A tom C Warnings 'HE American public is getting a little tired of being told about the dangers of e atomic bomb and the resulting neces- y for world unity. Ever since the atomic sh over Hiroshima, all sorts of people in sorts of places-statesmen, politicians, entists, military men, radio .commenta- s, newspaper columnists-have been imming the same lesson into our heads. e must have one world, or else the human ce will be destroyed by the atomic bomb. The repetition is becoming a little bor- ig. Many people today close their ears ,nd receive the lesson as indifferently as student listening to an exceedingly dull istory lecture. But the fact remains that he atomic bomb is not past history, but very real, vital and dangerous factor in ur future. rhe most recent warning about the atom mb comes from atomic scientist Edward h1er, physics professor at the University of icago. Writing in the latest issue of the lletin of the Atomic Scientists, Prof. Tel- predicts that future bombs may easily more than one thousand times larger an those used in the last war. He warns that larger bombs may prove be more dangerous in an indirect way through radioactivity than they are through blast and burning. By careful planning and design, he says, an enemy could make life impossible for us without delivering a sin- gle bomb into our territory, by releasing radioactive air masses. Strong enough ra- dioactivity will kill all living things, Prof. Teller states, and adds that this is "much more than a fantastic possibility." Prof. Teller's article was checked by the War Department for security violations and cleared for publication. He is one of the leading atomic scientsts in the world, and worked on the bomb at George Washington University, Columbia University, the Univer- sity of Chicago and Los Alamos. The scientists who worked on the atomic bomb do not under-estimate its danger. They have left their laboratories to at- tempt to tell us how very necessary it now is for man to learn the essential methods for living in peace with his neighbors all over the world. Last year 17 atomic scien- tists and American generals wrote a little book reporting on "the full meaning of the atomic bomb." They called it "One World or None," and emphasized the fact that it depends entirely on our present world behavior whether World War Three, the war to end more than war, ever comes. We're getting rather bored with hearing this lesson repeated over and over. We tend to ignore the speakers and writers who are trying to make us understand. And yet this is the most important lesson that we as a nation have to learn. -Frances Paine Editorials published in The Michigan Daily re written by members of The Daily staff nd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: FRANCES PAINE - -- ---- White Primary This is American Brotherhood Week, a period designed to further the cause of tol- erance in the United States. Yet this week will be better remembered as the time when tolerance in America took a step backward. [ronically enough, during this period dedi- cated to the elimination of racial and relig- ious prejudice, Herman Talmadge and his Georgia gang have managed to push a white >rimary election through the state legisla- ture. By removing all mention of primary elections from the state constitution, Her- nan Talmadge, or "Hummon" as a national magazine calls him, has made it virtually .mpossible for the Negro to have a voice in he state government. Several years ago, the United States Supreme Court ruled that a Negro could not be denied the right to vote in regular- ly scheduled elections. Now "Hummon" and his coherts have decided to abridge that right for ".. . the good of the Negro." By making the Democratic party in Geor- gia a private club, "Hummon" and his gang are able to restrict membership to those citizens deemed "fit" to take part in the government. Legally "Hummon" is in the clear. He is free to continue the comic-opera fight for the governorship which has made Georgia the butt of country-wide jokes. Waving the banner of white-supremacy fostered by his father, "Hummon" has massed his father's followers solidly behind him. His dema- gogic tactics have won the approval of the majority of members in the state legislature. It is a sad commentary on the contem- porary American scene when instances of this kind are allowed to go unchecked. A nation which has just finished a war to end Fas ism in Europe now stands idly by while another brand of Fascism flourishes in its own back yard. Yes this week will be remembered-but not for the advancement of brotherhood among men. -Dick Maloy 19D RATER BE RIGHT: Occupation Notes By SAMUEL GRAFTON PRAGUE-SOMETHING happens to a country which has been occupied. I don't mean the obvious things like having slivers put under fingernails. I mean what happens to everybody. An occupation dis- torts life. It is as if it makes everybody look at things through badly fitted glasses, with- out knowing they are wearing them. A Czech told me that recently he criticized a minister of the government before a party of friends. One plucked his sleeve and whispered, "Don't say that, you will be pun- ished." The Czech answered, "Why? We are free now." His friend said meekly, "That's true. I had forgotten." Small things become very important during an occupation, whispers sound like roars. A couple of months ago one of the comic weeklies here published a short article burlesquing the plots of' American superfilms But it happened that the American film, "Wilson," opened the same week. The incident made quite an uproar. The article was interpreted as a cover Leftist attack on Woodrow Wil- son, who is revered here, on the United States and on the Conservatives' com- mand there were flareups and explana- tions. It is with these over-sensitized eyes and ears that a people come out of occu- pation. As to how free the Czechs are now, two years after occupation, the answer probably is that they themselves don't know. Few Czechs dared to criticize Communists during the first six months after liberation. Since then there has been a loosening up; right- wing newspapers do criticize Communism, but they do it obliquely by attacking Left- wing newspapers. In part these blunted polemics are traditional here; in part, cur- rent restraint is certainly based on fear of Russia and the Reds. . But t h e r e is something else beneath all this; occupation has made the Czechs enter into a kind of agreement to utter no word which might endanger national freedom. This is a coali- tion government of all parties, and just about every newspaper editor in town sits in parliament; one journal has five editorial writers in the National Legislature. And so among them, as among political leaders, there is a kind of acceptance of a voluntary discipline to avoid a worse discipline. One more point is that during an occu- pation you stop expecting sympathy. You expect to be treated as if you smelled funny. It's an old thing, but when an American says a kind word about Czecho- slovakia here, it makes a sensation. It doesn't take a lot of sympathy to do it, just a touch. The Czechs know they have things here Americans don't favor, lots of Communists, nationalization of industry and so on; and they have forgotten to ex- pect to be liked. But to watch the effect of a kindly word about some detail of their effort is like watching a thaw after a dec- ade of frost. And when some foreign visi- tor, who has not shared the ordeal, dis- misses what the Czechs are going through with a catchword, one can almost see the faces hardening, the eyes returning to that unexpectant loneliness which was the set- tled. national expression for so long. (Copyright, 1947, New York Post Corp.) MUSIC Although holding to his familiar concert technique of "eat your spinach and you'll get your ice cream," Alec Templeton in- cluded a few of the heavier classics in his program last night at Hill Auditorium. The serious half of the program, which proved singularly tedious with an uninter- esting Bach Prelude and Fugue and the in- evitable Chopin nocturne, received little more than polite applause. Setting himself and the audience com- pletely at ease, Templeton started the latter part of the concert with 'Humoresque Di- vorced from Dvorak' and went quickly into his tradional two-in-one-four-in-one rou- tine. Revealing by his encores that he is, after all, the comedian first and the musician sec- ond, Templeton was successfully all four members of a barber-shop quartet, a 'scat' singer slaughtering Irving Berlin's 'Marie' and, in response to a call from the audi- ence to "Open the door, Alec," the notorious Richard operatically keeping the door shut., On the whole, the evening was enjoyable, apparently for pianist as well as audience, and it was evident that the numbers, for the most part, were chosen with care to show P the Templeton personality to its greatest ad- vantage. -Naomi Stern O THAT one new magazine could be born last week, three magazines were killed. Subscribers to Asia, Inter-American and Free World were asked to switch-sight un- seen-to a new monthly, United Nations World. Only a handful refused to; U.N. World started life with a circulation of 50,- 000. -Time Magazine (Continued from Page 2) Community Calendar of the Air at 10:40 a.m. daily except Sunday. Announcements of interest to the Village and the surrounding com- munities are made. Huston; Weiss, Leonard B.: vodnik, Edward F. Lectures School Situation University Lecture: Professor Aaron J. Sharp, University of Tennessee, will lecture on the sub- ject, "Disjunct Areas of the De- ciduous Forest in Mexico and Guatmala" (illustrated), at. 4:15 p.m., Fri., Feb. 28, Rackham Am- phitheatre; auspices of the De- partment of Botany. University Lecture: Dr. Gustave M. Gilbert, formerly of the Bard College faculty; and former Clini- cal Psychologist and Prison Psy- chologist with the U. S. Army, will lecture on the subject, "A Psychol- ogist in the Nuremberg Jail-Life with the Nazi War Criminals," at 4:15 p.m., Tues., March 4, Rack- ham Lecture Hall; auspices of the Department of Psychology. The public is invited. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Les- lie Rensselaer Holdridge, Botany; thesis: "The Pine Forest and Ad- jacent Mountain Vegetation of Haiti Considered from the Stand- point of a New Climatic lassifi- cation of Plant Formations," at 9 a.m., Feb. 24, Rm. 1139 Natural Science. Chairman, H. H. Bart- lett. History Final Examination Make-up: Fri., Feb. 28, 4 p.m., Rm. G, Haven Hall. Students must come with written permission of instructor. History Language Examination for the M.A. Degree: Fri., Feb. 28, 3 p.m., Rm. B, Haven Hall. Each student is responsible for his own dictionary, and must register at the History Department Office be- fore taking the examination Mathematics Seminar on Dy- namical Systems: 3 p.m., Mon., Feb. 24, 3011 Angell Hall. Dr. Kap- lan will speak on Fuchsian Groups and Ergodic Theory. Schedule of Tutorial Sections for Veterans for the Spring Term, 1946-47. (To begin the week of Monday, Feb. 17). CHEMISTRY: (3) Mon. 7-8 p.m., Wed-Fri. 5-6 p.m., 122 Chem., S. Levin. (4) Mon. 7-8 p.m., Wed.-Fri., 5-6 p.m., 151 Chem. R. Keller. (21) Wed. 4-5 p.m., 122 Chem., R. Hahn. ENGLISH: (1) Tues.-Thurs.- Fri. 5-6 p.m., 2203 AH, D. Martin. (2) Tues.-Thurs.-Fri. 5-6 p.m., 3209 A.H. ,D. Stocking. FRENCH: (1) Mon.-Thurs. 4-5 p.m., 106 RL, A. Favreau. (2) Tues.-Thurs. 4-6 p.m., 205 RL, F. Gravit. (31) Mon.-Thurs. 4-5 p.m., 203 RL, J. O'Neill. (32) Tues.-Thurs. 4-5 p.m., 108 RL, A. Favreau: SPANISH: (1) Mon.-Wed. 4-5 p.m., 205 RL. F. Thompson. (2) Mon.-Wed., 4-5 p.m., 207 RL, H. Hootkins. (2) Tues.-Thurs. 4-5 p.m., 207 RL, H. Hootkins. (31) Tues.-Thurs. 4-5 p.m., 210 RL, C. Staubach. GERMAN: Mon. -Wed. 7:30- 8:30 p.m., Sat. 11-12 a.m., 2016AH F. Reiss. MATHEMATICS: Wed.-Fri. 5-6 p..m, Sat. 11-12 a.m., 3010 Al, G. Costello. (6 through 15). (52, 53, 54) Wed.-Fri. 5-6 p.m., Sat. 11-12 a.m., 3011 AH, E. Span- ier. PHYSICS: (25, 45) Mon.-Tues.- Thurs. 5-6 p.m., 202 W. Physics, R. Hartman. (26, 46) Mon.-Tues-Thurs. 5-6 p.m., 1036 Randall, D. Falkoff. Business Aiministration 123: The following is a list of the stu- dents for Business Administration 123 and the hours they will at- tend class. Classes will be held in the East Lecture Room, Rackham Building. Members of the Class Meeting Tuesday and Thursday at 3:00 p.m. Beyer, Edith May; Blair, Ber- nard L.; Broutman, Stanford A.; Cantrick, George A.; Casey, Thom- as Francis Jr.; Coates, Audry L.; Craig, Robert T.; Crane, Leonard R.; Hunter, Mary Frances; Kem- mish, James V.; Lawson, Robert S.; Lillie, Hugh D.; Major, Louis; Mattison, Donald Kellner; Mer- rill, Mary Maxine; Mlinaz, Stephen W.; North, Evelyn Kurtz; O'Daur- rell, Jacques; Rasor, Dale William; Rizzardi, Frank G.; Ruth, Nor- man D.; Scott, Lawrence I. Jr.; Sexauer, Loren D. Jr.; Shpritzer, Saul H.; Stegman, John C.; Van- denberg, Phyllis; Walker, Billie Za- Members of the Class Meeting on Tuesday and Thursday at 4:00 p.m. Ainslie, William Earl; Aselin, Louis St. Onge; Blackwood, James R.: Cullum, Charles J.: Daugher- ty, L. Carrel; Ehnerd, Mary Jac- quelyn; Finlayson, Robert M.; Flott, Robert Fleming;- Forsyth. Earl; Garritsen, Florence Mildred: Gartner, Maurice Fred Jr.; Gold- berg, Louis L.; Gray, Barbara; Gray, John C.; Hathaway, Rodney C.; Husemann, Edward J.; Kay, Charles Herbert; Kerr, Jarries S.; Kipper, John Robert; Mack, Ar- thur W.; Lorion, Robert. H.; Mac- pherson, Nancy; McCluskie, Rob- ert S.; McNulty, Edward H.; Mas- sie, Paul R.; Merriman, Eleanor Louise; Meschke Robert E.; Mum- mey, James F.; O'Brien, Frank M. Jr.; Parker, Gordon E.; Shuir- man, Gerard; Spangler, Robert M.; Theidel, William H.; Wen- dling, Robert. Concerts Organ Recital: E. William Doty, Dean of the College of Fine Arts of the University of Texas, and form- er member of the faculty of the Organ Department here, will ap- pear as guest organist at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, February 23, in Hill Auditorium. The program has been revised and will be In Memoriam for Professor Palmer Christian, University Organist, 1924-1947. It will be open to the general public with the exception of small children. William Klenz, Assistant Pro- fessor of Violincello in the School of Music, will present a recital at 8:30 Monday evening, February 24, in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. His program will include Sonata in A Major by Buccherini, Suite No. 1 in G Major for Solo Violoncello by Bach, Variations on a Theme from the "Magic Flute" by Beethoven; Beethoven's Son- ata in A Major, Op. 69, and Brahms' Sonata in F Major, Op. 99. The public is cordially invited. Exhibitions The First Willow Run Village Art Show University Community Center, 1045 Midway, Willow Run Village Crafts and paintings by Village residents will be on exhibit at the University Center in the Assembly Room from February 23 through March 30. The public is cordially invited to see the show. Events Today University R a d io Programs: 2:30 p.m., Station WJR, 750 Kc. "Stump the Professor." George Washington Program, Panel-Re- gent Roscoe Bonisteel, Dr. Ran- dolph Adams, Major R o b e r t Brown and M~r. Colton Storm. 10:45 p.m., station WJR, 750 Kc. The Medical Series. Dr. J. Marion Bryant, "The Significance of Heart Disease." Art Cinema League presents film adaptation of foremost Czech playwright Karel Capek's SKELE- TON ON HORSEBACK, with Hu- go Haas. Dubbed-in English dia- logue. Sat., 8:30 p.m. Box office opens 2 p.m. daily. Reservations phone 6300, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Coming Events Graduate Student Council: 7:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 24, East Lecture Room, Rackham Bldg. Sigma Rho Tau engineers' speech society: Tues., Feb. 25, 7:15 p.m. Rm. 315, W. Engineer- ing. Circle training for the new semester will begin. The debate schedule and topics for those de- bates will be announced. Scalp and Blade: 7:15 p.m., Sun., Feb., 23, Michigan Union. All members and rushees are urged to attend. Quarterdeck Open M e e t i n g, Tues., Feb. 25, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 311, W. Engineering Bldg. Professor Baier will speak on "Trial Trips". Business meeting, 7 p.m., ; for members. Victor Reuther, educational di- rector for UAW-CIO, and Andrew Court, of the labor-economics di- vision of the General Motors Cor- poration will discuss "The Wage Price Issue and a Stabilized Econ- omy" in Rackham auditorium at 8 p.m., Feb. 25. The public is in- vited and there is no charge. U. of M. Hot Record Society will hold an election of officers at 8 p.m., Sun., Feb. 23, Hussey Room, DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Letters to the E L 1 EDITOR'S NOTE: Because The Daily prints EVERY letter to the editor (which is siged, 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. AY I D Motives To the Editor: I would be inclined to more be- hief in the purity of AYD motives if their platform planks incluld one which stated that along with being anti-lynch, anti-Franco, etc. they would also be anti-Tito. Also, it is not too late for the AYD to draw up a resolution deploring the rigging of Polish elections in favor of the puppet government. And I am sure that the AYD members know just as much about the situation in Yugoslavia as they do about what is going on in Spain. I ask the AYD. Why be narrow- minded? If you are going to de- plore the abrogation of civil lib- erties why restrict your interest to one section of the country, or of the world for that matter. We all know fascist armies supported Franco in the Civil War in Spain. Do we also know that Red generals and Red Army troops opposed him at the same time. What makes the fascists black and the commu- nists white? I am under the im- pression that the Communist state in Russia is totalitarian. Now all the AYD has to do is prove thak Communism and democracy are one and the same thing. It is quite fashionable to be an- ti-Franco. Hollywood has been anti -Franco for quite awhile. It is not quite so fashionable to be anti-Tito, or to question the val- idity of the puppet states set up by Russia in Yugoslavia and Po- land. If we are going to set up general principles or criteria to apply to foreign governments in order to determine whether the people of those countries are get- ting a fair deal, let us apply these to all countries without exception. I believe that our government has hestitated in censuring the Franco regime in Spain because it knows that in Mexico City the Communist government-in-exile is waitingto return to Spain. In other words it would be a ase of "out of the frying pan into the fire." I would be very happy to see ' the Franco regime replaced by one truly representative of the people, but not another puppet state like Yugoslavia. I would like to state that I am anti -,Fascists, anti - Communist and I am beginning to wonder about monarchies. James S. Irwin Parking Space To the Editor: The parking problem in the vi- cinity of the University campus has been difficult, but the recent police and city drive to reduce available parking space still fur- ther has made the situation intol- erable. Most streets near the campus now have parking prohibi- ted on one or both sides, even though many are of normal width. The law forbids parking within 20 feet of an intersection, but most "No parking to corner" signs now are placed about three times this distance from the corner ,thereby reducing available parking space in each block by another 10% to 20%. As a result, it now generally is impossible to park within five blocks of the campus, and park- ing tickets have been passed out freely to anyone not adhering strictly to the letter of the law, even though plowed snow prevent- ed proper parking in many places. The motorist who tries to protest what appears to be an unfair is- suance of a traffic violation tic- ket is greeted by an unreasonable "Tell it to the judge" attitude. and of course most citizens will pay the dollar fine rather than to suffer the inconvenience and loss of time required for cour; action on a not-guilty plea. It appears that the city of Ann Arbor has discovered yet another way to gouge the University, its students and faculty. This was League. Old members are urged to attend; a record concert will fol- low. Ball and Chain Club: 7:45 p.m., Mon., Feb. 24, Michigan League. Social hour and refreshments. All wives of student veterans are cor- dially invited to attend. Inter-Faith Seminar Committee of Lane Hall: 8:30 p.m., Mon., Feb. 24, Lane Hall. U. of M. Chapter I.Z.F.A. pre- (Continued on Page 5) expressed in the arrogant W of the police traffic captain said, "We're out to force the versity to buy more off-s parking lots. If I had my there would be no parking on of those streets around there Henry T. Johnson W. Editor's Note: According to Pc reports Dr. Johnson received traffic ticket for double p outside the Museum while atte ing a class. For explanation of eal parking policies see story, p 1. V eterans' Ro n To the Editor: It's a long time since I've ten a letter to the editor, but met J. Donnelly's letter in clay's Daily was too mud "take". Mr. Donnelly attemp justify a veterans' bonus on tremely short-sighted gro and in addition delights i derin the AVC, one of the few hrganizations which has any real thinking on the u Tiue, it would be very n ''recompense in so far as mon able to do so, the damages , veterans have suffered." But a bonus of the size it woul feasible to pay do so? We'v ready received mustering out terminal leave pay, unemploy compensation, tuition and su tence while going to school. ' more do we want? So far as 1 etary grants can do so, the vet has already been recompensa There are, however, vetE who have lost, by having gox war, far more than the natior ever requite. And how a those who did not live to bei veterans-what kind of b would Mr. Donnelly pay t The only way we can ever r the sacrifices made by those did the actual fighting--priva. measured not in money, by memories, blood, and lives- do for the next generation 1 the last did not do for us, : the kind of world where such rifices will no longer be neces Of course the VFW and American Legion favor state national bonuses-nan - il which stems from those very which AVC opposes-the desi obtain the maximum benefil veterans at the expense of rest of the country. But ar really gaining anything? The erans of today are the taxpi of tomorrow who will have tc for the bonuses we get now. AVC feels that the sacriflIc those who fought the war ca be requitted by mere mol bonuses and that such an proach is extremely unsub tial. And may I remind Mr x nelly that the decision to or bonuses, as are all AVC decis was made by the vote of the n bers. (This is not so in the A ican Legion, where the "big-I in Indianapolis announce to newspapers what the Legion ports and what It opposes Mr. iDonnelly objects to the st AVC takes, he is welcome to that organization and cast vote on any and all issues. As for the slanders on A might mention that AVC has er collected books for an: certainly not for Mr. Donn "young communists" in Poli The things we have workec are too well known to- requir iteration. For my part, I would ri have the money I would recel a, bonus go towards better e tional facilities, housing for erans and other citizens, an< lief for Hitler's victims, who fered far more than even our erans. Allen L. Mayers LTHOUGH they differed on method, both Gov. Sigler and his opponents who fav- red the sales tax amendment agreed on the ecessity of raising more money to improve lie lot of Michigan schools and teachers. And ell they might! For Michigan along with the other 47 ates is confronted with the possibility of a reakdown of the public school system. The merican public as a whole has, from time o time, hearkened to vague warnings that 11 was not well with their public school sys- em, but it remained for the New York Times > conduct an extensive survey which has evealed some pertinent and quite startling acts. Some of the findings as they appeared I the Times: "Three hundre&d and fifty th-usand teachers have left the American public schools since 1940. The United States spends 1.5 per cent of its national income for its schools.. . he Soviet Union spends 7.5 per cent. School buildings are in a deplorable state all over the nation. Nearly five bil- lion dollars will be needed to bring the educational plants into' good condition. Class room teachers get an average of $37 a week today. Two hundred thousand get less than $25 weekly. Twenty-two per cent of all college stu- dents attended teachers colleges in 1920. Today seven per cent attend. Veterans do not want to prepare to teach. Only 20,000 of the 1,000,000 veterans in American colleges and universities are in teachers colleges. Sixty thousand teachers in the United States have a high school education or less. The problem is a complex one, but it seems that the main method of luring competent teachers back into public education as well as attracting new ones to the field lies in providing adequate salaries for public school teachers. -Adele M. Trenchi r9 ... IT SO HAPPENS ... * I Cannot Tell a Lie j ime Is a River HISTORY professor of ours recently was talkilig about the text book used in his urse, noting that it was written by a his- )ry professor at another university. "I had to stop using the textbook I wrote ecause it wasn't sufficiently up to date," e told us. "I've lost a lot of money as a result," he id sadly, but added brightly, "It was a good orrecion If There Were One QUESTION of the week is: Does one need a Liquor Identification Card to buy a crepe suzette in Michigan? Rebate Demanded WE WERE called in by the Registrar's Of- fice the other day and told that we would have to change our elections if we wanted to graduate with a B.S. degree. Acting on their instructions, we went through the whole change of elections pro- cedure-advisor's signature, instructor's sig- nature, Dean Peake's signature, $1.00 fee, etc-to change our class from Sociology 62 to Psychology 62. It's the same class. Contributions to this column are by all mem- bers of The Daily staff, and are the responsi- bility of the editorial director. Items from sub- scribers are invited: address them to "It So Happens," The Michigan Daily. SASKATCHEWAN'S socialist CCF govern- ment took two important actions last week. For $3,600,000, it bought all the Sas- katchewan holdings of Canadian Utilities 1Mictga CHAT conspicuous reference to a Michigan "all-time football great" on the front of sterday's Daily omitted a key word. The copy should read, "Appearing twice C0 DETERMINE the best sections of the country for men and women interested marriage, Dr. Paul Popenoe, general di- ctor of the American Institute of Fam- y Relations at Los Angeles, Calif., worked it a table of sex ratios for all the states in e Union. He considered native-white sin- e women, 20 to 29 years of age, as repre- _I Fifty-Seventh Year Edited and managed by stude the University of Michigan und authority of the Board in Con Student Publications. Editorial Staff Paul Harsha ........ Managing Clayton Dickey.........City Milton Freudenheim .Editorial I 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 ......BusinessM Nancy Helmick .. Advertising M B AINAB IL m =jr RAF - - f- -- - -1 4.p. U. $. PW O!F. ~E ~ I, r