PAGE TWO THE M CHTGA.N n , AT v3 PAGE TWO Tmlit.i1ih I 1 £IT SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1954 E The Student Government Problem Regents Action ... FAILURE BY the Regents to mention the Laing proposal for a Student Government Council at its meeting this week raises two vital questions. First of all, we wonder why the Regents did- nqt consider the plan, which arose as an answer to the manifest need for reorganization of student gov- ernment. It is true that James A. Lewis, Vice- President in Charge of Student Affairs, outlined some reasons for the inaction. If we knew the Regents were opposed to SGC, we could draw the conclusion that they plan to kill the proposal by putting off a decision until students lose enthusiasm. But SGC would give the administration tighter control over student govern- ment than it now has, seemingly a necessary sacri- fice for more effective student government. Evidently, however, a hope that administration control over an SGC can be tightened still fur- ther prevents the Regents' merely turning thumbs down. Unless the Regents are holding out for changes in the SGC plan allowing even more administration control, the reason why they failed to act must lie in a desire to see SGC fall by the wayside like the driving ban pro- posals of the Student Legislature. This brings us to the second question: What will happen to the Laing proposal? The disappointment that followed a summer of anxiety instead of the decision that was to climax student, faculty, and administration efforts for SGC has occasioned a demoralization among many campus leaders. Not all of them have been so affected. Some are renewing their efforts to bring a decision next month. But their work will not be enough, for the work of only a few never is. All those who desire SOC must shake off any inclination towards ar "Oh, well" attitude and continue to press for a Regential decision. More than this, there must be an expression of student opinion from the students themselves, rather than only from organizations professing to represent or portray student opinion. A con- crete demonstration that student opinion is more than just something that SL represents is need- ed. Maybe that would convince the Regents that SGC Is important to us. And maybe they would give us something besides silence. -Jim Dygert The Nickerson Case Ends (Continued from Page 1) them or not. Neither does the University believe that respect for law is in conflict with freedom of the mind. This is not an inquiry into the technical competency of the men in question. It does not in- volve any question of the right freely to investigate, to arrive at or to hold unpopular views. It is a question of relation to or involvement in a conspir- atorial movement which, if successful, would sub- vert the freedoms and the liberties which we hold sacred." Nickerson's Opinion Prof. Nickerson released the following statement to the press when he learned of the Regents' ac- tion to dismiss him. "My dismissal by the President and Board of Regents of the University of Michi- gan establishes the administration's determination to dictate the political beliefs and associations of faculty members. This is clearly and simply a ques- tion of freedom of belief. The President's implica- tion that conspiratorial or subversive actions or be- liefs were involved in the decision is completely untrue. I have specifically denied, both before th Clardy Committee and in University hearings, any association with or belief in any objectives or meth- ods contrary to the principles embodied in the Constitution, and this fact has never been chal. lenged except by innuendo and doubletalk. "The President has charged that I have refused to denounce the Communist Party. I had and will denounce any part of the program of any political party which is not directed at promoting the best interests of the United States. I have refused as a matter of principle to make a blanket denunciation of any political party. Such blanket denunciations seriously interfere with the intelligent discussion and evaluation of issues. . .."The action of President Hatcher and the Board of Regents was directly contrary to the unanimous recommendation of the Committee on Intellectual Freedom and Integrity of the Univer- sity Senate, which is specifically authorized by the University Bylaws to handle cases of this type. The action seriously questions the good faith of the Pres- ident and Regents in setting up this committee pro- cedure and strongly suggests that they had no in- tention of considering Committee decisions that did not agree with their preconceived ideas. This action reflects the feeling of the President and Re* gents that the faculty of the University of Michi- gan is not qualified to evaluate the fitness and in- tegrity of its members and has handed over the responsibility of judging academic qualifications to unscrupulous politicians. "The fact that their decision was delayed for nearly four months, to a large extent needlessly, until a time when school is not in session,, Univer- sity publications are suspended and a major part of the faculty is out of town, makes it apparent that this action by the President and the Regents represents a calculated disregard for the opinions of the University Faculty." Shortly after his dismissal, Prof. Nickerson, his wife and three children, sold their Ann Arbor home and left the city. The 37-year-old pharmacologist won the John Abel Award for "most outstanding work in the U.S. in the field of pharmacology""in 1949. New Books at the Library Richer, Clement-Son of Ti-Coyo. New York, What Next, SL?... WELL, Mr. and Miss SL member, where do we go " from here? The Student Legislature has suffered a serious blow to its prestige, but one that places it somewhat at a crossroads. In endorsing a plan for reorganizing student government on campus, SL has admitted that it cannot; as it today is set up, attain the power it feels the students should have. Its members, with only two dissents, believe that the proposed plan for a Student Government Council would at least have a better chance of doing this. But there is one catch. The SGC plan calls for recognition by the Board of Regents and the ad- ministration. As is now a well-known tragedy, that recognition was not forthcoming at the Regents' meeting last Wednesday. It was not easy for SL to say, "We're not good enough, something else is better." It is even harder now for SL to say, "Well, maybe we are good enough." However they have little choice. They are still the elected student government. To give up is to leave the student body without any representing group. To continue as it has, however, is to do so in a climate of lowest esteem. The answer lies perhaps in a third choice. To continue, yes. But not as it has, a dispirited, un- certain, wavering organization. SL's greatest fault has been its seeming inabil- ity to communicate and exchange ideas with the student body. Certainly it has performed many important, even vital, services. But too often it has stifled ideas with an overabundance of talk, and a scarcity of action. Elections have become battles of campaign pos- ters, not plans. Meetings have wasted precious min- utes, and often hours, on stalling parliamentary procedure. And members too often have expressed greater interest in public relations than any form of action. This is a sad commentary on student govern- ment. But even if it has fallen to the bottom, there is even worse. The bottom could drop out. If there is a possible way to change the state of affairs, it is not with the so-called "renewed vigor" or "continued action," SL members are currently promising. What is needed is new action, new ideas, and a new philosophy. It is time that the Student Legislature look to the students and their demands. The expecta- tions and desires of the student body are regard- ed by SL as some sort of mystery. But if SL doesn't seem to know what the students want it is because it rarely asks them. While certain Legislators go about trying to stir up interest in an open forum on the SGC-SL ques- tion, an issue which students are showing a low degree of interest, the Nickerson-Davis dismissals are the subject of campus debate. Why not an ope forum on this question? One was held last semes- ter with a standing-room crowd taking part, and another one would hold the same interest. * Then what about football seating, women's hours, and yes, even Bermuda shorts to name just a few common topics 'of student complaint. If this is what the students are interested in, it is the duty of SL to be interested, too. Students on campus will support the organiza- tion that champions its causes. And if SL doesn't know what these cause are, it must go into the dormitories, quads, fraternities, and sororities to find out. Finally, what SL needs more than ever in this period of uncertainty, is a strong, firm leadership. Stalling SL members must be pushed, new schemes and plans derived with less talk and more action. The Student Legislature should invest every effort now to achieve student recognition and forget about any other recognition. If it can work itself into adynamic organization, then the stu- dents will follow it and back it. That is all the recognition, all the power SL needs. This is an admitted crisis and a crossroads. There are only two moves open. Either new ideas and back and forth communication with the students will be tried, or SL may be forced to admit failure. Well, Mr. and Miss SL member, where do we go from here? -Murry Frymer Architecture Auditorium . . . THE BLACK ROSE, with Tyronne Power, Or- son Welles and others. ONE OF THE happier aspects of movie-going is the relative ease with which one can leave the theater, light a cigarette and promptly forget about the whole thing. The lot of the critic is not such a happy one. Faced with the task of preserving for posterity a set of coherent impressions, this reviewer, for one, found sitting through The Black Rose a singularly tiresome business. The film starts pleasantly enough. After The Voice smugly tells us we are in Edward I's England and that things are rough all over, enter Tyrone Power brandishing a bare bodkin and bizarre hair- cut; he is just home from college, we learn, and he hates Normans and he is a Saxon and legally a bastard and shades of Ivanhoe we think and settle back comfortably. When we open our eyes some moments later we are in the Near East. Why are we in the Near East? We don't know that, but by now it doesn't matter- already we are crossing the desert, destination Chi- na. Mr. Power, forever the good mixer, has don- ned a turban. The scene is buzzing with in- fidels all speaking their native Infidel. Enter Orson Wells with a dirty face. His name is Bay- an, a character based, I suppose, on Atilla the Hun. Iie.speaks Oxford English. The Black Rose, who also goes by the names of Mohammed and Miriam, is only a girl. She speaks Eartha Kitt type French. She is a cute baggage. The action at this time has to do with a hein- ous plot of Bayan's which involves sacking China, grabbing some gunpowder, scooting back across the desert, blowing up $he walls of Rome, sacking Rome and calling it a day. Yet throughout Mr. The Young Criminals By WALTER LIPPMANN STATISTICS collected by the F. B.I. confirm the impression made by the recent newspapei stories of horrifying crimes com- mitted by very young men. The figures show not only a sudden increase in the number of these crimes but also in their vicious- ness. In a survey of 200 cities, the F.B.I. found that last year the crime rate of adults rose by 1.9 per cent while among youths, eighteen years and under, it rose by 7.9 per cent. From 1952 to 1953 the number of assaults committed by youths was doubled and there was a sharp rise in murders, rapes, burglaries, auto thefts, weapons- carrying and liquor violations. It is depressing and alarming, and a lot will have to be done about it. When we ask ourselves what can be done about it, we must not however look for the im- possible. We must not expect a "solution" of the problem in the sense that vaccination is a solu- tion of the problem of smallpox. The criminal tendencies will al- ways be there, re-born in each new generation, *and the question is how much these tendencies can be kept under control and how far they can be domesticated. The teen-agers of 1954 are not differ- ently constituted from the teen- agers of the past or of the future. If there is more crime and vice among thematoday than there used to be, it is not because there is suddenly a more criminal andvi- cious generation. It must be be- cause there is less discipline, more excitement, and more tempting opportunities for vice and crime. The tendencies which are latent in every generation are in this post-war generation less effect- ively restrained and more actively stimulated. When we ask ourselves what "we can do about the under-re- straint and the over-stimulation, I am not venturipg to think about advising parents with direct, im- mediate, and specific responsibility for growing children. I am think- ing of the general public which, of course, includes the parents as citizens, but is concerned with general measures. The problem is one for which public remedies are most likely to be found by choosing the more ob- vious issues, and tackling them ex- perimentally in various communi- ties. The commissions of study which will no doubt be set up are likely to be more productive if they can study the effects of prac- tical experiments. * * * Enough is known about the problem, so it seems to me, to jus- tify our picking three lines of ac- tion for the experiment. Not every- one will agree, I realize, with the proposals for action. But no one can deny, I think, that action of some kind is called for along these three lines. * * * First. The law should be amend- ed so as to hold parents liable to punishment and fines for crimes committed by their children. This is stern doctrine. But it need not and it should not be, nor is it likely to be, administered too harshly. These children are com- mitting adult crimes, and if they are too immature to be held res- ponsible then the adults who are responsible for them should be held responsible for the offenses. This liability should do something to make the wayward parents, who are letting their children run wild, amenable to the teaching and the preaching which they now ignore, Second. The schools are the pub- lic institutions which have to do with the formation of character and the learning of discipline. In many American communities, ow- ing to the weakening of the fam- ily ties and of the authority of the church and of public opinion in the social order, the public schools have had thrust upon them very nearly the whole burden of civiliz- ing the new generation. They are not equal to the very heavy and difficult burden of performing the function not on- ly of a school of learning but also the older function of the closely-knit family and of the powerful church. A shortage of our public education is grave but this is too big a sub.iect for this article. This much can, however, be said briefly. If the schools are to instill the discipline that the family and the church are not instilling, they must be giv- en much larger disciplinary pow- ers than they now have. * * * Third. There can be no real doubt, it seems to me, that the movies and television and the co- mic books are purveying violence and lust to a vicious and intoler- able degree. There can be no real doubt that public exhibitions of sadism tend to excite sadistic de-, sires and to teach the audiencet how to gratify sadistic desires. Nor nnn +lna,.a hP n nvy ,.a r .rihd- that ... oLeterito the dlilop. .I Baha'i Anniversary To the Editor: We have recently been observ- ing the efforts of many differing sects to find certain common un- derstandings in their religious out- looks. This same purpose, that of find- ing a common basis upon which the diverse religions of the world could meet, motivated the estab- lishment of the Congress of Reli- gions of the Columbian Exposition which met in Chicago in 1893. Dr. Henry H. Jessup, who had been a Christian missionary in Syr- ia, gave a message of tremendous spiritual import to the Congress on Sept. 23, 1893 - some sixty-one years ago. To quote Dr. Jessup in part "In the palace of Bahjii, just outside the fortress of Akka on the Syrian coast there died a few months since, a famous Persian sage named Baha'u'llah - the Glory of God. Three years ago He was vis- ited by a Cambridge scholar (Ed- ward Granville Brown) and gave utterance to sentiments so noble, so Christ-like that we repeat them . . . 'That all nations should be- come one in faith and all men as brothers. That the bonds of affec- tion and unity between the sons of men should be strengthened, that diversity of religion shoulddcease and difference of race be annulled . . . Let not a man glory in this, that he loves his country, let him rather glory in this, that he loves his kind.' These words of Baha'u'llah prompted a group of sincere searchers after spiritual truth to go to Akka in the Holy Land and to question there the son of Ba- ha'u'llah. This small band of peo- ple became convinced that Baha-. 'u'llah was indeed, as He Himself said, the "Promised One of All Ages." To the Christian, the Jew, the Buddhist, the Mohammedan He was the One foretold in all their holy books. In the words of Krishna, which are almost identi- cal with those of Baha'u'llah, "Whenever the world declineth in virtue and righteousness and vice and injustice mount the throne, then come I, the Lord, and revisit My world in visible form and min- gle as a man with men. And by My influence and teachings do I de- stroy the evil and injustice and re- establish virtue and righteousness. Many times have I thus appeared. Many times hereafter shall I come again." The World Faith of Baha'u'llah (Bahai means a follower of Baha- 'u'llah) does not belittle any of the previous Prophets. It does not at-' tempt to oust the founder of any' faith from the hearts of his follow- ers; nor to discard their revealed' books. Its aim is to widen the ba- sis of all the faiths by recognizing the unity of their purpose. In the words of the Founder of the Faith "That which the Lord hath ordained as the sovereign remedy and mightiest instrument for the healing of all the world is "Some Day That'l1 All Be. Done By Atomic Power" PYY a a - oF AS .t ".I= R.A. pl 0 the union of all its people in one universal Faith . . . one common Cause . .. The physicist, Dr. Glenn A. Shook, states "No age ever had a greater need for guidance, and no faith ever offered more promise than the Baha'i World Faith. Here at last is the Faith which can com- mand the respect and devotion of both the scientist and the man in the street." September 23rd was the sixty- first anniversary of the introduc- tion of Baha'u'llah's teachings into America. Today, Bahai's in over 1200 local cities in the United States (from widely diversified ra- cial, religious and ethnic back- grounds) are proclaiming the dawn or this new age of unity and peace. -- Jane E. Reynolds LYL Protest ... To the Editor: As you probably know, President Hatcher and the Regents fired Pro- fessor Mark Nickerson and Dr. Chandler Davis at a time when the least possible student and fac- ulty opinion could be voiced, as very few students and faculty members were in Ann Arbor. Davis and N-ickerson refused to answer questions of the Un-Ameri- can Activities Committee on the grounds of the First and Fifth Amendments, claiming that the Committee did not have the right to investigate personal political be- liefs, or to label people on the ba- sis of test questions designed td foster conformity. In firing these two men the Uni- versity administration has demon- strated its desire to dictate the political beliefs and associations of its faculty members, In the case of Professor Nicker- son, the administration disregard- ed the unanimous opinion of the Committee on Intellectual Free- dom and Integrity of the Universi- ty Senate, which had voted in fa- vor of retaining Nickerson. It is of significance to note that these attacks on the democratic rights to think as one pleases and to associate with whomever one desires are being carried out under the pretext of "fighting commnu- nism." The case is not closed, however. We think that the tradition of in- tellectual freedom at the Univer- sity of Michigan can be restored and preserved by the action of the majority of students, faculty, and friends off campus. We urge protest to the firings and indictment. We suggest that every campus organization public- ly protest immediately, send dele- gations to President Hatcher and the Regents, invite Nickerson and Davis to speak, circulate petitions for reinstatement, request civic and labor organizations to back up student protest, ask candidates in the November elections to aid the fight for reinstatement, and pe- tition Attorney General Brownell to drop the indictment of Dr. Davis. -- Mike Sharpe, Chairman Labor Youth League * * * Food Gripes ... To the Editor: The following was overheard at a recent convention of dieticians: "Thank you, girls. It is indeed a pleasure to see your smiling, well- fed faces this evening. You look as though you have been having a thoroughly delightful time this first week of school. I imnagine you have found the boys at the quad as hun- gry as ever, and if you've remem- bered my lessons from past talks, we'll be able to keep them that way for the rest of tie year. It's really best for them, you know; too much food isn't good for study- ing. "Today's topic will be a continu- ation, of course, of our main theme -economy. If there is one thing we must stress, economy is it. Be- cause apart from measures of economy whatrneed would there be for dieticians? We'd lose our jobs. And then what would happen to us, girls? We'd starve. Think what we'd be like - like the boys in the quad. "Some idealistic snip of a girl dared say the other day that her job as dietician was to see that the boys had well-balanced meals. I tell you, that girl was putting em- phasis in the wrong place, to the neglect of economy. It is impor- tant that the boys get well-bal- anced meals, that is, well-balanced to the budget. There is nothing better for a boy than an economi- cally well-balanced meal. "But as a whole you girls are doing a fine job. There have been many complaints from some of the more outspoken boys, but no more& than usual. Do your best to ignore them - as usual. As for the inquiries about how we pre- pare the food, I'd advise you not to answer them, since the boys are really better off if they don't know exactly how it's fixed. ".. .One more thing I'd like to mention. I stayed up about three , hours last night trying to think.of it; couldn't get to sleep until I did. Next time you serve the usual two hot dogs, only serve 'em with one bun." At this I leaped from my hiding place under the rostrum and yelled in a loud and confused voice: "So what's a guy gonna do with two wienies and one bun?!" Then I ran. The next day I suffered for it: they served beefless beef stew, which is much the same thing as the meatless vegetable soup served on Fridays, only a little thicker and without the vegetables. -Bruce Jay Compton ** * * Block 'M' Apology ... To the Editor: The Wolverine Club is truly sor- ry for the inconvenience and dis- appointment caused those fresh- men students who attended the Mass Meeting on Tuesday and failed to obtain tickets in the seo- tion. We realize that due to a mix- up some of you with Block M stubs were among those who missed out. For this we apologize. We hope that you will sign up for next fall's section during the spring semester, and we .assure you that you won't be disappointed a sec- ond time. -- Block M Wolverine Club r1 -4 i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN i i 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 Buildingbefore 2 p.m. the day preceding publication (be- fore 10 a.m. on Saturday). SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1954 Vol. LXV, No. 5 Notices Regents' Meeting: Friday, October, 22. Communications for consideration at this meeting must be in the Presi- dent's hands not later than October 14. Veterans who are resuming training under Public Law 550 (Korea GI. Bill) MUST report to Room 555 of the Ad- ministration Building between 8:30 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. before Friday, October 1. search & Development, Production, Technical Sales & Service. HALLIBURTON OIL WELL CE- MENTING COMPANY, Evansville, Ind. - B.S., Electrical and Mechanical En- gineering, and Physics for Field En- gineering and Research. AEROJET-GENERAL CORPORATION, Azusa, Calif. - Ph.D. & M.S. in Aero. E., M.S. in Electrical E., M.S. & B.S. in. Mechanical & Metallurgical E. for Re- search and Development. Those students who wish to sched- ule appointments should call the En- gineering Placement Office, ext. 2182, Room 248 West Engineering. PERSONNEL REQUEST SUN OIL COMPANY, Toledo, Ohio, is currently seeking three chemists for the Toledo refinery, to start in Pro- duction Control. For further information regarding this and other employment opportuni- ties, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., ext. 371. Each veteran must bring with him his tuition receipt for Fal, 1954. Recreational Swimming Hours - ________Women's Swimming Pool For Women Students only: Mon. Co-operatives on campus are still Fr Wgh en S:u-e:t; on.y:vMng accepting boarding applications. Three through Fri. 5:10-6:00; Mon. evening meals a day and house privileges at 8:15-9:15; Fri. and Sat. 2:30-4:30; Sat $8 a week. Apply in person to write 8'rn-9g15 :0F-i. .2 40S Personnel Chairman, 1017 Oakland; morning 10:00-12.00, Co-Recreational Swimming: Sat, eve- ning 7:15-9:15; Sun. 3:00-5:00. On all Sundays during the current Family Nights: Fri. 7:15-9:15. academic year, beginning September 26, the General Library will be open from A cadem ic Notices 2 p.m. - 6 p.m. Service will be given in the Main Reading Room, Periodical Doctoral Examination for . Robert Reading Room, and at the Circulation Charles Rathbun, Pharmacology; the- Desk. The Medical Library will not be sis: "The Selectivity of Ganglionic open but the Medical Stack is acces- Blocking Agents," Mon., Sept. 27, 103 sible through the Circulation Desk. Pharmacology Bldg., at 9:00 a.m. Chair- Study Halls will be closed but books man, M. H. Seevers. needed for Sunday use may be re- served by students on Saturday. The following seminars have been Holders of stack permits will have ac- organized in the Department of Math- cess to the stacks and may withdraw ematics: (1st semester 1954-55) books. Other users of the Library may Logic - Conducted by Buchi, first return and renew books at the Circula- meeting Thursday, Sept. 30, 4:20 p.m., tion Desk. at 439 M.H. Algebra - Conducted by Lyndon, PERSONAL INTERVIEWS - WEEK OF first meeting Thursday, Sept. 30, 3 p.m. Analytic Number Theory -- Conduct- ed by LeVeque, Friday, Oct. 1, 3:00 p.m. at 3011 A.H. Linear Spaces - Conducted by Ritt, Monday, Sept. 27, 3:00 p.m. at 2215 A.H. Applied Mathematics - Conducted by Churchill, Thursday, Sept. 30, 4:00 p.m. at 247 W.E. Orientation Seminar - Conducted by Rainich, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2:00 p.m. at 3001 A.H. History of Mathematics - Conducted by Jones, Tuesday, Sept. 28, 4:00 p.m. at 3232 A.H. Teaching of Collegiate Math - Con- ducted by Jones, Wednesday, Sept. 29, 4:00 p.m. at 3231 A.H. Events Today Intercultural Outing at the Fresh Air Camp, Saturday and Sunday, Sep- tember 25 and 26. Leave Lane Hall at 2:00 p.m. Saturday and return 24 hours later. Phone reservations to Univ. Ext. 2851. Cost $2.50. Tryouts for principal and chorus roles in the Gilbert and Sullivan So- ciety's production of "The Pirates of Penzance" will be held today in the Michigan League beginning at 2:00 p.m. Coming Events Graduate Outing Club meets Sun., 2:00 p.m., N.W. entrance to Rackham Bldg. Spend the afternoon at a nearby recreatio narea. Return about 7. Bring cars if have. Newcomers welcome. The Fireside Forum group of the First Methodist Church for single grad- uate students and young people of post- college age will hold a coffee hour after the 10:45 service on Sunday in the Youth Room. The weekly meeting and program will be held Sunday night at 7:30 also in the Youth Room. Gradu- ate students are cordially invited. The Unitarian Student Group will meet Sunday, Sept. 26, 7:30 p.m. at the church. There will be a panel discus- sion on Unitarianism. Students desir- ing transportation will meet at Lane their Spanish under informal condi- tions. Tutoring in Spanish is offered to club members. Join early. Employees - Women. A meeting sof all women who are interested in. bowl- ing Monday evenings with other Uni- versity business women will be held at 7:00 p.m. Mon. at the Michigan Recre- ation Bowling Alley. If you have any questions, call Irene Swanson, presi- dent pro tem., Ext.'2478. There will be an organizational meeting of the Michigan Actuarial Club in Room 3A of the Michigan Union at 4:10 p.m. on Mon., Sept. 27, 1954. Per- sons interested in actuarial mathemat- ics are urged to attend. 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 Phil1Brunskll, Assoc. Business Manager Bill Wise........Advertising Manager Mary Jean Monkoski..Finance Manager ,t. I.