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December 14, 1940 (vol. 51, iss. 65) • Page Image 1

… Weather Continued cloudiness with snow flurries; warmer. LY Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication Iait j Editorial lkegitwing of . New Regime VOL. Ll. No. 65 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1940 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Italians Flee Desperately On All Fronts Regents Accept $14,000 Gifts To Augment Scholarships Dental, Medical Schools, Sorosis, 3 Trust Funds Receive Financial Aid; Total Of$15,800 Given Sabbaticals Gra...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 1

…PERSPECTIVES University Of Michigan Literary Magazine rOLUME IV, NUMBER 2 Supplement to THE MICHIGAN DAILY DECEMBER, 1940 THE BURNT LEMON .By James Turner Jackson SCAR always scrubbed his hands hard-diligently--a5ter shaving Mr. Williams, some- times using a fresh towel to ipe them with. Not that he didn't be- imself up to Mr. Williams, but he anted to avoid any direct contact. Mr. Williams was a Cathol c. And hat's more, often went to mass ...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 51, iss. 65) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1940 TITI~ MTCUuE7~AN DAIlY SATURDAY, r)~CEMB~a 14, 194@ New Peloru Gifts Increase 6 Scholarships Regents Accept $15,800 At DecemberMeeting (Continued from Page 1) ing mechanics and metal process- ing departments, respectively, were granted leaves of absence because of illness. The leave of absence prev- iously granted Prof. Howard Y. Mc- Clusky of the Education School was extended by the Regents t...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 2

…Page Two 'PERSPECTI VES THE BURNT LEMON ...Continued from Page 1 ta with dust-strings and old insect- '.1b coated with woodsilt which accum- ul:ted on it for so many years. Not until later did he remember that thers would be no servants' entrance, that even if there were one it would be closed. Igo one lived there to let him in any- way. By himself he passed it, noticing the wall, high and thick, and the doors, douile and dusty, set in a p...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 51, iss. 65) • Page Image 3

… OAX, ImecElvWL-It 14, 1940 THlE MVICHIIGAN DAILY Wolverine Quintet Plays Host To Michigan Normal' Today don wirtehafter's DL AIL Y DOUBLE The OSU Answer... Action came just when we asked for it. Our learned friend, John Dietrich, sports editor of the OHIO STATE LANTERN, penned his ideas on the swimming schedule problem in his column yesterday. John didn't take long. He was brief, but powerful, but senseless. Here is the Buckeye angle: "M...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 3

…'PERSPECTIVES Pae ?"hree .,PsERi v P F CT iIV i./a geVTre BIG BUSINESS SITS DOWN .By Martin B. Dworkis 6n September 16. 1940, for the first Also, if at the end of eight years, the time in American history, the youth of company wanted to it could continue its this country were rendered liable to mil- lease and program for another eight itary conscription in peace time. The years. If it did not, the government con- American people showed th...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 51, iss. 65) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY V. .1 We'll Sit This One Out' THE REPLY CHURLISH By TOUCHSTONE I Edited and managed by students of therUniversity of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 4

…P-ag' Four P'ERS PECTIVES BROTHER TO THE OX ..By David Stevenson HE girl stood on the threshold, drew back her arm and threw her Fifth Grade Reader across the kitchen into the living room. .h: ,smelled the fumes of fermented cshas e that escaped from the kettle oen he stove and made a face. "Sauer- r'it again?" she asked. "Is that Pad- dy going to come here for supper again tonight, ma?" 'he woman adjusted the gas. Then she pointed her cook...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 51, iss. 65) • Page Image 5

… 14, 1940 TilE. -.ICIIGAN-DAILY r_.,._____________________ I. U. . . __. . ,.. .. .., . Student Red Cross To Sew Today At WAB Help Is Asked From Women With Spare Time; Varied Work Provided According To Ability Sewing machines will be in contin- uous action from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to- day as the student workers of the Washtenaw County Red Cross con- tinue their weekly meetings at the Women's Athletic Building. Kappa Kappa Gamma has added i...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 5

…WI1 IELS of sooty smoke floated / ipward from the blackened stove to mingle with other veils of cobwebs stretching under the ig roof. Lighter smoke danced a sable pot of boiling brew.. 1on dew ox foot tomb root, dust! spirit's in de grave clothes a-rottin' de cawpse. De spirit's 'round de ly mouth a-suckin' out de smoke. spt's down de well hole a-bubblin' de water. Bat tooth swamp scum guts, blood! De spirit's in de h can a-workin' on de corn....…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 51, iss. 65) • Page Image 6

…TfIEm ICH fIGAN DAB IILY ATbYDNi a St. Lawrence Project Draws NAM Attack NEW YORK, Dec. 13-(P)-The National Association of Manufactur- ers today adopted a resolution oppos- ing the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Waterway and Power project on the grounds it would be uncommercial in times of peace and would obstruct the national defense program. 6ompleting the navigation project would require at least eight years, the resolution said, and would be of...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 6

…Page Six TERSPECTI VES Page Six PERSPECTI VES A PRELUDE TO PEACE The virus of our time, infection from intense germ fusion, Festers. Malthus has caught us again in his Snare. Sex must be mud or dust, and our aqueous Origin waters itself in an empty succession Of cities. Order is ordained: chaos incongruous. Earth swung fixed in the grip of the nebulous sun-mother; Souls of the nascent oceans crossed Archean Cliffs and condensed to their shi...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 7

…TE R SPE C T IYE S Pine Seven P ERSPECTI VF S asseSevt I OCEANGOING My time, a wine too potent to be drunk, Beats beauty beyond bearing on the waves. Then take me, water, burdened with the blossoms Of my lost - or call them wasted - ways. Last night I dreamed I drifted on a chip. Thither to England, since the wind wills it. The ship dips doubting prow. Fall Blossoms and the frozen autumn fruit Float by. They told me that the full moon Rul...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 8

…Page TIgbt P'E R S P E CT==E BIG BUSINESS SITS DOWN ..Continued from, Page 3 portant points squashed. What had hap- pened was that the defense Commission had insisted that the items of complaint be studied by a special advisory board. When the board was through, the suit had been emasculated. Could it be un- American to point out that of the eleven men appointed to the board, nine were officers of Standard or Shell Oil Com- panies and were ...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 9

…THE THE RAIN was coming down hard and cold when we got into Ben- ham. We'd been walking all afternoon without a ride, and the raincoats were soaked through. The jog- ging weight of the packs cut the straps into our shoulders, but we were feel- ing so low already that we didn't notice the hurt. Patten wanted to get into a barn When it started to rain just after we left Petersburg, but I thought we might get a ride if we chanced it. We were alre...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 10

…Page Ten 'P E R S P EC T V E7S BRO THR TO THiE OX .Continued from Page 4 shifted the gears. Nobody could shift gears the way he could, no grating, no wear, no tear. And nobody kept a car the way he did. Nobody spent the time polishing, nobody spent the money the way he did getting the left-turn signals, spotlights, chrome hubt caps, electric clocks, new aerials, bumper guards, and other things that make a car a part of a man. And in an hour...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 11

…'PE S PE C TIY VES P, F . t, A- i r, uL 1,; BOOKS,-T N SEASON I For Whom the Bell Tolls,. By Ernest Hemingway. Scribners, 1940, 82.75. I have sat here and stared at the typewriter for an hour now, and I still have no idea how to start this review. If only somehow I could get right into the middle of the thing, and skip the superlatives I'd be a lot better off, but when you write a review you have to say things like astounding and magnific...…

December 14, 1940 (vol. 4, iss. 2) • Page Image 12

…Page Twelve PERSPECTI VES I - r l Y a ii i I V V BOOKS IN SEASON 'emark4 dr e tarx (Continued from Page Eleven) Marx rejected Hegel's divine spiri- tualization of the world and the his- toric process; he declared the funda- mental reality to be solid, stubborn, unconscious, and unconsoling matter. And then he proceeded to read into that matter the very essence of the Divine Spirit as ithad been conceived in Hegel' consoling system, its ...…

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