THE MICHIGAN DAILY I.LJ dZMA t, . ; t s irc wardt med New LOCAL DEMOCRAT: Prof. Cutler Tells Plans To Run for State Senate LI Head of. Albert H. Marckwardt of English department was ed acting director of the Eng- Language Institute at the Re- s' meeting Friday, will replace Prof. Robert of the English department is resigning to accept a posi- at Georgetown University. Prof. Richard L. Cutler, who was granted leave by the Regents to seek election to a state Legisla- ture post, has announced he will run for the state Senate on the Democratic ticket. Stating his intentions, Cutler said, "Over the past few years, I have watched with growing alarm the antics of a small group of old- M N DIAL NO 5-6290 * ENDS THURSDAY * When that lady walks in.. all restraint flies out! TONY D:AN JMNT CURTIS. MARTIN LEIGH guard members of the state Sen- ate, who have blocked every ef- fort at progress and reform in our state government. "Their behavior came to a cli- max in 1959 and 1960 when, based upon what seemed to be political expediency and sheer bull-head- edness, they deeply hurt the rep- utation of our state and made us a laughing stock in other areas of the country." Cutler said he would devote himself to restoring Michigan government to a high level and for constitutional revision, should it be necessary. "Even though I am not a pro- fessional politician," Cutler con- tinued, "I believe that my back- ground and experience enables me to understand the needs of people in all walks of life. I grew up in a rural area, have worked in fac- tories and as a construction work- er, and I am part owner of a small business. As a psychologist, I come in daily contact with THE PROMETH EAN OPEN DAILY at 2 P.M. Entertainment -Nightly SGC Invites Suggestions For Topics Suggestions for topics for the Student Government Council. Reading and Discussion Program to be held again this summer and next fall are now welcomed by the planning committee, Chairman Roger Seasonwein, '61, said yes- terday. Initiated last year, the program consists of summer reading on various topics followed by faculty- student discussion seminars held during the following semester. Seasonwein stated that this year "an even more diversified" program was being planned. He also said there might be a co- ordination between the Reading and Discussion Program and Challenge. Tentative topics include the evolution of physics from New- tonian to relativity; philosophy of ethics; Greek literature; political theory; and the works of D. H. Lawrence. Additional topics may be sug- gested by filling out a form at the table in the lobby of the Under- graduate Library.- Students will be able to sign up for the Program in approximately three weeks after which reading lists will be mailed out. These lists will include both prfmary and supplementary readings dealing with the various subjects. The seminars will convene in, the fall and continue meeting as long as students and faculty mem- bers are interested. Last year about 1,000 persons participated in the program, which included two series. MEETING HERE: Prepare for Human Rights Conference PROF. RICHARD CUTLER ...*to run for Senate the personal concerns of many people. ..' Tht Senate post that dcutler will seek is being vacated by Sen. Lewis Christmas (R-Ann Arbor) who will retire at the end of the cur- rent term. Funds Given t oNAACP Last Sunday, Brereton Bissell, '61, presented $1,050 to the local chapter of the NAACP. The money represented the first Final preparations are now be- ing made for the Conference for Human Rights in the North to be held on campus this weekend. About 400 students from more than 40 colleges and universities are expected to attend the meet- ing; which begins Thursday and runs through Sunday. Most of the schools represented are in the east and the midwest. Busses will bring groups from New York City and Athens, Ohio. Al Haber, '60, conference coor- dinator, held a meeting recently to explain the conference to in- terested University students. Ap- proximately 75 students attended and 60 to 70 are expected to at- tend the conference. Representa- tives from the Ann Arbor Human Relations Conference and the Hu- man Relations Board of Student Government Council will also at- tend. The conference is sponsored by the Students for Democratic So- ciety, a group affiliated with the League for Industrial Democracy. The League is an educational, non-profit and non-partisan or- ganization founded in 1905. It is concerned with the social and economic problems of an indust- rial society. Action-oriented Haber explained that the con- ference, whose local sponsor is the Political Issues Club, is action- oriented. It ,hopes to show stu- dents the areas in which they can work effectively to end discrim- ination and the most effective methods to employ. "We are now in the midst of a movement on the part of students for human rights, the scope of which we could not have imagined A few months ago. We want to make surethat the momentum of this movement will not die out. "We want to channel it into continuing programs for social action on the basic Northern problems -housing, employment, and the rest." "This work is not dramatic," he explained, "but it must be done." The conference will out- line techniques for making pro- gress in the fight against discrim- ination in areas such as housing and employment. Haber hopes that a coordinated program, for A UGHT- HEARTED SER AT LOVE AMONG THE ADULTSI handling many of these problems will emerge. King May Attend The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., will attempt to come to Ann Arbor to deliver the keynote ad- dress. If he is detained by legal battles in Alabama and unable to attend the conference, he will send one of his associates. Morris Milgram, building con- tractort involved in inter-racial housing development in Deerfield, Ill., will speak at the conference. Milgram, the president of Mod- ern Community Developers, has been building interracial develop- ments for nearly ten years. His most notable projects have been in Princeton, N.J., and just out- side of Philadelphia. Milgram works carefully with the communities involved in an attempt to prepare the commun- ity for his development. The Deer- field situation is the first time that he has become involved in court action. List Topics Other speakers will be James Farmer, national program direct- or of the National Association for the Advancement of Color e d People, and Lt. Gov. John Swain- son. Among the specific topics to be Pole Leader Makes Speech For Students POLAND - An impressive bat- tery of Polish governmental and Party personalities, led by Party First Secretary Wladslaw Gomulka and Premier Cyrankiewicz, at- tended the fourth congress of the Polish Student Union (ZSP) held in Warsaw from March 24-27. The main address, delivered by Gomulka, took on heightened in- terest and significance in view of the recent tightening of Party control over Poland's intellectual life. The Communist leader's speech concentrated on the need for young intellectuals to adjust their interests to "the spirit of the times" and to make "an active political commitment, and [iden- tifyl . . . their aims and views with the aims and views of the working class Party." "The reform in Polish educa- tion is well underway," he an- nounced, with. the aim to better prepare students "for their pro- fessional work and life in the Soc- ialist community." It will accom- plish this in part by orienting academic study toward achieving practical results -- in short, the usual Communist expediency of linking production with education. The primary task for the ZSP, Gomulka declared, was to mold the spirit as well as the training of the Polish student: "to fulfill your important role in the ideo- political training of students and in shaping their social views and Socialist attitude." discussed are: increasing Negro employment opportunities, voter registration and political oppor- tunities, integrating housing, sym- pathetic action for the Southern movement, direct non-violent ac- tion, fraternities and sororities, integration in campus activities and social life, developing the ac- tion potential of the Negro com- munity, higher education, pro- grams for minority group youth, the mass movement and leader- ship training programs. The work on the conference has been going on all fall. Recently, Charles Van Tassel, an employee of SDS, came to Ann Arbor to assist organizing the effort. Quadrants Tap New Members Proclaiming the stout virtues of ale - quaffing, wench-joshing, and arb-roaming, the sturdy band of yeomen, known as Quadrants, sal- lied forth to rout from the forests of Kwaddie-land the loutish rogues that lurk there, hoping to impress on such knaves the solid values of true yeomanry. So routed and seized were: Bruce Baldwin, '61, Lawrence Brink, '61A&D, Robert S. Holm, '61, Gary Joachim, '62E, John Marshall, '62E, Garry McDaniels, '62, Gerald Meyer, Grad., Thomas Moch, '62E, John Richardson, '62, John Ross, '62A&D, Jack Schwem, '62E. DIAL NO 2-6264 ENDING WEDNESDAY METRO-GOLDWYN.MAYER pruonis DORMS DAY DAD NIYt A WSUt! M9IT0ff lt W6MIIM (!im pII I- .ues eiI FOUR. Show Biz' Ticket Sales "Show Biz, U.S.A., the .New- berry-Gomberg Michigras produc- tion, received the award for high- est ticket, sales at the carnival. The show featured a series of Original numbers presented by the dancers and vocal talents of of the two housing units. Music and lyrics were written by Larry Kass, '60, and the booth designed by Paul Lin, Ron Lee, and Ray Cato, '61A&D. ftf: I FRESHMEN Stars of Capital Records Apaiga The Fabulous PEASE FRIDAY_______ BURT LANCASTER AUDREY HEPBURN in "THE UNFORGIYEN" Phone NO 2-4786 portion of money collected in a campus bucket drive and contri- buted by SGC and a local religious Korean Group guild. The money will go to the NAACP Legal Fund for Southern Ii. students and the Southern StudentTo H olicnic Fund of the NSA. Student Government Council The Korean Student Club will contributed $100 to the fund. hold a picnic Saturday at Ken- ----------_ _sington Park picnic area. Students will meet at 11 a.m. at Lane Hall and proceed to the pic- nic grounds from there. In case of rain by 9 a.m.. the outing will Auditorium Ypsilanti, Mich. Tues., May 3 8:00 P.M.A Tickets 2.00, 1.50 Classified Advertising 11 No . - OPENING TOMORROW 8:00 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE be postponed to Sunday, May 1. For further information, con- tact David Uh, NO 8-7137. on sale at THURSDAY _. __ - --- ----__ _ _ _ ._ _. :en . _ ____ ___ :. . ._ __ '°_' 1 Bob Marshall's 211 S. State JERRY LEWIS in ' "Visit to a Small Planet" LOOK HOMEWARD, ANGEL Ketti Frings' Pulitzer prize-winning adaptation of the Thomas Wolfe novel The U THR U SATURDAY $1.50, $1.10, 75c International Student Association will announce the PRESIDENT and VICE-PRESIDENT for next year on May 12. PETITIONS NOW AVAILABLE IN Room 18, International Center between 9-5 P.M. daily. Petitions are due not later than Friday, April 29 at 5:00 P.M. Ending Thursday ACADEMY AWARD WINNERr t4 i' EASTMAN(OLOR A Lopl Fim. Inc. Relom '* Friday * INGMAR BERGMAN'S "BRINK OF LIFE" W~i Wk CANN4ES FILM FESTIVAL 2ND BIG, WEEK DIAL NO 8-6416 Tickets available for Wednesday & Thursday performances only. Box office open today until 5:00, rest of week from 10:00 A.M. -Dept. of Speech I S E L I I Plus: THE GATEWAY SINGERS ;' TWO SHOWS I fI WED., MAY 4 -7 and 9:30 P.M. I ANN ARBOR HIGH SCHOOL 0A A~'~wr e) C , tl n A I L am'_.1 - - - - - _ _ - - _ - _ II _ _ _KI lr YL (II ~ '~ ' I~ II I V ~ fl 'far'itc r ~ wr . .. ::,