TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY is A MYTIM" A W invvir v j% , inner.. TWO HE MCHIAN D ILY l a,.lffln e__ SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1960 0 arx Expert fo Discuss Revolutions "The Russian Revolution and he Revolution of Our Times," is subject of a speech to be given1 >y Prof. Alfred G. Meyer, of Mich- gan State University, in the nulti-purpose room of the Under- graduate Library at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. The Democratic Socialist Club s sponsoring. Prof. Meyer, who is affiliated with the 14SU political science de- partment is recognized as one of the foremost authorities on the subject of Marxist political move- nents throughout the world. He is the author of "Marxism- [he Unity of Theory and Practice" and "Leninism." Call Parley To Discuss Sit-in Strikes 'Ensian Appointments Movement To Confer Leaders on Goals BETSY UNDERWOOD STEVE AUGUSTYN ... accounts manager ... finance manager JUDY DONER .. . personnel director S. Hurok Presents RICHARD the 20th Century Troubodor Auspices: Old West End Folk Music Society in association with Daniel Gordon FRI., APRIL 22,8:30 P.M. at Former Esquire Theatre 209 Superior St. Toledo, Ohio (now Toledo Youth Center) Tickets: $4.00, $3.00, $2.00 Available at HINES WORLD OF SOUND 641 Madison Ave. GRINNEL BROS. 411 Jefferson REESE RECORD SHOP Westgate Shopping KAUFFMANN MUSIC STORE 2063 W. Central SELIGMAN BROS. 1234 Sylvania' TOM KABAKER KEN McELDOWNEY ... magazine editor ... associate city editor KATHY MOORE . . .associate editorial director Invitations have been issued re- cently to some 1500 student lead- ers in the United States to attend a National Student Conference on the "sit-in" movement. The conference will be held in Washington on April 22-23. John. Feldkamp, Student Government Council President, will represent the University. Sponsored by the United States National Student Association, the conference is designed to bring together student leaders from all over the country. Present Goals According to Donald A. Hoff- man, USNSA President, and Cur- tis B. Gans, National Affairs Vice- President, the purpose of the conference is to present partici- pants with a coherent picture of the nature and goals of the South- ern movement and to discuss the responsibilities of all students with regard to this movement. Gans said they hope to create a national awareness that a num- ber of students are concerned with the situation in the South. Hoffman commented that the "sit-in" movement is the most important development in race relations in recent years, and that it is significant that the protest has come primarily from college students. Student Requests "The conference has been or- ganized," he said, "because of re- quests from student body presi- dents throughout the country for information concerning the move- ment." Since demonstrations began in the South at the first of the year, many sympathy actions have taken place in other parts of the country. Fund-raising drives, en- couragement to the Southern stu- dents, and official protests have characterized the concern. "In all areas of the country," Hoffman said, "the American stu- dent is vitally concerned with the human rights picture in the South. We feel there is a great need for co-ordinated discussion of the "sit-in" movement so that all opinions may be heard and students can gain a total picture of what is happening in the South and what is happening outside the South in support of the move- ment." Meetings Open Meetings will be held on an open basis, including presentation of pro and con viewpoints. Par- ticipants will be able to receive' first-hand information on the sit- uation from the Southern students themselves. Delegates to the convention will be provided with scholarships' covering room expenses and par-1 tial travel subsidies. -Daly-Larry vanic. NEW EDITORIAL STAFF--Chuck Moore (left) has been appointed 'Ensian engravings editor. Dotty Morrall (center) is copy editor, and Art Neuman (right) is new personnel director. Board in Control Names' DailyEditors, Managers (Continued from Page 1) Champe, '60BAd, as finance man- ager, Augustyn also comes from Detroit. He is an accounting ma- jor and an Evans Scholar. Miss Underwood will follow Marilyn Fisher, '60, as Daily ac- counts manager. She is a resident of Ann Arbor majoring in French DIAL NO 2-6264 and is president of Phi Mu soror- ity. McEldowny, a political science major, will replace Peter Dawson, '60, as associate city editor. He is a 20-year-old resident of Battle Creek. Succeeding Barton Huthwaite, '60, as associate editorial director, Miss Moore is from Flint. She is a 20-year-old junior concentrat- ing in English. The senior appointments for the summer edition of The Daily were also announced by the Boa-rd last night. Miss Moore will be summer editor and Charles Judge, '62BAd, will be business manager for the summer. Judge is a resident of Ames, Iowa, and a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. His ac- tivities have included membership on the central committees for Homecoming and Michigras. Board Names Senior Staffs For 'Ensiai1 (Continued from Page 1) we have many ideas. "We hope to continue the fine line of year- books Michigan is noted for." Martin, 20 years old, is a sopho- more economics major. Newman, a 20 year old history major concentrating in pre-legal studies, comes from Washington, Pa. Miss Morrall, a sophomore, majoring in psychology, is 19 years old, comes from Youngstown, 0. Moore succeeds Carol Hand- schumacher '60 Ed. A sophomore from Dundee, Mich., he is 20 years old. THE PROMETH EAN * OPEN DAILY at 2 P.M. Entertainment Nightly PAINTING: 'U' Exhibits Modern Art, Twenty-six contemporary paint- ings from the Guggenheim Mu- seum and other collections have been selected for the exhibition, "Images at Mid-Century," now on display at the University Museum of Art in Alumni Memorial Hall. James Johnson Sweeney, direc- tor of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, who selected the contemporary paintings ob- served: "If we hope to understand what a painter, a poet or any other artist is trying to do, we must see his efforts as a means of communication--a language." Painter's Language "The painter's language, like the poet's must be constantly re- freshed. Whether the artist cre- ates his painting out of elements or forms that have readily or less readily recognizable associations has no necessary bearing on the intrinsic quality of his work. "The only thing that counts is whether the artist, for his expres- sion, has created a "New Noun." Lectures in Conjunction The exhibition, which will con- tinue through June 12, is being presented along with a lecture series under the auspices of the architecture college and the Mu- seum of Art. Two lectures, one by Sam Hun- ter, chief curator of the Min- neapolis Institute of Arts and the other by Dore Ashton, asso- ciate art critic of the New York Times will be given on April 20 and 27 respectively at 4 p.m. in the Architecture Auditorium. Ceramics Shown Another exhibition currently at the Museum is one containing cer- amics by 11 potters-an interna- tional group representing Japan, Italy, England, the Scandinavian countries and the United States. Most of the articles in this ex-' hibition, "Clay Forms," are for sale. Items in the display were selected by John Stephenson and Paul Suttmen, both of the ar- chitecture college. A lecture by Bernard Leach, English ceramist, will be presented in conjunction with the exhibit at 7 p.m. May 3 in the Architecture Auditorium. -Daly-Larry Vanic. NEW BUSINESS STAFF--Edward Lublin (left) is Advertising Manager of the 1961 'Ensian, Sue Philippart (center) is Accounts Manager, and Roger Burt (right) has been appointed Sales Manager. ECONOMICS, ART Honors Prorm xrpands Courses I I The most important develop- ment in the Honors Program at the University is the institution of two new courses in the College Honors program. The first of these will be College Honors 198, which was formerly Economics 198, General Systems Theory. This course, which will be taught by Prof. Kenneth E. Bould- ing, will be open to seniors in the honors group in all fields of con- centration and will be an inter- disciplinary survey of various phy- sical, biological and social sys- tems. The second new course, to be taught by Prof. Marvin Felheim, will be College Honors 91, This course will be Romanticism in American Arts and will deal with the fields of literature, music, art, and the visual arts. The program will also continue its present courses. A sign of the progress of the honors program from its beginning two years ago is that next year, for the first time, seniors will take honors degree in all departments of the University. The high quality of the honors group and greater competition for admission to the University will enable the Honors Council to raise its standards for admission of incoming freshmen. Prof. An- gell commented that "it is very' evident that we are getting more good students here." The minimum college board score standard for the honors group has been raised from a 630 average two years ago to a 670 average for next year. Prof. An- gell said that "a large percentage of the group which was originally selected would not now be invited into the Honors group." Maize, Blue Pranksters Shake Campus for Frosh Weekend 4/-. - I E LATE SHOW TONIGHT ~c sop " ,( ETRO .Old OP 9t " 1 P.M J I I Last Chance Lost Chance GOOD SEATS FOR MATINEE TODAY Evening Sold Out "THE OLD LYDIA MENDELSSOHN REAALY BEGAN TO ROCK!" (Mich. Daily) "ALL THE ACTORS WERE GOOD-SOME TRULY GREAT" (Mich. Daily) "Irene Connors as Ruth . . . acted and mimed her way through the role with a delightfulness that would be enough to make the Civic Theatre ignore Rosalined Russell"- (A.A. News) "JOEL BOYDEN ... A MAN MOUNTAIN OF FUN!" (Mich. Daily) "David Newman, Ted Heusel . . . Bette Ellis . . . Jim Bob Stephensor. .. were memorable." (A.A. News) "CHOREOGRAPHY ... REMARKABLE !" (A.A. News) "Miss Hauman (Eileen) filled the theatre with her sparkling personality." (Mich. Daily) "MUSIC (Bernstein's) . . . AND LYRICS . . . FINE BLEND OF APPROPRIATENESS AND SAVORY MEL- ODY." (A.A. News) MUSICAL COMEDY HIT unAIInenFI By LYNNE FRIEDMAN "Beware of Little Blue Boo!" cautioned Debra Horwitz, '63, pub- licity chairman for the Blue Team of Frosh Weekend. "He's been especially mischiev- ous this week," she added. He turned the residence halls' desserts into blueberry cobbler, left his footsteps on trees on the diag, and has even caused the bells in Burton Tower to ring dif- ferently, she said. Seen On Campus Little Blue Boo has also been seen all over campus on the backs of unsuspecting students. African Union To Celebrate Freedom Day The African Students' Union is sponsoring an annual banquet to celebrate Africa Freedom Day, at the Father Richard Center April 23. Sudanese food will be served, and the celebration will feature African art and music. The guest speaker will be Mr. Eduardo C. Moundalane, a re- search officer with the United' Nations. He will discuss "Develop- ment of a New African Personal- ity in African and World Affairs." Tickets may be obtained from the Michigan Union or the African students. The Maize Team, as well as the Blue, presented skits on the diag this week. The Maize Team, whose theme pertains to the Deep South, presented a skit honoring Maisey Bell, the epitome of Southern womanhood. The Maize Publicity committee also scattered daisies on the diag. Adding new holidays to the month of April, the Maize Team has declared all Wednesdays "Maize Days." And to daze the campus, members of the Maize team will be wearing yellow bows with long streamers in their hair. Rumors Of Spring The rumor around campus is that the recent balmy Southern- like days have been by courtesy of the Maize team.' As "Beware of Little Blue Boo" was this week's indication of the Blue team's theme, the message from Maize cooed, "We cotton to y'all!" New members were added to both the Maize and the Blue teams this week. The names of all freshmen women who were not already participating in Frosh Weekend were distributed arbi- trarily among both teams, and these women will be contacted by the finance committees. All freshmen are requested to pay their 50 cents class dues. Daily Classifieds Bring Results DOORS OPEN AT 12:45 It + I.ame *O.. -n -A - , - . Ca starring Also BUGS SUNNY Cartoon From WARNER BRO$. DIAL NO 5-6290 I I I I S.G.C. Cinema qiI4 TONIGHT and Sunday at 7:00 and 9:00 "DREAMBOAT" A NIRENE (R1 E S BilWED., MAY 4 ANN ARBOR HIGH TWO SHOWS 7 and 9:30 P.M. Continuous Today From 1 P.M. d ' +. DIAL NO 8-6416+ TICKETS I Xkah$4.40, $3.30, $2.75, _. ir. r rirwn..