I Sixt y-Sixth Year EDITED AND NAIkAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNWM.ji!Y OF M IUGAN UNDER AUTHORITY Op BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PuBLICATIONs STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. " ANN ARBOR, MICH. " Phone NO 2-3241 "A mig" 'When Opinion) Are Free, Trutb WiD Prev&U" =; . " . ' P ; AT MELODY CIRCUS: 'High Button Shoes' Snmappy, Successfrul UESDAY NIGHT Melody Circus Theater. the musical theater-in- the-round at Eight Mile and Grand River in Detroit, opened the second show of their seven-musical season with a bouncing and batty performance of "High Button Shoes." The show deals very loosely with huckster Harrison Floy's high- handed operations in New Brunswick, New Jersey, and is set in the early 1900's. Since the musical is not strong on story, to be successful I Editorials printed in The Michiga'n Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers er the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1956 NIGHT EDITOR: MARY ANN THOMAS Mayor's Request or Money Deserves Polite Refusal by U'. M AYOR WILLIAM E. BROWN has come up with the most preposterous proposal of the year. He is asking the University to reimburse the city for the tax loss incurred through sale of Hoover Ball Bearing Co. Further he claims the University should have consulted the city first. Both propositions are absurd. There is no rationable (and the Mayor offers none) behind asking the University to waive its tax-exemption priviledge. Making non-profit educational institutions tax-exempt is sound. Asking the University to compensate for Ann Arbor's failure to balance its own budget and prepare properly for in- dustrial expansion is not. University-City relations are always a ticki- lish deal at best. Recent conciliatory moves in- clude offering the city $65,000 to cover fire protection (which should be rendered for noth- ing) and ,considering a campus police force (partly because the city can't provide adequate enforcement). MAYOR BROWN has obviously been carried away by University efforts to cooperate. The time has come to draw the line and tell the Mayor we are in business to provide edu- cation, not city services. There should be no conciliation on this issue. The Mayor's request doesn't even warrant serious consideration-just a polite refusal. As for consulting with the city before purch- asing the plant, it would be just as sound to ask the city fathers to consult with the Uni- versity on their business. T WAS NICE of Mayor Brown to concede that the University has no legal obligation to consult with city officials before purchasing land. But the more important point is that we have no moral obligation either. Mayor Brown and other city officials con- stantly harp on the suffering Ann Arbor en- dures financially because the University is tax- exempt. It's funny he never mentions the 10 or 12 million dollars University students spend in the average school year-dollars that sup- port a good many -merchants and indirectly kick-in to the tax till much more than the $95,000 the Mayor is upset over. We think the city has a pretty good deal. It ought to stop complaining and spend the time saved keeping its own affairs in order. -.LEE MARKS p fdSTAF OFF~Y ;^ V/ AN(LO1'dX ,&,ep5r4. -r*fr_ t. AVkP4aM4 T'O ST- 44k Ann Arbor Housing Picture Has Unfortunate Aspects, WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Nehru's U.S. Visit Sidetracked Ry DREW PEARSON STUDENTS coming to Ann Arbor for the first time this summer have most likely dis- covered for themselves that the housing situa- tion here has certain unfortunate aspects. Dormitory housing is not exactly spacious, and some of the regulations are a bit curious, to say the least. Women are locked in at 11 p.m. to keep them from wandering around and giving the city a bad name. Men are free from this regualtion, but unless they look for high school girls, the 11 p.m. rule is somewhat of an annoyance. Thus it is observed that a large fraction of students seeks housing outside of the dormitory system. Especially married students who would be seriously inconvenienced by dormitory lining. And you are, really going to be a campus figure and give parties you have just about got to have an apartment. UJNFORTUNATELY, the so-caned supply and demand equilibrium has shifted to the right in Ann Arbor, and the cost of living is second only to Washington, D.C., where no one can afford to live without federal aid. This can put somewhat of a strain on the financial arrangement of most everybody; often resulting in a considerably different stan- dard of living than might be expected. A small but significant number of Ann Arbor landlords have decided that, since most people will be spending all their money for rent anyway and have essentially nothing left, they should be provided with suitably unkempt, squalid, and generally decrepit apartments so they will stay home nights and hold up the plaster instead of wasting their pennies on concerts and movies. THE UNIVERSITY has made a small start in the right direction with the construction of some hyper-modern apartments at North Campus which are just the thing if you have a car and your wife has a bicycle. Still, most apartment seekers are going to be more or less at the mercy of the real estate offices, the cattle barons, and the faro dealers. The exact remedy for this situation is far from obvious. Until enrollment drops, more University apartments are built, or some un- forseen policy change results in a general tightening of the apartment permission pro- grarn, the demand for apartments will always exceed the supply. However, the situation is not totally beyond hope, hence the following ideas: First, it might be amusing to take some sort of dormitory survey to see just how many people are planning to leave the dormitories because of dissatisfaction with the system. Possibly, some changes in existing regulations might avoid some of this migration. Second, more University support to so-called Co-operative housing groups would help pro- vide housing at reasonable cost for students. Third, construction of University apartments on campus,. although evidently a remote pos- sibility, is occasionally amusing to contemplate. Certainly, the major disadvantage of living in Ann Arbor, at present, is this dismaying housing problem. Although no easy solution is in sight, this problem must be met if increasing numbers of people who care where and how they live are going to be attracted to this city. -DAVID KESSEL WASHINGTON - Quite a few diplomatic cables were ex- changed across the Atlantic before the State Department was able to sidetrack the long-scheduled visit of Prime Minister Nehru of India. At first the Prime Minister was advised informally that the Presi- dent's illness would interfere with the visit and that while Mr. Eisen- hower would be delighted to see him briefly, most of the con- ferring must be done with Secre- tary of State Dulles. This did not please the Indian premier, who has talked to Mr. Dulles before and doesn't particu- larly like him. He hasn't forgotten that Dulles statement siding with Portugal in the row with India over Goa. So Nehru was so burned up at the idea of talking to Dulles, not Ike, that his aides indicated he might not come to the U.S.A. at all. It was at this point that he sent the cable to the President suggesting that the trip be defer- red unil Ike was fully recovered. THERE'S A trick to everything, including running for Congress. When Congressman Bill Ayres of Ohio and Glenn Davis of Wiscon- sin, both Republicans, decided to fly some balloons at the congres- sional baseball game, the Demo- crats tried to stop them. Ayres and Davis, being smart politicians, knew that the annual baseball game between the Demo- crats and Republicans would be televised so they prepared some balloons marked "Ayres Is a Sure Hit," "Davis Is Your Friend," and ordered them delivered to the ball park. But they made one mistake. They ordered employees of the lost Office Department to put them on a mail truck for trans- portation to the stadium. Whereupon the Democrats got wind of this proposed use of the taxpayers' money for purely politi- cal purposes, and Postmaster Mor- ris of the House of Representatives stopped the truck. After that, Davis and Ayres had to hire their own truck. They got the publicity, all right, 'but at least the taxpayers didn't have to pay for it. , . * THIS newspaper's mail has in- creased as a result of the Presi- dent's illness. Most of my readers seem to be most sympathetic to- ward Mr. Eisenhower, but want all the facts about his health. Some of them, Republicans, believe GOP leaders are taking advantage of the President, imposing on him, risking his life further by demand- ing that he run again. A few editors have criticized my columns on Ike's health. On the other hand, some of the outstanding Republican publishers in the nation have been extremely frank, much franker regarding the second illness than regarding the first. Wrote John S. Knight of the Detroit Free Press, Miami Herald, Akron Beacon-Journal, and asso- ciated newspapers: "The seriousness of the presi- dent's illness has been minimized by friendly editorialists who point to Adlai Stevenson's operation for kidney stones; Harry Truman's gall bladder operation; the recent surgery on Gov. Averell Harri- man's prostate gland; Senator Lyndon Johnson's heart attack; and Senator Stuart Symington's sympathectomy for high blood pressure in 1947. "How idle and misleading it is to pretend that the President, a former heart case and chronic sufferer from gastric disturbances, can fully regain his old vigor. But in their anxiety over the future, the Republican strategists and the big guns in the business world are determined to have Ike run, even though he may not last through a second term under the pressures of the job. TOM DEWEY told friends in Washington last week: "I'll be seeing you in 1957." They took this to mean the dapper ex-New York governor intends either to run for the Senate or to join the Eisenhower administration. Most likely: he'll replace John Foster Dulles as Secretary of State ... The Republican National Com- mittee is so sure Ike will run, de- spite his health, that it has or- dered neon campaign signs with Ike's name in lights . . . . Secre- tary of Defense Wilson put his own judgment ahead of the com- bined warnings of all the intelli- gence agencies when he announ- ced confidently that our giant jet B-52 is "Greatly superior in alti- tude and distance" to the Soviet Bison.hIntelligence reports agree that the Bison and the B-52 are nearly equal in performance . Wilson also claimed the Russians have no tanker planes to refuel the Bison in flight. This flatly ig- nores intelligence reports that the Soviet long-range bomber, The Bear, has been converted into a huge, airborne ,tanker . .'. It was also Wilson, incidentally, who insisted that Russians couldn't build a long-range jet bomber for years to come. Yet Russia is now producing Bisons three times as fast as we are building B-52's. This has been confirmed by pic- tures of Bisons flown over Moscow in broad daylight. (Copyright 1956, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) it must be carried by a particular- ly talented song-and-dance man in the role of Harrison Floy. Tim Herbert was that talented guy in Tuesday night's opening, With an hilarious and overpowering col- lection of funny faces, exaggerat- ed dance stes and impersona- tions, Herbert ran the show quick- ly and delightfully from Floy's driver's seat-with a comic assist from his accomplice in crime, Sammy "I'll Take Two" Smith, In the young romantic roles, George Smiley plays an improb- able drawling, dim-witted Texan who suddenly becomes eloquent when he bursts into song. Opposite him, Charmaine Harma, as pretty and appealing a little actress as Melody Circus has had since the appearances of Peggy Bonini last year in their first season, is kept pretty much under a bushel with the charms she displayed in last week's "Call Me Madam" all but suppressed. Orchids for the best "romantic" performances in the show, how- ever, go to "Poppa" and "Momma" played by Walter Long and Undine Forrest respectively. On a comparison with last year's singing ensemble, however, the present male and female choruses seem to be the one factor that has not matured in the one-year his- tory of Melody Circus. It may be granted that they are competent, but they certainly do not demon- strate the sparkle and enthusiasm they used to fill the stage with during every show-good or bad- last year, Naturally, with a com- plete turnover in singing and dancing casts each year, the qual- ity will come out a little uneven. But still, remembering the poppy performers of last year, one is in- clined to get a little nostalgic. -DONALD YATES LETTERS to the EDITOR Letters to the Editor must be signed and limited to 300 words. The Daily reserves the right to edit or with- hold any letter. President's Illness. , . To the Editor: AS A MEDICAL student, I have & followed the course of events of the President's illness with great interest. And it is with great dis- may that I have read the press re- leases because they never contain- ed the information I was looking for; they were carefully vague ani always presented the most promis- ing outlook. I was dismayed because I know that the people are entitled to hear the whole story because it may well be that they will be given the choice of whether or not the President will serve another term as the Chief Executive of this country. Not only has information been withheld, but in addition, mislead- ing scraps of information have been tossed out to the anxious citizenry. It has been said that in the doctors' opinion the President has another 5-10 years of active life ahead of him, that he is "com- pletely recovered" from his heart attack, and, lastly, that his recent operative procedure was cureative and that therefore, he is the better off for it. What the public has not been told, is, however, available in the medical textbooks. This is, that in spite of what the doctors have revealed in the carefully cen- sored medical press releases, the prognosis after a case of acute myocardial infarction must always be held in reserve, since it is so unpredictable. In addition, the President has been revealed as harboring still another pathological process, a chhonic disease which it now turns out to have been present for years, but which has recently come to light only because of an attack which led to an emergency surgical procedure. I hope I've made it clear how much information we are not getting as regards the true signifi- cance, of the President's present state of health. I also hope, I've made some aware of the mislead- ing statements that are eminating from the news releases. As another example, try your wits on this one, made recently by one of the Presi- dent's doctors in charge of the President's case, one made in answer to a question regarding the possibilities for recurrance of the enteritis. The doctor answered DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin Is an official publication of the Universty of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility, Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN from the Roome3553 Administration Building before 2 p., the day preceding publication. TURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1956 VOL. LXVIII, NO. 3s Genteral Notices President and Mrs. Harlan Hatcher will have an informal reception for summer session students Thursday, June 28 from 8-10 p.m. at the Presi- dent's House. All summer session stu- dents are invited. Play Opportunity for Children Ann Arbor elementary school children (those who have completed the second or third grade) will be offered the op- portunity to participate in a series of lessons in basic movement and play activities this summer. Sponsored by the department of physical education at the University, Joan Whalley of Liver- pool, ngland, will be here to conduct the classes at Barbour Gymnasium, The course will be held from 2 to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday, July 11 through July 24. Recreational Swimming - Women's Pool Women only: M. W. sat. 2:30-4:30, M. T. W. Th. 5:10-6:10, Friday 4:00-6:00, M. T. Th. 7:15-9:15 p.m. Co-Rec Swims: Wed. 7:1511:15 p.m, Sat. 7:15-9:15 p.m., Sun. 3:00-5:00. Faculty Family Night: Friday 8:30- 8:00 p.m., (For' Faculty with children under eight years old), Friday 8:90-9:30 p.m. (For other Faculty families), Michigan Night: Sunday 7:15-9:15 p.m. Women Students A number of unlicensed bicycles have been left in the racks at the Women'a Athletic Building, Owners are asked to claim by July 5th. All bicycles left after that date will be turned over to the police. PARKING PERMITS Parking permits for the fiscal year 1956-57 will be required on the cars of all eligible staff members using ti- versity parking lots on July 1, 156. Application for permits can be made at the Information Desk second floor Administration Buildng and at ,the Ad- ministration Office second floor of the University Hospital, Annual staff permits costing $25 may be obtained by payment in full or for the payment of $5 for the initial perio4, summer session, and signing payroll de. duction authorizations for the balance The deductions will be made in the pay period ending closest to September 4 and February 28. Staff permits for the summer sesio only are also avaiable at a cost of '5. These permits expire September 10,. Permits for metered lots for the year and for the summer session are also available at no cost. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS will have its first meeting of the summer Thurs. at 8:00 in the,- Michigan League. Mle. Francose Mazet will speak, and ther will be songs, games and informal con- versation. All persons interested in France and things French are welcome, BUSINESS EDUCATION Get-together, Thurs., June 28, Rackham Building, West Conference Room, 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Plans for business education functio will be completed. You'll get to see Il the other business educators and meet the faculty, Refreshments will be served (20 cents), ACADEMIC NOTICES Preliminary Examinations in English: Applicants for the Ph.D. in English who expect to take the preliminary examina tions this summer are requested to leave their names with Dr. Ogden, 1634 Haven Hall. The "old style" examina- tions will be gvien as follows: English Literature from the Beginnings to 1550, Tuesday, July 10; English Literature, 1550-1750, Saturday, July 14; English Literature, 1750-1950, Tuesday, July 17; and American Literature, Saturday, July 21. The "new style" examinations will be given as follows: Tuesday, July 10; 1660-1780 Saturday,, July 14; 1780-, 1870, Tuesday, July 17; and 1870-1950, Saturday. July 21. The examinations will be given in the School of Buines Administration Building, Room 76, from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. GRADUATE STUDENTS expecting to receive the master's degree inAugust, 1956, must file a diploma application" with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Friday, June 29. A student will not be recommended for a degree unless he has flied formal application in the office of the Graduate School. CONCERTS CARILLON RECITAL 7:15 this eveni- ing, compositions by Percival Price, University Carillonneur and performed by Professor Price: Air for Carillon, Six Studies, Sonata for 30 Bells, Two Vic- tory Rhapsodies. ORGAN RECITAL by Robert Noehren, University Organist, 4:15 Sunday after- noon (instead of 8:30, as previously an- nouncer), July 1, in Hill Auditorium. Program will include compositions by Buxtehude, Vivaldi, Reger, Messtaen, Franck, Schumann, and will be open to th-e public without charge. V Iiv1..-.tr.aa,. 71r * . 9 Unified Armed Services Needed HE FIRST and most important stage of the annual battle of the military budget is over.. The citizens of the United States can once again crawl out of their foxholes and look around,. There is still a chance that you might be hit by a ricocheting press release but with Senate approval of the budget now a reality, the worst of the fire fight is over. Over that is until next year. Then once again the three brances of the "unified" armed forces will fill the public press and the halls of Congress with impassioned pleas for special attention. The mutually jealous services will attack each other's programs with shouts of "inefficient," "obsolete," and "a waste of money. When the armed forces were put under one cabinet officer by the Armed Forces Unification Act of 1947, it was the intent of Congress to remove the causes of such inter-service fights. It was hoped that harmony could be reached by unifying the services at the highest level, THE ONLY result of this policy was to drive the battle from the cabinet level to the members of the armed forces themselves. Since the Army and Navy no longer had civilian Editorial Staff LEE MARKS, Managing Editor Night Editors spokesmen in the cabinet to fight their battles fqr them, responsibility fell to the high ranking officers. As a result, the officers have had to disre- gard their basic mission, that of leading the members of the armed forces, in order to be- come contenders in the Congressional arena for funds. Of all of the statements which were turned out in the most recent battle of thehbudget, only one tried to attack the root of the prob- 'lem, the lack of unification in the armed forces themselves. This plan, which was proposed by army representatives, acknowledges that the battle stems from the present organization of the Department of Defense. However the answer that it proposes will lead only to fur- ther complications. In asking for unification of the top three commands the Army plan would still maintain a separation between the serv- ices in the field.. THERE ARE two possible answers to the problem. We can return to the old system with separate cabinet posts and departments for each of the services or we can unify the armed forces completely. Under the old system, the squabbles between the services were kept in the hands of civilians and on the level of political decision. This kept the generals and the admirals out of politics, but also kept the various branches from functioning together efficiently in time of war. Complete unification is the only system which will keep the armed forces free from TODAY AND TOMORROW: Western Alliance Disunity Shown By WALTER LIPPMANN THREE official visitors have come to Washington since the President was taken to the hos- pital, -- from Germany Dr. Ade- nauer. from France M. Pineau, and from Canada Mr. Pearson. All came hoping to find common ground where, with the United States leading, the Western allies could unite. Now that the visitors have come and gone, it is only too evident that there was no serious effort to find a common ground) and to negotiate a common policy. That was the kind of thing that the President, had he not been' ill, might well have attempted. Mr. Dulles did not attempt it. He underwrote Dr. Adenauer without qualification or reservation, an act which ruled out the chance to negotiate with M. Pineau, as well as much hope of a successful outcome of the labors of Mr. Pear- son and the other two "Wise Men" coalition can stand together. For NATO the question of how the two Germanies are to be reunited can well be make-or-break. In- stead of looking for the ground on which France, Germany, Britain and the United States can work together on the German question, Mr. Dulles let Dr. Adenauer com- mit him to terms which are so extreme that they foreclose seri- ous negotiation. ALMOST certainly this is a piece of bad judgment which we shall come to regret and shall have to try to repair. The Adenauer terms are not only certain to be rejected by the Soviet Union; they will not command the support of the other allies, or for very long of the West Germans themselves. How could they? Under these terms none of the allies would be permitted to come to agreement with the Soviet anuer. It would probably be im- possible to do this if Dr. Adenauer. had the overwhelming and ardent support of his own people. But in fact he can no longer count on an effective support in West Ger- many. "Instead of being able to rely on a sound parliamentary ma- jority," wrote the correspondent of the Times (London) shortly after Dr. Adenauer returned from Washington, "he is now faced with widespread dissatisfaction in his own party and a united opposi- tion." Is it necessary, and is it wise, we may ask, for the United States government to be more inflexible and more extreme than are the Germans themselves? Dr. Ade- nauer has done a great work. But he is a very old man, and those who succeed him will not, we may be sure, be bound by his views. Why should we, at this late date, let ourselves be bound by them? Is it good leadership to subject the