., PAGE TWO TiHE MICHIGAN DAILYT WEDNESDAY, JULY R, 1953 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ I I mm" Sen. Potter and the McCarthy Challenge ALL HE KNOWS is what he reads in the newspapers, Senator Potter of Michigan recently intimated. Potter, a 'member of McCarthy's Senate Permanent Subcommit- tee on Investigations, purely on the basis of newspaper articles, blasted J. B. Mat- thews for asserting in a magazine article that "the largest single group supporting the Communist apparatus today is composed of Protestant clergymen." Yet Potter admitted he had read merely newspaper reports of the charges and had not even bothered to read the American Mercury article. Other Senators on the com- mittee blasted the article as "a shocking and unwarrented attack" on the American clergy and held that such a charge "cannot be supported by the facts." However, Matthews, who joined the com- mittee as executive staff director two weeks ago, backs up his accusations with facts. First of all, Matthews quoted two per- sonages who supposedly should know something about the case. Earl Browder, former head of the Communist Party in the United States, in a speech to students of Union Theological Seminary in New York City said, "You may be interested in knowing that we have preachers, preach- ers active in churches, who are members of the Communist Party." In March 1947, 4. Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI, ip an interview before the Congressional Committee on Un-American Activities, pointed out, "I confess a real apprehen- sion so long as Communists are able to se- cure ministers of the Gospel to promote their evil work and espQuse a cause that is alien to the religion of Christ and Ju- daism." In one volume of the committee's report, 471 Protestant clergymen are named as par- ticipants in the Communist "Peace" offensive of 1951 which the State Department called an "organ of Soviet foreign policy." The author pointed out that "at least 7,- 000" Protestant clergymen had served "the Kremlin's conspiracy," though "it hardly needs to be said that the vast majority of American Protestant clergymen are loyal to the free institutions of this country." It is obvious that when McCarthyistie exposes reach a field that is near and dear to the hearts of the people, McCarthyites themselves use their own methods of pros- ecution to defend their position. It is based on flimsy, incomplete accounts meant to beat back the tide of facts in order to remove one of their exposers whose charges are supported by facts. It is a case of McCarthy methods versus a McCarthy staff man. Instead of using in- telligent means of combatting facts with facts, the committee rises on its haunches of righteous indignation with a righteous attitude unbacked by even a cursory glance at the facts. This could have been the chance for the gentleman from Michigan to wake up. In- stead, as defense attorney in place of prose- cuting attorney, Potter once again failed in his responsibility. In a court of law judge and jury demand truth or at least what passes for truth. In the court of public opin- ion insufficient, slanderous evidence too oft- en fills the requirement. No matter whic side you're on, it is a question of who cami yell the foulest accusations the loudest. Potter's action merely tends to reinforce this situation. -Becky Conrad The High School-College Gap (Second in a series) ONE OF THE FOUR lines of attack the Fund for the Advancement of Educa- tion has employed to test whether our edu- cational system can be changed, is the set- ting up of a seven year program to advance the ablest students throuh secondary school and college a year sooner. The committee has offered two main jus- tifications for this program. "Shortening the conventional process for some students, by even one year, if it could be done without significant educational loss would add thousands of fruitful professional 'man years' of service to the Nation's communities." The second justification is the advantage to the student hiself who would be starting his work a year earlier. Acceleration of a student can be accom- plished in two ways: the student could enter college with advance standing or the stu- dent could enter college after his third year in high school. The Fund is studying both of these phases. The program for early admission to col- lege got under way in the summer of 1951 when the first group of 421 Fund Scholars entered the freshmen year at eleven par- ticipating colleges and universities: Chi- cago, Columbia, Fisk, Goucher, Lafayette, Louisville, Oberlin, Shimer, Utah, Wiscon- sin and Yale. With few exceptions the Scholars were 161 years old or younger. Each participating college (representing a wide variety of educational Instiutions in- cluding a co-ed liberal arts college, a wom- en's college, and engineering college, a mu- nicipal institution, two Negro colleges, and a State University) chose their applicants by different criteria. Academic promise and personal maturity were given the most emphasis for selcting the scholars. All the institutions except Shi- mer sought a representative cross section of students with a large range of scholastic aptitude ratings. Judges Salaries IN TIMES of gigantic federal budgets and and deficits, it is not improper to scruti- nize any increase in federal expenditures. But as we do, let us bear in mind that when- ever we buy we usually get just about what we pay for. We may get less; not often do we get more. In filling judicial offices, the government goes into competition with the clients for the services of the members of the bar. The better the lawyer on the bench, the more likely is justice to be done. As prices rise, the salaries attached to these important of- fices are daily less and less attractive to the men who ought to be taking them. The only remedy is to raise them. Of course, federal judges could get along on their present salaries, or on lower ones. Millions of people live on less. One reason most of them do, however, is that they do not have the ability to earn more. The men to whose judgment is entrusted the dispo- sition of our properties, our liberties and even our lives surely ought to be men of su- perior attainments. Unless we spend on ju- dicial salaries the amount of money neces- sary to. get that kind of men, we need not expect the caliber of the federal judiciary to remain at its present high level. To fail to spend that money, even in these times, Most of the institutions favored high school students over private preparatory school students, other things being equal. Some also considered physical stature and appearance in an effort to weed out con- spicuous oddities." One institution "re- flecting the attitude of most others" was anxious not to recruit "simply a bunch of bright young twerps." At least one insti- tution challenged this idea of trying to avoid "misfits" in the selection, fearing that such a policy "might unconsciously degenerate into forcing all college students into a social stereotype." A majority of the instiutions gave the scholars the same academic treatment as any other entering freshmen. Except at Shi- mer the scholars outperformed their total class academically. (Data is not available at Fisk.) The scholars earned a strikingly higher percentage of "A's" and also a high- er percentage of "B's" than their class as a whole. However, it is not enough to compare the academic performance of the scholars to that of the freshmen class as a whole. A more revealing comparison is between the Scholars and a selected group of regular stu- dents with similiar aptitude scores. In seven of the nine institutions with such a group, the Scholars excelled their comparison group in grade average! At Goucher, the Scholars outperformed the comparison group in English and speech, foreign lan- guages, social sciences, physical sciences and mathematics, but they had a lower average in biological sciences and humanities. But how is the social and emotional ad- justment of the Scholars to college life?" Thus far there is overwhelming evidence that the Scholars in each of the 11 insti- tutions engaged in extra-class activities at least as extensively as their clasmates and that the large majority were well assimilated into the social life of the col- lege." Of the total freshmen enrolled in the 11 institutions, 11.6 per cent withdrew, ap- posed to only 8.4 per cent of the Ford Schol- ars. This'was the test of survival, which I feel, as well as any fact, shows that students can enter college eadly. Critics of this program of early admittance to college repeatedly question whether the young student is socially mature enough to participate in the campus social life and ac- tivities and derive any satisfaction as well as benefit. At Oberlin college a great major- ity of the Ford Scholars have fitted quietly and well into the campus scene. One of the scholars is a managing editor of the college paper; another is the business manager of the radio station. There is no stigma to be- ing a Ford Scholar because by the end of the first few months they were unrecogniz- able from any other freshman. There was little mention of the scholars the first year they arrived and even less publicity of the second group that came the next year so the Scholars were not placed in a conspic- uous light on their arrival. The men and women of this Ford program have experi- enced little trouble in dating. The four year report of this early admis- sions program will not be ready for two years. However on the basis of personal observa- tions of the program at work at Oberlin college for two years, the program should be continued and I believe that if the indi- cations of the Ford program now are indic- ative of what the final result will show, the a nona ~inrvaamisAfiinas n o MUSIC AT RACKHAM LECTURE HALL THE STANLEY QUARTET-Gilbert Ross first violin; Emil Raab, second violin; Robert Courte, viola; Oliver Edel, violon- cello A FULL HOUSE of eager string quartet enthusiasts was last night lavishly en- tertained as the Stanley Quartet presented a program of three works, the Beethoven Quartet in A major, Opus 18, No. 5, Mozart's Qintet in G minor, K. 516 (here the group was assisted by David Ireland, violist), and Bartok's Fourth Quartet, in C major. It was a program abundant in musical pleasures, intricate in compositional com- plexities, and very difficult in performance and technical problems. With only a few exceptions the Stanley proved themselves master of the whole. Only Haydn would have to be added to the composers played last night to complete the list of music history's greatest string quartet writers. The Stanley's interpretations were faithful and under- standing in bringing their pieces to life. Though the Bartok work came last on the program, it is fitting to discuss it first, since it was the most significant accom- plishment. The Quartets of Bartok rank with those of Schoenberg as being the most difficult technically in music litera- ture. Needless to say they are also the most difficult for the uninitiated ear to hear. But they can be the most rewarding to those wishing to probe the musical feelings of the present day composer, feelings which of course tend to reflect present day society. The Fourth Quartetof Bela Bartok is also rewarding as a work of art taken out of its twentieth century mode, if this is possible, and placed side by side with the great mas- terpieces of the past. It has a formal and organic structure so strict in its demands that it harkens back to the late Beethoven but in a differ- ent manner. Bartok has written a five movement work, with the midle move- ment serving as a center from which the others can be thought of as being pro- pelled from either side. But temporally it can be thought of as four symmetrical se- quences surrounding a fulcrum sequence which again is the middle movement, the movement of most melodic intensity. Into this framework Bartok has woven melodic designs completely interrelated, a tonal design emphasizing the temporal structure and becoming the auditory guide for the formal structure, and a mood design of two strong, vigorous movements encircling two scherzo like ones which in turn encircle the intense and melodic middle movement. But it is in the feelings represented that this work takes on most meaning to us today. The preoccupation of the twenties, when the' piece was written, with dissonances, with sounds supposedly "inharmonious," showed the composer's quest to find a new musical language with which to express his feelings. The language of the nineteenth cen- tury no longer suited his purpose. In exploring dissonances and new hdyth- mic devices, the composer had quite natur- ally come up with a new way of expressing feelings; he had come up with today's way. The Bartok Quartets are some of the best examples of this. At the risk of being speculative, particu- larly since composers recently have turned away from such dissonances, it seems that the Bartok Fourth Quartet expresses ele- mental emotions, feelings indigenous to the human personality. There is nothing super- ficial, meretricious, or of the concept "ideal beauty," in this music. It stems from all those things which are basic to every urge, gesture, motion, and impulse in the human organism. It has a dynamism and virility which is fundamental. The Stanley Quartet, an ensemble of virility and strength by temperament, gave it an exciting performance. From the sensitive way they played it, it would seem that it was not difficult at all but came to them naturally. The concert opened with the Beethoven Quartet. Here the program was at its weak- est since the group were not playing their best. I felt that they had taken their first movement too fast. The tempo seemed to make a clear ariculation of Beethoven's phrases impossible, and it sounded a little muddled. This work of Beethoven is one of his love- liest. It has an unpretentious beauty of ut- most simplicity. The playing of the slow movement ably brought this out. If the group had not warmed up to lie first number though, they did more than that in the second, the Mozart Quintet, as it was one of the most beautiful per- formances they have given. This work abounds in melodies, all pre- pared by a rich harmonic rhythm. Yet is also has a depth and passion reminiscent of Mo- zart's G minor symphony. The rapport in the ensemble during its performance was in- spired. The solo passages in the second movement between the viola and first violin were likewise. Sounding like arias, these passages rose melodically over the rest of the movement, which was the performance high spot of the evening. Other performance treats were the cello solo in the third movement of the Bartok, and the group's explisite handling of the c-rnni mnem-n of hey nA n,,+RiA sn "Who's Cooking, Comrade?" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN On one side are most of thel members of Eisenhower's person-c al satff, who would like the Presi-c dent to assert his mastery in hist own house. More particularly, this school holds that Eisenhowert must assume leadership of thet Republican party, even at the costt of open conflict with the Party'si powerful anti-Eisenhower fac-: tions. On the other side are a mucht smaller group of White Housee staff members, conspicuously in-t cluding the Congressional liaison man, Maj. Gen. Wilton B. Per-I sons, plus most of the Congres- sional leaders and professional Republican politicians. They want party harmony at all costs, even, if the pursuit of party harmony required the President to make the most humiliating surrenders to his enemies. The debate, thus far, has lar- gely centered on what the White1 House calls "the McCarthy prob- lem." The first real turning point, it is now clear, was the fight over the confirmation of Charles E. Bohlen as Ambassa- dor to Moscow. On that occa- sion, the White House and the State Department, being cor- nered, had to fight Sen. McCar- thy. Bohlen was confirmed. Yet the real victory went to Mc- Carthy. In particular, when the Bohlen fight was over, the Republican Senate leaders went to the White House, to declare that they "didn't want another Bohlen case." The President gave pledges of future cooperation. And Gen. Persons hastened to spread the happy word on Capitol Hill, that Sen. McCarthy and his ilk would there- after enjoy a virtual veto on all Presidential appointments. This was the real explanation of the recent case of Paul H. Nitze. As first revealed in this space, this brilliant State Department offi- cial was nominated for a high De- fense Department post by the White House itself. These report-. ers were incorrect in stating, how- ever, that Nitze's appointment had then been vetoed by Sen. Robert A. Taft. This was the official but false version of events given to the Defense Department by the White House Congressional liai- son, perhaps because the true ver- sion was much more embarras- sing. In brief, it was Sen. McCarthy who protested the Nitze appoint ment to Gen. Persons. It was in response to Sen. McCarthy's pro- test that Gen. Persons raised a warning signal. And it was be- cause they "didn't want another Bohlen case," that the Senate Republican Policy Committee then requested the cancellation of the Nitze nomination. Not Taft, but McCarthy, had interposed this veto. The President submitted with hardly more than a murmur of regret. This episode is only one of a long series of similar surren- ders, all of them highly unchar- acteristic of Eisenhower the man, but seemingly standard practice for Eisenhower the poli- tician. The question is whether these surrenders gain the Presi- dent anything more than the 1 lobbyists inevitably acquire the outlook of well worn pieces of chamois leather. Equally most of the Republican professionals plead for such surrenders because they do not want trouble, and hope{ that Sen. McCarthy and his fac- tion will make Republican votes I in 1954. The trouble is, however, that McCarthy-made votes will be an- ti-Eisenhower votes for anti-Eis- enhower Republicans, whose elec- tions will further weaken the President's authority both in his party and in the Congress. That should be plain enough after the recent Wisconsin Republican con- vention, which Sen. McCarthy and his friends transformed into a blatant anti-Eisenhower rally. The climax of the Wisconsin convention was the public and formal censure of Sen. Alexander Wiley, for opposing the Bricker Amendment to the Constitution at the urgent and personal request of the President. Wiley stood up and took it, on the President's be- half. But now the President has' cut the ground from under poor Wiley, by another of his so-called harmony gestures-the sudden of- fer to compromise on the Bricker Amendment. Even now, in short, the habit of yielding is spreading to issues of vital national policy. In the present Congressional session, the President is going to pass a minimum legislative program, not without many difficulties with the hostile groups in his own party. All sorts of larger, thornier and more controversial issues have been put off to the next session. Then will come the real test of the President's authority. In the next session, the Presi- dent will find that his authority has been altogether lost, unless he is willing to start fighting for it pretty soon. The oldest rule of politics is that no one wins a prize that he is not ready to fight for. (Copyright, 1953, N.Y. Her. Trib., Inc.) Interpreting The News 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). WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1953 VOL. LXIII, No. 98 Notices Seniors; College of L. S. & A., and Schools of Education, Music, and Pub- lic Health: Tentative lists of seniors for August graduation have been posted on the Registrar's bulletin board in the first floor corridor, Administration Building. If your name is misspelled or the degree expected incorrect, please notify the Recorder at Registrar's win- dow number 1, 1513 Administration Building.- Schools of Education, Music, Natural Resources and Public Health. Students, who received marks of I, X, or "no re- ports' at the end of their last semes- ter or summer session of attendance, will receive a grade of "E" in the course or courses unless this work is made up by July 22. Students, wishing an exten- sion of time beyond this date in order to make up this work, should file a pe- tition, addressed to the appropriate of- ficial in their school, with Roomr 1513 Administration Building, where it v'inl be transmitted. "Earning Opportunities for Mature Workers," the University of Michigan Sixth Annual Conference on Aging, will be held July 8-10, Rackham Building. Students and faculty may register for the conference without fee. The following student organizations have registered for the summer term and are entitled to the privileges ac- corded recognized student organiza- tions: Chinese Students' Club Congregational Disciples Guild Graduate Student Council International Students Assoc iation Women's League Undergraduate Council MATTER 'OFFACT By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP IKE'S POLITICS strictly temporary peace and quiet that is the reward of ap- ~VASHINGTON-There is an in- : aemn, creasingly sharp split in thej President's entourage, between Gen. Persons of course pleads two opposing schools of political for such surrenders because he strategy. has been the Army's Congression- al lobbyist for so long. All service By SIGRID ARNE Associated Press News Analyst WHITE-THATCHED Sen. Brick- er (R-Ohio) put his blunt, powerful finger smack into the middle of a no-man's land in our foreign relations when he asked that Congress take a new look at the way the U.S. is writing agree- ments with other nations. Bricker wants an amendment to the Constitution which will in- sure Congress the right of consul- tation when this nation makes an agreement with a foreign govern- ment. To anyone who knows the American Constitution, Bricker's move' looks like back-tracking. The Constitution says that presi- dents can sign treaties only with the "advise and consent of the Senate," and the Senate must ap- prove by a two-thirds vote. But with World War H and its pressures for speedy action, President Roosevelt began to sign papers called "agreements." The Senate was bypassed. Small groups of American delegates would go to a meeting and agree withdother nations what should be done. These groups were chosen by the White House and the State Department. The Sen- ate had nothing to say, Now the Senate is up against the fact that American delegates to the United Nations have support- ed two international agreements which could, some lawyers say, reach right into the heart of American life. That is, an inter- national body could set up laws which would reach past Washing- ton, and past all the state capitols, to tap the shoulders of Joe and Minnie Dokes, private citizens. One agreement is the "Genocide Convention" lobbied through the UN by a former mayor of Warsaw, Poland-Raphael Lemkin. He ad- vocates international punishment for anyone who kills because of hatred of racial or religious groups. Lemkin asks that such kill- ers be brought before an inter- national criminal court. This frightens some senators and some members of the American bar. Here and there, Americans are brought to trial for the death of American Negroes. Would such people be jerked out of the United States before an international court? Under the Genocide Conventionbwould they lose their right to be tried in American courts? The second most immediate worry on the international front is the "Convention of Human Rights" which has been support- ed, in large part, by Mrs. Frank- lin D. Roosevelt. She was the American delegate in the UN de- bates until President Eisenhower took office, when she resigned. The human rights convention promises: the right to work, to housing, to tree medical care, and to leisure. Most of those rights are part of the Rusian 1936 con- stitution which the Kremlin has never honored, except for a special Iclass. For lawyers the worry is this: the Constitution says that trea- Michigan Christian Fellowship University of Michigan Sailing Club Student Legislature Unitarian Student Group Graduate Record Examination. Candi- dates taking the Graduate Record Ex- amination will please report to Room 2446 Mason Hall on Friday, July 10 at 1:45 p.m. to 5:45 and on Saturday, July 11, from 8:45 to 12:45 and 1:45 to 5:15. Lectures WEDNESDAY, JULY 8 Conference on Aging. Rackham Lec- ture Hall. ThehProblem: Employment Security and the Aginga' Work Force. Morning: 9:30 a.m., "Work and Ma- turity and Employment Trends," Sey- mour L. Wolfbein, Chief, Division of Manpower Employment. United States Department of Labor; 10:00 ax., "Facts, Obstacles, Points of View"-a panel; 11:30 a.m., audience interviews. Aft- ernoon: 1:45 p.m., "Gains from Contin- uing Employment"-a panel; 2:35 p.m., audience interviews: 3:00 p.m., "The Older Worker-Taking Inventory" -- a panel; 4:15 p.m., audience interviews. Conference dinner: 7:00 p.m., Michi- gan Union. Address, "The Health and Welfare of Our Senior Citizens," Ove- ta Culp Hobby, Secretary of the Unit- ed States Department of Health, Educa- tion, and Welfare. Symposium on X-Ray Diffraction. 9:00 a.m., "Fourier Transformation and X-Ray Diffraction by Crystals," P. P. Ewald, Brooklyn Polytechnib Institute; 10:00 a.m, "Experimental Studies of Crystal Structures: The Structure Fac-, tor and the Reciprocal Lattice," William N. Lipscomb University of Minnesota. 1400 Chemistry Building. Linguistic Luncheon Meeting. "Var- escripts: Sampling Methods and Pre- liminary Counts," Macurdy Burnet, Maryland State Teachers College. 12:10 p.m., dining room, Michigan League. Symposium on Astrophysics. 2:00 p.m., Walter Baade, Mt. Wilson and Palomar observatories; 3:30 p.m., "The Origin of the Solar System," Gerard P. Kuiper, University of Chicago. 1400 Chemistry Building. Speech Assembly. "The Community in the Communications Age," Ola B, Hiller, Director of Radio and Televi- sion, Flint Public Schools: Manager of Station WFBE. 3:00 p.m., Lydia Men- delssohn Theater. Popular Arts in America. "A Capsule History of Jazz," H. Wiley Hitchcock, Instructor in Music Literature. 4:15 p.m., Auditorium A, Angell Hal. Speech Assembly, 3:00 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ola B. Hiller 4:00 p.m., Radio Studios-Radio Open House. Radio Studios, Angel Hall. Radiation Biology Symposium. 4:15 .pm., "Gene Function," G. W Beadle, Califoria Institute of Technology: 8:00 p.m., "Effects of Ionizing Radiations on Vertebrate Embryonic Growth and De- velopment," Roberts Rugh, Associate Professor of Radiology, Columbia Uni- versity. 1300 Chemistry Building, Dr. Martin Gumpert, Editor of "Life- time Living," will lecture on "Mak- ing a Life and Making a Living" at 8:00 p.m, on Thursday, July 8, in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. The public is invit- ed. Academic Notices Beginning Golf Instruction -Women Students. The Department of Phyical Education for Women is offering an- other Golf class on Monday and Wednes- day at 3:30 starting Wednesday, July 8. Register now in Office 15, Barbour Gym- nasium. Instruction is free and equip- ment is available. Make-Up Examinations in History-. Saturday, July 11, 9-12 a.m. 2407 Mason Hall. See your instructor for permis- sion and then sign list in History Office. M.A. Language Examination-Friday, July 10, 4-5 p.m, 3615 Haven Hall. Sign list in History Office. Can bring a dic- tionary. Orientation seminar meets on Wed- nesday, July 8 at 3:00 p.m. in 3001 An- Bell Hall. Blanche Schultz will speak on "Popular Illustrations of Topology and the Euler Formula" Geometry Seminar. Thursday, July 9, 7 p.m.. Room 3001 Angell Hall. Profes- sor K. Leisenring will speak on "Projec- tive Metrics." Concerts Student Recital: Richard Harper, or- ganist, will present a program in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Wednesday evening, July 8, in Hill Auditorium. His program will include works by Buxtehude, Bach, Vivaldi, Langlais, Alain andDurufle, and will be open to the public. Mr. Harper is a pupil of Robert Noehren. Special Choral Demonstrations (Sec- ond Series) by Marlowe Smith, East- man School of Music, and Director of Hig School Choirs, Rochester Public Schools, Friday, July 10, 10:00 a.m., and 3:00 p.m., and Saturday, July 11, 10:00 a.m., Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Tech- nis of Choir Directors; Reaching Chor- al Literature. Individual conferences with Mr. Smith may be arranged by signing for appointments. A listing of available hours will, be posted on the door of Room 708 Burton Tower, where appointments will be held. 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 S p.m. on weekdays; 2 to 5 p.m. on Sun- days. The public is invited. General Library. Best sellers of the twentieth century. Kelsey Museumyof Archaeology. Gill. man Collection of Antiques of Palestine. Museums Building, rotunda exhibit. Steps in the preparation 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 'r I 1 SixtyThird Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harland Britz.........ManagingI Dick Lewis .........,..Sportsf Becky Conrad............Nightf Gayle Greene............ NightI Pat Roelofs................NightI Fran Sheldon............Nightf Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Business Staff Bob Miller........Business Manager Dick Alstrom...Circulation Manager Dick Nyberg.......... Finance Manager Jessica Tanner...Advertising Associate Bob Kovacs.......Advertising Associate r