F° THE MICHIGAN DAILY W I -' E DNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1952 The Speakers and the Committee 'HE UNIVERSITY Lecture Committee had . in the Committee's opinion, would advocate no choice. the overthrow of that state. Not as defensible as the Committee's deci- By inviting two speakers whose contribu- sion are the methods used by both groups in tion to the campus scene would be dubious- inviting the speakers. YP in particular seems and doing this in an irresponsibie manner, to be interested only in forcing the issue on the C.il Liberties Committee and the Young the Lecture Committee when it is in the Progres ives forced the Administration into most awkward position to approve. an action unpleasant io both the University . and campus liberals, besides leading an un- With the CLC it is more a matter of deserved cloak of martyrdom to the two bungling which may cost it the good reputa- would-be lecturers. tion thus enjoyed. A determined minority The n nrammed the motion through five minutes einvitation extended to Abner before the meeting was to be adjourned, Greene, executive secretary of the Amen- when a number of the members had already can Committee for the Protection of the trickled home. Only those few who were Foreign Born, was railroaded through the pushing Greene had heard his name. In- stead of logically tabling the matter pend- The request that Arthur McPhaul, execu- ing investigation, the rest of the group auto- tive secretary of the Civil Rights Congress' matically approved him, then adjourned. Detroit branch, be brought to campus, was In the brief submitted to the Lecture clearly based on McPhaul's recent belligerent Committee requesting approval, the CLC de- appearance before the House Un-American scribed Greene as "author, lecturer and Activities Committee. . lawyer." But when the Lecture Committee We know asumuchl about Abner Greene as made a check, they found he was not a the Civil Liberties Committee-very little. member of the bar, had no books listed in We dd know this: he is a member of two the library, and left no evidence of being organizations branded subversive by the At- a lecturer. The request was returned to CLC torney General; he was recently in jail for for further information. And then the CLC cdntempt of Congress; he did not deny to instead of frankly listing his contempt of The Daily that he is a member of the Com- Congress conviction and similar pertinent munist Party, information-of which Greene's sponsors INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Committee Decisiont By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. Associated Press News Analyst JUST A WEEK AGO this column was warn- ing against too-ready acceptance of all the optimism emanating from Lisbon about progress on European defense. Developments in France, key nation in everything that has been done in Europe since the war, have followed so swiftly as to be shocking. France, bolstered by the promise of a half a billion additional aid from the United Stateg, agreed at Lisbon to extend her re- armament program. The National Assembly approved, but flatly refused to vote the taxes required. Another cabinet fell. The whole European defense program has thus fallen back into the doldrums. And there is strong fear, both among for- eign diplomats and middle-of-the-road poli- ticians in France, that the De Gaullist fac- tion, which opposes nearly everything which the United States seeks to accomplish in France, may return to power. De Gaulle is not even for the Schuman Plan, providing for supranational control of a unified European coal and steel in- dustry which, if it worked, would most surely make war between France and Ger- many impossible. The financial strain under which France suffers is, of course, very real. The expenses of the Indochina war started at a million dollars a day and are now up to something like three million. That just about equals all the aid France has received from the U.S. since the war. The country's trade balance is in the ied. The value of her currency is dropping almost daily. France is also working under heavy pres- sure from the United States which may not be entirely wise. Congress is making threat- ening gestures toward using -a meat cleaver on the aid program. France is being warned to "pull her weight" or else. But there is another angle to it. There is general acceptance in America that, re- gardless of what happens to Britain, even regardless of what foolish things she might do to herself, the U.S. will see to it that her hands are upheld in an emergency. France has some claim to such considera- tion, too, though she frequently makes it hard for herself. In France's present situation, bickering and impatience can make no constructive contribution. A constant awareness of her value to the United States from a purely selfish standpoint and aside from tradition- al friendship, should be weighed against even the barest suggestion of an idea that she could be abandoned. "What Do You Suppose Keeps Them Away?" ABLE MEN FOR IMPORTANT GOVgRNME'T POSITIONS r. ~ SMEARATTACKS HEAACHES Ar 7 651DAILY OFFICIAL, BULLETIN tettepJ4TO 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. We know as much about Arthur McPhaul as the.Young Progressives-quite a bit: he is a member of the Civil Rights Congress, which has been labelled subversive by the Attorney General; he did not deny to The Daily that he is ra Communist; he has charged the American people with "geno- cide" on the Negro race; he has appeared here at Lane Hall in behalf of Willie McGee under the sponsorship of the Civil Rights Congress. These facts do not in themselves indict the two. But the mere presence of such suspicions sharply point up the need for further investigation into the background of the men. In the meantime, the Committee had the duty to refuse McPhaul and Greene permis- sion to speak on campus. This is, after all, a state university, and as such, has certain responsibilities to the people of the state to prohibit the use of its property to those who, Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. were very well aware-accompanied by a well-reasoned statement why CLC felt Greene was not a Communist and had a worthwhile point of view to express to the campus, the group merely replied with some irrelevant family statistics. In this touchy' situation, where an or- ganization is struggling to establish itself on campus as an organ of liberal opinion, it is folly to allow itself to be associated in the public mind with Communism. In this way the YP, once a potentially useful group, has ben rendered completely inef- fective and worthless. And the CLC, by inviting Greene as its guest with such blithe disregard for the possible repercus- sions of profligate hospitality, took a long step towards being merely another "radi- cal" club. The Civil Liberties group, fortunately can still retain a good name by passing at its Thursday meeting the resolution disavowing those who advocate totalitarian forms of government. With mature judgment on the part of committees such as these, a Lecture Commit- tee would be unnecessary. --Harland Britz, Cara Cherniak, Barnes Connable, Donna Hen- dleman, Zander Hollander, Sid Klaus, Cal Samra, Crawford Young l' ' (Continued from Page 2) NIGHT EDITOR: CAL SAMRA + ART REVIEW + SINCE SEPTEMBER, I have not noticed any student-faculty comments on any of the exhibits at the Museum of Art in The Daily letter column, andI have come to the conclusion that our cheery campus is art unconscious. And if the currently show- "Advancing French Art" doesn't arouse someone, I'll throw in the towel. The 37 paintings in the West Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall are violently striking, what- ever else one cares to say about them. The eight artists shown actually only represent the abstract school, not French art as a whole. Stuart Preston wrote of them in the New York Times, "It looks to me . . as if pure abstract art has fi- nally come of age." Actually, Mondrian is as purely abstract as one can get, and he's been pretty well established for some time. Only three of the entrants achieve Mon- drian's purity, but Mondrian is also a constructivist with the accompanying ar- chitectural traces evident in his composi- tions. The constructivists are apparently more rigidly disciplined, but if one may believe the not totally disinterested par- ties who write press releases, these gentle- men are equally painstaking in their ar- rangements of color and form. This may be true, but I can't help re- calling the youth who recently got a con- sidered (if not laudatory) judgement from a Canadian authority on a piece of board re- trieved from the wastebasket, on which a number of commercial artists had dabbed to clean their brushes, test colors, and whatnot. The answer of a fellow authority that the commercial artists were unconsciously exer- cising sound aesthetic taste in where (in re- lation to previous smears on the board) the dabbled, and that the hoaxer unconsciously exercized his aesthetic taste in selecting that particular board to trim and frame, is not entirely satisfactory, but does give rise to a series of questions in relation to modern art. First, how much credit for aesthetic cre- ativity can be assigned to the workings of the unconscious? It is true enough that countless juxtapositions of colors, forms, lines, and contrasts of light and dark can be considered pleasing without reference to meaning, symbols, ideology, or whatever. Practically any combination will suit some- one, and many will please a great number of people. But is this art? According to at least one view, the ans- wer is a loud and unreserved YES! This immediate, diriect sensory appreciation has always been important to graphic art of acy in this respect, and got his contrasts within a natural framework. Other paint- ers who weren't concerned about natural treatment of light obeyed self-imposed restrictions of their own. But now we have painters attempting to abstract the qualities as such; the qualities are not now of the painting, but are them- selves painted, are themselves the painting. That this is a valid aim of art no one should deny, but I hope the abstractionists won't in- sist that it's the only valid aim. We'll as- sume that they are content to live and let live, and proceed. Since the abstractionists now attempt to put what were formerly qualities of paint- ings on their canvases, how are we to judge their merits? Not by the number of identi- fiable qualities present in the picture, sure- ly, for you can have every conceivable quality represented and still have an ugly arrangement. "Pleasantness" is not a thing that can be painted; it is there in greater or lesser degree depending on the appeal of the arrangement for the individual. Now, which individual? The artist? The sensitive observ- er? The unsympathetic acadamician? The blind man? Who can say? Who has the right to say? We could sit for a century arguing innum- erable such points without achieving chaos. Let's just say the normal observer. He must first brush aside the cobwebs of preconceiv- ed standards and stop demanding qualities that have no place irk pure abstract art (such as realism), and then he is fit to judge for himself whether or not a parti- cular arrangement is satisfying. * * * THIS LEADS, of course, to aesthetic an- archy on two different levels. On the' higher plane, it means that every school of art must be judged by different standards. This becomes obvious when we take the broader example of the differences between oriental and occidental art. Until purpose is given proper consideration to each by the other, judgements are of no consequence. Most critics want to draw a line somewhere, but that is another question that will never be solved. It is certain, however, that science has nothing to do with aesthetics or the prescribed- formula would have been discov- ered by this time and everybody could have a reproduction of the one best combination, and further artistic activity could be elim- inated as useless and unnecessary. Now that the normal man's taste is his own (not yours) criterion of good and ,bad in abstract art hasn't evervone an au1 to tell you that it can only be completely applied to three of the artists in the show. Only Gerard Schneider; Hans Hartung, and Pierre Soulages qualify as pure ab- stractionists in any strict use of the term. It is perhaps no accident that Schneider's paintings collectively make up an opera, since music has always been the least representational of the arts. A deliberate attempt was made in the early 19th cen- tury by German romantic writers to du- plicate the irresponsibility of music, but they failed. Judging by Opus 400, which for me is the high spot in the exhibit, Schneider and his two free-abstractionist accomplices have a chance to succeed where writers could not. Soulages is the most consistent of the three; it is more dificult to choose between his works (with dates for titles) than be- tween the sometimes better, sometimes worse, numbered paintings of Hartung. THE TWO "non-blacks" in the show, Jean Bazaine and Maurice Esteve, owe some- thing to Paul Klee and Mondrian, but not enough for their own good. They also owe something (perhaps unwittingly) to the old picture puzzles captioned "How many faces can you find in this picture?" To some ex- tent they are representational-more so than the others-and Bazaine himself declares that he is trying to create "an equivalent world" for the objective world, in much the same way, I suppose, as T. S. Eliot seeks his lingual "objective correlative" for emotions, and with about the same success. Charles Lapicque is, like Bazaine and Esteve, primarily a colorist, but unlike them he uses black to a considerable ex- tent. He is a little more successful than they, partly on this account (Les remous), partly because of his saving grace, humor. The last two Nicolas de Stael and Andre Lanskoy, are of Russian birth and rather gloomy. Their colors are predominantly dark, and they substitute modelling in thick pig- ments for variety of coloration, with prac- tically no success whatever. Lanskoy's Nuit de Bethlehem is the sole exception. For the most part their shapes blend into one anoth- er, and any effect these might have pro- duced is lost in a muddy morass. This exhibit is at least stimulating, and if anyone wants to see in what direction French art is advancing, he has until March 22nd to do so. Another question that arises is whether such art has any lasting value; I won't go into it now, but try to coniuun a en iman a ofa fw o fh an t -e History M.A. Language Examination. Fri.. March 7, 4-5 p.m., 212 A.H. Sign list in History Office. Dictionary per- mitted. Aero Semina?: Prof. J. D. Schezer will discuss "Trends in Aircraft Dy- namics," at 4 p.m., Thurs., March 6, 1504 E. Engineering Bldg. Interested students, staff and researchers are wel- come. GEOMETRY SEMINAR: Wed., March 5, 4:10 p. in, 3001 Angell Hall. Profes- sor Rainich will continue his talk on "Generalized Equivalence Relations and Projective Geometry". ORIENTATION SEMINAR (Mathema- tics): Wed., March 5, 2 p. m., 3001 An- gell Hall. Mrs. Kampe will speak on "SingularPoints of First Order Ordi- nary Differential Equations". Doctoral Examination for Arthur W. Howard, Education; thesis: "A Pro- gram of Physical Education for India," Thurs., March 6, 3 p.m., 4024 Univer- sity High School. Chairman, C. A. Eg- gertsen. Doctoral Examination for Doro- thy Twichel Chappell, Psychology; thesis: "Reduction of Spasticity In Paraplegia by the Use of Hypnosis", Wed., March 5, West Council Room, Rackham Bldg., 3 p. m. Chairman, D. G. Marquis. Engineering Mechanics Seminar: Wed., March 5, 3:45 p.m., 101 W. Engi- neering Bldg. Prof. W. W. Hagerty will speak on "Osborne Reynolds and His Number." Seminar in Applied Mathematics: Thurs., March 6, 4 p.m., 247 W. Engi- neering. Mr. Donald J. Ritchie will speak on "Linear Analysis ofFeedback Control System." Seminar in Physical Chemistry. Don- ald H. Payne will discuss "Rotational Molecular Motion in Crystals" at 4:10 p.m., Wed., March 5, 2308 Chemistry Bldg. Visitors are welcome. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Advancing French Art; Peiping .(LIFE photographs). Weekdays 3 to 5, Sundays 2 o 5. The public is invited. "Class Work"18 students represent- ed. (Lithographs, etchings, and aqua- tints are included). 1st floor exhibition corridor, College of Architecture and Design; through March 17. Events Today Michigan Arts Chorale will have its regular rehearsal at Lane Hall, 7 p. m. At 8:20 we will sing at the Rackham Building for the Religion in Life pro- gram. Michigan Christian Fellowship. Every- one is invited to the Bible study in the League Chapel at 7:15 p.m. Religion-in-Life Lecture. Rackham Lecture Hall, 8:30 p.m. Speaker: Canon Bernard Iddings Bell. Subject: "Reli- gion and Knowledge." Reception at Lane Hall following the lecture. Wesleyan Guild: School of Christian Living, 6 p.m.. at the Guild. Guest speaker: Mr. Walter R. Drury. Guilders are urged to attend the assembly at 8:30 p.m. at the Rackham Lecture Hall when Dr. Bernard Iddings Bell will speak on "Religion and Knowledge." SL Meeting. 7:30 p.m. at the Alpha Tau Omega house, 1415 Cambridge Road. All girls are requested to get late permission. All possible candidates for the legislature are invited to the meet- ing. Photography Group meets at.Lane Hall, 7-8 p.m. Open to all interested students. Undergraduate Botany Club. Meeting. 7:30 p.m. at Dr.' Clover's house, 1522 Hill St. Speaker: Prof. Bartlett, 8 p.m. Opening Tonight: "Don Giovanni," tragi-comic opera by Mozart, at Lydia, Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. Presented by The Department of Speech in con- junction with The School of Music.- Performances also on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Tickets on sale at Men- delssohn box office 10 a.m. thru 8 p.m. daily. Special student rate tonight and Thursday. Scabbard and Blade. Active members will be expseted to attend the meeting tonight at 7:45 p.m., TCB in uniform. Important.r Scabbard and Blade members wishing are invited to come and meet the mem- bers of the Psychology department. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Sup- per Discussion groups, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Guild House. Eisenhower for President Club. Meet- ing, 8 p.m., Union. Polonia Club. Meeting, 7:30 p.m., In- ternational Center. Final preparations for the dance will be made.rDancing, playing charades, and refreshments. All students of Polish descent or those in- terested in Polish culture are invited. Society of Automotive Engineers:; Meeting, 7:30 p.m., 229 W. Engineering. Two movies on American and European auto racing. Everyone welcome. U of M Rifle Club. 7:15 p.m., ROTC Rifle Range. A shoulder-to.shoulder match will be fired with the Dearborn Rifle Club. Also the team to fire at the University of Illinois Match will be se- lected. Lutheran Student Center, Hil at Forest. Wednesday evening Lenten Ser- vices at the Center at 7:30 p.m. Ser- -mon by Dr. Henry . Yoder on "Cyn- ics or True Believers in Christ." University Lutheran Chapel, 1511 Washtenaw. Lenten Vesper Service, 7:30 p.m. Delta Sigma Pi. Open meeting, 7:30 p.m., 130 Bus. Ad. Subject: Marketing Problems of the Auto Industry. Speak- er: Benson E. Billings, Asst. Mgr. Mar- ket Analysis Dept., Chevrolet Motor Div., GMC. Everyone welcome. Refresh- ments, Work may be submitted for the Inter- Arts Union Student Art Exhibit noa Inter-Arts Union Student Art Exhi- bit. Work may be submitted for the exhibit on Wed., Thurs., and Fri., from 9 to 12 and from 1:30 to 5, in the Mu- seum of Art office, main floor, Alumni Memorial Hall. Aiee-Ire: Informal Coffee Hour, 3-5 p.m., 3084 E. Engineering. Movies and refreshments. All faculty and 2.E's In- vited. Coming Events U of M Sailing Club. Open meeting, Thurs., March 6, 7:30 p.m., 3 R-S, Un- ion. Everyone welcome. Movies, refresh- ments. Kappa Phi: Rushing banquet at the Methodist church, 5:30 p.m., Thurs., March 6. Pershing Rifles: All members with money to return on the Military Ball should contact Jim McNally, 6812 Gom- berg House, South Quad, or Bill Fish- er, 404 Strauss, EQ immediately. All tickets and money must be returned by Thursday night, March 6. International Center Weekly Tea for foreign students and American friends, 4:30-6 p.m., Thurs., March 6. Congregational - Disciples G u ii d Freshman Discussion group, 7 to 8 p.m., Thurs., March 6, Guild House. Graduate Student Council. Meeting, Thurs., March 6, 7:30 p.m., Grad Out- ing Room, Rackham Bldg. Literary College Conference Steering Committee. 1011 Angell Hail, Thurs., March 6, 4 p.m. Hillel Seminar: "Is Religion Neces- sary for Happiness?" Thurs., March 6, 7:15 p.m., League. Room will be posted. Everyone welcome. Civil Liberties Committee. Meeting, Thurs., March 6, 7:30 p.m., Main Room (downstairs), Lane Hall. A constitution- al amendment will be voted upon; all members are urged to attend. Those members who have not paid dues, must pay before the meeting in order to vote. The Skeptic "NO MAN ever quite believes in any other man. One may be- lieve in an idea absolutely, but'not in a man. In the highest confi- dence there is always a flavor of doubt-a feeling, half instinctive and half logical, that, after all, the scoundrel may have something up his sleeve. This doubt, it must be obvious, is always more than justi- fied, for no man is worthy of un- Supreme Court Ruling To the Editor: IN THE article on Abner Greene appearing in Sunday's Daily reference was made to his work on the American Committee for Protection of the Foreign Born and to his serving as one of the Civil Rights Congress Bail Fund trustees. It was pointed out that both organizations had been placed on the Attorney General's subversive list. 'However, it was not pointed out, and should be I think, that the Supreme court in the case of the Joint Anti-fascist Refugee Com- mittee vs. McGrath, 341 U.S. 123, ruled the subversive list illegal, Themajority opinion stated that organizations named on the list had not been given the right to a bearing, in violation of a basic principle of democratic procedure. In view of this finding it would appear prudent not to consider the listings as having been fully validated and fairly judged. Fair reporting should note this fact or not note the listing at all. -Meyer Zald * * * 300 Words«..* To the Editor: AFTER READING THE Bernard Backhaut editorial, I summed up the journalistic talents of this aspiring young "liberal" in the fol- lowing manner, (1) He had a course in Political Science 1 and 2. (2) Somewhere along the line he read a book on Alexander Ham- ilton who believed basically that "the people are too dumb to gov- ern themselves." (3) He graduated from the three-week training course usually prescribed for Daily "cub reporters". Taking these things into consideration we can- not be too hard on our young friend when surveying his com- pleted product. Reporter Backhaut also claims that the resolution going on rec- ord as opposed to the Speaker's Ban was "railroaded" through the Young Democrats by a "majority clique" and that "there was no real debate on the question". The facts contradict such a statement. In the Y. D. Club we like to de- cide questions by majority vote- as happens in most clubs. After a full twenty minutes of discussipn on this problem (15 minutes of which was allotted to Mr. Back- haut who seemed to be the only one opposed to the resolution) a vote was taken and the "majority clique" w h i c h "railroaded it through" consisted in a vote of 22-2. Mr. Backhaut sounds like a very strange liberal to me. He sounds even stranger when he professes to be a Democrat. Mr. Backhaut distrusts people. Democrats never have. The great Jefferson said. "The will of the people is the only le- gitimate foundation of any gov- ernment, and no government can continue good, but under the con- trol of the people." Under President Andrew Jack- son, the Builder of American De- mocracy, the motto was "Let the people rule." The scholar, Wilson, proclaim- ed,"... and I believe with all my heart that the common people of this nation are to be implicitly trusted." And in his Four Freedoms speech in 1941, the greatest of all American statesmen said that the fii'st essential human freedom is "freedom of speech and expres- sion-everywhere in the world." As long as we continue to be- lieve in these ideals-ideals which proclaim that the ultimate au- thority of government rests in the masses, we can be assured that the "government of the people, by the people, for the people," which Lincoln spoke of, will never "perish from this earth." Eugene D. Mossner Door Rule ". To the Editor H AIL the downfall of tradition In a new enlightened Union. Dropped from its rules one old laugh The closed front door for the other half. But in her quest for equality looms A series of impending dooms. For what (in this day of the portal wide open) Can we do with the door marked-"MEN"??? (Call it a bit of intellectual speculation.) To the Editor: HAVE you noticed how many people have colds? (Snif) Everydne seems ,to be walking, or dragging themselves, around with some form of the flu. Classes re- sound with the strident trumpet- ing of infectious students. The less stalwart have given up the pro- verbial ghost, and have taken to bed, haunting dorm nurses for sick trays, and omnipresent (and worthless) gargle pills. If a person should venture g3ear Health Ser- vice he is given more gargle pills (still worthless),' and ifs he is ex- tremely unfortunate, a penicillin shot. This, however, provides him with an excellent excuse for not going to classes. Why? Simple. You can't sit down. Speaking of Health Service, and now we ap- proach the crux of this epistle; this year Health Service declined to give free flu shots. Consequent- ly many students did not have the opportunity to gain some immun- ity to the pervasive germs, (Snif) In view of, the widespread symp- toms of flu, why doesn't Health Service reverse its stand and now give the students still left alive FREE FLU SHOTS! -Nicky Wood T and we are limiting the Senior Ball to just six hundred couples, this dance is dedicated to the class of '52. If this dance is a suc- cess, and we sincerely believe it will be a tremendous one, your Senior social board will plan other social events for graduation week, It's up to you as Seniors. Just re- member that important date- Senior Ball, March 15, nine to one, semi-formal, and in the Un- ion Ballroom. Your obedient ser- vant, Mark Sandground for the Senior Ball Committee, So-called SL . * To the Editor: MR. BACKHAUT'S editorial "Against the Speaker's Bu- reau"''loses its validity through an important fallacy: We do not have a legislative body here on campus. Much of his argument rests on the point that "the legislative body should have the sole authority to decide legislation" and "the sep- aration of duty between the voter and the elected official," He ar- gues the disadvantages of direct rule as opposed to the advantages= of representation through legis- lators, each of whom "when he considers a bill, judges it in terms of the whole interest as well 'as in terms of those whom he repre- sents" and "can be held responsi- ble for what he votes for." This line of reasoning may well apply to the government of the. United States, to which Mr. Back- haut constantly refers. However, on this campus, the only body resembling a legislative body is the so-called Student Legislature, which is not a law making body, but rather an assembly which in matters such as the speaker's ban, can-only make recommendations. If in fact we had a governing body duly elected by the students, with the power to remove thet speaker's ban, a referendum would be superfluous. But since the stu- dents have no choice in the selec- tion of the real law givers, in lieu of such representation, a referen- dum is the best way, in fact, the only way open to measure "the consent of the governed." ' -S. Johnson ** * FreFlu Shots. 7 'h i I 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 Ron Watts............Associate Editor Bob Vaughn ...........Associate Editor Ted Papes...............Sports Editor George Flint ...Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker .....Associate Sports Editor Jan James .............Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Miller..........Business Manager Gene Kuthy, Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ... .Advertising Manager Milt Gtz, ......ircu12±1atin MTanager U0 F -Chuck Kauffman * * * Senior Ball ..~. To the Editor: ON MARCH 15, the class of 1952, your class, is preserting the annual Senior Ball in the Union Ballroom. By now, we all realize that Michigan is a big school-