THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCh 9, 1 1952 LOOK and LISTEN With ALAN LUCKOFF PRESCRIBE FOR YOURSELF: Local Store Sells Ready=MadeSpecs Delegates Plan Arab Parley *1 ~ "The Windy City," first in a series of four dramas based on the poetry of Carl Sandburg, will be featured on Angell Hall Playhouse at 8 p.m. Tuesday on WHRV and WUOM. The series will be written and directed by Sherm Fillmore, Grad., who has done research on Sand- burg and the adaptation of his work to radio as part of his Mas- ter's thesis. Although the national conven- tions are three and-a-half months away, radio and TV stations are alreakly starting on-the-spot des- criptions of the nation's political battles. NBC (WWJ and WWJ- sU'Faculty Takes Stand OnCO Blast By HARRY LUNN A CIO'blast' at workmen's com- pensation programs drew com- ment from two economics profes- sors who agreed that state com- peisation programs as they now stand are generally inadequate. CIO charges against state sys- tems appeared in a recent issue of Economic Outlook, a publica- tion of the union's Department of Education and Research, in which the progress of individual state programs was branded as "a story of failure.". * * * , IN DISCUSSING the article, Prof. William Haber of the .eco- nomics department commented kthat "workmen's compensation represents one of the most ne- glected areas in the field of So- cialSecurity'in the United States." Prof: Harold M. Levinson of the economics department agreed that "the great majority of state plans have numerous weaknesses in terms of cover- age and low payments." "There- ,are still industrial ac- cidents and diseases which are not coveed by existing laws and many people who are not yet pro- tected at all," he said. In looking to future progress, the article cites a unanimous re- solution of the IO's Thirteenth Constitutional Convention which 'asked for an immediate and cor- prehensive investigation of work- men's compensation by the Fed- eral government with an eye to ultimate enacemet of a national compensation law. However, Prof. Levinson remark- ed that such Federal legislation "doesn't have much of a chance of passage." . As far as progress in the state systems is concerned, he com- mented that some improvement in coverage is being made, and con- cluded that "strengthening of state laws would be more feasible ae. d practical than national legis- lation at this time." Near Eastern Clinic To Be Held Again The second "Institute on the Near East" under the Department of Near Eastern Studies will be held here during the summer, it has been announced. A program including courses in anthropology, economics, geogra- phy, history, law, linguistics and languages of the near east will be offered. According to Prof. George G. Cameron, chairman of the near eastern studies department, the faculty will beicomposed of men recognized to be outstanding in their respective Melds, three of whom will be visiting professors. Herbert Liebesny is the "one man in America today who is qualified to answer What near eastern law is." He is a lawyer by education, but has done everything from teaching, to working with the OSS to being an advisor to an oil com- pany. Peter Franck and William Schor- ger will lecture in economics and anthropology, respectively. Franck has worked with the OPA and the Afganistan government. For the past 'year Shoreger has held a so- cial science research fellowship to study in the Near East. In conjunction' with the Insti- tute a series of public lectures by "nationally famous and interna- tionally respected men" will be given. The institute was first conduct- ed during the 1950 summer ses- sion. It was not offered last sum- mer as Prof. Cameron made a field study of the near east instead. Campus Briefs Dean Wells I. Bennett olfthe TV) will send a crew of announ- cers and cameramen to report on all phases of the New Hampshire presidential primary, Tuesday. The first special broadcast from Con- cord, N. H., will be at 10 p.m. to- day. * , * SIGN OF SPRING: Starting yesterday, WHRV is broadcasting all Detroit Tiger exhibition base- ball games with Van Patrick at the mike,'replacing the late Harry Heilmann. The ball games have moved -the speech department newscast right off WHRV this season and they are now heard on WPAG at 3 p.m. "Radio Workshop Drama"'will be heard on WUOM only, during the season. PROGRAM NOTES: "The Talk- ing Cure," a story of Dr. Sigmund Freud, will be presented on CBS Television Workshop at 4 p.m. today, WJBK-TV. The workshop is an experimental program, which is featuring new techniques in television art, and has pioneered in some new innovations which- will soon be adopted by more con- servative shows. .* * * PROF. SAMUEL ELDERSVELD will use short dramatic sketches as illustrations on his political par- ties telecourse on the University Television Hour at 1 p.m. today, WWJ-TV. The topic will be "No- minating the Candidate." Prof. Philip Jones will discuss fundamental operations in his math telecourse and the work of campus linguists will be featured in the teletour. Limon Troupe To Perform. SL-Cinema Guild fans who en- joyed the performance of Jose Limon dancing "The Moor's Pa- vanne" in a movie short this week-end will be treated to'a per- sonal appearance of the dancer and his troupe at 8:30 p.m. Satur- day at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "Pavanne", the story of Othel- lo's tragic betrayal, will be in- cluded - on the program. Other numbers will include "Concert", a dance set to the preludes and fuges of Bach, and "La Malinche", a Mexican legend. On the lighter side, the dancers will present "The Story of Man- kind" from the cartoon by Carl Rose. "Mankind" is a humorous tale of man's rise from the cave- age to the penthouse, and his re- turn to the cave. Tickets for the performance will be on sale this week at the Lydia Mendelssohn boxoffice. Price of tickets will be $2.00 or $1.75. Daily-Don Campbell. DUBIOUS BARGAIN-At least one campus store still carries ready-made eyeglasses for people who don't trust eye specialists. Seventy-six cents takes home a set of specs after the customer tests them on a "Gettysburg Address" eye chart. COLLEGE ROUNDUP: .Administrators, Students .both. SlapLids on College Papers By DONNA HENDLEMAN Censorship held the spotlight last week again at the colleges' throughout the country. Biggest controversy is the now three-month-old one over the ap- pointment of an advisor to the University of California paper, The Daily Californian. Although the staff started out; with a compara- tively talm promise to "cooperate with an advisor as long as he is not a censor", the editors of the paper have lately increased agi- tation over the question. CIRCULATING the campus is a petition decrying the move as mis- directed and unnecessary. So far, more than 5,000 students have Christian Science Talk Slated Today "Christian Science: The Way to Fulfill God's Purpose" swill be the topic of a public lecture given by Mrs. Grace Jane Noee at 3 p.m. today in the Ann Arbor Ma- sonic Temple auditorium, 327 S. 4th Avenue. Mrs. Noee, Christian Science Lecturer from Chicago, is a mem- ber of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship. Formerly the head of a large food brokerage firm in Chicago, she withdrew from busi- ness life in 1927 to practice Chris- tian Science healing. During her commercial career, Mrs. Noee served as the first President of the Altrusa Club, an international organization of pro- fessional .nd executive business women. I signed the petition. But from official quarters there is no sign of a change in the new policy, although the student Executive Committee head said the committee would take it up when the petition was formally presented to the group. Any final action would have to come from the Regents. MEANWHILE, the University of Maryland's Diamondback News and the Lobo News of the Univer- sity of New Meico were bothhit recently by a similar loss of inde- pendence. At Maryland the ad- ministration layed down a com- paratively elastic censorship rule: "Student editors must submit to faculty advisors any matter that is questionable, controversial or debatable." Fellow students clamped the lid at New Mexico. When the editor refused to print a student govern- ment column free of editing, the council fired five student mem- bers of the board of publications for "incompetence." * * * Students have a different kind of gripe at the University of Wis- consin. A group of student leaders in Madison have started circulat- ing petitions which demand a "complete reorganization" of the university police department. Leaders in men's dorms, they have charged that the "unfit" uni- versity police department is sub- jecting students to "discourteous and illegal treatment." By BOB HOLLOWAY A fairly long nose, a venture- some mind and 76 cents can get you a set of self-prescribed eye- glasses in Ann Arbor. A holdover from this country's turn-of-the-century reliance on mail-order specs, the practice is carried on in a campus five-and- dime store where ready-made glasses lie exposed to the eye of myopic, purchasers. HERE, in an out-of-the way cor- ner of the establishment, is a tan- gle of horn-rimmed eye equipment and a few dog-eared eye-charts. The lack of promotion on the specs is reinforced by the sales clerk's warning to prospective buyers that she "can neither give advice nor instruction in the fitting process." Persevering buyers are able to test the horn-rims on a Gettys- burg Address of ever-diminishing type-size which after dwindl- ing down to miniscule gray let- ters, informs the testee, in big black type, that the store is not responsible for mishaps caused by its glasses. Patrons follow a fitting tech- nique described by an elderly lady with bright blue far-sighted eyes. "I need new spectacles once every year, so I try on these until I get ,one that makes this gray card here (the chart) look like a white card with fuzzy letters on it." "Then I just jiggle them around on my nose until the fuzz comes off the letters and go home for an- other year," she concluded with a. faith that brings frowns from eye specialists. A TYPICAL comment came from a University optometrist who warned, "Technique or no tech- nique, buying eyeglasses without a professional prescription is down- right dangerous." "Besides the possibility of con- cealing a pathological condition of the eye like glaucoma, the indi- vidual who fits his own glasses is getting no correction for astigma- tism or other eye quirks," he added. This kind of warning has had its effect. According to the store manager, sales of the ready-made specs have been falling off steadily with the years. But, he estimates, the out- fit'still sells about ten pairs a week -to people with long noses, ven- turesome minds, and 76 cents. 'Players' To Meet A general membership meeting of The Student Players will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday in the Ann Arbor Rm. of the League, James E. Brodhead III, president pro tempore of the group announ- ced yesterday. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Arab delegates from all over the world met in the Union this week- end to make plans for the Inter- national Arab Conference to be held here in June. Financed by the American Friends of the Middle-East So- ciety, the preliminary conference was attended by representatives of delegations and embassies of Syria, Lebanfon, Egypt, Iraq, Ye- t a o r STORE HOURS DAILY 9:30 to 5:30 AT BOTH STORES men and Saudi Arabia. Representing Arab clubs in this country were delegates from the Universities of Michigan, Colum- bia, Colorado, Texas, California, Wisconsin, Chicago and Missouri. Prof. Esson Gale, director of the International Center, and Prof. George Cameron, chairman of the Near East Studies department, were the faculty delegates. i - I dft 1 Arte rti LULLL(~L SHUJN Name the Color Name the Size Name the Name ... --.. .-. u .. Lang To Talk With Students Prof. Paul Henry Lang, of the musicology department at Colum- bia University, will be in Ann Ar- bor tomorrow through Thursday for consultations with graduate students majoring in mugicology. An authority in his field, Lang has contributed many articles and reviews on musical subjects to publications and is the music edi- tor of the Saturday Review. Lang will lecture on "Asthetics of Opera" at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in Rackham Amphitheatre. x and you'll have your very own genuine cowhide belt with name or initials . . . your signature so to speak, to your costume. A smart accessory that gives you the personal touch. 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Panels of precious imported lace . . . a flattering facade of tucks .. . in crisp and shimmering tissue faille . . . carefully piped at the neck for sure- fitting comfort. Perfectly wonderful Avondale chambray has a horizontally striped skirt with the third dimensional look. Smoky pearl buttons and man- darin neckline plus a glossy patent belt with removable fob. Sizes 7-154, 8.95 E ;4 2~ QUALITY EVERYWHERE YOU LOOK ...AND IN THE "HIDDEN" THINGS, TOO arch-pillow for extra support built on "slide-o-matic" lasts for improved fit t sole stitching added for wear insurance genuine leather, not imitation, covers -platform and heel $5 95 -.., - .