100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

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.

April 18, 1946 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1946-04-18

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

TIIURSDAY, APRIL 18, 1946

TIE MICHIGAN DAILY

Ann Arbor Churches To Hold

;um." This was the first word in a
grayer used in an early religious
;eremony in which the feet of 12 poor
_nen were washed in the imitation of
hrist's washing the feet of his dis-
,iples on Holy Thursday.
A Candlelight Communion Service
vill be held at 8 p.m. in the FIRST
1'ONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. Re-
eption of new members will take
lace during the service.
In ST. MARY'S STUDENT
CHAPEL, Holy Communion will be
listributed at 7, 7:15 and 7:30 a.m.
Mass will be said only at 8 a.m., and
here will be a Procession of the
Blessed Sacrament after mass. The
'ost will be left on the altar for
doration by the congregation until
1 p.m.
Devotions will be held in Spanish
or Latin-American :tudents by Fa-
her Manuel Elizaldi at 4 p.m. Holy
lour will be held at 8 p.m.
Maundy Thursday Communion
3ervice will be held at 8 p.m. in the
IRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Communion will be celebrated at
':15 and 10 a.m. in ST. ANDREW'S
'PISCOPAL CHURCH. There will
>e Intercessions at 12:10 p.m., but
he Canterbury Club will not have its
isual luncheon.
CANTERBURY CLUB will have a
raditional Maundy Thursday supper
t 6:30 p.m. in the Student Center.
k communion service will be held at
p.m. in the church and the Men
E nd Boys Choir will sing.
Reception of new members will
ake place at 7:15 p.m. in the FIRST
RESBYTERIAN CHURCH. This
ill be followed by a communion
ervice at 8 p.m.
The MEMORIAL CIRISTIAN
A HURCH will have a Candlelight
:ommunion Service at 8 p.m.

Campus Highlights
Poetry Club Meets .Arborresidents onithe basis of high
Poety Cub Metssch~olastic st and ing.
The Modern Poetry Club will meet A $1,000 pre-doctoral fellowship in
at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3231 An- German and a tuition scholarship in
gell Hall. The discussion topic will mathematics were granted Hester
be announced at the meeting. Reed Gehring and her son Ensign
Frederick Gehring, respectively. Oth-
Spanish Club Meets . . * or fellowships were awarded in the
fields of education, forestry and con-

The conversation group of La s
Sociedad Hispanica will have its
weekly meeting at 4 p.m. today in
the League Cafeteria. All students
interested are invited to attend.
Play Rehearsal ...
A Russian play rehearsal will be
held at 9 p.m. today in Rm. 2219 An-
gell Hall. All members of the cast
are urged to attend.
Panel-discussion . .
Turkey and the Near 'East will be
the topic of a panel-discussion
group sponsored by International
Student Exchange Committee at 8
p.m. Tuesday in Kellogg Audito-
rium.
The committee comprising rep-
re-entatives of foreign and Ameri-
can student organizations will pre-
sent a series of discussions, lec-
tures and films on the Near East,
Russia, India, China, Latin Amer-
ica and the Balkans.
Unionist To Speak.. .
UAW educational director George
C. Crockett, third in a series of
speakers sponsored by the Inter-Co-
operative Council, will discuss tested
methods of combating racial discrim-
ination in unions at 8:15 p.m. Friday
at Muriel Lester Co-operative House.
Mr. Crockett is noted for his suc-
cess in curbing anti-Semitism and
prejudice against Negroes in Detroit.
The public is invited to the meeting
at which refreshments will be served.
Graduate Appointments
Awarded to Residents
Fellowship and Scholarship ap-
pointments in the Graduate School
for 1946-47 were awarded to six Ann

servation, English and mathematics.
Willow Village Veterans
To Gir e Dance at Lodge
Veterans living at Willow Run will
sponsor a Willow Village Dance to be
held from 8 p.m. to midnight Sat-
urday, April 27, in the West Lodge
Community House, Mrs. Betty Ding-
len, social director, announced.
Continuous from 1 P.M.
NOW
SMtSMEN!

STUDENT PIANIST TO PERFORM-Jeanette Haien, graduate student in piano in the School of Music, will
be the soloist appearing with the University Symphony Orchestra today in hill Auditorium. She will present
Beethoven's "Emperor" Concerto, No. 5.

Kaiser Is Called
Coddled Darling
WASHINGTON, April 17-(P)--
Senator Bridges (Rep., N.H.) tore into
Henry J. Kaiser's financial dealings
with the government today, calling
the industrialist the "coddled darling
of the New Deal"
Bridges told the Senate that Kai-
ser now owes the government through
RFC loans "almost $115,000,000, much
of which bears no interest," and that
the government is "planning to spend
additional millions in equipping
plants for his private operation."
"Truly it can be said that he is
Miss Democracy's boy friend,"
Bridges said after outlining what he
called "Kaiser's wonderful years of
wallowing in public moneys."
DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN

Symphony Orchestra To Play
(Continued from Page 1)
which thesentire complicated struc-
to its taking a . position of almost ture of so-called modern opera is
equal prominence. reared.
Overture Iphigenia The other work chosen for to-
The opening number of the pro- night's concert is Symphony No. 4
Thenopeningrnumbercofikheskro-
gram will be the Overture Iphigenia in F minor by Tschaikowsky.
in Aulis by Gluck. This overture was The concert tonight will be the
written for the lyric tragedy, Iphi- second presented this year under Re-
genia en Aulide which has remained velli's direction and tentative plans
a monument to the genius of the have been made for a third concert in
composer and is the foundation upon the first week of June.

. i

Gillette Receives Gold
Stars in Lieu of DEC
Comm. Norman C. Gillette, Jr.,
Executive Officer of the University
Navda Unit, has been awarded a gold
star' in lieu of the Second Distin-I
guished Flying Cross and a gold star
in lieu of the Third Distinguished
Flyiig Cross, it was announced yes-
teYday.
Comm. Gillette was cited in the
second award for displaying "keen
professional skill by effecting single-
handedly, the partial destruction of
the valuable enemy seaplane base at
Toko Formosa," in January, 1945.
He received the first award for
"participating in the destruction of
one large oil tanker, one lugger and
numerous luggers on ways and in
damage to shore installations," while
on duty several hundred miles from
his home base in Morotai in Decem-
ber, 1944.

11

I

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

-d

I

' I

G.I. FLIGHT TRAINING
PROGRAM
For Information Call
Th"ton or Young
2-4508 - or - 25-7394

1' '

i

* ART CINEMA LEAGUE
Presents
1;a a tjt4 1CtR- E RENCHs
Thurs., Fri., Sat., 8:30 P.M.
Adm. 42c (tax incl.)
Phone 6300 Reservations
Box Off ire Opens 2 P.M. Daily
Lydia MENbELSSOH N Theatre
The weekend brought another shipment of Artie Shaw
albums with delightful oldies like "Frenesi" as only Shaw
can play it, "Begin the Bequine" and "Stardust".
For a charming souvenir of Deanna D)urbin's recent
picture "Can't Help Singing" we have her album of the
same done with Robert Paige.

Publication in the Daily Official Bul-
letin is constructive notice to all mem-
bers of the University. Notices for the
Bulletin should be sent in typewritten
form to the Assistant to the President,
1021 Angell Hall, by 3:30 p.m. on the day
preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat-
urdays).
THURSDAY, April 18, 1946
VOL. LVI, No. 117
Notices
Good Friday Services. In accord-
ance with past custom, instructors
are free to excuse from their classes
any students who wish to attend
Good Friday services. Office employ-
ees may also be excused for this pur-
pose.
Honors Convocation: The 23rd An-
nual Honors Convocation on Friday,
April 26, at 11:00 a.m., in Hill Audi-
torium, will be addressed by John P.
Dawson, Professor of Law, and re-
cently Acting Regional Economic
Counselor, U.S. Department of State.
There will be no academic procession.
Faculty members will assemble in the
dressing rooms in the rear of the
Auditorium and proceed to seats on
the stage. Academic costume will be
worn. Reserved seats on the main
floor will be provided for students
receiving honors for a c ad em i c
achievement, and for their parents.
To permit attendance at the Convo-
cation, classes with the exception of
clinics, will be dismissed at 10:45 a.m.
Doors of the Auditorium wil be open
at 10:30 a,m. The public is invited.
Assembly of the School of Forestry
and Conservation at 11:00 a.m., Mon-
day, April 22, in the Amphitheater of
the Rackham Building. Mr. John B.
Taylor. Personnel Officer of the U.S.
Forest Service, Milwaukee, Wiscon-
(Continued on Page 4)
I

CLASSIFIED
RATES
$ .40 per 15-word insertion for
one or two days. (In-
crease of 10c for each
additional five words.)
Non-Contract
$1.00 per 15-word insertion for
three or more days. (In-
crease of 25c for each
additional five words.)
Contract Rates on Request
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: String of pearls, two-strand.
Call Jean Griese, 23159.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE-Tuxedo, size 36, excel-
lent condition. 1111 White. Phone
5117.
PRECISION DRAFTING INSTRU-
MENTS, made by "Dietzgen, for
sale. 10 genuine Dietzgen drafting
sets of 10 pcs. each. In original case.
with locking device. 2 ten inch pro-
portional dividers for planes, circles,
solids and lines; micro-adjustment
and lock. 1 seven-inch proportion-
al divider. "Same as above." These
are all new PREWAR instruments.
Phone 3778. Ask for "Frank."
SAVE 25% ON TENNIS RACQUETS,
Strings, repairs. Just arrived, H. C.
Lee frames. McClusky and Dare,
417 8th street. Ph. 2-7360.
FOR SALE: Handsome large library
table, 6x 3 ft. mahogany, colonial.
Ideal for fraternity house. Miss
Mary Kane,. 1731 Longfellow Ave.,
Detroit, Townsend 5-2877.
FOR SALE: Man's pre-war 3-piece
blue tweed suit, size 38. Excellent
condition. Call 2-6478.
FOR SALE: Man's brown tweed
spring topcoat. Size 40 long. Excel-
lent condition. Call 2-6806.

HELP WANTED
IELP WANTED: Fountain help, top
pay, hours to your convenience
Apply in person to Mr. Lombard or
Mr. Benden. Witham's Drug Store=
corner of S. University and Forest.
WANTED-Experienced waitress for
part time work. Apply Mr. L. W.
Anderson, Willow Run Bowling Al-
leys. 1065 Midway, Willow Run
Village. Phone Ypsi. 1852.
HELP WANTED: Young man or wo-
man: Do you need money to help
the college budget? A few hours a
day taking orders for Avon Pro-
ducts will bring you a nice income.
For particulars write Zada Norris,
manager, 325 West Washington,
Jackson, Michigan.
WANTED
MIDWAY Bicycle Shop, 322 E. Lib-
erty. We have rebuilt used bikes
for sale. Your bike can be expertly
repaired also.
WANTED: May Festival tickets. 3 for
Friday, single or together, one for
Saturday afternoon. Call 2-4547,
Nancy Tressel.

CHAS.
HOGAN'S BAGGAGE
Phone 2-1721
TRUNKS, PARCELS
Small Move Jobs
INSURED

_I

-I Also
"DAYS OF 76"
WORLD NEWS
-- Coming Sunday -
"MISS SUSIE,
SLAGLE'S"
We Deliver!

Telephone 3008

Open 11 :00 a.m. to 1:00 a.m.
2x4 LUNCH

I

r

Featuring Box Chicken
HAMBURGS ! HOT DOGS *
GOOD COFFEE

50c

BAR-B-Q's

1319 South University Ave., Ann Arbor

'.

-
-

r

MICHIGAN
NOW
THE WOLVES' HOWL---
AND SHE HOWLS
I

AT ANN ARBOR'S MOST FAMOUS RESTAURANT
WATCH for our
FAMOUS EASTER MENU
which will appear in this space
c'A\ "3 I A \ n r E°

,j

-OM

I

I

1m

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan