THE MICHIGAN DAILY Faculty LATEST RESULTS of The Daily's survey of faculty opinion on a State Legislature bill, which would prohibit Communists and ex-Communists from teaching in Michigan schools and colleges, leave the division of cpinion substantially unchanged. The 15 replies that have trickled in since the poll ended last week make the score 41 per cent for to 53 per cent against, with six per cent wanting to bar only present members of the party. Only about one-third of the faculty-354 replied to the survey, andhthey may not be representative of the whole. Probably those who were not interested enough to reply are the ones who don't feel strongly one way or the other. But it is the comments that were receiv- ed that trouble us. Approximately one-half of those who indicated an opinion included s sentence or two in comment. Most of these comments were respect- able explanations of their authors' opin- ,ons. A surprisingly large proportion were unintelligent or irrelevant. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff nd represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: GEORGE WALKER 4 nswers Four faculty members said Communists should be deported, and one said they "should be liquidated." Another said "only a Communist or a Communist sympathizer can object to such a law": the large number of his colleagues who oppose it are appar- ently all fellow travelers. Inanities were also common in the state- ments against the bill. Four faculty mem- bers, for example, said that outlawing Com- munists is unconstitutional and unwise. This may be true, but the proposal is to prohibit Communist Party members from teaching-another matter entirely. Several replied in the standard "liberal" cliches about "mass hysteria" and "guilt-by-asso- ciation." It may be objected that you can't say very much . about this complicated issue in one-fifth of a post-card (which was the amount of space left for comment). But the remarks quoted above can hardly be said to concern themselves with the real, problems involved. In fact, these comments illustrate what Mr. Conant remarked in his recent speech, that groups of men tend toward their lowest common denominator of intelli- gence and express it in easy cliches and pat phrases. And it is shocking to find how low that denominator can be on the faculty of a university. -Phil Dawson. iul 34~ d'E * i'll/a diri ~ * AM 133 LW I ItUvuuv-ltt J UST AT THE MOMENT the unique Vet- erans' Rehabilitation Center proved it- self, its status is seriously threatened by an appropriations bill in the Michigan House of Representatives which would cut off the center's annual allowance of $250,000 from the interest of the Michigan Veterans' Trust Fund. The center here is the most advanced clinic of its kind in the United States. It ;,reats in-patient and out-patient veterans who have mental and nerious conditions which make it impossible for them to par- ticipate in normal civilian life. It cures 86 per cent of its patients-who would otherwise be $20,000 or $40,000 wards of the state for the rest ;of their lives. The clinic here is a model from which other states could follow the progressive lead taken by Michigan. It has been in operation since November 1947 and in that time cured more than 1,000 veterans. The 39 men now being treated as in-patients receive a mini- mum of 15 hours occupational therapy each week and three hours with psychiatric spe- cialists. More OT time is available if they desire it. But what is pounding a piano or making a wooden tie rack to us is "tough work" for these patients, in their own words. Their problem is to learn how to do tings again. A Marine patient cannot read, study or concentrate. He cannot ?ring his mind fully to bear on difficult )roblems. An Army man cannot ride in cars, streetcars, busses. All meeting together, they explained to me that the Rehabilitation - Center offered them "hope for normal life." They said that without the center, they would either have been committed to a "Snake-Pit" mental J, C O,( ,LU institution for life or allowed to run free until they committed some sort of crime for which they could not be responsible. Most of the 39 are about ready to leave. Practically all of them will be discharged before July 1, 1949-when the center's last appropriation runs out. They are fighting a battle of their own "to educate the whole state" to the need for the center, so the hun- dreds of veterans on its waiting list and out- patients who make up more than 60 per cent of= the clinic's cases will not be deprived of treatments. They fear that the clinic may either be shut down entirely or turned into "just another mental institutions where patients are kept and not cured." Exactly how the center would operate or even exist without an appropriation has not been made perfectly clear by House Com- mitteemen sponsoring the bill. One possibility is that funds may be allo- cated by individual counties on the basis of the number of patients each has or on a share-alike basis. Funds from the counties, of -course, would come from the Veterans' Trust Fund. However, I fail to see the ad- vanage to such a re-routing of monies- which could possibly result in inefficiency on the part of the counties and undue politi- cal pressure for patients from one area over another. Or the clinic might revert to state con- trol and be operated as just another men- tal hospital. I see no advantage to this proposal over the present arrangement either. 'e Veterans Readjustment Center is ade- quately serving a useful purpose. It must continue its work. -Craig H. Wilson IT HAS BEEN interesting to watch many of the old, well established swing aggre- gations make the change to bebop. One of the more recent additions to the fold is the Gene Krupa band. The "Chicago Flas" has been well known in jazz circles as an outstanding musician ever since he cut a few records with a small combo headed by the illustrious Bix Beiderbecke back in 1930; that was called dixieland. Since then, Gene has played with many top flight swing bands like Tommy Dorsey's and Benny Goodman's. Gene's band showed some inclinations to- ward employing bebop ideas in 1947 with Disc Jockey Jump, and recently, Columbia Records has released Calling Doctor Gilles- pie backed by Up An Atom (Columbia, 38382). The latter two sides are well han- dled by the band, and both feature solo work by Kai Winding, playing trombone, and Buddy Weiss, on tenor sax. We particu- larly enjoyed Weiss' contributions; he is obviously influenced by Lester Young, but he introduces a few interesting ideas of his own. An Invitation To Dance (Victor, p-243) is the appropriate title of Claude Thorn- hill's recent album on the Victor label. The album contains an excellent selection of dance numbers played very "Thornhill- istically" with generous portions of Claude's right-handed piano patter. The Snow Flakes take the two vocals, I Don't Know Why and There's A Small Hotel, among six sides; the rest, Autumn Noc- turne, Sleepy Serenade, Lullaby of the Rain, and Where or When are strictly in- strumental. A few of these numbers are re-issues from previous Columbia cuttings so it might be a good idea to check up before buying the album to prevent dup- lications. Although the Thornhill arrang- er has offered little variety, he has picked six, good tunes and worked them into fine, danceable arrangements. The Victor company credits their release of Body and Soul and Watta Ya Say We Go (Victor 20-3396) to "Charlie Ventura and his bop for the people." We don't know what people Cholly had in mind, but we're quite sure that it wasn't us. Soul begins with a pretty piano solo, followed altogether too soon by the coarse baritone sax work of Ventura. After a few inches of toying with the melody, the band breaks into a wild tempo-something that shouldn't happen to Body and Soul-and then puts on the soft pedal for a last chorus and drawn-out coda by Charlie. The reverse side features the bop-skat attempts of Jackie Cain and Roy Kral and a rather unimpressive tenor solo by the leader. Charlie employs a few novel ideas on both sides, but the good spots are too few and far between to give this platter above a C rating. It'll probably sell a .mil- lion copies. Sarah Vaughan is singing musically again, and she's given up jazz to do it. Black Coffee and As You Desire Me (Columbia, 38462) vouch for the potentialities of the new Vaughan. Coffee is a blues tune-inci- dentally, a steal from What Did I Do-with very clever lyrics. Sarah's interpretation is in good taste, commercial, occasionally hu- morous, and very enjoyable. The Joe Lipman orchestra can take credit for a great deal on this side too; the background gives this number a big (not brassy) sound but main- tains a delicate, moody. atmosphere that is so well adapted to this type of tune. Lipman has done a lot of clever little things with rhythm and novel instrumental effects that make this disc hit parade material. The flipover is somewhat less interesting, but Sarah manages to put it across in a manner to which we'd like to become accustomed. -John Osmundsen'. Current Movies At the Michigan .. . MOTHER IS A FRESHMAN. The ads are too kind. WELL, GO SEE this if you want to. You'll get a laugh-not because the picture is good, but because of the inane way in which it portrays college life. Mostly it's just silly. The producers, I think, realized they had an extremely far-fetched story on their hands-that of a mother enrolling as- a freshman in the college where her daughter was a sophomore, and falling in love with the same guy her daughter is mad for. I hope this portrayal of professors is equally as fatuous as the way in which they depict, students, because herein Van Johnson seems to hold the chair of Eng- lish lechery in a most unsubtle fashion, You wonder how he ever gets time to pry- pare his lectures. "You don't want to flunk the course, do you, honey?" he asks whenever a pretty female has occasion toT ask him academic advice. With the notable exception of "Apart- ment for Peggy," Hollywood seems to feel that all college students are about to enter the tenth grade of some small-town high school, and should behave as such. The picture was probably made to appeal to the non-college element in our population, and anyone else who is equally unaware may not find the picture annoying. The one redeeming feature of the pic- ture is the excellent work done by Rudy Monday Monday Monday Monday Monday Monday Monday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Tuesday Evening at 8..........................W ed., at 9..........................Thurs., at 10..........................Tues., at 11.........................Sat., at 1..........................Fri., at 2..........................M on., at 3 .........................Sat., at 8.........................Sat., at 9.........................Fri., at 10 ..........................W ed., at 11 .........................M on., at 1..........................Thurs., at 2 ..........................Tues., at 3 ...... ...................Sat., Classes, Seminars............. Wed., SECOND SEMESTER EXAMINATION SCHEDULE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS COLLEGE OF PHARMACY SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SCHOOL OF FORESTRY AND CONSERVATION SCHOOL OF MUSIC SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH MAY 28-June 9, 1949 NOTE: For courses having both lectures and recitations, the time of class is the time of the first recitation period of the week; for courses having recitations only, the time of the class is the time of the first recitation period. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular sched- ule. 12 o'clock classes, 4 o'clock classes, 5 o'clock classes and other "irregular" classes may use any examination period provided there is no conflict (or one with conflicts if the con- flicts are arranged for by the "irregular" class. In the College of Literature, 'Science and the Arts, instructors of "irregular" classes with 20 students or less, most of whom expect to graduate in June, may use the regular hours of the last week of classes for final examinations if they wish. A final examination on June 9 is available for "irregular" classes which are unable to utilize an earlier period. Examinations of any student expecting to receive a degree this June must be completed not later than Saturday, June 4. It is the responsibility of the instructor to arrange special exam- inations, if necessary, for these students. Each student should receive notification from his instructor as to the time and place of his examination. In the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, no date of examination may be changed without the consent of the Committee of Examina- tions. The graduating student should also check to see that his examinations are to be completed by June 4. June June May May June May June May June June May June May June June June 1 2- 5 2 9-12 31 9-12 28 9-12 3 9-12 30 2- 5 4 2- 5 28 2- 5 3 2- 5 1 9-12 30 9-12 2 2- 5 31 2- 5 4 9-12 1 7p.m. 9 9-12 TIME OF CLASS TIME OF EXAMINATION Irregular ........ .....................Thurs., DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN These "regular" periods have precedence over any special period scheduled concurrently. Conflict must be by the instructor of the "special" class. SPECIAL PERIODS Ec. 51, 52, 53, 54, 102 ................. .Tues., Soc. 51, 54, 90 .......................... Thurs, English 1, 2 ...........................Thurs., Chem. 1, 3, 21, 55 ......................Sat., Chem. 4.......... ....................Sat., Psych. 31 ...........................Mon., Bot. 1 - Zool 1 .........................Mon., Speech 31, 32 French 1, 2, 11, 12, 31, 32, 61, 62, 91, 92...Tues., German 1, 2, 31 .........................Tues., Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32 .......................Wed., Pol. Sci., 1, 2 ...........................Wed., arranged for May June June June June June June June June June June 31 2 2 4 4 6 6 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 7 7 8 8 I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Maturity Line ) By SAMUEL GRAFTON MR. ACHESON'S LOT is not an easy one. I feel we owe him a certain amount of sympathetic understanding as he looks ahead to renewed negotiations with Russia. The courage to negotiate is a special kind of courage, in the current political setting, and it involves stuff like this 1. Bipartisan harmony on foreign pol- icy tends to be weakest during a period of negotiation, strongest during a period of non-negotiation. It is much easier to get up general agreement on a tough line than on a line of conciliation and compro- mise. It will be odd, indeed, if Mr. Ache- son isn't accused, during any sort of nego- tiation that seems to be going well, of giving the country away. It would not be unprecedented for any concession what- ever to be taken as a sign of pro-Russian- ism in the administration. A tough line can be worked out jointly by both parties; a line of compromise and practical settlement has to be justified to the Republicans by the Democrats, and that's not quite as easy as ordering up some more arms. To expect critics of the Administration not to kibitz a negotiation is to expect a great deal indeed. 2. Another very serious difficulty is wrap- ped up in the idea of "open diplomacy" which will certainly be urged upon Mr. Acheson. The theory that the public should know of every diplomatic offer, the moment it is made, is a fine, idealistic one, but it does make bargaining hard. Such publicity tends to make it difficult to withdraw from any position once taken, without seeming to have surrendered. The press, too often, tends to score the results as if it were scoring a basketball New Books at the game, so many points for them, so many for us, and that hardly minimizes each side's all too human desire to be credited with winning as many points as possible. If Acheson wants to negotiate effectively, he will have to negotiate privately, and yet if he negotiates privately he is almost sure to negotiate in an atmosphere of considerable alarm and suspicion. 3. As if all this were not enough, Mr. Acheson is going to have to try to get con- cessions from Russia, while trying to put the Atlantic Pact through the Senate. The first requires an atmosphere of reassurance, if not cordiality, while the second requires an atmosphere of apprehension. If the ne- gotiation goes too swimmingly, interpreta- tions of that fact may be bad for the Pact; if the Pact is pushed too raucously, that will not be good for the negotiations. To steer both these craft at once will not be easy. 4. To sum it all up, it is much easier to get along, domestically, when you're not negotiating, than when you are. The plain truth is that the road of rearmament, de- fense pacts, toughness, etc., while compli- cated and expensive, is not the hard way --}politically, it is the easy way. The other road, the road of negotiation, is uncom- parably harder. We have been talking a great deal lately about our increasing national political ma- turity, and I think that here, in the current- ly renewed interest in negotiation, we have a golden chance to show such maturity off. It will have to be the maturity of genuine understanding of Mr. Acheson's difficulties, and the world's, instead of merely that ma- turity of defiance which is, no matter how you -lok at it, maturity of a lesser order. (Copyright, 1949, New York Post Corporation) SOME WESTERN newspapers have com- SPECIAL PERIODS FOR THOSE GRADUATING THIS JUNE Speech 31, 32 French 1, 2, 11, 12, 31, 32, 61, 62, 91, 92.. .Tues., May 31 7p.m. German 1, 2, 31 Spanish 1, 2, 31.32 . SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any nec- essary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. SCHOOL OF FORESTRY AND CONSERVATION Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any neces- ary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Individual examinations by appointment will be given for all applied music courses (individual instruction) elected for credit in any unit of the University. For time and place of exam- inations, see bulletin board of the School of Music. SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any neces- sary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS MAY 28 to JUNE 9, 1949 NOTE: For courses having both lecture and quizzes, the time of exercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the time of exercise is the time of the first quiz period. Drawing and laboratory work may be continued through the examination period in amount equal to.that normally devoted to such work during one week. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. All cases of conflicts between as- sign examination periods must be reported for adjustment. See bulletin board outside of Room 3209 East Engineering Building between May 11 and May 18 for instructions. Seniors and graduates, who expect to receive a degree this June and whose examination occurs after June 4, should also report to Room 3209 E.E. between May 11 and May 18. To avoid misunderstandings and errors each student should receive notification of the time and place of his appearance in each course during the period May 28 to June 9. No date of examination may be changed without the consent of the Classification Committee. Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all i members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent ina typewritten form to the Office of the Assistant to the President, Room 2552d Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication] (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). SUNDAY, MAY 1, 1949 VOL. LIX, No. 148a NoticesF Employment Notices: On May 3 he following companies will have -epresentatives here to interviews nterested persons:4 Needham, Louis and Brorby,. nc., advertising agency. Publica-a ion, writing and art work. Great West Life Assurance Com- any. To interview college seniors. Michigan Express Co., to inter- iew men interested in transporta- ion business.t On May 4, the North American aviation Company will interview -.S. and Ph.D. candidates in Elec- rical and Mechanical engineering, pplied physics, and mathematics.e Further information and ap-f 'ointments may be obtained byI alling Ext. 371, or in Room 3528 'dmin. Bldg.e The City Service Commission of laltimore, Maryland announcesF In examination for the position ofC enior Supervisor of Colored Ac- ivities in the Bureau of Recrea- ion. Further information may be. btained at the Bureau of Appoint- nents, 3528 Administration Build-1 ng. Doctoral Examination for Albert ). Pepitone, Social Psychology; thesis: "Motivational Effects in he Perception of Social 'Gate-@ :eepers,"' Tuesday, May 3, 3:30 .m., West Council Room, Rack- iam Building. Chairman, Leon 'estinger. Education School Seniors may ay class dues ($2.00) any time on Tuesday, May 3, or Wednesday, Aay 4, in the Student Lounge of1 Mducation School. Senior Honors in English: Ap- lications are now being received1 or, entrance into the Senior Hon-e rs Course offered by the Depart-1 nent of English Language and iterature. The course is open toF tudents who have demonstratedl uperior aptitude for and excep- ional interest in the study of Eng- ish literature. It is conducted as a1 eminar; each student is assigned o a Tutor, and will be expected to1 .omplete a large amount of inde- )endent reading. Applicationsi >hould be addressed to the Englisht ionors Committee, and should ;onsist of a brief statement as toI vhy the applicant wishes to pur-t .ue the course as well as a resume >f his qualifications. An up-to- late blue-print should accompanyI .l applications, which may be1 urned in to any member of the Committee (Messers Ogden, Mue- chke, and Litzenberg, Chairman),1 r to the English Office. The clos- ng date is noon, Saturday, May 7th. Students who apply will be notified of an appointment forE personal interview by the Commit-< tee. Academic Notices Water Safety Instructors' Course: rhe first meeting for this course, vill be held on Monday evening, Aay 2, 'at 7:00 at the Intramural3 Pool. All those who signed up for the course should be there. Sociedad Hispanica: Applica- tions for scholarships to Mexico Should be made in writing, ad- Iressed to Sociedad Hispanica, Room 414, Romance Language Building, before May 6. Applica- tions should include class, Spanish yourses studied, and club activities in which you have participated. Eng. Mech. 2a Make-Up Experi- ments: Any of the experiments ,overed during the first five weeks may be made up on Thursday, May 5 between 3 and 6 p.m. in .yoom 102.tWest Engineering. All :f the other experiments may be made up on Friday, May 6, be- tween 3 and 6 p.m. in Room 102, West Engineering. This notice does not supersede any previous arrangements made between indi- vidual instructors and their classes. Concerts Student Recital: Warren Bellis, clarinetist, will be heard at 8:00 Monday evening, May 2, in the Hussey Room of the Michigan League, when he will present a program in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. It will include compositions by von Weber, Saint- Saens, Gaubert, Edward Chuda- coff, Stravinsky and brahms, and will be open to the public. Mr. Bellis is a pupil of William Stub- bins. Student Recital: Hugh Altvater, another program on the Baird Memorial Carillon at 2:15 Sunday afternoon, May 1. It will include four old English works, composi- tions by A. Rubinstein and Nina Rota, and a group of hymns by J. B. Dykes. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation -Musicale Sunday afternoon, 3:30 at the Hillel Foundation. Selec- tions to be played at the Music Festival, with explanatory pro- gramme notes, will be featured. West Quad Glee Club will pre- sent its Annual Spring Concert at 4:00 p.m. today in the Michigan Union Ballroom. Admission is free and everyone is invited to attend. Events Today Inter-Guild Joint Council meet- ing for new and old representa- tives Sunday, May 1, 2:30-4:00 p.m., Lane Hall. B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundatio-- Hillel-IZFA "State Day" Sunday evening, May 1, 7:30 p.m. at the Hillel Foundation. Rabbi Morris Adler, of Congregation Sharey Zedek, Detroit, will be guest speak- er. Gilbert and Sullivan Society: Full rehearsal, Sunday and Mon- day, 7 p.m. in Michigan League. UWF Discussion: Sunday night 8-9:30, 822 Arch. Apt. 2. Sunday May 21st. Topic: "What Can We Do About It?" University Community Center, Willow Village: Interdenominational church pro- gram: 10:45 a.m. Church Service and nursery. 4:30p.m. Discussion group. 5:30 p.m. Pot-Luck Supper. Congregational Church: 10:45 a.m., Dr. Parr's subject will be "Learning the Lesson of Life." 6:00 p.m., Rev. E. K. Hidgon on "The World Task of the Church," at the Guild meeting. Westminster Guild: 6:30 p.m. Regular fellowship meeting in the social hall of the church building. New officers will be installed. Speaker: Mr. Charles F. Bole, Michigan Director of Christian Education of the Presbyterian Church. Informal supper will be served at 5:30 p.m. Bible Seminar under the leadership of Mr. Hen- derson, 9:30-10:30 a.m. Coffee and rolls are served at 9:00 a.m' All Near Eastern students of Asia are invited to attend an informal tea to be given from 4:00-5:00 pn. in the Russel parlor of the church building. This tea is being given to start off International Week on campus. Michigan Christian Fellowship: Rev. T. Stanley Soltau of the First Evangelical Church, Memphis, Tennessee, will speak on "the Claims of Christ" in the Fireside Room, Lane Hall, 4:30 p.m. Every- one is welcome. Unitarian Student Group meets at 6:30 p.m., snack supper. Speak- er: Dr. Gerard Mertens on the subject: "Goethe." Congregational-Disciples Guild: Supper at the Congregational Church, 6:00 p.m. Rev. E. L. Hig- don, Secretary of Oriental Missions for Disciples of Christ Church will- speak on "The World Task of the Church." In observance of Inter- national Week, the Chinese stu- dents will be guests at a tea at the Congregational Church, 4:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Association: (Continued on Page 5) Q11 Al~tau UlulI TIME OF CLASS TIME OF EXAMINATION Monday at Monday at Monday at Monday at Monday at Monday at Monday at Tuesday at Tuesday at Tuesday at Tuesday at Tuesday at Tuesday at Tuesday at 8 ............................W ed., June 9..... 10..... 11..... 1..... 2..... 3..... 8.,... 9..... ................'Thurs., June .. . .... ..-........ T ues.,. .......... Sat., . Fri., ........................M on., ........................Sat., ........................Sat., .. .. . . .. ........ Fri., May 3 May 2 June May 3 June May 2 June June May 31 10 .................... 11 .................... .. :.Wed., .M.....Mon., 1, 2- 5 2, 9-12 1, 9-12 8, 9-12 3, 9-12 0, 2- 5 4, 2- 5 8, 2- 5 3, 2- 5 1, 9-12 0, 9-12 2, 2- 5 31, 2- 5 4, 9-12 28, 2- 5 30, 2- 5 31, 2- 5 2, 2- 5 4, 9-12 A h- R Fifty-Ninth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control ct Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ....Managing Editor Dick Maloy ...............City, Editr Naomi Sternr.......d ial Directo? Allegra Pasqualetti ...Associate Edito? Al Blumrosen ........Associate Editor Leon Jaroff .........Associate EiUtor Robert C. White ......Associate Editor B. S. Brown ...........Sports Editor Bud Weldenthal . .Associate Sports EFA Bev Bussey .....Sports Feature Witt Audrey Buttery......Woen's Editor Mary Ann Harris Also. Women's Editot Bess Hayes ..................Librarxan Business Staff Richard Hait .......Business Manaer Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman ....Finance Manager Cole Christian ...CirculationM Mnag 1........................ Thurs., June 2..........................Tues., May 3 3............................Sat., June M.E. 135 ...............................*Sat., M.P. 3, 4; Surv. 2 ...................... *Mon., Ec. 53, 54; C.E. 21; Draw. 1 ..............*Tues.,7 E.E. 5, 7............................*Thurs.,. May May May June June X11., a Z 3 3 M.E. 13, 136; Surv. 4; Chem. 1, 3...... . ak -. 4 i I