PAGE omu THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1953 (dihv'4 7Ite 1 By CRAWFORD YOUNG Daily Managing Editor 'T WAS interesting to note that the staid Senior Board, never a leading organ of student agitation, voted unanimously to con- demn the arbitrary methods employed by the Administration in juggling the final ex- amination schedule. When even normally conservative opin- ion is stirred to unanimous indignation over an Administration attitude, it would seem high time for some top level re- evaluation of procedure in matters affect- ing the student interest. The issue is clear cut. Over the week- end, the story of the exam switch inadvert- ently leaked out of the Administration Bldg. The change had been made in the upper reaches of the University hierarchy, with no effort made to feel out the opinion of the students on the issue. Why were the students overlooked? Of- ficials give various answers. We didn't think of it-an academic matter of no concern to the students-an oversight-but one can find neither substance nor satisfaction in any of them. Why was the change made? There was a real problem to be faced. Previously, stu- dents were only "candidates for gradua- tion" on Commencement Day-there was not time under the existing examination schedule for the faculty to grade final exam- inations and determine semester grades. get the diplomas made out and the final process- ing completed. Approximately ten per cent of the graduation candidates dropped by the wayside when the final tallies were in. Difficulties in publicity were created by the procedure. Most important, it was felt that the ceremony was not very meaningful to the student if it was not the actual occasion of his graduation from the University. The Regents and President Harlan H. Hatcher were concerned with the general lack of interest in the Commencement ex- ercises on the part of a goodly proportion of the degree candidates. The time had come, they felt, to act. A committee headed up by Assistant to the President Frank E. Robbins was as- signed the task of coming up with a solu- tion to the problem. Their answer: move final examinations up from the scheduled date of Monday, June 1 to Friday, May 29. knock off the classes scheduled for that Friday, and arrange for all seniors to complete their examinations by Friday, June 5. In that way, it would be possible to officially graduate the seniors at Commencement, planned for Saturday, June 13. This formula was then submitted to the small executive committees of the various schools and colleges concerned, which are empowered to give sanction for the entire unit they represent. These duly endorsed the change; it would have been surprising for them to object to a proposal which ha dsuch strong high-level backing. Thus the shift was made with the knowledge of a handful of faculty members and officials and no students. It is hard to believe that this plan is the best answer to the problem. There are sev- eral serious disadvantages immediately ap- parent: 1) Elimination of the "dead" weekend for study will seriously handicap many stu- dents. At the end of the semester, deadlines for innumerable term papers and projects fall. For the most part, these projects can- not be - undertaken till the latter part of the semester when the student has sufficient background in the course material to tackle a specialized assignment. With regular class obligations until the day before the begin- ning of examinations in addition, the Uni- versity is putting the entire student body under a good bit of pressure for the benefit of the small percentage of graduating stu- dents. 2) Many faculty members will have to make out two sets of final examinations. Those whose classes "are not scheduled for finals before June 5 will be required to give a special exam for the seniors-a most un- satisfactory arrangement for both the stu- dent and teacher. 3) There will be an eight day interval bp- tween the time the seniors complete their examinations and Commencement. With many unwilling to wait the three or four days customary in the past, it would seem quite probable that many more students will return home to begin work or wander off on summer ventures. Until three years ago, final examina" -tions began on Saturday and seniors re- ceived diplomas. However, at that time the policy was changed when the faculty strongly protested the necessity of giving two exams in many courses and the rush to get senior grades in. The Student Legislature had also been- working for a couple of years in an effort to win a "dead" week before finals, as is the practice at many other schools. The re- sult of their efforts was a compromise ar- rangement by which finals were deferred until Monday, leaving at least a "dead" weekend. One alternative to the plan would be a scheme of exemptions for graduating seniors who were doing satisfactory work in any course. This method is used elsewhere with profit; it might well be applicable here. But regardless of the merits of the plan, which are at best dubious, the methods used in changing the procedure are com- pletely inexcusable. One wonders whether the Adminktration will ever learn that ar- bitrary decisions handed down from above will inevitably be resented. The matter was THE FITZGERALD STORY: Simply Tragic? "Oh-Oh, They Found Another Democrat" 'j HE TENDENCY to moan and weep over the "overwhelming tragedy and disil- lusionment" of the life of Scott Fitzgerald has been, for the dozen years since his death, almost a literary vogue. Robert Rice's one act play, "The Late He and She" performed as part of the Inter-Arts Festival last weekend, is no ex- ception. The poor production only em- phasized the stifling veil of bitter failure which cloaked the play. Rice has joined the ranks of those who have allowed the irony of Fitzgerald's later years to virtually blind them to the other side of the scale. These critics search "The Last Tycoon" for the greatness it would have had, had he finished it and they bemoan his tragic end. I wonder if their tears and sentiments might not embarrass Fitzgerald. For the alcohol, the tuberculosis, mental anguish and the final heart attack from which he died on December 21, 1940, were the climax to the orgiastic tumult of earlier productive years. The irony is that shortly before he died he wrote his own epitaph. "Your books were in your desk I guess and some unfinished Chaos in your head Was dumped to nothing by the great janitress of destinies." Every one of his books was out of print; his novel was unfinished; his reputation was only a faint shadow of what it had been. And he had lived "to give that chaos in his head shape in his books and to see the knowledge that he had done so reflected to him by the world. He died believing he had failed." Yes there were the ironies but there is more. "You can take off your hats, now, gentle- men," Stephen Vincent Benet wrote. "and I think you had better. This is not a legend, this is a reputation-seen in perspective, it may well be one of the last secure reputa- tions of our time." Let's take a look at what was the hectic life that wrote the books that built that reputation. Once at Bar-le-Due, Montaigne saw a portrait which Rene, King of Sicily, had painted of himself and asked, "Why is it not, in like manner, lawful for everyone to draw himself with a pen, as he did with a crayon?" "Off hand, one might reply," suggests Virginia Woolf, "not only is it lawful, but nothing could be easier. Other people may evade us but our own features are almost too familiar. Let us begin! But then when 'We attempt the task, the pen falls from our fingers; it is a matter of profound, mysterious, and overwhelming difficulty. After all, in the whole of literature, how many have suc- ceeded in drawing themselves with a pe?" There have been many writers who have given us reflections, glimpses, flashes of understanding; but the giving of one's self, completely, successfully, honestly, above all, consciously, has been rare. Throughout ev- erything that Fitzgerald wrote, he re-crea- ted experiences of his life (his few attempts to write of another period were abandoned as failures); his work is one long series of personal revelations, colored by imagina- tion. This reliance on actual experience for subject matter suggests to Andrews Wan- ning that sheer lack of material may have been responsible for the falling off in vol- ume of Fitzgerald's output in the last fif- teen years of his life. "It is suggestive that between 1920 and 1925 he published three novels in which he used (or used up?) the backgrounds of his youth; that much later he drew on the international background of bars, beaches, and asylums for Tender is the Night; arid that ironically, the pot boiling excursion in Hollywood gave him material for the last serious work, the Last Tycoon." unfinishe Take his life story and trim it off into a paragraph of commonplace: talented, ambitious, attractive, early years embit- tered by failure to make the Princeton football team and a gentle bounce out of that ivy-covered haven; an armistice which was signed before his overseas cap got a chance to go overseas. Then, in spite of immediate acclaim for his first book, "This Side of Paradise," there fol- lowed the inability to be the Jazz Age idol on $36,000 a year; short stories for slick magazines earning the derision of the critics; then redemption with "The Great Gatsby." The paths that wound to Zelda's sanatarium also led to periodical alcoholic holidays and finally script writing in Hol- lywood where, wasted by drink and disease and torn by his own mental anguish as well as Zelda's, he had begun to work on "The Last Tycoon" and, where at the time of his death in 1940, he had begun to build himself a new life. For the story of that life in its imagina- tive entirety and the unconsciousness of im- pending destruction there are his novels and over two hundred short stories. AMORY BLAINE was the pseudo-intellec- tual Fitzgerald of Princeton. It was he who bore Fitzgerald's dismissal from college; his love affair was that of his creator, writ- ten when Fitzgerald's love was still "bleed- ing as fresh as the skin wound on a hae- mophile." Anthony and Gloria of "The Beautiful and the Damned" are embarrassingly real, they say what Scott and Zelda said to each other with that curious shocked im- maturity about sex. Fitzgerald's theory of "emotional bank- ruptcy" was deeply imbedded in both The Great Gatsby (who, at one point ceased being Gatsby and became Fitzgerald him- self) and, especially, in Tender Is the Night. Dick Diver's destruction is Fitzgerald's own self judgment, his ironic prophecy. Diver's emotional bankruptcy deprives him of his personal discipline and his ability to strengthen other people which sends him back to being a doctor, just a doctor with an unfinished treatise on his desk and noth- ing else, closely paralleling Fitzgerald's own return to writing - preparing his endless notes for the final, unfinished Last Tycoon and the hack work film scenarios. Just as he had used the story of Zelda's emotional breakdown, their adventures which took them from St. Paul to New York, to the warm beaches of Antibes to the psy- choanalyst's couch, his own emotional col- lapse was expressed publicly in an almost masochistic confessional. In a series of short essays for "Esquire Magazine" he comes, perhaps, closest to intentionally cre- ating that pen drawing of himself. It is in these essays that the psuedo-selves, the selves as romanticized in his novels are bared;'Fitzgerald's search for his "real" self came eventually to be a "moral inner com- pulsion to symbolic destruction." It may have been such an inner compulsion that drove him to stand before his audience- naked nerves exposed-wasted body bared -and bravely point out the ugly wounds. Fitzgerald himself saw only the failure. Saw himself as a piece of cracked crockery+ If that was to be his weakness it should not be ours. Surely from this distance the hap- piness, the production far outweighs the tragedy. If we insist on standing over his dead body and repeating quietly what Owl Eyes said at Gatsby's funeral, as Gertrude Stein said at Fitzgerald's: "The poor S.O.B.," let's keep the pity out of our voices. -Gayle Greene - -... !,... DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN DEP'ARTMENT cOF Xetter4 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. English Prisoners . . . 1 AFTER Mr. Samra's charge in his Behid te Lies"that the majority of the prisoners transported to the Southern Col-l onies from England were "noth-! ing but thieves, murderers, and profligates," I have been reading in the library on the subject. I have found that Mr. Samra wast unjustified in both his statements that the Southern Colonies were1 populated by criminals, first, be-~ cause of the unusually severe penal code of England in which trans- portation to America was part of the system of pardons; second, be- t cause of the economic conditions 1 of the time in which the popula- tion was divided between those int dire poverty and those who were wealthy, with no middle class. The laws of England werel unique among those of all other nations for the severity of pun- ishment for petty offenses. In 1600 over three hundred offenses were punishable by death, rang- ing from stealing a loaf of bread to sustain life. (Or for stealing anything worth more than a shill- ing.) Even just before the Ameri- can Revolution there were over 150 capital crimes. The word "felon" conveyed a different meaning in the seven- teenth and eighteenth centuries than it does now. In addition, transportation to the colonies was regarded as a mitigation of pun- ishment and awarded to those thought deserving of leniency, which included a large proportion of debtors and religious and po- litical offenders. The worst crim-l inals were not transported but executed in large numbers after every session of court.1 The permanent influence of the convict element on society in the colonies was comparatively small,t since the rigid discipline of colon- ial laws and the expenditure of seven years of hard labor as in- dentured servants in a new land of hope and promise converted the greater number into respectable< and self-supporting citizens. Transportation of prisoners was by no means limited to the South- ern Colonies. The committee of trade for New York petitionedr authorities in 1693 to send them all of the prisoners who were to be transported from Newgate Prison. -Douglas Carr Ed, Joe & Gene ... ED LEVENBERG seems to have changed his tune with regard to Joe McCarthy. Ed now says he doesn't like Joe. The fact is how- ever that Ed always took Bob Taft's view of McCarthy last year. This view was well-stated by the Ohio Senator himself when he came to Hill Auditorium, seeking the Presidency, and said for every- one to hear, "I think the junior senator from Wisconsin is doing his country a great public ser- vice." We must also recall that General Eisenhower, whom Ed supported (though reluctantly), said that he wanted Joe on his "team." Now it appears that Ike, and Bob, and Ed want nothing to- day with him, but there are a few of us left to, remember the facts. Now Ed says he didn't mean that there should be an immed- iate invasion of the Chinese main- land. This reminds me of Ike's recent statements that he didn't mean that he would give the peo- ple a tax cut immediately, or bal- ance the budget immediately, or end the Korean conflict immed- iately. These will hardly suffice as excuses to the thousands unon rupt government of Chiang who lost free China, and no one else. We poured billions down a rat Thole to help save free China, but Chiang has no one to blame but himself. It may very well be that the leader of Formosa h'as reformed. If he has, that is good. But this does not answer the argument that Chiang is not ready for any invasion and will not be for a long, long time. The best advice to him is sit tight, and keep build- ing. And the best advice to Ike, and Bob, and Ed is to keep fighting the McCarthy's with all their heart-as the Democrats always have-and maybe they will be able to salvage a little self respect for the once proud political party which boasts the names of Abra- ham Lincoln and Theodore Roose- velt! -Gene Mossner, '52 'Right You Are' AS ONE WHO has been interest- ed in the theatre, both pro- fessional and amateur, for many years. I have naturally attended at least one performance of every play given this year by the Student Players, Speech Department, Arts Theatre, and Civic Theatre. I have often disagreed with the Daily crit- icism but never so strongly as with Bob Holloway's review of "Right You Are If You Think You Are." I was completely enchanted with the play, and particularly with this production. I have seen it done on other campuses but never so de- lightfully. Mr. Holloway devotes one half of his review to a statement of Pirandello's philosophy. Never once does he state that this is his opin- ion. Is Mr. Holloway such a Piran- dello authority that he can say "this is without doubt what Pir- andello thinks?" Far from giving what Mr. Hollo- way considered an "inconsistent performance," I thought Tony Georgilas gave a disarmingly de- tached performance as Laudise that consistently captured the hu- morous and yet deeply critical at- titude toward busybody humanity. The character of Laudise obviously represents Pirandello homself, and Georgilas caught this serio-comic attitude in a nearly perfect man- ner, I thought. While I was leaving the theatre Wednesday night, my opinion was expressed by a stranger to me, also leaving. "The Speech Department," he said, "has finally come of age." -Edward A. Ravenscroft, '56A&D (Continued from Page 2)T Personnel Interviews foro Week of April 13. rheAmerican Brass Co., Detroit. will have an interviewer here on Tues., April 14, to talk to men graduating in June interested in Sales, Management, and Engineering positions within the firm. Royal-Liverpool Insurance Group, New7 York City, will be here on Wed., April 15, to see men for such positions as Special Agent, Underwriter, special Representative, Accountant and Sta- tistician, as well as for other admin- istrative trainee positions; also women for Underwriting Trainirig. On Wed., April 15, there will be a representative from Eli Lilly and Co., Indianapolis, Ind., to talk to indi- viduals receiving degrees in Bacteriol- ogy, Pharmacy, and Business Adminis- tration. Pan American World Airways, of New York City, will be on the campus, Thurs., April 16, to talk to June gradu- ates interested in their Sales Execu- tive Training Program. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., New York City will be at the Bureau f Appointments on Fri., April 17, to see June graduates for their Management Development Program, The Halle Bros., Co., Cleveland, Ohio, will be here on Fri., April 17, to see per- sons interested in positions In their Merchandise, Personnel, or Store Man- agement Divisions. Companies Coming. Those organizations coming during the remainder of the semester will in-l clude: YMCA, Owens-Corning-Fiberglas,4 Equitable Life, Dow Chemical, Doehler-7 Jarvis, Winkemans, Zurich General Ac- cident & Liability Ins. Co., Muelle Brass, Chemical Bank -& Trust Co., Time, Inc. (Subscription Dept. for wo - en), Penn. Mutual, Chicago National Bank, Cold Metal Products,- New York, Life Ins. Co., Michigan Bell (for wom- en--Training Program). Dates and fur- ther details will later be announced. Personnel Requests. Personnel Requests. An Ann Arbor Organization is in- terested in finding a woman to fill a position which would include some su- pervision and planning. One with a knowledge of typing is preferred and also with some office or school expe- rience. Frame Master, of Chicago, has avail- able opportunities for Architecture or' Structural Engineers expecting their de- grees this June. The position would train one in all phases of the business. Modern Plastics Corp., of Benton Har- bor, has sent some detailed booklets to the Bureau of Appointments concerning the possibilities within the 'firm. Those interested may contact the Bureau for further information. Radcliffe College, Cambridge. Mass.. announces that May first is the dead- line for Fellowship applications for their Management Training Program, 1953. Seismograph Service Corp., of Tulsa, Okla., has openings for Electrical and Geographical Engineers, Geophysicists, Geologists, Physicists, and Mathemati- cians. This firm, in addition to geo- physics, is engaged in.Electronic De- velopments. For further information, ' applica- tions, and appointments, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admin- istration Building, Ext. 371. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for William Harold Dawe, Education; thesis: "A Study of Cognate Work in the Program of Preparation, for Superintendents of Schools," Thurs., Apr. 2, 4015 University High School, at 4 p.m. Chairman, H. R. Jones, Doctoral Examination for Gerardus Cabble deRoth. Fisheries; thesis: "Rela- tionship between Bottom Fauna and Production of Largemouth Bass, Mi- cropterus salmoidest(Lacepede), in the Absence of Competing Sport Fishes," Fri., April 3, 2122 Natural Science Bldg., at 1 p.m. Chairman, K. F. Lagler. Doctoral Examination for Samuel Al- exander Pratt, Sociology; thesis: "The Impact of Transportation Change and of Flint Metropolitan Expansion on the Linden Community," Sat., Apr. 4, 5602 Haven Hall, at 9 am. Chairman, A. H. Hawley. Doctoral Examination for Jacob Isaac Hurwitz, Education; thesis: "Some Ef- fects of Power on the Relations among Group Members," Mon., Apr. 13, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 4 p.m. Chairman, A. F. Zander. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Apr. 2, at 4 in 247 west Engineering. Speaker: Dr. I. Marx. Top- ic: Weyl and Mueller's Existence Proof for the Wave Equation. Course 402, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar in the Applications of Mathematics to the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., Apr. 2, at 4 p.m., in 407 Mason Hall. Dr. Paul Henle, of the Philosophy Department, will speak on "Hypotheti- cal. Constructs and Intervening vari- ables." Geometry Seminar. Thurs., Apr. 2, at 7 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Dr. R. Buchi will talk on "Gewebe and Affine Ge- ometry." Chemistry, Department Seminar. Thurs., Apr. 2. 7:30 p., 1300 Chem- istry Building. Mr. J. Richard Weaver will speak on "Irreversible Reductions at a Streaming Mercury Electrode," and Mr. Stephen L. Wythe will speak on "The Structure of Astoniline." Interdisciplinary Seminar in the Theory of Growth (Econ. 353). Profes- sor Pierre Dansereau, of the Depart- ment of Botany, will speak on "Growth Patterns and Environmentar Response," at 4 p.m., Thurs. Apr. 2, in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Concerts Woodwind Quintet Concert Cancelled. The program by the University Wood- wind Quintet, previously anounced for Tues., Apr. 14, in the Rackham Lecture Hall, has been cancelled due to illness. Events Today International Center Weekly Tea for foreign students and American friends from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Congregational Disciples Guild. 5:05- 5:30, Mid-Week Meditation in Douglas Chapel on "The Last Word" of Jesus. Pi Sigma Alpha. All students invited to become members are reminded that Sat., Apr. 4, is the last day on which initiation fees may be paid and reser- vations made for the initation ban- quet. Old members are also asked to make their reservations for the ban- quet, to be held on Tues., Apr. 14. Res- ervations may be made and fee paid by contacting Miss Kieske in the Po- litical Science Department Office. Frosh Weekend. The Decorations Com- mittee for the Blue Team will be working tonight at the League from 7 to 10 p.m. All members of the commit- tee and any others interested are urged to come. The last meeting before spring va- cation of the Publicity Committee will be held at 7 p.m. in the Publicity room. This is a very important meeting and all girls are urged to come to work on stunts and skits. We will be work- ing on posters after the meeting. This is very important so come and bring your dates if necessary. weekly Graduate Record Concerts will be resumed tonight at 7:45 p.m. in the East Lounge of Rackham; program: Beethoven, Symphony No. 6 (Pastorale); Copland, Appalachian Spring; Wagner, Prelude and Good Friday Spell from Parzifal. All grads codialy invited. La Petite Causette will meet today afronte3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the North Cafeteria of the Michigan Union. All interested students are invited. U. of M. Sailing Club will hold an informal meeting Thurs., Apr. 2, in West Engineering Building. Final plans for the Annapolis regatta will be dis- cussed. Roger Williams Guild. We participate in observing the Lord's Supper this evening at 8 p.m., when our choir will sing Stainer's "The Crucifixion." Christian Science Organization. Tes- timonial meeting at 7:30 Fireside Room, Lane Hall. Ukrainian Students'Club. Meeting at 7 p.m. in the Madelon Pound House (1024 Hill St.). Guests are welcome. Graduate Student Council. Meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham. Lutheran S9udent Association. Com- munion Service at the Center Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Good Friday Services on Friday at Trinity. Lutheran Church- 12-3 p.m.; Zion Church-1:30 and 7:30 p m. Coming Events Unitarian Student Group will meet during Spring Vacation for informal group discussions. The April 5 meeting will be at the home of Neil Weller, 523 Packard; the meeting April 12 wll be held at the Unitarian Church. No trans- portation provisions have been made. S.R.A. Coffee Hour, Lane Hall, Fri., 3:30-5:30 p.m. All students and faculty invited. Gilbert and Sullivan. Principal re- hearsal Sunday and Monday nights,' Aprils12 and 13, at the Union. Pinafore action rehearsal for the chorus Mon., Apr. 13, at the League. Motion Pictures, auspices of Univer- sity Museums, "Shell Fishing" and "Seashore Oddities" (color), Fri., Apr. 3, 7:30 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. No ad- mission charge. 4 4 's. I .0 t , f iir r i m + ART + I ''i THROUGH APRIL 22nd, the University Museum of Art will feature a loan ex- hibition-"Early Chinese Jades"-in the Oriental Room, within the West Gallery of Alumni Memorial Hall. It is a small show in some ways, but fetching, and should prove rewarding, apart from the attractions it has for specialists in oriental studies and ar- chaeology. Anyone whose only previous acquain- tance with jade comes from reading Sax Rohmer's tales of Fu Manchu or the ex- otic descriptions in similar fantasies may be disappointed. There are no large, translucent and sparkling incense burn- ers or willowy goddesses among these samples; they exist, but not during the chronological confines of this exhibit. Most of the items are quite small, and understandably so, since the medium is a species of semi-precious stone, not often available in boulder size. Since they are valuable, the pieces must be kept under glass, and in a regrettably large number of instances, they cannot be as attentively ex- amined as they deserve. The show is small in another respect, that is, with things on an almost miniscule plane physically, differences in quality are necessarily equally infinitesimal (my apolo- gies for this opaqueness). At any rate, many of us haven't the necessary experience to objects within any of the groups do not differ greatly except to a practised eye, despite the (possible) variance in time of anything up to two millenia. There is, for- tunately, a considerable variety in color and texture. The color range, so far as I can tell, does not include more than perhaps two or three pieces in the emerald green Fei .Ts'ui that (other things being equal) is most valued by collectors of jade. Pos- sibly it wasn't available until later, but in any case, there are various shades of yellow, brown, green, etc.. some grained and streaked with other colors.- Since we cannot touch the pieces, we can only im- perfectly apprehend the many textural qualities present, but they are at least easily discernible visually, and can con- tribute much to the viewer's enjoyment. There are but a dozen figures in the round, of which only three are larger than three inches. To some extent, these are merely modelled in outline with incised de- tails. My favorite is a tiny human head (No. 53) in pale green, practically smooth, with facial detail lightly carved in or in low relief, and in much the same spirit as some contemporary negro primitive art. It would be quite in order to call special attention to a great many other samples from every category in the show: beads, ceremonial utensils. various ornaments and 'i Little Man On Campus by Bibler Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authorty of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young ....Managing Editor Barnes Connable .. ...City Editor Cal Samra.........Editorial Director Zander Hollander........ Feature Editor Sid Klaus........ Associate City Editor Harland Brilt........Associate Editor Donna Hendleman.....Associate Editor Ed Whipple ...... .......Sports Editor John Jenks......Associate Sports Editor DickSewell. Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler.. ... Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills. Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell ... Chief Photographer Business Staft Al Green.......... Business Manager Milt Goetz........Advertising Manager ilane Johnston. ...Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg.......Finance Manager Harlean Hanlin ...Circulation Manager -( - r ?S c. A V