PAGE TWO 'I"I[E MCMGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7," 956 4 PA flU! 'WE~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7,1956 Wellwishers Get Returns In Lansing (Continued from Page 1) "It has been a rewarding per- sonal experience to be associated with you in this-high endeavor, for which I am most thankful. "God Bless You." Visits Wayne County Williams arrived home at 10:30 p.m. yesterday, after a visit in Wayne County. He retried to his den where he kept personal tabulations of elec- tion returns, aided by Paul Weber, his press secretary. The governor made few ap- pearances during the, night, pre- ferring to keep up-to-date on late returns. About 1:30 a.m., Williams said "Early but incomplete returns are encouraging for the Democratic Party, but we must wait for the outstate returns before saying anything sure." Thomas M. Kavanagh, attorney general, and Sanford A. Brown, state treasurer, observing election returns at the Governor's home, both said the Democratic Party had achieved "great success" dur- ing the election. 'National Timber' James Crowley, a speech writ- er for Williams, said "In 1954 Williams took the state by 253,- 000 votes." He predicted that "Wil- liams will. win by more than that this year while running against a national hero. "This," Crowley said, "makes him national timber." Meanwhile, Weber commented "Cobo may go ahead for awhile, but the Wayne County non-vot- ing-machine precinct votes will pull" the governor into the lead. Weber said, "Williams this year took 72.3% of the votes in the 144 machine precincts of Wayne County." He pointed out that this was a decidedincrease over "1954, when he took 70.3 % ." Anxiously awaiting the final word, people in the governor's home chuckled at 3 a.m. when Williams said "It looks good, doesn't it?" -Daily-John Hirtzel MIXED EMOTIONS-Both Democrats and Republicans sat out a six-hour vigil in front of South Quad's Club 600 television set. FROM DETROIT: Cobo Holds Out To End Despite. Williams Lead V By ALLAN ST1LLWAGON special To The Daily DETROIT-Despite trailing by a substantial margin all night, Detroit Mayor Albert E. Cobo, GOP gubernatorial candidate, held out to the bitter end and finally con- cended victory to Democratic in- cumbent G. Mennen Williams at 4 a.m. this morning. Reports from Mayor Cobo's cam- paign headquarters, located in the Fort Shelby h'otel, Detroit, indi- cated the GOP still held faint hope and a slim mathematical possibil- ity that their candidate would come through until then. Fair Weather Friends Before midnight last night, it appeared Mayor Cobo had only fair weather friends. Not many supporters were to be found in his campaign headquarters. S h o r t I y afterwards, however, things began to pick up as people came in to get outstate results. The general atmosphere was quiet, and lacked a sense of expectancy. President Eisenhower's victory wasj assured and Mayor Cobo trailed4 by a considerable margin. 'Down the Drain' About 1 a.m. campaign manager Provost admitted he thought the Mayor's chances had gone "down the drain." The crowd thinned out, some packing bags of the food with which the headquarters abounded. The select remainder moved up- stairs to the Mayor's suite to listen to Democratic candidate Adlai E. Stevenson's, speech of concession,! one describing the address as a "really dandy speech." At 1:45 a.m., with returns show- ing to be 100,000 votes behind, Mayor Cobo wished to make a statement but was dissuaded by his managers. At this point, the GOP gubernatorial aspirant ob- served, "One thing I never do is kid myself, and there's no use kidding myself now." 'We're Pulling Ahead' Five minutes later, incoming re- ports showed a substantial im- provement in the Mayor's position. A well-wisher remarked that with a "miracle," he might win. To this, Mayor Cobo replied hopefully, "It won't take a miracle-we're pulling ahead." Dorm Fees May Go Up Next Year By JAMES ELSMAN, JR. Odds are better than fifty-fifty that residence hall dwellers will be paying more for their rooms next year. It will depend on whether dormi- tory labor gets a raise in the near future. Administrators say this depends on whether University employes set the pace with a raise, which finally depends on how much the University is awarded from the State Legislature of its general operations request. It can be said it is likely that University employes will receive some raise which means self-liqui- dation employes will get some raise, which ultimately means a rent hike for the residence halls. University administrators weren't willing to give a yes or no answer to the possibility of a raise, but there was a hedging implication of a yes. "rancis C. Sheil, manager of service enterprises, said an in- crease was "always a possibility." Wilbur K. Pierpont, University vice-president, commented, "In a period of increasing costs. we are reviewing all of our sources of income." Both men emphasized there will be no hike next semester. Pierpont also pointed out that an increase "could be justified" by zooming costs of supplies. The University ranks third to Illinois and Northwestern in room and board costs, Shiel noted. A double without a wash basin costs $770 now. Since 1954 rates have catapault- ed $70. There is some speculation by informed student sources that students may be asked to forego their Sunday evening meal, in- stead of paying the rent boost. Shiel was sure the raise, if any, would reflect only cost increases of labor and supplies. Student leaders are being watchful lest any raise represent an effort to hasten payment of self-liquidation bonds. SGC To Hear Forum Plans For Students Student Government Council will hear a plan for student forums at its weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union. Tentative plans include a forum every two or three weeks covering an issue of major importance to the campus. The forums will be led by SGC members, but any student will be allowed to express his views. Student forums were part of the original SGC plan. To date, little has been done to set up such a program. The Education and Social Wel- fare Committee will give a report on the academic counseling study presently being conducted by SGC. Also on the agenda is a motion regarding football games held during Thanksgiving vacation. The Council defeated a similar motion two weeks ago. THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IN ANN ARBOR cordially invites you to a public lecture KARMA - THE LAW OF CAUSE AND EFFECT Miehigan League - Thursday, Nov. 8- 8 P.M. Listen to: "RADIO THEOSOPHY" Every Sunday 12:15 P.M. -- Station WPAG (1050 kc.) Adlai, Ike Stir Little Controversy (Continued from Page 1) gressed, a hand-wringing Demo- crat in the back of the room in- sisted, "Doesn't mean a thing un- til we hear from up-state Utah." Between appearances by Betty, Furness and Leonard Hall solo's, 600 students consumed four gal- lons of Law Club cider, 10 gallons of coffee, 500 donuts and the left- over donkeys. One alleged "South Quad In- dependent" insisted he had "de- vised a system of gerrymandering which, if combined with my unique system of election procedure,' would carry the prohibition can- didate in on a landslide." One student joined the South7 Quad crowd with paper and pen-a cil in hand "because I figured I'd find some excellent subjects for my psychology project." When Stevenson lost the Demo- cratic stranglehold on Chicago, Wesley Stewart, '60, announced, "All you Democrats are going to have to repair the holes in those little shoes you're wearing." I Wanna' Go Back ... A Stevensonian across the room,1 conceding defeat and looking for a new candidate to back, retorted, "Adlai lost; all I can say now is GO BLUE!" . Although the customary wild student election bets were at a minimum, a few staunch Demo- crats suffered heavy financial losses in defeat. "I lost more than Stevenson did," Connor Lazarov, '59, de- clared. "This is going to cost me three steak dinners." Another bettor on Stevenson said he got "great odds on Adlai, but I found out after I made the wager, he had already indicated he was going to concede." Only Personal Victory Students For Stevenson Co-- ordinator Martin Adelman, '58, felt the election indicated a per- sonal victory for President Eisen- hower rather than a GOP tri- umph. "The vote in the race for House of Representative seats doesn't show any kind of a Republican trend," Adelman said. Lewis A. Engman, '57, President of Young Republicans, said "This is a very big victory for the Re- publican party and something which certainly shows the re- sponsiveness to the fine program President Eisenhower has carried I out." A democratic deserter, acknow- ledging defeat when he heard President Eisenhower swept New York, headed for the post office so he "could change that write- in ballot and ride the winner." Anti-Soviet Mob LUXEMBOURG ()-A mob of 2,000 anti-soviethdemonstrators all but wrecked the Soviet Legation in Luxembourg yesterday. Only action by police kept them from burning the building. The demonstrators, mostly stu- dents protesting Soviet military1 action against Hungarian rebels, tossed furniture out the windows onto a courtyard bonfire. (Continued from Page 1) The 250-vote margin by which Republican challenger Chris Del- Sesto led incumbent Democrat Dennis Roberts was subject to possible change by the 11,000 ab- sentee votes not scheduled to be counted until Dec. 5. Big Democratic victories were in Illinois, where substitute can- didtae Richard Austin defeated Gov. William Stratton, and Mas- sachusetts, where former state treasurer Foster Furcolo defeated Lt. Gov. Sumner Whittier for the seat being vacated by Republican incumbent Christian Herter. Farm unrest is being adjudged the major factor in upsetting Re- publican governors Leo Hoegh in Iowa, Joe Foss in South Dakota and candidate Warren Shaw in Kansas, although the latter suf- fered from a party split following his primary victory over the pres- ent Governor Fred Hall. Democrats Herschel Loveless, Ralph Herseth and George Dock- ing were all leading in their races. Democrat Arnold Olsen was beating Gov. J. Hugo Aronsen in Montana, and Albert Rossellini was heading to replace Gov. Arth- ur Langlie, who was defeated in his Senatorial bid yesterday. Republican C. Williath O'Neill defeated former Office of Price Stabilization chief Michael DiSalle for the seat being vacated by Sen- ator-elect Frank Lausche, and Edwin Mechem was beating Dem- ocratic Gov. John Simms of New Mexico. And Republicans were also win- ning Democratic seats in West Virginia -- Cecil Underwood over Robert Mollohan for the seat of unsuccessful Senatorial candidate William Marland. Ike Sweeps Victoriously Across U.S. (Continued from Page 1) -Daily--John Hirtzel SQUINT, STRETCH, AND SNEAK -- Bitten-fingernails, cigarettes, coffee and narrowed eyes were the order of the day for Law Club TV-viewers ... Hungry appetites knew no difference between don- key and elephant cookies ... 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The work Is vital; the opportunities for ATOMICS INTERNATIONAL, you, as a creative engineer, are correspondingly great. CONTACT YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICE TODAY Make an appointment NOW to see North American Repre- sentative on cam- pus. OR WRITE: Mr. J. Kimbark, College Relations £". P 7 Days Left until S.G.C. Elections Democrats Gain Seat (Continued from Page 1) general, who clearly defeated New York Mayor Robert Wagner, al- though the latter ran heavily ahead of the Democratic ticket in his efforts to hold Senator Her- bert Lehman's Democratic seat. Late returns gave Javits 2,769,000 to Wagner's 2,582,000. West Virginia Chapman Revercomb, former Senator, who is generally con- sidered a conservative, the winner by a 61,000 vote margin over West Virginia Governor William Mar- land. They were contending for the seat vacated by the death of Senator Harley Kilgore, a Demo- crat. Governor Frank Lausche of Ohio, a phenomenal Democratic vote-getter who had unexpected difficulty in pilling up an 83,000 vote lead against Senator George Bender. Representative Frank Church, young Idaho Democrat, appeared to have won with a substantial 13,- 000 vote lead over incumbent Senator Herman Welker, whose conservative views had offended many Idaho Republicans. Glenn Taylor, former Senator and 1948 running-mate of Henry Wallace on the Progressive ticket, was a write-in candidate, but did not draw enough Democratic votes to defeat Church. states as New York, Ohio, Cali- fornia, Massachusetts and Steven- son's own home basenofd llinois. Democratic leaders figured they were done if they lost Pennsyl- vania, California or Massachu- setts. Takes Corn Belt Marched out in front in the corn belt, where the Democrats had counted on a "farm revolt" to give them a hand. They got one, in spots, but not enough of one. It appeared to be adding up to a victory even more mammoth, In electoral votes, than the one Presi- dent Eisenhower marked up four years ago. He won then by taking 39 states with 442 electoral votes to 9 states with 89 votes for Stev- enson. It added up, too, to an impres- sive demonstration that the bulk of the American people prefer the Eisenhower version of a "new prosperity to the version of a "new America" Stevenson futilely un- furled before the voters. Over this election hung the pall of gun smoke from Egypt in the Middle East and from Hungary, fighting for freedom against im- possible odds. Unquestionably this meant votes for the man who has served his country in uniform and in the White House. Assurances to Voters From Eisenhower had come as- surances to the voters that peace was the paramount aim of his ad- ministration. As he put it late in the campaign: "For the race of man, if there is no peace, there can be no hope. The building of that peace is my all-embracing goal. It is my deter- mined, unshakable, fixed purpose. So it shall remain forever." In vain Stevenson tried to con- vince the country that the Eisen- hower administration had swept perilously close to war with a foreign policy Stevenson said had "bluffed and blundered the United States into a shattering diplomatic disaster." Times of Crisis In these times of crisis abroad, the people clearly preferred to keep President Eisenhower in office for another term-heart attack, ileitis operation and all. Unquestionably, too, the Presi- dent's great, magnetic, personal popularity helped propel him to his victory. In many places he ran ahead of the Republican ticket. President Eisenhower was su- premely confident all the way. And as the returns came in from yes- terday's voting.he hopped out in front at the start and stayed there, like a champion, all the way. Smile, Tie Trademarks Of Williams Gov. G. Mennen Williams, who was re-elected Governor of Mich- igan yesterday for an unprece- dented fifth term, is one of the most colorful governors in the United States. He is nationally famous for his own unique trademarks - the name "Soapy," his familiar big smile, and of course, the ever- present green polka-dot bowtie. In spite of his attractive per- sonality, Williams had to conduct a very vigorous campaign to hold onto his seat in Lansing. This was partly because in two of his four previous victories, he slipped in by a very narrow margin, need- ing a recount in both cases to certify his victory. And his oppo- nent this year, Mayor Albert E. Cobo of Detroit, gave him one of the toughest campaigns of his ca- reer. Toured 83 Counties In the course of his campaign, Williams toured all 83 counties in Michigan, shook an estimated 200,000 hands, and made frequent appearances on television. In answering Cobo's charges that he had been a "do nothing" governor, Williams cited his rec- ord and leveled charges of his own against his opponent. Among the accomplishments of his administration, he pointed to his work on the Mackinac Straits Bridge, more beds for the mentally ill, a nationally-praised farm mar- keting program, an extended edu- cational program, increased State Police personnel, a fair employ- ment practices law and other civ- il rights legislation. Hit GOP Legislature He declared that he could not accomplish all he wished and at- tempted to because of Republican control of the State Legislature and several state departments. He laid some of the blame on Repub- lican commissioners for shortcom- ings in Michigan's highway and school construction programs. Williams is a native of Michi- gan. He was born in Detroit 45 years ago, and attended Detroit University school. He later went to the Salisbury school in Salis- bury, Conn., then to Princeton University, where he received his B.A. degree in 1933. He was graduated from the Uni- versity Law School in 1936 with a J.D. degree. Shortly after grad- uation, he became an attorney for the Social Security Board n Washington, D. C., the first step in his career. In 1938, he returned to Michigan as Assistant Attor- ney General. About a year later, he was ap- pointed an executive assistant to the United States Attorney Gen- eral, then special assistant to the Attorney General, Criminal Di- vision. Has War Record During the Second World War, Williams served as an Air Combat Intelligence Officer aboard a num- ber of aircraft carriers. In the course of his military service, he received 10 battle stars, the Le- gion of Merit with Combat V, and participated in three Presidential unit citations. He was discharged in 1946 as a Lieutenant Commander. After his separation from the service, Williams was made depu- ty director of the Office of Price Administration for Michigan, lat- er became a Democratic member of the Michigan Liquor Control Commission. He resigned this post to run for governor in 1948. He ran four times on the Demo- cratic ticket and emerged victor- ious each time. His fourth term, won -by a majority of more than 250,000 votes, was unprecedented. His fifth and latest victory is not only unprecedented; it is unheard of. Williams is married to the for- mer Nancy Quirk of Ypsilanti, and is the father of three children, a son and two daughters. Dulles Progress Report Favorable WASHINGTON (M) - Secretary of State John Foster Dulles was reported yesterday to be "progres- sing very favorably" from his in- ;testinal operation. IThe State Department said he is already giving subordinates in- structions on how to deal with foreign policy developments. Secretary Dulles underwent sur- gery three days ago to remove cancerous growth from his' large intestine. 1c t A a -.{ DIAL NO 2-3136 LIMITED ENGAGEMENT STARTS TODAY {p. 1 I Shows Today ' 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. "Solid gold . MICHIGAN DIAL NO 2-2513 fill r-- I entertainment" -Times FRI., SAT., SUN. 8:15 AUGUST STRINDBER( I Sometimes a girl has to be a little 4, E .; I 1! II II I 'III