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April 08, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 116) • Page Image 5

…8, 1945 THE IICHIGAN DAILY PROVOST DUTIES EXPLAINED: Adams Is Second Highest 'U' Official W, By ARTHUR KRAFT Dr. JamesP. Adams, recently ap- pointed Provost of the University, is a tall and affable man who brings to his alma mater, Michigan, an im- pressive record as an educator and citizen. As chief executive officer of the University next to the president, Dr. Adams' responsibilities relate to the educational programs of the Univer- s...…

April 08, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 116) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY StNDAY, APRIL 8, 1945 Panhel-A ssemb ly Bail To Feature Music of Gene Krupa I Positions Open For Chairman, Captainsj McCormick Scholarships To Be Awarded The Ethel A. McCormick Scholar- Novel Theme Drive To Collect Sophomore Dues Will Be Used WI1 Last Monday Through Friday, The committee, responsible for placing the volunteers and keeping records of the work, act as captains at both University and St. Joseph'...…

April 08, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 116) • Page Image 7

…SUNDAT, APRIL 9, 1"45 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SE1 Engineers To Give Ball Friday Members of the School of Engi- neering will present their annual Slide .Rule Ball from 8:30 p.m. to midnight Friday in the Rainbow Room of the Union. The formal dance is an all-campus affair open. to members of any school. Slide Rule Ball is the University tradition highlighted by the efforts of law students to obtain the famous slide rule dear to the hearts...…

April 08, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 116) • Page Image 8

…EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY N Peace in UMW Dispute Expected RUSS GIRT WILL PLAY: Pan-American Ball To Be Saturday' 1i Prof Hobbs Retains Polar Society Post Believe Contract Can Be' Agreed Upon Tomorrowj t Operators, Miners Think Wage Will Be Reached Without U.S. Coimlpromuise Intervention Professor Emeritus William H. Hobbs of the Department of Geology was re-elected to the executive board of the American Polar Society at the sprin...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 1

…Y r e tna tiattij WEATHER Partly Cloudy and Mild, Showers, Cooler I VOL. LV, No. 115 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. Aids Flooded Louisiana Red River Covers Shreveport Area By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS, April 6.-Levees crumbled and a general exodus of dwellers followed as a major flood spread out today down the Red River basin in central Louisiana. Calls for relief were answered by the Red Cross,...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 2

…PAGE tO Svl'iTIY ? AR1, tti:f '; i: C,.4 £irc4jau Bally Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Open Letter t Josef Stalin 'The Pendulum 1 v:? ;- c, ", . f{ UII JA; -Ifoffm folloomp" on. A Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon , Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 3

…E MICHIAN D)AUYDAL F our Games Added to Baseball S e ule Vetter, Star Half-Miler, Lost for Outdoor Season Conference Championship Chances Hindered1 By Losses to Draft; Marcoux Taken Earlier Michigan hopes for a third suc- cessive Western Conference outdoor track championship this spring were jolted yesterday with the announce- ment that George Vetter, ace middle distance runner, has been inducted into the Army and will not be avail- able ...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 4

…)UR, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAT, )UR SATUJUJAZ Lewis Summons Policy Committee; Crisis in Coal Negotiations Is Reached 5th Annual Orchestra'Concert To Be Given Tomorrow at Hill Perkins' Proposed Contract To Be Considered; Seizure Is Indicated By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 6-Soft coal wage negotiations virtually broke down today and John L. Lewis summoned his 250-man policy committee to determine the United Mine Workers' futu...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 5

…music SUPPLEMEN 1 N Kr 4 / ati MUSIC SUPPLEMVENT ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1945 Eleven Soloists 'Rhapsody in Blue' Will Be Performed by LevantF Playing the music which has become a national institution, Oscar Levant will present -the beloved Gershwin "Rhapsody in Blue" and "Con- certo in F Major" at 8:30 p. m. May 4. Levant boasts a record of a rare combination of fine musicianship and prominhence as radio and screen personal...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 6

…PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY- SUNDAY APRIL 8, 1945 PAUL LEYSSAC RUDOLPH SERKIN ** * * * * mous Pianist To Play Leyssac To AppearMay Narrator Will Give" 'Peter and Wolf' Paul Leyssac, popular Danish dramatist, will be featured as nar- rator of his own translation of Pro- koffief's "Peter and the Wolf" with the Philadelphia Orchestra on the third May Festival program at 2:30 p. m. Saturday, May 5, in Hill Aud- itorium. Plays "Gonzalo" in "Th...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 7

…S44NAX', AP-UJ 8, 1945 THE MIHIGAN DAILY 'SINGING AMBASSADOR': Sayao Promotes Good Neighbor Policy Wr 4 Mme. Bidu Sayao, charming Bra- zilian soprano, who has often been called "Brazil's Singing Ambassa- dress," is the only woman representa- tive of South America on the Metro- politan Opera's roster of artists and has received great acclaim for her operatic and concert appearances. Interested at Early Age . Mme. Sayao became interested...…

April 07, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 115) • Page Image 8

…I*HE . ;. ju icj,, J~L I .1i THE 5 2 nd 4NNURL I, S I x C C ERT S -4 THURSDAY, FRIDRf SATURDAY fND SUNDfY MfY 3, 4, 5 AND 6 "II I THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA Eugene Ormandy CONDUCTOR Soul Caston ASSOCI ATE CON DUCTOR BIDU SAYAO, Soprano EZIO PINZA, Bass ELEANOR STEBER, Soprano HERTHA GLAZ, Contralto ROSALIND NADELL, Contralto RUDOLPH SERKIN, Pian ist NICOLA MOSCONA, Bass FREDERICK JAGEL, Tenor ZINO FRANCE...…

April 06, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 114) • Page Image 1

…. R r i L 46F :IatH WEATHER Clearing, Freezing Temperatures VOL. LV, No. 114 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Russia Denounces Tokyo Neutrality Pact * * * * Ruthven * * * * * *: Plans Post War ampus lc 'U'Must Now Strike Out From Veterans 'Vale of Decision ' <f Needs To Shape Program The University is in the "Valley of Decision", and must now decide either to retire from the world into an ivory t...…

April 06, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 114) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHITGAN DjAILY _________ Sees Nazi Guerilla Warfare; TAX LOAD TOOHEAVY: Dean Stevenson Questions Promise of 60 Millio.Jobs MacArthur Heads Army Forces in Pacific STATUF RESI~S Onivi YONTAN S-- ZAMPACAE= . t sHill K,--u HE (A NZ A KATFNA NPV !Cuba ~Bay / - _-'Nakagusujku NAHIA AIRFELD' Bay k ~ Yonadbaru IRFIELDS UT o 4'KUTAKA toman, ,. Gushichan CAPE CH-AMUJ Nimitz Takes Over Navy in Pacific Theater Arnold To Continue Commander...…

April 06, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 114) • Page Image 3

…4V. APRIL 's; 1945 6THE MICHIGAN DAILY £sAGI Baseball uad ill pen Season Here April 3 Taking the Count By DAVE LOEWENBERG Associate Sports Editor AN IMPOSING LIST of more than 500 of the nation's professional, col- legiate and amateur athletes have lost their lives since Pearl Harbor. The sports national service flag is cluttered with gold stars representing athletes whose feats before the war made them nationally famous. Here are just a f...…

April 06, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 114) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY I RAY, WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Supply Problem Paramount By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Over in the Pentagon Build- ing, the military problem which the generals are watching and worrying about most today is supplies. Actually it's not the production of supplies on the home front which so much con- cerns the Army, but getting them from the chan- nel ports to the fast-moving Western Front. If gasoline, bread and bullets can k...…

April 06, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 114) • Page Image 5

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pan-American Will Present Annual Dance Ball To Be April 14 at League; Native Dances, Songs Planned For Students and Townspeople An annual Pan-American Ball, presented by the Latin American So- ciety of the University, will be given from 8:30 p.m. to midnight April 14 in the League Ballroom to commem- orate Pan-American Day. Plans are under way to present some of the native dances and songs of the various American countries....…

April 06, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 114) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN AILY F RIDA t . VETE RANS' PROBLEMS: Returned Servicemen Seorn Pre-War 'Joe College' Mood By JERRY LISKA Associated Press Correspondent BLOOMINGTON, Ind., April 5-Battle-tested veterans returning to school scorn the "Joe College" spirit of peacetime years. That's the discovery of Indiana University which has 350 veterans, or eight per cent of the total student enrollment, now on its campus. Wendell W. Wright, director of the ...…

April 05, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 113) • Page Image 1

…ig, A6F t an 4:D:Itt!J WEATHER Freezing with Winds and Cloudy 16. 1! VOL. LV, No. 113 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS japs Retreat Before New Yank Invasion Army-Navy Revue Will Sta rFieldingNavyBand Servicemen To Prnsent All-Campus Show at Hill Auditorium Wednesday * * * * * * * * '00 The 80-piece Navy band and Doc Fielding as master of ceremonies will be featred in the first all-campus Army-N...…

April 05, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 113) • Page Image 2

…PAGE -'77 AID -_ _ _______-.---- -_ _______________________ TJR~Y, APRil.~ ~, 1945 Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND. USSR Policy on Small Nations Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul Sislin Dank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis ennedy Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt nKay McFee Editorial St...…

April 05, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 113) • Page Image 3

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fr.IGE THREt ........ . . Ib01a AW-NL Wkii-verl.nu k, wimmers ecel-ve It aking the oun44 By HANK MANTHO Daily Sports Editor commissioner Landis' Psition sStill Uniled Varsity Letters Church, Fries, Kessler Leading Honor Winners Westerberg, Chubb, Mowerson, Munson Drake, Pulford, Breen Also Snag Letters Farley, Frick Remain As Prospects for Job Vacated Months Aorio TN 'A MT w'T ~hich 1fivcrd to he afthee-war fihtfor...…

April 05, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 113) • Page Image 4

… - - aaa'.. aaa,. .aL .. aa..TH MICHfIG.AN DlAI.Y THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1945' .'... a as a.a rra a 'si nn- n 0.F CD. 1 q E.O .C1 1 L 1 THURSDAY... ,d. APIL . 1945.s Cut In Sugar Ration Will Give U.S. Civilians Less Than British WOMEN'S NEWS: Engine Ball Planned; Thu rnament To Start By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April -4-Civilians in the United States, famous for their sweet tooth, will find 1945 "the most difficult of the war" from t...…

April 04, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 112) • Page Image 1

…0 V E Air t an 4:3atID WEATHER Rain or Snow. No Decided Change in Temperature VOL. LV, No. 112 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. Third Army Army, Marines Gain on Okinawa* Slashes 19 Miles Yanks Reach Outskirts of Gotha; Strike Within 65 Miles of Czechoslovakia By The Associated Press PARIS, April 4, Wednesday-Pow- erful U.S. Third Army tank columns smashed into the outskirts of Gotha yesterday ...…

April 04, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 112) • Page Image 2

…T' HMICHIGAN D AILY. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1945 Senate Overrides FDR To Stop Manpower Control Bill By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, April 3-The Sen- ate overrode' President Roosevelt to- day with a crushing 46 to 29 rejec- tion of a bill empowering the Ad- ministration to freeze workers to war jobs and apply other sweeping man- power controls. Convinced that further efforts to win votes for the measure were fu- tile, majority leader Bark...…

April 04, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 112) • Page Image 3

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TI _________________________ ________________________________________________ Great Lakes Thinc4ads Slated To Run in May 12 Comipetitionr Grover Kilemmer, Champion Runner To Appear in Four-Cornered Meet Coach Ken Doherty yesterday announced that the originally scheduledI triangular meet between Illinois, Ohio State and Michigan on May 12, would probably be increased to a quadrangular meet which would include the Grea...…

April 04, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 112) • Page Image 4

…__THE MICHIGAN DAILY EwENs$A 11"j A 3i'UL 4 1:1 t : c4 idja at WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Discharge Credits Now Fixed T he Pendulum Fifty-Fifth Year vim- ;- . , .' -4'f lI Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay Mc...…

April 04, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 112) • Page Image 5

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE .v !. 'a cavau: .cc '.. fa1r E 1 , a Peoples of Liberated Nations Need Useable Castoff Clothes . UNRRA Asks American Aid For Thirty Million Children "What can you spare that they can wear?" is the slogan which sets the tempo for the nation-wide clothing drive which opened April 1 and will continue throughout the month, un- der the sponsorship of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration. Mo...…

April 04, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 112) • Page Image 6

…PACT 2m THE MICHIGAN DAILY va : i: i r i,. fy "Fsi7t. 4, 1944, PAm~ ~lTx WEiTh~E~flAY, ArT~TL 4, 194.~ Automobile Industry Presents Program For Employing Wounded Wur Veterans "Crik 'ul N W2 DIETROIT, March 30.-(A)- On employment begins with a medical ex- the theory that no man is "disabled" amination. In some instances an ap- if he has the courage to go ahead, titude test follows; in others the re- the nation's automobile industry is...…

April 03, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 111) • Page Image 1

…Jr A*F ftitr, tgan Daxi i WEATHER Mostly Cloudy and Colder VOL. LV, No. 111 ANN ARBOR, MICIGAN TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Americans Take Legaspe on ast Luzon * * * * * * Ir * * * * * * * Yanks Thwart azi Escape From Forces Roll Fifteen Miles into LHolland Ninth Army Columns Reach Weser River Near Pied Piper Town, Hamelin By The Associated Press PARIS, Tuesday, April 3-American troops again crushed Germa...…

April 03, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 111) • Page Image 2

…VAIc TWO Th°E NICHIIG.AN DAILY T 17P I SDAY , APRIL, 3, 1945 Reds Rip To Forces Batter Vienna's Southern Defense Wall Within 3 -.. ofSlovakia Bill To Allow Graft Inquiries Of Legislatures Is Drafted '. ovsky's troops stormed into and cap- tured Bischdorf, two and a half miles east of Bratislava. The puppet government had fled the city, it was reported. The Russians also seized more than 100 other places. Farther northeast Malinovcky's...…

April 03, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 111) • Page Image 3

…TUE sDAY,.APRIL , 1945 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rA Spring Footb Thinclads OpenPractice For Outdoor Campaign ( d One an LA)st will also be named for the half-mil( and mile relays, he said. ToO utdoor "-'uaAs yet, no members of any of the competing teams have been selected, Michigan's track team officially It is expected, however, that distanci opened its outdoor season yesterday men Ross and Bob Hume, Dick For- after a week's layoff with substantia...…

April 03, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 111) • Page Image 4

…DAILY I .. .. _... _ .... _..- - _ . ._-I z_ _ A N A I _Y WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: UNRRA Kept Out of Albania THE TREADMILL Professors . t By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-For months the Albanian radio has been broadcasting daily appeals to the outside world for food, clothing and medi- cal supplies. But although UNRRA is supposed to care for the war-torn countries, and although Albania has suffered more than most, UNRRA still has been unab...…

April 03, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 111) • Page Image 5

…THE 'MICHIGAN DAILY ..U" ~ rn - i Coed Petitioning for Assembly To Continue Through Saturday Archery Club Positions Available For Independents An Assembly officer will be in the Kalamazoo Room of the League from 3 p. m. to 5 p. m. each afternoon of this week to answer any questions concerning petitioning for positions on Assembly Council, which is now going on and will continue through Saturday. Assembly is the campus organiza- tion for a...…

April 03, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 111) • Page Image 6

…PAGE SIX THE N MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1945 c U "1 mop "WI t y can 'Yj Across the barren wastes of war-torn countries, wander multitudes of dazed and destitute people. Their appalling number, in Europe alone, is 125 million, of which more than 30 million are children. They are living in the ruins of their homes. They are working in their ravaged fields. They are kept alive more by courage than by food; warmed more by hope tha...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 1

…\'L Sir igau Dait WEATHER Fair and Mi1l. 74 VOL. LV, No. 110 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Buckeye Mermen Snare NCAA Title over Michigan, 57-48 * * * * * * * * * * * * Allies Clamp Deathiock Around Ruhr Ohio's Divers Are Michigan's Poison Mert Church Presented With Coaches' Swimming Award; Schlange- Stars By BUD ROVIT Sparked by three champion divers and a great long distance freesty...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 1945 V-E DAY: Factory Reconversion Rate Will Be Slow WASHINGTON, March 31--(4)-James F. Byrnes told the American people today that the nation's factories will be free to produce nearly a estinghousethird more civilian goods within nine months after Germany falls. 1 ~This is a slower reconversion rate than was expected last fall. 4ourse Nevertheless it means that, even before Japan is whipped, Americans s...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 3

…APRIL 1, 1915, THE MICHIGAN DAILY P, APlUL 1, 194~ PA April Foolishness Started with Zeus, the- Great Rainmaker; or Was It Charles X? I Birthplace of 'The Old Rugged Cross' THE HEART OF A MAN: German Officer's Diary Shows Underlying Desire for Peace By The Associated Press Probably you will be an April Fool today but don't be downcast about it: this risibility routine has been going on for centuries. There's even a legend that Zeus in...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY lJ1 Y tL '; r4A"1::YA 1; h3-}:; W ASHING TON MERR Y 0RUOUN~D: Food Shortage Analyzed' FIRST NOVEL BY YOUNG WRITER: Prof. Boys Reviews 'Forever Amber' By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON.- Basic cause of our food shortage boils down to the fact that the food planners have been trying to figure too close to the line. Instead of working during the last few years to provide a margin of safety, they have tried to schedule producti...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 5

…SUNDAYA~i~U,*~~94~TILE .. iCHIGAN DAILY AF 1V PAGE-VIVA. Campus Sororities Bid 344 Women Pledging To Take Place at Houses at 5 p.m. Tomorrow; Silence Period To Continue (Continued from Page 1) Handelman, Chicago, Ill.; Ethel Isen- berg, Detroit; Edna Elaine Klein, Louisville, Ky.; Irene Lager, Cleve- land, O.; Ruth Lazar, Chicago, Ill.; Lois Lefkowitz, Kansas' City, Mo.; Peggy Maire, Hempstead, N. J.; Jan- ice Oberman, Chicago, Ill.; Lois ...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 6

…___________THE MICHIGAN__DAILY SUNDrA, APRIL 1, 1945 olverine Spring Grid Prv Penna, Dodson Contesting for Durham Open Lord Byron Nelson Hottest Man in Game DURHAM, N. C., March 31-(M- The "Little Men" of golf showed no inclination to give up today in the second round of the Durham Open, Toney Penna and-Leonard Dodson deadlocking for the lead at the half- way mark of the 72-hole meet. Penna, the smallest of the pros, added a 71 to his o...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 7

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN C age ia n s e mo va,, GArgime9n Against 'ou*IRules By WHITNEY MARTIN Associated Press Columnist A FRIEND OF OURS is very sore. He paid his money to see Bob Kurland of the Oklahoma Aggies and George Mikan of DePaul meet on a basketball court the other night, and al- though they did meet he feels somehow that he was gyped, as the meeting was so comparatively brief it was quite incon- clusive, and just left a b...…

April 01, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 110) • Page Image 8

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY 5 U N IJA V , AxPRIL 1, I I Seeks Social Security Aid GM Council Corporation Requests Support DETROIT, March 31 -(')- The national GM council of the United Automobile Workers (CIO), repre- senting some 300,000 union members in General Motors Corp. plants, in- structed its officers today to re- quest the corporation to finance a social security program for UAW- CIO members which would be ad- ministered by the union. Th...…

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