PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1953 WENEDAJAUAY14Mm5 BEHIND THE LINES 9A 'Golden Mean' Society By CAL SAMRA fiction in their spare time. (Perhaps this Daily Editorial Director objectionable practice merits a separate W HAT WITH its being fashionable now- investigation.) adays to be an extremist of one sort 2-Zoology professors spend their extra- or another, the most reasonable suggestion curricular time at the General Library, try- this writer has yet heard is a plan to or- ing to discover mention of their names in ganize a "Golden Mean Society" on campus, scientific periodicals. (This information Such an organization would reportedly comes from a reliable source.) embrace both conservatives and liberals-- 3-Political Science professors occasional- Republicans, Democrats and non-parti- ly quote "Das Kapital." sans-excluding those with Red and Black- colorations. Its function would be to ex- -LET'S NOT GET CARRIED AWAY- amine the pressing issues of the times SINCE THE first article exposing the clan- with a rational perspective divorced from destine activities of the Labor Youth dogma. At the same time, it would be on League came out, a number of anxious stu- the look-out for attacks from either the dents have descended on The Daily office Left or the Right. gwith offers of information or requests for Of course those who feel that the Gov- favors. ernment should do nothing more than run One such lad was really concerned. the mail and those who feel that the Gov- (The word "hysterical" is getting rather ernment should provide social security for trite.) He feverishly related that he had prostitutes won't like it. overheard a couple of radical "Commun- But, at any rate, it sound like a good idea. ists" and "Socialists" plotting to write a Perhaps some courageous Aristotelian will letter to the editor accusing The Daily have enough enterprise to start an organi- of cheap journalism and profligacy, zatioxi pledged to restoring a bit of political among other things. Seems that they said sanity around campus. they were going to sign his name to the -HOUSE COMMITTEE PROBE-- letter. THIS WRITER is going to venture to pre- "If you get the letter," he implored, dict that, if and when the House Un- "scratch my name off it. My old man works American Activities Committee makes its for the government." debut on campus it will find the University As The Daily pointed out when the faculty of unquestionable loyalty. series was inaugurated, we do not sub- It will also discover that: scribe to hysteria. It's hardly necessary to I-English professors, by and large, pre- look under your bed at night. fer reading detective stories and science And, as the poet said, "Down, boy." Conant Appointment "Maybe Ill Stick Around And Watch This" MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP T HE APPOINTMENT of Harvard Univer- sity President James B. Conant as the United States High Commissioner in Ger- many should prove to be an asset to boIta President-Elect Eisenhower's Administra- tion and to the welfare of Germany. Conant, a brilliant scholar, brings to the position a record of government service which includes special assignments by Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman in London and Moscow. He served on several government boards during World War II and since 1947 he has served on a general advisory commit- tee to the Atomic Energy Commission. Long recognized as an outstanding edu- cator, Conant had turned down. a' similar offer by President Truman, but with his pending retirement from Harvard and sub- ject to pressure from Eisenhower and John Foster Dulles, he consented. Conant's thoroughness and his experience in both domestic and foreign affairs should serve him in good stead in Germany. His strong stand on Universal Military Training may see him push for the lagging Western German defense army. Because of the universal respect for Conant, his appointment will also help raise U. S. foreign policy in Europe from the low ebb it reached during the Truman Administration. What undoubtedly influenced Eisenhower and Dulles in their decision was the grav- ity of the problem of Germany today. To most observers, Germany is the key to the safety of all of Western Europe. In Conant, a man of great ability and intellect, Eisen- hower found a leader qualified to assume the responsibility. -Eric Vetter ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round with DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-By a narrow margin, the dynamic foreign policy of the Eisen- hower administration is not, after all, to be enriched by the celebrated comedian, Ar- thur Godfrey. Judging by the Hooper rat- ings, the appointment would have been pop- ular. By any test, it would have been spec- tacular. But it's not to go through. Even so, the incident is not without interest. In brief, President-Elect Eisen- hower and his Secretary of State-desig- nate, John Foster Dulles, are getting to- gether a special committee to consider the problems of psychological warfare. There has been much talk of reaching out to the peoples behind the Iron Curtain. The committee is to decide what to do about it. The first two proposed members of the new committee were William Jackson, form- er Deputy Director of the Central Intelli- gence Agency, and C. D. Jackson, publisher of "Fortune" magazine. The question then arose of Defense Department representation. The nature of the projected committee was explained to Defense Secretary-designate C. E. Wilson, and he was asked to name a man to speak for him. He proposed Godfrey, on the theory that "Godfrey knows how to reach the mass mind." Considerable consternation was caused by the idea of co-opting a. public entertainer, however popular and admirable, for this sort of assignment. In the end, the God- frey idea was dropped. Other members of the committee, as of now, are likely to be Robert Cutler, the Boston lawyer-banker turned aide to Eisenhower; former Secre- tary of the Army Gordon Gray; Abbott Washburn, of the Committee for a Free Europe, and Barklie McKee Henry. The intention to develop the projected committee's program in a very active way is indicated by other personnel plans. In brief, William Jackson is likely to go on from the projected committee to the di- rectorship of the Psychological Strategy Board, or whatever substitute body the new committee proposes. C. D. Jackson will quite probably become an Assistant Secretary of State with special duties concerning the Soviet and satellite areas. And there is talk that Washburn will be named a White House Administrative Assistant. All this is interesting enough. But the Godfrey story, though sadly abortive, is cer- tainly the most interesting plum in the whole pudding. It has, broadly speaking, two different kinds of meaning. First, Godfrey himself is certainly a splendid entertainer, and by all report a courageous, decent and sensible man. The fact remains that his experience of the complex problems of foreign policy is, to say the least, pretty limited. In proposing Godfrey, one cannot' help but feel that Secretary of Defense-designate Wilson showed himself a sufferer from the Bryan illusion. This is a view of the human require- ments of national policy-making that was once voiced by the late William Jennings Bryan. With his voice grating with rage, Old Sen. Carter Glass used to tell the story: "Do you know what that fellow Bryan once said to me? He once' said that any man with real goodness of heart could write a banking act." The Bryan illusion, if it creeps into defense or for- eign policy, can produce very odd, not to say very horrible consequences. Second, the suggestion of Godfrey also betrayed another rather common error, best described as BBD&Oism, if one may bor- row the initials of some deservedly famous hucksters. BBD&Oism is the notion that democracy can be peddled to less enlight- ened breeds of men by the same brilliant techniques which serve to sell soap flakes, deodorants, tea, automobiles and other necessities and semi-necessities of the American way of life. Unfortunately, this is not true. Democ- racy cannot be peddled like soap flakes. There are, moreover, a series of highly dif- ficult and delicate questions involved in the kind of program the new committee is to draw up. From the standpoint of simple communications, for instance, the Kremlin is strengthening the Iron Curtain every day and every week. Are the vast expenditures worthwhile, that are needed to overcome the Soviet radio jamming, microwave trans- mission and other Iron Curtain measures? Again, it is wise to make a great, im- mediate effort to promote resistance movements in the Iron Cureain countries, when resistants who are discovered will only be condemned to the dreadful fate of the Poles in the premature Warsaw uprising against Hitler? And suppose there is Tito-ism in one of the satellites--say Czechoslovakia. It is now known, quite positively, that the Red Army will move to stamp out the next satellite govern- ment that shows Tito-ist tendencies. Are we prepared to move our forces too, in order to protect these new Tito-ists? These are not questions that can be ans- wered by the techniques prevalent in ad- vertising agencies. These are not difficul- ties that can be overcome by "reaching the mass mind" of the enslaved people in the way that Arthur Godfrey reaches many American families. It is naive, amazingly naive, to make such suppositions. And this kind of Naivete can be dangerous in the eytreme. s R goo , / *r ( 1/ t * i ,': i .. ,. 11' pQSV 1' 1 / V g FDAILY OFFICIAL BULL ETIN WASHINGTON -- President-Elect Eisen- hower has now lined up most of his important diplomatic appointments. How- ever, he has run into a minor delay in get. ting clearances from foreign governments. When he announced the appointment of Winthrop. Aldrich of the Chase Bank to be ambassador to Great Britain, the Brit- ish were miffed. They had nothing against Aldrich, but according to diplomatic pro- tocol, the government to which an am- bassador is appointed is supposed to be sounded out first to see if he is acceptable. This was not done in the case of Ald- rich. Since then, Eisenhower. has been up against the fact that he cannot make any- more announcements of political posts with- out seeking an "agreement" from the gov- ernments concerned; and since he had de- cided that he cannot cooperate with the Truman administration, it's a bit embar- rassing to ask the State Department to take up these "agreements" for him. That's why, although Eisenhower has sounded out Douglas Dillon, the Wall Street banker, to be ambassador to France, the French have not been notified. Dillon is the son of Clarence Dillon, founder of the investment banking firm of Dillon, Read & Co. Selection of Mrs. Clare Boothe Luce, wife of the Time, Life, Fortune Publisher, as ambassadress to Italy, has also been kept under official wraps for the same reason. Other ambassadorships which Eisenhower has pretty well firmed up follow: JAPAN-John Allison, now assistant Sec- retary of State in charge of the Far East, has been offered the post of ambassador to Japan or ambassador to Indonesia by his new boss,-John Foster Dulles. Allison, who helped Dulles write the Japanese peace treaty, would like to remain in Washington as assistant secretary, but Dulles told him that Eisenhower wanted no holdovers from the old Acheson regime. Therefore, Alli- son will probably become ambassador to Tokyo. ' GERMANY-Robert Murphy, now ambas- sador to Japan, will be the new high com- missioner to Germany. Murphy was the State Department officer attached to Eisen- hower when he landed in North Africa, and worked out the deal with Admiral Dar- Ian for French cooperation. Later Murphy worked with Eisenhower in Germany. They are old friends. on Russia, Charles E. Bohlen, an expert Russian linguist and now counselor at the State Department, also is in the Dulles dog- house. He will be offered the ambassador- ship to Belgium. Ralph Bunche, the Negro educator, is under consideration as ambassador to Mos- cow. His appointment would automatically counteract Moscow's propaganda that lynchings 're as common as football in the 'United States. THE NETHERLANDS-Mrs. Hiram Cole Houghton of Red Oak, Iowa, former pres- ident of the General Federation of Wo- men's Clubs, is in line to be ambassador to The Hague. In view of the fact that Hol- land has been governed by two women- Queen Wilhelmina and now Queen Juliana --it is believed appropriate to send a wo- man there as ambassador. Incidentally, Eisenhower is expected to keep Mrs. Perle Mesta in Luxembourg for the time being. When he was stationed in Paris, he used to visit Mrs. Mesta, en- joyed cooking in her kitchen. Mrs. Mesta, though a close friend of Truman's also did a little quiet boosting for Eisenhower during the campaign. BRAZIL-Lt. Gen. Willis D. Crittenberg- er, former commander of Governor's Island, is slated to be ambassador in Rio De Jan- eiro. He and Ike served in the War Depart- ment together as young officers-Critten- berger in press relations, Eisenhower writ- ing speeches for General MacArthur. S * * * --WASHINGTON PIPELINE- CALIFORNIA will have three Senate of- fices on Capitol Hill until January 20. Senator Nixon will be allowed to keep his office, though he has no official status until he is sworn in as Vice President two weeks hence . . . There will be a drive tg drastically modify the Sherman Anti-Trust Act at a result of the antitrust crackdown on the Kansas City Star. ...Joseph Fluet of Boston is slated to be an Eisenhower appointee to the Civil Aeronautics Board. He is the CAB's chief accident investigator at Idlewild, N. Y., a good man for the job. ... President Truman's first order of busi- ness after he leaves the White House is to sift through his vast stack of records and start writing his memoirs. He has told friends he'll do nothing "political" for at least six months after leaving Washington. .. .Despite industry pressure OPS will not .-- . ' 3 . Y t± \ (Continued from Page 2) The Bureau of Appointments has re- ceived a request for a Secretary to a Personnel Director in an industrial firm in this area. Shorthand is required for the position and a college degree and experience is preferred. The Kellogg Company, of Battle Creek, Mich., has openings for students grad- uating this year in their Production Division (developing into supervision and Mechanical Engineers, or Business Administration students preferred for positions); Engineering Division (Me-. chanical, Electrical, Civil, Architec- tural, and Chemical Engineers); and Accounting. The City of Flint had openings for a City Planning Assistant (Civil En- gineer) and also for a Chemist. The for- mer position would involve profession- al community planning work and the latter makes and interprets the re- sults of a wide variety of chemical, bac- teriological, and physical determina- tions and analyses of water samples, etc. The Young Men's Christian Associa- tion, of Chicago, has openings for young men as Assistant Physical Director (2 positions open) and Boys' Physical Di- rector. There are also openings for women as Assistant women and Girls Secretary (3 positions available). SUMMER PERSONNEL REQUESTS. The Kellogg Company, of Battle Creek, Mich., has available openings for Freshman, Sophomore, and Junior stu- dents of the Business Administration, Economics, Industrial, Mechanical, Elec- trical, and Chemical Engineering schools. The work would be general in nature throughout the plant and would not be confined to specialized fields. Those interested must have their ap- plications mailed to the company no later than Feb. 15. 1953. For further information concerning the above openings, contact the Bu- reau of Appointments, 3528 Administra- tion Building, Ext. 371. Lectures University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Biological Chemistry, "The Hormones of the Posterior Pitui- tary Gland," Dr. Vincent Du Vigneaud, Professor of Biochemistry, Cornell Uni- verSity Medical School, New York City, Thurs., Jan. 14, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. The Jerome Lectures. General topic, "Manpower in the Western Roman Em- pire," Fifth lecture: "Manpower and the Fall of the Roman Empire in the west," Dr. Arthur E. R. Boak, Richard Hudson Professor of Ancient History, Wed., Jan. 14, 4:15 p.m., Rackham Am- phitheater. Senator Paul Douglas and Congress- man Walter Judd will be presented to- night at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium as the fourth number on the 1952-53 Lecture; Course. Recognized as two of the most respected and influential members of the national legislative body, Senator Douglas and Dr. Judd will offer a stim- ulating and informative discussion "Our Foreign Policy, Right or Wrong?" Tickets are on sale today at the Audi- torium box office from 10 to 1 and 2 to 8:30 p.m. Sigma Xi Lecture by John Hogg on' "Cortisone" on Wed., Jan. 14, at 8 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for John Clif- fordHerbst, Geography; thesis: "The Naugatuck Valley," Fri., Jan. 16, 210 Angell Hall, at 4 p.m. Chairman, S. D. Dodge. Doctoral Examination for Harriet Wil- son Foster, Psychology; thesis: "Stim- ulus Predifferentation in Transfer of Training," Thurs., Jan. 15, 7611 Haven Hall, at 10:30 a.m. Chairman, D. G. Mar- quis. Doctoral Examination for Patricia Joyce Spaulding, Psychology; thesis: "An Investigation of the Relationships Between Ocular Muscle Balance and Intelligence and Auditory Memory var- iables," Mon., Jan. 19, 7611 Haven Hall, at 11 a.m. Chairman, A. S. Elonen. Doctoral Examination for George Cass DeLong, Geography; thesis: "The North- eastern Illinois Dairy Region," Mon., Jan. 26, 15 Angell Hail, at 4 p.m. Chair- man, K. C. McMurry Seminar on Methods of Machine Computation. Dr. Franz Alt, Assistant Chief of the Computation Laboratory, National Bureau of Standards, Wash- ington, D.C., will speak to a special session of the Interdepartmental Semi- nar on Machine Methods of Computa- tion Wednesday afternoon, Jan. 14, in; 429 Mason Hall at 4:30 p.m.. on "Somee matics Department will speak on "Dom- inance Relations and Sociometric Mat- rices." Geometry Seminar. Wed., Jan. 14, 4:10 p.m., 3001 A. H. Prof. K. Leisenring will speak on "Pappus theorem in higher dimensions.," Concerts The vienna Choir Boys will be heard in AnnsArbor for the third time, under the auspices of the University Musical Society, Fri., Jan. 16, at 8:30 o'clock, in Hill Auditorium. They will present the following program: Repleti sunt................ Gallus HodietChristus............Sveelinck Virga Jesse ............... Bruckner 117 Psalm.................Hedding "The Calif's Goose"..........Mozart (operetta in costume) INTERMISSION Die Nacht............ .. Schubert Bandlterzett...................Mozart Tritsch-Tratsch Polka.. Johann Strauss Kaiserwalzer......... Johann Strauss Tickets are on sale at the office of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Tower daily; and will also be on sale on the night of the concert at the Hill Auditorium box office, after 7 o'clock. May Festival. The University Musical Society announces the following par- ticipants in the May Festival of six concerts, April 30 through May 3, in Hill Auditorium: ZINKA MILANOV, Dramatic Soprano. DOROTHY WARENSKJOLD, Lyric So- pane; and CESARE SIEPI, Bass-ail stars of the Metropolitan Opera Association. JANICE MOUDRY, Contralto; KENNETH SMITH, Baritone; and HAROLD HAUGH, Tenor-American or- atorio singers. ZINO FRANCESCATTI, Violinist; and MYRA HESS and RUDOLF FIRKUS NY, Pianists. EUGENE ORMANDY, THOR JOHNSON, ALEXANDER HILSBERG, and MAR- GUERITE HOOD, conductors. THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA; UNIVERSITY CHORAL UNION and THE FESTIVAL YOUTH CHORUS. Orders for season tickets (6 concerts) -$11.00, $9.00 and $8.00 each; are be- ing accepted at the officers of the Uni- versity Musical Society, and filed in sequence. Events Today Last Tryouts for the Annual French Play will take place today from 3 to 5:15 p.m. in 408 Romance Language Build- ing. Any student on the campus with a certain knowledge of the French language is eligible. Undergraduate Botany Club meets at 7:30 p.m. for an informal party at the home of Dr. K. L. Jones, 607 W. Davis. Transportation will be provid- ed. Those needing rides please meet at the parking lot between Chemistry and Natural Science Buildings by 7 p.m., Ski Club. There will be a meeting to- night in Room L of the Union at 7:30. All students interested in taking part in a five-day ski trip to Boyne Moun- tain should attend. A deposit of $5.00 will be necessary at this time, A movie will also be shown about skiing in Aspen, Colorado. Wesley Foundation. Morning Matin Worship, Wed., 7:30-7:50; Mid-week Refresher Tea, 4:00-5:30. Congregational Disciples Guild. Mid- week Meditation in Douglas Chapel, 5:05-5:30. Supper Discussion: This will be a planning session for next term. If you are interested, you are invitedto come and help chose a subject. Please phone reservation for the supper at 5:45, or just come and talk at 6:30. Delta Sigma Pi. There will be a pro- fessional meeting tonight at the Chap- ter House at 7:15 p.m. Professor Wil- ford J. Eteman, of the School of Busi- ness Administration, will be the guest speaker. Coming Events UNESCO Council business meeting Thurs., Jan. 15, at 4 p.m. in Room 3-D of the Union. Agenda: election of offi- cers for the spring semester. La P'tite Causette will meet tomor- row from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the North Cafeteria of the Mirhian TTninn J-Hop and Cell Blocks To the Editor: HAVE been mulling over the recent lists of regulations gov- erning student activity during the J.Hop weekend. I was at once struck by the similarity between these regulations and rules con- cerning the recent Spring Soirre given by the Women's Reforma- tory at Framingham, Massachu- setts. Excerpts from the rules fol- low. The dance will take place in the prisoners' exercise area from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday night. Prisoners may not re-enter the area after once leaving. Cell blocks housing men guests will be closedto womenpafter 2 p.m. Friday, but will open at 2 a.m. when a breakfast will be served. Women may reenter the cell blocks after 1 p.m. Saturday at which time all men are to be lined up for transportation back to Charlestown State Prison. Any woman wearing a corsage to the dance will be ineligible for the wall-scaling contest. Two chaperones are required for each cell block. It is suggested that they be chosen from such groups as the State Police, Prison Guards, Parole Board, or former prison inmates who will be willing to cooperate to assure that prison regulations are observed. I might add that the Soirre was a great success and Prison offi- cials have decided to make it an annual event. --Persse O'Reilly ** On Lattimore .,.. To the Editor: THE INDICTMENT of Owen Lattimore marks a new low in our government's attempt to scare off intelligent criticism of its for- eign policy. Lattimore's consistently anti- Communist record did not protect him from the stated charge of per- juring himself in denying he had "pro-Communist" sympathies. For McCarthy and the Formosa-first- ers had long been out to "get" him, and the frightening fact today is that when the government goes out to silence a man or an opin- ion, it has the means and ruth- lessly employs them. Lattimore 's sin was to have al- lowed his researches on the Far East (he is without doubt one of the world's foremost authorities on Central Asia) to bring him to a position in disagreement with Chiang Kai-Shek's China lobby. Lattimore'did not let his opposition to Communism blunt his schol- ar's objectivity. He recognized the complete inability of Chiang Kai- shek's regime to deal with the forces making for social revolution in China. He believed, and be- lieves, that American foreign poli- cy must be based on a realistic recognition of facts, not on myths and jingoism. For this, the accu- sations of McCarthy, the investi- gations, the headlines, and the in- dictment for alleged "perjury." These are days when one is sup- posed to accept, in authoritarian submission, that which the gov- ernment decrees. One is not to look into a matter with an inde- pendent mind-as, e.g., one is not to lift an eyebrow at McCarthy's "star witness," the professional informer Louis Budenz, his fabu- lous tales, or his elastic memory. But the~e also are days when, out of sheer self-interest (to say noth- ing of moral obligation), one must maintain an independent mind, and make that opinion effective. We in the academic community particularly have a stake in seeing to it that the harassment of men like Lattimore comes to a halt. We cannot afford legalistic illu- sions, and we cannot afford si- lence. The vindication of Owen Lattimore will be the vindication of the scholar's right to indepen- dence, of the citizen's right to' criticize and oppose. -David R. Luce * * * * 'Liberal c'rusade' . ,. To the Editor: T HE YOUNG Democrats are not the only victims of the "liber- al" crusade against the rights of minorities to express their view- points. Last Thursday, Dave Cargo and his "I-call-the-que tion" cohorts succeeded in terminating debate on a motion before the Young Re- publicans without one minute of discussion. The day before that, in the United States Senate, the "liberals" were again trying to curb Senate minority expres- HOLLANDER'S series on sub- versive fronts reflect a cer- tain degree of political naivete. His extractions from House Un- American Activities Committee hearings and cloak and dagger descriptions of Stalinist campus activities are very amusing. One might wonder if Hollander had belonged to one of the groups criticized in the articles and is now attempting to clear his rec- ord by splashing this particular type patriotism across the front pages of The Daily. What is he trying to accom- plish? Maybe The Daily, Admin- istration and Regents are worried about'the impending arrival of Potter's Circus though-without Chuck, of course. I would expect Hollander's type of journalism in one of the Detroit dailies, where articles written on a fourteen year level are more appropriate. -John Leggett (EDITOR'S NOTE: Mr. Hollander Is not, and has never been a member of any of the groups mentioned in his articles. His sole affiliation is with The Daily.) * * * Red Series .. To the Editor: THE COMING investigation by the superpatriots (paid for by you and I) and the recent parti- san articles of Zander Hollander (presumably designed to out- sleuth, the sleuths) are a clear threat to the cause of liberalism, principally because it is in the liberal interest that Marxists go unmolested in the land. The presence of active and un- purged reds on campus benefits the liberal in at least three ways: (1) As long as the reds are free, we are assured that a measure of civil liberty still exists for every- one; (2) the agitation of the reds serves to highlight the danger of incipient native fascism, the greatest menace to our historic liberties since Hitler himself; (3) dealing with reds on the Idcal level is of great aid in the educa- tion of the liberal. Marxism, this greatest of all contemporary illusions, has se- duced some of the finest minds of our time, and thus requires in- telligent exposition and refuta- tion. Without Marxists around to be refuted, it is unlikely that this would be done. In conclusion, may we hope against hope that, for the' next nine months, The Daily will direct its inquisitorial zeal toward a rev- elation of the influence of con- servative economic interests upon university policy. -Jack Danielson R d * * * Red Series .. . To the Editor: WITH RE=ERENCE to LYL, YD, AYD, YR, etc., "Nay, if you come to that, Sir, have not the wisest of men in all ages, not excepting Solomon himself-have they not had their Hobby-Horses - their running horses - their coins and their cockle-shells, their drums and their trumpets, their fiddles, their pallets-their mag- gots and their buterflies? And so long as a man rides his Hobby- Horse peaceably and quietly along the King's highway, and neither compels you or me to get up be- hind him-pray, Sir, what have either you or I to do with it?" -Paul D. Hellenga .~ 4r* Xettep TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed oy 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. Mi A. ,4 ,t t Red Series .. . To the Editor: / , I Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority 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 Britz......... Associate Editor Donna Hendleman..Associate Editor Ed Whipple...............Sports Editor John Jenks......Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell.Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler......Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor Business Staff Al Green.............Business Manager Milt Goetz........Advertising Manager Diane Johnston....Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg......Finance Manager Tom Treeger.......Circulation Manager x {, 4 I