VAG9 TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. JULY 21 1954 " M'+ 'a . rf~as as . .} V 4/iii A/.F .i t#. The Lesson of Indochina: Russia's Strategy of Revolution "I May Just Yank Out The Whole Thing" I go WHETHER or not Mendes-France is successful in concluding an acceptable Indochinese truce, certain elements in the situation are relatively con- stant and provide materials for some basic reflec- tions. It is unfortunate that in the United States the label of "appeasement" has often been attached to the French Premier's efforts to end the Indochinese War. Mendes-France is clearly not an "appeaser." Appearing before the French National Assembly in his bid for the premiership, he stated that he would not accept office if his election depended on Communist votes. For many years, Mendes-France has been a severe critic of his country's policy in Indochina, which he has characterized as unable to achieve either victory or a reasonable settlement. He has said that if the current peace negotiations fail, he will recom- mend the sending of draftees to Indochina. Existing French law forbids the dispatch of any but Regular Army troops to the Far East-a course which Men- des-France has repeatedly attacked in the past. During the Geneva conference, the Premier has consistently rejected Communist attempts to obtain guarantees against an Asian security system simi- lar to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, as the price of an Indochinese settlement. What is it, then, that leads such a man to seek so earnestly for an Indochinese peace-one which will, if obtained, leave Vietnamh partitioned be- tween Communists in the north and the French in the South? It is the realization that the military, eco- nomic and psychological costs of the Indochinese war have long exceeded any benefits that France and the non-Communist world can obtain from its prosecution. The total cost in money of the Indochinese war --which is 8 years old-has exceeded the value of all American aid tendered to France under the Marshall Plan. That France has been "bled white" by the war is not an idle phrase, when one con- siders that a third of that nation's young military officers, recently graduated from the French equivalent of West Point, has been killed in In- dochina. This is a frightful toll among those on whom France must depend for military leader- ship, the cost of which she will pay for years to come. In domestic politics, the intense distaste with which the French people regard the war in Indo- china has given the large and well-entrenched French Communist Party a powerful talking point: they have managed to assume the role of peace makers, and have made much political capital out of their fierce denunciations of the war. That the Communists' attitude towards Indo- china springs not from their love for France but rather their allegiance to the Soviet Union is not as obvious to many Frenchmen as the fact that the Indochinese war is clearly a liability which the non- Communist parties have dealt with in a persistently irresolute manner. s* . s. ALL THESE evil effects spring chiefly from the hopelessness of France's military situation in Indochina. No such surge of intense zeal fires the non-Communist native population as motivates the forces of Ho Chi Minh, the Communist leader. A ghastly and unforgiveably short-sighted French decision, after the Japanese defeat in World War II, to impose again the tradition of exploitative col- onialism in Indochina is what lies at the root of the tragedy on which Mendes-France is striving to draw down the final curtain. In negotiations in 1946 at Paris with Ho Chi Minh, the French proved unable to adjust their policies to the huge groundswell of revolt, affirma- tive nationalism and anti-Western feeling that arose after World War II and continues to run high in Asia. They made no significant concessions whatever to' native demands for progress towards self-government. In 1946, Ho Chi Minh was neither a Commu- nist nor committed to the policies of Moscow, but primarily a native leader striving to obtain a measure of self-determination for his people and an end to colonial exploitation. His experience with French intransigence sent him back to his country embittered and despairing. His only course, as he saw it, was to join with any move- ment which promised aid in the struggle against renewed colonialism. This the Communists were only too eager to provide. The Communists in Indochina thus captured and still retain the slogans of independence, surging nationalism and protest against foreign exploitE tion. All the ardor and dedication that comes with the cause of popular rebellion against oppression was enlisted in the service of the greatest single enemy of human freedom existing today-the Com- munist Party of Russia. World history has rarely witnessed so agonizing and pitiful a contradiction. The West would be foolish to persist in attempts to implement a policy that has so tragically mis- carried. Only military force keeps the French in Indochina, and it is most probable that a contin- uation of the war would result either in a prolong- ed stalemate or the total defeat of the French army. Hence the sad but practical wisdom of obtaining as advantageous a settlement as is possible, and seeking a stabilization of the Indochinese situa- tion. * * * * GREVIOUS as this turn of events has been, the West may profit from its experience. We need only glance 4t the contrast between Indochina (where the French hung rigidly on) and India (where the British surrendered sovereignty and got out). Much of Indochina, whether or not Mendes- France obtains a truce, will pass wholly into the Communist world. But India, while avoiding total commitment to the West, vigorously combats do- mestic Communism, seeking to develop its resources as an independent nation and within a democratic framework. The West must never again attempt to per- petuate dying traditions. We must realize that the Russians' most valuable technique of aggression is their ability to pose as liberators and foment revolution in the name of reform. We must not permit the Communists to usurp that urge for freedom and human dignity which was brought' into the world by the functioning democracies of America, Great Britain and France, and to use it for the purpose of imperialist expansion. If we mean to defend freedom, we must do a world-wide job of it-and most imperatively in those areas where underdevelopment, long exploi- tation, and mass poverty have created irresistable demands for new political and economic institu- tions. It is intolerable that the Kremlin should con- tinue to profit by its adroit and cynical manipula- tion of Asia's cry for freedom. -Allan Silver , , - , , f r is 4 { .. t..' l/. 't ......' --" 4n" ice/ - -.yarn -- , _. I we _ '1 .Sf O7 A I y " 4, x ' ' , t x+ .', !r. ,. , -h -e ie,3 oct .,,r . " WASHINGTON - U.S. policy re- garding Indochina has flip-flopped almost as rapidly as John Foster Dulles has shuttlecocked across the Atlantic. However, out of these trans-Atlantic trips and the latest Dulles report to President Eisen- hower the following policy now seems in vogue: To some extent, we are back in somewhat the same .position re- garding Indochina as last April when Vice President Nixon warned that we might have to send Amer- ican troops to Indochina. Reason is that we have now made a definite commitment to back up France in the Indochina War if the Reds keep on fighting. Though we have talked about this in the past we have never made such a com- mitment before. What happened was that Prem- ier Mendes-France told Dulles that if the United States wanted a stiff no-surrender policy in Indochina we would have to share the re- sponsibility. Dulles agreed. He al- so agreed to a line partitioning Indochina. But most important of all, he agreed to back France all- out if the Reds don't accept a rea- sonable line. Simultaneously, Dulles became convinced that Mendes-France was a sincere patriot, was trying to salvage stability from the political les got an extremely important pledge from the French Premier- namely, that France would join the United European Army. All this did not take place, how- ever, without some unpleasant mo- ments, and until after Mendes- France had issued one of the blunt- est threats ever served on a re- cent American secretary of state. The French Premier issued a virtual ultimatum that either Dul- les would come back to the Gen- eva Conference or France would pull out of the North Atlantic Pact and adopt a neutralist attitude in Europe. U. S. Ambassador Doug- las D i11on, who conveyed the French warning, told Dulles that Mendes-France was not bluffing, that he had better make the trip. That was why the secretary of state packed his baggage and caught a plane to Paris in three hours, later sending his undersec- retary of state, Bedell Smith, to Geneva. ing Committee and sibustituted a motion of censure. . .It was only a few weeks ago that Majority Leader Knowland made a speech proposing the right to remove Sen- ate committee chairmen when they didn't cooperate. His speech was then aimed at Langer of North Dakota. Now that a resolution is on the Senate floor to remove Mc- Carthy as chairman, Knowland has changed his mind. Latin Yanqui Twenty-two years ago a South American ex-president arrived in New Y o r k, penniless, an exile from his country. He was Carlos Davila, who, after serving four years as ambassador in Washing- ton, had taken over the presiden- cy of Chile, finally was ousted. Un- like many Latin-American presi- dents, he left with no "nest egg," no secret funds in a foreign bank. He had run a strictly honest ad- ministration and left Chile with only the clothes he had on. Davila settled in New York and made a living at his original pro- fession - journalism. He became one of the great interpreters of the United States to Latin America, pointed out that crime news did not properly represent the USA, that we had idealism, culture, mu- sic, opera, literature. Only three or four times during his two decades in the United States did Davila return to his na- tive Chile. Once, when his wife, dying of cancer wanted to return, President Roosevelt put a flying fortress at Davila's disposal, and his wife arrived just in time for one last breath of Chilean air. Now married to an American, Francis Adams of Virginia, Davila has sometimes suffered because in Latin America he is considered a "Latin Yanqui." And the State De- partment in turn thinks he's too in- dependent. But after a year in Chile as editor of La Nacion, Davila came back to Washington last year to become secretary general of the Office of the American Republics. This can be one of the most im- portant jobs in the Western Hemi- sphere-the job of welding the Americas closer together. Under Davila's direction it should go for- ward with vigor. Copywright 1954, by the Bell Syndicate Interpreting The News By J. M. ROBERTS JR. The decision at Geneva to par- tition Vietnam has many parallels with the decision at Munich which gave Czechoslovakia to Hitler. Overwhelming in the long run was the hard fact that the free world was not in position to wage an all-out defense of Indochina without running the very grave risk of a general war, and a gen- eral war in Asia which was the last thing it was in a position to undertake. When the Russians were found to have mobilized a powerful ex- peditionary force too near Japan, choices had to be made which were just as bitter as the choices given France and Britain in 1938. There is, however, one vital dif- ference between the Allied posi- tion then and now-that is, there is a difference if the Allies go ahead with their plans for South- east Asia. When Chamberlain returned to London in 1938 he spoke publicly of "peace in our time." But his "umbrella salute" was to become the symbol of retreat, and an invi- tation to new Hitler aggression. In those days, Britain and France clung to the hope that Hitler would keep a bargain. Now the Allies are dealing with an enemy which has demonstrat- ed time after time and almost without exception that it will not keep a bargain, and there is less chance to retreat into false secur- ity. Britain, France and the United States are reported agreed that they must now go ahead in South- east Asia with a twin for the North Atlantic Treaty Organi- zation. The object is to avoid, as Eu- rope has avoided since 1948, be- ing faced with another decision such as that regarding Indochina. So far, the Communists have not challenged real strength and de- termination, nor moved in the face of such an ultimatum as is represented by NATO. The Communists are, however, establishing another festering sore similar to those of Germany, Aus- tria and Korea: If an end to the last postwar shooting produces any complacency among the Al- lies, if they do not go through with SATO, then more and greater trouble will not be long in coming. Powtsuer Ott the Spot! SENATOR COOPR'S significant differences with the Adminis- tration position on electric power in the Tennessee Valley ought to give some pause to promoters of the private contract. Mr. Cooper has made what is probably the clearest and simplest explanation of the issues. He has pegged his opposition to the Adminstration plan on the most fundamental dis- crepancy: an abuse of the author- ity of the Atomic Energy Commis- sion. Actually, under the Adminis- tration plan the AEC would be used to contract for private power, not directly for its own needs, but for Tennessee Valley Authority custo- mers in the Memphis area. Fur- thermore, there has been no com- petitive bidding on the contract which the President has directed the AEC to enter into with the private Dixon-Yates group. Both Senators Cooper and Pas- tore noted that this contract would have the effect of rewriting by ex- ecutive action the basic functions of TVA as determined by Congress. Mr. Cooper's proposal for an al- ternative means of financing TVA's needs for additional power plants through the sale of bonds seems to us to have much merit. But any change in the scope of TVA opera- tions ought to be made openly by Congress. There is special reason to hold up any precipitate action, as Senator Cooper suggested, in order to give the new TVA admin- istrator, when he is appointed, a chance to survey the situation. An amendment by Senator An- derson would block the Dixon-Yates contract unless it were rewritten to eliminate reimbursement forI Federal income taxes and to pro- vide that power be furnished di- rectly to the Atomic Energy Com- mission. The Administration will be very foolish indeed if it permits this amendment to come to a vote. For either the Administration will lose, or it will hand the Democrats a potent campaign issue, not only in the Tennessee Valley, but else- where in the country where public power is in question. From the standpoint of the Adiministration's prestige it would be far better for the President to compromise by accepting Senator Cooper's sugges- tion that the whole matter be shelved pending study by the new head of TVA. -Washington Post AT THE MICHIGAN .. . Johnny Guitar with Joan Craw- ford and Sterling Hayden This horsopus is a fitting adjunct to the Women-in-the-World-of-Men- kick the University is on this sum- mer. It is essentially the tale of a battle between a nice bad girl (Joan Crawford) and a real louser of a "nice" girl (Mercedes Mc- Cambridge). The Americans IF ONE THINKS in broad terms of the role played by the United States since the war, three things stand out. First, the United States has done more than any other country to guarantee peace in the world. Secondly, America remains the foremost country in the w o r 1 d whose ideal, in the words of its own Constitution, is to "promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity." Thirdly, the United States has done more than any country in the world to help others and secure their health, prosperity and welfare. Do we not sometimes too easily assume that, because the United States did these things, she was bound to do them anyway? The assumption is false. It would have been, easy for all the Kennicotts to retire to their Gopher Prairies, as they did after the First World War, and there forget about all the torments and troubles in the distant continents of Europe and Asia. Or it would have been easy for America to take the MacArthur line and "go it alone." -The Manchester Guardian CURRENT MOVIE The rest of the large cast is male but they don't really do much. They either ride with the vengeful posse headed by Miss McCam- bridge ordodgebthe vengeful posse with Joan Crawford. Ostensibly the hero of the piece is Johnny Guitar. To be sure, he saves Joan Craw- ford of a death worse than fate at the hands of the posse but the episode seems to be invented only to give him some- thing to do. The rest of the time Joan is thoroughly capable of taking care of herself in the World of Men and Johnny Guitar hulks in the background, muttering something like "You want I should throw him in the river, boss?" at every cri- sis. Mercedes McCambridge is, It anything, even more at home in a man's world. She persuades a large posse of obviously reluctant men to hang our girl Joan, Emmy, as played by Miss Mo- Cambridge, is a splendid villain- ess. She is just crazy enough to account for her nastiness but not so crazy that we can forgive her for being such a pot. This filum is one of the new high-toned westerns that have recently been galloping into the wide western spaces opened up by movies like Shane and High Noon. But whereas Shane elevated the cowboy cliche to mythic stature and High Noon presented a moral delemna that could stand independ- ently of its wild and woolly locale, Johnny Guitar is content simply to take the standard bill of goods and act it to the hilt amid posh surroundings. Offered with the feature is a Disney short; a Fantasia-like treat- ment of Dorsey's quintet. It is exe- crable. --Don Malcolm t v fi -L DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETINj + MUSIC+ At Rackham Auditorium . . . Stanley Quartet; Gilbert Ross and Emil Raab, violins; Robert Courte, viola; Oliver Edel, cello. Program: Beethoven Quartet in B-flat major, Op. 18, No. 6; Villa-Lobos Quartet No. 14; Bee- thoven Quartet in A minor, Op. 132. THE STANLEY group played another of its var- ied and interestingly arranged programs last night. It gave us an opportunity to revise or con- firm certain opinions of the new Villa-Lobos work (commissioned by the University and first per- formed earlier this year), and to rehear the two Beethoven quartets which effectively epitomize the early and late styles of this composer. The Beethoven B-flat quartet is perhaps one of the most imaginative of the Opus 18 set. Its the- matic material is fresh and striking, and the whole composition is written with the assurance of one who has already attained a mastery of his craft. And, despite what you will hear in oversimplified summaries of Beethoven's creative work, there is not the least possibility of confusing this (or, for that matter, any of the other Opus 18 quartets) with those of Haydn or Mozart. There is an un- mistakeable striking out in a new direction in this quartet-a realization on Beethoven's part that it was not for him to continue a great tradition, but to form one of his own. The performance of Op. 18, No. 6 is a difficult one for me to criticize. I made the unhappy dis- covery that there are areas in Rackham Lecture Hall where one can hear comparatively little sound from the stage. I sat near the right side (facing the stage) of the aduitorium, and what I heard was a small, rather pinched sound-the aural equivalent of looking at an object through the wrong end of a telescope. This, I am sure, is the main reason why the performance seemed uncommunicative to me, though I must report that the players were rather often at odds as regards intonation. On second hearing the quartet by Villa-Lobos strikes me as a bright, unpretentious work-one which its composer probably does not distinguish much in his own mind from the other 1500 or so pieces that he (prolific fellow) has written. Ac- tually, the work has several points in its favor. The writing is clean and efficient, the sonorous tex- ture is often very effective, and the work is not The first movement of the Villa-Lobos begins with an initially striking figure consisting of a few notes tossed from one instrument to another, descending from the first violin to the cello. It's effective, but it hardly seems a strong basis for a first movement. The fact that the movement holds together somehow can probably be explained by a certain rhythmic impulse and the conciseness of the form. The second movement displays a rather amusing juxtaposition of styles. Beginning with a series of fugal entrances in a linear, chromatic idiom, it soon progresses to a fairly banal tune in romantic style, by way of some totally irrelevant passages in parallel fifth. A rather curious mis- mash, to say the least. The third movement makes use of jagged, leaping melodic patterns, with ef- fective string writing-the sort of thing that al- most passes for real musical vitality. The final movement says little that hasn't been said before, but is 'a pleasant conclusion to the work. The playing (heard from a more advantageous posi- tion in the auditorium) was a real joy, and came close to compensating for the shortcomings of the work. The quartet played with technical aplomb, and just the sort of vigor that the piece needs. The A minor Qaurtet of Beethoven which con- cluded the program is, of course, one of the great ones. When I first heard it several years ago it struck me as a very impressive work which some- how managed to get along without any themes at all. It take several hearings to be convinced that Beethoven lavished some of his greatest .thematic inspiration on this quartet. The ideas from first to last are of the highest order, and the work as a whole is full of the sounds that the deaf Beethoven heard during his last years, and which no other composer has ever approached. There may be greater music--in any event there is other music which I myself like as well. But Beethoven in his last quartets (with the A minor as perhaps the supreme example) reached a certain intensity which goes beyond the intensity all music has to some degree. It is solid, well-written music (as is all of Beethoven's work), but with a certain qual- ity that simply cannot be verbalized. Beethoven could not have verablized it himself. If he could, he might have been a writer instead of a composer. But every time we hear this music, we come closer to its essence, and to hear it is something to be accounted as a privilege. 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. WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1954 VOL. LXIV, No. 218 Notices The University of Michigan Blood Bank Club has arranged to have a Red Cross mobile unit at the Student Health Service on August 4, 1954, to take care of staff members who wish to contri- bute a pint of blood and thus become members of the Blood Bank Club with the~privilege of drawing upon the bank for themselves and their immediate families in the event blood is needed. The unit will be at the Health Service from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon and from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Staff members who are interested should contact the Personnel Office, Room 3026, Ext. 2619. Students intending to take the admis- sion Test for Graduate Study in Busi- ness on August 14' should leave their names at the Information Desk in Room 150, School of Business Administration, no later than Wednesday, July 28. Law School Admission Test: Applica- tion blanks for the August 7 administra- tion of thea baw School Admission Test are now available at 110 Rackham Bujild- ing. Application blanks are due in Princeton, N.J. not later than July 28, 1954. The Naval Aviation Cadet Procre- ment Officer will be available in the Main Lobby of Mason Hall between the hours of 9 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. on 22 and 23 July 1954 to disseminate information on the Naval Aviation Cadet Training Program. Students are cordially invited to ask questions about the opportunities of Naval Aviation. 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 Health. 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. PERSONNEL REQUESTS Sutherland Paper Co., Kalamazoo, Mich., is interested in hiring a woman graduate to work in its Publications Dept. The applicant should be interest- ed in news writing and should be able to do some creative thinking and writ- ing. For additional information con- cerning this and other employment op- portunities, contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Linguistics Institute Luncheon. "Prob- lems in the Study of Mass Communica- tions." Morris Janowitz, Associate Pro- fessor of Sociology. 12:10 P.M., Michigan League. Speech Assembly, auspices of the De- partment of Speech. "A School Admin- istrator Looks at Speech Education." Paul W. Briggs, Superintendent, Bay City Public Schools. 3:00 P.M., Rack- ham Amphitheater. Near East Lecture Series, auspices of Irene Rice Pereira, artist, New York City. 4:15 P.M., Auditorium A, Angell Hall. Panel discussion: "The Artist's Val- ues and Perspectives." James B. Wal- lace, Assistant Professor of Music Liter- ature, moderator; Henry D. Aiken, Pro- fessor of Philosophy, Harvard Univer- sity; Leo Goldberg, Professor of Astron- omy; Irene Rice Pereira, artist, New York City; Aline B. Saarinen, Art Critic, New York Times; Richard Wilt, Assist- ant Professor of Drawing and Painting. 7:45 P.M., Auditorium A, Angell Hall. The Economics Clam Chowder and Marching Society: Professor Gregory Grossman will be theguest speaker of the Economic Department's graduate discussion group this Wednesday. His topic is: "Allocation of Capital Re- sources in a Planned Economy Experi- encing Rapid Economic Growth." An in- formal discussion will follow. All inter. ested in the problems of economic plan- ning or underdeveloped nations are in- vited. Refreshments. Wednesday, July 21. 8:00 p.m. Rackham Bldg.: West Con- ference Room. Academic Notices Seminar in Lie Algebras: Will meet every Wednesday and Friday afternoon at 3 p.m. in Room 3001 Angell Hall. Doctoral Examination for Anna Bar- bara Carlin, Education; thesis: "An Historical Investigation of the Rela- tionship between Scientific Research and Changes in Methods and Materials for Reading," Thursday, July 22, East Council Room, Rackham Bldg., at 2:15 p.m. Chairman, G. M. Wingo. Concerts Carillon Recital: 7:15 Thursday even- ing, July 22, by Percival Price, Univer- sity Carillonneur. The program will con- sist of compositions and arrangements for carillon by Leen 't Hart, presently Municipal Carillonneur of Delft, Leid- en and Amersfoort, Netherlands, and Director of the Carillon School of Amersfoort. It will open with Suite for Carillon, and continue with Prelude, Song and Fugue on "Vie dat zichaelf verheft temet," five folk songs, varia- tions on "De winter is vergangen," and March for carillon. Student Recital: Betty Rice, student of piano with John Koilen, will per- form works by Bach, Beethoven, De- bussy, and Brahms, at 8:30 Thursday evening, July 22, in Auditorium A, An- gell Hall. The program is given in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Music, and will be open to the public. Exhibitions Clements Library. Women and Woman 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. Th. University in 1904. Museum of Art. Three women Paint- ers. Events Today Kaffeestunde: A German conversation group will meet informally every Wed- nesday at 3:15 p.m. in the south cafe- teria of the Michigan Union. All per- sons interested in speaking and hear- ing German are cordially invited to at- tend. Professors W. A. Reichart, A. J. Gaiss, and H. Bergholz will be present at the meeting on July 21. Lutheran Student Association-Hill and Forest Ave. Wednesday Tea and f Senate Inventor Sen. Ralph Flanders of Vermont was visited by many of his Re- publican colleagues last week who pleaded with him not to put the Republican Party on the spot by 4 4 4 i IIA J a vote on McCarthy. Among those who called on him were Senators Saltonstall of Massachusetts, Ives of New York, and Margaret Chase Smith of Maine. The Vermonter, who has spent' all his life as an engineer-indus- trialist, remained adamant. He ,---i even outlined to senators the speech he planned to make and told them that he was thinking of - releasing the speech 24 hours in . publish it in advance of delivery. Sixty-Fourth Year His idea, he explained, was so that Edited and managed by students of senators could read his speech be- the University of Michigan under the fore the debate opened and would authority of the Board in Control of forethe ebat opned nd wuldStudent Publications. have a chance to understand it. _StudentPublications. "That's a u n i q u e idea," ex- Editorial Staff claimed Senator Smith of Maine. Dianne AuWerter.Managing Editor "Why do you do that?" Becky Conrad...r........Night Editor "Well, I am an inventor," re- Rona Friedman..........Night Editor plied Flanders. "I have 29 patents. Wally Eberhard.........Night Editor And I see no reason why some- Russ AuWerter.........Night Editor thing new should not be invented Sue Garfield........Women's Editor fthg nshudeo.b"nvned Hanley Gurwin.........Sports Editor for the Senate. Jack Horwitz......Assoc. Sports Editor McCarthy Merry-Go-Round E. J. Smith........Assoc. Sports Editor Believe it or not, but McCarthy Business Stafft has suddenly become camera-shy. Dick Aistrom.......Business Manager After years of hugging the klieg Lois Pollak......Circulation Managert lights, he now goes out the back Bob Kovaks......Advertising Manager door to avoid TV cameramen..1 This is because publicity advisers Telephone NO 23-24-1 have warned Joe that his person- ality came over badly on TV, that Memrnber r- I f ,