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November 26, 1952 - Image 3

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1952-11-26

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0

IAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1952

THE MICHIGAN IAILY

PAGE

I-

Two Cabinet
Positions Stil
Unassigned
NEW YORK - VP) -- President-
elect Dwight D. Eisenhower's cab-
inet now is filled except for two
posts-secretary of labor, and sec-
retary of commerce.
* * *
HIS APPOINTMENTS to date:
Secretary of state-John Foster
Dulles of New York.
Secretary of defense-Charles
E. Wilson of Detroit.
Secretary of the Treasury--
George M. Humphrey of Cleveland.
Secretary of the interior-Gov.
Douglas McKay of Oregon
Secretary of agriculture-Ezra
Tuft Benson of Salt Lake City.
Attorney general - Herbert
Brownell of New York.
Postmaster .general-Arthur E.
Summerfield of Flint, Mich.
IN ADDITION, he has made
these appointments to high non-
cabinet posts:
Assistant to the President--Gov.'
Sherman Adams of New Hamp-
shire.
Mutual Security Administrator
-Harold E. Stassen, former gov-
ernor of Minnesota.
Federal Security Administrator
--Mrs, Oveta Culp Hobby of Hous-
ton, Texas.
Treasurer of the United States
-Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest of Bounti-
ful, Utah.'
Three major non-cabinet posts
still to be filled are those of the
secretaries of the Army, Navy and
Air Force.
Sallade Petitions
For Council Post.
Petitions to name George Wahr
Sallade as Republican nominee for
Ann Arbor City Council president
are now. being circulated.
Sallade, the only candidate so
far for the GOP nomination, first
made known his intention to run
in January when Cecil O. Creal,
present Council head, announced
that he would not seek reelection.

TAG DAY DEC. 5 AND 6:
Galens Fraternity Aids Sick Children

* * -

« *

* *

By NAN SWINEHART
A child on crutches, one in bed,
another in a brace-and they are
able to play and work together.
In spite of illness and other
handicaps, many children at the
University Hospital have this op-
portunity because of the efforts of
the Galens Society. Galens, an
honorary medical fraternity, sup-
ports the Galens Workshop, a
teacher for it and contributes to
the annual children's Christmas
Party. They do this through the
funds collected on their Tag Days
which, this year, will be' Dec. 5
and 6.
* * * .
GALENS uses its Tag Day funds
solely for the support of the work-
shop. Records, saws, toys, sup-
plies and other equipment are pur-
chased for the. children in the
hospital.
Each day, the child comes to
the Workshop, or if he is unable
to do so, then the shop goes to
him by means of mobile equip-
ment. Under competent guid-
ance every child chooses some-
thing that he wants to do. Cap-
abilities and length of stay at
the hospital are considered in
this choice.
Galens Workshop projects are
not just "busy work," but have ed-
ucationalband socialbvalue. By
working with other children, the
child is able to have social con-
tacts and companionship generally
not available during a long ill-
ness. In addition they are taught
about the things they make and
learn about the material and tools
used.
BY USING a variety of mater-
'U' Trio To A trend
IFC Conference.
Dean of Students Erich A. Wal-
ter, Bill Zerman, Assistant to the-
Dean and IFC president. Peter
Thorpe, '53, will leave Thursday
night to attend the National In-
trafraternity Conference to be held
in New York from Friday to Sun-
day.

.0

APO Plans
Guide Aids
On Campus
Alpha Phi Omega, Service Fra-
ternity, yesterday announced the
organization of a Guide Service
and a Bulletin Board Project to aid
the campus until next June.
The Guide Service has been in-
stalled with the co-operation of the
Union. APO members will be avail-
able at the Union's Student Of-
fices between *3-5 p.m. Monday
through Friday to conduct visitors
on guided tours through the cam-
pus. Twenty-five members of the
fraternity will be on call to help
bewildered tourists.
* * *
THE BULLETIN Board project
has been organized to put up post-
ers around campus. Groups inter-
ested in having APO place their
literature on classroom bulletin
boards are asked to bring their
posters to the Office of Student
Affairs on Mondays. The group will
disrtibute them before classes be-
gin Tuesday morning.
Other plans of Alpha Phi Omega
include a grass slogan campaign
early next spring to keep students
from trampling University lawns.
More recently, the APO's helped
Student Legislature tabulate elec-
tion returns.
Daily Classifieds
Bring Quick Results

URANIA RECORDS
The Iutic Ceter
300 South Thayer

1 mwwmmmwx

Your Local Dealer for

LA SCALA

Ali

CHILDREN'S WORKSHOP-Uni
workshop supported by Galens
duct a fund raising drive, mon
The Galens Society also puts on
S* * *
ials, the child gains some scientific
knowledge and through books on a
project they improve reading abil-
ity. A knowledge of numbers also
acquired in learning measurements
necessary to fell finished work.
To supervise and teach the
children in the educational as-
pects of the program, Galens pro-
vides a teacher who helps them
in reading, working with numbers
and comprehension.
The medical -society's contribu-
tion to the children's educational
and recreational program helps
many of them find friends and
happy hours while away from home
and parents in the unfamiliar
world of nurses and doctors.

got' -
oo z
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ao sddtCr

niversity Hospital patients work on various personal projects at a
, medical honorary society. Each year the fraternity members con-
ey from which buys records, saws, toys and supplies for the shop.
a a Christmas party for the Hospital's younger set each year.

I. m

Local Blood
Drive Slated
A blood drive, part of the Red
Cross Blood Donor program. and
sponsored by the Air Reserve unit,
will be conducted on campus Dec.
4 and 5.
The' State's Department of
Health blood unit will be set up in
South Quadrangle from 3-9 p.m.'
Thursday, Dec. 4, and 10 a.m.-
4 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5. Students
under 21 years old must have re-
leases signed by their parents.

*STAR CLEANERS *
1213 S. University
DRY CLEANING SPECIALS
FOR THE PRICE OF
Save $1.00 on Every
$3 of Cleaning
2-HOUR CLEANING AT REGULAR PRICE

SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER
FOR COMPLETE CATALOGUE

Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results

a F 4

LAWJAR . is a snow-covered mountain 19,710 feet high, and is
said to be the highest in Africa. Its western summit is called the Masai "Ngaje
- 'Ngai," the House of God. Close to the :summit there is the dried and frozen
carcass of a leopard. No one has explained what the leopard was seeking at that altitude.

SUSAN HAYWARD
as Helen
who followed Harry
Street to Africa to buy
a love that belonged
to another woman.

Gregory Peck
as Harry Street
He was a man search-
ing for his lost soul-
and a woman. His had
been an endless safari,
an insatiate quest for
adventure and now
he had come to the
end. Where had he
missed? In the little
Paris bistro where he
first saw Cynthia -or
the battlefronts of
Spain? The bull-fight
arenas of Madrid-or
the languorous seas
at Antibes, where Liz
taunted him with feline
eyes? Or was it here,
in the green jungles of
Africa, hunting rhino
and impalawith Helen?
At the foot, of the
great mountain of
Kilimanjaro, at the
edge of "Ngaie Ngai,"
House of God, Harry

GREGORY PECK-SUSAN HAYWARD-AVA GARDNER

ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S
THE N"t 'Q W $ )::£": i j
ti: "' L;.S4,7:iS. ii: ' K a' ijb .~ 2Gv'p.

)R by TECHNICOLOR

AVA GARDNER
as Cynthia
the beautiful model
from Montparnasse
who ltit an unquench-.
able fire in his heart.

Motion Picture
it was inevitable that Ernest Hemingway's classic story
of a virile novelist and big game hunter, should be
transcribed on the motion picture screen. The idea of giv-
ing it screen form came to Darryl F. Zanuck, Twentieth
Century-Fox production chief, while he was hunting on
the African continent. Perhaps the same wide shade of
a mimosa tree, and the vistas of the lush African bush
that spread out beyond it to the snow-capped top
of Mt. Kilimanjaro which inspired Hemingway to
write the story inspired Mr. Zanuck to film it.
After five years of planning and research, Casey

Making At Its Best

Robinson was assigned to do the script. Henry King, who
has been associated with scores of major film productions,
including "David and Bathsheba," was chosen to direct,
and a distinguished cast, headed by three great stars,
Gregory Peck, Susan Hayward and Ava Gardner was
assembled. The full resources of the Twentieth Century-
Fox studios were marshalled for this important job of
f film-making. Production units were dispatched to Africa,
Paris, the Riviera and Spain to film the variety of
-scenes Hemingway so vividly describes as background
for his characters.
v r T ,p nnwc Kiliania n ,iga;- itc hc

HILDEGARDE NEFF
as Countess Liz
coldly seductive,sure of
herself-and of Harry,
her newest and most
glittering trophy.

Street waited, and
dared not enter-for
his life as his loves had

t i ml

n

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