S~UNDAY, NOVE ~BER , 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Scribes Go Sleepless as Truman Trounces Torn By CRAIG WILSON The crisp chatter of teletype machines and the ringing of tele- phones marked the election night frenzy of thousands of student re- porters throughout the nation as collegiate newspapers broke out in a rash of 'Extra' editions. Typical was the scene here wt The Daily. Orderly processing of election returns virtually broke down as the night wore on-eyelids drooped and still Dewey and Truman slugged it out, precinct by pre- cinct. Finally, with the victory still very much in doubt The Daily went to Press. At 5:26 the last bulletin was slugged in and sent to the printer. CAUGHT IN THE SAME predicament was the Indiana Daily Stu- dent, at the University of Indiana, which gave up the wait at 5:10 a.m. with the headline, "PHOTO FINISH: DEWEY OR TRUMAN?" Just a nose ahead was the Cornell Daily Sun which hung on until 5:15 a.m. and ran a picture of Truman but qualified with a head- line: "Decision Uncertain." Finishing out of the money was the Daily Cardinal, at the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. It went to press at 5 a.m. even. * * ALSO-RANS include the Yale Daily News at " a little after 5 a.m." -which a reporter will tell you is somewhat less than one second. At the University of Illinois, the Daily > Illini gave up the ghost at 4:15 a.m. The Harvard Crimson re- FaCulty eries tired at 3:45 a.m. Others ran back as far as midnight. T o ( nn W ith O Oe* ith wteithBioW...hi wihBob White CAN'T SNOOZE? HERE'S NEWS: Little Things in Life May Keep You Awake THAT MAKES OUR own Michi- igan Daily look good, doesn't it? We lost. The Michigan State News, at Michigan State College, with the grim determination of a flunking student on a final, stayed with it until 6:15 a.m. to lead the na- tion's collegiate press. Even then, the situation was unchanged and the college papers that come out in the afternoon scooped everyone. AND THERE WERE sidelights to the Big Top. One student at the Detroit School of Law trailed badly in his fight to gain a seat in the State Legislature. However, those last few precincts that usually don't count for anything... POLLS TAKEN by many of the collegiate papers meant nothing as the Man from Missouri alone picked the long shot and won. Typical were the comments of fac- ulty members at Northwestern University. According to the Daily North- western, NU professors said Dewey would win by a "medium land- slide." One political science pro- fessor gave the New Yorker (not the magazine) 400 electoral votes. Dewey picked up almost 200. * * * STUDENTS at Yale were equally wrong. They gave Dewey 63 per cent; Truman 21 per cent; Thomas 6.5 per cent; Wallace 2.5 per cent, and Thurmond 1 per cent. * * * . THE UNIVERSITY of Washing- ton Daily managed to get an "ex- clusive" picture of the President last week. Seems that with a grey Palm Beach suit, a manuscript in hand and specs, one of their speech profs is a dead ringer for Tru- xnan. * * * AT MICHIGAN STATE College ducks and assorted fowl that live on the Red Cedar River (which winds beautifully through the campus) were disappearing and no one knew why. College authorities were baf- fled and detectives could find no traces of the truant amphibians. However a quick check of mar- ried veterans' housing unit re- vealed trash cans full of feath- ers. . . Viola Concert Paul Doktor, violist and lecturer in the music school, will open the series of faculty concerts at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre. This is Doktor's first semester at the University. He was born in Vienna and obtained his mu- sical training from his father, Karl At least one election prediction that panned out: the networks promised Grade-A coverage of the excitement-and they did the job like it's never been done be- fore. Most notably, we think, CBS came through beautifully with the tireless John Daly carrying a more-than-human load. In view of Daly's consistently complete and friendly election re- porting, we here-and-now nomin- ate him as Radio's Top Newsman. ALSO INTERESTING to hear that Nightmare Night was Lowell Thomas-the Republican candi- date's close friend and fellow farmer. Seriously and surprising- ly at a loss for words, Farmer Thomas opined that the hinter- land. vote was very strange in- deed. "I'm a farmer, and I thought I understood farmers," said he, "but I guess . . . I was wrong." But then, he wasn't a lonely man in making that admission. * * * WE'D LIKE TO make note of a sleuth program that seems well above its stereotyped companions Toledo Group Plans Holiday Toy Collection Operation Christmas Present, latest project of the Toledo Club, will provide a real holiday for some of Toledo's needy children, ac- cording to Don Rothschild, pres- ident. The club will discuss plans for their toy collection program at a meeting at 7:15 p.m., Wednesday in the League. Members will begin collecting toys shortly in Ann Ar- bor, and will continue their work during Christmas vacation in To- ledo. The Toledoites will recondition the toys, and even try their hand at making some of their own. A few days before Christmas, they will complete their Santa Claus act by distributing the toys among Toledo's needy. Other plans for the holiday in- clude a Christmas dance for club members to be held at one of To- ledo's larger hotels. Rothschild especially stressed that freshmen are eligible for membership in the club, and in- vited all Toledo students to attend the meeting. Dawson To Speak Prof. John P. Dawson, of the Law School, will speak on Greece at 7:30 p.m. today, at the Greek Orthodox Church. Recently returned from Greece where he was head of the foreign trade administration of the Greek government, Prof. Dawson was able to make an analysis of the problems of the Greek nation. - i.e., Sam Spade (CBS-WJR, Sunday, 8 p. m.). It's not that its plot set-up is far from usual, but just that title- roler Howard Duff manages to approach the thing with a sort of casual tongue-in-cheek atti- tude. Almost assuming the pro- portions of a parody on all Pri- vate Eye epics, the program is often very funny. * * * ANYTHING NEW and novel in radio always deserves mention, and it looks like Ralph (T. & Q.) Edwards has come up with an in- teresting - though frighteningly complex - brainchild. It'll be the basis for a new show called This Is Your Life (NBC-WWJ, Tues- day, 9 p.m.). Each week, Edwards will call an "average citizen" to the studio, and unexpectedly con- front him with the piped-in voices of assorted people who have played roles in his past life -- a grade school teacher, the minister who married him, or perhaps the lad whose life he saved in the jungles of Ba- taan. The program, of course, will re- quire an elaborate technical hook- up. But if it sounds as good in practice as it does in theory, it should be pretty absorbing. * * * Brief Comment Department: A carnation is in order for the speech department's one-man- script-department, Al Slote. Tal- ented and versatile, he supplied the copy for two successive Work- shop Dramas. One, "The Flags Out There"- already broadcast-was an im- mensely powerful post-war story. "Jimmy Smith and the Skawio- git", something more than a kid's fantasy, will be heard Tuesday at 7:45 p.m. via WHRV ... * * * HOPE YOU CAUGHT an hour- long CBS documentary last week: The Hollywood Story. Tracing the production of a movie from con- ception to box office, it was tre- mendously enlightening. Suggest- ed-if CBS can face the facts- another documentary, The Radio Broadcast . . . The Roosevelts-Eleanor and Anna-re-enter the broadcast pic- ture this week on a Monday-Wed- nesday-Friday deal at 10:45. a.m. What they'll talk about (on ABC- WHRV) is still anybody's guess. It's the little things in life that keep ushfrom pulling down eight or ten hours of solid sleep every night. While fear and anxiety are still the main causes of insomnia, Dr. Carl D. Camp, of the Neurology department, believes that some slight physical discomfort may be keeping you awake-not just worry over when the subsistence check will arrive. HE SUGGESTS a complete physical examination as one so- lution of your problem. Another is a glass of warm COLLEGE SHOP, milk or regulation of eating before bed as a method of coun- teracting gastronomic difficul- ties. Or if you have conditioned your- self to staying awake, Dr. Camp suggests that a regular routine before going to bed, such as brushing your teeth, placing your watch in a certain place end ar- ranging your clothing for wear the next day will help establish an attitude for sleep. ABOVE ALL, Dr. Camp warns against the use of drugs as a way of promoting sleep. "Temporary use of sleeping po- .r tions after operations or some painful injury is proper," he said. "But unregulated use is not only dangerous but habit form- ing." People become so worried for fear they won't sleep without tak- ing a capsule that they actually are unable to sle p until they've done so, Di Camp concludes. 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