xE FOUR THE ltlICIU16AX DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1'7, 1954 ~E POUR rjflj MItAU6A~% DAILY r WDraNSDwaY. MrARCH 17. /)Th54 It The Hawaii- A laska Dilemma By WALTER LIPPMANN IT IS NOT an agreeable task to argue at this late date that before statehood is granted to Hawaii and Alaska, Congress and the country should re-examine the issues very carefully. High hopes and great expec- tations have been raised in Hawaii. Yet we must remember that the granting of state- hood is an irrevocable act. Once done it cannot be undone. Statehood cannot be re- pealed and a state cannot secede. Congress is, therefore, faced now ith the kind of de- cision which must not be made except with fullest deliberation. Now the admission of outlying territor- ies to statehood would mean a radical change in the structure of the Union and of our external relations. If such a change is to be made, it should be done when the people of this country are listen- ing and have their eyes open. They are not listening now and in the uproar of the McCarthy crisis, which is really a grave Constitutional crisis, they could not hear if they wanted to listen. As I read the record, the crucial question was raised in the House of Representatives last July by Mr. Farrington, the able and highly respected delegate from Hawaii. In an eloquent and moving peroration he said: "Either we become a state or we enter per- manently into a colonial status. This is what continuation of the territorial status in its present or modified form means, and nothing else. The issue clearly is one of statehood or colonialism. Proposals that we be permitted to elect our own Governor; that we be given a larger measure of local self- government and possibly an increase in our representation in the national government, are nothing but attempts to disguise an un- willingness to grant the people of Hawaii their full rights as American citizens. They are colonialisms and, so far as I am con- cerned, I want nothing of them." Mr. Farrington's thesis is that no people living under the American flag have or can have their full rights unless they are grant- ed statehood. Anything but statehood is, said Mr. Farrington in the same speech, to assign a large group of American citizens "permanently to an inferior position." In putting it that way he has posed the fundemental question which has never, I be- lieve, been explained properly to our people or adequately debated in Congress. Is it true that under American principles there are two and only two choices: that of inferiority and a condition of colonialism and that of equality as a state of the Union? If that Is the dilemma, which we are acknowledging by voting statehood for Hawaii and Alaska, what about the oth- er outlying territories under the Ameri- can flag? What do we have to offer as a goal towards which they can work, for which to develop their powers, to which to educate themselves? What do we propose to the people of Guam, the Virgin Islands, perhaps of our trusteeships in the Mari- annas, the Marshalls, the Carolines? Are they to be told that unless they achieve statehood, which they have no hope of achieving, they must remain "permanent- ly" in "an inferior position?" Is Congress going to declare that there is no way to have full freedom and a lasting associa- tion with the United States except as a state? Before we impale ourselves on the horns of this dilemma-colonialism or statehood -let us re-examine the question. * * * * MUCH has been made of the promise of statehood in the party platforms. But anyone who takes the trouble to read what the party platforms have said about state- hood for Hawaii, Alaska, and Puerto Rico in the past twenty years will come away con- firmed in the belief that neither party has ever seriously put its mind on the question. The platform on which President Eisen- hower ran in 1952 advocated "immediate statehood for Hawaii; statehood for Alas- ka under an equitable enabling act; even- tual statehood for Puerto Rico." As a measure of how little the authors of the platform have done their homework, we. may note that in the previous March the people of Puerto Rico had ratified by a popular vote a new constitution, mak- ing Puerto Rico not a state but a free com- monwealth associated with the United States, In 1940 the Democrats were in favor of statehood for Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico; the Republicans were saying, on the other hand, that statehood was the logical aspiration for Puerto Rico, while to Hawaii they were saying no more than that it was entitled to the fullest measure of home rule. The point of it all is that at one time or another, both parties-the Republicans as late as the Eisenhower campaign of 1952-- have been in favor of statehood not only for Hawaii and Alaska but also for Puerto Rico. Yet in fact we have seen the working out of a quite different relationship with Puerto Rico. It is, therefore, not true that the only choices are permanent inferiority in a co- lonial condition or statehood. There is no such ugly dilemma. The Congress can, as Sens. Fulbright, Monroney, and others are now proposing, work out a Consvitutional status for Hawaii and Alaska which avoids the Farrington dilemma of statehood versus colonialism. A Steering Committee That Steers MAYBE THE trouble with apathetic cam- pus organizations can be traced to a simple failure of the groups to live up to .heir means. A case in point: the Literary College Steering Committee, which for several se- mesters had become entrenched in a posi- tion so limited that it could do little but set up plans for the college's occasional stu- dent-faculty conferences. Recently put under virtual "new man- agement," however, the Steering Commit- tee has devoted several meetings to an extensive re-evaluation of its function. Members concluded that as a Steering Committee their purpose is to steer-in the direction of "better educational meth- ods for the college." Among the several concrete improvements advocated by the committee is that of add- ing "reading periods" to as many L.S.&A. courses as would be able to use them. At present the group is in the process of feel- ing this idea out, and getting the impres- sions of students and faculty alike to such a program. Reactions have been favorable. A reading period, the committee explains, is an interval in a semester course during which no class meetings are conducted. Stu- dents are sent off instead on intensive indi- vidual reading projects. Periodically, they report to instructors on their progress, for advice and opinions. Operating under such a schedule, stu- dents could be expected to develop some of the characteristics now found sadly lacking in many cases: initiative, indepen- dent thinking and primarily a feeling of individual accomplishment. As some of those questioned have pointed out, there might be disadvantages to these reading periods-classes would have to re- linquish a feeling of interaction, and cer- tainly not all students could be depended upon to carry out such a concentrated pro- gram without more incentive. But at the Universities of Detroit and New York, among other reading periods have been attempted with apparent success. Fa- culties there report that the innovation is a valuable addition to the educational process. On this campus, too, the idea has been tried, though on a very small scale. Cour- ses in psychology and political science in particular have given the device a chance, and students concerned seem to be well satisfied.: A greater effort here to experiment with reading periods couldn't cause much dis- ruption of the more traditional educational methods, but it would inevitably show just how well such a program might be received if it become a regular University method. Its failures could be pointed out and eliminated, its advantages nurtured and developed to the benefit of the entire college's policies. The University in general might well un- dertake a dual responsibility: first, enthu- siastically supporting rejuvenated and for- ward-looking groups such as the Literary College Steering Committee, taking their interest as a manifestation of student con- cern over existing room for improvement; and, at the same time, giving fair trials to new methods. The reading period idea, showing real promise of broadening and bet- tering the learning process, is well worth consideration.k -Jane Howard "I'd Have Said To Those Reds, 'Now, See Here! .. . - ..+a-- - T -' Fz Tom' .. c. ..- **c^ 'n6 --rK^d ~ -- w.I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON + ART+ MANY OF YOU have doubtless seen at least one reproduction of Roualt's "Old King;" it is deservedly one of his most popular paintings. Through March 28th, you may see the original, in the University Museum of Art's current Roualt-Beckmann exhibition. As the informatory placard notes, Geor- ges Roualt is our most prolific print- maker. He has turned out lithographs, color aquatints and etchings, almost with- out number, most of them as illustrations for the fine, limited editions gotten out by the publishing firm of Ambrose Vol- lard. Many of them have since been re- published, at least in part, in cheaper, editions, throughout the western world. Roualt's characteristics have become by now so famuiliar as to need no further des- cription. Judging by his entries in this show, and by what is readily available in book form, Roault has a decided preference for "religious" treatment and subjects. An aquatint, "Christ on the Cross with Dis- ciples" is a typical, if rather obvious ex- ample. But even in his non-religious sub- jects, such as "The Old King" or "Pierette,, his only oils in the show, exude the same feeling of serene piety that has become as- sociated with Roualt's name. Much of this effect is the natural out- come of the technique Roualt has chosen and perfected, and style and content can hardly be considered separate entities in his work. His sensitive use of color heigh- tens further the warmth and depth of his creations. However bright his pigments, or striking his contrasts, he blends the various elements into a soft and quietly beautiful composition. Max Beckmann appeals to me consider- ably less than Roault, but the point is only significant as an admission of prejudice that should be taken into account in weigh- ing the rest of these remarks. At one time I felt very much drawn to Beckmann, and if my liking for him has decreased, my res- pect for his capabilities has not. Part Hof the reason for any artist's appeal rests on his ability to communicate, and once contact is established, on how import- ant his revelation seems at a particular time. I'm losing contact with Beckmann, I'm afraid, and with the other German expres- sionists of the same tendency, such as Geor- ge Grosz. Unfortunately, I can't tell you why. Roault and Klee, two of my favorite painters, "distort" reality as much as Beckmann, although in a different way, but I don't find them in the least ob- jectionable. I could complain that in his awesome "Carnival Triptych" Bechmann's forms are too elongated, too angular, or even too ugly. But such judgments have validity only for myself, and anyone will notice that I am seizing upon superficial- ities to try to justify'a position that wants no defense. His colors are cold, but not more so than three years ago, and their flatness is necessary to the thesis he wants to expound, and therefore quite appropriate. In a sense, every artist is a critic, of so- ciety, of life either on a small or large scale. My personal feeling is that Beck- mann's message has lost-and will continue to lose-its power, because his is essentially a destructive criticism, or at least a negative one. Roault is as critical, but less obvi- ously so, and is constructive and positive. To me, this difference is important, but judge for yourself. -Siegfried Feller WASHINGTON-Here are some questions which investigating Sen- ators may want to ask Messrs. McCarthy, Cohn, Adams, et al, in the current attempt to get to the bottom of the Schine incident. Also here are some of the possible answers. Quesion: Why did Senator McCarthy seriously believe that the Army should fear 27-year-old Roy Cohn? What was there that a 27-year-old lawyer could do to an organization that has never been defeated? Why did McCarthy suggest to the Army that it faced a long-range fight with Cohn, if it didn't transfer Pvt. Schine to New York? It's possible McCarthy thought Cohn could throw these influences against the Army, or else he thought the Army could be frightened into thinking so. Answer: Cohn was on intimate terms with Walter Winchell, and was the pipeline by which McCarthy got Winchell's support and fed Winchell items. Cohn also has contacts with right-wing columnist George Sokolsky and newspaper executive Dick Berlin, who formerly employed Dr. J. B. Matthews, the McCarthy committee counsel who was dropped aftier he alleged the Protestant clergy was riddled with Communists. Question: Did Roy Cohn flex his muscles for Walter Winchell by calling James Wechsler, editor of the New York Post before the Mc- Carthy committee after Wechsler printed a series of articles on' Winchell. Answer: Wechsler is the only leading editor ever called before the McCarthy committee. In newspaper circles this crackdown was considered a Cohn move to curry favor with Winchell. Question: Is McCarthy 'afraid of Roy Cohn? Why did McCarthy tell the Army to show no favoritism to Schine when Cohn was ab- sent, then reverse himself in Cohn's presence? Why did McCarthy make it clear to the Army he didn't want Cohn to know he considered Schine a pest? , COHN KNEW BURIED BODIES ANSWER: Cohn knew all the secrets of the McCarthy investigation. He knew all the bodies buried by the McCarthy committee. He also knew the personal problems, had sat in on at least one confer- ence where McCarthy debated what he should do about the Las Vegas Sun and extraordinary allegations it published regarding his personal life which cannot be repeated here. In brief Cohn knew about all there was to know about McCarthy. EUROPEAN JUNKET QUESTION: Why the persistent attachment of Cohn for Schine? Why was he almost savage in his demands that Schine be trans- ferred back to New York? Answer: The two have been inseparable friends for some time. Schine is 26 years old, had had no important experience as an investigator, served with the McCarthy committee without salary. Cohn liked to have him around, took him to Europe on a trip that would have been comic had it not so disrupted U.S. re- lations. Reported the Frankfurt Abendpost: During the Cohn- Schine probe of Communism in Bonn "the event occurred which is still the main topic of conversations. At 2:30 Mr. Schine announ- ced he had put on the wrong trousers. A driver was sent to the hotel to pick up the right ones. Mr. Schine put them on, then discovered his notebook was missing. He rushed back to the hotel with Mr. Cohn to look for it. "In the hotel lobby it was observed that Mr. Schine batted Mr. Cohn over the head with a rolled-up magazine. Then both disap- peared into Mr. Schine's room for five minutes. Later the chamber- maid found ash trays and their contents strewn about the room. The furniture was completely overturned." After lunch the two investigators missed the regular plane and took a special plane to Frankfurt. Cost: $300. WHY DRAFTED? (QUESTION: Since every American diplomat reported on the ac- tivities of Cohn and Schine, why were they continued on the McCarthy committee? Among other things, they felt an unpaid hotel bill in Paris of $175, though they were in Paris only 16 hours. They ran up this bill by registering at the Crillon, then going to a second hotel without registering out of the Crillon. The American embassy paid the bill. Answer: For months, both the Eisenhower Administration and Republican Senators have either been afraid or unwilling to tangle with McCarthy, even to make suggestions regarding his staff. Question: What are the facts regarding McCarthy's letter to the Army on Dec. 22 complaining that Schine never would have been drafted had not "Pearson started screaming about his case." Answer: On Dec. 22, the same day of McCarthy's letter to the Army, this writer told how Schine was getting so many special favors at Fort Dix that Gen. Cornelius Ryan complained about it. Earlier, on July 17, this writer gave a detailed account of Schine's various physical examinations and his draft deferments. This column, which was distributed to newspapers in advance, came to the immediate attention.of the McCarthy office with the result that Mr. Roy Cohn demanded hat the column be killed. It was not killed. But that same day, July 15, it is now revealed by the Army record, McCarthy approached the Army to get a direct commission for Schine since he might be drafted. If McCarthy refers to the column as "screaming," then I plead guilty. What I called attention to was that Schine graduated from Har- vard at the close of the war, got a draft-exempt job in the Army Transport Service, later became an executive of his father's Ambassa- (Continued from Page 2) the general public. Mr. McCreary is a - - -- pupil of Robert Noehren, SUMMER EMPLOYMENT: 1The weekly Bureau of Appointments'. summer placement meeting wille heldExhibitions today at the Michigan Union, Room 3-A, from 1 to 5 p.m. for all students Clements Library. Old Japanese bo- interested intcamp, resort, business or tanical books: a loan exhibitio nom industrial positions this summer. tanical books: a loan exhibition com- memorating the 100th anniversary of "The Seventeenth Century" - Two Japan's first treaty with the United lecture-demonstrations on Baroque Art States. On display until April. Forms: 'Baroque Art," wed., Mar. 17, by Events Toda Harold Wethey, Professor of Fine Arts, Auditorium B, Angell Hall, 4:15 p.m.; Psychology Club. Dr. Withey will "Baroque Music," Wed., Mar. 24, by speak on "Problems of Opinion Re- Theodore Heger, Assistant Professor of search" this evening at 7:30 at the Music Literature, Auditorium B, Angell Women's League. This meeting will be Hall, 4:15 p.m. Sponsored by English of special interest to the members who 172 (Mr. Huntley) and History 149 (Mr. are working on the Club's evaluation Wilcox). Public cordially invited, project. University Lecture, auspices of the Pershing Rifles. All Pershing Riflemen Department of Botany, "Twelve Years report to T.C.B. at 1925 hours in inl- In the Northwest Amazon," Dr. Richard form. Bring gym shoes. Pledges study Evans Schultes, U.S. Department of manual of arms. Due to the drill meet, Agriculture, Wed., Mar. 17, 4:15 p.m., promptness is requested, Rackham Amphitheater. Lutheran Student Association. There * will be the Wednesday Evening Lenten A cadlemic Notices tc2J"- En :Aca emi Notces Service at 7:30 at the Lutheran Student Women's Physical Education Classes. Center, Hill St. and Forest Avenue. Ser- All classes in the Women's Physical Ed- mon will be by Pastor Henry O. Yoder, ucation Program will have the oppor- on "Pilate, a Compromising Politician." tunity of a swim in the new pool on Wednesday and Thursday of this week Le Cerce Francals will meet this at the reular class hour. Swimmers are evening at 8 p.m. in the Michigan asked to furnish caps and a non-wool League. Mr. C. G. Christofides, of the suit. A limited number of suits will be French Department, will speak on avalable at the pool. "Modern French Painting" with the aid of a group of slides he has prepared. Preliminary Instruction-Water Safe- Dancing, singing, and refreshments will ty Instructors' Course. All those plan- complete the program. All interested are ning to take this course must attend a invited. Members are urged to attendi preliminary session. The last opportu- nity will be this Fri., Mar. 19, at 7:30 American Society for Public Admin- p.m. at the Tappan Junior High Swim- istration Social Seminar. You are in- ming Pool. Sign up at Red Cross Head- vited to a special Social Seminar this quarters, Nickels Arcade. All candidates evening at 7:30 p.m. in the West Con- must be 1S years of age and hold a cur- ference Room of the Rackham Building. rent Senior Life Saving Certificate. Our guest for the evening will be br. Henry Reining, Jr., Dean, School of Recreational Leadership Class-Wom- Public Administration, University of en's Required Physical Education. Class Southern California. will meet at the Women's Swimming Pool on Fri., Mar. 19, at 3 p.m. Bring a Wesleyan Guild. Lenten matin wor- non-wool suit and a cap. A limited ship, today, 7:30-7:50 a.m., in the number of suits will be available at chapel. Mid-week refresher tea, 4-5:30 the pool, this afternoon, Plan to come Women's Swimming Pool. Recreation- Museum Movie. "Horsemen of the al swimming for upperclass women is Pampa," free movie shown at 3 p.m. scheduled for this week as follows; daily IncludingSat. and Sun. and at Wednesday 4:15-5:30 12:30 Wed, 4th floor movie alcove, Mu- Friday 4:15-5:30 seums Building, Mar. 16-22. Saturday 10-12; 2-5:30 Sunday 3-5TegationalDcip Gui. Please sign up ahead of time for Discussion Group at Guild House to- these swims at the desk at the Women's night at 7 p.m. Athletic Building. Swimmers must show I.D. cards and are asked to furnisp caps Episcopal Student Foundation. Silent and a non-wool suit. A limited inumber Luncheon for students and faculty of suits will be available at the pool, members, Canterbury House, 12:10 p.m. today. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Mar. 18, at 4 in 247 West Episcopal StudentFoundation.,Btu- Engineering. Speaker: Professor C. L. dent-Faculty led Evensong, Chapel of Dolph. Topic: The estimation of solu- St. Michael and All Angels, 5:15 p.m. tions of elliptical boundary value prob- today. lems by the method of Treftz and Ray- Inter-Arts Union. Tryouts for a one. leigh-Ritz,.ne-rsUin rot o oe act fantasy to be presented by the In- Course 402, the Interdisciplinary Sem- Arts Union early in May will be held Inar in the Application of Mathematics today (Wednesday) and tomorrow to the Social Sciences, will meet on (Thursday), from 7 to 9 p.m. in Audi- Thurs., Mar. 18, at 4 p.m., in 3409 Ma- torium D, Angell Hal. Anyone inter- son Hall. Mr. Stefan vail of the Eco- ested in acting or technical assistance nomics Department will speak on "Sell- Invited. ing Behavior under Uncertainty." Geometry Seminar. Wed., Mar. 17, 7 Coming Events p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Prof. N. H. Kui- Chemical Engineering Seminar. The per will speak on "The Principle of graduate seminar and coffee hour will Triality." he held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in 3205 East Engineering Building. Prof. Don- Topology Seminar will meet Wed., ad Katz will discuss the role of the Mar. 17, at 11 a.m., 3017 Angell Hall. engineer In the proposed American- Dr. G. Livesay will continue the series Louisiana natural-gas pipe line. of talks on Faisceaux. La p'tite causette will meet tomor- row afternoon from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in Concertsthe wing of the Michigan Union Cafe- Concert. Myra Hess, British pianist teria. Anyone wishing to speak French, of world-wide renown, will give the 10th and only French, is cordially invited! and last concert in the Choral Union etcrVrinKfeSud wl Series this season, Wednesdayrevening Deutscher Verein-Kaffee Stunde will Mar. 17, at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium, meet on Thursday at 3:15 in Union Dame Myra will play the following pro- taproom. Dr. A. Weinkauf of the Ger- gram: Bach's Fantasia in C minor; man Department will be present. All and his French Suite, No. 5 inG major; interested in speaking German in an in- Beethoven Sonata, Op. 111; Haydn So- formal atmosphere are urged to attend. nata No. 7 in D major; and the Schu- mann Etudes symphoniques, Op. 13. dEpiscpalyStudent Foundation. Stu- TcEtusreavalable at the Offices dent-Faculty led Evensong, Chapel o of theUniversity Musical Society in St. Michael and All Angels, 5:15 p.m., Burton Tower daily; and will also be Thurs., Mar. 18. on sale on the evening of the concert The International Tea onsored b at 7?o'clock in the Hill Auditorium box The International ea, snsored by office, the International Center and the In- ternational Students' Association, will Student Recital. John McCreary, or- be held Thurs., Mar. 18. from 4:30 to 6 ganist, will present a program at 8:30 o'clock, third Floor, Rackham Build- Thursday evening,tMar. 18 in Hill Au- ing. Thie Filipino group will present the ditorium, in partial fulfillment of the ntoor show, which will consist of their requirements for the degree of Bachelor native songs and dances. of Music. It will include works by Cou- CrsinSineOgnzto.Ta pern, Le Grand, Bach, Franck, Mes- Christian Science Organization. Tes siaen, and Reger, and will be open to timony meeting Thurs., at 7:30 p.m., i ii R m TnoTol Alen ml .4 + MUSIC + Rackham Auditorium * Oxford String Quartet: Elizabeth Walker, Adon Foster, violins; Joseph Bein, viola; Elizabeth Potteiger, cello; with Richard Chamberlain, tenor. Haydn: Quartet in D major, Op. 20, No. 4; Herbert Elwell: "Blue Symphony," Five Songs for Voice and String Quartet; Beethoven: Quartet in E-flat major, Op. 74 ("The Harp"). A VISIT LAST NIGHT from the Oxford String Quartet, in residence at Miami University of Ohio, provided the occasion for the first performance here of a large work by Herbert Elwell, the composer and music critic of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, and the first appearance in Ann Arbor of another University string-quartet-in-resi- dence, showing a trend gathering greater significance each year. Elwell's "Blue Symphony" is a vast un- dertaking since the text by the late John Gould Fletcher is lengthy, and more im- portant, without much variety in meter or mood. This of course doesn't hamper the poem, but a text which is so long and un- changing presents a. considerable musical problem. Elwell met it by lyricism of a sim- ple, nature in the vocal line and a string quartet accompaniment which tried to un- derline the subtle changes of meaning in the text. While the vocal line sustained the poem's continuity of tone, the string quar- tet provided pungent interjections for dra- But the poem, on quick perusal, seems non-dramatic, immediately causing an initial shortcoming; as this detracted from the meaning of the dramatic interjections. Likewise by giving this role to the string quartet, the work didn't seem to proceed to any climax nor did the harmonic rhythm want to contribute to the beauty of a phrase. A more graceful arch both expressively and structurally would have made the piece more successful, but much credit must be given Elwell for the at- tempt which was not as unsuccessful as this short paragraph might indicate. There was a naturalness of expression which was quite communicative. The Oxford Quartet performed the work sympathetically, as did Richard Chamber- lain in the solo role. The Quartet played the Haydn and Beethoven with fervor and admiration. Their technique was commend- able; their interpretations plausible and convincing. The concert again emphasized the magnificent contribution our Universities are making by sponsoring string quartets. Such an evening is most worth while. -Donald Harris THE ADMINISTRATION of President Eis- enhower is only a year old, and hence no irrevocable conclusions can be formed of its courses. But thus far the President appears to have taken to heart the Republican criti- cism of bipartisanship as practiced by his predecessors, and has resolved not to justify the xvit'nj h ,.aenni n h 1- c . tn ., nr~nnA'n,.n i r I 4 E1 t Xe ((eM, res.e oom, Lane Hall. All are wel. come. TO THE EDITOR A idt13nltnatilg Wesley Wells ... To the Editor: THE PEOPLE in this region and students here in particular have had little chance to learn about the case of Wesley Wells. Wesley Wells, a Negro convicted about twenty-five years ago for car-theft, is confined to Califor- nia's San Quentin Prison. On April 9 he is to die by virtue of an ob- scure section of the California Penal code. His offense is that he threw a cuspidor at a prison guard, injuring him slightly. The guard reported back to work in a week. The prison trial of Wells for his "assault" was marked with irre- gularities. For example, medical and psychiatric testimony on Well's behalf was not admitted. At the time the cuspidor was thrown, both the prisondoctor and the prison psychiatrist had concluded that Wells was suffer- ing from a "state of tension." All seven of California's Supreme 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 Wolfi.......Associate City Editor Alice B. Silver..Assoc. Editorial Director Diane 0. AuWterter..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 Chuck Kelsey.. Chief Photographer Business Staf Thomas Treeger. Business Manager William Kaufman Advertising Manager Harlean Hankin....Assoc. Business Mgr. William Seiden........Finance Manager Don Chisholm.....Circulation Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1 Member ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS