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April 03, 1940 (vol. 50, iss. 135) • Page Image 8

…PAGE EIGHT THE MICIIIG AN DAILY WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3, 1940 ... ............ . ......... ... . .... ...... ...... . Trade Meeting Will Consider State Barriers Sessions Of Conference Will Include Speeches By Truitt And Ruthven , Consideration of the pros and cons of trade barriers will feature the in-" itial session of tne two-day Confer- ence of Trade and Industrial Secre- taries which will open under the joint sponsorship of the Ann Arbor ...…

April 03, 1940 (vol. 3, iss. 3) • Page Image 8

…frie Eight PERSPECTIVES i i a,. M n..r s s.w +t. i i * i.l M i Garden In The Rain M IDNIGHT on the flaming lawn While black hawks Suckle the glass flowers. The shuffle of rain Plunking against twisted trellises Encircling vines Know at the root Gyrations of earthworm. A tube of wind Splits petal from petal Anemone moon blackens And shrieking flowers Lift hungry mouths To descending harp strings. - Howard Moss mas Eve-43rd Street THE moment ...…

April 03, 1940 (vol. 3, iss. 3) • Page Image 9

…PERSPECTIVES Page Me .u ._ _ v m v .d r. 4ITIN[G . . Continued from Page Five "Come on, Arden. I have a marvel- ous idea" They hurried out of the auditorium, breathless and secretive. "Is there any reason why we have to stay?" she whispered. There wasn't. Nothingcould be simpler than walking right out the door. "We hdd better be very careful, though," warned Arden. "Just act as though we were leaving for a breath of air." No one was at. th...…

April 03, 1940 (vol. 3, iss. 3) • Page Image 10

…Pale Ten PERSPECTIVES LLNTRYN L Continued from Page Three croaches upon our feelings, and limits them or turns them aside. The center of our existence becomes the center of a smaller and smaller circle, and though the rhetoric of our feeling may be as grand as ever, what our words refer to is less and less. The forms we had first worked out for our expression we had really developed for other things, and they fit loosely now. If we grow co...…

April 03, 1940 (vol. 3, iss. 3) • Page Image 11

…\PERSPECTIVES PageEle, DDYLE PRE SS . ..Continued from Page Four that first night she had shown him that she knew how to talk, that he coudn't embarrass her, that he couldn't under- stand her entirely in one evening. After a few weeks he still could not make up his mind. It was either a pose on her part-or she was a curious woman. And he conceded the fact that whatever it was, he liked her strange veneer. Lawrence motioned to the waiter. ...…

April 03, 1940 (vol. 3, iss. 3) • Page Image 12

…Page Twelve PERSPECTIVES 7lati'e you 7Ake taopk tar' (Continued from Page 11) augurated what 'may be the most fruit- ful and the most creative period in our literary history. We now have a few novelists in America (and among these Wright stands near the head of the list) who feel their material deeply and authentically, who possess a perspective which enables them to understand the interconnection of the social and psy- chological aspects...…

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