I PAGE TWO THE MICIIIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1953 I- MATTER OF FACT: Soviet Air-Atomic Power Worries Administration D RAMA W ASHINGTON ---Last week the Presi- dent's appointment schedule was quiet- ly revised to conceal a significant fact. By the President's order and under his leader- ship, the National Security Council held an all-day meeting. Since the morrow of Pearl Harbor, no single problem has ever engaged the con- tinuous, combined attention of all the heads of the American government throughout a working day. Yet the subject of last week's unprecedented meeting of our highest poli- cy making organ was not the Korean truce, or the power contest in Moscow, or any oth- er topic of current discussion. The subject was the air defense of the American con- tinent. Despite the very special consideration giv- en to the problem, the administration will want the views of the new Joint Chiefs of Staff before taking its decision about air defense policy. But the mere fact of the re- cent Security Council meeting rather clear- ly implies that the administration is in- creasingly worried about the increasing air- atomic striking power of the Soviet Union. This is not a distant danger, if the of- ficial estimates are not misleading. One of the reports that have been presented to the Security Council actually credits the Kremlin with the power to destroy just under 40 per cent of the American in- dustrialpotential, and to cause the death of about 13,000,000 Americans. Any such estimate of current Kremlin capabilities is of course highly debatable. But the signs are plan, nonetheless, that a major turn- ing point in American policy is now ap- proaching- The approach has been made by stages, several of which have been revealed in this space. First there was the report of Project Lincoln, the remarkable scientific task froce of the Masachusetts Institute of Technol- ogy. Then there was the Truman administra- tion policy paper NSC-141, which defined the air defense problem for President Ei- senhower. Then there was the further re- port of a special committee of leading scien- tists and industrialists headed by Dr. Mervin J. Kelly, president of the Bell Telephone Lab- oratories. ALL THESE successive papers pointed in the same unpleasant direction, toward the need for an urgent, costly effort to im- prove our air defenses. Finally, after receiv- in; the report of the Kelly Committee, the Security Council named still another study group. This new group was headed by the President's war-time Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations, Gen. Harold Bull, who is now a6ie4ficial of the Central Intelligence Agency. The President and his Cabinet colleagues waned "sonething from their own people," according to one explanation. Gen. 'Bull and his co-workers, who were recruited from the armed services and other interested agen- cies, presented their recommendations for action at last week's meeting of the Securi- ty Council. It is hard to believe that fairly dra- matic action will not be taken, simply be- cause of the character of the potential thrfeat. In the first place, the best es- timates of Soviet atomic production now appear to have been revised upwards. Un- til rather recently, the British were talk- ing of Soviet atomic bombs of the power of the bombs that fell on Hiroshima, while American estimates were given in bombs of 50 kilotons. It is now forecast, however, that the Krem- lin will stockpile its one hundredth atomic bomb of 80 kiloton power during the cur- rent year. An 80 kiloton bomb has the ex- plosive force of 80,000 tons of TNT, or four tim~es the force of the Hiroshima bomb. One hundred such bombs is an impressive stock- pile. * * * *S IN THE SECOND PLACE, the Kremlin's ability to deliver these bombs to American targets is not seriously questioned in any of- ficial quarter. All American targets can be reached by the thousand or more TU-4 bombers of the Soviet Strategic Air Army. It is considered that 500 of these planes can be sent against the United States in a single saturation attack. It is further known that the Soviet TU-4 squadrons have been equip- ped and trained for night flying and night bombing during the past two years. Meanwhile, the strength of the Ameri- can Air Defense Command has not kept pace with the growing threat. If an at- tack were delivered in broad daylight and good weather, it is thought that our de- fenders might knock down a maximum of 15 per cent of the attackerss But if an attack should be delivered by night, it is thought that the maximum rate of kill would be only one tenth of one per cent. With what amounts to, a zero kill rate, an air-atomic saturation attack delivered by night should in theory unload the whole Soviet atomic stock on the chosen Ameri- can tarkets. Such are the calculations behind the estimate that the Kremlin can now de- stroy nearly 40 per cent of our industry and take a toll of thirteen megadeaths (which is top secret jargon for the death of 13,- 000,000 people). An estimate close to this has already been made public by Sen. Stewart Symington, in his rather lonely fight for American pre- paredness. It can now be disclosed that the estimate comes from the authoritative re- port of the Kelly Committee. SUCH AN ESTIMATE cannot be lightly disregarded, when it comes from a group led by Dr. Kelly and including such scien- tists as Prof. Charles Lauritsen, and such industrialists as R. E. Wilson, of Standard Oil of Indiana. At the same time, it should not give rise to hysteria, either For one thing, the Kelly Committee was not equipped to "war-game" the problem, and careful war-gaming is essential if the results of complex air operations are to be accurately judged. The British Cabinet recently directed a parallel study of the air-atomic threat to Britain. For this study, the damage esti- mates were carefully war-gamed. The re- sult was a forecast that an all-out air-atomic attack on the British Isles would take a toll of 2,000,000 deaths. The figures are still fearful, but two megadeaths are much less than thirteen megadeaths. And the British Isles are far more exposed than the United States. Under realistic operating conditions, there- fore, it seems likely that the Kremlin now has the power to hurt this country very badly, but not to cripple it. Unfortunately, however, the Kremlin's atomic stockpile and the strength of the Kremlin's Strategic Air Army are both still growing. The power to hurt this year can become the power to cripple next year and the power to destroy the year after. That is the real problem that the National Security Council has got to solve. (Copyright, 1953, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) L.. At Lydia Mendelssohn.. rpi E SPEECH DEPARTMENT is putting on a really excellent production of Clifford Odets' The Country Girl. The acting is on a uniformly high level with all seven players turning in convincing and consistent per- formances. The pacing is fast and punching, taking advantage of all of Odets' skill as a builder of dramatic complications. It is in the play's own words good "theater," . . . but not "with a capital T." In fact, to continue Odets' definition, the play would be pure "show business" were it not for the ableness of the direct- ing and the acting which has fully delin- eated the characters and kept the ac- tion moving. Contrary to the New York theater critics who almost universally greeted this play with bravos and accolades as marking the emergence of a new Odets, in fact, the best ever, Country Girl continues a trend that was evident in the Clash by Night of 1940. If further carried on, this trend would make Odets the darling of Broadway and the money-minded producers such as his own Phil Cook, but will not produce an Odets of any significant stature% in the American theater. In short Country Girl, despite its adequate character portrayal and its tight dramatic structure, is not as significant or worthwhile a play as Odets' social allegory of the middle thirties, Awake and Sing or the later Rocket to the Moon. Perhaps the critics were lulled into praise by the fact that Odets after 1939 had pro- duced theatrical trash and Hollywood scen- arios. Perhaps it was the fact that he had left behind all his social criticisms that earn- ed him a reputation as the best "Marxist" playwright of the thirties, a not too accur- ate definition. The important fact is that Odets in Clash by Night and now in Country Girl has practically isolated his characters. They exist in a world of their own, and one which is almost trite in its plot sit- uation. There is nothing new about the regeneration of an alcoholic in Country Girl. In fact there is often the feeling that we have met these people before and have worked out their problem in, a closely similar fashion. The resolution comes close to being typed as belonging to the slick magazine and the soap opera, but is saved by the character portrayals. All this is by way of saying that it is more than worth while to take in Country Girl this weekend, for the performance is highly entertaining, but don't expect to find the great American play or a revitalized Odets. He needs to leave stock situations be- hind and to attach some social reality to his plays before he can gain the position that he promised to hold back in the thir- ties. Odets is at his technical peak, able to say everything well but with little to say that you can take home after the show. -Leonard Greenbaum MUSIC "You Can See What A Big Saving We've Made" ( ) ( j y '_- r UT, ri ar DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN c c I t t i 7 E t 1 i di m ti a 1<. ti a7 T ix iz G T ti F a i I 3 F c c T C E 1 M~as., ,xmsyav~ ""_ ilk ON THE WASHINGTON MJItIY-GOwROUND WITH DREW PEARSON V ~ ~ W I IV I MU' v v W VVV v .V V _VV VVWV VVW CIINIEMA Architecture Auditorium T1IE MALE ANIMAL A HOLLYWOOD movie that is funny and supports a good idea and does not make the university seem totally ridiculous is a curiousity worth seeing, if only to say "this I have seen." To pick bones with it, is not quite fair. One should be satisfied with the two really funny scenes, and the fact the movie takes a stand on academic freedom should be the cherry on the cake. But "The Male Animal" could have been so much better! Whoever went in there to smooth out the rough, unpopular spots should have drowned in the swampy areas he left in their place. However, the picture gets off to a grand start. Almost immediately, we meet Whirl- ing Joe Ferguson who, only six years after his Statue of Liberty play, is set down with Lincoln in the college annals. The back- slapping, "Hello, Joe. Whadday, know?" "You've put on a little weight, eh, Eddie?" greeting this football hero and the trustee- DO AND I must reverence human nature I bless it for its kind affections. I honor and still more for its examples of heroic it for its achievements in science and art, and saintly virtue. These are marks of a friend give each other is really something. Only the pep rally scene can compete with it for bellylaughs. There we have the traditional get-in- there-and-fight exaggerated just enough, and the faces of the football players are photographed from just the right angle. After this scene the characters all be- come stereotypes. At this point we realize they all respond mechanically, and the movie becomes less and less funny. The women can only kick and scream. The men fall into two camps, that of- the football addict or the intellectual. For some reason or other, the football ad- dicts are dirty reactionaries, some on the verge of getting divorces, some on the verge of kicking our intellectuals out of college. Those belonging to the other camp merely think of themselves as intellectuals. They act quite stupidly. Indeed, the old idea of the absent-minded professor is not wholly discarded in this movie. He should have been pictured as a man who really thinks clearly, as one who likes to cite many examples and analogies to strengthen his point; and his drunken en- numerations of bull elephants, male sea- lions, wolfs and tigers would not then have become tiring. As it is, there is little contrast between the scenes when he is drunk and those when he is a sober intellectual. The professor manages to reach his full stature as a male by doing something he At Hill Auditorium .. Cass Technical High School Band, Harry Begian, conductor IN CONJUNCTION with the National Band Conductors Conference Workshop, the campus was entertained last night by the Cass Technical High School Band, an or- ganization rated among the top of the na- tion's high schools. - Directed precisely and expertly by Har- ry Begian, they proved that this was a rat- ing justly deserved. This was especially in evidence last night since, with school for these young musicians not in session during the summer, they performed the concert with only four rehearsals. The Band displayed an energetic per- cussion section and a well trained brass section. If the intonation in the wood- winds, and for that matter the entire or- ganization, was not always perfect, it was sufficient considering the circumstances. David Kelton, trumpet, Nancee Keel, pi- anist, and Karolyn April, flute, were all en- thusiastic soloists. The Band played best in the two marches, Hail Miami and their en- core selection. The Franck, Psyche and Eros, also came off well. The great emphasis this country is plac- ing on Bands is paying off. But if it is apropos to make such a comment here, it would be awfully nice if such an emphasis were also placed on strings. --Donald Harris H1AVING rejected President Eisenhower's offer of $15,000,000 worth of free food for hungry Eastern Germany, the Kremlin now announces a "relief" program of its own. It promises, at least on paper, to ship $57,- 000,000 worth of foods and other materials to its rebellious satellite in an effort to counteract the effect of the President's offer and to abate the still-seething un- rest of the population. But the Kremlin, which always takes but never gives, proffers no gifts. On the contrary, it demands re- payment of the "relief" in East German manufactured goods and machinery at Soviet prices. WASHINGTON-Governor Dewey has taken two tough defeats fromf Democrats in two presidential elections, but it was the Democrats who came to his defense last week regarding what they call thee "give-away" of Niagara Falls power. Dewey doesn't exactly call it a "give-away" but, regardless of the terminology, Democratic sena-1 tors, led by Chavez of New Mexico, blocked the "give-away" bill and gave Dewey a chance to testify against it today. What Dewey wants is to have Niagara Falls power turned over to the state of New York for development. Many Democrats, on the other hand, want it turned over to the Federal Government. But both are opposed to the Miller-Capehart bills turning Niagara Power over to a combine of private utilities. This is the bill which I reported two weeks ago had been "ram-i med" through the house public works committee by congressman Dondero of RoVal Oak, Mich. The Buffalo Chamber of Commerce has1 taken issue with my reporting of these facts, pointing out that ex-i tensive hearings were held regarding Niagara going back even to . 1951. This is true., However, the final vote in Dondero's committee was unques- tionably a "ramming" job. Regardless of previous hearigs, it is highly unusual for a' chairman not to give an important bill a final reading before a committee votes on it. Usually it is read line by line. This Dondero refused to do. He also refused to read the letter from the budget bureau repre- senting President Eisenhower's views, later bawled out the budgetF bureau for sending him the letter. For the letter opposed the Miller- Capehart Bill and asked that Congress delay action until the Federal Power Commission could make recommendations. Dondero seemed so anxious to ram the bill through his commit- tee that, when two congressmen-Blatnik of Minnesota and Kluc- zynski of Illinois arrived late-he refused to allow another vote so they could be recorded as voting "no." Finally, at a later closed-door meeting, Dondero accused con- gressman Tom Steed of Oklahoma of "leaking to Drew Pearson." However, he did not deny that he had rammed the bill through; he only complained that the story of his operations had leaked. Result of the Senate delay to give Governor Dewey and New York state officials a chance to testify will be that no action on Niagaras Falls power will be taken at this session. It may also mean that thef Senate will launch a thorough study of various power projects includ- ing Bonneville Dam and Hells Canyon in Idaho-Washington. President Eisenhower, speaking in Boise, Idaho, during the cam-3 paign about a year ago, did not take a position one way or the other2 regarding federal development of Hells Canyon; and his Secretary of the Interior, genial Douglas McKay, has vascillated.I Meanwhile Senators Kefauver of Tennessee, Magnuson and Jack-r son of Washington and Morse of Oregon want a probe of McKay'sg proposed contracts turning Bonneville Dam power over to eight pri' vate uitlities. All these issues-from Niagara to Bonneville and from the Tennessee Valley to Hells Canyon, go to the bottom of the con-t troversial issue of private vs. public power. It promises to be one of the biggest battles of the Eisenhower administration. FLOAT FOOD OVER IRON CURTAIN1 IT'S STILL IN the planning stages, but the Pentagon is secretly sur- veying the feasibility of delivering emergency food behind thea Iron Curtain by balloon. The Pentagon survey also estimates that 1,000 balloons could be launched each night from eight scattered sites in West Germany at a nominal cost. Only hitch is that the U.S. government is reluctant to bombard the Soviet Zone with balloons carrying anything-even food packages-that might be interpreted as a hostile act. However, there's nothing in the book of diplomatic niceties preventing private citizens from going ahead with the project on their own. COMMIE DRIVE DISASTROUS THE LATEST fanatical Communist offensive hit our lines in Korea much harder than the public has been told. Three crack South Korean divisions caved in, one of which was literally chewed to pieces, losing over three-fourth of its men. As a result, Gen. Mark Clark rushed five full American divisions to the front, thus putting more U.S. troops on the battle line than at any time in the past two years. He also cabled the Joint Chiefs of Staff for permission to shift two divisions from Japan to bolster his reserves in Korea. However, he was authorized to move only the U.S. 24th Division. At the height of the battle, the only thing that prevented the Reds from tearing through the battered South Korean divisions all the way to the 38th parallel was the abandoned artillery, am- munition, and other equipment. The advancing Chinese were so eager to inventory all this deserted equipment that they failed fo exploit their gains. Altogether, more U.S. equipment was lost than at any time since General MacArthur's disastrous retreat from the Yalu River.. The Red offensive, which came as a complete surprise to the UN command, was aimed at capturing valuable hydroelectric installa- tions and tungsten mines just above the 38th parallel. Chinese prison- ers, picked up during the fighting, also revealed that the Communist plan was to push the battle line back to the 38th parallel, then agree to a cease-fire. This would leave the Korean dividing line exactly the same as it was before the war started three years ago, and save face for the Communists who don't like to admit that they must give up any territory. The Eighth Army also estimates that the Communists could have 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). THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1953 VOL. LXIII, No. 23-S Notices August Teacher's Certificate Candi- lates: The Teacher's Oath will be ad- ministered to allAugust candidates for the teacher's certificate on Thursday ad Friday, July 23 and 24. in Room 437 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. rickets are available for the remain- ing Department of Speech productions n 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. Industrial Chemistry in Giza, Egypt. Persons to teach industrial chemistry are needed at the Fouad I University in Giza, Egypt. For further information please contact Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Building or tele- phone University extension 2614, Veterans enrolled under P. L. 346 (World War II G.I. Bill) who will re- ceive a degree, change course, or change institutions, at the end of Sum- mer Session and who wish to take ad- ditional training under the Bill, must apply for a supplemental Certificate of Eligibility on or before July 29. Appli- cation should be made in Room 555, Administration Building, Office of Vet- erans' Affairs. Pi Lambda Theta initiation will be held Monday, July 27, at 8:00 p.m., in the West Conference Room of the Rack- ham Building. 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. The student sponsored social events listed below are approved for the com- ing weekend. Social chairmen are re- quested to file requests for approval for social activities in the office of Stu- dent Affairs not later than 12 o'clock noon on the Monday prior to the event. FRIDAY, July 24 Graduate Student Council Greene House Intercooperative Council SATURDAY, July 25 International Students Assoc. Michigan Christian Fellowship PERSONNEL REQUESTS The Michigan Bell Telephone Co. In Detroit has openings for two Architects in their Building & Extension Dept. These will work under a Registered Ar- chitect and will earn credit towards a professional certificate. Alumni or Au- gust graduates may contact the Bu- reau of Appointments for further in- formation. 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 hld 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 of run- 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, Chem., Phy- sics, Bus. Ad., Econ., etc., are eligible to apply. The Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. in Tren- ton, Mich., has a position open in thei Engineering Dept. for a Jr. Process En. gineer, preferably a recent or Augus graduate. For appointments, applications, and additional information about these an other openings, contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures THURSDAY, JULY 23 Band Conductors Workshop. Vanden- berg Room, Michigan League, unless otherwise designated. Morning. "Coin mon Teaching Faults and Their Cor- rection," Nelson Hauenstein, Instruc tor in Woodwind Instruments, 9:00 a.m.; "Preparing the Young Trombonist fo the Contest," Glenn P. Smith, Instruc tor in Trombone, 10:00 a.m.; "Teaching the Woodwinds," Joseph Erskine, clin- ician and lecturer, Elkhart, Indiana 11:00 a.m. Afternoon. Woodwind demonstratior clinic, 1:00 p.m.; "Materials for thf Cornet Student," Clifford P. Lillya, As sistant Professor of Brass wind Instru. ments, 3:00 p.m.; Summer Session Band 4:15 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Symposium on Astrophysics. 1400 Chem. istry Building. "Influence of Turoulene on Various Physical Properties, P'res" sure, Density, Sound Radiation 1ag netic Field," G. K. Batchelor, Cam bridge University, 2:00 p.m.; "Forma tion of Heavier Nuclei," E. E. Salpeter Cornell University, 3:30 p.m.; "Origin o Cosmic Rays," E. E. Salpeter, 7:30 pim Popular Arts in America. "Censorshil and Popular Literature"-a panel. PaT Kauper, Professor of Law; Allan Seager Associate Professor of English, novelist Wesley Mauer, Chairman, Departmen of Journalism; Eugene B. Calder, Chic Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Wash- tenaw County Lyle Blair, Managing Editor, Michigan State College Press. 4:15 p.m., Auditorium A, Angell Hall Linguistic Forum. "Some Theories of Meaning in Linguistics," Robert B. Lees, University of Chicago, 7:30 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheater. Lane Hall Lunch IDiscussion: 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. Call reservations to 3-1511, extension 2851. Lane Hall Lecture. Friday. Rev. J. Fraser McLuskey, of the British Council of Churches will lecture on "The State of Religion in Britain." 4:15 p.m. in Lane Hall Library. A. reception honor- ing Rev. McLuskey will follow. Academic Notices 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 Mathematics will meet today at 4 o'clock (sharp). Prof. R. Nevanlinna will speak on Quadratic Forms in Abstract Space. Doctoral Examination for Loraine Vis- ta Shepard, Education; thesis: "A Test of Attitudes toward Social Interming- ling of Negro and White Boys in the Upper Elementary Grades," Friday, July 24, 4023 University High School, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. C. Trow. Doctoral Examination for Martha Sturm White, Social Psychology; thesis: "Attitude Change as Related to Per- ceived Group Consensus," Friday, July 24, 5631 Haven Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chair- man, T. M. Newcomb. Doctoral Examination for Wilard Mather Bateson, Education; thesis: "The Determination of Standards for Industrial-arts Laboratories," Friday, July 24,. 4014 University High School, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, F. D. Curtis. Concerts Outdoor Band Concert previously an- nounced for 7:15 this evening, has been cancelled. Instead the Sumer Session Band, William D. Revelli, conductor, will be heard at 8:30 in Hill Auditorium. Carillon Recital: Percival Price, Uni- versity Carillonneur, will present the 1953 Summer Evening SeriesNo. 5, carillon concert at 7:15 this even- ing. It will include Pachelbel's, Toc- cato and Fugue on the Theme, "von Himmel hoch da komm' ich her, Arrangements of vocal works, Martini's Plaisir d'amour, Berloiz's, Mephisto- philes' Serenade from the bamnatlon of Faust, Brahm's, Lullaby, Milano's, Song of Mara 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 of Michigan Summer Session Chorus, Alex Zimmerman, conductor, 'will present a concert this even-. ing, at 8:30 p.m. in Hill Audi- torium. It will include. Cline's, Sons of 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, 0 Sing Your Songs, and Schuet- ky's, Emitte Spiritum Tuum by the Summer Session Chorus; Gershwin- Summerfet'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 withSummerSession 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 Wa'ter 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 Museum of Archaeology. Gill- man Collection of Antiques of Palestine. Museums Building, rotunda exhibit. rSteps in the preparation of ethnolo- gical dioramas. Michigan Historical Collections. Mi- chigan, year-round vacation land. I ClementsaLibrary. The good, the bad, ( the populart f (Continued on Page 4) 04Y I f SixtyThird Yea 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.............Night Editor Pat Roelofs ............. Night Editor Fran Sheldon.............Night Editor Business Staff Bob Miller. ,..... Busimess Manager Dick Aistrom ... Circulation Manager Dick Nyberg.........Finance Manager Jessica Tanner. Advertising Associate Pn Vn.. mnc rr..a...-.....P+ Asusoni,,te S 'I 5 3