THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, APliTL 23, 1959 TINE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1951 -andidates in ISA Elections Announce Positions Hungarian Students Ask U.S. To Meet 'Obligation' male members and the most active female member, and a "Miss ISA"z would be chosen.1 The "Miss ISA" would be strictly for fun, he admitted. El-Afandi headed the studenti organization at Cairo Universityi when he was an undergraduate,1 he said, and while a teacher inE Saudi Arabia was invited to dinner1 with the King. Miss Hoebbel has served on ISA committees for' three years, and headed the last Monte Carlo ball.E KRISHNAMURTHY Our experience in the interna- tional student activity field gives us the best opportunity for evalu- ating a proper program and carry- ing it through effectively, Krish- namurthy said. He was expressing the reasons why he and Arnove were running for the offices of President and Vice-President of ISA. Krishnamurthy said he holds B.S. degrees in science and phar- macy from the University of Madras in India and is working on his M.B.A. in business adminis- tration at the University. "While in India I took part in extensive extra-curricular activi- ties," he said. Since coming here he has been secretary of the Indian Student Association and member- ship chairman of the International Student Association. Encourages Americans Vice-presidential candidate Ar- nove, a junior in English honors, has served as chairman of the International Coordinating Com- mittee of SGC. Homecoming Head Named John Kirkendall, '60, has been selected as male chairman for the '1958 Homecoming festivities, it was announced yesterday by Rus- sell Berman, '58, Union Executive Vice-President. Petitions for the male chairman of Spring Weekend are available now, according to Berman. These will be due on May 5. : ',":,..,%',' ." M Mfi" .e rX:" .'i~i t7' rf:" " : yw'a ti p He headed the past year's Inter- national Week, he said, and will likewise head this year's program. Their joint major objective is to "increase, membership and active participation of foreign students in ISA," Krishnamurthy said, but Arnove's presence on the ticket is expressly to encourage American participation.r International cooperation of this sort is a seedbed for the "one world" concept, Krishnamurthy explained. He advocated "increasing ISA prestige" by more joint planning projects with campus student or- ganizations. Wants SGC Seat ISA should have an ex-officio seat on SGC, according to Krish- namurthy, so the international student will have a voice in gov- ernment. Perfecting present social, cul- tural and sports activities and de- veloping the present committee structure will broaden interest and increase the number of positions of responsibility, he said. Krishnamurthy also mentioned assisting and coordinating nation- ality club activities and assisting students who do not yet have na- tionality clubs to form them. Guild Praised By Magazine University residence hall place- ment policy has drawn the at- tention of The Christian Century, a non-denominational Protestant magazine. In its April 16 issue, Christian Century congratulated the Con- gregational Students Disciples Guild for "resolute and often skilled attempts to put their faith into action." The Guild is the group whose petition started the current Resi- dence Hall Board of Governors review , of' roommate placement policy. (Continued from Page 1) It is necessary to know commun- ism to fight it, Letai pointed out. American youth are very "ideal- istic," he said, and need to be taught. He illustrated this point with a question asked at last week's lec- ture on the development of com- munism. A student asked a ques- tion, "a very stupid one," on negotiating with the Russians. Points Out Treachery Letai said he was very sorry this was the last question, for he would liked to ask the student if he had ever heard of Gen. Pal Maleter. Gen. Maleter was negotiating with the Russians when he was arrested and presumably he will not be given a trial. "Russians understand only the voice of the first," Dr. Gocza inter- jected. Letai said the attitude of the United States toward Russia since the Hungarian Revolution seems more favorable rather than less. Past Attitude 'Strong' In the past Henry Cabot Lodge and John Foster Dulles have acted strongly toward the Russians, ac- cording to Letai. If we negotiate with them now, we may go the way* of Hungary, he said. "His advice to the United States, could be very good since it is based on experience;" Kiss said. "It wouldn't be the same as study- ing about communism in a book." Letai pointed out that the United States now has 3,000 Hungarian students who know all about com- munist-style education. This country sent a delegation to Moscow to find out about it, he said, but "nobody asked me." Kiss illustrated the problem of information on Soviet education with Eleanor Roosevelt's Russian trip. When she went behind the Iron Curtain, the young engineer said, she was visiting the top uni- versities, speaking to the top com- munist students. Dr. Gocza said it would be a shame to model American educa- tion after Russian education, since the latter is after all based on German education. Communist Level Down' In Hungary the educational level has actually declined since the communists took power, Letal de- clared., Mentioning that his engineering courses in Hungary contained about 30 per cent politics, Kiss demanded to know why the Hun- garian Revolution occurred if com- munist education is so good. Letai and Kiss described school children down to the level" of kindergarten singing songs about how Stalin and Rakosi were good and Eisenhower, Tito, Adenauer and Truman were bad. When they left school the children saw how much more cultured Hungary was than Russia, Letai said, and doubt- ed what they'd been told. Letai pointed out that scientists locked in jail were offered freedom if they solved problems-"this is Russian education." Jenner's Bill 'To Produce Bad Results' Sen. William E. Jenner's . R- Ind.) bill to cut the United States Supreme Court's powers of judicial review was sharply criticized yes- terday by Dean E. Blythe Stason and Prof. Charles W. Joiner of the Law School. They said the bill would lead tq "a multi-headed court system op- erating without direction or guid- ance," and termed it "a bald at- tempt to deprive the Supreme Court of jurisdiction in five areas where it has recently rendered opinions. "The remedy suggested by the bill is one that will produce disas- trous results. To deprive the Court of its power . .. will upset a care- fully conceived balance of power. It will be an invitation for all- dis- gruntled litigants U' To Hear Speech Head Prof. Fred W. Haberman, chair- man of the speech department at the University of Wisconsin, will address the speech assembly to- day at 4 p.m. in Rackham Lecture Hall. Prof. Habermanx, author of such books as 'The .'Bell Family: A Dynasty in Speech," and "De Quincey's Theory of Rhetoric,' will speak on "Spokesmen for Liberty. 3. 1 L i I I P. KRISHNAMURTHY ... the candidate from India What does this fruit have to do with ,tui cigarette filter? DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ....i:1 + * . ;fi , r, Masters degree is required. Also there n is a current vacancy for a Hospital - Staff Pharmacist. A registered pharma- s, cist with hospital residency or experi- - ence is preferred but a new graduate ia would be considered. t Ansul Chemical Company, Marinette, f Wis. has current openings for Product Engineers, Manufacturing Engineers L and 4 Research Chemist. The Institute of Paper Chemistry, d Appleton, Wis. is seeking an addition to their staff who is a prospective Ph.D. candidate in Physical Chemistry. >r Davis and Elkins College, Elkins, W. o Va. is looking for a person to teach t Civil Engineering subjects. Must have at least a Masters Degree. Ls State University of New York, Agri- - cultural and Technical Institute at r Morrisville has need of a mechanical Engineer to teach in the Industrial Di- s vision. Summer. Placement Notices Personnel Interviews Musical Tent Auditions, Mr. Robert K. Adams, producer of the "Flint Musi- cal Tent" and the* "Detroit Melody Circle" will be at the Michigan Union (Room 3G) on Sat., April 26 from 1 to 6 p.m. to audition singers, dancers, ac- tors and technicians. .Besides available * cast and crew positions there is an ap- a prentice program open to those who .s wish to gain backstage experience. d Some of the shows to be produced are: e "Bloomer Girl," "Vagabond King," "Girl t Crazy," "The Most Happy Fellow," "Oklahoma," etc. i- - -M M THE VICEROY FILTER IS FROM A PURE, NATURAL (Pretty Soon) DON'T MISS '58 Skidoo MATERIAL FOUND IN -and it gives you Maximum Filtration for the Smoothest Smoke! * From the same soft, pure material found in the rich pulp of nature's healthful fruits, modern filter scientists have created the greatest cigarette filter ever designed ... the Viceroy filter. For the Viceroy filter gives you the maximum -filtration for the smoothest smoke of any cigarette. 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