PAGE TWO , THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1953 ti NOW C~to6 b 7kte By HARLAND BRITZ THE UNIONS are getting abuse from all sides. The newspapers are filled with ac- counts of union abuses and violence. Wednesday two union organizers were convicted in Miami of attempted murder. They made the attempt because their victim "knew too much about terrorist methods used in the organizing drive." Congressional hearings in Kansas City and Detroit turned up reports that "millions of tax dollars appropriated for the defense ef- fort are being paid out to persons who do no work." The same report spoke of collec- tion of monies through threats and extor- tion. A Senate committee in New Orleans re- ported large financial discrepancies on the books of the union and indicated that both the testimony and the tax returns of a high unioi leader might be phony. Meanwhile, as the reports come through on the situation atWillow Run, we have no alternative but to believe that selfish union management at the huge aircraft plant is causing considerable waste to taxpayers and to the defense effort. Put together with the long standing re- ports of the crummy situation on the' New York piers, reports of union abuses have giv- en a large. segment of the American public an apprehensive view towards the labor union movement. The unions, conscious of the bad pub- licity, are trying to correct the impres- sion. But instead of actually looking into the situation, higher ups immediately de- nounce reports of abuses as trumped up and phony. Thp president of the CIO Newspaper Guild recently said the nation was "divided by the maneuvers of a cal- lous core of name calling nitwits who would rather smear labor and liberals at home than to smash communism and fascism abroad." Vote conscious senators from industrial areas likewise issue generalized and often non-specific defenses of their workers. Alert Americans, conscious both of labor faults and virtues, cannot help but feel sor- ry for the worker who is so often lambasted because of hissconnection with the unions. Few among us begrudge the workers their right to collective bargaining. The trade union movement is an established part of the American system. Idiias done immeas- urable good for the working classes. But too often the very same workers who should be beneflitting from the unions are victimized by high handed methods that smack of gangsterism. The poor dock workers and the unfortunate victim in Miami are examples of people who have put their trust in a great movement which has developed abuses which work against the workers instead of for them. Labor has a long and distinguished record on the American scene. But its reputation is in danger of becoming extremely poor, so long as the focus of labor leaders remains on themselves instead of the workers. Goon squads, strong arm tactics, and corrupt ad- ministration are jeopardizing the true cause of unionism which is to raise the workers standards through mass representation. U. S. Big Stick in Iran H AVING reached an impasse with one aged fanatic Korea's Syngman Rhee, President Eisenhower has turned his attention to an- other-the venerable strongman of Iran-- Premier Mohammed Mossadegh. No large scale economic aid to Iran will be forthcom- ing until there is a settlement of the oil dispute with Britain, Eisenhower has in- formed the Premier. In his first' communication with Iran since he took over the Presidency, Eisen- hower expressed the United States' displeas- ure over the freedom allowed Communist activity in Iran. His ultimatum-settlement or no money-- is liable to set off an unfortunate chain of reactions, as other U.S. ultimatums have. Foreign resentment of U.S. interference in foreign affairs based on the assertion that Congress is the paymaster of Western Europe, was recently pointed up when the House Foreign Affairs Committee made half of the foreign aid program for West- ern Europe conditional upon the creation of the European Defense Community-an action which seems to have embarrassed even the State Department. Although the foreign aid bill lost its ob- jectionable provision during its sojourn in the Senate, Mr. Eisenhower has picked up the Big Stick and is waving it over the Mid- dle East. Resentment in Iran of U.S. interference could send Mossadegh to the other side of his renowned invalid's bed to shed his oil rich tears on Russia's shoulder. There is only a small chance however, that this may be just the push to goad the Premier to positive favorable action. At one time, the Truman administration had an opportunity to indirectly influence power distribution in Iran. When the Shah toured the country a few years ago and broached the subject of a $100,000 loan, he was refused. Iranian experts have expressed belief that if the Shah had come home with that loan in his pocket, Mossadegh might never have risen to such power as he now enjoys, power which could allow him to initi- ate a policy of simpering coyness with the Communists in an attempt to fortify his own position. , Whether Ike's Big Stick has effect or not does not justify tl}e fact that his ultimatum added new dimension to the unflattering picture of United States interference held by the entire world. -Gayle Greene INTERPRETING THE NEWS: Georgi Malenkov Victorious Over Lavrenti Beria BY WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst SPARKS from the restless Soviet satellite nations apparently have touched off the Kremlin's powderkeg in an explosion that could rock the Communist world to its foundations. The showdown for power seems to have burst prematurely-before the contestants were fully ready for it. At the moment, Pre- mier Georgi Malenkov appears to have won and vice premier Laventri Beria to have lost. Beria, long czar of the vast network of secret police and the most dreaded man in the Communist empire, seems on his way to becoming the chief scapegoat of all the ills, economic and political, afflicting the USSR itself and the captive nations in its orbit. Beria, for all his power in the secret police, wasboxed in by the subtle organi- zation of the Soviet Communist party which grips every phase of Soviet activi- ty. The strength of the party at the pres- ent moment has outmatched that of the police network. But the battle may be far from ended.. Stalin drew his personal strength from the party, but he ruled the party for many years with an iron fist. Malenkov is not the man Stalin was, and may have a tough war on his hands to keep the power. Not only will he face the anger of the defeated faction of the party and danger from the ranks of the police, but he may yet have to deal with the Soviet Army's officer cadres who make up the unknown quantity in this historic struggle to decide upon the ruler of a third of the earth's surface. Once again Soviet Communist history re- peats itself. The purger is to be purged. Beria held the reins of the secret police for a long time-ever since 1939, but it has always been the most uncomfortable pinnacle of power in the USSR. He himself directed the purge of his predecessor who in turn had sent the previous police chief tothe firing squad in Stalin's blood purge of the 1930s. Moscow's communique indicated that Beria himself would go on trial as a crimi- nal who directed anti-state activities in the interests of the United States. Nothing, of course, can be more fantastic, but, as a recent arrival from Moscow has commented, nothing is too fantastic for the Soviet Union today. The battle for power in the Kremlin might have smouldered for some time to come, ex- cept for the events in Middle Europe. They appear to have hastened the showdown. It became clear recently when diplomats were called home to Moscow from key posts abroad, along with the military and civilian authorities from Germany, that something important was bubbling in the Kremlin pot and that it might boil over at any moment. The Communist party, fearful that its power was on the wane throughout Europe and even, indeed, in the USSR itself, had to strike swiftly.. Somebody had to be blamed for the ills which were forcing the party into a world retreat. Perhaps Beria and his allies eyed Malenkov for the honor but Malenkov once again proved to be the wiliest and quickest in a showdown. From now on, unless a force stronger than Malenkov emerges in the con- fusion, it will go hard with old-line Stalin- ists, such as Beria, whose loyalty to the So- viet dictator has never been questioned. Unquestionably, this is only the first act of the new Soviet drama. There will be more shocks and surprises as the story unfolds. Toward German Unity PRESIDENT EISENHOWER has put his finger on the essential point in the German problem in his message to Chan- cellor Adenauer. As the President said, "The safety and future of the people of Eastern Germany can only be assured when that region is unified with Western Germany on the basis of free elections." This has long been and is still today the goal of the United States Government' whose concern for a free and independent united Germany is at the opposite pole from Moscow's plans for a slave Soviet Germany. The demonstrations in East Germany have been the German people's answer to the Soviet plans and to the Soviet oppression. No Soviet concession will meet the griev- ances of East Germany until Moscow aban- dons its old opposition and permits achieve- ment of the objective which President Eisen- hower has once more pledged this country to support. -The New York Times rooks at The Librarv. Bissell, Richard - 7'Y%2 Cents. Boston, Lit- + tle, Brown & Company, 1953, Blake, W. T. - The Pampas and the An- des. London, Cassell & Company, 1953. Hancock, Ralph - Douglas Fairbanks. New York, Henry Holt, 1953 Idell, Albert - The Corner Store. New York, Doubleday, 1953.4 Moraes, Frank-Report of Mao's China. 'A nr Vn.I ~ n01 I nrO ___ - --- - ON THE " -And That's The U. S. Senate, Over There" DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WASHINGTON ME R RY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON F;; F ij I __ ______ . I'z WASHINGTON - Inside the White House - The Cabinet is splitE over giving encouragement to restless satellites behind the Iron; Curtain. John Foster Dulles, who campaigned last fall on the idea of encouraging revolt behind the Iron Curtain, wants to do something. Ike hemself is on the cautious side. . . . Best man to replace Voice of America chief Bob Johnson is C. D. Jackson, ex-publisher of Fortune, now in the White House as psychological warfare adviser. Jackson knows his propaganda onions, is a human dynamo. . . . The White House may have stubbed its toe on another appointment-that of Leonard Walsh to be Chief Judge of the D.C. Municipal Court. Some- body forgot that Walsh got involved in a hit-and-run accident case inI which a jury not only fined him $10,000, but the U.S. Court of Ap-' peals handed down a decision seriously impugning his credibility. Chief Judge D. Lawrence Groner wrote that "He (Walsh) falsely charged the act to another." This, added the Judge, "was sufficient to justify.the jury in rejecting the whole of his evidence." . . . Des- pite this false testimony, Walsh has now been nominated as Chieft Judge for the District of Columbia. . . . Ike is bringing more militaryf men into the White House. The latest, Colonel Paul Carroll, assistant to Governor Adams, is efficient, civilan-minded and should be an asset. . . . The White House got a phone call from the first wife of General MacArthur the other day, gracious Mrs. Louise Heiberg, sug- gesting that the best way to calm down old Syngman Rhee was to' send her brother, Jimmie Cromwell, over to Korea. Jimmie, who stood by Rhee during his years in exile. probably knows him better than anyone else in the U.S. and would be persuasive. Once married; to Doris Duke, Cromwell served under F.D.R. as minister to Canada. Inside the State Department-Exit of Bob Johnson as State De-; partment propaganda chief was a serious loss for the Ike administra- tion. He had just learned the ropes, was doing a good job. . . . Real reason he went back to Philadelphia's Temple University was dis- gust with his boss John Foster Dulles re book-burning; also health.1 Johnson was on a rice diet for high blood pressure, had orders to' take an hour's rest after lunch, another after dinner. Instead he, worked from 7 a.m. to midnight. . . . But what made it impossible for him to stay was friction with Dulles. . . . Inside fact is that Dulles himself wrote most of the first two book-burning directives, Johnson got the blame. But Dulles with the help of Assistant Sec- retary Carl McCardle, wrote the first panic-stricken directive, then. f f I E~ Mr(NG a - 66 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). FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1953 VOL. LXIII, No. 98 Notices "Earning Opportunities for Mature Workers," the University of Micnigan SixthAnnual Conference on Aging, will be held July 8-10, Rackham Building. Students and faculty may register for the conference without fee. Late permission for women students wbo attended the Faculty Concert on Tuesday, July 7, will be no later than 11:10 p.m. Late permiassion for women students who attended "Knickerbocker Holiday" on Wednesday, July 8, will be no lat- er than 11:20 p.m. Judiciary Cuncil Lectures FRIDAY, JULY 10 Spmposium on X-Ray Diffraction. 9:00 a.m., "Fourier Transformation and X- Ray Diffraction by Crystals," P. P. Ewald, Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute; 10:00 a.m., "Experimental Studies of Crystal Structures: Fourier Develop- ment of the Electron Density and Its Application," William N. Lipscomb, University of Minnesota. 1400 Chemis- try Building.j Conference on Aging. Rackham Lec- ture Hall, New Designs for Continued Earning. 9:00 a.m., "Our Challenge- Creating New Opportunities," James C. Worthy, Assistant Secretary, Unit- ed States Department of Commerce, 9:30 a.m., "What New Ideas: What More Can Be Done"-a panel, Conference luncheon, 12:15 p.m., Michigan Union. "The Mature Workers Evaluate the Conference"-a panel. Symposium on Astrophysics. 2:00 p.m. "Variable Stars in Population II and the Zero Point of the Period Lumi- nosity Relation of Cepheids," Walter Baade, Mt. Wilson and Palomar ob- servatories; 3:30 p.m., "The Origin of the Solar System." Gerard P. Kuiper, University of Chicago. 1400 Chemistry Building. Radiation Biology Symposium. "Haz- ar to the Fetus and Protection Against Ionizing Radiations," Roberts Rugh, Columbia University. 4:15 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Building. Dr. Martin Gumpert, Editor of "Life- time Living," will lecture on "Making a Life and Making a Living" at 8:00 p.m. in the Rackham Lecture Hall. The public is invited. AcademicIN otices iM.A. Language Examination-today 4-5 p.m., 3615 Haven Hall. Sign list in History Office. Can bring a dictionary. Doctoral Examination for Walter Rich- ard Tulecke, Botany; thesis: "Studies in vitro on the Pollen of Ginkgo.biloba," today, 1139 Natural Science Bldg., at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, C. D. LaRue. Doctoral Examination for Louis Poin- dexter Brown, Education; thesis: "The Status of Guidance Services in Twenty- two Accredited Secondary Schools for Negroes in Virginia," today, 4019 Uni- versity High School, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, H. C. Koch. Dctoral Examination for Thomas Ed- win Talpey, Electrical Engineering; thesis: "A Study of Induced Grid Noise," Saturday, July 11, 2518 East Engineer- ing Bldg., at 8:30 a.m. Chairman, S. S. Attwood. Concerts 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 .m., and 3:00 p.m., and Saturday, July 11, 10:00 a in, Auditorium A, Angell Hail. Tch- nics of Choir Directors; Reaching h'or- 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. Student Recital. Alfred Boyington, violinist, will present a recital in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 4:15 Monday afternoon, July 13, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. It will in- clude works by Handel, Copland and Brahms, and will be open to the pub- lic. Mr. Boyington is a pupil of Gilbert Ross. Faculty Concert. Lydia Courte, pian- ist and Robert Courte, Violist of the School of Music Faculty will be eard at 8:30 p.m., Monday evening, July 13, 1953 at Rackham Lecture Hall. Their program will include Martin Marais' Four old French dances, Haydn's Di- vertimento in D major, George Wilson's Sonata, Homer Keller's Sonata and Mo- zart's Divertimento in C major. It will be open to the public without charge. Faculty Concert. John Kollen, pian- ist, wll1 appear in the third faculty con- cert Wt 8:30 Tuesday evening, July 14, in the Rackham Lecture Hall. His pro- gram will include Mozart's Sonata in C major, K. 330, Brahms' Sonata in F mi- nor. Op. 5, and Beethoven's Sonata in E- flat major. Op. 31, No, 3. The gen- eral public will be admitted 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. Best sellers of the twentieth century. Kelsey Museum of 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 Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office is open from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. today. Tickets for individual performances of the De- partment of Speech summer play se- ries are available: Knickerbocker Hol- day and The Tales of Hoffman, $1.50- $1.20-90c; The Country Girl and Pyg- malion, $1.20-90c-60c. Knickerbocker Holiday, the hilarious musical comedy by Maxwell Anderson and Kurt Weill, plays tonight in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre at 8 p.m. Choreography is created by M.s Es- ther Scholz of the Detroit public schools and guest instructor in the Women's Physical Education Department. Or- chestra and chorus 'are under the di- rection of Paul Miller, Grad., Music. The entire production is under the di- rection of Professor. William P. Hal- stead of the Department of Speech. Department of Astronomy. Visitors Night, 8:30 p.m. Dr. Hazel M. Losh will speak on "The Milky Way." After the illustrated lecture in 2003 Angell Hall, the Students' Observatory on the fifth floor will be open for telescopic obser- vation of Saturn and a double star, if the sky is clear, or for inspection of the telescopes and planetarium, if the sky is cloudy. Children are welcomed, but must be accompanied by adults. Hillel Foundation this evening. Serv- ices at 7:45 p.m. Saturday Morning Services at 9 a.m. Everyone welcome. Lane Hall Punch Hour, 4:45 to 6:00 p.m. Everyone welcome. Lane Hall Tour. A small group will visit the Art In- stitute, Detroit Museum, and other- places of interested in Detroit Satur- day. Call extension 2851 for details and reservation. The ythird Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held today. Dr. Ralph Rabinovitch will be the psychiatrist. Students with a professional interest are welcome to attend. - Main Lodge, University of Michigan Fresh Air Camp, Patterson Lake, Eight o'clock. The graduate women at Alice Lloyd Hall invite graduate men students to an open house at the Hall this eve- ning from 8 to 12 o'clock p.m. There will be dancing, games, and refresh- ments. SL Cinema Guild Summer Program. Jeanne Craine - Linda Darnell - Kirk Douglas-Paul Douglas in "A Letter to (Continued on page 4) 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.......Managing Editor Dick Lewis. ..........,Sports Editor Becky Conrad.............Night Editor Gayle Greene...,.... NigtEdio + ru ; REiNT M oVIE Architecture Auditorium A LETTER TO THREE WIVES, with Lin. da Darnell, Ann Southern, Paul Doug- las, Kirk Douglas A letter to Three Wives is a comic attempt to make an intriguing guessing game about someone running off with someone else's husband. The female smeone is never known, but she acts as a catalytic agent be- hind the scenes to provoke some fun and some moral reforming. The wives, it seems, have not been good enough to their hus- bands. The film is full of heartstirring speeches, and people finding their way out of spots. The acting is fairly good, especially on the parts of Paul Douglas, who represents a maligned magnate, and Thelma Ritter, as Sadie the independent maid. The visual pleasures of the film are, I think, enough to compensate for the poor soundtrack. The costumes and settings besides being very good, are also significant in the sense that the characters are depicted as transcending their costumes and settings. If the film is weak, it is mainly in its not going far enough, or not concentrating enough on one point, or not being consistently and thoroughly satirical. The three Vales of which it is made are long enough to evoke many moral re- flections, and to provide fairly effective satire against soap-opera, against adver- tising, and what it does to people, against the loss of fidelity to the ideal in marriage. Marriage gets tangled, it is asserted, when the monetary values become predominant, and when people prefer the "illusory per- fect" to the rough and square contentment with what they have. The plot involves all the characters and couples being brought together, desipte their incompati- bilities, in an affirmation of what is "com- monly human." The different classes min- gle, all are held up for their weaknesses and pretenses, as well as their strengths; all are somehow justified. At the Michigan ... NEVER LET ME GO with Gene Tierney, Clark Gable IN A FEEBLE attempt to display anti- Soviet propaganda, Hollywood has turned put an adventure film with too little adven- ture and too much talk. The plot centers around the adventures of a chesty American newspaperman in Moscow who marries a Russian ballerina and then finds that he is unable to take her with him when he leaves Russia as a persona non grata. In a wild scheme to rescue his wife by sailboat, the correspondent manages to sm'uggle his wife out and reach the in- evitable happy ending. As the rough, tough foreign correspond- ent, Clark Gable manages to display his aging muscles frequently enough to prove that he is the old Gable. However, there are tremendous inconsistencies in the dia- logue that he is forced to voice. In one scene he is grinding out such well-worn cliches as "let's go sweetheart," or "baby, its me." In the next he is haranguing the Russian secret police on their philosophi- cal shortcomings. Outside of these red herrings, Gable manages to give a credit- able performance. Gefie Tierney as the Russian wife is ade- quate, but impeded a bit by a psuedo-Rus- sian accent that makes one wonder at times if she 'sn't mouthing a little gravel. In several scenes, notably a fine balletj sequence and a dramatic automobile chase, Hollywood demonstrates the technical ex- cellance for which it is well known. The camera is well employed through a balance of good angle shots, storm scenes, and ro- mantic closeups. On the whole, the picture suffers from the lack of a coherent plot and natural dialogue, thus letting an otherwise good adventure film deteriorate into a mere vehicle for anti-Russian propaganda and the display of Gable's physique. the second regarding periodicals. These were what caused State De- partment officials abroad to start dumping books wholesale, even burning some. . . . Since then a half-dozen directives have been written by other State Department officials trying to rectify the original panic. . . . Johnson thought all this made us look ridiculous abroard.... Reports that Johnson had cuddled up to Senator McCarthy were exaggerated. They got started because he invited senators to meet with him on Monday nights, and on one occasion another Senator invited McCarthy to come along. . . . Cohn and Schine fre- quently came down to the State Department to get in Johnson's hair, i Make-up Examinations in History - Saturday, July 11, 9:00;,12:00 a.m., 2407 Mason Hall. See your instructor for permission and then sign list in His- tory Office. r e f but he did no snugglingG. TO THE EDITOR -NEW JERSEY GANGSTERJSM-- CLENDENIN RYAN, amateur detective and playboy grandson of Thomas Fortune Ryan who once owned the streetcar lines of New Foreign Student Deaths York and Chicago, has been giving gay dinner parties in Washington and talking about his campaign to become governor of New Jersey. To the Editor: Among other things he threw an ornate wedding anniversary party RUSI SIGANPORIA - the boy for TV producer Martha Rountree who has featured him on "Meet the I who was drowned on Sunday, Press," and even donated a new fence to Martha to keep the hoi pol- June 28, and buried only on Fri- loi out of her backyard. Ryan talks grandiloquently about using wire- day, July 3 is just one more of the tappers against his political opponents and once had a bevy of list of foreign students who came wire-tappers working on Mayor O'Dwyer of New York. to Ann Arbor to keep their- ap- While nobody in Washington takes Ryan's political ambitions pointment with "Death." In al- too seriously, it just so happens that he may end up as the next most all these cases-at least in the, governor of New Jersey-thanks to the wrath of New Jerseyites case of two of my personal friends over the way gamblers and gangsterism have thrown their weight who died here in accidents-the around during the GOP Driscoll administration. bodies had to be preserved until With testimony that the late Willie Moretti had contributed the parents concerned living across the oceans were informed and they $118,000 to the Driscoll administration-though Governor Driscoll then gave instructions to the au- says he knew nothing about it; and with Harold Adonis, the gover- thorities here as to what was to be nor's assistant, who received part of the money, now hiding out in done with the body-whether to Holland, a lot of new Jersey voters are anxious to vote anything but be buried, cremated or flown back Republican next November. to them. -N.J. RACKETEER BOSS- In the recent case it took five TLOWEVER, they are not particularly anxious to vote Democratic days to receive the parents' in- due to the fact that the Democratic nominee, Robert B. Meyner has stuctions. Another case I referred to above-Eric Castelino, another the backing of Democratic John V. Kenny, who as Mayor of Jersey Indian boy-it took about the same City made the notorious deal withe the Republicans by which Gov- Ime .Itit jtoauesoo ernor Driscoll and the unpopular crowd around him were put in. time. It is not just a question of i Ipreserving the body until word was I Behind this neat political deal by which Kenny Democrats received from the parents. There scratched the backs of Driscoll Republicans was the man who has are other matters like who will pay pretty much dominated New Jersey politics of late, Abner "Longie" the expenses for funeral or for the Zwillman, famed racket boss of the rum-running era and the man -body to be flown back, what about who refused to answer 41 questions asked by the Kefauver crime his bank balance (or his debts!). committee. his other belongings, etc.? To deal It was gangster Zwillman, according to testimony before the wPtsuen one.-...er..eaNihtDuit- ith sch ons-aftr-Editoru Kefauver committee, who offered $300,000 of campaign funds to ness would not be half as head-' Fran Sheldon............Night Editor Congressman Elmer Wene, Democratic candidate for governor in ache-some if only the concerned 1949, provided Wene would let Longie pick his Attorney General' authorities had a written s e Busness Staff refsed Itwasaftr tat, ment from the student and if he BbMle.....Bsns aae Wene, a south Jersey chiken raiser, refused. It was after that, was a minor, from his parents o i rom .Circulatin Manager that Zwillman made his deal in Jersey City and Wene was de- guardians as to what is to be done Dick Nyberg.........Finance Manager feated. with the body in case he is to die Jessica Tanner... Advertising Associate This spring Wene was up for governor again, but again boss here and also regarding other mat- Bob Kovacs.....Advertising Associate I I ad