PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1951 PAGE TWO THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1951 U - S Council Controls Action jH E BATTLE OVER rent controls has ended-at least, temporarily. It consumed more sweat, time and emo- tion than any controversy in recent Ann Arbor history. It was a complex and deep- rooted conflict between contradictory evi- dence, opposing economic principles and burning political theories. It became plagued by side-issues, un- guarded statements and misunderstandings. City Councilmen, reporters and many other citizens for months waded through the facts and distortions, the speeches and the rumors, and finally emerged, some jubilant, some disgusted. Now, in a sense, the headache is over. The Council has chosen to eliminate con- trols. But, in a strange and futile last- minute stroke of conscience, the munici- pal body set up a "watchdog committee" to receive tenant complaints. Judging by this action, it would seem that the real headache had just begun. And it is also a sign of the confusion which has clouded the issue throughout its long and turbulent existence. It is an indication that the anti-rent lid individuals weren't sure of the effect of the control lift. This uncertainty gave rise to numerous misJudgements of the underlying reasons be- hind the Concil's unique handling of the rent control situation. * * * THE DAILY editorial of July 15, signed "The Editors," was generally well- founded and concluded correctly that the removal of rent controls was a dangerous and unwarranted move. However, its insinu- ations concerning the Council's motives were based upon an apparently logical ap- praisal of statements and actions which were not thoroughly investigated. The editorial hit the Council's passing of a dual proposal which first asked Federal Housing Expediter Tighe Woods to decon- trol rents voluntarily, leaving him the pow- er to reinstate the ceilings, and, as an alter- native, required Woods to lift the lids. Knitting together several statements by Prof. Russell A. Smith of the Law School, [Republican alderman, the editorial at- tempted to prove that the unprecedentel Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: SID KLAUS resolution was intended to place respon- sibility with the Federal Government for possible rent spirals after decontrol. Because the Council's resolution was a novel one, and because the Republican ma- jority on the Council were actually in favor of decontrol with no strings attached, this deduction could be supported superficially. But, as the evidence of the conclusion was scanty and questionable, this glib classifica- tion of motives proves false on further anal- ysis. Ald. Smith, the main force behind the Council's compromise move, was well aware of the Council majority's desire to kill rent lids without any means for reinstatement left in the hands of the Government. This much he pointed out in his letter to the edi- tor of July 15. * * * (N PLUGGING FOR the two-part resolu- tion, Ald. Smith was in a dangerous mid- dle-of-the-road position. After a conscienti- ous investigation as head of the Council's special rent committee, he had decided in favor of rent decontrol but wanted to in- corporate a safeguard by which the lids could be clamped on again if the local rent levels got out of hand. Ald. Smith took a gamble and he lost. Woods refused to decontrol rents on his own initiative after Federal surveyers had relayed to Washington their findings on the rental housing shortage here. The Expediter's decision was the only ten- able one he could make. Although the Gov- ernment thereby lost its power to reimpose controls, Woods, in lifting the ceilings vol- untarily would have been forced to ignore the results of the Federal survey. Woods also took a gamble-that the Council would change its mind on the basis of his recommendation. And he too lost. In short, the Council's dual resolution was the best that could be passed considering the eagerness of the majority; and Woods' action was soundly based although it neces- sarily won the battle for the less cautious anti-control forces. The process which preceded the lifting of rent controls in Ann Arbor was, therefore, a more complex one than the sweeping state- ments of The Daily editorial would indicate. Although Ald. Smith's final conclusion- this juncture-was unfortunate, it was even that rent ceilings should be swept away at more unfortunate that his position on the issue resulted in an indirect attack on his unquestionable integrity and sincerity. -Barnes Connable DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go-Round WASHINGTON - Tidelands oil lobbyists are planning a neat trick in order to win the wealthy submerged oil lands off the coast of Texas, California, and Louisana. They are secretly planning to bring up their bill for a surprise vote tomorrow when Northeastern Congressmen begin their Fri- day exodus to New York and Philadelphia. Northeastern Congressmen for the most part favor the plan proposed by ex-Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes and pushed by Senator Hill of Alabama and others, to use royalties from submerged oil lands to aid the schools and colleges of the entire nation. The Supreme Court has ruled that tidelands oil belonged not to the three states which have large deposits off their - shores, but to the entire 48 states. However, the oil lobby has introduced a bill which would reverse the Supreme Court. This is the bill set for a surprise vote on Friday. Note 1-Several hundred thousand teach- ers, school boards, and parent-teacher asso- ciations will be watching to see what Con- gressmen are absent on Friday and how the others vote. Note 2-Senator Case of South Dakota, Republican, who went on record several years ago for the use of tidelands oil royalties for education, is now helping the fight for the improvement of schools and colleges. - PROTECTING THE LOBBYISTS - THOUGH the law requires that Congress publish quarterly reports on lobbyists in t h e Congressional Record, giving their names, incomes, and affiliations, no report has been made so far this year. However, a report on the lobbies for the first quarter of this year has been gathering dust at the Government printing office for almost three months-all because Senator Carl Hayden of Arizona, Chairman of the Joint Committee on Printing, has refused to permit its publication. Senator Hayden claims that it would cost too much to print the full report in the Congressional Record. However, the Arizona Senator hasn't raised his voice against filling the Record with page after page of form letters against price controls which these same lobbyists have inserted through friendly Congressmen at the tax- payers' expense. Naturally, the National Association of Manufacturers, the National Association of Real Estate Boards, the American Medical Association, and other big lobbies agree with Senator Hayden in not wanting the names of their pressure men, or their fees, made public. However, the law is quite clear, and at the moment Senator Hayden is violating the law. - ST. LAWRENCE LOBBY - CERTAIN shipping lobbies are frantically pulling wires against the St. Lawrence Seaway, by which Labrador iron ore could come by boat to the Great Lakes and make Chicago a great inland seaport. This would cut the cost of producing steel and reduce the risk of submarine attack on iron ore that's shipped down the Atlantic Coast. Last week, the anti-Seaway lobby failed by only one vote to pigeonhole the St. Lawrence project permanently in the House Public Works Committee. Here are the Congressmen who voted secretly against this important defense seaway: Fallon of Maryland, Pickett of Texas and Quinn of New York, Democrats; and Angell of Ore- gon, McGregor of Ohio, Auchineloss of New Jersey, Beall of Maryland, Vursell of Illinois, George of Kansas, Bray of Indi- ana, Baker of Tennessee, Wood of Idaho, and Scudder of California, all Republi- cans. Prediction: The lobbyists have been put- ting on more pressure this week, and will win the votes of at least two more Congressmen. As a result, the vital St. Lawrence Seaway, the answer to cheaper steel, will be defeated. -MAC ARTHUR REPORT- P RESIDENT TRUMAN is pressing Demo- cratic Senators to write a report on the MacArthur investigation. They had planned to forget about a report, because they feared a majority would not agree to blasting Mac- Arthur. However, the President believes chairman Dick Russell of Georgia is honest enough to accept the evidence, which most observers consider to have been clearly and overwhelmingly against MacArthur. He knows that Russell's support would almost guarantee a majority report criticizing the General. (Copyright, 1951, by The Bell Syndicate, Tin.) I 5 f at . r. :. " J I "In Case Of Attack I'll Make An Unusually Shrill Speech" rxfy! pfilU r~ .' ' .'.er. y.f - .J.Dv' .&$. - TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. MATT'ER Of A\C't By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-Before very long, the Air Force issue is going to come out, or perhaps burst out, into the open. The pre- liminary drumfire has already been heard from the friends of air power on Capitol Hill. Secretary of Defense George C. Mar- shall and Under Secretary Robert A. Lovett now have before them the Air Staff's pro- gram of requirements for an expanded force of 150 groups. Even if the plan is accepted by Secretary Marshall and the Presdent (which seems likely) its first disclosure is bound to be a bit explosive. If only because of the immense outlays and grave issues involved. As a min- imum, the cost is estimated at "several bil- lions" of supplemental appropriations by the present Congress and $15 billion addi- tional in the 1953 budget, with recurring huge appropriations in the subsequent bud- gets. The chief issue raised is, of course, the proportion of defense investment between the services. The Navy is considered to be approximately large enough already. The Army is reaching its planned man power ceiling, although still deficient in' many types of vital equipment. But while the curves of expansion of the brother services are thus levelling off,, the Air Force expansion curve is to shoot upwards precipitately; and it is not to level off until annual Air Force expenditure is far above either Army or Navy expenditure. The kind of trouble this can give rise to is only too easy to imagine. Building the defense establishment square- ly around the AirForce; increasing the al- ready vast defense budget by such huge further sums-these are serious steps to take. On any realistic appraisal of the world situation, however, there is no alter- native to taking these steps, except to take unforgiveable risks with the American fu- ture. The reasons why a greatly expanded Air Force is needed at this time are, in fact, quite unanswerable. FIRST, the air defense of the continental United States is rapidly becoming a larg- er and larger job. The Soviet atomic bomb stock is increasing continually, which means that the Kremlin is getting nearer and nearer to the point where the war planners in Moscow can hope to deliver a crippling blow against this country. The existing So- viet strategic air force, of imitation B-29s, is expanding. And at the recent air show in Moscow, the Soviets displayed a truly long- range heat-y bomber of B-36 type, which air intelligence credits with a 5,000 mile striking radius. Since the smaller and less costly standard Soviet heavy bomber can efficiently hit tar- gets anywhere except in this hemisphere, vitals of the Russian war machine. Its first priority must now be the destruction of Soviet strategic air. This is an immense task in itself. Furthermore, it is essential for the destruction of the Soviet industrial vitals to go forward concurrently; other- wise the defense will learn from experience to take the measure of the offense. Thus, in effect, the American strategic air force must now be built big enough to do two jobs at once. Third, the importance of tactical air in ground war is now so great that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's staff has evolved a rule of the thumb-"The fewer divisions you have, the more air groups you need." For the de- fense of Western Europe, it is necessary for Genj Eisenhower to have a tactical air force ready at all times for combat, which will be capable of dominating the very large Soviet tactical air force from the moment when the first shot is fired. For this purpose alone, it may be necessary to double the present requirement for American tactical air power. Nor are these requirements, and the So- viet air threat that begets them, mere dreams of air propagandists. The new Soviet bomber of B-36 type is not the ten engine jet that has been wildly reported. It is a huge, four engine plane, of fairly conven- tional design. But it exists, has been photo- graphed, and by the magic of intelligence analysts has been shown to have approxi- mately the characteristics given above. Equally, the air force actually has in its hands a MIG-15 engine, and has more than ruefully examined the decidedly superior high temperature alloys and remarkably skillful welding that make this the best jet engine now in production. (Copyright, 1951, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) Catholic Issue . . . To the Editor: It is not often that I feel called upon to defend the Michigan Daily, whose editors handle them- selves pretty well in most matters. But perhaps it would be well if some ground rules concerning the current controversy over the Ro- man Catholic Church and its al- leged restriction of personal free- dom in Spain were laid down by a relatively neutral observer. If anything is to be learned by editorial comment and be conse- quent barrage of letters in reply, it must be granted that the op- posed forces are sincere, even if misguided. When M is s Watts charges that the editors may be simply seeking to fill space and Mr. Barkley repeatedly insists that the whole issue seems "pointed to arouse a spirit of mirth," then it is evident that they do not in- tend to discuss the matter serious- ly, whatever else they may say. I have re-read the original "Edi- tor's Note" and find no evidence of levity on the part of the editors. Such a charge, if true, would make all replies in a serious vein point- less, anyway. A sneer is not an argument, at least not a worthy argument. If a defense can be made for the church's position, it will not convince intelligent read- ers on such a basis as this. A con- cession of good faith to the op- posing writer woulddseemdto be a sine qua non to further discus- sion. Of equally great importance to such intelligent discussion is the careful use of terms and the omis- sion of irrelevant arguments. I would have found the original edi- torial comment more logical if the closing reference to Communism had been left unwritten. It was not the point of the editorial to compare two authoritarian forces but rather to declare the authori- tarianism of the Roman Catholic church to be opposed to the free- dom of the individual. In the men- tal state in which most people now find themselves, dragging Com- munism headlong into the discus- sion beclouds the issue with an emotional overcast which is un- wise. But I would be equally censori- ous of Mr. Thornton's charge that "bludgeons of bigotry" had been wielded by the editors. Bigotry is a word which has been popularized by the defenders of the Roman Catholic hierarchy w h e n logic fails, and it is perhaps not to be wondered at that when Cardinal Spellman hurls s u c h charges against Congressman Barden oth- er defenders of the faith would take up his cry. Bigot is an ugly word; it should not be charged lightly. Its use, when proven, dis- qualifies the bigot from further serious consideration. The issue at stake in this discus- sion is not really either bathing suits or birth control, but tyranny over the human mind. If Roman Catholics can successfully defend the Spanish or American hier- archies against this allegation, they ought to be heard. But scare words and irresponsible epithets used by either side don't enlighten anybody. -Lee Copple, Grad. Cicero Defense . .. To the Editor: - WE WOULD like to call this let- ter to the special attention of Mr. Barnes Connable and Mr. John Briley, in connection withf their editorial comments on Cic- ero, Ill., which appeared in last Sunday's Daily. These paragraphst seem to be merely a condensationi of what has been printed in manyI other periodicals and newspapers. We question the qualifications of the writers to make such biased re-t marks under their own byline. 1 Have these two members of The Daily staff ever been in Cicero? If so, for how long? Assuming that these fearless reporters dared ven- ture into "dirty, grimy, infamous Cicero" we wonder' if they took time to view the following things: 1. The largest airport in the world.1 2. The third-largest copper wiret mill.s 3. The Western Electric plant, maker of Bell telephones. 4. Morton High School, one of1 the outstanding high schools in1 the Chicago area., 5. The numerous churches and civic groups. In regard to the recent dis- turbance in Cicero, which journal-i ists have used for their own bene- fit, we wonder if it can be termedt a real "race riot." To our know- ledge, no Negroes, including the Clark family, actively participated.I This is hardly even sides and cer-1 tainly not up to the Detroit-style rioting. We would also like to in-E form these columnists that less than 25 per cent of the rioters were Cicero citizens. As proof, we are enclosing a list of people tak- en into custody. Careful observa- tion will show that only 14 of the 60 people on the list were Cicero inhabitants. We will not deny that Al Capone used this town as his headquarters over twenty years ago. But, we will point to Detroit's "Purple Gang," Kansas City's Pendergast, New York'ssCostello, and the Longs, the Cohens, and the Licavolis and say, "Don't condemn a city of 70,000 people because of one person or one organization." -Frank Lexa, Charles Skala. (Editor'sNote: We're still wait- ing for that list.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Bldg. at 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication. THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 21-S Notices The Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be Friday night, July 27, 8:00 at the camp on Patterson Lake. Dr. Rabinovitch, Asst. Prof. of Psychiatry; in charge of Children's Service, Neuropsychiatric In- -itute, will be the speaker. Summer Exhibitions, Museum of Art,] Alumni Memorial Hall: "France - in Paintings and Prints," South Gallery; "works by Contemporary Americans," North Gallery: "Modern Graphic Art," West Gallery. All exhibits selected from the Museum Collections. Hours: Week- days, 9-5; Sundays, 2-5. The public is. invited. Academic Notices; Seniors: College of L. S. & A., and Schools of Education, Music, and Public ' Health: Tentative lists of seniors forj August graduation have been posted on the Registrar's bulletin board in the' irst floor corridor, Administration Build-' ing. If your name is misspelled or the1 degree expected incorrect, please notify the Recorder at Registrar's window number 1, 1513 Administration Building. Law School Admission Test: Those students who have not as yet obtained their application blanks for the Law, School Admission Test to be given Au- gust 11, 1951, can obtain them ato110 Rackham Building. These application blanks are due in Princeton, New Jersey. not later than August 1, 1951. Graduate Students In English who wish to begin work toward a Ph.D. degree upon receiving their A.M. degrees must apply formally for permission to register as an applicant for the Ph.D. degree. In order to obtain this permission, students should apply to the Secre- tary of the Graduate Committee, 3221 Angell Hall, at once. Students will be notified as to whe- ther or not they have been given per- mission. August Teacher's Certificate Candidates: The Teacher's Oath will be administered to all August candidates for the teach- er's certificate on Friday, July 6, in Room 1437 UES. This isca requirement foil) ; he teacher's certificate. All applicants for the doctorate who are planning to take the August pre- liminary examinations in Education, to be held in Room 4009 University High School Building, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 N, August 20, 21, and 22, 1951, will please notify the Chairman of the Committee on Graduate Studies in Education, Room 4019 University High School, im- mediately. Seminar on Mathematical Statistics: Thursday, July 26, at 4 p.m., in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Miss E. B. Schaeffer and Mr. J. B. Tysver will be the speak- ers. Preliminary Examinations in Linguis- tics, Angell Hall 5208. Linguistic Sci- ence, Friday, August 10, 2-5 p.m. Coi- partive Grammar, Saturday, August 11, 9-12 a.m. English Language, Saturday, August 11, 2-5 p.m. Doctoral candidates who are planning to take examinations should consult Professor Hans Kurath beforehand. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West En- gineering Building. Prof. Charles Dolph will speak on vector wave equations. Events Today U.of M. Sailing Club: Meeting, ':30 p.m., 3D Union. Dues deadline Is this meeting; no pay, no sail. Barton Pond team race is this Saturday at Whitmore; all skippers eligible to participate. League Activities this week: 7:30 p.m., Duplicate Bridge Tournament. Friday, 9-12 p.m., Informal Record Dance. French Club: Meeting at 8 p.m. in the Michigan.League. Miss Jeannette Brisbois, Grad., will give an informal talk entitled: "Souvenirs de vienne." Songs, games, dancing. All students in- terested are welcome. Phi Delta Kappa (Men's Education Fraternity) meeting, 6:00 p.m. at the Michigan Union. Go through the cafe- teria line and take your tray into the University Club Dining Room. Program will be an informal meeting with this summer's visiting faculty members. Band Conductors Workshop- 8:00 The Art of Listening t olusic, GLENN McGEOCH, 206 Burton Tower. .9:00 The Function of Music Credits and Music as a Preparation for Col- lege by DR. CLYDE VROMAN, Direc- tor of Admission, Rackham Amphithea- ter. 10:15 Arranging for the School Band 1:00 Summer Session Workshop Band, Hill Auditorium. 2:00 Technics of teaching the percus- sion instruments, James Salmon, Hill Auditorium. 3:00 Pontiac Elementary School Band, League Ballroom. 8:30 University of Michigan Woodwind Quintet, Rackham Lecture Hall. Lectures Today Education Lecture. "Youth in Transi- tion from Schools to Jobs." Lee M. Thurston, State Superintendent of Pub- lic Instruction. 4:00 p.m., Schorling Auditorium. University High School. Linguistics Program. "Grammatical Structure and Lexicon (in Their Formal and Semantic Aspect)." Roman Jakob- son, Harvard University, 7:30 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheater. Symposium on Biophysics- 4:00 "viruses: Structure, Reproduc- tion and Origin, (contd) S. R. LURIA, 1300 New Chemistry. 7:30 "Structure of Proteins" (contd) J. L. ONCLEY, 1300 New Chemistry. Coming Lectures Friday, July 27-- Radio and Television Conference. Rackham Amphitheater. "Radio and Television in the Public School," Ed- ward Stasheff, Director of Television Development, WYNE, New York, 9:45 a.m. "A' Review of Educational Radio," Walter B. Emery, Legal Assistant to Commissioner Walker of the Federal Communications Commission, 10:45 a. m. "The Commercial Station and Edu- cational Television," James Eberle, Pub- lic Affairs Manager, WWJ, WWJ-FM, WWJ-TV, Detroit News, 1:45 p.m. "The Philadelphia Experiment in Television Education for Adults," Armund Hunter, Director of Television, Michigan State College, 2:30 p.m. "The Outlook for Education Television," Walter B. Emery, 3:15 p.m. Astronomy Lecture a n d Visitors' Night. "The Planets,"Dr. Gerard P. Kuiper, Yerkes Observatory, 8:30 p.m., 1025 Angell Hall. Student Observatory, Angell Hall, open to visitors after the lecture. Classroom Conference, Friday, July 27. Open house in classroom, laboratories and libraries. Luncheon meeting at 12:15, Michigan Union. Tickets and of- ficial programs may be procured at 1524 Administration Building. Curriculum conferences from 2:00 to 4:00. Panel discussions on "Subject Matter Prob- lems in Todays' Classrooms" 7:30 p.m, Michigan Union Ballroom. Concerts Carillon Recital, by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 Thursday evening, July 26. Program: War March of the Priests by Mendelssohn, three ;olk songs, Good Night. My Dear (Czech) Near Krakow (Polish), Shep- herds' Song (Greek; Sonata for 30 Bells by Professor Price; selections from op- eras by Handel, Weber, Tchaikovsky, Verdi and Weinberger. Faculty Concert: The University Wood- wind Quintet, Nelson Hauenstein, flute, Lare Wardrop, oboe, Albert Lucon, clarinet, Ted Evans, French horn, and Hugh Cooper, bassoon, will be heard at 8:30 Thursday evening, July 26, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The program is presented as a part of the Third An- nual Band Conductors Workshop, July 23-27, and will be open to the general public. It will include works by Reicha, Cailiet, Hamerick, and Juon. Student Recital: Mary Parsons; so- prano, assisted by James Berry, pianist, and Rupert Neary, clarinetist, will pre- sent a program in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Mu- sic degree in Music Education, at 8:30 Thursday evening, July 26, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall. Miss Parsons Is a. pupil of Philip Duey and the program will be open to the public. Student Recital: Elizabeth Delia- Moretta, soprano, will present a pro- gram at 8:30 Friday evening, July 27, in the Architecture Auditorium, in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. A pupil of Philip Duey, Miss Della-Moretta will sing works by Handel, Mozart, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Chausson, Aubert, Hahn, Duparc, Santoliquido, and Cim- ara. The general public is invited, Coming Events International Center: Friday, July 2 at 12:30 p.m., there will be an educa- tional tour to the Kellogg Food Plant at Battle Creek. Foreign Students and American friends are invited to partici- pate. Tickets are now available at the International Center. Graduate Student Mixer, Rackham Assembly Hall, July 27, Friday 9-12. Student sponsored social events for the coming week-end: July 27- Lloyd Hall Inter-dorm Council. Graduate Student Council. Next Week: The Department of Speech presents Dion Boucicault's breath-tak- ing 19th century melodrama, "The Streets of New York," August 1-4, at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Box office opena daly 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., on days of performance until 8 p.m ICC Open House for Students and Faculty: Dr. Chandler Davis, Math. Instructor and noted science-fiction author, will spak on "What Future Shall We Make?' A discussion and so- cial will follow. Friday, July 27. 1951, 8:30 p.m. - 12 p.m., Robert Owen House, 1017 Oakland. "One of the finest actions of a truly intelligent government would be a law disqualifying university graduates from election to public bodies and particularly f r o m teaching." -George Bernard Shaw ; d I, 7i DRAMA I Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control df Student Publications Editorial Staff Dave Thomas .........Managing Editor George Flint ..........Sports Editor Jo Ketelhut..........Women's Editor Business Staff Milt Goetz ....... ...Business Manager Eva Stern .........Advertising Manager Harvey Gordon .......Finance Manager Allan weinstein ...Circulation Manager Telephon 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. I. yI THE ENCHANTED, produced by the De- partment of Speech at Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. BACK IN THE REALM of fantasy again the speech department presents its third play of the summer season. Like all fan- tasies, it only occasionally makes sense, but is agreeably light and frothy for most of the distance in a uniformly adequate pro- duction. It is bound to disappoint those, however, who expect a completely worthy successor to writer Giradoux's "Madwomen of Chail- lot." Reaching neither the depth of char- politician, and ultimately, by a real live flesh and blood lover who weans her away from her celestial friend and returns her to an imperfect, but presumably healthy, reality. Dorothy Gutekunst and William Brom- field play the happy pair with the requisite ardency and enthusiasm. Both seem to un- derstand that they are themselves blithe spirts and hence, not to be taken too seri- ously. Ted Heusel is a little solemn as the ghost, but then he is supposed to represent the torpid perfection of the more traditional phantoms. Mischievous ghosts seem to be out BARNABY r The science of rain-making is easy to mnfo .--. f& io fa rl-a:--i n I n r Hmm. No Well, it takesI fAnd then, of course, the wind hasl co-or' n dt , mnv4 ..nv;nnn thr, e nrnnr 61 Lima vnur caa f^r n r-nlrl II