PAGE SIX' THiE MICHIGAN D)AIL~Y i MTDAT, MAnCR 23, 1940 ... . ....... ......... . ... . .. FItTDAY, MARcff'~2K, 194w 'FACELESS FOTOS': Deke Pranksters Fool 'En NSA To Meet sian Editor For Regional Conference i f t ir .4 *: * ASSOCIATED PRESS U RE " An editor's lot is not all glory. Jeannie Johnson, House Groups editor of the Ensian had to con- tend with Deke jokesters, frater- nity and sorority pins and ram- bunctious copy before she could whip her section-into shape. When it came time for the Delta Kappa Epsilon house to take its formal picture, Glenn Carpenter '49, and Ted Merrill, '49, decided that the occasion called for "some originality." SO THEY PUT their shirts and ties on backwards and took their pictures with the backs of their heads towards the camera. The gag went unnoticed by the yearbook staff, and when a member of the fraternity came in to identify those in the pic- ture (standard practice), he car- ried through the joke by spell- ing the pranksters' names back- wards. By the time Miss Johnson no- ticed the error she was powerless1 to change it, so probably for the PICLUr es, ssUjUohnson g d art and page layout worries too. The' More than 175 students, faculty edior ndtheartstff eciedmen and administrators from editor and the art staff decided Michigan campuses will convene that replica sketches of all frater- in Ann Arbor at 8 p.m. today, in nity and sorority pins should ap- the Rackhain Amphitheatre, for a pear on the groups' pages. student leadership conference and "After a call to the various regional meeting of the National houses, we were literally snowed Student Association. under with fraternity pins," de- Dean Charles H. Peake, of the clared Miss Johnson. "It was a Literary College, will welcome the chance of a lifetime!" she said delegates, followed by a dramati- regretfully. zation of the problems facing stu- dent leaders, presented by the Uni- Miss Johnson maintained that versity Research Center for Group at times she felt like the Holly- Dynamics. wood office of the same name. Delegates will also hear Prof. after editing the copy which the Alvin Zander. director of the group houses send in to accompany their dynamics center, following a ban- pictures. quet at 7 p.m., tomorrow, in the "I tried very hard to keep the Michigan League. copy intact, with the result that our section should be very clever," MI rine Drill she said. One of her favorites was PENSACOLA - Naval aviation the parody on the Gettysburg Ad- midshipmen in pre-flight training dress written by the Alpha Delts. here are drilled by Marines. Two Things That Go Together-Coke and 50 Daily-Oh liniger JEANNIE JOHNSON . . keeps watchful eye first time in Ensian history, a faceless duo will have their "pic- tures" in the yearbook. BESIDES DEALING with house Summer Housing Applications Still Available for 'U' Women Women may still apply for summer housing at the Office of the Dean of Women, 1514 Admin- istration Building. Seven sorority houses, 19 grad- uate league houses, three under- graduate league houses and nine other houses will be used for summer residences, according to Associate* Dean Mary C. Bromage. AS IN THE PAST, assignment of students to housing is kept U.S. Sponsors StudentPlan Scholars from Axis States To Study Here The first large-scale government sponsored program to bring stu- dents from former enemy coun- tries to the United States has just been announced. This program has been made possible under the terms of a con- tract signed last week between the Army Department and the Insti- tute of International Education. muids-lhive been set aside by Con- gress to assist nationals of Ger- many, Japan and Austria. ARRANGEMENTS are being made to bring a total of 300 stu- dents into the country by Septem- ber, according to Donald J. Shank, vice-president of the Institute. Of this number, 150 will be German, 100 Japanese and 50 Aust'ian. Both graduates and under- graduates will be admitted for one year, returning to their homelands at the end of that time. The students selected will be screened for academic qualifica- tions by civiilian selection com- mittees in each country and for political affiliations by American military government officials. SHANK emphasized that none of these students will displace Americans in colleges and univer- sities. They will receive scholar- ships or fellowships set aside spe- cifically for foreign nationals. Funds made available by the Army will only be used to supple- ment these funds. The University has not as yet received any official notice of this plan, according to Esson M. Gale, Director of the International Cen- ter. strictly impartial and non-dis- criminatory, Mrs. Bromage said. When a woman desiring summer housing applies at the Dean's office, she is shown the entire list of available housing. After she makes her selection, she is given the house of her choice if vacancies still exist there, she said. She said the same procedure will be used for fall assignment of supplementary housing, scheduled to begin April 11. THREE LANGUAGE houses will be open June 15 for the summer session. The Dean of Women's office, the Romance Languages department and the German de- partment are now completing plans for separate French, Span- ish and German houses for women students. Students may still apply for the houses, which provide eight weeks of social and scholastic practice in a foreign language. Men may take their meals at the houses. Beginning at 7:30 a.m. Friday, April 1, women now living on campus outside the dormitory sys- tem may apply for dorm housing for the 1949-50 school year. Ap- plications will be taken at the Dean of Women's office until the limited number of vacancies are filled. SORORITIES requiring annexes next fall are now discussing their needs at the Dean of Women's office. Larger annexes may be needed by several groups because bigger pledge classes have increased the number of women who will have to live outside their sorority, houses, Mrs. Bromage said. WOODEN HEN, WOODEN EGGS-Much to the astonishment of these youngsters, this wooden hen lays wooden eggs durint preview of British Export Toy Fair at Birmingham.;" NIN L T- M I N UTIEHEAD-Sculptor Bartellety- Daillion carves a head in sot limestone in ninety minutes in ai exhibition at the Injured War Veterans Home in Paris. FiR 3 ." !kn t j i L R: C f t BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF ME COCA-COLA COMPANY BY ANN ARBOR COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY Q 1949, The Coca-Cola Company I V EARCi 'U NIOAH 'SARK - Egerton Sykes and his wife study a map of Turkey, in London. They will head expedition to Mt. Ararat hoping to find traces of Noah's Ark. VIC T UR IAN I K AVELER --Two models, in Vic- torian costumes, wait at a London railroad station for a train to the Ideal Homes Exposition where they appear in a fashion show. i It, for Ann Arb In Ann Arbor 508 E. William Dr s greatest CONhBIN TION PHOnO-REC0 R LU UEI MICROGROOVE - MOOSE HAVE MOOSE MASCOT-Billscott (right) puts his tame moose, Nancy, through her routine of tricks in Lander, Wvyo, where she is mascot of the Moose Lodge, U A L LI IT U U O A IN G- Paul Valentine (left), Bal- let Russe dancer and boxer, trains with Tommy Garlana for "East Side Story" in HIollywood. Debra Paget, also in the film, referees. ANY 2 COLUMBIA® LONG-PLAYING RECORDS $1095 MICROGROOVE r x¢"- ,kr'^ .} .4 _ ::rte ..', .r , f4 .., .... t... :.1 .-n .v. a -. ._t~-:.y.s .r#1...,;. .. :z ..t. :s . .4h. :. '+ .: . '. : ...... <... '.:: " : k.....a'.... ,. , +': . e3'... .'. .. s.'r'"?TM:. : , .s',_'S..(d,". r..