THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, Y.23.1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. MAY 22.. I9~2 NY, 4k lvN Soviet Farming Lags Behind A RTS and IL ETT IE R S with MARJORIE BRAHMS Charles Hohman cies on very little knowledge of the needs and psychology of the farmer, Prof. Harris continued. The new plans called for increased prices paid to the farmer, higher capital investment Into the agri- cultural sphere, greater production and use of fertilizers, and train- ing of agricultural specialists, he said. More recently emphasis has been placed upon the development of new lands for cultivation and the increased production of corn, Prof. Harris explained. Assembly, IQC Select Fall Orientation Leaders Historical measures- He outlined the historical mea- Assembly Association and Inter- sures taken by the Russian Com- quadrangle Council announced the p.m. in the Multipurpose Room munist government to meet the names of students who will serve they will be given more specific agricultural problems. "Collectivi- as orientation leaders for fresh- h.i tnegarng thei ie zation, begun in 1928, tended to men during next fall's Orientation rIntation regas for incoming w-s. decrease the total output of the Week. There will be a meeting for en are the following: Doreen Dubritsky, farms but increase the urban de- them on Thursday, May 24 at 7:15 '65N; Ruth Ann Fidler, '64 Dent. Hyg.; Margaret Ozer, '65; Alice Ashmore, '65N; Claudia Chapman, '65; ShirleydMargiat, '65N; Nancy Schller, '65; Judith Dar- vill, '65; Janet Weiss, '65A&D; Elleva Davidson, '65; Elaine Gabrenya, '65; Sandra Panozzo, '65N; Patricia Hart- wig, '65; Karen Johnson, '65; Maxine A vaiableLoomis, '65N; Marilyn Case, '64; Carol "OsrIOfl Phinney, '65; Joyce Prosser, '64; Barbara Mager, '65; Claudia Varblow, '65; Bar- bara Hart, '65; Linda Hinton, '65; Bar- bara Johnson, '65; Sally Nash, '65; Pris- cilla Keyes, '65; Sandra Sperry, '65; Mar- garet Chamberlain, '65N; Janet Linge- mann, '65; Ronnie Nadler, '65N; Dale Varie y Sh w M CBlakmoreC, '65; Susan Cameron, '64 Pharm.; Cristine Link, '65; Sandra Pur- sel, '64; Margaret Ryan, '65; Catherine chill '65; Elizabeth Weber, '65; Mar- garet Gray, '65; Margaret Herriman, '64; FRC. Ellen Calahan, '63; and Mary Knott, I '64. Orientation leaders for incoming men are: John Curry, '64; William Knight, Stephen Schechter, '65; Ted Mullett, '64; John Paton, '65; James Patton, '65E; Saul Schultz, '65; James Dressel, r65E; George Maoulis,7165E; Gregory Lehmann, '65E; Gerald Solensky, 66 A&D Jeffrey Fortune, T6E; Melvyn Thomsen, '64E; Nick Pisor, '65E; Douglas Taylor, '65E; Edward Wagenveld, '65; Louis Banciu, 65E; Gary Bart, '64E; Michael Donahue, 64; Lee Pearlmutter, '65A&D; Gregory Robbins, Timothy Fox, '65E; Thomas Gregory, '63E; David Pal- r! /ymer, '65E; John Tyson, 64E; Harvey Levin, '64; Kenneth Locke,1'65; Edward Malinak, '65; Gerald Hanson, '65; Ron- ad Kline, '64E; Clifford Kuhl, '63E; Robert C. Lucas, '65; Paul Christensen, Uni n S ud nt ffies'65; Robert v Elledge, '6E; EdwardH- duke, '65; Everett Woods, '65; Ronald Brender, '65E; Fred James, '65; Frederick Jardon, '65; Robert Lasken, Donald Fil- ip, '65; R. Thomas Johnson, '63BAd; W ednesda3 5and Leonard Weinstein, 65. Orientation leaders from Greene House, East Quadrange and al South Quadrangle Houses will be notified by their respective house presidents. ~e4 Honors Assembly... BATNV. V. McNitt, chairman of the board of the McNaught Syndicate, 11 400 East Shore Drive Inc., will address the journalism AT WHITEMORE LAKE honors and awards assembly at 3 10 miles north of Ann Arbor by way of U. S. 23 p.m. today in Aud. A. HUAC... Frank Wilkenson and Earl Bra- den will speak on "The First THE BEST SAND BEACH Amendment and HUAC" at 8 p.m. today in the Multi-purpose Rm. of the UGLI. The program is be- WI Ning sponsored by the Young So- - -- cialists and Voice Political Party. SOUTHERN MICHIGAN The beach Hopwoods-..-- The annual spring presenattion is now open of Hopwood awards in drama, es- say, poetry and fiction will be held today at 4:15 p.m. in Rackham HIG H SLIDES * HIGH DIVE Aud. Prof. Mark Scherer of the DIVING BENCHES " 130 PICNIC BENCHES English department at the Univer- sity of California, author of sever- Complete line of BATHING SUITS for al short novels, will speak on "The Burdens of Biography." men, women, and children on sale. * REFRESHMENT STAND Bike Storage... Students will be able to store their bicycles this summer in the Campus Bike and Toy Center due to an arrangement made between 4 Interquadrangle Council and the Center.. The bikes will be picked up be- tween June 4-12 without charge at previously scheduled times in front of the dorms and quads. SUMMER STORAGE including F LT free lubrication Beaver's Bike Shop 605 Church We will cuddle your bikes ) ASH FOR-TURKISH STUDEN and the MICHIGA . AN FXHIRIT OF Charles Hohman, star of the Ann Arbor Drama Season's pro- duction of "No Time For Ser- geants," has had a colorful career, beginning as a performer on a showboat that toured the Missis- sippi River. While in the Army, Hohman was a member of actor Maurice Evan's entertainment group composed of 62 G.I.'s who toured the Pacific area. The troop performed Shakes- pearean plays and comedies. "That was when the original 'G.I. Hamlet' started, and it was later put on on Broadway. The lines were Shakespeare's but the costuming was different. The men wore fatigues and the women wore gingham dresses," Hohman re- called. Replaces Griffith Hohman replaced Andy Griffith, the originator of Will Stockdale in "No Time for Sergeants," for a Broadway run for 1,818 perform- ances. After that, the show went on the road, doing a bus and truck tour of small towns. Hohman does the role of Will Stockdale differently from Andy Griffith's interpretation of the role. "I keep thinking of a boy in the Army with me from Georgia, who was simple, naive and home- spun. Stockdale does his own type Gale Reports 'Urgent Nee Of Prayers The stabilizing influence of prayer is urgently needed in to- day's world, Mary Wellington Gale, a teacher of Christian Sci- ence, Said Monday. "The farther the physicists penetrate outer space, the greater the domination achieved on the basis of the accomplishments, the more urgent becomes the need of mankind to find that divine love is the only motivating force," Mrs. Gale declared. In her address on the subject "Christian Science: Its Stabilizing Influence in a Changing World," Mrs. Gale emphasized the under- standing of God as principle as well as love. The understanding of God as principle is a stabilizing influence in one's experience, she said. Mrs. Gale explained that "one of the greatest contributions to humanity that Christian Science has made is the light it throws on the subject of prayer." She de- scribed a number of incidents of spiritual healing, including several from her own experience. CHARLES HOHMAN ... veteran actor of thinking; he believes everything that he is told and doesn't dream that anyone could take advantage of him," Hohman explained. "I feel the role of Will Stockdale has stereotyped me. People auto- matically think of me as a hill- billy," Hohman said. Trend to Road-Show Hohman, a veteran road-show performer, finds a growing trend in the United States toward road- shows, especially in the small towns. Actor's Equity has new rules over bus and truck travel to take care of the growing trend, he noted. Hohman cited President Kenne- dy's interest in the cultural side as "unique." He is one of the first top executives who has showed any interest in the theatre since Lin- coln, and it proved fatal to him, Hohman quipped. He sees this presidential interest as a "great shot in the arm for theatre." Speaking about the Drama Sea- son presentation of "No Time for Sergeants" Hohman noted that the cast, composed of eight people from the Broadway cast and 12 people from the Ann Arbor and University communities, have had one week to rehearse. OSA Picks Up 200 Bicycles, Seeks Owners About 200 bicycles disappeared from illegal locations yesterday morning as the Office of Student Affairs followed up its blunt new warning signs with action. The signs, warning that improp- erly parked bikes "will be im- pounded," were placed in areas of the worst congestion in front of the UGLI and around various liv- ing units. Owners of the impounded bicy- cles will be notified by mail as soon as the process of identifica- tion is complete. Bikes will be kept in the storage bldg., on E. Wash- ington between Fletcher and For- est, and may be reclaimed upon presentation of proof of owner- ship and payment of a $3.00 stor- age fee. "Well, I know my bike was parked illegally," one errant own- er said, "but I didn't expect to have it impounded at 8 a.m. Dean Notes Big Factors For Health MIAMI - Communication, pop- ulation, economics and interna- tional cooperation are four major factors affecting the health of the Western Hemisphere, Dean Myron Wegman of the public health school told the National Tubercu- losis Association Monday. Dr. Wegman said, "modern air travel makes traditional methods of quarantine seem futile. A win- ter epidemic of influenza in mid- July threatens an earlier and more serious start to an epidemic in the United States." The Western Hemisphere is growing faster than any part of the world, he noted. However, dis- ease keeps the possibility for a higher standard of living distant, he added. There is a nurgent need for in- tensive research on "population planning" which will consider re- ligion, social behavior, political im- plications and other factors, Dr. Wegman urged. Pointing to growing new inter- est in the interrelationships of economics and disease, Dr. Weg- man, in describing a malaria erad- ication project, warned "that malaria eradication may not be a completely good thing from an economic standpoint. The econ- omic readjustment may not be able to cope with so many more mouths to feed." Spuhler Cites New Changes In Structure "Animals assigned to the same family are not necessarily closely related just because their common ancestors may have lived 25 mil- lion years ago," Prof. James N. Spuhler, chairman of the anthro- pology department, said Monday. Commenting on a New York Times article which reported find- ings presented at a meeting of the New York Academy of Sciences, Prof. Spuhler said that because of new evidence on chromosome structure and recent bio-chemical approaches, anthropologists are beginning to change several ani- mal classifications. Evidence presented by one sci- entist linking gorillas, chimpan- zees and man in the same family was considered by Prof. Spuhler to be valid. The scientist based his finding on the stricture of blood protein in the gorilla, chim- panzee, and man. Prof. Spuhler said that this method is preferable to comparing bone structure. Police Arrest 16 On Morals Charge Ann Arbor police have arrested 16 persons as alleged homosexuals on the University campus in the past month. The arrests, by plainclothes of- ficers on special assignment, were all made in men's rest rooms in various University buildings. Most of those arrested are students; two are faculty members. The 16 cases are being processed by Ann Arbor Circuit and Munici- pal, courts. All have made state- ments admitting attempting to procure an act of gross indecency. Dial 8-6416 "ONE OF BERGMAN'S MOST POWERFUL FILMS! Harriet Anderson is spellbinding!" -Life Magazine ACADEMY AWARD BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR FRIDAY "LAST DAY AT MARIENBAD" ---..-- ENDS THURSDAY "A powerful personal experience -Makes one's senses reel! Crowther-N. Y. Times ttpOWERFUL"s N7 A G. PA FOR ALL YOUR FORMAL NEEDS! Q TUXEDO'S , WH ITE DINNER JACKETS WEDDINGS - PROMS - DANCES "SPECIAL STUDENT RATES" RUSSELL'S TUXEDO RENTAL SERVICE 1230 Packard NO 5-4549 Dial 2-6264 Doors open 12:45 TRA TH URSDAY l f l MARY WELLINGTON GALE ... religious teacher OUTDOORS: To Present Band Show The University Symphony Band and Varsity Band will hold their annual outdoor concert, "On the Diag," at 7:15 p.m. today. In case of rain, the concert will be heldsat 8 p.m. in Hill Aud. Under the direction of William D. Revelli, the Symphony Band will perform Bach's "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor," "Elsa's Pro- cession to the Cathedral," from "Lohengrin" by Wagner, George Gershwin's "Summertime," and "Finale from Symphony No. 4" by Tchaikovsky. "The Bugler's Holi- day" by LeRoy Anderson will fea- ture a cornet trio. The Varsity Band will combine with the Symphony Band in the second half of the program. The cornet trio will present "Michigan March." NEED MONEY? See "Help Wanted" Classified "ARE YOU A BALL OF FIRE?" R JOANNA MOORE scme*8 4 JOHN FANTE & EDMUND MORRIS eua , utxou sa« , ADULT ENTERTAINMENT I i Democratic Socialist Club and VOICE DAY OF PRAYER FOR PEACE - FOR ALL PEOPLE OBSERVANCE of a "Day of Prayer For the Peace of All People," is being sponsored by the Prayer Fellowship of the First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenow. You are welcome to pray and meditate in this sanctuary at any time from 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Leaflets will be available to guide you in your meditation, if you so desire. EVERYONE - students, persons of any faith, townspeople or strangers are encouraged to pray for peace daily and especially to join us in this concerted prayer for the peace of all peoples and all nations, on May 23. -present FRANK WILKINSON CARL BRADEN Hurry- Last 2 days (J =~~T MAT.$1.00 EVES: $1.25 discussing STS ASSOCIATION kN UNION present OL-PAINTINGS Academy Award winner! NO RESERVED SEATS! Maximilian Schell E xclusive specia tEegageent l e t : ria I 3 PERFORMANCES DAILY! Best creenpay lnpcor Tranv .urt l tr Rihar, Ilart The First Amendment, Civil Liberties' and HUAC I Iledona fliatih ainand m2iillni lrhi I I I II i