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February 28, 1950 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1950-02-28

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Dorm Plan
THE UNIVERSITY Resident Halls, long
pregnant with organizing possibilities,
has finally begun labor pains.
Expected: A Residence Hall's Council
that will establish the coordination of
activities within the entire "U" dormitory
system.
The gleam in papa's eye was first seen
last October in the East Quad Council.
More decisive action was taken at a subse-
quent meeting of Dormitory House Presi-
dents and interested rsidents.
Now the big problem is to gain social
approval and popular backing. The pros-
pective plans of the Council have been
aired before open meetings of several of
the houses in both men's and women's
dorms. To date the project has been ap-
proved by seven houses and rejected by
two.
When and if the Council becomes an
established fact it can offer a basic five
point program to student living in the
dormitories.
1-It would provide a concrete liasion
group between resident students and the
Administration.
2-It would tie the Residence Halls more
intimately to general University life by
being an official council recognized by the
students as a complete and cooperating
group.
3-It would unify Residence Halls and
increase individual house spirit and pres-
tige.
4--It would facilitate the opportuities
for inter-residence hall functions, both so-
cial and academic.
5-It would further education in house
government by the free exchange of ex-
perienced ideas.
The monkey wrench threatening resi-
dent approval of the Council is an un-
official attack launched by the Associa-
tion of Independent Men.
AIM seems to feel that its future existence
as a politically powerful group will be en-
dangered by the Resident Halls Council.
Moreover it apparently believes that a
wasteful duplication of tasks will occur.
This is not the case. The Resident Halls
Council will deal only with the problems
of University residents. Basically the prob-
lems of men and women in the Resident
Halls are the same. At present Assembly
and AIM are the duplicating organizations.
'The Resident Halls Council would be a uni-
fying agent.
At one of the recent house meetings the
voting was channeled into a choice be-
tween AIM and the Residence Hall Council.
The issue was deceptive. The Council is not
an insurrection to overthrow Fiailer, Kly-
man and Co. Both can exist side by side
strengthening one another rather than
weakening.
The Residence Halls Council is not a
political group but rather a service or-
ganization. And such an organization is
badly needed within the Residence Halls.
If anything the Council offers AIM the
possibility of increased numbers by or-
ganizing 5000 students under one set-up.
Should the Residence Halls Council be
forced into politics in the future it will
possess tremendous potential merely in its
numbers. But again rather than hinder the
expressed aims of AIM it would strengthen
the power of the independents. And that's
what AIM wants, isn't it?
-Leonard Greenbaum.
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN DAVIES

t.8

UMW & Coal Industry

"WellI, Here Goes'

DAILY OFFICIAL BULETIN-

AS THE paralyzing coal strike spreads its
deadly effects throughout the nation's
economy it becomes increasingly more ap-
parent that traditional methods of labor-
management bargaining are incapable of
working out lasting agreements between the
miners and operators. And with the rise of
this labor-management anarchism, there
have come repeated demands that the gov-
ernment take drastic steps to cure the sit-
uation-that the Army be called out to force
the miners back into the pits-that the gov-
ermnent take over operation of the mines
-or that the entire coal industry be na-
tionalized.
The causes for our current coal dilema are
reflected in the history of the industry
throughout the past 10 years. During that
period, which has been marked by wave af-
ter wave of crippling nation-wide strikes,
tremendous technological strides have been
made in the perfection of new methods of
mining coal. Although more than 250,000
miners have trickled out of the industry
since the twenties, scientific mining methods
would soon displace thousands more, were
it not for the coercive prohibitions of John
L. Lewis' United Mine Workers.
Even more significant has been the tre-
mendous rise of competitive fuel indus-
tries. Natural gas and oil have been substi-
CURRENT MOVIS
At The State...
WHIRLPOOL, with Gene Tierney, Rich-
ard Conte, and Jose Ferrar.
IT LOOKS as if nature has taken its course
and the species Psychological Thriller has
evolved into a weak, inbred imitation of its
healthy predecessors, pictures such as "Spell-
bound."
A remarkable conglomeration of useless
mutations and vestigial remains is present
in "Whirlpool". The neurotic is married to
the psychiatrist, a quack psychiatrist tries to
use his hypnotism to make her the goat for
a murder he committed, and lending the case
history flavor to the entire hodge-podge is
the neurotic's kleptomania.
With these diverse elements, the movie
is, nevertheless, soggy. As the neurotic,
Gene Tierney confusedly goes through the
actions required, while Richard Conte, as
her psychiatrist husband, is badly mis-
cast and knows it. Brightest spot in the
film is Jose Ferrar, as the scheming quack.
His efforts are wasted in this particular
vehicle. And so is Ben Hecht's name on the
script. The greatest inpression this film
makes is as an example of just how badly
good talent can be wasted when the movie-
companies get hold of it.
-Fran Ivick
At The Michigan .. .
KEY TO THE CITY WITH Clark Gable,
Loretta Young, Marilyn Maxwell, and
Frank Morgan.
THE COMEDIES we used to see in which
situations like happy amoebas spontane-
ously created others with rapidity and all
sorts of running-around action are not with
us now. We can think of the Marx brothers
as an example. Nor are those urbane flicks
that were talky as the devil but during
which one just wanted to sit there and en-
joy the wit. One can think of early Hepburn
for instance.
These two methods have been forced to-
gether in Key to the City and we get the
kind of bastard product in which there is
an attempt at the bon mot and also a few
frenetic Laurel and Hardy-like action
scenes. The film turned out neither rare
nor well-done. Perhaps half-baked is the
word that best describes it.
The general situation is fair enough. There
is a national convention of mayors in that
very photographical city San Francisco. Miss
Loretta Young is a female mayor. Mr. Gable
is a male mayor. As male as male can be it

goes without saying. This is clear when you
see him in that inevitable scene dressed as
a little boy. Miss Young is the mayor of Min-
oma, Maine; Mr. Gable hails from Puget
City, we guess, Washington. Maine meaning
conservatism and Washington brawn we
have before us a romance.
Gable is not a man I laugh at easily. He's
too taut when reading lines that should be
ambling. While watching cooch dancer
Marylin Maxwell at her trade, the double-
entendre between Gable and Young goes
something like this, "Quite a bump," says
Young referring to a bruise Gable has on his
hand. "Yeh," is his off-hand reply. As you
can see this isn't very close to Noel Coward,
nor is it the funny nonsense Red Skelton
turns out.
What was supposed to be a funny action
scene was a duel between Gable and his ene-
my both tearing at each other with long-
shoremen's hooks. Ah, for the days when the
puffing policeman chased Charlie Chaplin
around New York beating him over the head
with a (rubber) nightstick.
-S. J. Winebaum
The Scientist
"rlHE VALUE the world sets upon motives
is often grossly unjust and inaccurate.
Consider, for example, two of them: mere
insatiable curiosity and the desire to do
good. The latter is put high above the

tuted for coal by both private consumers
and industrial concerns until coal-bred
ene'gy has dropped from 90 per cent of
the ,nation's total, to less than 50 per cent.
Realizing the danger in these develop-
ments, Lewis has called his miners out per-
iodically until a reduction in coal stockpiles
assured uninterrupted production for anoth-
er year or more. His most recent solution has
been the introduction of a three day work-
ing week.
Neither of these solutions is economically
desirable. The first greatly increases the
danger of cyclical fluctuations in our econ-
omy resulting in periodic depressions, while
the second is essentially a weak admission
that the United States is incapable of main-
taining full production.
What is the solution then? First, and pro-
bably most important, there must be a ma-
jor reduction in the number of miners to
permit the natural development of new tech-
nological mining methods. Nearly all ob-
servers agree that there are too many miners
-and that the coal dilema cannot be per-
manently cured until their numbers are re-
duced. Such a reduction could be adequate-
ly effected through a far-reaching, long
range government rehabilitation prograr
which would shift thousands of miners into
new and expanding industries and into new
agricultural and reclamation projects.
In the more immediate future, however,
there must be a well-planned program to
coordinate the industry and adjust coal
production to consumer demands.
Is such a program best effected by extend-
ing the present bargaining system with more
intensive government mediation, by nation-
alization or by a combination of these two.
Clearly the first method is inadequate.
Lewis and the mine operators have tried for
10 years to reach an agreement-and haven't
been able to-even with government media-
tion, injunctions and mine seizures. And
while the second method would certainly
centralize control of the mines, it would be
an admission that our present system is in-
capable of solving its problems and would
undoubtedly lead to increasing demands for
nationalization of all other basic industries
which should be only the last resort.
Obviously then, the third method seems
to be the only feasible solution. The gov-
ernm!nt must enforce a strict coordina-
tion of the coal industry and set up a sys-
tem of mine quotas and production sche-
dules which would be adjusted to consumer
demands over a long range period. In add-
ition, government officials must force the
closing of the more unproductive mines
and initiate a rehabilitation program for
thousands of miners.
Although such government restrictions
would greatly reduce the power of the mine
operators, it would retain the basic char-
acteristics of private ownership and at the
same time stabilize a very unstable industry.
-Jim Brown
Rep. Crawford
WASHINGTON-A lot of people have been
wondering why crusty, hard-working
Congressman Fred Crawford of Michigan
punched a young farm hand, then sat for
two days in a Maryland county jail. The
real explanation goes back to some unfol,
tunate philanderings in which the Congress-
man got himself involved, which have han-
dicapped his hitherto useful service.
When a man holds the high honor of
representing the American people in Con-
gress, his actions must be subject to more
scrutiny than the average citizen. Such
scrutiny is the only way the voters in this
district can know whether or not he is
adequately representing them. Mere are '
the unfortunate facts about the Congress-
man from Michigan.
Most tragic of all is that when Ray Han-
bury, the boy he punched, went to the police
station, Crawford's son William went with
him to help swear out the warrant for his
father's arrest.

Undoubtedly this parental resentment
stemmed from the fact that the 61-year-old
Congressman has been so open in his at-
tentions to his 26-year-old secretary, Miss
Ruth Peters, that it has caused great family
embarrassment. Not only did he take his
secretary to Alaska on a Congressional jun-
ket, leaving Mrs. Crawford at home, but park
police records show that on July 15, 1949, the
Congressman and Miss Peters were sitting on
the grass at Hains Point (Washington'
lovers' lane) when two boys stole Miss Pe-
ters' purse. The Congressman gave chase, re-
covered the purse after $15 was stolen, but.
did not prefer charges. When asked to pre-
fer charges by Sgt. Charles Apfelbeck, he
said: "Hell, I can't do anything. You know
what the situation is with me."
Meanwhile Ray Hanbury, the youngster
who got punched, had become a good friend.
of Mrs. Crawford, and a constant companion
of "Skip" Crawford, the 17-year-old son. He
worked in the Congressman's office by day
and at the farm during week ends, and his
sympathy was not with the Congressman's
secretary.
So it's not difficult to understand how
Hanbury remarked to the Congressman,
"that damn girl has lied to you again,"
and how Skip then climbed down from the
ladder which Hanbury was holding when
he got punched, threw down his monkey
wrench and remarked to his father: "If
he's finished I'm through too."
And the great tragedy was that as tlhc

And then the Lion said: "But I got a right to be scared
-look what happened to Parnell Thomas."

ette' TO THE EDITOR
The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of
general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer
and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or
libelous letters, and letters which for anysreason are not in good taste will
be condensed, edited, or withheld from publication at the discretion of the
editors.

Source of Hope .
To the Editor:
THIS EVENING I heard the re-
broadcast of Mrs. Roosevelt's
speech which was given at Cornell
University. Now, for the second
time this month I became ex-
tremely proud that I belong to a
truly great university. But this
time I began to wonder if the
many, many other people here
were conscious of wherein a great-
ness lies. I wondered if others-
as I-had lost sight of that which
makes our University, and others
like it, the source of hope in to-
day's world. One which we see
seems to be dedicating itself to
destruction rather than creation
and human happiness.
Last week I chanced to have the
opportunity to show our campus
to a friend. During this almost
complete tour I casually mention-
ed the costs of our fine new build-
ings; I outdid myself in telling of
our traditions; I proudly stated
our refusal totsacrifice educational
standards to the tacit demands of
state legislature and other un-
thinking people.
I ended our tour at a climax,
the Rackham Graduate School. It
was here that he unequivocally
voiced his admiration. He thought
the school was really fine-parti-
cularly dimensionally. But what
impressed him most in the entire
university was the small Graduate
check room. There were three at-
tendants-one colored, one white
and one Chinese.
Here, in very ordinary talk he
voiced the sentiments of Mrs.-
;Roosevelt. Here was the only
hope. Here was a small evidence
of that truth for world peace
which has permeated throughout
our University. And here is the
truth which makes me very hope-
ful, thankful and proud.
-Patrick Heck
* * *
SL Calendar . .
To the Editor:
DON MCNEIL in a column en-
titled Pointed Pen recently
criticized the Student Legislature
in its calendaring of campus
events asking, "It is too difficult
a problem to work out a clearing
system by which the various
groups could know what was com-
ing off on a certain weekend? It
would then be up to them to decide
whether or not they want to per-
form in the face of too much
social competition."
I suggest to Mr. McNeil that he
stroll over to the Office of Student
Affairs and avail himself of the
opportunity of viewing the SL's
Events Calendar. There he will
find listed on a very large calen-
dar every social event approved
by the Student Affairs Committee
this year.
We have a problem of congested
weekends simply because groups
after looking at the calendar and
sizing up the competition decide
to put on their shows in the face
of such competition. On a campus
of this size there simply are not
enough weekends available to al-
low everyoe a choice, non-compe-

titive date. There is bound to be
heavy competition. We simply try
to reduce the conflicts to a mini-
lmlum.
Under the present system of
calendaring events, SL approval
and then SAC approval must be
sought. The tendency in both
these groups is to leave the deci-
sion of 'staging or not staging a
particular event up to the spon-
soring group. Only when there
seems no chance of success for the
conflicting events do these groups
intercede.
The best we can do is to point
out to groups seeking dates just
the kind of competition they will
face and to recommend possible
new dates better suited to their
purposes, leaving the final deci-
sion on whether to continue or
drop their plans to the groups
concerned. This we do.
Wc are now in the process of
parding the calendar to include
a listing of athletic evets ao.
Bt- contrary 4o the implica'.ions
of Mr. McNeil'. litorial, we o
1rvo ide a clearin ; house for s;.
cial events.
-Quentin Nesbitt,
President,
Student Legislature.
* * *
Hospital Affair. ..
To the Editor:
I HAVE READ with careful in-
terest, and clipped for refer-
ence, everything you have printed
about the Mrs. Philpot-Dr. Sullen-
berger affair, from your opening
front-page news-story of Feb. 14
to the sensitive, constructive let-
ter this morning by Al Eglash.
It has been rather painful to
observe how a co-chairman of
the Inter-Racial Association, and
R. Nakamura, have picked up the
word "assault" and are waving it
strenuously in behalf of Mrs. Phil-
pot and Justice without consider-
ing all the facts. T advise anyone
who is interested to go back to
the Feb. 14th issue of The Daily,
read the facts as there printed,
and imaginatively reconstruct the
situation which led to the violence.
Dr. Sullenberger I know by rep-
uation to be an excellent thoracic
surgeon, and Mrs. Philpot is a
woman of friendly and attractive
appearance. If Dr. Sullenberger
was angry when he got on the
elevator, it is fairly evident that
Mrs. Philpot provoked rather than
appeased his wrath.... Will those
who cry Assault! Assault! please
note that the unfortunate blow
was not delivered until after "Mrs.
Philpot grabbed the doctor's shirt
and tore it down the front."
(Daily, Feb. 14). It seems to me
a commonplace of everyday ethics
(I don't know about the legal
stand here) that those who de-
liberately provoke assault have it
coming to them.
As one who has cumulatively
spent many hours of my life wait-
ing for tCn crsity Hosital Cc.va-
tors, I :houlr. like to futher re-
co i? mqn pression which I am
ql"I' sure other nurs-': anc do.c-
to; will veify. At the time in
Janur'y when this inide oc-
"2. r"cl a'he late evening -atur

(Continued from Page 3)
van, Colette Jablonski and Charles
Fisher, pianists: Mary Hammond
and Norma Heyde, sopranos;
Richard Miller, tenor; Edward
Troupin, violinist; and Carlo Car-
taino, flutist. Compositions by
Mozart, Telemann, Chopin, De-
bussy, Ravel, Ponchieli and Liszt.
The public is invited.
Student Recital: Robert Miller,
a student of violin and viola with
Paul D'oktor, will be heard in a
program at 4:15 p.m., Tues., Feb.
28, Rackham Assembly Hall. Com-
positions by Beethoven, Kor-
nauth, Smetana and Mozart. Pre-
sented in lieu of a thesis for the
Master of Music degree, the re-
cital will be open to the public.
Student Recital: Florence Laz-
arski, oboist, will present a recital
at 8:30 p.m., Wed., Mar. 1, Rack-
ham Assembly Hall, in partial ful-
fillment of the requirements for
the degree of Master of Music.
Miss Lazarski will be assisted by
Nancy.Lewis, harpsichord and pi-
ano, Eugene Mengel, violin, David
Ireland, viola, and Jerome Jelinek,
violincello. Compositions by Bach,
David Stanley Smith, and Benja-
min Britten. Open to the public.
Exhibits
Exhibition of Advertising De-
sign by Lester Beall of New York.
Preliminary sketches through fin-
al presentation. East Galleries,
Rackham Bldg., through March 11.
Sponsored by College of Architec-
ture and Design.
Euents Today
Canterbury Club: 5:15-5:45 p.m.,
Evening Prayer and Meditation;
7:30-9 p.m., Chaplain's Seminar.
Christian Science Organization:
Testimonial meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Upper Room, Lane Hall. All are
welcome.
Research and Journal Discussion
Group, Electrical Engineering De-
partment: Meeting 4 p.m., 3072
E. Engineering. Mr. Warren D.
McBee will discuss "Some Elec-
tronic Aspects of Modern Kinetic
Theory."
Armenian Club: Social, 7:30
p.m., Union. Refreshments. All
Armenians on campus welcome.
Room number will be posted.
Sophomores and Juniors inter-
ested in positions of assistant man-
agerships for baseball varsity come
to Yost Field House between 2-4
p.m.
Alpha Phi Omega: Pledge meet-
ing, 7 p.m., Rm. 3-A, Union.
Chess Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Union.. Continuation of tourna-
ment. New members always wel-
come.
Association of Independent Men:
Meeting of council, 7 p.m., Rm.
service 1jad been getting progres-
sively worse. With minutes to
meet an appointment, it is quite
a frustrating experience to watch
the elevator dial and eye the clock,
while the elevator sits in one place
two, three to five minutes, and
then when at last it begins to
approach, and you stand ready
to enter, to have it whiz past....
No one has yet explained publicly
precisely what the emergency was
which caused the elevator to whiz
past Dr. Sullenberger, but I for
one don't blame him for doubting
when Mrs. Philpot said "Emer-
gency." It is like the fable of the
boy who cried "Wolf, Wolf!"
However, a minor revolution does

seem to have occurred. The Uni-
versity; Hospital elevator service
has lately been noticeably good. -
As to the irter-racial stir in
this affair, let me state first that
I have been a member of a Co-op
and lived with other races, and
am as free of racial prejudice as
anyone. Yet when the Inter-Racial
Association, the Committee to End
Discrimination, and the Associa-
tion for the Advancement of
Colored People devote vital energy
in taking up arms and making an
issue of a case as fundamentally
weak as Mrs. Philpot's I find my-
self wondering if they are not
arousing rather than alleviating
antagonisms. . . .
All those who fly banners for
various redeeming social causes
would do well to remember that
no cause has real drive unless
based upon pleasant individual
experiences and relationships, and
that genuine courtesy is as much
a civilizer as an outgrowth of
civilized life.
-Dorothy R. Pravda,
RN; MA '49.

Square
7:30-9:45
Women's
invited.

University Marketing Club: Spe-
cial meeting, 7:30 p.m., Wed., Mar.
1, 130 Business Administration
Bldg. Speaker: Mr. Everett R.
Smith, president, American Mar-
keting Association. Those inter-
ested in marketing and market re-
search invited. Refreshments.
Women of the University Fac-
ulty: Tea, 4 to 6 p.m., Wed., Mar.
1, fourth floor clubroom, League.
Delta Sigma Pi: Meeting, 7:30
p.m., Wed., Mar. 1, Chapter House.
U. of M. Rifle Club: Practice, 7-
9:30 p.m., Wed., Mar. 1, ROTC
rifle range.
Industrial Relations Club: Meet-
ing, 7:30 p.m., Wed., Mar. 1, Rm.
3-R, Union.
Anthropolgy Club: First meet-
ing, 7:30 p.m., Wed., Mar. 1, 3024
Museums Bldg. Entrance by' the
rear door. Mr. Stephen Williams
will present an illustrated lecture
on the Anasazi and MIogollon areas
in Southwestern Prehistory. Re-
freshments. Members and inter-
ested persons invited.
Lecture, Sigma Gamma Epsilon:
Prof. W. H. Hobbs will talk on
"A 14th Century Discovery of
North America." 12:15 p.m.,rWed.,
Mar. 1. Meeting will be in Rm.
2054 Natural Science. Open to the
public.
Mid t1jg

3-C, Union. All members are urg-
ed to bring eligibility cards.
,Wolverine Club: 8:45 p.m., Un-
ion. New members and others in-
terested should attend.
Coming Events
Canterbury Club: 7:15 a.m.,
Wed., Mar. .1, Holy Communion
followed by Student Breakfast.
Ushers needed for the ice show
"Icelandia" at Hill Auditoriu=,
Mar. 7. Those interested in usher-
ing come to the box office at Hill
Auditorium, Thurs., Mar. 2, from
5 to 6 p.m.
Staff members of women's resi-
dences, sororities and League
houses. First meeting of the Resi-
dence Staff Institute, 10 a.m., on
Wed., Mar. 1, League.
Dr. Ronald Lippitt, Program Di-
rector, Research Center for Group
Dynamics, will lead a discussion
on: The Conflicting Demands in
the Role of Resident Staff Mem-
bers.
English Journal Club: 8 p.m.,
Wed., Mar. 1, East Conference
Room, Rackham Bldg. Subject:
Myth and Literature. "Poetry and
Myth,"by Alan Markman: "Faul.-
kner's Absalom," "Absalom! and
Myth" by Edgar Whan.

and Folk Dance Club:
p.m., Wed., Mar. 1,
Athletic Bldg. Everyone

AJ

4

A

I

A.

I

THE BALLET Russe de Monte Carlo pre-
sented an exciting and colorful evening
of dance at the Michigan Theatre last night.
In spite of the sporadic lack of precision of
the corps de ballet, the relatively shoddy
sets, and the small and "squeaky" orches-
tra, there seemed to shine through a certain
fire and excitement that makes chills run
up the spines of dance-lovers.
The progitam got off to a rather slow and
uneven start with the traditional "Les Syl-
phides" of Fokine, done to the romantic
strains of Chopin's music. Probably because
lof the small stage, the corps of balletinas
seemed to be a bit crowded and at times col-
lided, destroying the illusion of other-
worldliness.
The "Pas de Deux Classique" was un-
doubtedly the high point of the evening. Here
was classical ballet in all its pomp and glory
and glitter. Nina Novak was beautiful to
look at, as well as possessing the brilliance
and ability of a top-ranking dancer. Leon
Danielian has developed into a magnificent
and vivacious dancer with an impeccable
technique that evoked gasps of wonder from
the enthusiastic audience.
The last ballet, "Divertissements from

Fifty-Ninth Year
Edited and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board in Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Leon Jaroff...... .Managing Editor
Al Blumrosen..............City Editor
Philip Dawson......Editorial Director
Mary Stein.............Associate Editor
Jo Misner...........Associate Editor
George Walker ........ Associate Editor
Don McNeil..........Associate Editor
Wally Barth....... Photography Editor
Pres Holmes.........Sports Co-Editor
Merle Levin..........Sports Co-Editor
Roger Goeiz.....Associate Sports Editor
Lee Kaltenbach ....... Women's Editor
Barbara Smith.. .Associate Women's Ed.
Allan damage..............Librarian
Joyce Clark ......... Assistant Librarian
Business Staff
Roger wellington....Business Manager
Doa Nelson.. Associate Business Manager
Jim Dangi.......Advertising Manager
Bernie Aidinoff......Finance Manager
Bob Daniels...... Circulation Manager
Telephone 23-24-1
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The Associated Press is exclusively
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of all news dispatches credited to it or
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