PAGE FOUR 11E'ICIAN UJ. S4SA . Mt 7t^. rttr cv air. : .w. . . .. .. ... . ....... .. ..... T acal1MlieWiVL11 1f11K7 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1954 E City Will Eliminate Reported Firetraps. N O BUILDING is fire proof but Ann Arbor buildings seem to be fire prone. In the last eight months Ann Arbor residents have been witnesses to three fires which caused close to one half million dollars in property damage and tragically took two lives. Students living in residence halls, co-ops, sorority and fraternity houses are living in Uni- versity inspected buildings. Conditions in these buildings are presumably in accordance with those requirements stated in state housing codes. However approximately 5000 University students are now living in rooms over which the University has no jurisdiction. THESE ROOMS may be fire traps, but the University doesn't inspect/ them. University officials feel that a student who has the in- telligence necessary to attend this school should be able to recognize situations which are ob- viously fire promoting. Rubbish filled hallways, closets filled with oilsoaked rags, exposed wires, and faulty in- sulation are situations which an untrained amateur can detect. These conditions should be reported to the city building inspector. His department, located in the city hall building, has expressed its willingness to bring to any landlords attention conditions which are fire promoting. This department can force land- lords to correct these conditions through court orders. City building inspector John Ryan has stated that with its present staff the .depart- ment can only hope to finish inspecting all Ann Arbor houses in a period of ten years. At Mon- day's council meeting, provisions for the ap- pointment ofa full-time building inspector was approved. Mr. Ryan feels that this addition to his staff will cut down the inspection to two years. However he is willing to inspect any student-inhabited building within the week if it is brought to his attention as a fire hazard. OF COURSE students in University supervis- ed housing shoud bear in mind that although their buildings are not fire traps they are not fire proof. A burning cigarette in a residence hall bed is as liable to cause a tragedy as a pile of rags in a private apartment. Caution and common sense are two fire preventatives in any house. -Elissa Panush "Official Statement-Politics Is Not Interfering With Our Work--" \3 { - - -.-- -- . 19 "TTI EWASRt -ora 1EE . PoR' £ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Preferred U. S. Prison To Freedom in Russia By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst FRED ERWIN BEAL died in Lawrence, Mass., Sunday after as con- fused a life as any I have ever known. Bealy came out of Lawrence 25 years ago hardly more than a boy, determined to help make a new world along the Marxist-Leninist line which he had been persuaded was one of brotherly love, freedom from want and security for all. He was a member of the Communist party and chose its National Textile Workers Union as his vehicle. He had worked in a textile mill from the age of 14, and was then about 22. THE UNION launched an organizing campaign in the South and Beal went to Gastonia, N.C., as the local leader. I was then city editor of the Charlotte Observer, which covered Gastonia as a suburb. Beal was in my office frequently, protesting that he did not want the vio- lence which inevitably occurred during the long strikes. He did not advocate violence in his speeches to the workers he sought to organ- ize. But he appealed to them because he was sincere-the Communist party always uses these sincere stooges in its front lines-and instilled in them deep resentment against the "bosses." One night Gastonia's police chief and several other officers ap- proached the darkened hangout of several strike leaders, both im- ported and local, As he put foot on the porch, a shotgun blasted from inside. BEAL AND six others were indicted for conspiracy to murder. When they could not induce brotherly love, they had sought to enforce it. The sandy young man from Lawrence had gotten sand in his eyes and faced 17 to 20 years in jail after a trial which produced a national sen- sation. He jumped bail and fled to Russia, which he believed to be his spiritual home. In three years he was back, preferring the life of a fugitive in the United States to even a special status in the Soviet Union. He was finally captured and was paroled after serving part of his term. I WOULD RATHER be an American prisoner than a free man in Russia," he said in applying for restoration of his citizenship. From then on out he campaigned against Communism. I talked to him from time to time. I never learned for sure whether he had found a philosophy to replace the starry-eyed one which got him into so much trouble. He would grow irritated because he could never get me to express a firm belief in his "reform." I, just considered him a benighted victim of something which -has fooled supposedly wiser people than he. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN .. Gargoyle Medieval Issue A Savoury Dishe BILLED AS the "medieval issue," this Garg- oyle doesn't quite restrain itself to that narrow compass of, say, a thousand years. The antic wits of its publishers have ranged all the way from the world of the ancients through the slightly arch'aic, and into the neo-modern. The best things in it, however, have a dis- tince flavor of' the Miiddle Ages. The cover, by Stuart Ross, shows an assemblage of monks in a football stadium, cheering the formation of a gothic "M" on the field. This beautifully executed linoleum cut is the best Gargoyle cover I've ever seen. The story called "Griselda the Prurient," pur- porting to be "a tale of the Tyrols," also makes excellent use of the medieval motif. Its dead- pan, breathless style .$ tirizes, perhaps, Sir Thomas Mallory and his imitators. It tells the story of a perfectly respectable man who turn- ed into a werewolf each Thursday and who is bedeviled for his secret by his faithless wife, who wishes to turn him permanently into a werewolf so she can be free to marry her para- mour: "Griselda then once more confronted Bodo and beseeched him to tell her the secret. 'A boon, sire, a boon,' she pled, 'my birthday approacheth.' But Bodo was adamant. 'Ask me no more, woman, or I shall take a whip to thee.' Griselda then repaired to her bedchamber and pondered so as to find a way she could extract the secret, so wicked was she!" This ex- cerpt illustrates the consciousness, and mas- tery of style which makes the story so out- standing. More often, however, the written material in the magazine seems only to be dealing with preposterous assemblages of exotic words ("Zarvin's agent in Kharkov was the brilliant proto-subversive, Kook the Dull, who was likewise a proto-strategist, and an ortho-reactionary with leanings to the left.") These are larded with non sequiturs so that the result is often almost the negation of style. Though the inventiveness in these piec- es is quite brilliant in places, it usually seems isolated and without direction. Somebody on Gargoyle has a genius for scav- enging up odd photographs and providing them with new and hilarious captions. There is a group of them in the article called "The Col- legiate Look" which utterly devastates Life Magazine's recent "The Big Ten Look." Others are scattered provocatively throughout the ma- gazine. The ads and illustrations are done with their usual verve. Larry Scott has produced a witty and ingratiating group of decadently ornate scholars, knights, ladies and sundry others. Ross has also contributed a couple of illustra- tions, bold in line and casually forceful, which will not fail to please. In a couple of articles, Gargoyle has at- tempted social criticism of a much more direct kind than it has in the past. Debra Durchslag's "People Are Talking About . . puts together a group of more or less pungent witticisms about Ann Arbor and its deni- zens in the manner of the Broadway pundit. Although I have never much cared for this particular type of column which tends to be chaotic and rather precious, it is an in- teresting venture. The other piece takes a decisive stand on the faculty dismissals; Don Malcolm's poem, "The Lay of the Last Pedagogue," is in the best tra- dition of lampooning political verse. Both the poem and its illustrations have a lilting, child's- garden-of-verses air which belies, but does not invalidate, the criticism they contain. This issue's faults do no worse than add spice to its virtues. It's a very savoury production, taken all in all. -Bob Holloway WHAT THEY'RE SAYING Six for Twins? ... To the Editor: I WOULD like to know the motor- ists current point system. Here is how I have it figured out. Five points for pastel colored coats (as these are hard to find in the winter.) Four points for brown and beige. Three points for red. Two points for navy blue coats with plaid scarves (as this is the current fad on campus). As a student proceeds to cross the street the motorist ably accel- erates his car so that the poor stu- dent must make a dash for the curb or dirty up John P. Motor- ist's car with blood. Couldn't something be done about these discourteous drivers? -Iris Bennett, fellow walking student * *.* Housing Opportunity . . To the Editor: MUST say immediately before I let lethargy set in that I feel very strongly that the situation in housing in Ann Arbor today, as described by The Daily, for the Negro student is not just deplor- able, but slightly nauseating. I feel that it is high time the Ann Arbor townspeople wake up to the fact that they are human beings as are their potential boarders, and that they should act as such. I might point out that if news- papers such as the New York Times, the Louisville Courier- Journal, and the Daily, mention all people equally as much as they are humanly capable of doing so, and respect rights of all, there is no reason why a property owner should be ashamed in the least to do so also. And if they have any qualms about the results they should take a look at the housing situation in the dormitories on campus, where all people live to- gether, regardless of their physi- cal characteristics. There have been no disturbances to my know- ledge, because of this fact, in any University dormitory. Surely the townspeople in Ann Arbor can equal the example their Univer- sity has set them. I believe firmly that here exists a wonderful opportunity for a good and honest businessman with capital to set up some good "non- discrimination" housing units near campus, for fair rates. He'd make a tidy sum of money, and set Ann Arbor straight as to the facts of rental ife at the same time. -Martin H. Buchman * * '* Wyvern Indignant... To the Editor: SPEAKING for Wyvern, the jun- ior women's honor society, I would like to express our indigna- tion at the editorial which appear- ed in Tuesday's paper deriding the Block M Section. We represent ac- tivities all over campus, and we be- lieve that the Block M is doing a good job. We would like Mr. Baad to realize that the Block M is a growing institution. It is better or- ganized, is using more complicated maneuvers, and is more impressive this year than ever before. At this rate, in a few years it could very well reach the perfection of the sections on the west coast. It can hardly be expected to be perfect from the start. Mr. Baad's article is the only criticism we have heard of the section, although we have heard numerous favorable com- ments. The latter appear to us to be well substantiated by the Block M pictures of the first game which have been exhibited in Mason Hall. We feel that the members of Block M are working hard and are doing a good job. They need favorable publicity and encouragement rath- .. .. .1L._l.. 1L. cannot possibly be like the one at UCLA. To begin with, the section there is sponsored financially by the school itself and various other agencies. "Block M" is self-sup- porting and could not possibly af- ford to hold theesuggested two hour practice session per week, since neither the stadium nor Hill Auditorium is inclined to lend us their respective sites. Secondly, it must be taken into account that "Block M" is given a limited time within which to per- form. Other schools permit their card sections to function through- out the entire game. Thus, preci- sion and co-ordination are of the utmost importance, and both have been more than amply displayed this year. The performances of "Block M" have been excellent and have com- pared in every way to those of Illinois, Northwestern, and so on. the new instruction card has been carefully followed, and the new flips and colors have been shown to their greatest advantage. Mis- takes are inevitable, but those mis- takes have been few. If Mr. Baad will read the write- ups given to the section by the "Detroit News" and the "Detroit Free Press," my points will be born out. He may also -consult Joyce Lane, general chairman of "Block M," if he wishes to read the num- erous letters she has received from visitors who praise the precision of performance as well as the sec- tion's excellent co-operation and co-ordination with the band, when they perform together during the half. Moreover, the pictures which have been taken of the section should be proof enough of the ex- cellent job it is doing. There will be a showing of the "Block M" movies at the Union in the near future. I hope that Mr. Baad and any followers which he might have can take the time to be in attend- ance at this performance. It is not the freshmen who must be encouraged, since their loyalty is well expressed through partici- pation in the section as card hold- ers and ushers. The apathy lies among the upper classmen, and our main purpose this year has been to give them a card section which they can be proud of and consequently interested in-inter- ested enough to wish to participate in it themselves. We think we have given you such a section, but it's up to every student to -support it from there. It has grown tremen- dously this year, and we hope will continue to do so until its tradi- tion and prestige are unquestion- able. -Harriett Thorne, Publicity Chairman, "Block M" * * * Clardy Defeat . To the Editor: REP. KIT CLARDY'S defeat in last week's election deserves more attention, it seems to me, than The Daily has given it. To ;ay that isn't it grand he lost and isn't it ironic he was beaten by a professor is not to say very much. It is significant that a man who went into his own state and dis- trict to make headlines as a Com- munist exposer was defeated just a few months after his sensational appearance. The Daily could have done a ser- vice to its readers if it had at- tempted some -sort of analysis of Clardy's defeat. . It is still not too late an answer such questions as 1. Did Clardy make his investigations the main point of his campaign and did his opponent attack Clardy chiefly on those investigations? or 2. Did Clardy take the 'A Vote for Me T_ - T _. - "_. .1 .. _l . - , t CALIFORNIA STORY: The saga of Goodwin Knight, victorious Governor of California, is commencing. Reports of his aspirations for the GOP Presidential nomination appear in two influential newspapers of the country (New York Times, November 7; Chicago Tribune, November 8). Cameras are being focused on him. editors are planning feature stories, GOP committeemen are discussing the new figure. We happen to know that the board of one foundation is considering a proposal to invite Knight to speak at a banquet soon to be given in Washington--thus offering this inquisitive city a chance to look him over. For the politicos and political observers know that Knight will control one of the largest blocs of delegates at the national nominating con- vention two years hence. They compare his tri- umphant eagles to the lowered standards of the now beaten "liberal" GOP state machines of the East-the "boss" organizations which Sixt-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 Sobelof......................... Editorial Director Pat Roelofs................... Associate City Editor Becky Conrad......*....***........Associate Editor Nan Swinehart. ..:........Associate Editor Dave Livingston . ,..........Sports Editor Hanley Gu,,win ....... Associate Sports Editor Warren Wertheimer.... .......Associate Sports Editor Roz Shlimovttz..................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............Associate Business Manager Bill Wise . .................. ...Advertising Manager steam-rollered the popular demand for Taft in 1952, thus easing Ike into the nomination. Hence, seeking hope for the GOP in 1956, ob- servers talk of Knight. Canvassing comment (by long distance phone) across the country, we found Governor Lee of Utah recalling with approval how Knight (like Lee) had spurned UN day in Caifornia. In Nebraska, former Congressman Howard Buffet said to us: "The salvation of the anti-socialist element in the GOP lies in leadership in the West, not the East. It is rath- er ironical that California, long labelled as tlp homeland of strange radical causes, should produce Governor Knight, the No. 1 conserva- tive leader in America today." And in Chicago, former Congressman Samuel Pettengill told us: "The election reveals the eclipse of the Dewey 'liberal' wing of the GOP, exemplified by the crash of the big machines in New York, Penn- sylvania, Connecticut and New Jersey. Speak- ing of Governor Knight of California-it looks as if 'the sun rises in the west'." --Human Events New Books at the Library Audett, Blackie-Rap Sheet, New York, Wil- liam Sloane Associates, Inc., 1954. Gann, Ernest K.-Soldier of Fortune, New York, William Sloane Associates, Inc., 1954. Henry, Joan-Yield to the Night, New York, Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1954. Lynes, Russell-The Tastemakers, New York, Harper & Brothers, 1954. Poncins, Gontran de,-The Ghost Voyage, New York, Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1954. Taylor, Elizabeth-Hester Lilly and Twelve Short Stories, New York, The Viking Press, 1954. Waltari, Mika--Moonscape, New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1954. Kramer, Dale - The Heart of O. Henry, New York. Rinehart & Conmnnv 1954 (Continued from Page 2) 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. today and 10:00 a.m.-8:30 p.m. tomorrow. "English Immigration to the United States, 1789-1812." Dr. Herbert Heaton, Chairman of the Department of His- tory, University of Minnesota. 4:15 p.m. Thurs., Nov. 18 in Auditorium C, An- gell Hall. Academic Notices Sociology Coffee Hour: Undergradu- ate majors in Sociology, as well as So- ciolbgy grads and faculty, are invited to the coffee hour at 4:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 17, in the department lounge, 5th floor, Haven Hall. Engineering Senior and Graduate Stu- dent Seminar: First ofthree meetings on "How to Interview for a Job." Wed., Nov. 17, 4:00 p.m., Room 311, West Engineering Bldg. Geometry Seminar will meet at 7:00 p.m. Wed., Nov. 17, in 3001 A.H. Dis- cussion will continue on certain aspects of algebraic geometry. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will meet. Thurs., Nov. 18, at 4:00 p.m., Room 3201 Angell Hal. Jack Meagher will conclude the discussion of Chap- ter V of Cochran's "sampling Tech- niques." Zoology Seminar. "Cortical Reaction in Sea Urchin Eggs," Robert Day Al- len, 8:00 p.m., Thurs., Nov. 18, Rack- ham Amphitheater. Coffee hour for all Political Science concentrates Thurs., Nov. 18, 4:00-5:00 p.m. in the Michigan League. 401tInterdisciplinary Seminar in Ap- plication of Mathematics to Social Sci- ence will meet Thurs., Nov. 18, Room 3401 Mason Hall from 4:00-5:30 p.m. G. Graves will speak on T. W. Anderson's "Probability Models for Analyzing Time Changes in Attitudes." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Nov. 18, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247 West Engineering. Ted W. Hildebrandt will speak on, "Elimina- tion methods for matrix operations." Education School Council is spon- soring a coffee hour Thurs., Nov. 18 in the Education School Lounge, 4:15- 5:30 p.m.. Events Today Conference on Higher Education. Theme: Pre-Professional Education. Wed., Nov. 17, Thtrs., Nov. 18. Tryouts for the Annual French Play Wed. and Thurs., Nov. 17 and 18. 3:00- 5:15 p.m. in Room 408 of the Romance Language Building. All students with some knowledge of French are eligible. Research Club: The second meeting will be held in Rackham Amphithe- atre Wed., Nov. 17. at 8:00 p.m. Paul S. Dwyer (Mathematics): "The Art of Computation," and Hans Kurath (Eng- lish): "On Making a Dictionary." The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Wed., 7:00 p.m., Discussion Group at the Guild House. La Sociedad Hispanica will hold its annual poetry contest Wed., Nov. 17 in the League at "8:00 p.m. Prizes will be awarded, singing and refreshments. Vengan! Undergrad Zoology Club. Dr. Richard Hartman will talk on, "The Contribu- tions of the Electron Microscope to the Study of viruses." Demonstration of the microscope in operation. 7:00 p.m., General Meeting of Sigma Alpha Eta, speech correction fraternity, at the University Television Studio at 310 Maynard Street, Wed., Nov. 17 at 7:30 p.m. After the business meeting, the fraternity will watch the filming of a television program about aspects of speech. Everyone interested in speech correction is invited. - Movies. Free movie, "Glacier Park Studies," Nov. 16-22. 4th floor Exhibit Hall, Museums Building. Films are shown at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m. daily, in- cluding Sat. and Sun., with extra showing Wed. at 12:30. Open to the public free of charge. First Baptist Church. Wed., Nov. 17. 4:-5 p.m. Guild will be hosts at "Skep- tic Corner." St. Mary's Chapel Novena devotions in the chapel Wed, at 7:30 p.m. Open forum discussion at the Fr. Richard Center immediatelyfollowing the serv- ices. Fr. McPhillips will show color slides. Social hour and refreshments. Pershing Rifles. Regular company drill Nov. 17 at 1930 hours. Be at TCB in uniform. Bring gym shoes, Wesleyan Guild. Wed., Nov. 17. Mid- week Worship, 5:15 p.m. in the chapel. Mid-week Tea in the lounge, 4:00 to 5:15 p.m. Economics Department Coffee Hour. The seventh in a series of Union stu- dent-faculty coffee hours will be held in the Terrace Room of the Michigan Union from 4:00-5:00 p.m., Wed., Nov. 17, and will feature the Economics Dept. The public is invited to meet thepfaculty informally, and Speech students are especially urged to attend. Refreshments. UlIr Ski Club will meet Wed., Nov. 17, 3rd floor of Lane Hall at 8:00 p.m. Talk and discussion on ski equipment. Coming Events Christian Science Organization Testi- monial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea Thurs., Nov. 18. 4:30-6:00 p.m., Rackham Building. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House, Thurs., Nov. 18, after the 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion. La P'tite Causette will meet Thurs., Nov. 18 from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. In the right room of the. Michigan Union cafeteria. The Congregational-Disciples Guild: Thurs., 7:00-8:00 p.m., Bible Class at the Guild House. A.S.P.A. Social Seminar, Thurs., Nov. 18 at 7:45 p.m. in the West Con- ference Room of the Rackham Build- ing. Speaker will be George Bean, City Manager of Peoria, Illinois and Presi- dent of the I.C.M.A. Light refreshments. English Journal Club will meet at 8:00 p.m., Thurs., Nov. 18. in the East Lecture Room, Mezzanine Floor, Rack- ham Building. Prof. Norman E. Nel- son will speak on "The Social Sci- ences and their Relation to Literature." Faculty and graduate students of the Psychology and Sociology Departments are invited. Hillel: Musicale Thurs. at 8:00 p.m. Bach's Fourth Symphony, Leonard Bernstein's "Fancy Free" Brunch scheduled for Sun., Nov. 20 has been postponed to at later date. Martha Cook invites all women new to the campus this year to an Open DREW PEARSON: 'Joe Must Stay' Locusts WASHINGTON. - A middle-aged woman opened the Senate office building door of Sen. Earle Clem- ents of Kentucky and stepped in- side. Abruptly she asked the steno- grapher sitting at a desk near the door: "Whom are you for?" Senator Clements' secretary was perplexed. The woman visitor had not announced herself, had given no name, but on her breast was a large button. It read: "God Bless Joe." The intruder did not give the senator's secretary much time to ponder. "Whom do you work for?" she demanded. This again was weird question, since the door of the office was plainly marked: "Senator Clem- ents of Kentucky." Before the senator's secretary could answer, the visitor blurted out: "Ah Ha! You won't tell whom you work for. That shows where you stand-afraid to tell whom you work for!" And she flounced out. Thus operate the Joe-must-stay lobbyists who have descended on the Capital like a swarm of locusts. Behind Joe's Lobby Sen. Joe McCarthy borrowed a page from the Communist book when he imported organized dem- onstrators to try to stampede the Senate into voting down the cen- sure resolution. Backstage story can now be told of their noisy march on Washington. Their spiritual leader was Rabbi Benjamin Schultz who, ironically, joined, forces with the nation's most poison-mouthed anti-semite, Gerald L.K. Smith, Under an as- sumed name, Smith also slipped into town to help organize the demonstration for McCarthy. \Smith registered as "Stephen Goodyear" in room 1017 of the Mayflower Hotel,, not far from Rabbi Schultz's room. Both spent most of their time on Capitol Hill, huddling with pro-McCarthy sena- tors and herding the demonstrators around. Significantly, the McCarthyite in- vasion followed the same pattern as the frequent Communist marches on Washington, when the Reds have poured into town to try to influence Congress. Like the Reds, the McCarthyites got their instructions from profes- sional organizers, who acted as pep leaders. They came bearing pla- cards, shouting slogans-a boister- ous but disciplined mob. They also swarmed into the Senate gallery and trooped from office to office in small groups, pressuring sena- tors. Down to the last detail,this is the standard Communist tech- nique. The McCarthyites were recruited mainly from freedom clubs and McCarthy clubs that Joe has been organizing in Brooklyn, Boston, and a few other cities. The main contingent, estimated at about 650, boarded a 7:30 a.m. train at New York City's Pennsylvania Station. A copy of the "Tablet," a Catho- lic publication of Brooklyn, was waiting on each seat. This con- tained an inflammatory defense of McCarthy, including his word-for- word attack on the Watkins Com- mittee. As the tran chugged toward Washington, the professional pr- ganizers wandered down the aisles, giving instructions and whipping up enthusiasm. Significantly, they de- nounced both Republicans , and Democrats alike. One beetle-browed pep leader as- sailed President Eisenhower as "soft" on communism and pro- posed Senator McCarthy for presi- dent. This was greeted with cheers. When the train pulled into Wash- ington's Union Station, the demon- strators were greeted by a District of Columbia police officer who warned it was against the law for them to parade their placards on Capitol Hill. The McCarthyites booed him down. Nevertheless, the organizers were careful to collect all the placards before they moved on th6 Senate. Instead they handed out several mimeographed protests for the demonstrators to sign and present to various senators. Who Promoted Peress? In the past, Red demonstrations in. Washington have had little effect upon Congress. But the McCarthy pressure tactics seem to have some of the solons cowed-particu- larly Senator Case of South Dako- ta. Perhaps this is because the only mail being received is from the McCarthyites. Though all the polls, plus the election returns, show that McCarthy's public fol- lowing has dropped, the mail has been lop-sided in his favor. Per- haps this may be because the Mc- Carthyites take the trouble to write, while those against him