I I PAGE TWO ""HE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY'', AUGUST 1, 1951 IH MCIGNDAL WEDNESDAY,_ AUGUST .. 1..vvw.1951~va By DAVE THOMAS ROTEST over the Atomic Energy Com- mission's tolerance of undemocratic em- ployment practices in the South have been steadily growing. The most recent and most heartening is a resolution made public by all southern chapters of the American Vet- erans Committee criticizing the AEC as "out- doing the South in racial discrimination." Thus the southern AVC chapters have gone on record along with the National Urban League and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in protest- ing the refusal of the AEC to require that private contracting companies (including such nohern firms as du Pont, General Electric and Union Carbide and Carbon) employ workers on the basis of merit rather than color . The AVC resolution points out that by adapting their hiring policies to prevailing racial customs, the contracting companies are committing an injustice which is "dou- bly reprehensible in Federal operations which are designed to build weapons for the defense of the very democratic princi- ples which are now being violated." The companies, apparently, are working on the pusillanimous principle that in racial matters it is best to let time take its course and avoid incidents which are likely to rouse racial tensions (and in this case, it must be pointed out, perhaps cause costly labor trouble and ill will toward the corpora- tions involved.) THIS go-slow policy rests on the familiar "evolutionary" argument which is used by everyone from barbershop proprietors to fra- ternity men in defending discriminatory practices. The argument maintains that it is impossible to force social change upon so- ciety and that incidents or controversies of any sort in racial matters act only to inten- sify existing prejudices The point that this argument ignores is that without agitation, the mutation which is needed to effect social evolution will never take place. A good example of just how falacious the "evolutionary" argument is can be seen In Mississippi where campaigning for the. August 7th primary election is in full swing. Because of a U. S. Supreme Court decision in 1945 which held that Negroes *ere entitled to participate in that state's traditionally all-white Democratic pri- mary, the often abused race issue, with its attendent tensions and injustices is totally absent In this campaign. The reason is, of course, that an estimated 20,000 registered Negro voters may hold the balance of power in the all-important Democratic primary and no candidate dares run on a racial platform because he fears antagonizing the Negro voters. So, because pf newly-gained political power - power which wasn't gained without many "inci- dents"-the Negro has come into a position of new dignity and prestige in Mississippi. Without political power, he could not have done so, and the same is true on an econo- mic level. Without economic power, he will never gain the equality to which he is en- titled under the Constitution. In the communities of Oak Ridge, Tenn., Paducah, Ky., and Ellenton, S. C., where it operates installations, the AEC is missing a good opportunity to strike a blow for equality of treatment in his own country for the American Negro. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: EVA SIMON ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round WIT- DREW PEARSON -SPANISH INTERLUDE- DICTATOR FRANCO of Spain dropped two important hints when nine U.S. Senators interviewed him in Madrid, which the Truman Administration apparently did- n't realize when they embraced Franco so ardently recently. First Franco refused to make any com- mitment on using Spanish troops to defend Western Europe. Second, he made no commitment to re- store civil liberties, including freedom of religious worship. The Senators' trip, including the inter- view with Franco, was highlighted by the irrepressible diplomacy of Sen. Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin, ranking Republican on the Foreign Relations Committee, who boomed out to the Spanish dictator: "Franco, we're with you 100 per cent." Wiley also reached around the back of King Paul of Greece to shake hands with Mrs. Jack Peurifoy in such a way that he bumped the King on the back. The reason he did so, explained the genial Wisconsin Senator, was because he wanted to slap the King on the back. Wiley slapped so many European backs that Senators Guy Gillette of Iowa and Brien McMahon of Connecticut closed in on each side when they were ushered in to see the Pope. "We grabbed his hands to keep him from slapping the Pope on the back," McMahon explained afterward. -WOULD FRANCO HELP?_ FRANCO'S REVEALING statements came in answer to questions by Gillette and Sparkman of Alabama, after Franco boasted that he could mobilize 2,000,000 men in case of war with Russia. "How many of those two million would you commit to the defense of Western Eu- rope?" Senator Gillette asked.. Franco talked back and forth to his in- terpreter before answering. Obviously it was a ticklish question and in the end the dic- tator ducked. "It would depend on the conjecture of events," the interpreter finally replied. Neither Gillette nor the other Senators knew what this meant. So Gillette tried again. "Would you be willing to commit one sol- dier to the defense of Western Europe?" Gillette pin-pointed his query. Again Franco conferred with his interpre- ter. Finally the interpreter replied: "The Generalissimo has already answered that question." The Senators, remembering that the Spanish Blue division which fought for Hitler on the Russian front, had over 30 per cent desertions, came away not too optimistic about military help from Fran- co in case of war. The other significant Franco answer came when Alabama's Sparkman observed that one great American objection to Franco was that "in Spain the ordinary freedoms are denied-freedom of speech, press, religion, and the right to free assembly." "I would like to state that the very term freedom is relative," Franco replied. "It means different things in different coun- tries. In Spain during the last 13 years we have been in a state of turmoil. Under these conditions it became virtually impossible to maintain the so-called freedoms. There has had to be some curtailment. As time goes on, we might be able to remove some of the curtailments." It was considered significant that Franco declined to make any definite commitment on civil liberties, though President Truman, in OK-ing the new liason with Spain, had demanded that Spain permit Protestants the right to worship. (Copyright, 1951, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) "Do You Swear To Preserve The Government Of C I iP. ;l.i , Protect, And Defend Kiang Kai-Shek?" H V~- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN /et te' 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. MATER nO FACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON - In the background of the battle between President Harry Truman and Sen. Paul Douglas over the Illinois judgeships is something far more interesting and significant than appears on the surface. At first blush, it would seem that Truman simply took a wholly gratui- tous and politically stupid slap at a major Fair Deal supporter, when he broke prece- dent and refused to nominate the judges Douglas wanted. In fact, Truman's move is almost certainly a shrewd bid for sure support from the crucial Illinois delegation at the 1952 Democratic convention. The reason Truman wants the sure sup- port of the Illinois delegation-which he distinctly did not have in 1948-is rather obvious. Truman fully intends to run again. Indeed, he virtually said as much in a recent conversation with Democratic Sen. Tom Hennings of Missouri. He told Hennings that he hoped the Missouri Democrats would nominate and elect in the 1952 Senatorial race "somebody I can work with." The im- plication is obvious; Truman himself ex- pects to be nominated and elected in 1952. The connection between the Illinois judgeship row and Truman's 1952 inten- tions is, moreover, very close. The judge- ship fight is a part of a bitter struggle for power which is now going on within the Chicago Democratic machine, a strug- gle in which Truman has a major politi- cal interest. On one side of the struggle is Jacob Arvey, Chicago's Democratic political boss. Arvey, who is a good cut above most big city bosses, is in a sense the political god- father of Sen. Douglas, whose nomination Arvey put through in 1948. Arvey has been in the past one of the Democratic party's great panjandrums, and perhaps the most powerful machine politician in the country. In 1948, however, he made the mistake of jumping the tracks and backing Dwight D. Eisenhower for the Democratic nomination, as did Sen. Douglas. In backing Eisenhower, Arvey did not endear himself to President Truman, who undoubtedly finds this sort of aberration even less excusable in a ma- chine politician than in a man like Douglas. * * *: * MOREOVER, Arvey's hold an the Chicago machine has slipped badly since the Democrats took a beating in 1950. And now, Arvey is most seriously challenged in his own bailiwick. His challenger is ward-leader Thomas D. Nash, nephew of a former Demo- cratic boss, who hankers to inherit the political throne his uncle once occupied. In Nash's fight to replace Arvey, Chicago's powerful "syndicate" has taken, according to all accounts, an attitude of at least ben- evolent neutrality. Already, Nash controls nearly half of Chicago's Democratic wards. In other "weak" wards, the ward leaders are sitting on the fence, until it becomes clear who is to win the battle. But they are showing increasing signs of moving over to Nash. Thus Nash is by no means a bad bet to dis- place Arvey. And President Truman has now bet squarely on Nash. The judgeship now really centers around one of the three vacant judgeships. For this vacancy, Douglas proposed the able, non-political William H. King., Jr. Doug- las did not consult Arvey in advance-he is by no means "Arvey's man" or indeed anyone's man-but Arvey loyally backed up his choice.j Nash's candidate, on the other hand, is Cornelius Harrington, an amiable but by no means non-political lawyer. Harrington was actually proposed to Truman by a major Democratic contributor and Presidential ac- quaintance called James B. McCahey. But there has never been any doubt that Har- rington is a Nash man. And when Truman disregarded the unwritten law that Senators should have the right to propose Federal judges in their states, and sent Harrington's name to the Senate, he was serving notice that he was backing Nash against Arvey. No doubt Truman had his personal rea- sons for this public slapping of Douglas and Arvey. Truman has never liked Doug- las, whom some of those in the White House entourage are fond of describing as a "damned intellectual." He has liked Douglas even less since his part in the R.F.C. investigation, and since Douglas called for Eisenhower's nomination on both tickets. And it must have given Truman pleasure to slap back at two men who had left him for Eisenhower in 1948. But it would be naive to suppose that Tru- man, a professional politician to his finger- tips, was swayed entirely by personal pique. For Truman cannot be sure that Douglas and Arvey will not again leave the Truman Cicero . . * To the Editor: I WAS RATHER shocked to see in the "Letters to the Editor" column a letter defending the city of Cicero in connection with the recent riot in that city. It is, how- ever, my firm belief that though the city may have its defenders that it has no real moral defense for its action. But it was only the ugly head of bigotry that was evidenced by this overt act and I only wonder how much of a body of bitter white chauvanism is attached to its head? Although it is important to spotlight the tragedy of this man that had every legal, moral, pro- perty and human right to live in an abode of his own choosing, we must remember that to solve the problem it does no lasting good to just bash the head of prel idice be- cause it will only arise somewhere else and in some new form. We mustgby our untiring efforts, pull the ground out from under pre- judice by education and under- standing. Sensationalism will nev- er cure our race problems, which in my estimation are more white problems than Negro because the whites are more to blame at this juncture in ,human history than is the Negro race. I suggest that we celebrate "Emancipation Day" by trying to solve slum clearance, housing, and sufferage problems. We should al- so strive to provide a real two par- ty system in the South and to se- cure equal employment rights for our minority groups. President Truman could provide equal employment rights in most large industries by simply signing an' F.E.P.C, executive order that has been on his desk since last January. The rest will take much longer and until the many prob- lems are solved we should never rest. --David Cargo, President of the University of Mich. Young Republicans. P.S.: Let's see some editorials on the signing of this F.E.P.C. order for a change instead of rambling about the Catholics. S * * * ling Manchuria at the risk of en- larging the present conflict. And need I answer his question, "What is the plan for bringing to a halt this inflationary movement . " Ask the Republicans and Southern "Democrats" in Congress, or bet- ter still ask President Truman, Economic Stabilization Adminis- trator Eric Johnston (former pre- sident of the Chamber of Com- merce) and Defense Mobilizer Wilson. They have offered some- thing. MacArthur has chosen to open the 1952 campaign now. For the sake of our two-party system I sincerely hope that the Republi- cans will not base their 1952 pro- gram on this attack on the Tru- man foreign policy. If the Repub- lican National Convention does not nominate a man like Eisen- hower, Morse, Saltonstall or oth- ers of their good sense, I would not be and am not afraid to pre- dict that President Truman will be renominated and re-jected by a vote larger than in 1948. My vote would most certainly be for President Truman. --Alan Berson, '52 ** * C at holic Issue... To the Editor: THERE IS A confusing concept regarding the "Catholic Is- sue," Fri., July 27, which is the crux of controversy. True, the church temporal concerns worldly affairs; the ecclesiastical, church dogma. The former is fallible, whereas the latter enjoys abso- lute infallibility. However, auth- oritarian precepts of the latter are frequently confused with mili- tant social action of the former, and in a democracy such as our own, they are open to review. For example, when Cardinal Play Daniel broadcast welcom- ing orations to the fascist troops over radio Barcelona, Seville, and Madrid, and later accepted the franchise of Catholic education, banning free public schools, was he acting as part of the "Catho- lic Church" or as an individual fascist? What is the moral differ- ence? Cardinal Play Daniel was the highest curate at the time. When the Cardinal of Buenos Aires preached that a vote for Peron was a vote for divine love, was he acting as part of the "Ca- tholic Church?" If not, then why did he discipline a priest from Tucuman because he preached against Peron? To refute the aforementioned article, both Nicholas Vitelli and Donoso Cortes were Italy's and Spain's foremost Catholic neofas- cist philosophers. Their moral re- fomr was headed by an attack against American bathing suits, movies, materialism, and unchap- eroned dates. If American Catholics repudiate facts, confusing infallible faith with wordly datum, they are in- deed intransigent thinkers. For not only do they enjoy religious preference, but also the freedoms of citizenship, which include elec- ting intransigent politicians who follow their preferred dialectic. Indeed, any citizen may morally review such medieval retrogres- sion as carnal punishment for spiritual reward. Especially, when our historical dignity affirms the minimum human suffering and the maximum facility to choose one's own salvation. -Luis Altamira 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- tivesnotice 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. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1951 VOL. LXI, No. 25-S Notices Candidates for the Masters Degree at the end of Summer Session are invited to be the guests of the University at the annual Masters' Breakfast, Sunday, August 5, at 9:00 a.m. in the Michigan Union ballroom. Tickets may be se- cured at Room 3510 Administration Building up to Friday, August 3 at 4:00 p.m. Veterans' Requisitions Friday, August 10, 1951, has been established as the final date for the procurement of books, supplies and equipment using veteran requisitions. No requisitions will be honored by the vendors subsequent to this date. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS: The Oscar Mayer Company, Madison, Wisconsin, is in need of men for their Supervisory Training Program in addi- tion to Chemical and Mechanical Engi- neers, Chemistry majors and Food Tech- nologists and related fields. This com- pany Is one of the ten leading meat packing firms and has plants in Madi- son, Pairie du Chien, Wisconsin; Dav- enport, Iowa; Chicago, Illinois; Phila- delphia; and Los Angeles. They will in- terview at the Bureau of Appointments if enough men are interested. Please call immediately at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Admnistration Building If interested. 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- ineve-ing for his own store and others In the R. H. Macy Corporation, New York and elsewhere. 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. 1Personnel Reque± : 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 bonsider Chemistry majors, Me- chanical or Civil Engineers, or Business Administration graduates who have had 2?'2 or 3 years engineering or have me-- chanical aptitude. The ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Maryland, hs 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 -t least two years of engineering to be a detail checker. For further information please call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Ad- ministration Building. Student sponsored social events: Aug- ust 1, Graduate Outing Club; August 5, Graduate Outing Club, Intercooperative Council. Personnel Interviews: Tuesday, August 7 Oscar Mayer & Company, Madison, Wisconsin, will be interviewing men in- terested in the following positions: Trainee for Personnel to work in the Training Department; Mechanical En- including drafting; majors in Chemistry, gineering or other engineering training Chemical Engineering, Food Technology, and related fields for Product Control and Product Research; and men forPre- Supervisory Training Program. For ap- pointments for interviews please call at the Bureau of Appointments 3528 Ad- ministration Building. Academic Notices Seminar in Mathematical Statistics: Thursday, August 2, at 4 p.m., in Room 3201 Angell Hall. Mr. W. S. Bicknell and Mr. P. C. Cox will be the speakers. Events Today Roger Williams Guild: 4:30-6:00. Tea, talk, table-tennis. Michigan League, Ballroom Dancing Lesson. Beginners 7:00, Advanced 8:00. Tonight at 8 p.m. in the University High School Auditorium, The Depart- ment of Speech presents the Teachers' Dramatics Workshop production of Noel Coward's improbable farce, Blithe Spirit. Tickets may be obtained at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office free of charge today from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. Non- ticket holders will be seated after 7:50 if there are any seats available. T he Department of Speech pre- sents 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. La p'tite causette meets today from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m., in the South Room of the Michigan Union Cafeteria. Sociedad Hispanica: Meeting on Wed- nesday, August 1, 8:00 p.m., Room D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Dr. Darnell Roaten will present an illustrated lecture: "Wolfflin's Princi- ples of Art in the Spanish Baroque Drama." The public is cordially invited. There will be aGraduate Outing Club bike trip at 5:30 p.m. Fifteen miles dia Mendelssohn Theatre. Box office open daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and until 8 p.m. on days of performances. Events this Week: Michigan League, Thursday. Duplicate Bridge Tourna- ment. Women's League 7:30. Friday, Beach Ball, Informal dance, League Ballroom, 9:00-12:00. Free. French Club: A social meeting on Thursday, August 2, at 8:00 p.m. in the Michigan League. French songs, games and dancing. All students on the cam- pus are cordially invited. A special wel- come to the professors from France who attend the English Institute. Lectures Today Biophysics Symposium, 1300 Chemistry Building. "Infra-Red Studies on Pro- teins," G. B. B. M. Sutherland, Univer- sity of Michigan, 11:00 a.m.; "Ionization and Thermal Effects on Viruses and Enzymes," E. C. Pollard, Yale University, 4:00 p.m.; "Sturture of Proteins" (con- tinued), V. L. Oncley, Harvard Univer- sity, 7:30 p.m. Linguistic program. "Crucial Problems in Areal Linguistics." Roman Jakobson, Harvard University. 1:00 p.m., Rackhan Amphitheater. Speech Assembly. "The hole of the Theater in a Democracy." Lee Norvell, Chairman of the Department of Speech, Director of the University Theater, In- diana University, 3:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Coming Lectures Thursday, August 2- Biophysics Symposium, 1300 Chemistry Building. "Veruses: Structure, Repro- duction, and Origin" (continued), S. E. Luria, University of Illinois, 4:00 p.m.; "Structure of Proteins" (continued), V. L. Oncley, Harvard University, 7:30 p.m. Linguistic Program. "Formation, Dis- integration, and General Laws of Lang- uage," Roman Jakobson, Harvard Uni- diana University. 3:30 p.m., Rackham versity. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Amphithe. United States in the World Crisis. "Re-thinking Our Asiatic Policy." Ed- win 0. Reischauer, Professor of Far Eastern Languages, Harvard University, 8:15 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Friday, August 3- Biophysics Symposium. 1300 Chemis- try Building. "Ionization and Thermal Effects on Viruses and Enzymes" (con- tinued). E. C. Pollard, Yale University, 4:00 p.m. Concerts University of Michigan Summer Ses- sion Orchestra, Wayne Dunlap, conduc- tor, will play its- annual concert at 8:30 Wednesday evening, August 1, in Hill Auditorium. The program of summer music will include Orfeo by Monteverdi, Beethoven's Symphony No. 6 in F' ma- jor; Prokofieff's Summer's Day Suite; Barber's Knoxville: Summer of 1915, Op. 24, featuring Carol Neilson Wilder, so- prano, and A Summer Overture by Clyde H. Thompson. The program will be open to the public without charge. Student Recital, Postponed: Robert Dumm, pianist, will play a recital a8:30 Monday evening, August 6, in the Rack- ham Assembly Hall, instead of Thursday, August 2. fident Recital: William Wilkins, or- ganist, will be heard at 4:15 Thursday afternoon, August 2, in Hill Auditorium. A pupil of Robert Noehren,Mr. Wilkins will play a program of compositions by Buxtehude, Bach, Alain, and Widor, as partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree. The general public is invited. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, Uni- versity Carillonneur, will present an- other in his current series of summer recitals at 7:15 Thursday evening, Aug- ust 2. It will include Romance, from Mozart's Elne kleine Nachtmusik, Selec- tions from Pieces de Clavecin by Cou- perin, Andante cantabile for carillon by Denyn; four spirituals, and Caller Her- rin by Gow. It is a strange coincidence that Franco's Spain and Chinese For- nosa seem to be able to provide just about the same elastic num- ber of soldiers: between half a million and a million. This at least is the estimate that Senator Pat McCarran made recently in an article on Francos Spain, pub- lished in the Saturday Evening Post. In both cases, of course, we are offered the raw material, not the finished product: The soldiers have to be trained or retrained, equipped, and fed. But, Franco's and Chiang's middlemen say, we could never find a better buy. -The Reporter us 4r I 4 It & MacArthur. f '6 + MUSIC + EMIL RAAB, violinist, and Benning Dex- ter, pianist, performed four sonatas, including two by contemporary American composers, Monday night, in Rackham Lec- ture Hall. The works presented were the Schubert Sonatina in D major, Op. 137; the Sonata (1946) of Diamond; the Sonata in G minor of Debussy; and the Sonata (1946) of Cop- land. The performance was excellent. Good ensemble complemented by Mr. Raab's fine bowing arm and Mr. Dexter's control of line served to effectively project the musical idea. The high point was the Debussy Sonata. The very nature of the music provided the performers with the opportunity to exploit the resources with which they are best equipped. Likewise, the works of Copland and Schubert were warmly and cleanly per- formed.' The sonata of Diamond was unmoving. THROUGHOUT his second piano recital last evening John Kirkpatrick again treated us to consistently absorbing piano playing. Under his hands, the piano is capable of sounds as various as life itself. As interpreter, his spiritual strength lies in unselfconscious devotion to the musical idea. Perhaps this very concentration helped the series of short pieces come off so well. In Theodore Chanler's "A Child in the House" both composer and performer suc- ceeded in bringing truth from the always risky grownup venture into the child's world. Paradoxically this very sense of the unique in musical style hindered flow in the Mo- zart fantasia. The composer allows him- self to range a vast arc of musical ideas before he announces the strong theme of the sonata which follows. Too pronounced loud-soft contrasts robbed its character of To the Editor: THIS PAST spring General Mac- Arthur spoke before Congress and presented an excellent pic- ture of his views on Far Eastern policy. Whether one agreed with him or not-I chose not to-he offered a basis for criticism or agreement. However, when Mac- Arthur spoke on July 25 before the Massachusetts State Legisla- ture, he in effect politically doomed any Republican who might choose to accept his guid- ance. I am happy that several prominent Young Republicans on campus have disavowed any con- nections with his policies, though I wonder if their view will domi- nate their party. Needless to say, his comments on political domestic questions were a mark of an amazing come- back for the General. Wasn't it this same man who two months ago told the Senate Investigating Committee that in his 14 years in the Far East he was so intent upon his job that he did not feel+ qualified to comment on the gen- eral world situation? I wonder1 how in these three months he has+ not only caught up in this field, I Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications Editorial Staff Dave Thomas .........Managing Editor George Flint.. .. .. ports Editor Jo Ketelhut .......... Women's Editor Business Staff Milt Goetz ....... .. .Business Manager ,