"mm MfiRMiMto ' ' - ;. . - V; MM I Weather ■f j Daily Student Publication of Michigan Pair State College V0L.MZ.3M EAST LANSING. MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1944 NO. 137 Today's Yearbook Appointments A nnounced Russian Sui Foo, Editorial Assistant, Wins Army Editorship; f~ Races Toward Campus Betty Amos Named Business 1945 Wolverine Manager of Italian Monarch Sui Foo, St. Johns by Publications Board Will Resign When Sevastopol |... Lots of Work N. Y., junior, will be the junior, and Betty Amos, Tuckahoe. i editor and business ess. Success Imlicntcil for Red Newest genus of the species respectively of the 1945 manager. slUUiS rp i J Iffffs Mwuif » M||p , nens on campus this board of publications Wolverine, it was decided by the i Attempt to Retake is the "goops," a group yesterday. NApLES April 12 (AP)— Oimean Area jcvtl ped from the Alpha Gam Miss Foo will be the sec- j Ki"ng vitto'rio Emnnuclc III to- class which is going New irlllliea Base, n ! ond woman editor of the ( day announced that he had dc- LONDON, April 12 (API t.ided ; Wolverine ill at least 12! trom "irrevocably" to withdraw —The Red army in its swift (through courtesy week Fun. Too prior to initiation Satur- iay. Usefulness of the Nnnmi new genus is being tested ilUIIIUI Island lHiailll IIU. till. editor, being the ilrst, publica- Umbcrto "on the day on which i r public life and turn his years, J°.v Randall, present kingly powers over to his son offensive to recapture the . «• members of the soror- , . —w . . 1- | tions records show, -i ! ,h» Allied ■ ,J laud 40 miles re- lb troops enter Rome." "N?n. thc 1ccn,tn,1I Crimean rail- 1- for •" a king the "goops" getting them up iri HC3Vy Attack A mo* Is Oirire Manager it, 74-year-old mon- ^ci? l° ^vith'n M Simferopol^ .and - jr< ' their 8 o'clock*. carry- Miirn uno cntrruurvuJ At present, Miss Foo is the cdi- e 43-vcir reiun h is ?. only 48 ■, ■ - ks. and supplying candy rise and fall of Fas- :.:.!!,1 : "i ! °.f ^ from ,he Krent "aval baso carets upon demand. u ... Sovasto|>oj. and has cleared .. . C.reen Situation \ xtiirh is time saves nine, .rem- to be the metis of Alpha damage at that Japanese basei „ „ ._ . . . .. the . on northeast coast of New* Hetty Amos has had three years [experience on the staff. She isIj receives Phi omega, service honorary. When Crown Prince Umbcrto) ward Sevastopol, Guinea. :»r contrary to pees I—a an¬ Gen. Douglas MacArthur in now serving as the office mana- ' father royal (lowers from his attempt to duplicateperhaps to nul n r menIs the organisation he will in effect be his i historic defnese there the j,er> doinR tpc duties of the which the Rus- derided to pet np its tra¬ announcing this latest attack i father's regent. The King is | sians made under ... ditional -keep otT the gram" said also that heavy bombers I sjstnnt business manager. She siege earlier js a business administration ma- --•id to have no idea of abdical-1in the war. >tgnv Among the clever re- bombed Nomi island southeast ing. Truk in the Carolines and also' j j0r, and a member of Sigma Ep- Approach Oil Fields I-sindrrs to Spartan (arbltv the young is the must sproata atadents a to chance,' and "give bit Wewak on New Guinea badl.v-shattered silon, and J honorary, business administration The king has been opposed tlie lending Italian by Russian forces on the main- political par- | (and, demonstrating thoif surg- Rabaul, New Effective ties mainly on the contention I ffower to maintain multiple while a more heWgecent warn Britain. July 1 »t ;—ted is "Beware . . . grass Wcwe'* j - ° | tj10 new editnss will appoint that he had been too closely tied ' ~Ukraine offensives, seized by ■--- storm - - .• the city of Tiraspol. vlitMltv." took i in fi I inst LsP. IK Style Show j barges Dabua in the Wewak sector. Rabaul s Tobera The Wolverine appointments I Sjomsttrs Drive airstrip and, wff| not become cffcctivo supply areas at Talili bay were leaders insisted ^then that the, until, 39.year-old Umberto squeezed the Skala fxn-kct on | plastered with 30 tons ol bombs. 1 j approximately July 1. when with the Fascist brush as much was tarred the first Ukraine front to a rag- president editor Joy Randall, | gcd remnant of lO.ODO for Members I A lone Japanese plane bombed; I American Lansing senior, ami business positions at Saidor on j manager Kay as his father. ! From Germans. April 1 to 10 the Ger- Sprague, Royal mans west of Skala lust 30.000 given for the north coast of New Guinea 1 Oak senior, retire. • ing a program dead and 6,988 captured, wsU last night in the but destroyed only a few tents.1 Tneater of the Home Ec One man was wounded. "* —— Spotlight Review | Russian booty included 187 ! and solf-prnpollod while tanks guns, declar- r'-i .1. : j :"»i IX (j-g.) Elizabeth The new raid on the and Yoeman 3; C Bar- llansa bay supply base was car-1 enemy's Clti S Political „ , . . /Ictum Takes to Stage | ed the Soviet night eommunique, i recorded i i A -m( will be in the Union lied out'in r mn,:.le,i,\ f by the. Soviet muni tor. until :« p. m. today to talk to target still smoked from mld-dsy while the] t'OmittItiCt S Presenting 10 nets Union ballroom today, CDC-1 ,, ! Offense \Vrll Prepared The :<> are interested in the ••ious day's sea and air the pre to Be In restinoted ; ''H? whirlwind whirlwind campaign to .. pound 1 sponsored Spartan Spotlight fiyc the Crimea, which the Ger¬ ing in which destroyers boldly mans and Romanians have held The . . ! moved in to poul shells ashore in 1WCA £fS8U> I ">°rdination tal bombing. with a 227 ton aer- icaturcd a style show ■ t SPAR uniforms. Starting off v was Nancy Trabue. Marine Awarded Meilal i! J . • Park sophomore, who Smitb said he had tumetl j rioicuet- uiin-, cui.-i uoi™h» > nine cuiiKoi me axis -K.tlcd the navy blue enlisted junior, who will sing, and Mar- I . oy sui- WASHINGTON. April 12 (AP) Buldlc's assistant, G. | jorI prise, yet the Red armies quick- . while Hazel Ashe, East Tevple, Minden City sopho- hy eut through the long-prepared . ireshman, showed the . .nter uniform, outfits modeled were: working smock, and ..lacks. snot down -n Japanese ngioe. . > [dayclothes are also in- planes before his plane crashed ,h« comment, McGirr, Birmingham junior; into jungles near Rabaul. " m the SPAR uniforms. Previously Biddle had an-iCordle Morrison. Dearborn sen • Detroit freshman, and Boyington ouyiiigtuii scored nvuivti his Ku last vic- •uneed that an investigation ior, and ] IJ1NDON, April 12 (AP) — ... Genevieve Knopc, | The miMin-dodging German air e Trust. Owomo freshman, tory Jan. 3 over Rabaul shooting ; made at Rep. Smith's request [j Grand Grand RapidsRapids junior. I force foree stubbed briefly •s: plav dresses, and play down a Japanese Zero and later 'disclosed no evidence that Ihe briefly atat Lond laindon .n Mary Murphy, Ml. Clemens > re shown by Marge that day his own plane crashed. I CIO group had violated the' icnior; Jean and Joan McCul- tonight for the first time lin.-e March 31 but it was nenmnnrn Detroit senior, and Betty He now is listed as missing in, Smith-Connally war labor dis- lough, Northville twin sopho Detroit freshman, nction ,)utes act' tively light blow with Ihe rah!" oi,. | Sue Hutaon. crs coming over singly at inter" in.forms completing thc Murray, Ky. graduate student,; vals. will also be presented in skits, ere: cadet uniform, en- pnng uniform, officer's Chilean Journalist to Often Lecture (o include lap dancing and a re¬ There ports of any were no imineillntc re¬ cital. bombing. . uniform, enlisted dress Anti-aircraft gunfire Itoomcd officer's dress coat white Series on Latin-American Topics in the capital and along the i-d. and officer's whites, ■ English Department Thames estuary, but not in the -'-yle show was followed Erncstro Montenegro, volume of the "vie at what SPAR* do author and journalist, will open a.ilean; Harf, litprary March fire raids. February and . . a series of lectures on Latin- eve men in the coast guard America this evening at 7:30 in I ] (.ritlC OS truest ' colored movie at a task - en tision in which the coast play a vital part. thc lecture (hcinical laboratory. room of Kedz.e' Burges Johnson, well known [ writor and literary critic, will TIME TABLE Montenegro, who . . appear at a public lecture Mon- brought to the campus for a two . ni{ day evening jat 7:30 In room 130 weeks' period by the institute Morrill hall, according to Prof. IUnurho's Attacker Ln*» Fight for Mexico crnr. April 12 Life of foreign studies, will use fo.- Ben Euwema, acting head of thc his opening topic, "Latin-Ameri- English department. csn Nations and the War." Johnson's subject, "A Literary Workshop," will deal with remi¬ SPAR Interviews, tin Org. ream t, Unten Prose and pastry eeateel AP Antonio de La Lama Having lived in Argentina for niscences Ho-, • period of 10 years, Montenegro about Mark Twain, 4:1ft p. m., ream 49, And. wUl emphasize the political and Stephen Crane. Howells, and I a- Mexican army lieutenant, "( a bullet That* CM smekar. 7 p. as. r h.«irs other famous writers. after a 1 economic aspects of the role Faealty dteiag mm Since he will be on campus played by this nation in the war, all CDC. 7 p. m. day Monday, arrangements I TW lii -un passed harmlessly Avila »he coat at South the this point. same time American surveying countries other from are being made for his meeting with certain advanced compoei Room 187. Union Christian FeUwoshlp, 7 p.m. tion classes. Ill Uakm Students with business or fu¬ At present. Johnson is chair¬ Med Bio etab. 7: IS |«®b|«rban street Iff a ***1 tv ture travel interests in South man of P- m. .--Might to — English at Union college, Room 11. Baety failing in his attompt-to America, are invited to make an Schenectady, if. Y. Among his «*»j».nate the "" * appointment to meet Montenegro own worts are "As I Was Say- Alpha CM Sigma samkar s-^ -rgeoos in his ouice in 310 Morrill hall. ing," 7:38 P. m„ room 119. Unlan I--tal j ■*'"*ht at a military boa- "Essaying and Essay,", "A At present, the journalist js New Rhyming futOsty to save the Dictionary," audi In terns Uoosi RslaHens x-okt See MONTKNEGBO—Face X "Professor at Bay." • j 8 p. as., ream 1ft, Unian I*. MICH Thursday, April 13, i944 Grfc and Hear It By Lichti ■r st th. rwt-oglss. tost Lsashv. MM. OKcm Wis* of Union BnlMIss Anne*. room S. 7 on* Mondof wines durtns the irrtilir Mkool tardoy moraines Sarins summer ernston Mr Mm staff. tuMNMi imr A.ristant buslnm Dr. Chao Chang Lee and Al¬ manatm—YVONNC DAY RARRAJU man. IDE. Cmtrust* mansisr—MAtiALYN WILLI Circulation mumr— berto Sanchez of the Liberal Arts division, and Ernesto Mon¬ tenegro of the foreign institute staff are also indicative of the strides taken in providing edu¬ cational opportunities to stu¬ the Faculty views the news dents in connection with their courses. In addition there are all the PROF. FRANK MANNHE1MF.R men and women and groups who make up the lecture-con¬ cert series each year, including ALMOST simultaneouslyactivity the declaration 1939 all musical of with only war In were year heldJune in were in the the of basement, and jnsom* following they permitted to re- of belter and entertainment in tt,e world today, knowneducation names censed in England. The famous turn to their original place un- Students cannot know what concert halls closed their doors der die dome of the main hall, they arc missing if they consider and .many of the programs of in *pite ()f the greatest diffi- that they could not attend sudh serious music arranged by the "After the war, it'll sure seem strange seeing morn tho either too busy (It always sounds WASHINGTON. April 12 (AP) since July 1940. lation. ceiling, making it necessary for °r 100 or the weather —Congress ended its Easter re¬ Only a relatively It was only n short time be- the audience to arrange their '* unpleasant or something, cess today by setting to work on amount, $803,685,104, u,i- fore the general public was dc- chairs around pools of water. Starting today Montenegro is a record $32,647,134,336 navy mcd by the committee !i<> in laid- manding the opportunity to hear Sometimes there was no heat good music once more. In Oc- [or the building because of bro- ' l^iin lV-rinll Persons p^n, appropriation bill intended to . „ give the world's largest navy the get estimates, with the ev plana tuber, 1939, little more than u ken pipes. On one occasion a ! il? ILa diplomatic career punch for final defeat of Japan tion that the purse strum- month after war had been dc- time bomb exploded in another J", £ Am*T.ic®n c."ll1n" and Germany. be kept open to meet «: ( lin ed, dally concerts were start- part of the gallery during a con- ![ , vY?ulcl no do}*J>l b®neflt by cxl at the National Art gaUery £rt. EveryZ^ceivZl kind ,the talks as would others who Warned by the men who oper¬ future requirements. Th; in London. ()f interference and discomfort s^rne'u™"* °T ate the fleet that the end of the needs are by no means u These concerts were organized has been encountered, but the Tt muk h! dii^raaU^' f„r war is not in sight, the house was indicated in testim. for the specific purpose of giv- music has gone on without a sin- ing person* in all walks of lile Kte concert having been post- ,Bron 8UJlh ^kere S3glu B appropriations committee acced¬ James V. Forrestal, unrie ed to virtually every request for tary of the navy, who u large, fljled room In which to cliunce to hear music. The poned or cancelled. funds and sent to the floor for committee that the «ppi give their talks, to stand before program, to be given duiring ini the The audiences attending the "Yandful 5 haU iuteresU^lis expected approval the bill boost • tions were preliminary to lunch period, was dosigi jned to concerts during the terrible f-neM and honrt^. ing to an estimated $326,000,- operations in both At Unit last one hour, and the admission months of the bombing of Lon- seats wh« they are daSa 000,000 the nation's war outlay Pacific. fee was set at 25 cents. Three Rays before the don managed to pick their way prwto^ tlme lTor the Zd n concert was to be given, first an- frf^he'rftv''I'tr "ib* s,ndcnta of the city for the ^ Mirru, „thcr plucc who seem to prefer to nounccmcnts appeared in the Privilege of hearing the music, ETCH'ETTE STATIONERY newspapers. That was the only Tha Lwtdon Ham* stated that * * * Illustrated by Lola Fisher advance publicity given to this "lour out of five in the audiences g\NE of the moat baffling mys- enterprise, On the day of the ***1}n 'beir early twenties. The \J1 teries of the war against 79c a box concert, every available space shilling , . _ charged for admission Japan has recently come to was taken 10 minulM before the ™8 enahled young students to light with the conquest of "Farm." "Travel." "Mlaa Patriot," "Mistress Patriot." program was scheduled to begin Imar artists from whom, under Makin island in the Gilberts, "Romance." "Young Love." "Treee" and Pastel Florals and the dours of the gallery had pre-war conditions, they would Two American soldiers dis- to be closed, turning away hun- have been cut off by normal covered a pile of bloodstained drcds of people. concert prices." newspapers In a hut which had Since that time, the concerts have become the canter of mu- to Concerts similar in character been occupied by Jap troops be¬ thoae given in the NstionoLJore the island was captured, Marjorie Dee Shot no ABBOTT ROAD — EAST LANSING sical activity in wartime Lon- gallery in London have now 'The surprising thing was not don. Every day, Monday through been started in Oxford. Cam- so much finding the papers as On the eeraer diagonally across from the State Theater Friday, thousands of people as- bridge, Bath, Heading, Bristol, the fact that they were printed Hours 10 a. m. to 3:39 p. m. Phone 8-3112 scmble at the noon hour to hear and numerous other cities in in English and in the style of good music performed by famous England. the New York Times and were artists. It is heartening to know that dated a* late as April, 1*42, four Only once was it necessary to inside the British island fortress months after the Japs bombed hold the concert in another "there has never been such a Pearl Harbor, building. On that occasion a demand for music as there is to- The papers found were copies time bomb was discovered in a day. It Is not only the musically of the Japan Times and Adver- wrecked room in the National educated who attend the con- tiser which incorporated the gaUery. Except for that one day, certs, but many other* go be- Japan Chronicle and the concerts have been con tin- cause of the instinctive feeling Mail. ued without interruption. of security which listening to n. Advertiser was the onlv Japan A New Shipment When the dayli*>t raids on great music can and does give," American-owned *> frequent dally new.pa- m one of England s most distin- p<.r in jupjlo, having been pub- September, 1*40. the concerts guished musicians has reported, by Benjamin Fletshertor 30 years until November, 1942, of Fiber Stock when it was sold to the foreign office of the other two publica¬ tions. The reading matter offered in the papers which the American soldiers found wqg also interest¬ Laundry Cases ing. Including a story openly ridiculing Adolf Hitler for hav¬ ing one* said Germany should gain mastery of the EngUffi ehannel. only 30 miles wide. The Jap comment continued. "In the case of the Japanese $2.25 JPRW This country has been aettve over a great distance of MM mass, more than too times the width of the channel." stained English written . ** ****- papers found in the wake at Japanese retreatere is still a major mys¬ tery Of the war. _ Complete facta ware not m- • 'ig papery but to increase irf. ':>;J 4' Thursday* April 13, JM4 M Allied '>Chindits' Harry Jap MONTENEG (Continued irotn Pife J) Troop* Trapped in Burma lecturing in the Latin-American history classes, and plans for addresses in social science and foreign language classes are be¬ ing made. Montenegro is no new-cam - cr to this country. He spent 15 years here prior to 1329 as cor¬ respondent for El Mercurio, five Chilean newspapers, and spent five additional years as a speak¬ er. He has two sons serving in the United States army. The second and third lectures in the series will be given on Monday and Thursday of next Br MAY ANN MAJOR week when his topics will be "Characteristics of Latin-Ameri¬ can Culture" and "Latin-Ameri¬ can Probems After the War." movie slur MICHIGAN Patriot. I Floral! JG » Theater hone X-3112 Dean to Preside at Power Conference in (Itieagn Presiding as chairman of the Victor opening meeting of the midwest but there thousands who Maybe you've never hud to call the fire are more are power conference at the Palmer Bluebird deportment — maybe you never will. ready to do their share at a moment ! house. Chicago. this mom - But ifs a mighty comforting thought notice, the volunteer firemen. ing will be Dean H. B. Dirks, of Columbia to know that it's there, ready night and To all of these valiant the ..Engineering division. men, we of the day to save you and yours from one of Greyhound Lines pay sincere tribute. Friday morning Dr. C. Clyde Dccca — Okeb DeWitt, head of the department man's most treacherous and terrifying We're proud of these fellow-citizens— of chemical and metallurgical enemies. thankful for them, too. And we fed we Records engineering, will present to the The heroic work done by fire fighters have at least one thing in common with conference a paper. "A Statis¬ in so many of the towns and cities of them. They're fighting hard to improve tical Comparison of Fuels." The our Allies, which have been showered the safety record ai our State and so paper was jointly prepared by W. D. Baten. associate profes¬ with incendiaries and explosives, is arc we. In these tense and busy days, sor of mathematical statistics, drama itself. The job of our own fire¬ we feel that Greyhound, in providing and Dr. DeWitt. safe, convenient transportation between men right here at home in Michigan may be leas spectacular but it's no less this community and its good neighbor i, important—particularly to us. Yet most is also playing its part in making lfkhi- of us give little thought to this vital safeguard of our everyday life — until an emergency comes along There are 3,438 men in Michigan whose full-time job is the protection of hues and property of the citizens of this State. These are the regular firemen— CREYHOt ND TERMINAL US S. Grand M td IM W. Grand River Tsl »- GREYHOUND ■■ ■ u ten 19 A * ST A T a it if • Thurudgy, April 13, m Storttdhr^ettTwikr Allied Raider* Reported Sunk by s„|, Center Attack SAN rRANCISCO. (AP)—Thirty.three April 0fTic on Austria men were reported ml**i,i;. RKNKMt AcmrrrnM v.|; (he Standard Oil timk. Seniors may order their Invl- r'H tatlons Thursday and Friday in Collier was torpedoed M, Mraaerarhniitt Firlorim the lower lounge of the Union. by an enemy submarine „ , No orders will be accepted after Take Pounding from Arabian sea in mid-Mar. I, 5:30 p. m. Friday, according to 12 naval district American Ferrrs Prea. Larry Frymlre. annum.,,,| All aenior activities will be day. announced at the close of the Ten officers and men LONDON, April 12 (AP) , marriage lecture tonight. known to have been •—American 16th nlr force They have ndt yet rem h, ,t heavywelrhtrt from Itniy ARADUATS RXAMS Francisco. dealt a thundering blow Graduate exam reauMa are new available at the ertentattan today at Measerschmltt factories In Administration In Wiener-Neustadt, Austria, as office the tiad weather forced Liberators hNttdina. They may he ealted mid Fortresses from Britain to for at any Uaae. All thaao de¬ turn back after n 72-hour suc¬ siring to take the Interest Inven- cession of big-bomber attnex* tory with the gradmto exam ..gainst (icrmnn Kuro|>e from should make sppolnlmenU al the west. American ninth nlr force Ma¬ rauders and British Mosnultos from Britain assaulted airfields, rail yards and other targets in France and Belgium during the day. however, and hundreds of American lightnings, Thunder- holts and Mustangs made offen¬ sive sweeps against western tJcrmany and Holland, t'robslile Raid The Merlin radio broadcast a warning tonight that "enemy planes are over northwest, cen¬ tral and southwest (Sermany." Herman planes caused a one- hour alarm In London and anti¬ aircraft batteries and search¬ lights were In action. I( was the first alert in the capital since March ,11. Weather Adverse It was officially announced that some Liberator and Flying Fortress formations |ienetrateri over the continent from Britain but buil to return to their bases as llie weather closed In, Iou can bet it all that'TS' is the CLASSIFIED ADS Army Liberators Hit Guy-Popular at mail-call. Those R u rile Islands in folks of his never slip on sending 8CHWINN lutlkmn tire mm. n I N.w llrsa. Aim* lloUott trumiut, Second Air Raid plenty Chesterfields . .. and of K-4ITI Hill KtiTO«4l. IT. S. PACIFIC FLEET HDQ.. course being Aces himself, this IVarl Harbor, April 12 (AP)— U. S. army Liberators bombed makes a handsome combination. HINUI.K 8TRANII i—rU Matsuwa and Onnekotan in the Camtihrll ami nmlluiritim. of In Kurile Islands, losa than a thou¬ Sure, you've got it...( ainihiiiu- fnimn Cull lUt Ml. IMty llsOaiuhr. sand nautical mlleo from Tokyo, tion is what we're leading op to ItHOWN Hhraffrr fountain »hi». with »<«m« UN It, t*.«w to M net, Warm. on Monday. Adm. Cheater W. > •nktaHm t Call IM2M. tfewunt. Ntmlt* announcetl today. ... Chesterfield's taa-iaA-ta; It was the second raid ever reported against those two RIGHT COMBINATION northern Japanese bases. HKVKMAIs anOwth ma yuuni mrn to Other American planes, rang¬ »«*)! aU-|.arfw«aw -Uolmr knifa Uriionun ing the central Pacific thousands WORLD'S BIST TOBACCOS .vmiRhNkw I'hwr a-kWti. kVkiay P. M. and Ha I unlay 1BA.IIT.IJR ot miles to the south, bombed Moeu and Dublun islands of 5 Key-words for the Truk atoll, I'onapc and four ob¬ jectives in the Marshall islands. mlldor, botfor-tosting These raids also were on Mon- smoko that satisfies uy. Invest in Victory—Buy War Bonds and Stamps. » Start* Friday » FRI.. SAT. - SUN. SUNDAY AFTERNOON Presenting THE FINEST FLOOR SHOW JOMM NfSJlTT'S FASSINO PARADE TimaJguAIhurt-Nights ■It CIS Stations