TME MICHIIGAN DAILY w OR SCHOLARSHIPS, RESEARCH: Regents Accept Gifts and Grants for January Introducing ... i. Gifts, grants and bequests total- ig $452,679 were accepted by the tegents at their Jan. 22 meeting. The largest sum was $157,500 rom the estate of William W. tout to establish the William W. tout Scholarship. Income from he funds will be used for scholar- hlps for worthy students who will eed financial help "in order to et the maximum benefit from heir education." The Regents accepted $119,523 rom the estate of, Stanley D. McGraw, an 1892 graduate of the iniversity. Of this amount, $50,000 ill be added to the Stanley Dick- ison McGraw Student Loan Fund rd $69,523.09 to the Stanley Dickinson McGraw Scholarship und. This final payment from the. state brings to $1,121,310.62 the mount which the University has eceived. From the estate of Edith Bruce Morley the Regents accepted $40,- 00 in frll payment of the bequests nade in the will of Mrs. Morley. 3f the total, $25,000 is for Uni ersity Hospital and $15,000 is to stablish a scholarship to be nown as The William H. Morley ,nd Edith Bruce Fund, with both ncome and principal to be used -s the scholarship committee of he medical school seesfit. Give for Cancer American Cancer Society, Mich- gan Division, has given $16,894.25 or the University Cancer Re- earch Institute. Mrs. Standish Backus has given 00 shares of Burroughs Corpora- onl common stock with a current aarket value of approximately 10,500 to establish the Lotta B. ackus Scholarship and Fellowship 'und in Science and Engineering.' The fund is to be administered y the graduate school as follows: wo fellowships not in exces of 2,500 each for two predoctoral tudents in mathematics or the pysical sciences, two fellowships ot in excess of $2,500 each for a fth year of study by two senior tudents now in the College of ;gineering and the balance of 500 to be used for scholarships to ermit high school teachers of cience and mathematics to spend full summer in Ann Arbor while orking towards a master's de- ree. r I M r- There were three grants total- ling $6,375 from Parke, Davis & Company with one of $4,000 to support research on respiratory and polio vaccines under the di- rection of Dr. John M. Sheldon. A grant of $1,875 is for tissue cul- ture study under the direction of Dr. Donald J. Merchant, repre- senting, a first-quarter payment. A $500 grant is to establish the Parke, Davis Chemistry Lecturers Fund. From Lilly Endowment, Inc. the Regents accepted $6,000 for the Clements Library Fellowship, Fund. The grant makes it possible to award two fellowships each summer for visiting scholarq to do research at Clements Library in the general area of early American history.I There were two grants, totalling $5,400 from Upjohn Company, with 'a $3,000 grant for the com- pany's fellowship in pharmacy and one of $2,400 to establish a fund for research by Dr. Arthur G. Johnson of the medical school's bacteriology department. Represent Sale The Regents accepted $5,262.29 representing the sale of securities from Charles R. Walgreen, Jr. for the Pharmacy Research Building construction fund. An anonymous donor has given $5,000 for the construction fund for Botanical Gardens develop- ment. Another anonymous donor has given $5,000 'for use by the De- partment of Pediatrics in the Medical School. Ford Motor Company has made a grant of $5,000 to cover a one year's subscription to the Indus- Company the Regents accepted try Program of the engineering $2,250 for toxicology research. - -" ^ I- - college.I . Give Scholarships From Arthur D. Krom, 10 S. LaSalle St., Chicago 3, Ill., the Regents accepted $4,000 for the Eita Krom Fund which is used for scholarships. Another of the numerous grants from the Forney W. Clement Me- morial Foundation, Inc., was ac- cepted. This one, for $3,500, will be used to support the work of the Hospital School. The foundation is supported by the Kiwanis Clubs of Michigan. ' A doctoral fellowship In nuclear engineering will be established with $3,000 given by General Motors Research Laboratories. From Armour Pharmaceutical I Back Program There were two grants totalling $2,000 from Lincoln National Life Insurance Co. with $1,000 for the Actuarial Science Program and $1,000 for use by the Heart Sta- tion in the Medical Center. From the John Harvey Kellogg Estate, the Regents accepted $2,- 000 representing the first of 25 annual payments which the den- .tistry school will receive for its research program and teacher training. This is under the terms of the John Harvey Kellogg Memorial Fund established last November by the Regents. Through the Michigan Alumni Fund, Oscar R. Palomo has given $1,730.93 for the University Gua- tamalan Scholarship. A GreatBoo0,kstore MICHIGAN NEWCOMERS soon discover the resources of State Street include one of the mid-west's largest and best.book stores, Bob Marshall's Book Shopat 21 1 South State Street across from Lane Half. Bob Marshall's compares favorably with the best book stores of New York, Boston, and Chicago 1- I SWASTIKAS PAIN TED: Here's why: OSU, Northwestern, Illinois List Anti-Semitic Incidents ~ ~ ~~Y COLUMBUS-Two Ohio Univer- sity freshmen and an Ohio State University senior have been re-. moved from their respectiveschools for painting a swastika on the door of the Ohio State Hillel Foundation. The two freshmen were sus- pended indefinitely on unanimous recommendation of the Men's Disciplinary Committee at Ohio. The committee felt the painting of the swastika was "inexcusable" action for any college student, The Ohio University Post reported. The two freshmen will not be, able to apply for readmission until June, at which time a 'committee will consider their cases. The "OhioState Lantern" re- ported that the three student have apologized to Rabbi Harry Kaplan, Hillel director. The paper also reported that the students had -no anti-Semitic action in mind and the idea struck them after they had been drinking in bars. Later, swastikas drawn in crayon appeared on the rear door of anI Ohio State building. Police investi- gated the incident, but no results were announced. s , , a EVANSTON-A four foot high black swastika was painted on the side of the Tau Delta Phi fra- ternity house at Northwestern. The university's superintendent of building and grounds removed the swastika early in the morning, before Tau Delt members realized it was there. An attempt'was made to trace' the paint, according to the Daily Northwestern, but it is a "widely used brand." In an apparently unrelated inci- dent, a white swastika appeared' on a Northwestern bulletin board, scrawled across an ad for the motion picture "Open City," a story of Nazi tyranny in wartime Italy. LACROSSE-A LaCrosse State Teachers College student and a friend admitted stenciling red swastikas and the words "Jews Get Out" on the Abraham-Syna- gogue. The pair reportedly also burned a Star of David in front of the synagogue in this Wisconsin city,. * * *9 TUSCON - Two University of Arizona freshmen involved in a wave of anti-Jewish vandalism in Tuscon were sentenced to five days in city jail and fined $50 apiece. The two were apprehended by police shortly after they had painted anti-Semitic symbols and an anti-Semitic slogan on Green- berg's Kosher Meat and Poultry, a delicatessen. Both students admitted the paintingObut said in court it was "a spontaneous prank." They apologized, saying they had no grudge against the store owner or against Jews in general. University officials met to decide the students' fate, but "in accord- ance with administrative policy" made no comment on their deci- $ion, according to the Arizona Wildcat. The students asked for leniency in court, saying they had already been expelled from school, which was punishment enough. BOULDER--Alpha Epsilon Phi scorority and Phi Sigma Delta fra- ternity, both predominantly Jew- ish, reported swastikas painted on their houses the morning after an AEPhi pledge dance. , University of Colorado Dean of Student Arthur H. Kiendl said the person who painted the swas- tikas "certainly will be subject to university discipline. There is no question of that in my mind." BETHLEHEM -Members of Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity at Le- high Uniyersity awoke one Sunday morning to find a sign in front of their house daubed with two 10- inch swastikas. The police investigated the in- cident but reported little progress, according to the Lehigh Brown and White. B I O pd n BURLINGTON-A predominant- ly Jewish fraternity at the Uni- versity of Vermont has received threatening letters recalling the name of Buchenwald Concentra- tion. Camp. CHAMPAIGN - Swastikas were painted on three fraternity houses and the Hillel Foundation of the University of Illinois. Three blue and grey swastikas- one on the sidewalk, another on a front window and a third on the front door -- were discovered at Zeta Beta Tau. Grey swastikas were painted on the back of the Phi Epsilon house. Another, also grey, was found on the front sidewalk at Phi Kappa Theta. Earlier in the week, five swas- tikas appeared on the front of the Hillel building. Police were con- tinuing their investigation but had found no clues. AT FLINT JUNIOR COLLEGE: U' Alumni Establish Trust Fund To Support Study The Elsa U. Pardee Foundation as made two grants totalling L0,200, with $5,400 to support a tudy on statistical factors in ancer and $4,800 for the Elsa U. ardee fellowships in cancer re- larch training. From Wallace Frost the Re- ents accepted $10,000 to estab- sh the Wallace and Grace Frost cholarship Fund. This fund will e used to provide five $2,0001 ,holarships for freshmen with wo of the scholarships to be warded in 1960, two in 1961 andJ ne in 1962. A third quarterly payment of! 7,442.88 was accepted from fichigan Heart Association for ze medical school Dean's Fund. Special to The Daily FLINT-Two University gradu- ates and their son recently estab- lished a trust fund for Flint Junior College. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Edmund Brownell and Edmund Begole Brownell created the Begole- Brownell Trust Fund, to be ori- ented toward improving the amount and quality of aid avail- able for study in the humanities and social sciences. The Brownells said that the reason that they chose these areas rather than the sciences was that, in spite of the impor- tance of the natural and physical sciences, they felt that the latter fields are already receving gener- ous aid throughout the nation. The annual income from the fund will be used for scholarships to Flint Junior College and to other institutions for graduates of the junior college, monetary awards to faculty members for distinguished service, and to pro- vide for visits to the campus by eminent persons to deliver lec- tures or meet informally with stu- dents and faculty. Flint Junior College Dean Clyde E. Blocker said that this "repre- sents an important step forwArd in the next phase of the growth" of the junior college. "It will greatly enhance the en- richment of the intellectual sta- ture of the institution," he con- tinued. The younger Brownell will be one of the trustees for the fund, and will be assisted by a policy committee to be set up to aid in the administration of the monies. Dean Blocker will be the chair- man of this committee. The elder Brownell is a Univer- sity graduate and lawyer in Flint and is former president of the Michigan Bar Association and was prosecuting attorney of Gene- see County for two terms. His son, also a University grad- uate, is an instructor in the Flint Junior College political science department. * MORE BOOKS - more individual titles from which to choose than any other store in middle-USA. * BETTER BOOKS -- a carefully-selected and discriminat- ing stock of the good and great books of this and all the past centuries of publishing, representing most fields of man's search for knowledge and self-expression. * MORE PAPER-BOUNDS - at Bob Marshall's you'll find one of the largest selections of, quality paper-backs any- where ... plus a huge selection of low-priced paper backs. * MORE BARGAINS - there is always a sale at Bob Mar- shall's. Usually the sale is of considerable proportions (as it is right now) with several thousand different titles on sale table display. These sale tables are loaded with the cream of currently-available offerings of publisher's over- stocks and remainders, all marked way down. The sale tables at Bob Marshall's change rapidly with new stock added every week of the year. * MORE USED BOOKS - our South Wall is a good used book shop in itself, a shop within a shop. All the used titles at Bob Marshall's are modestly-priced. The original price is listed also. If the title is out-of-print that information is furnished too, * MORE BROWSING - browsing is an integral and natural part of the bookish atmosphere at Bob Marshall's. Com- fortable chairs, lots of room, and a lack of high-pressure (or even low-pressure) selling tactics back up this invita- tion. You are always welcome, even during the so-called textbook rush, to come browsing here. You will never be made uncomfortable or out-of-place if you do not choose to buy.. , assuming you can resist the blandishments and temptations of a fabulous stock. It is not an overstatement to suggest that browsing at Bob Marshall's is an essential part of your university experience. * MORE HOURS - for your convenience and especially for your browsing pleasure, gob Marshall's is open seven days a week: Monday through Saturday from 9 A.M. to 10 P.M.; Sunday from 2 P.M. to 10 P.M. On Sundays we carry The New York Times. * MORE SERVICES - our staff is a full-time, professional staff of experienced book people whose competence is accompanied by an almost "missionary" zeal for good books. We can obtain any book you want regardless of' the country of origin, whether in print, or out-of-print. Gift-wrapping and/or wrapping-for-mailing at no charge. * LESS ETC. - because this is a book store, believing in the efficacy and the viability of the world of books, you will find no supplies, no sweat shirts, no mish-mash . .. noth- ing but books plus a few accessories like book plates and art prints. ti 'ofessorship atus Altered i CO MING A change in the Richard Hudson rofessorship of History at the niversity was approved by the egents at their January meeting, The professorship, renamed the ichard Hudson Research Profes- rship, will be open to associate ofessors and professors in the istory department on an annual asis. Previously it has been open aly to full professors on a con- nuing basis. ; r M W s j l ': March 5 f , r , , f it t r i V, lip' 1171 /. } i i i i y 'i I I i i i iI STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY. Proudly Presents to U. of M. STUDENTS4 SPECIAL SPRING SEMESTER RATES Magazine Special Regular (faculty or students) TIME ............$3.87-1 yr...... .$7.00--1 yr. Like I said, LIFE . ........... Newsweek{.......... Fortune . . .. .. ....M Sports Illustrated ... . Sat. Eve. Post . ....... New Yorkerf........ Architectural Forum ..« Esquire ........... Atlantic Monthly .... New Republic ........ Nation :............ 4.00-1 yr....... 5.95-1 3.50-1 yr....... 7.00-1 7.50-1 yr....... 10.00-1 4.00-1 yr....... 7.50-1 4.79-60 weeks.. 6.00-1 3.00-8 months... 7.00-1 3.25-1 yr....... 6.50-1 2.00-8 months.. 6.00-1 2.50-8 months.. 7.50-1 5.00-1 yr....... 8.00-1 6.00-1 yr....... 8.00-1 yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. yr. you 'll split when you see A GREAT GENERAL BOOK STORE SERVING THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY those crazy Valentines at :hester Roberts. 312 S. State , 3n E ,,. . Mail your order NOW so that your subscription will begin in the semester. Or, if you are in Ann Arbor, phone your order to our office, 2-3061. "STUDENT OWNED - STUDENT OPERATED - TO SERVE MICHIGAN STUDENTS" -~ ~ ~~ ... w...a-a-~ -- ~- - ii I I STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY Box 2006 Ann Arbor, Michigan LOUIS ARMSTRONG BOB MARSHALL'S BOOK SHOP' Al 11