MICHIGAN FORUM See Page 4 LIT lflr yr 4Iatg CLOUDY COOL Latest Deadline in the State VOL. LIX, No. 46 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1948 PRICE FIVE CENTS Wolverine Big Guns Trained on Indiana .n * * * Campus Set For Largest Ballot Tussle 107 Candidates File for Offices By AL BLUMROSEN One hundred and seven candi- dates have filed petitions for thirty-nine campus offices with what appears to be one of the largest all-campus elections in his- tory less than two weeks away. First sign of the intense elec- tion activity came yesterday when SL election committee chairman Knight Houghton pushed the elec- tion date ahead one day. * * * HE WAS IMMEDIATELY be- sieged by local politicos who had scheduled rallies and meetings for Ithe day before the election. Houghton reconsidered and the election will be held Tues- day and Wednesday, Nov. 23 and- 24 as previously scheduled. Independent and Fraternal or- ganizations are both aiming at a hbig chunk of the expected 10,000 votes. FRATERNITY and sorority houses will begin the usual vote swapping and combining for the J-hop election. In the battle for the 32 SL seats the fraternities work to beat the Hare system of proportional representation, ac- cording to IFC .chairman Bruce Lockwood. This involves having the bigger houses give their second place votes to weaker houses. Lockwood said that, as usual, some fraternity men would pose as independents and vice versa. SORORITIES will work together and with the fraternities in ex- changing votes, Mary Stierer, '48Ed, Panhellenic president said. Sororities are already at work sending post cards asking for votes to the various houses. The independents are in there pitching too. Member Al Maslin said that the independents ex- pect to cop twenty-five seats in the Legislature. East and West Quadders will hold rallies the evening before election with all candidates speak- ing. The independents have ar- ranged to get one man from each house to run. They are asking the houses to vote first for their own man, then for the rest of the inde- pendent slate. ASSEMBLY president Arlette Harbour said that, "list~s of inde- pendent men and women, running for office will be distributed to all the residence halls." Assembly is planning a rally four days before election to introduce the inde- pendent candidates. At yesterday's deadline, eight students had filed for Board in Control of Student Publications, twenty-one for J-Hop Commit- tee, and thirteen for Senior class officers, Candidates for Senior Class Of- ficers: president: Pete Elliott and Val Johnson. SeB CAMPUS Page 6 Biased Polling Procedure Hit By Newcomb The main reason for the failure of the pollsters to predict accur- ately the recent election was a bias favoring the Republicans in the methods of sampling, according to Professor Theodore Newcomb. Speaking at the Hillel Founda- tion yesterday, Professor New- comb said that the quota sampling method used by Gallup and Roper has consistently under-estimated the Democratic vote in this cohn- try. The interviewers have free choice of whom to sample, which tends to eliminate the lower in- come groups who usually vote Democratic, he stated. The large number of 'undecid-; eds' polled influences the results of the polls, Professor Newcomb said. "I have a hunch they voted DRIVE NEEDS $200 MORE: Band Fund Near $2,000! * , As the "Bandwagon" rolls into its third and final day, some $200 is still needed to send the Band to Ohio State. Pledges now total nearly $1,- 800. YESTERDAY'S biggest pledge -$200-came from the Univer- sity of Michigan 6lub in Detroit. And an individual alumnus, Doug Roby of Detroit, climbed aboard the "Bandwagon" with a century note. Stockwell Hall pledged $125- the largest sum pledged so far by a campus organization. BANDWAGON deadline is 2 a.m. tomorrow morning. Persons $204 is needed to roll the Bandwagon to the $2,000 mark- er. Deadline is 2 a.m. tomorrow morning. To make a pledge, phone The Daily at 2-3241 and ask for the Band Fund Com- mittee. Plans for collecting the money will be published in to- morrow's Daily. wishing to make pledges may do so by phoning The Daily at 2-3241 and asking for the Band Fund Committee. Arrangements for collecting the money pledged will be an- nounced in tomorrow's Daily. The spontaneous drive for $2,000 to send the University Marching Band to Columbus for next week's game was launched day before yesterday by Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity with an initial pledge of $65. SMARTING under allegations by a national magazine that Michigan's band is inferior to Ohio State's, students, faculty, townspeople and alumni flocked aboard the Bandwagon. The Daily got permission from University authorities to act as a clearing house and contributions started pouring in. With its annual two-trip tra- vel budget exhausted, the Band wouldn't have been able to make the trek to OSU. But Band Di- rector William D. Revelli says his men will be glad to go if - the necessary $2,000 can be raised.' .0, 6'~'yii Help the Gong Go Sky High .. "" « s "sS f - - " " a*w ""0" " ew "em " " Mr" s " w " BAND FUND SKYROCKETS TOWARD GOAL .. contributions pour in from students, alumni and merchants * * * * FOLLOWING is a list of pledges made yesterday: Hinsdale House $21, Stock- well Hall $125, Anonymous, $5, Alpha Kappa Kappa $10, Dom- inic Dascola $5, Don W. Kelsey $10, Metzger's Restaurant $5, Delta Tau Delta $20, Kappa Delta $10, Robert Campbell $2, Theta Xi $20, Quarterdeck So- ciety $10, Chi Omega $10 and Swift's Drug $10. The list continues with Tinker, Inc. $5, Doug Roby $100, Kenmore Restaurant $5, Williams House $15, Health Service staff members $30, Witham's Drug $5, Mrs. Betty O'Connor $5, WPAG radio station $25, Dr. Vincent Moore $1, Eleanor Downing $1, Ken neth Chatters $2, Mosher Hall $25, George Wells $5, Phi Al- pha Kappa $10 and Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Atkins $1. Concluding yesterday's list are Tom Walsh $1, University of Michigan Club of Detroit $200, Boersma Travel Service $5, Ran- dall's $10, Room 14 Winchell House $1, 4th Floor Anderson House $10, Dr. L. F. Ritter- shofer $5, David Bailie $2, Ray Kehoe $1, Prof. Jesse Ormon- droyd $5, Bert Heideman $2, Sig- ma Chi $75, Goodyears $25, Adams House $10, 1023 Stock- well $1, Bob Wise, Wm. Chap- man, Ray Schultz $3. U' Regents Refuse CAB Hearing Plea SL's Proposal Will Be Heard The University Board of Regents yesterday refused an audience at its monthly meeting to the Com- mittee to Abolish the Ban. In a preliminary session yester- day, the Regents told CAB rep- resentatives that a hearing could not be granted because they were expecting to receive a written al- ternative to the protested speak- ers ban from the Student Legis- lature. BLAIR MOODY, president of SL told The Daily that he hadn't been told the SL's tentative sug- gestions to the Regents were to be submitted in writing for their consideration. He said that no written proposals had been drawn up by SL. "However, the Legislature will formulate a proposal early next week," Moody said. He refused to say whether the suggested Oxford Ui on system of debate would be included, Buddy Aronson, spokesman for CAB, announced that the Regents said they would examine the Leg- islature recommendations first be- cause it is the more representative group, and has previously con- ferred with the Board about the ban. Aronson explained that CAB would continue its task by filing with the Office of Student Affairs a petition with more than 1,800 names protesting the speakers ban for the Regents' consideration. * * * THE LEGISLATURE, which has registered its disapproval of the ban, along with 13 campus groups in CAB, originally requested a hearing before the Regents last spring. However the Regents never got around to them. Moody and Bill Miller, vice president of SL, were to have presented their suggestions for revising the ban. Now that the Regents have ap- parently given the 'go ahead' sig- nal to the Legislature, action to whip up a plan will probably get under way quickly. * * * WHAT THE PLAN will amount to is still uncertain. However, high in consideration is the "Oxford Union" system reported on by Ralph Carson, University grad- uate and Rhodes Scholar, earlier this week. The plan, which would probably be called "Michigan Fo- rum" would offer a regular escape valve for student opinion on po- litical and other issues. The Oxford Plan calls for weekly debates on issues of local and national interest, with two speakers arguing on each side of the question for fifteen min- utes. The audience is permitted to enter into the subsequent discus- sion. Informal debate is carried on for two hours under the direc- tion of the president. Slippery Streets Cause Accidents A total of eight accidents on slippery Ann Arbor and Wash- tenaw County streets were re- ported by local authorities last night. Three persons were injured as a result of these traffic mishaps, in- cluding one University coed who was struck by a car driven by Richard C. Wakefield. also a Uni- versity student. Hiealth Service authorities reported that her in- juries were of a minor nature. DICK RIFENBURG ... Last home game * * * Local Grid Year Exits WithColor By GEORGE WALKER Ole King Football will abdicate today, as far as Ann Arbor is concerned. But the ruler who reigned su- preme these past eight weeks won't give up his crown without the us- ual fanfare of bands, cheerleaders, crowds, and caravans of autos. * * * SOME 85,000 FANS will have their final football fling today. Though the game is not a sellout, it might develop into one before kickoff time at 2 p.m. Don Weir, University Ticket Manager, announced that the stadium ticket booths wou'l be open for business this morning as long as the ducats last. The weatherman was not as grim as usual on football Satur- days. He predictecL.cloudy skies but little chance of rain this af- ternoon. THOUGH THIS is not a sell- out game, Ann Arbor's hotels were nevertheless packed to capacity last night. For the crowds, the band has fashioned something new in the way of half-time entertainment. The music makers will stage an old-fashioned minstrel show, complete with Mississippi River boat. "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee," "Old Man River," and "O Su- sanna" are some of the numbers they will play. The band will share the field, both before the game and at half time, with Indiana's band, under the direction of Daniel Martino. Chinese Rivals ClaimVictory NANKING - (/') - Pro-gov- ernment newspapers proclaimed in extras today a "major victory" over nine Chinese Communist col- umns along the Grand Canal 160 miles northwest of Nanking. (The Communist radio, heard in Peiping and San Francisco, made similar victory claims over Gov- ernment forces. The Communists said they were within six miles north of Suchow, last main base guarding Nanking.) * * * THE OFFICIALLY - sanctioned Nanking reports said National troops savagely attacked and hurled back General Chen Yi's troops who were trying to cross the historic canal. Government claims of victory and of enemy casualties usually are greatly exaggerated, but it was the consensus of observers in this capital that the main Communist drive' against Suchow had been stopped-at least temporarily. amazing war-time eleven will be playing their last game in Mich- igan stadium. Among them are Captain Dom Tomasi, Stu Wilkins, Quentin Sickels, Joe Soboleski, Dan Dworsky, Ed McNeil, Donn Hershberger and Pete Elliott. The Hoosiers, well known for their "one man team" triple-threat George Taliaferro, will not be at full strength for their encounter with the Wolverines. * *I * SUFFERING FROM the effects of a gruelling 42-6 licking at the hands of powerful Notre Dame last week,, they will be without the services of fullback Harry Jagade who suffered a leg injury. It will be a battle of yearling coaches this afternoon with both Michigan's Ben Oosterbaan and Indiana's Clyde Smith compet- ing in their initial season as head mentors at their respective schools. Smith, who took over for Bo McMillan when he left to coach the Detroit Lions has not encoun- tered much success so far this sea- son. Although his Hoosiers start- ed out fast this year with vic- tories over Wisconsin and Iowa they have failed to emerge vic- torious since then and have dropped successive contests to Texas Christian, Ohio State, Pitts- burgh, Minnesota, and Notre Dame. * * * INDIANA, however, shares with Army the distinction of being the only team to have beaten the Wolverines twice during the past five years. Many of the present members of the Maize and Blue squad still remember the stinging 13- '7 defeat in 1945 at the hands of the Hoosiers who went on to win the conference championship. By way of revenge the Wolver- ines have run up impressive scores against Indiana in their last two meetings, defeating them 21-0 and 35-0. Other Wolverines who will be playing their home finale today will be All-American Dick Rifen- burg, Gene Derricotte and Ralph Kohl. Fur Cravats ick leMen? Fur bow ties! That will be the latest fad on campus if freshmen Jerry Schafer and Milt Rosenbaum have any- thing to say about it. The two Flint students are sure that the leopard skin creations of Flintite Leon Backhaut will go over big with the students. Selling for two dollars, in brown or spotted leopard skin, the fur bows will soon be on sale in cam- pus shops if Schafer and Rosen- baum san swing it. "The only other fur bow ties we know of are mink and sell for fifty dollars," Schafer said. v Michigan Picked To Top Hoosiers M' Seeks To Extend Win Streak, Gain Firm Grasp on Big Nine Title By BUD WEIDENTHAL Associate Sports Editor Michigan's magnificent Wolverines, looking for number 22 in their long undefeated streak, meet Indiana's injury-ridden and victory- starved Hoosiers this afternoon in their final home appearance of the 1948 season. Seeking to assure themselves of at least a tie for the Big Nine championship and a more firm grasp on their ranking as the nation's top pigskin aggregation, the Maize and Blue will be favored to win going away by as many as five touchdowns over the hapless Hoosiers. THE LAST REMNANTS of the famous "pink-cheeked wonders of 1945" who composed Michigan's0 SEX EDUCA TION: U' Experts Endorse Marriage Lectures 4 ~ ---/ War Tribunal Orders Tojo, Aides To Die MacArthur Holds Review Power TOKYO-(OP)-Hideki Tojo was sentenced to hang as chief' of the criminal Japanese military clique whose dream of ruthless conquest wrecked their own country and tumbled all East Asia into chaos. Six of his fellow conspirators were sentenced to the gallows with him. No execution date was fixed. SIXTEEN GOT LIFE imprison- ment; one a 20-year term, and an- other seven years. The tribunal Oresident, Sir William Webb of Australia filed a separae opinion stating in effect that Emperor Hirohito-not on trial-was mor- ally responsible but politically im- mune. None of the 25 defendants was acquitted by the 11-nation In- ternational military tribunal which spent two and one-half- years trying them. After the interminable months of wordy trial, it took just 21 tense and dramatic minutes for the court to convict and pronounce sentence on the men who tried to fashion the greatest oriental em- pire since the time of Ghenghis Khan seven centuries earlier. GENERAL MAC ARTHUR, com- mander of the Allied occupation of' defeated Japan, set Nov. 19 as the deadline for appeals. MacArthur is the sole reviewing authority. He has power to reduce but not to increase sentences. Tojo, the slight, bald little' man whose arrogant cunning won him the nickname "The Razor," scorned in advance any plea for clemency from the man who engineered his defeat. Anticipating the death sentence he got, he told his attorney to make an appeal based on his con- tention that Japan fought in self- defense. * * * IN ADDITION to Tojo, those sentenced to hang were Generals Kenji Doihara, Seishiro Itagaki, Heitaro Kimura, Iwane Matsui, Akiro Muto and former premier Koki Hirota. . Life sentences went to Gen. Sadao Araki, Col. Kingoro Hash- imoto, Gen. Shunroku Hata, for- mer premier Kiichiro Hiranuma, former cabinet member Naoki Hoshino, Marquis Koichi Kido, Gen. Kuniaki Koiso. Gen. Jiro Ninami, Adm. Taka- sumi Oaka, former ambassador Hiroshi Oshima, Gen. Kenryo Sato, Adm. Shigetaro Shimada, former finance minister Okinori Kaya, former ambassador Tochlo Shiratori, Gen. Teiichi Suzuki and Gen. Yoshijiro Umezu. Shigenori Togo got 20 years and peg-legged Mamoru Shigemitsu seven years. Both these former foreign ministers will get time off, for the nearly three years already served, Aged and ailing, neither seems likely to survive his remain- ing term. T'rrnan nrimrea By MARY STEIN With the fate of marriage rela- tions lectures at the University hanging in the balance, four fac- ulty members yesterday endorsed a program of marriage education. One-Dr. Edward Blakeman- even said that "twice as much time should be spent on sex edu- cation as is now spent on English and mathematics." * * * THE OTHERS-a sociologist, Prof. Robert C. Angell; a physi- cian, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe; and a psychologist, Roger W. Heyms, declared their support of such a program. All indicated, however, spe- cial emphases or changes that might be made in the series that has been offered here. , Prof. Angell, chairman of the sociology department, declared that "Any course or program that will make marriage better from the start is a good thing. If stu- dents want the lectures continued, they should be," he said. * * * HE POINTED OUT that stu- dents seemed to be partly dissatis- fied with the program offered last year. Dr. Blakeman, University re- ligious counselor, declared that much more time should be spent 'CORNY' AROZIAN: Coed Earns New Nickname STracking Down Bacterium on marriage training-and that it should be taught "reverently, thoroughly and scientifically." He advocated splitting marriage education into several classes dealing with different phases of the subject. "Here at the University, under- classmen as well as seniors should be given a chance to hear the lec- tures," he said. JOINING IN PART in Dr. Blakeman's stand, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, director of Health Serv- ice, also favored different classes for the various subjects treated in the program. Parents' responsibility in molding their children's charac- ter should receive primary em- phasis in the marriage relations course, he said. Roger Heyns, research associ- ate in Navy conference research and psychology instructor, took a slightly different tack. He favored a course emphasizing marital ad- justments as well as stressing the family as a social unit. "We have over-emphasized ro- mantic love before marriage in- stead of facing realistically the adjustments necessary afterward," he warned. Boote Will Open For Ticket Resale The football ticket resale booth at the Union will be open from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. today, with tick- By JO MISNER Most people would object to be- ing called "corny," but Marguerite Arozian, '50, doesn't mind. In fact, she's rather pleased with1 her newly earned nickname of "Corny Arozian." This epithet represents her first scientific dis- covery. * * * MISS AROZIAN, who intends to go into microbiology, pioneered in her field-on a small level-when she tracked down a hirtherto un- identified soil bacterium recently. Scientific ethics gave her the right to add her surname to the genus picks and shovels each day of class this semester to get soil samples. Since that time the class has been making various tests on these samples. Miss Arozian hit "pay dirt" when she attempted to identify the particular soil micro-organ- ism she had chosen to work on. Her sepcies was unclassified in Bergy's 1,529-page "Manual on Determinative Bacteriology." The discovery may bear little weight beyond the limits of the University, Dr. Jones said, point- in ouit that there man hf eamanv _____________ ____._ e FISSION FASHIONS FORM: Uranium Makes World Grow Around <> NEW YORK-')-A new idea, that atomic energy is changing the earth's surface, was presented to The changes are slow. No ge- ologist saw the least danger that this buried atomic energy H aan c im..... fl. o hn from uranium and other radio- active minerals which are thin- ly spread. Atomic physicists havt. hen ciaring it nossi-