PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1954' PAGE IITWO THE MIICHIGAN IIIIII DAILY WEDNESDAIIIIIIIY. I DECEMBERI 1I.195I 4I -- -- .II. II-. IIIIII IIIIII III IIIIIIEI IIII POINTED PEN 11 I By PAT ROELOFS Associate City Editor THE Common Sense Party was conceived by a group of students who wanted Student Legislature to be a responsible body. The group felt issues should be worked on after elections as well as during campaigns. They were tired of having large sounding promises turn into nothing more than election devices abandoned as soon as regular sessions of the Legislature began. They decided the only method of check- ing irresponsibility was to form a party to back certain ideas, and candidates who believe and will work to enact those ideas. The party will support the candidates during elections by campaigning for them and outlining the plat- form to the public. After the elections, party members will meet regularly with their repre- sentatives oi the legislature to discuss what measures have already been taken up by stu- dent government and how best to work for enaction of the party's platform. An advantage of a party system over a non- party system is the very coordination of ideas into a platform, for which a group of people who agree, are working. As is, persons running independently for SL are campaigning on many diverse issues, and when elected to the Legisla- ture they are all working for different ends. In addition, because issues are not clearly defined under the present no-party system, personali- ties and beauty become the highlights of an election. THE PLATFORM of the Common Sense Party contains 16 points. On some of the issues in the platform, few students would disagree. As examples, "dead" weekend prior to final exam- inations and extended closing hours in women's residences are points of little differenbe of opinion. But on these issues, which have been discussed to death during SL campaigns in the past, CSP feels method of action is important. The Common Sense Party has a carefully worked out plan of nmethodology: based on the premise that pressure to enact the above poli- cies is a first necessity. Too often a legislature member will contact members of other organi- zations or the administration and make little headway, then give up in despair and let the contact forget the issue was ever suggested. "Constant pressure is the only means of final achievement" is the guideword of CSP. CSP further emphasizes formal contact by the legislature with organizations and in- tensive personal contact with influential indi- viduals in student organizations, the faculty, administration, alumni, Ann Arbor govern- mental and interest groups, the State Legisla- ture and the Board of Regents in order to effect action and change. Very important to remember however, is that action be carefully planned before begun; in the past action was often hastily initiated be- fore possible objections had been considered, before all steps had been planned; the result was often only a half-completed job or no accomplishment at all. Common Sensers stress in their platform the need to discover what public opinion is on issues coming before the student governing body: CSP hopes to conduct surveys of the various segments and interest groups by scien- tific methods arranged with the help of the Survey Research Center. Having scientific knowledge will make student government more able to fight successfully. THE Common Sense Party feels that if stu- dent government becomes more responsible as well as more aggressive and more unified, the rest of the University community will have to pay attention to what it is doing. It seems 18,000 students, the majority group in the campus community, would desire a strong voice on campus issues. Today, to say students had a voice at all would almost be an overstate- ment. By voting for members of the Common Sense Party students will be taking a first step toward more responsible, more respected gov- ernment. Student-Regent Understanding: SGC Can Pave Way JF THE Student Government Council is ap- proved by the Regents, it will mark the first time in the University's history that the students have an official student government. This alone is sufficient reason for preferring the SGC proposal over the present Student Legislature. We cannot be sure that SGC will be any' more effective than SL in putting student de- sires into practice. This depends more on the people within the organization than its struc- ture. Yet, SGC can offer more effectiveness because it should attract competent people, being the official representative of student opinion. That the Regents retain final authority is another reason why there is no guarantee that 'SGC will accomplish more than SL has been able to do. However, it seems more likely that SGC would accomplish more, because its deci- sions will probably receive more attention from the Regents. This is deduced from the fact that the Regents would have approved SGC. THERE IS also another reason why SGC can promise greater effectiveness. Approval of SGC by the Regents may very well bring about a more cooperative attitude between the Re- gents and the students. So far, our efforts to have proposals approved have often seemed trivial, and perhaps our wish for SGC is meaningless. That the Regents always seem to ignore our efforts is the cause of this. It has been said that the Regents are doing their best as elected supervisors of the Uni- versity, and have the best interests of the stu- dents at heart. Without disputing this, we can point out that the definition of "the best inter- ests of the students" remains in the minds of the Regents. THEREFORE, it is very possible that every- thing the Regents do regarding students is done within the purpose of doing what's best for us, and that we, at the same time, think they have an opposite attitude. The resulting misunderstanding follows because we sincerely disagree on what's best for the students. It is also caused by the fact that the Regents give us no basis for thinking that they do, in fact, have our interests at heart. Until now, the Regents are to some degree responsible for any student feeling that they are ruthless. This is because the Regents do not usually give any indication of how heavily studeit opinion weighs in their decisions on what is best for us. In fact, very often they fail to say whether student opinion has any weight at all in their decisions. What we need is a compromise. We must be willing to yield graciously to the final authority of the Regents (for it is theirs anyway) if the Regents are willing to demonstrate that they do take student opinion seriously. REGENTAL approval of SGC would most likely be the first step in establishing such an atmosphere of mutual trust and respect between the Regents and the students, an atmosphere that has not often existed. At any rate, students must see the meaning in an approval of SGC, and make every effort to see that it is approved. The Regents are reasonable men, and are no doubt willing to demonstrate to students that they do have our best interests at heart and thereby clear up the misunderstanding. At the same time, students are probably more reason- able than they are interested in SGC. Being reasonable, they must realize that a large and therefore representative vote must be turned in on the referendum if they have any desire at all to see their own opinions have a chance of becoming at least part of the basis for the forming of University policy involving students. A SMALL VOTE will indicate that students do not know, or do not care, what is best for themselves, and will relieve the Regents from considering the possibility that they do. With this in mind, every student should make it a special point to vote. in the SGC referendum. -Jim Dygert DREW PEARSON: Germany Undercuts U.S. Trade WASHINGTON - U.S. bankers have a lot more at stake in the Rio De Janeiro economic conference than most of them realize. So does the American public. This was one reason why Con- gressman Jim Fulton of Pittsburgh tangled with his fellow Republi- can, Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey, for coming to the Rio conference with "an empty brief case." Congressman Fulton not only knew Latin American temperament regarding the Eisenhower admin- istration's loan policy, but he also knew that both the President's brother Milton and U.S. Ambassa- dor Merwin Bohan had stepped off the U.S. delegation because they opposed Humphrey's tight-fisted point of view. What U.S. bankers face in Rio is a plan for a purely inter-Latin American bank put forward by Ar- turo Maschke, president of the Cen- tral Bank of Chile. This bank would be composed only of Latin Ameri- can nations. The United States would be barred. However- and here is where U.S. bankers would get caught in the middle - the capital for this bank would be drawn from Latin American de- posits now in U.S. banks. As of today, Latin Americans have a total of $1,800,000,000 on deposit in North American banks. And under the Maschke plan, they would withdraw this money from U.S. banks and put it in their own bank as collateral against develop- ment loans to underdeveloped La- tin American countries. Any withdrawal of nearly two billions from American banks, es- pecially if done suddenly after the Rio conference, might have a dis- comboulating effect upon t h e American banking system. Meanwhile, what the American public doesn't realize is that Ger- man businessmen are descending on Latin America in increasing numbers, offering long-term credit and cheap prices. Thus, while the USA spends money building up Germany, Germany is indirectly using that money to unbuild Amer- ican trade in Latin America. Today, Latin America buys more from the USA than all of Europe and Asia combined. Ranking next to Canada-our best customer - come Brazil, Cuba, Mexico, Vene- zuela, all buying more than Eng- land, France, Germany. And while Latin delegates at Rio learn that the USA is considering a two- to three-billion development fund for Asia, Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey discusses a prospective bank which would take a year to organize and which would loan Latin America $100,000,000 sometime in the future. That's why Congressman Fulton criticized his fellow Republican, Secretary Humphrey, for coming to Rio with "an empty brief case." Republic.ans are almost holding their breath to see whether Demo- crats at New Orleans walk into a trap. What they're hoping is that the Democrats will elect as their new national chairman James Finne- gan, chairman of the Philadelphia City Council. The Republicans haven't any- thing against Mr. Finnegan per- sonally, politically, or any other way. But they do have some inter- esting data on another James Fin- negan. And they know that the American public, which reads, in a hurry, is sure to get them mixed up. The other Finnegan is the for- mer collector of internal revenue in St. Louis, who went to jail for taking pay from people in tax trouble. Most of the public have now forgotten his name. But what the Democrats don't know is that the name James Finnegan is going to pop into the headlines fairly soon as a result of a federal grand jury now meeting in Omaha which has been trying to ascertain who origi- nally whitewashed the Finnegan case. At first the St. Louis Finnegan w a s completely exonerated by friends inside the Treasury Depart- ment and, based upon this white- wash, President Truman accept- ed his resignation. After this, how- ever, persevering Sen. John J. Wil- liams of Delaware brought out such damning facts on Finnegan that he was sent to jail. Senator Williams has now been demanding that the Justice Depart- ment investigate and prosecute those responsible for the white- wash, and a grand jury in Omaha has elicited some dynamite-laden statements from Frank Lohn, for- mer chief of tax intelligence in Kansas City, one of the men who probed the Finne-tn case. All this has nothing to do with the Philadelphia Finnegan-except Still, Small Voice DRAMA REVIEW At the Cass in Detroit*... THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH with Eddie Bracken, Anne Kimbell, Kaye Lyder, Howard Freeman, and Edward Hunt. THE OLD PROBLEM of how to make a worn out, tired touring company sparkle appeared anew at Monday night's performance of George Axelrod's The Seven Year Itch. This romantic comedy which has received considerable acclaim since its Broadway debut in 1952, emerged as anything but a "hit"-it was a cold, mechanical, and very disappointing reading. Only in the final act did the cast project any feeling of fun and humor. Admittedly, Seven Year Itch is hardly the funniest play of all time. It is a pleasant and diverting spoof about a typically American husband whose typically American wife takes their typically American boy to the beach for the summer. Hubby, left home alone with an ulcer and a stern warning against cigarettes and intoxicants, begins pursuing a curvacious model who lives in the upstairs apartment. The play occurs within a single living room set. But the author uses flashbacks, dreams, solioloquies, and even a few talking con- sciences to provide movement and contrast with the real-life episodes. It is chiefly these fantasy sequences that give the play humor and hold together an otherwise simple story line. AXELROD'S WORK is often rather cliched and very seldom original. However, the manner in which he pokes fun at psychiatrists, pocket books, drinking , and dozens of American institutions can be fun if handled with spirit. Monday night's cast had very little spirit, and, consequently, failed to give the play the needed boost. Eddie Bracken as the husband has an extremely arduous role. He must be on stage throughout the entire evening. Bracken, famous for his many movie roles,, is well equipped in the talent department, a necessary prerequisite if Seven Year Itch is to appear worthwhile. But the many months of reading the same lines over and over again have begun to show; and Bracken has apparently lost any feeling for the play. He reads his lines with perfect accuracy, but there is a terrifying kind of mechanization that leaves the audience cold. ANNE KIMBELL as the girl is one of those attractive females who insists on over-acting. It is not really overacting, just a kind of bubbling and chortliing that seems so popular with today's ingenues. She failed to suggest that her character was anything more than a fifty-mile-a-minute gabbing fool. The lines that deserve laughs failed to register with Miss Kimbell's delivery. Kaye Lyder as Bracken's wife was wooden. The only actors who seemed to be enjoying their work were Howard Freeman as a sex- and-violence psychiatrist and Edward Hunt as the author who writes love scenes ("inward, outward, pulsing, throbbing, upward, downward"). Their spontaneity and ease brought most of the few laughs in a fairly boring performance. -Ernest Theodossin LETTERS TO THE EDITOR f y1 j~'- Y ' '., The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3553 Administration Building before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- fore 10 a.m. on Saturday). Notice of lectures, concerts, and organization meetings cannot be published oftener than twice. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1954 Vol. LXV, No. 58 Notices Air Force ROTC: Notice is hereby given that the Air Force Officer Quali- fying Tests for AFROTO cadets will be given in Kellogg Auditorium from 1:00-5:00 p.m., Fri., Dec. 3 and from 8 a.m.-12:OOM. Sat., Dec. 4. Attendance of all concerned at both sessions is required. TIAA - College Retirement Equities Fund. Participants in the Teachers In- surance and Annuity Association re- tirement program who wish to change their contributions to the College Re - tirement Equities Fund, or to apply for or discontinue participation in the Equities Fund, will be able to make such changes before Dec. 15. Staff members who have % or a of the con- tributions to TIAA allocated to CREF may wish to change to a ?; basis, or go from the latter to a ,a or J basis. Applications for Fellowships and Scholarships in the Graduate School for 1955-56 are now available. Applica- tion for renewal should also be filed at this time. Competition closes Feb. 15. Blanks and information may be ob- taned in the Graduate School Offices, Rackham Building. Graduate Record Examination: Appli- cation blanks for the Jan. 27 adminis- tration of the Graduate Record Exami- nation are now available at 110 Rack- ham Building. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N.J. not later than Jan. 13. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: Representatives from the following will interview at the Bureau of Ap- pointments: Tues., Dec. 7 Canada Life Assurance Co., Jackson, Mich.-Feb. men in LS&A and BusAd for Sales. Kalamazoo Vegetable Parchment Co., Kalamazoo, Mich. - Afternoon only, LS&A and BusAd men for Production and Sales Training. This is KVP pa- per products company. Wed., Dec. 8 Continental Casualty Co., Chicago, I1. - LS&A and BusAd men, and wom- en who have had a Math. background for positions as Accountants, Actuaries, Advertising and Sales Promotionalists, Salesmen, Claim Adjusters and Examin- ers, Statisticians, and Underwriters. Thurs., Dec. 9 American Seating Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.-Feb. men and women in LS&A and BusAd for Sales Trainee, Manage- ment and Supervisory Trainee Posi- tions. Students wishing to make appoint- ments with any of the above should contact the Bureau of Appointments, Room 3528 Ad. Bldg., Ext. 371. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: A local firm needs a man for its en- gineering lab. A high school degree is enough, but the man must have some mechanical aptitude and be able to work in a research lab. Dept. of Health, Educ., & Welfare, Nat'l. Microbiological Institute, Rocky Mt. Lab., Hamilton, Mont., has two po- sitions open for Research Assistants in Bacteriology GS-5. Y.M.C.A., Chicago, I11.-will hold its Annual Interpretation and Recruiting Luncheon for both men and women Tues., Dec. 28. Dept. of Personnel, City of New York, announces an exam for Superintendent of Construction (Buildings), grade 4. Requirements include 6 yrs. practical experience, including 3 yrs. as Supt. of Construction. Engrg education can be substituted for up to 3 yrs. of ex- perience. For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 371, 3528 Ad. Bldg. Students are reminded that applications for the JMA exam will not be accepted after Tues., Nov. 30. Academic Notices Botanical Seminar in Room 1139 Nat ural Science Building Wed., Dec. 1 at 4:15 p.m. Prof. William C. Steere, Stan- ford University and National Science Foundation, will speak on "Cytologi- cal Studies on Mosses." Lantern slides, refreshments. Geometry Seminar Wed., Dec. 1, 7:00 p.m., in 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. Smoke will continue his discussion of alge- braic geometry. Sociology Coffee Hour: A coffee hour for graduates and faculty of the So- ciology Department will be held at 4:00 p.m. today in the department lounge. 401 Interdisciplinary Seminar on the Application of Mathematics to Social Science will meet in 3409 Mason Hall, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Thurs., Dec. 2. F. Harary will speak on "Directed Graphs- as a Mathematical Model." Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thurs., Dec. 2, at 4:00 p.m. in Room 247, West Engineering. Prof. C. L. Dolph, "Remarks on the Schwinger Variation Principles." Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will meet Thurs., Dec. 2, at 4:00 p.m., Room 3201 A.H. J. Meagher will con- clude his discussion of Chapter 5 and Miss Irene Hess will begin discussion of Chapter 6 in Cochran's Sampling Techniques. Exhibitions Museum of Art. French Textiles, 1685- 1800, through Jan. 2; Whistler Prints, through Jan. 2. Alumni Memorial Hall. Open 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. weekdays, 2:00- 5:00 p.m. Sundays. Events Today Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent+Bafst a troc+ fCaontphorv ,., no DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ensong at 5:15 pm.,.Wed., Dec 1, in the Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. Linguistics Club will meet Wed., Dec. 1 at 7:30 p.m. in the East Conference Room of the Rackham Building. Miss Eva Siversten will speak on "Pitch in Kiowa" and Prof. Gordon E. Peter- son on "The Perception of Language." Society of Medical Technologists will hold a business meeting in the Rumpus Room of the League Wed., Dec. 1 at 7:30 p.m. All members must be pres- ent. If you cannot attend, phone 2- 6576. The Congregational-Disciples, Guild: Wed., 7:00 p.m., Discussion group at Guild House. Undergraduate Zoology Club. "Polio- myelitis, Its Epidemiology (ecology) and Prevention" by Dr. Robert F. Korns, deputy director of the Poliomyelitis Vaccine Evaluation Program. 3126 Nat- ural Science, 7:00 p.m., Wed. Last open meeting of the semester. ULLR Ski Club will meet Wed., Dec. 1, at 8:00 p.m. in Room 3S of the Un- ion. Movies. Free movies,. "Montana" and "Pompeii and Vesuvius," Dec. 1-6. 4th floor Exhibit Hall, Museums Building. Films are shown daily at 3:00 and 4:00 p.m., including Sat, and Sun., with an extra showing Wed. at 12:30. Open to the public free of charge. Pershing Rifles. Be at TCB in uni- form at 1930 hrs. Wed., 1 Dec. for regu- lar company drill. Bring gym shoes. Wesleyan Guild. Wed., Dec. 1 week Worship, 5:15 p.m. in the chapel. Mid-week Tea in the lounge 4:00 to 5:15 p.m. House Athletic Managers meeting on Wed., De. 1, at 5:10 p.m. in the W.A.B. Please send a substitute if you can't make it. Coming Events SRA Workcamp will be held in Ypsi- lanti this week-end-Fri. afternoon to Sun. noon. Only six vacancies are re- maining-make your reservation with a $2.00 deposit at Lane Hall. Christian Science Organization Testi- monial Meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thurs., Fire- side Room, Lane Hall. International Center Tea. Thurs., Dee. 2, 4:30-6:00 p.m., Rackham Building. Young Democrats. "India's Position in the Clash Between East and West" will be the discussion topic Thurs., Dec. 2 at the Michigan Union. Room 3R at 7:30 p.m., led by John F. Muehl, Assistant Professor of English and B. V. Govindaraj, student in International Law. Episcopal Student Foundation. Stu- dent Breakfast at Canterbury House, Thurs., Dec. 2, after 7:00 a.m. Holy Com- munion. Student-conducted Evensong at 5:15 p.m., Thurs., De. 2, in the Chapel of St. Michael and All Angels. La P'tite Causette will meet Thurs., Dec. 2 from 3:30-5:00 p.m. In the left room of the Michigan Union cafeteria, Phi Sigma Society. "Cellular Permea- bility in Bacteria," Dr. Philipp Ger- hardt, Assistant Professor of Bacteriolo- gy. Rackham Amphitheater, Thurs., Dec. 2, at 8:00 p.m. Refreshments. Open to the public. Business meeting, 7:00 p.m. Initiation 7:30 p.m. Welcome ad- dress by Nat'l. Chancellor, Dr. Karl F. Lagler. S.L. Travel Show Thurs., Dee. 2, at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. A student panel will discuss experiences in Europe and a travel agent will ge advice on low cost opportunities for student travel. Michigan Christian Fellowship. Re- ception following the "Messiah" Sat., Dec. 4, in the Methodist Student Lounge. Michigan Crib. Trip to Circuit Court Thurs., Dec. 2. All interested meet Bill Tyson, 1:00 p.m., Thurs., Dec. 2, in front of Hill Auditorium, to go to Judge Brakey's courtroom for the 1:30- 5:30 p.m. session. Late-comers should join the group in the courtroom on Huron Street anytime during the after- noon. I I .1 ,;, 4 y, INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Red Prisoners Need 'Peaceful' Freeing Check Fascism ... FOR THOSE who considered that McCarthy was a dead issue, the developments of the past few weeks should have dispelled the il- lusion. In that time, McCarthy supporters held a mass rally in Washington, launched "Ten Mil- lion Americans Mobilized for Jus- tice," and held another mass rally in New York. That wealthy and powerful forces are behind McCarthy is in- dicated by the roster of public sup- porters of "Ten Million Ameri- cans," including Rear Admiral John C. Crommelin, Chief of Staff of the group, and General George E. Stratemeyer, Chairman. These men have been long-standing ad- vocates of the "war-now" policy of blockading and attacking the mainland of China-McCarthyism in foreign affairs. These events signify the devel- opment of a fascist movement. Of the "Ten Million Americans," W. K. Kelsey, Detroit News columnist said: "the leaders of the crusade of the ten million are neither blind nor innocent dupes. They know what they want. In Italy it was called fascism." The 45th NAACP Convention Resolution stated: "Under the banner of fighting Communism, McCarthyism aims to lead the nation to fascism." We have seen a debate on Mc- Carthy censure scheduled by YR and YD at Wayne vetoed; a debate on the admission of China to the Carthy from the Senate, or failing that, his censure. Similar positive developments here by our facluty and students are needed to help check the omi- nous pro-fascist trends. -Mike Sharpe On Letters,. . T HE Letters to the Editor section of The Daily has always been a respectable medium through which interested readers have beenable to expressrtheirsconsid- ered opinions on topics of local concern. For this reason I find the loathsome abuse to which the sec- tion was subjected in the Novem- ber 30 issue both disgraceful and disconcerting. Specifically, I refer to the letter from Messrs. Fuller and Prendergast whom, incident- ally, I do not know. At the risk of getting a "punch inthe snoot," I feel compelled to clarify a situa- tion which may have confused some readers. Fuller and Prendergast, in a letter they no doubt considered clever and amusing, threatened to "punch in the snoot" anymore "mugs" who wrote "funny" letters about Steve Jelin. They were re- ferring to a letter in the Novem- ber 21 issue of The Daily which was submitted by Messrs. MacDon- ald and Swainson whom, incident- ally, I do know. MacDonald and Swainson, in a carefully phrased letter, had praised Mr. Jelin for By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst PRESIDENT Eisenhower and Secretary Dulles are still insisting on "peaceful" efforts rather than. the "war action" of a blockade to get imprisoned Americans out of Red China, and Sen. Knowland is still asking "When, and what peaceful means?" The answers don't come easily. A beginning was made at Geneva, where American and Chinese representatives met face to face and a strongly expressed American protest was re- jected, as expected. THE QUESTION of what to do next was be- approach, and a more realistic one insofar as actual release is concerned. It is just possible that Russia does not appreciate this interfer- ence with her "soft" policy of the moment. Russia is herself getting tougher right now, however, with her threats about what the Western European Union will do to peace, and her organization of a counter-bloc. Actually, if any release is achieved, it will probably come through specific and secret negotiations-which might be carried on either through the face-to-face offices established in Geneva or through Russia A SIDE FROM his answer to Knowland, which 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 Loi PolakBusiness Staff Lois Pollak .........Business Manager Phil Brunskill, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise .........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski Finance Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1