Page 6-Friday, April 20, 1979-The Michigan Daily Finals arriving as study slump sets in (Continued frorPage 3) Greg Roda, who was working on a Spanish paper. 'I'm taking advantage of study days," he explained. During the term Roda claimed that he studied about two hours a day, and said "I have t a rule of no studying on weekends." Charley Sneed shared Roda's laid- back attitude towards studying. "If I can stay away from the bars I'll do it tonight." He studies more "when the pressure is on" just before a test. On Wednesday and Thursday after- noons the tennis and basketball courts and track at Palmer Field were crowded with athletes. Bodies on towels dotted the hills behind the dormitories. A rather sweaty pair emerged fromt he tennis courts and explained how they could spare the study time. "One final," said one, and her partner grin- ned, "No finals." OTHER STUDENTS were more worried about their impending tests. They trudged to the libraries with bulging knapsacks begining at 8:00 a.m. Sleepy pre-meddies and panic- stricken souls who haven't cracked a book since midterms filled the libraries by mid-morning reading for - a marathon study session with textbooks and notes. On the fifth floor of the Grad, Kathy Stefanof, a LSA sophomore, took a short break from studying accounting. "I usually try to get one of the big typing carrols," she explained. "I got here at five after eight and they were, all gone." Stefanof said she planned to stay, "until I can't stand the Grad anymore. Diehard students remained in the libraries for hours. "Quite a few stay until about 2:00 a.m.," said, Andrea Phillips, a student worker at the Un- dergraudate Library. On Wednesday night about 20 students stayed until the library closed at 5:00 a.m. Even some professors were trying to catch up at the end of the term. English Professor Marie Ellman was working in her Haven Hall office "trying to put together an exam." "It always talkes longer than I think it will," she ex- plained. "I'm grading papers," said Prof. Thomas Toon, who teaches English and a History of the English Language course. "I should be doing something more exciting," he added with a wistful glance out his office window. Noting the mid-day crowd of students enjoying the warm weather on the Diag, he laughed, "They're not preparing for that exam I'm writing." Board votes to maintain Cellar's current structure (Continued from Page3) Cellar employee Ralph McKee, board member and business school professor Tim Nantell had considerable influence in the board's decision. "Tim brough a whole new light," said Jacobsen. "It was Tim's motion, he duly deserves credit." The board had expected to ap- prove a structure developed by a com- mittee consisting of several non-union employees and management, accor- ding to both Jacobsen and McKee. Nan- tell was unavailable for comment last night. McKee presented statistical infor- mation to the board during an open meeting Tuesday afternoon. He said he examined a survey conducted by'the National Association of College Stores (NASC) and determined that the Cellar is seventh in the nation in terms of sales per square foot. "In terms of our limitations, we're one of the most efficient store of this kind in the country," said McKee. "IT (THE structure) is not traditional, but the work is getting done," admitted Jacobsen. At a closed meeting Tuesday night, the board discussed the information it had received from McKee and evidence from its own financial records, said Jacobsen. The board then voted in public to maintain the current struc- ture. M- / APRIL 2021 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Stephen Sondheim Hugh Wheeler presented by -' ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE CURTAIN EVES 8 p.m. Box Office Hours 12-5 daily no phone orders