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.

May 10, 1946 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1946-05-10

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

ItfDAY, MAY 10, 1946

THE 1VIICH.tGA DAILY

PAGE SEV

THE M CHIGA DAI Y PAG gE

- .

UNRRA Says
Allocations of
Food Deficieni
LaGuardia Demands
World Grain Control
WASHINGTON, May 9-0P)-The
United Nations Relief and Rehabili-
tation Administration today demand.
ed immediate improvement in the
distribution of food to war-ravage
nations under its wing.
Following up the protest of UNRRA
Director General Fiorello M. La-
Guardia that present allocations are
"grossly inadequate" to feed Europe
and Asia's starving millions, the 48-
member governing council passed a
resolution, without a dissenting vote
urging improvement.
More Food Needed
Lester Pearson, Canadian Ambas-
sador to the United States, while
supporting the resolution, declared
that what the world needs most is
not improved machinery, but "more
food."
The resolution was sponsored by
United States delegate C. Tylerwood,
who told the Council that this coun-
try was planning to present a pro-
posal May 20 to improve the inter-
national distribution machinery at a
meeting of the food and agriculture
organization called by the United
Nations.
Specifically, it recommended that
governments - both those supplying
and importing food - "develop im-
mediately plans for the improvement
of international machinery for the
allocation of foodstuffs in short sup-
ply."
Passage of the resolution ended the
fourth session of the Council which
opened in Atlantic City, but recess-
ed five weeks ago to allow LaGuardia
time to study the situation.
Grain Control,
The former New York mayor open-
ed today's session with a demand for
establishment of an international
agency with far-reaching controls
over grain and other scarce foods.
LaGuardia placed his proposal be-
fore the 48-member council of the
international relief organization in
opening a session at which delegates
piled protest on protest that more
and bigger shipments of food were
needed urgently in a situation ap-
proaching catastrophe.
Meanwhile, the Department of Ag-
riculture announced a 10 per cent
cut in home supplies of fats and
vegetable oils for the April-June
quarter because of lower production
and famine relief shipments. The
government late yesterday posted
higher prices for grain and protein
feeds to encourage farmers to market
their supplies rather than feed them
to livestock.
Dr. M. M. Kaplan
Will Speak Tuesday
Dr. Mordecai M. Kaplan will lec-
ture on "The Courage To Live As
Jews" at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rack-
ham Amphitheatre.
Dr. Kaplan, who will speak under
the sponsorship of B'nai B'rith Hillel
Foundatiorr, Beth Israel Congregation
and the Student Religious Associa-
tion, is a dean of the Teachers In-
stitute of the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America and a lecturer
of the Teachers College at Columbia
University. He served as professor
of education at Hebrew University,
Palestine, from 1937 to 1939.
Dr. Kaplan originated the idea of
Jewish Centers and is the founder
and leader of the Society for the
Advancement of Judaism.

RARE VOLUMES ADDED:

i

S

First 'U' President's Library

Given to Historical Collecton
The library of the Rev. John Mon- of the few perfect copies in exis-
teith, co-founder and first president tcnce.
of the University, has been given to The books were collected by Mon-
the Michigan Historical Collections. teith from 1816 to 1821 in Detroit,
The gift makes the University the where the University was first lo-
Thecated He taught seven subjects in
only college in the country to own addition to being president, at a
the library of its first president. The salary of $25 a year.
132 volumes have been in the custody The Collections also own Monteith's
of the Collections since 1938, when diaries and manuscripts.
they were loaned by Monteith's --- - -
grand-daughter by marriage, but the Tutors Still Needed
Collections will now have permanent
possession of them. For Three Courses
Most of the books, which are print-I
ad in French, Greek, Italian, Latin, Tutors are still needed for Eco-
Hebrew, and English, are religious nomics 54, Drawing 2 and Embryolo-
gy. ,
Iworks, but grammars, dictionaries, Students must have received an A
poems and Shakespeare's works are in the course, or a B if it is their
also included. Some were printed on major to be eligible to tutor. The
the press of Father Gabriel Richard, standard rate for tutoring is seventy-
co-founder of the University. five cents an hour.
One volume, "L'Ame Penitente", is Students who wish to tutor and
the first book (third title) to have those wishing tutors may apply at
been printed in Michigan. It is one the Student Offices in the Union.

I
1

Bi~ousss
LOVELY
RAYON BLOUSES
JE:WEL NECK LINE,
SJIRRED NECK,
AN! TAILORED
STYLES.

'smarted t /'Iv'iePV LA yp
539 East Liberty Street
---- -

COAL SUPPLY DIM.l "NISIIES-A worker checks the diminishing coal
supply at the Ford Motor Company's Rouge plant near Detroit. .Mich.
The company ordered indefinite suspeusion of automobile production
because of the coal shortage. The coal strike and related tieups will
affect 110,000 Ford workers.
Campus .Higohlihts
Violin Recital Sunday . .. Guild Box Social.. .

Virginia Solomon, violinist, assisted
by Marilyn Mason, pianist, will pre-
sent a recital at 8:30 p.m. Sunday
in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre.
Miss Solomon is from Jackson,
Michigan and is studying under Prof.
Gilbert Ross.
The program will be made up of
compositions by Bach, Tartini, Sibeli-
us, Dohnani and De Falla.
High School lay ...
The Senior Class of Ann Arbor
High School will present sKauf-
man and Hart's comedy success
"You Can't Take It with You" at
8:15 p.m. today and tomorrow in
Pattengill Auditorium.
Y r a:
Graduate Mixer. . .
A Graduate Student Mixer will be
sponsored by the Graduate Student
Council from 9 p.m. to midnight
today in the Rackham Building.
Movies will be shown at 8 p.m. A
short program has been planned for
the intermission.
SRA Coffee Hour ...
Members of the Student Relig-
ious Association Board of Gover-
nors and their wives will be guests
of honor at the Lane Hall Coffee
Hour from 4:30 to 6 p.m. today.
TUrs. Franklin. H. Littell will act
as hostess.

Westminister Guild will hold a
box social with the Wesleyan Guild at
8:30 p.m. today in the social hall of
the Methodist church.
Women are to bring a lunch for
two, packed in a fancy box, and
money bid for the lunches will be
given to the World Student Service
Fund.
Newman Club . .
Newman Club will have a general
meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in the
Club rooms to prepare a listof
nomineesfor the Club elections to
be held May 19.
There will be a party after the
meeting, with dancing and enter-
tainment by a barber-shop quartet.
Spring Fever Party . .
Canterbury Club will have a Spring
Fever Party from 8 to 12 p.m. today
in Page Hall.
There will be a floor show and
plain and square dancing. Refresh-
ments will be served.
Mayor Brown Proclaims
White Cane Week for City
Next week will be White Cane Week
in Ann Arbor, according to a procla-
mation issued by Mayor W. E. Brown,
Jr., yesterday.
The week will be set aside for in-
structing citizens in their special dut-
ies toward the blind.

Y

drama by the dram .
for that extra-special gift for mother,
tuck a dram of an exciting fragrance
in with a dainty hanky . . . Vigny, Worth,
Suzanne, D'Orsay, Lucien Lelong, and
Helena Rubenstein scents
1.00, 1.50, 1.65
plus federal tax
pretty lace, colorful print, and smart
monogrammed hankies .. .
1.00 to 5.00.

4,,

,

A

,P
' '..
{+.
r ti. ,{, ..
JAL:': :':':.'. t
. : ::-ti:.
:- :':,

,

omx

The Junior Class of
ANN ARBOR HIGH SCHOOL
presents
"YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WIT H YOU"
Friday and Saturday, May 10 and 11
Tickets Will Be on Sale at School Both Nights
Admission 50c Pattengill Auditorium

>A..
Sit r.~
'.s Lt ' - \ 'S

r4it

LOVELY TO GIVE!
tie
Se . o
10 KT. GOLD
EWELRY BY

/

f. ll
- r <

b
j
1

genuine black prima
ballerinas. . . hand made of feather-
light leather for indoors, outdoors, or
sports ... make you light on your

10 NT. GOLi)
PRECIOUS PIECES
THAT ARE LIFETIME
TREASURES!
Deftly designed pins and earrings to match -
beautiful bangle bracelets, charm bracelets and
charms. Costume Jewelry, too! Just hundreds
of pieces - Wide chunky bracelets, necklaces,
lapel pins, earrings, charms from $1.00.. Stunning
chatelaines from $3.00.

" " ,,.

:; j
_+ (
f ' {t
r ._
° ti
:. . ,
., ., x
,,
.j i' C4 y " A
r Y'4. sa ''" ,
!:y: ' 4Vi "
3
11
'S
.
;y.:
is<
is . , t+ / y '.
;
4y ,
X

feet, graceful as a ballerina . .

in red, gold, blue, pink, light grccn .,, . 3.95.

also

/ _.

wV

9,

. --
; ; ..
..
:
f
f

_. ...

/rt ~
Y. :

\'.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan