Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 37, November 04, 1952 |
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oters to Decide U.S. Future Today
JOHN SPARKMAN
Final Adlai Appeal on
TV. Radio
CHICAGO, Nov. 3.—(UP)— [Adlai E. Stevenson ended his Jcampaign for the Presidency tonight by promising that if elected tomorrow he will make a “solution” and an armistice on the “miserable Korean stalemate his first order of business.
In an election eve broadcast, the Democratic nominee called upon the American people to close ranks and he promised that j if Dwight D. Eisenhower, his 'Republican foe, is victorious he would accept the verdict with I “traditional American sportsman- i ship.”
Half-Hour Broadcast
Stevenson shared the half-hour! broadcast over all four major radio and TV networks with 1 President Truman, Vice-president ,Alben W. Barkley and Sen. John [Sparkman of Alabama, the vice-presidential nominee.
Stevenson said:
“The Korean war and the mis- j erable stalemate there must be | freshly reviewed by fresh minds. Solution, settlement and an arm-fistice there is the first order of I public business.”
One Aspect But Stevenson declared that the Korean fighting is only “one as-tpect of the Communist conspiracy i against the free.”
He said that now is no time to ! hesitate in “doubt and confusion about the dangerous world we live in,” and he declared his dis-| belief of campaign talk regarding "a nation divided, feeble in faith,
, ruined by debt, threatened with bankruptcy, a nation afraid, a nation cowering before her des-I tiny.
Courage and Confidence
“No, I’ve seen and heard the deep-throated courage and confidence and faith of strong men
GOVERNOR ADLAI E. STEVENSON
VOTE TODAY
GENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
RICHARD NIXON
Ike Pleads For Unity And Faith'
idattifoitt.
Vol. XLIV
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Nov. 4, 1952
No. 37
Daily Broon Snafu Delays DT Press Run
Tbe Daily Trojan was three hours late hitting the stands yesterday morning—and It’s all the Daily Bruin's fault.
On Monday mornings, both the DT and the DB are printed in the same shop. Yesterday one of the Daily Bruin’s page mats was burned accidentally. That meant a two-hour wait for the DT while the DB crew went scurrying to Beverly Hills to get another mat.
The fire in the DB page mat is believed to have started from some torrid prose written in praise of the Bruin victory over California.
The DT, which usually starts its press run at 8:30, had to wait until 10:45 to start rolling.
Naturally, both newspaper staffs took the delay with good grace—only seven men were injured.
Party Analysis They're Watching
Topic of PSA Dinner Tonight
and women and happy children— ————— people w'ho still believe in one j glad he had avoided “political ex-another. in spite of all the timid, 1 pediency.”
doubting men,” he said. | Stevenson arrived by plane
Stevenson ,who tomorrow votes from his Springfield headquarters
at little Half Day, 111., and then returns to the executive mansion at Springfield to receive the returns. closed his campaign by stating that “I want to win.” but that win or lose “I have kept faith with myself during the campaign.”
He said he would await the
and was greeted by his running-mate, Sen. John Sparkman of Alabama, who reached Chicago earlier to join the Democratic presidential nominee on the air.
Confident Just before leaving Springfield, reporters askefl Stevenson if he felt “confident,” and he replied,
results “in good temper and sober j “Yes, I do.”
contentment.” j He added that he felt “partial-
Fight To Win ly refreshed’’ by a .rest of a day
Stevenson claimed that he had and a half in Springfield after fulfilled his promise on accepting campaigning a total of 32,000 the nomination to “fight to win,” 1 miles across the country, and that he had done so in belief ! Stevenson admitted, however, that it was "better to lose the that he has been “struggling with election than mislead the people." the speech” he will make tonight He said he had risked votes by 1 and "I don’t feel so good” about “talking sense," and that he wras it. ,
Speech Tells Need For Blood Donors
As the Korea casualty lists rise, so the need for whole blood on the battle-front increases.
This was pointed out by Robert
by Tom Eilken
Will it b? Ike or Adlai? According to a poll conducted yesterday among faculty and students. the presidential race is hot; the outcome will be close.
The question asked was “Who do you think w’ill be our next president and why?”
Answers showed that many Eisenhower backers were picking Stevenson to win even though they were voting for Ike. Stevenson supporters felt that they were voting for the winner.
Coaches Pick Ike The first opinion was credited battlefronts," Glenn said, “is the to Jess Hill who was caught w-alk-
Ari impartial analysis of the Republican and Democratic parties and talks endorsing both will be given at the Pi Sigma Alpha election night banquet in the Commons dining room at 6:30 tonight.
Dr. Totton J. Anderson, associate professor of political science, will give a non-partisan interpretation of the major parties’ platforms and tactics, while Dr.’ Frank P. Sherwood, visiting professor of public administration, will speak for the Democratic party, and Dr. Wilbert L. Hindman, associate professor of political science, will give a speech for the Republican party.
“After the formal talks, the rest of the evening will be devoted to a general analysis of the returns,” said Dr. Hindman.
Facilities will be provided for listening to the election returns. Price of the banquet will be $1.75. A few' dinner reservations are left and may be obtained in the office of the political science department.
Students who do not attend the banquet are invited to the after- j dinner talks.
The Democratic and Republican parties agree on one thing. They want lots of voters to go to the polls today. But while a vote is a vote, they are unusually interested in the size of the college student turnout.
Since we, as college students, are a small minority of the voting publfcT it might be wise to know why we have been courted so avidly by both parties.
The Democrats and the Republicans have obvious reasons for wanting our votes. They each want us to vote for their particular candidates. Since most of us will be voting for tihe first tirre, we college students are a powerful and unexploited minority. We are an nuknowif quantity politically, and can have a lot to do with the outcome of national and local elections.
Both parties want to en*ist us early in our political life. They are looking to the future. As each election year approaches, we will become more powerful politically. In 1952 we are students. In 1956 we will be insurance salesman, engineers, housewives, school teachers, doctors, and secretaries. A few will be running for officc.
The Democrats and the Republicans have more at stake than our brief appearance at the polls today. They want us to be well informed. They want us to think and to express ourselves. They want us to have opinions..
How we vote, how many of us vote, why we vote: The answers to these questions will provide vital information to the Democratic and Republican parties. They believe that we hold the future of their parties, that what we do today will influence political thinking in many elections to come. They say that we will some day control their parties, that we will form their policies, that we will make thejr decisions, and that we will be the leaders of public opinion.
The Democratic and Republican parties think we are important. How important are we? Regardless of the outcome of the election today, we won’t mean a thing politically unless we vote.—D.H.
Us Foreign Enrollment
Increases by 65
DT Night Owls To Chart UP Election News
Daily Trojan staffers will centralize their activities in the DT city room tonight to tabulate election results and check United Press wire for the lat?st w'ord on the progress of Ike and Adlai.
“Students who would like to receive first-hand information on returns may join us until we close up shop in the wee hours of the morning/’ said Editor Charles Sweet.
CP will pound out returns and DT reporters will tabulate the results on blackboards.
The DT city room is located on the fourth floor of the Student Union.
SC's Election Views Aired
use of whole blood.”
"The blood students donate next week will be in Korea within sev-
Glenn. a member of the Red en days." he said.
Cross board of directors and Col- Quoting from a recent letter lege Council adviser, at a recent from Gen. Mark W. Clark. Glenn SC Red Cross chapter meeting. said that today 1200 pints of “Give the combat GIs an even whole blood are needed each break by donating your blood." he i month in the Far-east conflict.
ing briskly into the Student Union. His opinion?
“I don't know who the next president will be. but I hope it will be Eisenhower. I think he is the best man for the job,” Hill stated adamantly.
Jesse Mortensen, head track coach and freshman football
said, in urging chapter members The blood must be used within coach, didn’t say who he was for. to meet SC's 1952 Blood Drive 10 to 14 days after it reaches but he believes Stevenson will quota of 880 next week. Japan. . *
With almost 700 individual ( “This life blood for the wound-pledges to date, SC students and ■ ed must continue to flow’ to. us faculty have until Monday to ar- I from the States if we are to save range for blood donations. | the lives of our brave men who
Actual donations will be taken are defending the freedoms we I on campus next week in the base- I hold so dear,” General Clark’s ment of Town and Gown dormi- ' letter concluded.
I tory. Pledges on campus are being employees on the government pay-
“One of the decisive factors in taken at the Red Cross booth lo- roll. Add to this the labor vote | saving lives of countless of our i cated between Bovard auditorium brave men wounded ot Korean [ t.nd Founders halL
but he win.
Ties Shoelaces
Looking up while tying his shoelaces in front of the Commons. he said.
"Look at the number of votes he already has to start with—especially that which will come from
and that of the solid South,” he said.
Another who thought Stevenson would win was Mike Wise, junior telecommunications student.
Interrupted in the middle of his musings while sitting at the base of Tommy Trojan, Wise said, “I don’t think Eisenhower has lured enough Democratic voters from their fold He has neither made a definite policy stand nor has he stated specifically What phases of the Democratic government he intends to change.” Chancellor Speculates A few moments lfiter, Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid came out of the Administration building. Queried, he put it simply and affirmatively, but with a twinkle in his eye.
“Mr. ‘Ike’ Eisenhower will be the next president because more people will vote for him than for his opponent,” the Chancellor said.
Roy L. French, head of the School of Journalism, and avow'ed Republican who said he is voting for and hoping for Eisenhower, thinks Stevenson will win.
Crosses Fingers With fingers crossed he said. “Stevenson will win. First, nobody know's who is running for Democratic vice-president—at least they don’t know much about him.
“Second.” he said, “Stevenson will receive the 171 electoral votes from the old South, and he will get the 95 more necessary for election from the CIO, federal em-
ployees, and the Communists.
“Can you imagine the Communists voting for Eisenhower?” he asked.
John Witt, junior pre-law student, concurred with Professor French.
Three Blind Mice
Three other members of the coaching staff, Joe Muha, Don Clark, and Bill Hargesheimer, w'ere stopped en route to a secret grid conference.
“This is a coordinated staff,” assistant coach Muha said.
“Whatever Jess Hill said goes with us,” Clark chimed in.
“We really think together,” Hargesheimer added.
With that your reporter gave up in his search to get line coach Mel Hein's opinion.
Sue Hutchinson, junior music educational student, was reading the plaques on the Trojan Column.
Woman’s Intuition
She summed it up beautifully from the feminine; standpoint.
“Ike will win. The people are tired of high taxes and they don’t want federal seizure of the tide-lands. They also want the Korean war stopped,” she said.
“Also, Eisenhower is the man to straighten out our foreign policy.” she added.
Fred Neil, DT Sports Editor, w-as in the “Eisenhower-for-but-Stevenson-will” camp.
“Although I prefer Eisenhower, Stevenson will be our next presi-
Four hundred and forty-nine foreign students from 61 different countries are enrolled at SC—an increase of 65 over last year’s registration—according to figures released from Foreign Student Adviser Dorothy H. Zech’s office.
Canada has sent 40 students, who make up the largest
number of this semester’s foreign enrollment from a single country. Thirty-two students from India and 31 from China are enrolled. Three from Russia Other countries represented are the Philippines, 26; Iraq, 21; Iran, 18; Japan and Brazil, 14; Turkey, 13; Israel and Mexico. 12; Germany and Egypt, 9; Costa Rica. 8; Korea and Greece, 7; Denmark, j England. Italy, Columbia, Pan-j ama, and the Netherlands 6:
I France, Czechoslovakia, Norway,
| and Poland, 4; Belgium, Guata-I mala, Sweden. Switzerland, and | Russia, 3; and Latvia, Lebanon, i Lithuania, Macao, Peru. Spain,
I South Africa, Jordan. Hong Kong,
! Finland, Chile, and Hungary. 2.
Countries with one student each ! are' Burma, Argentina, Austria, Cuba. Ecuador, Estonia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Jamaica. Nigeria, Pakistan, Viet Nam, Thialand. Rumania, and Portugal. Eleven students are stateless.
Don’t Speak English Nineteen students enrolled in the Cinema department Saturday, and the same number are postdoctoral. Four German policemen —w'ho don’t speak English—are registered in the School of Public Administration for special studies.
Men students predominate, 322 to 75 women, and new students number 153. Eighty-eight are here on permanent visas, compared to 309 arrivals on temporary visas. The three Russian students are here on permanent visas.
Most Are Graduates The Graduate School has 189 foreign student enrollments, while the Senior class has 43. The Junior class has 40, and the sophomore and freshman classes have 30 and 28. Other foreign students are either special or unclassified.
More foreign students—72—are enrolled in- the School of Engineering than in any other school. The School of Commerce trails by 40 with a total foreign enrollment of 32. Other schools and departments with foreign registrations are cinema, 22; education and public administration, 21; architecture. 18; international relations, chemistry, and pharmacy, 13; and economics and psychology, 11. Other students are scattered throughout other schools.
Scholarships Scholarships were given to 322 foreign students, 17 through the Economic Cooperation Administration. Seven students are attending SC under the International Institute of Education scholarship, and two are here on a Methodist church scholarship.
Two students received a PEO scholarship, one student is here on a National Council of Jewish Women scholarship, and another, is
dent. His campaign has been much more specific than Ike’s. The peo- ; pie want to know what the next , president will do. Eisenhower has ; failed in this respect.” Neil said. ]
One opinion came from a student who can’t vote, N* S. Malik, senior in public administration, a ! foreign exchange student from India. He was another w'ho thought the Democratic candidate would win.
“I think Stevenson .will win. I have great confidence in the people of the United States; who, on the basis of democracy, will pick the best man,” Malik said.
Don Beckhart, sophomore predental student, thinks that the voters of the U. S. believe that the two-party System is in jeopardy if the Democrats win.
One-Party Threat
“Everyone knows that Truman is run by his political bosses. Stev-ensoif is run by this same group.
If the Democratic candidate wins again, the party will become so entrenched that we will then be a government with a one-party system.” Beckhart said.
And so it went, first Stevenson, then Eisenhower.
Many of those polled were reluctant to voice any political opinion. Dr. Baxter summed it up, not only tactfully but accurately.
He said. “The next president will be either Eisenhower or Stevenson, or to be more accurate, men's Stevenson or Eisenhower.” grant.
BOSTON, Nov. 3 — (UP)— Dwight D. Eisenhower tonight scorned “the lusty language of a booming rally’* and closed his Republican campaign for the Presidency with a simple-stated plea for “unity and faith.”
The Republican Presidential candidate, fatigued after nearly 52,000 miles of campaigning, ended his stretch driv* toward the White House in an area that is normally Democratic. He addressed thousand* in Boston Garden, finishing what he has termed the “toughest fight” of his life and leaving hi« future up to the voters.
Help* Lodge
As much as &r himself, Eisenhower appearedfto be working for the election of Republican incumbent Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge who is opposed by Rep. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.).
Eisenhower hammered what he considered one the primary issues of the campaign—Communism.
“The menace of Godless Communism does not stalk us merely as a version of old czarist ambition,” he said.
“The final source of this menace is nothing so simple as material need.” the former five-star general added.
“Poverty must be fought by free men for its own evil—and that fight needs no other purpose.
Slap At Hiss ,
In the United States we must have a social program so effective that no doctrine of political desperation can ever take root.”
With an unidentified but none the less plain slap at Alger Hiss, Eisenhower said “Communism does not breed in slums alone.” “The most notorious Communist agents of our day were not standing in breadlines when they made their traitorous decision ot serve the Soviet Union,” he said. "They came all too often from places free from suffering, the hardships and the injustices of life.”
Toughest Fight
Eisenhower, in the closing hours of the campaign, has admitted freely that his quest for votes was the "toughest” thing he had ever tackled.
Eisenhower, working from a prepared-for-delivery speech in the Boston Garden tonight, then went to the studios of WBZ-TV-to make a nationwide, last-minute appeal for votes—an appeal which his staff said could cost about $250,000, with its coverage of four radio networks and four television networks.
To Vote at Columbia Eisenhower and his wife, following their many appearances in Boston, were scheduled to leave late tonight for New York where they probably would arrive at Grand Central station at 6:35 a.m. tomorrow. Eisenhower and his wife’ planned to motor to a Columbia university polling booth on 119th street and then return to their residential quarters on Momingside Heights.
Deadline Today For SC Faculty Chest Donations
Today is the final day of the SC faculty-staff Community Chest drive with only one-fourth of the $3750 goal having been reached.
Nevertheless, co-chairmen Donald M. Searcy, director of the extension division, and Carl Hancey, dean of University College, “are encouraged as to the extent that the staff has taken part in the drive, and are hopeful that a large response will come today.” Contributions may still be turn-registered with an American Wo- ed in at campus headquarters, 259
club, Brussells Belgium
Administration building, or sent through campus mail.
— ----
>
Object Description
Description
| Title | Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 37, November 04, 1952 |
| Description | Daily Trojan, Vol. 44, No. 37, November 04, 1952. |
| Full text | oters to Decide U.S. Future Today JOHN SPARKMAN Final Adlai Appeal on TV. Radio CHICAGO, Nov. 3.—(UP)— [Adlai E. Stevenson ended his Jcampaign for the Presidency tonight by promising that if elected tomorrow he will make a “solution” and an armistice on the “miserable Korean stalemate his first order of business. In an election eve broadcast, the Democratic nominee called upon the American people to close ranks and he promised that j if Dwight D. Eisenhower, his 'Republican foe, is victorious he would accept the verdict with I “traditional American sportsman- i ship.” Half-Hour Broadcast Stevenson shared the half-hour! broadcast over all four major radio and TV networks with 1 President Truman, Vice-president ,Alben W. Barkley and Sen. John [Sparkman of Alabama, the vice-presidential nominee. Stevenson said: “The Korean war and the mis- j erable stalemate there must be freshly reviewed by fresh minds. Solution, settlement and an arm-fistice there is the first order of I public business.” One Aspect But Stevenson declared that the Korean fighting is only “one as-tpect of the Communist conspiracy i against the free.” He said that now is no time to ! hesitate in “doubt and confusion about the dangerous world we live in,” and he declared his dis- belief of campaign talk regarding "a nation divided, feeble in faith, , ruined by debt, threatened with bankruptcy, a nation afraid, a nation cowering before her des-I tiny. Courage and Confidence “No, I’ve seen and heard the deep-throated courage and confidence and faith of strong men GOVERNOR ADLAI E. STEVENSON VOTE TODAY GENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER RICHARD NIXON Ike Pleads For Unity And Faith' idattifoitt. Vol. XLIV Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Nov. 4, 1952 No. 37 Daily Broon Snafu Delays DT Press Run Tbe Daily Trojan was three hours late hitting the stands yesterday morning—and It’s all the Daily Bruin's fault. On Monday mornings, both the DT and the DB are printed in the same shop. Yesterday one of the Daily Bruin’s page mats was burned accidentally. That meant a two-hour wait for the DT while the DB crew went scurrying to Beverly Hills to get another mat. The fire in the DB page mat is believed to have started from some torrid prose written in praise of the Bruin victory over California. The DT, which usually starts its press run at 8:30, had to wait until 10:45 to start rolling. Naturally, both newspaper staffs took the delay with good grace—only seven men were injured. Party Analysis They're Watching Topic of PSA Dinner Tonight and women and happy children— ————— people w'ho still believe in one j glad he had avoided “political ex-another. in spite of all the timid, 1 pediency.” doubting men,” he said. Stevenson arrived by plane Stevenson ,who tomorrow votes from his Springfield headquarters at little Half Day, 111., and then returns to the executive mansion at Springfield to receive the returns. closed his campaign by stating that “I want to win.” but that win or lose “I have kept faith with myself during the campaign.” He said he would await the and was greeted by his running-mate, Sen. John Sparkman of Alabama, who reached Chicago earlier to join the Democratic presidential nominee on the air. Confident Just before leaving Springfield, reporters askefl Stevenson if he felt “confident,” and he replied, results “in good temper and sober j “Yes, I do.” contentment.” j He added that he felt “partial- Fight To Win ly refreshed’’ by a .rest of a day Stevenson claimed that he had and a half in Springfield after fulfilled his promise on accepting campaigning a total of 32,000 the nomination to “fight to win,” 1 miles across the country, and that he had done so in belief ! Stevenson admitted, however, that it was "better to lose the that he has been “struggling with election than mislead the people." the speech” he will make tonight He said he had risked votes by 1 and "I don’t feel so good” about “talking sense" and that he wras it. , Speech Tells Need For Blood Donors As the Korea casualty lists rise, so the need for whole blood on the battle-front increases. This was pointed out by Robert by Tom Eilken Will it b? Ike or Adlai? According to a poll conducted yesterday among faculty and students. the presidential race is hot; the outcome will be close. The question asked was “Who do you think w’ill be our next president and why?” Answers showed that many Eisenhower backers were picking Stevenson to win even though they were voting for Ike. Stevenson supporters felt that they were voting for the winner. Coaches Pick Ike The first opinion was credited battlefronts" Glenn said, “is the to Jess Hill who was caught w-alk- Ari impartial analysis of the Republican and Democratic parties and talks endorsing both will be given at the Pi Sigma Alpha election night banquet in the Commons dining room at 6:30 tonight. Dr. Totton J. Anderson, associate professor of political science, will give a non-partisan interpretation of the major parties’ platforms and tactics, while Dr.’ Frank P. Sherwood, visiting professor of public administration, will speak for the Democratic party, and Dr. Wilbert L. Hindman, associate professor of political science, will give a speech for the Republican party. “After the formal talks, the rest of the evening will be devoted to a general analysis of the returns,” said Dr. Hindman. Facilities will be provided for listening to the election returns. Price of the banquet will be $1.75. A few' dinner reservations are left and may be obtained in the office of the political science department. Students who do not attend the banquet are invited to the after- j dinner talks. The Democratic and Republican parties agree on one thing. They want lots of voters to go to the polls today. But while a vote is a vote, they are unusually interested in the size of the college student turnout. Since we, as college students, are a small minority of the voting publfcT it might be wise to know why we have been courted so avidly by both parties. The Democrats and the Republicans have obvious reasons for wanting our votes. They each want us to vote for their particular candidates. Since most of us will be voting for tihe first tirre, we college students are a powerful and unexploited minority. We are an nuknowif quantity politically, and can have a lot to do with the outcome of national and local elections. Both parties want to en*ist us early in our political life. They are looking to the future. As each election year approaches, we will become more powerful politically. In 1952 we are students. In 1956 we will be insurance salesman, engineers, housewives, school teachers, doctors, and secretaries. A few will be running for officc. The Democrats and the Republicans have more at stake than our brief appearance at the polls today. They want us to be well informed. They want us to think and to express ourselves. They want us to have opinions.. How we vote, how many of us vote, why we vote: The answers to these questions will provide vital information to the Democratic and Republican parties. They believe that we hold the future of their parties, that what we do today will influence political thinking in many elections to come. They say that we will some day control their parties, that we will form their policies, that we will make thejr decisions, and that we will be the leaders of public opinion. The Democratic and Republican parties think we are important. How important are we? Regardless of the outcome of the election today, we won’t mean a thing politically unless we vote.—D.H. Us Foreign Enrollment Increases by 65 DT Night Owls To Chart UP Election News Daily Trojan staffers will centralize their activities in the DT city room tonight to tabulate election results and check United Press wire for the lat?st w'ord on the progress of Ike and Adlai. “Students who would like to receive first-hand information on returns may join us until we close up shop in the wee hours of the morning/’ said Editor Charles Sweet. CP will pound out returns and DT reporters will tabulate the results on blackboards. The DT city room is located on the fourth floor of the Student Union. SC's Election Views Aired use of whole blood.” "The blood students donate next week will be in Korea within sev- Glenn. a member of the Red en days." he said. Cross board of directors and Col- Quoting from a recent letter lege Council adviser, at a recent from Gen. Mark W. Clark. Glenn SC Red Cross chapter meeting. said that today 1200 pints of “Give the combat GIs an even whole blood are needed each break by donating your blood." he i month in the Far-east conflict. ing briskly into the Student Union. His opinion? “I don't know who the next president will be. but I hope it will be Eisenhower. I think he is the best man for the job,” Hill stated adamantly. Jesse Mortensen, head track coach and freshman football said, in urging chapter members The blood must be used within coach, didn’t say who he was for. to meet SC's 1952 Blood Drive 10 to 14 days after it reaches but he believes Stevenson will quota of 880 next week. Japan. . * With almost 700 individual ( “This life blood for the wound-pledges to date, SC students and ■ ed must continue to flow’ to. us faculty have until Monday to ar- I from the States if we are to save range for blood donations. the lives of our brave men who Actual donations will be taken are defending the freedoms we I on campus next week in the base- I hold so dear,” General Clark’s ment of Town and Gown dormi- ' letter concluded. I tory. Pledges on campus are being employees on the government pay- “One of the decisive factors in taken at the Red Cross booth lo- roll. Add to this the labor vote saving lives of countless of our i cated between Bovard auditorium brave men wounded ot Korean [ t.nd Founders halL but he win. Ties Shoelaces Looking up while tying his shoelaces in front of the Commons. he said. "Look at the number of votes he already has to start with—especially that which will come from and that of the solid South,” he said. Another who thought Stevenson would win was Mike Wise, junior telecommunications student. Interrupted in the middle of his musings while sitting at the base of Tommy Trojan, Wise said, “I don’t think Eisenhower has lured enough Democratic voters from their fold He has neither made a definite policy stand nor has he stated specifically What phases of the Democratic government he intends to change.” Chancellor Speculates A few moments lfiter, Chancellor Rufus B. von KleinSmid came out of the Administration building. Queried, he put it simply and affirmatively, but with a twinkle in his eye. “Mr. ‘Ike’ Eisenhower will be the next president because more people will vote for him than for his opponent,” the Chancellor said. Roy L. French, head of the School of Journalism, and avow'ed Republican who said he is voting for and hoping for Eisenhower, thinks Stevenson will win. Crosses Fingers With fingers crossed he said. “Stevenson will win. First, nobody know's who is running for Democratic vice-president—at least they don’t know much about him. “Second.” he said, “Stevenson will receive the 171 electoral votes from the old South, and he will get the 95 more necessary for election from the CIO, federal em- ployees, and the Communists. “Can you imagine the Communists voting for Eisenhower?” he asked. John Witt, junior pre-law student, concurred with Professor French. Three Blind Mice Three other members of the coaching staff, Joe Muha, Don Clark, and Bill Hargesheimer, w'ere stopped en route to a secret grid conference. “This is a coordinated staff,” assistant coach Muha said. “Whatever Jess Hill said goes with us,” Clark chimed in. “We really think together,” Hargesheimer added. With that your reporter gave up in his search to get line coach Mel Hein's opinion. Sue Hutchinson, junior music educational student, was reading the plaques on the Trojan Column. Woman’s Intuition She summed it up beautifully from the feminine; standpoint. “Ike will win. The people are tired of high taxes and they don’t want federal seizure of the tide-lands. They also want the Korean war stopped,” she said. “Also, Eisenhower is the man to straighten out our foreign policy.” she added. Fred Neil, DT Sports Editor, w-as in the “Eisenhower-for-but-Stevenson-will” camp. “Although I prefer Eisenhower, Stevenson will be our next presi- Four hundred and forty-nine foreign students from 61 different countries are enrolled at SC—an increase of 65 over last year’s registration—according to figures released from Foreign Student Adviser Dorothy H. Zech’s office. Canada has sent 40 students, who make up the largest number of this semester’s foreign enrollment from a single country. Thirty-two students from India and 31 from China are enrolled. Three from Russia Other countries represented are the Philippines, 26; Iraq, 21; Iran, 18; Japan and Brazil, 14; Turkey, 13; Israel and Mexico. 12; Germany and Egypt, 9; Costa Rica. 8; Korea and Greece, 7; Denmark, j England. Italy, Columbia, Pan-j ama, and the Netherlands 6: I France, Czechoslovakia, Norway, and Poland, 4; Belgium, Guata-I mala, Sweden. Switzerland, and Russia, 3; and Latvia, Lebanon, i Lithuania, Macao, Peru. Spain, I South Africa, Jordan. Hong Kong, ! Finland, Chile, and Hungary. 2. Countries with one student each ! are' Burma, Argentina, Austria, Cuba. Ecuador, Estonia, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Jamaica. Nigeria, Pakistan, Viet Nam, Thialand. Rumania, and Portugal. Eleven students are stateless. Don’t Speak English Nineteen students enrolled in the Cinema department Saturday, and the same number are postdoctoral. Four German policemen —w'ho don’t speak English—are registered in the School of Public Administration for special studies. Men students predominate, 322 to 75 women, and new students number 153. Eighty-eight are here on permanent visas, compared to 309 arrivals on temporary visas. The three Russian students are here on permanent visas. Most Are Graduates The Graduate School has 189 foreign student enrollments, while the Senior class has 43. The Junior class has 40, and the sophomore and freshman classes have 30 and 28. Other foreign students are either special or unclassified. More foreign students—72—are enrolled in- the School of Engineering than in any other school. The School of Commerce trails by 40 with a total foreign enrollment of 32. Other schools and departments with foreign registrations are cinema, 22; education and public administration, 21; architecture. 18; international relations, chemistry, and pharmacy, 13; and economics and psychology, 11. Other students are scattered throughout other schools. Scholarships Scholarships were given to 322 foreign students, 17 through the Economic Cooperation Administration. Seven students are attending SC under the International Institute of Education scholarship, and two are here on a Methodist church scholarship. Two students received a PEO scholarship, one student is here on a National Council of Jewish Women scholarship, and another, is dent. His campaign has been much more specific than Ike’s. The peo- ; pie want to know what the next , president will do. Eisenhower has ; failed in this respect.” Neil said. ] One opinion came from a student who can’t vote, N* S. Malik, senior in public administration, a ! foreign exchange student from India. He was another w'ho thought the Democratic candidate would win. “I think Stevenson .will win. I have great confidence in the people of the United States; who, on the basis of democracy, will pick the best man,” Malik said. Don Beckhart, sophomore predental student, thinks that the voters of the U. S. believe that the two-party System is in jeopardy if the Democrats win. One-Party Threat “Everyone knows that Truman is run by his political bosses. Stev-ensoif is run by this same group. If the Democratic candidate wins again, the party will become so entrenched that we will then be a government with a one-party system.” Beckhart said. And so it went, first Stevenson, then Eisenhower. Many of those polled were reluctant to voice any political opinion. Dr. Baxter summed it up, not only tactfully but accurately. He said. “The next president will be either Eisenhower or Stevenson, or to be more accurate, men's Stevenson or Eisenhower.” grant. BOSTON, Nov. 3 — (UP)— Dwight D. Eisenhower tonight scorned “the lusty language of a booming rally’* and closed his Republican campaign for the Presidency with a simple-stated plea for “unity and faith.” The Republican Presidential candidate, fatigued after nearly 52,000 miles of campaigning, ended his stretch driv* toward the White House in an area that is normally Democratic. He addressed thousand* in Boston Garden, finishing what he has termed the “toughest fight” of his life and leaving hi« future up to the voters. Help* Lodge As much as &r himself, Eisenhower appearedfto be working for the election of Republican incumbent Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge who is opposed by Rep. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.). Eisenhower hammered what he considered one the primary issues of the campaign—Communism. “The menace of Godless Communism does not stalk us merely as a version of old czarist ambition,” he said. “The final source of this menace is nothing so simple as material need.” the former five-star general added. “Poverty must be fought by free men for its own evil—and that fight needs no other purpose. Slap At Hiss , In the United States we must have a social program so effective that no doctrine of political desperation can ever take root.” With an unidentified but none the less plain slap at Alger Hiss, Eisenhower said “Communism does not breed in slums alone.” “The most notorious Communist agents of our day were not standing in breadlines when they made their traitorous decision ot serve the Soviet Union,” he said. "They came all too often from places free from suffering, the hardships and the injustices of life.” Toughest Fight Eisenhower, in the closing hours of the campaign, has admitted freely that his quest for votes was the "toughest” thing he had ever tackled. Eisenhower, working from a prepared-for-delivery speech in the Boston Garden tonight, then went to the studios of WBZ-TV-to make a nationwide, last-minute appeal for votes—an appeal which his staff said could cost about $250,000, with its coverage of four radio networks and four television networks. To Vote at Columbia Eisenhower and his wife, following their many appearances in Boston, were scheduled to leave late tonight for New York where they probably would arrive at Grand Central station at 6:35 a.m. tomorrow. Eisenhower and his wife’ planned to motor to a Columbia university polling booth on 119th street and then return to their residential quarters on Momingside Heights. Deadline Today For SC Faculty Chest Donations Today is the final day of the SC faculty-staff Community Chest drive with only one-fourth of the $3750 goal having been reached. Nevertheless, co-chairmen Donald M. Searcy, director of the extension division, and Carl Hancey, dean of University College, “are encouraged as to the extent that the staff has taken part in the drive, and are hopeful that a large response will come today.” Contributions may still be turn-registered with an American Wo- ed in at campus headquarters, 259 club, Brussells Belgium Administration building, or sent through campus mail. — ---- > |
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