I PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST,18, 1952 I I MATTER OF FACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP WASHINGTON-A great many voters-- perhaps enough to determine the out- come of the election-are anxiously await- ing the answer to a simple question. What is Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower going to do about Wisconsin's Sen. Joseph R. McCar- thy? Eisenhower and his chief advisers, ac- cording to Republican leaders close to the Eisenhower high command, have now agreed on at least a tentative answer. The Eisenhower plan for dealing with Mc- Carthy and McCarthyism starts with a major speech early in the campaign. In this speech, Eisenhower will warn solemn- ly of the dangers of internal subversion and Communist infiltration into the gov- ernment. But at the same time he will also voice an equally solemn warning of the dangers of indiscriminate hate-mon- gering and character assassination. He will not mention McCarthy by name, but his meaning will be clear enough. It will become clearer as time goes on, in that Eisenhower does not intend, according to this present plan, to appear at all in McCar- thy's native Wisconsin. Eisenhower also at present does not plan to appear in Indiana, when Sen. William Jenner is running for re-election. * * * THE REASON JENNER, among several other cut-rate McCarthys, has also been chosen to receive the silent treatment from Eisenhower, is rather obvious. McCarthy has as much as said that Gen. George Marshall is a traitor, while Jenner has said it out- right, calling Marshall "a living lie" and "a front man for traitors." Marshall is, of course, deeply admired and respected by Eisenhower, who perhaps owes . more to Marshall than to any other man. The silent treatment for McCarthy and Jenner is only the first part of this plan, however. The second part is to do every- thing possible, from personal appeal to public indorsement, to appease the ex- treme right wing of the party. Thus Sen. Everett Dirksen, the protege of Chicago's Col. Robert R. McCormick, has been in- vited to take his place u .the inner Eisenhower circle. Dirksen bitterly attacked Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, and by implication the whole mod- erate wing of the Republican Party, at the recent convention. He used an unpleasant mixture of McCarthyism and phony evan- gelism in his election campaign in 1950. Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writer only. This must be noted in all reprints. LEONARD GREENBAUM, NIGHT EDITOR Wisconsin's powerful Tom Coleman, a chief McCarthy backer, is also to be appeased. Wayne J. Hood, a Coleman aide, and a. McCarthy man, has been made executive director of the Republican National Commit- tee. Meanwhile, the Vice-Presidential nomi- nee, Sen. Richard Nixon, has been given the special assignment of binding up the wounds inflicted on the right wing of the party at the convention. Nixon set to with a will at the recent convention in Sen. Robert A. Taft's native Ohio, dis- tributing handsome compliments whole- sale to the Taftites present. Finally, Sen. Taft himself has agreed to take a major part in the campaign, making a number of important speeches. In short, the intention is to try to iso- late McCarthy and Jenner only, and to unite the rest of the party firmly behind Eisenhower. It remains to be seen whether the plan will work. The Eisenhower man- agers are certainly wise to avoid the mistake made by Wendell Willkie, who conspiciously snubbed the regular leaders and leaned heavily on his amateur admirers, undoubt- edly losing hundreds of thousands of votes in the process. * * * C ERTAINLY, if Eisenhower is to win, the - regular organization workers, most of whom were Taft men before the conven- tion, must be persuaded to work hard and enthusiastically for Eisenhower. The trouble is that, despite the surface show of amity, many of these people are still bitter about what happened in Chicago. Any deviation by Eisenhower from the true faith of "anti me-too" Republicanism will increase this bitterness. Sen. McCarthy, moreover, especially since he was invited by the Taft managers to address the Republican rally in Chi- cago, has been accepted by this faction as a high priest of the true faith. Thus there will be much pressure on Eisenhower to abandon his present plan for dealing with McCarthy, in the name of party unity. The outcome really depends on whether Eisenhower will remain true to himself. If he does so, it is downright impossible to imagine Eisenhower, a warm-hearted man and a sincere idealist who instinctively hates the mean and second rate, embracing a Mc- Carthy or a Jenner. And in this situation as in so many others in this campaign, be- ing true to himself is undoubtedly the best politics Eisenhower can play. The ten mil- lion or so independent voters will elect the next President. A great many of them cer- tainly very much want a change in Wash- ington. But a great many more could not, bring themselves to vote for any candidate who had embraced Wisconsin's special shame. (Copyright, 1952, New York Herald Tribune Inc.) DORIS FLEESON: Running Scared' W ASHINGTON-Both parties plan to "run scared" this fall. Each admits the other is not going to be easy to beat. It's a far different mood than prevailed here last spring when Democrats as- serted that Senator Taft was a set-up and Republicans were sure the party in power would fall back on President Truman. Both sides were taking a lot for granted in those days. Now nobody is taking any- thing for granted. The fact is that the campaigning abilities and appeal of all four national candidates are an unknown quantity, taking the country as a whole. Only one-General Eisenhower- can be certain of ready recognition on any main street of the United States and per- haps when out of uniform, he can't. Any- way, his fame rests on his prowess in an- other field than government. Governor Stevenson admits candidly that his biggest problem is that he is not better known. The two Senators-Nixon and Spakman-have only local fame. This means that both national tickets will lean heavily on the party organiza- tions. They are certain to pay more at- tention to state contests where popular party figures are running in the hope of cashing in on that popularity. Thus the prospect is for a different kind of campaign than has been seen in recent years. In 1932, Mr. Roosevelt ran against the depression; after that he ran on his record while the Republican candidate had to run against him. In 1948, President Truman fought much alone with the result that as- tonished the relaxed Republicans and the country. It will not be quite the same kind of fight- ing campaign the Taft followers wanted since General Eisenhower cannot, even if he want- ed to, go back on his own record in Europe. But it is already clear that he is a Kansas Republican conservative in domestic affairs, a position that may well put him to the right of Taft. This should certainly tend to call home the rebellious Taft following as the campaign develops. Since neither the General nor the Gov- ernor are such highly controversial figures as Truman and Taft, the prospects also are for less emotion, prejudice and pas- sion in the campaign. The President and Senator Taft often ap- peared to have a catalytic effect on one an- other. It is hard to believe that they had as little respect for each other's abilities as they pretended; they certainly had the pow- er to drive each other to extremes. On his own word, Governor Stevenson is neither the close friend nor associate of Gen- eral Eisenhower that he has sometimes been pictured. It's still impossible to imagine either nominee snorting at the mention of the other. Nor is either tied to the extrem- ists in his party, or likely to encourage them. Not all the state tickets are lined up yet, so it is not possible to weight probable advantage to each candidate there. The bare majority of governors are now Re- publicans and they seem on the whole more impressive than their Democratic opposite numbers. States under G.O.P. control in- clude New York, Pennsylvania and Cali- fornia where the Senate situation also favors Ike. Democrats can look to Michigan, Indiana Missouri and Massachusetts for strength from the statehouse. Generally speaking, they also have stronger candidates for sen- ator. However, the loss of Senator McMa- hon is a great one in Connecticut where he had been expected to bolster the incumbent Senator Benton. Now Democrats must fight for two seats there. They do not have a strong senatorial candidate in New York as yet, and California is already lost senate- wise with Senator Knowland nominated on both tickets. (Copyright, 1952, by the Bell Syndicate) Si lent General, THE JOB to which General Shoosmith is going in Tokio will not be easy. He will be the only senior officer on General Mark Clark's staff who is not American, and his colleagues will know that he has been sent partly because America's allies have been uneasy about some decisions taken in Tokio. They would be less than human if they were not slightly suspicious of the out- sider arriving among them. But General Shoosmith is a good choice for the job. He has lately been leading the British Joint Services Mission in Washington, where he must have become familiar with American ways of working, and he has plenty of tact and experience. It is also a good thing that the Govern- ment on Monday made completely clear what his position will be. He is to be a nor- mal staff officer, with his first loyalty to his commander, and he is not to be in any sense an agent of the British Government. No other arrangement would have worked. No commander could be happy at having a staff officer who was also a foreign in- vigilator, and if anything of the sort had been tried the British officer would inevit- ably have been left in a backwater aside from the main stream of the headquarters. He would not have heard the things he was there to hear. But as a normal staff officer General Shoosmith should be able to earn the con- fidence of General Clark, and, having "Independence Day" 9S93 "JANUARY _ 1953 I - -" I -c's n o ' F-- I 1 i 1 f i r {r {# r 1 1. .. .. ON THE WASHIN(TON MiERRIIY-4O-ROUND WITh DREW PEARSON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN + MUSIC + Stanley Quartet . . . THE STANLEY QUARTET presented the last of three excellent concerts of cham- ber music last night in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. The program was a rewarding one, both from the standpoint of musical interest and aesthetic enjoyment. Emile Simonel joined the group in the opening Quinet for two violins, two violas and cello by the younger brother of Joseph Haydn. The presence of the second viola changed the quartet conception completely, with the result even more classically balanced, as the pairs of violins and violas oppose each other on either side of the axis provided by the cello. The viola was the "black sheep" of the string family when this was written, and few orchestras could boast more than two. Besides this initial innovation, the muted instrumentation of the second movement also gave added interest. In this the first viola and violin played a duet, against a pizzicato background provided by the other three instruments which made a perfect trio. The effect was charming, due in no small part to the sympathetic performance. The frothy final movement was dispatched with great gusto. Mr. Simonel blended well with the ensemble, and his solo passages exhibited an excellent sense of phrase line. Hindemith's Third Quartet proved some- what easier on the ear than others by his contemporaries. It was a sincere expression, worked out in a craftsmanlike manner. In most respects a virtuoso piece, it was given a virtuoso perfomance, with a logical cli- max coming in the recapitulation of the second movement, which was entered at breakneck speed and produced a thrilling experience. The toccata introduction to the final movement was probably the highest point of sheer technical display. Beethoven's Quartet, Opus 127, was the major offering of the evening. This is gen- opening movement, giving a sense of re- turn and completion. In retrospect, the Stanley Quartet is worthy of the highest praise for a com- mendable series of summer concerts. The programs have been well-balanced and their performance carefully thought out and tastefully executed. Special mention should be made of the factual yet interesting anno- tations by Clyde Thompson. -Tom Reed Robe t Noehren .. SUNDAY'S PROGRAM of contemporary organ music, by- Robert Noehren, ex- plicitly pointed up one fact, the lack of distinguished modern organ literature. Ex- cept for two possible exceptions, the works by Milhaud and Koechlin, I found nothing of any real musical value. That the works were mediocre was even more unfortunate when it is considered how they failed to supply ample or sufficient material for the performing artist. Mr. Noehren is an ex- cellent musician, as his many other recitals will readily testify, but with second-rate music, not even superhuman powers can provide musical interest. The music performed can generally be fitted into two categories, although it, all lacked the organic stuff, the basic ma- terial and creative imagination that gives a musical composition artistic signifi- cance. The first category was academic. It showed composers trying to reflect pre- vious centuries by superficial means, nam- ely the strict formal structure of the eighteenth century. The works played here were a Prelude and Fugue by Schmidt, a Passacaglia by Andriessen (this piece did show a little subtlety of texture) and a Chorale Prelude by David. The second category relied on effects and tricks. It substituted novelty and cleverness for substance, as exemplified by the pieces of Messiaen and Langlais. The Toccata by 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 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication (11 a.m. on Saturday). \ Notices Concert Tickets: Season tickets for the Choral Union Series (10 concerts) and for the Extra Concert Series (5 concerts) are now on sale over-the- :ounter at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Memorial Tower. The following major concerts are an- nounced for the coming University Year: Choral Union Series Richard Tucker, Tenor........Oct. 8 Yehudi Menuhin, Violinist......Oct. 22 Danish State Symphony Orchestra.. ......... . ....................N ov. 13 Vladimir Horowitz, Pianist....Nov. 19 Bidu Sayao, Soprano..... ....Dec. 1 Vienna Boys Choir...........Jan. 16 Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra.... ... . . . . . . . . . . Feb. 12 Gershwin Concert Orchestra.. Mar. 2 Artur Rubinstein, Pianist......Mar. 12 Boston Symphony Orchestra.... May 19 Extra Concert Series Rise Stevens, Mezzo Soprano.. .. Oct. 17 Cleveland Orchestra.............Nov. 9 Caudio Arrau, Pianist,........... Nov. 25 Hefetz, Violinist,. ........ -... Feb. 17 Boston"Pops" Tour Orchestra.. Mar. 23 By purchasing season tickets a con- siderable savings in cost is made. They are now on sale at the office of the University Musical Society Burton Me- morial Tower. Veterans enrolled under the G.I. Bill who will receive a degree, change course, or change institutions, at the end of the summer Session and who wish to take additional training under the Bill, must apply for a supplemental Certif- icate of Eligibility on or before August 8. Application should be made in Room 555, Administration Building. Cercle Francais: The Cercle Francais of the Summer Session meets every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock in the Henderson Room of the Michigan League. The meetings offer a varied program of songs, games and short talks in French on topics of general interest, as well as the opportunity for informal conversation and recreation. All students, faculty members, and summer residents who are interested in France and things French are cor- dially invited to participate in any or all of the activities of the Cercie. Kaffeestunde: All students of Ger- man and others interested in spoken German are invited to attend an in- formal group which will meet in the Michigan Union Tap Room Mondays and Wednesdays from 4 to 5 o'clock. A member of the department will be present to assist, but no formal pro- grams are planned. Approved student sponsored social events for the coming weekend. August 9, 1952- Chinese Student Club Phi Delta Phi Personnel Interviews: A representative of U. S. Rubber Company (Mishawaga, Indiana) will be here Thursday, August 7, interview- ing August graduates for the following positions: Business Administration graduates for production supervision trainees, accounting, sales administra- tion, or production management train- ees; Chemists or Chemical Engineers (male and female) for control of de- velopment laboratory work; a journal- ism graduate for public relations trai- nee and assistant editor of plant publi- cation management; and mechanical and industrial and Chemical Engi- neers for general engineering. Personnel Requests Bourns Laboratories, Riverside, Cal- ifornia has a need for design and pro- duct engineers (ME oe EE or Electron- ics). They prefer persons in engineer- ing honorary societies and can get mili- tary deferments for men, company manufactures airplane instruments. Will pay expenses of moving out to coast. The Detroit Edison Company is cur- rently in need of a young women with a chemistry major or physics major with chemistry minor to be employed as a laboratory technician for its chem- istry research laboratory. Montgomery Ward, Chicago, Illinois, is interested in hearing from return- ing servicemen or August graduates who would be available for employment in the following fields: Merchandise or (bner,,til 10Trinees.TIdus, trl En1i - tion or Social Group work and exper- ience in camping or club leadership in a group work agency. Application forms may be had at the Bureau of Appointments. The Buffalo Forge Company, Buffalo, New York, is interested in receiving ap- plications from recent graduates or Aug- ust graduates in Mechanical Engineering who are eligible for permanent employ- ment. There are openings with the company for sales engineers, research and development engineers, and plant engineers, The R-B-M Division, Essex Wire Cor- poration, Logansport, Indiana, has need for experienced electrical and mechani - cal engineers capable of taking charge of a design project and following same through; to its completion. They also need mechanical engineers who can de- sign automotive accessory equipment. This company is also interested in in- terviewing June and August graduates in the field of engineering who want a career in product design, and will pay expenses of an interview if applicants show interest in having one. The B. F. Goodrich Company, Akron, Ohio, has several openings in its Ac- counting Training Group, and also for several Field Auditors. Would like to hear from anyone interested in securing employment with this company. TheGeneral Electric Company, Sche- nectady, New York, currently has a few openings in its Business Training Course for August graduates from among the fields of Business Administration, Lib- eral Arts, and Engineering. The train- ing program leads to positions in the Finance, Sales Promotion and Publicity, Market Research, Community and Em- ployee Relations, Sales, and General Management activities. A bulletin with ful details may be seen at the Bureau of Appointments. The Shreveport Child Guidance Cen- ter, Shreveport, Louisiana, has a position available in the Mental Hygiene Clinic located in the E. A. Conway Memorial Hospital in Monroe, Louisiana. This is a State Operated Clinic supported also by Federal funds. The need is for a Psychiatric Social Worker. Lectures Linguistic Forum. "Notes on Canadian English." Walter S. Avis, Teaching Fel- low in English. 1:00 p.m., Michigan League dining room. Symposium on Heat Transfer. "Heat Transfer for Non-Isothermal Surfaces." Myron Tribus, Director of Icing Re- search, Engineering Research Institute. 3:00 p.m., 311 West Engineering Build- ing. Speech Assembly. Readings from Tono-Bungay, by H. G. Wells. Louis M. Eich, Associate Professor of Speech; citation of graduate students. 3:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Modern Views of Man and Society. "Issues of the 1952 Presidential Cam- paign." Panel members: Neil Staebler, chairman of the Democratic State Cen- tral Committee of Michigan; Owen J. Cleary, chairman of the Michigan Re- publican State Central Committee; George Meader (Republican), member of the United States House of Repre- sentatives from the Second District of Michigan; John P. Dawson (Democrats, candidate for the United State House of Representatives from the Second District of Michigan; James K. Pollock (moderator), Chairman, Department of Political Science. 4:15 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Lecture, auspices of the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. "Tolstoy, the Man, and His Family." Marie Tolstoy, granddaughter of Count Leo Tolstoy and Visiting Instructor in Russian. 8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphi- theater. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Joseph Wil- liam Shepard, Chemistry; thesis: "The Effect of Surface Roughness on Ap- parent Contact Angles and on Contact Angle Hysteresis," Wednesday, August 6, 1565 Chemistry Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, F. E. Bartell. Doctoral Examination for John de'Graft Duah Agyeman Dickson, Geog- raphy; thesis: "Federation in West Africa: A Study in Political Geogra- phy," Wednesday, August 6, 210 Angell Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, D. D. Crary. Doctoral Examination for Gilles Marc Corcos, Aeronautical Engineering; the- sis: "On the Stability of Poseuile Flows," Wednesday, August 6. 1077 East Engineering Bldg., at 7:30 p.m., Co-Chairmen, A. M. Kuethe and L. L. Rauch. Doctoral Examination for Paul Ray- mond Barker, Physics; thesis: "Cosmic I ====- == = ==== WASHINGTON-It is probably no accident that the planners in the Kremlin have chosen the most hectic of all American election summers to do some of their ugliest nose-thumbing. Election years in the U.S.A. are always watched most care- fully by those in Europe who have something ominous to put across. It was no accident, for instance, that Mussolini, Hitler, and Japan ganged up in the fall of 1936-an election year-to start unofficial submarine warfare in the Mediterranean while Japan was pushing farther into China. Roosevelt called a conference in Brussels to try to stop the Japs, but worried politicians, including Cordell Hull, finally induced him to pull his punches. It wasalso no accident that Hitler picked the election sum- mer of 1940 to drive into France and try to take England. He knew that American isolationists would do their best to tie Roose- velt's hand. And had it not been for Roosevelt's courage in bucking the tide in Congress and sending arms to England, a Nazi government might have ruled the British Isles. KREMLIN'S MOVES LIKEWISE, it is probably no accident that the Kremlin is making some of its most telltale moves this summer-at a time when the American public is thinking about the heat, summer vacations, and who will be the next president of the United States. Here are some of the moves spurred on by Moscow at this time: 1. Reported test of the first Russian Hydrogen Bomb. If this is true, then the Soviet is ahead of us in developing the H-bomb. Bruno Pontecorvo, who escaped behind the Iron Curtain, is reported to be the scientist who developed it. Of course, thes reports could be an- other part of the war of nerves. But if true, a Hydrogen bomb in Russian hands will seriously upset the balance of military and diplo- matic power in Europe. For nations like to be on the side of the nation with the greatest power, and so far our Atomic power has been overwhelming. 2. Possibility that Iran will go Communist. Iranian riots and the demand that the American arms mission pack up and leave is no accident. Of course, incredible State Department and British stupidity have played right into Russian hands. But Com- munist agents, who now swarm all over Iran, are rapidly bringing about a situation where the Shah will have to abdicate, and Iran will fall into Red hands like a ripe plum. When, that time comes, Communist influence is bound to march down through neighboring oil-rich Iraq, to oil-rich Arabia, to strate- gic Egypt and the Suez Canal. Thus, the Soviet by working around Greece and Turkey, may circumvent the billions of American money sent into Greece and Turkey under the Truman doctrine to block off Russia from the Mediterranean. 3. Frenzied Soviet rearming of East Germany. This was spurred on partly by our pushing of a West European army. It is also why thousands of German refugees are fleeing into West Germany. They want to escape conscription into the Red Army. But this rush by Russia to build up an East German Army has brought great conster- nation to other Germans regarding the most important, farsighted project Europe has seen since 1870-the unity of French and German troops under one flag. LUCK AND STUPIDITY ON TOP OF THESE, are some other factors attributable more to bad luck or American stupidity than to Soviet astuteness. While the men in the Kremlin can't take credit for them, they certainly are benefiting from them. Here they are: A. The economic illness of Great Britain. This goes hand-in- hand with the split in the Labor party and the increasing strength of the cut-loose-from-America group. What's happened in England is exactly what's been happen- ing in the United States. England now has an isolationist party. It's somewhat comparable to the isolationists led by Senator Taft and Colonel McCormick, except that, being Labor leaders, they don't belong to the same economic strata. Nevertheless, they urge with increasing vigor and increasing popularity that England can't pay for heavy rearmament and must go it alone. While this might save us a lot of money, it would also wipe out our air bases in Britain and pull the props out from under our goal of European unity against Communism. B. The wobbly situation in France. What most people don't realize is that American subsidies, both under the Marshall Plan and later under the North Atlantic Pact, long have kept middle-of-the- road leaders of France in power. We have long benefited from a loose alliance between the Catholio leaders of the middle, the non-Communist leaders of Labor, and small businessmen of the middle. The chief factors keeping them together are fear of Communism plus the fact that the French government could balance its budget through subsi- dies from the United States. While these have not been large compared to the total French budget, they represented the mar gin that kept the middle parties in power. Today Congress has drastically cut this margin, and France may be torn between the Communist left and the Fascist right of anti- American General De Gaulle. This comes at a time when the Kremlin is pushing its propaganda harder than ever and when we appear to be within gunshot of attaining the great goal of a European army. All these things also come at a time when the American public is bored stiff with world problems and when it was difficult to squeeze a line of European news into the papers during the Chicago conven- tions, even with a crowbar. Nevertheless, this undoubtedly is why the Kremlin has stif- fened its truce talks in Korea, why inflammatory posters hae been tacked up in Moscow showing American planes shot down by the Reds, and why the Moscow radio has stepped up its hate- America program to a new pitch. In brief, we are pretty sure to face more trouble abroad this Summer and fall-regardless of politics, the heat, and our own desire to be let alone. (Copyright, 1952, by The Bell Syndicate) I I It will include the "Glockenspiel" Toc- cata for Carillon, Air in D, In Thee is Joy, and Sheep May Safely Graze, by Bach; Variations for Carillon on a Chime Tune by Sibelius, written by Professor Price, and six sacred melo- dies. Student Recital. Donald Jackson, stu- dent of piano with Benning Dexter, will be heard at 8:30 Thursday evening, Au- gust 7, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in a program of compositions by Bach, Bartok, Beethoven, Brahms, and Cho- pin. Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music, the recital will be open to the public. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Selections from the Permanent Collection. General Library. Dictionaries. Museum of Archaeology. Ancient Egypt and Rome of the Empire. Museums Building. Rotunda exhibit. Some museum techniques. Michigan Historical Collections, 160 04~r Shty-Setond Yeta Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications EDITORIAL STAFF Leonard Greenbaum Managing Editor Ivan Kaye and Bob Margolin ........Co-Sports Editors Nan Reganall ........ Women's Editor Joyce Fickies. .....,..,... Night Editor Harry Lunn ........... Night Editor Marge Shepherd.........Night Editor Virginia Voss..........Night Editor Mike Wolff ....... Night Editor BUSINESS STAFF rom rreeger. Business Manager 0 A Mitts......Advertising Manager Jim Miller Finance Manager : I