THE TAFT-HARTLEY ACT Bee Page 4 C, r Latest Deadline in the State 4Iai4h GENERALLY FAIR VOL. LXIII, No. 36 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1952 I -- 'THIS I BELIEVE': 2 Life's Purpose Seen i Givig EDITOR'S NOTE: In conjunction with the current lecture series, "This I Believe," The Daily is presenting statements of belief of prominent mem- bers of the University community. Today's article is by Ralph Stribe, '53, a member of the Michigan varsity football team and of Michigamua, senior honorary society. Stribe plans to go into missionary work after graduation. The second lecture in the "This I Believe"' series, "Ethical Problems in Public Life," will be presented by George N. Shuster, president of New York's Hunter College, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. By RALPH STRIBE { Man is in need of some universal moral and ethical order to which he must discipline himself. Only through such an order may man approach any reality of peace and understanding with his fellow be- ings. I believe the teachings of Christ provide the only means to such an order. At the same time these teachings bring forth the very best 4' efforts of man. I believe in the authority of these teachings through faith. My faith has been reinforced by many, experiences, three of which seem to have special significance. A tour of duty with the Korean Occupational Forces sharpened my quest for man's purpose .n life. pur years at the University created for me many doubts, but also sti lated me to search for answers. My days in Ann Arbor have convinced me that a life directed towards manifesting the self is fruitless. My last significant experience was a summer spent at a mis- sion station in the mountains of Puerto Rico. Here the oft repeated concept 'giving is receiving' became a living reality. I believe one must learn to give, and in turn one will receive. This I believe is the very basis of man's purpose in life-that of serving God and his fellow man. This besets his man 'with a ver- tical and horizontal relationship to which his activities should be r directed. These two relationships cannot be separated from one another in the activity of life. They are vital to each other. The vertical relationship is contact with God. To me it is praying, it Is understanding God's word, it is searching for truth, and it is understanding the individual's relationship to God and to reality. The vertical relationship develops and cultivates the guiding factor of life. It is an active relationship. It continues to mature in meaning and power as one learns to release the self to God. The horizontal relationship is contact with man. Personally I feel that most people have little conception of what they really can do, until they have to put forth some extra effort. This I have seen many times in football. Mostof us tend to become set in our ways. We become habitual in our actions. At the same time oppor- tunities to express ourselves surround us, but we neglect to grasp them. I feel that the majority of people fail to realize the great number of potential expressions which they possess. I know that everyone has limits to what he can do. But, often I do not know what my capacity is in certain tasks, nor am I fully aware of the variety of ways in which I might express myself. These latent *x- pressions must be released through activity, through contact, through seeking, and through giving. I feel that my expression must be directed by love and not hate or pride. I do not mean a, self-love, which is perpetuated by pride; but a self-releasing love. A love which is directed towards the well-being of others and not towards the glorification of the self. A love which embodies humility, compassion, forgiveness, understanding, and shar- ing. A love which is enduring. A love which is active and not passive. A love which is giving and not taking. A love which makes man a wanted human being and not a neglected wrangling entity. Individual success, which seems to bete goal of everyone today in our country, is but pure vanity when sougbt by means of hate and pride in place of love and humility. Paul said in his First Letter to the Corinthians, "If I give away all I have, and if I deliver my body that I may glory, but have not love, I gain nothing." Jesus said, "we are the salt of the earth" and "the light of the S H Adlai Winds Up Eastern Campaigning Ike Makes Quick Visit toChicago By the Associated Press Gov. Adlai Stevenson finished his Eastern campaign before a wildly cheering Brooklyn crowd last night with a blistering attack on Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's pledge to go to Korea. He called it a promise without a program. Stevenson was hailed in both Republican Queens and heavily Democratic Brooklyn by lanes of cheering people, lanes of red flares and bands on street corners along his route. The governor, referring to the Republican candidate's promise to go to Korea in an effort to emid the Korean War, said the Gen- eral had retreated even on the original promise. . . 4' IN CHICAGO last night Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said that if he wins the presidency "Com- munist contamination inside our government" would be stamped out through methods of "decency, fairness and of law." Invading Stevenson's home state, Eisenhower got a wild ova- tion at Chicago Stadium. On his way into downtown Chi- cago, where he got a warm wel- come from thousands who banked the streets in the loop area, Eisen- hower stopped for a brief speech at suburban Cicero, and later ad- dressed a crowd made up mostly of Negroes, 'on Chicago's South Side, pledging that as president he would dedicate himself to "elimination of second class citizenship in the United States." Meanwhile in Detroit, Emmett S. Cunningham, president of the National Council of Negro Demo- crats, announced yesterday that he is shifting his support to Eisen- hower. And in Dondon it was announc- ed early this morning that the Moscow Radio had declared that its favorite candidate is Vincent Hallinan of the Progressive Par- ty. Radio Moscow called repre- sentatives of both big parties the "true friends of Wall Street." 'M' Victory Vital To Bowl Chances Brosky Returns to Safety Positi A-tAr mr r . 0uur a.T ion; O'Connell '1o Lead Illini Pass Attack By ED WHIPPLE Daily Sports Editor Michigan seeks to tighten its grip on first place in the Big Ten today by beating Illinois for the first time in three years. A crowd of about 65,000 will be in the Stadium for the 2:00 .m. kickoff to watch the favored Wolverines make their bid for a fourth straight Conference victory. A win will move Michigan half a game ahead of Purdue in the Big Ten race. MICHIGAN and Purdue, only teams left undefeated in Conference play, are tied for the league lead with three wins apiece. The Boiler- makers entertain Michigan State -Daily-Alan Reid CHICAGO HOUSE PEP BAND BREAKS INTO "THE VICTORS" * * * - L *4* * * * world." Salt is of no use when it benefit when hid from sight. loses its taste nor is light of any By GENE HARTWIG Trick or treat forays, parties and a "Beat Illinois" demonstration combined to make Halloween a night of revelry on campus. Leading the "Beat Illinois" dem- onstration, West Quad's Chicago House pep band, paraded a crowd of about 60 cheering students along much the same route as last spring's panty raid. WITH A repertoire of "The Vic- Senior Pictures Senior picture proofs may be returned from 9 a.m. until noon today at the Student Publica- tions Bldg. Final deadline to include pic- tures in the 1953 'Ensian is Thursday, Nov. 6. Proofs may be returned any day from noon to 5:30 p.m. and from 7 to 6 p.m. any day next week until Thursday. HELP WEEK: Greeks Paint -Kids'_Camp Nearly 100 fraternity and soror- ity pledges gave the University Fresh Air Camp a sparkling new paint job yesterday as the largest "Help Week" project in local Greek history moved into high gear. Departing from the Union at 2:15 p.m., an hour later the pledges were industriously applying paint to the 10 frame cabins that house the camp's children during the summer. Under the direction of 10 pledge trainers and the Interfraternity Council staff, the sweat-shirted group, which included about 25 sorority pledges, got most of the t painting done by the time the 5 p.m. clean-up whistle sounded. Another group of 100 pledges is scheduled to complete the job to- day and possibly tomorrow. Dean of Students Erich Walter and Fresh Air Camp foreman Lawrence Camburn said they were pleased at the progress made on the project. The pledges appeared pleased, too. After mastering the intrica- cies of the ladder and paint brush by the end of the day, they suffered little worse than green hands and faces. A few of the more campaign- minded found the unpainted parts of the cabins a convenient medium for the expression of their politi- cal preferences. Without hazard- ing a guess as to the significance, it should be noted that Adlai slo- Adlai Appeal Some 300 University faculty and staff members endorsed an appeal by Columbia University faculty members asking sup- port of Gov. Adlai Stevenson. In a full-page advertisement in yesterday's Ann Arbor News, the local signers explained they had arranged for republication of the Columbia statement be- cause "they consider it a forth- right discussion of the issues and a judicious appraisal of the candidates in the current cam- paign. World News Roundup By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.-Four delegates from Allied countries with troops in Korea told the Communists in plain words yes- terday there will be no armistice in Korea based on forced repatria- tion of prisoners and appealed to the Reds to accept an armistice on UN terms. LA PAZ, Bolivia-The revolu- tionary government nationalized the big three tin producing com- panies of Bolivia yesterday un- der a decree implying there may be no payment for stockholders. * * *. LANSING - State government wound up its latest fiscal year in debt $65,341,208, state controller Robert F. Steadman reported yes- terday. tors," "Varstiy" and "Little Brown Jug," the band marched through every residence hall on campus in an orderly but enthusiastic dem- onstration. Surging into the Union the band found itself urged on by alumni arriving in the lobby for today's game. Comments from the gallary of alumni ranged from, "We used to be the same" to shouts of "Go Michigan, Beat Illinois!" lIOKs Battle Red Advances On KeyHill SEOUL--(P)-South Korean in- fantrymen, battered by intense ar- tillery and mortar fire, battled Saturday to block advances by some 1,500 Chinese Reds on Tri- angle Hill on the Korean Central front. Communist control of the blood height menaced the entire Allied sector. Thousands of ROK troops fought through the bloodiest 24 hours of the 19-day-old battle yesterday. After the South Koreans withdrew at dusk, the Reds hurled a bat- talion at a side ridge on Triangle Hill and one against Pinpoint Hill. on Sniper Ridge.' At least three ROK companies were wiped out in yesterday's sav- age fighting, but both attacks were checked. The Fifth Air Force reported five Allied planes were lost during the week, two of them to ack ack fire. Preparing to repeat last spring's performance of marching through local theatres, band members and followers found their entrance suc- cessfully barred from both cam- pus town cinemas by local police and theatre aides. Going on to tour all eight floors of South Quad after a victorious progress through women's resi- dence halls on Observatory Hill, the band, led, by Andy White, '55SM, drew both encouragement and quiziical glances from the somewhat bewildered denizens of the dorm. ELSEWHERE on campus soror- ity coeds disguised in white bun- ny costumes and other regalia cashed in on the season's bounty and filled their larders with can- dies and other sweetmeats in a - trick or treat tour of town. Adelia Cheever House was "haunted" last night but never- theless drew almost 30 student couples to a party held in an atmosphere of witchcraft and ghosts. In the true spirit of Halloween the elementary age groups of Ann Arbor were also out in force last night. Soaped car windowA were in evidence throughout the resi- dential areas where the trick or treat tradition still holds strong. Ann Arbor police could report no excessive vandalism last night but the fire department was forced to cope with an epidemic of leaf fires that kept equipment out of the station most of the evening. In Ypsilanti, police reported a quiet evening after a wave of van- dalism that hit outlying areas in the days before Halloween. in a non-conference affair this afternoon. Tossing Tommy O'Connell and his high elkss receivers Rex Smith and Rocky Ryan carry all the Illini hopes in the game that means little of practical value to the men from Champaign but everything to Coach Bennie Oos- terbaan and his Wolverines. Plagued with injuries that have decimated a once-powerful ground attack, Coach Ray Eliot's team has been knocked out of the Confer- ence race with losses to Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Purdue. THUS THE cellar-dwelling Illi-. ni have one dubious advantage: For the first time in some years they have everything to gain and very little to lose against Michi- gan. Illinois ,eoaches have been building large doses of the spirit that always runs high in Michi- gan-Illinois clashes. The Wolverines, by contrast, must win to retain anything but a prayer for the undisputed Con- ference championship and a Rose Bowl trip. * * * AFTER LOSSES to Michigan State and Stanford, Oosterbaan has brought his team back to trounce Indiana, Northwestern, and Minnesota. The Wolverine mentor is fighting over-confidence with the fact that Illinois beat Michigan 7-0 in both 1950 and '51. Today's 38th meeting between the two rivals finds Michigan with 25 victories, Illinois with 12. There have been no ties. The pressure is all on the Mich- igan defense that ranks No. 1 in the Big Ten, as does the Wolver- See 'M' Page 3 $1 000,000 Ohio Prison Riot Stopped- By the Associated Press The million-dollar Halloween re- bellion that sent eight buildings at.! century-old Ohio Penitentary up in flames virtually ended last night. All but a handful of 2,000 riot- ing convicts returned to their cells in the burned and battered Colum- .bus prison at 10:30 p.m.-six hours after the "bad food" uprising started. EXACT ESTIMATES of prop- erty damage weren't available, but prison officials said the damage would run "upwards to a million dollars." The eight burned build- ings were stone or brick with wood- en interiors. Many were aged, dat- ing back to the early days of the last century. The convicts returned ahead of a scheduled big push by 600 Ohio National Guardsmen. The guardsmen were mobilizing outside the prison when a dozen die-hard prisoners armed with knives gave up and allowed their fellow inmates to return to the cell-blocks. About 100 prisoners still milled about the prison courtyard. Meanwhile, a four-day rebellion by convicts at Menard State Pris- on in Chester, Ill., was also put down last night by an action- packed display of force from heav- ily, armed state policemen and an ultimatum delivered at the direc- tion of Gov. Adlai Stevenson. r ., I MEADER-DAWSON RACE: Local Politicos Predict Congressional Victory By TERI YOUNGMAN and JERRY HELMAN With the election only three days away, both the Democratic and Republican Parties of Washtenaw County are fairly confident that their candidates for the House of Representatives will win. However, the forms of confidence are different. GOP WORKERS have pointed out that "Maine, Vermont and Washtenaw County always go Republican" and this election shouldn't be any exception. They also noted that the student poll taken by The Daily at the beginning of the semester which showed a two-to-one victory for the Republicans is a good T indication of the prevalent trend inthMETRdPoLITANa District. As a result, many workers ex- * pressed surprise that there was OCIOlog any concern over Rep. George .W Meader's chances for re-election. *' * *By AR E E AT DEMOCRATIC headquartersr By MARK READER many workers were hopeful that The complexity of a modern me- Prof. John P. Dawson of the law tropolis which has bewildered gen- school would pull an upset. erations of Americans is for the "Most of us realize that it first time under careful laboratory SL DANCE TODAY: Dorsey's Band To Play At 'Autumn Nocturne' The orchestra of Tommy Dorsey, America's "sentimental gen- tleman of swing," will provide music for the SL-sponsored all campus dance "Autumn Nocturne" to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. today in the Intramural Bldg. Tickets, priced at $3.60, are on sale at the Administration Bldg. today. and will be available at the door of the Intramural Bldg. tonight. * w * * *- DORSEY'S ORCHESTRA was voted the two-to-one favorite in a SOCIAL PROFILE: epartment Releases Report on Detroit "campus poll conducted by the J-Hop committee at registration this fall. Singing with Dorsey's band will be Marietta Knox, his latest vocal, discovery. She will share the spotlight with Mary Hud- son. Taking the -tenor saxophone chair spot will be Sam Donahue, former bandleader from this area, Half-time entertainment will be provided by the Novelaires. a quar- population althoughi have interviewed only since January. researchers 735 people "There is a considerable oppor= tunity for increasing the voting participation of the citizens," the report notes. _ ; 4' r * . . t.. total population has moved to the area in the past 30 years, and14 per cent originally lived in South- ern states--many in rural areas. Prof. Freedman believes this in- The report deals with "Parti- cipation in Community Affairs." I