THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1952 The. New First Family DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER., President-elect of the United States, takes a brief moment to relax with his wife Mamie (right), his daughter-in-law Mrs. John Eisenhower, and his three grand children. • Ike Pans Visit= paration of the new budget which goes to Congress in January. Fox the visit to Korea, in fulfillment of a campaign pledge which was one of the factors in his landslide- victory, Eisenhower preferred a military plane. He told Truman he would let Secretary of Defense Lovett know when he wants to leave. Gov. Stevenson of Illinois faded into the silence of defeat. As his hopes of carrying on a 20-year Democratic dynasty collapsed around him, Stevenson also had summoned' his fellow Americans to unite behind his conqueror and advance together "in freedom and dignity and peace." But already weighty prob lems at home and abroad are pressing in on Eisenhower. Associated Press returns at 8:45 p.m., (EST) from 134,454 of the country's 146,361 voting unls showed the popular vote: Eisenhower 31,691,542 Stevenson 25,501,568 Total . 57,193,110 Eisenhower's percentage: 55.4 The Congress which will han dle his legislative proposals will have no more than a razor edge Republican majority in either Senate or House. In the past, a coalition of Re publicans and Southern Demo crats has been able pretty much to have its own way on domestic affairs, often balking the will of the White House. How well Eis enhower can work with such a line-up is a mat ter of uncer tainty. But he did make many political friends in Dixie in a campaign that split up the once Solid South. Early last night, the congres sional scoreboard stood like this, with a number of races still un decided: House: 435 seat s; 218 re quired for control. Republicans had elected 218; Democrats 205; Independents 1. Senate: 96 seats; 48 represent control since the Vice President votes in case of a tie, and the "Veep" will be Republican Richard M. Nixon after Jan. 20. Republicans had 49 including holdovers and Wayne Morse of Oregon, who now calls himself an Independent; Democrats had 47 includini holdovers. Thus Eisenhower's vast margin of victory was very much a per sonal thing. He outran his party in state after state and failed to take along with "him enough Sen ate and House candidates to es tablish a firm GOP hold on Con gress. And in ' - some respects, the de cision of the electorate seemed to be very much a mandate, a vote of confidence that Eisenhower will labor hard for peace, to ful fill his promise to try for a speedy and honorable end to the Korean War, to wipe out communism and corruption in government. TONIGHT -- 7- 9 p.m. LUTHERANS Have your contributions ready. Help Us Go Over the Top $ $ GIVE GENEROUSLY (Continued from page one) Election Results at a Giance By the Associated Press The latest election returns gave President-elect Dwgiht D. Eisenhower an overwhelming major ity of electoral votes=442 to 89. The General also lead in popular voting by 23 and one-half million to 19 and a third million for Gov. Stevenson. The Governor officially conceded the election at 1:45 a.m. yesterday after it was certain that he could not pull enough votes from the large cities to swing the election. Here is a rundown of the states and how they voted. • January Draft Can Set at 6027 in Pa. HARRISBURG, Nov. 5 (P)— The Pennsylvania draft call for January of 1953 was set at 6027 today by State Selective Service Headquarters. Lt. Col. Henry M. Gro s s, state draft director, said all men inducted under the call must have celebrated their 20th anniversary before the date of induction. The new quota is 671 higher than that set for December and is in line with the national draft quota. This month's fig ure was almost 200 higher than the January call at 6204. ME DAILY COLLEGIAN, STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA Popular Vote Adla! 253,394 72,809 167,758 1,458,504 2,382 20,746 1,650 169 278 1,684 1,814 165,337 481,482 62,228 415,538 348,392 93,559 1,995,098 794,040 423,720 239,374 443,516 286,508 118,545 9,680 4,202 2,481 2,851 4,135 2,118 1,428 1,967 4,480 3,793 1,790 4,771 1,137 2,067 391,744 1,085,821 1,178,532 444,882 147,265 873,575 66,960 166,476 Free World VieWs Ike Gls in Korea— SEOUL, Nov. 5 (JP)—American troops in Korea greeted the elec tion of Dwight Eisenhower as president with a mixture of cheers and boos today and some voiced a hope he would be able to bring them home. Brazil— RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, Nov. 5 (W)—Former President Gen. Eu rico Gaspar Dutra said today Bra zil will have a friend in the White House in President-elect Eisen hower. Hepredicted Eisenhower would further strengthen U. S. re lations with Latin America. Republic of Korea— UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Nov. 5 (JP)—Y. T. Pyun, foreign minis ter of the UN sponsored Republic of Korea, today offered his con gratulations to the Am er i can people on their choice of Dwight D. Eisenhower as president. Iran— TEHRAN, Iran, Nov. 5 (FP)— Foreign Minister Hossein Fatemi said today U. S. policy toward Iran has attempted to block Iran's national aspirations, and he ex pressed hope that under Gen. Eisenhower this policy will be reversed. Belgium— BRUSSELS, Belgium, Nov. 5 (?P) —Prime Minister Jean Van Houtte said today, "We are convinced that Eisenhower, who won the war, will also win the peace. He knows European problems." Nev. 353 315 22,602 43,706 3R N.H. 297 297 106,569 165,888 4R N.J. 3,840 3,840 1,009,195 1,365,243 16R N.M. 894 621 74,267 94,227 4R N.Y. 10,348 10,348 3,070,622 3,934,069 45R N.C. 2,036 1,841 604,723 505,477 14D N.D. 2,29 a 1,439 54,203 129,852 4R Ohio 10,877 10,661 1,554,082 2,040,903 25R Okia. 3,859 3,792 432,003 504,458 8R Ore. 2,269 1,491 141,660 238,007 6R Penna. 8,472 8,471 2,129,896 2,390,763 32R R.I. 284 284 200,209 206,351 4R S.C. , 1,563 1,426 165,172 154,404 8D S.D. 1,950 1,819 84,165 187,757 4R Tenn. 2,495 2,377 • 390,628 396,682 11R Texas 254 250 827,696 955,962 24R Utah 969 940 133,759 191,972 4R Vt. 246 246 43,220 109,239 3R Va. 1,795 1,783 270,158 347,247 12R Wash. 4,381 3,254 332,031 398,719 9R W.Va. 2,841 2,662 429,560 394,704 8D Wis. 3,225 3,182 609,637 958,173 12R Wyo. 677 598 37,307 64,455 3R Total 146,347 131,498 24,948,441 31,024,749 D- 89 R-442 Electoral Ike D R 139,067 11D 104,177 4R 133,146 1,891,693 6R 8R 3R IOR 12D 4R 27R 13R 256,368 610,989 65,770 503,594 160,613 177,841 2,463,564 1,115,644 IOR 8R 10D 10D 5R 761,147 538,400 434,326 261,092 232,275 493,947 1,293,800 1,491,839 583,631 100,468 892,909 93,750 363,620 9R 16R 20R 11R 8D 13R 4R '6R Stevenson Sends Concession Wire • NEW YORK (IP)—Following is the text of the concession tele gram which Gov. Adlai E. Steven son sent early today to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower: "The people have made their choice and I congratulate you. That you may be the servant and guardian of peace and make the day of victory a door of hope is my earnest prayer. Best wishes." • " ize TREAT of the WEEK • CHOCOLATE BROWNIES • STICKY CINNAMON BUNS giefin a Pasteries • 239 S. ALLEN, ST. J , ixon and Family SENATOR RICHARD M. NIXON, newly-elected vice president of the United States, sits in his Caliform'a home with his attractive wife, Pat, and blonde daughters Julie and Patricia. The only missing member of the Nixon clan is Checkers, the Senator's Texan cocker spaniel. Ike Captures State y Large Margin PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 5 (?P)—Dwight D. Eisenhower—piling up a majority which stunned' Democrats in Pennsylvania—cut deeply into every Democratic stronghold but Philadelphia to capture the Keystone State's 32 electoral votes with a crushing bulge of more than 251,000 votes. While all but the general's staunchest supporters seemed startled at his strength, the greatest out pouring of voters in Pennsylvania history approximately 82 per cent of the 5,340,936 registered —carried in with the Republican President elect every state wide GOP candidate, including U.S. Senator Edward Martin. The GOP took a shellacking in the Quaker City, the worst since 1940. Democrat Adlai E. Steven son won Philadelphia, in the city's biggest voter turnout ever, won by 160,247—a majority that paral leled the days of Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1948 Mr. Truman had a very slim margin. Republicans will have one more vote in the Senate but ten less in the House when the 1953 General Assembly tackles Pennsylvania's tax problems next January. The Democratic gain in the House, half of which came in the Philadelphia delegation, left the Republicans with only five seats more than they needed to control the 208-member chamber. The GOP will hold a probable 110-98 margin in the House. Dur ing the 1951 marathon session, it was 120 Republicans, 87 Demo crats, and one vacancy. In the Senate, the lineup for next year will be 31 Republicans and 19 Democrats. That margin is enough to pass a bill, but is in sufficient to confirm guberna torial appointments where a two thirds majority of 34 is required. Russia Repudiates U.S. Naval Zone MOSCOW, Nov. 5 (2 ( l 3 )—Russia tonight gave notice that it re fuses to recognize as legal a U.S. naval defensive zone in Korean waters. She said the U.S. naval order of Sept. 27 was an extension of a 1950 blockade which violated freedom of the seas. The TAVERN ITALIAN SPAGHETTI with Meat Sauce BEEF MARZETTI EN CASSEROLE CHICKEN- PIE MIXED SEAFOOD PLATE PRIME SIRLOIN STEAKS PAGE THREE DANA ANDREWS MARTA TOREN "ASSIGNMENT PARIS" RICHARD CONTE IN "THE FIGHTER" .i.CI • glass misinis . OPEN 6:00 CHARLES McGRAW "NARROW MARGIN"
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