rAC R X TIlE I ITCIAN OIi'Ys TUES 4D'AY, frl IEWRI . 119 7L ---_7 -Y-4" DO YOU REMEMBER? Japanese Hit Pearl Harbor Seven Years Ago Today What happened seven years ago today? Japanese fighters and bombers screamed down on Army and Navy bases at Pearl Harbor, Oahu, T.H., on Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941. And for the second time in 25 years the nation went to war. A DAILY EXTRA, which hit the streets at 4 p.m. Monday told bewildered students of the disas- ter and of U.S. vessels hit or sink- ing off the Philippines, another seized in the Yangtze River, and warships sunk in an Anglo-Amer- ican sea battle with the Japanese. Australia had declared war on Japan and both Congress and the British Parliament hastily sched- uled special sessions which result- ed in war declarations. Jap planes were sighted Hongkong and Singapore. home, private plane flying, off At was Pearl Harbor' News Flash To Beaired A recording of the actual news flash of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor which was broadcast over the combined NBC Red and Blue networks on Dec. 7, 1941, will be featured on this week's Jour- nal of the Air._ Broadcast at 7:30 p.m., over Station WHRV, the Journal's spe- cial Pearl Harbor Day feature will also present a recording of the late Franklin D. Roosevelt's Dec- laration of War on Dec. 8, 1941. THESE RECORDINGS are part of a documentary show, "Mile- stones on the Road to Peace," pro- duced by Prof. Garnet Garrison of the Speech Department when he was a program director for the National Broadcasting Company. The show, hailed by critics all over the country for the use of such historical recordings, was broadcast on the eve of VE Day, May 8, 1945. Also featured on the Journal will be an interview with assist- ant dean of women, Mary Brom- age, on displaced persons. For- mer training officer of over- seas relief workers, Dean Brom- age will discuss the functions of the UNRRA program with in- terviewer, Pollee Thomson. Items about the Galens tag drive and the new prefabricated houses will round out the program. * * * DIRECTED BY Jim Lynch, the Journal cast will include Jack Jensen, Tom Walsh, Nafe Katter, Bob White, Carolyn Daugherty, Don Frankman, Bill Swisher, and Ruth Livingston. The script is by Margery Zaller, Jim Reiss, Sey- mour Sonkin and Barbara Barnes. Pickets Ring Press Plant The firing of a printing press- man and pressman's apprentice resulted in an International Print- ing Pressman's Union strike at the Ann Arbor Press, with a 15-man picket line established yesterday. stopped, as the nation girded it- self for battle. * * * UNIVERSITY faculty members were glued to their radios most of Sunday and were ready with in- ternretative analyses for The Daily. Least surprised was Prof. Preston W. Slosson, of the his- tory department, who had pre- dicted that the United States would become involved from the Far East in the titanic struggle. Professor William Haber, of the economics department, prophe- sied that labor leaders who were "unaware of the gravity of the previous situation," would cooperate more fully now. Most of them were relieved that the change from peace to war had been clear-cut. * *" * STUDENTS CONTINUED their normal academic routine. Men worried a little more about-the draft and how army- proof educational deferments would be. The chairman of the Ann Arbor draft board predict- ed a lower draft age and relax- ation of qualifications. Least disturbed were two "Iron Man" students then dueling it out to see who could stay awake the longest. More than 100hours had passed, but wearing dark glasses and needing a shave the nodding pair continued their battle to win a $5 wager. Discuss Job ChancesToday Representatives from an in- surance company and an arsenal will speak on job opportunities for graduating students at 4 p.m. to- day in Rm. 231 Angell Hall. D. T. Jaeger, chief of the Civil- ian Personnel Division of the De- troit Arsenal, will talk on oppor- tunities in the federal govern- ment. T. A. Eggleston, of the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company of Hartford, Conn. will discuss the requirements and opportunities for field representatives in the in- surance business. These meetings, held once a week to acquaint graduating stu- dents with opportunities in busi- ness and government, are being sponsored by the University Bu- real of Appointments and Occu- pational Information. Expert Lectures On Botany Today "The Physiology and Chemistry of Plant Growth Hormones" will be the topic of a lecture by Prof. Kenneth V. Thimann, of the bot- any department at Harvard Uni- versity 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The lecture, which is sponsored by botany department is open to the public. Prof. Thimann is considered an authority on plant physiology and hos been recently elected to the National Academy of Science in recognition for his research con- tributions on plant hormones. Progressives To Hear Talk On Elecuoias Prof. Curtis D. MacDougall of Northwestern University will speak at a meeting of the Young Pro- gressives to be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the League. The topic of his address is "Young Progressives - Election- Post-Election." Prof. MacDougall was Demo- cratic candidate for the House of Representatives in 1944 and Pro- gressivencandidate for the Senate in 1948. He is at present teaching jour- nalism at Northwestern Univer- sity. Prof. MacDougall is the au- thor of "Rleporting for Beginners." 'Interpretative Reporting," "News- room Problems and Policies," "Covering the Courts," and "Hoaxes." These texts have been used here at the University. SINCE SEPTEMBER(2 , 1948 '0,488 COLLEGE S UDENTS HAVE CHANGE TO CHESTERF LD THERE'S A REA W: di r It won't lengthen your Christ- mas shopping list but it may lengthen the lives of some of the cold, shivering men, women, and children in Europe. This is the appeal of the Ann Arbor Society of Friends for their two week clothin- l;drive launched this week. "OLD CLOTHING and shoes which may be cluttering up your closet would make the most ap- preciated gift of all for the poor in Europe," Jack Huebler, public- ity chairman for Quaker group, said. "It doesn't matter what con- dition they are in," he emipha- sized, "because the Friends will wash, mend, press, and pack them at a work party following the drive." - YEOMEN OF THE GUARD--Principal characters snapped by a Daily photographer at an informal rehearsal. Standing, from left to right: Joyce Ed tar, Al Johnson, Cohleen Jensen, Rowland Mc- Laughlin, Jimmie Lobaugh, Dick Norling, Jim D iolittle, Director Maynard Klein. Seated: Doris Kays, Bob Elson, Roge Appleby, Dorothy Dunc in, Jim Ueberhorst. *" t* * * * * *T*h 'Yeomen of the Guard' Starts Tonight - HELPFUL GIFTS: Ann Arbor Friends Launch Clothing Driive To AidEurope (o o i~ & in F 1I Warm clothes-sweaters, coats, dresses--are especially needed, he pointed out, although anything that can be made wearable will be appreciated. "GAMES AND BOOKS, in ad- dition, are being collected, he said, "but, of course clothes are most important." Collection headquarters for the drive will be Tuckaway House, on the corner of Liberty and Maynard Streets, he announced. The clothing which is collected, will be distributed to the needy through the American Friends Service committee with headquar- ters in France, Germany, Poland, Finland, Italy and Czechoslovakia, he said. Red-coated guardsmen begin a tour of duty on the ramparts of the Pattengill Auditorium stage at 8 p.m. tonight, as "Yeomen of the Guard"' begins a three days en- gagement in Ann Arbor. THIS LIGHT OPERA, consid- ered by many critics as the best creation of Messrs. Gilbert and Sullivan, features a cast of ap- proximately 75 persons, in addi- tion to a thirty piece orchestra, conducted on, alternate nights by Prof. Klein and Wilson. 'U' Prof Gives Coed Aid Fund' A special scholarship for women preparing for careers in interna- tional affairs has been established at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy by Dean and Mrs. Ivan C. Crawford of the College of Engineering, the Medford, Mass. school announced yesterday. The annual scholarship has been provided by Dean and Mrs. Crawford in memory of their daughter Jean Anne Crawford who graduated from Fletcher in 1941. An annual stipend of $400 will be provided by the scholarship. Miss Crawford was fatally in- jured while assigned as a Red Cross correspondent accompany- ing the Hoover Commission in- vestigating food supply problems in Holland and Belgium. She was a correspondent for Newsweek, Ann Arbor News, Washington Post, and the Na- tional Broadcasting Company. Child Films Slated Two films on family relations, "Know Your Baby," and "Meeting the Emotional Needs of Child- hood," will be shown at 4:10 p.m., tomorrow, in Kellogg Auditorium. They are sponsored by the Audio-Visual Education Center and are open to the public. Costumes for "Yeomen" promise to provide all sorts of eye appeal for local audiences. A stage setting which includes a replica of the Tower of Lon- don as well as a gigantic heads- man's block will furnish an au- thentic medieval background for the sparkling music andj action of the opera. The plot of "Yeomen" deals with a strolling entertainer and' his girl friend who attempt to save the life of a gentleman scheduled to feel the keen edge of the headsman's weapon. THE INTRICACIES of this plot and the complicated love affair which arise in the coairse of the action are guaranteed to keep spectators on the edges of' their seats as they try to figure out whether or not the axe will fall. Some good seats for all three performances-tonight, tomorrow, night and Thursday-are still available, at 90 cents and $1.20. They are on sale at the University Hall ticket booth, and will be sold at the Pattengill box office each evening before the performance. i I _ r-- it PROGRAMS BROCHURE PRINTING. " 41 ROACH ?o TICKETS r Your dress shirt, carefully laundered for cowf fort nd pleasure. KYER MODEL LRUNDRY State Drug Co. State and Packard ICE CREAM - LUNCHES DRUGS 627 S. MAIN 1215 S. UNIVERSITY PHONE 4185 814 S. STATE ' II _____________________________________________________________----~-~-~-~ i GREYHOUND LINES offers RESERVED SEAT BUSES leaving Michigan Union for Chicago, December 17, 1948 at 4 P.M. Making connections at Chicago for all points. Secure tickets and reservations in advance at Boersma Travel Service, Nickels Arcade or BUS STATION, 116 West Huron Street. Fare One Way 4.60 Round Trip 8.30 Other typical low cost fares from Ann Arbor with frequent service: One Way New York, N.Y. ................. 11.75 Round Trip 21.15 E , fl i a