Search Results

Search Constraints

Search Results

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 1

….Weather Fair, somewhat cooler today. Tomorrow fair and cooler. VOL. XLIX No. 30 Z-323 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCT. 29, 1938 I , Eiditorial Homecoming- Return To Campus. How To Win Friends And Influence Electors PRICE, FIVE Newsmen Are Unprej udiced In Their Copy Speakers Hold Five Authorities Address University Press Club On Foreign Coverage Mo-ning Session Has Three Talks Newspaper and radio correspon- dents in Europe are overcoming...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 1

…P UniRs P ichaIe University f Michig an .literary Magazine VoL. IL, No. 1. OCTOBER 30, 1938 A Ret urn To Te So A Short Story By DENNIs FLANAGAN I T IE STOREKEEPER rubbed the side of his chin slowly with his hand as he spoke to Ernest. "It ain't very often that we get people up here hunting, so I can't think offhand of anybody that could put you up." He rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "Unless maybe Hubert Carver up there on the ridge might....…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 2

…T IGAN fDAIL.Y - Unprejudiced, SaySpeakCers ve Authorities Address University Press Club On Foreign Coverage (Continued fromPage 1) Battle Once Raged On Campus As Faculty Barred Fraternities DA ILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY, OCT. 29. 1938 Ripping Pants S DirgeOf Out (Continued from Page 1) manent sources of mutual intrigues and jealousies." Four Alpha Delts and three Chi Psis who had been expelled in December for belonging to a fratern...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 2

…Pa>eTwo PERSPECTIVES * * Editor - F. RANDALL JONES Fiction Editor -DON COZADD Henry R. Clauser, Jeanne Foster, Hervie Hauuer, Seymour S. Horowitz, Una Kelley, Penelope Pearl, Frances Pyle, Harry Purdy. Essay Editor - JAMES C. ALLEN Seymour 'Pardell, William Loud, Virginia Finkleston, Gwen Lemon. Poetry Editor - ROBERT WAYNE Nelson Bentley, Joseph Gornbein, Ruth Hatfield, Eleanor McCoy, David Stocking. Review Editor - HARVEY SWADOS Iris Behe...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 3

…THE. MICHIG. t A ? rV Remodeled Campus, Social Life Greet Homecoming A h New Buildings Alter Contour Of University Welcomes Alumni Rackham Graduate School, Baird Memorial Tower Are Recent Additions By LEONARD SCHLEIDER A trip around the campus of the "buildingest school in the country" should convince returning alumni of the tremendous changes that have occurred since they attended the University. Center of activities for men stu- dents ...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 3

…PERSPECTIVES Page Three THOMAS WOLFE ... by Elliott Maraniss I T IS NOT SUFFICIENT for Amer- ican University students to say that with the death of Thomas Wolfe a literary career of startling brilliance and peculiar value was cut short, that American literature has lost one of its most notable figures. For us there is a particular poignancy in the news of his death. Thomas Wolfe's "legend of man's hunger in his youth" is the legend of our o...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 4

…AN I AL.it 1 After Munich, What? Letters Portray Contrasting Experiences In The Crisis -- N Wi W 71 fD EN R N )m , 5f N d1cI MH iO d and managed by students of the University of t under the authority of the Board in Control of Publications. hed every morning exept Monday during the ity year and Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the republication of all news dispatches credited to n...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 4

…Poze Four PERSPECTIVES 'DUST AND IVORY. by Martia Wolff TDDENLY she could not hear the cool and scent there in that per- fect ivory room that Ahab had built for her so long ago. She rose up from her couch, and her white robe brushed against the slavegirls, squatted there upon the white floor, moving the great fan. She went to the window and stood with her hands upon the ledge; with her back straight and her head lifted, and looked out beyon...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 5

…4 ons Chosen Fo THE MICHIGAN DAIlY r The Interfraternity Ball mecoming Held Responsible Bridge Contest For 54 Dances, Parties Tonight Winners Given Annual Dance Will:Be Limited To 800_Couples Remaining Tickets To Be On Sale At Union Desk Throughout Next Week Patrons and patronesses for the sixth annual Interfraternity Ball, to} be held from 9-p.m. to 1 .m. Friday, Nov. 4, in the Intramural Building, have been announcedby Hugh Estes, '40 and...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 5

…PERSPE RC TITVES.C Pano Ft PFRSPPLX CT94 a AI LVF'L PiAP 64 She could stand no more of it, here by the window. She turned away and went out through the ivory room to the little winding fligl t of stairs up to the roof top. She rah up lightly on her bare sandalled feet, and her body made a swift graceful arc of motion around the spiral of the stairs. On the roof top she went out beyond the canopy, impatient- ly, into the sun and leaned agai...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATUED A..uw.- Es Michigan Faces Illini In Homecoming Game - 4" Illini Will Play The Game Called 'Who Has The Football?' llinois Attack For Michigan IKeptIn Dark Savilla Only Gridder Out; Zup Claims McDQnald Only Regular Starting (Continued from Page 1) nip and tuck affairs, decided on the breaks of the game and the queer twist of fate. The Wolverines, nettled by an un- impressive showing at Yale last week, should bounce...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 6

…PERSPECTIVES PaP .i. lI'C J!F KENbTyeUCKYONSHINE ..by Kervie Haufler THE "BULL SESSION' had pro- gressed rather peacefully from one topic to another when Wally and Frank returned from a beering party about midnight. Their state of mind quite naturally led us into a discussion of drinking, and Wally, who is pretty sarcastic even without the stimulus of beer, attacked the drinking habits of my home state of Kentucky. He must have gained his ...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 7

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY tle Once Raged On Campus As Faculty Barred Fraternities i (Continued from Page 2) ty, declaring that if fraternities were allowed to continue, the University to the aid of the fraternities in 1850 would "have to advertise our beautiful" when a committee of three, Isaac E. buildings and spacious grounds 'for Crary, D. A. Noble and Joseph Pen- sale or rent'." ney, declared that proscription of It was immediately after this ...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 7

…PERSPECTIVES aPI Seen V AL-4 L.. f, c I r THp FATHERS, by Allan Tate, G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York FROM THE TIME OF LESSING to the present the dominant ideas which have shaped the course of modern literature have been closely related to the ideas of specu- lative philosophy. Philosophy has at- tempted to create systems of ideas which rationalize man's physical and mental being in relation to the whole of his environment, and literature ha...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 49, iss. 30) • Page Image 8

…MICHIGAN DAILY S hy Alumni Sing I Wanna Go Parade Heralds Michigras Carnival Students Needed Pioneering pirit In Old Days When Men W ere Men Pranksters Ruled Campus mourn1,ed on a post at the rear, which Social life, according to Mr. Shaw. With Cow Professorsseemed to have been a prolific source centered mainly at the popular of student humor," Mr. Shaw says. church socials where students met And Frosh As Victims "It was turned upside do...…

October 29, 1938 (vol. 2, iss. 1) • Page Image 8

…Page Eight PERSPECTIVES CONCERNING THE YOUNG by Williard Maas, Farrar and Rine- hart, N.Y. THE FIVE-FOLD MESH by Ben Belitt, Knopf, N.Y. THE CARNIVAL by Frederic Pro- kosoh, Harpers, N.Y. A GLAD DAY by Kay Boyle, New Directions, Norwalk, Conn. Modern poetry, which for years has suffered the limp slings and indifferent arrows of the reading public, has begun to show, even in this country, a facade strong and arresting. It becomes increas- in...…

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan