1 ' 1 l a 0 PAGE TWO THE MIC'IIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1953 . . . Taft's Death WHEN THE 63-year-old Senator from Ohio died peacefully in his sleep yes- terday, he left a political vacuum which may not be so peacefully filled. Robert A. Taft was the great compromiser between the Re- publican party right wing isolationists and the GOP internationalists represented by his might-be successor, Sen. William Know- land from California. Mr. Republican, when he assumed the majority leadership of the Senate in the first Republican Administration in 20 years, took over the responsibility of handling a party not used to the business of holding the upper hand in the lawmaking body. Per- viously, Republicans had played the game of the opposition. In 1952, they returned to Congress as a team playing in their own well-filled ball park and under a competent manager. Counting on Taft to keep the delicate balance between extremists in the Party, Eisenhower who has had trouble With his Congress in the last six months, now faces the dilemma of no real middle-of-the- road leadership among his legislators. The GOP Senator's long-standing integ- rity, more than' his 15 year Senate senior- ity, undoubtably was one of the primary reasons for the respect given to his legisla- tive judgment and skill. Many times his was the leading voice in either dropping com- pletely or revising Administration proposals. He was not afraid to initiate legislation on the touchy labor issue in the controversial and often lambasted Taft-Hartley law and took a firm stand against the Truman plan to draft into uniform striking railroad work- ers. With the death of Taft, Republican rep- resentation in the Senate stands in jeop- ardy even though independent Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon has declared he feels "an ethical obligation to vote with the Republicans on Senate organizational issues." And so that brings us to the problem of a majority leader who can whip a Party with a less than bare majority into following Ad- ministration policy. The European-minded Eisenhower Administration would run up against a blank wall with Asia-firster Know- land in the Senate driver's seat. And then there always remains the open antagonism of Joe McCarthy, who was slapped down in the recent CIA controversy, and who doesn't like to be crossed up; witness his bitter de- nounciation of editor Wechsler. Without some unifying or at least calm- ing influence in Congress, Eisenhower is apt to run into quite a little trouble. And as yet, no such influence has appeared. -Becky Conrad 11 I a, MATTER OF FACT: "That's Funny - My Ticket Is For The Same Seat" American Policy in Europe Based on 'Articles of Faith' 'Mr. Republican' Left Vivid Mark on U.S. Political Scene By STEWART ALSOP BONN-The grand objectives of American policy in Europe look more and more like so much pie in the sky. If you are to believe that these aims are actually to be achieved, you must perform a whole series of acts of faith. You must believe, for example, that West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer is vir- tually indestructible. Adenauer's coalition, to be sure, is expected by American officials here to retain a thin majority after the September elections. No doubt they are right although it is not reassuring to recall that American officials also thought that Italian Premier Alcide de Gasperi would retain his majority. But everyone agrees that if ever the wise and powerful Adenauer is removed from the scene, his coalition will come apart at the seams. The American policy of German inte- gration into Western Europe would come apart at the same time. Thus American policy in Europe depends squarely on the longevity and continued active leadership of a man who is nearly eighty years old. This total dependence on one old man is only a symptom of the general flimsiness. of American policy in Europe. American policy in Europe also depends squarely on the passage of EDC, the plan for a European army, by the European par- liaments. Orders from Washington to Bonn are not to discuss or even think about the awful possibility that EDC might not be ratified. All American officials here, from High Commissioner James B. Conant on down, are manfully performing this com- pulsory act of faith. * * * * AS A RESULT the American officials are behaving like the three monkeys who see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. There is plenty of evil to be seen and heard and spoken, since independent observers in Eur- ope are almost unanimously convinced that EDC is moribund at the least, and quite probably dead. But American officials keep repeating "EDC will pass," like some medie- val incantation. Again, they may be right. But this re- porter was in this city two years ago, and the official line then was that EDC would be passed shortly, and that the first Ger- man divisions would be formed "within twelve months." Since the official line is precisely the same today, two years later, one may be pardoned for a certain skep- ticism. A third article of faith which must be ac- cepted is that, if EDC is passed, this paper treaty will be transformed into a real de- fense of Western Europe, capable of holding the Red army on the ground. This despite the fact that military budgets are being sliced right and left, and the further fact that EDC will be passed-if at all-only over the bitter opposition of huge segments of popular opinion in all the participating countries. Nothing is more easy, in short, than to show how rickety and unreal the whole structure of American policy in Europe has become. It is admittedly a good deal more difficult to say what can be done about it. But this must seems to be true. American policy in Europe is squarely based on the assumption that the division of Europe into two parts, with the Red army in the heart of Europe, is a permanent condition of life. This is a dreadful prospect for all Europeans -and they simply will not accept this pros- pect, unless they are convinced that there is really no alternative. THE GROUND has moved, moreover, since the autumn of 1950, when Dean Acheson, of all people, initiated the policy which the new Administration is pursuing with a sin- gleminded rigidity. In Western Europe, the growing resistance to EDC is an outgrowth of two developments. One is a perhaps ra- tional suspicion that a real defense of West- ern Europe is not feasible, as long as the Red army is on the Elbe. The other is a doubtless irrational upsurge of wishful thinking about Soviet intentions. At the same time, there has been the recent dramatic evidence in Eastern Eur- ope, demonstrating that the Soviet satel- lite empire is utterly artificial, held to- gether only by the naked force of the Red army. In these circumstances, Germans dream of the unification of Germany, and all Europeans dream of the withdrawal of the Red army from the center of Europe. The United States has succeeded in cast- ing itself in the role of thrower of cold water on these dreams. Washington's obvious re- luctance to talk seriously about German unity, and obvious horror at Churchill's May 11th speech, has convinced many Europeans that the United States is simply not interest- ed in a German settlement on any terms. It may look like a futile gesture in Wash- ington. But here in Europe it seems clear that the United States must soon undertake a great effort, involving genuine risks, in an attempt to secure German unification and the withdrawal of the Red army from the center of Europe. In the most unlikely event that such an effort succeeds, the cold war will be half won. If it fails, the West will at least know where it stands. This does not mean that EDC should be abandoned-on the contrary, EDC is the West's most use- ful bargaining instrument. And EDC, Ger- man integration, and all the other objectives of American policy now seem very likely to remain pie in the sky, until the doubtless irrational dreams of the Europeans are rea- lized-or shattered, once and for all. (Copyright, 1953, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) ( - OFFICE DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceeding publication (be- fore 11 a.m. on Saturday). SATURDAY, AUGUST 1 VOL. LXII, No. 27-S Nobices Tickets to the Masters Breakfast will be available throughout Saturday to candidates who failed to get their tick- ets on time. They may be secured Sat- urday from 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon at 3510 Administration Building and in the afternoon at the Michigan Union desk. School of Business Administration. Students from other Schools and Col- leges intending to apply for admis- sion for the fall semester should secure application forms in Room 150, School of Business Administration Building as soon as possible. Students in the prebusiness program in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts should secure the forms from a prebusiness adviser and return the completed forms to him. The student sponsored social events1 listed below are approved for the com- ing weekend. Social chairmen are re- quested to file requests for approval with the Office of Student Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on Monday prior to the event.C SATURDAY, AUGUST 1, 1953 Chinese Student Club International Students Assoc. Veterans eligible for education and training alowance under Public Law 550 (Korea G.I. Bill), whether they have received Certificate for Education and Training, (VA Form 7-1993) or not must sign Monthly Certification of Train- ing, VA Form 7-1996a, in the Office of Veterans' Affairs, 555 Administration Building, between July 31 and August 6. For the convenience of those veter- ans whose Summer Session classes end August 1, 1953 the Office of Veterans' Affairs will be open the morning of Saturday, August 1 from 8 a.m. to 12 noon. non. Lectures Lecture. Monday, August 3. Institute, for Mathematics Teachers: "The Role of Mathematical Models in an Empiri- cal Science," Clyde H. Coombs, Uni- versity of Michigan, 11:00 a.m., Room 130 Business Administration Bldg. MONDAY, AUGUST 3 Commentary on Stanley Quartet Re- cital. Louise E. Cuyler, Associate Profes- sor of Musicology. 4:15 p.m., Auditorium D, Angell Hall. CIINIEMA Architecture A uditorium ARIZONA, with Jean Arthur and William Holden THE ONLY thing epic about "Arizona" is its epic waste of talent, namely Jean Ar- thur. This film seems to hit just about the low point in Cinema Guild presentations. Let us hope it is not a trend. ,The plot, or what passes for a plot, con- cerns the struggles of a lone American girl in Tucson during the period around the Civil Wai. Through the shrewd management of A pie stand she manages to finance a freighting business. From there is it just a step to becoming the greatest rancher in the Arizona Territory. Mixed in with all this free enterprise is the girl's romance with a drifting cow poke. Of course, the smooth flow of events is in- terrupted now and then by the "bad men" or an Indian raid. But in true Horatio Al- ger tradition poor boy (girl) makes good against all odds, and they live happily ever after. Jean Arthur, cast as Miss Phoebe, is prac- tically unrecognizable as the quick shooting, tough talking frontierswoman. For anyone who has seen Miss Arthur in some of her other roles such as Peter Pan or A Foreign Affair will recognize this as the nadir of her career. The whole blame is not hers, how- ever. The script would have been the Water- loo of almost any performer. Bill Holden is also handicapped by the inadequacy of the script, but he at least looks the part of a roving cowboy. The entire film suffers from a severe at- tack of discontinuity. Whole scenes just seem to have been stuck in at random with- out any reference to the logic of the situa- tion, Perhaps the kindest thing one can say is that this is just another western. -Dick Wolf Books at the Library Cheever, John-THE ENORMOUS RA- DIO. New. York, Funk & Wagnalls, 1953, Deutscher, Isaac - RUSSIA: WHAT NEXT? New York, Oxford University Press, 1953. Morris, J. Malcolm-THE WISE BAM- BOO. Philadelphia, Lippincott, 1953. ON THE Washington Merry-Go-Round I with DREW PEARSON _j with Milhaud's Quintet No. 1 (with piano) following. The Beethoven Quartet in C-sharp minor, Op. 131 will be heard during the second half of the concert. Student Recital. Verena Stelps, Pi- anist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30, wednesday evening, August 5 in the Rackham Assembly Hall. It will in- clude the works of Bach, Beethoven, Ravel and Brahms. The recital will be open to the general public without charge. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall. Popular Art in America (June 30 -August 7); California Water Color So- ciety (July 1-August 1). 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays; 2 to 5 p.m. on Sun- days. The public is invited. General Library. First Floor Corridor.. Incunabula: Books Printed in the Fif- teenth Century. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Gill- man Collection of Antiques of Palestine. Museums Building, rotunda exhibit. Steps in theapreparation of ethnolo- gical dioramas. Michigan Historical Collections. Mi- chigan, year-round vacation land. Clements Library. The good, the bad, the popular. Law Library. Elizabeth II and her em- pire. Architecture Building. Michigan Chil- dren's Art Exhibition, Events Today LydiaMendelssohn Box Office will be open from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. today. Tickets for this week's play, Pygmal- ion by George Bernard Shaw, are avail- able at 60c - 90c and $1.20. All Depart- ment of Speech plays begin promptly at 8:00 p.m. Tonight, promptly at 8:00 p.m. the De- partment of Speech will present George Bernard Shaw's hilarious laugh riot, Pygmalion, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The production is under the direction of William P. Halstead with scenery by Jack E. Bender and costumes by Phyllis Pletcher, all of the Depart- ment of Speech. SL Cinema Guild Summer Program. Jean Arthur, William Holden, Glenn Ford in "Arizona." Cartoon: "Hurdy Gurdy Hare." Showing 7 and 9 p.m., Auditorium of the Architecture Build- ing. Michigan Christian Fellowship Pic- nic this afternoon at the island, Meet at Lane Hall at 4:30. International Students' Association: The Association is holding its Sum- mer Picnic this afternoon, at Kensing- ton Metropolitan Park on U.S. 16. Mem- bers attending are urged to meet at the International Center, 603 E. Madison, at 12 o'clock noon. Food and transportation tickets will be on sale at that time for one dollar. In view of the shortage of means of transportation those members who have cars at their disposition are irivit- ed to bring them at the International Center at noon Saturday. In apprecia- tion for this service these members will receive free food and transportation tickets. Coming Events Masters' Breakfast, honoring candi- dates for the master's degree. 9:00 a.m. Sunday, Michigan Union Ballroom. (Continued on Page 4) By The Associated Press Politics was in the blood of Rob- ert Alphonso Taft. His father, Wil- liam Howard Taft, was Governor- General of the Philippines, Sec- retary of War, President, and later Chief Justice of the United States. His paternal grandfather, Alphon- so Taft, served as Secretary of War, Attorney General and Min- ister to Austria and to Russia. The Tafts in the United States are all descended from Robert Taft, who came to Massachusetts from England or Scotland about 1680 and settled just north of the Rhode Island border. Alphonso was born and brought up in Ver- mont and moved to Cincinnati in 1837. "Bob" Taft started his political career at the bottom of the lad- der as a precinct committeeman in Cincinnati. Then he advanced to the Ohio legislature and to the U. S. Senate, where he became a power. Three times he came with- in striking distance of the Presi- dency. Along the way he established such a reputation as an exponent of undiluted party policy that he was known as "Mr. Republican." Headed Policy Committee When his party was in control of Congress in 1947-48, Taft had a dominant role as chairman of the Senate Policy Committee. As such he was the chief backstage plan- ner of Republican moves on do- mestic issues in the upper branch. His election to a third Senate term in 1950 was by the greatest plurality-431,000-ever achieved by any candidate for that office in Ohio. He won despite a hard fight against him by the Harry S. Tru- man administration and by off.i- cials of organized labor who were his unrelenting foes because of his sponsoring of the Taft-Hartley Labor-Management Law. But the office he wanted most of all, the Presidency, eluded him. The White House had been home to him while his father was Presi- dent. He was a student at Yale at that time. It was at the White House that he met his future wife, Martha Wheaton Bowers, daughter of his father's Solicitor General. She de- veloped into an able politician in her own right. Tried Hard for Presidency In 1936 Taft was Ohio's "fa- vorite son" candidate for the Re- publican nomination for Prei- dent. Then in 1940 he was one of the three leading contenders. But Wendell L. Willkie, a dark horse, skyrocketed to unprecedented pop- ularity that year and captured the bid on the sixth ballot. Four years later Taft stepped aside, for his friend, John W. Bricker, who was a candidate. The Presidential nomination went to Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, with Bricker as his running mate. Taft came back as a strong con- tender in 1948, but Dewey forces were in control of the convention and the call went to the New Yorker. Then in 1952 Taft set out in earnest with a vigorous campaign for delegates long before the con- vention at Chicago. Just before the balloting he claimed that the nomination was as good as his. But Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, with the substantial help of Gov- ernor Dewey, edged him out with a sudden burst of strength. End of His Hopes While Eisenhower won on the first ballot, it was a close race. The voting see-sawed on the roll- call of states and at the end of the call the General lacked nine votes of the 604 needed for the nomi- nation. He had 595 and Taft500. Minnesota then changed its vote to put Eisenhower in. Taft, in the blasted ruins of his hopes, vowed that "this is the last time I'll ever run for President." "I'll be too old," he added. He was then 62. Immediately after the nomina- tion was given to Eisenhower, he and Taft met to exchange mutual professions of esteem and respect. It was an obvious effort to allay factional bitterness within the G.O.P. ranks that had arisen dur- ing the heated fight for the nomi- nation. Taft threw his support to his successful rival and made a 22- state tour for him in the election campaign. At its conclusion, he said: "I think we've brought home the bacon." The election bore out that state- ment. Eisenhower was elected by a 6,616,000 plurality, carrying 39 states and winning an electoral vote of 442 to 89 for his Demo- cratic opponent, Adlai E. Steven- son. Taft Senate Floor Leader When the 83rd Congress conven- ed at the beginning of 1953, Re- publican Senators chose Taft as their floor leader. That put the man who was President aEisen- he felt might tend to involve America in it. He voted against Selective Ser- vicevin 1940, Lend-Lease, the deal making 50 destroyers available to Britain and repeal of the Neutral- ity Act. He also criticized the sending of American troops to Iceland. He contended Iceland was part of the European war zone, and de- clared: "When the American people have decided to go to war, I will support that war a vigorously as the President himself, but I deny his right to involve us in war or to send American troops into the war zones of Europe." In each of those instances, Taft was on the losing side. Long Feud with Truman Taft's opposition to the Demo- cratic program continued through the Truman administration. His feud with Truman came to white heat in 1946 when Truman de- nounced by name in a veto mes- sage a Taft amendment to a price control act. It went on all the rest of the time Truman was in the White House. During the Democratic regime the Ohioan was referred to by op- ponents as an isolationist, but he called such a designation a smear and said it was applied to hush criticism of administration deci- sions. His definition of what a foreign policy should be was this: "The principal purpose of the foreign policy of the United States is to maintain the liberty of our people. "It's purpose is not to reform the entire world or spread sweet- ness and light and economic pros- perity to people who have lived and worked out their own salva- tion for centuries according to the best of their abilities." Taft went on to say that the United States did have "an inter- est in the economic welfare of other nations and in the military strength of other nations, but only to the extent to which our assist- ance may reduce the probability of an attack on the freedom of our people." Explained "No" Votes He voted for ratification of the United Nations Charter, but on Dec. 4, 1945, was one of seven Sen- ators who voted against legisla- tion implementing United States participation in the United Na- tions. He contended that this law delegated to the President all pow- er to commit the United States to war without consultation with Congress. He also opposed the Bretton Woods international fiscal legis- lation. Discussing the lending pro- gram which included this legisla- tion, Taft predicted that "any such program of foreign lending is go- ing to wreck the country." In 1949 Taft voted against the Atlantic Pact by which 12 nations, including the United States, pledg- ed to give mutual aid against.ag- gression. The pact was for a period of 20 years and pledged the sign- ers to give aid against any nation which attacked any member of the pact. Explaining his opposition to the treaty, he said: "The pact is es- sentially aggressive, not defen- sive. If Russia sees herself ringed by so-called defensive armies from Norway to Turkey, she may decide this arming will lead to an attack on Russia. It is an old- fashioned military alliance." Challenged Truman Moves He called the Korean war "a Truman war," but gave his sup- port of United States' interven- tion once it took place. However, he held that the President had no power to intervene with Ameri- can troops. The Ohio Senator opposed the sending of troops in excess of six divisions to Europe during the "great debate" in 1951 on that subject. He sharply challenged the President's claimed authority to send troops there without first asking Congress. Taft as Author Taft compared the Truman ad- ministration with a man who can feel and see "but has no brain in his head to put together the vari- ous sensations and develop a con- sistent course of action." He wrote a book entitled "A Foreign Policy for Americans." In it he accused Truman of putting "all kinds of political and policy considerations" ahead of his in- terest in liberty and peace. His views brought sharp criti- cism from Senator Brien McMa- hon (D-Conn.), an administration supporter. In a statement analyzing the Taft book, McMahon said the Ohioan's "basic difficulty is that hc is still an isolationist," and added: "He fails utterly to relate the peace and liberty of our own peo- ple to the peace and liberty of f r 4 WASHINGTON-Most important develop- ments at the Quantico meeting of the top brass was an order by President Eisen- hower that his military commanders must settle their differences inside the Pentagon and send him only unanimous recommenda- tions. If minority views are forwarded to him at the White House, Ike bluntly announced he will pay no attention to them. In other words, he expects the new Joint Chiefs of Staff to present a united front. In the past, the Navy frequently dif- fered from the Air Force and Army re- garding Korean war strategy. But from now on no dissenting opinions will be permitted. At the Quantico meeting, the fiery, red- haired chairman-designate, Adm. Arthur Radford, served notice that he considered last year's election a mandate to the new Joint Chiefs to revamp their past policies. Radford didn't elaborate on what changes he expected to make, though he went on to stress the importance of the far east. He has long wanted the United States to inter- vene in China, rescue Chiang Kai-Shek, put him back in power on the Chinese mainland. The outgoing Joint Chiefs opposed this as likely to embroil us in war, TOP-SECRET MEETING A "top secret" sign was posted outside the conference door as the President met with his military leaders at the Quantico Marine Base. However, this column can give a thumbnail account of what happened-ex- cept for matters involving military security, which are omitted. The President rambled along pleasantly to the top brass about team play and harmony, about how pleased he was to meet with his former comrades-in-arms. Then he told a joke about a duck hunter who was so "roar- ing drunk" that his companions left hime behind in the rear blind while they went ahead to man the forward blinds. Finally, one lone duck flapped by, Ike to be unanimous decisions, approved by the chairman," he declared. "If a minority opin- ion is sent up to me, I will treat it as if it hadn't been sent." When Admiral Radford's turn at the ros- trum came, he hinted of changes to come in military planning. "The civilian leaders have changed. Now we also must change," he warned. "The election was a mandate for us to make some changes." Radford stressed the importance of For- mosa as a bulwark against Communism, urged a strong policy in the far east. This led some of the military leaders to conclude that the first "change" would be more mili- tary aid for Chiang Kai-Shek. Any minority views against moves in China, they feared, would be suppressed by President Eisenhower's order. Note-Theme of the Quantico conference was "team play," though some admirals and generals complained that they were treated like high school kids on a picnic. At a bar- becue, for instance, they were given huge aprons with "the defense team" spelled out in big letters across the top and "varsity" written across the middle. Secretary of De- fense Wilson and his civilian assistants also chipped in $100 each for prizes for the brass hats who caught the biggest fish, played the best golf game and otherwise excelled in sporting events. To Wilson's chagrin, most of the winners were the generals who have been bucking Wilson on budget cuts-the Air Force. POSTAGE GETS LICKED The backstage battle over postage stamps almost caused a divorce in the Eisenhower entourage. Bitterness reached a peak be- tween Ike's close friends, Postmaster Gen- eral Summerfield and Senator Carlson of Kansas, chairman of the Senate Post Office Committee. Carlson has been so opposed to Summer- field's proposed boost to four cents per ounce a Student Recital, auspices of School of Music. Paul J. Kirk, French horn. 4:15 p.m., Rackham sembly Hall. the Jr As- Popular Arts Films. A Short History of Animation: Selected Cartoons. 7:30 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Richard William Kebler, Physics; thesis: "The Excitation of Spectra of Highly Ionied Aluminum Atoms in a Low Pressure Spark," Tuesday, August 4, 2038 Ran- dall Laboratory, at 2:00 p.m. Chair- man, W. W. McCormick. Doctoral Examination for Paul El- len, Psychology; thesis: "The Com- pulsive Nature of Abnormal Fixations" Tuesday, August 4, 7611 Haven Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, N. R. F. Maier. Concerts Organ Recital: Robert Noehren, Uni- I) versity Organist, will present an organ Sixty-Third Year recital at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, Aug- Edited and managed by students of ust 2, in Hill Auditorium. His program the University of Michigan under the will include the works of Johann Sebas- teUiest fMcia ne h tian Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in G authority of the Board in Control of minor, Johannes Brahms Chorale Pre- Student Publications. ludes and Max Reger's Variations and4 Fugue on an Original Theme, Op. 73 Editorial Staff The general public will be admitted ....MnggEt without charge. HarlandBitz. .. .......Managig Eior wihotchrg.Dick Lewis..........Sports Editor Becky Conrad............Night Editor Student Recital: Paul J. Kirk, Jr.,, Gayle Greene...,,........Night Editor French Horn, with Ernestine Carr Kirk, PtReos........NgtEio Accompanist, will present a recital in Fran Sheldon............Night Editor partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 4:15, Monday afternoon, August 3, in Btsiness Staff the Rackham Assembly Hall. It will in- Bob Miller ............ Business Manager clude the works of Gliere, Dt la Presle, Dick Alstrom......Circulation Manager Barraine, Bernstein, Desportes, Dela- Dick Nyber.........Finance Manager marte, Mozart and Beethoven. His re- Jessca Tanner...Acivyptjiip Associate t . I