PAGE -TRRE3 T HE MtC1tM-A N- VA IY- _C, ... i . Broadway Hit, Sprig Again,' To Play Here Guthrie McClintic's comedy stage hit, "Spring Again," starring Grace George and C: Aubrey Smith in the roles they made famous last season on Broadway, comes to the Michigan Theatre Wednesday evening, Dec. 2, for a single performance direct from its Detroit run at the Cass. Grace George, noted star and top- flight comedienne returned to the field of light comedy as Nell Carter in "Spring Again." In recent years Miss George has starred in the somber melodramatics of "Kind Lady" and the involved doings of Somerset Maugham's "The Circle" on Broad- way.- C. Aubrey Smith, stalwart repre- sentative of the British Empire in scores of Hollywood products, made his first Broadway appearance as Halstead Carter in "Spring Again" in thirteen years. McClintic, who pro- duced and staged the prize-winning comedy, much to the surprise of the New York theatre public, cast C. Aub- rey Smith as an American in "Spring Again," not just an ordinary Ameri- can either, but the son of a fire-eating Civil War General, who devotes his long life to commemorating his belli- cose parent's memory with suita e plaques, monuments and other pu ic effusions. The play ran for a full season on Broadway last year with Grace George and C. Aubrey Smith as the battling and beloved Halstead Carters. happily married couple whose lengthy marital career is nearly wrecked with Mr. Carter's devotion to his father's memory. Where Battle Rages in Mediterranean TRIESTE FRANCE GENOA YUGO- WI " SLAVIA tosPEZIA M REt '" ITA L Y SPAIN ARALa CORSICAR ................................. .....R O M E . . *rARANTO SARDINIA ISLANDS . ..-.. SP.- - -w ALGIERS ZRI L -MALTA A LGE RIA sx TUNISIAS T S00 STATUTE MILES LIB Y A Another in the series of events started by the Allied invasion of French North Africa was the seizure of Toulon, last free French city and naval base. The French offered brief resistance while scuttling the home fleet of 62 warships. In Tunisia the Allies were reported closing in on Nazi defenses at Bizerte and Tunis. EDUCATION TAKES A STEP FORWARD: High School Victory Corps' Plan Would Train Six Million Cam pus Will Join Drive to Aid Charities Goodfellow Campaign Aiming at New Record, A campus organized for war will put aside its grim business Monday, Dec. 14, and join forces in the 1942I Annual Goodfellow Drive to raisei funds for local charity organizations.s Planned to encompass the campus, downtown and factory areas, the, drive will combine sales of the Good- fellow edition of The Daily with vol- i untary contributions in this signifi-r cant humanitarian campaign. The eighth drive in campus andt city history, this year's movement9 aims to top all former campaigns by the volume of its total returns. Fra-t ternities and sororities, dormitories and independent houses and the faculty are expected to swell the fund by selling the Goodfellow edi- tions of The Daily and making and soliciting voluntary contributions.' War Agencies Help A new factor operating to insure1 the success of the 1942 Goodfellow Drive will be the recently organized campus war agencies. Their role in putting the drive across was indi- cated by Mary Borman, director off the Student Manpower Corps, whot said yesterday, "Of course you can1 be sure that the Manpower Corpsi will give the Goodfellow Drive all of its support."t Started by The Daily in 1935, thet Goodfellow Drive has become tra- ditional, its all-time high in 1936 being reached with a total of $1,675. goal of the 1942 drive. Cooperate Among the campus organizations which have cooperated in the past have been the League, Union, Pan- hellenic Association, Assembly, In- terfraternity Council, the Student Religious Association, Women's Ju- diciary Council, Congress, and Wom- en's Athletic Association. Other campus organizations tak- ing part in the campaign in previous years have been: Senior Society, Scroll, Mortarboard, Wyvern, Sphinx. Michigamua, Druids, 'M' Club, Tri- angles, Men's Judiciary Council, Vulcans, the Engineering Council. SPEECH CONTEST Seventeen students, representatives from the various Speech 31 classes, will participate in the elimination contest of the annual Speech 31 con- tests at 4 p.m. Monday in Room- 4203 Angell Hall. Members of the faculty will serve as judges for the eliminations, from which six students will be chosen to appear in the final contest. i i now .:.. Louis Adamie, noted author of, such tenor best-sellers as "'The Native's Return," Rhea "Two Way Passage" and "Plymouth gani; Rock and Ellis Island" will be pre- tra; sented Monday evening as the third Van number of the current Oratorical all c Lecture Series. Mr. Adamic will speak 30c a in Hill Auditorium at 8:15 and his the 1 subject will be "Tolerance Is Not ton P Enough." Tickets will be on sale Monday at the auditorium box offie. Slosson Lecture: Tonight at 7:30 in the regular series of Sunday Eve- ning Programs at the International Center. Professor Preston Si-sson will speak on "Some Problems of Na- tionality in the Post War World." This will be followed by the usual "sing" and "snack hour." Anyone in- terested is invited. Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Monday, November 30, at 7:30 p.m., in Room 319 W. Medical Building. "Polysaccharides. Chemistry and Occurrence of Glycogen and Other Polysaccharides" will be dis- cussed. All interested are invited. Phi Eta Sigma will conduct a review session in Chemistry 5E, Monday, Nov. 30, Room 244 West Engineering Buil- ding, at 7:30 p.m. This is a part of the free tutoring service offered by the society. Tutoring in freshman en- gineering math and Ch. E 1 will bf- conducted Tuesday, Dec. 1, same roon' and time. Concerts University Musical Society Con- ^erts: The following concerts are'an- nounced for the month of Decembe ° 'n Hill Auditorium : Artur Schnabel, Pianist, Thursda December 3, 8:30 p.m. Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge .. s DAILY OFFICIAl BULLETIN Cer { ayd vich An Han noon form Eilee (Continued from Page 2) s vit,,ky, Conductor, Wednesday, imber 9, 8:30 p.m., Program: dn Symphony No. 88; Shostako- Symphony No. 7. nual Christmas performance of del's "Messiah," Sunday after- , December 13, 3:00 p.m., Per- ers: Marjorie McClung, soprano; n Law, soprano; Harold Haugh, r; John Macdonald, bass; Mabel ad, pianist; Palmer Christian, or- st; University Symphony Orches- University Choral Union; Hardin Deursen, Conductor. Tickets for oncerts on sale (Messiah concert: nd 60c including tax) at office of University Musical Society, Bur- Memorial Tower. -Charles A. Sink, President Carillon Concert: Pr oes Per cival Price, University Carpillonneur. con- cludes his fall series of programs with the playing of his recital at 7:15-8:00 this evening. It will consist of works of Schumann, Borodin, Mendelssowli, Debussy, four short modem composi- tions, and will close with Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata. Events Today Varsity Glee Club: Rehearsal will start at 3:30 p.m. sharp in the Glee Club Rooms today. Be on time. Michigan Outing Club will go on a hike today, leaving Hill Auditorium (Continued on Page 4) 0 . I , HIM with a monogrammed handkerchief suited to his own taste in coloring, size and pat- tern. Fine quality linen with hand-rolled edges. HER with handkerchiefs that she'll love because they are ini- tialed. She'll want several in varying colors and patterns to go with all of her best outfits. GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NICKELS ARCADE "Alvays Reasonably Priced" The Victory Corps, proposed orga- nisation to give high school students a1 part in the war effort and to prepare them for their part in the armed forces, received additional impetus last week at a Washington, D.C. meet- ing attended by Dr. Raleigh Schorling of the University's education school. Dr. Schorling was called to Wash- ington to join a group working under the joint direction of the War Depart- ment and the Office of Education. The specific task was to edit copy for a forthcoming bulletin to implement the Victory Corps, by which it is pro- posed to unite six and a half million high school students and give them a vital part in the war effort. The Corps, already in operation in several thousand high schools, is de- signed also to meet a shortage in training for young people about to go into the services, as revealed in a recent survey. Latest data show that 86, perhaps 87, out of every 100 sol- diers selected by the draft, need some kind of technical training either in pre - induction or post - induction courses. The War Department insists that in many of these training courses from one-third to one-half of the work could be taken care of by sec- ondary schools, relieving valuable army officials. The Victory Corps pro- vides an opportunity for youth to have a part in filling this shortage by ser- vice appropriate to their abilities and training. "The military officials have gone no farther than to point out the gap," states Dr. Schorling. "The schools must meet this shortage in training. There is no evidence that anyone in Washington is trying to impose the Victory Corps on high schools; it is advocated as a wholly voluntary pro- gram. Then, too, the responsibility of administering the local Corps lies en- tirely with the individual community." The most common objection to th" Victory Corps, that it will be a 'second Hitler Youth,' is met by asserting that, after all, the. community will design its own pattern of Victory Corps and proceed to administer it ir its own way. The army is by no mean- pressing military drill in schools, in fact they are damning it by faint praise and they are not, in any case. going to furnish any leadership, for such a program. Their interest is that a physical hardening program be en- forced to enable students to advance more, quickly, once they get in the army. Guerrilla Brigade' Is Next Cinema Film With the purpose of aiding the Russian War Relief Society of Ann Arbor, the Art Cinema League wit' present its third foreign film of thej year, "Guerrilla Brigade" at 8:15 p.m. Thursday through Saturday in thf Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. In addition to this picture which is a saga of Soviet fighters behind the enemy line, the League will also show three shorter films. One, "Soviet Wo- men in War" depicts the experiences of the Russian women under fire, and another, "Under Siege" pictures the battle put up by the citizens and sol- diers of Tula. The third film to be shown will be "Front Line Hospital." The action of these shorts will be de- scribed by a narrator. "Guerrilla Brigade" was photo- graphed in July, 1939, just before the Nazi-Soviet mutual non-aggression pact was signed and was released sev- eral months thereafter. I' C x 1 RMMMMIMM ...... -.... _ .............. J~CO on ROGUE SHIRTS Tailored as a man's shirt in women's sizes. Edges Whipstitched. . LOVELY by FLEXEE S $795 r 6' jdi ( & L j yyy E{ I L1nI . rt r i f/ V , :.1f '. s;' 1 AuNk.. } ., ".'s . " -\ TR ANSLUCENT IRADEL BEADS. Long strand at 6.50, short strand at 3.00, and ear- rings at 1.00. (Below) ALL-A-GLITTER with costume jewelry . . . pins, necklaces, ear- rings, and bracelets, all from 1.00. "... :,.. W aj-heart-lifting col 1righten his and you morale. ' ; 2~ . 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