EDITOR'S NOTE See Page 4 I E Ltw ditan Latest Deadline in the State 41,, :43 a t tU *0Wlveola FAIR AND WARMER VOL. LXII, No. 6 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1952 EIGHT PAGES S 3 Stevenson Cites 'Gifts' To Officials Money of '48 Campaign Used LOUISVILLE, Ky.- () -Gov. Adlai E. Stevenson announced last night his "gifts" totaling $18,150 to eight top Illinois appointive of- ficials from money left over from his 1948 political campaign fund. The Democratic Presidential nominee said the gifts came out of a surplus of $18,744.96 left from the campaign plus $2,900 in sub- sequent contributions from certain + Chicago businessmen. He did not account for the dif- ference between the total of the gifts and the fund total. Stevenson said his financial showdown with the Republicans will go further-he will make pub- lic his income tax returns for the last 10 years after he returns to Springfield, Ill., today. Sen. John J. Sparkman of Aa- bama, his Vice Presidential run- ning mate, has promised to do the same thing, Stevenson said. By implication he thus suggest- ed that his Republican opponent, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow, do the same. STEVENSON said the $18,744 left over from the campaign fund plus some additional contributions was used as a special fund to sup- plement the salaries of eight key officials who he said went to work for the state at financial sacri- f ices. His list sbowed that Fred Hoehler, Director of the Depart- ment of Welfare who received two $1,000 gifts, donated $25 to the campaign fund. J. Edward Day, Administrative Assistant and Director of Insur- ance, who also received a total of $2,000 in two separate gifts, made a $50 contribution to the 1948 fund. Four Michigan sources were among the donors to the 1948 + gubernatorial campaign fund of Gov, Adlai Stevenson, publication of the donors' list disclosed. Contributions from the four ranged from $5 from a Detroit , woman to $2,500 from the CIO United Auto Workers Union. Stevenson had been under heavy pressure from Republicans to make public details of the "Illi- nois fund," especially since the ° GOP Vice Presidential nominee, Sen. Richard M. Nixon, explained to the nation last week the $18,235 expense fund raised in his behalf by wealthy Californians. Korean Talks Reopen Today MUNSAN, Sept. 28-(o)-Allied and Communist truce negotiators resume their talks today at the end of their eighth straight week- ly recess but there was no indica- tion the long deadlock on prisoner exchange was any closer to solu- tion. Delegates were scheduled to meet in Panmunjom at 11 a.m. f(9 p.m. Saturday EST). Barring a change of attitude on the top governmental level, it ap- peared that military negotiators had progressed about as far as they could go. The Reds insist that all pris- oners be returned home. The United Nations command has emphasized that no prisoner will be forced 4o return to Red rule. Moody Visits Local Dems Senatorial candidate Blair Mnri hrpp~ze in and~ ouit of Ann M ! # # a1 " # s " " * * * Spartan Victory Is 16thStraight Yewcic, McAuliffe Shine as MSC Overcomes Early Michigan Lead By DICK SEWELL Associate Sports Editor Michigan State's colossal Spartans unleashe4 a power-packed gridiron attack to overcome an early two touchdown Michigan lead and defeat the Wolverines, 27-13, before a sellout throng here yesterday. The victory-16th in a row for the smooth-running State squad gave them the longest consecutive win streak in the school's history. It also marked the second time Spartans have won three in a ,row from the Maize and Blue. MSC'S LIGHTNING-LIKE attack, featuring the accurate tosses of quarterback Tom Yewcic and " i -Daily-Don Campbell END OF THE LINE-MSC HALFBACK BILLY WELLS (14) IS BROUGHT TO THE TURF BY MICHIGAN TACKLE JIM BALOG (72) AND UNIDENTIFIED TEAMMATE The isCallIt Football, Sir NAw~A First Impressionl iIf+ (EDITOR'S NOTE: The author is a graduate of Oxford University now doing research at the University. :He gives his impressions of the first college football game he has seen.) \By MKE FABER LETTERS TO N. D. LUSHING- TON-PENDERGAST, ESQ. Back in 1823, at Rugby School, England, a chap by the name of William Webb Ellis caught the ball, and in defiance of every conven- tion, started to run with it. And so it all began. A casual visitor from that Georgian age would find difficulty in recognizing the game as it is played in America today. Indeed he would find difficulty in recognizing it as a game at all. The first simple impression is of war. Two armies with apparent- ly limitless reinforcements. fully armoured, face each other in a grim trench - warfare without trenches. In the battle itself, life is short and extinction is violent. Indeed, looked upon as a game, the punc- tuation is the feature which can be criticized most validly. The whole action of the afternoon if taken consecutively would last about fifteen minutes, and the longest play runs for perhaps ten seconds. One misses the fluid con- tinuity of action, the graceful con- struction of thought and enter- prise which characterizes soccer. All, and to my taste too much, has been sacrificed for the at- tainment of power. Exhibitions of power are impressive, and the game is often tense because the play, even when stolid, is always potentially eruptive. The longed for may occur at any moment. The scheme of action is inter- esting to watch as it manifests it- self in the calling of the plays, but for the most part the plan is hidden in the recesses of the coach-general's mind, or in the mind of his quarterback-lieuten- ant. Again for the power of per- fect team co-ordination is sacri- ficed the occasional genius of in- dividual improvisation-a genius which can fill the afternoon with radiance. But there are moments of bril- liance. Two especially I remember. Once yesterday when Michigan State was 13 points behind, Mc- accompanied him for the first time. One could sense a new ela- tion in the way he ran, and many who had experienced such feeling in some obscurer field- even amongdthe ranks of Sus- cany-shared in his joy and somethingrof his triumph. And thent again, on a; somewhat earlier passing play, the ball was spiralled into a distant open space -I felt like Zeno as I watched its smooth hyperbola-and a team-' mate,. I think I fished the name ofl Perry out of the acclamation, raced leaping to catch it on his finger- tips, foiling his interceptors to reach the promised land. That was precision. It was laughing at distance and time and rate of change. It was the sporting of men. These two jewels I remember- and some minor sparklers too-but' the rest of the afternoon was a setting of magnificent, but unin- spiring, might. The magnificence of a vast packed stadium in the colourful sunshine, the magnifi- cence of two massed bands stir- ring in one fine romance the souls of a hundred thousand dim little individuals, the magnificence-a, Wagnerian conception - of two wonderfully trained and condi- tioned teams hitting each other with such power that sensitivity could almost feel the earth itself give tremor. World News Roundup By The Associated Press - LONDON-Russia has rejected the latest Western bid for a big1 four power meeting to draw up a treaty to restore independence to occupied Austria, Moscow radio announced early yesterday. The U.S., Britain, and France submitted to Russia Sept. 5 pro-; posals for an Austrian indepen- dence treaty which they said met previous Soviet objections to the. long-delayed pact. The three Western powers asked for four-power talks in London beginning tomorrow to draft thel treaty.I * * * , _ _ _ MSC Students Placid After Victorious Game, By ZANDER HOLLANDER Daily Feature Editor The goal posts stood untouch- ed after yesterday's workmanlike Michigan State victory testifying to Maize and Blue fans that even MSC can learn to take winning in stride. The State fans' attitude seemed a complete turnabout from their reaction to the 25-0 shellacking they gave the Wolverines last year. Then they daubed the cam- pus green - and - white, scrawled 'MSC" everywhere, got in brawls, and wound up their sojourn with an unsuccessful assault on the goal posts and hours of raucous roam- ing through Ann Arbor. * 4 course. of the 54 years of rivalry between the two schools. A better than packed stadium, with hundreds of spectators clog- ging aisles, witnessed the some- what inglorious return of King Football to Ann Arbor. Scalpers were known to have gotten as much as $20 for a single ticket, outstripping last year's known high of $15. STARTING the game on the Michigan side of the field, Gov. G. Mennen Williams took a round of derisive booing at the half when he semi-circled the gridiron to the MSC 50 yard seats, escorted by Mrs. Williams and an honor guard of ROTC members. The Gover- nor's concession to political reali- ty was underlined by the Univer- sity Marching Band's highstepping execution of an "election year" show, featuring a White House, donkey, elephants, and admoni- tions to vote. With amazing pre- cision and sparkling originality the 135 man army whipped throughone after another dazzling routine. Under the direction of crack Bandmaster William D. Revelli, the Maize and Blue musicians seemed to overshadow the MSC Band, which played a series of dance melodies. See MSC, Page 8 the hard-running of Captain Don McAuliffe and wingback Billy Wells, chewed up 223 yards rush- ing and 210 passing while holding the Wolverines to 161 and 151. . However, Michigan remained in the game until late in the final stanza and managed to give the Spartans more than one uneasy moment. during the afternoon. Scoring twice in the first quarter the Wolverines forced the green-shirted invad- ers to go all out to avert upset. Tailback Ted Kress gave Michi- gan an early lead with a six point sweep around his own right end at 9:50 of the first period. THE SCORING scamper capped a 22-yard drive set up by Lowell Perry's dazzling return of s Y.W, cic punt midway in the quarter. Gathering the pigskin in on the midfield stripe, perry scampered down the western sideline to the State 22. Four running plays moved the ball to the five, and on the next play Kress moved behind a key block by quarterback Ted Topor to paydirt. Russ Rescorla's at- tempted placement was low and the Wolverines led, 6-0. FOLLOWING Rescorla's kickoff, Michigan State tried three plays without success, and Yewcic punt- ed to halfback Don Oldham who returned to State's 37. On the first play from scrim- mage, left-handed Topor dropped back and lofted a long pass to Perry who snatched it up on the 12 and waltzed on into the end zone. This time Rescorla's kick sailed through the goal posts to give the Blue underdogs an impressive 13-0 advantage. It took the Spartans just one play from scrimmage to get back into the contest. SPARTAN safetyman Jimmy El- lis returned the kickoff to the State 30. Taking the ball on a handoff from Yewcic, swivel- hipped McAuliffe poured through a gap off tacle, cut to the right sidelines, and raced 70 yards for the score. Slonac added the point after touchdown. See WOLVERINE, Page 6 Fraternities OK Central FoodBuying By MIKE WOLFF Interfraternity Council house presidents and their alumni ad- visors gave the go-ahead yester- day to extensive plans for a cen- tralized fraternity food buying pro- gram. After a lengthy discussion at the special 10 am. meeting, the IFC voted to permit their EXcu- tive Council to draft a cnstutu- tion and by-laws for at non-pofit' corporation that wi serve as the n ileus for the new set-up. The proposed constitution and by-laws will then be submitted to the house president's assemblyfor revision and approval before go- ing to the individual fraternities for further study. A report on the mechanics of the buying program will also be submitted. THE BASIC idea behind the plan is that mass buying through a professional purchasing agent will enable the participatingfra- ternities to save more money tha is possible under the present prac- tice of separate buying, Thorpe said. In a. talk before last week's house president's meeting, How- ard Walsh, who organized a sim- ilar system at Michigan State two years ago, indicated that 3t might beijossible for the frater- nities to obtain an average net savings of three percent on their year's food bills Thorpe pointed out that the corporation would also provide an experienced and permanent buying organization 'for the fraternities. It would relieve the men of many of their current buying problems The history of this seventh try at a cooperative buying program goes back to last springWhen "the IFC voted to set up an interview ing board empowered to select a fraternity buying agent who would organize and present a plan to the house presidents. The board included the Dean of Students Erich A. Walter; Fran-' cis C. Shiel, manager of Univer- sity Service enterprises; Homer Heath of the Ann Arbor Trust Company, Thorpe, and Dave Ken- nedy, '54E, chaiman of the Ste- ards Committee. Fall Rushing OpensToday More than 700 rushees will at- tend open house functions at 44 campus fraternities from 2 to 5 and 7 to 9:30 p.m. today, mark- ing the official opening of fall rushing. Open houses will also be held TEHRAN, Iran - Premier Mo-j hammed Mossadegh issued the THOUSANDS sported tins after draft of a stiff new law regulating several hours of sunny skies and the nation's press yesterday and balmy weather, with temperatures asked all interested to study it and hovering in the mid-seventies and present their views within 15 days. the only shade provided by a circl- ing blimp. As State pulled ahead the air- Positions open craft's outline was nicknamed "MSC Shadows," a takeoff on the For Commi ttee Lansing school's anthem. Michigan rooters took comfort from the unexpectedly good show- Petitions for positions on the ing the Wolverines made against student steering committee of the the over-inflated Spartans, espe- literary college conference can be Icially in the opening quarter. And picked up starting at 8 a.m. Mon- those with a statistical turn of day in Rm. 1010 Angell Hall, ac- mind noted hopefully that Michi- cording to Sanford Cain, '53, chair- gan's total point edge over MSC man of the committee. 1still .stood at 1075 to 262 in the I o o ... .... ., ..... _ _ __ POLICE MAKE THREE ARRESTS: State Game Draws Crowd of Ticket Scalpers <4 * * * The Union front steps became a miniature market-place yester- I day, as ticket scalpers moved in to unload scarce football ducats on fans unlucky enough to be without seats for the big game. Students and professionals alike were busily hawking the precious pasteboards up until game time, and getting as much as $15 apiece for 50 yard-line seats. <"> 1 5 PLAIN-CLOTHESMEN from city and state police forces were also on hand at various scalping spots around Ann Arbor. Local police reported one arrest yesterday and said state officers had picked up two other dealers. Michigan law prohibits scalping (defined as selling tickets for higher than face value prices), and local police indicated that fines for the offense could range up to $100. But fear of arrest did not seem to bother hawkers, for they openly pinned tickets to their lapels and took on all comers. However, 9,20, :_