six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1951> 'U' Clarifies Radio Policy For Football Home Team To Have Full Rights By TOM ARP "The home school controls the radio policy for its football games and the visiting school has no right or authority to make broad- cast arrangements'on its behalf withotit permission." Yesterday the University sent this statement to Michigan State College. It was in answer to the charge that the University is re- sponsible for radio stations having to pay a fee to broadcast today's Michigan-MSC game. ' ** * THROUGH ITS college station, WKAR, Michigan State h a d planned to deliver a live, play-by- play broadcast of the game to any station in 'the state free of charge and with all line charges paid. The Board in Control of Ath- etics here had extended the us- ual host courtesy to MSC, whereby WKAR would have free privileges for broadcasting the game, according to Arthur L. Brandon, University Relations Counselor. That privilege did not give WKAR the right to set up a network of other stations, Brandon said. Police To Hit IllegalSales Football Program Sellers Need Permit By VIRGINIA VOSS Unlicensed students selling ten- cent football programs today can expect severe fines from Ann Arbor police, Leonard Wilcox, '52, president of Student Legislature, warned yesterday. Police in the stadium area have been instructed to crack down on enforcement of an Ann Arbor City Ordinance requiring vendors of football programs to obtain an eight dollar permit to sell on pri- vate property. In no case will peddling be allowed on public streets and sidewalks on football day. 4?U E a , - r < t _. r. * * -Daily-Malcolm Shatz "ROLL 'EM UP"-Harry Kipke, former 'M' All-American foot- ball star, coach of three Big Ten champion teams, and four-term regent performs the age-old ritual before 4000 partisan students, at last night's pep rally. * * * * 'M' Band Preparing Hill-Billy .Routine for Half-Time Show (Continued from Page 1) After being told that it is a vio- lation of Big Ten rules for a member to offer to pay line charges for football broadcasts, MSC offered the play-by-play to stations who would pay the costs. This is the same policy that has been followed by the University for several years. UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS gave MSC and the radio stations of s Michigan copies of its broadcast policy several weeks " ago, but did not learn that WKAR planned to feed the broadcast of today's game to other stations until last Thursday. It was only by accident that the plans were discovered at that time. The University then announced that it would be ne- cessary for the stations taking the broadcast from WKAR to pay a fee of $200. r F t today by more than 150 ,ales- men. * ** MEANWHILE, as cheerleaders went through their final paces on the edge of the grass-bottomed bowl, eight radio stations and a television company were setting up shop in the bustling press box. Maintenance men were bus- ily occupied with sweeping the long stretch of concrete which Brandon said that the Univer- sity will attempt to arrange broadcasts in any area with radio service provided the stations who request it pay the line charges, in accordance with the Big Ten ruling. Many Student Jobs Available. At University By GAYLE GREENE Anxious mates who want to know what their girls really look like in the morning may have their chance. . Disguised in a short white coat, any male student can catch a glimpse of her before she masks herself to face the world and at the same time make 75 cents an hour-all as a bus boy in the women's dormitories. ** *, FOIE THOSE in need of fresh air and exercise, raking leaves at, a dollar an hour may be the job with a future. From male models for Uni- versity life drawing classes to men to clean out buses during football games, there is a wide range of part-time jobs avail- able to students; as listed in the Personnel Office, 3012 Ad- ministration Bldg. The office has reported that there are still a great many part- time positions available - more this year than last. Each student interviewed thus far this year has received at least two or three job leads and almost all have obtained employment, according to Mrs. Paul A. Gauss, personnel interviewer. THERE ARE meal jobs, room jobs (which give room in ex- change for part-time work) and occasionally jobs which provide room and board.' In addition, the Personnel Of- fice has daily requests for stu- dents to do part-time work in; afternoons or evenings.1 Seventy-five per cent of all jobs handled by this service are non-University work. Employ- ment for women is usually hand- led through the Office of the Dean of Women. Judge Warns Students Using FalsifiedIDs Not even rationalization will sway the decision of municipal court judges in the case of stu-' dents using false identification to purchase alcoholic liquors. Whether or not, philosophically, one should be 21 years old before being permitted to drink alcoholic beverages, will not be considered, Municipal Court Judge Francis O'Brien pointed out yesterday as' University officials joined with him in this warning to students. * * * COUPLED WITH the warning was the threat that Judge O'Brien would not hesitate to impose fines ranging from $50 to a maximum of $100 and ninety days in jail, or both, on all cases coming before his court. Both Dean of Students Erich A. Walter and Dean of Women Deborah Bacon supported the judge in his threat to levy fines right from the start of the school year and added that student of- fenders also face disciplinary ac- tion by the University. Dean Walter explained that though in the past fines have been assessed through Ann Arbor's municipal court, students contin- ued to be violators of the liquor law. "This, year it is the expectation of the court to deal more drasti- cally with offenders," Dean Walter added. HIE AND Dean Bacon joined Judge O'Brien in emphasizing that Michigan law forbids the sale of alcoholic liquor to any person "un- less he shad have attained the age of 21 years." They added that "the Univer- sity obviously expects its stu- dents to be truthful and as exact as they can be in giving any in- formation about themselves. Our students are expected to carry identification cards with them at all times." "There is no excuse for giving inaccurate information about birth dates," the statement continued. "Alteration or falsification of such a date must be recognized for what it is-deliberate attempt to de- ceive. It is a serious offense and will be penalized accordingly." The liquor law also states that it is a misdemeanor for any per- son to give or furnish any alcoholic beverage to a minor "except upon authority of and pursuant to a prescription of a duly licensed physician." Franchot, Barbara circles the bowl, painting num- bers on thte seats and putting the final touches on the play- ing field itself. Late in the afternoon, workmen and pre-game spectators were shooed from thet stadium as the Spartan team went through an hour's practice on today's battle- ground. OUTSIDE THE stadium, a few children w e r e screaming the familiar "Park Here" at the droves of commercial trucks which poured into the area. Police had already slapped "No Parking" signs on scores of telephone posts near the stadium. Nearby Ferry Field was shar- ed by the Maize and Blue grid- ders and the University's famed marching band. While the Wol- verine workout w a s closely guarded from outsiders, the in- tricate band formations were watched by a small crowd of admiring teen-agers. At halftime today, the Band will present a series of popular hillbilly tunes. The Michigan State Band will also appear on the intermission program. * * * ' TICKET - HUNTING may be rough going today. Non-student ducats may be bought and sold at the regular price this morn- ing at the Union lobby ticket counter. But reported scalper prices run in the vicinity of $20 a pair. Michigan State ticket offici- als said East Lansing students who missed ordering the pre- cious pasteboards in a campus sale last spring were out of luck. The entire stadium has been sold out for more than a month. Celebrities will be a dime a dozen today. Gov. G. Mennen Williams, a host of other state officials and several Washington luminaries make up only a small part of the political figures who will watch the spectacle. Academy Award-winner Brod- erick Crawford will head up the Hollywood roster. Also hailing from'the screen world will be John Derek and Donna Reed, who will make a personal ap- pearance tonight at a local the- atre. One celebrity won't make the game. She is a two-year-old hei- fer whom members of Phi Gam- ma Delta had contracted to ap- pear on the field to lead the new hit tune, "Cow College Chant." Although the cow had under- gone a rigorous leadership pro- gram, the University put thumbs down.- Student-Run Raft, Continues MEMPHIS, Tenn. -(Al)- The motorized raft Lethargia resumed its voyage down the Mississippi River yesterday with two bachelors and an unmarried girl aboard, all University students. The other member of the orig- inal crew of four-Geraldine Gar- cia, 24-stood on the bank and bade it goodbye. She said she plan- ned to catch it in a couple of days when she recovers from nervous exhaustion. Five days ago the rafters pulled THIS YEAR'S strict action is a result of traffic congestion caused last season by roaming vendors, Captain Rolland J. Gainsley of the Ann Arbor Police explained. Following student inquiry, Wil- cox talked to Gainsley and Athle- tic Director I. . Crisler. Wil- cox said that Crisler emphatically urged students not to sell on football territory. The Athletic Director planned to handle the situation this year by distributing pamphlets, indicating the roster of players for each of the season's games to students as they picked up their football tickets. Students may legally sell ten- cent football programs if they first get a Michigan State Sales Tax License costing one dollar from Lansing, and a transient salesman's license for seven dol- lars from the City of Ann Arbor. This license requires the salesman to state a certain street address as his selling headquarters, City Clerk Fred J. Looker said. "SL will continue to work on a solution to the student vendor's problem. We do not consider it a closed issue," Wilcox remarked. AFROTC Uses New Textbook World Political Geography by Prof. Russell Fifield of the poli- tical science department has been selected by the Air Force as the text for their ROTC geopolitical course. The course is a requirement for all AFROTC freshmen cadets and the text will be used at the 187 colleges and universities through- out the country where the course is being offered. Prof. Fifield is co-author of the book with Edsel Peprcy, attache to the American embassy at New Del- hi, India. Pearcy is the geographic editor and Prof. Fifield the poli- tical editor of the work. In an address before the com- bined freshman Air Force ROTC cadet class at the University, Prof. Fifield stressed the political im- plications of geography and agreed with the Air Force that today's of.- ficer must be well versed in this subject because of the global mis- sion of .the USAF. He also applied some geopoliti- cal ideas to the American foreign policy of containment, pointing out that this policy is being car- ried out more fully in Europe than in the Far East. The book contains ideas on po- litical geography as expounded by geopoliticians in the U.S., Great Britain and Germany. The policy of containment, Prof. Fifield brought out, is the exact policy re- commended by several famous geo- politicians in the past. IFC To Settle Book Accounts Students who left used textbooks with the IFC Book Excaange should drop by the Exchange and check on their books, Norm Tho- mas, '53, manager of the exchange announced yesterday. Those wishing to retain title to their books must notify the ex- change by the end of next week, Thomas said. Otherwise the books become the property of the ex- change. If the books have not been sold they may be reclaimed or left for sale next semester, he contin- ued. Thomas also requested that any students who left books with the exchange last spring and have changed their address since then notify the exchange. Cards may be sent to the IFC Book Exchange, Michigan Union. The exchange will be open Mon- day from 1 to 4 p.m. in Rm. 3-B of the Union. It will close Tuesday. Flashcard System To le Used Today WITNHOUT A BATHI NG SUIT, T O O-Vera Marks of Frankfurt wears an evening gown before a Baden-Badea audience after eiecton as "tiss Germany 1951" over 14 fi ialists, , (" N O S T R A N G E R A T T A B L E - Bambi, found motherless in mountains, is now house-broken and permits young*. sters to feed him at D. E. Coffman home, South Pasadena, Cal. ,, 1< AERIAL PERCH-- Control operators will get a bird's eye view of traffic from this new 100-foot-high tower being com- pleted at Sky Harbor Airport, Phoenix, Ariz. S H A P IN C U P F OR S E S S i 0 N-Buildings being constructed for the U. N.'s General Assembly session in Paris form aU around the fountain in front of the Palais de Chaillot. " . 4, 4 D A RE D EV I L..-.joie Chit- wood, Jr., 7, son of auto racing star, does a one-leg stand on a midget motorcycle built by his father during an exhibition at a New York City track. I N P R 0 T E C T I V E C U S T 0 0 Y - "Maren," Copenhagen Zoo hippopotamus, conceals her pride under a dour countenance as she launches her month-old offspring in public society. r . :" .+.t ° " ..s { :.. .,irr. u: r . ..f r.r;.;.: :.,y t,:}. }n - {v , c ti vi s y:: {.? ." " ?:{s. ::-"- 'OCfi,;'. t :n '+""" : ?e r ,k+ .( k::}w . ° h x ' s . s ' :.-?. 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