THE MICHTMAN DMILY THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1940 Daily Receives Two Volumes Of Past Copies Early volumes of a newspaper are prize possessions, and The Daily now boasts complete copies of its own first volumes, published during the ses- sions 1890-91 and 1891-92, donated by Daily alumnus F. J. McElwee, '92, of Detroit, following the fiftieth anni- versary banquet of The Daily. Before this gift had been received, The Daily had only a defective copy of its-first volume and no copies of volume two. Mr. McElsee, following his gradua- tion from the University in 1892' went to New York to seek a job on the New York Sun. Chester Lord was then editor of that newspaper. Upon discovering that McElwee had been a member of The Daily staff, he told McElwee: "Young man, that's the best college paper in the United States. Come down in the morning."' After two years on the Sun, {Mc- Elwee studied law under Henry Daily, well-known lawyer and counsel to J. P. Morgan & Co., and was ad- mitted to the bars of New York,, Kentucky and Tennessee, but he never took up the practice of law. 14 Arthur Wood To Give Talk At Foundation intermarriage Problems To Be Teacher's Topic In Hillel Lecture Today Prof. Arthur Wood of the sociology department will be the third person to appear on the Hillel Institute of Jewish Studies' series of lectures on "Marriage and the Family" when ae speaks at the Foundation at 8:00 .m. today. "The Problems of Intermarriage" will be the topic of Professor Wood's discourse. He was preceded by Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen, who spoke on Jewish family life, and Dr. Claire Healy of Health Service, who dis- cussed the biological aspects of mar- riage. Professor Wood will lead an in- formal discussion period following his lecture. The course is part of he Hillel Institute's program which ncludes eight separate curriculums. Prof. Ralph M. Patterson of the osychiatry department and Richard Meyers of the sociology department are also scheduled to a~pear in the series. The lectures are open to the public and everyone is cordially in- vited to attend. The totalnumber of persons en- rolled in the Hillel Institute of Jewish Studies is over 100 students, and the Marriage and Family Relations course has proven to be by far the most popular, Elaine Fisher, '42;, chairman of the Institute, revealed. Courses in Jewish history, ethical concepts, language and literature are offered through the Institute as part of the Foundation's function as a Jewish cultural center. Goodfellows - Monday Wells L. Field To Talk Today NROTC Officer To Give Third Navy Lecture "The Navy Afloat" will be discussed by Lieut. Commander Wells L. Field of the Naval Reserve Officers' Train- ing Corps at 4 p.m. today in the NROTC Chart House in North Hall. The talk, which is the third in a series of lectures on the navy, its purposes and organization, will deal generally with the different types of ships in the American fleets and the organization of the fleets them- selves. Among the ships which will be de- scribed are the nation's battleships, cruisers, submarines, destroyers and torpedo boats while the organization will consider the U.S. fleet in the At- lantic, the Asiatic fleet, special serv- ice squadrons and the transportation service. French Destroyer Shown Beached After Battle Of Dakar Avukah Movie To Be Shown Film lDepicts Jewish Life, Activities In Palestine The first comprehensive technicolor sound movie ever to be produced in ?alestine will be given one of its ear- liest American showings Sunday by Avukah, student Zionist organization, in the League, Evelyn Sislin, '41, president, announced yesterday. Entitled "Our Promised Land", the film portrays , the Jewish national homeland in the beauty of its natural colors and depicts a story of the heroic menm and women who first built and then defended their coun- try against assault and attack from all sides. Tickets priced at twenty-five cents will be on sale at the League desk, Lane Hall, or they may be obtained from Avukah members. Tf E SHORTEST DISTANCE TWE TWO OITw osS IS Problems Of East Will Be Discussed Froblems of the Near East will be discussed by Mrs. Howell Taylor at 3 p.m. tonight in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building when she ,peaks on "The Second World War from the Dardanelles to Suez." Ismail Khalidi, Gr-ad., president of Al-Thagafa, Arabidn culture ociety sponsoring the lecture, has announced that the meeting is open to the pub- lic and that a discussion about the war will be lead by Mrs. Taylor after her talk is over. This is the first of a series of lectures on current topics, Wvhich Al-Thaqafa is planning to sponsor. ~x C° The wrecked French destroyer, 1'Audacieux, is shown as it lay beached after the the British bombarded the west Africanport in September. This picture was made by the cruiser Georges Leygues at Dakar. battle of Dakar, when a French sailor aboard I WITHnfcSeb Phi Kappa Phi To Initiate 60 HereToday (Continued from Page 3) Cheyenne, Wyo.; Elizabeth J. Karsh- ner of Ann Arbor; Barbara J. Fisher of Traverse City, and Constantine N. Bozion of Flint conclude the Lit- lerary College group. College of Engineering seniors are Earl Schaefer of Spring Lake; Allen Fletcher Gilliard of Buffalo, N. Y.; Hervert L. Misch of Port Clinton, Ohio; Carl J. Oxford of Detroit; Eu- gene H. Beach of Milford, and Car- ling Havermans of Muskegon. The rest are Abraham Hurlich of Everett, Mass.; Harold I. Johnson of Joliet, Ill.; Frank W. Kennon of Monroe, Wash.; Robert R. Peterson of Ypsilanti; George W. Weesner of Nashville. Tenn., and Herbert D. Hamilton of Ann Arbor. Representatives from the School of Medicine are Sidney S. Sobin, B.S., M.A.: Ph.D., of Detroit; Har- ford W. Friedman, A.B., of Bay City; Charles R. Lowe of Boise, Idaho; Myron Fink, B.S., of Toledo, Ohio. Gordon L. Watts of Portland, Ore.; William F. Carbine, B.S., M.S., of Salt Lake City, Utah; and Walter Cofnuk of Utica, N.Y. are from the School of Forestry while Ann D. Wills of Niagara Falls, N.Y. and Stanley B. Fleischaker of Louisville, Ky., are from the College of Archi- tecture. School of Pharmacy initiates are William L. Austin of Perth Amboy, N.Y., and Marjorie A. Kern of Cleve- land Heights, Ohio, and School of Education students are Thelma V. Gresham of Zebulon, Ga., and Earl A. Radley of E' Norwalk, Conn. Other seniors who were elected are Charles K. Wellington of Ann Arbor from the School of Music and Kenneth R. Gibson, Jr., A.B., of De- troit from the School of Denistry. Be A Goodfellow American Art Work To Be Shown Here Featuring exhibits of abstract pho- tography and a survey of American drawings, an exhibition sponsored by the Ann Arbor Art Association is now open to the public in Alumni Memor- ial Hall, it was announced yesterday. The photography exhibits were supplied by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and include about 30 photographs by well-known Amer- ican photographers. The display will be run until Dec. 23, and may be viewed Monday through Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. By CHESTER BRADLEA "President Roosevelt's ass of aid to Greece may be con another instance of the Adm tion's readiness to utilize the cial and other economic resou the United States in opposi Axis powers," Prof. Howard M mann of the history departme in an interview yesterday. "The President's message tc George II of Greece stated it 'the settled policy of the States Government to extend those governments and peopl defend themselves againsta sion'," Prof. Ehrmann said. Further evidence of this poli be seen, acording to Professo mann, in the conversations1 toward the granting of loan credits to Great Britain, the 000,000 credit advanced to Chi $50,000,000 loan, to Argentinat her stabilize her currency, a question of a proposed cr Franco's government in ordert Spain non-belligerent. Inr available these sums, the Adm tion has so far used the Expo port Bank and the Treasury' bilizing Fund. Professor Ehrmann pointe that the character and extent aid to Greece would be hamp several difficulties: the prior n our own defense program an Y, surance ping facilities sufficient for trans- sidered porting any considerable amount of inistra- materials to Greece; and the charac- finan- ter of the war, whether confined to CHARGES FOR TELEGRAMS rces of Italy and Greece or merged into a 'PHONED IN APPEAR ON YOUR ng the greatly extended struggle in the Near TELEPHONE BILL. . 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