THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JULY 16, 1950 COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Textbook Racket,' Lift, a. Old Buffalo Make News (.9 By PAULA STRAWHECKER Are you a victim of what the University of Texas calls "the text- book racket?" A Texas student complained re- cently :that although the twelve textbooks he "needs" for an Eng- lish course are available in the li- brary, the course requires that each student buy them. The University of Texas also has an answer for people who suffer from claustrophobia when taking an elevator. Their two solutions tower against the side of the new sci- Three Art Talks Slated This Week The Contemporary Arts and So- ciety program will continue with a lecture by Prof. Edward Rannells at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in Archi- tecture Auditorium. "The Art of Edvard Munch" will be the subject of Prof. Frederick Wight, director of education at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in Boston, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. John Ciardi will lecture at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in Architecture Au- ditorium. ence building-open air eleva- tors, 96 and 114 feet straight up. The elevators, which are used for construction, are run by a pul- ley arrangement and are operated from the ground by members of the Hoisting and Portable Opera- tive Engineers Union. * * * WHEN YOU get on the elevator the operator clutches the motor into gear, steps on the gas and up you go. The lowering stage is control- led by a foot brake, but as the operator says, "These things can drop so fast you have to be care- fnl to see you don't hurt any- body." At that, it's safer than the stairs -there aren't any yet. AND AT the University of Minn- esota the biggest news is an aged buffalo, or what's left of one. Bones of a massive ancient buffalo, estimated to be at least 1,000 years old were discovered in a peat bog about six feet be- low the surface and are being examined by experts at the uni- versity. The skull, about 36 inches from horn to horn, was uncovered by members of the Minneapolis Sew- er departmen.t BOMBER BURNS-Curious onlookers watch the wreckage of a B-50 bomber after it crashed near Lebanton, Ohio, killing from 11 to 15 Army personnel. LIFE IN TRISCO SALOON: Saroyan-Play To Open Wednesday Y A With the lights of a pin-ball ma- chine blazing brightly, William Saroyan's sympathetic d r a m a "The Time of Your Life" will start its Ann Arbor run at 8 p.m. Wed- nesday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, as the third of the speech department's summer dramas. Telling no particular story, the play revolves around life in a hon- ky-tonk saloon in San Francisco. The hero is Joe, a young man with money who comes to the liquor dispensary to 'meet the people' and help them along. * * * JOE IS BLESSED with a tre- mendous belief in people and Twenty-First Annual Education Meeting To Begin Tomorrow . i5 . .'. ( a +: ?,;; ^ SY.. ^? >r y: w;. i'i a t } . t 3K ti $ 'moo + ki. The University's twenty-first annual Summer Education Con- ference will open tomorrow. According to Dean James B. Ed- monson of the education school, conference director, at least 3,000 educators will attend part or all of the five-day program which will conclude Friday. In addition to 11 conferences, four lectures will be given on the first four days at 4 p.m. in Uni- versity High School Auditorium. PROVOST James P. Adams will speak tomorrow on "The Univer- Milford To Talk at Episcopal Church Chancellor T. R. Milford of Lin- coln Cathedral, England, legal cus- todian of the Magna Carta, will be the guest preacher at 11 a.m. on Sunday in the St. Andrew's Epis- copal Church. Chancellor Milford, who studied classics and. philosophy at the Uni- versity of Oxford and theology at the University of Cambridge, was professor of philosophy at the Uni- versity, of Allahabad, India. He is now head of the theological college of Lincoln. Chancellor Milford will give a lecture at 4:15 p.m. Thursday in the Rackham Auditorium under the sponsorship of the History De- partment and the Student Reli- gious Association. sity and the State of Michigan." Tuesday's lecture, "What Citizens Think of Our Schools," will be de- livered by Otto W. Haisley, Ann Arbor Superintendent of Schools. Assistant Provost John A. Per- kins will speak Wednesday on "Education in the World of To'- morrow." The final lecture, "Atomic Energy in Peace and War," will be given Thursday by Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the graduate school. Coferences during the five-day period will deal with the following main topics: public relations, oc- cupational adjustment, reading, physical education, secondary edu- cation, school libraries, audio-vis- ual education, special education and adult education. Linguistic Lecture The Linguistic Institute will pre- sent a lecture by Prof. Franklin Edgerton of Yale University on "An Original *Language of Budd- hism?" at, 7:30 p.m., Tuesday in Rackham Amphitheatre. Tanrnous To Speak Afif I. Tannous of the U.S. De- partment of Agriculture, in con- junction with the Institute on the Near East, will lecture on "Land Tenure: Major Problem of the Middle East" at 4:15 Tuesday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. brings happiness to such diversi- fied characters as a cop, a barten- der, a tap dancer who fancies him- self as a comic, a streetwalker and a piano player, by his obvious ap- proving interest in them. The play, with its intricate in- sights into the minds of the un- derdogs that Saroyan loves, was one of the few to cop the two highest dramatic awards of the New York stage: the Pulitzer Prize and the New York Drama Circle Award. THE PRESENTATION will be under the direction of Monroe Lippman, guest director for the speech department this summer. Lippman is no newcomer to Ann Arbor, since he received his bachelor's,,master's and doctor's degrees here. He was active in the speech department produc- tions throughout his university residence periods. Currently he is director of Le Petit Theatre Vieux Carre, known nationally as 'La Petit,' chairman of the Department of Theatre and Speech at Tulane University and president of the American Educa- tional Theatre Association. Tickets for "The Time of Your Life" will be available at the Lydia Mendelssohn box office from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily, according to Miss Ann Drew, publicity di- rector. The play will run through Saturday. Miss Speckman To Talk on Bach A music lecture on "Bach and the Musical Heritage of the Luth- eran Church" will be given by Ada Clare Speckman, member of the music school faculty of Valparaiso University at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Zion Lutheran Church. Miss Speckman will be assisted by organist Marilyn Mason Brown of the music school. 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