IR qw PAGO TWO Y TUGAN ' iLY -1 -, "llGAS' -5 0 L. -n U.S. & Russian Propaganda ONCE AGAIN Russia has given the world a demonstration of her ability to spout off about nothing in particular. Her latest venture in this field has been to declare that football in the United States is a warmonger device used to condition the people to accept brutality and murder, so that when the time comes they wil be "'-'kadv" War. A Mos- cow broadct w&t .-made this statement also went on to say that University of Mich- igan foo'b 'i yryers are often carried straight from tn t rtball field to the ceme- tery, the game is so tough. Russia, of course, is waging a campaign to top the United States in convincing the rest of the world who is right. Using tac- tics which recall those employed by Hitler, the Russians no doubt feel that if they keep reiterating the same falsifications long enough those countries on the bor-, derline politically might eventually swing over to the Communists. That the Russians do color their facts at every opportunity is clear. And in this campaign the Russians, one must admit, do a creditable job. Further- more, even those people in Europe and Asia that support the United States rarely hear us present our side of the picture. Russia has a virtual monopoly in the field of at- tempting to convince the people of the world that she is the champion of peace and not us. According to a State Department estimate, one-third of all the people in the world believe that the United States started the war in Korea. Such a condition is indeed pitiful for a nation that has the technical know-how to equal and even surpass Russia's achieve- ments in this sphere. For more than two years now, Drew Pearson and others have espoused a plan to have the government send over leaflets to Russia in balloons which could be calculated to drop over the big Russian cities. These leaflets could be of immeasurable value in disseminating the truth. Even if they did nothing more than to tell the Russian people the difference be- tween life in a democratic state and a to- talitarian state it would be well worth the effort. Another glaring inefficacy is the "Voice of America" program, which is now hardly Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP DAWSON more than a faint whisper. Even if it pre- sented the type of material which it should, the "Voice" program is heard by relatively few people, compared to the amount that hear Russia's broadcasts. Russia, for example, has 250 transmitters throughout the world; the United States and Britain combined have only 70. Russia seldom uses the same material on her pro- grams twice; our programs repeat the same script throughout the day. Russia has 832 program hours per week; the United States 192. Nearly all of Russia's stations operate 24 hours per day; only two of ours do. But aside from these physical differences there is a great deal that can be done to improve the content of the "Voice" program. Instead of repeating over and over, as we have been prone to do in the past, that we are against Communism and that the Rus- sians are wrong, we should emphasize the positive aspects of democracy. We can con- vince the peoples of the world that Com- munism is bad by stressing the virtues of life in a democracy far more effectively than if we merely criticize the Russians them- selves. And to accomplish this all we need do is speak th-e truth. We do not have to color the facts to make our side appear the more desirable. We need only to portray Amer- ican life as it is, illustrating the many freedoms that we have which are taboo under the Communist way of life. Let us leave the choice up to the people. When they have the facts before them, it is al- most a certainty that they will not choose to become another addition to the string of Russian satellites. Though we are waging a physical war in Korea, that is no reason to relent in pro- paganda efforts of our own. The success that the Russians have been having in their propaganda campaign is more serious than many of us think. It is imperative that we do not let the Russians continue to make fools of us, and begin in earnest to present our side of the picture. Unless we do this, the Russians will have added considerably to the success of any. plan they might have to dominate the world. For if they convert enough coun- tries to their side merely by propaganda, it will be but a simple task for Russia to march into them and take command. As John Foster Dulles has commented, "the question of whether we have a general war or not may depend . . . upon the rela-' tive effectiveness of the Communist propa- ganda and the free world propaganda." --Larry Rothman rdite/ 0 /e te By PHILIP DAWSON THE CUSTOM has always been for re- tiring editors of The Daily to let go with what is known as a Last Blast before dis- appearing into the oblivion of relatively pri- vate life. This year, however, there doesn't seem to be anything available to blast. Most of the traditional targets either have suf- fered from heavy bombardment or have proved so impregnable that it would be useless to waste verbal ammunition on them. Nevertheless, I have a coup?-w of things -blank cartridges, perhaps-to unload. They relate to the purposes of The Daily, not as a student activity, though it is that, but as a newspaper, which it is primarily. THE FIRST PURPOSE of a newspaper is to present the news in its complete essentials, in order that people may intelli- gently make the decisions that are necessary to the proper conduct of their public and private affairs. This cannot be repeated too often.' Newspapers often fail to do this job. More often, probably, than most of their readers suspect. This purpose should be held before the eyes of readers as well as of editors, as an ideal which is valid no matter how many times it is not fulfilled. Beyond this, however, a newspaper must have an editorial policy. It cannot operates simply on a combination of the profit motive and the desire to give its readers the news. There is something that a man puts first, when he stands up to endure the buffetings of the world. And a newspaper, as an or- ganization of men and women, has the same need for an ideal to give it integrity. In this respect, The Daily is unusual. Other newspapers are for or against a variety of ideas and personalities. The Daily, as a newspaper, takes no stand on these issue. It is neutral. But there is one thing for which I think The Daily does stand: free and responsible expression of all opinions. This policy is not only presented in the opinions of individual staff members, who may sometimes be wrong, in discussing such things as censorship; it, is carried out in the very operations of The Daily itself. Every member of the staff is entitled to his view -and entitled to express it fairly and intel- ligently in print. For the staff of The Daily, freedom of thought ought always to be an article Q faith, as befits a newspaper in a university community. CURR ENT BOOKS Purpose In Korea IN A recent letter to the editor James M. Lawler asked two questions regarding the Korean crisis: "What would we gain were we successful in pushing the North Koreans back across the now fam- ous thirty-eighth parallel? and what would we lose were we at last totally pushed from the diminui- tive peninsula-extension of Asia?" His comments, although high sounding, have little practical val- ue. The fact is that the UN police force is at present attempting to push the North Korean aggressors back across the arbitrary thirty- eighth parallel, and to my mind, there are two reasons for the UN police force to continue to do so. First, the Western world must show that we aren't afraid of the Communist threat, for if we don't, it will be an open invita- tion for more trouble. India, Pakistan, Burma, the Dutch East Indies, and other pos- sible "powder-kegs" could fall easy victim. To avert realization of this threat, the UN police force must show, with force if necessary, that it will not stand for any nonsense when the peace of the world is at stake. Aggression anywhere, whether it be civil or international war, must be met with firm resistance. Secondly, and most important, the UN has a certain prestige it must maintain in order to suc- ceed as a world government. If the people of the world lose faith in its ability to "keep the peace," it will die the same hor- rible death the League of Nations died, and freedom-loving people will find themselves again inhabit- ing a planet torn by hate and strife. It is imperative then that the UN police force should push the North Koreans back across the thirty-eighth parallel and show the people of the world that it is a powerful peace-making organi- zation worthy of their complete faith and co-operation. If we don't push the North Kor- eans back and retreat from the Korean peninsula, the UN will lose face which could very easily ini- tiate its down-fall. Hostilities could spread from Korea over the entire world like a forest-fire. If the UN police force does suc- ceed in pushing the North Koreans to the thirty-eighth parallel, I be- lieve the world will more easily embark towards its goal of a last- ing peace wfth a strong world gov- ernment which all can look to for protection in times of trouble. -Gerald Camiener Profits Tax By THOMAS L. STOKES W ASHINGTON-There is much lip service to "taking the pro- fit out of war." Why, then, all the reluctance, the hemming and hawing, about enactment now of an excess pro- fits tax which is the surest way to take the profit out of the pro- duction of military necessities for which Congress is appropri- ating? Secretary, of Treasury Snyder and Senator George, Senate Fi- nance Committee chairman, insist ienijclmnt of n excess profits tax > mist b4 Vostpned muntil the next session of Congress beginning next January.; aB0th usually reflect the views of2 the business and financial com- munity. President Truman, acquiescing in delay, explains that an excess profits tax is "highly controver- sial"-as what isn't?-and that it would take a great deal of time for Congress to consider.- He then adds, in his whimsically frank manner, that it would be better to wait until members of Congress get over "election jitters." It is risky to challenge Harry Truman on matters of political psychology, but just why should "election jitters" be agitated by an excess profitstax? Unless, perhaps, the inference intended is that members of Con- gress are afraid before an election to tax big corporate interests. There are not many votes in the big industrial fraternity, though it is powerful politically and is the source, so one hears, of campaign contributions. Is this what the President was getting at? In these latter days, the Demo- cratic Party has been enjoying handsome financial support from big interests that are always ready to court the party in power, and the Republican Party still gets such support, too. It would seem that "election jit- ters" should develop more logical- ly from increasing individual in- come taxes - which Congress is preparing to do now. As for time to consider an ex- cess profits tax, there is all the time needed. Congress is paid by DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). SUNDAY, AUGUST 13, 1950 VOL. LX, No. 35-S Notices Recommendations for Depart- mental Honors: Teaching depart- ments wishing to recommend ten- tative August graduates from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and the School of Educa- tion for departmental honors should recommend such students in a letter to be sent to the Regis- trar's Office, Room 1513 Adminis- tration Building before August 24. Library Hours After Summer Session The General Library will close at 6 p.m. daily, beginning Friday, August 18. Evening service will be resumed on September 25. , The Library will be open daily from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, except during the period from August 28 through September 4, when the Library Building will be completely closed for repairs. The Divisional Libraries will be closed from August 19 through September 16, with the exception of Engineering, East Engineering, Hospital, and Physics, which will be open on shortened scheduled. Information as to hours will be posted on the library doors or may be obtained by calling University Extension 653. Requests for ma- terial from the closed libraries will be taken care of at the Circulation desk in the General Library. Students having in their posses- sion books borrowed from the Gen- eral Library or its branches are notified that such books are due Monday, August 14. Students having special need for certain books between August 14 and August 19 may retain such books for that period by renewing them at the Charging Desk. The names of all students who have not cleared their records at the Library by Friday, August 18, will be sent to the Cashier's Office and their credits and grades will be withheld until such time as said records are cleared In compliance with the regulations of the Re- gents. Thursday, August 17 and Friday, August 18: Examinations for Uni- versity Credit. All students who desire credit for work done in the summer session will be required to take examinations at the close of the session. The examination sche- dule for the schools and colleges on the eight-week basis is as fol- lows: Hour of Time of Recitation Examination 8:00 .............Thursday, 8-10 9:00 ................ Friday, 8-10 10:00............Thursday, 2-4 11:00 ................ Friday, 2-4 1:00 .............. Thursday, 4-6 2:00 ............ Thursday, 10-12, 3:00 ..............Friday, 10-12 All other hours......Friday, 4-6 A representative of The Sinclair Research Laboratories will be at the Bureau of Appointments on Wednesday, August 16th to inter- view August;graduates taking de- grees in chemistry and chenfic'al engineering. They are interested in B.S. candidates in chemistry for beginning research jobs and chem-- ical engineers for junior engineers for pilot plant work. For further information and appointments for interviews call the Bureau of Ap- pointments Ext. 371. The United States Civil Service Commission announces an examin- ation for Engineers with options in architectural, civil, construction, electrical, hydraulic (general), hy- draulic (hydrologic investigations), material, safety, and surveying and cartographic. For further in- formation call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Administration Building. Summer Employment: Men with cars wanted for sales positions. For further information call at Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administra- tion Building. The Wayne County Civil Service Commission announces August 15 as the closing date for the filing of applications for examination for Psychologist I. Applications for this examination must be post- marked or received at the office of the Wayne County Civil Service Commission no later than that date in order to be considered. Bureau of Appointments Papers written for Contemporary Arts and> Society may be picked up now at the following offices: Col- lege of Architecture, 207 Architec- ture Bldg.; English Department, 3223 Angell Hall; Fine Arts De- partment, 206 Tappan Hall; School dents unable to pay, in full, loans which are now due should see Miss McKenzie, 1020 Administration Building, immediately. Lectures Survey Research Institute. "Mo- dified Techniques of Area Samp- ling." Raymond J. Jessen, Director of the Statistical Laboratory, Iowa State College. 4 p.m. Tuesday, Rm. 131, Business Administration Bldg. Institute on the Near East. "Art1 and Environment in Iran." Don- ald Wilber, Area Specialist on the Near East. 4:15 p.m. Tuesday Rackham Amphitheatre. ay Linguistic Institute. "Prosodic Systems of the Pomo Languages." A. M. Halpern, Rand Corporation.1 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Rackham Am- phitheatre Academic Notices , Doctoral Examination for Char- les Alvin Dailey, Psychology; the- sis: "Some Factors Influencing the Accuracy of Understanding Personality," Monday, August 14, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 1 p.m. Chairman, MaxI Hutt. Doctoral Examination for Fred Brafman, Mathematics; thesis:' "Generating Functions of Jacobi' and Related Polynomials," Tues- day, August 15, 272 West Engi- neering Bldg., at 3:30 p.m. Chair- man, E. D. Rainville.' Doctoral Examination for John J. Brownfain, Psychology; thesis: "Stability of the Self-Concept as a Dimension of Personality," Tues- day, August 15, 1027 East Huron Street, Room No 4, at 10 a.m. Chairman, E. L. Kelly. Doctoral Examination for Helen' Mar Churchill, Zoology; thesis: "Germ Cell Cycle of Echinostoma revolutum (Froelich, 1802) (Echi-' nostomatidae: Trematoda)", Sat- day, Augst 26, 3091 Natural Sci- ence Bldg., at 9 a.m. Chairman, G. R. LaRue. Doctoral Examination for Ro- bert Theodore Amos, Education;; t h e si s : "Comparative Accuracy with which Negro and White Chil- dren Can Predict Teachers' Atti- tudes Toward Negro Students", Tuesday, August 15, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 3 p.m. Chairman, H. C. Koch. ' Doctoral Examination for Ray- mond Ernest Nadeau, Speeh;' thesis: "The Index rhetoricus of Thomas Farnaby", Monday, Aug- ust 14, West Council Room, Rack- ham Bldg., at 3 p.m. Chairman, W. M. Sattler. Doctoral Examination for Mar- vin Lucius Aronson, Psychology; thesis: "An Exploatory Study of the Freudian Theory of Paranoia with a Group of Psychological Tests," Monday, August 14, West Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 7:45 p.m. Chairman, Abraham Carp. Doctoral Examination for Fran- cis Chester Seaman, Philosophy; thesis: "Some Philosophic Impli- cations of the Theory of Relativ- ity," Wednesday, August 16, East Alcove, Aseinbly .Ral1. acklan Bldg., at'2 p.m,-Chdirutan;,. "tW Burks. '-V 'Doctoral Fxaniiation. ,or Ger- ard M. Mertens, German; thesis: "S t e f a n Zweig's Biographical Writings as, Studies of Human Types," Tuesday, August 15, 102D Tappan, at 2 p.m. Chairman, F. B. Wahr. Doctoral Examination for Jacob Myer Geist, Chemical Engineering. Thesis: "An Electronic Spray Ana- lyzer for Electrically Conducting particles." Monday, August 14, 32- 01 East Engineering Building, at 2 p.m. Chairman, G. G. Brown. Doctoral Examination for Jacob Eichhorn, Chemical Engineering. Thesis: "Heat Transfer and Pres- sure Drop in Systems of Gasses and Solids in Fixed and Fluidized Beds." Thursday, August 17. East Council Room, Rackham Building, at 7 p.m. Chairman, R. R. White. Doctoral Examination for Sey- mour Lewin, Chemistry, thesis: "The Diethyl Bromoethylmalon- ates as Evidence of the Existance of Alternate Polarities in Satur- ated Carbon Change." Tuesday, August 15, West Council room, Rackham Building, 2 p.m. Chair- man, K. Fajans. Concerts University Summer S e s s i o n Choir, Henry Veld, Conductor, will be heard in its annual concert at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, August 13, in Hill Auditorium. It will be as- sisted by a string quartet consist- ing of Alfred Boyington and James I Xette4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on mttrs of gen- eral interest,aand will publish all let- ters 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 will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Peace' Petition . To the Editor: FORMER associate editor Mc- Neil's letter stating that he had been duped into signing the Stockholm Peace Appeal is very interesting. "I took it at face val- ue and signed," he explained. But after examination, "I think it an injustice to put all -the blame on the U.S. for the status of proposals to internationalize 'the atomic bomb. The petition is being used as an instrument of Soviet foreign policy to disc'redit the U.S." I don't know where Mr. McNeil got his information. It s.urely was- n't from the Stockholm Appeal. Perhaps he has confused the vari- ous petitions that are always cir- culated in an academic commun- ity. The Stockholm Appeal does not place all or any blame on either Russia or the United 'States. It recognizes that nations have reach an impasse on atomic con- trol and therefore attempts to ral- ly common sentiment in favor of outlawing atomic weapons as a mode of aggression, control to en- force this, and branding that country which plunges the world into an atomic war as an enemy of all. How this is aninstrument of So- viet policy is likewise a mystery to me. If to speak out :fo peace and back an atomic propc sal which both the U.S. and U."S.R. have agreed to in principle is consider- ed a Communist plot, then we had all better admit that our govern- ment is hell-bent fore *ar and go underground now. Wbrld peace should be neither Communist nor Capitalist-despite the Un-Ameri- can Activities Committe. Now is the timeto mbilize for peace. Tomorrow may be too late. Perhaps McNeil would best view the Stockholm petition as ob- jectively as possible. I realize that It is difficult in days when pow- erful groups seem bent on war. -Gordon MacDougall To the Editor: SDIDNOT sign the Stockholm SPeace Petition, but if I had, I would now want tV withdraw my signature. -Al Blumrosen Hill Auditorium. It will be ope to the general public. Carillon Recital. Professor Per- cival Price, Universitj :Carillon- neur. 7:15-8 p.m. Thurday. Exhibitions General Library, main lobby cases. "Trochiledae, Family of- Humming Birds," by John Gould, supplement, 1887. (July 27-August 18). Museum of Archaeology. From Tombs and Towns of Ancient 'Egypt. Musem s-Buildinig. R itunda ex- -a~t Fhibiflon' 1- xdr 'Develnment. Law Library. Legal cartoons (basement, July 24-August 18). Michigan Hkstorical Collections. 160 Rackham Building. "Tourists in Michigan-Yesterday: and To- day." Museum of Art. Oriental ceram- ics (June 26-August 15). Modern graphic art. (July 2-August 15). Clements Library. Michigan rar- ities. (August 1-18). (Continued on Page 3) e *a 'I '4 4 STAR OF EMPIRE, A Study of Britain as a World Power, 1485-1945. William B. Willcox. By DAVID P. LEONARD FOR THOSE STUDENTS who have enjoyed a course in English history with Prof. Willcox, no review of his new book, "Star of . Empire," is needed to arouse enthusiasm. It is enough to announce it for them to know :N the high intellectual adventure that is theirs for the reading. But to the many who, as a result of numbing experience in high school or college, have set down history as a dreary catalogue of facts and dates, a veritable for- est of Roman numerals, Mr. Willcox's book is recommended as an antidote. For those who have stigmatized history as not merely dead but deadly, this book will come as a happy surprise. In a field as old and noted for distinguish- ed scholars as English history, a writer must be both bold and gifted with original in- sights to produce an account of modern Britain that is both fresh in treatment and unhackneyed in interpretation. Yet this is just what Mr. Willcox has done in a single volume. In some 400 pages he has inter- woven all the essential threads of British developments from the dawn of empire with the advent of the Tudors, through the apogee of empire in the 19thcentury, to the twilight of empire in the present. To a clean, swift- moving account of the major stages and themes of British history since 1500 he com- bines a concomitantly illuminating interpre- tation which is as lucid as it is provocative -for those who believe that the past lives on to infuse in the mind of living men. a sense of continuity and direction. The result is a near masterpiece of historical literature. TO THE EXTENT that history is one of the liberal arts, it must, if it is not to remain the insulated domain of a scholarly elect, appeal to a wide audience. This means that to realize its function of providing per- spective and larger purpose for action in the present, it must delight as well as instruct-. in short, it must be readable. Mr. Willcox is keenly aware of this. For him history is in one sense a branch of literature. And he writes superbly. He does so in part because he avoids both the formidable argot of the scholar and the condescension of the popularizer. But more importantly, his writing excites 2 because he is a master of metaphor and the precise phrase. His forte is the extend- ed metaphor that compares, contrasts, sui-mets fires the imagination, and links sons he believes indispensable to fixing the significance of a period or problem. Each character is fixed sharply in a few deft, or- iginal twists of phrase. James I, for example, is no longer pigeon-holed as "the wisest fool in Christendom." Instead: "He was no fool, not even a wise one, and in many ways he was more intelligent than most of his sub- jects . . . at bottom he was an obstinate little man wandering in dignified bewilder- ment through an earthquake." His prose is as esthetically pleasing as his argument is intellectually compelling. * * * MR. WILLCOX has not attempted to write the whole of British history. This would not only entail many volumes and duplicate already extant works, but would defeat his -purpose of an integration designed'to appeal' to the large audience of intelligent laymen.- Besides, as he says himself, English history does not need telling again so much -as digestion and summary, the extraction of vital issues and solutions from the bulk of events, and forceful presentation for what- ever value they may have for the present. As the stuff of history accumulates there is a danger that the sheer volume and com- plexity of the human past will overwhelm its meaning and utility for the living present. It is the dual role of the historian first to piece out what happened in the past and then to extract the relevant core which can enhance the experience of the present age. The critical skill here is selectivity. By rigorous selection and the ability to recog- nize and exclude what is unessential to understanding, Mr. Willcox has stated the nub of each period of English history and linked the successive stages to produce an amazingly clear picture of the whole devel- opment. To omit so many details, yet show precisely how and why the elements retained are of the essence; to compress exposition to the limit yet state the meaning of each component; to write leanly yet avoid the distortions of bias - this marks the gifted historian. SELECTION and the handling of material imply a criterion of values, or philosophy of history. Whatever may be its ultimate meaning, history is not a random chaos, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. But it is nothing if not complex. No single, simple cause or logic accounts for the whole. In his study of modern Britain, Mr. Willcox has emphasized one pattern and dinate to the civil government. This fact has permitted England to experiment with a system of government that minimizes co- ercive force. The tragic exception is Ireland, where England, basing her rule on sheer military power, never achieved either a justj or stable regime. When the American revo- lution revealed as bluntly for the empire asj Cromwell's army had for England the futil- ity of bonds based on military force, Britain slowly developed the dominion to replace the colony, and the Commonwealth of Nations with its great paradox of unity in indepen- dence. British history is a mounting series of variations on the profound theme that no human society can long endure except it rest on the ties of voluntary collaboration, the ties which, as Edmund Burke said in 1776, are light as air but strong as links of iron. The failures and th eih il i ' ti4 history-as indeed with all atdhns; past an ! present-lie precisely in those areas and times when in exasperatioi. or ,blindness, the- bonds of goodwill and combr ohise were set' aside for the shackles of military coercion. It is true that in the past fifty years Britain has dleclined as a world power. But the empire, instead of crumbling like the empires in Europe and Asia, has ma- tured spiritually into a larger society of free yet united nations. Britain in her decline has become greater than she was at her height. Now American power, grown to maturity through British naval protec- tion in the 19th century, has replaced her waning sea power, and the two nations have entered into voluntary collaboration. It began with the crisis of 1939, as the spirit of partnership replaced the former isolation and mutual jealousy which were the unhappy legacies of 1776 and 1812. Mr. Willcox concludes that the hope of free men everywhere rests on the continuance of, this partnership and its expansion through the United Nations to include, eventually, if war can be averted, all nations. The acute danger to America and the Commonwealth, to the free United Nations forces fighting today to contain Soviet expansion, is that fear and military coercion will corrupt the basis of free society and replace the spirit of compro- mise and law with the cult of force. If this occurs, and there are alarming signs at hand that the process is far advanced here, then it will matter little what, ifj anything, emerges from the terminal wars1 of the 20th century. No one can any longer deny that the Communists have utilized with supreme "I Fifty-Ninth Yejr Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in. Control of Student Publications. - Editoria Staf Philip Dawson......Mana ing Editor Peter Hotton..........-.-.City Editor Marvin Epstein......-..'. orts Editor Pat Brownson.......Women's Editor A ,. Business St