PAGE TW4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'T'UESDAY, UCTOBER 9, 15 PAGE TWO TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1 ____________________________________________________ I U ._ DORIS FLEESON: Oversea's Americas -- - - -- "Anybody Care About Influence On Me?" PARIS-Shall the American men who are developing the nation's new frontiers of collective security have their wives and fami- lie with them as did their pioneer fore- fathers on the American mainland. If so, under what conditions? This in bureaucratic language is the problem of the dependents. In human terms, it is the problem of maintaining American family life. The increasing flaw of U.S. forces of all kinds to the Far and Middle East, Europe and North Africa makes it a very urgent one. A national magazine recently called at- tention to the difficulties, hazards and vast expense of keeping service families together in the mushrooming defense effort. The "Little Americas" established in the rela- tively easygoing days of the German occupa- tion were described and the question raised as to whether some sort of guns-or-butter decision was not due the heavily burdened U.S. taxpayer. A wave of pessimism swept through the forces, and theatre commanders had to con- sider in their own minds whether they would be ready to say that the morale factor out- weighed the hazards and expense. Policy regarding dependents is handled in the Defense Department whose initial prem- ise is that there must be as little discrepancy as possible in the a treatment of the three services. The wishes of the theatre com- manders are given great weight; if possible, they constitute the last word. The great difficulty of course is that it is not possible to treat everybody alike. Some stations have housing or can acquire it readily at a reasonable expense; at others, it is prohibitive in cost or un- available. The regulars of the services, like the State Department's foreign serv- ice, know this; they expect to alternate between the fat and the lean, figuring that in a whole career they will attain the general average. But these regulars are being greatly aug- mented by Reserves, National Guard and draftees. Neither they nor their womenfolk have the career service philosophy, condi- tioning, or that clan feeling which comforts the regulars. The Army has plans to rotate 12 divisions overseas, keeping only four at home at any one time. This involves the separation of families three years out of four unless the present dependent policy is maintainel. It is a big responsibility to decide to change it. Unhesitatingly, other things being equal. U.S. commanders prefer to let the men have their dependents with them. General Ridgway, for example, has re- opened dependent tfavel to Japan. He tries to equalize the Korean sacrifice by frequent shifts within his command. But the 43rd division, going to Europe, will not be allowed dependents. And they may find forces there, which antedate the change in the defense climate, quite plush- ly established. The people involved must be told the truth -that new hazards now exist; that, with the need for guns, planes, bases, ships, the frills must go. It is a new problem and a new kind of service for Americans but there is no rea- son to suppose the women can't take it. (Copyright, 1951, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH ALSOP EDITOR'S NOTE: Joseph Alsop, has written an open letter to Sen. Pat McCarran (D., Nev.) requesting that he be given an opportunity to refute the recent testimony by Louis Budenz be- fore the McCarran Sub-committee on Internal Security. Mr. Alsop said that he based his request on the fact that the testimony involved certain events which took place while he was in China andhabout which he had first-hand information. The text of the letter follows: EAR SENATOR McCARRAN: Having listened this morning to the tes- timony of Louis Budenz, I am moved to take a step which I had hoped to avoid. In my opinion, a newspaperman can make no greater mistake than to appear in any pub- lic role. But during the war in China, I took part in certain events which prove that Bu- denz has lied to your Sub-Committee on In- ternal Security. In these circumstances, therefore, in simple justice to the other persons in- volved in those events, who have been falsely accused by Budenz, I feel forced to request the opportunity to offer my testimony in refutation of his. Besides a tissue of half truths and a far- rage of misrepresentation, Budenz has told three demonstrable lies. He has said that at the time of HezIry A. Wallace's mission to China in 1944, the State Department offi- cial, John Carter Vincent, was a "member of the Communist Party." He has asserted that Vincent was "relied" on by the Com- munist Party leadership to "guide" Wallace along the path of the party line. And he has stated that the Communist leaders were "satisfied" with the results of Vincent's al- leged work as Wallace's guide. * * * tettsP TO THE E DITOR 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. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i ON T9E Washington Merry-Go-Round wITU DREW PEARSO0N ia } 111 ' . W ASHINGTON-George Allen, the former White House jester, is now about the closest man to General Eisenhower. It was Allen who acted as liaison between Truman and Eisenhower to make sure Ike didn't get into the race as a Democrat in 1948. Today, Allen, though a Mississippi Democrat, says that Ike is sure to run as a Republican, Talking to a friend recently, Allen pre- dicted: "What Ike will do will be exactly what Roosevelt did at Chicago in 1932. He'll hop on a plane and fly straight to the conven- tion." "How's he going to fly from Paris to Chi. cago when he's under orders from his com- mander-in-chief to do a job in Paris?" ask. ed the friend. "Don't be foolish," shot back the former White House jester, "what's the commander- in-chief going to do about it?" Seer -CENSORSHIP- INSIDE FACT about the President's long press conference lecture about protecting U.S. secrets was that his immediate advisers didn't want him to make it. They knew public reaction would be bad. However, the Defense Department, Cen- tral Intelligence and others in charge of military secrets urged the President not only to issue his censorship order but back it up-in part to keep the military from setting U.S. policy._ Time after time, high generals or admirals have barged in on civilian policy or dis- closed secrets which caused serious damage. Most important was the release of the Smythe report on Atomic Energy by Gen- eral Leslie Groves. A few hours after the re- port was sent to several thousand news- papers, horrified scientists protested to the army that the report contained vital secrets At The State.. .. DAVID AND BATHSHEBA with Gregory Peck and Susan Hayward. THE PSYCHOLOGY of the "advanced" price is liable to make this picture a popular favorite. Few will want to publicize the fact that they have been so egregiously taken in, and consequently hosts of be nighted moviegoers will come to silently share a sucker's shame. About the only enjoyment this rendering of the tale of David and his adultery with Bathsheba offers is a dialogue of double entendres that lack only the broad wink to be typical burlesque fair. If they were not delivered with a hypocritical priety, the result might be just a particularly un- subtle archness, instead of the rather dis- tasteful innuendo it turns out to be. Besides trying to wring all the superficial suggestiveness out of the situation, the pro- ducers have tried to graft a Hay's Office version of 20th Century morality and ethics by which an astute scientist could piece to- gether the know-how for making the a- bomb. Hurriedly, Groves demanded that the report be recalled. "That," replied a member of his staff, "would be like trying to put an egg back into a chicken." Newsmen, not being technicians, had no way of knowing the significance of the Smythe report's complicated wording. Another military boner which played into Moscow's hands was the statement by Gen- eral Orvil Anderson, commander of the Air War College at Montgomery, Ala., that the United States wanted a preventative war. It was necessary for the Air Force to relieve Gen. Anderson in order to demonstrate this was not our real foreign policy. NOTE-On Mr. Truman's desk this sum- mer was one of our newest ,secret weapons, a guided missile. Proudly he demonstrated it to many callers, told aboutits accuracy against enemy planes. No restriction of se- crecy was placed upon those with whom he talked. " * * -INCOME TAX PROBE- ALERT SENATOR Richard Nixon of Cali- fornia had a lot to do, backstage, with the cleanup of the income tax mess in San Francisco. Some time ago he received letters from those close to the federal grand jury which was trying to investigate the long-rumored internal revenue scandal but which was suddenly called off by U.S. Judge Lewis E. Goodman. At ,that time, young Assistant U.S. At- torney Charles O'Gara was endeavoring to present evidence of income tax irregulari- ties to the grand jury. But suddenly the probe was stopped by Judge Goodman, who, incidentally, had been appointed to the bench on the recommendation of ex-Senator Sheridan Downey. Collector of Internal Reve. nue Smythe, °now under investigation, was Downey's campaign manager. To remedy the situation, Senator Nixo introduced a bill which, if passed, will per- mit grand juries to hire counsel of their own and dig into a smelly situation-regardless of whether the U.S. attorney or the Judge gives the green light. Nixon also phoned the Justice Depart- ment in Washington to inquire about young O'Gara, the Assistant U.S. Attor- ney who was pushing the tax probe. "He's a psycopath," was the reply. In the end, 'however, O'Gara won out. He was brought to Washington as a witness be- for Senator Williams' income tax committee, while many of the tax collectors in San Francisco he was gunning for have now been removed. **e -WASHINGTON PIPELINE- EX-SECRETARY OF WAR Robert Patter- son has notified the Senate Judiciary Committee that he has withdrawn his en- dorsement of Miss Frieda Hennock to be a U.S. Judge. Since Patterson once sat on the U.S. Court of Appeals, his word counts heav- ily with the senators. He informed them that when he originally endorsed Miss Hennock, he had not realized all the facts now brought out by the New York Bar Association ... . Free hams, TV sets, etc. can certainly get AS IT HAPPENS, I was in China at the time of the Wallace visit about which Budenz has testified so freely. I was then serving as a member of the 14th Air Force staff and personal advisor to Maj. Gen. C. L. Chennault. When Wallace reached Kun- ming, where our headquarters were situated, Gen. Chennault assigned me to act as the Vice President's escort and sub-host during his visit. Wallace and Vincent were the General's guests at his house, where I also lived, and I was almost continuously with them both until they left China. Mre particularly, I was with Wallace and Vincent when they discussed the grave crisis then going on in China, and the American policy that should be adopted towards it. I was not only present-I was at the typewriter-during the drafting of the Wallace cable to President Roosevelt, advising the removal of Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell from command in China and his replacement by Gen. Albert C. Wedemey- er. Every detail of that episode refutes Budenz's testimony concerning Vincent in particular and the Wallace mission in gen- eral. I cannot attempt to make a full case against Budenz in the short space of this letter. That is what I hope to do in sworn testimony, but I should like at least to illustrate briefly. Budenz testified this morning that the Communist Party lead ers were not displeased by the suggestion of Gen. Wedemeyer as China Theater Commander, but were "very much opposed to Gen. Chennault (and) didn't want him in the picture at all." The sum of Budenz's testimony was that if the Wallace cable to President Roosevelt had proposed Chen- nault as China Theater Commander, it would then have been indisputably anti- Communist. In point of fact, the Wallace cable came very close to doing precisely that. When Wal- lace had decided, with Vincent's concur- rence, that Stilwell ought not to continue in command in China, he then stated that he would like to suggest Gen. Chennault as Stilwell's replacement. Again, Vincent in- dicated that he concurred. When my adviceI was asked, however, I was in the em- barrassing situation of having to argue, for reasons which I shall be glad to explain to your committee, that the suggestion of Gen. Chennault would be unwise. It was only then that the decision was taken to put forward the name of Gen. Wedemeyer. * * * ESIDES THIS, in my judgment, specific proof of Budenz's falsehood, there is the more general and decisive proof, around which I noted both Budenz and your sub- committee counsel rather carefully skirted this morning. The non-Communist character of the Wallace cable is chiefly shown, not by the recommendation of Gen. Wedemeyer, but by the proposal to remove Gen. Stilweg from command. When that cable was writ- ten, Gen. Stilwell was already working to arm the Chinese Communists, while denying all aid to Chiang Kai-shek's hard-pressed anrmies in China. Had Stilwell continued in command in China, the Chinese Commun- ists would surely have been able to destroy the Generalissimo before the end of the war. And when Stilwell was finally dismissed from command, the war-time hopes of the Chinese Communists fell finally and completely to the ground. In the face of these facts which I shall gladly prove to your committee, Budenz has the bare-faced audacity to claim that Wallace's proposal to dismiss Stilwell was pro-Communist, and was even welcomed by the Communist Party leadership. It is hard to know which is more shocking-- Budenz's free and easy way with the repu- tations of American citizens, or his fan- The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. i'ublication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (11 a.m. on Saturday). TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1951 VOL. LXII, NO. 13 Notices Summer Positions: Mr. Eugene viv- ian, director of camping for the Herald Tribune Fresh Air Fund, will be at the Bureau of Appointments, Tues., Oct. 9, to interview students for summer-camp counseling positions in the state of New York. For appointment phone Univer- sity Extension 2614, or call at 3528 Ad- ministration Building. Student Loans for Men There will be a meeting of the Stu- dent Loan Committee, yhurs., Oct. 11, beginning at 1:30 p.m. Students wish- ing to apply should see Miss McKenzie, 1059 Administration Building for ap- pointment. Student Affairs Committee: Today's meeting has been cancelled. The next meeting will be held October 30 in room 1011 Angell Hall. Guggenheim Fellowships. Applica- tions for theserFellowships, for research and study abroad, should be filed by October 15. Information is available at the Office of the Graduate School. Lectures The Department of Aeronautical En- gineering announces a series of lec- turees on "Dynamic Stability of Air- craft" by Prof. F. M. Scheubel of the TechnischerHochschule, Darmstadt, Germany. The first lecture will be on Wed., Oct. 10, 4 p.m., 1042 E. Engineer- ing Building. Academic Notices Graduate Students expecting to re- ceive the master's degree in February, 1952, must file a diploma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., Oct. 2. A student will not be recommended for a degree un- less he has filed formal application in the office of the Gradaute School. Make-up Examinations in History will be given on Sat., Oct. 20, 9-12. Stu- dents must obtain written permission from their instructors. After receiving written permission, they must sign list in History Office, 2817 South Quad. Orientation Seminar: The second meeting is to be held Tues., Oct. 9, 1 p.m., 3001 A.H. The seminar is recom- mended for all beginning graduate stu- dents and to those under-graduates who have attained a certain degree of mathematical maturity. Seminar in Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry. Thurs., Oct. 11, 7:30 p.m., 3003 Chemistry Bldg. Prof. W. W. Meinke will speak on "Some Special-F ied Techniques Used in Nuclear Chem- ical Separations." All interested gradu- ate students are invited. Seminar in Physical Chemistry. Wed., Oct. 10, 4:07 p.m., 2308 Chemistry Bldg. Prof. L. O. Brockway will discuss "The Electron Diffraction Study of Three Methyl Silanes by the Sector-Micropho- tometer Method" Al interested gradu- ate students are invited. -Seminar in Organic Chemistry. Wed., Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Bdg. Gilbert J. Sloan will speak on "Ni- trile Syntheses Related to the Letts Re- action." Open to all who are interested. Complex Variable Seminar. Wed., Oct. 10, 2:30 p.m., 243 Wet Eng. Mr. Osburn will speak on the partial sums of Tay- lor series of bounded functions. Concert Gladys Swarthout, Mezzo-soprano of opera, concert, movie, radio and televi- sion fame, will give the first concert in the Extra Concert Series, tonight at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Miss Swarth- out will be accompanied at the piano by Eugene Bossart, in a program rd operatic arias by Handel, Haydn, and Thomas; as well as songs by Granados, villa-Lobos, .Obradors, .J o h n .Jacob Niles, Celius Dougherty and Clara Ed- wards. Tickets are on sale during the day at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower; and at the Hill Auditorium box office after 7 o'clock. Events Today Wesleyan Guild: Worship commit-.. tee meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tues., Oct. 9 at the Guild; Program committee meeting. 8 p.m., Tues., Oct. 9 at the Guild. All interested, persons are invited. Pershing Rifles. First general meet- ing of thA season, 7:30 p.m. in front of the temporary classroom building. All new members are invited. Active members are to report in complete uni- form. In the event it rains everyone is to report inside of the T. C. B. Congregational - Disciples Guild. Tea at the Guild House, 4:30 to 5:45 each Tuesday. Hillel Choral Group: Hillel announ- ces the organization of a Choral Group. Will anyone interested in singing in this group contact the Hillel Office or call 3-4129. Beth Israel Congregation will hold its Day of Atonement Services Tues.,; Oct. 9 and Wed., Oct. 10, at the new B'nai 'rith Hllel Foundation-Beth, Israel Center, 1429 Hill St. Kol Nidre Services will begin at 6 p.m., Tuesday and at 9 a.m., Wednesday. Hillel Foundation Services will be held at Lydia Mendessohn Theater at 8 p.m., Tuesday, and 10 a.m., Wednes- day. Rabbi Herschel Lymon will preach at both Kol Nidre services. Topic, "Atone for What?" At Lydia Mendels- Sohn Theater he will be assisted by Prof. Ronald Freedman. Memorial services will be conducted by Rabbi Lymon, Wed., 12:30 p.m. at the Cente, and 4 p.m. at Lydia Men- delssohn. U. of M. Chess Club: First meeting, Room 3A, Union 8 p.m,.Alinterested chess players are urged to attend. Deutscher Verein: First meeting of the German Club, 7:30 p.m., Room 3G, Union. Singing, skits and refresh- ments. Christian Science Organization: Tes- timonial meeting, 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. Mathematics Club: 8 p.m. West Con- ference Room, Rackham Building. Prof. G. S. Young will speak on "N equals 3". Sigma Rho Tau: Membership smok- er, 7:30 p.m., Rooms 3K, L, M, N, Un- ion. Guest speaker: Prof. A. H. Lovel. All engineering and architecture stu- dents interested in improving their speaking ability are invited. Square Dance Group meets at Lane Hall, 7:15 p.m. S.R.A. Council Meeting, Lane Hall, 5:30 p.m. Coming Events UNESCO Council. Meeting, Wed., Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., Room 3R, Union. Prof. Boulding of the Economics Department will speak on the topic, "Is United States Foreign Policy leading us into War." Everyone is welcome, Westminster Guild: Tea 'N' Talk, Wed., Oct. 10, 4-6 p.m., First Presby- terian Church, Wesleyan Guild: Cabinet meeting, 8:30 p.m., Wed., Oct. 10 in the Green room. Everyone interested is invited. Wesleyan Guild: Do-Drop-In for food and fun, 4 to 5:30 p.m., Wed., Oct. 10 at the Guild. Everyone is welcome. Botany Club. Meeting, Wed., Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., in 1139 N. S. Bldg. Speakers: Mr. Roy Jervis and Mr. Grady Webster of the Botany Dept. Topic: Cuba. New members welcome. Union Weekly Bridge Tournament. Wed., Oct. 10. beginning at 7:15 p.m, in the Ball Room. Beginners are en- couraged to come. "Women must sign out with their House Mothers for 11:30 permission. Winners get two weeks free admission and runners up one week. Student Science Society: First meet- s Turkey Farm . . . . To the Editor: THANKSGVING will soon be with us and, according to un- o f f i c i a 1 estimates, 30,000,000' turkeys will be slaughtered before this festive occasion arrives. S h o u l d w e , indiscriminately slaughter turkeys without regard to their fitness for continued exist- ence? We say no! Why not give a slaughter de- ferment test for all turkeys pre- sently being exhibited at state and county fairs. Those turkeys not passing the test may also be de- ferred on the basis of blue rib- bons they have won during the past year. While a satisfactory score on such an examination would be beneficial to the turkey, it will not guarantee deferment, since exemption can only rest up- on the final decision of each local slaughter house. Upon receipt of his notice for slaughter, a turkey may ask for deferment until the end of the mating season. He may apply for consideration for reclassification by his local slaughter house on the basis of county or state fair status and Turkey Qualification Test Score. If his local slaughter house refuses to reclassify him, he should immediately appeal to his State Bureau of Turkey Affairs. If this appeal is refused, the turkey must i'eport for slaughter within one month after notifica- tion-unless, of curse, he is a conscientious turkey. Failure to report for slaughter will be pun- ishable by death. This is to guard against "foul" play,. -E. Sterling Sader William G. Stein Conrad Laurence Teitell Music Review.. .. To the Editor: WOULD like to address a few comments to your music critic. My dear Miss Goss, just because you thought that Miss d los An- geles is a mezzo-soprano instead of a full fledged soprano is no rea- son for you to tell the readers of this paper. It had nothing to do with the concert, and it should not have taken up newspaper space. I can enjoy a program of vocal music without having the slightest idea of the range of the perform- er. Also, you had no reason for' saying that Miss de los Angeles' three Schumann songs were a dis- appointment. Just because she is from a Spanish background you found it necessary to challenge her German lieder. If her name was Victoria von Schimmel, I am sure you would have knocked down her French and Spanish interpre- tations, and just praised the "authority and deftness" of her German group. You should not let names interfere with your judg- ments. You also did not like the accom- panist because he distracted from the recital. Apparently you are in favor of a cappella singing. The accompanist's name was on the program and I went to hear him at the coicert too, you know. I enjoy a piano background, and I respect a player who follows his crescendos and his decrescendos. I certainly don't want a faint drib- bling on the keyboard behind the vocal line of the singer. Lastly, you did not like the idea ing, Wed., Oct. 10, 7:30 p.m., 1400 Chem. Dr. Levinthal will speak on - "Mechan- ism for the Duplication of the virus." All interested are welcome. Journal Club of the Department of Romance Languages wl meet Wed., Oct. 1; 4:15 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Building. Speaker: Mr. Newton S. Bement. "Narrower Horizons for -Foregin-Language Study and New Responsibility for the Uni- versity." Folk and Square Dance Club meets Wed., Oct. 10, 8 p.m., Barbour Gym. Everyone welcome. Sociology Club will hold its first in- formal coffee hour on Wed., Oct. 10, 4 to 6 p.m. Club 600 in South Quad- rangle. All undergraduate concentrates, graduate students, and faculty mem- bers in the Department of Sociology are invited. Kappa Kappa Psi: Meeting, Wed., Oct. 10, at Harris Hall inmediately fol- lowing Symphonic Band rehearsal. Postponement: Meeting of the Young Republican Club has been changed from Tuesday to Wednesday of this week, 7:30 p.m., League. A treasurer and a member of the Board of Control will be elected. Speaker: Prof. Stolper who will speak on tariffs and our for- eign trade. S.R.A. Inter-Cultural Outing, center- ed around Arabian Culture, will leave Lane Hall, Sat. 5 p.m., returning Sun., 3 p.m. Reservations may be phoned to Lane Hall. To the Editor: EVEN IF I have to conduct a one man crusade, the MICHIGAN DAILY is going to learn to spel the name of my country correctly. Apparently that will take some doing, though. A similar plea last year seems to have had no effect. Now let's try to get it traight. The name of the country is Co- lombia. The fourth letter has a - ways been an "a" and there does not seem to be any likelihood of a change in the near future. Theie is no connection whatsoever with the District of. C-O-L-O-M-B-I-A, not Columr- bia. Please. -Roberto Valenzuela * * * Football Seats ... To the Editor: MISS WAGNER should not corn- plain. After having been here two years I still haven't quite reached the goal line. However, I am looking forward with opti- mism to next year-I understand that seniors sit on the ffity-yard line. -Louis Zako Football vs. Library... To the Editor: CONSIDERING the results of the last two weeks of football, ie feel that the administration should reopen the libraries. --Herbert Sherbin._ Gerald Gaull THE DOCTRINE of huma'n geuality reposes on this: that there is no man really clever who has not found that he is stupid. There is no big man who has not felt small. Some men never feel small; but these men are the few men who are. --G. K. Chesterton " M EN HEAP together the mis- takes of their lives and create a monster they call iDestiny. -John Oliver Hobbes ir 4 of Miss de los Angeles returning to the stage with a guitar in her hand because it did not "heighten the general tone of the perform- ance." Well, I personally thought it was one of the most down to earth demonstrations I have ever seen on the concert stage, and 't portrayed Miss de los Angeles as a truly unaffected artist. She sang and played that last encore beautifully and I considered it the very height of her entire Spanish. group.., I am sorry to say this Miss Goss, but you are a snoo. . -Ara Berberianr Corr"ction ,, Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control Hof Student Publications. Editorial Staff a Chuck Elliott .........Managing Editor Bob Keith................City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director vern Emerson........,Feature Editor Rich Thomas .........Associate Editor Ron Watts..........Associate Editor Bob Vaughn.........Associate Editor Ted Papes ................Sports Editor George Flint .. .Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker ... Associate Sports Edil~or Jan James...........Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor s usiness Staff Bob Miller.........Business Manager Gene Kuthy, AssAc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ... Advertising Manager Sally Fish ...........Finance Manager Stu Ward .........Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusivly 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 otiter matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second-class mnil matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail; $7.00,. BARNABY And othr Well, there ARE a miion And if threir atomic labs arrive at a 9 w (3~a.4r; 7 sb3.U e'-', 1