FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1952 _______________________________________________________ U U Open Meetings - TwoI TPHE OPPOSITION to open meetings re- cently expressed by the majority of the University's Regents is, to say the least, regrettable. The Board of Regents is an eight- member constitutional corporation which holds the University's charter for the peo- ple of the state and exercises the su- preme power in University affairs. Two members are elected to the Board in the statewide spring educational elec- tions every two years. They represent the people in guiding an educational institution which is owned and largely supported by the people. This is the theory. But, in a sense, the success of its implementation is dubious. The fact is, the Michigan voter is represented by the Regents but he has no way of determining the quality or method of his representation. There is no news- paper in the state which can accurately report the workings of a Regents meeting. Reason: Regents meetings are closed. Defense for this venerable custom is seem- ingly logical. Many of the matters con- sidered by the Regents are of a confidential nature. And even on matters less secret, the presence of the press 'and the public limits free discussion. These are important objections to a change in the existing set-up. But they are difficulties which can easily be ironed out. The bulk of the Regents' work would continue to be handled privately in the committee-of-the-whole. But every issue brought to an official vote, and accom- panying discussion if so desired, would be a matter of public record. The open meeting would give individual Regents opportunity to express agreement or disagreement with policies adopted by a majority vote of the. Board. The closed meeting is not a small mat- ter of procedure. It is primarily responsible for the widespread ignorance concerning the Regents, which results in relatively low otes sending them into office. It has led to a fallacious impression that the Board is a solid unit of infallible experts which rapidly achieves urfanimity on every issue with an omniscient, godlike precision. But, more importantly, closed meetings violate the democratic principle which holds that the free flow of information is essential to intelligent voting. There is no doubt that people of consider- able intelligence and leadership have the final say in the University. But in Regents meetings it is the people's business that is being transacted and the people have a right to know the manner of that transaction. Closed meetings can only be harmful. The fact that they cannot be logically justified leads people to mistakenly specu- late on what goes on In them. By opening Regents meetings, the Board has nothing to lose but an antiqiated, un- supportable tradition which benefits no one. It is squarely up to the Regents of the University to take the initiative in allowing their actions to be reviewed by their consti- tuents. -Barnes Connable T aft's .lecture EN. ROBERT TAFT must have been ra- ther surprised when he received a note from the Young Republicans telling him that he must not deliver a "political" speech but an "educational" one when he appears here in April. for the Regents Views - OF LATE, the University's Board of Re- gents and MSC's State Board of Agri- culture have been lapped with fire by a press determined to crack the secrecy en- shrouding their meetings. The "freedom of information" crusade, recently launched by the state's newspapers, has been aimed pri- marily at these two boards. Besieged with charges of being "un- democratic," a majority of the Boards' members are nonetheless standing firm ("adamant") in opposition to opening the meetings ("iron curtain"). The argu- ments of the University's Regents against open meetings are not to be overlooked. For one, in considering professorial and deanship appointments, it would indeed be difficult to consider candidates frankly and freely with a news-hungry press hovering over a meeting. The Regents would be compelled to guard their statements-good or bad-in the interests of the candidate's public reputation. Then too, Regent J. Joseph Herbert brings up another problem-how newspapers would handle disciplinary cases brought up by the Board. Even if an accusation against a faculty member or administrator were un- founded, his reputation might be ruined by connecting his name with adverse head- lines. What can happen when the press is allowed to attend a closed meeting was sadly illustrated several months ago at a local conference of the American Asso- ciation of University Professors. At that meeting, which was called to discuss Uni- versity athletics, Prof. Harry C. Carver personalized the discussion with a vitriolic attack on Athletic Director Fritz Crisler and his "one-man control of University athletics." Prior to the discussion, the only reporters present--two Daily staff members and a De- troit Free Press "agent"-were sworn to se- crecy, so that a free discussion could be carried on. A week later, a Free Press sports writer blared out, word for word, the charges against Crisler. As it was, the real issues were sidetracked in favor of a sensational story which ques- tioned the ability of Mr. Crisler to hold his job. The issue of de-emphasis was lowered to a personal level. Comparably, it would appear that rip- ping the "regent's iron curtain" would serve only to personalize issues at the risk of reputations. And, of course, there is the matter of poli- tics creeping in. As a nonpartisan educa- tional institution, the University cannot af- ford to permit the political leanings of pros- pective appointees or dismissals to be ad- vertised statewide. In the long run, it might also lead to a damper on academic freedom. Surely, the University's faculty would view such a situation with compunction. Moreover, there is the matter of the Uni- versity buying property. Had the Univer- sity advertised its plans to build the new Huron campus before acquisition of the ex- tensive Glacier Way acres, prices would have been skyrocketed beyond actual value, and a very worthwhile project would have been hampereoi by cost. Finally, to the credit of the Board, there Is no record of the misuse of state funds or private bequests by the Regents. And the University-under successive Boards operating with closed meetings-has un- deniably become one of the finest educa- tional institutions in the country. Whe- ther it would stay that way if thrown into the arena of partisan politics, name- calling, and scandalmongering is question- able. The state's newspapers, who do have a case in principle, should take these argu- ments into consideration before pressing their crusade for freedom of information on the University and MSC. If the meetings are to be thrown open, an adequate system of safeguards ought to be worked' out, a'nd the press will have to acknowledge the delicate responsibilities which go with reporting of such discussions. -Cal Samra DREW PEARSON: Washington Mrry-Go-Round WASHINGTON - Louey Johnson, the pleasant, barren-beaned ex-Secretary of Defense, has had three private talks with the President, all through the White House back door. Two were at his request, the last was requested by Truman. What the President cLiefly wanted, Johnson later told friends, was to get the veterans straightened out politically. He figured that Johnson, a big wheel in the American Legion, with his law partner, Don Wilson, now national commander, might be able to swing a lot of the vets back into Democrat ranks. But Johnson was quite unenthusiastic. "I don't think I could very well go to the veterans," he said, "with my reputation for having been fired, and expect to make a suc- cessful political appeal." The President didn't comment on this, but asked his ex-secretary of defense what he thought of the political situation. "I don't think Eisenhower will get any- where," Johnson told friends that he re- plied. "But I think he has enough strength to block Taft. In the case of that deadlock I think MacArthur will be the nominee, and he is one man, Mr. President, you can't beat." McCARTHY SQUEEZES TAFT FELLOW REPUBLICANS have been whis- pering behind Bob Taft's back about the way the Senator from Wisconsin has been pushing the Senator from Ohio around. What they say is that McCarthy barked and Taft jumped the other day when he issued his statement supporting McCarthy. For exactly three months, the Wiscon- sin wildman had been demanding such an endorsement-in fact, ever since Mr. Republican stepped on his toes last Octo- ber by declaring that McCarthy's charges had been "overstated." "I don't think anyone who overstates his case helps his own case," was what Taft told the press on October 22. "The extreme at- tack against General Marshall is one of the things on which I cannot agree with Mc- Carthy. I think some criticism of General Marshall was justified, but he should not have been accused of affiliation with any form of Communism." This infuriated McCarthy. Shortly there- after, he cornered Taft in the Senate and demanded a repudiation. At first, the Ohioan sidestepped. He tried to placate Mc- Carthy by repeating in subsequent speeches: "I don't agree with everything McCarthy says, but we can't criticize McCarthy for starting the Communists-in-government in- vestigation." Of course, McCarthy didn't start the Communists-in-government probe at, all, but jumped on the soapbox long after Alger Hiss and William Remington had already been exposed, largely by the un- American activities committee and by Mc- Carthy's fellow Republican, Senator Nixon of Illinois. Yet even this indirect tribute from Taft didn't satisfy the Wis- consin Senator. He began talking tough to Taft and threatening political re- prisals. He even boasted about it after- ward, until it became common gossip in the Senate cloakrooms. Finally the harassed Taft knuckled down and announced on January 21: "McCarthy's investigation has been fully justified . . . This administration has been dominated by a strange Communist sympathy." What made this all the more humiliating for Taft was that it was completely one- sided. While he announced his support of McCarthy, the Senator from Wisconsin said nothing about supporting Taft. In fact, on December 14, McCarthy came out for Gen. Douglas MacArthur for President "and a younger man for Vice President"-meaning, of course, McCarthy. Ironically, it was McCarthy who defeat- ed MacArthur in Wisconsin's 1948 pri- mary by claiming that MacArthur was "too old" and by smearing him with Catholic voters on account of his divorce. However, the political winds have shifted, and McCarthy is now trying to tie himself to MacArthur's kite. Meanwhile Senator Taft explains to Re- publican colleagues privately: "Joe was threatening to come out for Stassen in Wis- consin, and Wisconsin is very important to- me. Also I had pressure from party leaders to support McCarthy." He identified the other party leaders as Herbert Hoover and General MacArthur. NOTE-Though Taft indicates to friends that he isn't happy about his forced alliance with McCarthy, a March of Dimes solicitor calling on the Taft home the other evening, discovered Senator McCarthy seated com- fortably at the Taft dinner table. ANNIVERSARY OF McCARTHY CHARGES IT HAS NOW BEEN exactly two years to- day since McCarthy made his first claim, in a Lincoln's birthday speech at Wheeling, W.Va., that there were 205 Communists in the State Department. Immediately thereafter, at Salt Lake City, he changed his figure to 57 and an- nounced that he would supply the names to Secretary of State Acheson on request. Later he upped the figure to 81. But so far McCarthy has supplied the name of no, one who has been proved a Communist, "I Have The Same Trouble" I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i I (Continued from Page 2) tette . 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. SA Baas Action . . To the Editor: SOON, the Student Legislature will be taking up'the contro- versial bias clause issue again. It is an issue which many of us feel is very important, and it is the duty of SL to come up with the best solution. The only feasibile solution since IFC's complete failure to do anything at all about this matter, is the passage of another time- limit resolution. There are those on campus who say that a time-limit plan can never work . . . that we must wait around and let the fraternities and sororities "evolve" their own solution. I do not agree. The cam- pus has witnessed the miserable failure of IFC to cope with the problem time and time again. No one can condone such failure and still call himself a believer in the fundamentals of democracy. When President Ruthven vetoed the time-limit motion last year, a great hue and cry went up from every corner of campus. Even soft- spoken President George Roumell of SL was fed up then and said in a letter to the Daily: "The IFC has not won a victory. They have gotten themselves over a barrel. They claim they are against discrimination. Yet they show little action toward the elimination of bias clauses. Ac- tions speak louder than lip ser- vice! It is true that the IFC has no legal obligation in this matter now. Yet, the moral obligation is still there. What is IFC going to do about it?.." Well, just what has IFC done about it? Absolutely nothing. A few weeks ago they came to SL and said in effect that they were reflective reasonsing the infer- ences which I can draw as the reasons why I have not gained admittance are as follows: (1) My father is not an M.D. (2) I haven't enough political influence. (3) My marks are average, and erefore I need to possess (1) and (2). The (1) is eliminated by birth. 4) There are too many appli- cants, and not all of the qualified applicants are accepted. The med- ical schools claim that the reason is that they haven't got the facili- ties to teach all. The United States Government has plenty of money with which it could easily invest in the medical schools in order to get this country out of this dilemma, but the AMA, the cause of this dilemma, influences the United States Government not to correct this situation. How long will the people of the United States stand for this is the ques- tion. I haven't the answer, but let us not forget Newton's Third Law: Action-Reaction. Now let us speculate at the question of why do I want to study medicine. I have always been in- terested in the human body as long as I can remember. I am extremely interested in human pathology, and the therapeutics of these pathologies. I am fasci- nated by this science, and I do not really know why. All I can know is what I can feel and ob- serve. I feel myself drawn towards this science, and get a lot of pleas- ure out of studying it. Therefore I want to obtain a medical educa- tion since my interest is in this field. I am also sympathetic with all persons with pathologies, and I wish that I could help all of them.- The lectures will be given in 25 An- gell Hal at 4 and 7:30 p.m. as per the following schedule: Lecture No. Day Date 1 Mon. Feb. 11 2 Tues. Feb. 12 3 Wed. Feb. 13 4 Thurs. Feb. 14 5 Mon. Feb. 18 6 Tues. Feb. 19 7 (Final Exam) Wed. Feb. 20 You may attend at either of the above hours.aEnrollment will take place at the first lecture. Note that attendance is required. Health Lectures for Women not giv- en second semester. The University Extension Service an- nounces that most of the Spring se- mester classes offered in the evening program for adults open this week. Students electing courses scheduled to be held in the Business Administra- tion Building (Monroe at Tappan) and in the Architecture Building may reg- ister from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday during the first two weeks of the semester, beginning Feb- ruary 11, in Room 164 Business Ad- ministration Building. Students elect- ing courses scheduled to be held in all other buildings may register in the thirty-minute period preceding the first class session in the rooms desig- nated. The following classes open tonight. February 12: Appication of Punch-Card Methods to Research Problems. Kurt Benjamin, medical statistician and supervisor of the Tabulating Service, will offer this course covering principles of punch- card methods; suitable organization of data and coding systems; basic func- tions of all recent IBM machines and their adaptation to simple statistical and mathematical problems; illustra- tions with various computational prob- lems; sources and control of errors; and discussion of programming actual problems. Prerequisite: a course in elementary statistics or the equivalent with the instructor's permission, and quantitative research experience. Six- teen weeks, $16. 7:30 p.m., 170 Bus- iness Administration Bldg. Ceramics. A study of the materials and forms of pottery offered by J. T. Abernathy, instructor in ceramics. Basic ceramic design applied to the potter's wheel and simple use of glazes. Open to students who have had previous work in ceramics. Class limited to 20. Sixteen weeks. $16.00; laboratory fee, $5.00. 7:30 p.m. 125 Architecture Building. Chamber Music for Recreation. In response to a continuing demand for this performance course, Prof. Oliver A. Edeeisrepeating it in the spring semester. Participants will be organ- ized into small ensembles, with major emphasis to be placed on performance experience of each group. Enrollment is open to University students and to members of the community who can play string or wind instruments and can read the easier chamber works. No previous ensemble experience is re- quired. Eight weeks. $5.00. 7 'sn. 1022 University High School. Faster Reading. This course is de- signed to increase ability to read faster with greater comprehension. Selected printed passages are used as well as comprehension checks on all reading passages; also Harvard reading films and the tachistoscope. Prof. W. Robert Dixon is the instructor. Registration must be completed before the second meeting. Eight weeks. $4.00. 7:30 p.m. 131 Business Administration Building. Introduction tothe Literatue of Music. In this course, Prof. Glenn D. McGeoch brings to the layman a prac- tical method of listening to instru- mental music and familiarizes him with the significant forms and styles of music composition heard currently in the concert hall and over the radio. Its aim is practical and its approach is nontechnical; no previous knowledge of music is necessary. The last eight sessions, beginning April 15, will in- clude the programs of the 1952 May Festival and may be elected for a fee of $8.00. Registration for the sixteen- week course, $16.00. 7 p.m. 206 Burton Tower. Semantics: Scientific Living I. In this introductory course, Prof. Clarence L. Meader will discuss the fundamen- tals of the science of meaning, with special reference to the meaning of words as a guide to successful living; sane thinking and sane conduct. Ap- plications of general semantics to the solution of personal and social prob- lems wil also be touched upon in the lectures, demonstrations, and discus- sions. Eight weeks, $5.00. 7 p.m. 171 Business Administration Building. The following classes will open on Wednesday, February 13: Contemporary Novel. Dr. William A. Steinhoff, instructor. Eight weeks, $5.00. 7:30 p.m. 165 Business Adminis- tration Building. Great Books (University of Michigan Great Books Course). John E. Bingley, instructor. Eight sessions on alternate Wednesdays, $8.00. 7:30 p.m. 69 Bus- mess Administration Building. Office Standards - and Procedures. (Bus. Ad. 109, two hours credit). Fred S. Cook, Instructor. Siteen weeks, $16.00. 7 p.m. 267 Business Adminis- tration Building. Painting. Richard Wilt, instructor. Sixteen weeks, $16.00.. 7:30 p.m. 415 Architecture building. Personnel Administration (Bus. Ad. 142, two hours credit). Tom H. Kin- kead, instructor. Sixteen weeks, $16.00. 7 p.m. 170 Business Administration Building. Writer's Workshop. Dr. Sheridan W. Baker, Jr., instructor. Sixteen weeks, $16.00. 7:30 p.m. 171 Business Admin- istration Building. Concerts Faculty Concert: John Kollen, As- sociate Professor of Piano in the School of Music, has planned a program of works by Mozart, Schubert a n d Brahms, for his recital at 8:30 Wed- nesday evening, February 13, in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. It will open with Mozart's Fantasy InC minor, K. 475, followed by the Sonata in 0 ma- jor, Op. 78 by Schubert; after inter- mission Mr. Kollen wil play Brahms' IVariations and Fugue on a theme by Handel, Op. 24. The public is invited. Faculty Concert: Robert Courte, Lecturer in viola and Chamber Music, and Violist of the Stanley Quaret, will be heard in recital t 8:30 Tuesday evening, February 12, in Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. His program will include works by Marin Marais, Hadn, Homer Keller, Olan Shulman, Paul Hindemith and Darius Milhaud, and will be open to the public. He will be accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Courte. Exhibits Fine Arts under Fire, a photographic exhibition prepared by the editors of LIFE Magazine, Feb. 11 through March 1, first floor Exhibition Corridor, Col- lege of Architecture and Design. Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Four Centuries of French Prints, through February 26; Venice (LIFE Photographs), through February 28. Weekdays 9 to 5, Sundays 2 to 5. The public is invited. Events Today Choral Union Members are reminded of the regular rehearsal tonight at 7 o'clock sharp, in Kellogg Auditorium. Members are urged to come sufficiently early as to be seated on time. Finance Club. Organizational meet- ing, 130 B.A., 7:30 p.m. Movie on banking from the Federal Reserve Bank in Minneapolis. Coffee hour will follow. Any student interested in fi- nance is invited. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Tea, 4:30 to 6 p.m., Guild House, 438 May- nard. Christian Science Organization: Tes- timonial meeting, 7:30 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. Wolverine Club. Meeting, 7:15 p.m., League. All students are invited. Re- freshments. French Play: Meeting of the cast at 7 p.m.,In 200 Romance Language Building. Everybody must be present. Michigan Dames. Meeting, Rackham Building, 8 p.m.; sponsored by the Child Study Group. "Child Develop- ment in General" Dr. Byron 0. Hughes, University Elementary Schoo. Square Dance-opening night of ne semester, Lane Hall, 7:15,p.m. Students from all departments of the University welcome. Opportunity for instruction. Religion-in-Life Month Publicity Committee meets at Lane Hall, 7 p.m SRA Council meeting, Lane Hall, 5:15 p.m. Coming Events Student Legislature. Wed., Feb. 13, 7:30 p.m., Cooley-Hayden dining room, East Quad. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Sup- per Discussion Groups, Wed., Feb. 13, 5:30 to 7 p.m., and Freshman Discus- sion Group, 7 to 8 p.m., Guild House. Literary College Conference Steering Committee Meeting, 4 p.m., Wed., Feb. 13, 1011 Angell Hall. Wesleyan Guild: Do-Drop-In for tea and chatter, 4:15 to 5:30 p.m. Wed. at the Guild. Visitors are invited. School of Christian Living at 6:15 p.m., Wed. In the social hall. Prof. Musky will be guest speaker. Guild cabinet meet. ing at 8:30 p.m., Wed. in the Green room. All Guilders are requested to attend. 41r Atr~tiall I 4 j 31 a. - ,i A A. 4 I pa opatc eiiea powerless in this matter. The course of SL, then, is very a general practitioner. Ana "Mr. Republican" has for surprise and possibly There are many students whose vote he would like to Yet Mr. Taft is forced by a ents ruling to steer clear peeches. The rule stipulates good reason annoyance. on campus capture. Board of Re- of campaign that no Uni- versity property may be used to further a candidate's political cause but must be used only for "educational" speeches. Not only is it ludicrous to restrict the freedom of speech of right wing Sen. Taft, but it is also ludicrous not to realize that anything Taft has to say will have political implications. Though questionable as to their wis- dom, many policies, domestic and foreign, have come from the presidential aspirant. His name is attached to the well known Taft-Hartley labor bill, he is the author of a book on foreign policy, he has had something to say on the Senate floor con- cerning practically every issue that has come up. The Ohio Senator wants to be president presumably because he believes in these policies. As a candidate in a democracy it is his duty to bring these policies to the voting public. Mr. Taft seems to realize this. The Uni- versity Board of Regents does not. They speak of education yet fail to rea- lize that a political speech is of positive educational value to students. In all political science courses the import- ance of a well informed electorate is stress- ed. In view of the coming elections what could be of more informative value than to hear Sen. Taft discuss his political plat- form? Moreover, the tendency to separate poli- tics and education while ridiculous is also CURRENT MOVIES At The Michigan .. . I WANT YOU, starring Dana Andrews, should give a great boost to attendance at television sets. In a flag-waving attempt to glorify the draft, it even fails to be a tear-jerker. -Barbara Goldblum * * * At. The State . . THE LONE STAR-Featuring top box of- fice stars, this saga of Texas does not deserve serious consideration. Mock history, corn, superhuman feats of violence, insipid love making, melodrama and bad acting join hands to smother the audience in a fit of laughter and self pity. --Mark Allen New Books at the Library Davis, H. L.-Winds of Morning. Kings- port, Tenn., The Kingsport Press, 1952. Devoe, Aan-This Fascinating Animal Worwld. Newo'irk-Mr fptaw-H..ill 'Ronk roam- celar. It has given IFC time, it has compromised, it has shown every desire to cooperate with fraternities on this vital issue. Yet, all SL gets in return is a slap in the face! Right now, those of us who sup- port a time limit are in a slight minority. However, if those people on SL who originally favored the time limit last year would vote for it now, there would be no ques- tion as to its passage. I hope that those who really think the time-limit is a good thing will shake their timidity and vote with us in the affirma- tive. We are fighting for a princi- ple, not for that which is most expedient! The students of this campus are waiting to see if SL has the cour- age of its convictions, or if it will bow to those who say SL has no power or right to pass this motion. They are waiting to see if SL has the courage to stand up in the face of possible defeat and say that it is right on this issue. -Gene Mossner * * * Med School and Me . . To the Editor: THE PAST two years I have ap- plied for admission to this Medical School and a few other medical schools in the Midwestern part of the United States. Obvi- ously,I have not been successful. The reasons are obvious to me. Thorugh observation and through -Ben Johnson Two ords,. . To the Editor: rWO WORDS in your editorial 1 "Sequel to 'Assassination'" call for comment. One of these is "flaunt" and the other "lightly." The use of the word "flaunt," to parade or display ostentatiously (ACD) where the proper word would be "flout," to treat with dis- dain (ACD) would hardly warrant comment if it were not for the fact that it has been a kind of Daily tradition to confuse the two words. Far more significant is the other word, which appears in the statq- ment, "Orientation of hatred is an extremely d r a s t i c propaganda measure, and one which should never be employed lightly." In a Christian society, at least, hatred should never be employed in any way. -Joshua McClennen Weakest Links The weakest links in the dmeo- cratic system of the major western European countries are the demo- cratic political parties that have become ingrown, unrepresentative, and unresponsive. They are sup- posed to be the links between the people and their governments. The way the parties are now, they make the voters skeptical about their governments. -The Reporter S rty-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............Women's Editor Jo Ketelhut, 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 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. _ BARNABY And if you don't have your sixth birthday I won't have to go away. ue. But lots of people never] Wait, Barnoby. He's grown up himself. . : rL oW Tr I .i