THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRII. : THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRHI student Picketing Marks leaction to Cuban Invasion (UPS)-Petitions, picketing and rallies marked student reaction to last week's unsuccessful invasion of Cuba.a A group of Swarthmore College, students circulated a petitipn -to about 1,000 students at 300 col-3 leges and universities protesting United States "intervention" ina Cuba. It also expressed a desire to1 establish "avenues of communica- tion among students who are of? similar persuasion to co-ordinate activities regarding these issues." The group said it was not neces- sarily pro-Castro, but that it merely advocated a policy to end American intervention into Cuban affairs. Heckle Rally Members of anti-Castro groups heckled a rally protesting Ameri- can action in Cuba at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin. The rally, sponsored by Socialist Club, was called to present a view which the group believes has had little airing in the nation's press. However, the meeting was dis- rupted by 20 marchers who entered the theatre where the rally was held chanting "Cuba ail Russia no!" Chaos Reigns For a half hour, the Wisconsin Daily Cardinal reported, chaos reigned as the anti-Castroitei Road Projects Top Program Two major street projects will top Ann Arbor's second six-year capital improvements program, costing $9 million, the City Plan- ning Commission announced yes- terday. Planning commission officials said that Huron Parkway must be considered the most important highway project entirely under- taken by the city. It will extend from Platt Rd. between Packard Street and Washtenaw Avenue through North Campus to U.S. 23 north of the city. Engineering surveys and land acquisition are now proceeding and construction will get under way in 1963. Completion of the $2.25 million project will require ap- proval of a bond issue by the voters. A voted bond issue will also be necessary for the Fuller Road pro- ject. However, the University will pay an undetermined share of the total cost. Improvements to Fuller Road will provide an alternate access to the Eastbelt roadway (now under construction) and will facilitate travel between central and north campus. 'U' Glee Club Elects Heads heckled, booed and waved p- cards. One group unfurled a ban- ner proclaiming "Remember Hun- gary." A compromise was finally reached turning the rally into a debate between the groups pro- and anti-United States interven- tion. The socialists also ciruclated two petitions; one urging the United States to enforce its Neutrality Act and the other endorsing a letter sent to President John F. Kennedy by Norman Thomas and Eric Fromm. Violence Marks Rally Heckling also marked a Fair Play for Cuba Committee rally at the University of Minnesota. Ac- cording to the Minnesota Daily, violence was sparked when John Greenagel, a sophomore opposing the committee, attempted to speak at the rally. An effigy depicting both Cuban Premier Fidel Castro and the fair play committee was later found hanging in front of a university building. Petitions Out For Council Committees Student Government Council Ad- ministrative Vice-President John Martin, '62, announced yesterday that petitions for seats on five SGC committees are now avail- able. Petitions, which may be picked up on the first floor of the SAB, are due May 8. Positions open include a chap.- manship and three one-year terns on Cinema Guild Board, the group which selects the movies to be shown at Cinema Guild. Members of this committee are guests of the sponsoring organization at any showing. Five one-year positions are open on the Human Relations Board, a committee that works with dis- crimination cases on campus and "encourages better human ref a- tions in the University and Ann Arbor communities." There are also seven one-year openings on the Student Relations Board, which develops activities designed to arouse the interest and participation of students and alumni. Four other one-year terms are: chairman of the Early Registra- tion Pass committee, which hears requests from students desiring "out of order" registration, Stu- dent Book Exchange Manager, who earns $100 each semester and two assistant managerships which pay $50 per semester. Group Gives Russian Grants The Carnegie Corporation has granted $10,750 to the University's Russian department to provide partial scholarships for 20 stu- dents to study Russian in a 10 week course this summer. Three University students, Anita Lieberman, '63, Frank Wordick, '63, and Bonnie Roeber, '64, will participate in the program. As part of an experiment to de- termine how much Russian can be learned in such a program, undergraduates who were chosen from colleges and universities all over the United States will spend six weeks in an intensive third- year Russian course at the Uni- versity before going to Russia fori a month. In order to determine the pro- gress of the students as well as the success of the whole projects, three sets of tests will be given to the participants in the program. The first series of exams will be taken this summer when the students first arrive here, another after the initial six weeks of training, and a final testing in New York after the month in Russia. By FRED ULEMAN This year over 1,500 doctors are enrolled in University post-grad- uate medicine courses which are guided by the philosophy that "education is a lifelong process and the best medical knowledge comes from actual practice," said direc- tor Dr. John Sheldon. Clinics and lectures are readily available to any Michigan doctor, although there have been partici- Critic To Speak On Artistic Puns Katherine Kuh, art critic of the Saturday Review, will speak at 4:15 p.m. today in the Architec- ture Auditorium on "Visual Puns and Abbreviations in Present-Day Art." CONTINUOUS EDUCATION: Doctors Study Post-Graduate Medicine pants from 46 of the 50 states, Canada, Mexico, India, Australia and Africa. The post-graduate medicine pro- gram offers courses for doctors in 15 rural Michigan areas as well as refresher courses whicn last from 1-5 days and courses for highly specialized techniques which may last as long as 6 years. The program, instituted in 1927, draws doctors of all ages. One man came to his first conference at the age of 68-after he had re- tired. Another has been attending the courses annually for 30 years. The average doctor, however, is middle-aged and, having been out of school for a while, feels the need to be brought, up to date on the latest medical developments. "Much of the value of the con- ferences is in talking to the other doctors attending," said Dr. Shel- don. Other values of the program are seeing how things are differently done in different parts of the country, finding out how much one doesn't know, and being in- formed of advances in those things which one does know. "The post-garduate program is many things to many people, but is comprehensive and valuable to any doctor," said Dr. Ralph Cox, To Show Film On Air Science The air science department and the Arnold Air Society will pre- sent a technicolor film titled "The Argus Experiment" at 4:10 today in the Multipurpose Rm. of the Undergraduate Library. BIG-TIME WRESTLING at Ann Arbor High FRIDAY, APRIL 28 ... 8:00 P.M. FEATURE BOUT: RICKY "The Crusher" CORTEZ vs DICK "Mr. Michigan" GARZA plus THREE OTHER BOUTS, including a tag team match PAID ADVERTISEMENT Gi e presents Thursday and Friday: OF MICE AND MEN Saturday and Sunday: THE END OF ST. PETERSBERG I The Michigan Men's Glee Club chose officers for the coming aca- demic year Tuesday night. Elected by the members at large were: President, Thomas W., Gething, '61 and vice-president, James W. Wilkins, '63. An executive committee appoint- ed Robert C. Pierce, '63E, business manager; Keith C. Johnson, pub- licity manager; Roger :N. Ser- geant, '61E, alumni relations di- rector; Robert J. Lewis, '63, tick- et and program director; Donald F. Cole, '64, office director; Gor- don L. Elicker, '62, historian; James D. Cross, '64, stage direc- tor; Philip T. Lincoln, '64, assistant business manager and Michael F. Baad, '63NR, assistant publicity manager. Police Arrest CORE Group Police arrested four members of the New Orleans Congress On Racial Equality on April 17 for picketing Woolworth's and Mc- Crory's. The pickets had previously re- ceived assurances that they would be unmolested by the police de- partment as long as the number of picketersbdidknot exceed four per square block. The CORE members claim they had not in any way violated this stipulation. CORE is asking its branches in other cities to protest the action. SPRING WEEKEND ...paddle ball contest Plane.Parade* For 'Weekend' Spring Weekend festivities will begin at 3 p.m. tomorrow with a parade from the Diag to Palmer Field, the site of "Hour Town." The costumed male participants will compete for the title "Lady of the Hour. They will be judged on the originality of their cos- tumes, the relationship of, the costume to the building, parading ability and enthusiasm. After the caravan reaches Pal- mer Field, the building .of the housing units will begin. Plans designated beforehand will go un- der construction with "unconven- tional" undisclisedl building- ma- terials: Male participants must dress in female garb and decorate the house, while the girls, in work- men's dress must do all the actual construction unaided. "Erred Era," more commonly known as Skit Night, will begin at 8 p.m. with Prof. Richard L. Cutler of the psychology depart- ment, as master of ceremonies. Five groups will present original skits: They are Kappa Delta and Theta Delta Chi with "Old Noah Jones;" Alpha Epsilon Phi and Delta Tau Delta and "The Inter- Historical Public Relations Cor- poration;" Kappa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Phi Epsilon together on "Salem '61;" Delta Gamma and Phi Gamma Delta and "Monkey Shines;" Sigma Kappa and Tau Delta Phi with "Redopus Sex." On Saturday, the festivities will continue with a canoe race on the Huron River, an attempt to cap- ture a greased pig and a corn eat- ing contest. The grand finale for the weekend will be a dance on Saturday evening featuring Sarah Vaughan. Homecoming Posts To Open Petitioning for positions on the Homecoming central committee will begin tomorrow afternoon. The announcement was made by newly chosen committee co-chair- men Barbara Condon, '62Ed, and Neil Cohen, '62. Petitions will be available at the student offices of the Michigan Union. AIre 13 DIAL NO 2-6264 HELD OVER 3 r E T 1 C 1 r t i 1 i i T i. F,' FAVORS by BUD-MOR 1103 S. University NO 2-6362 DIAL NO 8-6416 ENDING TONIGHT stOne of the Year's It --N. VY Times--Herald Tribune, Best MN. Y.Post -Saluiday Review * STARTING FRIDAY * "Broad Humorl--N.Y Times "Highly Recommended ." "MAKE MINE MIN K"! TERRY- THOMAS "NO INCREASE IN PRICES-REGULAR ADMISSION PRICES PREVAIL. THE6REATET SIARANDJ OENI I « " SHOWS AT 1:00 3:30 - 6:20and 9:10 FEATURES AT 1:00 3:45 -- 6:30 and 9:15. In January 1940, about three weeks before the first showing of Grapes of Wrath, Lewis (All Quiet on the Western Front) Milestone's film version of Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men opened. This was the first Steinbeck movie. Since then several Steinbeck novels and short stories (The Red Pony, The Pearl, The Moon Is Down, East of Eden) and movie-scripts (Viva Zapata) have appeared, been financially successful and dramatically effective. Most books, because their characters and situations must be simplified to meet the time and esthetic demands of the screen, simplify into nothing- ness. This has not been true for Steinbeck's works. In almost all of his stories, economic forces and social movements have been inextricably tied to the destinies of his characters. I believe that it can be success- fully argued that this vital re- lationship between characters and socio-economic forces e.g., revolution, dust-bowl migra- tion, gives a depth and solidity to his prose stories (characters, plot, setting) once they have been translated into the film media that they would not have had otherwise. Milestone immediately throws his audience into the story (giv- ing the screen credits after the story has begun is a convention common in modern movies, but it startled critics and audiences in 1940). Escaping an armed posse are two men - one a huge, gangling fellow, the other an agile and comparatively small man. The big one is Len- nie (Lon Chaney Jr.), a Hercu- les with the mind and fascina- tions (he loves to stroke soft things) of a child. The other is his friend George (Burgess Meredith) who, necessarily, must do the thinking for them both. Employing the pattern of confinement and release which he uses throughout the film, Milestone has his hunted men clamber aboard a moving freight car. In a few moments we feel the sense of release as the two move out of the con- finement of the car into the vast freedom of the Southern California landscape. When our two lonely friends hire on as workers at a barley ranch, they are once again in- volved with society. Around them are other migrant workers equally as lonely, and a boss whose littleness makes him hate big men and whose bored, un- satisfied wife (Betty Field) makes him jealous of all men Linked by the common denomi- nator, overwhelming loneliness and usually unable to express it in anything more than two- syllable words--"Guys like us that work on ranches is the loneliest guys in the world"- they are an unusually pathetic group. Nevertheless, these grown men, little Hercules capable of a good day's work battle for dignity and try to combat their loneliness by dreaming; and George and Len- nie are beautiful dreamers They work at the dream of one day owning their own little farm, of a time when they can stop running, stop moving Even Mae, sick of her husband and his Jealousy, can sit in the sustained by his dreams. But dream what they will humanity, this film is certainly "among the good films of aly time . ." * * * Seeing a long series of Soviet films in 1947-48 at the Museum of Modern Art was a unique ex- perience historically. The Cold War was at its most frigid. To most Americans-and my reac- tions were like theirs - there was at least an initial defense in negative reactions to the se- ries by Esenstein, Pudhovkin Dostchenko. Were not these films pure propaganda? What were they trying to say, apart from advancing the cause of the totalitarian government that they obviously reflected? At that point I felt that the brilliant series of Eisenstein films were, in the essential sense, propaganda. Nothing that happened in an Eisenstein film had anything more to say than that "history" had caught up with its opponents. Beautiful though his films were, they neg- ated the individual. I found them monumental and often thrilling but also calculated and essentially cold. It took second viewings - and a ripening in film experience-before I saw Eisenstein's films as one of the great achievements in twenti- eth century art. ' Essentially, however, my early negative responses to Eisen- stein were due to my simulta- neous exposure to three films of his great contemporary and rival, Vsevolod Pudovkin. Here, it seemed to me, were present in fullest measure the qualities that I felt lacking in Eisen- stein: poetry, lyricism, humani- ty. They possessed the epic sweep no less than Eisenstein, and an equal skill in cutting to reach great climaxes. Pudovkin was a great romantic artist, Eisenstein a classic; in these initial experiences, Pudovkn's immediacy was directly moving. For Eisenstein the hero of his films was always the "masses;" and this concept is something that Americans, nourished on an individualistic tradition, find difficult to understand. The masses, of course, are society in the classic Marxist apotheosis; and when I term Esenstein a classic artist, it is in this sense of the subordination of the in- dividual to the social setting. Pudhovkin's aesthetic was quite different; he concentrated on inner emotion, the release of the individual through mean- ingful thought that is even- tually released in revolutionary action. Eisenstein's analysis of Pudovkin, whatever their dif- ferences, is an illuminating tribute: "In his films the spec- tator's attention is not concen- trated on the development of sthe plot, but on the psychic change undergone by some in- dividual under the influence of the social process. Pudovkin puts real living men in the cen- ter of his work. His works act directly by their emotional power" In the past several years a number of Esenstein's films have been presented to the Ann Arbor public-but not one of Pudhovkin, although he, like Eisenstein, is represented on the "Twelve Best of All Time" poll taken by the Brussels crit- ics. The End of St. Petersberg ha he samesbject asEisn stein's Ten Days That Shook the World, the triumph of the Bolshevik Revolution, and both I Read Daily Classifieds O-STARQING - DAN DAJLE(- SHIRLEY JONES -LUS MAURICE CHEVALIER * BING OROSBY MICHAEL CALLAN * BOBBY DARIN * SAMMY DAVIS Jr.* JIMMY DURANTE ZSA ZSA GABOR * *JUDY GARLAND * GREER GARSON* ERNIE KOVACS JANET LEIGH*JACK LEMMON *JAY"NORTH *KIM NOVAK*DONNA REED DEBBIE REYNOLDS * EDWARD G. ROBINSON *_FRANK SINATRA APAIQAS THEMSELVES Um 1. DOUBLE ACADEMY ENDING TONIGHT AWARD WINNER SHOW f , BEST PICTRE) s.G.C. Gitema quild TONIGHT and Tomorrow at 7 and 9 SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7 and 9:00 STEINBECK'S PUDHOVKIN'S OF MICE AND MEN The End of St. Petersberg "THE APARTMENT JACK LEMMON '--...."*. SHIRLEY MacLAINE FRED MaoMURRAY RWn " 6WtNmf -AR 9:4 Shown at 1:00-5:20 --9:45 :.1 wit I a, Wi i