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.

July 04, 1953 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1953-07-04

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

FACIE FOtM

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1953

PAGE POUR SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1953
________________________________________ I U

............. =

Octogenarian'
Philosophizes'
On Business
(Continued from Page 1)
At 17, Earhart left for Minne-
sota to work as a stenographer.
He started his first business, a
lake transit business, at 21. ("Much
too young to start a business," he
remarked.)
* * *
THE BUSINESS was liquidated
leaving Earhart with debts that
took almost 10 years to pay. At 40
he bought the White Star Refin-.
ing Company and started his rise
in the business world.
He illustrated how his com-
petitors had forced progress on
him. During World War I,
Standard Oil diverted his sources
of supply, so he built his own
refinery.
He was not bitter for he said,
"Competition is the life of 'trade
. . and America."
Afterward he made a contract
with a crude oil producer, a con
tract that involved millions of
dollars a year, and lasted 10 years.6
This contract was completely ver-
bal, a "gentlemen's agreement."
"IN THE OLD days many busi-
ness men realized that honesty is
always the best policy but fewer
realized that a business could be
successfully operated on the Gold-;
en Rule."
In 1930, the White Star Com-
pany merged with Socony Va-
cuum and Earhart retired two
years later at the age of 6?.
He settled down at this time at.
his summer home on the banks of
the Huron River. He had originally
bought the land when the coun-
try had badly needed food during
the first World War and had of-
fered many of his workers a chance
to raise food on this land for the
war.
EARHART HAS remained ac-
tive in the more than 20 years of
his retirement. The board of the
Earhart Foundation has indowed
such projects as a research plant
lab at the California Institute of
Technology and for the first three
years the chair of Human Rela-
tions in Industry here at the Uni-
versity.
He has also taken time to re-
flect on his long and active life.-
Earhart has written, "Business is
not the act of outsmarting your
competitors . . . for honesty is the
best policy. A business man can be
successful and be a Christian."
Concerning the world today he
said, "My generation has lived in
a wonderful age and has had a
wonderful heritage, dating back
to the struggles of the Pilgrims.
But," he added, "by your age we
didn't do so well. You have an in-
visible mortgage on your future
home of about $8,000 that our gen-
eration gave to you. And this debt
must either be paid or repudiated.
History has repeatedly shown that
the latter course is the road to
national chaos."

PROF. MAYNARD KLEIN
. . . directs chorus
'U' Choir To Inaugurate New
ChoralSinging Techniques

Hillary Tells
How Tensing
Saved Life
LONDON - (R) - Sir Edmund
Hillary disclosed yesterday that
Tiger Tenzing saved him from
plunging to death in a Mt. Ev-
erest ice crevice just as they were
in sight of their historic victory
over the world's highest peak.
The New Zealand bee keeper
told a news conference he and
his Nepalese Sherpa companion
were coming down a sheer wall of
ice to reach the final approach to
the summit when "a large piece
of ice gave way and there was a
crevice."
"TENZING had the rope tied to
me and pulled me up," he added
with a grateful look at shy, beam-
ing Tenzing, who stood beside him.
Hillary and Tenzing flew in
yesterday from India with the
rest of the victorious 13-man
British Everest expedition, led
by Lt. Col. Sir John Hunt. The
party, whose conquest of the
over 29,000-foot peak May 28
was announced to the world on
the eve of Queen Elizabeth's
coronation, were given a rousing
welcome.
Hillary and Hunt have received
knighthoods - entitling them to
add "Sir" to their names - for
their feat. Queen Elizabeth is to
award Tenzing the GeorgerMedal,
Britain's civilian honor for brav-
ery.
Hillary, 38 years old, gaunt and
hollow-cheeked, described the sum-
mit of Mt. Everest as "a nice cone"
which "does not rise to a partic-
ular point."
Quartet Talk
To Be Given
Prof. Louise Cuyler of the mu-
sic school will give a public lec-
ture on the Stanley Quartet pro-
gram, 4:15 p.m. Monday in -Aud.
D, Angell Hall.
According to Prof. Cuyler the
lecture will consist mainly of a
discusion of the Fourth Quartet
of Bela Bartok, although there
will also be some attention paid
to the other two works program-
ed by the Stanley.
This lecture will be the first of
a series of three, all of which are
to be given on the Monday pre-
ceding each concert by the Stan-
ley Quartet.
'U Book Wizs
A University publication, en-
titled "Guidebook for Planning an
Education at the University," was
awarded first place in a competi-
tion sponsored by the American
College Public Relations Associa-
tion.

(Continued from page 2)
take members and friends to nearby
lake for swimming, outdoor sports and
picnic supper. Newcomers welcome.
Lutheran Student Association (Na-
tional Lutheran Council) Hill and For-
est Ave. 'Sunday-9:30 a.m. Bible Class;
10:30 a.m.. Worship Service; 4 p.m. meet
for Picnic.
Michigan Christian Fellowship-4:00
o'clock Sunday afternoon, Bill Gilbert,
Professor of Chemistry at Albion Col-
lege will speak on "The Christian and
His Profession." All students are invit-
ed. Refreshments wvill be served follow-
ing the meeting.
Presbyterian Summer Student Fellow-
ship will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday, July
5, at the Church to go to Waterloo Re-
creation Area for an outing and picnic.
All Presbyterian summer students are
welcome.

Free Square Dancing. Lessons at the
Leaigue Ballroom. Monday. July 6. from
7 to 9 p.m.
La p'tite causette meets Monday,
July 6. from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in the wing
of the north room of the Michigan Un-
ion cafeteria. All students and Faculty
members interested to speak or learn
to speak French in a friendly atmos-
phere are cordially invited.
Russian Circle. First summer meeting.
Monday, July 6. at 8 p.m.. International
Center. Program: election of officers,
games, refreshments.
Play, presented by the Department of
Speech, beginning Wednesday, July 8,
at 8 p.m.-Knickerbocker Holiday.
Popular Arts Film-Basis of Modern
Technique-"Uncle Tom's Cabin," and
"Tol'able David." 7:30 p.m. Auditorium
A, Angell Hall.

SWEDEN'S BEST-Miss Sweden, pretty Ulla Sandklef (center),
is flanked by two other contestants for the title which she won
recently. Miss Sweden, who competed as Miss Gothenburg, will
take part in the 1953 Miss Universe competition at Long Beach,
California.

LOOK and LISTEN
With DONALD HARRIS

BANK BY MAIL
You can avoid Summer heat and

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

- a

A unique experience in choral
singing will be sponsored by the;
School of Music, when demon-
stration choral rehearsals are held
Quartet Slated
For Concert
First summer concert by the
Stanley Quartet will be given 8:30
p.m. Tuesday in Rackham Lecture
Hall.
At that time three works will
be played. The program will open
with the Quartet in A major, Op.
18. No. 5, by Beethoven.
This is the first appearance of
this particular Beethoven Quar-
tet by the Stanley. According to
Prof. Gilbert Ross, first violinist
of the group, it is in keeping with
their overall plan, which is to per-
form an all-Beethoven Quartet
cycle as soon as each of the quar-
tets has been played individually.
Also on Tuesday's program will
be Mozart's Quintet in G minor,
-K. 516. David Ireland, former Uni-
versity student, will play the sec-
ond viola part.
The contemporary work of the
evening will be the Fourth Quar-
tet of Bela Bartok, the Hungar-
ian composer who passed away in
the early forties. Bartok wrote six
string quartets of which the first
and sixth have been performed on
previous occasions by the Stanley.
This will be their first perform-
ance of the fourth.

at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday,
and 11 a.m. Tuesday in Aud. A,
Angell Hall.
According to Prof. David Mat-
tern, the audience will be the
choir, and there will be no "try-1
outs." Anyone on campus inter-
ested in learning new choral tech-
niques, or singingnworks ofchoral
literature under distinguished
conductors, is cordially invited to
attend.
S * * * . .
PROF. MAYNARD KLEIN, con-
ductor of the University Choirs,
and the National, Music Camp
Choirs, at Interlochen, Mich., will
conduct the demonstrations.
There will be a second series
of these demonstrations at 10
a.m. and 3 p.m., Friday, July
10, and 10 a.m., Sat., July 11.
At this time the conductor will
be Prof. Marlowe Smith, member
of the faculty, Eastman School of
Music, and Director of High
School Choirs, Rochester, New
York.
SL Cinema Guild
Opens NewrShow
"A 'Passport to Pimlico" begins
its run tonight at the SL Cinema
Guild.
Starring Margaret Rutherford
and Stanley Holloway the British
movie will have three showings
tonight at 6:30, 8 and 9:30 p.m. It
will be shown at 8 p.m. Sunday.

For those who are spending the
4th at home, three programs of
unusual interest have been sched-
uled by CBS Radio and Television'
From 5:30-6:00 p.m., CBS Radio
will broadcast Denmark's annual
U. S. Independence Day ceremon-
ies direct from that country. Fea-
tured speakers will be King Fred-
erik IX, and Paul Hoffman, former
ECA Director.
The "Saturday Sports Roundup"
from 6:30-6:45 p.m. on CBS Radio
will find John Derr broadcasting
the British Open, oldest interna-
tional golf tournament, direct from
Carnoustie, Scotland. This tour-
nament will also be broadcast Sun-
day, July 5, from 10:45-11:00 p.m.
Federal Civil Defense Admin-
istrator, Val Peterson, will be
"Man of the Week" on the CBS
Television public affairs pro-
gram, 4:30-5:00 p.m. Sunday.
Musical Comedy
Opens Wednesday
New York 300 years ago will
provide the setting for the politi-
cal satire "Knickerbocker Holiday"
which will be presented by the
speech department as the second
play on its summer playbill.
The Maxwell Anderson musical-
comedy will play at the Lydia
Mendelssohn theater Wednesday
through Saturday.
Final performance of "The Mad-
woman of Chaillot" current speech
department play will be given at
8 p.m. today.

Peterson, formerly Governor of
Nebraska, will be interviewed by
a panel of newsmen.
The second semester of "Sum-
mer School," nine-week television
series given by CBS Radio on Mon-
days through Thursday will begin
Monday, July 6 from 3-3:30 p.m.
Each week will find a new topic
being discussed. The first week's
topic, entitled "In the Beginning,"
will include talks on the "Stars,"
"Sea," "Earth," "Growing Things,"
and "Animals."
Three Deans of Women will dis-
cuss "What ,Every Woman Wants
to Know about Her, Education"
when CBS Radio broadcasts the
National Panhellenic Conference,
10:45-11:00 p.m. July 10. The par-
ticipating Deans will be Dean Nola
Stark-Rogers of UCLA, Dean Eith
Stallings of the University of
Georgia, and Dean Karen Carl-
son of the University of Georgia.

Mail" system.
so easy to use.

It's completely safe and

:k

conjestion by utilizing our

"Bank By

Come in and

inqulre

about the

many advantages at
THE ANN ARBOR BANK~
Main and Huron Streets
State Street at Nickels Arcade 1108 South "U"
COMPLETE BANKING FACILITIES

.. k

UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
AND STUDENT CENTER
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
1511 Washtenaw Avenue
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 10:30: Service with Sermon by the pos.
tor, "As Sorrowful, Yet Always Rejoicing."
Sunday at 6:00: Supper-Program, with report of
the Tri-ennial Convention of the Lutheran
Church-Missouri Synod, held at Houston,
June 17 to 27.

i

A.. J\.

11

Campus
Calendar3
EVENTS MONDAY
P. P. Ewald of the Brooklyn
Polytechnic Institute will discuss
"Fourier Transformations and X-
Ray Diffraction by Crystals" at
9 a.m. in 1400 Chemistry Bldg.
He will be followed by Prof. Wil-
liam N. Lipscomb of the Univer-
sity of Minnesota who will lecture
on "Experimental Studies of Cry-
stal Structures: Examination of
Diffraction Photographs and a
Discussion of Their Physical Basis"
at 10 a.m.
Walster Baade,. of Mt. Wilson
and Palomar observatories will
discuss "Galaxies: Their Com-
position and Structure" at 2 p.m.
in 1400 Chemistry Bldg.
A discussion of the Evolution!
of Stars and Galaxies" by Prof.
George Gamow of George Wash-
ington University will follow at
3:30 p.m.
* * *
The Speech and the Preacher
Conference will open at 10 a.m.
with an introduction in the Rack-
ham Amphitheater.
"Current Practices in Religious
Broadcasting," a panel discussion,
will be heard at 1:30 p.m. in the
Amphitheater.
Group discussions will be held at
10:30 a.m., 2:45 and 4:15 p.m.
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" and
"Tol'able David" wvill illustrate
the "Basis of Modern Technique"
in the second showing of the
University series on the history
of the motion picture, to be pre-

Beginning Monday, July 6 at 9:30 A.M.
SALE,
Summ__er ,"_S
AMERICA'S BEST-KNOWN
LIGHTWEIGHT FABRIC
YES, they're by the famous maker whose ads
you've seen in the national magazines. More
important for you-they're tailored with such
skill, styled with such flattery, that they're perfect
for your summer wearing and for clear around the
year, The fabric is so comfortable, wears so well,
sheds wrinkles because-it's a costly blend of
rayon enriched with wool. Not every style and
color in your size of course, but there's a good
selection-so hurry while it lasts.
LINED SUMMER SUITS
Were $35 - Now $25
I

11

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
1432 Washtenaw Ave.
Henry Kuizenga, Minister
Charles Mitchell, Assistant Minister
William S. Baker, University Pastor
Sunday Morning Worship 11:00: Henry Kuizenga
preaching, "Freedom in a Christian Nation."
Summer Student Fellowship
Meet at Church at 2 P.M. for outing and picnic.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
502 E. Huron
C. H. Loucks, Minister and Student Counselor
10:00 A.M.: Student Bible class studies "Proverbs"
11:00 A.M.: Church worship. Sermon topic "God
of the Lost."
7:00 P.M.: Roger Williams Student Guild discus-
sing Frank Laubach's stimulating book, "Wake
Up or Blow Up."

suits

BETHLEHEM ,VANGELICAL AND
REFORMED
423 South Fourth Ave.
Walter S. Press, Pastor
Irene Applin Boie, Director of Music
10:45 A.M.: Worship Service, Sermon by Rev.
Press, "A Christian Patriot."
11:30 A.M.: Broadcast over WHRV.
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
120 South State Street
Dwight S. Large, Erland J. Wangdahl,
Eugene A. Ransom, Ministers
9:30 A.M.: Informal Discussion group, Pine
Room. Topic "The Christian Student and the
World Struggle."
10:45 A.M.: Worship, "The Great Prayer of St.
Francis," Dr. Large, preaching.
3:00 P.M.: Meet in Wesley Lounge for outdoor
picnic and meeting at nearby lake. Swim-
ming, volley-ball, and picnic supper. Evening
vesper service. All students welcome.
Welcome to Wesley Foundation Rooms, open daily.
ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
No. Division at Catherine
8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion.
9:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Commentary.
10:00 A.M.: Student Breakfast, Lounge of Parish
House.
11:00 A.M.: Holy Communion and Sermon.
11:00 A.M.: Summer Church School (thru Grade 6)
12:15 P.M.: After-Service Fellowship, Recreation
Room.
6:00 P.M.: Student Buffet Supper and Speaker.
8:00 P.M.: Evensong, St. Michael's Chapel.
During the Week:
Wednesday, 7:00 A.M.: Holy Communion; Friday,
12:10 P.M.: Holy Communion; Friday, 4:00
to 6:00 P.M.: Student Tea in Lounge of Par-
ish House.
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
1917 Washtenaw Avenue
Edward H. Redman, Minister
Sunday at 8:00 P.M.: The Adult-Student Discus-
sion Group presents the second in a series of
six discussions on the Bible.

A
I

r

wft
s

LUTHERAN STUDENT
(National Lutheran
Hill and Forest Avenue
Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor

ASSOCIATION
Council)

A

Sunday-9:30 A.M.: Bible Class.
10:30 A.M.: Worship Service.
4:00 P.M.: Meet for Picnic.
Tuesday-7:30 P.M.: Seminar-"World's Great
Literature."
GRACE BIBLE CHURCH
State and Huron Streets, Phone 2-1121
Wm. C. Bennett, Pastor
10:00 A.M.: Church School
11:00 A.M.: "God's Invitation To Salvation."
7:30 P.M.: "Tests of Discipleship."
Wednesday, 8:00: Prayer Meeting.
A Friendly Church where the Word is preached.
ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL
William and Thompson Sts.
Masses Daily at 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M.
Sunday at 8:00 A.M., 10:00 A.M., 11:30 A.M.
Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings 7:30 P.M.
Newman Club Rooms in Father Richard Center.

Long and short sleeved un-
lined suits. Sizes 10 to 18
and junior sizes 13 and 15.
Colors: white, navy, black;
red, toast and light blue.

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, Scientist
1833 Washtenaw Ave.
9:30 A.M.: Sunday School.
11:00 A.M.: Sunday Morning Services.
July 5-"God."
5:00 P.M.: Sunday Evening Service.
8:00 P.M. Wednesday: Testimonial Service.
A free reading room is maintained at 339 South
Main Street where the Bible and all authorized
Christian Science literature may be read, bor-
rowed, or purchased.
The Reading Room is open daily except Sundays

rAkARdlc r14APFi

. . _,. .

. , r

i

If I ...:" 4",.; . <" "" . ft I i Y'T laA c l I i 'f" C C I 7P C 10

11 1

11

II

jf

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan