PAGE 'wn THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1954 w r a+a' svvv t s Y te By ALICE B. SLVER Daily Managing Editor SINCE no one seems to know exactly what's going on in Guatemala the catch-word for now is speculation. However, there seem to be some generalizations which can be made about the confused situation. Actually the story of Guatemala is an old one. It is a story of an underdeveloped country in which deplorable conditions are allowed to fes- ter for so long that only the Communists seem to offer the people any hope. And as made obvious by the current propagan- da coming out of Guatemala and the Iron Cur- tain, Guatemala is perfect pickings for the Com- munists. The usual party line about the rise of the exploit- ed masses against over-bearing capital and inef- ficient burgeois democrats certainly has relevance in the Guatemala crisis and as usual contains many half truths. Since Teddy Roosevelt's time the United Fruit Company has played the part of the imperalist pow- er in Guatemala. This tremendous organization owns fabulous amounts of land and in effect thousands of workers. The liaison between the government and the Fruit Company is intimate, to say the least. The financial well being of the country is very much dependent on the operations of the Fruit Com- pany. This among other things has necessitated a kind of impotent government tied down in many respects by the policies and wishes of the United Fruit Company. This pattern of a government dependent on a foreign business organization has been repeated time after time in Asia and the Middle East. Aside from the lack of real independence, the most unfortunate result of such a situation is usual- ly the way of life of the people themselves. Except for the few native over-seers who have been made wealthy by the operations of the Fruit Company, the standard of living of the fruit work- ers is rather shocking. Wages often run less than 50 cents a day. Work- ing conditions are hard and slum areas the rule. It is little wonder that the mass of workers are not stirred by the rather feeble efforts of the democratic moderates who have not been able to break their tie with the Fruit Company sufficiently to effect mean- ingful welfare policies. So the status quo is allowed to continue. And then the Communists start to move in and ideas for a democratic state with a high standard of living become lost in the panic. Again, what seems to be happening in Guatemala has happened many times before in similiar coun- tries. The big financial interests become threatened by the Comirimists and mass rebellion. They then at- tempt to put people in the government who will 'set- things right'-which has often in Asia, the Middle East and Latin America meant a repressive military government. Certainly to have a Central American country in the hands of the Communists or even strongly sympathetic to Russia would be an intolerable sit. nation. But the point is here, as always, things should not have been allowed to go so far that the need for a military coup becomes necessary to keep the Com. munists out. SS* * S NOW that the crisis has come the United States is talking double talk-and rather ironic double talk at that. It was the Russians who called the aggressions in Indo-China and Korea a civil war and not the business of the United Nations. Now Mr. Henry Cabot Lodge has warned the Guatemalans against bringing the matter up before the UN on the curious reasoning that the crisis is really just a lot of Communist propaganda and "Guatemala should not appear to be a cat's paw of the Soviet conspiracy to meddle in the Western Hemisphere." . Whether or not there has been aggression in Guatemala, is most certainly a question for the United Nations to consider. Mr. Lodge to the contrary, the United Nations was set up to handle all such complaints regardless of the political colr of the alleged aggressor. Many Americans must feel rather uncomfortable to find our delegate to the United Nations playing what Mr. Lodge himself called, "the Soviet game." Optimism OUR students do not as yet realize their power. Our Congressional despots are insolent when they have one unfortunate intellectual to torture, who is not accustomed to the rough and tumble of these disgraceful man-hunts. But their (Congressional investigators) methods would certainly calm down if they knew that a. large delegation of students, whom they profess to be protecting from subversive teaching, were in the audience. These ardent undergraduates who believe in fair play could help transform the atmos- phere not only of the Congressional investigations but of our whole unhappy fear ridden country if they make it clear that they intend to protect their colleges and their faculties from state control. They could lift the morale of their teachers and at the same time defend their own liberty and freedom of speech. The alumni should also be mobilized to come to the rescue of their colleges. Here is a vast res- ervoir of community forces which would be on the side of academic freedom if that cause were clearly presented to them. It is not possible that the majority of the men and women who have passed through our colleges and universities should be indifferent to their in- tegrity. These alumni are now the leaders of their communities. They are prominant in business and professions. They respond to the financial needs of their alma mater Sarelv thev woid resnond with A Moral "I Pled"' Allegiance to Joe McCarthy, and to the Committee Which Stands for Him ... Anti-Communism (EDITOR'S NOTE: Following are excerpts from an address by Bishop Bernard J. Skeil, founder and direc- tor of The Catholic Youth Organization, given before the International Education Conference of the UAW union in Chicago.) IF ANTI-COMMUNISM is immoral, it is not ef- fective. You cannot effectively fight immorality with more immorality. If anti-Communism flouts the principles of democracy and freedom, it is not in the long run effective. You cannot effectively fight tyranny with tyranny. Anti if anti-Com- munism is not effective, it is so much sound and fury signifying nothing. It is not enough to say that someone is anti- Communist to win my support. It has been said that patriotism is the scoundrel's last refuge. In this day and age anti-Communism is sometimes the scoundrel's first defense. As I remember, one of the noisiest anti-Communists of recent history was a man named Adolph Hitler. He was not wrong because he was anti-Communist. H{e was wrong because he was immorally anti-Commun- ist; he countered Communist tyranny with a ty- ranny of his own. And inevitably Herr Hitler was a dismal failure as an anti-Communist. No Hitler has risen in America, and I must say that I think it is nonsense when foreign reporters and journalists describe us as living in a kind of Hitlerian reign of terror. We are still free and we will remain free-let's have no doubts about that. But it seems to me now whle we are free is the time to cry out against the phony anti-Communism that mocks our way of life, flouts our traditions and democratic procedures and our sense of fair play, feeds on the meat of Auspicion and grows great on the dissension among Americans which it cynically creates and keeps alive by a mad pur- suit of headlines. Anti-Communism is a serious business. It is not a game to be played so publicity-mad politicos can build fame for themselves. If someone were to tell me that the masters of the Kremlin inspired this burlesque to distract us from the real dangers and keep us from taking effective anti-Communist measures, I'd have half a mind to believe him. I can't imagine what would please the Kremlin more than to turn America into a frantic, hysteria rid- den place full of suspicion of an American for an American. Are we any safer because the line between a liberal or a non-conformist and a Communist or subversive is hopelessly blurred? I doubt it. Are we any safer because non-conformity has been practically identified with treason? I think not. Do we have anything less to fear because people have been bullied by the chairman of an investi- gating committee and his counsel? I doubt it. Is America a safer place for ourselves and our children because the morale of our State De- partment has been blitzkrieged? Or because our fine officer corps has been insulted? Or because political controversy has sunk to a new low of name-calling? Again, I would say no. Are we any more to be feared by the Commun- ists because of all the hundred of headlines the Senator of Wisconsin has piled up? Just what has he accomplished? I wonder. The large type charges almost always peter out to a back-page item after they have served their purpose. To gain a headline. But by then our Man on Horseback is another direction-tomorrow is another day, another edition, there is need for another headline. In my book, if a man is truly anti-Commun- ist, he is concerned with meeting the challenge of Communism on every level. He is interested first of all in seeing to it that conditions here and abroad are such that they don't provide a fertile breeding ground for Communism. He is interested in such matters as seeing to it that people get enough to eat, have decent homes, are able to raise their children in dignity. His scope is broad. He is interested in measures to share the wealth of 'have' nations with the have- nots. He is interested in breaking down the barriers, that separate people-religious barriers, national barriers, class barriers. He is interested in making a better place of his own little corner of the world and of doing all he can to see that others are not in want. I judge an anti-Communist-the real thing, not the cops-and-robbers version-by how well he does these things. If he happens to be a legislator, I look at his record. I see how he voted on meas- ures to make freedom a reality and not merely an aspiration in the lives of his own fellow citizens and of the poor of the world. By this standard, a number of famous anti-Communists, I'm sorry to say, simply don't measure up. Communism is a military problem. I judge an anti-Communist according to his record of sup- porting military measures taken to hold back the Communist forces: I judge him according to how much he helped the Army do its work and not according to how much harm he did in Army morale-how many generals he has insulted. On the question of internal subversion, I judge an anti-Communist according to how well he does the very difficult job of seeking out sub- versives, clearly identifying them and removing" them from critical positions. I take it that a genuine anti-Communist is one who despises the court methods of the Communists. I take it he hates the Communist idea that one is guilty until proved innocent. I take it that the genu- ine ani-Communist is one who above all believes in the democratic procedures and is willing to stand by them, even in the face of great temp- tations to lose one's temper and to lose one's faith in the methods of free men. I judge an anti-Communist by how well he ful- fills all these responsibilities in a difficult, delicate job. In a word, on this score I judge an anti-Com- _n~. . nn nyr;ryv. fn '4, .- - 11 hcx naa .... iia --.-"lfi ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-HOUND WITH DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON - For some timet a new technique of governmenti operation has been taking place in Washington. It is a technique of revenge by investigatior, of threat, retaliation, and political blackmail; a technique reminiscent of Hitler'si day and hitherto almost unknown in government. Those who have introduced and employed this technique are the junior senator from Wisconsin and the l i t t 1 e group immediately around him. The technique has grown to such an extent that it has now almost become a pattern. It began when McCarthy raised money to defeat Senator Tydings of Maryland after Tydings refused to concur in McCarthy's Commu- nist charges against the State De- partment. And it continued through the campaign to defeat Senator Benton in Connecticutt, right down to the recent attempt to defeat Senator Margaret Chase Smith in Maine. The above cases are well known. But the cases which the public doesn't know so much about, when stacked up together, present an amazing record of intimidation illustrating the new Hitler tech- nique. Here is part of the record: When McCarthy learned that Struve Hensel, assistant secretary Army memo dealing with Cohn- Schine, he sent two investigators, Don Surine, once fired by the FBI, and Jim Juliana, to New York to probe Mr. Hensel's business activi- ties. And on March 25 at 9:30 p.m., a man called at the home of Mrs. William T. Creagan, 325 East 7th Street, Brooklyn, mother in- law of Fensel's former business associate, Arthur L. Peirson. The man identified himself as a de- tective from police headquarters and wanted to know here Mrs. Creagan's daughter, Mrs. Arthur L.Peirson, resided. Phony Cop Mrs. Creagan asked why he wanted to know and was told that her daughterhad been in a hit- and-run accident, had left the scene of an accident, and the police were looking for her. Mrs. Creagan is a lady in her eighties, and naturally news that her daughter had hit-and-run agi- tated her greatly. She gave the alleged policeman her daughter's address in Vineland, N.J., but later that night was still weeping when her daughter happened to call and assured her that she had been in no hit-and-run accident, nor in any accident of any kind. Next day Surine and Juiana, McCarthy's two gumshoe men, lo- cated Hensel's partner, Peirson, in Vineland and admitted that his ad- dress was secured from his moth- er-in-law. However, there was no secret about Hensel's address and they could have obtained.it through ordinary business channels. McCarthy, who also secured a confidential copy of Hensel's in- come tax returns from his friend Commissioner T. C o 1 e m a n An- drews, has now admitted that he had no case against Hensel but was following the "kick-'em - be- low-the-belt" technique once taught him by Indian Charlie back in Wisconsin. Cohn's Techniques McCarthy is not the only man who has used this technique. His counsel, Roy Cohn, used it on Sen- ator Jackson of Washington when the senator showed up Cohn's friend, Private Schine, and his ju- warfare. Cohn had been investigat- ing Jackson's past and came to the Senate hearings with a file ostentatiously labeled "Jackson's Record." Also when Col. Earl Ringler at tion with its second-class mail priv- ileges.) McCarthy secured f r o m Post- master General Summerfield fig- ures on the cost of Time's mail subsidy and in a committee hear-, ing proceeded to draw out the; fact that Time had received about $17,000,000 through second - class mailing privileges. He claimed this was a profit at the expense of the taxpayers. Probes Fellow Senators Just how many fellow senators McCarthy has kept a record on is not known. It is known that he has been checking on Symington of Missouri, McClellan of Arkansas, and Hennings of Missouri. At one time when Hennings was serving on the subcommittee charged with probing McCarthy, McCarthy ac- cused Hennings of employing Com- munists. Hennings asked that the FBI investigate his entire staff and disproved the charge. What makes the McCarthy re- venge technique particularly sinis- ter is the fact that he operates in part with private money, yet he has the power of Senate subpoena and is able to obtain income tax returns. Thousands of dollars have been poured i n t o McCarthy's hands by the Texas oil million- aires and others which, in effect, give him his own SS elite corps of private probers, financed by pri- vate funds, yet using the power and prestige of the U.S. govern- ment. Furthermore, he seems able to get income tax returns at will, even though they are not supposed to be given him without a vote of the Senate Investigating Commit- tee. Here are some of the others who have incurred McCarthy's ire and felt the whiplash of his re- venge technique: The Saturday Evening Post, which he accused of following the instructions of Gus Hall, secretary of the Communist Party, . .JamesrWechsler,editor of the New York Post, who was put on the McCarthy grid for two days of cross-examination. Wechs- ler had been critical of McCarthy and also of McCarthy's friend, Wal- ter Winchell. . .The Christian Sci- ence Monitor was accused of fol- lowing the line of the Communist Daily Worker. ..Russell Wiggins, editor of the Washington Post, was berated by McCarthy because he dared defend Wechsler. .The St. Louis Post - Dispatch; cartoonist Herb Block; the Washington Post; the Portland Oregonian; the Madi- son, Wis., Capital Times; John Steele of the United Press. By the Associated Press tr :ig ttrg tl Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications.M The Facts Of Life By J. M. ROBERTS JR Associated Press News Analyst The Western Powers have re- eived another demonstration that he facts of life are what they ire, not what anyone says they .re. The West went to Geneva with ;he claim that they were going to Lave Red China around as sort of n observer and consultant but were not recognizing her as one >f the great powers. Red China's Premier and For- sign Minister Chou En-lai left Ge- eva Wednesday with new stature is the key man of Asia. It was e, not Ho Chi Minh, who called the Premier of France to a pri- vate conference on an Indochina settlement. It was he who, imme- diately after this one-day confer- ence, was to meet Prime Minister Nehru of India in an effort to work out a united Asian front on the Indochina and other questions. It was Chou, and Chou only among the top level officials, who remained at Geneva until all of his opposite numbers were gone, and it was Chou who maintained at least a seeming independence, even of Soviet Russia, in the ne- The Big Three may not recog- nize Chou as a member of the Big Five, but they couldn't pre- vent him from acting like one. The result is not all beer and skittles for Chou, however. By as- suming the role of chief negotia- tor for an Indochina ceasefire, he likewise admits to responsibility for the Indochina War if it con- tinues: That's something even Russia was not willing to do publicly in connection with her fruitless war in Korea. Chou seems to accept the badge with indifference. Atoms for Peace The progress being made toward putting atomic power and related uses of nuclear energy to peace- ful uses is being graphically dis- played these days at the first In- ternational Congress of Nuclear Engineering at Ann Arbor, Mich. For the scientist and engineer con- cerned with these developments, of course, the atomic future is one filled with new materials need- ed to cope with the special haz- ards of this field. Glass as strong as lead, metals like beryllium and zirconium, whose use was in its infancy a decade or more ago, compounds of that most reactive of all elements, fluorine, these are some of the materials whose de- velopment is making possible the present strides toward taming the atom for the benefit of all. It is indicative of the progress already made that there are more than thirty nuclear reactors pow operating in the free world, while plans for building additional re. actors are proceeding both here and abroad. Each reactor supplies new and valuable data which car be used to build better ones to. morrow. Meanwhile, the existence of reactors permits the produc- tion, of large quantitiesof radio active isotopes whose uses in med. icine, in industrial control, in sci- entific research and other field are proliferating almost daily. Since so much nuclear techno logy has been accumulated b Government scientists working i secret on atomic And hydroger weapons, the problem has alway existed of securing declassifica. tion of information needed foI peaceful use of the atom withou at the same time divulging datf that might help unfriendly nation., increase their military strength It is encouraging therefore t learn that the director of classi fication of the Atomic Energy Commission, Dr. James G. Beck erley, believes the time is now a hand when much information ii this field can be declassified with out injury to the national security The sooner such vital data arm made generally available, the fast er will be the progress towar making the atom serve humanity - The New York Times- Hush! Hush! IF ONE reads the inner pages o the New York Times carefull, enough, one can find that then are some unpublicized doings go ing on in Washington which are, a best, rather weird. The following story appeared yes terday: "Washington-A ten page sta tistical study, 'Negro Women ani Their Jobs' has beentwithdraws from circulation by the Depart ment of Labor. "The withdrawal as said toda; to have stemmed from a polic: decision in the labor departmen on the ground that the text brough out differences between the race: "The brochure already had bee distributed to public libraries an DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN CURRC peNTMOI_ AT THE MICHIGAN ... She Couldn't Say No with Home- ly Virtues AS a member of the Great Un- washed Masses who are pre- sumed to live in the chink between Hollywood and the eastern sea- bord, I would like to register a mild complaint. To wit: I am grip- ed unto my innormost entrails by the glop that is supposed to repre- sent Smalltown, U.S.A. It was all right in the old days when us rubes were consistently being outsmarted by the big city fellers. We could shrug it off with a mild "B'gosh, b'heck her sure was a slicker, haw haw haw." In those days we didn't mind be- ing stupid if it brought smiles to the lips of our countrymen. But times have changed. Holly- wood has discovered that the Small Town is the guardian of the Simple Way of Life. To be sure we are still just as stupid as we were in the old days, but now, cleverly concealed under our veneer of stu- pidity, is one burnished gem of wisdom. We know that only the 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 preceding publication. THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1954 VOL. LXIV, No. 3s Notices President and Mrs. Harlan Hatcher cordially invite members of the summer faculty to an informal reception honor- ing the visiting faculty on Friday, the twenty-fifth of June, from eight until ten o'clock, at their residence. Schools of Education, Music, Natural Resources and Public Health Students, who received marks of I, X, or "no reports" at the end of their last semester or summer session of at- tendance. will receive a grade of "E" in the course or courses, unless this work is made up by July 21 in the Schools of Education, Music and Public Nealth. In the School of Natural Resources the date is July 16. Students, wishing an ex- tension of time beyond this date in or- der to make up this work, should file a petition, addressed to the appro- priate official of their school, with Room 1513 Administration Building, where it will be transmitted. Edward G. Groesbeck Assistant Registrar Art Loan Prints will be available for summer1rental to students and staff in Room 510 Admin. Bldg., June 24-25. A rental fee of 35c per print will be charged. Ushers are urgently needed for Anna Russell concert at Hill Auditorium on Monday, July 19. If you are interested in ushering for this concert, please re- port to Mr. Warner at Hill Auditorium between 5 and 6 p.m. during the week of June 28. PERSONNEL REQUESTS Allen Industrial Products, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich., a company serving the material handling industrysand the contractors equipment industry, has openings for graduates wth background in chemistry, physics and mechanical engineering. For additional information concerning these and other employment opportuni- ties, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures International Congress on Nuclear En- gineering, auspices of the American In- stitute of Chemical Engineers. Technical sessions. 9:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. The Atom Reports, auspices of the Michigan Memorial - Phoenix Project and American Institute of Chemical En- gineers. Morning session. "Social impact of Nuclear Energy." Robert J. Hansen. Pro- fessor of Civil and Sanitary Engineer- ing, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology; Shields Warren, Professor of Pathology, Harvard Medical School; Stephen Withey, Assistant Program Di- rector, Institute for Social Research; Elton Trueblood, Professor of Philo- sophy, Earuham College. 9:15 a.m., Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Luncheon. Addresses by the Hon. W. Sterling Cole, Chairman, Joint Commit- tee on Atomic Energy, United States Congress, and Dean Ralph A. Sawyer, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. 12:15 p.m., Michigan League. Afternoon session. "Social Impact of Nuclear Energy." President Harlan Hatcher; S. L. A. Marshall, Military Analyst, Detroit News; Lloyd V. Berk- ner, President, Associated Universities, Inc., New York, N.Y.; Dean E. Blythe Stason, Law School. 2:00 p.m., Rackham Lecture Hall Association for Computing Machinery Annual Meeting, auspices of the College of Engineering. Technical sessions. 9:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., Angell Hall. Michigan Writers' Conference, auspce of the Department of English Languag and Literature. Registration. 9:30 a.m., 1006 Angel Hal1. Session. "The Nonfiction Writer, John Frederick Mueh, Assistant Pro fessor of English. 10:30 a.m., 1035 An- gell Hall. Luncheon. "The Love of Writing.' Katherine Anne Porter, author of "Th Days Before" and Visiting Lecturer ir English. 12:15 p.m., Michigan Union. Panel: "The Fiction Writer and His Problems.' Henry C. Branson, autho Zurich> Switzerland. 7:30 p.m., 1139 Na- tural Science Building. Department of Chemistry Colloquium: Mr. Robert M. Fitch and Mr. John H. LaRochele, Graduate Students, will speak, at 7:30 p.m. Room 1300 Chemistry Building. Academic Notices Doctoral Examination for Don Edwin Dulany, Jr., Psychology; thesis: "Avoid- ance Learning of. Perceptual Defense and Vigilance," Thursday, June 24, 7s11 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, E. L. Walker. Sports and Dance Instruction-Wo- men Students Classes in golf; tennis; swimming; posture, figure and carriage; and mo- dern dance are open to all women stu- dents registered in summer school. Take advantage of this free instruction! Equipment for all activities is available for class use. Sign up for classes now in Barbour Gymnasium, Office 15. Exhibitions Clements Library. Rare astronomical works. General Library. Women as Authors. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. Egyp- tian Antiquities-a loan exhibit from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. Museum Hours, Monday through Friday 1-5; Sunday 2-5. Michigan Historical Collections. The University in 1904. Museum of Art. Three Women Paint- ers. Museums Building, rotunda exhibit,, Indian cottumes of the North' Ameri- can plains. Events Today President and Mrs. Hatcher invite all summer session students to an informal reception at their home, from 8:00 to 10:00 o'clock. Lydia Mendelssohn Box Office is ope4 today from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. for the sale of season tickets for the Depart- ment of Speech summer plays. Includ- ed on the series are Shakespeare's HAM LET, July 5-10; Mary Chase's MRS. Mc- THING, July 21-24; Sheridan's THE CRI- 'rIC, July 28-31; and Mozart's opera, THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO. with The School of Music, August 5, 6, 7 and 9. Season tickets are $6.00-$4.75-$3.25. Sociedad Hispanica: The Summer Ses- sion Sociedad Hispanica will hold its first meeting this evening, at 8 o'clock in the Kalamazoo Room of the Michigan League. There will be a talk in Span- ish by Professor Charles Staubach, chairman of the Department of Ro- mance Languages. His subject will be, "La Bogota que conoci." There will be a period for questions, followed by mu- sic and Spanishsongs. These meetings are of special interest to all persons in terested in the Spanish language and culture. All meetings are open to the general public. School of Education film festival on International Education. Thursday eve- , ning at 8:00 p.m. in Auditorium B of Haven Hall will be the first of a series of films on international education to be held every Thursday evening throughout the six weeks' session. The first one includes a program of three films on British education, and will be accompanied by comments from Pro- fessor Joseph A. Lauerwys, Professor of Comparative Education, University of, London, and Editor of the Education Yearbook, an annual publication on world education. The public is invited. Duplicate Bridge at the Michigan Lea- gue, 7:30 p.m. Poor are Really Happy. The rich can only stare wistfully and en- viously at our frolics through the windows of their Cadillacs as they roll past our tar-paper shacks. The offering currently on display at the State involves a toothsome young wench (Jean Simmons) whose life had been saved in her infancy by the kind hearts of the stupid townspeople who took up a collection to pay for a delicate op- eration she needed to save her from a death worse than fate. Now a very rich and comely young lady she returns from the big city with a small fortune to bestow upon the simple townsfolk. You know how it is with us sim- ple types who have learned the spiritual value of poverty. Money just plain goes to our heads and well night smothers our innate goodness. The fellers that made this movie called it "She Couldn't Say No." Reckon it's a good thing the rest of us can, b'gosh. --Don Malcolm 4 Editorial Staff Dianne AuWerter... Co-Managing: Alice B. Silver., .Co-Managing Becky Conrad ............Night Rona Friedman............ Night Wally Eberhard............Night Sue Garfield...........Women's Hanley Gurwin..........Sports Jack Horwitz.....Assoc. Sports E. J. Smith........Assoc. Sports Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor The Sailing Club will hold its open meeting tonight at 7:00 p.m. in room 3-A of the Union. Everyone interested in sailing this summer is urged to at- tend. Informal instruction will be given for beginners this weekend at the lake, Interreligious Cooperation in School & Community. Lunch Seminar Leader: DeWitt C. Baldwin, Coordi- nator of Religious Affairs. The first of five sessions. Cost Lunch served. Lane Hall-12 noon, Students and faculty welcome. Reservations requested. Coming Events Excursion to Henry Ford Museum, Greenfield Vilage & Edison Institute ending with dinner at Belle Isle and Band Concert. Saturday-9 a.m. to mid- night. $1.50 plus food. Call Lane Hall (NO 3-1511, extj 2851) for reservation by Wednesday night. Seventh Annual Conference on Aging. June 28-30. A' Business Staff Dick Astrom.........Business Manager Lois Pollack.......Circulation Manager Bob Kovaks........Advertising Manager -'.lof .n- Arn 7A - d_ - 1'{ k au >r z ,A