PAGE SIX TiM MICHIGAN DXILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 27, 1953 ____________________________________________________________________________ .1 _______________________________________ University-Owned House To BeIgnited by Firemen LEAGUE FIRST LADY RETIRES: PhylKaufman Gives Up 'U' Politics Naval ROTC HOPWOOD LECTURE: D AI. -ri 1 'a Educated firemen will set fire to a $300 "research" house and then put out the blaze in order to dem- onstrate a new principle in fire fighting at the twenty-fifth annual SL Agenda Student Legislature will dis- cuss the following items of business at an open meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in Strauss Din- ing Rm., East Quad. Motion on Academic Freedom Cinema Guild Report Report of Reorganization Committee Better Business Board Report Summer Planning and Prog- ress Report Michigan Fire College at the Uni- versity June 23 to 26. Firemen, civil defense workers and municipal officials from all over the state will be shown the efficiency of low pressure fog, a fine water spray which turns to steam and pushes smoke and heat out of a burning building. The eight-room wooden house to be used in the test is on Uni- versity property located at Hill and Fifth and was to be torn down. Wallace Gannon of the Univer- sity Extension Service which spon- sors the Fire College, said heat testing devices will be placed in- side the building so interior tem- peratures can be recorded. The amount of water used will also be measured, he added. Gannon said the fire will be carefully controlled so there will be no danger to near-by property. Well-disciplined energy has been the key for the first lady of the League, Phyllis Kaufman, in her tortuous climb up the campus po- litical ladder. From inconspicuous beginnings in newly opened Alice Lloyd Hall four years ago, Miss Kaufman rose through a maze of positions and activities to hernewly-shed posi- tion as president of the League. * * * DISTRACTIONS and frustra- tions of extra-curricular life have left the perpetual Kaufman smile intact, and a friendly disposition unruffled through incessant aggra- vations. Deans on down have learned that Miss Kaufman's innate sense of tact frequently sugar-coats a forthright and determined nature. "My chief accomplishment at the League," she reminisces with the embryonic nostalgia of be- ing four weeks removed from her office, "was to overhaul and modernize a patchwork constitu- tion." Friends can attest to the months of nerve-wracking effort embodied in that statement. In organizations where tradition has worn deep paths, change is naturally suspect- ed, and wins acceptance only after rigorous evaluation. And this process, to those involved in it, is a most time-consuming and trying one. However, the new constitution is in the process of clearing its fi- nal channels this week, and will shortly become a reality. AN ATTRACTIVE shapely bru- nette Miss Kaufman, in her alter ego as a student, has majored in speech correction and education. "My grades are nothing to brag about," she claims when pressed for her point average. But in- formed sources maintain that she isn't too far from the 3.0 mark. The retired chief female ex- ecutive is just completing a -Daily-Malcolm Shatz FINIS--Campus career completed, Phyllis Kaufman, '53Ed, pre- pares for departure, triumphant after clearing her last gradua- tion hurdle, a freshman physical education test. Honors Eight" Midshipmen Eight midshipmen were honored recently at the Annual Awards Re- view held by the Naval ROTC. Awards were presented recogniz- ing achievement, scholastic at- tainment and character.t MIDSHIPMEN Bruce J. Ma-; guire, '53BAd, and William C. Fil-7 kins, '53, were awarded the Unit- ed States Naval Institute Associ- ate Award and the United States Naval Institute Regular Award for interest in the advancement of professional, literary and scientific knowledge in the Navy by Cdr. G. W. Smith, U.S.N.- Midshipman James Kneussl,1 '53, was presented the Marine Corps Association Award by< Maj. G. C. Williams, Jr., U.S.N., as the outstanding Marine cadet. Scabbard and Blade Award for the outstanding sophomore mid- shipman was presented to William C. Weber. For outstanding attainment in the field of military science Mid- shipman George R. Curry, '54E, received the Armed Forces Chem- ical Association Medal from Lt. R. M. Davis, U.S.N. Col. W. B. McKean, chairman of the department of naval science presented Midshipmen Robert 0. Harger, '54E, and John Venner- holm, The Chicago Tribune Silver and Gold Medals respectively for scholastic attainment, military achievement and character. Midshipman William B. Stason, '53, was presented the National So- ciety of the Sons of the American Revolution Medal for leadership. Fries To Speak On Linguistics Prof. Charles C. Fries of the English department will speak at 8 p.m. today on "Meaning and Lin- guistic Analysis" at a meeting of the Linguistics Club in the East Conference Rm., Rackham Bldg. The meeting will be open to the public. Stephen Spender, poet, literary c'ritic and one of the founders of the literary review "Horizon" will deliver the Hopwood lecture at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow, in Rackham Lecture Hall. At present a visiting lecturer at the University of Cincinnati, Spender will speak on, "Being a YoungWriter, Past, Present and Future." Pogue Receives IBurkan Law Prize Richard W. Pogue, '53L, has re- ceived the $150 Nathan Burkan Memorial Award for , his essay, "Borderland - Where Copyright and Design Patent Meet." Known foremost as a poet his works include, "Poems," "Poems for Spain" and "Vienna." How- ever Spender has also done much work as a critic and has authored books on politics and morals. Some of these works include, "European Witness" in which he shows the effect Nazism has had on German intellectuals: "For- ward from Liberalism" and an au- tobiography titled "World Within World." After Spender's address Prof. Arno L. Bader of the English de- partment will present checks to the winners of the annual Jules and Avery Hopwood contest in cre- ative writing. A ' 4 4' roes npender to ueiiver Talk on YoungWriters NEED MONEY FOR NI SUMMER FOR MALE UNDERGI at GARY SHEET & TI United States Steel Co * STARTING RATE $1.431/2 P # TIME AND ONE-HALF FOR * EXCELLENT WORKING COT # PLACEMENT ON JOBS REL YOUR STUDIES - WHEREI FOR FURTHER INFORMA Contact the Bureau of Appc OR WRITE E. C. CLYME GARY SHEET & TIN h North Buchanan St Gary, Indiana FOST OFZ E B Here is the Bes KEEP COOL at the lake selling1 Write us for details, a EXT FALL? RADUATES IN MILL rp. ER HOUR OVERTIME NDITIONS Elementary School. "I love teaching," she declares, pri- vately expressing a partiality for the chubbier members of her spitball-tossing battalions. Teaching has at this point large-I ly supplanted her earlier vocation- al objectives of speech correction. Principle need at this juncture is a job for next year, she intimates. * * # t- A NATIVE of South Haven, Michigan, she found high school a happy hunting ground activity- wise as well, worked on a bevy of organizations, including the stu- dent council, dramatics group, yearbook, and school band. In college, she picked up where she left off in South Haven. Her first break came when, much to her amazement, she was named ..i....«. . . 1,..27 ... - - - F tively quiet-Miss Kaufman con- tented herself with chairing an Assembly Committee, plus some miscellaneous work with the League, dormitory government and Soph Cab. In that spring, she sprang back into the campus political scene, won a Student Legislature seat handily. In the fall, she was run- ning the election -- and shortly thereafter, had risen to the cabi- net as corresponding secretary. LAST SPRING, two alternatives faced the energetic coed-retire- ment to a cloistered academic life, or running for the League presi- dency. And this is where we came in. Most recent triumph for the bustling ex-president is comple- tion of a requirement which has been festering since the freshman year-her physical education skill test. With this hurdle out of the way, she stands resigned to the in-! exorable approach of graduation. t practice teaching semester with cnairman of tne Blue Team for A.TED TO the fifth grade at University Frosh Weekend, then in its sec- t POSSIBLE ond season. "We demolished 1 them," she recollects with the I Architect Wins last remnants of the freshman t exuberance which inundates the1 0TI:1Booth Fellowship campus with posters and noon-E intments time diag antics in the latter_ Edward W. Hammarsjkald, '51, part of April. of the architecture college has been Her sophomore year was rela- awarded the $1,000 George G. Booth Annual Traveling Fellow- ship in Architecture for 1953. VILL DeanrWell I. Bennett announced In Hill A ditoriun Hammarskjold plans to leave for Europe in June to study build- Four organ students of Robert ing research in Europe and Eng- Noehren of the musicschool will _____________land, give a public recital at 8:30 p.m. today in Hill Auditorium. Jane Townsend, '54SM. will play Bach's "Fantasia and Fugue in G minor," and Diane Meger, '56 will play the "Allegro" from the First Trio Sonata by Bach. D nCK SBuxtehude's "Prelude and Fugu in G minor" will be played by OX 78 BATTLE CREEK, MICH. Richard Harper, Grad, and Bach's "Chorale Prelude, Num komm der Heilen Heiland" will be played by Mary Catherine Hutchins, '53SM. t Summer Job of All! and earn substantial commissions qMORN this popular dock. _. °9ale as seen in CHARM - -i lIi I z4B OO4t0 C4 DINNERS LUNCHES 3 i Iii I I COCKTAIL LOUNGE For Private Parties - Phone 935 3YP' HoURs: 11:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M. 1322 Washtenaw on Highway 23 YPSILANTI, MICHIGAN Closed Mondays 4 3. I WHITE L IN EN S :J '<. 14 A BRIDAL AISLE g'eau tie4 '-'I NING .. AFTERNOON EVENING dvice, and lake territory desired. I i -"7 T ---" N SUMMER WORK FOR MEN BUICK MOTOR DIVISION Leith Street, Flint, Michigan NEED FOR ASSEMBLERS, MACHINE OPERATORS, FOUNDRY HELPERS, MATERIAL HANDLERS. ETC. o9E t 0, 1 Summer Prints . . . Sheers Silk Shantungs Marquisettes . . . 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