i Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. 0 ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3 241 'Okay - Now You Grab It At That End" "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: TAMMY MORRISON Fall Housing Crisis Past; What About Next Year? THE housing crisis of this fall is past. The question is, what will happen next year, in future years,. and whose responsibility is it to control the situation? For clarification of the first statment it is necessary to look at what the Administration has done to alleviate the campus housing shortage of this semester. In men's residence halls there are no stu- dents, except for a few married' men whose wives are off campus, living in temporary hous- ing. Last year at this time 75 Men were housed in the ninth floor study hall of South Quad- rangle alone. What is more, they were not all accommodated into adequate rooms until the semester ended. Women's housing is considerably more in- adequate. In spite of the fact that the tem- porary pools are expected to be emptied by Monday, 900 coeds will be inconvenienced by doubling and tripling of rooms. However, the Couzens Hall addition has made available 270 more spaces for women's housing. A new dor- mitory, planned for completion in 1958, will accomodate 1200 coeds. FOR married students, 296 units at the North- wood Apartments will be ready within a very short period. Foreign students have been hopsed in. apartments about campus. Further, in the Office of Student Affairs are long lists of apartments available for single and married students. These are the facts. What do' they mean? In spite of what has been done to alleviate the housing shortage this fall the situation still isn't satisfactory. Although students have been accomodated there remain far too many hard- ships resulting from high rent, inferior apart- ments, crowding in residence halls and trans- portation problems from suburban housing. That's this year's problem. Little more can be done about it. What we must now be con- cerned with is the future. Admittedly, the problem is enormous. Enroll- ment is increasing at such rates that dormi- tories planned for use two years hence will not even handle next year's increase. Appro- priations from the Legislature are a drop in the bucket compared to what is needed. The self-liquidation plan for residence not working. halls is IT must be remembered that the task con- fronting the University cannot be adequately handled without the aid of the students. A well informed student body must be capable and ready to support The Student Government Council and the University Advisory Commit- tee on Housing and Environmental Health is dealing with the Administration in regard to the housing problem. In the past, steps taken by the Administra- tion, such as dormitory rent raises, have been completed before the students were given no- tice of the situation. By this time nothing can be done. This results in vain complaining which only leaves a disgruntled student body and no reconciliation of student opinion and Admin- istrative action. It is the duty of the Administration to make it possible for the students to know the circum- stances involved in solving our housing prob- lem. Can enrollment be curtailed, if only until the University can catch up on residence construc- tion? Is it possible to lift the burden on this campus by enlarging the facilities of other University centers throughout the State? Is there something better than the self-liquida- tion plan for dormitory building? The job of the Committee on Housing and Environmental Health is to make valid recom- mendations to the Administration. The com- mittee must seeek out student opinion as a basis for their recommendations. - It is up to SGC to make sure that a clear and frank line of communication is cleared to the student body. FINALLY, it is the duty of the student body to sit up and take notice of what is going on. The campus at large must be willing to take on this responsibility if there is to be a solid base for a constructive solution. This problem will certainly not be solved overnight. But with the aid of relevant infor- mation made known to everyone the resulting picture will go a long way toward clearing up a seemingly insoluble mess. -THOMAS BLUES (f 4000 ~, r I V.M 4PP AT THE ORPHEUM: 'Divorcement' Dated But Interesting IT IS unfortunate that so much of twentieth-century drama deals with the immediate problem and is imbued with the popular mis- conception of scientific truths. David O. Selznick's 1932 production, "A Bill of Divorcement," is one of those medical melodramas where the characters are doomed to suffer because the doctors haven't been able to give the right answers. The scene is England, the family one Fairfield, in whose, blood flow the seeds of insanity. Hilary Fairfield simply went mad during World War I, his mental shortcomings augmented by "shell shock" (ah, how many of our post-World War I heroes had this difficulty). His wife, Margaret (Billie Burke), divorced him because she wanted to marry Gray Meredith (Paul Cavanagh) and lead a normal life. BUT HLARY'S sister, Aunt Hester (Elizabeth Patterson with a glint of Victorian wisdom in her eye), kept reminding Margaret that one r ^+ Y .i'w V/" .- A 'p 1 0#jg- -pccrf, CAN WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Kiennedy to Stump for Adlai By DREW PEARSON Mildred Didrikson Zaharias RED Didrickson Zaharias died Thursday morning in Galveston, Tex, at the age of 42.. With her passing an era has ended. Babe Ruth is gone, as is Connie Mack, Clark Griffith and Grantland Rice and now the greatest woman athlete in the world, the Babe, is gone. The Babe s fabulous co-ordination and skill earried her to the pinnacle of the sports world. But even if she had never won a track meet or a golf match the Babe was first, last, and always a champion. Wtihin her burned that extra spark of indefi- nable something marking the difference be- tween a star and a champion. All the time during her long losing battle with the disease to which she finally succumbed, the Babe showed her championship mettle. Against overwhelming odds she never gave up the fight. Mildred Didrickson Zaharias is dead and an era passes with her--but she can never be for- gotten because she was the Babe-and there will never be another. --ROBERT BOLTON IF you ask New England political observers whether Eisenhower will carry Massachusetts, most will tell you that it depends on the brilliant young senator from this state who came within a hairs- breadth of winning the Democratic Vice Presidential nomination at Chicago. Not all of them will tell you that, of course. Some, like the Italo-American followers of ex- congressman Foster Furcolo whom Kennedy knifed in favor of Re- publican Senator Saltonstall, wll tell you that Kennedy doesn't have enough power to swing the state. And genial John McCormack, the congressman from Boston and most powerful figure in Congress next to Sam Rayburn, is inclined to consider Kennedy a bit over- rated. Regardless of this, however, the news is that the able young sena- tor has definitely agreed to stump his home state for Adlai Steven- son. If he takes off the gloves, this should mean that Massachusetts, which went for Ike in 1952, will not go for him in November. * * * THdUGH THERE was never any question about Kennedy's de- votion to Adlai Stevenson, there has been some question as to how far Kennedy would go in opposing Eisenhower. The young senator's father, like a good many of the wealthier Boston Irish, is more conservative than the staunchest GOP Boston blueblood. Joseph Patrick Kennedy, who made several millions by getting the first Scotch whisky conces- sions immediately after prohibi- tion ended, was a strong Roosevelt backer, got big rewards from Roosevelt, then all but walked out on Roosevelt after FDR appointed him ambassador to the court of St. James. At London, Joe got pally with the Cliveden set of Hitler ap- peasers and became so down on Roosevelt foreign policy that he had to come home. So far Sen. Jack Kennedy hasn't followed his father's political thinking, but he's veering in that direction. Last August the elder Kennedy was in Cannes, on the French Riviera, when his son was making his sensational bid for the Vice Presidential nomination. Joe spent about 12 hours on the trans-Atlantic telephone trying to switch delegates for his son - and almost succeeded. * * * IMMEDIATELY after the Chi- cago convention the young senator flew to Cannes to be with his fath- er, and was out on a yachting cruise when his wife lost her baby -the second prebirth -tragedy in their famliy. Young Kennedy is back now, stumping for Stevenson in other parts of the U.S.A. When the time is ripe, he says he will go into his home state and stump every town to swing Massachusetts over to Adlai. Note -Whether Stevenson wins or not, political observers believe that the rest of the Massachusetts Democratic slate will be elected. Foster Furcolo, who had a fine record in Congress, later was elected State Treasurer, is now running for Governor. He's ex- pected to defeat Lt. Gov. Sumner Whittier, Republican. The present GOP Governor, Chris Herter, is not running again. It's also ex- pected the Democrats will capture both houses of the Massachusetts. legislature - even if Eisenhower should carry the state. * * * Newspapermen accompanying President Eisenhower didn't play up the hostile signs which greeted Ike at the Newton plowing contest, but the President himself seemed concerned about them. Roosevelt used to drive by hos- tile signs without even looking at them. But Eisenhower seemed somewhat upset when he saw a farmer's boot caught in a bear trap with a sign which read,. "Trapped by Benson's Blindness." There was also a sign showing corn flowing out of a horn of plenty, illustrating the prosperous farm policies of Roosevelt and Truman; with another sign which read: "Ike's peace like Neville Chamberlain's." The President asked one of his aides who put them there. His concern seemed that of a man who has been liked so much that he was bewildered that anyone should dislike him. I A CHANGE has taken place around Republican headquarters. One month ago, GOP leaders acted as if they would condescend to campaign, but that it wasn't really necessary. In contrast, one Republican money raiser recently made this frantic approach to a wealthy New Yorker: "We know the Democrats are going to take the House and the Senate," he confided, "but with enough help, we can elect Eisen- hower, That will give us the veto power over Congress. We've go to elect him." (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) day Hilary would return, com- pletely normal, finish his sonata, and take his place as a family man and musical genius. Indeed, one Christmas morning Hilary escapes from "that place" and comes home. What consterna- tion! How can Margaret explain they are no longer married? What will Gray say? Will Hilary's dau- ghter, Sydney (Katharine Hep- burn), become insane, too? Has Sydney any right to marry Kit Pumphrey (David Manners)? Can Hilary ever finish his sonata? Be- cause no one believes in Aunt Hester's old - fashioned morality and the doctors are so confused, will this mess ever get straighten- ed out? * * * PLOT ASIDE, "A Bill of Div- orcement" is interesting today chiefly as a document on three of America's most exceptional play- ers, Mr. Barrymore, and the Misses Burke and Hepburn. Mordaunt Hall, writing in the October 3, 1932 "New York Times," claimed of Mr. Barrymore's per- formance: "It is a character study worthy of Mr.. Barrymore's talent and his . performance' is incisive and telling, and never for an in- stant is he guilty of extravagant histrionics." "Extravagant his- trionics" is exactly what the pres- ent generation will accuse Mr. Barrymore of; but it is not so much that underplaying (often called "realism") has pushed aside Mr. Barrymore's art, as it is that another kind of histrionics, the sprinkled-with-Freud Actors' Stu- dio technique, has taken over. Un- like many of his successors-Mar- Ion Brando, PaulhNewman-Mr. Barrymore has thatErarest of skills: clear, precise English dic- tion, Miss Burke, in one of her few serious roles, plays with the same style as Barrymore. Only Miss Hepburn, looking fresh and lovely, offers a more modern interpreta- tion: one can see the beginning development of the semi-neurotic, lean, bony type with which she has become identified. * * * THE PICTURE was directed by George Cukor (recently remem- bered for the second "A Star Is Born" and "Bhowani Junction"), and Mr. Cukor handles his small cast with great care and economy, keeping his drama clipped to a sparse 69 minutes. "A Bill of Divorcement" is no longer distinguished, but it is a great deal of fun, and anyone in- terested in American theater and cinema ought to dash down to the Orpheum before the film is inter- sticed with television commercials. -Ernest Theodossin LETTERS to the ~gT?1 EDITOR Letters to the E5ditor must be signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or with- hold any letter. Sigma Kappa . . To the Editor: j AM somewhat puzzled and per- pleced at the Daily's, or at least somefof its editors and reporters, vindictive attitude toward the local chapter of Sigma Kappa. It is quite apparent that the antagonis- tic view ,obviously held by a large segment of The Daily staff toward the Fraternity system as a whole, has been carried over from the editorial columnst to the news pages. It is, however, regrettable that the responsible members of The Daily should let their emotions get the best of them at a time when such unsubstantiated charges will hurt most-at a time when this chapter has its last chance at a formal rush for a year and a half. Sigma Kappa is new to our cam- pus, and therefore faces enough difficulties without having to de- fend the actions of their national organization (however reprehensi- ble such actions may be proven) against the attacks of a sensation hungry, circulation seeking, college smear sheet, and of a publicity hunting, rabble-rousing, self-ap- pointed campus moral leader (Joe "burden of proof" Collins): The Daily has by its Star Cham- ber tactics prejudiced many coeds, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an of- ficial publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. No tices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day prece- ing publication. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1956 VOL. LX VII, NO. 10 General Notices Meeting of the University Staff. Gen. eral staff meeting at 4:15 p.m., Mon., Oct. 22, in Rackham Lecture Hall. President Hatcher will discuss the state of the University. All members of the University staff, academi and non- academic, are invited. Moving in date for Northwood Apart- ment tenants: The following apartments will be ready for occupancy Oct. 2: 1800-1815, inclusve. 1831-1842, inclusive. 1849-1856, inclusive. Please report directly to the manager of Northwood Apartments for your apartment keys. Fencing instruction for men will be offered in the Intramural Building Boxing Room this semester on Mondays and Tuesdays at 4:30 p.m. Training be- gins Mon. and Tues., Oct. 1 and 2. Wea- pons and protective equipment will be provided. Participation in various indi- vidual and team competitions will be possible later in the year for men suf- ficiently advanced in technique by that time. Plans are also being made for weekly coeducational fencing. Experienced fencers may call No - 2-2400 for schedule of advanced fencing. Rules governing participation i non- athletic extracurricular activities. Any regularly enrolled student is eligible to participate in non-athletic extra- curricular activities provided he is not on academic discipline. RESPONSIBILITY: Responsibility for observance of the eligibility statement is, placed directly upon the student. In case of doubt of status, students should inquire at the Office of Student Affairs. Partici- pation in an extracurricular activity in violation of the requirement may sub- ject a student to disciplinary action. RESTRICTIONS: In interpretation of the above eligi- biltiy statement, the following are spe- cifically forbidden to participate in extracurricular activities indicated be- low: b) Part-time and special students carrying less than twelve hours. ACTIVITIES:. The eligibility requirements must be met by students participating in such activities as are listed below. The list is not exhaustive but is intended to indicate the kinds of extracurricular activities for participation in which eligibility is necessary. a) Participation in public perform- ances which are sponsored by student organizations and which require group rehearsals. Examples: Union Opera Junior Girls' Play; productions of the 'Gilbert and Sullivan Society, Student Players, and Inter-Arts Union: per- formances of Arts Chorale and the Glee Clubs. b)Participation in public perform. ances which are sponsored by academic courses and which require group re- hearsals, for those participants who are not enrolled in the sponsoring course for credit. Examples: Ensemble 45, 46 (Orchestra), Ensemble 47, 48 (Bands), Ensemble 49, 50 (Choir), Voice 11, 12, 155, 156 (Opera workshop). C) Staff members of student publica tions. Examples: Daily, Gargoyle, Michi- ganensian, Technic, Generation. d) Officers and chairmen of stand- ing committees in student organizations including house groups. This includes positions in house groups such as so- cial, athletic, rushing, personnel, pledge training, and publication chairmen, house managers and stewards. e) Class officers and candidates for such office. f) Members and candidates for mem- bership in studen government groups. Examples: Student Legislature, Judici- ary Councils, Intrafraternity Council, Panhellenic Board, Assembly Board, In- terhouse Council, Inter-cooperative Council, League and Union student government groups, Music School As. sembly, Business Administration Coun. cil. g) Committee members for major campus projects and dances. Examples: Michigras, Winter Carnival, ,League committees, Frosh week end, Sopho- more Cabaret, Assembly Ball, Inter- fraternity Council Ball, Homecoming Dance, Senior Ball, J-Hop. h) Representatives of off-campus ac- tivities. i) Representatives of student aculty committees. SPECIAL PERMISSION: Special permission to participate i extracurricular activities in exception to the regulations may be granted in extraordinary cases by the offices of the Dean of women and the Dean of Men. DENIAL OF PERMISSION: The Dean of Women or the Dean of Men may, in extraordinary cases, deny permission to participate in an ac~tivity -4 } .1 j A GOP Overcoming Complacency REPUBLICAN LEADERS have rapidly become aware that the election in November may not be a walk-away for President Eisenhower. The chief executive seems to be dropping bit by bit his role of benevolent grandfather. His attack on the Democrats Wednesday in Peoria, where he called the Democratic farm program' "mockery and deceit," was by far his strongest since the 1952 campaign. His announcement Thursday that he is step- ping up his campaign activities at the request of some of his nervous party associates is again ndicitive of what has been taking place within the ranks of the Republican party. A rash of polls taken in the midwest and south within the past two weeks show that the Democrats have made clear gains over 1952. PARTY WORKERS in key parts of the coun- try have reported difficulty in getting voters interested. And in some areas, it has been diffi- cult even to get party workers interested. This apparent complacency reminded Repub- lican leaders of the 1948 dream that turned into a nightmare and they certainly don't want a repetition. The political situation is healthy when a man of the President's great personal popularity still has to deliver the goods before he can feel the election is "sewed-up." -RICHARD TAUB TODAY AND TOMORROW: Suez Solution Must Have Support INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Tito's Trip to Moscow By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst SOMEHOW OR OTHER, reports from Europe that Marshal Tito has gone to Russia to intervene in Russian internal affairs just don't seem to fit. If Khrushchev and Bulganin are in trouble with the Stalinist old guard of the Soviet, it is hard to see how Tito, the old guards long-time enemy, could be expected to be persuaded that the downgraders of Stalin are correct. We have in these European reports a re- currence that things are bad in Russia and the satellites to the point of some'sort of break. Over the years such reports have proved to be merely wishful thinking. Western observers have doubted all the time that the so-called co-operative government in Russia would prove permanent, or that the Molotov forces would accept downgrading with- out a struggle. That struggle may well be going on under cover. It's the Tito angle which seems incongruous. FROM THIS DISTANCE it seems more logical that Tito himself is either in trouble or else mad about recent criticism of his politics froni Russian sources. His Yugoslav party has been accused of not being truly Communist, which he may consider a violation of the "co-existence" agreement with Khrushchev. Tito may be insisting that the international Communists keep their fingers out of his pie, as they promised when they agreed that their was not the only road to Communist goals. There is also the possibility that the Kremlin still considers Titoism a subversive element among the satellites, and is trying to persuade him into greater neutrality on such issues as satellite autonomy. Khrushchev may be fright- ened at the results of his limited liberalization movement. Tito, whatever else you may think about him, has been a pretty shrewd operator. He backs By WALTER LIPPMAN THE SUEZ AFFAIR ,is being brought to the United Nations amidst predictions that nothing useful can be expected to come from the move. Must we t ke this defeatism for granted? That de- pends, I venture to think, on what is behind the move. Have Great Britain and France turned to the UN because they have run out of ideas, and cannot think of what else to do? Or will they, with the United States in the role of medi- ator on behalf of their interests, work out a Western policy which fits the realities of the United Nations? THE PESSIMISTIC predictions arise from the assumption that Great Britain and France will ask the Security'Council to approve as the terms of a settlement the pro- posals which were agreed to by 18 out of the 22 nations who were at the first London conference. These are the proposals for international "operation" of the canal. As at least two members of the Security Council, the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, are expected to refuse accept them. The second is that the Western proposals are, there- fore, -themselves negotiable, and that we are in the United Nations in order that a negotiation can be brought about. The alternative- which is to treat the Western pro- posals as essentially non-negoti- able, as in thennature of an ulti- matum-would be sterile and cer- tain to alienate the kind of inter-- national opinion which the West has gone to the UN to win. It will be better not to have gone at all than to refuse to negotiate when we got there. - * * . . A POLICY of negotiation inside the UN should have as its primary objective the working out of pro- posals which have wide and pow- erful international support. Great Britain and France, and in a meas- ure the United States as well, are in a weak position which they must correct before they can hope to come to satisfactory terms with Nasser. They have exposed to all the world the fact that the military threats were mostly bluff. They have exposed it to the world that the talk about a boycott was based end the moral and political isola- tion in which we find ourselves. How is that to be done? By re- membering that there were two plans at the first London confer- ence, the Western plans for inter- national operation and the Indian plan for international supervision, and they by offering in the UN to. found the new negotiations on both of these plans. The differences be- tween the two plans can be enor- mous or they can be small, depend- ing upon how much the two sides want to agree, * * THIS PRIMARY negotiation would not be with Nasser but in fact with India and with the Soviet Union. It is not possible to negoti- ate successfully with Nasser as long as we propose terms which the Soviet Union and all of Asia will back Nasser in rejecting. in the UN we have a chance to cori'ect the mistake which we made, so it seems to me, at the first London conference. The mistake was to prefer a plan which, however de- sirable, was impractical to a plan which has the support of all the nations concerned. This is not to forget to minimize