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October 21, 1951 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1951-10-21

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PAGE FO

SUNDAY; OCTOBER 2I, 2951

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1951
II

Study Group
IT WAS SUGGESTED on this page Friday
that "a strong and immediate program of
pressure is needed on the chapters of the
Interfraternity Council" to force removal of
fraternity bias clauses. However at this
time,rpressure is just what should be avoided.
-Last November the Student Legislature
and the campus forced the IFC to act
hastily on the bias question. As a result
the House President's Assembly passed a
meaningless resolution which succeeded
only in stifling any positive action from
their group for, a year. The ITC properly
revoked the measure Wednesday night,
finally clearing the way for some studied
progress.
The fraternity bias question is a big one
- ,and it will, need, a good deal of considera-
tion to find a correct solution. Tihe IFC has
admitted that it isn't quite sure of what the
problem is. It certainly includes more than
13 Michigan houses removing their dis-
criminatory clauses. An IFC-SL committee
has been formed to investigate all aspects of
the question and to find a practical" solution.
A superficial job will result if the committee
has to report immediately to soothe an arous-
ed campus.
Ideally, any attempt to remove bias clauses
should stem from the fraternities themselves.
At this time, they seem sincerely interested
in cutting out the clause. Let's give them an
unhurried opportunity.
-Sid Klaus

11

.1

i

MATTE R

OF

FACT

The Week's News
--. IN RETROSPECT .

A.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

By JOSEPH ALSOP

.

.I

I

I

WASHINGTON -Perhaps the strangest
characteristic of our time is the dist'or-
tion of the sense of history. Because they
uttered sentiments in wartime that were
widely shared by irreproachable, church-go-
ing, Republican-voting, tax-paying, payroll-
meeting citizens, unfortunate people areenow
hauled before Senatorial bars to answer the
charge of pro-Communism."s
By way of contrast, a man like Philip
Jessup, .who took a thoroughly pernicious
part in the "America' First" movement,
proudly drapes the "America First" man-
tle around . his, shoulders to prove that he
is not a Communist. And far from sg-
gesting that an extreme America-Firster
may not have the kind of judgment need-
ed for a post of high responsibility, every-
body wags his head and says, "Ah, that's
a strong point in Jessup's favor." The
whole busrness has become nonsensical.
These reflections are inspired by this re-
porter's curious experience of sitting for long,
weary hours, waiting to take his turn on
the stand, while Robert Morris, Counsel of
Sen. McCarran's Subcommittee on Internal
Security, grilled Henry A. Wallace on select-
ed tiny morsels from the distant past. One
bf the main subjects of inquiry was a rather
silly pamphlet Wallace wrote for the Insti-

,il

ON REE
Washington Merry-Go-Round
WITH DREW PEARSON

J4

WASHINGTON-Few people remember it,
but the United States faced a situation
in Panama in 1947 somewhat similar to the
current British crisis in Egypt. For a time
Panamanian tempers flared almost as hotly
against the U.S., but the situation calmed
immediately after the U.S. army got off
Panamanian soil.
The dispute .affected not the Panama.
canal itself, :but adjacent U.S. bases on
Panama soil. However, the same basi
mistakes have been made by both the
United States and Britain-namely, failing
to deal with problems before they reached
the boiling point.
Here is the inside story of what happened
in Panama.
During World War II the United States
was given the privilege of stationing troops
on Panamanian soil outside the Canal Zone
in order to spot enemy planes. And in the
spring of 1946, Julio Heurtematte, counselor
of the Panama Embassy,had a friendly talk
with the State Department about these bases.
"I am telling you as a friend," he said,
"that next October the Panama National
Assembly will cancel the American leases for
those bases. If you get busy now, perhaps
we can work something out. If you wait, it
will be too late."
However, the State Department waited.
It discounted fleurtematte's warning, pre.
dicted the Panama Assembly would do
nothing.
Later that summer, Heurtematte warned
the State Department again. "The only
tbing that can save these bases," he said,
,,is joint occupation by American and Pana-
manian troops. If you fly the Panama flag
alongside the Stars and Stripes and station
Better Business
EVERY YEAR scores of salesmen come to
campus. Although many of them are
reputable business men numerous others are
slick merchants of fictitious wares. Since
they are not allowed to sell their merchan-
dise in the dormitories, the fraternity and
sorority members are most often dupes of
the dishonest salesmen,
Students are often deceived by a win-
ning manner and a glib speech. Five .very
gullible girls were approached by a woman
selling stationery who took their orders
and advance payment for sorority crest
stationery. The woman asked no 'names
or addresses, gave no receipt; and didn't
even take the name of the sorority!-
'A few simple precautions will readily pre-
gent such occurrences.
1) If accosted by a salesman in a dormi-
tory, report him immediately to your house-
otherte
-2) Ask any salesman for his letter of
introduction from the Better Business Board
of the Student Legislature. -
3) Read all receipts and any material
presented for ydur signature.
-4) Never pay for merchandise until it
is received.
5) Report ANY salesman, especially dis-
honest or unsatisfactory ones to the Be.tter
Business Board.
The Board uJtempts to see that the stu-
dent gets a fair deal. They can either
prevent the return of companies to campus
as they did in the case of the University
Studios, a group of photographers whose
work was of a very poor quality, or seek
redress for the students as they did in the
ease of the publishers of an Encyclopedia.
This company offered a high quality edi-

a few of our troops With yours, I -think our
people would be satisfied. It would have to
be a partnership deal, though naturally our
troops would be in smaller numbers than
yours."
*. * *
U.S ARMY REAL FACTOR
AGAIN THE STATE Department procras-
tinated. Behind the scenes, it was the
U.S. Army more than the State Department
which opposed any joint occupation of Pan-
ama bases.
Time passed- and suddenly news dis-
patches from Panama told of growing re-
set.ent against the United States. Fin..
ally, just before the Panama National
Assembly was scheduled to vote, Panama's
Ambassador called at -the White House,,
urged President Truman to make a con-
ciliatory gesture before it was too late.
Otherwise, he warned, the Assembly was
sure to vote American troops out.
Truman; however, called in the State De-
partment, and once again the State Depart.
ment advised that a vote against the U.S.A.
was inconceivable.
A few days later, the Assembly voted
unanimously to cancel the military base con-
tract with the United State's. Local senti-
ment, as in Egypt today, had become so
vitriolic that no assemblyman dared vote
for the United States
Stunned, the State Department then
proposed joint occupation by American
and Panamanian troops. It was too late.
Public opinion was seething. Panama
bluntly refused. Throughout the other
Latin-American countries-as throughout
the Moslem world today-newspaper head-
lines shrieked against the- imperialist of
the North.
Whereupon Secretary of State Marshall
bowed. American troops were immediately
pulled off of Panama. soil. The furor sub-
sided.
In the current Suez crisis, if the British
Foreign Office had made its proposal of
joint military bases earlier, before public
opinion reached a fever heat, Egypt would
have accepted. Now King Farouk, who pri-
vately has told U.S. Ambassador Caffery he
favors the British plan, is powerless. Public
clamor is too strong.
VISIT TO U.S.A. CAUSES REPERCUSSIONS
LIKE ALL AUTHORITARIAN states, Peru
under Dictator-President Manuel Odria
is forever on the defensive, suspecting its
neighbors of sinister conspiracy and treach-
erous deeds. This frame of mind, it can now
be revealed, was responsible for the sudden
attacks by Peruvian troops on Ecuadorian
frontier garrisons last August.
Odria and his followers, whose under-
standing of democracy is so feeble that they
think the chance to vote for a single candi-
date under a state of siege constitutes free
elections, were sorely miffed when President
Galo Plaza of Ecuador went to the United
States asan official guest,.
Their idea was that the invitation should
have gone to the Peruvian "strong man"
instead. President Odria had overthrown
his country's legal government in 1948,
but since had "legitimized" his rule by
giving the electorate a chance to cast a
ballot for him--or cast no ballot at all.
Opposition candidates were not permitted
to run.
Even stronger than jealousy and hurt feel-
ings, however, were the dark suspicions
aroused by the United States bid to President
P10 ,A.n* Wr, An,. tin nir -nln o r, -1, cnn il

tute of Pacific Relations in 1944, called "Our
Job In The Pacific." Morris treated this
unrepaying ten cents worth as though it
were a red-hot bomb, confected in the se-
cret cellars of the Kremlin,
THE PAMPHLET did not mention Ameri-
can arms for the Chinese Communists.
It did not mention coalition in China. In-
deed, it did not even touch upon the Chinese
Communists at all, while it included a glow-
ingly laudatory reference to Chiang Kai-
shek. These points were not remarked upon.
The pamphlet was also anti-colonial in gen-
eral tone. An American who sympathizes
with colonies struggling to be free is not by
definition pro-Communist. Yet as far as this
implication could be left upon the record,
Morris left it.
The great point that Morris made, how-
ever, was that poor Wallace was pro-
Conunist in a series of waffling expres-
sions of hope that the Soviets would be nice
after the war. In brief, Wallace had writ-
ten that the Russians had shown good
faith by not previously interfering in Chi-
nese affairs (which was wrong, since
Marshal Stalin was the first to give active
aid to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in
the war against Japan). He had written
further that he believed the Russians had
no imperialist aspirations, and that he
hoped the Russians, Chinese and Ameri-
cans would all be able to co-operate cosily
in the post-war world.
As Morris droned on with his accusatory
questions, this reporter automatically sought
distraction in an article in the well-known
fellow-travelling publication, "Amerasia."
This article turned out to contain generous-
quotations from two other papers, by the
Morris system also by inference fellow-trav-
elling, "Life" and "The New York Times."
In the spring of 1944, the "Life" editorial had
commented on the unusually venomous at-
tack on Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's
government by the Time-Life corresepondent
in China, Theodore White. Reproducing a
few of the more choice White epithets, the
"Life" editors remarked:
"THE U.S. CANNOT ignore the fact that
if China's government should become a
fascistic, power-hungry, repressive, land-
lords'-and-usurers' government, it is all too
likely to get into trouble with Russia; where-
as a government which stands for freedom,
reform and international co-operation is not.
Under no circumstanses would the American
people ever wish to be embroiled with the
Soviet Union in a struggle in which they
would feel politically on the wrong side."
This "Life" editorial, so closely parallel-
ing Wallace, except that he was genial
towards the Generalissimo, closed with
the prediction that if the Chinese would
only be "freedom-loving, progressive,"
there would be no trouble with the Soviets.
As for the "New York Times," in the fall
of 1944 its editorial page ringingly called
ipon President Roosevelt to "make it clear
to Chiang that his prestige will be en-
hanced, not diminished, if he takes certain
steps." Among these steps were ceasing to
"hold a great part of (his armies) on guard
duty against his political opponents (the
Chinese Communists)"; making "a gen-
uine truce with the Chinese Communists";
and consenting "to take into his govern-
ment members of the representative groups
and parties."
Here, in the "New York Times," was strong
stuff indeed. Here was open advocacy of
several points that the eminent professional
ex-Communist, Louis Budenz, had testified
on oath belonged to the Communist party
line. Here was worse than Wallace, with a
vengeance. But who was on the stand?.
Why, Wallace of course, under charges of
pro-Communism. The reader can find his
own language to characterize this sort of
thing.
(Copyright, 1951, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.)

THIS training for war in time of peace is
not a process that comes easily to anti-
militarist Americans. Yet only by recogniz-
ing the scope of the disaster that awaits us
if we falter, and by agreeing to sacrifice
convenience and comfort in order to retain
freedom, can we or our ideal of freedom
manage to survive.
-Paul G. Hoffman
IT SHOULD be the business of teachers to
stand outside the strife of parties and
endeavor to instill into the young the habit
of impartial inquiry, leading them to judge
issues on their merits and to be on their
guard against accepting ex parte statements
at their face value.
-Bertrand Russell
CIVILIZATION, in the more important
sense, is a thing of the mind, not of ma-
terial adjuncts to the physical side of liv-
ing. It is a matter partly of knowledge,
partly of emotion. So far as knowledge is
concerned, a man should be aware.
-Bertrand Russell
THERE IS nothing to be said in favor of
war except that it is the lesser of two
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Daly-Bi Hampton
"Then it is resolved, gentlemen, that we choose a committee to
investigate the possibilities of forming a commission (which will
meet, of course) to submit a report at a time to be decided upon
later with a view toward the possible ..."
* * * *
T HE INTER-FRATERNITY Council removed their anti-bias
clause motion from the books on the grounds that it was "mean-
ingless," and set up a committee to study future action and prepare
a report by Dec. 4. The rescinded motion denied IFC recognition to
any house with a clause which fiiled to bring the discrimination ques-
tion before the fraternity's national convention, but just what this
denial of recognition meant was not too clear to the IFC, or anybody
LIBRARY COMPROMISE-Student Legislature clambered down
off the limb on which they had placed themselves Oct. 10 by ending
the boycott of the Student Affairs Committee and the President's
Conference, as the University moved to resume at least part of the
suspended library service. After a conference between SL president
Len Wilcox and top 'U' administrators, it was announced that the
library would reopen Friday nights beginning Nov. 2. The final deci-
sion on Sunday service, the principle issue in the library controversy,
will be made before Nov. 1. It appears that there is a good chance
of resumed summer hours if the library can obtain more funds from
the University and solve their problems of staffing the building Sun-
days.
WOLVERINES ROLL-The Michigan 11 drubbed Iowa yesterday,
21 to 0, for its second conference victory. Sparked by fullback Don
Peterson's passing arm, the Big Ten champs took advantage of every
break on the rain-drenched field at Iowa City to turn in another
Saturday of top-notch play.
NEW 'U' PROJECT-A huge new research project, designed to
house 14,000 people, is now in the blueprint stage, it was discovered
this week. The Regents have not yet approved the plan, and Uni-
versity official refused to comment on it, but the wheels seem to be
turning somewhere in the Administration Building.
TUG DAY-A group of sophomores tugged harder than some
freshmen yesterday.
* * * *-
International. .
KOREA-For the fighting man in Korea this week, Panmunjof
was just a big word. As truce negotiators continued bickering at the
new meeting place, the battlefront saw the fiercest combat since the
spring offensives. The Allies rammed ahead through a rain of Com-
munist rockets to the tottering Kumsong hub. After bitter fighting
in the outlying hills and heavy artillery exchanges, the Allies entered
the blood-stained streets of the former Red bastion yesterday.
At Panmunjom, compromises were busily being shoved across the
table ps UN liaison officers sought to renew the suspended truce talks
with the Reds. In Washington, the State Department appealed to
Russia to help bring about a Korean peace but Vishinsky came back
with the usual. Regardless of underlying motives and plans, it ap-
peared likely that truce talks would resume in the near future.
EGYPT REVOLTS-The hot spots were boiling this week in the
Middle East as the jittery West turned its attention to the see-saw
powers. In Cairo, the government scoffed at Western plans for in-
cluding Egypt in a new Middle East alliance and ordered the British
out of the Suez area and the Sudan.
Tuesday, riots broke out in two cities on the canal and redcoats
killed and wounded scores of Egyptian uprisers. More British troops
were parachuted in and a destroyer flotilla speeded from the Persian
Gulf as the rebels swung into full force with tanks and artillery. At
week's end, the defense perimeter around the canal was bristling
with. tough British reinforcements and the Egyptians pulled back
toward Cairo.
DEATH IN PAKISTAN-In Pakistan, bullets spelled death for
Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan at the hands of a Moslem warmon-
ger. Nehru expressed remorse-Liaquat had long been a proponent
of peaceful Pakistanl-Indian relations. In his place stepped right-
winger Khwaja Najimuddin, friend of the West and respected in,
India.
OIL DISPUTE-The Iranian oil dispute played on a New York
stage this week as ailing "Mossy" Mossadegh, Iranian premier, hauled

his aged self from a hospital bed to the UN Security Council chamber
where he told the Council to keep hands off. Eager support from
the Russian delegation was offered as Soviets hinted a Red veto of
any resolutions calling for resumption of oil tanks. The UN shelved
the dispute as the world looked toward the United States to be a
third party in direct negotiations between the British and the Iran-
ians.
* * * *
National .. .
ONE DOWN-Bill Boyle suddenly got bad health. Insisting that
he had carried out his duties as Democratic national chairman "with
honor and propriety," he quit his post. He had been accused of ac-
cepting $8,000 from a Missouri printing firm for "influence" in getting
it a huge RFC loan.
Democrats were breathing more easily but Republican leaders
feared the resignation would bring new pressure on GOP black sheep
Guy Gabrielson, Party chairman who also figured in the RFC hear-
ings.
IN THE RING-Senator Taft did it again-said he'd run for the
GOP presidential nomination. On the basis of a long-awaited grass
roots survey, the perennial also-tried said: 1) the people want him;
2) the Republican convention will nominate him; and 3) he will be
the next president of the United States.
--Crawford Young and Barnes Connable

(Continued from Page 2) 1
Charles Munch, conductor, will give the
following program in the Choral Union
Series, Sunday evening, October 21, at
:30: Beethoven Overture to "Egmont";
Honegger Symphony No. 5; and the
Tchaikovsky No. 6, "Pathetique."
The Orchestra will be heard ii a
second concert in the Extra Concert
Series Monday, Octber 22, at 8:30, in
a different program: Suite from "Dar- 1
danus" (Rameau); Symphony No. 4 in
D minor (Schumann); Strauss' "Death
and Transfiguration" and the Ravel.
Spanish Rhapsody.
Tickets will continue on sale until
Saturday noon at the offices of the
University Musical Society in Burton
Tower; and on the night of the re-
spective concerts after 7 o'clock in the
Hill Auditorium box office.
Stanley Quartet, Gilbert Ross and
Emil Raab, violinists, Robert Courte, vi-
ola, and Oliver Edel, cello, will play the
first in a series of three concerts at
8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 23, in the Rack-
ha Lecture Hall. Assisted by William
Stubbins, clarinet, the group will pre-
sent works by Beethoven, Ross Lee Fin-
hney, and Mozart. The general public
will be admitted without charge.
Events Today
Sunday Night o-Ed Record Concert.
League Library (3rd floor), 8:30-10 p.m.
Program: Bach-Concerto in D minor
for piano & orchestra; Prokofiev-Con-
certo in D Major for violin & orches-
tra; Siebelius-Symphony No. 2.
U. of M. Hot Record Society. Record
program "Bix Biederbecke and his In-
fluences on Jazz Musicians," League,
8 p.m. Everyone invited.
Intercollegiate Zionist Federation
(IZFA) and Hillel. Sichas Torah Party,
Lane Hall, 7:30 p.m. Games and re-
freshments.
Inter-Arts Union, Meeting, 2 p.m..
Michigan room, League. All are wel-
come.
Town and Country Club. Roast at
4 h tte
TO THE EDITOR
The Daily welcomes communica-
tions from its readers on matters of
general interest, aud 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 er withheld from
publication at the discretion of the
editors.
Tug Weekk...
To the ,Editor;
I N MY ESTIMATION it is uttr-
ly contemptible that only 35
University students are willing- to
turn out f or the beginning of Tug
Week activities. After all the plan-
ning and hours of thought that
hadgone into making the affair
a success, it seems the campus is
downright apathetic.
Gosh, Michigan needs more
spirit and here was a fine oppor-
tunity to show it.
And for those cynics rho think
Tug Week is kid's stuff and silly,
let me tell you that Ws a lot of
fun. I was on the Diag Friday
night and had the time of my life
pushing some little weaseled up
freshman all over the place.
I'd tell more about _it now, but
have got to hurry off to the Huron
River to do some tugging.
--Arthur Hunting ton

Island Park. Meet at WAB at 5 p.m. In
case of rain roast will be held inside at
WAB.
Canterbury Club: 5:45 pan. Speaker:
The Very Reverend Lane Barton, Mis-
sionary Bishop of Eastern Oregon. Fol--
lowed by supper and Chorale Evening
Prayer at the Church.
Congregational-Disciples Guild: 6:00
p.m., Supper: 6:45 p.m., program at
Memorial Christian Church. Speakers:
Dr. John Nevin Sayre, secretary of the
International Fellowship of Reconcl-
iation.
Roger Williams Guild: 6 p.m., Sup-
per; 7 p.m., Dr. Sosson of the His-
tory Department speaker: "The Rele-
vancy of the Church to the Interna-
tional Situation."
Lutheran Student Association: Co-
munity Open House at the new Student
Center, corner Hill and Forest, 2:30-
4:30. Students welcome. 5:30 p.m., L.S.A.
supper. 7 p.m., Program: Rev. Henry .
Yoder and Mr Frank Norman will speak
on their summer experiences in Ger-
many.
Young Friends Fellowship: ome of
Arthur Dunham, 1911 Austin Ave., 5:45
p.m., supper, followed by Work Party
and Discussion. Transportation provided
at Lane Hall, 5:30 p.m.
Wesleyan Guild: Breakfast Seminar,
9:30 a.m. In Pine RoomBible Study
4:15 p.m. in Green Room. Supper and
program, 5:30 p.m. Panel discussion:
"Right or !Wrong?"
Unitarian Student Group: 6:30 p.m.,
Unitarian Church. Mr. D. Leonard and
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Chance will pre-
sent the Quaker proposals for peace,
and uphold the peace position of the
Friends.
Coming Events
English Journal Club: First meeting
of the year, at 8 p.m., Wed., Oct. 24,
East Exhibition Room, Rackham Bldg.
Panel discussion: "What Is a Good The-
sis." Participants: Dr. Warner G. Rice,
Dr. Norman E. Nelson, Dr. HT V. S. Og-
den, and Dr. Austin Warren.
Russian Circle Meeting. Interna-
tional Center, Mon.. Oct. 22, 8 p.m. A
brief sketch of Pushkin's Eugene One-
gin will be presented with some ex-
cerpts from Tschaikovski's opera. Rus-
sian refreshments and songs around.
the Samnovars
La Socledad Hispanicainvites all
Spanish students to its first social hour
at the League, Mon., Oct. 22 4 to 6
p.m. Refreshments and Latin-Ameri-
can dance Instruction.
Hillel Drama Group: Organizational
meeting and tryouts, Tues., Oct. 23,
3:30 p.m., League. Accompanist needed.
Everyone welcome.
Chess Club: Meeting Tues., Oct. 23.
Room 3B Union.
The West Quad Radio Club Invites
anyone interested in amateur radio or
experimental electronics to an open
meeting, 7 p.m., Tues., Oct. 23 in "Tie
Shack" on the fifth floor of Williams
HouLse, West Quad.
Barnaby Club. Supper and business
meeting in Lane Hall, Mon., Oct. 22. No
reservations will be necessary.
La p'tite causette meets Monday from
3:30 to 5 p.m. In the south room, Un-
ion cafeteria.
Deutscher Verein: Meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Tuesday in the Union. There will be
,ongs, speaker and refreshments.
Gilbert and Sullivan Soeety: Women's
chorus only, Mon., 7 p.m., League.
Crcle Francals: Meeting, a 2 .
Tues., Oct. 23, League. Skit and re-
freshments.
014

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Serenading *

0 0

To the Edtior:
T RADITION is dead; long live
the University. Last night, as
we were serenading a local soror-
ity, a husky police officer brusque-
ly informed us that we were
breaking tle law, and ordered us
to disperse. He then proceded to
flash his prowl car spotlight on
the girls, who were clad only in
their pajamas and bathrobes.
That we were breaking the law
came as rather a surprise, because
our fraternity has been serenad-
ing Michigan.co-eds since 1889.
It is common knowledge that
the civil right of the student are
far less than those of the average
citizen, but when the ancient cus-
tom of serenading the girl of your
choice is declared - illegal, then
things are going too far and it is
time for the citizen of Michigan
to take notice of the excesses in
the use of delegated power being
perpetrated by the "servants of
the public."
-David W. Pethick
Thank You .
To the Editor:
I LIKE the sans-serif headline
schedule which you are now
using on the women's page. It is
really legible and quite attrac-
tive-or one might call it refresh-
ing. Why not use the sans-serif
headline throughout The Daily,
or at least on the front page?
-Walter Vogtmann

Sixty-Second Year
Edited and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board of Control of
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
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 Editor
Jan James :........ ... Woflen's Editor
Jo Keteihut, Associate Women's Editor
Business Staff
Bob Miller ..........Business Manager
Gene Kuthy, Assoc. 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 exclusively
entitled to the use for republication
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BARNABY

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You're right, Jane. The day has

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