THE MICHIGAN DAILY cSUNDAY, WI T 141 10 I COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Minnesota Students In Europe; Four Officials Speak At MSC 4 Thirty-four students from the University of Minnesota arrived last week in Europe for a summer of studying. The group will split up and go to England, France and Spain to Americans .®.. (Continued from Page 1) the power of suggestion that many prominent citizens shortly reported unpleasant encounters with the Jersey Devil. The devil did not remain a lo- cal phenomena by any means. He was reportedly seen in California and New Jersey on the same night, and at various times in Pennsylvania, Delaware and Maryland. Scientists. propounded theories about still existent pre- historic beasts, and people be- came panicky. . The devil was finally "cap- tured" and exhibited to the pub- lic, oddly enough in the museum of; the intrepid publicity agent. The devil was later found to be nothing more than a cleverly dis- guised kangaroo, which probably had never even been loose in the countryside. Men from Mars Another famous example of America's gullibility is the Orson Welles broadcast of H.G. Wells' novel, The War of The Worlds in 1938. This was not an intentional hoax, however, as the fictional nature of the program was an- pounced. Nonetheless, many Americans took up arms to de- fend their homes from the "heat- ray-spurting Martians." With recent discoveries making actualities formerly impossible things, it isn't hard to believe al- most any likely tale. It seems that Americans are just highly sus- ceptible to that ancient disease, imaginitis. Vets Checks Being Held Checks are being held at the Ann Arbor post office until July 17 for the following veterans: John K. Erbaugh, Louis A. Errede, Robert Van Orman Evans, Alen D. Feith, Frederick C. Ferguson, James C. Finch, Lionel Finkelstein, William D. Flaskamp, Joseph Lee Flynn, Eugene J. Formefeld, Jo- seph P. B. Franklin, Louis R. Frei- miller, Jack W. Fritz, Harvey J. Galloway, Jr., William V. Gam- zon, Ernest H. Garzieri, John G. Gilpin. Other names included are: Gor- don I. Ginsberg, Bernard Gold- man, Gilbert A. Goodwin, William 0. Gotdon, Murray J. Grant, Rob- ert F. Gray, Jerome M. Greenberg, Norman A. Gremel, Joe G. Grubbs, George B. Gudz, Richard Hocker Gutherie, Frank A. Haentschke, James H. Hagen, Robert M. Hal- sey, Saul L. Handlers, Gordon H. Hardie, Elizabeth A. Hartilieb, Eugene R. F. Heffelfinger, Noland Heiden, Allen R. Hennes, Milton Heller, Rowland James Hill, Har- ry H. Hilton, William A. Hilton, Betty C. M. Hofmeister, Donald D. Hostetler, Thomas Frederick Hyde, PF1l F TJaeobsnn. James J. Jamie- son, Norman C. Jimmerson. observe and study European polit- ical parties, the economics of so- cialism, the theatre and the press. While abroad, the students will join with about 570 students and teachers from all over the United States for the trip. At Michigan State College, four prominent officials, including Gov. Kim Sigler, expressed disagree- ment over the right of the federal government to assume the func- tions of the individual states, at the initial meeting of the politi- cal science workshop last week. Gov. Sigler expressed the fear that the stretching of federal re- sponsibilities "lies one of the first steps on the road to dictatorial government." Also taking part in the discuss- ion was Prof. Joseph Kallen- bach of the University's political science department. And at Michigan State, the hor- ticulture department has been se- lected by the American Rose So- ciety as one of fifteen to do re- search on the rose. Over 20 en- tirely new strains of roses are cur- rently being studied in the gar- dens. Prof. C. E. Wildon, of the horticulture department, is recog- nized as one of the nation's lead- ing rose authorities. * * * The Third Annual Music Con- ference, sponsored jointly by the School of Music and the Division of Adult Education and Public Services, will meet at the Univer- sity of Indiana this week. One hundred teachers of piano,' voice, violin, cello, and wind in- struments, and church organist- choir directors are expected to at- tend. The University will also'be host to Miss Marya Zaturenska, who will lecture the Writers' Confer- ence on "The Woman as Poet." Miss Zaturenska, a recognized po- et, was born in Kiev, Russia. At the University of Illinois, President George D. Stoddard, in a speech relayed last week from the University of North Carolina, said that "as education goes, so goes the country. To teach the young is to estimate the future and to prepare for it." A total of 1,878 students attend- ing the University during the academic year ended last month held scholarships totaling $ 178,- 457 in valu, according to a re- port by George P. Tuttle, regis- trar. Mischa Elman, violin virtuoso, gave a program of Handel. T'schai- k'owsky, Saint E4aens, Smetana, Chopin and Mendelssohn, last week at a University sponsored concert. Five students at Ohio State Uni- versity were among the first col- legians to report flying saucers across the campus last Monday, They were playing baseball at the time. A prominent Ohio State alum- nus, cartoonist Milton Caniff ("Steve Canyon") will pay a visit to Columbus this week. He will attend an air show. The Ohio State Historical So- ciety received a collection of his- torical papers, letters, and maps from a Californian last week. Some were dated in the early 1800s. Others included letters by Hayes and Garfield (Presidents). A Ohio State student was killed last week when the Navy plane I in which he' was flying crashed and burned near Lancaster, Pa. Show Literary College Ready For Increase (Continued from Page 1) tent instructors for advanced students. With a larger program than before the war, the depart- ment is operating with a smaller staff. Housing Problem . The lack of housing in Ann Ar- bor for additional instructors is hindering the growth of the rap- idly-expanding German depart- ment. Comparing this summer's enrollment of 375 with the 284 figure of last summer, Prof. Hen- ry W. Nordmeyer, chairman of the department, declared, "If this indicates a trend, it is not in the best interests of efficient teach- ing." Classrooms are scattered over the campus, he said, but space is adeuate. The psychology department, which closed registration after the first day in the spring term, may receive some relief in the fall. The situation is expected to be eased by the switch of psychol- ogy 31 from group two to group three. In addition, the department has requested the use of Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre for two courses to fill the need for large classrooms. Office space and more room for graduate students are other pressing problems. Limited Enrollment A limited enrollment again ap- pears inevitable in the chemistry department. Although some class- rooms in the new building addi- tion are- expected to be completed by September, the work of con- necting the two units will actually reduce the total space available. Completion date of the addition is unknown. A similar situation exists in the zoology department, which turned away 200 studentsginRthe spring term. Prof. George LaRue, de- partment chairman, summed it up: "We took advantage of all available hours, even scheduling noon and evening sessions, but we still couldn't accommodate all :ho applied for the beginning ^ourses, and we won't be able to take any more in the fall than we did in the spring." He emphasized this did not mean students will miss courses, but that they would only be temporarily delayed in taking them. Landeckers. . .. (Continued from Page 1) proudest of his air raid warden duties during the blitz. "I was never in a shelter during the bombings," he boasts. Plans begun in the fall of 1946 were culminated last month, when the Landeckers came to America to join their son, who had arrived here ten years ago on a scholar- ship from the International Stud- ent Service. "We arrived in New York on a bright, sunshiny Monday morn- ing," Mrs. Landecker said, "and the Statue of Liberty there in the bay was thrilling beyond all we had heard of it." They were immediately struck with the free-happy air of Ameri- ca." Americans have a character- istic strut as they walk down the street, Mrs. Landecker said, "one that points to the constant light- ness of spirit, the feeling of inde- pendence about them. "It's exhilarating to watch and live with Americans-to see their chests beam when they talk of their country," the Landeckers agreed. "It will be wonderful to join them in that pride." Publish Works Of Winners Poems by two former Hopwood prize winners appear in the sum- mer issue of Prairie Schooner, publication of the University of Nebraska Press. "Grandfather" was contributed by Bernice Slote, winner of sum- mer poetry awards in 1944 and 1945, who is now teaching Eng- lish at the University of Nebraska. "Silent Night, Holy Night" was written by Baxter Hathaway, au- thor of "The Stubborn Way" and winner of a major fiction award in 1935 and a major poetry award in 1936, who is now instiructing creative writing at Cornell Uni- versity. Ln o Diamonds o -and ' s Wedding o 77 North University Ave. For that Delicious Midnight Snack fI c'I1 I .0 4 G I A N T D 1 S C P L 0 W - A 60-foot disc plow which turns a strip of earth 42 feet wide at the rate of 14 acres an hour moves across the plain near Wildhorse, Colo. C FT FOR O 'CON NOR-A little girl from UNRRA camp at Hanau, Germany, for displaced children hands a gift to Basil O'Connor, chairman of the American Red Cross, who brought packages from the U. S. 6 .4 I SUN, WARMS TIGER..... e big cats from Africa feel the sun's warming effects in Chicago's. Lincoln Park zoo, enabling Andrew Guagenti, animal keeper, to pet a Bengal tiger- from outside the cage. T W I N .' 'T I L E T A B L E-Jeff and Jerry, twin 2 -year-old sons of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Martin of Kew Gardens, N. Y., sit, at the combination play and dining table built by their father, He made the top of ceramic tiles, hand-decorated with figures and ABC's. 4 'j 4 U 4 4 4 A 4 EXCITING SALE!l 4 G I A N T B E A R I N G -John Ostlund, expert grinder in the SKF plant at Philadelphia, works on the largest spherical roller bearing ever made in the U. S. This unit weighs 5,100 pounds. It's for a Niagara, Wis., paper mill. 1. V I S I T O R F R O M A M E R I C A - Msgr. Edward Flanagan, founder of Boys' Town, near Omaha, Nebr., talks with small Japanese on a recent visit to an orphanage in Tokyo. COTTON Values up ow DRESSES----'gil 11 to $16.95 $5,00 J A -~______BLOUSES Values up to $10.95 Iw $3.OO an $*5.,00 -- LINGERIE GOWNS... Value up to $35.00 S -15di d I >i 4 IL II ow . SLIPS . . . Values up to $15.00 Iw 17.00 III 4+ ' I 0 .1 ~~iw.". ~ '--.. .. ..; , ;. .. ... .. . K _.4. :.. fX__1 'fi } ..... .-,..._.. kti. .G:a }::. :. v ! :.. .......... .. ...2ia.''. ..: .a. .... ...... 7 ..7.... : ..._ __ ... .. I