FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY I ____________________________________________________________________________________ Midst of Inflation EV7 HAVE NOT had inflation, President Truman told the nation on the occasion of his 63rd birthday. Efforts have been di- rected at preventing inflation, but we have not yet experienced it, the president said. But the Bureau of Labor Stati=,tics tells us that for the month between Feb. 15, and March 15, 1947, retail cost went up 20 percent over that period last year; since 1939, they jumped 58.5 percent. Perhaps a 100 percent boost in prices is necessary before inflation is recognized. Inflation is an unpleasant word. But if the president is trying to spare the Ameri- can people an unhappy experience, he is going at it the wrong way. One of the Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and rebresent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITORS: KATZ & MALOY most important methods of combatting in- flation is to recognize it. The president's failure to place the right tag on the present situation serves to aid the shortsighted business men who claim that the price reduction campaign will start a recession. Response to President Truman's cam- paign for lower prices has been warm heart- ed, but ineffective. Small businessmen in a few widely scattered communities have cut their prices, but the big city retailers and the manufacturers haven't yet imitated their action. Unless the policy makers and the big pro- ducers realize what the individual consumer has long known-that we are already in the midst of inflation-even the fine-spirited, but futile reductions of a few small business- men will have to be discontinued. President Truman seems to have joined the ranks of the "say it isn't so, and it isn't" businessmen, who talk about a recession while sitting atop a mighty big mountain. Harriett Friedman MATTER OF FACT: Developing Crisis, By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON, May 8-As in the pre- lude to the Greek-Turkish crisis, the danger signals are going up in Washington. There is almost the same coming and go- ing of worried high officials, the same har- assed conferring and unhappy scanning of grim memoranda. The prospect of a world- wide monetary crisis is the cause. And while the mechanics of monetary crisis may be mysterious to all but the experts, the re- sults will be plain enough for everyone to see.: The results will be more hunger, more in- security, a weakening effort to reconstruct, and further political deterioration in many of the key regions of the world. The cause of the monetary crisis is sim- ple. Of the great producing centers in the world, the war temporarily destroyed Ger- many, Japan and Southeast Asia, and left Britain and Western Europe crippled and limping. To all intents and purposes, the world's deficits of food, coal and goods have been met, since the war, by exports from the United States. The exports have been paid for in dollars-either dollars loaned by us, or obtained by the consuming coun- tries by sales of gold and American securi ties. And now the dollars are running out. During the past year, such seemingly prosperous and undamaged countries as Sweden, Mexico and , Canada suffered losses of their original gold and dollar holdings equivalent to a third of the to- tal. The war-damaged nations have been more, sparing in their purchases, but the situation of France, Italy and other im- portant major European economies will "shortly" become critical, according to an authoritative American estimate, if they cannot find more dollars somewhere. And despite the loan Bitain is also caught in the same squeeze; for the coal crisis and bad weather this winter have redueed Britain's productivity, while her customers' poverty prevents her from get- ting dollars from them to pay for goods from us Just when or how the developing crisis will become acute-whether late this spring, or this summer, or during the fall- no one can as yet predict. But the facts that the crisis is developing, and developing much faster than even the pessimists had expect- ed, are no longer disputed. That is the meaning of the carefully expressed speech of warning just delivered by Under Secretary of State Dean G. Acheson at Cleveland, Miss. The increasing tempo of events may be gauged from the March figures for imports and exports. In the month of March, the United States exported more goods than in any month in the country's 'peace time his- tory-a total of $1,327,000,000 worth. And of imports, the country took only $444,000,- 000 worth-ominously less than earlier in MUSIC Second Concert: Beethoven: Missa Solemnis in D, Op. 123; The University Choral Union, The Philadelphia Orchestra, Thor Johnson, Conduc- tor; Soloists: Regina Resnik, Soprano; Anna Kas-I kas, Contralto; Frederick Jagel, Tenor; John Gurney, Bass; Frieda Vogan, Organist. the winter. In the nineteenth century, econ- omists would have jumped for joy over the "favorable trade balance," which should run close to $9,000,000,000 for the whole year of 1947. But this so-called "favorable bal- ance" simply means that the whole world desperately needs American goods and coal and food for which it cannot pay. This in- ability to pay has just been dramatized by a sudden increase of Federal Reserve gold holdings by over $150,000,000 in one week- a sure sign that this country's customers are scraping the bottom of the barrel. MORE THAN A FORTNIGHT AGO, when it became unmistakably apparent that we had again been hoping for the best with- out preparing for the worst, administra- tion leaders began to discuss remedial ac- tion. The problem has been canvassed at a series of conferences in which Under Sec- retary Acheson, Budget Director James Webb, Secretary of Commerce Averell Har- riman, Secretary of the Treasury John Sny- der, President of the World Bank John J. McCloy and members of the President's per- sonal staff have all participated at one time or another. The President himself has weighed the situation carefully, and inter- im decisions have been reached. These are embodied in Acheson's speech, the tone of which indicates that there is a rather slim hope of delaying the climax of the crisis un- til late this year or early 1948. The first step to be taken is to secure from Congress a renewal, beyond June 30 of this year, of the controls by which essential goods are made available for export and directed to the countries most in need of them. This is the only way to avoid an insane competi- tive scramble. The second planned step is to bring the World Bank to life-to get the Bank to meet the most urgent needs of France and other Western European countries from its present limited funds, and then to raise larger funds for more substantial loans by sale of its bonds. The third step will be to expand the lending power of the American government, through the Export-Import Bank or some other chosen agency, by a very large sum. Because of the political situation, this third step will almost certainly be delayed until the 1948 session of Congress. Yet it is admitted that this delay may be shockingly costly. All this will be exceedingly unpleasant for the political sleepwalkers and the "back to normalcy" drum-thumpers. But they, and the country, will have the same choice, on a much larger scale, as in the Greek- Turkish emergency. Either they can pro- vide the few billions immediately necessary to promote political and economic stability in the world. Or they can expect their bel- lowings for "economy" to be rudely inter- rupted, by the necessity to pour anywhere from 25 to 40 per cent of the national in-, come into national defense in a world in chaos. All of which brings to mind the question of a nature loving lady, who asked this correspondent why the newspapers now- adays were so gloomy. Upon being asked, in turn, what there was to write about of a cheerful nature, she replied: "Why not try birds?" (Copyright 1947, New York Herald Tribune) . EDGAR HOOVER told the House appro- priations Committee that the Commu- nists have penetrated "every field of en- deavor in this country" and that there are more Communists per capita in the United States today than there were in Russia in 1917; in the result he got every cent of his requested appropriation for the police ac- tivities of the Federal Bureau of Investiga- tion. Secretary Marshall told the committee that the State Department's cultural and information program, largely designed to meet the Communist challenge on the plane of ideas, purposes and facts rather than on that of police work, is "an integral and es- sential part of the conduct of foreign rela- tions." In the result the committee gave him nothing whatever for the information program and slashed the State Department request by $60 million, or 22 per cent below the budget estimate. Unless we are ready to abandon the field and put our main trust in police instead #'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Foreign Policy By SAMUEL GRAFTON IT IS ABOUT TIME we began to blow up the myth that there is a bipartisan foreign policy. There isn't. When General Marshall begs, hat in hand, for the foreign broad- casts program, and for the cultural pro- gram, and for the foreign relief program, and when a Republican Congress turns him down, it becomes impossible to talk any longer of a bipartisan foreign policy. There is bipartisan feeling against Russia, but that is not the same as a bipartisan policy. The Republicans approve of General Mar- shall in his capacity as a sound and sturdy American, who will stand up against Stalin for what he conceives to be our country's rights, but they refuse to support him on the specific plans, methods, techniques he wishes to use to win his points. In this sense, the "bipartisan foreign policy" ac- centuates the negative, and flies apart on the positive. At most, our "bipartisanism" amounts to a vague, blubbery, emotional agreement; it does not go beyond that. It is agreement on the thwarted and vexed feeling which underlie policy; but policy is not emotion, policy is program, and on that there is al- most no agreement. Actually, there is ground for saying that while the Democrats are responding to their anti-Russian feel- ings by trying to build, more or less con- structively, in the fields of foreign relief and cultural interchange, the Republicans are using their anti-Russian emotions as an ex- cuse for retreat into a kind of cranky iso- lationism. AS FOR THE foreign broadcasts and the cultural program, the Republicans are against them for many reasons, too many to be entirely convincing. They fought these activities, first, on the ground that no spe- cific law authorized them; then they fought them because the State Department radio happened to review a book about Henry Wallace; next they hit the ceiling because they didn't like some of the American paint-' ings which were sent abroad. But when there are so many reasons as this, there is per- haps only one reason, and that is that the Republicans are reverting to some of their old isolationist preoccupations. Yet it is the constructive side of the pro- gram which alone offers hope that we can have something like a democratic gala on our side of the world, in our time; that we can, by helping friendly nations to their feet, and by convincing large numbers that it is fun to be free, set up a reliable counter- poise to Russia. Some Republicans, such as Mr. Stassen, are sharply aware of the negative content of the "bipartisan" policy, but they remain, of course, married to their party and are thus in a poor position to concede that the "bipartisan" policy is drag- ging its feet precisely because it has to carry the Republican, weight. We are obviously approaching a new de- bate on foreign policy; out of it must come a public realization that merely to have a low opinion of Mr. Stalin does not of itself qualify a man as a master of policy, a full partner in the production of the better world. (New York Post Syndicate, Copyright 1947) S-- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the Editor... Pubication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). SATURDAY, MAY 10, 194' VOL. LVH, No. 154 Notices College of Engineering: Stu- dents who expect to attend the Summer Session shopld notify the Secretary's Office, Rm. 263, W Engineering Building, as soon as possible. Aernautical, Civil and Electri- cal 'Engineers: A representative of Bell Aircraft will interview stu- dents in the above departments with a grade point of 2.5 or above on May 12 and 13. Interested stu- dents may sign schedule on Aero- nautical Bulletin Board. Bureau of Appointments & Oc- cupational Information, 201 Ma- son Hall. Office Hours: 9-12, 2-4. GENERAL PLACEMENT: Design Service Company, Cleve- land, Ohio, has announced open- ings for graduate civil and struc- tural engineers. For further in- formation call at Bureau. The Ebasco Service, Inc., New York City, will have a representa- tive in our office on Monday and Tuesday, May 12 and 13, to inter- view mechanical, electrical, and civil engineers. The International Harvester Company, Chicago, will have a representative in our office on Wednesday, May 14, to interview men for sales, accounting and parts. The Bankers Life Insurance Company will have a representa- tive here on Wednesday, May 14, to interview men interested in a ca- reer in the insurance business. Civil Service: Michigan Civil Service will have a representative in our office on Tuesday, May 13, to interview any students interest- ed in Civil Service. Some of their openings include the following jobs on various levels: Bacteriolo- gists, Physical Therapists, Gradu- ate Nurses, Attendant Nurses, Lab- oratory Technicians, Typists, Body Repairmen, Department Librarian, Highway Engineer Aide, two Or- thopedic Nurses, General Clerks, Nutritionist, Biochemist, Veri- typist, Engineer Draftsman, Lawv Librarian, Library Assistant,Hear- ings Reporter, Dietitians, Cooks, and Social and Psychological Workers. Phone 371 for appointments. SUMMER PLACEMENT: Bennett Pump Company, Mus- kegon,rMichigan. has announced summer employment for men in that area. Call at the Bureau for additional information. Lectures Unlversity Lecture: Dr. H. P. Himsworth, professor of medicine, University College, London, will lecture on the subject, "Nutrition- al Factors in Liver Injury," at 8 p.m., Mon., May 12, Rackham Am- phitheatre; auspices of the Medi- cal School and the Alfred Duns- ton, Jr., Fund. University Lecture: Professor Max Fisch, Department of Philos- ophy, University of Illinois, will lecture on the subject, "Evolution in American Philosophy from 1860-1917," at 4:15 p.m., Tues., May 13, Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of Philosophy. The public is cordial- ly invited. Furniture Industry Lecture: Mr. R. K. Braund of the Furniture De partment of the J. L. Hudson Com- pany in Detroit, will speak on "Retail Merchandising of Furni- ture" at 10 a.m., Tues., May 13, East Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg. All students in the wood technology program in the School of Forestry and Conservation are expected to attend and others in- terested are invited. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Joe Kendall Neel, Zoology; thesis: "A Limnological Investigation of the Psammolittoral Zone in Douglas Lake, Michigan, with Especial Ref- erence to Shoal and Shoreline Dynamics," Sat., May 10, 9 a.m., Rm. 3091, Natural Science Bldg. Chairman, P. S. Welch. Doctoral.Examination for Rob- ert James Lowry, Botany; thesis: "A Cytotaxonomic Study of the Genus Mnium," Mon., May 12, 3 p.m., Rm. 1139, Natural Science Bldg. Chairman, W. C. Steere. Biolagical Chemistry: Seminar, Rm. 319. W. Medical Bldg., Sat., May 10, 10-12 nocn. Sub,iect: "Vit- amin P-Citrin-Rutin." All inter- ested are invited. Wildlife Management Seminar: 4:30 p.m., Mon., May 12, Ran. 2039, Natural Science Bldg. Dr. Arnold Haugen, Wildlife Ex- tension Specialist of the Michigan Conservation Department and of the Michigan Conservation Insti- tute, will speak on the role of wildlife extension work in conser- vation and wildlife education for the public. All students in the field of Wild- life Management are expected to attend, and anyone else interested is invited. Graduate Students in Education. The preliminary examinations for the doctorate in the School of Education will be held on May 27-28-29 from 2 to 5 p.m. Any stu- dent desiring to take these pre- liminary examinations, should no- tify my office, 4000 University High School, not later than May 15. Clifford Woody, Concentration Advisement Se- ries: During the coming week seven departments of the Literary Col- lege will hold concentration ad- visement meetings. Sophomores and freshmen seeking assistance in choosing a field of concentration are urged to attend these meetings and to ask questions. Speakers will attempt to make clear the nature and scope of a departmental area of study, its relation to a liberal education, and its professional or vocational significance. The pro- gram for Monday, May 12, is as follows: Physics Department-2231 An- gell Hall, 4:15 p.m.- Prof. H. R. Crane-Physics as a field of concentration. Prof. J. M. Cork-Industrial op- portunities in physics. Foreign Language Department- 231 Angell Hall, 4:15 p.m. Prof. A. J. Jobin-Values in the study of modern foreign languages. (Advisers in the Romanic and Germanic languages will be pres- ent to answer the students' ques- tions.) Concerts May Festival Concerts will take place as follows: Saturday, 2:30. First half: Song Cycle from the Masters; Philadel- phia Orchestra; Festival Youth Chorus; Marguerite Hood, con- ductor. Second half: Isaac Stern, violinist; Alexander Hilsberg, con- EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily print, flVERY letter to the editor (which is signed, 300 words or less in length, and in good taste) we re- mind our readers that the views ex- pressed in letters are those of the. writers only. Letters o' more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted .4 the discretion of the edi- torial director. Traffic Control To the Editor: SEVERAL months ago I wrote a letter remarking on the poor and dangerous driving in Ann Ar- bor and the lack of enforcement of traffic regulations except park- ing violations. Our worthy Chief of Police honored me with an an- swer, admitting the condition but pleading lack of manpower. Since then 4* whole new rash of parking meters and restricted zones have appeared and there seems to be no shortage of man- power to write out summonses for violations to these while the driv- ing situation seems unchanged. Now it appears that we are to have traffic lights; Prof. Morri- son of the Highway Engineering Department has pointed out in an interesting letter that auto- matic signals only cause unneces- sary delay and actually increase accidents while being of value only during relatively brief inter- vals of congestion. It appears to me that between traffic lights and parking meters the Police De- partment wants to be wholly au- tomatic. Why can't we have the simple solution of patrolmen on foot di- recting traffic at the offending intersections during the congested hours and have these patrolmen, still afoot, supervise the enforce- ment of stop signs and speed limit at other times? As td the source of these pa- trolmen, why can't there be one police officer per patrol car in- stead of two? Or why can't more be hired? Ann Arbor must have money or its cars wouldn't be Pontiacs- Or should the State Police be directing traffic as they have occasionally done in the past (aside from football week- ends)?' Concerning the speed limit, Prof. Morrison will probably agree with me that the Michigan statu- tory speed limit of 25 miles per hour is high for business and school (University) areas. When even this limit is not enforced we have a dangerous wituation that I think is the crux of the matter. Less speed is the way to safer intersections. -Walter T. Arnold Competitive System My only comment on any per- son who wants to be, or is, a com- munist is this: he or she Must have been reared in the wallow of underprivileged poverty, with no desire for good health, comfortable living, or quality goods and serv- ices-a fanatic, a stoic, an ascetic, a person incapable of using his raise in pay for anything but an- other ten pounds of baloney. I personally will still prefer the fruits of natural competition, in- cluding high prices. I'll take good food to bad, good housing to in- decent housing, and good trans- portation to lousy transportation ANY OL' TIME. -Laird Brooks Schmidt Student Treachery To the editor: goodlord: howlong are we to be abused by student treacheries? i do not wish (ono) to calumniate the weak or the mute, but when the university (thatwhichisallof- us: 1) allows an undergraduate to monopolize its facilities without license of knowledge or safeguard of eyesight, something must be done. something (indeed). whatintheworld (oroutofit) you will ask me (askme) am i talking about? not nothing, but some- thing so simple, so obvious, that we overlook it till it comes and overwhelms us (you you and i) with its own insinuating enormity. It is a plot. it is a plot; so dramatically has the whole business been conceived and perpetrated that onlywhen we are finally (and irrevocably) presented with it ( our eyes sud- denly alive to it) shall we realize it with incongruous tears and laughter. i prefer not to make any direct charges, but will one mister true come forward (i wonder) and Jus- tify his premeditated actions, yea, in spite of heaven (and highwater) i dare him to present his creden- tials; i dare him to state by what law (living or dead, anonymous or otherwise) he belittles us with re- bellious silence, organizing forces and concealing identities, in order to take from the university its soul. i dare him to make public his unwonted position. no. he is not alone in his ma- chinations. i shall not (no, i shall not) name that department of our great and illustrious (light- shedding) school which purports to be candid and enlightening (lightshedding), but which UN- DERGROUND is helping to bring the whole matter to a head short- ly. i use the word "underground" advisedly, for this resourceful group has for years been gather- ing undisclosed strength and only in the cover of darkness does it show itself. it parades under pseu- donym and alias, playing upon our minds with false motions and clev- er deceits, till unwittingly most of us become its dupes (you you and i). accordingly i suggest that presi- dentruthven have pressure or pressures put upon him that he shall oust this loudmouth delud- ing outfit which hides until it sees its prey and then springs in- vidiously. o what shame sits upon our heads that we have neglected so might a challenge! and yet, beguiled by justice (on the one hand) and humanity (on the other), i say to him and his cohorts who have devised such deviltries to arise and demon- strate, before all, their integrity and ingenuity. (if such they pos- sess) that we may for ourselves see what has been going on behind our backs. sincerilly, cid corman AI-Olgau Baltm, yI LL ,# 4 !I HAPPENS . . . 0 Clear Water of Truth A Small, Red 'E' for You AT THE CONCLUSION of a long lecture intended to step on the pet corns, miscon- ceptions and prejudices of every conceivable kind of listener, one of our professors cau- tioned his class. I want you to remember, he hedged, that I'm only repeating what has been estab- lished by other authorities. You might com- pare me to a water pipe transporting the clear water of truth. The end man in the third row was up to the challenge. "Does that mean you're all wet?" he asked the professor. How Is She at Mazes? THOSE STARRY-EYED sophomores who naturally think of any professor as a po- tential husband had best beware of the psy- chology prof. One of the latter told our class that recently he entertained some guests with a psychological experiment. "My wife makes a wonderful hypnotic subject," he added. Busy as Bees T[HE STUDENT LEGISLATURE, up to its old tricks, has just set up a Special Com- mittee to Investigate (better change that to "Survey") Possibilities of Creating Special "Keys" for Legislators. If the Union can have them. wny not the Legislature, one of our student representa- tives is said to have said. Contributions to this column are by allmem- bers of The Daily staff, and are the resp~on- sibility of the editorial director. Items from subscribers are invited; address them to "It So happens," The Michigan Daily. ductor. To The Editor: Saturday, 8:30. Philadelphia Or- NNYONE with communistic lean- chestra; Ezio Pinza, bass; Eugene ings should come to Willow Vil- Ormandy, conductor. lage. Communists would do away Sunday, 2:30. Philadelphia Or- with capitalistic system. A "class- chestra; Robert Casadesus, pian- less" society would rule. Competi- ist; Eugene Ormandy, conductor. tion in housing, real-estate, public Sunday, 8:30. Philadelphia Or- utilities, railroads, buslines, medi- chestra; Ferruccio Tagliavini, ten- cine, education, etc. would be non- or; Alexander Hilsberg, conductor. existent. "Te Deum" (Verdi); University Competition is non-existent here Choral Union, Thor Johnson, con- at the Village. The warped res- ductor. tauranteur who runs our cafeteria has no competition and therefore Organ Recital: Claire Coci, of no reason to improve his food to Westminster Choir Co lege, attract customers. Consequently, Princeton, N. J., will appear as the garbage served is almost in- guest organist in Hill Auditorium, edible. Thurs., May 15, at 4:15 p.m. Pro- Competition is non-existent here gram: Compositions by Bach, Pee- at the Village. The confused gov- ters, Sowerby, Dupre and Reubke. ernment housing manager who The public is invited, runs our dormitories has no com- T ub sm d petition and therefore no reason Carillon Recital: Percival Price, to improve our living conditions. University Carillonneur, Sunday Consequently, windows remain afternoon, May 11, 1:30. Program: broken, wall paint remains peeled Handel's See the Conquering Hero off, rooms remain uncleaned and Comes, instrumental selections by beds unmade. Daquin, Couperin, Martini and Competition is non-existent here Rameau; Sonata for 35 bells by at the Village. The "anything-to- Professor Price, and a group of vo-t attte-ofo h-bs-artr - cal compositions by Purcell, Grieg trip" attitude of the starters who andchmubsert., run our buses is typical of the bus service which has no competition and therefore no reason to im- The Unversity of Michigan prove its service. Consequently, Women's Glee Club, Marguerite V. buses are overloaded, as many as Hood, Coneluctor, will present its ten to twelve people stand for 10 annual spring concert at 8:30 p.m., miles at a stretch, bus drivers re- Wed., May 14, Lydia Mendelssohn fuse to wait an extra 30 seconds Theatre. Program: 16th Century for a student who has run all the Madrigals, Art Songs, Songs by way to catch the bus, and there is 20th Century Composers, semi- no possible way of getting into popular and Michigan songs. The Ann Arbor for a nine o'clock public is invited, dance without arriving either an hour too early or an hour too late. Student Recital: Daniel Allen I feel that our way, the usual Kyser, Clarinetist, assisted by Bea- American way, works pretty well. trice Gaal, pianist, and Charles I feel especially happy when I read Jacobson, violist, will present a re- of business in the East and in our cital in partial fulfillment of the own Detroit cutting prices by 10% requirements for the degree of without coercion of any kind; Master of Music in Music Educa- when I read that many of the tion, at 8:30 p.m., Mon., May 12, striking workers of A.T.&T. re- Rackham Assembly Hall. Program: j turn to their jobs voluntarily as Compositions by von Weber. in Woodward, Okla., scene of the Brahms, Rabaud, Jeanjean, Le- recent tornado tragedy where un- febvre and Mozart. Open to the ion officials ordered workers to public. ignore the emergency and stay on (Continued on Page 51 strike. 4 4 i i IN ALMOST all of Beethoven, possible exception of the last we are faced with an attack on an perlsonal plane. The great Missa is no exception. Sharing none of lime detachment of other great music, it is the outpouring of a and almost fevered soul. with the quartets, intensely Solemnis the sub- religious tortured Thus, in spite of its ecclesiastical content, the greatness of this music rests on more worldly grounds. The concept is more he- roic and reminiscent of an earlierBeethoven. Whether or not Mr. Johnson had any such idea in mind in his presentation of the Missa Solemnis last night at Hill Auditor- ium is mere conjecture, but in any event, the result was a highly satisfying and dy- namic performance. The rough beauty of both the vocal and orchestral polyphony was unloosed to particular advantage in the Gloria and the Credo following it. 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 Dickey...........: City Editor Milton Freudenheimn..Editorial Director Mary Brush .......... Associate Editor Ann Kutz........... Associate Editor ClydeKRecht.........Associate Editor Jack Martin.............Sports Editor Archie Parsons..Associate Sports Editor Joan Wilk.............Women's Editor Lois Kelso .. Associate Women's Editor Joann De Carvajal. .. Research Assistat i BARNABY ": l .. :jy Business Staff Robert E. Potter .... General Manager Janet Cork......... Business Z~anager Nancy Helmick .. .Advertising Maaer (,' ,, .,fin. i9t], Ttta N