PAGE TWO THE MICMGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 7 PAGE TWO THE MICH1GA1~ DAILY .SAT ..DA.. AT1 T1T%.0 7. ytV THE BOX SCORE: Eisenhower Legislation in Retrospect During the year's session, Congress passed no important law that had not been part of Presi- dent Eisenhower's program. But many of the Presi- dent's proposals were sharply modified, others de- feated, some still pending. The line-up: Victories St. Lawrence Seaway. Passed after 30 years of delay. Tax Revision. A massive, 1,000-page streamlining of the Internal Revenue Code was passed, cutting next year's anticipated tax revenues by $1.36 bil- lion. Democratic moves for larger-scale reductions were. successfully blocked. The Administration re- quest for dividend income relief was partially en- acted. The House approved deductions up to $100, plus up to 10%, but they were thrown out in the Senate. The final compromise of $50 and 4% es- tablishes the principle of this type of deduction, and counts as an Administration success. Excise Taxes. With Administration approval, many 20% excise taxes were halved. The drive to pare tobacco, gasoline and liquor taxes was opposed by the Administration because the cost in lost re- venue would be too high. It was defeated. Air Force Academy. Approved. Highways. A stepped-up program for highway construction, calling for $1.93 billion of grants-in- aid to states, was passed. Commodity Credit .Corporation. A $1.75 billion increase in borrowing authority was passed. Korean Defense Pact. Ratified by the Senate. Hospitals. A three-year, $182 million program for hospital construction, medical centers and nursing homes was authorized. Housing. A very limited victory, representing something like a 50-50 compromise on the Presi- dent's mortgage insurance proposals, something less than that on public housing. Ike asked for 140,000 public-housing units in four years, got 35,- 000 in one year, with restrictive conditions under which they must be built. Atomic Energy. Passed. The bill sets up ma- chinery to create a private atomic-energy industry for generating electric power, and permits the Ato- mic Energy Commission to exchange nuclear ma- terials and information with friendly nations. Probable Victories Farm Parity Prices. A compromise version es- tablishing the policy of flexible price supports pass- ed the House, is delayed in the Senate. Social-Security Expansion. Passed the House, tied' up in the Senate, which is likely to eliminate some compulsory coverage the Administration asked for. Death Penalty for Peacetime Espionage. Passed the House, awaiting its turn in the Senate. Witness Immunity. Passed the Senate, awaiting House action. The bill would force Fifth Amend- ment witnesses to testify by protecting them from prosecution based on their testimony. Defeats Hawaiian Statehood. Passed by the House. The Senate simultaneously passed the bill but scuttled Hawaii's chances by linking it with Alaska, which the House would not accept. Voting Rights for 18-year-olds. Killed in Senate. Taft-Hartley Act Revision. Killed in the Senate. Health Reinsurance. Killed in the House. Postal-Rate Boost. Killed in the House. Wiretap Authority in Subversive Cases. Passed by the House, snagged in a Senate committee. Foreign Trade. A one-year extension of the Re- ciprocal Trade Agreements Act was passed, but it contains none of the authority to cut tariffs that the President originally asked, thus defeating in principle a clear presidential policy. The adminis- tration made no serious effort to get the rest of its foreign economic program. Liquidation of Red-Led Unions. Shelved in Sen- ate and House committees. Security Risks in Defense Plants. Gutted by a Senate committee, shelved by a House committee. The bill would give the government power to order dismissal of any security risk in a defense plant. In the Balance Unemployment Compensation. Passed by the House, trying for its chance in the Senate. The bill would extend coverage to 4,000,000 new workers. Debt Limit. The House authorized raising the limit from $275 billion to $290 billion. No action yet in the Senate. --Time Magazine "Try This On For Size And See Me Again N xt Year" - , - -'- ILI O i .. DAILY OFICIAL ULLETI ] HOW MUCH FOREIGN AID? The International Economic Program in a CriticalStage XYZIITH THE foreign aid authorization bill in con- ference and the appropriation bill still to be completed, this country's international economic program had yesterday reached a critical stage. To the President, speaking at his press conference, the action of the Seanate in lopping half a billion more off the sum requested seemed niggardly. The same adjective could be applied to- the House action on the appropriation bill. Everybody concerned seemed to be anxious to sweat the dollar figures down with- out asking what the dollars would buy. The Senate authorization measure represented not merely a half-billion-dollar cut in the bill as originally con- sidered, but it was 800 million dollars below the approximately $3.5 billions of new money the Ad- ministration had asked for. The President said that the Administration had already cut the foreign aid figure as far as it thought was safe, and no one can doubt his sin- cerity. He is as anxious as anybody to sweat expen- ditures down and carry out his promise to balance the budget. But there are situations in which it simply isn't economic to cut expenditures. The Pre- sident thought that members of Congress might be more sympathetic with foreign aid if'they could see what foreign aid does. They may not be as well aware as he is of the situations into which such aid goes. There can be no better answer to Com- munist threats and Communist propaganda than an increase in the military and economic strength of the democratic countries. Foreign aid is bound to change its character as it goes on-indeed it has already done so. It is less and less a matter of direct economic contri- butions. Emphasis now is laid on building up a defensive military strength. There has also been a shift in emphasis so that the Far East gets more attention and Europe relatively less attention than was the case a year or so ago. Finally, in the Far East itself we have to reconsider our pro- gram. For example, we can hardly put military supplies into Indochina to maintain a position that has already been surrendered. Nevertheless, our friends in the Far East will continue to need our help and encouragement. I If we could diminish or extinguish our commit- ments abroad without endangering our own secur- ity, there would be an argument for doing so. But In a very real sense we are our brother's keeper and he is ours, whether we desire this or not. If we do not strengthen our, friends abroad we will find it necessary to build up greater strength-and by this we have to mean military strength-at home. In other words, we cannot safely save many dollars on foreign aid. It is a question of where the dollars will pe spent and for what purpose. We need perhaps to revive some of the hopeful- ness and resultant enthusiasm 'with which the Mar- shall Plan was received seven years ago. The Mar- shall Plan-and the President must have been thinking of this as he paid his warm tribute to Gen- eral Marshall yesterday-won a great victory for freedom. It saved Europe from economic disaster and in doing so saved it from political disaster. Now we stand on the threshold of new projects and de- mands. We have witnessed a victory for communism in Indochina following what was at best a stale- mate in Korea. But the march of communism may be slowing down. We may be able to halt it through military aid, economic aid and the long-range as- sistance. We may be able to rally our friends and make firm the boundaries of the democratic world. Success in this venture will cost money, but it will not cost as much money as failure would. Yesterday a conference committee dealing with the foreign aid authorization measure was putting back some of the cuts that had been made. Let us hope that there will be enough statesmanship in both houses to give the Administration, when the appropriation bill comes up, the money it really needs. We cannot afford to be niggardly with democracy's future. -N.Y. Times 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- tivesnotice to all members of the University. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m, the day preceding publication. SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1954 E VOL. LXIV, No. 35S Notices Admission Test. for Graduate Study in Business: Candidates taking the Ad- mission Test for Graduate Study in Business on August 14 are requested to report to Room 130, Business Admin- istration at 8:30 Saturday morning. Be sure to bring $10.00 registration fee (check or money order). Attention August Graduates: College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, School of Education, School of Music, School of Public Health: Students are advised not to request grades of I or X in August. When such grades are absolutely imperative, the work must be made up in time to al- low your instructor to report the make- up grade not later than 11 a.m., Aug- ust 19. Grades received after that time may defer the student's graduation un- til a later date. EDWARD G. GROESBECK Assistant Registrar Recommendations for Departmental Honors: Teaching departments wish- ing to recommend tentative August graduates from the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts, and the School of Education for departmental honors (or high honors in the College of L.S.&A.) should recommend such students in a letter delivered to the Registrar's Office, Room 1513, Admin- istration Building, before August 19. EDWARD G, GROESBECK Assistant Registrar Women's Swimming Pool - Recrea- tion Swimming Hours. During the week of August 2, the hours for women are as follows: 5:00- 6:00 and 7:30-9:00-August 2-6, Monday through Friday (Friday night will be Family Night.) The pool will close for the summer on Saturday, August 7. Art Print Loans must be returned to Room 510 Admin. Bldg. on August 5-6 between the hours of 9-12rand 1-5 or on Saturday, August 7 from 8-12. A fine of twenty-five cents (25c) a day will be charged for all overdue pictures. All student groups interested in a booth at registration should make a type-written request to the Registrar's Office as soon as possible. Law School Admission Test: Candi- dates taking the Law School Admission Test on August 7 are requested to re- port to Room 100, Hutchins al at 8:45 Saturday morning. PERSONNEL REQUESTS Station WKMX, Saginaw, Mich., has a Traffic position open for a young wo- man graduate. Anyone who has had courses in radio or TV is eligible to apply. This is a permanent, full time position. For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for John Wil- bur McClymont, Botany; thesis: "Spores of the Musci: Their Structure and Sig- nificance in Systematic Research," Sat- urday, August 7, 1139 Natural Science Bldg., at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, W. H. Wagner. Doctoral Examination for Gertrude Elizabeth Nye, Linguistics; thesis: "The Phonemes and Morphemes of Modern Persian: A Descriptive Study," Monday, August 9, 102D Tappan Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, Herbert Penz. Doctoral Examination for James Ed- ward Lynch, Speech; thesis: "A Study of the Size and Composition of the Viewing Audience of an Educational Television Program in the Detroit Met- ropolitan Area," Monday, August 9, 4002 Angell Hall, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, E. E. Willis. Doctoral Examination for Earl Wads- worth McDaniel, Physics; thesis: "An Experimental Determination of Nega- tive Ion Mobilities in Oxygen and Oxy- gen Mixtures," Monday, August 9, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, H. R. Crane. Doctoral Examination for Robert Richards Lewis, Jr., Physics; thesis: "Some Contributions to the Theory of ton, Judith Price, Harley Rex, Eleanor Ryder, Keith Saxton, Frank Stachow, Lois Stauffer, and Jack Wagner. Com- positions will cover works by Pugnant, Handel, Bach, Purcell, von Knorr, We- lander, Bozza, Swain, Gershwin, Leon- ard, von Weber, and Chopin, five of which have been dedicated to Mr. Ras- cher. The concert will be open to the general public. Student Recital: Elizabeth Woldt, Heidbrink, violist, will play a recital in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Music degree at 8:30 Monday evening, August 9, in the Rackham Assembly Hall. Her program will include compositions by Henry Eccles, C. Stamitz, John Duke, and Ernest Bloch, and will be open to the public. Mrs. Heidbrink is a pupil of Robert Courte. Stddent Recital: Jay Thompson, bari- tone, will appear in a recital at 8:30 Tuesday evening, August 10, in Audi- torium A, Angell Hall, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the de- gree of Bachelor of Music. It will in- clude compositions by Purcell, Dibdin, Handel, Rosa, Falconieri, Carissimi, Mo- zart, Wolf, Host, Vaughan Williams, Charles Griffes and Peter Warlock, and will be open to the public. Mr. Thomp- ton is a pupil of Harold Haugh. Student Recital: Sister Maria Invio- lata Delaplane, pianist, will be heard at 4:15 Tuesday afternoon, August 10, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, playing a recital in partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the Master of Music de- gree. It will include compositions by Mozart, Beethoven and Bartok, and will be open to the general public. Sis- ter Maria Inviolata is a pupil of John Kollen. Exhibitions Clements Library. Women and Wo- man in Early America. General Library. Women as Authors. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Egyp- tian Antiquities-a loan exhibit from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. Michigan Historical Collections. The University in 1904. Museum of Art. Museum Collections. Coming Events Sunday, August 8 Services in Ann Arbor churches. Hillel Pre-Final Open House: When? Sunday, August 8, 8-10:30. Where? Hil- lel Foundation-1429 Hill. What? Dan- cing, games and refreshments. Free- everyone welcome. Michigan Christian Fellowship, Sun- day, August 8. This will be our last meeting before the summer session closes. The program will be at the regu- lar meeting place at Lane Hall at 4:00 p.m. and will consist of a hymn sing, a devotional talk by Dr. Louis York, Professor in the Chemical and Metal- lurgical Engineering Department here at the University, and a time for testi- monies. Refreshments will be served following the meeting. Film showing, auspices of the Inter- national Center. 8:00 p.m., Internation- al Center. Graduate Outing Club: Will meet on Sunday at 2 p.m. in back of the Rack- ham Building to go to the lake. Every- one welcome. Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Xettena4 TO THE EDITOR A Conservative Speaks.. To the Editor: t WANT it understood that I speak as a conservative; that am a perfectly orthodox Roman Catholic; and that there has nev- er been a moment in the last twenty ears-not even when so many of my liberal fellow-citizens were persuading themselves other- wise-when I doubted that Com- munism was a deadly menace to mankind. And now I should like to ask President Hatcher and his ad- visors, in the name of reason, and in the name of all we owe to free- dom, why they think Chandler Davis must be fired. If his posi- tion made him in any degree a threat to our national security, I wouldn't hesitate, on the basis of the record already public, to fire him. But that isn't the case. If there were any evidence of im- proprieties in Dr. Davis' relations with his students either in or out of class, I would say fire him. But there is no such evidence, and there are statements on record from his students and colleagues explicitly contradicting the sug- gestion, It is sometimes said that a commitment to Communism may distort a man's teaching. But Dr. Davis teaches mathematics! What might he do? Start claiming that four and four make eleven or twelve? Finally, we note that Dr. Davis' professional competence has never been questioned, and that he stands convicted of no crime, and of no scandalous or public breach of morals. What, then, is all the excite- ment about? Is he merely being offered up as a sacrificial victim to appease the powers tha the? Or will the reply be that Dr. Da- vis, in refusing to answer ques- tions about his political convic- tions and activities shows a want of proper candor before his col- leagues? Come gentlemen, for shame! Why do we put these nas- ty questions to Dr. Davis at all, in the absence of any reasonable need to know the answers? Is that the disposition of men who love liberty and who loathe the spirit of the inquisitor? I don't claim that Dr. Davis has any inalienable right to teach; I don't say that the people of Mich- igan haven't the right to seek his dismissal. But I do say that this university has the obligation to resist the attempt to dismiss him. It has the obligation to instruct and edify the society it serves: and not only in its classrooms, but most important of all in these sad days, by the example of its con- duct on the stage of our public af- fairs. If the University will not speak, and act, for freedom and for reason, who will? -John F. Baumgartner, Grad. Interpreting The News By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst Despite a last 'minute appeal from the President, Congress ap- parently is going to make quite a slash in foreign aid and order the whole economic program ended next year. The administration asked for about 3 billion. The House bill cut off about 200 million and then the Senate put its figure at $2,700,000,- 000. In conference Thursday it was finally agreed for the two houses to authorize about three billion. Opponents of continued aid might yet succeed in reducing this figure when the actual appropriation is voted. They had already won a pro- vision in the bill to end economic aid, but a cut-off date for military aid was eliminated by the confer- ees to reassure the free world that the United States was not dropping the fight against Communist ag- gression. The President accused the cut- backers of failing to understand what the Kremlin is doing in the world and what the United States needed to do to build up the rest of the world against Red propa- ganda, outright subversion and bribery. He got $319,000,000 back from the Senate cut, but that's about all. The Foreign Operations Adminis- tration is to be abolished by next summer if not sooner. Just how military aid and the Point Four technical assistance programs will be administered aft- er that has not been spelled out. Presumably the State Department will again become the prime mover, a job which it does not want and only recently escaped. In connection with Point Four, its return to the State Department will be particularly disturbing. Point Four operates much like the extension programs of many state universities. It provides ex- Administration Tripped Up y Its Jobless Figures THE ADMINISTRATION, paint- more on the basis of an expected ing pretty pictures of prosper- mcirease in unemployment claims ON THE WASHINGTON ME H BY-GO-HOUND WITH DREW PEARSON Y &maim= WASHINGTON-The latest Mc- Carthy incident has Senate wives just as mad as some of their husbands. Seats in the "family gallery" of the Senate are not reserved.; However, it is a long-standing rule that no one except a senator's wife can sit on the front row of the gallery. Not even a senator's daughtercan sit on the front row. Wives only can sit there. Imagine the surprise of three Senate wives, therefore, when they were barred from sitting on the front row because they were "re- served for four friends of Senator McCarthy and Mrs. McCarthy." When Mrs. James Duff of Penn- sylvania, Republican, together with Mrs. Paul Douglas of Illinois and Mrs. William Fulbright of Arkansas,Democrats, entered the family gallery to listen to the Flanders resolution debate, the gallery attendant called them back from some empty seats in the front row. The sergeant-at-arms, he said, h a d given strict instructions to hold those five front-row seats for Senator McCarthy. The three Sen- ate ladies pointed out that the sergeant-at-arms apparently didn't know the rules.sMcCarthy had only one wife, and she alone could sit in the front row. But even she could not have a seat reserved in advance. But the attendant insist- ed. So, to avoid an incident, the ladies quietly sat in rear seats. Imagine their surprise, there- fore, when in walked Mrs. Mc- Carthy accompanied by Mrs. Con- stantine Brown, wife of the Waslh- ington Star columnist, and sat down in the front-row seats from which the Senate wives had been barred. With them was a bulky man, who looked like a bodyguard, and two elderly ladies, neither of them a Senate wife. McCarthy-Go-Round Things The Senate Already Knows About McCarthy-A lot of time, stenographic ink, and money will now be spent in another in- vestigation of Senator McCarthy. Meanwhile, the sworn official facts already on file regarding Jumpin' Joe take up a young library. There have already been five investiga- tions, directly or indirectly, of ei- ther McCarthy or his charges ... Here are some facts the new Sen- ate committee can easily docu- ment without wasting any time whatsoever: Malmedy Massacre-First inves- tigation of McCarthy resulted from his charge that the American Army had tortured the Nazi Elite Corps who shot down unarmed American prisoners in cold blood at Malmedy during the battle of the bulge. Though the Democrats were in power, they made a Re- publican, Senator Ray Baldwin of Connecticut, chairman of the in- vestigating committee, which end- ed with McCarthy's walkout in a huff and charging his own Senate colleagues with deception . .. The! probe showed that American offi- cers had not tortured the Nazis, but McCarthy charges did play into the hands of German Commu- that Mrs. Rosenberg was just the opposite of a Communist and she was overwhelmingly confirmed as assistant defense secretary ... M The Senate voted to send the In- vestigative report to the Justice Department for possible perjury prosecution, but the Justice De- partment, after weeks of hesita- tion, did. nothing ... This is the same Don Surine whom McCarthy kept on the committee staff at the taxpayers' expense until recently barred as a security risk by the Defense Department. Maryland Elections-A Senate committee spent months hearing evidence on McCarthy's involve- ment in the 1950 Maryland elec- tions. It found that McCarthy had raised money from the Chicago Tribune and the Texas oil million- aires ... It showed how he had faked a photo of Communist lead- er Earl Browder in supposed + friendly pose with Senator Tyd- # ings ... It showed how the same Don Surine had taken William Fed- der, a Baltimore printer, for an all-night ride in an effort to bull- doze him into surrendering a let- ter from John Butler, who, in de- feating Tydings, had made Fedder a financial pledge in violation of the corrupt practices act ... All this was sworn testimony ... The Senate investigating committee re- ferred the entire matter to the Justice Department for possible prosecution, but Attorney General B~rownell quietly let the statute of limitations expire. State Department Communists- McCarthy's charges of Commu- nists in the State Department were investigated for months. First he said there were 205 card-carrying Communists known to Dean Ache- son. Then he changed the figure to 57, then to 81-all in one week. Then he claimed he had never made the charge of 205 Commu- nists - though the staff of the Wheeling, W. V., radio station where he spoke swore under oath in the Benton libel suit that Mc- Carthy had made exactly that r statement .... The Senate probe ended with a majority voting Mc- Carthy could not substantiate his charges, but with Senator Lodge of Massachusetts voting with Mc- Carthy . ... Last spring, ironical- ly, McCarthy castigated Senator Lodge as among those participa- ting in an anti-McCarthy meeting at the Justice Department,... McCarthy's Communist charges were pretty well punctured when General Bedell Smith, Eisenhow- er's undersecretary of state and his chief of staff. in Europe, swore under oath last winter that no Communists , had been discovered in the State Department. McCarthy's Finances - This probe lasted a year and a half. It not only confirmed the $10,000 Lustron fee previously exposed in this column, but showed that Mc- Carthy had used $10,000 advanced him to fight communism by Con- gressman and Mrs. Bentley of Michigan to speculate for his own profit on the soy bean market. It { also showed how he owed $170,029.- 03 to t h e Appleton State Bank when first elected to Congress in ity on the horizon, has been tripped up by its own figures. Comforting words have been shouted from the housetops that unemployment is easing off and all's right with the economy. But when it comes to asking for funds to take care of unemployment com- pensation claims for the next year a far different picture has been revealed. The bureau of employment sec- urity, which handles such claims, is seeking additional funds for the fiscal year which began July 1. The bureau recently put in asup- plementary request that indicates the administration expects an average level of unemployment claims activity at least as large this fiscal year as last. A close examination of the fig- ures shows even the higher request is low. From the June 1954 rate of 2 million insured unemploy- ment would have to drop close to 50 per cent to bring claims ac- tivity down to the level estimated for fiscal 1955. The fact is, Press Associates has learned, BES asked for a larger supplemental appropriation based on its own higher unemployment estimates. However, the bureau of the budget, the political-fiscal arm of the administration, instructed the bureau to revise its figures downward. BES originally requested $216- million for fiscal 1955. However, by the time spring rolled around the bureau asked for $43 million activity. The house committee, headed by representative John "Meat Axe~ Tabor tR-N.Y.), promptly chopped down the request and recommend- ee only $4.6 million. After all, didn't the administration say that the recession was over? The report of the house commit- tee shows how the administration's prosperity claims have caught up with its statistics. It determined that another post- war year of high unemployment was 1950. The average number of insured unemployed that year was ,f 2.03 million. The appropriation for the year was $174 million. The estimate for 1955 was 1.68 million insured unemployed. Ap- propriations, including- the supple- mental request of $43 million, was for $259 million. The committee asked: "Thus ; with insured unemployment esti- mated to be 17 per cent less, the request for administrative funds is 49 per cent more. Considerable time was spent to determine why there should be this discrepancy," The Committee finally conclud- ed that despite higher costs and salary rates, the real reason for the higher request was that 3,400 more employees, were being re- quested by BES over 1950. Now the house committee has called the administration's bluff and BES has far less money and may have fewer employees than it thinks it will need to handle un- employment compensation claims. --CIO News 1t 9 Justice Department Times Banana Split Well I THE DEPARTMENT of Justice were concerned with psychological warfare, it would be being congratulated on the timing of its anti-trust suit against the United Fruit Company. For this firm, through the ramifications of the banana trade which is its main interest, has become the largest single investor in the seven Central American re- publics and exercises a dominant influence on their economies. This monopoly has thus become the symbol of "Yankee Imperialism," and the Commu- nists who have been infiltrating the area from Guatemala have made the company the focus of the anti-American feeling that they have been fos- tering. When the United States played an open, even if not active, part in the Guatemalan revolution, there was a natural tendency in Latin America to believe that the State Department was concerned not so much with saving the western hemisphere from Communism as with saving the United Fruit Company from expropriation. The Department factorily anti-Communist way, should provide an antidote to these suspicions. It may be more ef- fective from a propaganda point to view even then the medical supplies which were rushed to the support of the new government in Guatemala over the Fourth of July holiday, or the increased technical aid for Latin America which is being proposed in the Senate in order to "solidify anti- Communist gains." One of the United Fruit Company's replies to the anti-trust charges is that it, a private investor doing its duty with educational, lanor, health and welfare programmes, has been far more active than has the US government in attacking Communism, in Central America. Justified as are these claims, and adequately as they answer accusations that the company is exploiting the "banana republics," they have little relevance to the Department of Jus- tice's case. This, in effect outlining the basic causes of rCentral American resentment against United Fruit, is that for nearly twenty years the com- nn.v. imnn,,, arl fu-fhie, o fh h-nn Editorial Staff Dianne AuWerter..Managing Becky Conrad. .. ... Night Rona Friedman..........Night Wally Eberhard..........Night Russ AuWerter..........Night Sue Garfield .......... Women's Hanley Gurwin...........Sports Jack Horwitz......Assoc. Sports E. J. Smith........Assoc. Sports Business Staff Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Dick Aistrom.........Business Manager Sue Garfield. .Assoc. Business Manager Lois Pollak.......Circulation Manager Bob Kovaks........Advertising Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1