BATTLE LINES IliwF40 n FORM See Page 4 4Iati4p RAIN BETWEEN TOUCHDOWNS Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LVIII, No. 53 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOV. 22, 1947 PRICE FIVE CENTS Encore to '46SeeninBuckeye Clash Today <4 *" * * * * * * * * Gen. Bradley Follows 'Ike' As Staff Chief Railroad Man To Take Over VA By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 21-Four- star Gen. Omar Bradley was chos- en today to succeed Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower as Army Chief of Staff, and Carl R. Gray, Jr., a railroad executive, was named to follow Bradley as Veterans Ad- ministrator. Bradley's appointment as chief of staff had been anticipated ever since Eisenhower announced his forthcoming retirement from mil- itary life to accept the presidency of Columbia University. But the selection of Gray to supervise vet- erans' affairs was a surprise to official Washington. Three other shifts in the high executive posts were announced by President Truman at his news conference: 1. Robert Littlejohn is resigning as War Assets Administrator ef- fective Nov. 28. His deputy, Jess Larson, will take over the job, pointing toward liquidation of WAA, except its real estate, by next June. 2. Maj. Gen. Clifton B. Gates was appointed commandant of the marine corps, succeeding Gen. Alexander A. Vandegrift, who is retiring. 3. Dillon S. Myer resigned as commissioner of the U.S. Housing Authority, in the expectation of taking another government posi- tion. Mr. Truman said Myer has not said what job he wants. The President said that he him- self does not know when Eisen- hower plans to step out as chief of staff. Maj. Gen. Floyd L. Parks, army public relations chief, told reporters that Eisenhower's plans are "very indefinite" but that he probably will begin his terminal leave "around the latter part of February." He made the an- nouncement after talking by tele- phone with the five-star general, who is in Walter Reed hospital for a routine check-up. Vets' Insurance Dividends May Be Wiped Out Dividends scheduled to be paid eventually on 19 million war vet- erans' life insurance policies could be wiped out if a U. S. court ruling in Chicago last June is upheld by the Supreme Court, according to an Associated Press report. Full Face Value In its ruling, the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals at Chicago held the beneficiary of a veteran's Na- tional Service Life Insurance pol- icy must receive the full face value of his policy, plus interest, every ten years. s Commenting on the decision which is to be reviewed by the Su- preme Court, H. W. Breining, Vet- erans Administration insurance chief, warned that it could elimi- nate the surplus from which divi- dends are to be paid. Declared Surplus The National Service Life In- surance fund, derived from pol- icy-holder premium payments and interest on investments which now totals 7 billion dollars is used to pay insurance claims. A part of it eventually is to be declared sur- plus and be paid back to veterans in dividends. Unofficial estimates of the portion of the fund which may be declared surplus have ranged from 3 to 50 per cent. The $1,700,000,000 which Fed- eral attorneys believe this decision will add in payments to beneficiar- ies, would make it impossible to pay veterans dividends on their policies and simultaneously main-I tain a fund sufficiently large to pay off death claims, VA officials declared. IT Blum Nomination Vetoed By French Parliament President Auriol Believed To Have Offered Schuman Position as New Cabinet Head By The Associated Press PARIS, Saturday, Nov. 22-Leon Blum, nominated for Premier of a new French government, failed to win National Assembly approval last night, and early today it was reported that President Vincent Auriol had offered the post to Robert Schuman. Auriol, a Socialist, was said to be awaiting a reply from Schuman, who is 60, a member of the middle-of-the-road Popular Republican movement (MRP) and a former finance minister. He called the Lux- embourg-born Lorrainer to the presidential Elysee Palace at 2:30 a.m. (8:30 p.m. Friday, Eastern Standard Time). Blum, 75-year-old Socialist, had been nominated by the Presi- dent Thursday night to succeed Premier Paul Ramadier, also a Socialist, who resigned Wednes- C day night. To take office, he needed 309 votes in the assembly -one vote s more than half the total. He got r300 votes to 277 against him. Michigan Heavily Favored To Run Over Ohio State V v Brieske Leads Way in Wolverine Assault on Modern Record Books By BOB LENT Associate Sports Editor Today they're writing the last chapter of the 1947 edition of "Fritz Crisler's Amazing Wolverines," a sort of 'in memoriam' to Ohio State, leaving a few blank pages in the back of the book to be filled in with a Rose Bowl epilogue. Usually one of the top spots on Michigan's schedule, the Buck- eye game this year is pretty much anti-climactic with more interest being centered around the score and the records Michigan is expected to break than who will win theC * * * DR. JOHN WILLIAMSON ... directs choir * * * Westminster Choir To Give Concert Here Under the direction of Dr. John Finley Williamson, the Westmin- ster Choir, famed American choral group will present the fifth in the current series of Choral Union concerts at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. The group was first organized as the volunteer choir of the Westminster Presbyterian Churchl of Dayton, Ohio. Its original mem- bers were business men and wom- en and housewives who devoted their leisure time to singing under the direction of* Dr. Williamson, then minister of music at the church. To provide training that would meet his high standards, Dr. Wil- liamson founded the Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey, a non-sectarian musical institution. The personnel of the group is now chosen annually from the student body. The choir made its first tour in 1921, and since that time has appeared throughout the United States and Canada, and has made two European tours. The program Monday will in- clude compositions by Bach, Han- del, Brahms, Sibelius and Liszt, as well as groups of English and American folk songs. A limited number of tickets at all prices are available at the office of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower. Students Give Grid Tickets Contribute 59 Ducats To Hospitalized Vets Tickets seating 59 hospitalized! veterans at the Ohio State game today were given by students, Jack Geist, chairman of the campus chapter of American Veterans Committee revealed. The tickets will put 15 vets from the Ann Arbor Veterans Readjust- ment Center, and 44 men from Percy Jones Hospital in seats from the 40 yard line to the end zone, Geist said. Including two non-student duc- ats, the giftswere given yesterday in response to an AVC appeal in The Daily. :.q. M 7ff iarg~t Mc~uh.T. ~octial There were 41 abstainers and ab- sentees. France thus was left still without a government at a time when upward of 600,000 work- ers were on strike and foreign minister Georges Bidault pre- pared to go to London for the vital four-power foreign min- isters' conference on treaties with Germany and Austria. Before the vote, Blum had warned the assembly that the Fourth Republic was endangered both from the left and from the right. Immediately after the session, he left. to inform Auriol of the result. The latter was expected to confer with Assembly President Edouard Herriot and party leaders before deciding upon another name to offer the assembly. Gossip in the assembly corri- dor was that Auriol would offer the premiership to Herriot and that Herriot would decline in favor of another radical social- ist, possibly Andre Marie, Ra- madier's minister of justice. About 100,000 more workers walked out in different parts of France today, swelling the total on strike to more than 600,000. Sailors in Bordeaux and 20,000 more coal miners struck tonight. 1Earlier, school teachers, building workers and part of the railway- men joined the metal workers, miners, stevedores and flour mill- ers already out. The executive bureau of the Paris region Building Workers Un- ion decided, without putting the question to a vote, to continue its one-hour "warning" strike indef- initely. World News Aft a Glance By The Associated ,Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 21-Presi- dent Truman said today he sees no reason to halt shipment of U.S. machinery to Russia in the face of * * * coressondeandsupthatother LONDON, Nov. 21-Secretary of State Marshall cautiously re- assured the British people to- day that plans for American aid to Europe are "progressing favorably" in Congress. WASHINGTON, Nov. 21-Se- retary of Agriculture Anderson forecast today a "distressing" shortage of meat and the prospect of sharply increased prices in Feb- ruary, March, April and May. DETROIT and CHICAGO, Nov. 21-The National Labor Relations Board Friday brought a formal complaint against the Interna- tional Typographical Union (AFL), charging the union with violation of the Taft-Hartley Bill, as news- paper publication schedules in Chicago and Detroit were disrupt- ed by what publishers termed "slowdowns." New Plan for Palestine Goes To Assembly U.S., Russia Agree, Wait British Approval LAKE SUCCESS, Nov. 21-(/P)- A modified plan for partitioning Palestine, designed principally to, meet objections raised by Britain, was agreed upon tonight by a United Nations subcommittee. The United States and Russian delegates on the subcommittee no- tified delegates that their govern- ments had agreed to the modifica- tions. A British delegate said that{ the new version of the partition plan would be sent to his govern- ment and that he iad no com- ment now on its attitude. The revised plan, which still carries the essential plan for cut- ting Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, will go to the full 57- member Palestine committee of the United Nations Assembly to- morrow at 10:30 a.m. E.S.T. for debate. Meanwhile, the Assembly itself cleared up the remaining few items on its work sheet in a ses- sion at Flushing Meadows. Its ac- tion left the Palestine question the only issue to be settled before the 1947 session is completed. Vishinsky said that the condi- tions laid down by the U. S. for aid to Europe can be compared to the "guarantee soup'.t by Shy- lock." Vishinsky charge ; that the As- sembly at this session passed a series of measures underdirect pressure from the U. S. and con- tended the U. S. had proved it is "contemptuous" of the UN. j 'Juice for Europe' Drive Too Popular' TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 21-(IP)-The Tampa Tribune frankly admits it started something it can't stop. It has a car and a half of canned grapefruit juice oil its hands and doesn't know what to do with it -and there's more on the way. The newspaper started out to raise three cars of juice for Euro- peans via the Friendship Train. The job was done in three days. The paper said it wanted no more donations. Now, moans Managing Editor V. M. Newton, Jr., "we've begged people to stop giving. We just can't handle it." BACKFIELD IN ACTION-Wes Fesler's Buckey es will face this powerful backfield combination this afternoon at the Michigan Stadium and will at tempt to halt the hitherto unbeatable Wolverines. Signal-barker Howard Yerges, left, is pictured handing the pigskin off to fullback Jack Weisen- burger, leading ground-gainer for the Michigan gridders. Bump Elliott (18) and Bob Chappuis (49) are providing the husky interference. In the eig ht games played and won thus far by the Maize and Blue, Crisler's aggregation has piled up a to tal of 324 points, 151 of them in Conference com- petition. GET OUTA TOWN: Work of City Police Praised In Clearing Football Traffic That small army of policemen who blanket Ann Arbor each Sat- urday don't wear the magician's long black cape, but they still manage to shake 20,000 cars out of the city in less than an hour and a half on football Saturdays. ,This in itself seems like quite a trick, but it's only one of many chores which keep the local boys in blue on the go from dawn to dusk, according to police Captain Rolland J. Gainsley. "Three Shifts" "Football days are the only time in the whole year we have all three shifts on duty," he said. Altogether, there are 110 city police, state police, and deputy sheriffs on duty when the armada of autos invades Ann Arbor. The traffic flow is handled by an intricate plan worked out by Capt. Gainsley in cooperation with traffic heads of other agencies. The control plan, which has been successfully used for three years, utilizes squad cars, motor- cycles and traffic patrolmen, all controlled by an elaborate radio hook-up involving two stations. Noted Actress ToTakHere Stage Is Topic for Chatterton Speech Ruth Chatterton, stage and screen star, will present the fourth Oratorical Association lecture at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Audi- torium. One of the first 'glamorous" ac- tresses to consent to play charac- ter parts in movies, Miss Chatter- ton enacted such famous roles as 'Madame X." The legitimate stage, however, is Miss Chatterton's first love, and it will be her experiences on the stage that will be included in her lecture Tuesday. In addition, she will give some dramatic readings from her favorite plays. Tickets may be purchased from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. Monday, and from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Hill Auditorium box office. Pa- trons may use the ticket issued for the Jane Cowl lecture. The efficiency of the plan is prov- en by the fact that twice Ann Ar- bor's population is channelled out of the city within an hour and a half of the game's end. Busy Workers The Ann Arbor police are on duty long before game time, how- ever. They are out in the wee hours of the dawn posting "no parking" signs on thoroughfares around the stadium. While most of the officers di- See PRAISE, Page 6 SL Petitions Now Available To Candidates Students who plan to run for positions on the Student Legisla- ture in the all-campus elections Dec. 10, may obtain candidate pe- titions after noon today at the Of- fice of Student Affairs, Dick Kelly, Legislature elections committee chairman has announced. Petitions, as well as a 50 word' statment of qualifications, show- ing seriousness of purpose, must be returned to the office by Dec. 3, Kelly said. New Set-up Under the new elections set-up, recently approved by the Legisla- ture, prospective candidates must obtain 150 student signatures on the standard forms provided. No petitions may be circulated in classes, study rooms and li- braries and, in any case, may be circulated only by the student seeking nomination. Each student obtaining a peti- tion must post a $5 bond, to be forfeited in the event of petition or election discrepancies, or if the candidate receives fewer than 25 first place votes in the elections. May Talk on Steps Speaking opportunities from the library steps, at set hours, will be made available to candidates. The campaign talks, however, are not compulsory. Other election rules included in the newly revamped elections sys- tem are the prohibition of cam- paigning within 50 feet of the polls, and of campaign posters on campus or in campus buildings. game. According to those in the know, the Buckeyes have about as much chance of winning this afternoon as Joe Stalin has of running on the Republican ticket in next year's Presidential election. Point spots along the Betting Boulevards of the country ,'are running all the way from 28 to 50 points. Reasons for the installation of Michigan as a prohibitive favorite are two-fold. First of all, the awesome grid machine Mr. Crisler has whipped togeth-, er this year is considered the greatest since the point-a-min- ute days of Fielding Yost; and secondly, Ohio State is on the last lap of one of its worst sea- sons in history. The Buckeyes have won only two ball games this year and one was the disputed affair with Northwestern which the boys from Columbus won four minutes after the game had ended. Michigan on. the other hand is riding a 13 game win streak which is carrying it on its first perfect season since 1932. Then, too, the boys who play around with football psychol- ogy point out that the Wolver- ines have multi-multi personal incentives for really pouring it on to Wes Fesler's boys from south of the Michigan border. There's Jim Brieske who needs six more points to break the mod- ern conversion record of 47 held by Dick Walterhouse of Army and George Jernigan of Georgia. There's Bump Elliott who could wind up the season as the Big Nine scoring champ if a couple of T.D. chances come his way. The Bump- er is currently tied with North- See 'M', Page 3 Ohio, Michigan Bands To Rival At GridBattle Traditional rivalry will be played out with drum beats and bugle blasts as well as flying tac- kles and forward passes in the Michigan stadium this afternoon when the 120 man Buckeye Marching band meets the 131 man Wolverine marching band in two 15 minute "halves" before and after the first half of the regular ball clash in a bid for audience ap- plause. Director Manley Whitcomb's Ohio band will present a marching routine accompanied by "Free- dom Train," "Feudin' and Fight- in'," and "Surrey with the Fringe on Top." Bill of Fare "Auld Lang Syne," "California, Here I Come," and Michigan songs will make up the musical bill-of-fare of Director William D. Revelli's Michigan band as they honor the 1947 football team. Preceding the "TEAM" forma- tion which salutes the entire squad the band will form the nicknames of ten outstanding Varsity players who will be playing the last Big Nine game of their careers today. Honor Players Capt. Bruce Hilkene, "Hank" Light Showers May Dampen Sell-out Crowd Ohio State Rooters To Number_10,000 Light showers predicted for this afternoon may dampen the enthu- siasm of 85,938 gridiron fans who will fill Michigan stadium to ca- pacity for the final home appear- ance of the Wolvrines. The weatherman says that rain will start early this morning but he predicts only light, intermit- tent showers by game time. The third sell-out thron)g of the season will include 10,000 Ohio State fans. A special football spe- cial arriving between 12 and 1 p.m. today will bring 500 Buck- eye rooters from the Columbus campus while thousands more are expected to utilize a newly con- structed section of Route 23 to motor here. Several specials are also slated to bring Detroit fans from the Mo- tor City to view the Rose Bowl bound Wolverines. The longest trek of the week- end was made by Henry George, his son, John, and their wives, who traveled from Spokane, Wash., to view the grid clash. Both men are University alumni. Also in the stands today will be a number of Michigan State grid- ders. The MSC 11 has an off- weekend, and a number of the players and coaches will make the trip to Ann Arbor to view the Wol- verine-Buckeye clash For the second time this year the visiting team is bringing its marching band along. The Ohio State marching band will open the pre-game routine and share the half-time spotlight with the Mich- igan musical group. * u * Fiery March Made by Fans Band Leads Throng To Last Rally of Year About 600 loyal students and townspeople turned out to follow the Michigan Band in its fiery march down State St. yesterday to Ferry Field in the last Pep Rally of the 1947 season. Flanked on all sides by Wolver- ine Club members with cotton batten torches, the band marched from the Union to the bonfire, with a cheering procession behind them. Highlight of the ritual was the burnt offering of a rather limp Red and White "man" who had been impressively escorted to the fire by motorcyle police with sir- ens screaming. Dean Rea and hockey coach Vic Heyliger, with "short pants" urged the crowd to get out and cheer the team today in the last Conference game of the season with its traditional rival. After cheers and singing, the crowd "snaked" its way back to FRENCH CAPITAL'S RENAISSANCE: Paris Pays Honor to Unknown Soldier of Two Wars E F.t mnrr} WnmF.- This is the first I - - i - {