THE MlrCMGAN DAILY
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1955
THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5,1955
'OUNG WORLD TRAVELER:
Student Studies Abroad Four Years
By JOAN SLATER
Rosemary Mapes, '57, came to
he University this semester by
land, sea and air.
When she overhears coffee-talk
from students yearning for Europe
he smiles. Four years of study
and travel in Europe and the Mid-
ile East are in her immediate past
experience.
The Dutch ship Johan Van 01-
denbarnevelt--"loaded with stu-
dents"-docked in New York City
Sept. 16. Two days and one plane
trip later Mimi, as her friends
call her, was up to her shoulder
bob in the job of finding housing
and tallying up credits from four
foreign colleges and one prepara-
tory school.
Attended University of Beirut
Her first coffee date brought to
mind freshman days at the Ameri-
can University of Beirut in' Leba-
non. "There the students gathered
at Uncle Sam's," she said. "The
proprietors were two Arabian
brothers who catered to American
students by serving hamburgers
and milkshakes."
Although hamburgers are the
same in any language and Ameri-
can students anywhere in the
world take catsup on their french
fries the setting she described was
strictly atypical.
"The University of Beirut," she
explained, "is situated on a hill
overlooking the Meditteranian
with bouganvillia, hibiscus and
palm trees. growing all about."
Holiday In Egypt
In the summer of 1954 Miss
Mapes, her mother and sister vis-
ited Egypt. During the same sum-
mer she todk five classes in the
Foreign Service
Talk To Be Given
Important information concern-
ing the State Department foreign
service examination, will be given
at 4 p.m. Thursday in Aud. B,
Angell Hall by Philip H. Trezise.
Before this meeting Trezise will
be available for conferences in
Rm. 3528 Administration Bldg.
Candidates must file their re-
quest to take this examination no
later than Oct. 21. The written
test will be given Dec. 9, 1955, in
65 cities.
Eligible candidates must be at
least 20 and under 31 years of
age. They must also be United
States citizens of 10 years stand-
ing and if married, married to an
American citizen.
Five-Year
Funds Plan
Submitted
(Continued from Page 1)
itself. Rehabilitation of the fourth,
fifth and sixth floors, along with
electrical and general renovations
and improvement of food and
other service equipment, is plan-
ned.
'U' Hospital Modernized by 1960
By 1960, it is expected that
UniversityHospital willtbe com-
pletely modernized under the new
five-year program, according to
Vice-President Pierpont.
DAILY OFFICIALBULLETIN
(Continued from Page 4) "
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[K
JAS
DENIAL OF PERMISSION:
The Dean of Women' or the Dean of
Men may, in extraordinary cases, deny
permission to participate in an activity
or activities.
PARTICIPATION LISTS:
Managers and chairmen of student
activities and projects are required to
submit to the Office of Student Affairs
an alphabetized list of all students
participating in activities under their
leadership, indicating positions held.
For activities which are organized at
the beginning of a semester, lists must
be filed not later than the end of the
third week of classes. For activities
organized during the semester, partici-
pation lists must be filed within fbrty-
eighthours after the activity is or-
ganized..
Watercolor Exhibit sponsored by De-
partment of Journalism in Rackham
Gallery through Fri., Oct. 7. Paintings
by E. O. McMullen of Evart, Michigan.
Gallery hours 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Thurs., Oct. 6, 171 School of Business
Administration.
Registration for these classes may be
made in Room 4501 of the Administra-
tion Building on South State Street
during University office hours, or in
Room 164 of the School of Business
Administration on Monroe Street, Wed.
and Thurs. of this week, 7:30 p.m. to
9:30 p.m.
Doctoral Examination for Frank Wes-
ley Lanham, Education; thesis: "A
Field Investigation of the Co-operative
Business Occupations Program in the
Midland (Michigan) High School,"
Wed., Oct. 5, 4015 University High
School, at 9:30 a.m. Chairman, J. M.
Trytten.
10 Makes to Choose
100-Mile free service
Open Evenings 'til 9 P.M.
415-16 E. William Call NO 2-0035
r
--Daily-Lew Hamburger
NEW STUDENT 'MIMI' MAPES
social sciences at the University
of Vienna.
"Viennese have something akin
to the student tickets for football
games," she mentioned. "Included
in tuition were three tickets to
the Saltzburg music festivals and
three tickets for tours of the Salz-
kammergut area."
Miss Mapes spent her sopho-
more year at the University of
Maryland Extension . in Munich,
Germany. The following summer
she toured the Scandinavian coun-
tries, was on the French Riviera
and attended summer school at the
International College at Cannes.
Traveled With Father
Textbooks and travel have al-
ways been highly related terms for
this native of Tennessee. Her fath-
er was a United States Army of-
ficer and as..a child she attended
schools in Virginia, New Jersey,
New York, Florida and California.
Starting her studies abroad, she
finished high school at the Inter-
national School in Geneva, Switz-
erland. During Easter vacation in
1952 she toured Italy,'Spain, Por-
tugal, England, Holland, Austria
and Germany.
Before enrolling at the Ameri-
can University in Beirut she vis-
ited Trieste, Yugoslavia, Greece
and Turkey.
Currently she is concentrating
in Russian language and litera-
ture. "I still want to travel," she
said.
N
A
Audience Requests Influence
Cinema Guild Film Selections
Haveyou ever wondered how
the Cinema Guild chooses its films
and where its money goes?
Audience requests play a very
important part in the selection of
the films. The audience is encour-
aged to write down names of films
which they would like to see and
leave them at the box office.
The availability of films, of
course, is another important de-
Don't sy
you can't find. it
till you try
J-
Al-
'rS
terminant of which films will be
shown.
Manager Schedules Films
Bill Morgan, Manager of the
Cinema Guild, prepares a list of
good films compiled both from re-
quests and catalogues. This list is
then turned over to the Cinema
Guild Board who in turn either
rejects or accepts the films.
The Board is trying to start a
trend toward establishing an "arts
theatre" bye occasionally interject-
ing foreign films. They feel that
many foreign films are "good" but
that these films are not, as yet,
completely accepted by the stu-
dents.
The main objective of the Cin-
ema Guild is to bring good films to
campus at a price students can
afford.
Guild is Non-Profit Group
In addition to bringing these
films to campus, the Guild is also
working as a non-profit organi-
zation-non-profit for themselves.
The films are spons'ored by var-
ious campus organizations who pe-
tition for the right of sponsoring
the films.
The groups are interviewed by
the Board and are given sponsor-
ship on the basis of how much
money they need and why.
These organizations receive 80%
of the profits from the showing of
the films while the remaining
20% is used for insurance'of the
films and Cinema Guild expansion.
Petitions for organizational
sponsorship of Student Govern-
ment Council Cinema Guild are
now available in the quonset hut.
Petitions should be returned by
Monday. Interviewing will be held
Oct. 27.
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DRESSY...
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Tassel-Ties
Here's the slip-on shoe that combines
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A
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