A FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY X .a~ 1J~lWAJ A %y ~l itLl L Scholarship Deadlines Announced A number of general undergrad-, uate scholarships are available to all students regardless of the school or college in which they are enrolled. Applications may be submitted to the Office of Student Affairs, unless otherwise specified, with the request to have them considered for any scholarship for which the applicant is eligible. * * * THE AMERICAN Indian Schol- arship for American Indians of either sex enrolled at or eligible for admission to the University awards a cashtallowance equiva- lent to semester fees. The Fred W. and Annie A. Balsam Scholarship provides $200 annually for one "worthy undergraduate student" with one semester's residence. Appli- cations should be made before Feb. 28. Undergraduate students with one semester's residence may also apply before March 31 for the Ben and Lucile Braun Scholarship for $400 awarded annually to one per- son. ANOTHER scholarship open to undergraduate students with one semester's residence is the Eugene G. Fassett Scholarship, awarding $200 annually. Applications must be in before Feb. 28. The Elmer Gideon Memorial Scholarships for undergraduate men, originating from funds al- located annually by the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics, awards not more than $1,100 to one individual in a. one-year period, depending upon individual need. Applications are due by March 15. Undergraduates students with one semester's residence may ap- ply for a grant from the Hartwig H. Herbst Fund. Cinema Guild Movie Coughlin, Price Discuss Practical Phases of Law Considering the question "Why Study Law?" Assistant Attorney General Edward Coughlin and Laurence Price both of the Mich- igan Employment Security Com- imission gave law students profes- sional advice at a meeting of the Michigan Crib Society last night. Coughlin, as the first speaker, warned the pre-law students to consider whether they had the mental, physical, and moral en- durance to pursue the law profes- sion. Prerequisites for the lawyer-to- be are above-average intelligence, good eyesight, and patience, he said. Stating the advantages of I I ' law, he said the lawyer is as- sured stimulation for the rest of his life in his chosen career and he can count on a long profes- sional life. "He must, however, be aware that he is entering an over-crowd- ed field where the start to success is gradual and renumerations slow in coining." Following Coughlin's talk Price discussed the personal satisfactions that are to be had from a life devoted to the legal profession. If four years of law school do not eventually lead to law prac- tice, the training is inestimably valuable in any field, Price con- cluded. "THE GRAPES OF WRATH"-The scene above is taken from the movie adaptation of John Steinbeck's novel "The Grapes of Wrath," this week's Student Legislature Cinema Guild offering. Film showings are scheduled for 7 and 9 p.m. today and tomor- row and 8 p.m. Sunday at the Architecture Auditorium. Politicking Methods Learned By'' YD's at State Convention .] By MIKE WOLFF Membership in a local political club can involve more than just attending meetings. Campus Young Democrats who served their political apprentice- ship at this month's Democratic State Convention found politick- ing could lead to anything from washing glasses to hunting up 3 a.m. caucuses. YD PRESIDENT Blue Carsten- son, Grad., spent his first evening at the Grand Rapids convention hanging posters, handing out pamphlets and shaking hundreds of hands at the headquarters of Ann Arbor lawyer Talbot Smitl!. Carstenson and five other YD's managed Smith's hotel room headquarters while cam- paign manager Prof. John P. Dawson of the Law School and other faculty supporters con- tacted various delegations to line up votes for their State Su- preme Court candidate. Previously, the local delegation attended a general caucus where they questioned candidates for the Board of Regents on stands they would take on the Lecture Com- mittee and opening Regents' meet- ings to the press. The main job the YD's per- formed, however, was locating the numerous caucuses. It is necessary to know where they are and what is going on, for the. timing of your candidate's en- trance can be crucial to gaining the group's vote," Carstenson ex- plained. The ways to find this informa- tion vary, he added. "Although we could rely on several faculty mem- bers who sat in on the different, caucuses, one, woman from another delegation had to resort to wait- ing at the bar as the delegates. left their meetings," Carstenson said. WELCOME STUDENTS Formerly Rice's Restaurant Steaks * Chops * Sea Foods Bottled and Draught Beer 9 Wineo* Your Host LYLE ZIEGLER Welcomes you! Open daily 10 A.M.-Dinners 4:30 P.M.-9 P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS ZI EGLER'SI 1e tau~aft ki1 4 I None of the campus area book- stores or drugstores has "girlie" magazines on display. The places selling the magazines are some distance from the campus. Commenting on the distinction between magazines and their cov- Campus Calendar Events Today MUSEUM MOVIE - "Animals Unlimited" and "How Animals De- fend Themselves" are the Univer- sity Museum sponsored movies which will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Kellogg Auditorium. PHILOSOPHY LECTURE.- Prof. Douglas Morgan, chairman of Northwestern University's philoso- phy department, will speak on "Pictorial Metaphor" at 4 p.m. in the East Conference Rm. of Rack- ham Bldg. PHILADELPHIA STORY-The Student Players will continue the production of Philip Barry's, "The Philadelphia Story," at 8 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. The last performance will be given tg- morrow. By NAN SWINEHART A wedding in Germany is not announced by the society pages of a newspaper, but in the form of a paid advertisement. Such differences between Ger- many and the United States in all phases of American life by two of Germany's leading women jour- nalists, Imogen Seger and Anne- liese Steinhoff, during their visit to this country. * * * WITH THIRTEEN other jour-, nalists, Miss Steinhoff and Miss Seger came tdi the United States in September on the invitation of the State Department, under the sponsorship of the Women's Bu- reau of the Department of Labor. Their purpose in coming is College Panel To Start Talls "Effective Teaching: How the Objectives in Teaching Are De- termined" will be the topic of dis- cussion when the Forum on Col- lege and University Teaching holds its first session of the new semes- ter at 3 p.m. today in Rackham Amphitheater. The panel will consist of Uni- versity vice-president Marvin L. Niehuss, Dean George G. Brown of the engineering college, Prof. Claude Eggertsen of the education school, Prof. Kenneth L. Jones, chairman of the botany depart- ment, and Prof. Albert H. Marck- wardt of the English department. Open to the public, the forums, sponsored by the Committee on College Relations, are aimed at presenting new and improved teaching methods. - 120 W. Liberty Street Currently in Ann Arbor on a ten-day visit which ends today, they were sponsored by the Uni- versity and Prof. Wesley Maurer, chairman of the journalism de- partment. Miss Seger, a free lance journal- ist and radio script writer, is in- terested in opportunities and man- agement of jobs concerning wom- en. Miss Steinhoff, also a free lance journalist, works on a Munich newpsaper through which she tries to influence women to get out of the home and organize to alleviate the mass unemployment problem. The war, Miss Seger ex- plained, has left German wom- en with a very serious problem. In spite of long standing tra- dition which dictates that they belong in the home, the women are forced by necessity to earn their living. War losses among men were so great that many women will nev- er have husbands to support them. Over a period of 15 years, Ger- man laws have been undergoing changes to give women equal rights. Now more and more Ger- man women are attending univer- sities, making the need for organ- ization great, the journalists said. Miss Steinhoff was very im- pressed with the League on cam- pus because she felt it demon- strated that American women are organized in terms of having made a place for themselves. She hopes that she and Miss Seger can suc- cessfully promote the idea in Ger- many. i.. t. C ( «.4 17 1. 41 Events Tomorrow NEAR EAST LECTURE-Presi- dent of the American University of Beirut in Lebanon, Prof. Stephen B. L. Penrose, Jr., will speak on educational problems in the Near East at 10 a.m. in the East Lec- ture Rm. of Rackham Bldg. ALARM CLOCKS Travelling Clocks Electric Clocks HALLER'S JEWELERS 717 N. University Near Hill Auditorium U f t r., nrr Tnrr .:'i':,:"".,:.:":.,:::a,,"..... E... ::.;_a. U Urs :..". ; r's I 1I