PAGE SIX 'TAT F MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 1948 __~l _. _____., ,_ ,_. w Y SUNDAY, AUGUST 8, 1948 National Guard Opens Annual Encampment Air Arm Prepares For Interstate Meet GRAYLING, Mich., Aug. 7-(A) '-Seven thousand men, carrying packs and rifles,dclimbed out of .tailroad cars and marched into Damp Grayling today chanting: One-two-three-hup-when do we They were the men of the Mich- gan National Guard, gathered from all parts of the state for the kainual summer camp, bigger, more intensive and more impor- .tant this year than ever before. In the two weeks they will be in camp, the men will get a prac- tical course in the modern way of fighting a war. One-Fourth Veterans About a quarter of the enlisted men saw active service in the last war, and all of the officers are veterans. Attached to the camp, too, are a number of regular army tren, who will serve as instructors. tWhile the infantrymen were shaking their camp into being 800 members of the Air Nationa 1Quard passed in review before aj.-Gen. Ralph Loveland, com- manding officer of the 46th Di- vision, Michigan National Guard. Pilots Train The air field, several miles away from Camp Grayling, has been open for a week, and the fliers are half through with their two-week edurse. Gen. Loveland, whose head- quarters will be at Camp Grayling,, inspected the air arm of the Na- Xional Guard as a preliminary to the maneuvers Monday in which1 the 65 planes of the Michigan Guard will join with those of the Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin Na-' tional Guards in a simulated at- tack on an imaginary enemy force. The attack will center from Joliet, east of Plays To Be Aired An original story by H. C. Bun- ner, adapted for radio by Galen Wenger, speech department maj-, or, will be presented over WHRV t 10:45 p.m. today.' The play, "Zenobia's Infidelity," Is' described as an amusing yarn about a young doctor and a circus Elephant who gets tipsy.- "Zenobia's" cast will includeR Wenger, Jim Lynch, Geraldine Wfde, Charles Floyd and Ruth Livingston. They will be assisted by Donald barbe, Richard Ferle, Melvin Thomas and Robert McGhee. Directed by Edgar Willis, the play will be the final presentation of the "Radio Workshop Drama" series presented by the radio div- ision of the Department of Speech. ' gularly scheduled programs will be resumed in the fall. Campus Events Preview smfth lw ' k .1 Mk P/ k I Music Double Opera Bill. "Down in the Valley" and La Serva Padrona," presented by the Department of Speech in collaboration with the School of Music. 8 p.m., Monday, Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. The Music Center, 210 S. Thayer, will be open from 3:15 to 5 p.m., Sun- day, to permit the public to wit- ness the special telecast of the program. Faculty Concert. Chamber music recital by Gilbert Ross, Emil Raab, Bernard Milobsky, Oliver Edel and Webster Aitken. 8 p.m., Monday, Rackham Lecture Hall. Art Cinema League and AVC. "The Lady Vanishes," with Mich- ael Redgrave, Margaret Lockwood, Paul Lukas and Dame May Whit- ty. 7 and 9 p.m., Sunday, Kellogg Auditorium. Movies Michigan Theatre. "Summer Holiday," with Mickey Rooney. Sunday through Wednesday. "Wo- man in White," with Eleanor Par- ker and Alexis Smith. Thursday through Saturday. State Theatre. "The Noose Hangs High," with Abbot and Cos- tello. Sunday through Wednesday. "Big City," with Margaret O'Brien. Thursday through Saturday. Wuerth Theatre. "Naked City," with Barry Fitzgerald, and "The Wreck of the Herperus," with Willard Parker. Sunday and Mon- day. "State of the Union," with Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn, and "Hat Box Mystery," with Tom Neal. Tuesday through Thursday. "It Had To Be You," with Ginger Rogers and Cornel Wilde, and "Where the North Be- gins," with Russell Hayden. Fri- day and Saturday. , FRIENDSHIP WAY: Homespun Internationalismi Sprouts from Town-Adopting SOUTHERN CANDIDATES - Gov. . Strom Thurmond (left) of South Carolina is presidential candidate and Gov. Fielding L. Wright (right) of Mississippi is vice-presidential candidate of Southern Democrats opposing President Truman, NEW YORK, Aug. 7--0P)-It may seem too simple for this com- plex age, but a new grass roots kind of internationalism is span- ning the Atlantic, without official red tape, legislative oratory or dip- lomatic jabberwocky. It is a spontaneous program by which American towns are "adopt- ing" needy European towns and villages, sending them relief goods and, more important, developing a kinship with their old world coun- terparts. More than 200 towns scattered around this country already have adopted communities in France, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg and Germany. Now there's optimistic. talk about puncturing the Iron' Curtain and adopting towns in Poland, Austria, Finland, even Russia itself. Creates Friendship The total money value of food, clothing, medical supplies and other things sent abroad probably is under a million-tiny compared to official programs - but the people in the movement are con- vinced it is kindling friendship and understanding in a way no govern- ments ever could. Telephone operators in New Rochelle, N.Y., are helping tele- land, where many Albany war veterans saw action. Now the two cities have a 40-week, air-mail chess match going. Doctors, law- yers and other professional people of Neosho County, Kansas, are corresponding with their voca- tional counterparts in Zevenberg- en, Holland. Operation Democracy Other trans-oceanic friendships have developed quickly. The town-to-town movement now has a coordinating agency called Operation Democracy, Inc., with headquarters in New York. It is underwritten by some of the pioneers in the movement and raises no funds nor does it solicit American 'towns to join up. It is merely an advisory organization, supplying information on re- quests. The movement came before its coordinating agency. No one is quite sure where it started first, but everyone concerned insists is started spontaneously without high-power organization. Phones Answer Back: 'Braaack' DETROIT, Aug. 7. - (iP-- Add the mechanical raspberry to the latest crop of inventions. The Michigan Bell Telephone Co. came up with it to let callers know when they dial the letters of a non-existent exchange. It admitted it could do nothing about wrong numbers. When someone dials the wrong letters, there comes through the receiver a siren-like noise. A Bell spokesman described it as "a high, wailing sound, like when food prices go up." S P O R T Y R E S T A U R A N T - In a rustic setting, actors fish during lunch -at a new restau- rant in Hollywood. Trout stream is fed by artesian wells. Left to right: Co-owner David Harlig, Evelyn Knight, Co-owner Raymond Fine, Betty Mills, William Eythe. Y O U N G C A P T I V E S - Mrs. Thomas J. Herbert, wife of the governor of Ohio, holds two opossums after their mother and her litter of eleven were caught by a gardener on grounds of the executive mansion at Columbus. phone operators in La France. Sixteen towns Carolina each have French towns and more 000 school children in are sending packages Rochelle, in South adopted than 10,- the state and ex-I changing letters regularly with the children of the French villages. Firemen in Los Angeles adopted firemen in Calais. Luray, Va., sent soap and shortening to Luray, France. The staff of the Dunkirk (N.Y.) Evening Observer main- tains contact with the newspaper staff in Dunkerque, France. Albany sent packages to Nijmegen, Hol- A I R M A N A N D 5 O N S - Douglas Corrigan, who made famous "wrong way" flight from U.S. to Ireland, plays with sons Douglas (left) and Harry at Los Angeles. Corrigan still claims a compass error sent his plane to Ireland instead of California., I; rro I,/ Jaco 4oni 4 'I M A R I N E T RPIBU TE- stained glass windows in the Marine chapel at Camp Lejeune, N. C., were dedicated to leather- necks who died in World War II. Gen. Clifton B. Cates (left) and Maj. Gen. Franklin A. Hart of the Marines pose at windows. Into-fall basic WRAP-AROUND DRESS of rayon gabardine Soft tailored from the clean cut shoulders to out-curving hips, our fall background junior-sized gabardine, slim- lined with a smooth wrap- around skirt. Gray, aqua L 0 N G - H A I R E D S I N G E R - Blanche Thebom, the Metropolitan Opera's leading mezzo soprano, relaxes in the sun at Los Angeles. Her hair is longer than her swim suit. 'I A I ~1 I: } -, 7 + :: ^ via, "" yiia;'. 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