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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 28, 1943 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1943-11-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


831UNDAY , Ntv, /8 1 4 ,' .

11I1I l'11.i(AN DAI]LY-

PAGI E EEN

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ARMY, NAVY SHOW:1
ThainIs fgivLin - Songa Service lol
BeBroadccast Today on WJR

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A. drama tized hnkgvigsong
service, written by Prof. Kenneth
Rowe of the English Department arnd
a committee of enlisted men of the
Army Specialized Training Program
and the Navy Training Unit V-12,
will be broadcast from 9:15 to 9:45
a.m. today over WJR,. Detroit.
Built on the history of proclama-
tions of Thanksgiving in America,
the script contains excerpts from the
colonial period, the Revolutionary
?War and Washington's first presi-
dential proclamation, the Civil War
and Lincoln's proclamation, World
War I and Wilson's Armistice-year
proclamation, World War, II and
IRoosevelt's first war- time proclama-
tion, and a declaration for the future.
Participating in the program todayI
will be Dr. Edward W. Blakeman.
;counselor in religious education, rep-
resenting the minister: Charles Ben-
jamin, narrator, Henry Dillof, an-
nouncer. Melvina Eberly, Sherwood
'Katz, and John Kintzler.
A quartet under the direction ofj
Prof. Arthur Hackett will furnish the
music. Soprano will be sung by Dor-
othy, Feldman, alto by Florence Mc-
Cracken, tenor by Arthur Hackett
and arioneby Robert Dierks. I
I h-program is under the direction
of Prof:. Joseph Maddy.
Ser~vicemen and faculty members
who contributed to the dramatized}
service include Sam Lieberman, tech-
Mayfield Gets
Flying ,-Cross

nician fifth grade, Co. A. A.S.T.P., Lt.
Raymond Moore, U.S .N.R.. Kenneth
M. Allison, apprentice seaman, Navy
V-12, William A. Rohrback, appren-
tice seaman, Navy V-12, and Prof.
LIaddy, chairman of the Committee
on Wartime Civic Music, Michigan
Council of Defense.
D rive Begin1s
For Old Clothes
A two-week national drive'to col-
lect discarded clothing for destitute
peoples freed by advancing Allied
armies is now under way and will
last until Dec. 4.
Suits, dresses, children's wear and
all manner of clothing which will not
be used again by the family is to be
deposited during the drive by house-
wives at churches and various char-
itable organizations.
George H. Gabler, chairman of the
Washtenaw County Salvage Com-
mittee, said yesterday, "Almost every
type of clothing which is too small or
too worn to be used by members of
the family can be used in this drive,
and it's our job to supply those whose
need is greater than anything we can
imagine."
EThe Ann Arbor Public Schools will
handle local collections, and clothing
will be picked up there by Stein,
White Swan and Greene cleaners,
who will clean, pack and ship to the
IDefense Supplies Corporation.

New Device
Perfected, Hene
Sounce Waves Detect
Flaws in, Metal Objects
A new scientific device for inspec-
tion of metals by sound waves has
been perfected -recently by: the Uni-
versity physics department, accord-
ing to Prof. F. A. Firestone.
Named a supersonic reflector-
scope, the apparatus reflects flaws in
the inteirior of a metal object on a
screen. If there .are no ,defects pres-
ent, the screen merely,_ shows the op-
posite side. Its action is, similar to
the X-ray machine, but penetrates
better.
Production, Plwis
"The role of this d~epartment has
been principally, research," said
Prof. Firestone, "although a: few
models have been constructed for use
in factories. Plans are now ready for
general production of the machine in
other places.
The research was started. several
years ago and is still continuing with
improvements added as they are de-
veloped.
Not Pestaruetive.
The reflector-scope is not of the
destructive type, requiring a; sample
of the object, but can be. placed at
the side" of the object and tested on
the spot. Further descriptions, can
not be revealed during wartime, Prof.
Firestone added; except that the
value is several thousand dollars.

I
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E A R L Y MO0R N I N C m A R CH E R S--As the early sun glints on sici~ilan f ci hseFn' Gu' r mve into position
single file to fight alongside American troops, The Goutniers are eoie rl il ncinu'om

Local tBoy ttored
For Bombing -Mission

1E. UGH A. BUTLER, (R-
I:;.itwho recently charged that
a ~S. isp-nding in Latin America is
wI~e arking Uncle Sam as a
"_ vker" or arousing suspicion.

N E W B R I T E S H T IR A N S P 0 R "t-Head-on view of the new British Avro-York, ta~~~
version of the Lancaster bomber-a high-wing monoplane with a 102-foot wing span.

The Distinguished Flying Cross has
been awarded to Flight Officer John
D. Mayfield, 22, son of Mrs. John R. <
Mayfield, 625 Brooks St. for feats of
bravery and flying while acting a.s
co-pilot of a B-17 bomber in a mis-
sion over Germany this September
with the Eighth Army Air Force
Bomber Command.
F '0 Mayfield, a graduate of Ann
Arbor High School in 1940, enlisted
in the Air Forces three years ago. He >
began his aviation cadet training in
March, 1942 and woik his wings 13
months later. Sent overseas in June,
F/0 Mayfield has already received
the Air Medal, an Oak Leaf Cluster
and the Purple Heart. He is now
recovering from an arm wound in an
English hospital and hopes to be
home after Christmas for a grafting
treatment.
Butler, Wallace':...
Feud IsRait
WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.-(f7')
Senator Butler (R-Neb), reiterating
his charges that the New Deal is
wasting billions in Latin Ameriea,

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2i ALGERIA ~TNSAIPI if
F A R FLUN C T H E A T R E 0 F W R-From the Pyrenees to the (t'r runcaY. iI' urh f hi M'dt:r aWtA plays ani im-
portant role intW ~jrld War U, as the Allies press the a ttack t(Upon Jlii rsk :_° _ ,, d Luropc' "

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$5to $25
ans and Pufllovers
Aa new pick-up
r wardrobe
IINSl
.J I y at Maynard

Boxy

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that will ler
to you

suggested tonlightL thatLVice tPresient
Wallace apologize to "the hard-beset
taxpayers of this nation who are pay-
ing for the wild and wooly activities
of this global WPA."
Wallace apologized to Latin-Amer-
icans "for this shocking slur" after
Butler filed a repor't with the Senate
yesterday saying the Administration
is spending $6,000,000,000 south of
the border in wild extravagance. But-
ler called it a form of dollar diploma-
cy winning the United States, at the
best, the "sucker" label, and, at the
worst, a suspicious mistrust of motive.

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-Clip Here And Mail'

To RU.-M. Mlan In The Armed Forces *-* - '*"'-

SERVICE
EDITION
THANKSGIVING in
Anin Arbor. . . Some
thought it a bit grim...
Some wvent to church .
Some went to classes . . .
Some just ate. And what
did; they eat? Servicemen
ate the traditional Thanks-
giving dinner-turkey with
dressing, corn, cranberry
sauce, pumpkin pie .. . Be-
tween two and three thou-
sand pounds of turkey
were purchased for local
Army messes. But the meal
had to be served at night;
many of the men had
classes doring the day . . .
Ann Arbor townspeople
tried to make the day more
pleasant for servicemen
who stayed in town, in-
vited the men to their
homes for dinner ... V-12
men, stationed at the West
Quadrangle, received about
60 invitations, could accept
only 40 . . . For civilian
students living in resi-
dence houses roast chicken
was substituted for turkey.
Only the analytical were

Lw Sfioant Dat

was pleasant and the
Bomber Scholarship was
$1,000 richer . .. Last night
the band playing for the
League dance had a unique
jargon, at least. They were
the "Sophisticats," a swing
band from Detroit; the
vocalist was one "Tabby
Cat." This, they triumph-
antly announced, was to
suit all student tastes.
UNION FOR.MALS
might have been believed a
thing of the past-or as
such for the duration. This
proved to be a misappre-
hension - or an illusion.
The Union will hold its an-
nual formal Saturday.
Students will dance to the
familiar music of Bill
Sawyer. Rupert Straub,
ticket chairman, an-
nounced that 350 tickets
and "no more" would be
sold for the dance. The
tickets sold in just about
20 minutes.

Web 1F'eet

DOGIS continue to -make"
the headlines at the Uni-
versity. The impish hero-
and he is a hero in a Way-
of the latest incident is a
little brown and white ca-
nine. Diligent students had
flecked to the basement
study hall of the library-
also the brown and white
dog. He went from table to
table making friends,
walked up and down on
top of the long tables. For
35 thrill-packed mninutes a
frantic librarian tried to
put h~im out in the cold.
But the dog was too clever.
Finally Stan Wallace, pres-
ident of Sigma Alpha Mu,
caught him, carried him
out of the study hall, Stu-
dents laughed and ap-
plauded.
MR.S. MARK W .
CLARK, wife of Ame~rica's
famed commanding gen-
eral of the Fifth Army,
spoke vesterda i onl"When

--:2*:-:<-*2:2:2~,A;->. -

.r

" * N'

Dr. Bill Murphy of the

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