4
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1951
"
I
SL Elections
t .f
Uh - We Can't Purge Them, Boss - They've Left"
MATrE R
JrP PA CT
TF STUDENTS today know nothing else
about the Student Legislature, they
know that elections are held twice a year
and are accompanied by tremendous ex-
citement.
There is nothing essentially wrong' in get-
ting worked up over an election. Ever since
Harrison and his jug of hard cider, Ameri-
cans have been getting excited about them.
But on this campus, it seems that, while
the public concern has over SL itself re-
mained extremely moderate, election en-
thusiasm has burst all reasonable bounds.
The 'effects of this governmental
elephantiasis are peculiar, to say the least.
Students with no more purpose. than to
see if they can be elected run for a legis-
fiture which they know nothing (and wish
to know nothing) about. The whole
works degenerate into a massive popular-
ity contest.
As proof of this attitude on the part of
many SL candidates, witness some of the
platforms which appeared during the last
election. "I will sincerely work to get a
playground for the East Quadrangle" (even
if SL could do anything about such a mat-
ter, it is doubtful that they would come
down off their lofty jurisdictional perch long
enough to consider it).
Surely, not many of this sort of candidates
manage to get themselves elected. But
some do, and they are the part of the SL
which does the least good both to the stu-
dents and the legislature itself.
Serious student government does have
a place on this campus. The SL has
managed to poke through a certain
amount of constructive legislation in
their several years of existence, and given
good membership, they may well manage
more.
Petitions are waitingin the Student Leg-
islature Bldg., 122 S. Forest, for any student
with the ambition to see through more than
the campaign. With another election pon-
derously approaching, it might be well for
the Student Legislature and the campus at
large to stand back a few paces and consider
some relative values. The elected student
government is an important thing.
-Chuck Elliott
Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
and represent the views of the writers only.
NIGHT EDITOR: LEONARD GREENBAUM
I By STEWART ALSOP -
BERLIN--This strange city is an island of
freedom amid the surrounding slavery
of the Soviet zone of Germany. It is a place
where millions of simple people bravely car-
ry on in the ever-present shadow of danger.
It has several other personalities and as-
pects. But for the traveller, Berlin is, above
all, a chink in the iron curtain, through
which much can be seen that is not visible
from Washington or Paris or London.
Perhaps the best symbol of the first
thing one sees through this chink is a
mothballed tank. Until rather recently,
a large faction of Western intelligence
officers had been encourkged by the be-
lief that the Soviets possessed no reserve
armor west of the Vistula. True, there
were at least twelve Soviet armored divi-
sions in Eastern Germany, but these di-
visions, constantly wearing out their tanks
in training ands on maneuvers, did not
seem ready for a drive across Western
Europe.
Then one fine morning reports began to
come in of tanks mothballed in garages and
warehouses, in the same way that we moth-
ball our reserve fleet. The size of this new-
ly discovered reserve of Soviet armor has
not yet been determined, but the estimates
of the readiness of the Soviet armored divi-
sions have already been anxiously revised.
No one in Berlin expects a war this year
(as no one in Seoul did either, it must be
added). But the fact remains that the most
striking phenomenon to be seen through
this chink of the iron curtain is the exten-
sive war preparation that has been carried
on in the last ten months by the masters of
the Kremlin.
IT IS NOT THAT the Soviet armies have
heavily reinforced-there are still the
same thirty divisions in Eastern Germany
and six more in Poland, although recent
evidence suggests that at least one addition-
al armored division may now be on the way
from Russia. What has happened, rather, is
that these armies, which were not ready to
attack before, have now been brought al-
most to the stage of full offensive readiness.
Besides sending in reserve tanks, the
Soviet planners have taken many other
steps to prepare their war machine.
Whereas their air and mechanized forces
were formerly provided with fuel on a
hand-to-mouth basis, a large permanent
fuel stock has now been built up. Under-
ground tankage is being constructed. at
the airfields so that this stock can be fur-
ther increased.
In the same way, stocks of ammunition, of
spare parts of all kinds for the air and
ground forces, and of all other similar ne-
cessities of war have been substantially in-
creased.
Crated air engines and even air frames
have been brought in, so far as can be judg-
ed in far larger numbers than would be
needed to support the present Soviet Air
Force of from 450 to 500 jets in East Ger-
many.
Even more significant, personnel and
equipment for aircraft maintenance and
tank repair shops have recently arrived in,
East Germany. In the last war, the Soviet
Army was often forced to send its damaged
tanks as far as Kuibyshev before they could
be put in order. In any European campaign,
this would obviously be ruinous. The newly
arrived maintenance staffs, which include
German technicians trained in Soviet me-
thods, will provide full maintenance facili-
ties of all kinds here in Germany.
THE GENERAL PICTURE is one of meth-
odical war preparation, accomplished so
slowly and quietly, on a foundation 'already
so menacingly strong, that very few people
have taken alarm. To be sure, there are still
some gaps. The transport facilities avail-
able to the Soviet armies would be thought
inadequate by any American or European
commander, partly because of the poor
quality of steel rails supplied from East
Germany for railroad improvement. But
Russian commanders, who get their experi-
ence with the Russian rail system, are un-
fortunately unlikely to use American or Eu-
ropean standards of transport.
Again, and this time more significant,
although they have a very high propor-
tion of armored and mechanized divisions,
the Soviet armies in Germany and Poland
are distinctly short of artillery. Here the
Russian standard is higher than ours--
Russian ground force tactics call for mass-
ed use of artillery on the greatest scale.
Probably, any Soviet war plan would call
for bringing in additional artillery divi-
sions, as it would certainly call for bring-
ing in additional air groups-which of
course can be done in a single night's
1. ht from Koenigsberg.
All these different toilsomely collected
facts about wvhat the Soviets have done and
have not done in the last year for their Euro-
pean forces, form a pattern which requires
discussion in a subsequent report. It is
enough to say here that what has been done
vastly outweighs what has not been done..
If we had done one-half as much, the Krem-
lin would be justified in its perpetual bellow-
ing that the American war mongers are
preparing an aggression.
(Copyright, 1951, Ner York Herald Tribune Inc.)
Ii
ii
~4.',r
,ROLLS
k j v
"'S fa . P Y
n II
/ettePA 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.
Student .Draft ,
,0
DORIS FLEESON:
Farmers in Mobilization
WASHINGTON-President Truman has a
touchy farm situation on his hands
whieh could make his labor troubles look
like a Sunday-school picnic.
When labor revolts against the Presi-
dent, it gets little of anything from the
Congress, including sympathy. When far-
ters complain, Congress bends both ears
to the grass roots and acts obediently on
what it learns.
All this is perfectly clear to Mr. Truman's
politically minded Secretary of Agriculture,
I he Weekend
In Town
EVENTS OF UNUSUAL INTEREST IN
TOWN T4HIS WEEKEND:
DANCES
OUT OF THIS WORLD, featuring an
ultra-modern motif which includes ouch un-
realistic items as surrealism and transcen-
dentalism (just how is not clear), will be
given tomorrow from 9 p.m. to midnight at
the West Quad. Sponsored by Winchell
House and Newberry Residence, open to all.
LITTLE CLUB, dancing and refreshments
in a cabaret atmosphere, at the League to-
night.
UNION DANCE, the regular weekly thing,
with Tinker's orchestra, at the Union from
9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow.
DRAMA
HOTEL UNIVERSE, By Philip Barry, sec-
ond in the Arts Theater Club's current series
of six, opens tonight at 8:30 in the Club's
theater, 209/2 E. Washington. Tomorrow
and Sunday (and all next week); time is
8:30 p.m. Sat. and Sun., 8 p.m. other nights.
For Club members and guests only.
- , . c
MOVIES
THE KILLERS, a top-flight adaptation of
Hemingway's very short story, with Bert
Lancaster, Sam Levene and Edmund O'Bri-
en. Tonight and tomorrow, 7:30 and 9:30
p.m. and Sunday, 8 p.m. at the Architecture-
Aud.
DON QUIXOTE, Ceryante's masterpiece
in a Spanish film version with English sub-
titles, tonight and tomorrow night, 7:15 and
9:15 p.m. at Hill Auditorium.
AGAINST THE WIND, a British film
about the OSS, at the Orpheum, today, to-
morrow and Sunday.
THE REDHEAD AND THE COWBOY, a
1-ne n n- - - XA+1 r arn_ *rrl mnni MM-
Mr. Brannan, who is energetically applying
himself to ways and means of assuaging
farmers' complaints against mobilization.
These are principally that not sufficient
weight is 'being given to agriculture and
the allocation of materials for farm supplies.
POTENTIALLY even more troublesome is
the cotton blo-'s threat to legislate a
ban of price controls on cotton at the farm
level. The present ceiling is more than 125
per cent of parity. The threat comes in the
midst of growing tension between the city
consumer who is so squeezed by high prices,
and the farmer, who feels he is unjustly
blamed for it.
President Truman of course is squarely
in the middle of the contending factions.
Mr. Brannan has to work fast lest he be
euchered out of representing agriculture in
the mobilization effort as happened to his
opposite number in labor, Secretary Tobin.
In the wings, spurring on the farmers, are
such tried and tested Brannan-haters as the
American Farm Bureau Federation. its ag-
gressive President, Allen Kline, who is a
prominent Iowa Republican, and the Na-
tional Grange. In a recent meeting here this
group tried out the idea that farmers should
name their own deputy administrators in
the Office of Defense Mobilization, the eco-
nomic stabilization agency and the Nation-
al Production Administration.
*~ * *
THOSE PRESENT included Messrs. Flem-
ing of the Farm Bureau, Tabor of the
Grange, Stong of the Farmers Union, Davis
of the Council of Farmer Co-operatives,
Peer and Simms of the Committee on Farm
Production Supplies.
Fleming opened the meeting with a declar-
ation that what is really needed to stabilize
the economy is not price ceilings but an in-
crease in interest rates and withdrawal of
government support of United States bond
prices at par.
Davis reportedly agreed that price con-
trols should be temporary and urged ag-
riculture to get its own people into the
mobilization program quickly. Flemingj
was ready with nominees including Dean
Myers of Cornell, Jesse Tapp of the Bank
of America, and Chester Davis, a veteran
of the Roosevelt farm agencies whois now
with the Ford Foundation in California.
Stong of the Farmers Union which has
strong Fair Deal ties, refused to make nom-
inations and withdrew. He later informed
his hosts, the F.P.S. committee, that he had
attended the meeting to discuss farm sup-
plies but that it had in his opinion develop-
ed into an effort to outflank Secretary
Brannan.
It is a fair guess that he hinted as'
4
CJINIEMA
A rchitecture A uditorium
THE KILLERS with Burt Lancaster, Ava
Gardner and Edmond O'Brien.
0RDINARILY, a cinematic expansion of
a short story the caliber of Hemingway's
terse masterpiece, The Killers, would be
viewed with more than a little perturbation.
In this case, however, quality and good taste
take over the action where the Master leaves
off and the end result does him no dis-
service.
The film is in the nature of an explora-
tion into Ole Andreson's past and what
might have been the circumstances lead-
ing up to his murder by two professional
killers. The picture opens with the classic
lunch-room scene with most of the orig-
inal dialogue intact and is, in mood and
atmosphere, an almost perfect reproduc-
tion of the original. The rest of the con-
tinuity is concerned with the victim's
recollections as he waits passively to be
killed knowing ,there is no escape. This
sequence, while not as successful as the
fragment which precedes it, is neverthe-
less very powerful in its own right and
remarkably faithful to the probable in-
tention of the author.
Burt Lancaster is a tower of strength as
the doomed Andreson while Ava Gardner
gives full flavor to the role of a double
crossing wench. Edmond O'Brien and Sam
Levine fill out the cast of able supporting
players.
In the words of one of Hemingway's most
articulate admirers, "real class."
-D. R. Crippen
---.a
i
To the Editor:F
W HILE Mr. Stegner and Mr.I
Pike are putting in theirt
"yell" for our country, perhaps
they had better consider what is
really best for the country at thisf
time. I am assured that planse
being presented concerning draft
deferment for college students ar
based on more than mere "selfish
motives" and -"hogwash." True,1
there a r e possible unpatriotict
draft-dodgers in the universities,
just as elsewhere. But the ma-1
jority of draft-eligible men on thist
campus and others are not of that
class. We should hope that they
are intelligent men, who realize1
fully their responsibility tortheir
country, and who conceive ther
fact that the fate of their nation
is their own fate. They will not1
selfishly resist fighting for their
country, though they may grieve
the prospect of time lost in thes
important business of getting at
college education.1
The very fact that getting at
college -education is important-
not only to the individual, but to
the country-is what has spurred
deferment plans for college stu-
dents. The government, as well1
as most educators, certainly rec-
ognize the advantages of making
it possible for these students to
continue with their school work.
By cutting short their education
they would, in some cases, be
eliminating some of the country's
most important citizens and po-
tential leaders. In a country such
as ours, intelligent leaders are not
only desirable, but are a necessity.
There is no doubt that the col-
leges and universities produce im-
portant leaders in all fields.
Mr. Stegner and Mr. Pike are
showing little faith or respect for
their fellows when they state that
as far as they are concerned "the
more of these so-called intelli-
gentsia they nail, the better.'' I
agree, let's not be selfish or unpa-
triotic, but please, sirs, let's do be
reasonable and intelligent about
this.
.-D. Shaver '52
McGee Case .
To the Editor:
IN REGARDS TO Mark Sand-
ground's letter in Sunday's
Daily we have the following com-
ments to make:
First, we agree with his state-
ment that students should do a
little thinking before jumping
headlong into a project such as the
recent one to save Willy McGee.
However, the very fact that
Justice Harold Burton of the
United States Supreme Court saw
fit to postpone the execution of
Mr. McGee, seems to indicate to
us that everything concerning the
McGee trial was not strictly on the
up and up.
Mr. Sandground states that
"McGee ws tried and found guilty
by a jury of his peers in a United
States Court." This fact seems to
satisfy him that Mr. McGee is
guilty. He seems to assume that an
American court can do no wrong.
Whether or not Willy McGee is
innocent, we do not know. This is
not the question, anyway. The
question is: "Should Willy MgGee
be allowed to have a fair, unbiased
trial in a court of law which will
assure him every measure of jus-
tice possible? We believe that any
man, innocent or guilty, is entitled
to this.
After this trial has been con-
ducted, and even if Mr. McGee is
found to be guilty, it is still debat-
able that he should be electrocuted.
To us, this seems like rather cruel
punishment. We know of no state
in the Union where a white man
has ever been put to death for this
crime!
Mr. Sandground accuses the
people on campus who are sponsor-
ing the movement to stop the exe-
cution of Willy McGee of being
"agitators, rabble-rousers, and
plain Communistswho are trying
to destroy our freedom." Why
must everyone who believes in
sticking up for the underdog be
labeled a Communist?
We may be wrong, but we are
still not convinced that the stu-
dents of this University who are
trying to save a man's life, are all
Reds! We still believe that the vast
majority of these people is acting
in this matter because they do not
want to see freedom perish. In his
letter, Mr. Sandground said that
"men have died and are dying to
protect our form of government."
Yes, that is true. And we believe
that they are dying to protect that
form of government which was
founded on the principle that "all
men are created equal" be they
white or black, or yellow; -rich or
poor!
-Gene Mossner '52
~Alan Warshawsky '52.
McGee Case .
To the Editor:
H AVING EXCHANGED views
with Mr. Cal Samra on the cur-
rent Willie McGee case, I was sur-
prised to read in his "interpretive"
editorial his persistent belief that
the ad hoc committee is not one
merely interested in winning jus-
tice. The fact that he criticizes the
statements of individual commit-
tee members (re: two-minute si-
lent prayer) seems to indicate
judgment of the committee, not as
a whole, but as a rally of individ-
ualists striving, through the means
of this case, towards their own
ends. It is true, the suggestion for
the silent prayer was made by an
individual, but it did not reflect the
views of the committee-it was
merely an idea, offered in sin-
cerity. As Mr. Samra himself
pointed out, the committee did not
approve the suggestion-does this
necessarily imply underlying cu-
rents of misled agitation? Just as
Mr. Lynch exercised the right to
comment and suggest, so did other
"emotional" individuals. Let the
committee and the public agree
with whom they wish.
The McGee case wasnot brought
to public attention as a political
issue, and therefore, no political
groups were asked' to participate.
All meetings were open to the pub-
lic, whether this public was YD,
YR, or simply interested in justice,
politically speaking or otherwise.
If 'these political groups were in-
terested, why could they not have
attended these meetings without
special invitation? If I am not mis-
taken, these groups are now being
urged to work with the committee.
Aside from these petty disagree-
ments between the various individ-
uals contributing their views, we3
must not forget the true issue-the
cause of the formation of the com-
mittee. Those who tear apart this
committee, or those who wrangle
together as to Mr. McGee's inno-
cence or guilt, seem to have com-
pletely lost sight of the issue. If
these people would apply their cri-
tical energies constructively toward
helping the committee achieve its
goal-that of a stay of execution
and fair trial for Mr. McGee-not
only would the wasteful name-
calling desist, but chances for its
success would be greatly- increased.
-Francine J. Daner.
McGee Case.. ..
To the Editor:
Considering the factual vacuum
in which the McGee case is cur-
rently discussed, we believe that
it is not amiss to present an anal-
ysis of the charges raised by his
supporters.- ,
The Supreme Court of Mississip-
pi has considered the case on three
separate occasions. In its first de-
cision the court ordered a new trial
which was subsequently conducted
in another county where there was
less likelihood of mob pressure. The
state supreme court reversed the
trial court the second time because
of systematic exclusion of Negroes
from juries. A third trial ensued
and again the jury returned a ver-
dict of guilty. On appeal the state
court sustained this conviction. In
this trial there was no evidence of
mob violence, and as the appellate
court remarked, McGee's counsel
had every opportunity to present
his case-evidenced by the five
volumes of testimony presented for
and against the accused.
Moreover, testimony, unrefuted
by the defense,, indicates that the
trial was conducted in a calm at-
mosphere. These questions were
considereA by the state supreme
court--a court which gave the de-
fense special permission to appeal
after expiration of the legal time
limit. These questions were raised
before the U.S. Supreme Court,
and were summarily dismissed for
want of jurisdiction. Although, as
Mr. Silk points out, this does not
constitute an expression of opin-
ion on the merits of the case, it is
strong evidence that no procedural
injustice occurred. In the past fif-
teen years, the Supreme Court has
not been niggardly in granting
hearings with respect to state
criminal procedures, nor has it
been noted for its insensitiveness to
the rights of Negroes.
Even if we concluded; as we can-
not, that the trial was unfair, we
would not agree to the unsound
remedies proposed by McGee's ad-
herents. It is said by some that
President Truman should intervene
under Civil Right's legislation.
What legislation? Do they refer
to legislation which manifestly
does not authorize such interven-
tion; or do they appeal to pending
legislation which Congress has not
yet passed? How do they reconcile
constitutional principles with the
foolish contention that the Presi-
dent can or should intervene with
the Supreme Court? It is perti-
nent to point out that under our
federal system the President has
no power of pardon or commuta-
tion regarding offenses committed
against state law. Moreover, care-
ful reading of some of the letters
indicates a rather callous attitude
to the effect that "the law be dam-
ned."
The only realistic recourse of
McGee supporters is to request
clemency of the governor of Missis-
sippi. Morally, we do not condone
the imposition of the death penal-
ty; we recognize that it may be un-
just to execute a Negro in a situa-
tion where that penalty has never
been imposed upon a white man.
However, this is essentially a dif-
ferent matter-one to which Mc-
Gee's adherents have not enthusi-
astically addressed themselves.
On the basis of known facts we
cannot conclude that the third
trial was unfair. Rather it would
seem that the off-campus instiga-
tors of the present agitation have
adopted admirable strategy: they
have chosen a case which, from the
defendant's standpoint, legally is
weak and emotionally strong. They
can thereby exploit fully either his
execution (which, in their view,
will discredit our legal system) or
an improbable commutation or
pardon (which, in their view, would
constitute an admission of the
righteousness of their charges),
-Clyde E. Jacobs,
Theodore V. Liss,
Reo M. Christenson,
Sidney Belanoff,
. Heber R. Harper,
Joseph L. Sutton.
of their adulation of fame and
great liames, will passionately and
barbarcisly attack Mr. Gross for
his revi4w of the Heifetz concert.
It is oL15 the thought of such
gross injustice that has determined
me to a rite, this letter
In fact, I believe Mr. Gross was
far too lenient and gentle with
Heifetz; such leniency is to be
deprecated whether it originates
from the editorial office of The
Daily, the Music Schoo :. or Mr.
Gross' forgoing the luxury of
W'eaties for Wednesday's break-
fast.
Mr. Gross commixed an over-
sight which would account, in part,
for this gentleness; he explicitly
states that he was "armed with a
score" but where, oh! WHERE was
his tuning fork? I am sure this in-
strument should have proved most
embarrassing for all concerned.
But this is a minor point when
compared to the soft-pr aled cri-
tique of the violinist's interpre'a-
tion. Mr. Gross is right. The only
way to have the Kreltzer Sonata
is to have it performed on a
mechatcally perfect player-pian
and "player-violin - pr ferabiv k
without', human inicerference on
eitherthe part of the performer or
the composer. Like Mr. Gross I
believe that mathematics and the
laburawt*i would be far more suit-
able for the composition and per-
formance of music - after all,
adagio is adagio, presto is pr" sto
and ne'er the tempi should meet..
Were it not that we had d cicd to
liquidate the human element. I
should h ve mentioned the hope-
lessly ir~exact comp omise which
musical notation forces on the
composer's intentions.
Beyond all this, the fact is that
Mr. Heifetz was totally INCOM-
MUNK ABLE in many passages of
the 1=e utzer - especially where
the piano was the solo instrument.
I hope this defense of Mr. Gross
wil be taken at its face value: his
sentiments and mine are exactly
the samne. Perhaps it was editoial
pressure which caused him to over-
look his weightier arguments, and
thus I have taken the liberty cf
extending his principles to their
logical conclusions. Apat from the
innate benefits of these conch-
sions, I feel the letter serves the
purnose of transferring a great
deal of the stigma of Mr. Gross'
"adverse criticisms" fron himself
and The Daily to one of its co-
tented readers.
--Earl E. Stevens.
DAILY
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(Continued from Page 2)
Hostel Club: South Lyon Hostel
Work Trip and Square Dance, Sat.,
March 17, and sun., March 1. Bike
or ride. Call Mary Rowley, 3-8687.
Faculty sports Night: 7:30 to 0 p.m.,
IM Bldg. For faculty and staff mem-
bers, their wives, and chidren; all
sports, including the swimming pool,
available.
Frosh Weekend Mass Meeting for all
freshmen women, Mon., March 17 7:3
p.m., League Ballroom.
..--
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
Bob Miller ........ Circulation Manager
Telephone 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.
All rights of republication of all other
matters herein are also reserved.
Entered at the Post Office at Ann
Arbor, Michigan as second-class mail
matter.
Subscription during regular school
year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00.
Heifetz Review
To the Editor:
. .
I
11
I AM NO personal friend of Mr.
Gross; indeed, I know nothing
about him except that he is a
member of the English Depart-
ment. However, = do feel that a
defense of his position is neces-
sary Tbcere are those who, because
Looking Back
35 YEARS AGO
GENERAL John J. Pershing left El Paso
for somewhere on the Mexican border
to lead American forces in Mexico in a
hunt for bandit Franscisco Villa.
BARNABY
it's Barnaby and his Fairy Godfather.
With a little.surprise for our favorite
Ghost. Here! Wear it in aood health.
Not exactly. It's yard goods. Effect?
The boy's mother will run it
un for You on her machine.
O'Malley