A. x PAGE- U5M THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MARC!! 17, 1954 Courthouse Progresses -Daily-Don Campbell TAKING TO THE AIR-The $3,250,000 county courthouse is fast taking shape around the old building located at Fourth, Huron and Main Sts. Completion of the U-shaped structure is slated for the end of 1955. TEACHERS LIKE IT: lattery Often Promotes Successful College Dys By FLORENCE HUBER An old saying warns the stu- dent "flattery will get you no- where," but there seems to be a difference of opinion. Robert Tyson, of . the Hunter College psychology and philosophy department, listed a few sugges- tions-recently for students "who want to stay in college." * * * AMONG them: 1) "Bring the professor news- paper clippings dealing with his subject. If you can't find clip- pings dealing with his subject, bring any clippings at random. He thinks everything deals with his subject. 2) "Nod frequently and murmer, 'How true!' To you this seems ex- aggerated; to him, it's quite ob- jective. 3) "Laugh at his jokes. You can tell. Ifx he looks up from his notes7 and smiles expectantly, he has told a joke. 4) "Ask for outside reading. You don't have to read it, just ask. ; 5) "Ask any questions you; think he can answer. Avoid an- nouncing you have found the, answer to a question he couldn't answer, and in your brother's second grade reader at that, City Officers To Meet Today Representatives of Michigan cit- ies will meet here today and to-' morrow in the East Conference, Room of the Rackham Bldg. 'for; the fourth annual Municipal Fi- nance Officers Training Institute. The meeting is sponsored by the University Institute of Public Ad- ministration and Extension Ser- vice in cooperation with the Mich- igan Municipal League and Michi- gan Chapter of the Municipal Fi- nance Officers Association. Current legislation, annual aud- its and parking meter revenues will be examined during the meetings. Discussion groups will highlight most of the sessions. Schultes To Speak' Today at Rackham Richard Evans Schultes of the United States Department of Ag- riculture, will speak today at 4:157 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheater on 'Twelve Years in the Northwest+ Amazon." The lecture is sponsored by the botany department. 6) "Call attention to his writ- ing. Produces an exquisitely pleas- ant experience connected with you. If you know he's written a book or article, ask in class if he wrote it." * * * ' REACTIONS to Tyson's sug- gestions were varied. A Michigan psychology instructor laughed heartily. "Of course," he said, "you can usually see through these tricks." - He went on musingly, "I had a student once who always laughed at my jokes. I remem- ber one spring day he was al- ways laughing. But maybe I was being particularly funny that day . .." The instructor thought it would be handy to have a few additions to the Hunter College list. Larry Hulack, Grad., obligingly said there were two things to watch, dress and mannerisms. "If the professor wears a tweed suit, you wear a tweed suit," he said. "If he wears knitted ties, you wear knitted ties. If he smokes in class, you smoke in class- and smoke a pipe if he smokes a pipe. If he drums on a desk, practice on a piano or typewriter until you can keep time with him." * * *. A COED thought there was a lack of the feminine touch in the suggestions." Keep your eyes on his face ,constantly," she advised. "Believe it or not, some of the profs still fall for the helpless ap- proach. Talking to him after class and intimating you've never known such an intelligent instructor- well, women still have some ad-I vantages over the fellows when it1 comes to flattering men." A dissenter to the flattery ap- proach is Etienne Thiel, Grad., from Paris. "I hate apple-pol- ishing," he said emphatically. "If the professor is boring, show him that he's boring.. If his jokes are bad, laugh too loudly." "However, you must be Machia- vellian about exams," Thiel added with a note of caution. "Any means you mnust use to pass an exam is good. I once came to class for an exam impeccably dressed in a soldier's uniform. I told the professor that I had been on maneuvers and drills for days. I was yery tired and had had no time to study. I passed." . Summing it up, he said, "In the end, it's a kind of game between the two of you. You must fight all the time and you must try to dupe the professor." SL Agenda Student Legislature will meet to discuss the following reports and motions at 7:30 p.m. today in Strauss house dining room of East Quadrangle: Student Loan Committee re- port. 'Driving ban petitions Fresh Air Camp Tag Day Cinema Guild sponsors Motion calling for a special election in May concerning the calendar. Elections report Free University of Berlin drive report Motion on academic freedom week Student Discount Service Recommendations qn a stu- dent book store Mock UN Assembly progress report SL has invited all interested students and faculty members to the meeting. Berlin's Free U Discussed {Continued from Page 1) replaced by more serviceable ave- nues of learning. For there .is the conviction amongst younger faculty members and students at the Free Univer- sity that academic work in Ger- many must become functional if the German universities are ever to regain their former role in Eur- opean culture. Therefore, to make scholarship of this type possible and mean- ingful in the future, it will be the main task of the scholars to mould a new generation, even at the ex- pense of individual research. THIS AIM, however, can be served against all the inroads of misunderstanding and hostility only if the university is able to preserve its dynamic character. Besides bein an institution of higher learning of the Western type it'has to perform the increas- ingly difficult function of assimi- lating the two types of German students who become more diverse from year to year. Since the adaptability of the university as an institution to this task depends largely on a close and considered co-opera- tion between students and fac- ulty (which is an exception for German conditions), it is essen- tial that safeguards be taken to prevent this newly achieved pat- tern from being destroyed by student groups which desire to import into Berlin the old-fash- ioned forms of German student life revived ii West Germany. The modern traits of German academic life which seem to emerge at the Free University may briefly be characterized as 1) the longing for a higher de- gree of critical realism, 2) a pragmatic approach to scholarship, 3) a functional conception of academic freedom. Ihmediately after the war there was much discussion of the handi- caps imposed upon a German democratic government by this lack of political awareness on the part of the educated classes. How- ever, the only concrete reform of significance to date is to be found at the Free University. Inter-Arts Union f To Hold Tryouts The Inter-Arts Union will hold tryouts from 7 to 9 p.m. today and tomorrow in Auditorium D, Angell Hall for a one-act fantasy to be performed at its festival in May. Tom Arp, '54, vice-president of the Union, also announced tryouts from 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday in the League for a one-act social satire, scheduled to be produced at the festival. 3T A ,., FLUSHED F R O M DE I T H -S .--A"frogman" holds two ancient Greek jars in a Paris store. He helped to recover them from a ship wrecked in the Mediterranean in 200 B. C S Q U A R E- S H A P E D P L A N E -.William Horton sits in cockpit of his experimental plane. at Santa Ana, Cal., after it made second test flight. Wing tips fold back into fuselage. E Ni N I C E H A N D F U L -- Mrs. Margaret Clark displays a 56-pound Brazilian aquamarine valued at $2,500,000 now resting in a New York vault pending decision in an ownership dispute. G 0 0 D S T A R T-- Ticonderoga, White Heather and Caribbee, left to right, get away in 125- mile Great Isaac ocean race at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Caribbee, owned by Carleton Mitchell, won. a,: r. t BEAUTIFYING R A P I D T R A N SIT- Workersbuild what mayappearto bea rural farmer's home but is in realityjthe subway station in the Dahlean district of West Berlin.t LLAMA AND LOVE L Y-Nicole Maurey holds llama that makes movie debut with her in "Legend of the Inca." Llama was brought to Hollywood from Peru where much of film was made, We H oveTeFiDRAPESt- CURTAINS We Have The Finest In Equipment for Laundering or Dry-Cleaning Your Draperies. Call NO 3-4185 for FREE ESTIMATE WITHOUT OBLIGATION. 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