PAGE FOUR T HE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1953 Proposed Union Addition IN SHARP contrast to the flurry of student discussions, subcommittee reports and "top secret" policy meetings centering around the proposed Union addition last spring has been the entire lack of any Inen- tion that the' idea is still being considered in the new semester. Prior to the summer vacation the idea of a student activities wing on the Union had snowballed to considetable propor- tions beginning with the first meeting on the subject held by the Union Board of Directors Feb. 19. Here plans drawn up in 1948 were resurrected and examined by a board seemingly quite cordial to the idea of Union expansion along lines of a stu- dent activities center. Obviously any idea embodying the no- tion of .a coed activities center would have a direct bearing on the position of the women's. League. Consequently several im- portant Union-League subcommittee meet- ings were held, the results of which showed a definite interest in the idea of a coeduca- tional activities center on the part of stu- dents and faculty advisers participating. At this time it was learned that the University was also interested in the creation of such a center either as a separate building or as an addition to the present Union or League buildings. In any case a University con- structed building would be under Univer- sity control. From a subcommittee meeting held early in April it was found that both parties (the Union and the League) were highly recep- tive to the idea of greater cooperation as the only solution to future problems. Talk of maintaining the status quo, that is of a separate Union and League was significantly absent from that discussion. Also absent for the. most part references to the "blood, sweat and tears" of the alumni and alumnae that had gone into the construction of the present buildings. It was felt that at least in the case of the Union the alumni would pose no serious obstacle to making it a more useful organization on campus. In a joint Union-League board meeting April 29 both groups enthusiastically recommended establishment of a joint stu- dent-faculty study committee of both boards to study and make policy recom- mendations on the student activities facil- ities problem. The study group consisted of three student representatives from each of the boards, two alumni representatives from each and one faculty member from each, making a total membership of 12. This committee was not only set up by unanimous approval of the two boards, but later off the record discussion on the prob- lem showed that some of the most conserva- five minded from both groups were recep- tive to the idea of increased Union-League cooperation pointing toward the creation of a joint activities center. Chief problems that the group had to iron out were ques- tions of finance and administrative organ- ization. It was speculated at the time that in order to pay for such a center it would be necessary to add 10 dollars to the yearly tuition rate for a period of 20 years. The possibility of going to the alumni for con- tributions was generally ruled out as im- practical. In light of so much enthusiasm on the part of student, faculty and Union-League personnel last spring it is difficult to un- derstand the complete silence on the is..e this fall. The need for such a student activities center still exists and will no doubt continue to grow each year as stu- dent enrollment on campus increases. At present student groups and organizations are forced to meet at scattered points on campus. At the University there is no centrally-located spot where students can meet, exchange ideas, take part in social activities together and acquire a sense' of being part of a single university com- munity. It is to be assumed that discussion of the student activities center by both the Union and League will continue this fall. This was the responsibility they accepted last spring when the joint Union-League board was set up. The group which began with so much promise last spring soon should be able to tell the student body whether a coed stu- dent activities center can be established here or whether the differences between forces of the Union and League are too great to be overcome. -Gene Hartwig My friends, democracy is not a mere po- litical formula. Democracy and the yearning for democracy among the people not only of America but of the world is not-bound by state borders or by national borders o- in- ternational boundaries. Democracy and freedom, as we understand them and want to enjoy them, are not cir- cumscribed by religious denominations. They are not circumscribed by race, creed or color -either here or elsewhere in the entire world. While, of course, in part democracy and freedom represent a political formula, de- mocracy and freedom are things of the spi- rit, as well as of the mind. They're things that appeal to the hopes and the ambitions and aspirations of mankind everywhere. -Alhon WRn.rIv MATTER OF FACT: Post-Truce Outlook In Communist China By JOSEPN ALSOP HONG KONG-Before his appointment as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Arthur Radford was well known to 'believe that the Free World could not af- ford to allow the consolidation and devel- opment of Communist power in China. Here in' Hong Kong, the Free World's best window on China, it is all too easy to understand Radford's view. And it is equally difficult to understand the mo- tives and purposes of the American and other Western leaders, who were so eager to grant the Chinese Communists a Kor- ean truce on their own terms. The main result of the truce in Korea will be to permit precisely the consolidation and growth of Chinese Communist power that Radford so much feared. The stages of this process are not easily predictable, but its consequences may be predicted with almost complete confidence. Before very long, the growing strength of the Chinese Communist regime will altogdther' upset the fragile power balance of Asia. What has been and is now happening to the Chinese armed forces, is enough to in- dicate the trend. Great change is going on, almost unnoticed even by the Washington policy makers. Three years ago the Chinese Communist armies were still the same vast, inchoate masses of half-armed manpower that had beaten Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. The famous "human sea" attacks of the early days in Korea were in fact cold bloodedly planned to overcome weakness in firepower by lavish expenditure of man- power. But very early in the Korean fighting, the Chinese generals and their Russian advisors evidently decided that this kind of Chinese army was not good enough. The sign of this decision at the time was a flood of reports that the capable and ruthless Russian-trained Gen. Lin Piao had been dismissed and disgraced. What actually happened was that Gen. Lin Piao was trans- ferred from his former command, and placed in charge of vast military re-or- ganization and re-equipment. program. In consequence, Lin Piao is now China's chief military figure, while the hero of the guer- rilla years, Gen. Chu- Teh, has become a picturesque figurehead. The forces Gen. Lin Piao has had to work with fall into two main parts. There are the "kung" or security divisions, com- prising in all about a million men. These security divisions have the sole responsi- bility of crushing opposition and maintain- ing order throughout China. Thus they re- lease for purely military tasks the Chinese regular army, which number at least 2%4 million men. The table of organization and equip- ment adopted by Gen. Lin Piao snd his Soviet co-workers for this huge regular army is carefully fitted to Chinese con- ditions. An infantry division of about 10,000 men, with about three quarters of the firepower of a Soviet rifle division, is the basic building block. The infantry divisions are in turn backed up by a powerful engineer element, more lim- ited numbers of armored, heavy artillery, rocket launching and anti-aircraft divi- sions, plus a skeleton supply organization skilled in directing great press gangs of local labor in the work of supply move- ment. Hitherto only the 800,000 Chinese soldiers in Korea have felt the benefits of this pro- gram. But now the entire Chinese regular army will be reorganized and re-equipped. The best informed forecasters here, Ameri- can and British as well as Chinese, think the job will be completed within about two years. * * * TwO YEARS from now, therefore, Peking will command a force of something like 170 infantry divisions, perhaps 20 armored divisions, perhaps 15 heavy artillery divi- sions and the rest in proportion. Heavy equipment will still have to be obtained from Russia, but the Chinese arsenals will be able to supply all this large force needs in the way of light weapons. And this very large regular army will be usable in any way Peking chooses, since the numerous se- curity divisions will still take care of the police work in China. A similar process, though on a much smaller scale, must be expected to take place in the Chinese Communist air force. Today, the Chinese Communists have less than 100 IL-28 jet bombers, perhaps 200 more medium bombers of the obsolete TU-2A type, and less than 700 Mig-15s. ]3u* Chinese air training schools are cur- rently graduating from 1,200 to 2,000 fin- ished pilots every six months. A larger air force equipped with Russian castoff aircraft is plainly in prospect. The Korean truce gives these figures and projections a vivid and ugly meaning. On the one hand, the end of the drain in Ko- rea, which was on the whole heavier for the Chinese than for us, will allow the military buildup to be greatly expedited. On the other hand, Korea will no longer tie down all the modernized and really ef- fective forces that China has. Even today, the limited Chinese Com- munist air force is quite big enough to challenge the American 7th fleet's control of the Formosa strait, if re-deployed for this purpose. Even today the Chinese di- visions in Korea would produce a political earthquake, if they were simply transfer- red to the Indo-China-Burma border. China's military weight is already great enough but because of Korea it is still. wrongly placed for fullest effect. Because of the truce in Korea, China military weight will grow much greater, and will soon be distributed, no doubt, in the most efficient manner possible. More than enough oower on the Chinese Communist side of the line to overwhelm the slight power on the other side of the line-that is the future prospect in Asia. And as Adolf Hitler's successive early tri- umphs proved, overwhelming power can often gain great ends without a shot being fired. (Copyright, 1953, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) ".. « It's A Lonr, fhigh Fly To C ester Field, A E . ." I "o D INGi "=--.,.,, UN1'c__ STAPE 0.41______________ /ette' TO THE EDITOR The Daly 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 libelousletters, 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 I .r / .a- agLae r.. R Mf wn N r f;Tw^+ F f A «..... Reprinted from October Y, J9V1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 6 _ _ ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round (Continued from Page 2) Music Literature 42. Recitation sec- tions (labs.) will not meet this week. Lectures as usual. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Oct. 1, at 4 in 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Professor C. L. Dolph. Topic: The Conjugate Gradient Method for Solving Linear Algebraic Equations. Engineering Mechanics Seminar. The first meeting of the Engineering Mech- anics Seminar will be held in 101 West Engineering, from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. on Wed.. Sept. 30. Professor J. Ormon- droyd will speak on "The Importance of Kinematics in Mechanics." Refresh- ments will be served. Course 401, the Interdisciplinary Sem- inar in the Application of Mathematics on the Social Sciences, will meet on Thurs., Oct. 1, at 4 p.m., in 3409 Mason Hall Dr. David Birch of the Psychology Department will speak on "Some Mathe- matical Similarities of Some Learning Models." Botanical Seminar Meeting. "Nema- todes and Plants" will be discussed by Dr. G. Steiner, Principal Nematologist, U. S. Department of Agriculture, 4:15 p.m. Wed., Sept. 30, in 1139 Natural Science Building. The University Extension Service an- nounces that enrollment may still be made in the following classes: Meeting Wednesday, September 30: Books and Ideas II. This course is designed to acquaint students with lit- erature and ideas that have helped to shape Western civilization. The books to be read (usually one every two weeks) have been carefully chosen to illus- trate various epochs and aspects of the history of Western thought. Lectures and discussions will center around the fundamental ideas expressed in these works. Limited to twenty students, and classes meet on alternate Wednesdays. Eight weeks, $18.00. Instructor: John E. Bingley. Practical Gardening. A survey course in methods and techniques of plant- ing. transplanting, pruning, and soil management. The selection and cul- ture of ornamental plants, with at- tention to individual development of home planting, and problems of main- tenance will also be considered. Class discussions and illustrative material supplement the lectures,and sug- gested reading lists will be furnished. Eight weeks $8.00. Instructor: Mrs. Ruth Mosher Place. The Modern Novel. The reading and discussion of outstanding novels by such major writers as Hemingway, Faulkner, Dreiser, Forter, and Joyce. Emphasis will be placed on the prin- cipal artistic and intellectual develop- ments in the field of the novel dur- ing the first half of the twentieth cen- tury. Eight weeks. $8.00. Instructor: William R. Steinhoff. Meeting Thursday, October 1: Positive Citizenship. A series of lec- tures and discussions by University of Michigan specialists in the fields of political science and health and by experts in the local government of Ann Arbor. Topics to be included are: Form and Functions of Government; The Work of the City Council: General Sur- vey; Ann Arbor's Revenues and Expen- ditures; The Budget Today; How a Council Committee Works with Admin- istrative Boards and Officers, with par- ticular reference to Police and Fire ad- ministration; Coordination of Public Health Service: Ann Arbor and Wash- tenaw County; Comparative City Gov- ernment; Four Fundamental Forms of American City Government. This course offered with cooperation of the Ann Arbor League of Women Voters. Open to all interested citizens. Six weeks, $5.00. Instructors: A. W. Bromage, Co- ordinator; John S. Dobson; Otto K. Engelke; Gene D. Maybee; George Sal- lade. Ceramics, Advanced. The materials and forms of pottery. Basic ceramic design applied to the potter's wheel and uses of glazes. Designed for stu- dents who have had some previous work in ceramics. Class limited to twenty. Noncredit course, sixteen weeks. ,$18.00. Laboratory fee, $5.00. Instruc- tor: J. T. Abernathy. Astronomy for the Layman. For those who wish a general knowledge of the constellations and a survey of the elementary facts of astronomy. Lectures will be supplemented by lantern slides, demonstrations with the planetarium, telescopic observations, and identifica- tion of constellations from the sky. Eight weeks. $8.00. Instructor: Hazel M. LoSh. Introduction to the Fine Arts: The work of art has both its own personal meaning and the power to tell us of the attitudes of an entire age. The arts termediate students, emphasizing the reading and criticism of students' writ- ing. Sixteen weeks. $18.00. Instructor: John F. Mueh. Industrial Electronics. Theory and practice of electronics for measure- ment and control. Subjects include vacuum tubes as circuit elements, am- plifiers, oscillators, and oscilloscope circuits. Applications to motor.speed control and weldng control. Labora- tory periods will be held in connection with the course. Films, slides, and demonstrations will supplement the lectures. Sixteen weeks, $18.00. Instruc- tor: Stephen Hart. Concerts Student Recital. Unto Erkkila, violin- ist, will be heard at 8:30 Wed. evening, Sept. ,30 in the Rackham Assembly Hall. in a program of works by ach, Paganini, Bartok, Milhaud, and Beeth- oven. Mr. Erkkila is a pupil of Gilbert Ross and armember of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Played in par- tial fulfillment ofrthe requirements for the Master of Music degree, the program fill be open to the public. Events Today Social Chairmen. There will be a com- pulsory meeting of social chairmen of all men and women's independent houses today at 4:30 in the League. American Chemical Society, Student Affiliate. Dr. Elderfield will speakon "Opportunities in the Chemical Pro- fession," at 7:30 p.m., 1400 Chemical Building. All students interested in chemistry are invited. Le Cerce Francais will hold its first meeting of the year at 8 p.m. in the Michigan League. There will be a short talk on the importance of the French culture by Prof. Charles E. Koella, of the Romance Language Department and Faculty Adviser to the Club. Election of officers, French popular songs, slides on Le Quartier Latin of Paris, social hour and refreshments. All students eli- gible for membership. Pershing Rifles. All Pershing Rifle- men report to the Rifle Range in uni- form by 1925 hrs. Bring gym shoes and be prepared in the manual of arms. Roger Williams Guild. Wednesday aft- ernoon tea, 4:30 to 6:00, at the Guild House, Church Supper at 6:30 p.m. in Fellowship Hall with students as guests. Call 7332 for reservations. Beacon Society. Election of officers and discussion of events at 8 p.m., Room 3-B, Union. New members wel- come. Hillel. Petitions for the vacant posts of publicity chairman andof educa- tional coordinator on the Hillel Stu- dent Council may now be picked up at the Hillel Building. At that time appointments may be made for an interview. ReligiouseSymposium Executive Com- mittee meets at Lane Hall, 8 p m Coming Events Friday Lecture Series. Dr. Leonard Himler, Director of MereywoodSani- tarium, "Religion and the Emotional Life." 7:30 p.m. followed by Coffee Hour at Canterbury House. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at 7:30 a.m., Thurs., Oct. 1, Canterbury House. Roger Williams Guild. Yoke Fellow- ship meets Thursday morning at 7 a.m. in the church prayer room. In- spirational devotions followed by a breakfast. Through in time to get to your 8 o'clock classes. Hillel: The Interfaith Committee will hold its first meeting on Thurs., Oct. 1, at 4 p.m. in the Hilel Music Room. Everyone interested is asked to attend. International Center Weekly Tea will be held Thurs., Oct. 1, from 4:30 to 6 at the International Center. Christian Science Organization. Tes- timony meeting, Thurs., Oct. 1, 7:30 p.m., Fireside Room, Lane Hall. All are welcome. Attention all Orthodox Students. There will be an organizational meet- ing on Thurs., Oct. 1, at 7:30 p.m., in the upper room of Lane Hall. Young Democrats. First meeting this semester Oct. 1 at 7:30 p.m., Room 3R, Michigan Union. Frank Blackford, Leg- islative Secretary to Governor Williams, will speak on "National and Michigan Politics." Plans for the year will also I) S Answer. .,.j To the Editor:{ RECENTLY statements were made in The Daily on the Young Democrats by three people, none of whom are members of YD. Jasper Reid, President of the Young Republicans, suggests that Democrats are against civil rights. The implication is particularly in- sidious since it harbors a measure of truth-somewhat less than a! half-truth and therefore com- pletely misleading. The Democra- tic Party is split now as it has been for many years between the Dixiecrat - northern-city-machine coalition and the liberal faction. But the coalition is today in a minority, and there is evidence that their influence is decreasing -partially because of some Dixie- crat defection, to the Republican Party. Admittedly, there is dan- ger of the coalition gaining con- trol of the Democratic Party. The YD's of Michigan, however, be- lieve that the Party must be first honest and second liberal, and we are capable of wielding a rather surprising influence to that end. As for Bernie Backhaut's letter -his sarcastic reference to "Fa- ther Adlai" is perhaps good for a snicker or two from some people, but it is not really very enlighten- ing. It is true that the YD's are composed almost exclusively of Stevenson supporters, and we are proud of that fact, but we do wel- come Dixiecrats and Republicans to our meetings. There is the bare hope that we can do some- thing for them. With Miss Voss' thoughtful, ra- ther pessimistic editorial we take no exception but to mention that last year at least the YD's were a better attended club than the YR's, and we believe that it will: be even stronger this year. , Interest in politics is important to the intellectual, moral, and cultural development of students and citizens, for politics is ines- capable in the real world today. We urge that all students take an active interest in politics in gen- eral and, of course, Democratic politics in particular. The first meeting of the Young Democrats will take place this Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 3R of the Union. We welcome all interested students. -Charles Sleicher The Executive Board Young Democrats w- Pertinen t Quote * * To the Editor: ' W ITH reference to the current Radulovich case, I would like to cite the following quotations from The Reader's Digest conden- sation of The Terror Machine, by Soviet Major Gregory Klimov: "One of the most unpleasant features of Soviet life is the col- lective responsibility of all one's relatives. No matter how far be- yond reproach a man may be as a member of Soviet society, if any of even his most distant relatives comes into conflict with the MVD he is automatically classed as "politically unreliable." -Ted Powell * * * - Radulovich Case ,. . To The Editor: THE DAILY Senior Editorial staff is really to be commend- ed on its stand in the Radulovich case. Its call for University ac- tion places a responsibility on all of us to express our dislike of the tactics used by the Air Force to smear the name of one of our Uni- versity students. The Air Force, in attempting to give Radulovich an honorable .dis- charge because his father reads a particular newspaper and his sis- ter was seen at a particular meet- ing, is the same kind of tactic us- ed by the notorious Un-American Activities Committee. Like this Committee, it is resorting to the use of the principle of guilt by association in questioning the loy- alty of a person. This is an insi- dious way of depriving a person of a job, because no wrong act has been alleged or proven. Even if a person were to talk to someone with unorthodox politi- cal views, or to read a book con- taining such views, does it mean that his loyalty is questionable? I believe that this kind of rea- soning on the part of any govern- ment agency jeopardizes not only any future job opportunities we may have, but the very learning process as well. For it is manda- tory that education, in order to have meaning, must allow for freedom of association, discussion and exploration of ideas. I think that this kind of action on the part of the Air Force is a result of the general hysteria per- petrated by such groups as the Un-~AmmriennA an+vitim. Ammi+_ Logic of Security. To the Editor: CONCERNING Mr. Radulovich's plight, I think it is axiomatic that where the rights of a single individual are infringed by the conscious policy of high officials that an atmosphere is created in which the same sort of thing can happen to anyone. Where are civil liberties when a man can lose his reputation and his job because his relatives are alleged to read radical newspapers or be seen at "radical" social gath- erings? It seems to me that to ask Ra- dulovich not to see his father and sister would be going against our concepts of the sanctity of the family. The logic of security -is not big- ger and better bombs. Neither is it it a system whereby each indi- vidual is given a "political relia- bility" rating. The simple logic of the situation is to return to an atmosphere of free thought and discussion and to resolve all differences via the conference table rather than by the sword. -Robert Scor * * * Critic, Relax .. . To the Editor: I READ WITH pleasure the Daily critic's anihilation of that "tear jerking" film "The White Line." We are fortunate to have critics who not only attend the films be- ing reviewed, but who play the flagellant's role in print with mo're fanaticism and unconscious piety than righteous converts ever know. Public confessions via the cri- tic's column are of fairly recent origin, perhaps reaching their nauseous zenith under the pen of Alexander Woolcott and "deteri- orating" since under the pen of collegiate critics. But even the hot-rod collegiate critic may become a public men- ace, for the freedom to criticize surely entails a responsibility to. the reading public, as well as the pleasure of sucking the lemon of criticism. The responsibility is not a large one, it is simply that of expressing a personal distaste, a lack of indi- vidual understanding without the pretense of final benediction. It would be wrong to leap upon the critic for a difference of opin- ion, to snarl at his refusal to write our point of view. But when thedo critic closes his mind to the en- tire worth of a film, when he dis- suades the public from seeing the film, through misstatement and inexperience, it is time to con- sider his worth. "Tne Wite Line" is nt a Frank Capra myth, but a moment of re- ality as the children of violent times understand it. It is an ex- pression of how children rise above the stupidities of their parents, the hate, the lies and the complete imbecility of animal-man in war, to return to open love and friend- ;hip while the adults rage and bellow without even the grandeur of critical detachmenc. The "suffering, wordless chil- dren" ire effective if the critie wCuld relax, and put down his in- tellectual football and attempt to see the story as a quite bclievable bit of madness in our time. -Tom Linton V U I with DREW PEARSON I WASHINGTON-Quiet-spoken Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey, who has more influence with the President than any- one else inside the cabinet, was quite wor- ried the day after Ike's Boston speech. He was so worried that he put through an ur- gent phone call to the President himself. What upset Humphrey was the way the newspapers played up the President's re- mark that "no sacrifice, no tax" was too great for the defense of our freedom, and had interpreted this as meaning the ex- cess-profits tax and high personal income tax might not be dropped after December 31. The President, however, reassured him. He had not. meant to imply, he said, that these tax reductions were out the window. This was the backstage reason why Hum- phrey suddenly went before the American Bankers Association convention here with a reassuring tax-reduction statement aimed at changing the press interpretation given to the Boston speech. Humphrey said nothing about the na- tional sales tax, however. It's still under consideration. NOTE-Those who sat with General Eis- enhower at a once-famous dinner at the F Street Club recall that his views have chan- ged radically since then. At that time Ike told a group of Republican leaders that if young men had to give up their lives in wartime he saw no reason why businessmen should not give up their profits. He was in favor of using taxes to remove all profits during wartime, he said. The reaction was such that several Republicans present said they would not support him. -. L. LEWIS EXPOUNDS WHILE OTHER congressional solons have been junketing or gathering headlines around the world, GOP Sen. Homer Cape- hart of Indiana has been making an im- nra',tin thoah nnnhliizi turdv of honw "A large part of the money sent over there hasn't benefited the common people," opined John L. Lewis. "It's filtered alp in- stead of down. It's being used for specula- tion purposes by bankers and politicians, instead of raising wages and the living standards in countries we are trying to help." The big miner chief also said he had been informed that about $2,460,000,000 of 'our aid money had been used to purchase gov- ernment bonds, on which we have to pay interest. NONPAYING NEIGHBOR ON THE GENERAL question of foreign trade, Lewis said that some nations were slow about reciprocating our "good neighbor" policies. "Take Brazil, for example," he pointed out. "We buy close to $700,000,000 worth of coffee every year from Brazil, but when that nation wants to buy something it shops around in all the cheaper markets of the world, using American dollars. Brazil doesn't buy American goods except on the cuff." What he referred to is the fact that the United States has just given Brazil a $300,- 000,000 credit to pay for goods bought in the United States, chiefly automobiles. When Paul Hoffman was called upon, he found himself standing between Senator Capehart in the front of the Senate com- mittee room and about 100 members of the advisory group seated in the rear. Turning toward the latter he said: "There was a time when I never dared to turn my back on'a United States Senator, but perhaps in this case I should do so." Hoffman told the closed-door session that any program which called for "giv- ing away" something was "essentially un- sound." The American people, he added, had every right to expect that the money ( Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harry Lunn..........Managing Editor Eric Vetter. .. . , ......City Editor Virginia Voss.........Editorial Director Mike Wolff......Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver. Assoc. Editorial Director Diane Decker.........Associate Editor Helene Simon.;........Associate Editor Ivan Kaye...._.......Sports Editor Paul Greenberg....Assoc. Sports Editor Marilyn Campbell.....Women's Editor Kathy Zeisler.. Assoc. Women's Editor Don Campbell.......Head Photographer Business Staff Thomas Treeger......Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin..Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seiden......Finance Manager James Sharp.....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 4l r'