PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1951 Catholic Issue DAVE THOMAS' recent attack on the Ca- tholic Church can only increase the evils he is trying to fight. His editorial will stiffen the resistance of Catholics and cre- ate or increase religious bigotry among non- Catholics. Thomas has made an error that no Cath- olic can forgive and few non-Catholics will note as they follow his argument against the Church. The Catholic Church has never sought restrictions on bathing suit apparel, Hol- lywood movies or even non-Catholic birth control. However, Catholic officials and laymen have done all of these things, and more, to spread the influence of the Church and promulgate their own ideas of right and wrong. But Church officials and proselytizing, dictatorial laymen are not the Catholic Church. Thomas must know this for he sees mov- ies made in "Catholic" Italy banned by the American Legion of Decency. He sees the predominately Catholic French produce bathing suits that Catholic officials of Spain feel are immoral. *" * *I THOMAS USES the fact that Church offi- cials in Spain have influenced local au- thorities to regulate sunbathing as an in- stance "of the arrogance which the Catholic Church displays in every country where they get away with it towards citizens who are not Catholics ..." As a newspaper man, Thomas must rea- lize that most people in a position of author- ity are liable to use that authority in "un- democratic" ways. A policeman's arrogance in cowing an unoffending drunk does not constitute an argument against a police force. The arrogant policeman and the Span- ish clergyman are, in my mind, both wrong, but there is a big jump from the Individuals to the organizations to which they belong-a jump Thomas ignores. A policeman gets his authority by law. The Spanish clergyman gets his simply from the power he has to influence his church members. Because of his exalted position in the religious lives of the laymen that sur- round him, this influence is often consider- able and sometimes extends into fields where few clergymen have any real capacity. The Legion of Decency, run largely by Catholic leaders, exercises a stupid, but ef- fective censorship over American movies, a censorship that is harmful to the American rovie-goer-Catholic and non-Catholic- both psychologically and morally. Many Ca- tholic laymen resent the Legion of Decency and vehemently protest its influence, as articles in such liberal Catholic magazines as the Commonweal frequently attest. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN BRILEY DORIS FLEESON: Brewster & Ike WASHINGTON-The indispensable man is with us again. According to Sen. Owen Brewster of Maine, a Taft lieutenant, he is Gen. Eisen- hower. The catch is, however, that in the Brewster view, Ike is "indispensable in Eur- ope at this time." Senator Brewster made this inspired grab for the political-speculation headlines im- mediately upon his return from a look-see at the North Atlantic Alliance with fellow members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. None of them apparently had the nerve to approach the General directly on the personal questions that are in the forefront of every politico's mind. Thus the field was clear for Sen. Brews- ter to rush in wher the bandwagon sear- chers feared to tread. "Gen. Eisenhower is indispensable in Eur- ope at this time," proclaimed the man from Maine. "We have a long, hard road ahead there. France has no government. Italy has no government. An election is coming up in England." A SENATE CORRESPONDENT familiar, with Sen. Brewster's key role in the Taft campaign for the Presidency sug.ested at this point that an election was also coming up in the United States next year. Ignoring the crude interruption, the Senator swept on: "In addition to these problems, Gen. Eisenhower, against the advice of many of his staff, has also come out for a Eur- opean army as distinct from the national armies first planned. This is basically a French move arising from French fears of German rearmament. It will inevitably mean further delays for the Eisenhower goals. "It is plain that Gen. Eisenhower is deep- ly committed to his job. He talks of it with great emotional fervor and crusading zeal; the practical details are explained by Gen. Gruenther (Ike's chief of staff) ." Democrats were considerably entertained by Sen. Brewster's admiration for Gen. Eis- enhower as an inspired European leader. One reported that the Senator had displayed an unselfish willingness to cooperate with such Truman Democrats as also preferred to F THOMAS sincerely wanted to attack the censorship some Catholics exert on mov- ies, magazines, newspapers and books, he would have accomplished more by attacking precisely that, rather than putting his ar- gument on an emotional level, for both sides, by striking out at the Catholic Church. Some "good" Catholics could supply him with a profusion of such arguements. While tacitly approving the reported Papal favoring of socialized medicine, Thomas deprecates the attached warn- ing that the Pope was against "any at- tempt . . . being made to violate the right of a human person" in the question of therapeutic abortion and birth control. The person the Pope's warning refers to is the unborn child, whose soul the Church considers more important than the life of the mother producing the chuld. While this may sound "anti-humanistic" and just plain unenlightened in light of world conditions to most non-Catholics, it is a patent, dogmatic truth to believing Ca- tholics. Presumably Thomas grants people the right to believe what they believe. * * * THE CULMINATING argument of the Thomas editorial is the statement that the "tyranny of the heirarchy" and the Church's protection of its sources of ma- terial wealth are contributing factors to the rise of communism in Europe. The only tyranny the heirarchy of the Catholic Church perpetrates is a tyranny over religious dogma and practice. To remove it would remove Catholicism, an appeal Thomas is not making. The Church's protection of its sources of ma- terial wealth (where it is found to be the church and not part of the clergy acting quite independently in lay matters) is probably no more responsible for the spread of communism than is General Motors' protection of its sources of wealth in Europe. Thomas is properly concerned about the concerted influence certain Catholics are ex- erting on our movies, reading matter and, most importantly, our educational system. Just informing most Americans of the facts is a most important and needed office. It should be performed, though, with a great deal of intelligence and real insight, or in- cidents like those of last week at Cicero, Illinois, will be sparked in half the cities of the land. CATHOLICS MUST be assured that we who do not believe are not attacking their belief or their right to believe. Non- Catholics and Catholics alike must know that these practices are not basic Church dogma and are in no way a part of the Ca- tholic Church. Some Catholics, sometimes honestly con- cerned with the world's growing materialism and sometimes just filled with the poison of minority psychology, are creating a real threat to American ideas of democracy. In the long run the threat is perhaps more ser- ious than the McCarthy-hysteria threat to human rights in the United States. The way to end the threat is not to ere- ate a worse one by lining up the 120- million non-Catholics in the country against the 30 million or so Catholics in a misdirected religious argument. The threat can be ended constructively by recognizing and stating that it is not a re- ligious argument-and it is not. People as concerned as Thomas about the situation should actively employ the argu- ments of Catholics against these policies, clearly stating their source. Catholics will rightfully defend any promiscuous attacks on their faith. But like any other conglomerate group of human beings, they can change their minds about a mistaken policy if they are shown to be wrong. However, as with any minority group that struggles for its identity in an overwhelming majority, they will fanatically resist any change they feel directed-either deliberately or mistakenly -- against their faith,--John Briley E - 9 CIINJEMA At Hill Auditorium... ANNA AND THE KING OF SIAM, with Irene Dunne and Rex Harrison. N the wake of the acclaim for Rodgers and Hammerstein's "The King and I," it is interesting once more to look at the original dramatization of Margaret Landon's biogra- phy of the English school teacher who trekked off to Siam back in the 1860's. Furthermore, the original "Anna" has the double merit of the ambitious Darryl Zanuck as its producer and Rex Harrison in a role that is, for a change, large enough for his talents. He gives what is surely his best Hollywood performance as the re- doubtable king, a part that calls for the full gamut of his comedy techniques as well as an unusual understanding of the more complex side of the monarch. Where Harrison has soared, however, Mr. Zanuck has occasionally faltered. He gives his script a suitably lavish production, and abundant wit and movement in individual scenes. However, there are too many of these scenes which accomplish much the same thing, making the picture a good thirty minutes longer than it need to have been. MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH ALSOP WASHINGTON-Every so often a reporter has a personal experience interesting enough to call for breaking the good rule of impersonality,, and telling what happened to him. One such has just come to this re- porter, in the form of an appearance before the State Department Loyalty Board in the case of John Paton Davies jr. To be sure, there was nothing very stir- ring about the hour or so at the hearing. The three man board, headed by a shrewd, dry-spoken New Englander, Conrad E. Snow, clothes itself in no special majesty. The setting is an ordinary State Department of- fice borrowed for the occasion. After the oath, the routine of question and answer goes forward in an informal but businesslike way. The board seems both sensible and patient. When it is over, your first reaction is, "Well, I thought there would be more to it than that." On reflection, however, it seems to me that there IS more to it than that, which is the reason why the first person singu- lar is being used in this sphere for the first time in six years. Here was Davies, after all, formerly a senior member of the State Department Planning Staff, now publicly charged with doubtful loyalty, and publicly suspended from duty on the eve of a most important assignment as political adviser in Germany. Here was his name blackened, his career perhaps permanently damaged, his fortune already hard-hit by all the horrible compli- cations of a sudden change of family plan after the sale of the family house. And all for what? To make a burnt offering with a sweet savor in the peculiar nostrils of Sen. McCarthy and Sen. McCarran. Certainly, if anyone can testify compe- tently as to the sense or nonsense of this proceeding against Davies, it is this reporter; for in the wartime years in Chungking we were, so to speak, competing backroom boys. ** * DAVIES was the political adviser of Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell; I was the adviser of Dr. T. V. Soong and Maj. Gen. C. L. Chen- nault. I fought for airpower and a policy of strengthening the Chinese national gov- ernment; and he defended Gen. Stilwell's views and advocated American military aid to the Chinese Communists. Davies was finally defeated when Gen. Stilwell was dis- missed. But it was a bitter battle while it lasted, and on the principle that no one knows you as your enemy knows you, I think I know John Davies pretty well. As to loyalty, no doubts ever occurred to me, even in the most squalid moments of the long, squalid struggle in Chungking. In- deed, the thought that I could not escape as I sat before the Loyalty Board, was the thought that Davies' judgment of the Chin- ese scene had stood the test of time rather better than my own. The difference between the two views was simple enough. By the end of 1943 and the beginning of 1944, it was already clear that the regime of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek would succumb to the Chinese Communists after the war, unless something pretty drastic was done. My view was that a Communist triumph could be prevented by replacing Gen. Stilwell with a wiser man, increasing the scale of American aid, and intervening very active- ly to reform the rotting Nationalist gov- ernment. Given the satisfaction of all these diffi- cult conditions, particularly the indispens- able third, I still think I might have been proven right. Davies held the view, on the other hand, and with many excellent reasons, that the Generalissimo's government was already past saving. If this was the case, the ques- tion was not how to prevent a Chinese Com- munist victory, but how to come to terms with it. Davies also knew certain thinks that very few people in America seem to know even today-that Mao Tse-tung and his Communists had developed their party and their policy in isolation from and some- times in defiance of the Kremlin,. for ex- ample; and that throughout the course of the China war, the only recipient of Soviet aid had been the Generalissimo. WITH this special knowledge, Davies made what must now be accounted an ex- tremely brilliant deduction-that Tito-ism was possible, before Tito-ism had been heard of. Believing Chiang Kai-shek was past saving, believing also in the possibility of Chinese Tito-ism, Davies therefore recom- mended moderate American aid for the Chinese Communists. His avowed aim was to promote their Chinese Communist confi- dence in America, and thus to achieve a di- vision between them and the Kremlin. And if Davies' recommendations had been fol- lowed, I now believe he would have been proven right. In short, there were two perfectly logical and defensible American policies in China, and you could take your choice between them. What actually happened-what I for one had certainly never foreseen-was that after the dismissal of Gen. Stilwell, we ceased to have any China policy at all. Even when Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer was performing so admirably as military commander, his hands were politically tied; after that, there was Everything In Its Little Cubbyhole 'r. XetteP TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Catholic Issue . To the Editor: IN MICHAEL THORTON'S letter of June 25, he writes of the "professional manner" in which Dave Thomas "wields the bludge- ons of bigotry." In reality, nothing could be further from the truth. Dave Thomas did not attack Ca- tholics, as persons, in America or anywhere else, nor did he attack the Catholic religion. He merely expressed his feelings about eco- nomic and social actions on the part of the. Catholic hierarchy. And he had no reason to feel any- thing but perfectly free in doing so. When the Catholic Church, or any other institution for that mat- ter, casts itself into the political arena, it at the same time lays it- self open to criticism. I personally feel that when a nominally reli- gious organization lays down the law on temporal subjects as often and as dogmatically as the Catho- lic Church has, it is over-stepping its bounds. But at any rate, it can- not assume that its religious na- ture automatically prohibits a rea- soned and tempered discussion of its worldly policies, Thorton's characterization of Dave Thomas for his views, be they right or wrong, shows that it is he-not Dave-who has re- sorted to bigotry and intolerance. -Paul Levin, '53 * * * 'Burger Record . . . To the Editor: IT WAS WITH much interest that I noticed a recent article in The Daily telling of a Univer- sity student who broke the world's record for eating hamburgers. While this particular student's adroitness in consuming hambur- gers is especially outstanding and will probably never be surpassed, it merely represents a phase in the rapidly changing mode of eat- ing at this nation's universities. For the past fifteen or twenty years, the feminine craze for slim- ness has been manifested all over the United States by calorie-con- scious coeds carefully ascertaining the affect of each bit of food on their figures. Some have gone on selfdepriving diets. Others have resorted to patent medicines. A few radicals have even decided to see their doctors. All this was done under the as- sumption that most men prefer thin women to stout ones. This, of course, is still a matter for con- jecture, but most women seem to be convinced of its validity. On the other hand, the physical stature of the male 'species has not become nearly so important. Yet it would be folly to assume that women are not at all inter- ested in the height, weight, and over-all stature of their menfolk. Some men have become convinced that the opposite sex prefers the stouter to the thinner varieties of masculinity. This belief was, with- out doubt, started by the immense popularity of television wrestlers most of whom weigh over 250 pounds and all of whom get count- less fan letters from every section of the United States. Of course, this fact must be balanced against the millions of fan letters received by notably thin radio crooners in movieland. It is therefore far from conclusive. Yet we can not dismiss hambur- ger eating orgies as merely being caused by the same impulse that causes people to eat goldfish, as was stated in your recent article. It is far deeper than this. Perhaps, some day, after more of these events have been com- pleted and there is sufficient data available for scientific research, we will eventually ascertain whe- ther women prefer their men thin or stout. In the meantime, we should all be grateful for such pioneering ex- periments as a step further in sci- entific research. They are as wel- come as a whiskey sour at the Mi- chigan Union. -E. S. Sader, '53 ** * Campus Tours To the Editor: 0 40 Asst. Prof. of Psychiatry; in Charge of Children's Service, Neuropsychiatric In- stitute, will be the speaker. Summer Exhibitions, Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall: "France - in Paintings and Prints," South Gallery; "Works by Contemporary Americans," North Gallery; "Modern Graphic Art," West Gallery. All exhibits selected from the Museum Collections. Hours: Week- days, 9-5; Sundays, 2-5. The public is invited. Personnel Interviews: Thursday, August 2- Mr. Smiley, Personnel Director of LA- SALLE & KOCH COMPANY in Toledo will interview men and women who are interested in department store training programs. Mr. Smiley will be interview- ing for his own store and others in the R. H. Macy Corporation, New York and elsehwere. Thursday, August 2- LEHIGH PORTLAND CEMENT COM- PANY, Cleveland, Ohio, will be inter- viewing men interested in sales or sales administration, Literary College, Bus- iness Administration students as well as technical men are eligible. Their train- ing program will begin approximately September 1 and will continue for 6 to 8 months in Allentown, Pennsylvania, then candidate will be placed in either outside sales or sales administration in one of their district offices. For further information and appoint- ments for interviews please call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Adminis- tration Building. Personnel Requests: The ELECTRIC STORAGE BATTERY COMPANY, San Francisco, has openings for sales engineers in their Denver, San Francisco, and Seattle branch offices. They prefer Electrical Engineers, but will consider Chemistry majors, Me- chanical or Civil Engineers, or Business Administration graduates who have had 2% or 3 years engineering or have me- chanical aptitude. The ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Maryland, has openings in their Ballis- tic Research Laboratories for men and women in the fields of Electronics and Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics, and Physics. we have had a call from a local re- search laboratory for a man who has had at least two years of engineering to be a detail checker. For further information please call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Ad- ministration Building. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for George Ray- mond Brewer, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "The Propagation of Electro- magnetic Waves inua Magnetron-Type Space Charge," Saturday, July 28, 3521 East Engineering Bldg., at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, W. G. Dow. Doctoral students in Sociology should turn in summer prelim applications at the Departmental Office at once. The examinationsrare scheduled to be held August 6 through 10. Events Today Band Conductors Workshop- 8:00 The.Alto Clarinet, clinic, NOR- MAN ROST. 9:00 Informal Recital. VIRGINIA HOURIGAN, soloist, HORTENSE REID accompanist. Rackham Assembly Hall. 10:00 and 2:00 Survey on Wind In- strument Literature, 204 Harris Hall. 4:30 Picnic, Dexter-Huron Metropoli- tan Park. Informal Record Dance, 9:00 - 12:00 at the League. ICC Open House for Students and Faculty: Dr. Chandler Davis, Math. Instructor and noted science-fiction author, will speak on "What Future Shall We Make?" A discussion and so- cial will follow. 8:30 p.m. - 12 p.m., Robert Owen House, 1017 Oakland. International Center: at 12:30 p.m., there-will be an educational tour to the Kellogg Food Plant at Battle Creek. Foreign Students and American friends are invited to participate. Tickets are now available at the International Cen- ter. Graduate Student Mixer, Rackham Assembly Hall, 9-12. Student sponsored social events for today: Lloyd Hall Inter-dorm Council. Graduate Student Council. This week: Wednesday through Sat- urday, Julyn25-28, at 8:00 p.m.inthe Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, the De- partment of Speech presents the comic- fantasy, The Enchanted, by Jean Girau- doux and adapted by Maurice Valency. ThexEnchanted, whichopened in New York in January, 1950, was adapted from Giraudoux' Intermezzo which was pro- duced in Paris in 1933. Tickets are on sale at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office daily from 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., on days of performance until 8 p.m. Michigan Christian Fellowship Bible Study, Lane Hall, 7:30, Ephesians. Roger Williams Guild: Fri., 8:00 p.m., Hobo Party (dungarees). Lane Hall, Coffee Hour, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. Everybody welcome. Coming Events Conference of English Teachers. "The Possible Importance of Poetry," July 30. Intercultural Education Conference. July 30 - August 1. Pi Lambda Theta (Honorary Women's Sorority) meeting for initiation and program, July 30, Monday, 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room in Rackham, Sarita Davis will tell of her recent ex- periences in Germany and present twelve guests who teach English in other countries. All members in town are invited. Next Week: The Department of Speech presents Dion Boucicault's breath-tak- ing 19th century melodrama, "The Streets of New York," August 1-4, at 8 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Box office open daily 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., on days of performance until 8 p.m. Lectures Today Radio and Television Conference. Rackham Amphitheater. "Radio and Television in the Public School," Ed- ward Stasheff, Director of Television Development, WNYE, New York, 9:45 a.m. "A Review of Educational Radio," Walter B. Emery, Legal Assistant to Commissioner Walker of the Federal Communications Commission, 10:45 a.m. "The Commercial Station and Educa- tional Television," James Eberle, Public Affairs Manager, WWJ, WWJ-FM, WWJ- TV, Detroit News, 1:45 p.m. "The Phi- ladelphia Experiment in Television Ed- ucation for Adults," Armund Hunter, Director of Television, Michigan State College, 2:30 p.m. "The Outlook for Education Television," Walter B. Emery, 3:15 p.m. Classroom Conference. , Curriculum conferences and open house in class- rooms and laboratories, 8:00 a.m. - 12:00 M. Luncheon, 12:00 M., Michigan Union, "Our Classroom Goals," Eugene Thom- as, President, Michigan Secondary School Association, Dean Hayward Ken- Iston. Instrumental group meetings, 2:00 p.m. "Subject Matter Problems in Today's Classrooms," 7:30 p.m., Michigan Union ballroom. Astronomy Lecture and Visitors' Night. "The Planets," Dr. Gerard P. Kuiper, Yerkes Observatory, 8:30 p.m., 1025 Angell Hall. Student Observatory, Angell Hall, open to visitors after the lecture. Biophysics Symposium. "Light Scat- tering Studies on Proteins and Nucleic Acids," PAUL DOTY, Harvard Univz- sity, 4:00 p.m., 1300 Chemistry. Concerts Student Recital: Elizabeth Della- Moretta, soprano, will present a pro- gram at 8:30 in the Architecture Audi- torium, in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the Bachelor of Music degree. A pupil of Philip Duey, Miss Della-Moretta will sing works by Han- del, Mozart, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Chausson, Aubert, Hahn, Du- pare, santoliquido, and Cimara. The general public is invited. Student Recital Postponed: Vivien Milan, mezzo-soprano, whose recital was previously announced for Sunday, July 29, in the Architecture Auditorium, has postponed her program until 4:15 Sunday, August 5. Student Recital: Wyatt Insko, stu- dent of organ with Robert Noehen, will play a recital at 8:30 Sunday eve- ning, July 29, in Hill Auditorium. It will include compositions by Buxtehude, Bach. Hermann Schroeder, Schumann, and Max Reger, and will be open to the public. The program is presented In partial fulfillment of the require- ments for the degree of Master of Mu- sic. Faculty Concert: Emil Raab, violinist, and Benning Dexter, pianist, School of Music faculty members, will present a program at 8:30 Monday evening, July 30, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. It will include Sonatina in D major, Op. 137 by Schubert, Sonata (1946) by Dia- mond; Sonata in G minor by Debussy, and Sonata (1943) by Copland. The general public is invited. Faculty Recital: John Kirkpatrick, Guest Pianist in the School of Music during the Summer Session, will play ,his second program at 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 31, in the Rackham. Lec- ture Hall. It will include Fantasy and Sonata in C minor, Op. 11 by Mozart, A Child in the House by Theodore Chanler, Piano Sonata by Hunter John- son; Evocations by Carl Ruggles, and Nostalgic Waltzes by Ross Lee Finney, Composer in Residence at the University of Michigan. The general public is invited. To strengthen our European allies, it is -not enough to send them guns or let them make guns for themselves. The manufacture of armaments is only one of the items-and not the major one--of increased European production. We and the European governments must see to it that their workes gain an improved standard of liv- ing from their enlarged opportuni- ties of employment-that the peo- ple on our side are relieved from both misery and fear, for these are the two main enemies of freedom, --The Reporter ffi~tgll ail t 7 AM REGISTERED at the Uni- versity for the summer session as an auditor and have been in- formed that there is no organized permanent tour of the campus' available for visitors and students. There are so many fine things to be seen here, that the many visitors and students, should have an oppor'tunity to learn of the fa- cilities available and to make greater use of the excellent fa- culty, libraries and buildings, on the various "campuses. I suggest a permanent Tour bu- reau be organized and hope that many of your readers will have their views published on this mat- ter and also recommend that ev- ery building on the campus be marked with a sign, which can be easily read from the street. I would likento make a pilot tour of the Ann Arbor campus some afternoon next week, ac- companied by a representative of the Office of Information, Alumni Council and Phoenix Project. -George F. Trombley A public meeting is, of course, a public meeting. And the people must certainly be informed. But television (which seems to have become standard equipment for Congressional investigations) has to become at least as well behaved as the newspaper reporter with his. notebook, or the radio microphone, which fo rall its faults neither blinds its victims with glaring lights nor intimidates them with its superior bulk. --The Reporter DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 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- tivenotice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Bldg. at 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication. FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 22-S Notices The Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be Friday night, July 27, 8:00 at the camp on Patterson Lake. Dr. Rabinovitch, Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students af the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications Editorial Staff Dave Thomas.......Managing Editor George Flint ........ Sports Editor Jo Ketelhut .......... Women's Editor Business Staff Milt Goetz ..........Business Manager Eva Stern .........Advertising Manager Harvey Gordon .......Finance Manager Allan Weinstein ...Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. ) . BARNABY Nonsense! Barnaby's imaginary I So, let's finish watering the garden with our sprinking fl