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November 21, 1954 - Image 4

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PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1954
Single Faculty Members Show Ingenuity

IVING for the most part on a
small scale, single teaching fel-
lows and instructors on the Univer-
sity faculty exhibit ingenuity in
their ability to convert their living
quarters into living room, kitchen,
bedroom and study.

44

Durapes, bamboo ,, mg
inary efforts and wa':s or. s
ly, are used to execui s
sary divisions. No sater
small the aparline:t ir>o
lections and lage Iihri in
evidence. The inhabins sot -
er. busy with cla,:r and 'hsea
do not find much tie for outiside
activities.
Don tKrummel, an instructor in
music literature, who reads schol-
arly books ion subjects other than
music) and works on his disserta-
tion in, spare time commented--
"even if its not relaxing-it'sa
change."
Occasionally playing piano duets
provides real relaxation to the Uni-
versity graduate who has also done
much work in library science.
Krummel describes himself as
half musician and half librarian.
More than one wall in Krummel's
two room apartment is devoted to
his overflowing music library.

TIME OUT FOR MORNING COFFEE

COMPACT LIVING FOR ODETTE GOLDEN

LIVING IN a casually kept, four
room apartment three miles
from campus in what he- calls "an
unlimited noise district," J. Philip
Benkard, a teaching fellow in the
mathematics department, spends
most of his spare time building
electronic equipment and listening
to records which include "classi-
cal through classical."
As for Benkard's culinary tal
ents, his roommate commented,
"spaghetti ith meat sauce is his
specialty. It takes all afternoon to
prepare and all the dishes are dir.
tied, but it's worth it."
Bombay chicken currey is the
favorite dish of Ruth VandeKieft,
a teaching fellow in the English
department. However anything
that's "quick. easy and cheap' to
prepare is all right with her.
"In fact, I've acquired the art
of turning out a hamburger in a
hundred different ways," she *com-
mented as she prepared a chicken
dinner in her modern and compact
kitchen.
Recently returned from Oxford
University where she spent a year
studying English literature, Miss
VandeKieft spends her spare time
reading (modern novels to 14th
Century mystical works) and lis-
tening to classical music.

1

GERMAN CUCKOO-('LOCK OERLOOKS PHILIP JENKARD'S
ABODE

ODI CONGLOMERATION CLUTTERS DESK

I

RELAXING WITH ]POETRY ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE
ROOM

I'

IN COMFORTABLE ATTIE. RUTH VANDEKIEFT PREPARES CHICKEN DINNER

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