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October 28, 1952 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1952-10-28

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PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 8,2

_____________________________________ * U

Congratulations
Walter "Bud" Rea's elevation over the
weekend to the newly-created post of
Dean of Men seems an eminently praise-
worthy decision by the University.
The position should prove to be a sig-
nificant step in developing a more cor-
dial, franker relationship between the
student body and the administration. The
lack of communication channels became
glaringly apparent during the crescendo
of student-administration conflict last
spring; establishment of more adequate
channels is highly worthwhile.
And the promotion for Dean Rea, uni-
versally noted as a genuine friend of the
student throughout his long association
with the University, is well-earned rec-
ogn tion of distinguished service.
An exact delineation of Dean Rea's
new function and areas of operation ap-
parently remains to be made. It is hoped
that the new arrangement of deans in
the student affairs office foreshadows the
elevation of the Dean of Students posi-
tion into a vice-presidency, placing stu-
dent affairs in its proper perspective in
the overall University structure.
But whatever implications it may have
on the future, our warmest congratula-
tions go to "Bud" Rea on his new appoint-
mint
-Crawford Young, Cal Samra,
Zander Hollander, Sid Klaus,
Harland Britz and Donna Hen-
dleman: The Senior Editors
CURRENT MOVIES'
At the Orpheum . .
NEVER TAKE NO FOR AN ANSWER,
with Vittorio Manunta.
THIS PICTURE may mark the beginning of
a movement in Italian films: movies to
be made in. Italy with dialogue in English, de-
signed for English or American theaters. The
idea is not a very good one, as this picture
testifies. Some of the charm and attraction
of foreign movies can be found in the fresh
approach which they bring to the screen,
and which makes them in many cases su-
perior to the polished and often very sterile
productions of American film-makers. When
foreign companies deliberately try to sell on
the American market they lose much of their
own appeal and adopt a mass-produced ap-
pearance which domestic audiences seem to
like. (This is not to say that European movies
with "dubbed-in" English words are un-
desirable; on the contrary, if the dialogue
is sensibly translated, these should prove
far more effective than the older sub-title
'method.)
This picture, based on the Paul Gallico
- story "The Small Miracle," is rather sen-
timental and simple. Vittorio Manunta
portrays a small Italian boy, alone in the
world except for his donkey. When this
friend becomes ill the boy decides to take
her into the crypt in which St. Francis of
Assisi Is buried; he is sure the saint will
cure the donkey.
Since the Franciscans refuse to allow him
and the donkey inside the crypt, he journeys
to Rome to seek an audience with the Pope.
And he is determined that he will "never
take no for an answer."
The story, it seems, is aimed at the junior
Bible school level, and despite its religious
overtones will take its place alongside in-
numerable "Lassie" and "Rin-Tin-Tin"
movies.
-Tom Arp
At The Michigan...
0. HENRY'S FULL HOUSE
f E-FIVE STORIES that make up this
medley range in quality from excellent

to mediocre. All of them build up to the tra-
ditional O. Henry surprise ending, and while
it is used effectively and cleverly in some,
it falls flat in others.
The best of the lot has Charles Laughton
portraying an elderly bum who tries to get
thrown in jail so he won't have to spend the
winter on park benches. He is alternately
grandiose and devilishly sly. Laughton's
splendor. is made especially effective by con-
trast with his fellow hobo, David Wayne,
who plays a shuffling, cringing, down-and-
outer.
Oscar Levant and Fred Allen are cast as
confidence men who kidnap a little mon-
ster of a child and are finally reduced to
paying his parents to take him back.
Allen is at his dead-pan best, and the epi-
sode is lots of fun.
Not nearly as good as these two is "The
Last Leaf." Gregory Ratoff plays an accen-
tric old artist who manages to revive the
spirit of Anne Baxter, who is dying of pneu-
monia and scorned love. The story is irre-
deemably trite, and its handling is no bet-
ter than pedestrian.
Richard Widmark, the perennial nasty,
gives an excellent performance as an un-
couth criminal. But this episode is marred
by its sketchy development. and the irrele-
vance of its conflict.
The final story is a faithful rendition
of "The Gift of the Magi." Jeanne Craine
and Farley Granger handle the simple,
direct roles skillfully, and manage to cap-
ture the spirit of the original.
Comnared. as it inevitably must be. with

The Case for Prof. Dawson

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of
two partisan editorials relating to the
candidacies of Prof. John P. Dawson and
Congressman George Meader, who are at
present campaigning for the position of
representative from this district.)
AT MICHIGAN STATE COLLEGE, there is
an iron-clad rule that professors may
not run for office--which has probably saved
Lansing politicians considerable embarrass-
ment. Fortunately, the University has no
such precept, and in the past, such intel-
lects as Prof. Preston Slosson of the history
department and Prof. John P. Dawson of
the Law School have ventured into the local
political arena.
Prof. Dawson, a popular man on a cam-
pus where intelligence counts, is making
his second bid for Congress from this
district. Pitted against him is Republi-
can incumbent George Meader, who two
weeks ago was privately singled out by
columnist Drew Pearson in Ann Arbor
as a "better-than-average" Congressman.
Such praise from the usually hypercritical
Pearson might be enough to warrant Mr.
Meader's re-election, if it were not for the
urgent need for greatness, and not for
only "better-than-average" standing.
Prof. Dawson is not timid. >le is not mal-
leable. He does not hesitate to criticize his
own party when he believes that it is not
following the correct policy. Mr. Meader;
on the other hand, seems to be tied to his
party's apron strings, as indicated in his
refusal to discuss McCarthyism.
Prof. Dawson does not wince from cen-
suring the McCarren Immigration Act, draft-
ed by a fellow Democrat. He knows that
the Act was shabbily written, and that it
violates democratic principles by giving the
Attorney General sole power in deporta-
tion proceedings and by discrimating
against the peoples of Southern and East-
ern Europe.
Nor does he hesitate to criticize his
party for being slow in cleaning out cor-
ruption.
Yet at the same time, he stands for re-
taining the advances the New-Fair Deals
have made in social legislation.
On the Taft-Hartley issue, Prof. Dawson
feels that the Act should be repealed, and a
logical balance drawn up between the Labor-
favoring Wagner Act and the management-
favoring Taft-Hartley Act.I
On price controls, Prof. Dawson sees the
need for the small degree of regulation
necessary to keep our economy on an even
keel in this post-war period, and to fore-
stall the lopsided situation which, after
World War I, led to spiraling inflation and

then a total bust. Dawson's opponent, on
the other hand, has already voted against
price controls on all but rationed com-
modities-a few chemicals and metals.
Unlike Mr. Meader (who believes that the
best way to eliminate racial prejudices is
"by emphasizing the common rights of all
citizens," a do-nothing approach) Prof.
Dawson has taken a constructive position
on the matter. He favors a compulsory
FEPC.
Prof. Dawson also favors federal aid to
housing, while his opponent is a member
of the group which voted to cut it from
75,000 to 5,000 units per year. In this, Daw-
son is recognizing the fact that low cost
housing is an urgent need at this time. Once
there is adequate housing in the United
States, the Federal Government can back
out of the field, but not until then.
In the foreign policy field, it is notable
.that Mr. Meader, in principle, embraces
most of the Democratic program, though
he did vote for a 46 billion dollar limit
on defense spending, which in effect,
would have postponed preparedness two
years, had not the Senate seen fit to raise
the amount.
Mr. Meader, however, deviates slightly on
the problem of Point Four. Being a good
Republican, he wants to cut down unneces-
sary expenditures in this field. This is com-
mendable, but his belief that investments of
American capital in underdeveloped' coun-
tries will serve the purpose is not tenable.
In the first place, American capital
cannot effectively be drawn to areas in
which the average income of natives
ranges from $40 to $80 a year. Private
enterprise requires profit, and, except
where there are resources to develop such
as Saudi Arabian oil, the chances for prof-
it are very slim. As in our own West, where
the Federal Government was compelled to
construct dams and initiate irrigation
projects because private enterprisecon-
sidered such projects risky, the Federal
Government has been forced to lend un-
derdeveloped countries money and offer
them technical assistance, in order to
stem the rise of Communism.
In the light of these considerations, it
would seem that Prof. Dawson is a great
deal more qualified to represent this dis-
trict. The nation today needs more men in
Congress who can think for themselves, who
can cross party lines and vote in the in-
terest -of the country-not necessarily in
the interests of one or several pressure
groups. No doubt it is time for a change-
a change to independence, ingenuity, and
foresight.
--Eleanor Rosenthal and Samuel Brown

. dcLelleri to the e&ddlor

Luce's Reply .. .
To the Editor:
1) I oppose Universal Military
Training, and favor the repeal of
the present draft law.
2) The U.S. must cease sending
military supplies to France and
England as long as those nations
are waging war against the peo-
ples in the colonial areas, in Indo-
China, Malaya, etc. The U.S. must
face the fact of a changing world,
and stop playing the role of a Met-
ternich.
) 3 I am opposed to the Point
Four program as presently con-
stituted. It is now an instrument
for ensuring American domination
over the world's markets, assisting
the feudal rulers of the underde-
veloped areas rather than the peo-
ple, a device aimed at maintaining
the status quo in the face of the
great stirrings for social change.
Instead of Point Four, I favor a
program of relief and aid to those
areas left depressed and bankrupt
by war and exploitation, to be ad-
ministered through the United Na-
tions without political strings at-
tached. An international, rather
than a unilateral, undertaking of
this sort would be a major step to-
ward uniting a divided world.
4) I favor the repeal of the Taft-
Hartley Act, and a return to the
Wagner Labor Relations Act un-
der which labor made its greatest
gains.
5) The corruption in the Ad-
ministration symbolized by mink
coats and deep freezes is penny-
ante, compared with the pork-bar-
rel legislation and war profiteering
which Congress (for obvious rea-
sons) is reluctant to call attention
to. The long-run solution must
consist in our having legislators
and administrators put in power
by the people's independent po-
litical action, and responsible to
the people rather than to the spe-
cial financial and business inter-
ests which now directly or indi-
rectly dominate the political situ-
ation, through their control of
both major parties.
6) The subversives now threat-
enirig American democracy are not
the Communists, but the Potters,
McCarthies, Trumans, Dixiecrat
and Klan elements, who would im-
prison, deport, and persecute real
Communists, alleged Communists,
Negro leaders, outspoken liberals,
and all who oppose the govern-
ment's attempt to enforce una-
nimity of opinion on the Ameri-
can people. It is this subversion
of democratic principles here and
now, by the government itself,
which is the menace of our time.
Not as an abstract matter of jus-
tice, but in defense of our own
rights, we must demand that the
government turn toward combat-
ting our true enemies, the real sub-
versives.
7) I favor an FEPC with effec-
tive enforcement provisions, anti-
poll tax and anti-lynch laws, and
the mobilization of every means
to bring about a New Reconstruc-
tion, making democracy a reality
North, South, East, and West.
8) My chief legislative objec-
tives would be repeal of the draft
law and enactment of federal aid.
to education and a federal schol-
arship program.
-David Luce
(EDITOR'S NOTE: In presenting
statements of local Congressional
candidates in Sunday's issue, The
Daily only included the two major
partyscandidates since space limi-
tations made it impossible to in-
clude the minor candidates. Dave
Luce, local Progressive Party Con-
gressional candidate, yesterday sub-
mitted his answers to the questions
asked of Prof. John Dawson and
Rep. George Meader and they are
printed here.)
* . *
'Stalin & Sin' ..
To the Editor:

RECENTLY I came across a
.,.Young Republican leaflet: "Are
You Tired of Korea, Communism,
Corruption? Vote Republican!"
Who isn't tired of Korea and
who isn't against Communism and
corruption? But What is the Re-
publican answer?
General Eisenhower in one of,
his responsiblemoments said that
Korea has shown the Kremlin that
aggression would not lead to cheap
victory. But then he says else-
where that the American boys
should come home and the war
should be conducted with "Asian
Against Asian." Aside from the
ugly connotation of "Asian Against
Asian" does he not realize that
for the past two years South Kor-
ean troops have been trained and
now number fifty per-cent more
on the line than American troops?
Governor Dewey, moreover, in his
"Journey to the Far Pacific" point-
ed out that the American troops
can not be withdrawn from the line
as long as the UN is to maintain
the obligation it so valiantly in-
curred. The insinuation that if we
are tired of Korea, we can vote
Republican and escape the sacri-

AL

_...-
: .
_-
/'' j
'f r
,, 1 4

WASHINGTON - Little was published
about it nationally but, while Senator
McCarthy has been scattering guilt-by-
association charges around the country, some
legal depositions have been taken in Wheel-
ing, W. Va., regarding the all-important
question of whether Senator McCarthy tells
the truth.
McCarthy's first charge of Communism
in the State Department, which so start-
led the nation, was made at Wheeling, W.
Va., Feb. 9, 1950, when he said 205 Com-
munists were in that vital agency which
conducts our foreign affairs. Since then,
and due perhaps to the fact that no Com-
munists have been found in the State
Department, McCarthy has been trying to
deny that he ever used the figure "205."
He has claimed he was misquoted, mis-
understood, unfairly dealt with.
However, here is the testimony of wit-
nesses at Wheeling, W. Va., who saw Mc-
Carthy on that day and heard him speak.
Witness No. 1--News Editor James Whit-
aker of station WWVA identified a copy
of the script McCarthy used on Feb. 9,
1950; testified that he was present when
McCarthy spoke; said he used the script to
check the speech while making a tape re-
cording; that both the tape and the script
containe0d the following statement by Mc-
Carthy:
"While I cannot take the time to name
all the men in the State Department who
have been named as active members of the
Communist Party and members of a spy
ring, I have here in my hand a list of 205
--a list of names that were made known
to the Secretary of State as being mem-
bers of the Communist Party, and who
nevertheless are still working and shaping
policy in the State Department."
Witness No. 2-WWVA Program Director
Paul A. Myers testified: He read over Mc-
Carthy's script on the afternoon of Feb. 9
and it contained the above language. On
Feb. 10 he read an account of the speech
in the Wheeling Intelligencer quoting this
language. Later that morning he got the
tape recording and played it back to make
sure if this language had been used. It
had been.
Witness No. 3--Frank Desmond, reporter
for the Wheeling Intelligencer, testified:
he wrote the news story appearing Feb.
10 concerning McCarthy's speech which
contained the above language regarding
205 Communists. He received copy of script
from McCarthy en route from airport, and
it contained this statement.

Feb. 9 and heard the figure 205 used in
listening to the broadcast later that night.
He also identified a photo-tat of the script
which contained the language.
MC CARTHY'S ALIBIS
IN CONTRAST McCarthy swore on April
24, 1950, before a Senate committee
that he had not used this language. He
stated in a Senate speech Feb. 20 not only
that he hadn't used this language but that
he hadn't used a written speech. (Witness
Whitaker testified under oath he had seen
McCarthy reading from a written speech,
while four witnesses identified copies of
McCarthy's script.)
On Sept. 7, 1951, McCarthy, interview-
ed by the U. S. News and World Report
said that at Wheeling he had referred to
a 1946 letter from Secretary of State James
Byrnes to Congressman Sabath. But all
four witnesses stated that at Wheeling he
said no such thing.
Thus McCarthy has put himself in the
position of giving at least three different
versions of what he said at Wheeling ii
order to alibi the fact that actually there
were not 205 Communists in the State De-
partmen; and that, despite prolonged in-
vestigation since his speech, not one Com-
munist has been discovered by the loyalty
board.
COAL WAGE FLARE-UP
PENT-UP feelings over a wage increase
for striking coal miners almost explod-
ed into fisticuffs between two prominent
members of the Wage Stabilization Board
--Elmer E. Walker, an AFL member, and
Robert C. Bassett, a Chicago attorney serv-
ing as an industry member.
The altercation occurred at a closed-
door session shortly before 'the WSB ap-
proved a compromise mine pay boost of
$1.50 a day instead of the $1.90 raise
agreed to by John L. Lewis and the mine
operators.
Labor members, led by Walker, vigorously
opposed the compromise, but were out-
voted by industry and public members.
"We on the labor side feel that the $1.90
increase is equitable, justified by higher
living costs and not out of line with the
stabilization program," declared Walker.
"In fact, we could approve as much as $2.15
using the standards the board itself has set
in the aluminum, tungsten and northwest
lumber cases."
Industry members, led by Bassett, hot-
ly dissented, contending that Walker was
making irresponsible statements and that
he ias . in o,, i vrea voe ithnut sf-

stroying. our bill of rights, is he
therefore "soft" toward commun-
ists? Governor Stevenson is his-
torically correct in his assertion
that economic distress and poli-
tical suppression are the causes
of communism. With the excep-
tion of Czechoslavakia which had
the Red Army on its borders, not
one democratic nation with any
degree of economic security has
gone communist. I submit that
the Democratic Administrations of
the last twenty years have been
most responsible for the socio-
economic advances that have kept
the communists in our country
from becoming morethan just a
lunatic fringe. The truth is that
every time McCarthy opens his
mouth the breeding grounds of
communism are fertilized.
As to corruption, no party has
a monoply on it, witness the Mc-
Carthy Lustron Adventure, the
Owen Brewster mess, GOP nation-
al chairman Summerfield's run in
with a Republican attorney gen-
eral over campaign contributions
and the doubts which persist from
Nixon's unwillingness to disclose
his financial affairs after his im-
propriety in accepting a private ex-
pense account.
Korea, Communism and corrup-
tion are indeed distressing, but
come on Republicans, let's do more
than proclaim a crusade against
Stalin and sin.
-Leonard Sandweiss
. ,
Henuhin . .
To the Editor:
I HAD THE privilege of sitting
next to Mr. Balsam to turn the
pages at the Menuhin concert and,
in short, every reference Harvey
Gross made to Balsam's accom-
panying is entirely false. Perhaps
he does not know, but Mr. Balsam
is considered the world's foremost
violin accompanist. His playing
was not "harsh and metallic" and
he certainly was not "unsympathe-
tic." From watching the music
closely, from hearing the liquid,
flexible tones come forth, and
from observing the deep musical
feeling at a foot's distance, I can-
not help but let him know that I
disagree with his groundless ac-
cusations.
-Alfred Neumann, Grad.
* * *
Counterpoint...
To the Editor:
STEVE SMALE charges in a let-
ter to The Daily that Al Blum-
rosen urged some ten-year-old
football players to disturb the Pro-
gressive rally last Saturday. This
charge is typical of the pathologi-
cal drivel of that party. But one
is forced to concede Smale a cer-
tain symbolic appropriateness since
his party is the uncrowned cham-
pion at playing political football.
Liberals in universities a r e
among the first to get the axe
when Communists take over.
Therefore, in watchful self-de-
fense I went to the "peace" rally,
which only confirmed my reluc-
tance to judge the traitorous an-
tics of the Progressive Party as
anything but dangerous. The PP
(a self-inflicted abbreviation, not
mine) is even more openly Com-
munist dominated than in 1948.
Their publication The National
Guardian, indistinguishable from
the Daily Worker, gives friendly
notice to such card carriers and/or
fellow travelers as Corliss Lamont,
Howard Fast, Harry Bridges, W.
du Bois, and Vito Marcantonio
(whose voting record was identical
with Bricker's). As for Robeson,

chigan. Thus they knowingly base
their entire campaign upon a fun-
damental dishonesty.
Let the hard-core Progs elect
their Republicans directly, since
they want them. Their preference
is understandable: see any issue
of Bertie Love-Charlie-Potter Mc-
Cormick's Chicago Tribune, like-
wise indistinguishable in intent
from the Daily Worker on foreign.
policy. And let the uninitiated,
neophyte, and potential Progres-
sives give a few minutes' study to
the voting records of the two ma-
jor parties. They can then recog-
nize the error in the chorus of
"The. Lesser Evil Blues," a ditty
which the fruitcake faithful sang
Saturday:
"This story has a moral,
As every story should.
There ain't no lesser evil,
There's only bad or good."
NB: There is a moral for Re-
publicans in all this, too.
--Eric Stockton
Rosenberg Case...
To the Editor:
ONLY the beautiful strains of a
Mendelssohn Concerto can give
me the strength to write this let-
ter.
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were
denied a retrial of their "spy" case
before the Supreme Court. But
even from prison facing the death
penalty, they express their com-
plete innocence, their faith that
the common people will save them.
All their letters reflect their love
of life, their love for their two
small children, their determina-
tion to fight for the truth. These
letters are as beautiful and mean-
ingful as those of Sacco and Van-
zetti. Here are people who hold
devotion to principle and truth
above their very lives. They sym-
bolize the best in the American
tradition.
There is little doubt in my mind
that something is woefully wrong
fi

in the Rosenberg case: 1. Even
granting that the Rosenbergs were
guilty of passing secrets to a war-
time ally, why the death penalty
for them and clemency for the
Nazis who exterminated millions
in gas chambers? All fair-minded
Americans should protest against
this monstrous double standard.
2. The Sacco Vanzetti Case occur-
red in a period of hysteria after
World War I. This is a case which
would be best forgotten if only
dead men could be brought back
to life. The Rosenberg case also
takes place in a period of war ten-
sions, spy scares, attacks on civil
liberties and academic freedom.
3. the record will show that the
evidence on which the Rosenbergs
were convicted is unconvincing
and politically motivated.
We can see that justice is done
by writing postcards to President
Truman asking for executive cleam-
ency. Ask that the government
consent to a reversal of the Rosen-
berg conviction, thus permitting a
new trial or discontinuance of
their prosecution. Write to the
National Committee to Secure Jus-
tice in the Rosenberg Case for
more information. 246 Ffth Ave-
nue, N.Y. 1, N.Y.
-Robert Schor, Labor Youth
League
No Smuggling...
To the Editor:
IN TUESDAY, October 21st edi
tion under the heading "UN Ba-
zaar to feature World Wares" it
has been said "Many foreign stu-
dents, when they come to this
country, are not allowed tobring
much money with them so they
bring material, vases and jewelry
and then sell them when they get
here."
This I must say is a "very rash
statement and concerns all foreign
students on the campus. I chal-
lenge the concerned editor the au
thenticity of this statement. I aM
a foreign student andths" s My
second entry into United States
and I would like to inform the
concerned editor and also othes
what one has to go through with
Customs at the port of entry. Pill..
ing out the "rail-road ticket"' at
the time of registration oi :the
campus is nothing compared to the
forms one has to fill out and. the
detailed information one asto
give in these for customs clear-
ance. One has to list item by itea
giving each item's value in dollars
all the things he has brought with
his and swear that all these atil
cles are his personal belongings
and for personal use and none of
these are intended for sale at any
time during his stay in United
States. That means to be able to
bring these articles into this con-
try to sell later one should have @-
ther made a false declaration xr
the other alternative is he must
have smuggled them! This is whet
the statement in The Daily InaiUx
atesi
The things that will be on sale
at UN Bazaar must have been
the ones originally brought by sti-
dents for their personal use. They
are now sold not because the stW-
dents want to make a profit but to
raise some money towards a on-,
tribution to UNESCO Book Fund.
No law-respecting foreign stu-
dent brings anything into United
States with all intention to sell the
same later and make some mony
as The Daily puts it.
-Herman . Radit
" WHO BUYS a minute's mirth
to wail a week?"
--The Rape of Lucrece
41 t~a-

1 _ j _

DAILY
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN

1

(Continued from page 2)
at 7:30 p.m., Union. Important issues
to be discussed. All interested students
invited.
Fortnite Skits Chairmen. Meeting 4:30
p.m., League.uBe sure that a representa-
tive from your house is present.
U. of M. Rifle Club will meet at 7:15
p.m. at the R.O.T.C. Rifle Range.
Young Republicans. General meet-
ing at 8 p.m., Room 3-A, Michigan
Union.
Hillel Drama Group, Tryouts and cast-
in gfor first production, 7 p.m., Hillel
Building. Anyone who is interested may
attend.
Christian Science Organization: Tes-
timonial meeting, 7:30 p.m. Upper
Room, Lane Hall.
Ballet Club. Meeting tonight in Bar-
bour Gym Dance Studio. Intermediates:
7:15-8:15; Beginners: 8:15-9:15.
Senior Board meeting to work on the
class receipts will be held in the League
at 7:30. The room will be posted.
The J-Hop Committee will meet Tues.,
Oct. 28, in Room 3L of the Michigan
Union.
Freshman Discussion Group meets at
Lane Hall, 7:15 p.m.
Constitution Committee of SRA Coun-
cil will meet to further discuss plans
to revise SRA Constitution, 4:15 p.m.,
Lane Hall.

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Sixty-Third Year
Edited and managed by students of
the University of Michigan under the
authority of the Board. 1n Control CC
Student Publications.
Editorial Staff
Crawford Young.......Managing' dtf M
Cal Samra............Editorial Directa
Zander Hollander......Feature Utor
Sid Klaus.......Associate City EditOr
Harland Brite.......Associate EdItW,
Donna Hendleman......Assoiat s-W
Ed Wh.ipple ............ sport.s Itor
John Jenks.. ..Assoclate sports Editor
Dick Sewell.....Associate Sports eitar
Lorraine Butler.........Wonen's daitov
Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women'a Editor
Business Stafff
Al Oreen............Busint ?n augt
ilit Goets........ Advertising'-use
Diane Johnston.. .Amoc. Business MO.
Judy Loehnberg..,Finance Manag
Tom Treeger...I... rculatIon Manage

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