PAGE s T MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1953 FAGE SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1955 IN MARBLE CASE: Map of North Campus Gift of Class of '54 . It By ERNEST THEODOSSIN 'Future Ann Arbor visitors will have no difficulty locating North Campus, thanks to the graduat- ing class of 1954. 'A large marble case which will hold a map of North Campus has been erected at the corner of N. University and State St. As yet, there is no definite date set for placing the map in the case. When asked what she thought of the 1954 class gift, one bewildered tuetqueried, "You mean the television set .. ." Other student opinions register- ed diverse attitudes. "Why didn't they get Michaelangelo's 'David' instead," snapped Joan Cooper, '54. "It's perfectly adorable," Joe Frisinger, '56, said. Perpetuates Memory James Walters, '55E, thoroughly approved of the gift. "It does per- petuate the memory of the class and is of some benfit to the 'cam- pus as a whole," he said. "We need a map of the whole campus - not just North Cam- pus," JoAnn Clark, '56, asserted. "Buy a bus-not a map," Judy Gregory, '56, muttered. "I honestly have never heard of anything more useless in my life," Diane Wengarden, '57, said. Other students registered en- thusiastic application. "Simply fabulous" expressed Nick Kouch- oukos', '58, approval. "Real crazy man, real crazy," added Glen Carlson, '57. Confusing "This will confuse freshmen more than ever," Ann Sterling, '57, said. "For one thing, I don't really see why they have it," Marie Bourbonnais, '57, said in a puzzled tone. "It's more distinctive than a drinking fountain, but it doesn't have neon lighting." Workmen have just recently completed construction of the marble case. Work began late last Hopwood Talk To Be Given By M~aLesh Archibald MacLeish will give the annual Hopwod Writing Contest lecture at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, May 19. MacLeish, distinguished Ameri- can poet and professor at Harvard University will speak at Rackham Lecture Hall. He will discuss con- temporary poetry under the topic, "Why Can't They Say What They Mean?" The Hopwood Contest is open to all University students. Cash prizes for creative writing in drama, es- say, poetry and fiction are award- ed. The awards will be presented after the lecture by Prof.Arno L. Bader of the English department and chairman of the Hopwood Committee. "Conquistador," a long poem by MacLeish won a Plitzer Prize in 1932. In 1953 he was again a reci- pient of a Pulitzer Prize and of the Bollingen prize in poetry. Group Leaders Men students who wish to sign up as group leaders during orientation week may do so in the student offices of the Un- ion from 3-5 p.m. daily, start- ing today. Brown To Talk At Rackham George Granger Brown, Dean of the College of Engineering, will deliver the annual Henry Russel lecture at 4:15 p.m. today in Ra ,- ham Amphitheater. The lecture program was estab- lishqi as part of a project, under the request of the late Henry Rus- sel, 73 Detroit. Dean Brown's lecture is titled, "Fuure Sources of -'cwer." Peace Visit To Russia Called Off NEW YORK (P)-Ten veterans of the American-Soviet meeting at the Elbe didn't leave last night for Moscow and a reunion with their Russian counterparts. They didn't have enough money to get to Paris. Joseph Polowsky of Chicago, head of the American Veterans of the Elbe River Linkup, appealed for funds through reporters and newsreel cameras. He said he was determined to make the trip, even if others in the group had to drop out. The reunion was set for May 9. The 10th anniversary of the Elbe meet- ing was April 25. The 10 members have U.S. pass- ports and visas for the Soviet Un- ion. Russia has promised plane transportation between Paris and Moscow. The problem was to get to Paris. The group had reservations on a Trans World Airlines flight to Paris that left at 9 p.m. Hours be- fore plane tine, it was apparent they weren't going to be able to raise the money. "We thought we had a commit- ment for the money but it didn't materialize," Polowsky said. TWA suggested they could go on a pay-later basis, but some of the group didn't have enough for the 10 per cent down payment. The Greatofe Hour If the University student knows anything, he knows how to make conversation over a cup of coffee. Atth peak social hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. studejits drift across campus to their favorite coffee spots. Music students migrate to "The Betsy," the Greeks congregate to Mary Lee's, and the Pub- :;;: :::.,. + lications crowd distributes themselves behind ..... the counter at "Red's." }}::.-: %iv : :i;}}:}}}: }:.{}:.: }}: }i}'"Bridge}}.fanatics. \.cut...classes Bidgofangets at gamee tgoingagadownstairsstaisin the League, and the Juke box is jumping at the Parrot. The fine art of the coffee date is in full swing. xh ,.".?i.xvv}.v . ":".x: v:.:.:v;....:, .. UT..: :nThe coffee break is more than a diversion-it's a institution. Students are as faithful to the coffee convention as the :ngish to their afternoon tea.' Even the professors gather in the coffee room high in Haven Hall. Some of the students are "social drinkers." They can't stand coffee, they never touched the stuff before they came to college, and they gulp it down quickly with generous supplies of cream and sugar. Others just like something to slosh around in a cup, and coffee is the standard order. But the real devotee always takes his black, can't talk civily be- fore he's had his morning brew, and speaks authoritatively on the best coffee places in town. Coffee in Ann Arbor performs two notable services. One is the :.;:t moral support the beverage gives final-frantic students, the other Sis the time-honored custom of the coffee date. ''' = .". >:+r. ;: :. ...xv..j in the last few weeks of the semester, coffee takes on a ritus}- :} istic importance. Like the plaid hats and English coins that stil- dents take to exams, coffee is endowed with certain mystical powers {+: ; that help in passing bluebooks. Coffee-drinking keeps some students } :: :>;>::: ;:::>x::xi<}:. "'' .. '.i _...>.;}.} .::ie ' awake, but is usually just habit. wtT} : :: }u It is with the delicate procedure of the blind date that coffee really becomes essential. The boy with a pledge formal on his hands and no girl prefers to have a few coffee dates under his belt before :}:ytrusting his fraternity brother's recommendation. The coffee zealots tend to look on tea-drinkers as infidels to } fthe true belief. Those of the tea persuasion may be observing the form of the coffee hour, they say, but are missing one of the finer things of life. HIGH TEA IN ANN ARBOR With the coming of spring, some of the fringe drinkers desert to the lemonade and ice-cream ranks. The sale of popsicles goes up, and soda straws replace the coffee cups. But the addicts remain true to their principles, and pass the ice-cream stands with scorn. ( I CAMPUS INSTITUTION: , +1 -Daily-Dick Gaskill 1954 CLASS GIFT-NOT A TV SET year, but has been hampered by Angell Hall Building, where elec- snow and ice during the winter trical outlets were available. season. The case will provide an acces-, At night, the case is lighted by sible guide to North Campus. As indirect lighting. Ditches were dug new buildings are added, the map from the corner of the campus to will be brought up to date. TEACHERS GET WORD: Education Conference Slated Here -1,h point of the School of Edu- ra fon's 75th anniversary observ- ance will be the 25th annual con- ference on teacher education. The conference will be held in the Union May 12. It will center around discussion of the next 25 years in teacher education, with attention given also to the history of the move- ment. Magee To Speak At 10 a.m. Robert Magee of Wayne University will opeak to a general session meeting on "Per- sistence ir. the Teaching Profes- sion." Prof. William C. Morse and Prof. W. Robert Dixon, of the School of 8ducation, will talk on "A Study of Empathy in Teaching: Student Teachers and Pupils." Speaker at the 12:15 Union luncheon will be Maurice Seay, di- rector of the educational division of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. His topic will be "The Significance of the Community School Concept for Teacher Education." The afternoon session will fea- ture a panel discussion entitled "The Preparation and Status of College Teachers of Education in Miehigan." At 4 p.m., conf rees will attend the eth annual School of Educa- tton Convocation in Auditorium A, Angell Hall, at which President Harlan H. Hatcher will preside. Fo. owing the presentation of ach'e'ement awaids to honored students, David D. Henry, presi- dent-e'ect of the University of Il- linois, will speak. At the dinner following the con- vocation Dean Willard C. Olson, of the School of Education, will in- troduce past and present leaders of educational organizations of the state, who will be guests at the conference. I Give SmtigDifferent0 ON MOTHER'S DAYUU Large assortment of GIFTS to select from 0 INDIA ART SHOP 3 30 MAYNARD STREETn FOLLETT'S need COLLEGE TEXTBOOKS Sell the textbooks you are no longer using before new editions and newer books decrease their value. SELL THEM NOW- SELL THEM FOR CASH Sell them at FO LLETT'S State Street at N. University SOMETHING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY -in the Christian Science Monitor LEARNING T1lE TRADE DAILY, PHOTO F EATU RE Story by DEBRA DURCHSLAG Pictures by DICK GASKILL THREE NO TRUMP--AND WHO CARES ABOUT BOTANY ' A See the SPECIAL DISPLAY of this International Daily Newspaper at 211 E. 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