PAGE EIHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, MAY 9. 1940 THEa.TCTtCW 1/N Y 1L 1V WEDNESDAY. MAY S. 1940 [~ I C Ui I r U' N r 'N/ J His face tense from the ordeal of a long trial, Henry Cawthon, ga,agemnan, is shown in court in Atlanta, Ga., as he was given the maxim r-n penalty of 12 months on the p 1ublic works, six months in j'.i0 and a $1,000 fine following his conviction in one of nine flog- ging C.Is S. Massachusetts Democrats may well he concerned since glamor- ous Miss Camilla White (above) of Boston was chosen "Miss Re- piibiican of Massachusetts" at a SuFfolk County G.O.P. rally. She captured the male vote easily. This picture, radioed from Berlin to New York. shows a heavilf banidaged British soldier in a hospital aboard a(German warship, ac- cording; to the British cens-or. The whereabouts of the ship was not W sclosed. be~e three men were announced in New York as winners of Pulitzer prize literary awards. Carl Sand- burg (left) for his books "Abraham Lincoln: the Wa r Years," won the $1,000 prize for a distinguished book of the year upon the history of the United States; William Saroyan (center) won the $1,000 prize for as original Atmerican play with his "The Time Of Your Life"; aiul John Steinbeck (right) won the $1,000 award for a distinguished novel with "Grapes of Wrath." Mrs. Gladys G. Lowe (above) is on a sit-down "strike" in the school auperintendent's office a~t lighlandville, Mo. She said she wouldn't budge, until she has "justice" for her son's smashed nose. Supt. Stanford Knight said the boy's nose was broken in a fight with two other bays and that he considered the incident closed. This ten-ton stainless steel plaque which "symbolizes the collection and distribution of news and news pictures" was unveiled at the en- trance, to the Associated Press building, in New York City, by Kent Cooper, General Manager of the Associated Press, and Nelson Rocke- feller, President of Rockefeller Center. The five men depicted are work- ing with camera., pencil, wirephoto, teletype and telephone. The dluck which stayed with 22- yeax-old Harry B. Wilson (above) through the Spanish Civil War deserted the Albuquerque, N. M., youth somewhere on the snows of Norway. HeIc was killed in action while fighting as a volunteer with Canada's famed Princess Pats regiment. Not all the baseball "Deans" are Dix and Daffy, for here's Arthur Lovill "Chubby" Dean. who's been pitching baseball headlines for the Athletics. A Native of :Mount Airy, N. C., he used to pitch at Duke. (ncr- rovecnl Berlin sources say that Copy; bagen is "preparing for steady lblackout," urge sitrip(-,; like these, on fen.ders for safety on dar-k st~reets. Flanked by the tugs that maneuvered her into position, the new U.S. aircraft carrier, Wasp, is shown, at Quincy, Mass. The 14,700-ton, 739-foot carrier is nearly 18 months behind building schedule. is ; - -3 " . . z. r . is - 'x..4..,r x.._:....:"+.'ti .... .. ............:3 ....:n-..._...,, , ... '+ tam