WHERE NOW ?, See Page 4 A61F Ap ti1 CLOUDY RAIN Latest Deadline in the State VOL, LIX, No. 38 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS I 0 Strong Controls : on in Congress New Legislators To Face Problems Of Taft-Hartley Bill and Civil Rights WASHINGTON-')-The Democratic Party gained firm control of Congress by electing 24 Senators, assuring themselves of 54 seats and 257 Representatives (with 218 needed to control). The returns brought a rush of questions today over the legislative future. These 'subjects popped out as returns from Tuesday's voting gave the Democrats a wide working majority of both the Senate and the House after two years of playing second fiddle to the Republicans: Victory Smile Truman Elected Williams Wins Governor Post In State Race Republicans Capture host State Offices DETROIT--(P)-Youthful Dem- ocrat G. Mennen Williams, Grosse Pointe socialite and World War II veteran, has won the governorship of Michigan but both his "cabinet" and legislature remained republi- can. WILLIAMS, a 37-year-old cam- paigner who had strong and ac- tive support from labor, rolled up a lead of 149,000 over Governor Kim Sigler, the Republican who was seeking his second term. Early returns from heavily in- dustrialized Wayne County gave Williams' running :mates a lead through most of the day, but by nightfall the Republicans seemed to have salvaged at least three "cabinet" offices. Stuart B. White, Republican candidate seeking the Attorney General's post vacated by Eugene F. Black, trailed his Democratic opponent-Stephen J. Roth-and with 4,005 of the state's 4,202 pre- cincts counted Roth held onto a lead of 7,763 votes. *A* DEMOCRAT John W. Connolly held a lead of 1,004,662 to 985,436 over Republican lieutenant gover- nor Eugene C. Keyes. But three other Republicans- Secretary of State Fred M. Alger, Jr., State Treasurer D. Hale Brake and Auditor General Murl K. Aten .-held onto leads that were slim. The labor-led Democrats took at least two seats held by the GOP in the 80th Congress. They made sizeable gains in the Re- publican state legislature, but not enough to give Williams a working majority. Sen. Homer Ferguson gained a second term only after a bitter Srace with Democrat Frank Hook, a former Ironwood congressman. Washtenaw Returns GOP Incum ents With ballot tabulations still incomplete, Washtenaw County anV Ann Arbor returned its in- cumbent Republican office-hold- ers with voting majorities of slightly more or less than 2 to 1. Forty-three of forty-eight county precincts have reported. The remainder will not.be tabbed up until sometime today. Ann Ar- b or's 10 precincts were all counted. Rep. Earl C. Michener, won his fight to retain the Second Con- gressional District seat in the House. He defeated Prof. Preston . W. Slosson, 60,219 to 45,128 sweep- ing Washtenaw, Lenawee and Jackson Counties. Slosson took Monroe by a few hundred votes. One Democrat, Dr. William H. Dickson, Sr., won the second coroner position. Others assured of victory were: Jnn T. rcnrn e, fiaif Ta11l. 1. WHAT will happen to State Rights Democrats elected to con- gress? 2. Will the Taft-Hartley Law be repealed? 3. What will become of Presi- dent Truman's Civil Rights Pro- gram which split the Democrat- ic Party wide open this election year? 4. How about taxes, inflation curbs, and rent control on which Mr. Truman differed sharply with the Republicans? * * * THERE WAS no talk, at least publicly, of punitive action against Southern Democrats who bolted President Truman and backed States Rights Presidential Can- d~date J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina. The general belief was that the regular Democrats would re- ceive the straying Southerners back in the fold and net deny them their committee posts and positions of party seniority. The Civil Rights proposals have another angle. If they soft-pedal the anti-seg- regation measures to mollify southerners and win them back, the Democrats will risk the ire of many northern members who have championed the legislation. These include Senator - elect Humphrey of Minnesota, at whose insistence the 1948 Democratic Convention approved a strong civil rights program. President Truman has shown no signs of weakening in his stand for Civil Rights measures. * * * REPEAL OF THE Taft-Hartley Act is another Democratic cam- paign promise. Whether enough votes can be won to carry out that pledge is debatable, for many re- elected Democrats as well as Re- publicans voted for the law in 1947. Prospects were brighter for ac- tion by the new Congress on infla- tion curbs and rent controls. President Truman repeatedly had asked the 80th Congress to enact some laws on these subjects and Democrats backed him up futilely against Republican opposition. Republican failure to follow his recommendations was one of the reasons Mr. Truman called the 80th one of the nation's worst Congresses. Many of the Republicans who helped block the President's proposal won't be around next year. The President also opposed the tax reduction law enacted by the 80th. Some Democrats want taxes hiked in these days of high income and a staggering national debt. THE MARSHALL Plan, by which billions in aid already have been poured into the Stop-Com- munism drive abroad, appears headed for a future less stormy than its past. And Democratic House control may affect the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee, which President Tru- man and other Democrats have criticized sharply. UWF To Hold Panel Today The role of nationalism in a worl1 anvrnmnt will hc 4h tni As Nation Rests After Heavy Vote By The Associated Press Scrappy, underrated Harry Trumancaptured the presidential election yesterday in one of the biggest upsets in America's political history. And in the hour of his greatest triumph, the Democratic Party gave him a solid, comfortable majority in both Senate and House. It was a triumph which the little man from Missouri, standing almost alone against the flood-tide of pre-election forecasts, had pre- dicted with unswerving confidence. * * * DOWN TO DEFEAT went Thomas E. Dewey, trying for a come- back along the road to the White House which invincible Franklin D. Roosevelt blocked four years ago. Down with him went Republican candidates in key congressional races and gubernatorial contests. They went down fighting, in the toughest presidential battle since Woodrow Wilson squeezed out Charles Evans Hughes in 1916. Dewey conceded defeat at 10:15 a.m., Central Standard Time, Wednesday. The popular vote lagged behind the record total of more than 50,000,000 that had been expected. And there wasn't much chance it would climb to a new mark. EARLY LAST NIGHT reports from 87 per cent of the polling places, 117,872 out of 135,858, put the total at 43,296,211. It was split this way: Truman 22,031,686, Dewey 20,217,515, Thurmond 839,025, Pro- gressive Candidate Henry A. Wallace 1,019,150. AS DEWEY LOST, he called out to all Americans to "unite" be- hind the man who beat him and behind "every effort to keep our nation strong and free and establish peace in the world." Dewey indi- cated his second defeat for the Presidency may well be his swan song in politics. He told a news conference flatly he would not run for the White House again. Miracle Man By RELMAN MORIN WASHINGTON-(P)-A simple and friendly man with blue eyes and side-winding smile had performed a miracle today. Months ago, from the very first, people were saying it would take a miracle, and nothing less, to return Harry Truman to the White House. His party was broken and disintegrating. There were men within its ranks who disavowed him and tried hard to find another candidate. No President, assailed from within and without, ever went into the fight under such handicaps. * * * * AND THE ODDS were increased by the power of his opponents supported by a smooth, efficient and swift-moving machine. Yet Harry Truman won the election. His victory is without parallel or counterpart in the history of the Presidency. It was a valid and genuine political miracle. But this miracle can be explained. The President promised to support farm prices. He also promised assistance in obtaining storage for their products. In the same way, he reminded industrial workers that he had ve- toed the Taft-Hartley Act, and is still opposed to it. But beyond these things-and this is the major part-it appears that Harry Truman, a simple and friendly man, simply won his way into the hearts of the people he met in his zig-zagging trail around the country. One of his intimates, who was almost as astonished as any outsider by the victory, put it this way: "YOU JUST can't explain it in anyother way. People liked him. He spoke their language. They called him 'Harry,' and they liked the way he talked and acted." And so, Harry Truman, the man who couldn't win, will return to an astonished Washington. He has achieved the impossible, in some measure because of his attitude toward Farm and Labor issues. But mainly because he is a friendly man who made people like him. Campus Expresses l00m, joy, and Surprise at Upset Campus reaction to Tuesday's election ranged from deep gloom to wild exuberation yesterday, but underlying all sentiments was an almost unanimous feeling of surprise at the outcome of the presiden- tial race. * * * * STUDENT political leaders expressed varied opinions concern- ing the victory of President Truman. Expressing the jubilation of the Young Democrats, Harry Albrecht said, "despite the unanimous adverse opinion of the press and pollsters, the people have shown their inherent ability to think clearly and vote with wisdom." He added that he thought the election reflects a repudiation by President-Elect Harry S. Truman SL Approves GAB Aetions Endorsement of the activities of the Committee Against the Ban was given last night by the Stu- dent Legislature. The CAB, composed of SRA, NSA, IRA, and AVC, is working for the repeal of the Regents ban on political speakers. * * * SL ALSO VOTED to join with IRA in issuing a series of three leaflets on racial discrimination in Ann Arbor. President flair Moody an- nounced a special session of the legislature to be held Nov. It in the Union to hear Michigan graduate Ralph M. Carson, for- mer President of the Oxford Union discuss the possibilities of creating a similar institution on campus. Varsity Committee Chairman Bob Ballou said that an open meeting would be held soon to dliscuss thhematter of basket hall FAITH REWARDED: Democrats Reap Profits SAs Election Bets Pay Of f Correspondent Says Soviet Position weak 4 Faith in their party paid off for some Democrats who reaped in the fruits of their election bets yester- day. Among the members of the Young Democrats Club who took advantage of the odds against Tru- AVC To Deba te On Civil Rights AVC will hold a public forum on "Civil Rights and You" at 7:30 p.m. today in the Allenel Hotel. Speakers will discuss the civil rights question in the United States today, with particular em- phasis on the indictment of the 12 Communist leaders. * * * man were Frank Butorac and Bob Hills. * * * BUTORAC collected from a 100- to-1 long shot bet on Truman. He paid one dollar and received $100. Although Hill's bets were not as spectacular, he also raked in $100. Liquid remuneration consisted of five quarts of whiskey for George Petrosian. THE OWNER of a campus ham- burg hangout will be minus his establishment if Young Democrats take him up on his election bet. He said that if Truman won he would unqualifyingly relin- quish his store. What the gentleman doesn't know is that the winners of the het are all senior lawyers who Power position in the Soviet is still too weak from the devasta- tion of the last world conflict to face another global war according to Russell Anderson who spoke last night at the Kellogg Audito- rium. Anderson, foreign news editor for the McGraw-Hill World News, declared that the end of World War II saw the Russian economic potential reduced to omny 25 per cent that of the United States. UNITED STATES steel output is four times as great as that of the Soviet and its electric power is almost five times that of the Rus- sian capacity, he said. Soviet international tactics are based on trying to sustain a turbulent world to prevent world rehabilitation, Anderson