THE MICHIGAN DXILY , A I Win Top Pubications Positions. CAMPUS GROUPS PAY: Eight More DP Students May Enroll Here in Fall If present arrangements go through, eight more displaced stu- dents will be enrolled at the Uni- versity by next fall, Bill Miller, chairman of the Committee for Displaced Students, reported yes- terday. All but one of the new group of students will arrive here directly from Europe. Arrangements have been made with the National Co- ordinating Council for the Place- ment of DP. students, which, in turn, will contact the students through the International Refugee Organization of the UN. * * * SPONSORSHIP for the eight students will be provided by var- ious campus organizations. Funds voted by the Student Legislature will support a woman student who will be placed in one of the resi- dence halls. Wesleyar Guild will provide expenses for another woman student, who will live in a sor- ority house. Housing, as well as general ex- penses, will be furnished by the Lutheran Student Association and four fraternities, for a student each. The fraternities are : Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Alpha Mu, Trigon and Zeta Beta Tau. THE ADMINISTRATION will provide foreign student tuition scholarships for these seven stu- dents. The eighth student, who is already in this country, has been given a scholarship to the Law School. With the arrival of this new group the total of displaced stu- dents on campus next fall will have reached 16. Sylvestre Mar- cingjanis, one of the seven stu- dents brought here by the Com- mittee for Displaced students this spring, will have graduated. But the rest of the group, as well as the two students who came here under the auspices of Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority and Zeta Psi fraternity, respectively, will remain at the University. The new students to come from abroad will be screened by the overseas staffs of IRO and other resettlement agencies. An Aca- demic Credit Review Board will check the scholastic records of each of the students. Transporta- tion costs to this country will be paid by the IRO. PHILIP DAWSON JEANNIE JOHNSON BARNARD AIDINOFF ALFRED BLUMROSEN I . ! MARY STEIN GEORGE WALKER JOANNE MISNER CRAIG WILSON Photos by Alex Lmanlan O'Neill Drama Opens Festival Of FivePlays Father, Mother, Son Take Leading Roles The first troupe of actors for the Ann Arbor Drama Season will arrive tonight for rehearsals and performances of Eugene O'Neill's "Ah, Wilderness." Almost the entire cast, includ- ing stars Ernest Truex, Sylvia Field and Barry Truex, will be on hand along with student actors to put the play into shape be- fore it opens May 9 in Lydia Mendelssohn. "AH,'WILDERNESS" is the first >f a group of five plays of the revived Drama Festival. It will be followed by "Twelfth Night," "Night Must Fall," "As You Desire Me" and "The Heiress." Truex, who is equally familiar to the stage and screen audi- ences, has been a beloved the- atrical figure ever since his ear- liest appearances with such fa- mous names as Lillian Russell, Mary Pickford and Clare Boothe Luce. His most recent appearances in New York have been with Eve Le Gallienne's American Repor- tory Theatre and in "Oh, Mr. Meadowbrook" in which his wife, Sylvia Field, who will star with him in "Ah, Wilderness" played opposite him. A THIRD MEMBER of the Truex family, Barry Truex, will enact the role in "Ah Wilderness" which is his in real life-that of the youngest son of a famous par- ent. Good season tickets are still available and may be purchased from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the box office of Lydia Mendelssohn every day but Sunday. Tickets for individual productions will go on sale May 5. Israel Is Topic Of Rabbi Adler Israel's current position in the world as well as its heroic past will be described by Rabbi Morris Adler, of Temple Shaarez Zedek in Detroit, at 8 p.m. today at the Hillel Foundation. Rabbi Adler will be the main speaker at a program commem- orating the first anniversary of the establishment of the Jewish state in Israel. The University chapter of the Inter-collegiate Zionist Federation of America is sponsoring the state day observance which is open to the public. Jazz Stars To Play Here Tomorrow ORIGINAL POLEMITACTI CA: Campus ROTC Survives Ups, Downs Of all the days in the year, only one is reserved just for telling that grandest A ,person in the world just how wonderful she really is. By PHOEBE FELDMAN The campus ROTC has a stormy past of ups and downs. With each war came the estab- lishment of various training units under various names, but as soon as the wars stopped, the pro- grams left the campus. *, * * ORIGINALLY provided for un- der the founding statute of 1817, "polemitactica," as it was termed at the time, was to be one of the 13 projected programs of study in the Catholepistemiad, or Univer- sity of Michigania, along with an- thropoglossica (literature) and diegetica (history). But when the pedantic terms were cleared away and the Uni- versity of Michigan actually be- gan operating in 1841, military science had been dropped from the curriculum. Although literature and history survived after "anthropoglossica" and 'diegetica" were erased fromj the catalog, for the time being military science went the way of its elaborte parade-dress title. * * * IT WAS NOT until shortly be- fore the Civil War that the first "University Battalion" of 90 stu- dents was finally formed under the guidance of mathematics pro- fessor W. P. Trowbridge, a West Point graduate. The Battalion dis- integrated, however, when Trow- bridge left the University. But the Civil War did bring the return of army training to campus. Names still figured prominently in ROTC history, with units colorfully calling themselves the "University Guards," the "Chancellor Greys," and the "Ellsworth Zuaves," and "Company A, U. of M. Rifles." Apparently though, the rifles got a little rusty, and it wasn't until the advent of the first World War that a real Reserve Officers Train- ing Corps was established. Short-lived under this name, the program was continued for a short time as the SATC (Student Army Training Corps). Finally, in the following year (1919), the ROTC was permanent- ly reestablished on campus. This semester, 675 students are enrolled in the postwar ROTC program, according to ROTC figures. o y i .'; } , . . :_ .,,, ,c , Remember her this Mother's V Day, May 8th, with a fine quality Gibson Card from our complete selection. 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