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April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 1

… t Weather Partly ci & d LY Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication :43 tt Editorial Trade Unionism Faces Greatest Task P VOL. LI. No. 132 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Settlement Proposedo nd Ford Strike German Forces Mass Near Yugoslav Border lC.._ Nazi Units Endanger Belgrad( Italian Diplomats Attcip To Stave Off Conflict Fear Albanian InvasioI Adriatic Is .Mined As Defense Step BELGRADE, Ap...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 2

…PAGE TWO Red Cross Editor's Note:rThis is the second in a series of articles on the nurses and the University of Michigan Train- ing School for Nurses. By GLORIA NISHON Nurses? Your attention please. The Red Cross and your country call to you now in the name of hu- manity and national defense. En- roll at once in the Red Cross Nursing Reserve for the Army and Navy. It is your privilege and your duty. Health preservation is your THE MICH1IGAN ...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 3

…THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1941 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE .. .I +4 AR ldl l4/ ilLiiWli:Y :1 .:, Dopesters Find Going Tough In Figuring AAU Swim Meet By WOODY BLOCK The news-hounds were three-deep around Matt Mann's crowded quart- ers in the Sports Building pool yes- terday. It seems that a rumor has been circulating about a certain swim- ming club from Chicago dethron- ing Mann's undefeated Wolverines in the National AAU meet this week- end...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 4

…roU t THE MICHIGAN' DAILY THURSDAY, APRI 3 1941 ..._____________________ .. -- _ . . - - U . . _ .w ... , a.... .....7 .. ..v.....,, ::y am'a:.eb lIE MICHIGAN DAILY i - -I 11 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 ...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 5

… y, , -., 1A IN 1. IF AL l f_:r Y.1 F . %F' a l"' F' i w Three Debating Group Winners Are Announced' Final Women Intramural Contests Will Be Held' After Spring Vacation Winners in the three groups of the women's intramural debate tourna-, k-11 I A - -2-IL ,peakers At Democratic Dinner ormer Envoy Quads Receive 1,500 Letters Daiy' T, T 1k erfit iLLf3rt.U 1d Of Mal- Ann Arior, but sent out tr iough iithe h" m" d"k "ipioyes sna~ilng des...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 6

…PAGE SIX HugeSlide Rule Will Decorate Engineers' Ball Committee Chairmen's Guests Are Announced For A?fair In Union Tomorrow Engineers will have to leave their slide rules at home, and be content with the big rule which will be used for decoration at their annual Slide Rule Ball, which will be held :rom 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, in the Ramin- bow Room of the Union. Sporting red ribbons at the dance will be the 12 committee-chairmen. Evelyn Kuiv...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 7

… ___________________________________________THE. . M ICHIGAN DAILY lb PAGE SEVEN I T\ 0db 7 w. rT _ Fifth Annual Fuel Institute To Meet Here Coal Retailers To Convene April 15; Progressivef Plans To *Be Discusseds Retail coal merchants and fuelj experts from all parts of the nation will convene here April 15 and 16 for the fifth annual Retail Coal Utiliza- tion Institute, sponsored by the Uni- versity College of Engineering and the Extens...…

April 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 132) • Page Image 8

…~TQHTT~lE MATICA(~N D4JLY THiUSD -V -FRii, , 04i Deadline Is Set In Scholarship Fund Awards Engineers Must Submit Applications To Lovell Before Noon Saturday Students in the College of Engin- eering must submit their applications for Simon Mandelbaum, Cornelius Donovan, Harriet EVeleen Hunt, Ro- bert Campbell Gemmell and Joseph Boyer Fund scholarships before noon, Saturday, to the offices of Assistant Dean Alfred H. Lovell. in the West Engin...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 150) • Page Image 1

… Weather LL Fair' Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication Dlati Editorial The Vice-President Speaks For Labor. . VOL. L. No. 150 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Board Packing' Evokes Campus Protest Trackmen To Meet Notre Dame Today; Nine Defeats Ohio v Will It Stay That Way? 'Publications Body Fill Discuss Plan At Meeting Today Wolverine Baseball Squad Swamps Buckeyes, 13-5, In First ...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 1

…PERSCI University Of Michigan Liter'4ry Magazine VOLUMNE IV, NUMBER 4 Supplement to THE MICHIGAN DAILY By Gerald Bui MAY, 1941 trns won't leave you being such that the neighbors' child- bout you." a spectacle," he said, begin- angry. "And who is writing roughs," she told him. "He's ut you in his book, and peo- ng to laugh at you." them laugh," he said, as a e. "Or if you want me t to make him stop it." at dressed and go to the show he repeat...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 150) • Page Image 2

…GE TWO T H E MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 3, 1941 I I Glenn Miller's Band To Play At Senior Ball Annual Event Will Feature Favorite Bandleader For Second Time Glenn Miller, recently voted fav- orite bandleader of college students, for a second year, will play at the Senior Ball, which will be held from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. Friday, June 20, in the Intramural Building. Louis Wirth To Talk Jere Faculty, Students Voice Disapproval OfPublicati...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 2

…Page Two 'PERSPECTI VES SPEARS AND0GOGLES By William Newton VEN BEFORE I had tried fishing in Hawaii, equipped with a throw- net or with a spear and goggles or a glassbottom box, I could not understand what pleasure anyone might find in still-fishing. As a boy six years old, I had been taken out for a day's fishing with my uncle--we sat in the boat-he fished and contemplated Lord- knows-what; I fished and squirmed. That was-and is-my basi...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 150) • Page Image 3

… THE MICHIGAN DAILY. PAGE THREE' CS{AJW .R iIiV L/ Nine Defeats Buckeyes, 13-5; Thinclads Meet Notre Damc ______i . ... Nelson Clouts Homer To Pace Varsity's Win Harms Garners Double, Two Singles In Third Victory In Big Ten (Continued from Page 1) the Buckeyes' 10 hits. Maynard how- ever, kept them fairly well scattered and held the Ohio team to five runs. Only once was the Michigan team behind and that was in the third in- ning. The br...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 3

…'PERSPECTI VES Page Three ACCORDING TOMBON .By Vernon IBlake HE HAD LIVED sixty-six years, and now she lay in this little room, with the slightly moving white curtains, the flower-and-berry wallpaper, the two sad pictures on the wall, knowing that she was dying, that she had lived long enough. Now she remembered the Victorian days that were not always so sad, when she had been with the others in the spring, rid- ing through blossom-scented ...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 150) • Page Image 4

…THE MICH1GAN DAILY 5 TURYDAIU MViY2s1911 -, m_. _ _ , . ,,. . . 5 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I .- THE REPLY CHURLISH By TOUCHSTONE Former Daily Man Discusses Officers In The New Army 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...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 4

…Page Four 'PE RSPECTIV ES IF. TANGLEDBPAyRJTeR eJO 0 .By James Turner Jackson MORE than he needed six par- rots with their bills hooked together, Cesar needed a phonograph. Recordings of great noises, blasphemous to harmony and wonderfully discordant, would re- store his minid, freeing it from the ter- rible consistency of the incantation shrieked by those tangled birds hang- ing day and night in an open cage above his bed. Cesar had not le...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 150) • Page Image 5

… To 'H-E M I CH I GAN D Al WA' vd lb THE ICHGAN IbALY - --. - ~ PAGEFI ,I ~" . 1 ."- .. Student Senate To Give Scholarship Dance May 23 In Union Edward Tann Chairman, Quest To Attend Dormal I s Chairman First Annual Spring Dorma Theta Chi Regional Convention Begins Today As 'Fourth Corral' I Of Committee Bill Sawyer's Band Will Play For Informal Affair To Raise Funds For Needy Students' Use Needy students on campus will be aided...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 5

…E RS PEC TT VE-S ' ge:. five .sPERSPEv C vv s.TI ..VE.s" Fi.ge Five THE PHYSIO-PSYCHO-SOCIAL ASPECTS OF SMOKING1 By Cleora Forth 1. eprinted here through the :_ortesy of the following periodi- cpds: Psychological Review, The -esournal of the American Medical Association, The Voice of Tem- perance, Encyclopedia of the Soc- el Sciences and Superman. INTRODUCTION Whdce it is not exclusively the prob- lem _-i psychologists, the behavior pat- t...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 150) • Page Image 6

…ORs' ' , THE MICHIGAN I)AILY SA TURDAY, MAY 3, 1 ,. Occupational Therapy Plays Important Role In Hospital DAIqLY OF..FICIA4L BULLETIIN' 4) By ROSEMARY RYAN Occupational Therapy as a part of the hospital establishment, is an important factor contributing to the maintenance of morale during the period of the patient's incapacity, according to Miss Dorothy Ketcham, Director of Social Services, Univer- sity Hospital. "One thing medicine does...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 6

…Page Six T ERSPEC TI V ES Page Six 'PERSPECTI VES LAWYER AMES GOES CALLING "I'll have two lumps of sugar, please- No, thanks, no lemon, if you do not mind." I watched her fingers pour the tea with ease, Her face was sad, but it was not unkind; Her eyes were full (their gleam had been so brief!) And through their lids I saw her memory stir; Her cheeks were pale, but, I could tell, the Thief Had left no other evidence with her; The room (so l...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 7

…TERSPECTIVES Paze Sevets g 8 EsSaECTIVES Pa e CONVERSION He rides alone along the country road, Thoreau on a bicycle. Reality, the flex and flow of muscle, Translates itself through pedals to the ground In terms of motion, ever faster in descent, Slower yet more rugged as he climbs approaching hills. He is fleeing from the groups, the men who grope With common hopes and plans to mend the world. The groups forever fighting in themselves, St...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 8

…pa'ge EigNf ,T ER S P 1? CT I V s. lk--Lp JL " A-0 JL -A By Katherine Ruddy F AYE didn't have much to worry about, the neighbors said. Faye was a very fortunate girl. She had lovely clothes, - perhaps not as many or as expensive ones as some of her friends whose families put every- thing on their back, but plenty of clothes for any girl. After all, you know, beauty is as beauty does. She was quite popu- lar-everyone knew her, and almost ev...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 9

…'P E R SP E C T I V E S Page Nim . By Don Folkman F YOU'RE ALLERGIC to honest-to- god, every-day, gut-bucket swing, don't read any farther. That's what this is about - swing; musicians; dance band. Before I start, I'd better tell you that I play the bass fiddle (in a dance man's lingo it's called "dog-house) and perhaps it would be better to say that I "play at it." Anyway, I'm the guy that stands back there holding up one end of an over-g...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 10

…Page T'en 'P ER S P E C TI V ES THE POETS The Double Man, by W. H. Auden, Random House, 1941. Every writer is under double surveil- lance today.-The poet, above all others, is responsible to his audience. In a time of crisis, he must do more than reflect the chaos about him - there seem to be artists enough to accomplish this in times of peace - he must demonstrate his understanding of events, and he must suggest, if not demand, a way out,...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 11

…'P ERSPECTI V ES Pale Eleven BOOKS IN SEASON The City of Man (collected essays), Viking Press, New York, 1940. $1.00 A New Testament of Democracy For those without faith, here is a book to believe in. For those who see only the problems of the modern crisis, here is a possible answer, couched neither in the selfish sermonizing of of capitalism nor in the stale scholasti- cism of communism. A -brief book, little more than a pamphlet, it app...…

May 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 4) • Page Image 12

…Page Twelve 'PERSPECTI VES BOOKS IN SEASON h Jee,66 cunt Men of the Mountains, by Jesse Stuart. E. P. Dutton and Company, Pub- slisher. $2.50. This is a collection of the stories Jesse Stuart has sold to such magazines as "Esquire," "The American Mercury," and "Story." When placed side by side in a book they show very plainly that they were written to be sold. Their calibre is generally much lower than that of his novel, "Trees of Heaven....…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 175) • Page Image 1

… Weather 12 Cloudy; light .howers. Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication mill * ditorial A H eadcach.e For Britain .. . VOL. LI. No. 175 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1941 Z-323 - - PRICE FIVE CENTS 7Workers Harms Named Capt Ouit TJhs Of Nine For Next Y w In Le'aguel Emnploye Resign In Protest Of Act To 'Discharge Willian Cannastra, '43 JIspute Is Caused By WagePetilion By ROBERT SPECKHARD Seven employees of the Michigan ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 1

…University Of Michigan Literary Magazine VOLUME IV, NUMBER 5 Supplement to THE MICHIGAN DAILY JUNE, 1941 By Vernon Blake I' WAS COOL, outside. He went down the long lane, over the bridge, and the planks rattled as he crossed. There was no breeze. The crickets and frogs were making a lot of noise, and a white mist was rising from the creek. The place had a strange, damp smell a mixture of everything-grass, weeds, muck, watercress, cowdung. ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 175) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY E M Clear and Concise ENGLISH LITEIR ATURE HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE (Part I--Early Anglo-Saxon thru Milton).. .. (Part Il-Addison to the Present) ......... . ENGLISH LIT.,OF THE 17TH CENTURY (Part I- From 1603 to 1660) .. ........ . . (Part 11-1660-1700, exclusive of the Drama) ENGLISH LIT. OF THE 18TH CENTURY (Part 1-1700-1740).................... (Part 1- 1740-1789) ........ . . . ENGLISH POETRY OF THE 19TH CENTURY...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 2

…Page Two PE R SFP E C TI V ES THE NEW POETRY OF FAITH B. y Sam Moon T IE CURRENT DISCUSSION con- cerning youth's attitude toward politics in general, and - which is of more concrete importance -the present state of democracy in the United States, is assuming larger dimensions each month as the new mag- azines appear on the news-stands. The question has been viewed from many different sides by our older writers, evi- dence being offered by s...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 175) • Page Image 3

…1 THIE MICHIGAN DAILY P*A01 m EE George Harms Elected 1942 Wolverine Baseball Captain 'C. Geor ge Ridehle Gets Valuable Player Award Michigan Catcher Batted Over .400 In Western Conference Competition (Continned from Page 1) sons in the American Legion, t1he battery mates being split up when the Tigers signed Newhouser to a contract. The Michigan catcher has Major League aspirations, but although he has been approached by several ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 3

… PER S PEC T I V ES Page Three DEEP.ByRETHleSN ________________________ By Emile Gele NOW IS FALLING HERE NOW. Snow drifts are banked loose on her window and in the old oak's crotches where she could see. The hills are thick with white, and the wood- house .roof. She watched the window toward the last and wondered when the snow would come. Sometimes, I think, near the end she prayed for snow. And now the snow is falling slowly, softly and s...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 175) • Page Image 4

…PAGE FOUR T HE M IC H IGA N D A ILY TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1941 - -_.I THE MICHIGAN DAILY t Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the. Board #n Control of Stadent Publications. Published every morning except# Monday during the University yearrand Summer Session. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 4

…A Page Four 'PERSPECT I VE S MR. GJLHAUSEN ..By Helene Suarez "WICE A WEEK he spent two .hours rolling his cigarettes on a little porcelain machine. His at- titude was so ritualistic that on no occasion did I ever interrupt him. It was like a ceremony of a religious service. Every movement he knew from long habit and he performed it pains- takingly in absorbed silence. His wife never spoke to him until after he had put the machine away ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 175) • Page Image 5

… THE MICHIGAN DATLY N' 19': C U A £lUI ' i' lY7 6_ Dors Allen Is Named Summer League Council President ____,_ Other Women To Hold Posts Announced Elizabeth Newman, Elizabeth Johnson, Virginia Capron, Jean Johnson Named To Council Doris Allen, '42, has been appointed president of summer League Council, Jane Baits, '42, announced. Assisting Miss Allen on the council will be Elizabeth Newman, '43, chairman of judiciary; Elizabeth Jo...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 5

… 'PERSPECTIVES Page Five I CAN WELL REMEMBER ..By Esther Jewel1 S HF WASA SHAPELESS WOMAN, heavy with age and sickness. The sallowness of her face and hands contrasted with her black hair and long black smock. She sat bent over in a straight, hard chair beside the dining-room table, on which she was just able to rest her arm. Her stubby pencil was pushed along persistently by her swollen fingers. Sometimes the tablet wc'ld move beneath it,...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 175) • Page Image 6

… THE MIChIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 3, USO Dinner To Open Campaign More than four hundred campaign instructions. Prof. Brandt will repre- rorkers and solicitors for the local sent President Ruthven at the dinner, rnited Service Organizations cam- which is subscribed by the committee aign - will attend an instructional for the Ann Arbor campaign. inner and meeting at 6:30 p.m. today Contribution boxes will be placed in n the Union, officially ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 6

…Puge Sx 9 E R S P E C T 1 V E S Page Six 'PERS PECTI VES COMFORT The saddest hour is that we passed, Our sweetest flower can never last. The tumbleweed tells the truest tale, For wind's its creed on the dustbowl trail. The clock in the tower slow tolls too fast; Time's total power makes a lost moment vast. The bending reed minds not the gale 3ut its small heed is of small avail And now headlines pound as our tyrants ride- Our ear's to the g...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 7

… P t E RSPE C TEVE S PageSeven 'PERSPECTIVES Page Seven THE HILL GIANTS IN THE EARTH I sought the top the other day. I-climbed a hill past topmost trees And ached and pained and smarted And shook and trembled all the way And panting hung and slipped degrees And held, while watchers started. My heart beat at the task I chose, Condemned such madness, taut and failing. But gain the peak I could And did-so fought the air and rose And gulped t...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 8

…Page Eight TWER S PE C TI VE S IMIR.GJLHAUSEN ...Continued from Page 4 proud to ask for work. There were men walking the streets, wearing themselves out, and what good was it doing them? No, when he got a chance he would open up a shop of his own.$ He would never work for another man. Where did it get you? Bootlicling, that's what it was. The only way a man got anyplace these days was to be his own boss. A man has to make people respect him...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 9

… PESPE CT I VES Page Nine ...By ervie Haufler Y UNCLE PETE is a sharecrop- per on our farm. It-isn't a farm to be very proud to own. It's a hundred acres of Ken- tucky hill-land - all rocky hills of clay that wash and gulley till gfass won't graw on them. Our share of the money hardly pays the taxes and the interest, much less anything on. the principle. Uncle Pete has to keep a wife and seven kids on his half. He does a pretty damned go...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 10

…Page Ten PE RS P E CTI V E S THE NEW POETRY OF FAITH ..Continued from Page 1 - and in the very last stanza he re- iterates that warning, placing the re- sponsibility for its execution with youth. His company is gone, his enemy Like Egypt or Cathay, museum-ban- ished; Yet have we known blood-relative and heir, Whose carrion skull, marked Rome, Berlin, shouts The death wish in his ,tribal mono- tone, Whose sterile corpse, immaculate with lust...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 11

…~PE R SPE C T i VE S Page lee' THE FIRST DRINK Continued from Page 1 Poor Butterfly? I like Whispering, too. I like you, even." Mac didn't say much. Bell saluted her, and said with a flourish, "For you, my little lotus-flower, we will play any- thing." She grabbed her boyfriend. "Aw- right, then, play anything, and we'll dance." And off they went. Bell shook his head. slowly. "Well, that's that." . Hunt struck out a few chords. "Let's go. ...…

June 03, 1941 (vol. 4, iss. 5) • Page Image 12

…rage Twelve ERSPE CTI V E S BOOKS IN SEASON Whisde Stop, by Maritta Wolff, Random House, 1941 REDUCED to the barest terms, Hamlet becomes a penny-dreadful tale Of carnal, bloody and unnatural acts, Of accidental judgments, casual slaughters, Of deaths put on by cunning and forced cause. Similarly, the narrative of Whistle Stop, by Vtaritta Wolff, consists of ,deeds of violence and horror: the somewhat de- mented little girl, Dorothy, stra...…

July 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 3) • Page Image 1

… Weather Continued Cool Y t Official Publication Of The Summer Session 4,I5aitij Editorial Norman E. Cook: His Work Lives On .,. VOL. LI. No. 3 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Faculty Will Hold' General Reception For Student Body Perkins Traces History Of U. S. Foreign Policy Nazi Troops Slaughter Trapped Soviet Forces; Dances, Bridge To Follow Event In Rackham Hall; All Students Are Invited Hopkin...…

July 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 3) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY T1 I I I Daily Calendar of Events Thursday, July 3- 2:00 p.m. Excursion No. 1-Tour of Campus. Inspection of General Library, Clem- ents Library of Early American History, Cook Legal Research Library and other buildings of the Law Quadrangle, Michigan Union, Burton Memorial Tower, Aeronautical Laboratory, Naval Tank, and other points of interest. Trip ends at 4:45 p.m.1 4:05 p.m. Lecture. "Physical Education and the Natio...…

July 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 3) • Page Image 3

…-H E MICHXIGAN D A ILY ?AGE THREE . - . . . ...:. . .® ... ...... ad... ............ .F Russian Tank Wrecked By German Shell a. P. blausteiu",Oo I + POTPOURRI + FROM a financial point of view, the most successful man who left the University this June is a lanky six foot three, 200-pound sophomore by the name of Richard -C. Wakefield. The young man, who has just reached his 20th birthday, now has some- where between $40,000 and $50,000...…

July 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 3) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, Jl T THE M[CHIGAN DAILY THVItSDAT. 3 y Children's art On Exhibit July 6 An exhibit of children's art of the The exhibit is being assembled by Vestern Hemisphere will be shown the WPA art project in Detroit. laily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the Members of the committee in Rackham galleries in conjunction charge of the exhibit are Holger Ca- vith the eighth international con- hill, WPA art program; Victor D'- Ami...…

August 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 29) • Page Image 1

…Weather Probably LY SfrAltigaup xtl Editorial Ecuador And Peru Cease Firing . I Official Publication Of The Summer Session d VOL. LI. No. 29 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1941 Z-326 SI PRICE FIVE CENTS U To . Warns Vichy 'Stiffen' Stand Against Germany Sumner Welles Threatens France Not- To Repeat Capitulations To Axis Reviews Far East With Lord Halifax WASHINGTON, Aug. 2. -( P)- With Germany reportedly applying new pre...…

August 03, 1941 (vol. 51, iss. 29) • Page Image 2

…PAGE TWO Reservations Are Due Tuesday For Next University Excursion Ninth and last of the Summer Ses-Qpanied the Niagara Falls excursion, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1941 sion's University excursions will take place Wednesday, Aug. 6, when stu- dents will have an opportunity to visit Put-In-Bay on Lake Erie. Reservations for this excursion must be made by 5 p.m. Tuesday in Room 1213 Angell Hall. Total ex- penses for the trip, inc...…

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