7 TlE MICHIGAN DAILY r Initiates Join Phi Kappa Phi Coed To Get $100 Scholarship Award Seven University professors and 238 graduate students and grad- uates-to-be will be initiated into Phi Kappa Phi honor society at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Lecture Hall. An award of $100 for outstand- ing scholarly achievement will be presented to Patricia A. Williams in behalf of the Society by Dean Alice C. Lloyd. "The Role of Research in the Social Sciences" will be the topic of a talk by Rensis Likert, of the psychology department, the speak er for the evening. The society, founded in 1897, was the first such honorary group whose membership is open to stu- dents in all fields of study. Initiates are picked from, those recommended by the faculty as exceptional students. STATEWIDE SURVEY: 89 Per Cent of Ilgh SchooI Grads Pick Mlc-Iiit i i ,14Ir - il ToVON-L- A VLACE I~niIt Try Tto Predict i Michigan colleges were the goal )f 89 per cent of the 12,000 mem- bers of Michigan's 1946 high school graduating classes who went on to college, with large schools like the tniversity claim- ing the lion's share. Sending questionnaires to the superintendents of Michigan's 646 high schools, which graduated 50,- 000 students last year, the Bureau of Appointments and Occupation- al Information found that approx- imately 45 per cent of these 12,- 000 were admitted to Wayne Uni- versity, Michigan State College and the University. The state's 12 junior colleges en- rolled 1,296 (about 11 per cent) and the four state teachers' col- leges 1,516 (about 13 per cent). The remaining 2,424 students are divided among 21 small state schools. 'The Bureau's survey, th- only one of its kind ever made in this country, showed that 5,989 of 20,- 000 male high school igadat!s arc enrolled in Michigan ( ollges, in contrast to 4,706 of the 30,60 C1LItii~' 'IItsiih1 IR~tp', o I h "n s"(i city of An~n Arbor wll be' votid On by uitizens~ of Ain Airbor and the areas concerned in a speciai election June 17 F ive proposals are on the spech Oal election ballot :-o that each stu entsir a( -isOfti ,,'l.1e r myb voted on separately. however, 724 are women nd £The five areas lie on the south-' men, east and orthwest sies o the Foreign study attracted eight of city. Together they comprise 2,- f the graduates, five of whom are studying in Canada, one in Me::i- co City, one in Hawaii and one in Australia. Included in the survey are tab- ulations on students receivng training in such special fields as art, music, electronics, television and nursing. Of the 698 in this group 217 are men and 422 women, with 180 enrolled in 21 other states. 153 acres, an area more than 50 per cent the size of the present of Ann Arbor. On the southeast side of the city are three areas totaling 1,379 acres and including Pittsfield Vil- lage, Ann Arbor Hills, Tuomy Hills and several undeveloped sections. The two areas on the north- west side of Ann Arbor comprise 774 acres of comparatively un- developed land. lhIt rl f /$Ias Vi'ition E xodus When the campus biraks up Ve ire when the annual mass exodus go home next week, it will "breal vill hit, lSometimes the students out- With a business hoon of about ~mart us," Earl J. Smith, veteran I 5 times abuve normal in the off- f 35 years with the railroads, ing, an Ann Arbor ticket agent' complained. "They jump classes bigge'st headache is trying to fig- on us, or some good-hearted pro- fessor lets them off a day early." Grades Vill Be Held Must Notify Terminals This makes for unhappiness 'at I.1 Book Is Overdue the railroad station, he explained, where the object is to notify De- Grades and credits of all stu- troit or Jackson ahead of time for dents who have not cleared extra coaches. Railroad officials their records at the library by made a special trip from Detroit Monday, June 9, will be with- to see Walter Rea, Smith said. held by the cashier's office ac- to try to plan the rush in ad- cording to the regulations of vance. the Regents. - Special trains, run for students Specialapermission maydbe only, are often left partly empty, obtained at the charging desk while the regular trains are for retaining books between crowded. "The students are kind June 4 and 12. of hard to convince," Smith ad- __._- mitted. Some foresighted students, prob- ably upperclassmen, Smith noted, 1:30 P.M. purchase tickets well in advance. They probably got tired of wait- 1A" mA T - 11-lT n ng in line," he said. IMere's a SUPE R of Government Surplus Navy Officers' Shoes ''No better shoe ever made" -Ask any Naval Officer A 16.50 Value 195 6 Limit: Pair to Cus~tomn Famous Makes:, Florsheim, Nunn-Bush, Bostonian, etc. SIZES: -, - -- IG ____®_ ..____ _._ it ;;, II k I I a i i SUJXDAV. Y1 AX UT InT11I t A-" O THANK YOUO Io Mbour palronaqje Y?,u'll heal, ca lovely fan aalry.. PJ.L