Lit/1i1% Z3LI' mt "Now"N" on in China U OCKETING INFLATION of ex- roportions has added new peril in he already critical political situa- s have soared from 80 to 200 per several day period. Citizens are rushing to convert their savings from merchants who are with- eir stocks rather than sell for the Chinese dollar whose rate to the ates dollar is now somewhere 00 to 1. ave blamed this economic crisis hinese Government's efforts to exports with 100 per cent sub- .hers claim that it is a result austed supply of gold. But this .s more likely a culmination of ents. China has been carrying 'am of vast war expenditures for us length of time with no in- xes to finance it all. Again, ex- s have run precariously high on ports while almost nothing has rted. No nation in this dilemma fly hope to avoid disastrous in- consequences. servers have quite positively laid for this inflation at the door of States for abandoning its peace hina. It seems quite improbable published in The Michigan Daily n by members of The Daily staff ent the views of the writers only. DITOR: STUART FINLAYSON that this could have been an actual cause but what is significant is that it could have precipitated what was likely to happen any- way. When General Marshall withdrew from China he issued sharp censure of both the Kuomintang and the Communists for their failure to cooperate toward an equit- able solution. But the Kuomintang is the party in control of the government and it is they who will feel the slap hardest. Now *to them alone falls the responsibility for China's survival. The withdrawal of United States partici- pation in China was outright ackngwledg- ment of a hopeless political situation and for the first time everyone in China and eleswhere was struck with the realization of its economic implications. Business groups in China are bringing pressure to bear on the government and, are demanding that something be done quickly. The Kuomin- tang and the Communists may not find it imperative to settle their differences im- mediately but remedial action to inflation can not be postponed. It is very probable that the Chinese Government will once, again experience a. reorganization within the next few months in a last ditch stand to stop inflation. But the question still re- mains whether even then the Kuomintang would be effective until Communist inter- ference subsides. Although China has weathered calamity before, the implications of this inflation are grave and foreboding. This is a late stage of the game, if China is to save itself it must take positive action at once. -Bruce Schwartz TER OF FACT: Turkey Jittery By STEWART ALSOP DITOR'S NOTE: This is the first dispatch tewart Asop w~o is 'touring the Medi- nean area to wp1t4 about turbulent con- as there. Joseph Asop continues to cover nation from washington. ARA, Feb. 15--Virtually every politi- event in Turkey can be explained in terms of a fear or of a memory. The ;, of course, the fear of the Soviet Un- 'o Turk and indeed no foreign obsrver rkey has the faintest doubt as to the 'oviet ambitions. e Russians want a friendly Turkey, rkey on the Balkan model, with a e ipsed and controlled by the Olin. The Turks believe that the de- I for joint control of the Dardanelles the earlier demand for two northern Ish- provinces are but a means to end. is, no informed Turk-and in Ankara the lowliest Anatolian peasant is re- Lbly informed-can go to bed at night it wondering when the masters in the in will decide to reach out for what want. It is hard to exaggerate the of this feeling. It is not generally i that the maneuvers (a politer word general mobilization) which took place n September and October, was the re- f a firm conviction held by the Turk- eneral Staff that a Russian attack was ent. The Turkish generals were wrong. n the distance of America, their fears eem to have smacked of hysteria, but in the shadow of the Soviet Union, possible to sense something of the rg of the heavy psychological pres- o which the Turks are being subject- is true that the Turks are breathing le more easily than they did a few ti ago, yet the pressure continues. It a number of forms. One is the Soviet which daily in Turkish broadcasts ac- the Turkish government of everything (oddly enough) being anti-religious ZECORDS Jazz is very interesting and clever. all for it. But there are times when I hat I may go mad if I hear another of frantic be-bop gymnastics, or or blast from Stan Kenton's brass a\ or another screech from. Illinois Jac- I was just about at this stage yes- when I happened to hear some re- ig music by Bernie Leighton, a pianist mnagination, delicacy, and a wonderful nic sense. His ivprovisations are "hip" h for jazz lovers and pretty enough to' Then your family is around. Leighton corded six sides in an album entitled Contrasts) (Keynote Alb. 133). Un- any pianists, Leighton does not play >rked standards like "Body and Soul" veet Lorraine," but instead has selected 1 heard numbers including "Beyond oon," "I See Your Face Before Me," Wotei Swing." Dave Tough on drums, r Alpert on bass, and Hy White on back Leighton with a rock-like beat. act that Tough appears on these s is alone worth their price, for both and modernists agree that little Tough has the greatest beat in the iorld. The sixth side, "Waitin' for on," adds Peanuts Hucko on clarinet, g a quartet that approaches the old lan Trio in precision and clarity. It I to say just what "style" Leighton to harboring a large contingent of American troops for war-like purposes. The Soviet press, both in the Soviet Un- ion and the Balkan puppet states, echoes the Radio by heaping torrents of abuse on the regime. Again, there is the pressure organized from within. Turkish estimates of the Soviet invest- ment, both in subsidizing pro-Soviet news- papers and in influencing Turkish politics vary from half a million lira to five or six times' that amount. These figures should no doubt be taken with a large grain of salt, (grains of salt are evidently items of equip- ment as essential to the political reporter in the Near East as aspirin tablets.) Even so, among competent observers there is no doubt that an attempt said to be directed from Sofia, to capitalize on the prevailing discontent and to organize a pro-Soviet un- derground, is being made. A peculiar form of pressure to which the Turks consider themselves subjected is the continuing Soviet importation of thousands of Armenians from the Middle East. Turks of all parties seem unanimosly convinced that the objective of this Soviet-sponsored hegira is to build up a huge block of Ar- menians on the borders of Kars and Ar- dahan, the northern Turkish provinces, to which the Soviet press has already laid claim. The idea is that when enough Armenians have been imported, the Soviet Union will point out officially, as its press has already pointed out unofficially, that the Armen- ians need more living space. The demand for Kars and Ardahan will be renewed. This kind of oriental triple play may seem plain- ly incredible to westerners. That the sus- picion exists widely in Turkey, neverthe- less, indicates the extent to which Turkish fears of Russian intentions, nourished by an ancient tradition, have been aroused. FEAR OF RUSSIA is a central factor in Turkish political life. Only less central than this fear is a memory, the memory of their astonishing Renaissance figure, Kemal Ataturk, drunkard, lecher and great politi- cal leader. In the main dining room of the hotel in which this is being written a tea dance is currently in progress. It is wholly indisting- uishable from a tea dance in Dubuque, Iowa, or Alburquerque, N.M. The orchestra is play- ing the same American jazz tunes (perhaps a trifle older). The men and women are dressed in the same way (perhaps a trifle more conservatively) and in Turkish the same conversational inanities are doubtless- ly being exchanged. Yet the older men and women knew the Turkey of the veil and the fez, the Sultan and the harem. If they knew Ankara at all, they did not know it as it is now, a city of some 250,000 plumped down in the mid- dle of the bleak Anatolian plain, filled with gas stations and dubious modern archi- tecture. They knew it rather as Angora,' an unsanitary hill town of less than 25,000 resting on the immeasurably ancient lines of Hittite, Egyptian, Greek and Roman cul- tures. No country, not even the Soviet Union, has undergone such vast changes in its whole way of life as has Turkey in one gen- eration, for all these changes Ataturk was alone responsible. Ataturk has been dead more than eight years, but his memory lives on together with the revolution which he created single-handed from the inexhaust- ible reserves of his energy. A new revolution in Turkish politics, a IJOMINIE Savi IN OUR EPOCH everyone feels tht his own institution or city or environment is "pe- culiar." "You see, Son," said a father at the station recently, "this town is not so good for you. When you get there, this odd re- action of our little burg to world war will be missing." We quizzed that father to discover that he thought his own spiritual hunger was unique. He failed to realize that our post-war hunger is universal. It had to supplement my reading by classes off cam- pus and journeys east and west to be con- vinced of this. Some°of the elements are (1) In the conflict objectives were unduly definite. When the fighting stopped the objectives became unduly vague.. (2) In conflict the unity was so tight that we could rejoice in a victory by the remote Soviets, but after, in peace, the unity is so loose that we both desire evil for them and automa- tically invent news against them. (3) In conflict we were so specifically dependent on power, speed, and mechanized life that we are lost when we dare not use them. Being called upon to learn human relations, we stutter, hesitate, and are ineffective. (4) In conflict the communique each morning an- nounced a remote island or tribe, and all the world was part of our immediate engage- ment. But, in peace those same peoples or nations become competitors for the leader- ship which belongs to us. (5) In conflict to be the creditor nation gave us prestige, patronage, the sense of having helped, and the cooperation of all other nations. In peace, being the creditor places us in the center in a very vortex of distrust and fear. (6) In short, we were all trained as were the boys in the barracks. "Hell," said the top sergeant, "you. can't think. Do what you are told." Totalitarian discipline is what won the conflict. But now there is no sergeant and thinking is hard work. We are a democracy now. The thing we fought for we cannot quite receive. Here is the supreme pathos of a war for humanity. Controlling the emotions is harder work than fighting. Getting rid of the surplus energy which a free press, free pulpit, and free education supplies is still harder. Next harder is the task of finding spiritual satis- faction in the various disciplines. Therefore, the spiritual hunger we find at home is found as soon as one goes away or meets other situations. It is a malady eating at the souls of families, schools, parties, corporations, and cities or counties everywhere. It is easy to oversimplify the social problem and expect the preacher to cure it, expect the next play to give the key to the lock, and be disappointed when love, work, worship, or study stop short. Such a solution will not be immediate. Slowly we must wander about this hide- out into which the war has thrust us while we learn how not to hate that enemy, how not to fight concertedly, and how to expect precise victories. How to be human, take the long road of person-to-person skills is a major for all of us. How to wait with patience while we relearn group-to- group relations at the level of men de- pendent on their own slender resources in an international, inter-racial, inter-faith, inter-societal, inter-cultural world which has been thrust on us before we learned to live in it is our assignment. The problems we are dealing with are God's problems as well as mine and yours- God's as well as the culture's task in our tragic era. It should steady our nerves to know how God works. Religion, so con- sidered, is expounded by Alfred N. White- head as "Immanent God" Says he: "God is: That function in the world by reason of which our purposes are directed to ends, That element 'in life by virtue of which judgment stretches beyond fact to existence to values of existence, That element in virtue of which our pur- poses extend beyond values for ourselves to values for others, That element in virtue of which the at- tainment of such a value for others trans- forms itself into values for ourselves, That binding element in the world. That consciousness which is individual in us is universal in Him, That element because of which love in us is partial-but is all-embracing in Him." (Religion in the Making, page 158). Edward W. Blakeman Counselor in Religious Education PORTAL-TO-PORTAL-PAY ISSUE breaks down into three questions: 1. Should payment be made for "pre- work" and "post-work" activities? Labor and employer must agree on beginning and end- ing time limits of a fair day's work. Employer should then pay for mutually agreed-upon time period. 2. If such payment is made, should it be retroactive? No, employer . should not be responsible for a cost he did not know he was incurring. Labor should not be paid for work it did not know it was performing. 3. Should Congress make the decision through legislation? No, keep Congress out of it. Each industry and each company problem differs. Industrial-relations prob- lems of this type cannot be satisfactorily set- tled by legislation. Employer and labor must, work out their own problems on the "home plant" level. -Lowell W. Herron in United States News (Continued from Page 3) tra, Karl Krueger, Conductor, will give the eighth concert in the Choral Union Series on Monday, Feb. 17, 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Overture "Prometheus," Op. 43, (Beethoven); Symphony No. 4 in B-flat major (Beethoven); and the Tschaikowsky Symphony No. 6 in B minor. Faculty Recital: Joseph Brink- man, pianist, will present the sec- ond in a series of faculty recitals, at 8:30 p.m. Sun., Feb. 16, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Program: compositions by Beethoven, Bach, Mozart, Brahms and Chopin. Open to the public. Organ Recital: Marilyn Mason, a graduate student, will present the first of a series of five organ pro- grams at 4:15 p.m., Feb. 16, Hill Auditorium. Program: composi- tions by Bach, Ducasse, Malein- greau and Haines. Other programs in the series will be heard on February 23, March 2, 6, and 9. All are open to the pub- lic. Wind Instrument Program by Russell Howland, Haskell Sexton and William Stubbins, of the School of Music faculty, Tues., Feb. 18, 8:30 p.m., Rackham As- sembly Hall. Grace Sexton and Mary McCall Stubbins, pianists. Program: Music for cornet, clari- net, flute, saxophone and piano. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions The Museum of Art presents Forty Modern Prints from the De- troit Institute of Arts, February 10 through March 2. Weekdays, except Monday, 10-12 and 2-5; Wednesday evenings, 7-9; Sundays 2-5. The public is cordially in- vited. Events Today Men's Varsity Club: The special Sunday rehearsal for the men list- ed below will be held at the Un- ion at 3:30 p.m. instead of 4:30, Sunday, Feb. 15. McLaughlin, Henry, Converso, Beam, Stevenson, Cott, Phebus, Anderson, Fischer, Van Husen, Mc- Gowan, R. De Merritt, Tattelsall, Westphal, Miller, Jensen, Sand- weiss, Malitz, Quetsch, Hammel, Rieckhoff, Blair, Harmon, Mor- rison, Sorenson, Holmes, David Loughrin, Howard, Morris, Crys- tal, Lindquist, Carpenter, Som- merfeld, Bickham, Campbell, Ross, Foster, Brockhaus, Stirgwolt, Wil- helm, Cleveland, Garchow, Mur- ray, Hall, Laity, Compton. Delta Sigma Pi, professional Business Administration frater- nity. Formal initiation ceremon- ies, 2 p.m., Rms. 321-5, Union. Banquet, honoring new members, 6:30 p.m., Allenel Hotel. U. of M. Hot Record Society: 8 p.m., Hussey Room, League. A talk will be given on Louis Armstrong. U. of M. Chapter of the Inter- collegiate Zionist Federation of America: Business meeting, 8 p.m., Hillel Foundation. Coming Events Research Club: 8 p.m., Wed., Feb. 19, Rackham Amphitheatre. Papers: Prof. Clark Hopkins, 'Early Christian Art in the Near East." Prof. A. A. Christman, "The Metabolism of Caffeine and re- lated Methylxanthines." A.S.C.E. The Student Chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers will meet at 7:30 p.m., Tues., Feb. 18, Michigan Union Mr. S. M. Cardone, of the Michi- gan State Highway Dept., will speak on the subject, "Engineer- Soldier Road to Rome." Business: Future field trips with all student chapters in Michigan area. Last date to make reservations for Annual dinner meeting with Michigan Section, A.S.C.E.-Feb. 18. Mrs. Raymond Clapper, author and radio commentator, will be presented at 8:30 p.m., Thurs., Feb. 20, Hill Auditorium, as the sixth number on the Oratorical Association Lecture Course. Social as well as political life in Wash- ington will be discussed in her lecture, "Behind the Scenes in Washington." Tickets on sale at Auditorium box office Wednes- day and Thursday. La Sociedad Hispanica presents "Cantinflas," Mexican comic act- or, in "Un Dia con el Diablo," a film comedy in Spanish. Tues. and Wed., Feb. 18 and 19, 8:30 p.m. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All seats are reserved and tickets may be purchased at the Box Office in theLeagueeanyafter- noon from 2-5 p.m. Members of the Sociedad Hispanica pay only the federal tax. Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity: 7:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 17, Rm. 319, Michigan Union. Gilbert & Sullivan Club: 7 p.m., Mon., Feb. 17, Rm. 305 Union. Polonia Club: Electoral meet- ing, 7:30 p.m., Tues., Feb. 18, In- ternational Center. Members be present. Future members cordial- ly invited. Entertainment and re- freshments. La Sociedad Hispanica Conver- sation Group: 3:30-5 p.m., Mon., Feb. 17, International Center. Russian Conversation Group: 2-3:30 p.m., Mon., Tues., Thurs., and Fri., International Center. All students invited. Russian Circle, Russky Kruz- hok, 8 p.m., Mon., International Center. The business meeting will end in time for students to attend the concert. All members and those interested are urged to at- tend. Interested in meeting other Li- thuanians? Come to Michigan League 7:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 17. Inquire at desk. The U. of M. Chapter of the In- tercollegiate Zionist Federation of America will present the March of Time movie "Palestine Problem" and a United Palestine Appeal re- lease at 8 p.m., Tues., Feb. 18, Hil- lel Foundation, 730 Haven. The public is cordially invited. B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation: Social committee, 4:15 p.m., Tues., Feb. '18, at the Foundation. Bring eligibility cards. Churches First Presbyterian Church: Morning Worship service 10:45 a.m. Dr. Lemon's sermon topic will be "Nurture Plus." Westminister Guild, 5 p.m. Dr. Lemon will speak on "Prayer." Supper will follow. First Congregational Church: Service of worship, 10:45 a.m., Dr. Parr will speak on "Finally." Interguild, 5 p.m., meet in the Church for Student World Day of Prayer and Service. Guild Supper, 6 p.m. Sound movie. World Student Day of Prayer will be observed by all Protestant student groups on campus in a worship service at the Congrega- tional Church today at 5 p.m. The Congregational Disciples Guild: Supper at 6 p.m. at the Congregational Church. A sound movie on "All Peoples Church," Los Angeles, will be shown. Mrs. Rosa Page Welch, Chicago con- tralto, will lead singing. Memorial Christian Church ,Dis- ciples of Christ, Hill and Tappan. Morning worship, 10:50 a.m., Rev. F. E. Zendt preaching. Nur- sery for children during the ser- vice. Lutheran Student Association will join with other Protestant groups in a Student World Day of Prayer at the Congregational Church at 5 p.m.. Sunday evening supper, 6 p.m., Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Mr. Wilbur Maki will speak. Bible Study Hour, 9:15 a.m. a4 the Center, 1304 Hill Street. University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw. Services 9:45 and 11:00. The Rev. Alfred Scheips' subject: 'Whence the Power of the Cross?" Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club: eSupper meeting, 5:15 p.m., Student Center. The First Unitarian Churdh,. Edward H. Redman, Minister. 11:00 a.m., Service of Worship, Edward H. Redman preaching on "The Rights of Man." 5:30 p.m., Vesper Service, Ed- ward H. Redman, preaching on "Democracy is Imperilled When." 6:30 p.m., Unitarian Student Group Supper and Discussion Meeting. Topic: "Do We Want a Department of Religion at Michi- gan?" Consultants: Dr. E. W. Blakeman and Rev. John Craig. First Church of Christ, Scient- ist: 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:30. Subject. "Soul." Sunday School at 11:45. Wednesday evening service at 8 p.m. EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints EVERY 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 of more than 300 words are shortened, printed or omitted at the discretion of the edi- torial director. * * * 'Campus-Citizens' Open Letter to Governor Sigler: My Dear Governor Sigler: YOU WILL be doing your state a great injustice if you oppress such minority groups on its cam- puses as the AYD at Michigan State. Not only that, you will be insulting the' entire student body of voting age; such actions as red- baiting are denials on your part that the thinking student is cap- able of choosing his own ideas and ideologies. You will be imposing the same type of undemocratic and inhu- man tyranny on campus activities in your state as was thrust upon the Japanese by the "thought po- lice," upon the German people by the gestapo, and upon the Rus- sian citizens by the OGPU. Fur- ther, you will be launching a di- rect refutation of Jefferson's pol- icies that the people should be trusted to govern themselves. We, the people of Michigan, elected you, Governor Sigler. By limiting our activities and group actions, you will be telling us that we are incapable of selecting proper thought. You are saying that we should not be allowed freedom at the polls 'when you imply that we should not be per- mitted to exercise our campus groups. Many of us agree with you that Communism is impractical and harmful to good government. Others of us must be shown first hand what is wrong with it by experimentation on small scales. As sentient and (presumably) in- telligent human beings, we will discover for ourselves the flaws and shortcomings of systems in- ferior to Democracy . . . but you must 'let us discover this for our- selves. The empirical method is the best way to learn, Governor Sig- ler. You of all people should re- alize this. Your experience as Governor of Michigan has given you more insight into the duties of a governor than 'any studies of consultations prior to your elec- tion could possibly have afforded you. You must not forbid the cam- pus-citizens of Michigan (in any institution) to look around them by means of such groups as AYD. If there are uninhibited Com- munists in such groups, they are at least visible for. all to see and judge. By suppressing such groups, you will merely drive the Communists underground, causing them to pop up in other, stronger, groups ; unlabeled, subversive and more dangerous to conserva- tive thought than ever before. You must permit the collegiate voters of 'your state to deal with campus issues in their own man- ner, Governor Sigler, if you ever expect them to mature into intelli- gent voters .capable of making up their own minds at the polls in the accredited American mannner. As a student veteran, I submit this humble suggestion. -Bill Hyde * * * Vet :Bonus To The Editor: THE ILLIBERAL Liberals, up to their old tricks of gazing at the stars but not watching what goes on under their noses, have apparently decided that it is "uni- democratic" to give a bonus to Veterans. Several states have passed bon- us bills, and on January 23 the Illinois Supreme Court declared that the Illinois bonus bill was entirely constitutional. Several Bonus Bills are now up before Congress. The idea of the overall Federal bonus is to correct the inequality of current bonus legislation,, viz., First, the GI Bill of Rights aids only those relatively few veterans who want to go to college, or trade school, the great mass of veterans being left out in the monetary cold. Second, the state bonus bills seem illogical, since it was a United States war, not an individ- ual states war. Also, many states are too. stingy to pay a bonus, es- pecially those that have Tal- madges, Crumps, and penny- pinchers for governors. Veterans in those states are also left out in the cold. AVC, however, is not worried about mere unfairness to Veter- ans. It wants no unfairness to war bond purchasers and war- workers; "How unfair to war- workers and farmers who make only $3,000-to-$10,000 per year! DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the Eitoi Only Veterans will getabpi Dreadful!"g' Since AVC will likely be ce paigning next to help the : penguins at the South Pole w- that notorious Fascist Adn Byrd is displacing, it seems r essary to tell AVC the why Bonus; any Bonus that is, si AVC calls 'em all "unliberal. War service, often amouni to 5 or 6 years, cost the vetei First, Direct loss of time speni the war. Second, The differe between his service pay and w he would have earned in civil: Third, and most serious, the of possible promotions and vancements in civil life, if he; been there to take advantage them;. Fourth, wounds and sease, like malaria. A bonus to veterans, hence, a definite theory: To recope in so far as money is able t so, the damages which vete have suffered by being deprive the money, the employment the education which would no ally have come their way, if t were not obliged to go to war A bonus aims to put vetex in their original position, the s us quo ante bellum, by mc compensation, as near as pos -AVC not withstanding. The people of Michigan an linois likewise admit it is fair cause they voted for it. The Illinois Supreme Co thinks it is constitutional. VFW and likely the Ameri Legion favored not only thep bonuses, but are now working a Federal Bonus to treat all erans equally. And I have yet to meet aVe an who is meeting expenses mere necessities ( what. with friendly merchants of Ann A charging 15 cents for soap) o $65 per month, or even $90. If AVC wants to preserve bloated war-profits of every sc profiteer and every hami-hoa: they should change their nam American War-Worker Commi (AWWC). If AVC wants to tax those fits to provide a democratic I eral Bonus for all veterans, I should say so, and stop collec books fpr young Communist! Poland, and whatnots for ev body in every nation of the w -except America. The AVC should stop tryini be more democratic than the e tion results. -Emmet J. Donnel State Service To The Editor: ANY STUDENT who is acti trying to destroy the e omic institutions which are pa for his education should be vestigated by the governor Governor Sigler will do the s a great service if he carries. his proposed investigation of c munist activities at state-supp ed colleges. -Miner S. Keel PALESTINE is harvesting bitter fruit of a policy of decision and cowardice the bl for which, if resting primarily the British government, mus shared by the government of United States. The order to ev ate British civilians from P tine occasioned by the recent nappings can only be interpr as a signal to convert that tri land into an active theatei war. The military will now tempt to repair the failure of diplomats of London and W ington and their efforts doomed from the start. -The Nati ,Lck jigau Bat Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by stude the University of Michigan und authority of the Board in Coni Student Publications. Editorial Staff PaulHarsha.........Managing Clayton. Dickey...........City Milton Freudenhei .Editorial D' Mary Brush...........Associate Ann Kutz.............Associate Clyde Recht........Associate Jack Martin...........Sports Archie Parsons Associate Sports Joan Wilk ...........Women's Lynne Ford .Associate Women's Business Staff Robert E. Potter .... General M Janet Cork.......Business M Nancy Helmick .. Advertising M BA RNABY r"' - , - t" I IL- A m