THE MICHIGAN DAILY College Roundup By RASHEL LEVINE CAMBRIDGE-Despite the fear of the Dallas Alumni Chapter of Harvard University that a debate with the Negro Bishop College would hurt the prestige of the university, the debate was held. SAN FRANCISCO-Eight-five thousand dollars will be appro- priated to San Francisco State College this year for civil defense. The appropriation was granted by. the State College Trustees. ATHENS, Ga.-The non-affil- iated men of the University of Georgia have unanimously voted to abolish class officers. They are refusing to offer a slate of officers for the spring election because they don't feel that the student council officers that they vote for are an effective group. * * * CAMBRIDGE-Fifteen law stu- dents from Harvard, Yale and Columbia will work on a civil rights project in Washington and Greenville and Jackson, Miss. this summer. The project is financed from private funds and is being organized by William L. Higgs, former attorney to James Mere- dith. * * * SWARTHMORE-Fourteen stu- dents from Swarthmore college were arrested for demonstrating for civil rights in Cambridge, Mr. SEATTLE-The University of Washington is building the na- tion's first mental retardation cen-. ter. The center will serve the whole state and will focus on re- search. * * * ITHACA-The Cornell Daily Sun, the newspaper of Cornell Univer- sity, has printed a guide to courses entitled Insight. The guide is bas- ed on opinions expressed in ques- tionnaires filled out by students. Reds Model Free System Soviet economic planners have begun to model some of their ideas on the free enterprise system, Prof. Ross J. Wilhelm of the business school said recently. The current debate in Russia over prices, profits, competition and the role of the consumer stems from trying to reach high levels of economic growth as well as try- ing to provide a wide range of consumer goods, he said. Russian planners are seeking to make their managers and laborers work hard by offering incentive bonuses if production quotas are exceeded. However, this system has gener ated a number of problems which some economists feel could be solved by "capitalist" means, Prof. Wilhelm added. One of these problems is lack of consumer demand for products which planners have ordered de- veloped. This problem could be solved, according to "free enter- prise" theorists, by instituting a free price system. This will force factories to cut production of un-' wanted goods because of the loss involved in producing them. A second problem is that of re- sistance of managers and workers to changes in the production proc- ess, he commented. Proponents of free enterprise hold that the in- troduction of a profit system would force producers to modernize or be forced out of business. Triangle Reveals New Membership Triangles, the junigr men's en- gineering honorary, last night se- lected 10 new members for the 1963-64 academic year. Those tap- ped were ]Douglas Boven, Stephen Ellis, Sandoe A. Frecsko, Dennis Hanink, Michael Henderson, Ger- ald Mader, Daniel Patt; Duane L. Reppert and David Sanborn. OPENING TONIGH T UNIVERSITY PLAYERS, DEPT. OF SPEECH PRESENT f A eand CGi raudoux's THE. I A MAD' iO ,A ILLOT with Prof; Claribel Baird in the title role 8:00 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre performances thru Saturday . $150, 1.00 Fr. & Sat. 25c additional Box Office 12:30-8:00 daily BEST SEATING TONIGHT i and announcing . . . Regents Announce Changes in Faculty Assigments rved as assistant professor of for Prof. Edward A. Carr, Jr., of ,mance languages. Then, in 3928, the pharmacy college, from May 1 e accepted an associate,.profes- to Oct. 31, 1964, to work in the orship in the English department. thyroid laboratory of the medical he University appointed him pro- clinic of Dr. Alfred Vanotti at the essor of English in 1936. University of Lausanne. Leave of absence for James A. Leaves of Absence Cohn of the mathematics depart- Prof. Marston Bates of the zool- ment, for the coming year, to ac- gy department, granted sick leave cept a visiting appointment at ntil approximately May 1. Queen Mary College in the Univer- Sabbatical leave for the second stiy of London. emester, next year, was granted Sick leave for Prof. .Nelson W: >r Wilbur C. Bigelow of the en- Eddy of the Romance languages ineering college, to complete a department to the end of the cur- aanuscript for his textbook "Cry- rent semester. ;allography and the Structure of Leave of absence for Prof. Law- olids." / rence C. Eggan of the mathematics Sabbatical leave was granted for department for the coming year i'of. Harold J. Blumenthal of the to accept a visiting appointment iedical school from Sept. 1, 1963 at the University of London. hrough Feb. 29, 1964, to pursue Sabbatical leave for Prof. Jere is research at St. George's Hos- E. Goyan of the pharmacy college ital Medical School in London. for the second semester, 1963-64, Leave of absence was granted to pursue his barbiturate drug >r Prof. R. Lee Brummet of the studies at the Royal Danish School usiness administration school for of Pharmacy in Copenhagen. he coming year to accept an ap- Extension of leave of absence for ointment with the Ford Founda- Lewis Henry Hodges of the educa- ion to serve as a consultant to tion school for the coming semes- he National Institute of Manage- ter to complete his work as Indus- ient Development in Cairo. trial Advisor-Apprenticeship Coor- Sabbatical leave was granted dinator with the AID in Sao Paulo. Dial 2-6264 3 Performances Daily I:00 p.m., 4:30 p.m., and 8:00 p.m. Leave of absence for Prof. Ga- briel Isakson of the engineering college for the coming year, to do research in the aerospace indus- try. Sick leave for Prof. Eleanor M. King of therpublic health school retroactive from Feb. 19 to March 25. Extension of leave of absence for Prof. James M. Kister of the mathematics deparmtent to con- tinue his research at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. Maternity leave of absence for Margaret Walker Kraft of the Medical School through June 8. Leave of absence for Prof. Wil- liam J. LeVeque of the mathe- matics department for the coming year, to accept a visiting profes- sorship at the University of Colo- rado. Leave of absence for Associate Dean James H. Robertson of the See REGENTS, Page 8 in the AlR-CONDITIONED Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre PLAYBI.LL SUMMER 19631 June 26-29-Rodgers and Hammerstein's SOUTH PACIFIC with Prof. Ralph Herbert of the Metropolitan Opera July 10-13-William Gibson's TWO FOR THE SEESAW July 17-20-George Bernard Shaw's ANDROCLES AND THE LION July 31-Aug. 3-Dorothy & Michael Blankfort's MONIQUF. Aug. 7-10-Opera Dept., School of Music in A ' OPERA, to be selected -w andP GB.4 FALLSPRNG PAYBLL '3-6 LIMITED ENGAGEMENT LAST 3 DAYS ! I Winner of 2 Academy Awards ! "Best Picture of The Year !" -Selected by the National Board of Review DARRYL FZANV(CKS I TiI I 5 DAY with 42 International Starsl SASt'Do ai ewor CORNEUS RYAN " RrEAs eD ,r 20th cvtUkOx SCHEDULE OF PRICES: Adult Matinees 'til 5 p.m,............... $1.00 Adult Evenings .... .' ................... $1.50 I uess Have to Hide! All I did was wear my new A-T RACERS to school. You'd think I was a star, the way the girls mob me. I'm not conceited .,.1. know they're RA CERS fans / Oct. 16-19-Moliere's THE MISER Nov. 13-16--Jean Anouilh's THIEVE'S CARNIVAL Dec. 4-7-Oscar Wilde's THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST Feb. 26-29-Max Frisch's BEIDERMANN AND THE FIREBUGS Apr. 2-4- PREMIERE PRODUCTION of a new play dRa!gm DIAL 8-6416 Apr. 22-25-Shakespeare's : . .. Y . ... 1 . . Y' ."r 1 . .r " s S th In the Red Seal Classic. Seri w s the Inoomopsah.h FONTEYN TROYA L ies ! HENRY V 11 May 8-13-Opera Dept., School of Music in AN OPERA, to be selected PLAN AHEAD-order forms for both >:': ."r I 4 I I