talk at 2 p.m. on "Maturing the Members voted to refuse volun- Parents Through Parenthood." tary answers to questions from a LIVE MODERN MUSIC IN CONCERT "AN EVENING WITH JAZZ" presented by THE JACKSON JAZZ CLUB Thursday, Nov. 6th, 1958 8:15 P.M. Admission $1.00 Total Jackson County Bldg. Auditorium - Jackson, Mich. (Tickets at the Door) not supply if it aspires to be a free university." CAMBRIDGE; Mass. - A pe- tition calling for the abolition of the Harvard Student Council has been circulating in some of the housing units, The Harvard Crim- son reported Friday. The petition reportedly asks the council to surrender its assets to a new inter-house committee. One Harvard student criticized the present council as "composed of members . . . whose main ob- ject is to use Council membership to push personal political en- deavors." AUSTIN, Texas - The South- western Rocket Society at the University of Texas is working to fire its own missile. To be shot off Nov. 22 at Fort Sill, Okla., the society's 13-foot, two stage rocket is expected to reach an altitude of 50,000 feet. Work has begun on the current missile, the Iwapa R-3, in May. LOS ANGELES, Calif. -- A unique International Communica- tions Library will be set up with- in the next four weeks on the Los Angeles State College campus. To be separate from the col- lege's other libraries, it will even- tually contain thousands of vol- umes of books, films, records and visual aids covering some 15 Asian and Mid-East countries. It will look quite different from a regular library, containing sev- ORGANIZATION NOTICES Congregational and Disciples Guild, freshman discussion, Nov. 5, 7-8 p.m., Guild House. Council of Religious Organizations, regular meeting, Nov. 5, 3 p.m., SAB. a * Graduate Student Coffee Hour, Nov. 5, 4-5:30 p.i., Rackham Bldg., 2nd floor, W. Lounge. Speaker: Dean Saw- yer, "Election Results and Nuclear Test Banning." All graduate students invited. La Socledad Hispanica, "Tertulia". Coffee and conversation, Nov. 5, 3-5 p.m., 3050 F. B. Everyone welcome. * * * La Sociedad Hispanica, meeting, Nov. 5, 8 p.m., 3050 F.B. Speaker: Topic, "American Foreign Policy and Latin America." Refreshments, everyone wel- come. Newman Club, Grad. meeting, Nov. 5, 8 p.m., 331 Thompson St. Talk and dis- cussion by Miss Louise Cuyler, (Music Dept.( on "Liturgical Music" with re- corded examples. SGC Campus Affairs Cons., Commit- tee meeting, Nov. 6, 4 p.m., 3524 SAB, All interested persons welcome. United Christian Federation, weekly all-campus mid-week worship, Nov. 5, 4:15 p.m., Douglas Memorial Chapel, State & William. Sponsored by 11 de- nominations. I.S.A., General Assembly meeting, Nov. 5, 7:30 p.m., Union, 3rd floor. I.S.A., Nov. 6, 8 p.m, Angell Hall, Aud. A, Speaker: Dr. Faez Sayegh, member Arab Delegation to UN, "Arab Nationalism and Democracy." All are cordially invited. Political Issues Club, executive board and organization meeting, Nov. 5, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. KL. Political Issues Club, discussion, Nov. 5, 8 p.m., Union Rm. KL. Speak- er: Prof. Warren Miller (Political Sci- ence Dept.) "Psychology in the Nation- al Election." Analysis of 1958 elections will be followed by general discussion, questions and answers. * 9 Russian Circle, business meeting Election of Pres. and Especial commit- tees, Nov. 6, 7:30 p.m., 3511 SAB. * * * Stamm Foundation of the Evangeli- cal United Brethren Church, Progrea- sive Dinner, Nov. 7, 6 p.m. Meet at Lane Hall. To make reservations, call NO 3-8201 after 7 p.m. * * * Women's Senate, regular meeting, Nov. 5, 4:10 p.m., League. SOC candi- dates will speak and guests are invit- ed. Bill West (International Center) will discuss International Week. I ............................ .......................... k See Russia yourself Sthis summer 27. i Rd Squre , Moscow. You cm cthsere hsI tery .n mmr:. ---- - -. ... r . . . . . . . . . ... .. .- - --... .. . .. .. . MAUPINTOUR Russia by Motorcoach Tours Join this MAUPINTOUR group in Helsinki or Warsaw any week June through August. 18-day motorcoach tour visiting Helsinki, Lenin- grad, Novgorod, Kalinin, Moscow, Smolensk, Minsk, Warsaw (or in reverse order). $519, complete from Helsinki or Warsaw., IAUPINToUR Grand European Russia Circle Tour Join a limited number of college students and young adutt in- trnctors this Ammer on a 72 dav y nloratinn tnrdrected 1.Ameri. I DEPT. OF SPEECP '' Fr t 9 L "5 19 1 61 i t a ' n i 4. I I