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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...…

March 31, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 109) • Page Image 1

…cl I Sir grn Dait& WEATiHECR Partly Cloudy with Little '4 VOL. LV, No. 109 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks m h Forward 20 * Miles in Day * * * * * * * * * * * * University To Adopt Central ime Aril 8 =: i Ohio State Leads NCAA During First Night Campus and City Clocks To Differ by One Hour Five Appointments Made by Regents; Forestry School Ci rricuulni Changed Michigan Do...…

March 31, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 109) • Page Image 2

…PAGE TWO THE MTCHTC-AN DhATIN: SATURDAY. MARCH -31. 1045, --AY. L 11Y 1B 1 lU.A . ~ ..i 1.A.VF',k14 A. 1 LI a.. *Jlk7 -Afll. 'l AL~'k-A l ~I Ald sa ,4 a.' Wa a 0, Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON, MERRY-GO-ROUND: Arnall Receives Brass Ring THE BRIDGE ,< - Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Stafff Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray ...…

March 31, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 109) • Page Image 3

…SATURDAY, AJARCII 31, 11945. THE MICHIGAN, DAILY. . i. Swimmers Hold econd Place in -NCAAi Haegg Makes Farewell Run, Aims for First Win Over Jim Rafferty BUFFALO, N. Y., March 30-(PA)- Gunder Haegg, the Speedy Swede, is scheduled to make his farewell ap- pearance of his 1945 American Track Tour in Buffalo tomorrow night, but sponsoring officials were wondering whether "Gunder the Wonder" would make it. Haegg has been visiting his ...…

March 31, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 109) • Page Image 4

…FOUR 'S HE MWIHIGAN DILYTV Ste. DAT, I ' C . L 14.45:, ...+, . .. r..., a- «...«.. ...., as v. w, "us F, Stettinius Says s '1 Russia andUS. TOliave Three; Britain Six Votes Secretary of State Sees Prospect For Successful World Organization By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 30---Turning aside a barrage of questions, Sec- retary Stettinius insisted today the hot "multiple vote" issue has not dimmed his confidence in the success of ...…

March 30, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 108) • Page Image 1

…LY2 Sir i4an Elatt WEATHER Fair and Somewhat Cloudy Little Temperature Change t I VOL. LV, No. 108 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN PRICE FIVE CENTS Yanks Knife 55 Miles Deeper into Reich Good Friday Rites To Begin Today at Noon Church To Hold Union Services Good Friday services will be held from noon to 3 p.m. today in the First MethodisthChurch under the sponsorship of the Ann Arbor Min- Isters' Association, and will co...…

March 30, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 108) • Page Image 2

…THE ~MICHIG~AN TbAIV FRIDALMARCH t X94~ ' '.F .ti.. ..I 1 .1. 1 \. I 11 1 4) 111 1 \ L l-1 1 L 1 Ryukyus Shelled for SeventhStraight Day, Powerful British Force Joins U.S.Fleet in Attack By The Associated Press GUAM, Friday, March 30-The United States Pacific Fleet, augmented by powerful British battleship-carrier task forces, poured shells and carrier planes for the Seventh straight day Thursday at the Ryukyus where Tokyo said American...…

March 30, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 108) • Page Image 3

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE HE B To Open NCAA Swim Carnival Here TRIM TIGERS: Manager O'Neill Likes His Ball PlayersSlim EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 29-( )v -"The baseball player who reports for spring training without having to take off weight to get into shape is way ahead of the field, manager Steve O'Neill told his Detroit Tigers at their Evansville camp today. The subject was Rudy York, belt- ing first baseman, who reported three days ago ...…

March 30, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 108) • Page Image 4

…R Ec Ox 'III .M ICIGAN IIAILY tL 1, arx:sY l ri S l; ;S45 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Army Parachutes Out-Dated 7he Pendulum MILITARY TRAINING. Poll Indicates Approval By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-It has now been over a year since this column exposed Army tardiness in ordering the quick-release parachute, but un- fortunately the old-fashioned triple-release har- ness is still dragging some victims to death. Latest tragedy was Lieut. Joseph ...…

March 30, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 108) • Page Image 5

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE _. .. } Independent Coeds May Petition For Assembly Council Positions Petitioning for officers of Assem- bly Council for the coming year will begin today and continue until Sat- urday, April 7, it was announced yesterday by Florene Wilkins, As- sembly president. Petitions may be obtained in the Kalamazoo Room and in the Under- graduate Office of the League. They are to be turned in the Assembly box in the Und...…

March 30, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 108) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY, FRIl"!A'I.'', nARCH 30, 1945 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 34k, 1945 Yanks at Teheran Run News Service itors understands Russian, but so fa- miliar are they with announcer Yuri Levitan's dramatic readings of spe- cial orders of the day over Radio Moscow that PGC troops frequently hear of the progress of the Red Ar- mies a full ten minutes before the English rebroadcast by the BBC in London. One reason for the effici...…

March 29, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 107) • Page Image 1

…I. Ait A 4 aiil WEATHER Fair and Cooler- Winds VOL. LV, No. 107 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS U.S. First,Third rmiesPlunne27 ils in Reich - ,C;, * * * * * * * * C ) FDR Asks Action on Manpower Positive Betterment' Reported by McNutt By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, March 28-A re- newed plea today by President Roose- velt for manpower control legislation coincided with a report by Manpower C...…

March 29, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 107) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY TflUR SDAY, lV4ARWTI 29, 1945 c . r ,9 r rxgttn ttt1 WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Paletstine Policy Protested Fifty-Fifth Year £?ttCPJ to the 6/ or - c% .~ . -I I5 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the lofid in Control of Student Publications. Evelyn Phillips Margaret Farmer Ray Dixon . Paul Sislin Hank Mantho Dave Loewenberg Mavis Kennedy Dick Strickland Martha Schmi...…

March 29, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 107) • Page Image 3

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan, Cornell, Ohio State ,RJtakiii9 the £ound4t Dy HANK UMANTIO Daily Sports Editor I N THE MIDST of our fourth year of war, final tabulations revealed that basketball is now second only to football as a major sport in the Big Ten, and this is rather surprising since the sport was nine years old before it was incorporated into Conference athletics. Credit for the innovation of this game goes to Dr. James Naismith, ...…

March 29, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 107) • Page Image 4

…PAGE FOUT HE MICIHIGAN DAILY I "HURflAYt 1I 4BCll 2% ;194ZL Labor, Business Pledge Includes Rights Of Unions, Management- Leaders Sign Post-War Charter Chamber, read the document aloud. A few minutes later all three signed it. Each expressed confidence that his own organization would approve the peace charter, and Murray observed that it was being submitted especial- ly to the people of the United States for their approval-"We want people ...…

March 28, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 106) • Page Image 1

…y, 'f+1 e t Jr Sir 43~t 4&zt WEATHER Increasing Cloudiness and Continued Warm Today. Fresh, Winds VOL. LV, No. 106 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS Allied Forces Knife 27 Miles 0 into Enemy Lines; 'Germans on 'Western Front Beaten' - Eisenhower 4 V * * * * * * Yanks Hit intoj Cebu with Air, Sea Support MacArthur's Troops March into Talisay By The Associated PressE American invasion of Cebu, anot...…

March 28, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 106) • Page Image 2

…Swo T II MICHIGAN DAILY fsa ND MARC 28, 1945 Vet Aid Bill Forced Back to Committee Prof.Maddy Announces Music Camp Season at Interlochen By The Associated Press LANSING, March 27-(AP)-A bill to provide for "bargain" sale of state-owned lands to veterans for homestead purposes was returned to the House Military and Veterans Affairs Committee today in what Rep. Pat- rick J. Doyle, Dearborn Democrat and its chief sponsor, said he feared was ...…

March 28, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 106) • Page Image 3

…WEDNESDA, MAUCR 28;'5 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fourteen Teams Entered in Annual NCAA Meet Sixty-five Swimmers To Vie in Eleven Events Wolverine's Mert Church, Heini Kessler Will Struggle Against Stiff Competition By HANK KEISER Fourteen eastern and midwestern schools hale signed up for the 22nd annual NCAA swimming championships scheduled for this Friday and Saturday at Michigan's Varsity Pool. Wolverine coach, Matt Mann, host of the meet, anno...…

March 28, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 106) • Page Image 4

…IaLEMCIA D AI Y 1 . . - .a., WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Gen. Marshall Won t Guess The Pendulum r. v By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-In a highly secret session be- fore the Senate Military Affairs Committee last Thursday, General George Marshall, Army Chief of Staff, refused to guess when the end of the war with Germany. will come: According to all logic, he said, the German resistance should be at an end now, but there is no sign that the a...…

March 28, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 106) • Page Image 5

…MAR~CH 28; 1945 THE. MICHIGAN DAILY _______________________ Panhel Night, Assembly Ball Heads Named Independent, Sorority Women To Hold Dance: D. Heidgen, Bethine Clark To Be Chairmen Announcement was made yester- day of the members of the Central Committees for Panhellenic-Assem- bly B3all and Panhellenic Night. On the Panhellenic side of the Ball committee, Doris Heidgen, Gam- ma Phi Beta, was named general chairman, Finance, was awarded...…

March 28, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 106) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIG AN DAILY WEDNESDA , MALUR 28, 1945 ;... New Polish Student Gives Information About Present Problems, Conditions in Homeland r qc -UIE N- 2Ws By CAROL ZACK "The Poles are freedom-loving peo- pie." Stephanie Albrecht, who lived in Warsaw for 11 years declared, in a recent interview, that the Poles want to be independent and want to live with every nation in peace. Educated in Warsaw Born in the United States, Miss Albrecht lef...…

March 27, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 105) • Page Image 1

…Y Sit i ait& WEATHER Partly Cloudy with Little Change in Teepecratjure VOL. LV, No. 105 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS zis REEL U DER * SS LLIED DRI E * * * * * * * * * * * * * Three-Pronged Red Drive Races cross Hungary .} , Russians Only 69, eliesfrom Vienna Other Forces Are Battering Through Caripal ianus of Czechoslovakia By The Associated Press LONDON, March 26-Russian tank spea...…

March 27, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 105) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fifty-Fifth Year WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Army Promotion Policy Raked COMPULSORY MILITARY TRAINING FORUM: Dean Edmonson Presents Pro and Con 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 Dick Strickland Martha Schmitt Kay ...…

March 27, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 105) • Page Image 3

…THE IICIIIGAN DAILY t Swimmers o Cornell~Is Threat to Midwest Supremacy Seven-Maii Big Red Crew Boasts Record of 21 Consecutive Victories By BUD ROVIT Entries for the National Collegiate meet, which closed yesterday, now include Michigan, Minnesota, OSU, Cornell, Purdue, Columbia, North- western, Rensselaer Polytech, Iowa, Indiana, Michigan State, Canisius College of Buffalo, and Illinois Tech. According to all pre-meet statistics, the meet ...…

March 27, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 105) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHIGAN AILY Tells of Need for- Public Works Projects 1 _ . _ Begin with War s End By LILA MAkIMA "To relieve possible unemployment the state of Michigan must be prepared to enter the postwar period with a large backlog of public works projects in the completed blueprint stage ready to start construction," Robert N. Cross of the Bureau of Business Research said in an interview yesterday. "The projects, the total 'estimated const...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 1

…Jr Lie i~jrn tIait~i WEATlHER Mild with Little Change in Temperature. VOL. LV, No. 104 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1945 PRICE FIVE CENTS 'End-the- ar Offensive oves Deep into Ruhr Allied Forces Push Ahead k *k 0 %k. * : TRUCKS CROSS RHINE ON PONTOON BRIDGE-Heavy supply trucks cross the Rhine River on a pontoon bridge erected by U. S. Army Engineers. The War Department does not reveal where this bridge is located. Censorsh...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 2

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY, Former Senators Face Bribe Charge Logie, Diggs Are Reindicted on Racing Count; Howell Named State's Witness EYE-WITNESS ACCOUNT: Optimistic GI's Swarm Across Rhine Fy The Associated Press LANSING, March 24. -- Former State Senators Jerry T. Logie of Bay City and Charles C. Diggs of Detroit today were reindicted by Circuit Judge Leland W. Carr's one-man grand jury, charged with accepting bribes on the 1941 horse racing bi...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 3

… Michigan Tinclads Capture Purdue Relays TAKING IT EASY: Tigers' Newhouser Foresees 'Only 20 Wins' Next Season llafiing the ouni By HANK MANTHO Daily Sports Editor By FRANK KENESSON Associated Press Correspondent 'EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 24 - Blond, slender Harold Newhouser, ace Detroit lefthander and the winning- est pitcher of the Major Leagues in 1944, believes he won't duplicate his 29 victories this season-because he "won't get enoug...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 4

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: Japs Nearly Took Chungking By DREW PEARSON W ASHINGTON-It is now possible to reveal just how close the Japanese came to captur- ing the Chinese capital of Chungking last Nov-. ember. While Lieut. Gen. Alvin Wedemeyer was en route to Chungking to replace Gen. Stilwell, the Japanese were driving on Kunming, gateway to Chungking. It looked very much as if they would capture it. December 22, the Japa...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 5

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY FORMER LIT DEAN: Prof. E.H. Kraus Continues Brilliant Scientific Career By PAUL SISLIN only part of an academic and sci- entific career extending nearly half a century was brought to a close at the end of last term when Prof. Edward H. Kraus retired from his position as dean of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts. Although an academic career be- gun in 1896 was closed With Dr. Kraus' retirement, today the forme...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 6

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY Annual Slide Rule Ball To Be Presented A1 pril 13 . , rOl Louis Prima Band To Play At Engine Hop Ticket Sales Will Be Held Tomorrow, Tuesday, and Wednesday; V-12s Get Liberty Slide Rule Ball, an annual tradi- tion at the University, will be pres- ented by members of the engineer- ing school from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday, April 13 in the Rainbow Room of the Union. Contrary to custom, Slide Rule Ball will not be limited ...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 7

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE _A_ Assembly Will Give Red Cross Night To Explain Organization's Activities Three Servicemen To Be Speakers Assembly Organization in coopera- tion with the Red Cross extends an invitation to the public to attend Red Cross Night which will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Rack- ham Amphitheater. The purpose of Red Cross Night is to tell the public how its contribu- tions are being used, what the Red Cross is doin...…

March 25, 1945 (vol. 55, iss. 104) • Page Image 8

…THE MICHIGAN DAILY MIGHT SAY ANYTHING: "Little Flower" Will Address New Yorkers By The Associated Press NEW YORK, March 24-Promptly at 1 p.m. tomorrow, a squatty man with a mop of unruly black hair will unbutton his vest with a single mo- tion born of long practice, yank his dark-rimmed spectacles off his fore- head and strain forward over his desk like a racehorse at the barrier. He will drum on his desk in city hall with his fingers and g...…

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