THE MICIGAN DATLY TuRSDAY, MARCH FLY TO CLEVELAND: Students ill Make Trip For UNESCOMeeting Sixty University students will fly to Cleveland Friday to attend the Second National Conference of the U.S. Committee for UNESCO. Under the auspices of the School of Education a four engine plane has been chartered to make a trip. MEMBERS OF THE University group, the majority of whom are in the School of Education, have been given credentials by the State Department insuring their entrance to otherwise closed meetings. The idea to take this trip grew out of classroom discussions in the School of Education. Students and faculty felt that their study of the history and philosophy of education would be greatly facilitated and augmented by attending this meeting. Delegates to the Second Conference of the U.S. Committee for UNESCO explain that the purpose behind their meeting is to inform as many people as possible about UNESCO and to stimulate further activity in the U.S. * * * * THE SENTENCE in the UNESCO charter which reads "Since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the minds of men that the defenses of peace must be constructed," is the basis of UNESCO activities. Prospective teachers will be part of the "defenses of peace" according to the School of Education. The UNESCO conference will take place from March 31-April 12. The University sponsored group will attend the meetings of the first day. * * * * ARRANGEMENTS have been made with a Cleveland hotel to serve lunch and dinner to the University group. Clarence Dykstra, president of UCLA will speak at the luncheon. Plans for a dinner speaker have not yet been completed. Besides the lunch and dinner meetings the day's agenda for the group includes attending section meetings of the conference. Ways in which UNESCO affects the U.S. films, radio, schools, churches, labor organizations, and other institutions will be dis- cussed. Members of the School of Education UNESCO trip will attend the section meetings which fit in with their particular interests. The chartered plane will leave 7:30 a.m. Friday and return before midnight that same day. Faculty Members To Attend Conventions During vacation 'U' Revives high School Open House It'll be University Day April 22. For the first time since the war, students from 900 Michigan and northern Ohio high schools will get a chance to see what life at their future alma mater is lik from the dining hall of Stockwell to the Engineering Building. * * * THE ANNUAL visitors' event, held for six years up to 1942 but suspended during the war, will join this year with the Engineering Open House, to be held the same day. Brought by school busses from their home towns and cities, the high schoolers will arrive bright and early April 22 for their ed- ucational holiday. As soon as they reach Ann Ar- bor, they'll be whisked off on a thorough-going tour of campus. * * * FUTURE MICHIGAN coeds will be the guests of Stockwell coeds for a few hours. After they've tak- en a look at authentic collegiate quarters, they will lunch with their dormitory hostesses. The men will meanwhile ex- plore the West Quad. University Day for the visitors will also mean a wide-eyed walk along the Diag as they make a general tour of campus, a look at the slide-rule situation at the 17th Engineering Open House, and a movie view of the University's Rose Bowl team. * * * DICK ALLEN is general chair- man of the event, Bob Bristor is tour chairman and Dick Johnson is in charge of general arrange- ments. Campus organizations that wish to take part in the program may contact Allen, Bristor or Johnson at the Union. W UOM To Air Documentary Story of Vet's Return Written by Students Highlighting today's "Michigan Journal on the Air" to be broad- cast at 5 p.m. over station WUOM will be a semi-documentary on the veteran's return to college life written by Al Sanborn, Thomas Poe, Paul Morgan and Eleanor Littlefield. An interview with Jack Bren- nen of the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information will be conducted as part of the broadcast. * * * THE PROGRAM will be direct- ed by Al Samborn, and in the cast are Don Hall, Don Roth, Jim Reiss, Bob Carter, John Reynolds, Joyce Cregor, Ann Drew, Harold Lentz, Francis Benesh and Dick Charl- ton. "Workshop Drama" will pre- sent an original script by Rob- ert Riskin at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow over the same station. The pro- gram entitled "Friendly and Dumpy," a story of the trials and tribulations of a henpecked husband, will also be broadcast over MSC station, WKAR. The cast for the program in- cludes Tom Cramer, Joe Walsh, Jim Reiss, Margaret Poll and Strowan Robertson while William Stegath of the speech department will direct. A I 'ICr UK SN 5WS ' L4M E N O N C E VWOR E T H E M--Mrs. sally Mar. -.Les Angeles, shaws some of 2,100 hatpins she's collected. U (P E K AT ©UMK v V E S H 1 IS K A I N - J. Wilbur Sakers, electrician, operates the ml9del railroad exhibit of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, an exact copy of the railroad standard equipment, on exhibition at the Franklin Institute, Philadelphia. It is insured for $40,000. S N U F F B 0 X-Made in 1742, this gold snuffbox with inset watch, owned by 11. H. Blum, is shown at Chicago Art Institute. Educational and research con- ferences in various parts of the country will attract numerous Uni- versity facultymen during Spring Vacation. Among the conferees are Drs. Arthur C. Curtis, William T. Kruse and Richard J. Rowe, of the der- matology and syphilology depart- ment of the Medical School. They will attend a symposium on "Re- cent Advances in the Study of. onorary B8 Group Picks New Initiates, Beta Gamma Sigma, national business administration honorary fraternity, has elected 29 new nembers from the top ten per cent of the BAd. and MBAd. graduates in the business administration school. The February graduates who were chosen are Gerald Millstein, John Hoolsema, William Orley, Gooch Parker, Robert Klumpp, Andrew MacKinnon, Donald Ken- ney, Edward D. McNeill, Harold Roscoe, Robert Dinger, George K. Anderson, Ivo Binder, and Donald Taylor. The June graduates recently elected are John Jansma, Donald Rehberg, Edwin Donley, Thomas Adams, Donald Krueger, Hugh H. Wilkin, Arthur Fridstein, Gary VanOmen, Frank Mosier, George Sheffer, Peter Behrendt, Gerald Christin, John McCormick, Ray- mond Talaska, Charles Hoppe, and Gordon Ginsberg. Melburn Biddulph and Bryce. Durant are August graduates who, became members of Beta Gamma Sigma. Venereal Disease," April in Washington, D.C. 7 and 81 ALSO FROM THE Medical School are Drs. Richard J. Rower and Arthur C. Curtis, who will present two papers before the public health service group of the National Institute of Health, next Wednesday in Washington. Prof. George G. Cameron, of the department of Oriental Lan- guages and Literatures, will at- tend a meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research, Monday in New Haven, Conn. Prof. Cameron has just returned from a research trip to Iran, on a grant from the American Schools. Prof..A. E. R. Boak, authority on Ancient History, will present a paper at the meeting next Fri- day of the Medieval Academy of America, in Toronto, Ontario. He is also a member of the executive council of this organization. * * * PROFS. BRUNO MEINECKE, F. S. Dunham, and J. E. Dunlap of the classical studies department will leave Ann Arbor this week- end to attend a classics conven- tion in Richmond, Va. Veteran Eligibility Veterans without eligibility cer- tificates of any kind, planning to attend summer school, are advised to make certificate application at the nearest VA office, not re- gional office, as erroneously stated by the VA Tuesday. They may obtain forms from the Veterans Service Bureau, Rm. 1514 Rackham Bldg., or from VA of- fices, Rm. 100A, Rackham Bldg., and not the University Registrar's office. Completed applications must then be submitted to the VA on campus, instead of the Columbus, O., office. S K 1 J O R I N G I N G E R M A N Y - Towed by galloping horses over a measured course these skiers race at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. The competition was part of the annual winter s :is weeks in which visitors participated in speed skating, figure-skating, skiing and hockey. P IL OT A N D CH A R G E S- Capt. John T. McGeog- hegan, of American Overseas Airlines, holds 3 of the 53 DP's he flew from Germany to N. Y. for the Int'l Refugee Organization. A R T O N A N 0 S L 0 B R I D G E - Statuary by Gustav Vigeland, one of Norway's out- standing sculptors, adorns the bridge at Vigeland Park, and the Park itself, in Oslo, Norway. HERE AT LAST! The Record You've Been Waiting for The NEW RCA VICTOR 45 RPM RECORDS and PLAYERS Silent Surfaces Nonbreakable Vinylite Light-Compact Distortion-Free Trouble-Free Changer No Storage Problems I nA ('cc+ UNRUFILE D SCU B"WU MAN -Acleanerpur- sues her duties unruffled as Nina Vyroubova, star of the Ballet de Paris, limbers up for a rehearsal at Princes Theater, London. T E RIERIER B E C O M ES R E T RI EVER- Shorty, a terrier in the home of John Casa near Windsor, Canada, brings back to the nest one of the brood of baby chicks she recently adopted. The terrier has yet to injure one of the fuzzy youngsters over which she is playing mother. - y? ''i :r '?b~ - k .. '5 .: .-,,.:a~ c ,.:: _ : : ? D l ?l,:r . . ' : . ... ..... .. .. . _