PAGE Sx THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1953 CULTURE BY THE TERM: Students, Staff Rent Art Reprints By JIM DYGERT When a student is seen strug- gling across the diag with a large, framed picture, the first impres- sion is that he has made a fruit- ful visit to a local art gallery, or is a member of an int'ernational smuggling ring. ** * THE COLLECTION, housed in Rm. 510 of the Administration Bldg., contains 948 framed repro- ductions of famous paintings, which may be rented by students, faculty and staff members for 50 cents a semester. During orientation week at the beginning of each semester, about 600 of. the prints are ex- hibited in the Rackham Gallery. Prints may not be rented dur- ing this week because of the confusion that would be caused, but students may sign up for one print in the first week of school. Faculty and staff members are eligible to rent a print in the sec- ond week. Although the original limit is one picture to a person, more may be obtained after the first rush. In charge of the collection is Mrs. Michael Conkey, reception- ist in the office of Student Af- fairs. According to Mrs. Conkey, many students initially rent a print merely to cover up con- spicuously bare walls, but often develop an , attachment for the picture they rentedsand are re- luctant to return it at- the end of the semester. A MORE or less educational function is also served by the pic- tures, for students previously un- acquainted with art often become interested after a semester with a print -from the collection. Manuel Krashin, a fine arts 'student, assists Mrs. Conkey with the collection. Since he began work with the collection this fall, the office in 510 has been open daily from 3 to 5 p.m. and the former storage room has been redecorated to' look. more like an art office. - The collection was born seven years ago when a Detroit depart- ment store donated 400 prints to the University and a fund was set aside to frame the pictures and buy more. Since then, the collection has grown through other gifts and purchases made from rental fees to become the largest collection of its kind in the United States. Although the popularity of the prints is evidenced by the bare shelves in the office, Mrs. Conkey intends to make more students aware of the collection, which is primarily for them, by a campus- .wide poster campaign before the end of the semester. U' Linguists To Gather Four papers on the teaching of languages will be read during a- meeting of the Michigan Linguis- tic Society at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Amphitheater. Papers written by Prof. Charles C. Fries, director of the English Language Institute, Prof. Hide Shohara of the Far Eastern Lan- guages department and Prof. Yeo Shen of the English Language In- stitute will be read. The reading of two other papers, one -by James Downer of the De- partment of English and the other by Edward Anthony of the Insti- tute will conclude the meeting. Medical Directors To Discuss Health Industrial medical directors from all over the United States will discuss developments in industrial medicine and evaluate the impact of present practices on future pro- gress at 9:30 p.m. today in the School -of Public Health. Excite . ent, Suspense t Reign at o cl ey Game -Daily-,Dick Gaskill MRS. CONKEY BEAMS OVER ONE OF THE PRINTS FOR LOANING U Telecourse Series Slated "The Land and Peoples of Latin America" will be brought to tele- vision screens throughout the state at 1 p.m. this Sunday as part of the University's weekly television hour. The program, which will at- tempt to create a better under- standing of our neighbors to the: south, is the first in the series of a new seven-week telecourse. Coordinator of the course on Latin America will be Prof. Philip. B. Taylor, Jr., chairman of the program in Latin American Stud- ies Committee. Also slated for Sunday's pro- gram is "The Casting of Metals," as taught by Prof. Richard A. Flinn, of the engineering college. The one-hour show will be pre- sented over WWJ-TV, Detroit,, WJIM-TV, Lansing, and WKZO- TV, Kalamazoo. Bull-Ring Group To Hold Meeting The Bull-Ring, a group com- prised of faculty members and graduate students, will meet at 9 p.m. today at the Roundtable, 1114 W. Huron.1 Organized in 1949 by Prof. Aus- tin Warren of the -English depart- ment, the club was formed to ef- fect an intellectual exchange be-I tween the various departments of the University. Where will your education take you? Is it a part of your plan for a successful and remunerative career? If not, we invite you to investigate the opportunities for young. Americans in FOREIGN TRADE or FOREIGN SERVICE The American Institute For Foreign Trade is a graduate-level institution specifically designed to give you the training need- ed to fulfill the exacting requirements of American business and government in their international operations. Advanced degrees given. .'r. At the end of your one-year intensive course of training, you will be able to speak and understand one of the modern romance languages, you will understand the complexities of foreign trade and international exchange and you will be familiar with the history, politic's, geography and sociology of one of the major world areas-Latin America, Western Europe, or the Far East, Write to: The Committee on Admissions American Institute for Foreign Trade Thunderbird Field I. Phoenix, Arizona "The greatest spectator sport in America." That's the way an ardent hock- ey fan would describe the action, the excitement and the thrill of watching his favorite sport. OFTEN referred to as being second only to the South Ameri- can game of Jai Alai as the world's fastest sport, ice hockey certainly rates high on the list when it comes to offering its watchers a great exhibition com- bined with the suspense of rugged competition. Here at Michigan, hockey en- thusiasts are doubly fortunate for not only does the University possess a hockey squad, but it happens to have the nation's finest, the National Collegiate Athletic Association champions. Six times the Wolverine puck- sters have journeyed to Colorado Springs to compete in the annual N.C.A.A. collegiate championship tournament after sweeping through rigorous 20 to 25-game schedules with only few losses. Four times the Maize and Blue returned to Ann Arbor with the huge trophy symbolic of United States collegiate hockey suprem- acy. Last March, after an uphill struggle to even qualify for the tournament, Heyliger and - his team again went west and once more the Wolverines swept through their two games to the title. This season the team will be out to retain its crown. This week- end the Wolverines battle Toronto University in two non-league tilts before engaging the Nodaks of North Dakota in the first Midwest Collegiate Hockey League clashes of the season' at Grand Forks, N.D., on the 18th and 19th of the month. -4 THE PUCK GETS TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT 'I 4 SCARVES AND HOT COFFEE ARE ALWAYS IN ORDER HOCKEY WHETS THE APPETITE A Daily Photo Feature Story hv ,f 3 .'... K III II! I i II II N ~ "%... '*~, ,, 1