THE MICHiGAN DA ILY SUNDAY, NOVEMB~E1 26, 1950 I __________________________________ U T HOM AS L. ST OKES: GOP ntra-Pary Sife W A IN TNTe Cresional elec-the tioeresualy porten a vey fihth wifeti trol ofnth paty adge the 92Prsietial nomination.o n"usdr hca hs Thes ledesof the cflicting factinsr Dwhsinse the Gealobaneda cnwlasye of thorty and henhnced pretige. b tc rimphs inwhe eloin-Senu tat Tt ofm Oio and Goenors we ofhd iNew rkdo nd Wrren s of Califvornia. ctin f the cnserative foes Hle y Sentr Taft, lcanesgee was onestgned the modi- eatel prgesive andh moe Hinenatonlit wigreof th aty hichGoqernorasd Deey andWcarn, anduc East-We axis re leading *Thi exlatrntgnt semngygo ne Treri CnTGern or James H. Duff of- Pnnslana ygite of hisedrsimCngs ctio o the Sate he od bems thdendishput-s idbosser ofoongis staewihaw singsrpe s muchtedighi nastonacomnventons Thet Thaesi outom ofe thstra-partye batle wll et tuh the 192mncrase ftineshe Nft EWepuIA-ITYhpumedocito- h mitions ofl rtese proesa political loees phrobabl y lhv aotereffect toinisor a' degreeth prospecnha ts o noitio o "us hcercgider" whichst t is Ptage, mans Geerl DightD.rEsbenhower. his dnesite that that ovesrnora hat endorsement was discountedwby yn-e Rubicanitcswooined ut thatress cae dintee jst con tee of pulication of hs the nogfamu Jhoghe nenlete. They clieda this gtur wdasi deind to iti- gaegebls effe t o ee the Hnly politca nisretio hichrve ssequen case Re- publicans imuc ntroen ruirsesor mhexlaining. h 2n Cogesbt puicanesPariblty SenatorTaft haps he l ad ted prt's precosrd is made andcheren isy sene rin post es of mad The l Taft ladersp hsbeenstrnghedb thewres ny- electio thrughthe: inrased effctiess be e knw to rtre uli an Sentor Taftill edentifsned wihast.sle Unliey th gonors, todomnt tht lielitail b on- cnrated oalyrren his evr c n eision.d enmodies them threevbiggeshenational cn peoralnitinI id secre that senator-al Yrgonrsnomination in1948d.n in Peylvania195, hisUittetr e nie, and.) lue Caway UTig E hunk d offPnnslaia's delegaes Governgoy Duf ho ade the atia- tiy. Bin the mrusyea scof oundgly tronng tholee Gri udycadit 4 e. 2e tweeGearnor aren ahn enareectn Duftherer ha deveoe qteaiqen sdi n Hw mchus th attl inl the Rpulican vealeny the "duraft" ofGvro ee Tbe inalentials psositine ato the convt.in to calln the Tft kw exmet- Bywih Easrni-Taftrk inernationdaist sude nly reaizied at the lesvent hor what sGven Dwysrtrmnfrmplic woudheanifinlthe 195 atlefor mcsntros. Tuh vermlouness was dimpsclons plainly inthelindcents tha itnant over-ng node Haneyr dgrepored.i Tehiltterm a be maneto im torya gienhguerna tol nxminationdtk the senastorial nonton inthe a. ucmn. dns (Copyright 90,b Utntd e atur Synid inte, In Eucationafte ee hysol TiH CTRUabeCTIVE atytitudeofhlpig stunts willingly aishoo rae at theni- versity. Bthe msic schoolndi o esie a fair sbreas tod theno-msict scholvy su denters e roup.i iets Msi Lit41core. halfhtd at empts shown frelehr o BeTher are akmer ond tehniuei s usd inoyhi. coursensin thaoul be apied toer anaiy ohr cnoyrses. a icrasd Thne tre course isan oulndfo h tatIthwyte students n ow he exct- ly whichin msialhors re rheqire vad. are nt nontiidratio the lhast uedof th Theo difcul ob oue analyigmig is- ucs.mplifed.ehe scoumst is plaed fore manureanatonthie woprksc to b aefreet atend me labs peid inpe paraionif hey eeltheyshold. is It Seems ito Me IBy D pONs N U CTERLEIy N het A DAS buess ma reake o m lrat yner:s it that ou Amneras - cando sh a Crmarkabl jboavetsn y u sso sw idourselves tothnwrl? Thise pint upr Callrtss clealy one o Amepric'ratestn dficitenciliyes eads th world tha we ae pursun caitsel Tea tbrol whrmots Amc, i seems toome, iosidati tak tooncfgr a ned. Weou asume th atbecas weldn hav a g standar ofliving dafnd ecause we are the- riethfrppe of the world wlnaulywandt caupy ourfeconoi sthem.nk Furthermorey weroas- sme at bausewuare ightacigin, the nil ame reed andtdemracyn the est ou leadehip. ha a Aeicna: Theutrh ish foreign e o p a qute are taunc onppone ntsfthe ovmisstem.-- TDepartment hs had tohte nmCnrss d "Voe ofsin Aeia." Inateligen reot fromn Comuntcngtlled contMr.iesink tor h g~re aio f inteetta thVie gnertes bhe-r hs in , e Irn utbaik nd. odrho hy Bu ept anone as wefid ourelve in volve inwa Cungresslk immer dia ap- propriaes blons form t mlitaestab theCmi seemstmeha o capaign to sell Americ adbrjadwarasasof muchen ots therogpout the atoe anudinghu are - stroing mvr silitaryne friwecno- vince the e eed tte woldandt cause defecing in the rnsome eemy troghs meansaofnaaskillfulpropagandarcapign, whe illrhaveceaftds anothrkidl ofefes m-ohe whicfen roves trongr th an gnst Howat eng do youl hear n mera sad-: "Btsn ho can foreignrsobecy suiast be tae inry thish fanaiccomni s po- panda?" or oe t detieis The anrtse r tth Cbommuist an th sians are arer tha we are ingou- Mr.d Maib onyofi the UNowiththeir can expectaon to beleepr thae.brd Bu ine oundotre likoe Cxhinaor endiangor Itpoga ther aregny spueople weahr are s- heCaomnss s e tnlemntoa osess an e mrkable fandusty for undersandin thet Awiants dkpe.udieseof people candthgroups ploitin efeypoiily.utrc cmui propaganda. itheir we ounot relzh inthe present world csuis rw r not l smrteoughlto apgpl. our gseiusfo adsru- ried aory whsich ndicted' oinesap coms- cannot solve this problem. America might build the world's most tre- mendous defense force, but if it fails to gain the support of the free peoples of the world itmight very well lose the world struggle despite its military superiority. TEN YEARS AGO A N UNDERDOG Michigan eleven over- came a 14-0 first period score against them and bounced up to defeat Ohio State, the Conference champions, by a score of 21- 14. -From the Pages of The Daily. Te Wek' NeGws DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN U~o a ptir o o J n o P of s and sufiint aplcaonsm haver. bee 1 -Daly--B1 HamtonComm.,son will27 cne tLec- .~.'A"*'~'/.~ ~*. et n ap lctosu ntil"T he cose f PROFESORS wee confontedw....rws .ndrows o empt sets PrepsnateEnoive fromthe rde- thisweeendas he hankgivng oliay roveoutthosa nanceso Deelopmen Divisio Co-f stuent intrditona fshin. uc ofthecrwd eadd or'the- N ta l e au h of St ,da s. tioal id o Psadna.It asas oldandsnoy i Coumbs s tudetsr In Vilds o niner .asupher,.ut ihngwogaea an andte thr physics.E PLTer gratsp in . t.rsaandydoctorsrdegrees.TApps.ca- BLOO, STEL &BODIS-Dsastr stuck cros th naFor tifuEgtnern Bidf.rEaincallma aud Lecstdreseac e- Bbe Std ateGidHu. BeCoo:mitte Chisa.",8 Rv.kHenr0 Amodtear. Ptr of Lutheran Sturde Assito, will speak on the sujet "uTan Be in." and bnrefstd inPie Rolom. torn, wTlseak Son Christyanu- Gamma Detauthern Stu den-t Clb 5:30 spm. 2suppe4- n pram. Thfe e prorm topckwhll bedg "Chrisian Painti:g Do. Rael- inaing Crumink sUnier"ot." Bring: ownne skaesn orrt thema theres., ing ID , card Mett.1 pCmeOtin Club roomn, ntwest corne o:f Rackm, Uin ComersingTravnts ru Contsrotl:n l Mon., 273 p.. B.t Burr Purde Haniersi.,, will speak Ton "pAkn Intoducmtingt tins."PAl trstaraeome.w AfternoonTea SiologyV facug,- invited Mon., Nov. 27, 4-6g.mA., East Cnferene Roomi ackha Woentidmen of the erityFa cl:nDine eeting t thesea- 4gue, Tues., Nov. 28 6:15 pram.t 28,d7:30. nRom aDaes Unin uLtyeadeshprainige cry o n- metsaLne Hdsu'al Mn., A:30ep. me. Naene Stuents Fellowship pobmy ofThe aei ora te men willyb Dr.l Panucota ofp How- ell, Mirchria ,Idtia Itr-Art nind:Meeturing,8 Rm20E.Engineering Bldg.at~ week as freakish weather combined with even more freakish train and plane crashes to push the pre-Thanksgiving death toll well above 150.- Before the week got started, a steady deluge of warm rainfall had melted snow on the high Sierras and swelled Western streams to the danger point. By Monday the rivers and creeks crested over their banks and spilled into the lowlands. Ten thousand people fled their homes in California as damage soared above $10,000,000. In Nevada, the rampaging waters swept through the swank gambling club district of Reno. And along -the Atlantic Seaboard cold gale winds, rain and snow marked the first big blow of the season. By the time the storms had subsided, they had brought death to at least 29 persons across the nation.* On Tuesday, a late-running troop train collided head-on with a trans-continental passenger train high in the Canadian Rokies. At least 61 persons were In'jured and twenty--most of a them Canadian soldiers-were killed. The same day a twin-engine DC-3, chartered by a religious organization, crashed into jagged Mt. Moran in Wyoming. The wreck- age yielded 21 bodies., The climax to a week of horror and destruction came early Wed- nesday evening. It was tbe, height of the New York city rush hour, ancd more than 2000 homeward-bound workers and shoppers were jiammed into two trains of the Long Island Railroad. The front train slowed for a stop. Suddenly the brakes locked. As the train stood motionless on the track the second train came roaring in from behind, ploughed into the first and ripped its end car into tangled bits of blood, steel and bodies. The death toll mounted to 77 and injuries numbered above 300. It was the fifth worst rail disaster in American history. U-S. COMMUNISTS-In a history-making move, the Justice Depart- ment issued a formal ultimatum Wednesday to the Communist Party of the United States. The department, in a petition filed with the new Subversive Activities Control Board, charged that the American Communists were directly under the control of Russia. Local. . . CAMPUS ELECTIONS-Cold, wet snow held the vote to below 3,000 in the first day of campus balloting last Monday. However, by the time the counting began on Tuesday night, 7,221 students had cast their ballots, the second highest turnout in history. Counting began on a note of discord, as things didn't get under way until about two hours late. By 5 a.m., the tabulation was really fouled up, partly sone are ivited Willian L. Laurence, Science reporter for the N.Y. Times, will be presented Wednesday, 8:30 p.- in., in Hill Auditorium as the fourth number on the Lecture Course. "The Truth About the Hy- drogen Bomb"' is the subject. Mr. Laurence was selected by the gov- erment to explain ,theh Atomic recently been permitted toa dothe same concerning the Hydrogen bomb. Tickets go on sale Tuesday at the Auditorium box office, which is open 10-1, 2-5. Academic Notices NGame Theory Seminar: M on., Angell IHall. p. cm , Psychology-Sociology 232. Dr. Burton Fisher. There will be no special class session Monday eve- ning, Nov. 27. Class will meet on Friday evening, Dec. 1, as well as at the regular hour. Stochastic Processes Seminar: Mon., Nov. 27, 4 p.m., Room 3001, Angell Hall.'' Doctoral Examination for Fred A. Beeler, Mathematics; thesis: "A Study of the Variation in the Moments of a Frequency Distribu- tion Due to Grouping," Tues., Nov. 28, 3001 Angell Hall, 1:30 p.m. Chairman, C. C. Craig. Mathematics Colloquium. Mr. Daniel Resch will speak on "A transformation theory of partial differential equations"' at the ON THE Washigton Mrry-G- Ron WITH DREW PEARSON because of fraud. Sieepy, election oflicis, in despair of ever gettinge cs JWJ.Lu1m LFn e., things straightened out, turned over the job of selecting the 25th Nv. 28,at :0pl.i R 31 legislator to the Men's Judiciary. Agl al DISCRIMINATION-Last week the Inter-Fraternity Council was pre- C n et sented with an ultimatum from Student Legislature in the form of an SL-proposed time limit for wiping out fraternity bias clauses. This The Polytech Chorus of Finland week IFC feebly bounced back with an enervated anti-clause plan of will give the fifth concert in the its own. The IFC voted, 27 to 10, to tirge its members to make an Choral Union Series, Tues., Nov. active effort to rid their constitutions of the bias clauses. 28, 8:30 p.m., Hill. Auditorium. They will present a program of Finnish songs by distinsguished Around th Worl. .. composers of their native land, UN-Most UN members have long stood firm in their refusal to viz., Tornudd, Palmgren, Kuula, recognize the Chinese Communists. Even this week a new Russian Linnala, and a group by Sibelius-. demand to seat Red China in place of Chiang Kai-Chek's Nationalists Tickets are available at the of- was turned down. But the Reds have found a way to circumvent fices of the University Musical So- their opponents. Brandishing a charge of American aggression in ciety in Burton Tower; and will Formosa, a Chinese Red delegation arrived at Lake Success Friday to tho e onr inate Hil Ahudveioriu press action against the United States. U.S. rep~resentatives were box coffcer afte H l Ap dtm. TAHI.NGTON-Though a large part of the American public appears to be con- vinced that flying saucers do exist, so far the Air Force has not been able to track down a single bona fide saucer. This is despite the fact that U.S. aviators have spent hour upon hour checking reports not only og flying saucers, but of such weird phenomena as midgets from Venus, shooting Ts column hs no w beenable to ex- amine Air Force files, and it is quite evident that the Air Force has done a painstaking job of trying to establish whether or not flying saucers do exist. These files show that considerable time was even spent checking the report re- ceived from movie actor Bruce Cabot and the Wyandotte Echo, a newspaper published in Kansas City, that corpses of blonde, beardless 3-foot men from Venus had been seen arriving on a flying saucer by a mian named Coult er-. Dead on arrival, these space-traveling midgets had no cavities in their teeth, and wore shoes resembling human skin accord- ing to the story told the Air 1Force. Further- more, Coulter was supposed to have as proof of this visit from Venus-a lunar clock oper- ating on a 28-day cycle, a space radio, and agear from the flying saucer, all of them supposedly arriving with the blonde midgets from Venus. of Korea without recovering the bodies of these missing men, it is believed they must have been taken prisoners and removed to Siberia. So f an, Chinese troops have treated Ameri- can prisoners almost as if they were allies, returning many of them to American lines. But if the 4,000 G.I.'s were transported into Siberia by the Russians, the stony may be dlifferent. This possibility is giving the Army great concern. Note-as of the last official count, 4,144 G.I.'s were listed as missing. (Copyright, 1950, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) II I 1 wiiilng bo a+llow admissiun t the Reds; tiS country had some corn -____ plaints of its own-dealing with Chinese intervention in Korea-to take up with the Peiping delegation. Thus, while formally snubbed Ev ns To a by the UN, Communist China for all practical purposes appeas- to Congregational, Disciple, Evan- have slipped in the back door. gelical and Reformed Guild: 6 p.- KOREA-Gen. Douglas MacArthur watched from a front-lines jeep m. supper at Congregaional Thursday as United Nations forces launched an all-out offensive to Address: B"Compa t end the war. Initial resistance was encountered by Friday, but the Secretary of the Department of troops rolled on. Meanwhile the release of American prisoners by the Higher Education of the Congre- Chinese Communists touched off a brief flurry of peace rumors, but gational Church, and a brief won- no official top-level negotiations were reported in progress. ship service. GERMANY-Rearmament of Germany was given top bill in consulta- tions among Western European nations at Strasbourg, France, this Canterbury Club: 9 a.m., Holy week Tw prbles soodout D hw mch f a ary wuldCommunion followed by student week Tw prbles stod ut:1) ow uch f a ary wuldbreakfast. 5 p.m., Evening Prayer Germany be allowed, and 2) would war-ravaged, man-short Germany followed by supper and program. .agree to raise an army even if it w/ere permitted to do so. -Bob Keith and Chuck Elliott 1Roger Williams Guild: 10 a.m. Edited and managed by students Of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Controi of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jimn Brown......Manan Editor' Paul Brentlinger...... ....Cit Editor Davea Thmas........ .eture Eio Janet watts..........Associate Editr James Gregory.......Associate Editor Bi Cooly.......Spr Eior Bill Brenton..Associate Sports Editor Barbara Jans...........women's Editor Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor Business Staff waitr hapero'Assoc. Businss Maage Paul Schaible.Advertising Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press entited to the userfor republcatin of all news dispatches cedited to it or oterwise ceditedb to o thi esae. matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor Michigan as second-class mail Sscriptiondring; regular school RRENT MOVIES LET'S DANCE in technicolor with Betty Hutton and Fred Astaire. IN SLIGHTLY less than two hours, this movie runs the entertainment gamut from pure to poor. Betty Hutton, looking as soft and pink as ever, does some beautifully exe- cuted song and dance routines with Fred Astaire, who manages to keep up with her in spite of the fact that he is no longer soft is on the up and up. She goes back to Bea- con Hill to live with her mother-in-law, a domineering dowager who speaks only to God and a few Cabots. The hoofer instinct proves too strong in our heroine and she soon feels that her son (Richard something, something VII), now four years old, is not being brought up in the best show-business tradition. When the Queen Mother sends to Princeton for their 1968-1969 Announce- ment Catalogue, our heroine begins to fear for her son's manhood, and whisks him off year: by carrier?' $6.00; by mail. $7.00. * BARNA BY Mr. O'Malleyi the GOLDEN T HAT'S EGG!- That legend about the Goose that Laid the Golden Egg turns out to be another of those wish-fulfillment yarns invented by a hopelessly impoverished peasantry- The assay office said this egg was only gold plated... And thinly, at that..,