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March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 120) • Page Image 2

…E* T THE MICHIGAN DAILY ii Y: ', iUARIi'H 17; ISM: ETWO TUESThiT. MARCH 11~ 1942 I .I i1 I SRA To HearI Last Address Rev. Bradford Abernathy To SpeakAt Rackham The Rev. Bradford S. Abernathy, secretary of the Federal Church Commission to Study the Bases of a Just and Durable Peace, will con- clude the Student Religious Associa- tion's spring lecture series with a talk' on the "Bases for a Just Peace" at 8:15 p.m. Friday in the Rackham ...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 115) • Page Image 2

…PAE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY; A IE'A 1; 194 Them Movies Is Sinful T hings, Mississippi Sencuors Revead' Edward C. Beatty Is Presidet i, Ushers Absent As Night Owl Sarong-Wrapped Dottie Cannot Compare With Old Theatre Ads IA)SeS I li:t"11go Mkis Lamour Ain't Nothin' Legislators Tell Sad Tales4 Of Sunday Picture Evils In Blue laws Discussion Gloomy Sunday is a 120-year-old tradition in Mississippi. An 1822 blue law still forbids Miss...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 120) • Page Image 3

…""III MICHIGAN O IIY rAGET . ..........T H E .M I ...... .... .......AN.... ............ ..... ... PAGE TI Opponents' Power, Bad Breaks Whipped Trackmen At Butler By BOB STAHL Besieged for the past eight yearsI by a score of mid-western track squads, the Wolverine cinder crew finally succumbed at Indianapolis last Saturday, relinquishing the But-I ler Relays crown it has held almost perpetually and winding up in fifth place in the meet....…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 115) • Page Image 3

…4 T1HE MICHIGAN DAILY PADSZ .. . . ..... ....... . . . ........... . .. . . . . ................ . . . . . ................ . . . . . ............ . . . ........ . . . . . ............... . ..... . .... .................. . .................. . . . . ............... . .......... - . . ............... DFor Troubles' D~ols W114) Stiek Suh tanve Under SaM Arc CaW'(1 Of 1M11Ny__M-mitl (Casrc Sic hlcnrr t r ;lr1 t t 11]re f fthe f11ickeriil n...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 120) • Page Image 4

…THE MICIGAN DAILY &1j Sir! ji an &tj THE REPLY CHURLISH By TOUCHSTONE GRIN AND BEAR IT By Lichty i. I dl NOW I have always observed, in poker games and fist fights-other people's of course- that the cool guy won. Allowing a certain under- standable excitement in the midst of the event, if a man stayscalm, measures what he has to do, and then does it with his head as well as his fists or the ace in the hole, he generally gets considerab...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 115) • Page Image 4

…THE MICIHGAN ,DAILY T E SIlA r; ARH l, 194 Old Whitney Opera House Now Has Entertainment OfMuch Lighter Variety Vice-President Of 13atet field Circuit i i- Frank McIntyre Success Story I By GEORGE SALLADE It's a success story that only an author could duplieate. That's the career of Frank McIn- tyre, the local boy who became a nationally-known stage and radio star. Seated in his study and sur- rounde6 by four walls of pictures that trac...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 120) • Page Image 5

…t THE ~MICHIGA-N DAILY FACT Student Composers Provide Sparkling Rhythms For JGP Lawyers' Club Spring Formal, To 'Be Saturday 'r r w - r n - -w°..fl .r r,.nv.tr....r~-. - ..- rw- ,°r r - r------------- ---- - --I Acacia, Alpha Delta Phl And Sigma Nu Announce Initiations 3 i By BARBARA de FRIES Music-that all important stimu-t lant to any class production-for JGP's "No Questions Asked" has been finally disclosed as being a harmoni-I o...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 115) • Page Image 5

…'THE M1CHIGAN- DA ILY PAGE F l brand Opening Of Michigan Held In 1928 Double .Feature Attracted First Night Audience To Movie, Stage Show Tryon Is Starred It was just fourteen years ago that Ann Arbor theatre audiences last witnessed the grand opening of al theatre in this city. On January 5, 19?8, the Michigan Theatre, dedicated to the faculty and 1tudents of the University and to the residents of Ann Arbor, opened its doors for the first...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 120) • Page Image 6

…PGIX*I~ ~ ____ - -- THE MICHIGAN )AIY :AAR-Ci 17, 1942 War Training Class To Hear Army_ Officer Electronics Training Plan To Be Featured In Talk By Lieut. Zimmerman Dutlies Explained Lieut. F. A. Zimmerman, repre- sentative of the Chief Signal Officer of the War Department will visit Ann Arbor today to consult with students enrolled in a special war training course in the theory and use of Ulra- High frequency waves. Lieutenant Zimmerman wil...…

March 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 115) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1942 TOMORROW Butterfield Theatres Opens I The Beautiful, Ultra-Modern Theatre The New F A blaze in all its Glory The Grand New Comedy Hit Picture! Every Facility for Your Comfort and Enjoyment Styled in the modern munner . Handsomely appointed .. . Smartly decorated and carpet- ed . . . intimate lounges Richly upholstered Bodiform seats'. . , Soft and improved lighting and vision ... Newes...…

February 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 97) • Page Image 1

… 'Weather Slightly Colder. 44 i$t 4tr 4a111ti Editorial Churchill Should Advise British War Cabinet ... rAX ® I YYlO 1 Y X i .r u ir rirr rrr n nnr rrm rr Y VOL. LII. No. 97 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Subs Hit Student Plans For Summer Term Tankers At Aruba Giant Oil Refinery Shelled In Daring Axis Attack On Petroleum Center U.S. Troops Guard Dutch Possession --BULLETIN-- BALBOA, C.Z...…

February 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 97) • Page Image 2

… Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY - -0 ', r TITSBAT, TERRUAR "I - U -- - - -- -I a Gala Weekend To Be Planned As War Benefit Group Desires To Assist New University Board In Defense Instruction In preparation for a more vigorous action program for the second se- mester, the Student Defense Com- rnittee of 1942 will hold an impor- tant business meeting at 7 p.m. to- morrow in the Glee Club Room of the Union. The most important proposed ac- tivit ...…

February 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 97) • Page Image 3

…H 1II0IA DAILY LY, FEBRUARY 17, 194T DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETINf (Continued from Page 2)] Forms will be available this (Tues-c day) afternoon after 2 p.m. and on1 Wednesday. They must be returned1 within 24 hours after they are re-; ceived. College of L.S. and A. Freshmen and Sophomores-Office of the Aca- demic Counselor Juniors and Seniors -Concentration advisers. College of Engineering: In class' assemblies to be announced in the College. Gra...…

February 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 97) • Page Image 4

…m m THE MICHIGAN DAILY ____________________________________________________________ I I . P t t tti ttll Letters To The Editor Edited and managed by students of the University 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 republic...…

February 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 97) • Page Image 5

… 7157 ^i Y, 77i i U c . 1'6: 1 y k THE~flHIGN DAILY . .... .. ...... ....... . ... . ...... . etitioning For Freshmar 'Weddings and &igagemen ts The engagement o Doris Stewart to Edward Conners, '42M, son of Mrs. George Conners and thelate Mr. Conners, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Stewart of Virginia Park. Miss Stewart is a graduate nurse of Highland Park General Hospital, and Mr. Conners is affiliated with Phi Rh...…

February 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 97) • Page Image 6

…'IHE MIIG;AN DAILY TUESDAY~ Indiana Downs Cagers, 47-42; Matmen Crush Cornh uskers Varsity Faces Irish Ihinclads HeeSaturday Notre. Dame Seeks Second Win Over Wolverines In Its Entire History By BOB STAHL With a lop-sided victory over Michigan State and Michigan Nor- mal at East Lansing last Saturday to its credit, the Wolverine track squad is getting preparedthis week to meet a very powerful crew of cindermen from Notre Dame in Yost Fie...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 81) • Page Image 1

… Weather Warmner today. L sit igun 4:Aa aiti Editorial Nelson Appointment Clears Track . , VOL. LII. No. 81 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1942 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Dorr Delivers Keynote Talk; Parley Begins PanelsToday Speaker Cautions Youth Against Losing Peace In Conflict With Japan Students Will Lead Discussion Groups Stressing the importance of moral, physical and spiritual fitness, Prof. Harld A. Dorr of the politica...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 1

…PERSP IVES University Of Michigan Literary Magazine VOLUME V, NUMBER 2 Supplement to THE MICHIGAN DAILY JANUARY, 1942 THE IINynTZ RALD . .. ByJhn Ragsdale E HAD RIDDEN a hundred and fifty miles to Princeton; it was yet another hundred fifty to home. We could not even reach Petersburg, the next county seat, before dark. And we were due back at the Atchison Machine Shop next day, So we telephoned to get my brother Jim to come after us in my car...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 81) • Page Image 2

…PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN, DA ILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1942 / Andre Morize Will Address French Group Reconstruction Of France. To Be Subject Of Talk By Harvard Professor Cercle Francais will entertain a distinguished guest Thursday, when Prof. Andre Morize of Harvard Uni- ersity addresses members of the Uni- versity interested in France and the French language at 4:15 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. The talk, an analyis of "La Re- const...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 2

…Page Two 9PERSPEC TI VES THE VISION OF HUGH FITZGERALD ... Continued from Page One a year like 1940, that the '41 Model cars should reach a sales of over five and a half million. Jim went sick at the thought of his '36 Ford. And he was sick, desperately sick, about 6:30 in the morning. But by ten he was on his way south, crumpled up in the back seat of his buddy's car. Then came the long, long night of waiting, the grim six months, the man-...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 81) • Page Image 3

… THE MICHTEN II PAGE Matmen Face Spartans, Sextet Meets Illinois Again Today Spartans Hurl Mighty Squad Against Varsity Ray Deane - Bo Jennings Match To Be Feature Of Action-Packed Show By HOE SELTZER Tonight's the night.I The night that Michigan and Michigan Stte lock in mortal com- bat on the Field House wrestling mats in the most severe challenge to their title aspirations the Wolverines have met this season. If the match is going to ...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 3

…PERSP CTIVE S -Agg-T.e .... a ,v v s s' v v tr c t rarer TRUCKERS WELCOME ... By Eugene Mandeberg IWAS SO SURPRISED to see the place was open that I turned the car off the road and stopped in a little cleared spot a few yards away from it. It was just another roadside joint with a cracked sign nailed above the door and one bare bulb hanging in the window. Most of the places like that closed years ago. I've seen a lot of them boarded up sha...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 81) • Page Image 4

…Tl_l E M ICHIGAN DAILY tx It 1T Mt l Edited and managed by students of the University 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 news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All r...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 4

…Page Four 'PF"RSPECT VE7SV . THEJFUNERAL ...By Jean Michael BEFORE the old woman died, she had told her husband how she wished her funeral. "They'll let my grandsons car- ry me, won't they, John?" she begged. The old man lowered his head so that she could not see the tears on his bony cheeks. He pressed lightly the hand that lay on the rumpled coverlet, but her wasted fingers were too feeble to respond to his. "I'll see to it, Anna," he pro...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 81) • Page Image 5

… THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE IQ' _. _. Haas-Medlar, Other Betrothals Are Announced Mr. and Mrs. Charles Haas of Mon- roe, announce the engagement of their daughter, Alice Louise Haas, '42, to Dr. Robert Medlar, '41M, son of Dr. Edgar Medlar of Mt. Gregor, N.Y. President of Kappa Alpha Theta, Miss Haas was a junior night editor on the woman's staff of The Daily, secretary of Scroll, an orientation adviser and a member of the social committee of...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 5

… cPERSPEC TI VES Page Five INSIDE 1776 ... A Review, By Howard Peckham Secre History of the American Rev- olution, by Carl Van Doren, Viking, New York, 1941, 534 pp. $3.75. CARL VAN DOREN belongs to that all-too-small group of scholars who can also write well. Doubtless this talent is his be- cause he was first a professor of English, then an editor, critic and biographer, and lately a historian. His Pulitzer prize- winning biography of Be...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 52, iss. 81) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN AIILY ' AItTRDAY, JAiNTARY 17. 114? Concert Band' To Perform Here Jare o25 Music Music First Notable N Notables ProgramI Will Hear Will Hear Of Year Taking full advantage of the pres- ence of several notable composers and conductors, the University Con- cert Band will present its first con- cert of the new year Sunday, Jan. 25, in Hill Auditorium, following the two-day sessions of the fifth annual Band Reading Clinic. Dedi...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 6

…Sage Sixg 'TERSPECTIVES TWO LYRICS FROM THE BLACK SPEAR (A serive of poems in progresses on the Negro and White heroes of tht anti-slavery struggle and Civil War.) 0# By Robert Hayden And now the words for which the fathers bled return to storm their children's souls with questions darker than Iscariot's "Lord, its it I?" What is this liberty? Is it so small a house, though builded by so many hands? Is it so barren a field, though planted w...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 7

…'PER S PE CT I VE S Page Seven ~PERSPECTI VES Page Sevets FANTASY From Charlottesville to Washington I rode on the evening train, And the snow on the pine trees caught the sun And glittered back red again. To left, to right ,the woods were astir With men in Blue and Gray, Who reined in their horses, then gave the spur And silently rode away. Only the ashes where they had been Still smoked on the forest floor, And quickly the snowflakes sla...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 8

…age Eight 'PERSPECTI VES BR yBuErtnEavDIE ..yBurton Gavitt T TWAS THE SAME DAY that Pat saw them nft the motor out of a '37 Chevrolet for overhauling in Ab- ram's ge.e'- that he found out that Eddie Dun the lkid downstairs, was com- ng upstairs for a couple weeks. Pat didn't say anything right away when his :mother said that that was what she and Mrs. Dunn na been talking about sthat afternoon when Pat came home from school. He adn't hung a...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 9

…PERSPECTIVES Page Nie SCOTT FITZGERALD'S FAILURE .A Review, by James Allen THE LAST TYCOON, published with THE GREAT GATSBY and certain short stories by F. Scott Fitzgerald. COTT FITZGERALD'S death last year brought to a close one of the most ragic and arresting careers in modern American letters. More even han Thomas Wolfe's early death Fitzgerald's was lamentable; for there is little reason to believe that Wolfe could ever rise above wh...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 10

…Page Ten TPERSPECTIVES BROTHER EDDIE ... Continued from Page Eight Then Mrs. Lewis would come back and turn the light on. "What's the matter, Eddie? Is Pat bothering you again?" Pat would wait until Eddie answered. "No, ma'am. It wasn't nothing." "Well, leave him alone, Pat, and don't make him yell. You two have to get up for school tomorrow, so go to sleep, both of you. Good-night." Then she would close the door and there would only be th...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 11

…'PERSPECTI VES Page Elt - BOOKS ISEASON ION Goren (Cotinued from Page Five) OF COURSE Arnold was undiscerning or he would not have changed uni- forms in the first place. If he had been capable of analyzing his situation he would have forseen that the British he joined would'have no more respect for him than the Americans he deserted. A man who could be bought once could be bought twice. Therefore, when Clin- ton sent him on a raiding exped...…

January 17, 1942 (vol. 5, iss. 2) • Page Image 12

…Page Twelve 9PERSPECTIVES BOOKS IN SE ASON La Trahison d'un Clerc. Primary Lit. erature and Coterie Literature, Van Wyck Brooks. TO BE SPENDING the day of America's entry into the War in criticising a literary critic must seem preposterous, but, perhaps, it is more relevant than ap- pears at first sight. To be living in the greatest revolutionary epoch since the Reformation means, firstly that all our activities, political, economic, re- l...…

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