.it i ik fyiti'1L;"if6A1.N 1 [ i I . SIL X () jr, 0- ist3 Y, 0 (.,.L tjji t kU 12, 1854k 'liii: i~ii iLM~Ai~ i~AkzA 'kUE~a0bAY, OU'i) L1~ U, 1954 Congressional And the Bi EDITOR'S NOTE: The author of the following discus- sion on the First and Fifth Amendments is a professor of philosophy at the University of Chicago. The Daily's purpose in printing this observation is to present to readers some current views on the use of the two amendments which were used by H. Chandler Davis and Professors Nickerson and Markert respectively. An outline of the Davis case appears on Page 1 of to- day's Daily.) THE POWER to investigate is the power to des- troy. Equally, it is the power to preserve. Few Americans would deny either of these assertions about Congressional investigations. Few would deny that there are limits beyond which investigations should not go-in terms both of topics investigated and procedures followed. An even smaller number would deny that the power to investigate the state of the nation or the conduct of government is in- trinsic to the pursiut of wise and representative legislative policy. But between these limiting agreements there is much confusion. Even though the overwhelming preponderance of opinion probably is today on the side of the committees and, against non-cooperat- ing witnesses, still America's traditions of suspicion of government, and of cherishing private loyalties, do not easily wither. Thus we see, recurrently, ef- forts to restrain or reform the investigative pro- cess and to define more precisely the limits of its propriety. The two Constitutional provisions to which wit- nesses have appealed as they sought to limit com- mittees' questions have been of course the First Amendment and the Fifth. As I proceed to discuss each briefly, it is perhaps in order to remark that -at least to my non-legal mind-there appears to be no legally conclusive position on either Amend- ment's exact meaning. I do not mean that many or most legal authorities have not made up their minds; I do mean that good and wise men do not agree. The employment of the Fifth Amendment is today especially in a state of uncertainty in view of the recent passage of immunity legislation in the Congress as well as the "Communist-out- lawry" bill. The latter, and indeed the Smith Act of 1910, have provided a baisis for invoking the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-inerimi- nation, and both Committees and Courts in gen- eral have accepted the legitimacy of the plea. If, however, a witness is confronted with a specific guarantee of immunity against prosecution, re- fusal to answer will bring a sentence of contempt, and such immunity statutes have been upheld by the courts in the past. As far as the law goes it seems reasonable to expect that the present statutes also will be upheld, so that persons ac- tually on trial may not avail themselves of the Fifth Amendment privilege. This is not the same as removing it from their reach in investigative proceedings, however, and it seems at the mo- ment unclear how those proceedings may be af- fected by the new legislation. The more specific meaning of the Fifth Amend- ment in respect of investigating committees has come about to this: (1) a witness can properly in- voke it in response to clearly incriminating ques- tions such as that pertaining to Communist Party membership; (2) he can not properly invoke it with respect to the membership of others in the Party unless (and here there is uncertainty) his testimony could be expected to contribute to de- velopment of a case against him; (3) if he has of- fered some testimony he is regarded as unable thereafter to be silent, on the theory tgt he has waived immunity by the answers he given. Pending clarification of existing legislation, this seems to be about the effect of the Fifth Amend- ment. In point of fact, it is of course far more a political and social problem than a legal one. . The investigating committees, far from embar- rassment over the -silence of witnesses, have regard- ed it as proof positive of guilt. If one objects that the Founding Fathers meant the privilege to pro- teet more than just the guilty people, the investi- gators sweep logic and history aside. The protest that the privilege would make no sense unless it sometimes protected innocence is drowned in re- citals of Communist wickedness and the dangers of subversion. It is of course to be assumed that guilty persona do invoke the privilege. It also is to be assumed that guilty persons can be prosecuted and convicted in spite of the privilege. It also may be assumed that the agencies of government have the money and the manpower to protect us against actual spying Investigations 7 of Rights and sabotage. And the American colleges and uni- versities can surely-without the aid of congression- al committees-maintain traditions of liberal and democratic teaching. It conveys no disrespect of our government to suggest that our academic in- stitutions have better ways to judge their faculties than by what they do or do not say under sub- poena before a committee. I do not think, there- fore, that those institutions need to interpret silence before a committee as in itself a basis for conclud- ing that he is unfit to teach. His silence is no evi- dence per se of guilt; and the institution ought to have much better evidence about him anyway. I should make it clear, indeed, that while the posi- tion I take here is roughly that of the American Association of University Professors, it is not that of the corresponding administrative group, the American Association of Universities. So far, the, presidents and chancellors have stressed the "schol- ar's obligations to candor"-the professors have stressed his right to speak, not under duress, but under conditions which he thinks appropriate. This controversy leads directly into the in- vocation of the First, rather than the Fifth Amendment. Actually, the non-cooperating wit- ness sometimes challenges the inquiry on the ground that his freedom of thought or speech is abridged, sometimes on the more general ground that the committee's powers do not extend to the asking of certain questions. These arguments both are to be fought out soon in cases pending before the Supreme Court. Prediction of the out- come is risky, but a few observations are in or- der. At present the most prominent decision in this field is that in which the Court upheld the refusal of Edward Rumely, a "right-wing" lob- byist, to produce the names of various contribu- tors when ordered to do so by the Buchanan Committee on Lobbying. The significance of the decision is limited by the fact that the Court's majority ruled only that Congress has not author- ized the Committee to make such an inquiry; and Mr. Justice Black and Mr. Justice Douglas were unable to persuade the others to declare such an inquiry unconstitutional. That the Court would set some such limits seems likely. But ap- peal to - the First Amendment must today run the risk implied in the characterization of the Communist Party as a conspiracy which was-- for judicial purposes-most succinctly outlined by Mr. Justice Jackson in the Douds case uphold- ing the Taft-Hartley Law non-Communist oath. A witness who refuses to speak on the ground that matters of Communist Party membership are matters of opinion, or proper association, very probably will be sent to jail on the ground that he is wrong (and knows he is wrong). This is, I repeat, only prediction of a chancy sort, and I shall be happy to discover that I am wrong. As we view the present struggles between wit- nesses who appeal to our Bill of Rights and inves- tigators who invoke the needs of our national se- curity, we need desperately to see these struggles in perspective. The immediate perils of international tension and the cold war are clear enough. Yet they should not, as this writer sees it, blind us to the precious values associated in our democracy with the rule of law and the supremacy of the peo- ple over their government. Nor should present perils make us forget that recurrently in our history we have dealth unjustly with unpopular minorities and later recognized that injustice was done-in Salem's witch trials, in the Alien and Sedition Laws of 1798, in the treatment of radicals after World War I. The deepest dangers inherent in present investi- gative practices is that they render more slow, more timid, more dull the abilities of our people to retain their sense of humor and of perspective, their willingness to alter legislation that turns out to be unwise or unjust. The present temper is very short with the defiant individual who stands on his own interpretation of the Fifth or the First Amend- ment. And yet we know that laws and legislators can be wrong; we know that the Supreme Court can and has reversed itself. Our religious and mor- al traditions are rich with examples of individuals who endured the most drastic penalties to bring about the changes in the laws which their consci- ences dictated. While we cherish their example, while we recognize the contributions to our society of even "the thought we hate," we need to be eternally vigilant against the activities that stunt that thought and prevent its refutation in an open and free examination. -Prof. Donald Meiklejohn, Chairman, Sodial Sciences University of Chicago DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go- Round WASHINGTON - President Ei- senhower now has the benefit of an especially built electronic device to help him with his golf. It's the first one ever used in the United States and was devel- oped by Dr. Lewis Alvarez of the University of California at Berke- ley. The electronic instrument is not used in an actual game of golf but in practice. It measures the timing of the swing, the impact of the club on the golf ball, whether the stroke is off center, and how far the ball would have traveled. The Battle of Denver For about a week prior to the political strategy meeting l a s t week, t h e President's advisers were pretty well torn apart over what he should do about the alarm- ing reports coming in from the campaign front. The political advisers were de- termined that the President go out on the hustings and make a two- week whistle-stop tour through the strategic states. But his personal advisers said no. The latter argued first that the President was under no compul sion to go out and rescue the con- gressmen who had failed to sup- port his legislative program. They also argued that Ike could not afford to have his prestige lowered by sticking his neck out in certain key states and then having his neck politically chopped off, if the GOP candidates in those states lost. They remembered .of course, the attempt of President Roosevelt to invade certain states against key democratic senators, and although Ike would be speaking for, not against, Republican senators, they were afraid outside interference would not be effective just the same. But the political advisers argued just as vigorously on the other side. They included such potent figures as GOP Chairman Len Hall; Con- gressman Dick Simpson of Penn- sylvania, chairman of the commit- tee to re-elect Republican con- gressmen; and Charley Halleck of Indiana, the House majority lead- er. The debate was really hot and furious, and at one time the Presi- dent was reported lapsing into typically Trumanesque language "Those-wouldn't have been in this trouble," friends quoted him as saying, "if they had upheld me in the Congress." (Copyright, 1954, by the Bell Syndicate) "The Top Top One? That's The Dixon-Yates Contract -1 ' H'BOM6 SENRETS letteP' TO THE EDITOR The Daily 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 libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste w be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. New Guinea Adventure New Guinea, lisle of Adven- lectures noa noashrdlu noannn ture, Col. Arnold M. Maahs, Pat- tengill Auditorium, THE FILM-LECTURE "New Gui- nea, Isle of Adventure" was the first of the six lectures in this year's World Travel and Adven- ture series. The purpose of this series is socio-educational-broad- ly, by movies and first hand ac- counts, to increase understanding and accurate appreciation of vari- ous neglected or superficially known cultures. Next to Australia and Green- land, New Guinea is the largest island In the world. There is a striking difference between the civilization of thebcoastal re- gions, which has been touched by the fostering influences of the missionaries and the Austra- lian government, and the in- terior lands, in which live prim- itive peoples using mostly stone implements. The natives of the rimland are developing educa- tional systems and familiar wes- tern habits, their placid expres- sions earning them the nick- name of the "fuzzy-wuzzy an- gels." One of the interesting moments of the film was of an inlander named Rugglepot, shown being chief-foreman to his twenty-eight wives who, in plantation fashion, were spending busy days planting yams for the master's prestige. The end of a perfect day for Rug- glepot would be a fond look at his ninety-eight pigs' jaws, strung on a line as a symbol of his prosper- ity, since the pig has a remarkable value to a native New Guinean. The individuality and careful- ness of each native's decoration is intriguing. Basic dress being min- imum amount, t'he emphasis and creativity are devoted to the head- dress, shell and bone ornaments, and painting of the face. The headdress is always an elaborate arrangement of painted chicken feathers, or beautiful bird-of-para- dise plumes, or, most startling, a large conglomeration of plaited hair salvaged from family hair- cuts and arranged into a huge top- hat affair. Evidently the chief creeping places of evil spirits are felt to be the nasal and eustacian passages, so these halls are block- ed, especially by the inlanders, with curving human bones from nostril to nostril and from ear to ear. The face-painting is flamboy- ant-one of the proudest-looking savages had a polkadot facial which was grotesquely attractive. The photography of Col. Maahs was excellent, the films themselves full of intriguing glimpses at New Guinea. The shame was that the parallel lecture was not geared either to the possibilities of the film or to those'of the audience. -Anne Young MUSIC 11- - l Age of Ugliness... To The Editors: I WALKED BY a couple of soror- ity houses the other day and saw all the girls out front in their long khaki shorts, long white socks, unpressed men's shirts and short bobbed hair. It dawned on me like a blow from a sledge hammer that we are in the midst of another Age of Ugliness. Just a few years ago we laughed loud and long when viewing pic- tures of the flat chested high- waisted boyish bobs or boobs called "women" in the twenties. It was the ladies who laughed loudest as they said "Not me! Never again!" Then an outfit called Toni came out with a home permanent and the hairdressers union pressed the panic button. "We can't sell any more $16.00 permanents," they yo- deled in unison. "We'll go broke." "But no," said a small voice in the rear. "We'll change the style and then all the silly girls must come in every two weeks for a trim." So they were trimmed and the barber colleges had another lease on life. This year something new has been subtracted. Now,..it is shorts, shorts no woman would wear in Bermuda where a girl really knows her onions. They are not short shorts to show off an occasional pair of long ptemmed American beauties, but long shorts and long socks to display one of the most functional but unattractive of all joints, the vericose back of a wom- an's knee. Each summer a large percent- age of our coeds fly over Europe devouring culture like a swarm of locusts but they miss one impor- tant aspect in, their race to see everything. A European woman, with all her lack of the American female's rights and privileges is still an individual and she never forgets she is a woman. She uses the styles of the day as they best suit her natural ad- vantages. The length of her skirts or shorts depends on the shape of her individual calf and not the whim of a designer or a sorority sister. It is not so much a question of what we wear but who wears it. Perhaps those girls who stood with fat knees on the sorority lawns should protest. They are the dupes in this struggle to bring back The Age of Ugliness. Buck Dawson, Grad. At Hill Auditorium ELEANOR STEBER, Soprano, with James Quillian at the pi- ano., MISS STEBER, clad in a green gown which I am sure lights up in the dark, presented Sunday night a thoroughly disorganized, though frequently very beautiful, song recital. After singing two thirds of a program consisting of Mozart, Richard Strauss, Puccini, and Berlioz, Miss Steber decided that we had had enough art songs and arias, and proceeded to elim- inate several of the numbers from the final group and substitute some lightweight selections, per- formed with no particular distinc- tion, which for me tended to blot out memories of her very lovely singing earlier in the evening, and end the program with a crashing anticlimax. The soprano set herself an ar- duous task by beginning the recital with the fiendishly difficult, long- breathed aria, Non mir dir, by Mo- zart. She surmounted this hurdle with much tonal beauty and amaz- ingly little vocal unsteadiness. In a group of Strauss songs, she was at her best, and sang 'with the beautiful, silvery tones that she can control so well. I did object to her habit of gliding up to the high notes of the phrase instead of be- ginning them squarely. She dem- onstrated at various times that she is perfectly capable of attacking the tones without the glide. Inci- dentally, Mr. Quillian, whose ac- companying was generally compe- tent throughout the recital, was at his best in the feathery, diffi- cult piano part of the Strauss Stanchen. It seems to me that the appeal of Puccini's music is about fifty percent in the orchestral col- oring, and thus the three arias which concluded the first half, of the program seemed somewhat two-dimensional with the piano accompaniment. They were, how- ever, beautifully sung- except for the exaggerated sobbing at the end of Vissi d'arte, from Tosca. The second half of the recital opened with three attractive songs of Berlioz, in which Miss Steber caught exactly the right mood of each one. Then began the let's let-our-hair-down por tion of the program. Stravin- sky's Song of the Dew was scratched, and in its place we had the musically inane Aria of Lucy from Menotti's The Tele phone, and Kurt Weill's Sep- temlber Song. Then we heard two American folk songs in austere and lovely settings by Copland, and Nancy Hanks, by Katherine K. Davis. The final two num- bers were omitted and in their place Miss Steber sang Czardas, from Fleidermaus. This number ended with a high D which the singer should never have at- tempted. It was accurate, but it was almost a scream. There were three encores: Whistle and rU 4 come to ye, Danny Boy; and a set of parodied variations .on Long, long ago. Now, it should- have occurred to Miss Steber that there might have been a few ? listeners who wanted to hear the program as planned, and a few who thought that this was a pretty sorry closing group for a program that opened with Mo- zart, R. Strauss, et al. Besides, the group was full of patently laugh-getting devices that seem- ed to me totally unnecessary. This is probably dreadful snob- bery, but I think there is some- thing to be said for the singer who simply comes out onto the stage and sings good music. When Miss Steber does this so well, why should she feel obliged to do any- thing else? DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN LYL Merry- Go-Round: Is It Really Stopping? (Continued from Page 2) used. Copies of lecture notes are avail- able. Eight weeks. $9.00. Registration will take place at the first meeting of the class. Professor Roy S. Swinton, In- structor. 7:00 p.m. Room 165, School of Business Administration. This class will be followed by a sec- ond section, Strength of Materials -- Engineering Mechanics Review II, be- ginning on Mon., Dec. 6. Sociology Colloquium: Dr. Amos Haw- ley, chairman, Department of Sociolo- gy, will speak on "Social Science in the Philippines" at 7:30 p.m., Wed., Oct. 13, in the Vandenberg Room of the Michi- gan League. The talk is open to the public. Re- freshments will be served. Geometry Seminar will meet in 3001 A.H. on wed., Oct. 13, at 7:00 p.m. Dis- cussion will continue on the axiomatics of some interesting geoxietries. Orientation Seminar: Wed., Oct. 13, at 2:00 p.m., in Room 3001 Angell Hal. Mr. R. P. Jerrard will speak on "Graph- ical solution of a differential equation." Engineering Senior and Graduate Stu- dent Seminar: Wed., Oct. 13, 4:00 p.m., Room 311, West Engineering. Panel dis- cussion on engineering experiences in manufacturing andrconstruction. Rep- resentatives from Proctor and Gamble, Scott Paper Co., Argus Camera, Town- send and Bottum, and Pillsbury Mills. Concerts Special Vaughan Williams Program, 8:30 p.m., Mon., Oct. 11, Aud. A, Angel Hall, presented in his honor and in celebration of his 82nd birthday, Oct. 12, by members of the faculty and stu- dents of the School of Music. Harold Haugh, tenor; Robert Courte, violist; Charles Fisher, pianist; and the Michi- gan Singers, Maynard Klein, conduc- tor, will present the program of compo- sitions by Dr. Vaughan Williams. The concert, as well as the lecture by Dr. Vaughan Williams, to be given at 4:15 p.m. Tues., in the same place, will be open to the general public. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. The Classical Motif, Oct. 8-29; French Painting at Mid-Century, Oct. 10-31. Museum hours: 9-5 on weekdays, 2-5 on Sundays. The public is invited. Events Today Mathematics Club will meet in the West Conference Room of Rackham j ing presidential address, entitled "On the Intersection Theory of Sturm." WCBN South Quad: Ther will be a meeting of the South Quad Radio Club Tues., Oct. 12, at 8:30 p.m. in G 103, South Quad. ALL members are required either to be there promptly or to get in touch with Jerry Pavlik, 7719 Hu- ber, SQ. BEFORE the meeting. Elections will be held and important station business will be discussed. Square and Folk Dancing. Everyone welcome, from beginner to expert. Grey Austin, caller. Lane Hall, tonight, 7:30- 10:00. WCBN South Quad: There will be a meeting of the South Quad Radio Club tonight at 8:30 in G 103, South Quad. ALL members are required either to be there promptly or to get in touch with Jerry Pavlik, 7719 Huber, SQ, BE- FORE the meeting tonight. Elections will be held and important station busi- ness will be discussed. La Sociedad Hispanica is holding its first "tertulia" of the semester today from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the North Wing of the Union Cafeteria. Several faculty members will be there. Anyone inter- ested in conversing informally in Spanish is invited to attend. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: 4:30-6:00 p.m. - Informal Tea at Guild House, 438 Maynard. The poetry staff will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Generation office. Please have elections from Hopwood manuscripts selected. Lutheran Student Association. The second class of Dr. George Mendenhall, "From the Bible to the Modern World- Studies in Biblical Faith" will be given today at 7:15 p.m. at the Center, corner of Hill St. and Forest Ave. Coming Events "New Perspectives" Evening, an eve- ning of evaluation of summer projects, will be held in Lane Hall, Wed., Oct. 13, at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is invited to come and share his experiences and to learn about opportunities for next sumn- mer. Le Cercle Francais meets tomorrow in the Michigan League at 8:00 p.m. A film entitled "Chateaubriand a Coin- bourg" will be shown. Professor Den- kinger of the French department will give a short talk on Chateaubriand and will comment on the film. A social hour and French popular music will follow. All are welcome, At the State . SITTING BULL, with J. Car- rol Naish. HERE WE have the typical Hol- lywood treatment of a story already dulled through repeated telling. Custer's last stand in all its glory, brought to us 'in all the wonders of Cinemascope. The story does not become less dull in this rendition. Every trite trick of the trade has been crammed into this tech- nicolor nightmare. The soldier who stands up for the rights of the In- dian even to the extent of several demotions in rank for lack of dis- cipline; the peace loving Indian chief, forced into war against his will; the thick-headed officer who persecutes the Indians beyond all reason; the girl who vacillates be- tween our heroic Indian-protect- ing soldier and a famous corres- pondent of Civil War fame. Of course the soldier wins her in the end. She even saves him from the firing squad. More lack of disci- pline for the sake of the Indians had put him in this embarassing position. Oh, yes, we have everything in this one. All the picture lacks is competent acting, good pho- tography, a believable plot, and a good healthy supply of no-nod pills. If this production is any example of what Hollywood intends to palm off on the public as good enter- tainment, then we'd better all get used to television. J. Carrol Naish, usually an actor of better than average ability, plays Sitting Bull. He tries hard, but the part is impossible. If your studies are getting you down, and you find that you can't sleep, then by all means see this movie. You can't miss falling asleep, unless the loud jeering of fh~rn '..d..n 'hnirpaimrump n~ain nari At the Michigan.. SUDDENLY SUDDENLY is the name of a small California town in which nothing of importance has hap- pened for years. One day, however, both the President of the United States and Frank Sinatra show up. Until this is all explained, quite a few dull minutes have elapsed. But suddenly some shots ring out and this picture is elevated to a pretty good grade B film. Following on the heels of his non- singing, dramatic role in From Here to Eternity, Sinatra in this picture plays a sadistic killer and it is mainly his performance that makes the story as suspenseful as it is. Sinatra is a hired gunman who is paid to assassinate the Presi- dent; he doesn't know, nor does he care, who his employers are. This, to him, is a job that's paying well and it is of no con- cern to him who his victim is going to be. Setting up shop in a house over- looking the railroad station, Bar- ron (Sinatra) holds a widow, her son, and father-in-law as hostages, and soon adds the wounded sheriff and a television repairman to his group. Waiting for the President's train, Barron holds these people in supposed terror while they ap- peal to the killer's loyalty, feeling, and the like to no avail. In the waiting interval the film gets bogged down in lots of talk and philosophy: the usual poor background of the killer as a youth, his fine (to a point) war record, his love of power via guns-over and over again until the scene seems like a philosophy class with each member spouting words and words. As the hired killer, Sinatra is very good in a - quiet way. He is YESTERDAY THE Republican Administration opened in its newest farce. This one features the Subversive Activities Control Board and the Labor Youth League. It is concerned with the dark and murky jurisdictional question of registering "Communist front" organizations. This reviewer's one criticism is that the story is circular, it ends where it begins; in short, it is useless. The plot line is not involved. The Board de- mands that the League brand itself and its mail What They 're Saying THE ARTILLERY duel between the Chinese mainland and Quemoy island, four miles away, together with the Nationalist counter-attack on the port of Amoy, have made this obscure point on the map the world's most explosive trouble spot this week. There is, so far, no evidence that the attack on Quemoy is the prelude to an immediate assault MOVIES as "subversive." The League refuses. The Board subjects the national leaders of the League to individual fines of $5,000 and five year jail sen- tences for each day of refusal. The League's leaders, unwilling to capitulate, ap- peal their case to the Supteme Court. One or pos- sibly two years intervene before that body grants a decision. In these years the League continues to function, shamelessly humiliates-the Board, whose original purpose was to protect America. As yet, however, the League has manifested no overt at- tempt to overthrow the government. The Court defeats the League's appeal. The lead- ers must go to jail. Armed with two years of pre- paration, the League pulls a surprise tactic. It drops the name "LYL," adopts a new tag, such as "YoutV Regressives," and goes on, or rather begins again, looking forward bravely and optimistically. This leaves the audience repulsed. The federat government looks foolish. The explicit purpose of the Board has been defeated. The attempt to out- law by registration 'has been a complete failure. Now for some character analysis. The League may l t i i --Dave Tice Sixty-Fifth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under theI authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Eugene Hartwig....... Managing Editor, Dorothy Myers.......... C.City Editor Jon Sobeoff..........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 2 3-24-1 Me'mber,