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October 16, 1950 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1950-10-16

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PAGE FOURE

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1950

U I I

Kcrean Nationalism

IN A MOVE that ranks of selfishness and
personal ambitions, the Government of
the Republic of Korea, despite its' practical
non-existence two months ago, has placed
nationalism over and above United Nation's
rule and the welfare of the Korean people.
Led by President Syngman Rhee, the
Republic has rejected as "unacceptable"
the U.N. resolution calling for a national
election and restricting South Korean
authority to territory south of the 38th
parallel.
The Republic has stated in a telegram
sent to all U.N. members that "the Govern-
ment of Korea finds these proposals un-
acceptable as being wrong in principle and
untenable in practice since they disregard
the sovereign status and right of the Gov-
ernment of Korea ... "
Simultaneously the South Koreans issued
a "Little White Paper" in which they duti-
fully and politely thanked the U.N. for help-
ing them get back their country-and in
the same breath added that they do not
intend to allow the United Nations to
tamper with the sovereignty thus regained.
The U.N., in calling for a nation-wide
election, is following the plan of the State
Depaftment to rehabilitate North and
South Korea, remove all causes of resent-
ment and suspicion and promote local
responsibility.
Rhee's government does not fully approve.
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK ELLIOTT
Davis'
Citizenship
GARRY DAVIS, self-described "world citi-
zen No. 1," is an unstable young man,
who has, one must suspect, a strong dose of
exhibitionism mixed in his milk of human
kindness.
Two and a half years ago he renounced
his American citizenship, he said, to dram-
atize world citizenship. He' founded a
movement for world -government, then
withdrew in order to stand in dramatic
aloneness. He came back to the United
States and got married, again dramati-
cally. Then he fled from the U. S. once
more, protesting what he called American
"intervention" in Korea. Now he wants
his American citizenship back again, and
he wants it in a hurry.
It is certainly true, as Davis says, that
it is possible to be a citizen of the world
without being disloyal to the United States.
It is aso true, and this is something that
Davis did not see until recently, that it is
possible to be a citizen of the United States
and a citizen of the world at the same time.
In fact, the best way to be a responsible
citizen of the world is to fulfill the ideals
of American citizenship. A person who is
a good member of his family does not re-
nounce his personality; instead, he fulfills
it. A person who is a good citizen of the
United States fulfills his state citizenship.
This is something that many youg
Americans who did just as much as Davis
did in World War II, who hate war and
yearn for world order just as much as Davis
does, have always instinctively taken for
granted."
If there is any reason to deny Davis citi-
zenship it cannot be found in the fact that
he made a mistake. Everybody makes mis-
takes. Nor can it be found in the fact that
he disagrees with the wisdom of America's
policy in Korea. That is his privilege. He
is not accused of being disloyal. He can,
however, be accused of not understanding
fully the meaning of American citizenship.
It is not something to cast away and resume
according to mood. Millions of Americans
have won their citizenship the hard way.
Millions of non-Americans would give their

right arms for American citizenship. Nobody
askedi Davis to give up his citizenship. He
will have no valid complaint if he finds he
must now wait several years like everybody
else.
-St. Louis Star-Times.
At The State .. .
ROCKY MOUNTAIN, with Errol Flynn
and Patrice Wymore.
FRROL'SBACK in the saddle. This time it
is not the Light Brigade vainly charging
in the face of heavy Russian artillery fire,
nor is it the Seventh U. S. cavalry at
Little Big Horn heroically standing off a
host of ferocious Sioux, but rather a valiant
band of Confederate volunteers on personal
orders from General Lee hoping to provoke
an uprising in California and secure the
state for the Confederacy.
This situation is tailor made for Flynn's
meagre talents. He has little else to do but
draw a gun occasionally, bark a crisp com-
mand, squint interminably through a tele-
scope at the encroaching aboriginies gal-
loping across the valley floor, reminisce
mistily about the old plantation with the
white cotton fields gently sloping down to
the river. If one listens closely, a faint
rustle of crinoline can be heard.

Rather it would have an election only in
North Korea to fill the 100 seats left vacant
in the Republic's Assembly-and an election
under South Korean supervision.
The U.N. proposal would force the mem-
bers of the present South Korean Assembly,
all of whom were elected in May, to resign
and run for office again. It would place
Rhee, who will be president until 1952, in a
precarious position as his party lost heavily
in the spring elections.
Thus, many U.N. members regard Rhee
as a repudiated leader. Rhee does not agree.
His recent triumphal march through the
streets of Seoul with General MacArthur is
a political plume in his hat.
The nationalistic aggressiveness of
Rhee's government is revealed in the
not too published report that one reason
why the United States did not heavily
arm the South Koreans against attack
was that we feared they would start an
invasion of North Korea if they had the
supplies.
Today the South Korean government that
would have been eclipsed but for the U.N.
is belching like a full fledged power. There
is one interest apparently prime in their
minds-retention and expansion of power.
We, to be sure, did not enter the Korean
war for purely idealistic reasons. Our gov-
ernment does3 not care who rules Korea as
long as it is an anti-Communist power that
can serve as a buffer state between us and
the Soviet Union. Should the South Korean
Republic be allowed to rule all of Korea
it would serve as the necessary buffer but
an insecure one due to the threat of
internal eruption.
Though the State Department's goals are
essentially for our protection they also
appear to be the best answer to the prob-
lems of Korea. The recent war was not
waged without a heavy civilian toll, a
wrecked economy and homeless millions.
If Rhee's government holds the whole
hearted interest of the Korean people
foremost it would cease to voice opposi-
tion to the United Nation's proposal. If
it is interested only in the short range
plan of retaining seats in the Assembly
it will continue the present dissenting
attitude.
Whatever the South Korean's future
course be, their present action points out,
the constant threat of selfish nationalism
to the work of the United Nations and
world security.
-Leonard Greenbaum.

NSA Action
AT ITS RECENT national convention here,
the National Students' Association
passed several commendable resolutions.
One of these was a condemnation of the
curtailment of free speech at Michigan
State, where the student newspaper was
suspended for the summer and is now
publishing under the censorship of a pro-
fessional newspaperman.
The details of the case are familiar to a
great many students on this campus. The
immediate cause of the suspension was
an editorial printed in the MSC News,
stating that the Lansing chapter of the
American Legion showed tinges of mili-
tarism.
The issue at stake is clear. Whether or not
the State editorialist was justified in his
attack does not enter into it; nor does the
question of whether it is just to penalize the
entire newspaper staff, and in effect, the
entire student body, for the actions of the
individual who wrote the fatal editorial.
The only issue is: does an -individual have
the right freely to express an opinion
without fear of reprisals? The first amend-
ment to the Constitution says that he does;
certainly the whole tradition of academic
freedom and students' rights at our uni-
versities seems to show that he does.
And the National Students' Association
believes that he does. Apparently the con-
vention recognized this situation for what
it is-an attack on freedom of the press,
and essentially an attack upon the rights of
the entire student body. The students' news-
paper, their voice, the organ for their opin-
ions, has been suppressed. And NSA has
condemned this suppression.
But resolutions alone do not bring
results; the time has come for something
more. In accordance with the excellent
decision of the national convention, action
should now be taken on a local level.
The convention has announced its dis-
approval to the world at large; now the
local offficers must announce their dis-
approval to the State administration.
It is the clear and obvious duty of the
Student Legislature, now acting as the Uni-
versity NSA Committee, to find some ade-
quate and efficient means of protest, and
to register this protest immediately. As the
voice of this campus in national student
affairs, it should act at once to restore to
the students at State their right to express
their opinions freely and safely through
their own newspaper.
-Edward Lanning.

"Well, If It Doesn't Work Right Why Don't You Put
Your Thumb On The Scale?"'
\~
W,.-
ette' TO THE EDITOR
The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of
general interest, and will publish all letters whichsare signed by the writer
and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or
libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will
be condensed edited or withheld from publication at the discretionsof the
editors.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

I

ON THE
Washington NMerry-Gio-Round
WITH DREW PEARSON

WASHINGTON-Just as the ill-fated hos-
pital ship Benevolence sank recently
without lowering a lifeboat, the same thing
could happen to seven troopships which are
still equipped with cumbersome lifeboat gear,
almost useless in an emergency.
These troopships are plying the Atlantic
and Pacific today, crammed with G.I.'s going
to Korea and Germany, or with dependents
coming home. In case of an emergency, they
may not be as fortunate as the Benevolence
passengers who went down within easy range
of San Francisco rescue boats.
These seven troopships carry their life-
boats cradled in navy triple-bank davits
which don't even meet the minimum safety
standards of the Coast Guard. It takes ship's
power to swing the davits out with any de-
gree of speed. Yet ship's power usually fails
in any emergency serious enough to require
lifeboats. Though substitute handcranks are
attached to the davits, the mechanism is too
slow and cumbersome to swing the lifeboats
in position within the 10-minute Coast
Guard time limit.
The troopships still using triple-bank dav-
its are the Generals W. M. Black, Le Roy
Eltinge, W. G. Hann, Stuart Heintzelman,
W. C. Langlitt, M. B. Stewart and S. D. Stur-
gis. All were inherited from the Army but
are now operated by the Unified Military Sea
Transport Service. As military vessels, these
ships do not come under Coast Guard juris-
diction. However, the ships' officers have
complained repeatedly about the unsafe life-
boat gear. So far, their warnings have gone
ignored.
NAVY EXPLAINS
A mate who sailed on the SS General
Sturgis told this column: "Emergencies like-
ly to be encountered on ships at sea, such as
fires, strandings, founderings and collisions,
would not only make lifeboats necessary but,
on this ship, would make them almost use-
less."
A Navy spokesman explained that the
Military Sea Transport Service has been so
hard-pressed for troopships, since the Kor-
ean war began that there hasn't been time
to improve the ships inherited from the
Army. The same spokesman denied, however,
that a power failure had prevented the Be-
nevolence's lifeboats from being lowered. He
insisted the hospital ship was not equipped
with triple-bank davits which require ship's
power, but with simple gravity davits.
Yet Capt. Barton Bacon, Jr., commander
of the Benevolence, told a Coast Guard in-
quiry that lack of power had made it im-
possible to get lifeboats over the side. The
frantic crew was able to cut loose only one
lifeboat, which immediately capsized.
With illegal, Russian-made mines floating
loose in Far Eastern waters, the Navy may

last ten days of the campaign. Mr. Truman,
however, has remained lukewarm.
The inside reason for his coolness is not
the official explanation at the White House
-that the President is pressed with urgent
problems. It is his own fear that he cannot
repeat his 1948 victory in an off year,
Presidential secretaries Matt Connelly and
John Steelman threw the most cold water on
the speech tour, because: "If the boss goes
out and does his best and we still lose seats
in Congress, he won't be the champ any
more. That would hurt in 1952."
Democratic Chairman Bill Boyle and act-
ing Campaign Director, Sen. Clinton Ander-
son, on the other hand recommend that Mr.
Truman take the last 10 days before election
to stir up excitement and get voters to the
polls. Their reason: confidential and alarm-
ing reports that reveal the Democrats will
lose key seats unless they get out a big vote.
The surveys show the Democrats must get
55 to 75 per cent of the registered voters at
the polls in order to carry such strategic
states as New York, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri
and California. A smaller vote would lop off
Democrat incumbents, and a big turnout
would increase the Administration strength
in Congress.
In most areas, Democrat scouts report
apathy among the voters. Headline charges
of Communism, responsibility for Korea, and
appeasement of Russia have not stirred up
any excitement in the grass roots. One cor-
respondent wrote, "I wish the Republican
war cry of 'Communism, Korea and Confu-
sion' was clicking better, so the Democrats
would get out and work."
Note-The Truman-MacArthur meeting
was considered a compromise between the
two groups of Presidential advisers. The trip
keeps the President in the war news, and
also reminds voters that he had something
to do with the big decision of Korea.
* *
TRUMAN REWARDS GOP
A quiet move is under way by the AFL,
CIO, and Railway Brotherhoods to beard
Mr. Truman in the White House and blunt-
ly ask him why labor has been ignored in
favor of Republican big business executives
in making recent mobilization appointments.
One labor official complained to Don Daw-
son, President Truman's personnel man,
"There is only one labor man in all the new
defense setup-Eli Oliver on Symington's
Resources Board."
William Green and Phil Murray have also
griped to sympathetic Congressmen. The
appointments that particularly rankle them
are:
William Henry Harrison, former executive
of the American Telephone and Telegraph
Co., as director of the new National Produc-
tion Authority.
Alan Valentine. ex-President of the Uni-

Eliot on Critics .. .
To the Editor:
CONGRATULATIONS! We do
et weary of college music
critics who,swhatever the music,
invariably set out to show how
much more discerning they are
than the rest of us poor oafs who
were loutish enough to enjoy the
concert. So we wish to express our
delighted gratitude to whoever is
responsible for the stroke of in-
spiration which placed, beneath
the critics' latest bilious-attack (in
today's, Wednesday's, Daily), T. S.
Elliot's mnost adequate character-
ization of said critics' personality-
type:
Half of the harm that is done in
this world
Is due to people who want to feel
important.
They don't mean to do harm-
but the harm does not interest
them.
Or they do not see it, or they
justify it
Because they are absorbed in
the endless struggle
To think well of themselves.
We don't want to be too hard
on this particular critic-he's no
worse than the rest of his kind.
But we're sorry for the guy. He
misses a lot of joy in life. Maybe
Melchior's voice was better when
he was younger-we wouldn't
know. We know it's still got what
it takes to make impecunious folk
like us glad we paid the ticket
money. Or perhaps our critic was
referring to Melchior's voice in the
last number, after all the encores
the enthusiastic audience had de-
manded!
And besides the music, at no ex-
tra charge we were privileged to
watch the work of a genius in the
very fine art of showmanship -
and we don't mean "cheap vaude-
ville tricks"! We're talking about
the way Melchior communicated
the warmth of his personality, and
won our hearts by his naturalness.
But perhaps our critic had no
heart to be won.
Wayne and Helen Kuhns
McCarran Bill .. .
To The Editor
UNTIL very recent times intelli-
gent men have found it im-
practical to overthrow the govern-
men of the United States. Now,
happily, recent legislation has
rendered overt contemplation of
such normal joys odious and cor-
rupt. It only remains to congratu-
late the Congress of the United
States for its present mastery of
the human nervous system.
All of our difficulties-social,
political, economic-any way one
cares to classify them-are ob-
viously caused by the existence of
Communism. Communism is to the
state of our country and the world
as sex is to freudianism. Let us
not be deceived, the origin of evil
is in Moscow. But, presently we
shall elude the devil with a well
thought out law.
We may soon have a presidential
impeachment. Harry S. Truman
has taken a stand on what, is now
an act that smacks of communist
influence, though God save us!,
he has disagreed in spots with the
party line.

Fortunately, the a n a r c h i s t
strength in our country is slight.
Can we imagine anything so con-
trary to the stability of civiliza-
tion as a group which plans to
overthrow a government and re-
place that government with noth-
ing? But, we are saved by follies in
the Spanish Civil War from such
a hideous spectre. Can we con-
ceive of not being told precisely
what to do by government experts?
No indeed! Need we any morethan
suggest that anarchy is the natur-
al reaction of people living in a
world in which the power of the
state is growing so rapidly? Clear-
ly there should be a specific law
against not only thinking in terms
of an anarchist movement, but a
law against the existence of an-
archists. We must preserve civili-
zation from those who have not as
yet the power to destroy it. We
must save the world from domi-
nation .by the insects, spiders and
higher anthropoids who in the
final analysis could never equal
man in the, building of a better
world.
Patrick H. Doyle
Movie Criticism .. .
To the Editor:
IT'S a shame that John Briley,
who wrote the criticism for
FAUST AND THE DEVIL, spent so
much time in.degrading this pro-
duction and so little time lauding
the truly wonderful parts.
I notice that nothing was said
of the brilliant voices of Tajo, Cor-
radi, and Mattera. Could it be that
Mr. Briley is not in any way a
music critic? If so, maybe he bet-
ter go back to westerns. He men-
tions the fact. that he had difficul-
ty following the action. The movies
are not places to go to sleep, Mr.
Briley.
I am one, also, who has come to
expect superior films from Italy,
and it was my impression as I left
the theatre that this particular
film substantiated that view.
How about a little more under-
standing of the human elements
and situations being given their
just. place in Daily reviews? Let's
get away from the sneer that
comes from those who would look
down their noses at human en-
deavors. There is really much to
be said for them-and let's not be
afraid of a little praise where it is
justified.
Roger Wall
UNTIL you have become really,
in actual fact, a brother to
every one, brotherhood will not
come to pass. No sort of scientific
teaching, no kind of common in-
terest, will ever teach men to
share property and privileges with
equal consideration for all. Every
one will think his share too small
and they will be always envying,
complaining and attacking one
another.
-Fyodor Dostoyevsky
THE true way goes over a rope
which is not stretched at any
great height but just above the
ground. It seems more designed to
make people stumble than to be
walked upon.
-Franz Kafka

Publication in The Daily Official
Bulletin is contructive notice to al
i" ri' es of the Univsity. N otics
for the Bulletin should be sent in
lvpew ittcn form to the Office of the
Assirtait to the President, oom 2552
Adm~nistrtion Building, by 3:00 p.m.
on The day preceding publication
(11:00 a.m. Saturdays).
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1950
VOL. LXI No. 18
Notices
Dance Classes: A few tickets
available for the Couple Dance
Class on Tuesdays, 8:15 p.m., Lea-
gue Ballroom.
University Community Center-
Willow Run Village:
Tues., Oct. 17, 8 p.m., Wives'
Club.
Wed., Oct. 18, 8 p.m., Ceramics
Class.
Thurs., Oct. 10, 8 p.m., Ceramics
Class, Choir Practice.
University Bteture: auspices of
the Department of Romance Lan-
guages' and Literatures. "The
French Stage, 1945-49" (in
French). Charles Dedeyan, Pro-
fessor of Comparative Literature,
The Sorbonne, Paris. 4:.15 p.m.,
Wed., Oct. 18, Rackham Amphi-
theatre.
David. Lilienthal Tomorrow Eve-
ning - Mr. Lilienthal, former
chairman of the Atomic Energy
Commission, opens the 1950-51
Lecture Course at 8:30 p.m. to-
morrow in Hill Auditorium, "The
Atom in Peace and War" will be
the subject of his address. Tickets
are now on sale at the auditorium
box office, which is open 10-1,
2-5. Season tickets for %he com-
plete course will be available
through Wednesday night.
Academic Notices
LS&A Students: Any student
with the grade of "I", "X", or "no
report" on his record for a course
taken the last period he was in
residence, must have the course
completed by Fri., Oct. 20, or the
grade will lapse to an "E". Ex-
tensions of time beyond this date
to make up incompletes will be for
extraordinary cases only. Such ex-
tensions may be discussed with
the Chairman of the Academic
Counselors (Freshmen and Soph-
omores) or the Chairman of the
Board .of Concentration Advisers
(Juniors, Seniors, and NCFD's).
Pol. Sci. 216 will meet Tues.,
1 to 3 in the Geography Seminar
room, 210 Angell Hall.
The University Extension Ser-
vice announces a six-week course
on Positive Citizenship on the Lo-
cal Level to be held at 7:30 p.m.
on Wednesdays in Rm. 131 School
of Bus. Admin., Monroe at Tap-
pan. Dates, topics, and speakers
are as follows: Oct. 18-State-Lo-
cal Relationships, John Huss; Di-
rector of the Michigan Municipal
League; Oct. 25-Mayor-Council
Government in Ann Arbor, Prof.-
Arthur W. Bromage, Dept. of' Po-
litical Science; Nov. 1-Council
Manager Government in Ypsilanti,
N. G. Damoose, City Manager,
Ypsilanti; Nov. 8-Financing Our
Local Governments, Prof. Robert
S. Ford, Director of U. of M. Bu-
reau of Government; Nov. 15-
County and Township Govern-
ments, Marvin Tableman, Dept. of
Political Science; Nov. 29-Eval-
uating Our Local Governments,
John Iglauer, Assistant Director of
the Michigan Municipal League.
Enrollment, which is $3.00 for
the series, is open to all citizens
who wish to be better informed
about the local governments of
Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, and Wash-
tenaw County.
Lectures

University Museums Lecture:
"Pearls and Buttons or the Old
T HE bonds that untie another
person to ourselves exist only
in our mind. Memory as it grows
fainter relaxes them, and notwith-
standing the illusion by which we
would fain be cheated and with
which, out of love, friendship, po-
liteness, deference, duty, we cheat
other people, we exist alone. Man
is the creature that cannot emerge
from himself; that knows his fel-
lows only in himself; when he as-
serts the contrary, he is lying.
-Marcel Proust
A MAN MAY SEE how this world
goes with no eyes. Look with
thine ears: see how yond justice
rails upon yon simple thief. Hark,
in thine ear: change places; and,
handy-dandy, which is the justice,
which is the thief?
-William Shakespeare

Shall Game." Dr. Henry van der
t chalie, Associate Professor of
Zoology. 8:15 p.m., Tues., Oct. 17,
School of Public Health' Audito-
rium.
Dr. Alwin Walther Lectures:
The lecture scheduled for Tues.,
Oct. 17, has been changed to
Thurs. at 2 p.m. The second lec-
ture, scheduled for Thurs., Oct.
19, at 4 is unchanged. Both lec-
tures will be held in Room 1042
East Engineering Bldg. These are
sponsored by the Departments
of Aeronautical Engineering and
Mathematics. The 2:00 lecture
will be on "Mathematical Ma-
chines and Instruments in Ger-
many"; the 4:00 lecture on "Some
Remarks on Special Mathematical
Functions" will be in conjunction
with the Seminar in AppliedMa-
thematics.
Bacteriology Seminar, Wed., Oct.
18, 10 a.m., 1520 E. Medical Bldg.
Speaker: Dr. Abraham I. Braude;
Subject: Experimental Brucella
Infection.
Set Theory Seminar. Wed., Oct.
18, at 3 p.m., 3201 Angell Hall.
Mr. Jack Miller will speak on set
rings and fields.
Botanical Seminar: Wed., Oct.
18, 4 p.m., 1139 Natural Science
Bldg. Professors L. E. Wehmeyer,
C. A. Arnold, W. R. Taylor will
speak on "The VII International
Botanical Congress at Stockholm,
July 1950."
Exhibitions
Museum of Art, Alumni Memor-
ial.Hall: Art Schools, U.S.A., 1949;
through October 22. Weekdays 9-
5, Sundays 2-5. Public invited.
Events Today
Congregational, Disciples, Evan-
gelical and Reformed Guild will
have Tea this afternoon at the
Guild House, 438 Maynard, from
4:30 until 5:45.
Leadership Training G r o u p
meets at Lane Hall, 7:30-9:30 p.m.
Square Dance Group meets at
Lane Hall, 7 p.m. Everyone wel-
come. S.R.A. Council meets at'
Lane Hall, 5-7 p.m.
The Women of the University
Faculty will have a dinner meet-
ing Tues., Oct. 17, at 6 p.m. in the
dining room of the Michigan
League Building. A social hour and
welcome to the new members will'
follow the dinner.
Gilbert & Sullivan Society. Full
Chorus Rehearsal, 7 p.m., Michi-
gan League.
Christian Science Organization:
Testimonial meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Upper Room, Lane Hall.
American Society of Civil Engi-
neers: Opening meeting on Tues.,
Oct. 17, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-KLM,
Union. Speaker: Don P. Reynolds,'
(Continued on Page 5)
firid* a* *t43

I

Sixty-First Year
and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authoritya of the Board in Control of
Student ?ublications.
Editorial Staff
Jim Brown......... Managing Editor
Paul Brentlinger..... City Editor
Roma Lipsky.........Editorial Director
DaveThomas..........Feature Editor
Janet Watts ....... .. Associate Editor
Nancy Bylan........Associate Editor
James Gregory....Associate Editor
Bill Connolly . Sports Editor
Bob Sandell Assoaate Sports Editor
Bill Brenton .. Associate Sports Editor
Barbara Jans.........Women's Editor
Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor
Business Staff
Bob Daniels ........ Business Manager
Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager
Paul Schaible . ... Advertlsing Manager
Bob Merser~eau ...... Finance Manager
Carl Breitkreitz .. Circulation Manager
Tele phone 23.-24-1
Member of The Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use for republication
of all news dispatches credited to it or
otherwise credited to this newspaper.
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.4

,

BARNABY
Shrdlu is a fine press agent!
Not a mention of National
Fairy Godfathers Day Eve on
the front page today either!
Saturday will be here and

'Pd

Mrs. Givney knows about
it, Mr. O'Malley. She said
she'd tell the newspaper-
F lok.m'bov

i

"Children who, on the eve of
Fairy Godfathers Day, put out
toys to be fixed and painted
at the toy depot might find
in the morning that a new

Leprechauns!... What have
they got to do with Fairy
Godfathers Day?... Or toys?
That ShrdT jr

i ,

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