beadlong intensity .. .rousing success" 1 h A E d M a u c i s -Neiw York Time reanrDsies fIA RF lflFTD r e- a ce e crb sYR Term, For Contest . Joins Creal Due Today By ADELE BECKER The final deadline for eligible Roger Mahey. '61. resigned last freshmen to enter manuscripts in night from his position as chair- the Jule and Avery Hopwood man of the Public Relations Corn- freshman literary contest is 4 p.m. mittee of the Young Republicans today. Club to head a local Republican Any freshman regularly en- committee supporting Cecil Creal rolled in English 23 or 24 in the for mayor of Ann Arbor. literary college is qualified to en- In a special meeting of the ter competition. Executive Committee of the YR's. Entries in the contest may be Mahey was told that it is unethical in any of three areas: essay, fic- for a responsible member of the tion and poetry. Prizes of $50, $30 club to support one candidate in and $20 in each field will be preference toanother. awarded to thewinners, who will It was decided that Mahey could be announced early in the second maintain one of his two positions semester. but not both. He elected to retain Manuscripts should be left in the office of president of the the Hopwood Room, 1006 Angell Young Republican Committee sup- Hall, by contestants. Three type- porting Creal. written copies of each manuscript No Animosity Involved should be submitted, bound in a Hank Kerr, '59. said that "Ma- folder with title, category and hey was not forced to resign nor pen name of the writer on the was there any personal animosity cover. involved," He also stated that the With his entry, each contestant action was in accordance with the must hand in an envelope bear- club's policy of complete neutrality ding his pen name on the outside before the primary which is to be and enclosing his real name, his held in February. address and telephone number. Due to Mahey's importance in A manuscript that has received the organization, he pointed out, a prize in the freshman competi- it would appear as if the YR's also tion will not be eligible for a were supporting Creal. He added minor award in the spring Hop- that "the club wants to retain wood contest. complete impartiality in the case of both candidate House and jean a la The president of the YR's, Harry Scott, stated, "I personallyTan feel that University clubs have no _1 right to take part in city affairs no more than the city has the right to tell the University stu- dents who to elect to SGC." Mahey Supports Creal Mahey disclosed that Creal, "a personal friend of the family," had asked him to lead this committee. Mahey added that he is "in full support of Creal and will aid him in any way possible." The com- mittee includes about 100 mem- bers of the Young Republicans. Once the primaries are over Ma- hey will be eligible to re-assume his position in the YR's. The ex- chairman said that in all prob- ability he will do so. Performance Jean Langlais, a composer and organist from Paris, will perform at 4:15 p.m. Friday at Hill Aud. Among the selections played by Langlais will be "Fugue in E flat" by Bach, "Les Mages" by Seth Bingham and "Final from First .Symphony" by Louis Vierne. The program will be conclud- ed by Langlais playing a few of his own compositions, such as "Scherzando" and "Pastiecio." When not on concert tours he is the organist at the Basilica of Ste. Clotilde in Paris. Maxwell Calls Tools Indication Of Ancient Eskimo Ancestor Flint tools found off the north- west coast of Greenland have in- dicated the presence of the an- cient Dorset man, the fore-runner of the modern central Eskimo. This information was disclosed' by Prof. Moreau S. Maxwell, of the anthropology department at Michigan State University, who spoke here on behalf of the Ann Arbor Society of the Archaeologi- cal Institute of America. Professor Maxwell has explored the area around Lake Hazen on Ellesmere Island, where he found these remnants of past life. Dorset Evidence There is a possibility, he said, that these remnants were caused by the Dorsets because of the type of tools and house foundations found, but, he continued, it is dif- ficult to state positively that the Dorsets left them because these could Just as possibly be the rem- nants of the more recent Thule Tribe. The Dorset way of life, he ex- plained, has continued up to the Twentieth Century, but the Dorset man became extinct in 1200 A.D. Prof. Maxwell noted that scien- tists believe the Dorsets are de- scendants of the Paleo-Eskimo, who migrated to North America from Siberia to hunt musk ox and seal. Find Primitive Spears This is substantiated, he pointed out, by the finding of numerous primitive spears and harpoons used in their unique Maupoc method of hunting in which he hypothesized that the Dorset would sit motionless for as long as eight hours in 40 degree below zero temperatures waiting for the seal to s come up through his breathing hole for air, and then would spear him. Whoever the inhabitants of the area, he concluded they must have been present when the tempera- tures were more moderate, leaving in time to escape the harsh win- ters. To Give Talk On Japanese Prof. George R. Storry, of St. Antony's College, Oxford Univer- sity, will give a lecture on "The Super-Patriots of Pre-War Japan" at 4:15 p.m. today in Aud. A, An- gell Hall. The talk is being sponsored by the Far Eastern languages and literatures department. PROF. MOREAU MAXWELL ... discusses Dorset man NGRID BERGMAN CURT JURGENS Tr ROBERT DONAT SE J~ er , .q L r I BENEATH THE BAFFLEGAB and other folderol, we at Student Book Exchange are seriously attempting to add a touch of class to an otherwise bleak business transaction. Our two consumer collection posts, in the Fishbowl and SAB Basement, are far from dismal spots, for I1 II