I THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER .1954 . -z. )uthern Comfort And Desegregation T E KU KLUX KLAN is not riding too often in the Deep South these days. A few southern fraternity men no longer take off in true I920'ish fashion to "skin" a Negro. The hundred years are coming to an end; the Negro of the Confederacy has stood trial and, to the great dissatisfaction of Moscow hierarchy, ap- pears to have triumphed, White Americans from Dixie have achieved the impossibility of their tribal culture. They have superceded the sacred writ they read into the Bible; they have come to accept the constitutional amendments they once fought against. In spite of scattered and over-publicized incidents they are living without segregation in their public schools. The U.S. Supreme Court which laid down the anti-segregation ruling in May of 1954 convened this past Monday. It will soon be faced with a test on that decision. Any such test will, of course, Involve overwhelming problems of implementation. But regardless of the May ruling's prematurity these problems would have existed. To oppose the court's non-segregation action because it was not a grad- ual and slower process is illogical. The psychological problems of southern society's adjustment to the industrial age have reached a boiling point inthe last ten years. In factory towns the "white-trash"-Negro conflict has been more pronounced than ever before. Environment preju- dice naturally substantiates that conflict. The point at hand, however, is that the Supreme Court's ruling was more effective at this time than it would have been after ten more years of sociological pressure. Reaction against the decision has been notice- able but it has not smacked of the violent, per- Japs fanatic anti-Negro prejudice exhibited in the past. In fact, very few of the incidents at public grammar."mnd secondary schools have been instigated by the students themselves. Rather, almost all have been led by a small, determined faption. They are the embittered men and women who so acutely felt the initial decay of the Klan, those who grew up fn a diet of hate and terror. If they are successful now, their success is that of the drowning mai" who holds tight to the driftwood as he sinks. The relatively small town of Milford, Delaware affords us a good chance to observe this particular situation. A combined elementary and high school was closed to avoid deihonstration when eleven Negroes were admitted to the junior class. When the state police re-opened the school, white fami- lies restrained their children's attendance, ten of :the Negroes were on the scene and seventy per cent of the white students absent. Local observers reported a scarcity of expressed reaction among that seventy per cent. Most of them were reluctant to explain their absence. One of the few who were voluble cited a Negro boy's - movie invitation to a white girl. But the content of his remarks was chiefly adolescent, untouched by a distinctly recognized animosity. Most significant was the action of the Milford Board of Education members who, their lives threatened, resigned from office rather than with- draw or water down their anti-segregation belief. These men were willing to face their tense and emotionally upset community. It is vital to realize that within the framework of the Milford, Delaware incident, vicious preju- dice was present in a relatively minute, perhaps - Innoticeable degree.. But even in the most aggressively pro-segrega- tion areas there is no support for open, fervent defiance. Eventually non-segregation in the public school will begin to seem more natural, the law of the land will achieve its due respect, and our democracy will be secure in this, the most noble step forward it has taken in the area of racial prejudice, since the Lincoln Emancipation. -David Levy T he Act of London TURNING POINTS in history often go unnoticed or leave doubts in contemporary minds. This week the world saw an unmistakable shift in Euro- pean power, and it deserves all the praise it is re- ceiving. When Foreign Secretary Eden appeared be- fore the nine-power conference in London on Wed- nesday, Sept. 29, and pledged Great Britain to keep four divisions and a tactical air force at the dispos- al of the Brussels Treaty Organization and NATO he pronounced the end of 300 years of British aloofness and gave what may prove to be imper- ishable life to the ideal of European unity. There were some breathless hours during which France's difficult Premier seemed willing to throw the golden opportunity away, but at that point Chancellor Adenauer, who is a great "European" as well as a German patriot, made the neces- sary concessions to save the conference. So now we will see Germany rearmed and sovereign (a, result that was going to come whatever France did), but we will see it in the framework of a European organization to which Britain is at last a party. In all the excitement attending the conclusion of the London conference we should not forget that the man who stood behind Anthony Eden and who answered this call of history, as he did others in the past, was Sir Winston Churchill. As Prime Min- ister the great decision must have been his and it was made with his flair for the dramatic moment. There was little that Secretary Dulles could do ex- cept to promise that he would urge President Eis- enhower to renew the pledge to maintain American troops in Europe so long as the "threat exists." Chancellor Adenauer could do no more than to promise that Germany would voluntarily restrict the type and quantity of her arms production-a *promise whose validity will depend on future Ger- man Governments. Premiere Mendez-France is committed to stake the life of his Government on an acceptance of the London agreements. France is now being of- DREW PEARSON: Washingeon Merry-Go-Round LA PAZ, Bolivia-Sen. Allen Frear of Delaware was attending an official dinner party in Bolivia not long after the National Revolutionary Govern- ment of President Paz Estenssorro had put across its sweeping land reforms. "Mr. President," asked the Delaware senator, who happens to be a farm co-op leader and farm banker, "what about this socialist program you've started to divide up the land?" "I have found," replied President Paz, "that the best way to combat communism is to give each man some land of his own. A man who owns land doesn't become a Communist." And the President continued with such an eloquent explanation of his reform of Bolivia's feudal land system that Senator Frear remarked: "I withdraw my question" The point that Senator Frear explored was what makes Bolivia the most important country in Latin America right now. For what happens to Bolivia's plan of dividing up the huge landholdings among hitherto landless Indians may set a pattern for other South American countries. It may set a pat- tern first for Peru and Ecuador, which, like Bolivia, have large Indian populations. And it may set a pattern for counties like Venezuela and Colombia, which have small but unequal economic opportunity that tends toward communism and makes some governments sit on kegs of dynamite. If, on the other hand, the Bolivian experiment fails, communism is almost certain to engulf that nation-a nation which is our only important source of tin outside Communist-threatened Southeast Asia. Nothing, of course, could please Moscow more than to have the tin areas of both Southeast Asia and Bolivia come under Communist control. All of which is why what 'happens in Bolivia is vital to every American, and why Senate delega- tions, plus Assistant Secretary of State Holland, are visiting Bolivia today. It is also why I am reporting from that country now. Tin Barons Ruled To get the true picture of what's happening you have to go back to the days when Bolivia was con- trolled by three great tin barons and 1,000 ruling families. Of the tin barons, only one, Aramayo, was Bolivian; one, Hochschild, was German; and the third, Simon Patino, became the second wealthiest man in the world, took up residence in France, and until his death, watched his grandchildren win head- lines with their international divorce and custody brawls. In contrast, 90 per cent of Bolivia's population is Indian, cannot read or write, and lived under a feudal system whereby they were required to spend three to five days a week working on their landlord's hacienda in return for the right to cultivate a patch of corn and potatotes. The Indian was paid no wage, nor was his wife, who was required to work as a servant in the home of his landlord. It was a system of peonage pure and simple. And while Bolivia's first thoussand families sent their sons to Oxford and Harvard, they sent their Indian tenants on occasion from Cochabamba to La Paz, a distance of 300 miles, merely to maila letter. Furthermore, out of Bolivia's near 4,000,000 popu- lation, only 140,000-chiefly the property owners- were permitted to vote. Against this backdrop of Bolivian history it is easy to understand why Bolivia has experienced ap- proximately 129 revolutions in her 129 years of his- tory and why in a sometimes turbulent South Amer- ica she is the most turbulent country of all. Paz Revolts Such was the economic status of Bolivia until a dynamic ex-professor of economics suddenly came out of exile three years ago to ride back to La Paz and the inauguration of the most drastic reforms Bolivia, and probably no other Latin-American coun- try save Mexico, has ever seen. The new President, of course, was the same man who was questioned by Senator Frear-Victor Paz Estenssorro. What he did first was seize the tin mines of the Big Three and nationalize them; initiate universal suffrage; and divide up the land among the Indians who had worked on it. Since then Paz has put across various other less -sweeping reforms - some with the direct help of the United States-as for instance an agricultural small loan bank to finance the Indians on their new land, a plan worked out by Pete Hudgins, formerly with Nelson Rockefeller's Inter-American Corporation. President Paz has also given the United Nations the green light to draft a new civil service law for Bolivia. Naturally these reforms have not been accom- plished without some injustice, some violence and a great deal of bitterness, not only at the new regime but against the United States which has officially backed the "National Revolutionary move- ment." In Cochabamba, for instance, I saw President Paz and Eisenhower's assistant secretary of state Henry Holland, being acclaimed by several thousand Bo- livians who held up signs which read: "We are not Communists, but we are true revolutionaries." As far as I could ascertain, this is a fact. The Bolivian government is vigorously anti-Communist, but it is also vigorously revoluntionary. The story of how the Eisenhower administration, a conservative regime, has thrown its full weight behind this liberal, left-of-center regime, is an im- portant one which must be reserved for a subsequent column. Sufficeth to note at this time, however, that the Paz government has remained in power longer than MyDaddy Is A Dandy AT ONE TIME or another in their lives, most performers express some desire to enter new areas ofa the entertainment world. Dancers want to sing. Actors start devel- oping their terpsicorear. talents. Singers long to become dramatic actresses. Eartha Kitt belongs to the last division; and in Mrs. Pat-1 terson, a new play by Charles Se-] bree and Greer Johnson with inci-1 dental music by James Shelton, she makes a bid for recognition as an actress. The play is now in a1 pre-Broadway tryout at the Cass; Theater in Detroit.1 The play's setting is 1920, the edge of a small Kentucky town. In a tumble-down shack live Teddy Hicks (Miss Kitt), a 15-year-old Ne- gro girl, and Teddy's mother, Anna' (Ruth Attaway). Anna's lover ran away shortly after the birth of her' child, Teddy, and now she has to work for three dollars a week at the home of Mrs.rPatterson, a white Southern social leader famed for her literary soirees and after- noon teas. The mother and daugh- ter just manage to exist, and lux- uries are not to be had. To Teddy Mrs. Patterson comes to symbol- ize the elegant, the beautiful; and' she sums up her feelings in the first act curtain speech by an- nouncing, "When I grow up I want to be a rich white woman." The play does not attempt to preach any lesson about racial prejudice. Instead, it focuses all attention on Teddy and her world of day dreams in which she fan- cies herself admired and loved by Mrs. Patterson. In the end, Teddy learns to face reality and refuses to run away from her meagre existence with a neighbor's son. As theater, Mrs. Patterson is a combination of comedyeand fan- tasy, with the accent on the latter. The laughs are few and far be-r tween. It is chiefly the fantasy se- quences that try to carry the play. Unfortunately, they are much too wordy, going into endless streams of dialogue to make a single point. It is quite possible that these scenes may be tightened before the play reaches Broadway;, but it is unlikely that any degree of editing and solidifying will make Mrs. Patterson an artistic success. For although its chief purpose is to entertain, the play is neither sparkling nor delightful - it is rather dull and tedious, a fact borne out by the restlessness it in- cites in the audience. Burdened with a tedious script, the actors must rely on their own abilities to hold interest. Happily enough, the actors, both Negroes and whites, are a talented group that handle their roles with polish and detailed care. Especially out- standing is Enid Markey as Mrs. Patterson. Miss Markey appears only in the dream sequences where she can allow her portrayal of a Southern matron to become broad and humorous without the burden of injecting realism. Miss Kitt's role is one of great difficulty, for she is on stage al- most the entire evening. She must make her interpretation suggest the gawkiness and ro- manticism of a naive 15-year- old Negro girl without making the character appear like a silly juvenile. It is a tribute to Miss Kitt's talents that she manages as well as she does: her Terry is a person of great complexity, whose moods and actions are handled with realism and re- straint. Mrs. Patterson brings up a prob- lem which faces any singer-turned- actress. Will the public accept the singer without songs? The answer in Miss Kitt's case seems to be "No," for the producers have in- cluded six songs-songs, which in- cidentally, are never integrated into the plot and which neither ad- vance nor elaborate upon the story. The final result is that the viewer has the illusion that he is watch- ing a song recital and a play at the same time, and when one stops the other begins. Miss Kitt has a distinctive, innu- endo style of singing. She chooses to phrase meticulously, ending each phrase with a rise in tone and in- tensity. This tends to make her singing sexually suggestive; and there is little doubt that in a song such as "Monotonous" or "Santa Baby" this has some desirability. But in projecting the character of a naive 15-year-old girl it is en- tirely out of place. It annihilates all that she has created in her dra- matic scenes, confusing the audi- ence as to the real character of Terry. An example is the song "My Daddy Is a Dandy." It could be phrased "My Daddy Is a Dandy" to imply that it is Terry's father about whom she is singing. With Miss Kitt singing it comes out in this manner: "Mydaddyisa Dan- deeeeeeee," making the father ap- pear to be one of the most cele- brated products of the roaring twenties, a "Sugar Daddy," - Ernest Theodossin C ROWING profits must go hand .. ete 3 to t e i or.. . .i NAACP Founded... To the Editor: LAST SEMESTER a branch of the NAACP was founded at the University of Michigan. Its purpose is to give a new connota- tion to the word Negro. To make the word mean something, beside "the guy I don't want in my fra- ternityp," "the guy I don't want as a room mate," and "the guy to be hired only to do menial tasks." The branch was organized because there was a need for one. The thing that influenced us most was an incident that happened in the spring of 1953. While a Negro fraternity was serenading the girls at the East Quad, some of the men residents appeared on the grounds wearing white sheets apparently impersonating a racial prejudice group. When letters of protest began flooding The Daily, certain people became interested in hav- ing the situation hushed. A prom- inent SL member feared further discussio nwould cause a race riot. The impersonators said they meant no harm and they didn't think we would resent their ac- tions. The fact that there was enough tension between the races to make some people fear a race riot and the fact impersonators were ignorant of the feelings of Negroes convinced us there was a need for an NAACP. We don't be- lieve that such tension and ignor- ance could exist if the races were better integrated. So we began the NAACP and soon the need for "it was affirm- ed." In the Michigras parade Un- cle Tom's Cabin was entered as a float. We strongly protested the float as an insult to Negro people. Those who entered the float said it was an oversight and they didn't knowwe would be offended. I be- lieve they were sincere. The auth- or of the book had been anti- slavery. Lincoln had hailed it as the book that started the Civil War. But today Uncle Tom's Ca- bin has a different connotation to Negroes. Here was an incident that was caused by that process that robs Negroes of their individuality and makes them a part of a vague mob. The process is begun by the University. -Bob Evans, -ormer President of the NAACP * * * i tlce Lectures.* . To the Editor: WHEN A Negro comes to the " University his photo classifies him as a special student and he's first segregated by being placed with a Negro room mate. Then the process is furthered by the fra- ternities. They let him know he's not welcome as one of their mem- bers. The Negroes finish the pro- cess themselves by joining only Ne- "Pleased To Meet You, I Think" T ESWGERM -PWR aifR r ,a gro fraternities and by keeping to themselves even in dining rooms. He soon becomes wary of the stu- dent who heartily clasps his hand in friendship in the dorm and don't recognize him on the street. So the white student doesn't get an oppor- tunity to learn much about how the Negro feels. The Negro doesn't get a chance to know how the white student feels or to learn that he wouldn't deliberately offend him. Judging from the letters to the Daily many people failed to see why we objected to being stereo- typed. As if to illustrate our point, the landlady of 1811 Washtenaw refused to allow two students to wait for their dates inside her house. That the word Negro im- plied undesirable to her was shown by her statement that the girls lowered themselves by dating the students. Many Negroes have asked what the NAACP can do personally for them. Today you are in college. Tomorrow you will graduate and apply for other than menial jobs. Every time we get a future em- ployer, a future personnel officer, or a future foreman to recognize you, not as a mass, stereotyped Negro personality but as an indi- vidual; we reduce the probability that you will be refused employ- ment because you are a Negro. The campus chapter will work for this goal (1) by encouraging campus merchants to use fair methods in serving and employ- ing, (2) by attempting to persuade the University to assign room mates without regard to color. (3) by providing an atmosphere in our own meetings that will encourage interracial activity. The organization's activities will begin with a series of lectures by University professors designed to give information about race prob- lems. Our first lecture "The Legal Aspects of the School Segregation Case," will be given by Prof. Paul Kauper of the Law Department, Thurs., Oct. 7th at the Michigan Union. Everyone is invited to at- tend. --Willie B. Hackett President of the N.A.A.C.P. * * * Quad Door. . . To the Editor: HAVE enjoyed your picture- story on .Michigan traditions. However, the picture of what goes on under the Engine Arch: is that a kiss or a wrestling match? Be- ing in a position to observe Chica- go House coeds at 10:25 p.m. must say that these girls can do a much more graceful job, without benefit of trash can. Why don't you drop around some time to the West Quad side door and get a much better picture? Also, why no mention of the Ar- boretum? Isn't it also some sort of Michigan tradition? -Jerry Honingford * * * Hyena Demonstration... To the Editor: THE RECENT demonstration against integration by Wash- ington, D.C., high school students, among others, exemplifies the lack of maturity so common among adolescents. There is nothing wrong with either immaturity or adolescence as such. There is, however, something definitely wrong with such American and/or un-American (dependirig on in- dividual interpretation) demon- strations. If all the arguments, traditions, court decisions, basic rights and what-have-you involv- ed in the controversy were disre- garded, the demonstrations would remain a very disgusting display of a lack of common decency in subjecting fellow human beings to such ridicule. It cannot be expected of those opposing non-segregation to ac- cept it without due consideration and fair representation. But, there must be means other than milling about like a herd of cows, while at the same time, sneering and jeering like a pack of hyenas. Is it to much to expect common decency. --D. I.. Heinzman Poor Spirits ... To the Editor: IT SEEMS too bad that a school the size of Michigan can't out cheer a few Army Cadets. Our cheerleaders were down on the field leading us in cheers and for all the response they were getting they could just as well have stay- ed back in the bleachers, and watched the game. Coming from an Eastern school this poor team spirit seems quite a let down, since even the small Ivy League col- leges support their teams with more enthusiasm. This is not just my own opinion but the senti- ments of many' of the other stu- dents here. Don't tell me the down pour which rained out the pep- rally also rained out Michigan's spirit. --John J. Erlanger Cooley House * * * Re : Gargoyled... To The Editor: FOR THE SAKE of Messrs. D. H. Kessel,, L. H. Scott and advis- ors I wish to point out that I did not make a mistake when I used the word "gargoyled" in my recent letter to The Daily. It appears in Webster's Una- bridged Dictionary. I used the word advisedly to describe a badly garbled version of remarks made by Mr. Esch of the speech de- partment during a debate sponsor- ed by the Young Republicans. The adjective in question denotes a grotesquely carved architectural feature; and it was precisely only context) that the grotesque ver- by "carving" (out of its original sion of the debate was produced. Thus, and I regret to be so in- sistent, "gargoyled" may have to stand as a correct description of grotesque, verbal architecture. --Henry L. Bretton 'A I l DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN f (Continued from Page 2) Academic Notices Graduate students expecting to re- ceive the master's degree in Feb., 1955, must file a diploma application with the Recorder of the Graduate School by Fri., Oct. 8. A student will not be recommended for a degree unless he has filed formal application in the of- fice of the Graduate School. Rhodes scholarships. There will be a meeting of all interested in applying for a Rhodes Scholarship in room 2013 Angell Hall on Thurs., Oct. 7 at 4:15 p.m. Application for scholarships should be submitted on or before Oct. 15 to Room 2026 Angell Hall. Geometry Seminar will meet Wed., Oct. 6, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 3001 A.H. Discussion will continue on the general topic of inversive geometry. Algebra Seminar will meet Thurs- days at 3 p.m. in 3011 Angell Hall. Proposed program: (1) Commutative rings, (2) non-commutative rings, (3) non-associative (Lie, Jordan, etc.) rings. First meeting October 7: Intro- duction to commutative rings; speaker: Auslander. Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Oct. 7, at 4:00 in Rm. 247 west Engineering. Speaker: Profes- sor Hay will continue. Topic: A deriva- tion of certain plate equations. 401tInterdisciplinary Seminar in Ap- plication of Mathematics to Social Sci- ence will meet on Thur., Oct. 7, room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. J. R. P. French will speak on a Small Theory of Leadership. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will meet Thurs., Oct. 7, 4 p.m., Room 3201 A.H. Mr. R. W. Butcher will speak. Law School Admission Test: Appli- cation blanks for the Nov. 13 admin- stration of the Law School Admission Test are now available at 110 Rackham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N.J. not later than Nov. 3, 1954. Erpnra f cT odfa v Under the leadership of Prof. William P. Alston of the Philosophy Depart- ment. The Linguistics Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wed., Oct. 6 in the East Con- ference Room of the Rackham Build- ing. Professor AlbertcH.Marckwardt will speak on "The Teaching of Eng- lish in Europe." All persons interested in the scientific study of language are cordially invited to attend. Speech Clinic: On Wed. at 7:30 p.m. there will be a short meeting at the Speech Clinic for all those interested in joining Sigma Alpha Eta, National Speech and Hearing Association. This meeting is designed for all unable to attend the first meeting. Orientation Seminar. Wed., Oct. 6. 2:00 p.m., Room, 3001 A.H. H.P. Jerrard of General Electric Co. will speak on "Some Mathematics Used in Engineer- ing." Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House, on Wed., Oct. 6, after the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent-Faculty Tea on Wed., Oct. 6, from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. at Canterbury House. The Undergrad Zoology Club an- nounces that its second meeting will be held Wed., Oct. 6 at the Pharmacol- ogy Building. Dr. Edward Domino will speak on the Electroencephalograph. You students who are not yet members still have a chance to join at this meeting. It is the last open meeting of the semester. Welcome! The Industrial Relations Club will hold its first meeting of the academic year on Wed., Oct. 6, at 7:00 p.m. in the student lounge of the Business Ad- ministration Bldg. German Club. The first meeting of the "Deutscher Verein" will be Wed., Oct. 6, at 7:30 p.m., in room 3 of the Union. Everyone is welcome. There will be a variety of entertainment and re- freshments. Charles W. Joiner, Prof. of Law, will be at the Michigan Union Oct. 6 at 12:15 for lunch and a preliminary meet- ing with the participants in the panel discussion of "Do We Have a Hespon- pact Sound and Floating Floors and Comparison with Measurements" on Oct. 6, and "Insulation of Structure- borne Sound" on Oct.-7. Allinterested persons are invited. These lectures are sponsored by the Engineering Research Institute, in co- operation with the Department of Physics, Engineering Mechanics, and Electrical Engineering. Coming Events The NAACP will present Prof. Paul Kauper of the Law Dept. discussing the legal aspects of the school segre- gation case. The meeting will be held on Thurs., Oct. 7, at 7:30 in the Michi- gan Union. All are invited to attend. Hillel: Yom Kippur Services, Thurs. Reform: Rackham Lecture Hall 10:00 a.m. Conservative: Lydia Mendelssohn Theater 10:00 .m., 3:30 p.m. Carillon Recital by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 Thurs., Oct. 7. Program will include the An- dante from the "Surprise" Symphony, nine compositions by J. D. Gordon, Carillonneur, University of Sydney, Aus- tralia, and Waltz of the Flowers from "Nutcracker Suite" by Tchaikowsky. The Young Democrats will hold an Organizational meeting Thurs., Oct. 7 at 7:30win Room 3R of the Union. Fea- tured will be a talk by Pat Roelofs on the faces of the Suspensions followed by group discussion. All interested are urged to attend. La P'tite Causette will meet tomor- row in the wing of the Michigan Union cafeteria from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. If you have anything to talk about, come and talk about it "en francals." La Sociedad Hispanica will have its first meeting of the semester on Thurs., Oct. 7, in room 3A-3B of the Michigan Union, at 8 p.m. Movies on Latin Amer- ica will be shown. Refreshments and dancing are to follow. Membership cards willbe sold at the meeting. All members are, urged to attend and bring your friends. We'll see you on Thurs- day! Lane Hall. "Hlow will college life af- fect my religious beliefs?" Freshman Discussion Group, led by Grey Austin Michigan Crib: The first meeting of the MVichigan Crib will be held, Thurs.. Oct. 7, at 8:00 in the Henderson room of the league. Dean Stason of the Law School will speak on "A Legal Educa- tion at Michigan." tridA-g f ,, f {f I Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Eugene Hartwig.......Managing Editor Dorothy Myers..........City Editor Jon Sobeloff..........Editorial Director Pat Roelofs........Associate City Editor Becky Conrad........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart......Associate Editor Dave Livingston.......... Sports Editor Hanley Gurwin.....Assoc. Sports Editor Warren Wertheimer ..Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovitz.......Women's Editor Joy Squires....Associate Women's Editor Janet Smith..Associate Women's Editor Dean Morton........Chief Photographer Business Staff Lois Pollak........Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager. Bill Wise ..........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski. Finance Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1