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February 26, 1956 - Image 12

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Page Twelve

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Sunday Februnrv 26, 1951

Page TwelvyeTHEuMICHyIGANDIL

I

Work. ..
By SVEA BLOMQUIST was already enrolled in the group,
WHEN YOU TALK about spend-I od.
ing a summer in a "work What it cost me was the price
camp," most people look at you of an airplane ticket and $60.00
wh . for room and board, which am-
with a kid of puzzled expression mounted to about $1.00 a day.
-on their faces. Sometimes they
just laugh and say, "Oh camps are WE LANDED at the ultra-mod-
for children," and let it go at that. ern airport in San Juan very
But to anyone who has been a early on a Sunday morning in late
member of a work camp group, June.
whether for a weekend, or two We were to work in the town
weeks, or two months, a work of Mayaguez on the western coast
camp means many more things- of the island and we then got into
and none of them vague at all. cars to finish our journey. There
To one it might mean school were about 13 of us Americans. We
rooms freshly painted in Philadel- were joined by several Puerto
phia for under-privileged children; Rican young people who lived and
to another, the sound of excited worked with us for all or portions
boys when they are given a new of our stay.
baseball lot to play on. We arrived in Mayaguez about
basebl lt tons pla on ud 4 p.m. in the afternoon, and moved
To me it means a new building into our "home." Our "home" wasl
and the smiling faces of a people the Marina Neighborhood House1
whose language I do not under- in a poor section of the town.
stand, Our first week was spent ini
LAST SPRING I heard of a work painting a dispensary next door
camp that was being sponsor- to Marina, and in getting to knowi
ed by a board of the Presbyter- each other and the children fromt
ian Church. I inquired about it the ncighborhood who stood and
and was told that the Presbyter- watched us.
ian Board of Missions was going 'HE NEXT week our real job
to send a group of young Ameri- began. Our work camp was to
cans to a town in Puerto Rico. build a day nursery behind the
Their job would be to help the neighborhood house for the pre-
people of the town to improveIschool clhildren of the community,
their comamunity. Under t h e wahosear nents work during the
encsuragmracnt of a friend who oday.
Newest tour
of
Two days-One night
only $9.80 per person
DOWNTOWN HOTEL (one night)
BREAKFAST IN YOUR HOTEL
CHOICE OF
A four-hour or two-hour sight-seeing tour
of Chicago, or
A three-hour tour of public museums, or
A tour of Chicago's Chinatown and Chi- 1
cago by night.c
TICKET to television show or radio broadcast
TRAVEL BUREAU, INC.
1313 S. University NO 2-5587
- -- ----

t

-Photo Courtesy of Gordon Putnam
THE AREA IN WHICH THE PUERTO RICAN GROUP WORKED
It was then that we were intro- we began painting it. It felt good community center, or organizing
duced rather abruptly tocement just to stand and look at it. Not recreational programs.
blocks and sacks of cement and
lime, and the art of laying blocks. another Mason Hall, no. but IN ADDITION to the task that
We worked every weekday morn- yellow building that we had built the work camp has set out to
ing, and several afternoons a week. with our own hands. do, there is the educational side.
Two of our other afternoons dur- All work camps are for the most Members of the work camp get to
ing the week were spent in two part church sponsored. The jobs know and understand each other,
seminars. may be of a physical nature, such ,while they are developing an
as repair and building; or they awareness of the people and com-
BY THE SIXTH week our build- may be of a .more concentrated munity, or the country in which
mug was nearly completed, and social type, such as working in a they are at work.
J7 *

THE DAY NURSERY THAT THE WORK CAMP BUILT

Study..
By VERNON NAIRGANG Latin American study tours at York, or:
A PROGRAM of interviews with costs ranging from $950 to $1300. isme Un
government officiajs and politi- Applications for summer study Michel,P
cal leaders is featured in a surmer abroad under American colleges Anothe
study tour sponsored by the should be sent to American College student b
Americans for Democratie Action. Council or Bureau of University tours ant
Cost of the tour abroad is $850 Travel, 11 Boyd Street, Newton, under th(
to $1150, and applications should Massachusetts. Applic
be sent to ADA, 1740 K Street, N. For information on study tours, East 66 S
W., Washington 6, D.C. work camps, and summer schools, must be
Various American colleges coop- write Council on Student Travel, $800 and
erate in sponsoring European and 179 Broadway, New York 7, New available,
Europe
siastical
pean cu
Lutheran
America,
T TIAV~kW_ =1 ,&Z T ~rieah

m w -u-h r__ -ft \ A -W

EutiOPEAN ILIJA
Via the Mediterranean, Gibralter and Palermo, Sicily
ITALY, AUSTRIA, SWITZERLAND, GERMANY.
NORWAY, DENMARK, SCOTLAND, HOLLAND,*14 5
ENGLAND, BELGIUM. FRANCE I1 COUNTRIES
OMITTING SCANDIN AVIA . . .5$1165.00

Scholar
under thi
to $750.
Nation
(Division
Sixteenth
ton 6, D.
Europe, I
for its m
Studyt
land in
ogy are o
Office fo
Lions, 29
N. Y.
Studen
July and
to $645.
week tot
fields of
STUDEr
Associ
adventur
Applica
April 1 tc
New York
$450 to 2
Study t
are feats
program
States N
tion, Edu
West 48 l

in care of Office du Tour-
iversitaire, 137 Blvd. St.
'aris V, France.
r study program takes the
o Israel where he studies,
d works f or a short time
e Israel Summer Institute.
ations, to be sent to 16
treet, New York 21, N. Y.,
in by May 15. Cost is
various scholarships are
an theological and eccle-
life in relation to Euro-
Sture is studied by the
Student Association of
327 South LaSalle Street,
0, Illinois.
rhips are also available
is program. The cost runs
al Edacation Association
iof Travel Service, 1201
hStreet, N.W., Washing-
.C.) offers study tours to
Mexico and South America
embers.
tom's to Europe and Hol-
architecture andatechnol-
ffered by the Netherlands
Dr Foreign Student ,Rela-
Broadway, New York 6,
ts spend 56 days during
August at a cost of $555
Also available are one
urs in Holland in other
study.
NTS International Travel
lation offers study and
e trips in Europe, Latin
ations must be made by
o SITA, 545 Fifth Avenue,
k, N. Y. Cost ranges from
250.
tours to most of the world
ured under an extensive
sponsored by the United
ational Student Associa-
ucational Travel Inc., 48
Street, New York 19, N. Y.

SAILING New York, June 27
FOR INFORMATION
CALL: V
MRS. MAE UFER
ALPHA DELTA PI, NO 3-1813
Itinerary Planned By Boersina Travel Service

RETUkNING New York, August 29
...--...-------- ....----- - .-----.
I MRS. MARIE NETTING
WRITE I 1004 OLIVIA, ANN ARBOR
NAME
Address "

a

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