Voter Registration Survey Shows Discrepancies By PETER ECKSTEIN A survey of voting registration requirements for students yester- day revealed wide discrepancies in practice and interpretation of state law in Ann Arbor and other college towns in the state. At least one University student has received different interpre- tations on different days from the city clerk's office on his right to register and vote, and four different standards are in effect for stu- dents in Ann Arbor, East Lansing, Lansing Township and Ypsilanti. While many students in Ann Arbor face questioning on their fi- nancial dependence, intentions after leaving school, parental control and atttiude toward Ann Arbor as their "home", in Lansing Township, where many Michigan State University married students live, a simple statement of age and residence is all that is asked of a poten- tial student voter. In practice, however, several Ann Arbor students have reported being asked no questions concerning their intentions, whereas others have been denied the franchise on the grounds that they would leave Ann Arbor upon graduation. In East Lansing itself, married students living in the town can register, while unmarried ones "cannot register here except under very unusual circumstances," according to City Clerk Thelma Mc- Dougal. She explained that.otphans and naturalized Americans whose parents were still living abroad would probably qualify. In Ypsilanti, students at Eastern Michigan College are per- mitted to vote as long as they state they are free from the financial help of their parents. If a student there is married, he is "assumed" to be free of parental support and the question is not even asked. "We don't want to embarrass him," Ypsilanti City Clerk Betty Fenker ex- plained to The Daily. Despite the differences in practice, all four city and township clerks questioned are acting under the same constitution, supreme court interpretations and laws of Michigan. Now-Liberal Provisions The now-liberal provisions in Lansing Township - where the fact than an individual is a student is no longer an issue, and a special registration booth has been set up for student voters - came about as a result of negotiations between township officials and the MSU attorney, Leland Carr, Jr. Township clerk Belle McMillen, long a hold-out for stricter re- strictions on student voting, now registers students "on their admis- sion that they are residents. We take them wholesale." Formerly Mrs. McMillen asked the questions of intention to stay, parental control and financial independence still asked of some stu- dent voters in Ann Arbor. Once-Asked Qualifications Contacted in East Lansing, Carr ,told The Daily he interpreted the required affirmation of residency s implying that the registrant swears he meets the qualifications for student registration which were formerly explicitly asked. Ann Arbor City Clerk Fred Looker, when the Lansing Township procedure was described to him, suggested that it was in violation of the Michigan constitution. He explained that the requirements for student registration (asked of some - but not all - students, in Ann Arbor) are not implied in the affirmation Lansing Township now relies on. The large amount of legal material bearing on the issue of student voting is probably the major cause of confusion. Ann Arbor city attorney Jacob Fahrner, Jr., who has the final word on registra- tion applications in the city, uses as his guide a 1946 decision by the Michigan attorney general reviewing the relevant decisions and sta- tutes. The question goes back to a section of the state constitution which says, "No elector shall be deemed to have gained or lost residency .. . while a student in any institution of learning." On the basis of that section, Ann Arbor once barred all students originally from other cities from voting. Often-Decisive Circumstance The state supreme court in 1912 (People vs. Osborn) declared that the fact that a person is a student is --A circumstance of no im- See REPORT, Page 6 EDUCATIONAL POLICY: A FACULTY FUNCTION (See Page 4) Y . 4bujau Daii4 POSSIBLE SHOWERS Latest Deadline in the State OL. LXVII, No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1956 SIX PAGES Ask, City To Annex Canal All East Ann Arbor Uniusual Request Would Facilitate 'Existing Property Improvement' By WILLIAM HANEY A rare proposal for Ann Arbor to annex an entire city, East Ann Arbor, was presented to the Ann Arbor City Council last night. East Ann Arbor residents filed petitions last month expressing their desire to be annexed by Ann Arbor. The issue will be presented to Ann Arbor residents in form of a referendum vote Nov. 6. "Annexations in which one city wants to take in another entirej city are themselves unusual," Ann Set U' Users Amid Association st Dispute White Group Roughs Up ANegro Pu ils BEAUMONT, Tex. (P) - Pickets from a new white Citizens Coun- cil last night roughed up two Negro students and prevented them from attending night classes at Lamar Tech College. } The students were not injured, police said. Their names were not learned. Police who went to the scene met two other Negro students as they arrived at the campus to at- tend classes and advised them to go home. They did. Adults Converge About 150 white adults con- verged on the college about 7 p.m. and set up a picket line. They carried placards with slo- gans such as "rebels with a cause," "keep our education system white" and "for the good of the nation and the welfare of the in- dividual, segregate and educate." After the incident involving the first two Negroes, the pickets moved to the college administra- tion building. Reports Unconfirmed There were unconfirmed reports that a Negro student was in the building. The crowd was swelled by stu- dents attracted to the scene. Some students joined in passing out pamphlets and a newspaper pub- lished by the Association of Citi- zens Councils at Jackson, Miss. About 30 policemen patrolled the campus but made no effort to dis- perse the pickets. Ordered to Open Lamar Tech, a four-year state- supported school, was ordered to admit Negro students this year by a Federal District Court. It has an enrollment of about 5,000 day students and 1,300 night students. There are 26 Negroes en- rolled in day classes and seven in night classes. Three crosses have been burned on the campus since the first stu- dent applied for admission this fall. Israel Group Walks Out Of Meeting JERUSALEM (R) - The Israeli delegation to the Israel-Jordan Armistice Commission walked out of a meeting of the commission yesterday just as the chairman was about to vote on a resolution proposed by Jordan. The Israelis took the view the rhnr-bn mu c +rain r fn .nf . Arbor Administrator Guy Larcom said yesterday, "but this case is exceptionally unique in that both cities deem annexation desirable." Prior to presentation to the City Council the proposal had been studied by Ann Arbor's City Plan- ning Commission. Although the commission did not present an opinion for or against annexation, they did conclude "the proposal to annex East Ann Arbor shuold re- ceive favorable consideration." East Ann Arbor city officials ex- plained part of their reason for requesting annexation is "because of its limited economic and polit- ical potential, the city is unable to assume fully its share of commu- nity responsibilities." Most of the dwellings in East Ain Arbor were built prior to that city's incorporation, and were sub- ject only to minimum rural build- ing codes. At present officials of both cities feel the low level of ur- ban services discourages high grade residential construction. Extension of Ann Arbor's city services and resulting stricter building codes would 'eliminate many of the substandard dwellings and make feasible and desirable "improvement and rehabilitation of existing properties," acording to the commission's report. Immediate financial demands on various Ann Arbor city depart- ments would be quite substantial, but th1e Commission felt "short- range costs will not be so burden- some as to rule out completely subsequent economic advantages." Average assessment value per acre in East Ann Arbor is set at $5,100. Ann Arbor assessed acreage value has been levied at $20,500, including "an abnormally high amourt of tax exempt University property." In presenting the report to the Council, the planning commission stressed the similarity between Ann Arbor and other "core cities," such as Detroit, Cleveland, Ohio, and Peoria, Ill. Report Lists Soil Pay%,ments to Farmers WASHINGTON (A')-The Agri- culture Department said yesterday it paid out nearly three and one- half million dollars to farmers in the soil bank program up to Sept. 21. At the same time, it said the total of payments for 1956 proba- bly will be somewhat less than the almost 261 million dollars which it had originally estimated. The program was set up by Con- gress this year, with both Demo- crats and Republicans claiming authorship. Its purpose is to at- tack the farm surplus problem by paying farmers to divert acreage Prnm ~iinnP A r.,4, is~ri n -Daily-vern Soden MY NAME IS-Fraternity rushees meet Phi Epsilon Pi brothers in a session typical of current fraternity rushing. Today is the last day to sign up (at the Office of Student Affairs) for formal rushing, Shell Glass, '59, has announced. 6 _ I TO DECIDE FUTURE: Prof . Smith Appointed Law Dean. Appointment of Prof. Russell A. Smith as dean of the Law School has been announced by the Board of Regents. Prof. Smith, secretary of the University's Law School for the past 11 years, took over his posi- tion shortly after the Regents' dis- closure of the new appointment. The position was created "as a result of .the increasing pressures and administration load of the dean of the school," according to University officials. Prof. Smith, a graduate of the Law School in 1934, has been as- sociated with the University for all but a few years since his grad- uation. Among other responsibilities Prof. Smith will be directly re- sponsible to Dean E. Blythe Stason for the development and planning of educational ideas and policies and alumni relations de- velopment. Governor G. Mennen Williams in 1955 appointed Prof. Smith, an authority in labor law, to the chairmanship of a special com- mission under the Michigan State Labor Mediation Act in a matter concerning Consumers Power Co. and the Utility Workers Union of America. Prof. Smith is presently a mem- ber of the Atomic Energy Labor- Management Relations Panel, a federal commission. The professor was born in Man- illa, Ia., Sept. 20, 1906. He will act in an advisory capa- city for the selection of University personnel. Supreme Court Begms New Civil Rights Parley WASHINGTON (')-The Supreme Court yesterday began a session that may go far in determining the country's future course in the field of civil rights. The nine-man court in the weeks and months ahead will tackle a heavy docket of cases studded with problems of racial integration in public schools. It will also consider applications of the Smith Act, the govern- ment's primary weapon against the Communist party. Opening Session Brief The opening session was, by tradition, held to brief formalities. Next Monday the court will begin hearing arguments on the renewed attacks against the Smith Act. The court will determine later this month what action, if any, it will take in the school segregation cases. For Associate Justice Sherman Minton, this week and next will be his last on the high bench. Minton, 65 years old, is retiring Ot. 15 because of ill health. President Dwight D. Eisenhower Saturday named William J. Brennan, Jr., of New Jersey to succeed him. Brennan's appointment is subject to approval of the Senate. During the summer recess three CANDIDATES HIT CU appeals were filed from District high court's order last year to endIke enforced segregation in public schools "with all deliberate speed." Appeals Pending ALCd to SCht Two of the appeals now pending are from Texas school boards. The third appeal was filed by a group LEINGTON, Ky. E')-President of South Carolina Negro parents Dwight D. Eisenhower told 20,000 who want their children admitted cheering Kentuckians yesterday immediately to"white schools. his administration has pointed the Also scheduled for hearing is an nation toward "lasting prosperity" appeal by Steve Nelson, Pittsburgh in which 70 million Americans can Communist party leader, and by count on good paying jobs if he 14 California Communist leaders. is re-elected. All were convicted of advocating Invading the Ohio and Kentucky violent overthrow of the govern- midlands in a one-day campaign ment, a criminal offense under sortie, President Eisenhower blug- the Smith Act. geoned the Democratic-controlled FOUR CREWMEN PERISH: Largest Delta-WingJet Crashes on Test Flight LONDON (IP)-The Vulcan, world's largest delta-wing bomber, missed the runway and crashed in flames at mist-shrouded London Airport yesterday. Hair-trigger ejection seats catapulted the pilot' and a British air marshal to safety, but four crewmen perished. A distinguished crowd waiting to welcome the four-jet "Mighty Bat" home from a testing flight to Australia witnessed the crash. Plane Came Out of Rain The plane, one of Britain's secret atom-bomb carriers, roared out of driving rain and plunged into the ground while being "talked in" because of bad visi- bility. Britain's bomber chief, Air Mar- shal Sir Harry Broadhurst and pilot Donald Howard made last- second escapes as their ejector seats hurled them through the cabin roof. Undercarriage Ripped After an investigation, a spokes- man for the Hawker-Siddeley group and A. V. Roe, makers of the Vulcan, said parts of the undercarriage were found in a1 plowed field several hundred yards in front of the runway. This, the spokesman said, indi- cated the aircraft touched down in advance of the concrete runway and the undercarriage was ripped off. YD's To Hear UAW Director Campus Young Democrats will settlement of the question of Am- at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the. League. Brendan Sexton, educational dir- ector of the United Auto Workers, will address the group. Plans for the semester will be discussed, according to Bill Peer, '57, campus YD president. Dules Talks In ITelan WASHINGTON (P)-Secretary of State John F. Dulles met for 80 minutes with Iceland's foreign minister yesterday in.a.session both agreed "gave rise to hope" for; hold their organizational meeting erican troops in Iceland. " This cautiously optimistic note was disclosed in a joint statement authorized after the initial meet- ing, a get-together which both sides insisted did not represent "negotiations" but only prelimin- ary talks on the problem. Actual negotiations on Iceland's demand that United States troops be withdrawn from its territory will begin "sometime in the near future," spokesmen said. Dulles, on behalf of the 14-na- tion North Atlantic pact Council, wants to maintain some of the 4,000 American troops in Iceland to operate the giant Kefavik air base as an important outpost in Western defenses. ,I Big 3 Suez Controversy Continues 15 of 18 Countries Join Association; May Still Use Force LONDON (-)--The Suez Canal Users Association was set up yes- terday amid reports of Western Big Three disagreement on wheth- er Egypt may be either persuaded or forced to accept international control. Fifteen of the 18 nations invited to. London joined SCUA at once. Japan, Pakistan 'and Ethopsa re- mained on the fence. Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd of Britain once more refused to rule out force as a final solution." Dislikes Force Lloyd told newsmen just-before leaving by plane for New ork and the United Nations Security Council debate on Suez: "We dislike the use of force,but we intend to stand by our rights and the rights of other nations." Lloyd and Foreign Minister Christian Pineau of France will meet with Secretary of State John F. Dulles ahead of the UN del ate in an effort to present a united front before the Security Council. Stopgap Group The United States, Britain and France sponsored the formation of SCUA as a stopgap group to press Egypt peacefully to give up sole control of the waterway. The UN Security Council is due to debate the crisis Friday. In- formed diplomats in London say the United States favors a softer, more flexible approach to Egypt. than Britain and France. The Americans reportedly would like to get Egypt into talks. The British and French would like to chart courses that would compel the regime of President Nasser to come to acceptable terms. Control Settlement British and French officials em- phasized that Dulles has given them no reason to doubt that the United States wants anything less than they do-a settlement based on some form of international con- trol of Suez. But differences have come up relating to tactics and methods. While Britain and France are- the prime movers of the case for presentation to the Security Coun- cil, the United States has.caution. ed against a resolution condemn. ing the Nasser regime. Baum Unable To Perform Claramae Turner, Metropolitan Opera contralto, will replace- Kurt Baum in the Choral Union Con- cert Series at 8:30 p.m. Thursday at Hill Auditorium. Baum will not be able to per- form because of illness. Miss Turner will be heard in solos and 'duets with Herva Nelli, RRENT ISSUES: 70 Million Jobs; Adlai Calls for More ools; Estes Jabs Ike; Nixon Clears Self i y l 1 Sen. Douglas Taflk Slated. Thursday's speech by Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D-Ill.) will be held at 2:10 p.m. in the Union Ball- room, it was announced yesterday by Young Democrats President Bill Peer, '57. fan Thnrilac' fnu, n+i+HA "nTh Congress in the same manner in which former President Harry S. Truman attacked the Republican Congress in 1948. Without naming him, President Eisenhower described Adlai E. Stevenson, the Democratic presi- dential nominee, as an "appar- ently confused" candidate who wants to return to the "zig-zag, directionless road of trial and error" government. Eisenhower ripped into Steven- son and the Democrats for what WASHINGTON (A') - Adlai E. Stevenson called yesterday for a federal aid-to-education program to help provide 50,000 teachers and 100,000 classrooms each year, plus a college education for all "able students." The Democratic presidential' nominee accused President Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration of having "utterly failed to develop a comprehensive policy for educa- tion." He said the administration had demonstrated a lack of "strong leadership in the cause of our most valuable resource-our child- ren." Stevenson said his program en- visages spending of from 500 mil- lion to one billion dollars more each year for' the next 10 years. . He said local communities are having a tough time finding money to pay for schools so future financing will have to come largely WACO, Tex. (A*)-Senator Estes Kefauver said yesterday President Dwight D. Eisenhower is "too busy trying to win an election with sun- shine and smiles to do anything effective to help small farmers and ranchers hard pressed by drought." The Democratic vice-presidential nominee climaxed the first day of his second campaign tour with a speech at the big "Heart O'Texas" fair, hammering hard at the Re- publicans on the farm issue. He centered much of his attack directly on the President, but in- cluded some jabs at Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Taft Benson. Sen. Kefauver noted that 185 of Texas' 254 counties are listed as disaster areas because of drought, and remarked, "I am not going to blame the drought on the Republicans." But, he went on in his prepared text, "The natural disaster over this state has been compounded, MILWAUKEE (R) -Vice-Presi- dent Richard M. Nixon reiterated yesterday he had never accused Adlai Stevenson or former Presi- dent Harry 1S. Truman of being "traitors," in the general mean- ing of the word. But he admitted that he did say, that "Mr. Truman and others like him were traitors" to the princi- ples of the Democratic party. Nixon made the statements in a televised panel program, "Milwau- kee Reports," over station WXIX- TV. It was on' this same program that Truman recently accused Nixon of having charged him, dur- ing a 1954 campaign speech in Texarkana, with being a traitor. After the television appearance, Nixon made what was billed as a non-political talk at Marquette University's Brooks Memorial Union, where he got the biggest reception of the eight-hour tour