Page B10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 5, 1985 41 Study: pr By LAURA BISCHOFF After the first few weeks of rest and relaxation, you find your syllabi at the bottom of your back- pack, only to discover that you were supposed to be reading 300 pages per week in History. The Chemistry assignments have also been piling up, and your political science hourly is tomorrow. What is one to do now? The options are: a)panic, b)read Cliff Notes, c)call Mom, d)study, or e)drink heavily. THE ANSWER (drum roll please) is d)study. If you answered this correctly, you're one step closer to graduation. At college, nobody breathes down your neck telling you to study, but consider it a requirement - just like freshmen composition - only it lasts four years and you can't place out of it. It is less nerve-racking and probably more ef- fective if you start hitting the books rather than the bottle, and trying to cram six weeks into one night. even potion for success terrupted by chattery roommates and friends, stereo wars, hallway soccer, and two or three nuts running up and down the hall with underwear on their heads. Many central campus students take refuge in the Graduate or Undergraduate (UGLi) Libraries. Hill-area dwellers gravitate toward the Medical Science Library (Med Sci) or the Taub- man Library. THE GRAD houses floors and floors of cubicles and little rooms with windows in the stacks. But the huge reference room on the second floor is the place to be, and you're sure to see friends slaving away there. The UGLi has group study rooms and hundreds of cubicles and tables on every floor. In addition to being noisy, the UGLi is very ugly. "I don't walk into the UGLi unless I have to go to the reserve room. It's social hour in there," said RC senior Mary Houle. FnR iTNSPIRIN( decr trv the Law Library others doesn't sound appealing then you may want to check out the smaller campus libraries like the Natural Science Library in the Natural Science Building, the Social Work Library in the Frieze Building, or the Public Health Library on the second floor of the Public Health Building. PERHAPS THE libraries are too stuffy and quiet for you. In that case, check out the Michigan Union Grill (MUG) in the basement of the Union, or the PanTree restaurant on Liberty St. Olga's, on State St., offers free. soda pop refills when a student is pouring over the books for a long time. Those eight chapters of physics and the fifty economics problems may go faster over a cup of coffee or a burger. Area snackbarsand restaurants are great study spots also, especially for group study sessions where talking won't bother anyone. The Angell-Mason-Haven hall complex locks at 10 p.m., but if you get there before closing you can stay all night and stake out your very own classroom. These rooms are quiet and offer solitude. STUDYING IN the dorm lounges isn't all bad, except for the TV lounges - bad idea to study in front of the idiot box. But don't forget you can always scoot over to your dorm library for a study session. The Union study rooms have cushiony high- backed chairs with foot rests, carpeting, wood panelling, and long wooden tables. A 'rn Rlat-MI~ Y UMJ2 y y LJO W LlV* Q ONCE YOU'VE made up your mind to study, reading room with high ceilings, chandeliers, and you have to find a good, comfortable study spot - semi-private rooms along the walls. The law is but not too comfy, you wouldn't want to fall asleep. usually so quiet (except when the Tigers win the There are plenty of libraries, classrooms, snack- World Series) that you could hear a pin drop if the bars, lounges, and .outdoor areas to choose from floors weren't made of sound-absorbing cork. so you're sure to find something to please. The new business library across from East How conducive the dorm room is for studying Quad has comfy chairs and a rather modern rides on the characteristics, habits, and quirks of YOU decor. and your roommates. You will invariably be in- If studying in the same room with hundreds of Daily photo The reference room in the Graduate Library is a quiet, relaxing spot for many students. 4 Hillel grows as programs expand for ow i all students By SUSAN GRANT Hillel has undergone a transfor- mation. It no longer only serves the Jewish campus community. Now it offers a variety of activities - including films, concerts, and speakers - for everyone. "IN 1980, Hillel was very quiet. The only people who came to Hillel were students with fairly traditional values," said Michael Brooks, Hillel's director. "People came here because they were looking for those things like religious services, Kosher food, and Israeli dancing; I suspect," he said. "Now one is much more likely to meet people from the fraternity-sorority crowd and non-Jews than a couple of years ago." "In fact, non-Jews are involved in almost every aspect of Hillel except the religious programs," he added. MOREOVER, WHILE Hillel has a Jewish orientation, we "have no in- terest in converting non-Jews or making Jews more religious," Brooks said. Instead, while Hillel continues to sponsor religious services, a Kosher food program, and Israeli dancing, other programs designed to meet the needs of the entire community have flourished in recent years. Hillel has become the second largest student group on campus. Only the University Activities Com- mittee is larger, Brooks said. THE BUDGET has also doubled in the last three years and Hillel wants to expand their building. "Hillel didn't get to be the second largest student-run group on campus with their religious programs." Brooks said. "People from the entire community have come in and because of our cultural programs, we have wider contacts with the community," he ad- ded. PROGRAMS INCLUDE partially sponsoring "Consider" (a weekly pamphlet which discusses controver- sial issues), a concert series, speakers, such as Elie Wiesel, Alan Ginsberg, and Mary Travers (of Peter, Paul, and Mary), and films like "Dr. Zhivago." This year, Hillel is setting up the Hillel Street Playhouse. Their first production will be the play "Talking With..." by Jane Martin. Hillel also offers personal coun- seling with trained counselors. "WE GET calls from all kinds of ' students, with problems ranging from dorms, professors, and academics, to personal problems with the police or landlords," Brooks said. Also in the planning stage is a Raoul Wallenburg program where a group of people will discuss ethical issues in professions like journalism, medicine, or law, he said. Wallenburg is a University graduate who devoted his life to saving Jews during World War II. Although Hillel pays for these# programs, the students run the programs independently. Hillel has no say in what issues will be discussed or the stand each speaker takes. "Groups can and do run programs that are critical of Israel and take stands that may embarrass the larger Jewish community," Brooks said. "Because there is such a wide range of ideas, we feel we must present a ___ Immmmn- I Mmmmmmm