100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

April 01, 1947 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1947-04-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

- HE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUETSlAY,

.......... .......... . . . ....... . .

.,

Freedom of the Press

T HE CHARGES against the press made in
the recent report of the Commission on
'Feedom of the Press after a three year
survey are hitting home.
Col. Robert McCormick, of the Patterson-
McCormick newspaper dynasty ,and enfantt
terrible of the Chicago Tribune, has con'-
demned the report as the work of a "bunch
of- crackpots." Henry R. Luce, of Time, Life,
and Fortune fame, who initiated and financed
the survey, but did not control its findings,
severely criticized the report in Fortune,
The charge which probably annoyed these
publication moguls was that "concentration
cif power" in the press may become "so pow-
erful that they are a threat to democracy."
The commission then recommended that the
government "maintain competition among
large units through the anti-trust laws."
This, the commission feels, is one way of
expanding the "strictly limited" opportuni-
ties for newcomers in the newspaper, radio,
motion picture, magazine and book fields,
which may have discomfited Col. McCor-
press."
If control of the press continues to remain
in the hands of a few, the national govern-
-nent may decide that it has no alternative
but to step in, the commission said. The
press, therefore, is risking a "long step"
toward totalitarianism and curtailment of
press freedom.
Another charge levelled against the press
which may have discomfitted Col. MicCor-
;mick and Mr. Luce consisted of the state-
nmwent that "The news is twisted ... by the
personal interest of owners, and by pressure
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the wri/ers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: MARY RUTH LEVY
House Clean
THE REPORT by the special commission,
composed of educators and other groups,
which has recently completed a three year
study of freedom of the press in this country
is not an encouraging one. It is especially
disconcerting when we recall the action
forced upon the government by a similar lack
of self-control within the radio broadcasting
industry.
The increasing size of capital investments
in the daily newspaper field and the devel-
opment of the press as an instrument of
mass coniunication are cited as reasons for
the decrease in the proportion of the people
who can express their opinions and ideas
through the press. This is vividly illustrated
by the list of cities of greater than 150,000
population which are at present in the grip
of a local press monopoly. The total number
of cities so shackled now stands at eighteen
but the number' is increasing; narrowing,
rather than widening, the range of opinions
expsessed on national and international
affairs.
We would expect the press to realize the
I'D RATHER BE RIGHT:

groups." The commission recommended t I hat
the press "be hospitable to ideas and atti-
tudes" which are different from its own and
present them to the public as meriting at-
tention; that it finance new "literary, artis-
tic or intellectual activities" for "serious
minorities" and engage in "mutual self-
criticism."
Thus, the commission indicates that the
owners' stranglehold on the press is resulting
in a trend away from a free press.
Men like Col. McCormick and Mr. Luce
will try to block any efforts from the public,
the government, or from within the profes-
sion to alter the irresponsibility with which
press owners can dictate opinions to the
public.
A Chicago Sun editorial has pointed out
just how free these men want the press to
be. Quoting from the Chicago Tribune's sup-
posedly "objective" news story on the Com-
mission's Report, the Sun listed such gems of
objectivity as "The book apparently is a
major effort in the campaign of a deter-
mined group of totalitarian thinkers . .,
and "The 'commission' is clothed with the
same degree of public authority which covers
any 13 patrons in a Madison Street saloon."
This last was said of a group of prominent
educators and scholars.
There will be a tough fight if improve-
ments in the press are to be made where
they are needed. But the owners of the
press will have to realize that if they do not
find the solution, someone will find it for
them.
Prime Minister Attlee recently created a
board to investigate the structure, operation
and ownership of British newspapers. If the
American press wants a similar government
investigation, it need only continue on its
present course. It has been given a friendly
tap on the shoulder by the Commission on
Freedom of the Press; if it waits too long,
it may receive a harder blow.
-Harriett Friedman
ing Needed
implications of this increasingly greater
power which is being placed in their hands.
Instead, the commission has found that this
specific failure "is the greatest danger to
the freedom of the press."
Although the conmission in its conclu-
sions seems confident that curtailment of
the freedom of the press is not something
which will occur overnight, we think that the
situation is serious enough to warrant im-
mediate remedial action. The coloring of
news for the selfish interests of the publish-
ers or other pressure groups must be
eliminated.
Failure to effectively clean house and cor-
rect the glaring examples of corruptness in
the press will inevitably lead to a concerted
protest by the people and ultimate estab-
lishment of a monitor of the printing press
similar to the FCC.
It is paradoxical that venality and sub-
servience to political and economic pressure
can continue to exist under the guise of
maintaining "freedom of the press."
-Walter Dean

MATTER OF FACT:
French Future
By JOSEPH ALSOP'
AFTER THE NEED for a clearer mutual
understanding with Britain, the prob-
lem of France is the next on the grim list
which constitutes the agenda of American
foreign policy. Anglo-American relations
were materially damaged by a reckless ten-
dency to take the British for granted, which
has now been brusquely corrected by the
Greek crisis. Franco-American relations are
still being seriously endangered by an alarm-
ist tendency to despair of the French future.
This view is understood to have been strong-
ly implanted at the White House by the
half-forgotten but still animate Admiral
Leahy. It may be summed up in the catch
phrase, that the French Communists can
"take over the government by telephone."
Undoubtedly the intelligence reports
from France are extremely disturbing, since
the French Communisis retain control of
the labor unions and other essential lev-
ers of command in the French economy.
If it is true that they can take over the
government by telephone, however, why
are the French Communists so passive?
Why particularly do their masters in the
Kremlin permit such happenings as the
recent conference hetwen Generalissimo
Stalin and French Foreign Minister Bi-
dault?
France's representative, Bidault, had an
hour and a half's talk at the Kremlin with
Stalin almost immediately upon arrival. The
French Ambassador to Moscow, General Ca-
troux, had requested a meeting with the
Generalissimo a month previously. Upon
reaching Moscow, Bidault left cards on Stal-
in. The inviuation to the Kremlin followed
promptly.
This was, almost certainly, because the
Kremlin hoped for French support
throughout the Moscow conference. At
the previous Foreign Ministers' meeting
in New York, Soviet Foreign Minister V.
All Molotov indicated as mush to M. Couve
-e Murville, then acting for Bidault.Moo-
tov in fact proposed a crude deal by which
the French would have supported the Sov-
iet reparations claims and the Soviets
would have recognized the French claim
to the Saar.
The same desire for a Franco-Soviet deal
was manifest in the talk between Stalin and
Bidault. This time, the main topic was the
character of the German government. More
and more, the Soviets have emphasized their
demand for a centralized organization of
Germany. The reason is simple. A strong
German central government under four-
power control would give'the Soviets both
a power of veto on any undesired develop-
ment in western Germany, and a power to
help the German Communists to infiltrate
Westward.
The French, on the other hand,- are the
most extreme advocates of German decen-
tralization, and the French Communist
party is strongly committed to the policy.
Bidault refused to alter the French position
in any respect.
(Copyright, 1947, New York Herald Tribune)
C URRENT
MOVIES_
At The Michigan . . .
JOHNNY O'CLOCK (Columbia), Dick
Powell, Lee J. Cobb, Evelyn Keyes
HAVING HIT THE pre-war norm in the
western field (California), Hollywood
seems to be doing the same thing in the
gentleman-gangster spic. It's all so normal
that even the name is unchanged. The day
I see Johnny Apollo, Johnny Eager, and

Johnny O'Clock on the same triple feature
bill will, be the ultimate in something or
other. As you may 'have gathered there's
nothing unusual in this story of a good
tough guy, who knows all the angles and
plays them smart. There is still the sug-
gestion of an eerie feeling when one locks
at Powell's dead pan and recalls the dimpled
darling who crooned his way through
screenland's Annapolis and West Point.
There is also the feeling of deep apprecia-
tion for actors like Lee Cobb. The action is
slow'at times, but the average movie goer
won't object to that.
At The State, . .
THE MIGHTY McGURK (MGM), Wal-
lace Beery, Dean Stockwell, Edward
Arnold
THE TRADITION of Wally Beery being
worshipped and reformed by small boys
whom he reluctantly befriends, carries on.
This time the small boy is curly-headed
Dean Stockwell, whose carefully brushed-up
locks, theatrical grime, and belabored Brit-
ish accent do little to aid the situation.
Beery has not changed, nor has the plot
or dialogue. Edward Arnold as a saloon
keeper is merely earning his daily susten-
ance, and the rest of the cast consists chief-
ly of a couple of kids who are obviously try-
ing to get a screen start.
-Joan Fiske

UAL
OFFICIAL

BILL MAULDTN

1!

4

,: --.
l
:

1

(Continued from Page 3)
Friday Service, Interdenomina-
tional Church.
Keep Wednesdays open to at-
tend the spring talks on homes
and books.
Book Collections for the Joseph
Ralston Hayden Memorial Li-
brary: The General Library and
all divisional libraries will be glad
to receive from members of the
faculty books and other acceptable
libarary materials destined for
the Joseph Ralston Hayden Me-
morial Library of the University
of the Philippines during the
week April 7-12. Those whose
contributions are too large for
them to bring in person are re-
quested to teephone their names
and addresses to the office of the
Director of the University Library
(University 750) indicating ap-
proximately the number and char-
acter of the materials they wish
to contribute. It is urgently re-
quested that all such messages
should be left by April 5 so that
house collections may made on
April 7, 8 and 9.
Seniors and Graduate Students
who have received invitations to
the Honors Convocation on April
25- are notified that orders for
caps and gowns must be received
by the Moe Sport Shop no later
than April 15.
Girls who would like to learn
about cooperative housing for next
fall are invited to visit any of
the following women's cooperative
houses: Stevens House, 816 S.
Forest; Lester House, 1102 Oak-
land; or Osterweil House, 338 E.
Jefferson; or to telephone Freda
Perez, 5974.
Spigfield Collee, Sprinigheld.,
Massachusetts, the International
YMCA College, announces Gradu-
ate Assistantships for the aca-
demic year 1947-48. Major areas
of concentration are counseling
and guidance, group work and
community oganization. health'
education, physical education, and
teacher education. For further in-
formation, call at the Bureau of
Appointments, 201 Mason Hall.
Dr. T. B. Magath, Mayo Clinic,
Rochester, Minnesota, will be in
the office today to interview wom-
en for positions as laboratory
technicians. To make appoint-
ments, please call the Bureau of
Appointments, 4121, extension 371,
or stop at the office, 201 Mason
Hall.
Mr. Houghton, of Bethlehem
Steel Company, will be at the Bur-
eau of Appointments on Wednes-
day and Thursday, April 2 and
3, to interview engineers (mechan-
i c a 1, industrial, metallurgical,
chemical, civil, electrical, naval,
and marine), and also physicists.
Anyone who has not yet filled out
an application may get one today
at the office and return it by
Wednesday morning. Men who
have, previously filled applications
may make appointments by tele-
phoning 4121, extension 371.
Electric Auto-Lite has had to
cancel interviews today due to a
death on the staff. Mr. Robinson
will be here on Friday, April 18.
and new appointments will be
made. Call the Bureau of Ap-
pointments, 201 Mason Hall, ex-
tension 371.
Veterans' Tutorial Program:
Chemistry (3)-Mon., 7-8 p.m.,
122 Chem, S. Lewin; Wed.-Fri.,
5-6 p.m., 122 Chem, S. Lewin; (4)
-Mon. 7-8 p.m., 151 Chem, R.
Keller; Wed.-Fri., 5-6 p.m., 151
Chem, R. Keller. (21)-Wed., 4-5
p.m., 122 Chem, R. Hahn.
English (1)-Tu.-Th.-Fri., 5-6
p.m., 2203 A H, D. Martin. (2)-
Tu.-Th.-Fri., 5-6 p.m., 3209 A H,

D. Stocking.
French-()- Mon. Thurs. 4-5
p.m., 106 R L, A. Favreau. (2)-
Tu.-Thurs., 4-6 p.m., 205 R L, F.
Gravit. (31) Mon.-Thurs., 4-5,
p.m., 203 R L. J. O'Neill. (32)-
Tu.-Thurs.. 4-5 p.m., 108 R L, A.
Favreau.
Spanish---(1)-Tu.-Thurs., 4-5
p.m., 203 R L, E. W. Thomas. (2)-,
Mon.-Wed., 4-5 p.m., 207 R L , H.
Hootkins. (2) -Tu.-Thurs., 4-5
p.m., 207 R L, H. Hootkins. (31)-
Tu.-Thurs., 4-5 p.m., 210 R L, C.
Staubach.
German-Mon.-Wed., 7:30-8:30
p.m., 2016 A H, F. Reiss; Sat., 11-
12 a.m., 2016 A H, F. Reiss.
Mathematics - (6 through 15)
-Wed.-Fri., 5-6 p.m., 3010 A H, G.
Costello; Sat., 11-12 a.m., 3010 A
H, G. Costello. (52, 53, 54)--Wed.-
Fri., 5-6 p.m., 3011 A H ,E. Span-
ier; Sat., 11-12 a.m., 3011 A H, E.
Spanier.
Physics (25,45)-Mon.-Tu.-Th.
5-6p~.,202 W. Physics, R. Hart-
man. (26, 46)-Mon.-Tu.-Th., 5-
6 p.m.-1036 Randall, D. Falkoff.

L
w I
Co r. 1947 Unitad Feature Syndcate Inc
TroReg.'. U, Pat.Off-AM ,rgkt, reserved " °

~

.4.,

ii
I I - P

~-I

If
a - ---

etter4
TO THE EDITOR
l -pteI Facts
T) the Editor:
ANY statements are being
made these days pro or con
communists. Analysis of most of
these statements proves them has-
t1 and without an appreciation of
conuunisim and its features.
There are s.C'Veral facts concern-
in communisi that are basic and
untiversallya ccepted as being true.
To arrive at correct conclusions,
anly discussion or statement con-
cerning communism must be made
on Ihe basis of these facts.
1)> The aim of communism is
eventual overthrow of all gov-
ernments in the world, and sub-
siitution of a Communist govern-
ment in their place.
2 Communists recognize Mos-
cow alone as the source of their
orders, and place loyalty to Com-
niunism above loyalty to their own
country.
(3) Russia, the prime example
of Communism in the world, is a
totalitarian state, with a power-
ful minority in rule of the coun-
tr~y.

I

4I

4-, t.t t

"Hi ah, cannon fodder."

A nti-Intellectualis

Renzo Rutilli of the Johnson Fur-
niture Company, Grand Rapids,
will speak on problems of design
in the furniture industry on
Thursday, April 3, at 10 a.m. in
the East Conference Room in the
Rackham Building.
All students in the Wood Tech-
nology Program in the School of
Forestry and Conservation are ex-
pected to attend and any others
interested are cordially invited.
A cademtic Notices
Seminar in l ngineering Me-
chanies: The Engineering Me-
chanics Department is sponsoring
a series of discussions on the
Plasticity of Engineering Mate-
rials The discussion of this series
will be at 7:30 p.m., today, Rm.
402, W. Engineering Bldg.
Special Functions Seminar: will
meet Wednesday, April 2, at 1
p.m. in Room 340, West Engi-
neering. Mr. Dickinson will talk
on Certain Sums Involving Bi-
nominal Coefficients.
once--s
Student 1Recital: Nancy March,
student of piano under Joseph
Brinkman, will be heard in a
program of compositions by Bach,
Beethoven, Debussy, Chopin, and
Sowerby, at 8:30 Tuesday, April
15, in the Lydia Mendelssohn
Theater. Given in partial fulfill-
ment of the requirements for the
degree of Bachelor of Music, the
recital will be open to the pub-
lic.
Student Recital: Helene Jarvis,
pianist, will present a recital in
partial fulfillment of the require-
ments for the degree of Bachelor
of Music at 8:30 Monday eve-
ning, April 14, inLydia Mendels-
sohn Theater. A pupil of Joseph
Brinkman, Miss Jarvis has plan-,
ned a program to include compo-
sitions by Beethoven Brahms,
Griffes, and Rachminoff. It will
be open to the general public.
Lecture-Recital: Panorama of
Secular Music before 1600-Popu-
lar Music of the Middle Ages and
Renaissance, prepared for per-
formance by graduate students in
Theory and Musicology, under the
direction of Louise Cuyler; 8:30
p.m., Wed., April 2, Rackham
Assembly Hall; open to students
on campus.
Symphony Orchestra Concert,
Hill Auditorium, 8:30 p.m., Tues.,
April 1, under the direction of
Wayne Dunlap; Earl Bates, clari-
netist. Program: Cordnach, an
Elegy for strings, brass, and tym-
pani, written by Edmund Haines
and dedicated to the memory of
the late Palmer Christian; Sym-
phony No. 1 in E minor by How-
ard Hanson, Peleas and Meli-
sande by Faure, Premier Rhap-
sodie by Debussy, and Sdioees
Musicales by Britton. Open to the
general public without charge.
Faculty Recital: Elizabeth
Spelts, soprano, will present a re-
cital at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., April
3, Lydi Mendelssohn Theatre.
Program: compositions by Bach,
Mozart, Brahms, von Weber, and
two groups of French and English
songs. The general public is in-
vited.
Exhibitions
The Museum of Art presents
paintings by Ben-Zion through
April 3. Alumni Memorial Hall,

weekdays, except Mondays, 10-12
and 2-5. Wednesday evenings 7-9
and Sundays 2-5. The public is,
cordially invited.
Michigan Takes Shape--a dis-
play of maps, Michigan Historical
Collection. 160 Rackham. Hours:
8-12, 1:30-4:30 Monday through
Friday. 8-12 Saturday.
Events rTod ay

These are unbiased facts proven
either by communist doctrine or
by the world as it exists today.
Communists are well-acquainted
w ith these facts but the rest of
us, Democrats, Republicans, So-
cialists, liberals and conservatives
oti I f'rget them.
-Fred S.Honkala
e Elections
To the Editor:
N THE ELECTIONS for the stu-
dent Legislature last semester,
I voted for as many people as there

;were offices to fill even though I
A.s.C.E., The Student Chapter had neverHeard of many of the
of the American Sotiety of civil people I voted for. This semester,
Engineers: 7:30 p.m. today. acting on the advice of the elec-
Prof. T. S. Lovering, Geology tion officials at the polls and of
Department, will speak on the an election article which appear-
Geologic Features of Construction ed in last Tuesday's Daily, I vot-
of the Moffat Tunnel in Colorado. ed for only as many people as I

+

All interested are invited. I
Science Research Club: 7:30
p.m., today, Rackham Amphithea-
tre.
Program: Developments in the
Management of Sclerosis of ,the
Peripheral Vessels, R. E. L. Berry,
Department of Surgery.
Experimental Aerodynamics, W.
C. Nelson, Department of Aero-
nautical Engineering.
Botanical, Journal Club, Post-
poned meeting from last week;
today, Room 1139 N.S., 7:30 p.m.
Participants, Betty Frankel, Cheng
Tsui, Virginia Bryan, Harry Heig-
es and Margaret Bedford. F. G.
Gustafson, Chairman.
La P'tite Causette, today at 3:30
p.m. in the Grill Room of the
Michigan League.
Quarterdeek will sponsor a dem-
monstration of the Naval Tank at
7:30 p.m. today for members of
the Naval Architecture and Mar-
ine Engineering Dept. only.
U of M Chapter of the National
Lawyers Guild: Forum on LEGAL
STATUS OF RACIAL AND RE-
LIGIOUS MINORITIES Lynching,
Franchise, Fair Employment Prac-
tices, Restrictive Covenants, De-
famation 4 p.m. today. Room 120,
Hutchins Hall. All faculty and
students of all schools are invited.

personally knew - three to be
exact.
While reading about the election
returns today, I came across the
startling statement that over three
hundred otherwise valid ballots
':ere rejected because of "insuf-
ficient preference." This smacks
of foul play to me. While deplor-
ing the small number of students
interested enough to vote, the elec-
ion officials summarily discard-
ed ten per cent of all the ballots
that were cast. It behooves the
election committee to issue a
statement explaining exactly what
constituted "insufficient prefer-
ence" in this election.
Just what kind of behind-the-
scenes maneuvering is this, any-
way? Will the election committee
please explain.
-Malcolm MacGregor
"HE CITIZENS of Georgia have
Go finally found out who their
Governor is. He is Talmadge or
Thompson, according to what
courthouse you are in.
-The New Yorker
is welcome to attend. Call Vir-
ginia Howe 2-4471 for reserva-
tions. Slight charge for food will
be made.

4

I

By SAMUEL GRAFTON
THE BUREAU of Labor Statistics is a use-
ful little Washington agendy, whose busi-
ness is to tell us a lot about ourselves; it
compiles, among other things, a monthly
consumers' price index, which is a kind of
running serial story about whose hand is
in whose pocket at any given moment. It
costs a bit of money to run such an enter-
prise, and the Republican-controlled House
of RepresentatiVes has just cut the Bureau
from a requested budget of $6,700,000 to a
mere $2,373,000. One result is that we're not
going to have the monthly consumers price
index any more; we'll get it only four times'
a year from now on. This iron curtain has
been pulled down by the G.O.P. at a time
when prices are our chief domestic issue,
and when President Tri'man has begun a
campaign to reduce them.
Just when we need this information most,
we are going to have less of it; a perverse
accuracy has selected the worst possible mo-
ment for the change.
The budget saving will amount to about
one percent of what we propose to spend in
Greece and Turkey. I make the compari-
son deliberately, because it seems to me
that the issue of the democratic way of life is
involved. The same Congress which is
about to vote our money and our guns into
Greece and Turkey "to protect the demo-
cratic way of life" is voting us into ignor-
ance on facts we vitally need to shape home
policy.
A far more fateful drama is being pre-
pared for the American people in the strong-
ly united, aggressive and persistent effort of
all elements of the armed services to retain
and consolidate the position they won dur-
ing the war as the dominant directing force
in national policy, both national and
foreign.
That is the real issue. The unification bill
is only one phase of this effort. Already, the
tentacles and influence of the military are
potently fastened to key branches of gov-

It may be, of course, that the Republi-
cans are concerned about the semi-inflation
which has been brought on by their last
year's attack against price controls; since
they are now clearly unable to stop that
inflation, they are doing the next best thing,
which is at least partially to conceal the
figures on it, something like sweeping dirt
under a rug. But I cannot help feeling there
is something deeper involved, a kind of an-
ti-intellectualism, an actual hostility toward
data and research and toward the plain and
simple business of knowing where we are
going. The attack on the Bureau of La-
bor statistics fits into the major G.O.P. line
of "clearing the college profesors out of
Washington."
This attack on knowledge itself seems to
me in the highest degree anti-democratic.
It comes at a time when we are deep in ser-
ious debate over what is democratic, and
what isn't. It comes, also, at a time when
a kind of panicky putsch is under way to
force a sort of political orthodoxy on the
country, to discourage, even to punish, dis-
sent; to elevate conformity into an ideal, so
that not only must both parties think alike
on major matters of world policy, but all
government empoyees, too, and as many
more persons as can be reached. 8
Ignorance and conformity! Could there
be less democratic political ideals than
these? And as one watches these two trends
manifesting themselves, a trend against in-
quiry into our problems, and a trend against
variety in thinking about them, one be-
comes solemnly aware that there are deeper
and subtler dangers to democracy at work
in the tangled currents of our time than
merely those which manage to get into the
banner headlines.
For it still remains true that the way to
save the democratic way of life is to live
it, and in nervously hiding the facts of
our own economic life, and in pestering
people about their orthodoxy, instead of

Polonia Club.
Center, 7:30 p.m.,
Party.

International
April Fool's

The University of Michigan
Chapter of the Intercollegiate
Zionist Federation. Plans for Pal-
Zionist Federation. Plans for "Pal-
estine Night" will be made to-
night, 8 o'clock, Hillel Founda-
tion. Members are asked to be
present.
Flying Club: Special board
meeting, 7:15 p.m. today, 1300 E.#
Engineering Bldg. A new name
for the club will be selected. Mem-
bers may make suggestions and
vote on this issue.
Christian Science Organization :
3:00 p.m. Upper Room, Lane Hall.
Coning Events
A.I.M.E. A plant visit to the
Central Specialties foundry in'
Ypsilanti is planned for thisl
Thursday, April 3.
Meet in front .of the East En-
! gineering Building at 12:30 p.m.;
bus will be available.
There will be a fee of 75c.
The trip wil not be lengthy and
the close proximity should as-
sure 100% attendance.
Others interested are invited.

"Los Intereses Creados", Span-
ish play, will be presented Tues.
and Wed., April 1 and 2, at 8:30
p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea-
ter. Tickets may be purchased at
(Continued on Page 5)

Fifty-Seventh Year
Edited and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board in Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Paul Harsha......... Managing Editor
Clayton Jiekey ........... City Editor
Milton Freudenheim. .Editorial Director
Mary Brush .......... Associate Editor
Ann Kutz.............Associate Editor
Clyde Recht ..........Associate Editor
Jack Martin.............Sports Editor
Archie Parsons.. Associate Sports Editor
Joan Wilk........... Women's Editor
Luis Kelso .. Associate Women's Editor
an D c Carvaju. .Research Assistant
Business Staff
Robert E. Potter .... General Manager
Janet Cork......... Business Manager
Nancy Helmick ...Advertising Manager

Cookout sponsored byi
Counsellors' Club, April
p.m., WAB. Any one

the Camp
2 at 5:30
interested

BARNABY

Member of The Associated Press

_ ,._,.....,,..., .,,..,._.__ ___ .. i i

i

i

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan