PAGE FOUS THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 22. 1954 rditop.j Ile te WITH THE FIRST edition of the summer issue of The Daily, it has become traditional for the managing editor to open with a few remarks about the place of the newspaper in the overall scheme of the University. Tradition is a big part of The Daily. The news- paper's past is an evolution of continuous efforts to realize a dual objective, impartial presentation of the news coupled with free expression of opin- ton on current issues. In keeping with this tradition, The Daily at- tempts to present a complete coverage of Univer- sity and local news. Because of space limitations, it must generally relegate national and interna- tional news to a secondary place, but it tries to bring up-to-date coverage of major events to its readers. With the latest Associated Press deadline in the State, The Daily often presents stories on Its pages hours before they appear elsewhere. The tradition of The Daily editorial page is one of allowing each member of the staff an oppor- tunity to freely present his opinions because The Daily believes that only out of a divergence of opinions can clarification of issues arise. The Daily as such has no editorial policy; there- fore, all editorials are signed which appear on its pages. Occasionally, a prevailing number of staff members may hold similar opinions and an over- balance of editorials favoring these opinions re- sult. However, any dissenting member is free to express his dissent, and the Letters-to-the-Editor column is open to any non-staff member who wishes to challenge or discuss their views. More- over, anyone willing to do the work of a staffer may write editorials. The Daily is a part of the University com- munity, with this community's welfare fore- most in mind. Sometimes, criticism of the com- munity or one of its various segments seems the best was for The Daily to fulfill its obligation to the campus. To be truly effective, however, a newspaper re- quires an alert, critical readership. It is as such that The Daily welcomes its old readers back and anticipates becoming acquainted with its new readers. --Alice B. Silver Diane D. AuWerter Current Movies At the Michigan.. THEM with ants THAT long! The traditional mission of the science fiction- eer-staying at least one jump ahead of scientific progress-has become an increasingly tougher prop- osition in recent years as science threatens to outdo his fiction before he can even correct the spelling in his manuscripts. In sheer self defense he has taken to exploring the less spectacular. by-ways of science for material. Where a plain, old, everyday atomic explosion would have been plenty good enough for Jules Verne, the concoctors of "Them" had recourse to an explosion by-product-the effect of Ra- diocativity on herdity. The movie tells us that the 1954 atomic explo- sion in New Mexico which we all thought was such a joke, had more serious ramifications than we dreamed. It produced a mutant species of ant which is upwards of nine feet long, squeaks like a rusty gate, and enjoys nothing better than cut- ting human begings in two with its mandibles. As can readily be seen, this sort of thing con- stitutes a Threat to Humanity of no little conse- quence and what with one thing and another, the Army, the New Mexico State Police, some scien- tists, and an FBI agent have quite a time saving the human race from destruction. All in all, the movie is better than any other science fiction offering this reviewer has seen. The acting is restrained; the style is all but documentary. In fact at times the characters seem almost indecently casual as they discuss the possibilities of the end of homo sapiens. The giant ants, on the other hand, bite people in half with a great deal of gusto and with every sign of real enjoyment. As the last of the ants gets its come-uppance, someone, possibly thinking of monstrous tuna or colossal Japanese fishermen, brings up the sub- ject of all the other atomic explosions and specu- lates gloomily on the probability of other mutations. It was quite a relief to return from the movie to an apartment infested with cockroaches which, if they are only slightly smaller than the giant ants, have at least a more amiable disposition. -Donald Malcolm Life With Clardy CONGRESSMAN KIT FRANCIS CLARDY of Mi- chigan has one main interest: to get publicity as a Red-hunter. Though a freshman congress- man, he managed to wangle a prized assignment to the Un-American Activities Committee. He does not give a hoot for his party leadership. "It's wrong to talk about a presidantial program," he says. "It should be a congressional program . . , people who bear down on the idea that the Presi- dent should tell Congress what to do are out of the same mold as the German people who created Fuhrer Hitler." t Clardy grew up in the Missouri farm county that also gave Jesse James his start. He dabbled in Re- publican politics while practicing law in Flint, Mich. until one night in 1950, when he brooded ahout the aovernment "T ist eou1d not think of The 1948 Election And Ike's Troubles By WALTER LIPPMANN ONE OF THE minor problems of our age is what a columnist shall write about if his article is to be published a week after he has gone on va- cation. The article must be about something which will still be there no matter who is elected, who is fired, who makes a speech, who gets run-over, while his piece is waiting to be given to a breath- less public. The safest of all the devices is to rewrite his- tory in order to show that if something had hap- pened which did not happen, many things, which unfortunately did happen, would not have happen- ed. Articles of this kind are very safe. That is not because many people are likely to agree with them-far from it-but because nobody can prove or disprove them. * * * * T ALKING NOT LONG ago with a friend who has known at first hand a great many things that go on in Washington, we were agreeing that somehow or other the government was not work- ing as it should. What was the explanation? With- out being in the least dogmatic about it, I would say that what follows is not the explanation but an explanation. I would begin by arguing that the election of 1948 was a political misfortune. This is not because of any special fault of Mr. Truman's but because in 1948 it was time under the Am- erican party system for the Republicans to come into office. They had been out of office for sixteen years during which the country had gone through the Great Depression, the New Deal, the Second World War, and the opening of the cold war. It was time for a change of parties in order to redress the errors and right the balance of the Democratic excesses, and also and no less to con- front the Republicans with the realities of the modern age and the responsibilities of governing in the modern world. By 1948 the Democrats had, so to speak, exhausted their popular mandate. In 1948 the Republicans had in Dewey and Warren men of indubitable political experience brought up in the normal practical political life of this coun- try. They had also many elder statesmen in Con- gress and men available from private life who were in the great national Republican tradition of The- odore Roosevelt and Alexander Hamilton. ** * * So AFTER 1948, in the second Truman admin- istration the Democrats had no genuine po- litical mandate from the country, and they knew it. They were, moreover, divided into factions as always happens to any party which is in office too long. And opposed to them was a Republican par- ty which was in the hands of men who had never had the responsibility for governing, who were wholly habituated to being in the opposition. We are very conscious today of the fact that the authority of the Eisenhower administration is so gravely enfeebled. But the enfeeblement of the Executive began under Truman. In fact, it would be fair to say that Eisenhower is the inheritor of a mess-the mess of Executive feebleness-which he has not known how to overcome, though that is what the country hoped and believed it was electing him to do. The Truman administration was subjected to a terrible ordeal of events which it lacked the strength and the authority to cope with. History is usually, I realize, not so precise as someone writ- ing it makes it seem. But one might say that the ordeal which was to prove too much for the Tru- man administration began in September 1949 with the news that the Soviet Union had broken the monopoly of atomic weapons. During the following year the Truman administration made a series of catastrophic errors, all of them I believe due to its weakness. It kept the country grossly disarmed right up to the Korean War. Though it kept the country disarmed, it ceded to Congress its Con- stitutional right to treat the recognition of Red China as a negotiable question. It announced a defense perimeter in the Far East which appear- ed to abandon South Korea. It made the colossal error of authorizing MacArthur to march to the Yalu River, which was followed by the intervention of China, by a great disaster to American arms and by the creation of an almost insoluble prob- lem of Chinese-American relations. For these major errors have created a condition in our policy which it will take more than one agonizing reappraisal to repair. They were all of them, I think, characteristic errors of an enfeebled Executive, of one that is unsure of itself and of its mandate from the people. The end of our atomic monopoly required a radical reappraisal not only of technological policy in atomic matters-as for example in relation to the hydrogen bomb on the one hand and of tactical weapons on the other. It required also a reappraisal of the political conse quences which have been enormous, the conse- quences to our allies, to the neutrals, to Germany and to Japan, both of them prime atomic targets, and to the uncommitted nations of Asia. But that reappraisal required the kind of intellectual and moral courage which neither the Truman or the Eisenhower administration has possessed. The cluster of errors in the Far East-leaving South Korea exposed, allowing our military es- tablishment to sink to a low level, tying our hands so that we could not negotiate with Red China, getting away ahead of ourselves and our military capacities in Northern Korea-these have produced the consequences which are with us today. It was the panic of August 1950, for it was mere panic, that caused us to put the cart before the horse in Germany and has put our whole European policy in jeopardy. These errors were committed because at bottom it was easier to commit them than to refrain from committing them. It was easier to say "yes" than to say "no," and so we said "yes" against the best advice of our wisest advisers. Teachers' Statements THE following statements were issued to the press by the three faculty members who appeared be- fore the House Un-American Ac- tivities sub-committee yesterday following their testimony before that group. * * * H. CHANDLER DAVIS I exchange political ideas freely with people who judge them on their merits. I do not discuss poli- tics with a sword over my head; the First Amendment is intended to keep coercion out of politics. If I announced my opinions pub- licly now, either in the hearing room or outside, they would not be listened to for their content, but in terms of the acceptability or un- acceptability by the Committee's standards. I will not discuss my political ideas while they are the subject of scandal and threat. CLEMENT L. MARKERT In a democratic society no one is answerable for his political be- liefs or affiliations to any agency of government. This fundamental tenet of democracy was wisely in- corporated in our Constitution as the first amendment, which for- bids Congress to inquire into or interfere with political beliefs or associations. The House Committee on Un- American Activities has unfor- tunately transgressed the bounds of constitutional authority in asking questions related to po- litical belief and association. I cannot in good conscience co- operate in such violations of the constitution and have therefore refused to answer all questions pertaining to my political beliefs or associations or the lack of them. Since the committee denied me the right to invoke the guarantees of the first amendment in refusing to answer questions, I have been obliged to rely upon the constitu- tional protection of the fifth amendment which prevents Con- gressional committees from com- pelling any person to be a witness against himself. No amount of misreprentation or false inference of guilt can ob- scure the fact that the fifth amendment was designed to pro- tect individuals from unjust pros- ecutions. I have therefore invoked the fifth amendment in order to protect myself from the possibility of unjustified prosecution. MARK NICKERSON, M.D. A fundemental tenet of our de- mocracy is that an individual's po- litical beliefs and associations are not subject to invasion by any agency of government. This was specified in the Constitution of the United States in 1788 because one state after another refused ratification except upon the con- dition that the Bill of Rights be incorporated. To require a citizen to categorize his political beliefs opens the way to the application of various pressures to change them, and therefore, to the con- trol of thought and belief. Both as a scientist and as a citizen I have unequivocally re- jected any association or com- mitment which would in any way limit my freedom to evalu- ate evidence objectively and to arrive at my own intellectually honest conclusions. I do not consider that the present hear- ings represent a valid excuse for departing from this principle. Although refusal to answer questions relating to espionage, sabotage or related overt law breaking may properly be included under the protection of the fifth amendment, they involve a moral issue entirely different from that posed by questions relating to po- litical beliefs and associations. I feel that it is a part of my respon- sibility as a citizen to answer all pertinent questions in this cate- gory to the best of my ability. THE difficulty in countering this damaging breach of confi- dence between allies-on whose continued cooperation the future of freedom depends-lies in the fact that many of the concrete criticisms must stand. Americans themselves are deeply disturbed and divided by such policies as the so-called "New Look" in strat- egy. The isolationism of certain newspapers and certain political leaders is an undoubted fact. Many people inside America have not remarked with any pleasure the eyes of the nation glued to the television screen during the Stevens-McCarthy hearing. So the list could be continued. There are as many people in the United States as anywhere else bent on criticism from degenerating into "the indictment of an whole peo- ple," from degenerating, in short, into irrational phobias and des- tructive nationalist emotion. -The New York Times THE American mind runs natur- ally to broad, sweeping, logi- rcl conclusions on the largest ti16 "Run Along And Shoot Pool Or Something" _ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WASHINGTON-It may make some people unhappy to have it published, but the White House recently received a confidential memo telling how thoroughly all Democrats had been purged from the U.S. Information Office and how Harry Truman's picture de- finitely was not shown on U.S. In- formation bulletin boards abroad. Reason for the memo was a complaint from good old speaker Joe Martin that the U.S. Infor- mation Offices were still harbor- ing Democrats and were even flaunting Harry Truman's pic- ture overseas. Republican Con- gressmen used this as an excuse to cut the Information Office's budget by $13,000,000-a drastic cut at a time when Soviet pro- paganda offices are spending money by the basketful. So the White House asked for a report and got back this word: "With respect to the Acheson speeches and Truman-Acheson pictures reportedly on display at our posts in Spain," defends the memo, "we have talked personal- ly with our public affair officer, Bill Cody, in Madrid. He swears that they have had no Acheson materials for distribution any- where in the country since the present administration came in. They have had no picture dis- plays of Truman or Acheson any- where. There were displays of Marshall's picture at the time he won the Nobel Peace Prize last year. It is just possible that 'Tru- man might have been in one of the pictures with Marshall, but he knows of no such instance. Cody is one of our best men and de- finitely not an egghead." The memo is dated May 11, 19- 54, and signed by Able Abbott Washburn, the agency's deputy director, a former executive of General Mills, Inc., and national director of the Citizens for Eis- enhower during the 1952 cam- paign. In the secret memo, Washburn states: "Better than 5,000 people have been dropped from this agency since the Eisenhower ad- ministration took over on Janu- ary 20, 1953. Some 2,300 of these I were Americans. The rest were local nationals. In other words, we got rid of almost half of the to- tal number of Americans former- ly employed. I doubt whether any other agency in Washington has dismissed, percentagewise, more employees than we have. "To say 'they have not cleaned house-it is the same old person- nel' is just not true!" Washburn laments. "In order for the agency to reflect administration Repub- lican policy," the memo contin- ues, "We set about the difficult task of filling as many senior executive posts as possible which qualified Republicans . . . the attached list of senior officers of the agency reveals an overwhel- ming preponderance of Republi- cans. There are no Democrats among them. Three are gov- ernment career men with ab- solutely no political coloration. One is an independent. We are proud of the high caliber of this team. They, are definitely not 'the same old crowd of New Deal sympathizers!' to suggest such a thing is extremely un- fair to what Ted Streibert (the director) has accomplished in the nine months he has been here." NOTE-Originally this politi- cal purge was ordered to appease Senator McCarthy, who sent his two junior G-men, Roy Cohn and Dave Schine, on a barnstorming trip through Europe to investigate America's information program, . (Copyright, 1954, by the Bell Syndicate) (Continued from Page 2) Intoxicating beverages. The use or presence of intoxicating beverages in student quarters is not permitted. (Committee on Student Conduct, July, 1947.) Women Guests in Men's Residences. The presence of women guests in men's residences, except for exchange and guest dinners or for social events or= during calling hours approved by the Office of Student Affairs, is not permit- ted. This regulation does not apply to mothers of residents. (Committee on Student Conduct, January, 1947.) (Fraternities without resident house directors and fraternities operating as rooming houses during the summer have no calling hour privileges and may en- tertain women guests only at exchange or guest dinners or for social events ap- proved by the Office of Student Af- fairs.) Responsibility for Maintaining Stan- dards of Conduct. Student organizations are expected to take all reasonable meas- ures to promote among their members conduct consistent with good taste and to endeavor by all reasonable means to ensure conformity with the foregoing standards of conduct. University students or student organ- izations are responsible for their guests' compliance with the standards of con- duct. Any student-sponsored function at which conditions arise that are injuri- ous to the prestige of the University may be abolished by the Committee on Student Affairs. (Regents' Proceedings, May 1923.) It is the joint responsibility of the chaperons and the president of the or- ganization sponsoring a social event to see the University regulations are ob- served, particularly those relating to conduct, presence of women guests, and use of intoxicants (Committee on Stu- dent Affairs, November 13, 1946) Registration of Social Events: June 23, 25 Social events sponsorec by student or- ganizations at which both men and wo- me nare to be present must be approv- ed by the Dean of Students. Applica- tion forms and a copy of regulations governing these events may be secured in the Office of Student Affairs, 1020 Administration Building. Requests for approval must be submitted to that of- fice no later than noon of the Mon- day before the event is scheduled. A list of approved social events will be published in the Daily Official Bulle- tin on Thursday of each week. Exchangeand Guest Dinners may be held in organized student residences (operating a dining room) between 5:30 p.m.-8 p.m. for weekday dinners and between 1 p.m.-3 p.m. for Sunday din- ners. These events must be announced to the Office of Student Affairs at least one day in advance of the sched- uled date. Guest chaperons are not re- quired. Calling Hours for Women in Men's Residences. In University Men's Resi- dence Halls, daily between 3 p.m.-10:30 p.m.; Nelson Internationai House, Fri- day, 8 p.m.-12 p.m.; Saturday 2:30 p.m. -5:30 p.m. and from 8 p.m.-12 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m.-10:30 p.m. This privi- lege applies only to casual calls and not to planned parties. women callers in men's residences are restricted to the main floor of the resi- dence. 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. Cerce Francas: The Summer Session Cercle Francais will meet weekly on wednesday evening at 8:00 through the month of July, in the Michigan Lea- gue. A varied program of music, talks, games, and discussions is planned. These meetings are open to all students and residents of Ann Arbor who are inter- ested in France and things French. No previous membership is necessary. All are welcome. Consult the League bulle- tin and the Daily for place, details, in- dividual programs. La Petite Causette: An informal French conversation group will meet weekly through July in the Round-Up Room of the League. Fridays at 3:30. A faculty member and a native French assistant will be present but there is no formal program. Refreshments are available nearby, and all persons in- terested in talking and hearing French are cordially invited to come. Art Loan Prints will be available for summer rental to students and staff in Room 510 Admin. Bldg., June 24-25. A rental fee of 35c per print will be charged. PERSONNEL REQUESTS U.S. Naval Training Center, Bain- bridge, Maryland, has an immediate need for three Librarians, GS-5. The City of Vassar, Michigan, is tak- For additional information concerning these and other employment opprtuni- ties, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. EMPLOYMENT REGISTRATION A meeting will be held at 3:00 p.m. on Thursday, July 1, in Auditorium C, Angell Hall, for all seniors and graduate students who are interested in register- ing with th eBureau of Appointments now for employment either after gra- duation, after military service, or for future promotions in any of the fol- lowing fields: education, business, in- dustry, technical, and government. Reg.. lstration material will be given out at the meeting, Those students who have previously registered with the Bureau of Appoint- ments for empolyment and who are still on campus are requested to contact the Bureau as soon as possible at 3528 Ad- ministration Building in order to bring their records up to date. We must have your present address and telephone number as well as your current courses. This information is necessary for ef- fective service. 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. Luncheon. Introduction of interna- tional guests, Alberto F. Thompson, Di- rector of Technical Information, Atom- ic Energy Commission. Address by A. M. Weinberg, Driector ofrResearch, Oak Ridge National Laboratories. 12:15 p.m., Michigan League. American Astronomical Society, aus- pices of the Department of Astronomy. Technical session. 9:00 a.m., Auditor- lum B, Angell Hall, Symposium: "Turbulence and Magne- tic Fields in the Photosphere." Robert R. McMath, Professor of Astronomy, chairman. 2:00 p.m., Auditorium B, An- gell Hall. International Mass Communications Conference on Nuclear Energy Develop- ments, auspices of the Department of Journalism. Session Five. "Utilization of Isotopes and of Radiation." Lloyd Brownell, Pro- fessor of Chemical Engineering; Sylves- vester E. Gould, Research Associate, AEC Biological Effects of Irradiation; Dr. William H. Beerwaltes, Associate Professor of Internal Medicine; Joseph J. Martin, Associate Professor of Chem,- ical and Metallurgical Engineering; Leigh C. Anderson, Professor of Chem- istry. 9:00 a.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Teachers of French and Spanish: Pro- fessor Emile B. de Sauze, founder and director of the Cleveland Plan for for- eign language learning, will speak on "The Teaching of Modern Languages in the Elementary Grades and in the Jun- ior and Senior High Schools" in 429 Mason Hall at 3:30 p.m. The public is invited. 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 costumes of the North Ameri- can plains. Events Today Weekly Bridge Lessons starting to- night, 7:30 p.m., at the Michigan Lea- gue. square and Folk Dancing. Tonight and every Tuesday. Everyone welcome. Grey Austin, caller. Lane Hall, 7:30- 10:00. Graduate Study Group on "Christian Liberty and Academic Freedom." A con- tinuation of a U.S.C.C. pilot project started in February. New members are welcome at this time. Tonight, Lane Hall Library, 8:30. Coming Events Department of Speech Summer Play Schedule: July 5-10, Shakespeare's HAM- LET; July 21-24, Mary Chase's MRS. Mc- THING; July 28-31, Sheridan's THE CRI- TIC; and August 5. 6, 7, and 9, Mo- zart's opera, THE MARRIAGE OF FIG- ARO produced with The School of Mu- sic. Season tickets are on sale daily from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. in the Lydia [endessohn Box Office, north end of ON THlE I> /ettei TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. wASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND WITH DREW PEARSON Suspensions . .. j To the Editor: W E LEARN from the newspaper} that Mr. H. C. Davis, called before an investigating commit- tee of Congress, and hiving re- fused to reveal his political opin- ions to that body, basing his re- fusal upon the First Amendment, has been suspended from his du- ties as Instructor in the Mathe- matics Department of the Uni- versity of Michigan. This decision by the adminis- tration of the University of Mi- chigan cannot be ignored by the undersigned students of the Uni- versity of Lyon. We knew Mr. and Mrs. Davis in 1952. They earned special -esteem from those who met them by their qualities of heart and mind, their broad culture, and the high schol- arly level of Mrs. Davis's research on the history of our city. By their example they gave a favor- able impression of their fellow students, their faculty colleagues, their university, and their coun- try. We are eager to put this on record now, when the integrity of Mr. Davis is put in question. We also want to take a posi- tion on a particularly serious as- pect of this matter. First let it be clear that we are not making any judgment on the Un-American Activities Committee, of whose actions we are aware, but are limiting ourselves solely to the academic aspect of the question. . In view of the fact that this Committee has not at present made any definite decision con- cerning Mr. Davis, we do not un- derstand the university admin- istration's haste in announcing his suspension. In spite of appear- ances, we do not want to believe the university is in collusion by hypocritical arguments of expe- diency. Whatever may be the re- sult of the action begun against Mr. Davis, nothing should take precedence over the fundamental principle that the University is the natural guardian of the peo- ple's freedoms. Without them, it cannot accomplish the tasks of diffusion of culture and develop- ment of the national intellectual heritage. Indeed, learning cannot live without liberty, and the uni- versity which punishes its teach- ers and students for their opin- ions destroys itself. We want to emphasize the ser- iousness of such events, for we hav rnown a time when in our on this topic with gravity and firmness, for any yielding would betray the memory of our dead. We are convinced that the Uni- versity of Michigan, following the highest traditions of the great country to which it belongs, and reminding itself of the sacrifices undertaken ten years ago in our common struggle, will retract the action taken against some of its teachers, and thus will take the path of reason and greatness. -Fifty-six students and recent graduates of the Schools of Letters, Science, Law, Medi- cine, and Dentistry, Univer- sity of Lyon, France. Congratulations . . . To the Editor: congratulate you for speaking out against the suspension of the three University of Michigan faculty members. We must fight mocracy is to survive in the Unit- all forms of McCarthyism if De- ed States. --Ed Conners, Chicago I : Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the -Board in ,Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Dianne AuWerter...Co-Managing Editor Alice B. Silver....Co-Managing Editor Becky Conrad...........Night Editor Rona Friedman............Night Editor Wally Eberhard............Night Editor Sue Garfield.........Women's Editor Hanley Gurwin.........Sports Editor Jack Horwitz......Assoc. Sports Editor E. J. Smith........Assoc. Sports Editor Business Staff Dick Aistrom.........Business Manager Lois Pollack...,....Circulation Manager Bob Kovaks.......Advertising Manager Telephone NO 23-24-1 - .-r I F _. I