CONGRESSIONAL: ISSUES DISCUSSED See Page 4 C, , r Latest Deadline in the State Daii4 Old CLOUDY, COLD VOL. LXV, No. 36 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1954 EIGHT PAGES I DI H DS ICHIG FIRST CO FERE CE 'SETBACK Prof. Hunter Comments On Housing Fire Victims Get Aid, Donations: HALTED BY HOOSIERS-An unidentified Michigan back is su Among those stopping the Wolverine runner are Le s Kun (43), Joe Ma Stevenson Blasts -GOP'Propaganda' Raps Eisenhower, Nixon, McCarthy In Nationwide Television Address By The Associated Press Adlai E. Stevenson charged last night that "the President him- self" has affirmed Republican campaign material which has been standard Communist propaganda for years." The 1952 Democratic presidential candidate attacked President Dwight D. Eisenhower, Vice President Richard M. Nixon, Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) and other Republican leaders in a nationwide television and radio address. He told a Democratic rally in the closing days of the campaign he fears that "irresponsible politicians, tearing the nation apart in search for votes, have recklessly damaged our freedom, our self re- spect and our unity of national purpose." Meanwhile in Washington President Eisenhower, in an unprece- dented political move, telephoned 10 citizens around the country By JOEL BERGER "Since the University acts 'in loco parentis' for unmarried stu- --Daily-Dick Gaskill dents under 21 years old, it should varmed over by seven Hoosiers, have something to say as to fire aglish (87) and John Gentile (42). conducive conditions in student rooming houses" Prof. Thomas Hunter of the engineering college said yesterday. W o r NibwATSAlthough women students are YYorIA e carefully looked after, the profes- n sor said he felt the University Rp ushould take a more active interest in housing used by male students. By The Associated Press Also yesterday donations of By Te Asociaed Pessclothing and the organization of LONDON-The waterfront strike an educational grant in memory that crippled eight great ports of of Florence Vandergrift were aft- this island nation for almost a ermaths of the Monroe rooming month is over, house fire here Thursday morning The 44,000 strikers - most of which killed Miss Vandergrift and them quit work in defiance of their her landlady Florence Hendriksen. union leaders-voted yesterday to In discussing ramifications of go back to the docks tomorrow and the fire, Prof.Hunter said he would start moving more than 500 million "be pleased to work for the Uni- dollars worth of imports and ex- versity as a building inspector." ports idling in ships and in ware- "You can't just whip through a houses- home when inspecting it," he ex- * * *plained. This is why city council- McCarthy Defends man Dean W. Coston said recent- ly it would probably take 10 years! McCarthy (R-Wis) stepped up his to completely inspect all local WASHINGTON-Sen. Joseph R. rooming houses. pre-session defense against a Sen-i Top coats, shirts, blouses, ate censure move yesterday with , sweaters, shoes, skirts, trousers new requests to a Democratic sen- and other wearing apparel were ator and to Atty. Gen. Herbert R. brought to the Student Publica- Brownell. toins Bldg. during the past two, The Wisconsin senator touched days for evacuees of the home. on the three points of censure pro- This clothing will be distributed posed against him in: tomorrow. Checks made out to 1. A wire to Sen. Gillette (D- The Daily Fire Relief Fund for Iowa) asking for "a clearcut state- distribution to the 14 people may ment" before Tuesday's election be sent to the Student Publica- on whether Gillette will vote for tions Bldg. this week. censure at the special Senate ses- Carol Walsh, one of the origi- sion starting Nov. 8. nators of an "educational grant"' 2. A letter to Brownell urging as a memorial to Miss Vandergrift, him to seek an indictment of for- said yesterday the fund would be mer Army Maj. Irving Peress un- used to help University students der the false statements statute. from the fire victim's home area * * * around Grand Rapids and Muske- Dixon-Yates Plan it gon.- WASHINGTON - Opponents of the Dixon-Yates private power plan predictedat a Senate Anti-monopo- ly subcommittee hearing that 1. it will never take effect and 2. if it i 'Hlet Judie Board Hears Cases Of Cheating (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth in a series of articles' inter- preting the current plans, problems and functions of the University's studet judiciary councils.) By JANE HOWARD What happens if you cheat on a bluebook? If you're in the literary college, and you're caught in the act, chances are you'll be summoned before the Literary College Ad- ministrative Board-a seven-mem- ber body whose little-recognized job it is to hear cases of student cheating, plagiarismand falsify- ing of records and drop slips. A disciplinary group, similar to the Engineering Honor Council, the Administrative Board draws three of its members the student representatives-from Joint Judic iary Council. Robertson Chairman Faculty members hold the re- maining four Board seats, with Assistant Dean James H . Robert- son of the literary college as Chair- Students whose cases call for Board action are always inter- viewed first by Robertson. In rare instances Dean Robertson settles casses with individual students so that Board decisions are not nec- essary. Norm Giddon, '55, Joint Judic member, estimated that actual hearings are held "a maximum of four times a semester." r Punishments Fit Crime- Instead of financial penalties, the Board usually imposes penal- ties dealing with the -courses in which cheating has occurred. Students who appear may face suspension from the University, having to repeat the course, or acceptance of automatic 'E's' as final course grades. However often students receive only 'E's' for the examination on asking them to help set off a chain reaction of Republican votes Tuesday. "This Is the President" Prefacing e a c h conversation with "this is the President," Presi- dent Eisenhower talked from his White House office with a soror- ity house cook in Illinois, an un- employed secretary in California, a farmer in North Carolina and a housewifp in Texas among others. He asked each of them to do him a favor by voting and asking 10 of their friends to vote in the elections that will decide whether Democrats or Republicans control the next Congress. Each of the 10 friends was to be asked to relay the request to 10 more friends, and so on. An attempt to blow up the au- tomobile of Rep. George H. Ben- der (R-Ohio) miscarried yester- day when two sticks of wet dyna- mite failed to explode. Rep. Bender is running for the Ohio Senate seat now held by Dem- ocratic Sen. Thomas A. Burke. The car, a 1946 Cadillac, was un- occupied and was parked in the drive of Bender's 14-acre estate at nearby Chagrin Falls. It suffered only minor upholstery burns caused by a burning fuse. Dynamite Wet Police said the fact that the dy- namite was wet apparently was the reason it failed to explode. Bits of paraffine paper wrapped around the dynamite were blown about the car when a detonator cap went off. Patrolman Frank Barnard of Chagrin Falls reported, "It defi- nitely was not an attempt on Rep. Bender's life. It was more a threat or a scare." Bender also said, "Somebody is trying to scare me" and added: Police said that apparently the dynamiter had placed the bomb in the car after Bender parked it. There apparently was no attempt to kill Bender, they said, only to wreck his car. ISA Legislature N'ominations Open Nominations are now open for election to the House of Repre- -Daily-Dick Gaskill MICHIGAN SCORES-Fred Baer scores the Wolverines' lone touchdown of the afternoon. Florian Helenski (25), Hoosier quarterback looks on dejectedly. Hoosier Win, Bitter Cold Mar Football Afternoon By LEE MARKS .LMRing band, in top hat formation, First score in the Indiana game band alumni led students in "I came at minus two minutes when Wanna Go Back to Michigan" and a mongrel dog romped past n "College Days," which no one diana's line into the end zone. semdtrmmb. Fred Baer scored a few minutes seemed to remember. later for Michigan but in the end Watch for Gate Crashers it was Indiana's day. All things Right after Michigan's first considered it was a pretty medio- touchdown, Major, Lambda Chi cre afternoon. Alpha's mascot dog, dashed on to Bitter cold and brief snow flur- the playing field but was unable ries had spectators huddled in to score as cheerleaders distracted blankets, heavy coats and winter him back to the stands. clothing. "The nationally famous Before the game, stadium em- University of Michigan Marching ployees backed ticket . takers Band" wore top coats during the watching for possible gate crash- pre-game show and even cheer- ers. leaders needed jackets by half- Hopes were lifted when the loud- time.CheergEnthu st.speaker announced a first period Cheering as enthusiasticpart- scoreless tie at Evanston where 't prt Northwestern was trying to pin ly because dazed fans could an upset on unbeaten Ohio State. quite believe Michigan's Rose Bowl'Fn pstub thioSU-NU. aspirations were on the wane Final outcome of the OSU-NU not until the final whistle blew and game was still unknown when dis- showed Indiana still ahead 13-9. appointed fans filed down the grey Aware of the bitter cold, conces- stadium ramps but Ohio had pass- sionaires hawked hot chocolate for ed to a 14-7 victory. 25 cents a glass and fleets of taxi So students realized they'd go cabs stood waiting to take pas- home for Christmas, leaving Pasa- sengers, willing to pay 50 cents dena for another year and old 13-9 Upset Hurts Rose Bowl Hopes Interceptions Costly as Helinski Paves Way for Underdog Victory By WARRENsWERTHEIMER Associate Sports Editor Michigan got a taste of its own medicine yesterday as a stubborn, fired-up Indiana eleven led by Quarterback Florian Helinski upset the Wolverines, 13-9. A gathering of 48,502 surprised fans saw almost a duplicate of the Michigan-Nofrthwestern contest as the Maize and Blue dominated play throughout ,the game only to see the Hoosiers take advantage of a re- covered fumble and an interception to tally their two touchdowns and then stubbornly hold onto the lead. Helinski, who knows a lot about forward passing whether he is on offense or defense, not only made it 118 consecutive passes- he has thrown without an interception (a Big Ten and probable national record), but he also snared three Wolverine heaves, all of them within his own 20-yard line. In addition he scored one of the winners' touchdowns, passed for the other, kicked the extra point, punted, and 'directed the Hoosiers throughout the contest. Hoosier Recover Fumble After Michigan had taken a 7-0 lead, the Indiana quarterback was given his.first opportunity to shine when Wolverine Halfback Ed Shannon's fumble was recovered<+-- by Ron Rauchmiller on the Michi- ganowing two running plas,sp Helinski passed to Don DomenicBy for 20 yards and a first down on N T VT k the Maize and Blue four-yard line. Four plays later he barely made it over from a couple of inches out. B i * L a The try for the point was wide. Michigan took the kickoff which followed and proceeded to move down to the Indiana 20 before He- Northwestern's pass defense, steel- linski got in front of a Wolverine like for three quarters, suddenly aerial and ran it back 14 yards to collapsed in the fourth period yes- his own 33. Ten plays and 67 yardstedyanDveLgttlfda latr, ndina entint th led.terday, and Dave Leggett lofted a later, Indiana went into the lead. 24-yard touchdow'" pitch to Bob Fifty-five of these yards were eat-24adstoughdo.1ranktc h o en u byfiv Heinsk tosesin-Watkins to give No. 1 ranked Ohio en up by five Helinski tosses in-Saeahadpesd147timh cluding a 20-yard pass to Milt State a hard pressed 14-7 triumph. Campbell for the score. Ohio State thus took undisputed Helinski ended the Indiana scor- lead in the Big Ten race. ing for the day by kicking the ex- The Wildcats, playing before 41,- tra point and as it turned out that 650 Homecoming patrons, threw a was all the winners needed. scare into 14-point favored Ohio Yet despite all of Helinski's he- State by holding the Associated roics, Michigan still.had a number Press' top-rated team to a 7-7 of 'chances to recapture the lead standstill until the decisive Leggett and the ball game, especially in pass. the second half. Four times in the OSU Remains Unbeaten last 30 minutes, Bennie Ooster- The toss kept the Buckeyes un- baan's eleven drove down within beaten in six games this season Indiana's 25-yai'd marker and four and pinned a five-game losing times the attack sputtered to a ; streak on Northwestern. The Wild- halt. cats have beaten Ohio State only The last drive provided the most once in 10 years and have failed exciting and heartbreaking minutes to win a Big Ten game since 1952. of the game. Taking the ball on their own 25 The Ohio State victory, however, Ting lsth alonfeirtsong25,was rather hollow for the Buckeyes with less than five minutes to go did not look like potential national in the encounter, the Wolverines champions today as a Northwest- began to throw the pigskin as they em sophomore quarterback from. marched down the field in a des- Rock Island, Il., Jack Ellis, stole perate race with the clock. A idvda oosi i is ol. screen pass from Lou Baldacci to idvidual honors in his first colle- Dan Cline picked up 19 yards and giate appearance Dunc McDonald hit Ron Kramer Ellis' three successive pass com- for eight more.. Baer carried for pletions in the second period 15 yards and a first down 'on the touched off a 54-yard Northwest- Indiana 33 and McDonald again en surge in six plays that full- connected with Kramer for 4. back Bob Lauter capped with an On the next play Terry Barr 8-yard scoring smash. dropped a pass as he was standing Bobo Scores for OSU all alone in the left flat with but But the Buckeyes, flashing their one Hoosier between him and the best form of the game, retaliated goal line, quickly to tie the score, 7-7, with See BAER, Page 6 sophomore fullback Hubert Bobo drilling 31 yards for the payoff. Bobo played the entire 60 min- utes. The defensive play of end Ziggie Niepokoj and halfback Dick Ran- icke was outstanding for North- by injuries in the bruising battle before halftime. By A.i. PressWriter Leggett's triumphant touchdown Associated Press Wie pass, on the second play of the fin- In the language of the nuclear ale, climaxed a 52-yard drive in age, a reaetor plant becomes crit- six plays. ical when it begins to -convert Northwestern passed. up two fine does, President Eisenhower take a political shellacking. may Goblins Quiet "The goblins will get you if you, don't watch out" was not true last night when local po- lice reported soap streaked win- dows as the only manifesta- tion of vandalism ushering Hal- loween in. Most of Ann Arbor's young- sters spent their evening "trick or treating," dressed in im- promptu costumes. A mixed student-faculty cast will appear in the speech depart- ment's presentation of "Hamlet" Wednesday to Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The first major work on the de- partment's fall playbill, the play is a revival of a summer produc- tion directed by B. Iden Payne of' the University of Texas. Nafe Katter of the speech de- partment will play the title role, Claudius will be portrayed by Prof. Richard Burgwin, Gertrude by Gwen Arner, and Ophelia by Bev- erly Pemberthey. '54. each, back to campus. Half time festivities grads ambled out mumbling powerhouses of yesteryear. had theI band performing "Victors" the way it would sound in foreign; lands. Leading off with a dancer from the land of "Aloha," the band portrayed an Indian fakir, a Chi- nese rickshaw, a gondolier and, to prove "Victors" is bigger than the' iron curtain, a Soviet volga boat- man. Top hatted Michigan Band Alumni presented their sixth an- nual show, performing both before the game and briefly during half-I time. Surrounded by the march-i aboutI Statistics Mich. Ind. First Downs.......18 11 Rushing Yardage .236 149 Passing Yardage . .52 103 Passes Attempted ..23 19 Passes Completed .. 8 10 Passes Interc'pt'd by 0 4 Punts..............2 7 Punting Average ..38 30 Fumbles Lost ...... 1 1 Yards Penalized ...10 55 ALLIES PROCEED WITHOUT RUSSIA: Peaceful Use of Atom Nears Decisive BELGIUM a. n... .. ...... LSW EDEN... .... ': ",.. t aBIRMINGHAM ot S - aAN FtH AERM A N: HANFOR '' ;®CANADAI. A I'l-i FRANCE BERKELEY UNITED BOKHAVEN PORTUGAL ::HtNA Atlantic . :TzFORMOSA .cean 4 * ENIWETOK LOS ALAMOS - BURMA to power. President Eisenhower's atoms-j for-peace machinery, proposed for the first time last December in the United Nations, appears to be nearing that stage late in 1954, after some jockeying with the Rus- sians. Nearly 11 months afterthe Presi- dent first proposed his idea, the plan began to strike off sparks in the.U. N. scoring chances at the outset of the first period. The Cats marched 76 yards with the opening kickoff behind the passing of Dale Pienta and the running of Jim Troglio, each of whom was injured in the See WATKINS, Page 7 Hanlon To Speak On World Health I