ONLY IDYLLIC 7 SYSTEM? See Page 4 A6F A6F t n ~~ii6j CLOUDY, LIGHT RAIN Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LIX, No. 35 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS 4 C War, Strikes Hit Peak il Postwar Era Chinese Report Loss of Mukden War, revolution, striking work- ars and failing cabinets seemed to be signs that civil unrest is more irresistibly on the march than at any time since World War II, As- sociated Press reports reveal. NANKING-Mukden has col- lapsed into Chinese Communist hands in the most stunning gov- ernment loss of the three-year civil war, reliable sources in this fearful capital reported last night. Many high Chinese and for- eign sources declared the civil war had been decided with the fall of the great Manchurian city. Quick retirement from the remaining small holdings in southernmost Manchuria was predicted. Bitter fighting may continue in China proper for months or even years, the sources said, but Gen- eralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's ef- fort to defeat the Communists on a nationwide scale has died. The latest setback brought speculation on the possibility of replacing China's long-time leader. ATHENS, Greece's 87-year-old premier, Themistokles Sophoulis said his government would re- sign within two or three days. The Premier's statement came as a result of a quarrel between himself and the deputy leader of his Liberal Party, Sopho- cles Venizelos, over a proposed re-shuffle of the cabinet. Veni- zelos is the son of the late Fleutherios Venizelos, founder of the Liberal party and one of Greece's greatest statesmen. Venizelos had given notice that he would ask parliament for a new government picked for ability rather than party affiliations or political strength. The country has been under martial law for 48 hours. * * * LIMA Peru - Gen. Manuel Odria, leader of Peru's three-day revolution, has arrived in Lima to form a new government. A Buenos Aires dispatch said Bustamante had arriver in the Ar- gentine capital by special plane to take up residence in exile. He reiterated to newsmen that he had not resigned and had not given up his mandate to the peo- ple of Peru. The revolt which he started in Arequipa, in southern Peru, spread to the capital and caused the overthrow of the govern- ment of President Jose Luis Bustamante. Odria, a former interior minis- ter, said in a broadcast from Arequipa before taking off for Lima that he would hold demo- cratic elections as soon as poss1- ble. PARIS-French troops and po- licecompleted the occupation of more than half the struck coal mines in northern France today, driving pickets out of 20 pits near Buray. Four million tons of un-mined coal has been lost to the nation in the 26-day tie-up-about 10 per cent of the yearly production. So the government is expected to divert $19,000,000 of Marshall Plan funds from cotton, food and raw material purchases to get more foreign coal. Recuperating Vets Will See 'Furia' Patients at the Veteran's Re- adjustment Center have been in- vited to the last showing of the Italian film "Furia" at Hill Audi- torium tonight by the Art Cinema League and National Lawyers' Guild in cooperation with the Wolverines Win, 28-20; Krueger Stars for Illini McNeill, Rifenburg, Teninga, Allis Record Tallies for Maize and Blue By BUD WEIDENTHAL Associate Sports Editor In one of the most bitterly contested games seen in Ann Arbor in over a year, Michigan's undefeated Wolverines carried their victory string past the 20 mark yesterday as they subdued a desperately bat- Uling Illinois eleven, 28-20. Before a screaming Homecoming crowd of 86,000 the Wolverines, >howing sign of a letdown after their grueling encounter with Minne- sota last week, exhibited just enough power and finesse to stop the .eyed up Illini. * * * CAPITALIZING ON ALMOST every break and flashing an effec- 'ive passing attack the Maize and Blue used the aerial route to score three times and counted once ono * * * OUTA THE WAY-Two Wolverines block and an Illinois man tackles thin air as Chuck Ortmann pushes his interference, Joe Soboleski, around right end for a first down in yesterday's game with the Illini. All pictures of thehe Michigan-Illinois game are by Daily Photographer Alex Lmanian. /* * * * * * * MICHIGAN BAND: U' Professor Crticizes Life's Ridicule of Band By DON McNEIL A statement in Nov. 1 issue of Life Magazine concerning the Michigan Marching Band, in- tended as humor according to Life officials, was regarded as ser- ious by Prof. William D. Revelli, band director, today. Life said the Michigan band was "sotpitiful in comparison" to Ohio State's last year, that the team was accompanied to the Rose Bowl by a band of "Detroit ringers carrying Petrillo cards and subsidized by the Buick Division of General Motors." * * * LIFE HAD concluded the charg- es with "or at least so the report was around Columbus." Part of an article on Ohio State school spirit,the state- ments were intended as color, according to Life's Detroit offi- cials and were not the opinions of either the writer or Ohio State. But Prof. Revelli was not amus- ed, nor the many alumni who contacted him, from as far away as Oklahoma. * * * "ONLY STUDENTS are eligible for the Marching or Concert bands," he said, "and we are stricter than most of the nation's colleges in that, eligibility require- ments are the same as for ath- letics, a 2.0. 11e especially regretted the references to Buick, saying that the General Motors Division had subsidized the band to one trip a year. "Last year they sent us to the Rose Bowl," he said. "This year they paid for the trip to Minne- apolis." Straw Ballot Gives Dewey Faculty Vote Plurality Equals 290 Out of Total of 350 It's Thomas E. Dewey for presi- dent among the majority of fac- ulty members who voted in The Daily's traditional faculty straw vote. Dewey received 290 votes to 113 for President Harry S. Truman. Votes were cast on unsigned post- cards by 530 of the University's more than 1,000 professors and instructors. PROGRESSIVE candidate Henry Wallace ranked third with 66 votes, and Socialist Nor- man Thomas, whose name was omitted from the ballot by error, received 26 write-in votes. Only four votes were cast for States Rights Democrat J. Strom Thurmond, and Social- ist-Labor candidate Edward A. Teichert was given one write-in. One faculty member voted for Eisenhower. Other write-ins were "Stahlin," "Republicans," "The Democratic Party," and "Some protest candidate." * * * SEVERAL FACULTY men ex- pressed themselves as "undecided" or stated that they would not vote as none of the candidates were acceptable. The faculty straw vote has been conducted regularly by The Daily before presidential elections. In every past vote, the Republican candidate has come out with at Judges Choose Winning HomecomingDisplays Sigma Nu, Alpha Chi Omega Place First Phi Gamma Delta, Mosher Hall Second By GEORGE WALKER When the judges of this year's record crop of homecoming dis- plays started touring the town yesterday morning, they had no idea what a job lay before them. It took them two and a half hours to look over the 92 displays and pick the ten winners, and there were some tough decisions to make. * * SIGMA NU TOOK first place among the men's entries, followed by Phi Gamma Delta with second place and Alpha Delta Phi with third. Psi Upsilon and Zeta Psi were awarded honorable mention. Alpha Chi Omega won first place honors among the women's displays. Mosher hall was judged second, and Delta Delta Delta third. Honorable mention went to Gamma Phi Beta and Chi Omega. , * CROWDS WHICH STOOD and stared at the displays were some- times heckled by hucksters attempting to "sell" their entries over loudspeakers. Many of the displays were equipped with sound ef- fects, moving parts, and blinking lights. Sigma Nu's winning entry was modeled after an atomic fis- sion lab. They called it "The Phoenix Athletic Lab," with white coated Doc Bennie as the brain behind the atomic team. The second place Phi Gams engineered a "Michigan Point-Ma- chine," with Illinois players as raw material. A long conveyor belt carried points to the sidewalk, where passersbys were advised to help themselves. * * 4' i THE "MICHGAN Destruction Co." at 556 S. State gave Alpha Delta Phi third place award. A knotty fence shielded the wrecking See HOMECOMING, Page 8 the ground on a wide sweep by Wally Teninga. The Illini attack, which also sputtered on the ground, was centered around the aerial wiz- ardry of Bernie Krueger, a heretofore unheralded junior from Hammond Indiana. The elusive Illinois quarterback, dropping back sometimes fifteen yards behind the line of scrim- mage with superb protection, completed 12 amazingly accurate bullet-like passes out of 21 at- tempts good for 216 yards, ac- counting for more than twice the yardage .of any other individual on the field. IT WAS THE COMBINATION of Kreuger and end Walt Kersul- is, another junior who towers 6 feet 4 inches that threatened to bring Michigan's long winning streak to an abrupt halt. But when the clock finally ran out the Wolverines emerged with more than enough for the victory, and a more secure grasp on their defense of the Big Nine title. For the Wolvtrines on a far from perfect afternoon, the point- after-touchdown perfection of end Harry Allis, who kicked four in a row, was the highlight of the day. HIS ACCURACY could well have been the margin of victory,, but just to make it certain, the Wolverine sophomore personally accounted for the final touchdown when the Maize and Blue led by a single point. The contest threatened to turn into a punting duel between Michigan's Walt Teninga and Illinois' Dike Eddleman, as early in the game neither team was able to get its offensive machine rolling. Not until 12 minutes of the first quarter had expired did either team register a first down and neither team was able to capitalize on a couple of breaks that could havet split the contest wide open. MIDWAY in the initial period Teninga dropped back to kick on his own seven and fumbled a bad pass from center. It was Illinois ball on the Michigan five. In four plays, including a fake field goal attempt, the hard- charging Wolverine line stopped the Illini cold. Only a few plays later Eddleman fumbled a Teninga punt on the Sss 'M' NOTCHES, Page 7 Excited Fans See Michigan Down I.inois 87,000 Enjoy Near Perfect Weather It was a hoarse and sunburned throng of 87,000 homecoming fares that poured from Michigan sta- dium following the Wolverines' spine-tingling win over the Illini. The close game brought them to their feet screaming time and time again during the two-hour grid clash played under the siz- zling rays of an Indian Summer, sun. THEY ENJOYED the sidelights of the game too. Michigan's high-stepping {?arching band put on an exhibi- tion of terpsichore which had the fans jubilantly clapping time with them. They got a big kick out of the pre-game festivities when old Louis Elbel, '98, vigorously led the band in the famed "Victors" song he composed just 50 years ago. The sell-out homecoming crowd gave the cheerleaders a big hand as they peddled around the sta- dium in an old-fashioned one- wheel bike before the game. The cheerleaders' new method of counting the score by bounding, from a portable springboard also came in for applause. ; EXPERT ON ATOM: Sw I eToaVisit Campus For News Speech at Hill BEFORE THE game time throngs of alumni crowded the Union steps and lobby greeting old friends ancL nostalgically looking over the campus. All over the campus area crowds of spectators gaped at the ingenious house displays fashioned by the 91 entrants vying for trophies and cups. The sell-out horde of fans be- gan arriving in Ann Arbor early Friday. By yesterday they had filled every extra room and hotel in town. Restaurants were jammed and heavy traffic slowed travel in the normally quiet town. AT LEAST 1,000,llMini rooters made the trek from Champaign. They occupied the northeast cor- ner of the stadium and were led by two white-clad cheerleaders. Half-time. announcements of homecoming display winners caused small eruptions in the stands as residents of winning houses danced in their seats, cheered and waved pennants. Raymond Gram Swing will be in town tomorrow to deliver his analysis of "History on the March" at 8 p. m. in Hill Audi- torium. Known as the foremost author- ity on atomic energy among the commentators, Swing is also an advocate of world government. He is the national vice-president of the United World Federalists. Swing has just returned from an extensive tour of Europe, and held conferences with the leaders of France and England. He is con- vinnpdt+whma IAworldiomrrnment is :..... t..... The program will originate in Ann Arbor, and can be heard over stations WXYZ and WUOM-FM. HA LLOWEEN HI-JINKS: Kids' Party Lessens Holiday Vandalism least a 2-1 victory. Totals: Dewey......,... Truman .... Wallace Thomas. Thurmond..... Teichert ........ ... . . . 290 .66" 26 4 .. . . . . . 1 By CRAIG WILSON Squawk horns split the quiet air of Yost Field House last night as the Junior Chamber of Com- merce established an uneasy truce with Halloween-happy Ann Ar- bor youths. More than a thousand kids, when pranksters kept the Fire Department busy until 4 a. m. stopping off opened fire hy- drants. Officials said the city temporarily had no fire protec- tion. A window in the Rackham Bnilding was smashed. nolice re- But police remembered Fri- day night and held their breath. That was only a warm-up; to- night is officially Halloween Night! Busy with Homecoming activi- ties, University students failed to 11loTo Shmow Movt~t~pi smosommmmes i i