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October 27, 1950 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1950-10-27

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I

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1950

Tug Week
TODAY IS Tug Week.
So is tomorrow.
In joyous commemoration of all this,
classes will not be held tomorrow after-
noon. Neither will a home football game.
And President Truman will probably say
something in Washington. It is indeed a
hallowed occasion.
Supposedly non-existant school spirit will
burst forth in manufactured glory. And it
will be directed into proper channels.
So will some students.
That is, if they affix themselves to the
wrong end of a rope stretched across the
Huron River.
If they don't, there can't very well be
a Tug Week. However, if SL can't get
enough people to man the ropes perhaps
two large bulls would do just as well. But
then it would have to be called Bull Week.
Which perhaps wouldn't be a bad idea af-
ter all.
-Chuck Elliott and Bob Keith.

Newspaper Ethics

"It's Too Small To Play House.

Let's Play School"

A BASIC ethical standard in journalism is
that no matter how original or sensa-
tional a set of charges may be, the news-
paper must always consider the source in
assigning them space and position. Thus,
"who says what" is just as important in
running a story as what "who" has to say.
Reduced to everyday practice this
means that a story from a reputable
source should be given a higher position
and a larger play than a comparable
story from an unreliable source.
This is the journalist's way of saying
"honesty is the best policy" or "truth will
out" or "crime does not pay."
Adhering to this principle, a fair-minded
newspaper editor would find it difficult to
understand how the Chicago Daily Tribune
could report the opinions of Sen. Joseph R.
McCarthy with the position and length of
coverage that they did on Oct. 24.
McCarthy's comments, which ran in a

1 1

,#I

ON THE
Washington Merry=-Go-Round
WITH DREW PEARSON

WATCHING THE CANDIDATES
LOS ANGELES-These are days so many.
claims are made by candidates that it's
hard for the average voter to sift the true
facts before election time.
As a result, voting in a hurry and re-
penting at leisure sometimes saddles un-
fortunate congressmen on the nation.
As a guide to voters, therefore, this col-
umn will attempt to point out some of the
phony statements issued by candidates.
Take for instance, Jack Hardy, GOP can-
didate for congress in Helen Gahagen Doug-
las's old district in Los Angeles. His cam-
paign literature features pictures of himself
and wife with his three children. The pic-
ture even names the children "Tertie, Mar-
garet and Charlie" and quotes them as say-
ing: "We live with Jack (Hardy) and know
what kind of a person he is at home. We
know he is a professional man, not a pro-
fessional politician."
The three Hardy children, whom the GOP
candidate thus features in his literature
look to be around the ages of 12 to 14. How-
ever, the interesting thing is that candi-
date Hardy married his wife only last May
and Tertie, Margaret and Charlie are not
his children. They are the children of his
present wife, Georgia Sibley, by a former
marriage.
Furthermore, the only child of his own
which candidate Hardy ever had was the
daughter of actress Fay Helm, who di-
vorced him five years ago. At that time,
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: RON WATTS
The Weekend
In Town
EVETS OF INTEREST ABOUT CAMPUS
DRAMA
STUDENT PLAYERS will present Moss
Hart's comedy, "Light Up The Sky," at 8
p.m. today and tomorrow at Lydia Mendels-
sohn Theatre. An erstwhile Broadway
smash success, the 'play pokes good fun at
a group of ambitious show people. Tickets
available at the theatre. Review on this
page.
DANCES
WfITCHES and hobgoblins will get stellar
billing at "Witchery," the League's annual
fall dance. Amid a Hallowe'en setting,
couples will prance to the music. of Johnny
Harberd's band. Be there from 9 p.m. to
midnight tomorrow, at the League Ball-
room.
THE WEEKLY Union frolic still features
Frank Tinker and his orchestra, from 9
p.m. to midnight today and tomorrow.
MOVIES
DEAD OF NIGHT, a British psychological
masterpiece, "well off the beaten Holly-
wood path." Stars Michael Redgrave. Pre-
sented at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. today and
tomorrow at Architecture Auditorium, by
the Student Legislature Cinema Guild.
SO YOUNG, SO BAD, starring Paul Hen-
reid and assorted wayward girls. Today and
tomorrow at the State. Sunday's offering
will be COPPER CANYON, with the charms
of Hedy Lamarr and the suave ruthlessness
of Ray Milland.
DARK CITY, with Lizabeth Scott and
newcomer Charlton Heston. A mediocre
hunter-and -hunted, psychologically sea-
soned. Today at the Michigan. THE PETTY
GIRL, with Joan Caulfield and 50 beautiful
girls comes to the Michigan tomorrow.
FRIC-FRAC, with three top-notch French
stars, is the Orpheum's weekend fare, start-

Hardy relinquished all rights to custody
of his baby," including even the right of
visitation. It was agreed however, that he
would contribute $35 a month to the baby's
support.
However, even this mere pittance was too
much. He defaulted on payments to the
tune of $800 and, under a new court decree,
now pays nothing.
Yet the man who now aspires to sit in the
halls of congress plays himself up in his
campaign literature as a great family man,
and quotes his stepchildren who have been
with him only since May as saying: "We
live with Jack and know what kind of a
person he is at home. We know he is a pro-
fessional man, not a professional politician."
Query-When you bring another man's
children into politics, just how political can
you get?
* * *
NO WARTIME PRODUCTION PLAN
The inside story has never been told of the
shocking inefficiency and neglect that forced
Hubert Howard out as Chairman of the
Munitions Board. Meanwhile, President Tru-
man has let six weeks go by without appoint-
ing a new Chairman to clean up the mess.
The public doesn't realize it, but the
Munitions Board is just as vital to pro-
duction planning as the Joint Chiefs of
Staff are to military planning. The Board
is responsible for charting the nation's
industrial needs and stockpiling rubber,
tin, quinine, manganese and other ma-
terials regarding which we were caught
short at Pearl Harbor.

featured position on the Trib's front page,
consisted of a series of smears on the repu-
tations and loyalties of a number of Chicago
scientists and educators. He made no at-
tempt to substantiate the charges and so
their worth rested solely on his own reliabil-
ity as a source.
But a look at his record would have
told the Tribune's editors that McCarthy
is a completely irresponsible and unreli-
able source, if not an outright liar. Time
and again he has made charges against
groups and individuals and then failed to
offer any substantiation for them. They
remain improved to this day.
Moreover, evaluations of McCarthy in-
clude his being called a "fraud and a
nefarious hoax" by one Congressional re-
port and a "liar and perjurer" by Senator
Millard E. Tydings, chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations sub-committee which re-
viewed his charges. 4
On the basis of past performance Mc-
Carthy's latest diatribes certainly did not
merit the Trib's featuring them as if
they were important and reliable news.
Logically and ethically they belong with
the Tribune editorials and other fairy tales.
-Zander Hollander.
CIINIEMA
Architecture Auditorium
DEAD OF NIGHT, with Michael Redgrave,
Mervyn Johns and Googie Withers.
HAVE YOU EVER, in the middle of some
prosaic action, had the feeling that you
had done all this before, somewhere, some-
how, someplace, perhaps in a dream? Usual-
ly it is just a passing feeling, a small frag-
ment of what seems to be a larger, more
important experience, but when you try
to concentrate on it, it recedes back into
your consciousness just beyond reach. It
is a universal experience.
But what if you found that you could
remember almost everything; the things
that you felt were to come to pass did
happen; the people you expected to meet
did arrive; the man you knew you had to
kill stood before you, helpless.
"Dead of Night" probes deep into the
mind of the man who was afraid that his
dreams were coming true, for he could
predict the future. But it is an objective,
as well as subjective study. For every
weird fantastic experience there is a scien-
tific psychological explanation, but with a
delicate touch it is the inexplicable, the
impossible which seems to have validity.
Ordinarily the attempt to reproduce the
impression of chaos by being chaotic is a
dubious procedure, but somehow here it is
particularly effective. The picture employs
a series of flash-backs (in one of which
Michael Redgrave does a superlative job as
a schizophrenic ventroloquist) to buttress
the central fantasy whenever it shows signs
of sagging. But the success of the film lies
in its perfect blend of the mundane with the
supernatural, the light humor with the dead
serious, from the innocuous beginning to the
terrifying climax.
-Allan Clamage
I.a

ette'J 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 any reason are not in good taste will
be condensed edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the
editors.

Yet the tragic fact is that Korea found
our stockpiles dangerously low and with no
production blueprint at all for the future.
Even to this day, the Munitions Board hasn't
come up with a single plan or estimate to
guide wartime production.
This nearly resulted in disaster a week
before the Inchon landing, when the Air
Force almost ran out of aviation gasoline.
The manufacturers were supposed to keep a
30-day supply on hand in the Far East, but
had no production goal to guide them. As
a result, the supply ran dry on September 6,
and our planes were nearly grounded on the
eve of the Inchon landing. A gasoline ship-
ment arrived in the nick of time, but the
supply dropped dangerously low again while
our troops were storming Seoul. Meanwhile,
the producers hastily adjusted their pro-
duction gears and stepped up the flow of
aviation gas.
. * *.
BIG PRODUCERS HAVE BOARD'S EAR
The Munitions Board also permitted the
nation's wool supply to dwindle so low that
the Army is short of wool to clothe its troops
for the severe Korean winter. As a result, the
government is now frantically bidding for
wool on the Australian market. The irony is
that the Agriculture Department had plenty
of wool last year but couldn't get the Muni-
tions Board to take it over for stockpiling.
Anxious not to get caught short of
cotton, for uniforms, the Agricultural De-
partment asked the Munitions Board in
August what its needs would be.
No answer was received for more than 30
days, then a note came back from the Muni-
tions Board, advising that the man in charge
of the cotton problem was out of town. Des-
perately, the Agriculture Department made
its own estimate by going over the Board's
head and getting figures direct from the
armed services.
One trouble with the Munitions Board is
that it listens to the big producers, which
want to use raw materials in normal civil-
ian production, and not have them stock-
piled for emergencies instead. For example,
the Munitions Board has been lulled by the
giant aluminum company of America and,
as a result, has done virtually nothing about
stockpiling precious aluminum. Yet in case
of total war, 90 per cent of our aluminum
output would be used up by the military,
leaving civilians almost none.
One reason for the Board's inefficiency
is that it has inherited too many cast-
aways from the three military services.
When the Board called upon the armed

Human Progress .. .
To the Editor:
THE OCCASIONAL letters of Dr.
Francis S. Onderdonk appear-
ing in The Daily have always been
a fruitful source of thought for us,
and we look forward to the pub-
lishing of his book. His thesis, bas-
ed on what he terms an "evil polar-
ity in men" is both a profund and
a provocative one. Yet-it leaves us
with a badly troubled feeling.
We feel that somehow this "evil
polarity" is far from being all of
the story. Some of the questions
that arise are these:
Could any educational process
have prevented the catastrophes
he mentions, or would they have
met with the same cynical, self-
indulgent non-belief that-in cer-
tain quarters at any rate-greets
any attempt at moral teaching on
the college level? The student of
whom he speaks was a classics
student. Could he have avoided the
reading of Plato and Aristotle?
Why did their teaching leave him
cold? Why do philosophy teachers
-for instance-steadfastly refuse
to admit that the ethics they teach
has any application to real life?
We get the feeling, too, that a
field of study which might be even
richer than the study of crime
would be the study of non-crime,
of socially approved evils. Or, to
put it another way, are there no
ways in which a whole society is
criminal? For instance, the firing
of Haven Hall is an acknowledged
bad, and the man that did it is
most certainly a social deviant.
But what about the Marine with
the flame-thrower that destroys
the Korean native hut? Or the
bombadier that utterly destroys
the Korean city? The Naval gun-
ner that stops firing only when
there is no longer any target?
There was little indication, when
we read about these three, that
there was any disapproval of their
actions. Are the actions therefore
to be considered less criminal?
And we wonder, finally, if there
might not be a fruitful field for
study in the possible existence of
a "polarity for good" in men. We
often doubt that such a force ex-
ists; yet there occasionally appear
what may be consideredverifica-
tion of it. An item in the pacifist
magazine "Fellowship" today tells
how Robert Lewis, former bomba-
dier in the U.S. Air Force who
pressed the button which released
the atom bomb of Hiroshima, has
entered a monestary because he
has "lost his inner peace." Can this
"inner peace" be a force for good
more persuasive than any class-
room mobility?
We do not wish to give the im-
pression that we are contradict-
ing Dr. Onderdonk, but we do won-
der if his investigations have not
led others to ask questions similar
to ours.
-Roger Quentin,'46
* * *
German Armament ..-.
To the Editor:
MR. NUECHTERLEIN says the
Germans don't understand nor
particularly appreciate our con-
cept of democracy. Unfortunately
there are few people anywhere who
do. However that has little bear-
ing on the importance of rearming
Germany, or better put, rearming
the Germans. The question is no
longer on our hands. The Russians

have already done so. Not only
have they created an army, a hard
tough cadre core for a future much
expanded army-reminiscent of
the post-Versailles army which was
later much expanded with little
loss of efficiency-but even recon-
stituted a navy, consisting at pre-
sent of torpedo boats. Fortunately
at the present we need not fear
the Germans going over wholesale
to Communism-mainly because
they are anti-Russian, it's true,
not anti-Communist, for there is
basically little difference between
Communism and what they had.
However, with the years, and with
the spirit corrupting influence ex-
ercised by the espionage system,
many people seeing no hope and
being constantly exposed to the
eastern propaganda will succumb
and add more fuel to the Commu-
nist fire.
Therefore, at a time when our
very existence is at stake, when
the Russians are training an East-
German army, which would cer-
tainly be far more formidable than
the likes of the N. Koreans, and
might attempt the unification of
Germany as they did of Korea It
would certainly be very much to
our advantage to have some force
in Europe capable of withstanding
them.
- Who could supply that force?
England has been straining its
economy to keep conscription since
the war. It would be unfair if not
impossible to have her make a
sizeable increase to the forces now
in Germany. France, beridden with
Communists and sympathizers,
would need at least a month of
war emergency measures before it
could root out the Communists who
reach right down to the core of
French life. If the Russians strike,
only a much expanded American
army in Germany could give Italy
and France (not to mention the
U.S. or England) that month or
two we so desperately need. Such
an expanded American army if
maintained for an extended period
would menace the national econ-
omy upon whose success the fate
of the free world is dependent.
The- only logical and necessary
alternative is to rearm the Ger-
mans on a volunteer basis. Al-
though Fritz is gun-shy now, we
could still raise enough volunteer
troops to perhaps make Russia
back down on some of its more
bellicose policies. Naturally there
must be safeguards for this force.
The French have been using 40,000
Germans in Indo-China for two
years. By putting future German
forces under a UN command with-
out an air arm there would be lit-
tle to fear from such a measure.
If the emergence ends in Europe
those who would not wish to be
disbanded could serve as part of
the UN police elsewhere in the
world.
-Norman Luxenburg
Grid Programs . .
To the Editor:
THE NEWS of the recent dust-
ing-off and enforcement of a
long-dead city ordinance has cre-
ated quite an unfavorable impres-
sion on me, among others. Why
should students be forced to pay
$7 per Saturday to obtain per-
mission to sell programs? Capt.
Gainsley says, "The enforcement
was due to the traffic hazard the

student salesmen were creating."
But was it really? Perhaps, to
some extent, it was, but surely
that was not the main reason.
How can a few hundred widely
scattered salesmen constitute a
traffic hazard when literally tens
of thousands of spectators are en
route to the stadium?
In my opinion, the explanation
Capt. Gainsley gave was fabricat-
ed to conceal the real source of
complaint; namely, H. .0. Crisler
et al. The "M" Club sells pro-
grams inside the stadium for 50
cents. Perhaps these high-priced
programs haven't been selling too
well. It would be quite easy for
the athletic department, on be-
half of the "M" Club, to influence
the common council, in view of
the trade it brings to Ann Arbor
merchants each home game. Pos-
sibly the, "M" Club felt it necessary
to remove the 10-cent programs
from competition. The action
taken will accomplish that end.
The weekly $7 fee will discourage
many, if not all, of the would-be
student salesmen because they
have little surety of making a
profit sufficient to justify their
efforts. I strongly suspect that
the fee was imposed, not because
the program-selling caused a traf-
fic hazard, but because the
"M" Club wanted no more com-
petition.
By enforcing the ordinance, the
common council has deprived
many industrious students of a
means of earning a few extra dol-
lars before each football game.
The council is clearly interfering
with private enterprise and frus-
trating the attempts of students
to contribute to their educations.
It is indeed a shame.
-Russell Chappell, '54
* * *
Panacea ..,.
To the Editor:
EDWARD G. VOSS, Grad, sug-
gested in Saturday's Letters
column that we defeat war by
renouncing it. The efficacy of his
treatment may be doubtful, but
if it contains the clue to success,
what a boon to mankind is he.
Like most other human beings,
I, too deplore war. Likewise I de-
plore disease, crime, etc. Hence I
rejoice at the tidings of a bland
method whereby man may over-
come things deleterious to his wel-
fare. Lo, we shall renounce them.
We all admit to the evil of war,
disease, and crime, but we are not
agreed upon the most effective way
of coping with them. There are
a number of professions dedicated
to combating them, and preparing
for times of crisis during times of
peace. Professions such as the
the medical and constabulary, al-
though possibly misguided, are not
antagonistic to the hygienists and
clergy who, with lay support, are
endeavoring to educate mankind
to avoid evils. Indeed, these pro-
fessions exist for a different pur-
pose: to-overcome the forces of
evil when they do break out, dur-
ing the period of imperfection be-
fore the millenium. Doctors breed
disease germs and hold them in
readiness to fight epidemics. They
keep their knives sharp for the
eventuality of an operation. Alas,
they emulate the war strategist by
fighting disease with disease, and
in extremities, by actually severing
living parts of whole human beings
like warriors eliminating aggres-
sive parts of populations bent on
overcoming them. Similarly, police
exist, and maintain implements
the use of which constitutes the
very substance of the crimes they
oppose.
Now if Edward G. Voss, Grad.
is right, and all we have to do is
renounce evil to overcome it, no
longer need we endure Typhoid
or Capone or Pearl Harbor. Poof!
they are renounced.
But before we relegate all doc-
tors, police and armed forces to
the boneyard, I suggest that we

test the efficacy of his prescrip-
tion in less fatal fields. Let us be
done with sophistry, for example,
not by logic which is a virtuous
attack in kind, but by renuncia-
tion.
--Taylor Drysdale
Moscow Dispatch...
To the Editor:
I THINK THAT The Michigan
Daily should reprint some of
the articles by Harrison Salisbury,
N.Y.. Times foreign correspondent
in Moscow, in order to present an
objective picture of what's really
going on behind the so-called
"Iron Curtain."
Just in case the Daily editors do
not agree, let me quote at length
from one of his articles, datelined'
Moscow and headlined, "Peace-
time Air Of Moscow Indicates
People Expect No War." The ar-
ticle goes on:
"There are no queues today in
front of food stores in Moscow.
The price of butter has not risen.
There is no hoarding of sugar.
There are more shoes for sale in
Moscow stores than there were
last spring. Prices are lower and
quality has improved.
"Those statements are not So-

viet propaganda. They are plain
truths, vouched for by this Ameri-
can correspondent . . . The list
could be extended indefinitely.
". ..there is not today in Mos-
cow anything an honest observer
could possibly describe as ,war
scare" or ,war hysteria"a. ,w.
". ..there is no feeling among
the people of Moscow that war
with the United States is immin-
ent.
"Having just returned to Mos-
cow after several months in the
United States, I am aware that
some of the statements in this
dispatch may come as a.surprise to
most Americans . . . these are ob-
served facts, . . . sufficient to pro-
vide important conclusions regard-
ing the mood and temper of the
Soviet people and their govern-
ment.
"The atmosphere of Moscow and
of the part of Russia that I cross-
ed in traveling here from Poland,
is not one of war nor of prepara-
tion for war. There are no re-
cruiting posters in the streets, and
there have been no appeals for
recruits in the public press. In
World War II Soviet mobilization
was carried out through public
announcements in the form of pos-
ters and notices in the press ...
"Today, no additional classes
have been called to the colors. No
reservists have been summoned to
duty. No classes have been kept
in the Soviet Army beyond their
normal release dates ...
"There are in Moscow today no
signs of hoarding or panic buying
of foods or consumer goods as
might have been expected if the
public felt that war was near or
likely.
"Possibly more important than
any of these facts is the evidence
that exists on every side, that the
Soviet Government has made no
radical alteration in its economic
program as a result of the war
tension.
"Textiles, leather and metal for
civilian use are becoming more
plentiful.
"The Government has not, of
course, neglected 'its program of
military defense . . . Russia pos-
sesses military forces incompar-
ably superior to those of any other
power on the entire land mass of
Europe and Asia...
"What is interesting about the
Soviet situation is that as of to-
day, so far as research can de-
termine, there has been no sub-
stantial change-over of the econ-
omy from its predominantly peace-
time aspect to one of preparation
for, or anticipation of, war."
Let usecompare this article with
two brief quotes from Friday's
Michigan Daily.
"Attack Russia, Bentley Urges,"
headlines one article about a
speech to the Young Republicans.
This Bentley goes on to say: "The
United States should attack Rus-
sia before she attacks us . . . inas-
much as Russia is headed for war,
we should not sit by and wait for
her to make the fist move."
Another dispatch: "The United
States told the UN yesterday that
two American planes strafed a
Russian airfield Oct. 8, and offered
to pay for the damage." Draw
your own conclusions.
-Al Lippitt
(EDITOR'S NOTE-Space limitations
generally prevent The Daily from re-
printing news stories from other
papers. However, we do feel that Mr.
Salisbury's article is more of an in-
terpretative piece of writing than the
obLective picture of Russia indicated
by Mr. Lippitt.)
1_

I

D RAMA

I

urrwr. . rn ' 1

At Lydia Mendelssohn ..
"LIGHT UP THE SKY," with Pat Skinner,
George Stevenson, Carroll McCortney,
Bette Ellis, Ron Soble, and others.,
"ACTORS (particularly the female variety)
are vicious" seems to be the message
with which Moss Hart wishes to light up his
sky, with the foot-note that all directors are
pansy idiots and a producer is an amalgam
of lead-head and gold-palm. There is, how-
ever, the author who will save the. theatre.
In the middle of the second act this idea
became clear when Pat Skinner, Dale Stev-
enson and Carroll McCortney, the hacks in-
volved in this sky-writing, created a welcome
lull in the pyro-technics. Whatever hurts
show business may have given Moss Hart, he
has always done well by. that crazy cock-
eyed business in return, and Light Up The
Sky, presented by The Student Players, is
as full of crazy cockeyed people as his pre-
vious pieces.
Bette Ellis, wasted but welcome in her
role as the star's mother, and Ron Soble,
who plays the angel with perception and
fine humour, attempt to carry the whole
business. They receive some support in
the last two acts, particularly from a brief
performance by Herbert Sherbin as a
Shriner who somehow got involved. Ex-
cept for a staggeringly vulgar characteri-
zation of an angel who is no lady, given
a curious adenoidal gusto by Miriam Le-
vine, the rest of the cast got lost in a stage
which was not lighted up at all.
A match applied to the cheezy furniture
donated by an architectural fraternity and
that garish set, might have made things a
lot brighter.
If Mr. Sanowitch. the play's producer.

Sixty-First Year
Edited and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board in Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Jim Brown. .........Managing Editor
Paul Brentlinger.........City Editor
Roma Lipsky. . ........ . Editorial Director
Dave Thomas. .......... .Feature Editor
Janet Watts......... .Associate Editor
Nancy Bylan.............Associate Editor
James Gregory.......Associate Editor
Bill Connolly..............Sports Editor
Bob Sandell...Associate 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..Advertising -Manager
Bob Mersereau....... Finance Manager
Carl Breitkreitz.... Circulation Manager
Telephone 23-24-1
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f

BARNABY

Ellen? I'm at the freight
station ... That crate your
mother sent-it's a GOOSE!L

Nice? Ellen! What will we
do with it?... IT'S ALIVE!
7-7

Where's Barnaby? He'll have
to understand that 'he MAY1
NOT make a PET of it-

[Perhaps the best way
to study leprechauns
is to find one. Follow

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