Sixty-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN when Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY,OCTOBER 17, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: CAROL PRINS A SENIOR EDITORIAL: Legyislature Should Aid '' In Building Residence Halls At the rate new housing is going up Because of the rapid building pro- the deluge of students expected in the gram this source has been exhausted, next few years may force conversion of and the University is now attempting to State Street into a trailer camp. - raise equity by the use of a portion of By next fall there will be an estimated student fees, a long and complicated increase of 2,250 students-but no new process. housing. The following year we will A major cause, thei, for the Univer- have the new women's dorm providing sity's inability to keep pace with enroll- 1,200 spaces. ment is the time needed to accumulate A proposed coed dorm housing 1,500 equity money for new residence halls. is at least five years away (1961) with ere is no feasible way in which an expected increase of 6,500 students the University can accumulate, by itself, by 1960. equity rapidly enough to provide suffi- Clearly, construction of University dent housing. housing will be unable to accommodate Traditionally the State 'Legislature increased enrollment. has made no appropriations for resi- Much of the trouble stems from the dence halls. If it sticks to tradition it may find the Ann Arbor landscape self-liquidating plan. Although work. dottedwthesurplusbartnsc ablewhe coceied i 190, he lan dotted with surplus army tents. able wn tconceived iThe Legislature's reluctance to fi- as it now stands is incapable of providing nance residence halls is largely a residue residence halls fast enough. from the days when housing was looked Essentially, self-liquidating financing upon with a jaundiced eye and the entails building with borrowed money. feeling prevailed that universities had The financing involve~s a pledge of no place in the real estate business. restricted revenues (such as room and With common recognition of the board fees) to pay off the debt accord- value of housing socially and culturally ing to a prescribed time schedule. The oriented to the pace of the academic money is borrowed by selling revenue life, such reluctance is hard to justify. bonds, usually to banks and life insur- ance companies. The State Legislature has fostered the In order .to borrow the money, the growth of the University in many areas. University must already have on hand It has responded generously to the 20 to 25 per cent of the total funds needs of the institution. It should re- for a new dorm. Thus, to build a spond in similar fashion to housing $5,000,000 residence hall the University needs. must accumulate roughly $1,000,000, State Legislature appropriations to called equity money, before it can provide equity money for residence halls borrow the other $4,000,000. self-liquidating projects would greatly speed construction. Further, it need not It is in accumulating the equity that essentially change the nature of the the University runs into trouble. The self-liquidating plan. first dorms were built with the help of Such appropriations would bring the federal funds. Dorm rates were set State Legislature up to date on the higher than needed to retire the bonds. concept of University-sponsored hous- The excess was used to provide equity ing as a logical adjunct of education. for new dorms.-THE SENIOR EDITORS Personalities Influence Women's Vote "You Keep Out Of This!" I LETTERS to the EDITOR I POJ'T r LIMIT' I 'Y - GP'9sZ '14. wlASit+ 6'rY~wt'F S' "e* Letters to the Editor musthbe signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or with- hold any letter. Twisted . . To the Editor: SATURDAY'S editorial represent- ing Mrs. Mary Schoenheit's fight to secure a more liberal and individualized education for her children (than is available in her public schools) as a condemna- tion of the progress that has been made in public educational phil- osophy contained some of the most twisted logic which I have ever read in professional or lay com- mentaries on education. The former school teacher ob- jects to her public schools for be- ing "antiquated," you object to their progress; she has added violin to her child's studies, you object to an "emphasis on extra- curricular activities;" she rebels at the pressure for conformity still prevalent in too many of our pub- lic schools, you ridicule the mod- ern educator for his aim of "de- veloping the individual." . Those of us who believe in the merit of public education believe that Mrs. Schoenheit's child should go to school not because she couldn't learn the "3 R's" at home, but because we know that for a child to live successfully in the world of today she needs more than the 3 R's, she also needs the experience of growing up enjoying the normal associations of work- ing and playing with people her own age which are essential to adult social adjustment and the maturity which every society owes to it's youth. Children are different. They vary in their social and emotional needs and skills as well as in their academic skills. Mrs. Sch- oenheit has stated her opposition to the "concept that all children, regardless of race, color, creed, social background and individual capabilities should be forced to submit to one standard of educa- tion." But this is a concept of your S"traditional" schools, not that of the modern school where teachers reflect the basic truth that every child deserves the kind of educa- tion best suited to his needs end abilities. 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 preced- ing publication. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1956 VOL. LXVII, NO. 24 General Notices Freshman Testing Program: Make-up sessions for freshmen who missed any of the Aptitude tests given Saturday of orientation week will be held Tues. evening, Oct. 16, and Thurs. evening. Oct. 18. Please report, on either night. to Aud. B, Angell Hall promptly at 6:50 p.m. The language placement examina- tions and the engineering mathemat- ics, chemistry, and English placement examinations will not be given. For further information call Ext. 2297. Blue Cross Group Hospitalization, Medical and Surgical Service Programs for staff members will be open from Oct. 8 thru Oct. 19, 1956, for new ap- plications and changes in contracts now in effect. Staff members who wish to include surgical and medical services should make such changes in the Per- sonnel Office, Room 3012 Administra- tion Building. New applications~ and changes will be effective Dec. 5, with the first deduction on Nov. 30. After, Oct. 19, no new applications or changes can be accepted until April, 1957. Marshall Scholarship applications are now available in the Scholarship Office, 113 Administration Building. Completed applications must be returned to this office no later than Oct. 24. Late permission: All women students who attended the concert on Monday, Oct. 15, had late permission until 11:00 p.m. Michigan Union, 7:30 p.m. 4 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND; Wron Senator' Explanation By DREW PEARSON THE OTHER DAY when this column approached Sen. Albert Gore, Democrat of Tennessee, about a Republican from Nevada who mistakenly asked him for funds to defeat a fellow Democrat in Nevada, Gore flatly refused to say anything. However, we have now been able to obtain a private letter which Gore wrote to a friend in Nevada giving further details of the phone call. The man who phoned Gore thought he was Sen. Barry Gold- water, the rootin' tootin' Republi- can of Arizona, formerly top mon- ey-raiser for Senate Republicans. In the letter Gore refers to the man as a "Mr. Stanford." How- ever, he was actually William San- ford of Reno, Nev., who has been raising money for Rep. Cliff Young, the .Republican candidate who is running for the Senate against Sen. Alan Bible in Nevada. HERE IS THE letter which Sen- ator Gore, the man who is probing campaign funds, wrote about the phone call from the man who wanted more campaign funds: "I had a most unusual tele- phone call. When I returned from lunch, one of the girls told me that a Mr. Stanford from Reno had called, saying he had just arrived and hadn't slept for three nights but was most anxious for me to call him and not to hesitate to awaken him. She told me the call had only come in about ten min- utes before my return. So I tele- phoned Mr. Standford. "When he came on the line he started talking and I started lis- tening, having some difficulty un- derstanding all that he was talk- ing about. "MR. STANFORD first told me about how hard he was working and had been up for most of three nights either in Nevada, Chicago, or en route. He first said he sup- posed I would be' down at the cocktail party at the Mayflower this afternoon. I replied that I wasn't sure I would. As a matter of fact I had not heard anything about a cocktail party, but was a little uncertain about my remarks since one does receive invitations to such affairs and either may overlook them or temporarily for- get the date. "Anyway Stanford went on to say, 'I'll see you at the committee meeting in the morning.' I said, 'What committee meeting is that?' He then went on to explain that it was the finance committee; that he had received an urgent wire to come into Washington for a meeting of the finance commit- tee which '. . . said that you would be there.' "From that point Stanford pro- ceeded to tell me of 'our plight' in Nevada and said that campaign contributions had dried up; that they had not been able to raise more than $10,000 for Young; that two weeks ago ht seemed to be 20,000 votesbehind; that he may have picked up 5,000 votes but was still running behind and need- ed money badly. * * "AT THIS POINT I broke in to Stanford's conversation and said, 'Mr. Stanford, there must be some error; this is Senator Gore speak- ing and I'm a Democrat.' "You can imagine how flabber- gasted he was, and finally mut- tered something about my voice sounding exactly like the voice of the Senator to whom he had been talking. Of course I made no in- quiry as to whom he may have talked. In fact, I asked no ques- tions at all. Stanford did make some remark about having a brother who ran a paper in south- ern Nevada. That is the only clue I have to his identification as he did not give his first name either to me or to the girl who took his call." Senator Gore attached a post- script to his letter explaining that he frequently gets phone calls that are intended for Senator Goldwater of Arizona. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) r i t 4 a a --Bob Geake THOUGH statistics prove that women hold the balance of voting power in the United States, a recent survey has shown that they think about politics to a lesser extent than do the men of the nation. At least the survey has shown that they talk less about politics - which is practically the same thing, as any male expert will hasten to assure. In an election year such as 1956 where the individual basic issues are those propounded by the candidates themselves and not main planks in the party platform, American wo- men are going to be more increasingly aware of personalities rather than issues. Certainly some of the issues under con- sideration will draw more attention than oth- ers. Adlai Stevenson's proposals to abandon the draft and abolish hydrogen bomb tests will probably have the effect of cancelling out one another. ON THE surface, the draft problem is ap- pealing -- women like having their ~men reasonably near home. On the other hand, they have a distrust regarding H-bomb curtailment. The distrust stems from the security of know- ing that as long as the U.S. has nuclear weapons they are not likely to be used against her. The Democrats plan to make the cost of living a major campaign issue, but in these times of economic stability, the slight rise in food prices creates no more than a very minor effect. So there is a turn to personalities - Eisen- hower's against Stevenson's - or against the Demcratic party, as has been proposed by sev- eral political analysts. AND THE women like both Eisenhower and Nixon as personalities. They like Ike's kind- liness and his sincerity. They feel that he knows his way around in foreign affairs. And they like his partner on the ticket - again, because of his personable qualities. The majority of women are unconcerned with the more complicated intricacies of the presidential election, and little can be done to change this. Party organizations as will be shown on Nov. 6 in order to "get-out-the-vote" from this large group must have a segment of the campaign directed toward the particular in- terests of the American woman. -JANET REARICK Associate Editorial Director IKE AND ADLAI: Rematch of 1952 Candidates By MARVIN ARROWSMITH Associated Press Writer PRESIDENT Eisenhower is scrapping hard for a second- term victory. The "new" Adlai Stevenson is waging his own kind of a "give 'em hell" campaign up and down the land. The rematch of the 1952 candi- dates resembles, in some respects, the pattern of four years ago. But there are some tangible contrasts. It's true that Stevenson, the Democratic nominee, opened up in the later phases of the '52 cam- paign when Eisenhower was hit- ting harder too. But this year it's a different Stevenson. It is a difference based much more deeply than his decision, aft- er his March defeat in the Min- nesota primary, to get out and shake a lot more hands, slap some backs, and be less of an intellec- tual "egghead"-a term he laugh- ingly notes is still sometimes ap- plied to him - in talking to cam- paign crowds. The basic change in Stevenson is the conviction which prompted him to go out and fight for the nomination this year-his stated belief that President Eisenhower's Republican administration has not been good for America and the world. And there is Stevenson's contention, also stated publicly many times, that the President himself has failed and should be held personally responsible. From the Republican camp, Ei- pening since the nominating con- ventions of the two major parties met in August underscores why a hammer-and-tongs scrap was in- evitable. The President, obviously stung by Stevenson's point-blank criti- cism, made a dramatic switch in tactics and started firing back hard early in the campaign. Those who know Eisenhower well had predicted he would shift gears and reply to his opponent. They made the prediction even though in San Francisco on Aug. 23, a few hours before he was nominated for another term, the President said he never had and never would reply to criticism. A. good deal of it had been aimed his way from the Democratic con- vention in Chicago a week earlier. Last month, before the cam- paign was formally under way, Eisenhower again declined to an- swer Stevenson attacks on his ad- ministration, including a conten- tion the Republican regime had been marke dby "a contagion of corruption." The President said he would leave the replies to others in his party. 'Bicycle' Sidewalks? To the Editor: T SEEMS the time has come for someone to do something about the present bicycle problem in the central campus area. Joel Koening started the wheels rolilng in his letter to the editor which appeared in Sunday's Daily. I have a few ideas on how to make it safer for both the rider and walker.' 1. The University should (with a little of its many millions of dol- lars) construct a few strategic bi- cycle walks like those in England parallel to the sidewalks. These would be exclusively for bicycles. Those who still walk to class vould never have to worry about being bruised by a Raleigh and .hose 4,000 pedalling to and from class could move faster to their desti- nation. 2. SGC could form a bicycle committee that would reason with the City Council which has, in the past year, taken the bicycle s tu- ation into its own dictatorial hands. Our councilmen apparently go on the assumption that they can strong-arm the students since we can't vote them out of office. Maybe if they could visualize this town minus the University, then might consider the students an asset to their cherished commu- nity. An SGC committee might tactfully force some light into the opaque minds of our city law mak- ers. Until these (or other) things are done to cope with the problem. maybe the best thing to do is have other amateur writers like myself draft proposals. In the meantime-safe riding and cau- tious walking whenswe meet in the muddled confusion of class- hopping through the diag. -Robert Mancell, '59 Perennial Question .. . To the Editor: WHILE sitting in the Michigan "' League, Recovering from caffein fatigue, I thought of the year to come. It seemed to be: Back to lab fees and to M.G.s, To "Academic Freedom" and the Arboretum; Back to radium and the Michigan stadium, To Hatcher teas and to Mary Lees; Back to the regimental filling of bicycle racks And to the competitive fighting for useless facts; Back to the study of isotopes and schisms, Back to learning of pragmatism and prisms, Back to the search for intellec- tualisms. I wondered, what is it all? A return to learn - Perhaps. -Paul C. Vitz, '57 German Department Make-up exami- nations will be given 3:00 p.m Thurs., Oct. 18, in Room 103, Tappan Hall. All students concerned must register with the departmental secretary, Room 108, Tappan Hall, by Wed., 5:00 p.m., Oct. 17. Orientation Seminar, Thurs., Oct. 18, 7:00 p.m., Room 1300. Chemistry Build- ing. Dr. R. C. Elderfield and Dr.-P. J. Elving will, be the speakers. Physical - Analytical - Inorganic Physical-Analytical-Inorganic Chemis- try Seminar Thurs., Oct. 18, 8:00 p.m., Room 3005, Chemistry\ Building. Dr. L. 0. Case will speak on "Kinetics of Met- al Electrode Reactions." Organic Chemistry Seminar. Thurs., Oct. 18, 8:00 p.m., Room 1300 Chem- istry Building.Richard Zielinski will speak on "The Schonberg Rearrange- ment." 401 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science. Room 3401, Mason Hall, 3:00- 4:30 p.m. Oat. 18 Ian Ross and F. Har- ary (Univ. of Mich.) "Identification of Cliques in Groups." Doctoral Examination for Nathan Al- tucher, Phychology; thesis: "Conflict in Sex Identification in Boys," Thurs., Oct. 18, 7611 Haven Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, R. W.'Heyns. Events Today Speech Assembly, auspices the Dee partment of Speech: 4 p.m., Rackhara Lecture Hall. Dr. Lester Thonnsen, pres- ident of the Speech Association of America and professor at the College of the City of New York, will speak on "Thoughts on a Great American Insti- tution." Coming Events Annual Meeting of the Michigan Con. ference of A.A.U.P. chapters Sat., Oct. 20 at 10:00 a.m. in Room 32. Union building of Michigan State University. SAll members of the U-M A.A.U.P. chap- ter invited. AGENDA STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL MEETING OF OCT 17, 1956 Minutes of the previous meeting Officers' report: President - Interim action Oct. 18, 19 Pakistan Students As-' sociation, movie, Rackham Amphithea- tre. Vice President: Treasurer, Budget. Student Representatives: Cinema, Guild report. Student Activities Building Repert: Dick Good. Administrative Wing Report: Janet- Winkelhaus. National aild International: Free Uni- versity of Berlin. Education and Social Welfare: Lecture Committee study committee. Coordinating and Counseling:' Calen-i dar April 25. 26, 1958 Michigras; Week- end of May 3, 4, May 3 Grease Bag, 1 o'clock closing; Military Ball; May 4 In- ter House Council. Old Business: New Business: Members and constituents time Adjournment. Next meeting, Oct. 24, 1956. Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the English Department. Thomas H. John- son, author and critic, "Emily Dickin- son: How Poetry Is Written." Rackham Amphitheatre. Wed., Oct. 17,4.:10 p.m.' American Chemical Society Lecture. Wed., Oct. 17, 8:00 p.m,., Room 1300., Chemistry Building. Dr. Robert A. Al- berty of the University of Wisconsin will speak on "Kinetics of the Fumarase Reaction." ASC StudentAffiliate. Wed., Oct. 17, Room 1400 Chemistry Building. George; Killich will give a glassblowing dem- onstration. Refreshments. Victor D'Amico, director of the De- partment of Education, Museum of Modern Art, and chairman of the Na- tional Committee on Art Education., will speak at the Architecture Auditorium on Thurs. Oct. 18, at 4:15 p.m. on, "Creativity and Reaction in Art Educa- tion." Open to the public without charge, Academic Notices LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Imponderable Independents (II S By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst IN A political campaign which is stirring a little excitment, some political prognostica- tors are beginning to wonder if the perennial imponderables, the independents and the new voters may not be more imponderable than ever. For one thing, a great new force of voters became independent, at least for the moment, this year, or later? Is there a tendency, as some have pro- fessed to perceive in recent years, for new and younger voters to ignore traditional family vot- ing lines more frequently than their fathers did? ARE these younger voters more jealous of their political prerogatives, more inclined to make up their minds and go to the polls, Placement Notices Representatives from the following will be at the Engineering School: