PAGE TWO T'lE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1953 I I U ____________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________ Cditep~ rn lete By HARLAND BRITZ SENATOR JOSEPH McCARTHY faced a rather watered down version of "Meet the Press" the other evening. The question- ers, apparently afraid of getting into any real controversies, asked Joe the types of questions for which he had ready made answers. Not until the end of the show did the senator say anything interesting. What he said was both cheap and shock- ing. In answer to a question about public criticism of his two, pet investigators Roy Cohn and David Shine, McCarthy charged that attacks on these men were an awful example of anti-semitism. Quickly the pro- gram ended. There was no time for any ex- plandtion. There were no piore questions. If the program would have gone on any longer, the McCarthy charge might have been just enough spark to get the panel of . -newsmen excited. If they had more time they might have asked just who these anti-Semites were that had been persecuting the two youngsters. It would then have been poited out that the attacks on Cohn and Shine came from such men as the great champion of Ameri- can Jewry, Sen. Herbert Lehman. The liber- al magazine The Reporter recently devoted huge sections to a discussion of 'the pair and Drew Pearson, who delights in expsing such ant-Semites as Gerald L. K. Smith and Merwin Hart, devoted a recent column to the buys' activities and careers. * * * FAIR MINDED people from every political extraction have joined the criticism of Cohn and Shine and their ballyyhooed trip to Europe. But missing from the critics were the men wlho usually are in the forefront of American anti-semitism. Where were Smith and Hart, Coughlin, and the Christian Fronters? Perhaps Senator McCarthy could "provide the real reason for their absence from the discussion. To realize the real motivation behind the attacks on Cohn and Shine one must look only to the record. If one is too lazy or finds it too inconvenient to do so, then one may take the easy way and throw ran- dom charges. This is known as McCarthy- ism. The record shows that Cohn and Shine whizzed through Europe so quickly that it was almost impossible to get any authori- tative information on the object of their tour, the overseas information services. They took information from professional informers and gossipists. They so scared government officials with their slapdash methods that the Reporter claims that "All over Europe and all over Washington, there are government servants with their resigna- tions signed, sealed, and pocketed, ready for delivery as soon as other jobs are lined up, as soon as family affairs can be set in order, as soon as enough time has elapsed to give their actions the appearance of unhurried judgment rather than of panic inspired by Cohn and Shine." What's more, the boys' personal deport- ment was anything but diplomatic. They shocked the Europeans by chasing one another around a hotel lobby with folded newspapers and by cracking lewd jokes to hotel clerks. Their smug attitude was of- fensive to erstwhile continentals. Their rec- ord' as American civilians is likewise not too savory, as Drew Pearson has pointed out in these columns. The saga of Cohn and Shine is only another chapter in a story that is frighten- ing to those Americans who respect the truth. Senator McCarthy's latest addition to the story is completely in line with the es- tablished pattern. r? +M'U AT RACKHAM LECTURE HALL STANLEY QUARTET, with Marian Owen pianist THOUGH MUSIC history is obviously un- able to herald Ann Arbor as the birth- place of the Quintet with Piano, it seems quite likely that chroniclers of music will designate it as one of the most significant homes. In the past few years three world's pre- miers of Quintets with Piano have been given here, those of Wallingford Riegger, Walter Piston, and last night, Ross Lee Fin- ney, All three of these composers rank with the best of the Americans produced in this century. The Quintet by Ross Lee Finney is, in this reviewer's opinion based on one hear- ing, his most inspired and rewarding ef- fort. The work sings from beginning to end, and though the compositional pro- cess is meticulous and painstaking, it sings without pedantic moments, a fault some- times felt in Mr. Finney's Sixth String Quartet. But the song in the Quintet with Piano is not, for the most part, to be hummed by the voice. It is a sound for the ensemble, or as the composer described "a mass of sonority." Though singable melodies pro- End of 'Socialism' Book Burns Man 'DAILY OFFICIAL. BULLETIN "SOCIALISM" is no longer a creeping men- ace in this country. The Eisenhower administration is busily remedying all the encroachments it made during the New and Fair Deal Administration. The giveaway program is underway. First, tidelands oil was legislated to the states which in turn will probably sell it to private companies. Whether or not pri- vately competing companies can process the valuable oil with more conversation than could the government (the crucial problem) is open to dispute. It is hoped that the Eisenhower economists were more in the know than those advising Truman who in the last days of his administration objected so vociferously to the measure. Not as publicized as the Tidelands Oil issue is the Administration's gradual turn- ing of power development over to business and the states. Where the New Deal was .planning to set up a federal project on the Snake River, Idaho area, the Federal Power Commission has started hearings on an application by Idaho Power Com- pany to build a small 3-dam power pro- ject on one stretch of the river. Similarly the FPC gave a license to the New York State Power Authority to develop and operate a power project on the United State's side of the St. Lawrence River. Another blow to a Democratic dream. * * * IN THE SOUTHEAST, the Department of Interior has made it possible for electric companies to buy government power and then sell it to government's preferred cus- tomers. This does not seem to be the most. efficient way to produce and sell cheap power, ,especially without government con- trols. In conjunction with giving away electric power, the Eisenhower administration is trying to undermine most of the "socialist"' projects it happened to inherit from its Democratic predecessors. What is happen- ing to the Tennessee Valley Authority is one example of this destruction. A large piece has been cut out of the TVA's budget- collapsing, temporarily, a plan to build a new much needed steam generating plant north of Memphis. Officials connected with TVA claim that if this Memphis plant isn't built, there'll be a severe power shortage in the area within two or three years, The new head of the Atomic Energy Commission under the Eisenhower Ad- ministration is a man wholly in favor of converting atomic energy over to private enterprise. There is a chance that in the near future, Congress may amend the atomic energy act to allow business a hand in the atomic industry. At present AEC information has been made available to five "study teams" from ten corpora- tions so -that they can judge the possi- bilities of commercial atomic power. If business could successfully take over the atomic energy development, the gov- ernment: and consequently the taxpayers, would be saved $1.8 billion a year. How- ever, for most corporations the cost of building a full scaled atomic power station would be very high, a condition necessita- ting government help. The one or two large corporations, offering to take over without government help would eventually be able to turn atomic industry into a private mon- opoly because of the cost and the nature of the industry. The overall tendency towards private ownership of public power sources may be an excellent trend as far as Republican fear of "socialism" is concerned, but there is a danger of going too far to the other extreme. A power and profits hungry business man isn't necessarily going to look out for the service of the people when he has a mono- poly on a vital commodity at his disposal. -Elsie Kuffler ., ~y" C' x._ r ;.( I 11 g 7f S 0A 4c CARThIY r , i " * ;' !' '. U :. II I k S Y S I1 vi' i' T- ^ 7Zg, c. a c ec g4ft 7+1E a kfRtNfzowf POST sw ON TE Washinugton M erry-Go-Rollid with DREW PEARSON t WASHINGTON-Two years ago this sum- mer, Harold Stassen, the present Mu- tual Security Administrator, C. D. Jackson, now Ike's psychological warfare expert, and I were on the German border sending pro- paganda balloons into Czechoslovakia. Large weather balloons, about four feet in diameter, stuffed with 3,000 leaflets each, were filled with hydrogen in a wheat field three miles from the border and floated up and into Czechoslovakia. The winds-which in the upper altitudes always blow from west to east-we had timed in advance to drop the balloons into the chief cities of Prague and Pilsen betw/een 6 a.m. and 8 a.m., when people were going to work. By picking our nights and working most of the night with German civilian crews inflating the balloons, we were able to launch about 2,000 balloons a night; andj over a two-week period we put about 11,- 000,000 leaflets into Czechoslovakia. The leaflets carried merely a message of friendship. They told the Czechoslovak peo- ple that the people of the western world had not forgotten them and expressed the hope that eventually they might be free. PREVENTING WAR THIS WAS PURELY an experiment, and some officials in the State Department frowned on it. For over three years I had been urging that we get behind the Iron Curtain with this type of propaganda. The This Quintet is also, I think, more signi- ficant than the other two Quintets premiered here. Stylistically it shows the bringing to- gether of chromaticism, the unresolved ques- tion of music's two thousand years, with tonality, the necessary architectural legacy. This is a recent stylistic current throughout music, and in the case of Mr. Finn'ey, brought to life through his associations with Alban Berg, a composer he reveres from a musical and sensual standpoint as well as technical. Under the expert guidance of the Stan- ley Quartet, and with sensitive musician- ship by Marian Owen, soloist, the work was projected with the same understand- ing- and "alive" interpretation that has characterized all their performances of contemporary music. Mrs. Owen blended into the ensemble so that her notes came from the whole, and yet handled virtuostic passages with virile four- ish. Playing such craftsmanlike string writ- ing, the Stanley were perfectly at home. The concert began with Beethoven's Quar- tet in C minor, Op. 18, No. 4. The Stanley played it vigorously, with all the thunder it demanded. The first movement achieved a splendid dynamic balance, as did the en- tire work. The last movement, however, was just about to sprout wings and fly out of only way we could avoid war with Russia, I said, was to make sure of the people behind the Iron Curtain were our friends. If enough of them realized we were friendly, it Would be difficult for them to fight in the first place and, in the second place, would cause trouble for the Red army even if war did finally come. General Omar Bradley heartily agreed. But several State Department officials, with the exception of Ed Barrett, then assistant Secretary of State in charge of propaganda, were opposed. They argued that we should not encourage restlessness behind the Iron Curtain until we were absolutely ready to free the people. However, the Czechoslovak experiment seemed to hit pay dirt. The American Em- bassy reported that the freedom-friend- ship leaflets were tacked up on telegraph poles, put in the baggage racks of pas- senger trains, mimeographed, even sur- reptitiously placed on Communist bulle- tin boards. They swept over Czechoslo- vakia to such an extent that Premier An- tonin 7apotocky made a speech on the floor of Parliament denouncing them, and the official Communist newspaper, Torba, carried a front-page cartoon showing Harry Truman releasing balloons. Of course, Harry Truman had nothing to do with them. But the best way for the Communists to combat the balloons was to claim that they came from the U.S. Govern- ment, not from private Americans, as was the case. FOOD BALLOONS It has already been demonstrated that President Eisenhower's offer of food has had terrific repercussions behind the Iron Curtain. We were a little slow in acting on this suggestion, but even so, Communist leaders behind the Iron Curtain have been boiling with' rage ever since the offer was made. And East Berliners have been crossing into West Berlin, as I predicted they would, to get even the food sold them at cheap prices by suburban Mayor Willy Krassman. However, it seems to me the time has come to go one step further and send food packages into East Germany by balloon. Many parts of East Germany are, of course, sone distance from Berlin. Furthermore. the effect would be electrifying. These packages sent over the border into East Germany by balloon at the rate of 1,000 a night, each balloon containing a message, not from the U.S. Government, but from the American people, would have a tremendous effect on people behind the Iron Curtain. The food which CARE already has in Berlin, plus the $15,000,000 surplus food which Secretary of Agriculture Benson is sending, could be delivered to interior East Germany in part by balloon with messages from groups of Americans. The messages, cost of ballooning, wrapping, etc., should of course be paid for by these Americans, since Ike is trvine to balance the budget and since MA7rER OF tACTJ By STEWART ALSOP BERLIN-Here in Berlin, the infinitely dangerous unresolved dilem- ma of American foreign policy is startlingly visible. The nature of this dilemma is very simple. There are all sorts of reasons why the United States should now be engaged in an all-out political and dip- lomatic offensive for German unity. But, it is difficult to engage in an all-out offensive for something you do not really want. Virtually everybody in Berlin, from the outspoken Mayor Ernst Reuter to the cautious State Department men, is convinced that the United States should already have demanded a Four-Power Confer- ence in order to pound the table for the unification of Germany. All sorts of advantages would accrue from such a course. In the first place, the unification of Germany under a free, all-German government was, in a sense, what the historic June 17 East German revolt was all aboiit. The courageous resistance of the East Germans to their puppet overlords could be a tremendous asset to the West. It will not be an asset for long if the only American response consists of transparent gestures dreamed up by the psychological warriors, coupled with a tremblingly cautious approach to the central issue of German unity. In the second place, the June uprising has transformed the sit- uation for the West as well as for the East. It has dramatized the issue of German Unity for all Germans. Since June 17, the Germans have therefore been visibly losing whatever enthusiasm they once had for the policy of "integration before unification." "ONLY TEN PEOPLE in Europe still really believe in the European Army," they say in Berlin, "and they are all Americans." Thus a side effect of the East German revolt has been to weaken further the moribund European Army project, and to compromise the position of pro-American, West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, chief German sponsor of the European Army. In these circumstances, in the almost unanimous view here, the United States had everything to gain by instantly seizing the initiative on the German unity issue, in order to exploit the East German revolt, and its sequel, the 'purge of Beria. Suppose the Soviets angrily rejected the American initiative. This could well revive the European Army project, by ,persuading both French and Germans that there was no rational alternative. At the same time it could greatly strengthen Dr. Adenauer in the German elections in September, while placing the Kremlin squarely on the defensive. Finally there are those here who believe that the Russians, in the,midst of a gigantic upheaval at home, subjected to pressure both within and without their overgrown empire, might actually be in a mood to negotiate a reasonable German settlement. Yet it is just here that the unresolved central dilemma of Am- erican policy becomes visible. What might seem reasonable to the allies of the United States might seem very unreasonable to the United States. This is the basic reason why Secretary of State John Foster Dulles at first strongly resisted any approach to the Russians on the issue of German unity, and in the end only agreed reluctantly to a Four-Power meeting in the autumn. DULLES' RELUCTANCE is easily explained. Not long before he met with the British and French Foreign Ministers, according to reliable reports here, the National Security Council had firmly ruled that American bases in Western Germany must under no circum- stances be given up. This decision merely serves to underline what has been obvious for a long time-that American policy in Europe is squarely based on the permanent division of Germany into two parts. It is fatuous nonsense to imagine The Daily Official Bulletin is a official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is constru- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before3 p.m. the day preceeding publication (be- fore 11 a.m. on Saturday). WEDNESDAY, JULY 22 VOL. LXIII, No. 22-S Notices August Teacher's Certificate Candi- dates: The Teacher's Oath will be ad- ministered to all August candidates for the teacher's certificate on Thursday and Friday, July 23 and 24, in Room 1437 U. E. S. This is a requirement for the teacher's certificate. Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office is open daily from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m. Tickets are available for the remain- ing Department of Speech productions in the summer series: The country Girl and Pygmalion $1.20 - 90c - 60c; The Tales of Hoffman, produced with the School of Music, $1.50 - $1.20 - 90c. Superintendent Virgil Rogers of Bat- tie Creek, Michigan, will be in our of- fice today and will be interested in interviewing teachers regarding elemen- tary vacancies (kindergarten through sixth grade); Junior High School posi- tions in are; girls physical education and English; and Science; and in high school positions in electricity and shop; and home economics. He is also look- ing for principals for elementary and junior high school levels. Interested candidates should contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building, telephone 3-1511 ext. 489, im- mediately. La Sociedad Hispanica. For students who wish to have further opportunities for informal conversation, meetings are being held on Tuesdays and Thursdays, at 2 p.m., in the North wing of the Mi- chigan Union Cafeteria. Latin-American students attend these meetings regu- larly. Teaching Opportunities in Jamaica, British West Indies: There is a need for two persons, either male or fe- male, to teach between them mathe- matics, Latin and Spanish. Any per- sons qualified to teach any of these three subjects, or a combination there- of, and interested in Jamaica, please contact Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building, or telephone University extension 2614 for further information. PERSONNEL INTERVIEWS There will be a representative from The Proctor & Gamble Co. of Cincin- nati, Ohio, at the Bureau of Appoint- ments on Thurs, July 23, to interview August men graduates Interested in the company's opportunities in man- agement accounting. An Administra- tive Training Program is being offered in their Comptroller's Division to Bus. Ad. graduates; a major in accounting is not required. PERSONNEL REQUESTS THE U. S. Civil Service Commission has announced an examination for Accounting and Auditing Clerk for positions in Illinois, Mich., and Wise. The Michigan Civil Service Commis- sion will hold examinations in August for the position of Administrative An- alyst II. Requirements include a de- gree with specialization preferably in Public Administration or Bus. Ad. plus 1 year of experience. General Motor's Proving Grounds at Milford, Mich., has an opening for a Civil Engineer who is capable ofrun- ning a survey crew. August graduates may apply. The Board of U. S. Civil Service Ex- aminers, Ordnance Ammunition Cen- ter, U. S. Army, Joliet, Ill., has an- nounced an examination for Indus- trial Specialist in the fields of Metal Processing & Fabrication, Ammuni- tion, Chemicals, & Machine Tools. Graduates in Engineering, Chm., Phy- sics, Bus. Ad. Econ., etc., are eligible to apply. The Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. in Tren- ton, Mich., has a position open in their Engineering Dept. for a Jr. Process En- gineer, preferably a recent or August graduate. For appointments, applications, and additional information about these and other openings, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures WEDNESDAY, JULY 22 Band Conductors Workshop. Vanden- berg Room, Michigan League, unless otherwise designated. Morning "The Beginning Band," Fred Weber, Mich- igan City, Indiana, Public Schools, 8:00 a.m.; "Selection of Contest Solo Ma- terial for the French Horn," Ted Ev- ans, French, horn, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, 9:00 a.m.; panel on uniforms for high-school band, 11:00 a.m. Afternoon. "The Instrument Program from the Fourth Grade through High School," F. E. Martiboy, Davenport High School, Davenport, Iowa, 1:00 p.m.; TO THE EDITOR Urges Action.. . To the Editor: ON JULY 9th the Senate passed a new McCarran, Bill which has the effect of repealing the Fifth amendment. This bill states that no person can refuse to testi- fy on the grounds that he might incriminate himself once he has been granted immunity by Con- gress. A person granted this im- munity must testifj but is sub- ject to no prosecution on the grounds of his testimony. Cass Technical High-School Band, De- troit, reading session, 2:45 p.m., Hill Auditorium; "The Concert Band Reper- tory," Harry Begian, conductor, Cass Technical High-School Band, 4:15 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Evening. "Marching Band Movies," 7:00 p.m. Linguistic Program Luncheon. "Lam- bert Ten Kate, Linguistic Pioneer," Seymour Chatman, Cornell University. 12:10 p.m., dining room, Michigan League. Symposium on Astrophysics, 1400 Chemistry Building. "Galaxies: Their Composition and Structure," Walter Baade, Mt. Wilson and Palomar observa- tories. 2:00 p.m.- "Building up from Helium," E. E. Salpeter, Cornell Un- versity, 3:30 p.m. Speech Assembly. "Is Teaching Per- suasion Enough?" Wilson B. Paul, Chairman, Department of Speech, Michigan State College. 3:30 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Popular Arts in America. "The Birth of the Blues," with music. W. C. Handy, composer of "The St. Louis Blues," "Beale St. y Blues," and "Memphis Blues." 8:00 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall. Professor John Englekirk, Head of the Department of Romance Languages, Tu- lane University, who has traveled ex- tensively in South America, will give a talk in Spanish on the subject, "Andan- zas por Sur America." In dealing with Brazil, he will speak for a few minutes in Portuguese. This lecture will be giv- en in the East Conference Room, Rack- ham Bldg., beginning promptly at 7:15. The lecture is open to the public. Lane Hall Lunch Discussion: Rev. J. Fraser McLuskey of the British Coun- cil of Churches will discuss "Wartime Experience in France with the Under ground Movement." 12:15 noon. Cali reservations to 3-1511, extension 2851, Academic Notices M.A. Language Examination in His- tory Results. The results are now posted in the History office. Doctoral Examination for Duane Glen Chamberlain, Education; thesis: "Fac- tors Relating to Teaching of Practical Arts Activities in the Elementary Schools of Michigan," Wednesday, July 22, 4200C University High School, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, R. C. Wenrich. Prof. Bergmann's class, Philo. 301, Seminar in the Theory of. Knowledge, will meet this week on Thursday, July 23, instead of Wednesday, July 22. Seminar in Applied Mathematcs will meet on Thursday, July 23, at 4 o'clock (sharp). Prof. R. Nevanlinna will speak on Quadratic Forms in Abstract Space. Concerts Student Recital: Margaret Strand, Pianist, will present a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music at 8:30 Wed- nesda evening, July 22 in Rackham As- sembl Hall. It will include the works of Respighi, Beethoven, Bach and Cho- pin. Miss Strand is a student of Mr. Brinkman and her recital will be open to the general public without charge. Band Concert: The Cass Technical High School Band, Harry Begian, Con- dutor, will present a band concert Wed- nesday evening at 8:30, July 22, in Hill Auditorium, It will include Richards', Hail Miami, March, Franck's, Psyche and Eros, Symphonic Poem, Clarke's, The Debutante, Caprice with David Kel- ton Trumpeter, Mussorgsky's, Pictures at an Exhibition, Suite, Tschaikowsk's, March from Symphony No, 6, Bennett's, Suite of Old American Dances, Addin- sail's, Warsaw Concerto with Nance Keel, Pianist, Debussy's, Sprinxnwithh Karolyn April, Flutist an Stravinsky's, Bercuese and Finale, from "Firebird Suite."sThis concert will be open to the general public without charge. Outdoor Band Concert previously an- nounced for 7:15 Thursday evening, July 23, has been cancelled. Instead the Summer Session Band, William D. Revei1, conductor, will be heard at 8:30 on the same evening in Hill Audi- torium. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, Uni- versity Carillonneur, will present the 1953 Summer Evening Series No. 5, carillon conpert at 7:15 Thursday even. ing, July 23. It will include Pachelbel's, Toccata and Fugue on the Theme, "Von Himmel hoch da komm' ich her," Arrangements of vocal works, Martini's Plaisir d'amour, Berloi's, Mephisto- philes' Serenade from the Damnation of Faust, Brahm's, Lullaby, Milano's, Song of Maria of Fatima, Percival Price's, Fantasie 6 (quasi una sonata breva), Welsh airs. The Ashgrove, Ar hyd y ncs (All Through the Night), The Bells of Aherdovey and Ton-y-Botel, Band Concert: University of Michi- gan Summer Session Band, William D. Revelli, Conductor,. assisted by the Uni- versity ofMichigan Summer Session Chorus, Alex Zimmerman, conductor, will present a concert Thursday even- ing, July 23, at 8:30 p.m. In Hill Audi- torium. It will include Cline's, Sons f the Desert-March, Handel's Song of Jupiter, Mozart's, The Impresario, Koff's arrangement of LaVirgen de la Marcarena, with Byron Autrey, cornet soloist, Holst's, Second Suite for Band; Bennett's, The Spirit of Music with the Summer Session Chorus and Band, Cain's, O Sing Your Songs, and Schuet4 ky's, Emitte Spiritum Tuum by the Summer Session Chorus; Gershwin. Summerfelt's, Summertime, with Allan Townsend, soloist, Williams', The Tur- tle Dove with Earl Little, Baritone solo- ist, Reed's LaFiesta Mexicana, Handy's, St. Louis Blues March, and Moore's America with Summer Session Chorus and Band. This concert 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 t y. 1 A; that the Russians, short of a war, are going to agree to withdraw their forces from Germany while American forces remain on Ger- man soil. There are of course compel- ling reasons for a policy of re- taining the West German bases at all costs. But surely it is time to ask whether the corollary of this policy-the permanent di- vision of Germany-will work in the long run. Suppose, for ex- ample, that the Russians one day offer to meet all other con- ditions for a German settle- ment, providing only that all foreign troops be withdrawn and Germany "neutralized." The fact might as well be faced that such an offer would be hail- ed with glee in France, accepted enthusiastically by most Germans; and supported in influential quar- ters even in Britain, thus isolating the United States. In these circumstances, there are wise Americans here who would gladly exchange a paper German neutrality for the evacu- ation of Soviet troops from Eas- A.I. SixtyThird Year Edited and managed by students o the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications, Editorial Staff Harland Brita.....,,Managn Dick Lewis ........... .Sporta Becky Conrad.............Night1 Gayle Greene.........Night1 Pat Roelofs..,...... ...Night Fran Sheldon.............Night1 Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor ( Business Staff Bob Miller. ..........Business Manager Dick Alstrom. ..... Circulation Manager Dick Nyberg........:...Finance Manager Jessica Tanner....Advertising Associate { , ti