UNION OUSTER See Page 4 Y 4it irn Latest Deadline in the State aii4 FAIR, WARMER VOL. LX, No. 37 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1949 PRICE FIVE CENTS m I Allie-Japan Treaty Draft Nears Finish Pact To End U.S. Occupation WASHINGTON - (IP) - The State Department yesterday neared completion of the first full American draft of the proposed allied peace treaty with Japan. It would provide for ending the military occupation. SEPARATELY, the United States intends to make a military treaty which would retain U.S. bases in Japan after the occu- pation ends. The U.S. version of the peace treaty may be ready for open- ing consultation with Britain and other Pacific war allies around Dec. 1 as a preliminary to a peace conference next year. Under the proposed treaty, the Japanese government would take full control over the nation's in- ternal 'and foreign affairs, sub- ject only to provisions designed to make it a peaceful member of world society. S* * ONE OR MORE separate Amer- ican economic agreements cover- ing aid to Japan's deficit economy are expected. Secretary of State Acheson will thus be able to report no- table progress toward restoring formal peace in the Pacific and also providing security for an unarmed Japan, when he sees .+ British foreign minister Bevin. and French Foreign Minister Schuman in Paris next Wednes- day. While the three-cornered talks will be primarily on Germany and European unity, the foreign pol- icy chiefs are.expected to take a quick look at the Far Eastern situation. The State Department will con- sult with Britain and other smaller nations on provisions for the treaty and at some point will make a serious effort to get Russia to participate, but without a veto. SL Candidates To Be Heard at Opend ouses Open Houses for election can- didates will begin tomorrow and continue through Nov. 20, the day before elections. * * * FOLLOWING is the schedule: P.M.: Nov. 7, 5-Alpha Sigma Phi; 7:15-Sigma Delta Tau. Nov. 8, 5-Alpha Delta Pi; 7:15 -Sigma Phi Epsilon. Nov. 9, 5-Jordan Hall; 7:15- Allen-Rumsey. Nov. 10, 5-Kappa Delta; 7- Collegiate Sorosis, Theta Xi. Nov. 11, 4:30-Betsy Barbour; 3:30-Martha Cook. Nov. 13, 2:30-Phi Delta Theta; 7-Open. Nov. 14, 5-Delta Delta Delta; 7 - Kappa Nu, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Nov. 15, 5-Theta Chi; 7:15- Alpha Delta Phi, Lloyd House. Nov. 16, 4:30-Helen Newberry; 7:15-Alpha Gamma Delta. Nov. 17, 5-Gamma Phi Beta; 7:15-Acacia, Sigma Chi. Nov. 18, 5-Chi Omega. Nov. 20, 2:30-Alpha Tau Ome- ga; 3:30, 4:30-gpen; 7-Win- chell House. In addition to these regular open houses, the West Quad will hold a rally at 9:30 p.m. Nov. 17. Spirited Ivy Rally Winds Up in Court CAMBRIDGE, Mass.-G')-Six- teen youths, most of them Har- 'M' Scores Twice Inside 90 Seconds Dufek, Allis, Don Peterson Score Touchdowns in Big Ten Title Race By ROG GOELZ (Daily Associate Sports Editor) Michigan and Purdue needed only 90 seconds to decide the winner of the "We Beat Minnesota Club." In that space of time the Wolverines and Boilermakers scored three touchdowns, Michigan counting twice to Purdue's once. THE WOLVERINES were leading 7-0 on a first period score by Don Dufek when the final two minutes of the first half arrived and the fireworks began. Purdue, starting from their own 23 yard line, moved through the air on passes by Ken Gorgal and Bob Hartman to cross the Wolverine goal line in 13 plays. The conversion by William Skowron was blocked by Wally Teninga. The scoreboard clock showed 904' * * * seconds remaining in the half as both teams lined up for the kick- off. CHUCK ORTMANN took the Purdue kick-off on his own 3 yard line, followed his down field block- ing all the way to the Boilermaker ten yard line. He would have crossed the goal line collided with blocker son. had he not Jim Atchi- HIGH, Purdue. and on -Daily-Lmanian WIDE AND HANDSOME-Rugged fullback Don Dufek leaps over a mass of Purdue linemen to chalk up Michigan's first touchdown in yesterday's clash with Michigan's captain, Al Wistert, is shown in the foreground about to roll-block a Boilermaker backer-up. In the right background is Charlie Ortmann (49) the ground at right is center Bob Erben (53), who's watching the play after completing his blocking assignment. BOARD MEETING REPORT: Regents Approve Four Appointments Democratic Germany Far Off--Van Waogoner Four appointments were ap- proved and gifts totaling $99,- 438.44 were accepted by the Board of Regents yesterday. Also approved were 15 scholar- ship of $100 each to be offered for the 1950 Summer Session to residents of Canada. These schol- arships will be used in connection with the program of Canadian- United States Relations which will be conducted by the University next summer. * * * LARGEST of the gifts accepted was $27,564.97 from the estate of Cleveland Orchestra To Play Brahms'_SymphonyAt Concert Brahms' Symphony No. 2 in D major will be featured in the Cleveland Orchestra's concert at 7 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. George Szell, conductor of the Orchestra, will also lead the group in a performance Cherubini's Overture to "Anacreon," and the "Concerto for Orchestra" by Bar- tok. IN A POLICY of bringing more music to more people, Szell has lengthened the Cleveland's regular season to 30 weeks of 44 concerts. Its numerous other appearances in ''Professors 'Tale on China Recognition of Reds Considered Inevitable Recognition of Communist China by the United States is in- evitable according to University faculty members speaking on the "World Forum" over station WWJ last night. Discussing "Our Position In Asia," Professors Russell Fifield and Robert Ward of the political science department, and Prof. Frank Huntley of the English de- partment, agreed that the Com- munists are strong, and have the support of the people. "The strong support of the Communists arises from their ap- peal to the fundamental Chinese interests, agrarian reform and nationalism," Prof. Ward said. According to traditional Ameri- can foreign policy, the State De- partment will no doubt grant its recognition, he added. Prof. Fifield felt that the Chi- nese Communists would gradually ballets and other civic concerts, plus its four week tours from Maine to Missouri give the Cleve- and Orchestra a busy 150 concert season. Also part of the Orchestra's concert program are the regular broadcasts over Cleveland's WHK and the Mutual Broad- casting System. Judged by the New York "Her- ald Tribune" to be "one of the finest expressive mediums of its kind" in concert performance, the group was also acclaimed by the New York "Times" as having made the best recording of the year in its rendition of the Violin Concerto by Alban Berg. * * * FIRST VIOLINIST and con- certmaster of the orchestra is Josef Gingold, who has been with the 100-man group for the past two seasons. Born in Poland in 1909, Gingold began studying the vio- lin when three years old. He came to this country in 1920, and made his debut six years later in New York. Tickets for the concert may be purchased one hour before the concert at Hill Auditorium box of- fice. the late Sophia Gomberg, of Ann Arbor. The money has been as- signed to the Moses and Sophia Gomberg Fellowship Fund. Grants from the American Cancer Society, Inc., amounting to $17,385 were accepted for three research projects. Another donation of $3,126.67 was made by the Buick Motor Di-! vision, General Motors Corpora- tion, for the University Bands As- sistance fund. THREE OF the appointments made by the Regents involve new duties for present members of the faculty and staff. Dr. Enoch E. Peterson was ap- pointed director of the Museum of Archaeology, effective Feb. 13. 1950 when the present director, Prof. John G. Winter goes on re- tirement furlough. A member of the faculty since 1925, Dr. Peterson has been curator of Egyptian Antiquities in the Museum of Archaeology since 1934. Prof. Paul Spurlin was named associate chairman of the Depart- ment of Romance Languages with special responsibility for work in the French and Italian languages. DEWITT C. BALDWIN was ap- pointed director of Lane Hall, stu- dent religious center. He has been serving as acting director for the past five months following the resignation of Dr. Franklin H. Littell. The fourth appointment was the naming of Dr. Jitsuichi Masuoka as a visiting associate professor of sociology for the Spring semester and the 1950-51 Fall semester. "They have to learn to creep before they can walk," was the way Murray D. VanWagoner, '21E, former governor of U.S.-occupied Bavaria summed up the "demo- cratization" of Germany. Interviewed last night at a local tavern, Van Wagoner, once gover- nor of Michigan, said we "can't guarantee that Germany would become democratic." It is a 20 year job because the only people National Round-Up By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The govern- ment was reported yesterday to have set a deadline roughly one week from now for decisive action to end the soft coal strike. * * * PITTSBURGH-The nation's supply of soft coal available to the non-industrial public has been reduced to close to nothing. In Michigan the nature of the coming winter weather will de- termine the severity of the situ- ation. A three or four weeks supply has been stockpiled. * * * CLEVELAND-The CIO conven- tion set up committees yesterday to air the pro-Communists charges against ten unions and nine leaders. * * * CLEVELAND - Republic Steel Corporation and CIO Steelworkers held two sessions yesterday to discuss a pension plan offer. They scheduled another talk for today. we can influence are the children, he explained. * * * AND WE ARE only doing a "fair" job with them, he added. "But we cannot be sure that another strong man won't come along and wave the flag." The German people have been living under dictatorships for too long to know what democracy means after just two years, HE CITED legislature in Bavar- ia as an example. The parliament initiates very little legislation and usually okeys measures suggested by the administration. Van Wagoner tossed cold wat- er on speculation that the Ba- varian press might be taken over by former Nazis. "We had 38 licensed papers be- fore we removed restrictions, and these papers were democratic," he said. * * * AFTER THE occupation author- ities dropped the policy of licensed papers, 125 new ones sprang up overnight, he added. "Some of the papers will na- turally fold up." It does not matter what these new papers say as long as the dem- ocratic sheets are still in business, he added. German economic conditions were described by Van Wagoner as "improving." "Two years ago, you couldn't buy a thing there," he said. "But now, if you have the money you can get anything you want." Van Wagoner said there was no need to worry about communists getting anywhere in Bavaria. "And as economic conditions get better, they will become less and less important." Don Peterson plunged through the Purdue line for the Wolver- ine touchdown. Harry Allis was wide on his conversion attempt. In all, 20 seconds of play had passed since the Boilermaker score. ALLIS KICKED off to end Bob Whitmer, and recovered the lat- ter's fumble, running it to the Purdue 42 yard stripe before he was brought down from behind. Two passes by Chuck Ortman failed and the Michigan back punted out on the Purdue 24. Fifteen seconds remained when Chuck Lentz intercepted Ken Gor- gal's first down pass and drove to the Boilermaker 13. Bill Putich connected with Har- ry Allis on his first try and Allis converted the extra point, giving Michigan a 20-6 lead as the half ended three seconds later. BOTH TEAMS scored once to augment the point total of the deciding two minutes. Michigan waited until the final minutes of the first quarter and marched 54 yards for the initial touchdown of the game. The score was set up by the 28 yard run of Chuck Ortman giving See SECOND, Page 6 * * * Game Traffic Causes Death A pre-game traffic collision yes- terday on US-12 near here brought death to one -man and injuries to three other persons. Grover Leroy Klumpp, 45 years old, was killed. He was riding in a pick-up truck driven by Arthur Schmitt, 57 years old. The other vehicle involved was a car driven by Marilyn Kingscott, an 18 year old Kalamazoo College student. Riding with her was Carol May Bender, 18 year old stu- dent at Albion College. Both are from Kalamazoo. Schmitt was badly hurt with head and leg injuries and a pos- sibly broken pelvis. Miss Kingscott and Miss Bender were hurt, but the injuries were not believed serious. Spartan-Irish Ganme Stirs 'U Attention By AL BLUMROSEN A not-quite capacity crowd of 95,207 fans pulled out almost win- ter clothes yesterday to watch the Wolverines pick up their third straight win and hear Notre Dame beat Michigan State over in East Lansing. For the first time this season, some of the 97,237 stadium seats were vacant. There was another first-this was- not the "Game of the Week." * * * HUSHED ATTENTION to the public address system as the Notre Dame-MSC scores were announced and an unprecedented number of portable radios in the stands show- ed where the attention was. Ticket scalpers, usually secre- tive and quiet when they peddle pasteboardseat higher than legal prices, turned humanitarian for the afternoon. Fifty-yard-line seats were going for less than purchase price in front of the stadium gates well before game time. Even the press box, usually ov- ercrowded with reporters and radio men had plenty of vacant seats. Notably present were scouts from Indiana and Ohio State. CLAD IN OLIVE drab and grey, with half a dozen color bearers, the Purdue band, 180 strong, gave a pre-game and half-time display featuring a moving "P". But they were out-classed by Michigan bandsmen whose fea- ture of the week was entitled "injun trouble." Sparked by a painted "red man" the Michigan marchers first form- ed a bow and arrow, then shot the arrow through a quickly created heart. THEY CANOED along the "Waters of the Minnetonka" for a while, then converted a fearsome tomahawk into a non-violent peace pipe. University students had a good chance to learn the "Yellow and Blue" at half time when first Purdue and then the Michigan band played the Alma-Mater. And they got a long-distance taste of female cheer-leaders while several Purdue coeds led the more than 1,000 enthusiastic La- fayette rooters on the east side of the stadium. * * * BUT EVERYONE'S mind was not on the Michigan or the Notre Dame-MSC game. For former Governor Murray D. Van Wagoner, '21 E, yesterday's football was "incidental." "I'm here to see my daughter Ellen play in the Powder Bowl game today between the Pi Phi's and the Tri Delts," he said. Over-eager news photograph- ers, crouched at the sidelines, had ithe.ir jnnnsha ei BILLBOARDS GET BIRDS-EYE VIEW: Aerial Ads elp Keep. Grid Fans' Attention High By PETER HOTTON It's advertising at its highest and fastest. When the weather's favorable, 100,000 potential buyers see it at football games in the form of "banners" towed by airplanes 120 feet long for the plane to contend with. towing 'In cold weather, we can tow a few more letters because of the extra uplift by the colder air," Dale Sheren, manager of the firm, said. "The planes have to fly just fast enough to prevent stalling to enable someone on the ground to read them. Minimum speed is 50 miles per hour." * * * TRICKIEST problem is to get the banner into the air, Sheren so suddenly it looks like it hit a stone wall." A PLANE can change two or three banners in an afternoon, Sheren said. "Only time we got intoreal trouble was when one of the p iots drane i s b anner into A SPECIAL public liability pol- icy insures each plane and equip- ment for $50,000. The banners are custom- made for $10 a letter, and with $300 letters and pick-up equip- ment, the entire outfits come to $450.