MISS MEAD TOUCHES SOFT SPOT See Page 4 :YI e it 4al t u Latest Deadline in the State aii4 CLOUDY, WARMER QLIL AVA VOTr T Vi_ Nw_' 1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1956 71L a^~ Y rv* 'L. .sa va. a. *asa -" Regents Approve Dorm Rent Raise Fixed Policy To Keep Tuition, Room Rates At Minimum-Hatcher The University Board of Regents yesterday approved a $20 per year raise in roomand boardrates for residence halls. No formal vote was taken. Under the Regents' by-laws, no vote is required. The increase was presented in the form of a request by University President Harlan H. Hatcher. Since it was not dis- approved, the raise will go into effect next fall. The increase is to cover increases in salary, and wages for resi- dence hall employes and three extra days of food service brought by the revised academic calendar, which also goes into effect next fall. The increase brings the rate for a double room to $770 for the academic year. This compares with $380 for men and $400 for women - in 1939-40 or an increase of 102 Reds Join In Peace Plan Search LONDON (A) - Soviet Premier 4 Nikolai Bulganin and Communist boss Nikita Khrushchev agreed yesterday to join the British in a search for a Middle East peace plan. The Kremlin leaders and Prime Minister Anthony Eden ordered their experts to submit proposals for a United Nations program aimed to avoid war between Arabs and Israelis. Diplomatic sources said Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower will be kept informed. The experts were ordered to re- port by next Tuesday, diplomatic sources said. Prime Minister Eden was under- stood to have told the Russians that an Arab-Israeli conflict could touch off an H-bomb war between the Communist and Western worlds. Khrushchev told the British at1 a luncheon Thursday that Com- munists .and capitalists, however much they dislike each other, must strive to maintain peace lest. H- bomb warfare destroy both. Three big Mideast problems im- mediately faced Eden and his guests: 1. Devising a system of ration- ing the supply of Communist and Western arms to the Arabs and Israelis. Britain is understood to have ready a plan whereby the arms would be rationed by the U.N. 2. How to block and turn back any aggressor. 3. What to do about the Bagh- dad 'Alliance of Britain, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Pakistan. The Rus- sians regard the pact as a threat to them and have demanded it be disbanded. World News Roundup . By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-Rep. J. E. Moss (R-Calif.) said yesterday congre - sional hearings have shown "there is ample justification for the com- plaints of newsmen" that the gov- ernment has tried to clamp down on many types of legitimate in- formation. He told the annual meeting of the American Society of Newspa- per Editors that his House Gov- ernment Information subcommit- tee is working on legislation aimed at excessive government secrecy. * * * WASHINGTON - The Demo- cratic high command, heading into the presidential campaign in near-desperate financial plight, tapped Speaker Sam Rayburn yes- terday to preside at the party's National Convention next August. The financial crisis facing the party was the outstanding prob- lem arising at the start of a two- day strategy conference which brought together Democratic lead- ers from across the nation. MILWAUKEE -Milwaukee bus drivers voted yesterday to end the strike which has tied up all pub- lic transportation in the area for eight days. The membership of Division 998, Street Railway and Motor Coach Employes, Union, voted 1,293 to 368 to accept the same contract nrnnosal which they rejected one per cent for men and 92 per cent for women. During the same period salary and wage rates for residence hall employes have increased up to 190 per cent, operating supplies about 95 per cent and construction costs approximately 150 per cent. Vice-President Wilbur K. Pier- pont told the Regents that the 'University's rates were in the up- per third among schools in the Big Ten and at the top among other state-operated schools in Michigan. 'Provide More Services' "But we provide more services in our residence halls than the others," Pierpoat added. President Hatcher said it was the University's "fixed policy to keep tuition and room and board rates at a minimum consistent with sound operation." Regent Paul K. Adams started the discussion by 'asking if the raise was really necessary. He said he had noticed that students were ,objecting to the raise. He asked if rates could be reduced by fin- ancing residence halls construction with bond issues of longer matur- ity. Vice-President Pierpont said that investors were unwilling to buy bonds of longer maturity than the 25 to 32 years for which current issues have been floated. Would Pay Off More He added that student payments would be paying off more inter- est if maturities were lengthened. He also questioned the conten- tion that students are paying more thanrtheir share and financing future construction. He didn't know how "their share" could be determined, he said, and students were receiving the benefit of past payments and construction, some of which was built as a result of gifts. In other action yesterday, the Regents approved a loan contract with the Housing and Home Fin- ance Agency to float $3,300,000 in bonds to finance another 300 Northwood apartments for married students on the new North Cam- pus. Under the contract, if the bonds cannot be sold to the public, the federal government will buy them. Hiss Invitation PRINCETON, N. J. (P)-The Princeton University Board of Trustees announced yesterday they disapproved the action of students in inviting Alger Hiss, a convicted perjurer, to speak on the campus but they approved the decision of the administration not to inter- fere. In a statement issued afterward, the trustees said they had been unanimous in their action express- ing "disapproval of the action of the students who have invited Al- ger Hiss to speak on the campus." Middle East~ Peace Seen Progressing 'On Right Road': Hannarskjold JERUSALEM ()-Dag Ham- marskjold wound up the second week of his Middle East peace' mission yesterday with the declar- ation "I am sure we are on the right road." "Personally I don't see any rea- son why we should lose it," the United Nations secretary general told newsmen after completing four days of talks with Israeli officials in Jerusalem. Against a background of new friction on the Jordan-Israeli frontier, Hammarskjold took a plane for his temporary headquar- ters in Beirut, Lebanon. With con- ferences in Egypt and Israel out of the way, he expects to visit Jordan and Syria next week. Cease-Fire Accomplished He opened the mission with his' flight from New York April 6 under Security Council orders to seek an easing of tension. The Egyptian-Israeli cease-fire agreement, ordered effective Wed- nesday night, is the mission's big- gest announced accomplishment. Egypt charged Israel has vio- lated that cease-fire agreement both aground and in the air. Is- raeli spokesmen denied it and UN officials in Cairo described the cases as "minor incidents of little importance." Egypt Accuses Israel Emphasizing that Egypt was abiding by the cease-fire, Egyp- tian spokesmen declared Israeli soldiers fired on a post in the Gaza Strip Thursday and Israeli planes' flew over the area yester- day for the third straigt day. While brushing off those accu- sations, Israel presented a fresh charge of trouble on the Jordan- ian flank. . A military spokesman said a Jordanian group fired from inside Israeli territory at an Israeli mili- tary car in the Beith Gurvin area of the Judean Hills last night. The1 Israelis fired back, he said, and3 suffered no casualties. Carrilo To Address Class of '56 Nabor Carrillo, Rector of thel University of Mexico, will be the l University's commencement speak-;1 er at its 112th commencement thist June. Carrillo, the 45-year-old leader of Mexico's national university, is1 reported to have made great pro- gress in building up his institution1 and its faculty. He has also been active in the work of the Fund for Peaceful Atomic Development, directed by Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law School. Carrillo has been on the Uni- versity of Mexico's faculty sincee 1932. He has served as chief of engineers of the National Com- mission of Mexico in 1936 and as investigator for the Co-Ordinat-l ing and Organizing Commission of I 'Scientific Investigation in 1943. He has a civil engineering degree from his university as well as ijaster of science and doctor of science degrees from Harvard Uni- versity. Commencement exercises areJ scheduled for 5:30 p.m., Saturday, June 16, in the Michigan Stadium. Salary, Wag Given to Staff, P'y Raise -Daily-John Hirtzei CROWD CIRCULATES AT FIELDHOUSE-Thousands jammed Yost Fieldhouse last night for the first of two Michigras nights. Increases Faculty Best Parade Float Prizes Announced Amidst shrieks, background roar and general chaos, the awards for the prize floats were given out last night at Yost Field House. First prize went to Gamma Phi Beta and Theta Xi for the float; "Scheherezade." Alpha Omicron Pi and Phi Sigma Kappa copped second honors for "Babes in Toy- land." Third place went to Alpha Xi Delta and Theta Delta Chi for "Tales of Hoffman." Honorable Mention was given to Sigma Delta Tau and Sigma Phi Epsilon's "Gaite Pariesienne." Ann, Arbor High placed first in the band competition. By 11 p.m. last night, carnival patrons had already gone through the Friday night supply of five cent concession tickets and had bought out two-thirds of Satur- day's supply, buying 250,000 of them. Michigras officials hope to replenish their supply in De- troit,eaccording to co-ticket chair- man Joanne Marsh. The pre-sale of 50 cent admis- sion tickets tripled last year's pre- sale, and gate receipts are still coming in. The number of ad- mission tickets sold before the Carnival even opened totalled 4,100. Between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. to- morrow, Michigras will open its rides to the children of Ann Ar- bor (ages six to sixteen) during the special Kiddy Carnival. From 7 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow booths and rides will again be open in the final session of the Michigras week-end. University President H a r 1 a n Hatcher will present the awards for the best entries in the show, refreshments and skill categories during the evening. Parade Viewers Climb Hydrants, Trees, Roofs By PETE ECKSTEIN They stuck their-heads out office windows; they closed their stores and stood on the sidewalk outside; they climbed on painters' scaffolds and Good Humor trucks; they stood on the top of the Ad- ministration Building and theater marquees; they balanced on step- ladders and fire hydrants; they put the roof of a Union construction shack to the test-and it flunked. They were coeds with Bermuda shorts shivering under slickers; they were townspeople holding up children, or bolding them back;' they were foreign students in beards and turbans; they were waiters with their noses against the windows of empty restaurants-and they all seemed to be carrying Fieldhouse Tour Offers 'Abs', Roars The following is mate stenographic sounds heard in and Fieldhouse. GENERAL ROAR GROUND. an approxi- record of around Yost IN BACK- Republicans Challenge Soil Bank Approval WASHINGTON (A'-Republicans on the House Appropriations Com- mittee took a second look yester- day at the $1,200,000,000 soil bank appropriation approved' by the committee Thursday - and then raised the roof. They challen'ged the committee's legislative authority to vote the money, stated that no more than 250 million dollars worth of it could be used for anything but preventing soil erosion, and de- clared only a limited acreage could be taken out of production before the appropriation expires Dec. 31. The committee approved the fund 36-7 Thursday as an emer- gency measure to launch President Eisenhower's plan to pay farmers for withdrawing some of their land from the production of crops. Chairman Clarence Cannon (D- Mo.) reported that only one Demo- crat and six of the 20 Republicans on the committee voted against the appropriation, although all the Re- publicans were opposed to a re- port which accompanied the bill. cameras. They began congregating around 3 p.m., forming first one row along the street and then another row pressed close behind. For 45 min- utes or so they talked, sometimes quite intensely, about anything but the coming parade: "I'm sorry you didn't come to my party last night," "What did the Tigers do?" But that was soon over. The music grew louder, the crowd grew thicker, and the tots jumped around faster. "Here comes the band," a beaming parent informed his small son. As the lead cars and marching bands came by, shutters began clicking. "I got Michiclef, any- way," a high-school girl sighed. Enthusiasm waned as Michigras bigwigs and judges rolled by in convertibles. "Who are they any- way?" asked one adolescent. "Ma, ma, here comes Michi- mouse," several people swear they heard one tot exclaim as Mickey and Minnie Mouse came rolling and revolving by. She jumped, clapped her hands, and jumped some more. A horse-drawn chuck wagon passed, followed by a now-reluc- tant, now-overanxious jackass, and one boy barked his head off while See ALL, Page 5 "Look at that line!" "Are all these people waiting to buy tickets?" "Ouch." "Excuse me." "How much?" "Fifty cents?" ROAR INCREASES, has musi- cal overtones. "I'd like to go on the merry-go- round. That's all I like." "AHHHHHHH. AHHHHHH" "That 'Tiltawhirl' looks scary." "HOT DOGS? ICE COLD POP?" "Let's go inside." ROAR INCREASES, loses musi- cal overtones. "STEP RIGHT UP. EVERY- BODY WINS. EVERYBODY WINS." "Ouch." "Sorry.~ "THROW A PIE. COME ON AND TEST YOUR SKILL." 'COME ON UP. IT'S FREE ... Three tickets for cokes, five for hot dogs." "Excuse me." "Whose glove is this?" ROAR INCREASES. "YOU DON'T HAVE TO RING THE LEG. ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS HIT ONE." "Hey!" "Excuse me." "FOUR IN A ROW AND YOU WIN A GIRL FOR HALF AN HOUR." "Oh. I'm sorry." "THERE IS NO SMOKING IN THE FIELDHOUSE. NO SMOK- ING, PLEASE." "My gosh, things are jammed in here." "HARLAN HATCHER WON BACK EVERYTHING HE LOST HERE. COME ON IN AND WIN A PILE OF MONEY." "He must be trying to impress his girl." "AND, LADIES, O N L Y 25 CENTS." "Excuse me." "THEY'RE RUSHING DOWN THERE! EVERYBODY'S PLAY- ING THE GAME." ROAR DIMINISHED SLIGHT- LY, became more musical. "HOT DOGS? ICE COLD POP?" "Excuse me." "AAAAHHHHHHH. AHHHH." "Tickets are 50 cents." "I'm kinda glad it only happens everv nther vear." Retroactive To Feb. 1st Appropriation To Cover Costs By JIM DYGERT Daily City Editor The University faculty and staff will receive salary or wage in- creases from four to ten per cent retroactive to Feb. 1, 1956, the Board of Regents passed at its April meeting yesterday. Also at the meeting, the Regents authorized the preparation of three budgets for the 1956-57 year, including a General Funds budget of $34,802,700, the highest in Uni- versity history. The pay raise amounts to six per cent of the total payroll and was made possible by action of the State Legislature and the gover- nor authorizing $658,000 for the purpose. Follows Civil Service The University will follow the Michigan Civil Service adjust- ments, so far as the schedules apply, in making non-academic increases. Academic salaries will be adjusted on a straight basis of six per cent. Salary checks for the Increases will be issued about May 20 for the months of February, March and April. May and June checks. will reflect the increases for those months. Merit or promotion in- creases will be considered in the new 1956-57 budget. Appropriation of $27,500,000 To finance the budget there will be a Legislative appropriation of $27,500,000 and an anticipated revenue from student fees and re- lated sources of $7,302,700. Enrollment is expected to be 22,300, an all-time record. It was pointed out at the Reg- ents' meeting that only five years ago the University received only $13,000,000, less than half the present appropriation, from the Legislature. The Regents approved the bud- get recommendations of the Uni- versity's Committee on Budget Ad ministration with the understand- ing that the completed budgets would be submitted ior approval at the June meeting of the Reg- ents. The other two budget recom- mendations approved were: A budget of $316,250 for the Flint branch of the University based on an estimated enrollment of 300 and a Legislative approp- riation of $275,000 and student fees and related income of $31,250. Preparation of a budget of $300,- 000 for Research and Service in the Utilization of Human Re- sources. Regents Make Appointments University Regents yesterday made 17 appointments and approv- ed 21 leaves of absences and three retirements. Permission was given three pro- fessors to retire at the age of 65 instead of the mandatory 70-year- old age. Prof. Arthur L. Dunham, of the history department, will retire at the end of the first semester of the 1956-57 year. Associate Prof. B. A. Soule, of the chemistry department, will leave at the end of this semester, and Engineering Prof. O. W. Bos- ton will retire in July. Of the 17 appointments approv- ed yesterday, eight concern facul- ty members of the College of Lit- erature, Science and the Arts. Geography Chairman Prof. Charles M. Davis was ap- pointed chairman of the geogra- phy department for a three-year term beginning at the end of this semester. Prof. Shorey Peterson was made acting chairman of the economics I 'POGO IS SWEET, WITH MOLASSES INSIDE': Walt Kelly Lectures at Press Convention By RENE GNAM j "The whole thing is kind of a Schools attending the conven- 'Search for Bridey Murphy'," Kelly tion entered contestants in the Over 1,76Q high school journal- declared, annual Donal Hamilton Haines ists jammed Rackham Auditorium Kelly illustrated his lecture with Memorial Awards speech report- yesterday to hear Walt Kelly ad- ~ several drawings of his comic strip ing contest. dress the 29th annual Michigan characters. Contestants were required to Interscholastic Press Association charogorshe said "is something writesnews reports of the Kelly onvention, sweet, with molasses inside." lecture. It was the largest MIPA attend- In the second main address of These reports were judged by ance in history. the convention, Prof. Kent W. members of the sponsoring pro- } Kelly, creator of the comic strip Leach of the education school fessional journalistic fraternity,; "Pogo," advised attending stu- said words in newspapers "should Rirma Teta Chi and Professors