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October 29, 1952 - Image 6

Resource type:
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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1952-10-29

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PAGE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1952

I I I

I

CALIFORNIA AGAIN PIVOTAL:
Election May Be Closest Since 1916

Speech Play
To Begin
Tomorrow

Im

By HARRY LUNN
As the 1952 presidential cam-t
paign approaches its climax it ap-t
pears that the race may be thek
closest battle since the Hughes-c
Wilson election of 1916.e
Although Woodrow Wilson ulti-
mately won his bid for re-electionc
by edging GOP candidate Charles
Evans Hughes out in California
and other doubtful states, the Re-
publicans were conceded the pres-
idency until three days following
the election.
NEARLY EVERY paper in the
country was out on the streets with
extras proclaiming a Hughes vic-
tory early on the morning follow-
ing voting day.
The Daily's headlines provid-1
ed embarrassing contradictions
which. told the story of the top-1
sy-turvey race.
High School
Group to Talk
On Leadership
About 1,500 high school stu-
dents and faculty advisors will
hear Director of physical educa-
tion and athletics H. . Crisler at
the eighth annual Michigan High
School Conference on Citizenship
today in the Rackham Building.
Prof. Criser will speal at the
first session on the topic of "Lead-
ership."
The meeting, sponsored by the
School Services and the Univer-
sity Extension Service, is designed
to foster ideals and principles of.
student government in schools.
Following Prof. Crisler's speech
the group will have a panel dis-
cussion on the topic, "What Can
Your Council Do to Improve the
Citizenship of Your School?"
In the afternoon the assembly
will have another panel discus-
sion on "How Do YounGet the Best
Student-Faculty Co-operation in
Your School."
Asian Students
To Meet
The new All Asian Association
will hold its organizational meet-
ing and will present a general cul-
tural program at 7 p.m. today in
the International Center.
The drafted constitution will be
submitted for approval and the
executive committee for the com-
ing year will be elected.
An Asian evening will also be
given when students from China,
Japan, Hawaii, Pakistan, Indone-
Aia, Iraq, the Philippines, Korea,
and Thailand will present music
and dances popular in their re-
spective countries. Yoga exercises
performed by an Indian student
will also be featured on the pro-
gram.
Asian articles, pictures, and in-
formative pamphlets will be on
display for students to look at be-
fore and after the meeting.
Asian students have been re-
quested by the Association to come
in their national costumes and to
bring their friends along.
Law School Head
To Give Awards
Dean E. Blythe Stason of the
Law School will present awards to
outstanding law students at 7:30
p.m. In Rm. 100, Hutchins Hall.
Following the award presenta-
tion, Robert Storey, president of

the American Bar Association, will
speak on "Law Schools and the Le-
gal Profession."
The lecture, sponsored by the
Law School Students' Bar Asso-
ciation, is open to the public.
Read and Use.
Daily Classifieds

On Tuesday as the nation went

to the polls, The
the fence saying
both Wilson and
certain of prize
election today."
On Wednesday
claimed "Hughes
Vote."

Daily straddled
"Supporters of
Hughes appear
in presidential
the paper pro-
Wins in Heavy

Thursday revealed a more
doubtful frame of mind with
"Wilson's -lead cut in doubtful
states; Republicans claim victory
for Hughes."
Finally Friday's paper blazoned
the true outcome in two inch high
letters announcing "Choose Wil-
son Again."
MANY OF the states which had
been conceded to Hughes on the
basis of narrow leads of several
hundred votes were shifted into
the Wilson column by final re-
turns.
But California's dramatic
count swung the main tide of
13 electoral votes which put the
former college president back
into the White House.
Today with 32 electoral votes
California is again in the "doubt-

ful" class although Eisenhower is
given a slight edge at the moment.
Together with about 10 other
undecided states, California may
well tell the take of this campaign.
Several of these are in the "solid
South" which may be broken by
Ike.
The remaining states are those
with large industrial areas whose
pro-Democratic tendencies are
often balanced by rural Republi-
can preferences. Michigan is in
this group.
Threats of world war were in
evidence in 1916 and the war is-
sue provided some of the hot-
test campaign debates as it has
in the current election. Running
on the slogan "He Kept Us Out
of War" Wilson gained strong
support from Americans who
hoped to avoid entanglement in
the growing European battle.
Theodore Roosevelt, waging a
strong campaign on behalf of
Hughes, concentrated on foreign
policy and urged that America
generously aid the allied nations.
Hughes also was interested in tak-
ing a stronger position toward
German aggression than Wilson
had up to that time.

The speech department's first
production of the year, the pre-
miere performance of the Hop-
wood play, "The Shadow and the
Rock," will be presented 8 p.m. to-
morrow, Friday and Saturday at
Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
The playwright, recent Universi-
ty graduate James Murdock, wrote
the 1950 Hopwood winning drama
under the supervision of Prof. Roy
W. Cowden of the English depart-
ment. The three act play, directed
by Prof. Valentine Windt of the
speech department tells the story
of a mother who lives in the sha-
dow of her dead war hero son,
but is forced to give up the past
in order to salvage the lives of
other members of her family.

iii liii

STENOGRAPH ERS
TYPISTS
Ideal Working Conditions
Top Wages
KAIZER-FRAZER CORPORATION
Willow Ryn, Michigan

-Daily-Ken Tootell
JAPANESE COUPLE STUDYING AT UNIVERSITY
* * * *
Professor Kato to Compare
Oriental, Western Literature

I

USES OF THE ATOM:

Magazine Reviews Advances
Developed by Phoenix Project.

Unborn generations will profit,
as a result of atomic research for
peacetime 'uses now going on at
the University's Phoenix Project,
William Cherniak of the English
department writes in the Novem-
ber issue. of U. S. A.
Cherniak's "Wrestling Human
Betterment From the Atom," tells
the history, accomplishments and
plans, of the Phoenix Project
which is an organization inde-
changes in food preservation. This
Rev. Kennedy
To TalkToday
Joe Kennedy, world famous
Evangelist minister, will speak at
3:30 p.m. today at the Wesleyan
Foundation of the First Metho-
dist Church.
During his missionary trips, Rev.
Kernedy has traveled over much
of the world. He has just recently
returned from Europe and Singa-
pore where he has worked with
young people's groups in the face
of Communistic threats behind the
Iron Curtain.
In order to speak here tomor-
row, Rev. Kennedy, is making a
special trip away from the series
of Evangelistic meetings that he
is conducting during this week at
White Lake.
Space Still Open
For Morse Trip
The County Democratic Com-
mittee has announced that a few
spaces are still available in the
"Morse Caravan" going into De-
troit at noon today.
Persons interested in going into
Detroit on the car caravan may
call Mrs. Mary Raphael at 6451
this morning.

pendent of the government.
Among the projects so far, Phoe-
nix scientists have discovered that
radio-active materials may bring
may make possible the long dis-
tance shipment of tree-ripened
fruit. In cancer research, Phoenix
has developed a new "wet process"
of photographing the growth pro-
cess of radioactive cells. This will
provide a way to study the growth
of cancer cells in comparison to
that of normal cells, according to
the article.
Cherniak says that other pro-
jects proposed by Phoenix con-
cern research on disease, indus-
trial techniques, agricultural dam-
age and productivity, genetics and
in other phases of science.
Faculty Members
To AttendMeeting
Eleven members of the faculty
and staff will attend a meeting of
the Michigan College Association
tomorrow in Albion.
Those attending are Marvin L.
Niehuss, vice-president; Robert L.
Williams, assistant dean of facul-
ties; Dean Charles E. Odegaard
and Assistant Dean James H. Rob-
ertson, of the literary college.
' Also. Pi ofessors Algo D. Hender-
son of the education school; Wil-
liam J. Schlatter and L. Clayton
Hill of the business administra-
tion school; Edward G. Groesbeck,
assistant registrar and the as-
sociation's secretary - treasurer;
Clyde Vroman, director of admis-
sions; Gayle C. Wilson and Don
Feather assistant directors of ad-
missions.

By BECKY CONRAD
"Literature is the expression of
ideas common to people of all na-
tionalities."
Working from this premise,
Prof. Kato, on leave from Nagoya
University in Japan, is making a
year's study at the University in
the comparative criticism of na-
tional literature on a Rockefeller
Foundation fellowship.
The method of criticism pre-
viously used worked for literature
having a cultural unity, but has
not succeeded in the comparison of
oriental and occidental literatures.
Joint Exhibit
To Be Shown
Anrexhibition highlighting the
contributions of engineering de-
velopments to architectural de-
sign will go on display at the Ar-
chitecture and Design Building to-
day through Nov. 20.
The exhibition, "The Reunion of
Architecture and Engineering," is
jointly circulated by the American
Institute of Architects and the
Smithsonian Institution Traveling
Exhibition Service.
Dean Leopold Arnaud of the
Columbia School of Architecture
organized the exhibit by estab-
lishing six sections each devoted to
a major development in building
design and construction: Cast
Iron, The Steel Frame, The Ele-
vator, Reinforced Concrete and
Glass and Standardization. Two
hundred enlarged photographs
mounted on 48 panes exemplify
Dean Arnaud's theories.
Lectures To End
Prof. Arthur Dunham of the
School of Social Work will hold
the last of two lecture and discus-
sion sessions Friday at Wayne Uni-
versity in Detroit.

Prof. Kato and his wife, also
working on the project, are com-
piling a list of criteria common to
both western and eastern civiliza-
tion, such as the eternal problem
of all peoples, "Where do we come
from, and where are we going after
this life?
Through this study, Japanese
students will be able to enjoy
Shakespeare with an open mind
just as an English student can
the great writings of the Orient,
according to Prof. Kato.
Both the professor and his wife
received their master and doc-
torate degrees in English literature
at the University.
Since her last visit, Mrs. Kato
has noticed some changes in cam-
pus customs. She has seen many
students carrying lunch bags,
something non-existant from 1937
to 1941 around the campus.

The mother will be portrayed by
Martha Beck, Grad.; Ralph Beebe,
Grad., will play Kim, her oldest
son, and A. Vernon Lapps, '54, will
play Pian, her retarded son. Jo-
anne Kaiser, Grad., will take the
role of Kelly, the daughter-in-law
and Nate Katter, Grad., will por-
tray Lorin, an artist.
The entire action of the play
takes place in the interior of the
Maine fisherman's home. The
show's one set has been designed
by Jack E. Bender, instructor in
the speech department.
Tickets for all three perform-
ances, are on sale from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m. daily and until 8 p.m. (cur-
tain time) on the nights of the
performances at the Lydia Men-
delssohn box office.
Tryouts To Meet
The Interfraternity Council try-
out meeting will be held at 5 p.m.
today in Rm. 3-B of the Union.
IFC president Pete Thorpe, '53,
will preside. There will be a dis-
cussion of the Fresh Air Camp
project and duties on committees.

SL CANDIDATES
ENGRAVINGS
for
Election Posters
may be
obtained- at
The Daily

I

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NOW!
SAVE '13 ito 2304)
IN OUR
SPECIAL PURCHASE
SALE

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