P.r si THE MICHIGAN DAILY TftrUR. i: iDi. i ii :'2; 19$ Name Arthur Klein For Speech Contest y "tedy t- in ir c:1nt 1vttj ieganin the Noitherii rihatotca Llagie con-i test t be held at ti University of Iowa May 5, according to Prof. Louis M. Eich. He won the honor for his speech "Baby, Tell Me How To Belong." Prof. Gail E. Densmore, Professor Eich and Herbert C. Weller, of the speech department, acted as judges. Other contestants were Oliver Cra- ger, '39; William Muehl, '41, and Louis Poplinger, '39. Barbour Scholars Shown Here To Return For Service In Orient 225 Applications Are Received 4 For A inmi eholarhip Awarids 'I iFro a n a5 ppi at-obs fuI i j i gan :pmited i Tiese clubs are uiiv r3, of 4ip11ii A iii1 U in dree t contact with desirable stu- dergraduate Scholarships are now dent prospects for the University. under consideration by Dr. C. S. The three bases for awarding the Librarians Plan Supper The Ann Arb~or Junior librarian Club will hold a. Pot Luck Supper at Room of the Gvaduate School. A ihngqiien=r~ are being handled by Frances Vivian, Grad., Marian *?j McAmbley, Grad., and Donald Rod, Grad. H. W. CLARK English Boot and Shoe Maker S Our new repair department,.the best in the city. Prices are right. 438 South State and Factory on South Forest Avenue. - Yoakum, vice president of the Uni- versity in charge of educational in- vestigations, it was announced yes- terday by Robert O. Morgan, council seei (ary of the Alumni Association. 'Te s holarships are granted an- nually to 75 graduates of accredited high schools in Michigan by the Board of Regents, under the direction and supervision of Dr. Yoakum. Recommendations for the scholar- ships, all ofwhich were filed by March 15, come from the 45 alumni and alumnae organizations in the State, scholarships, which are potentially worth tuition for four years, plus remission of semester fees, are finan- cial need, scholarship and character. A rune year scholarship is originally granted, but this is continued for four years depending upon satisfac- tory scholastic average. Actual recipients this year will be announced by Dr. Yoakum not later than May 15. About 190 students, representing all four classes, are now attending the University on these scholarships, Morgan stated. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY WANTED WANTED+Old copies of Michigan Daily for Sunday, April 3, 1938, and Friday, March 18, 1938. Call. Mrs. Rogers, 2-3241. 458 WANTED-Clothing wanted to buy. 8 u i t s, overcoats, typewriters, watches. Sam pays the most. Phone 6304 for appointment. 388 WANTED VOTES-Vote for better lighting in the library by electing Frank Dubell to Student Senate, March 31. 493 WANTED-Textbook for Political Science 52, Government of Fascist Italy. Call Ed, phone 6092. Thanks. 541 WANTED--Three tickets for Nation- al Collegiate Swimming Meet. Call Morin, 2-2171. 537 WANTED--Speech book, The Work- ing Principles of Argument by O'Neill and McBurney. Bob Wg- ner, 2-2565. BEAUTY PARLORS JUANITA'S HOUSE of Beauty, ex- perienced complete service, reason- able prices. Phone 3023, 410 Wol- verine Bldg., 4th and Washington. 514 MONTH-END SPECIAL-Regular $6 Eugene permanents $3.50. College Beauty Shop, phone 2-2813, open revenings. 531 MOVING SERVICE MIOVING-A and C Cartage, storage. Local and long distance hauling. Every load insured. 325 S. Fifth, Phone 9835. 522 ELSIFOR Cartage Co., Inc., local and long distant moving, storing, pack- ing, shipping. Every load insured. 310 W.. Ann Phone 4297. 526 H. B. GODFREY Moving, storage. Local and long distance moving. 410 North Fourth Ave. Phone 6927. 525 DECORATORS HOME DECORATORS-Decorating, painting. Budget plan if desired. Dial 7209. 181 PAINTING and Decorating, interior and exterior. Cleaning windows, walls, woodwork washed. Guaran- teed. Reasonable. References. Phone 2-1280 8-6. 548 PAINTING Paperhanging, wall wash- ing, paper cleaning and all interior and exterior decorating. First class .workmen. Phone W. P. Jacobson, 2-1320. 517 REAL ESTATE GRANGER Avenue-Six rooms with .arge living room and fireplace and three good sized bedrooms. Garage Priced reasonably with terms. Ed- ward M. Couper, Realtor, State Savings Bank Bldg. Phone 2-1322. 510 MISCELLANEOUS WASHED SAND and Gravel, Drive- way gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, Phone 7112. 17 TO SWAP-New guitar for what have you. Call Yale Coggan, 6738 at 616 Church. 505 FURNACES VACUUM cleaned and re- paired. Carl Sweet, 2-3578. Succes- sor to Carl Heinzelman, formerly Marshall Furnace. 518 BLACK DIRT and manure. Also ashes and rubbish hauling. Work guaran- teed satisfactory. H. Tolman. Phone 2-2926. 523 SPECIAL-Paste Waterless Cleaner. Was $1 gal, now 79c. Factory Paint Store. Phone 2-2440. 516 CARPETS CLEANED, sewing and laying. Oriental rugs washed. Amer- ican Rug Cleaning Works, Green St. Phone 8115. 5201 L - EL SF D Mon., Tues., Wed., 50c Croquignole Specials The above photographs are of the Levi Barbou r Scholars for the year 1938-1939 and three of the fornieti scholars now resident in Ann Arbor. Seated left to right are Mrs. Joseph Yamagiwa of Japan, a former scholar; Esperanza Castro and Gloria Cortes, both of the Philippine Islands; Amna Ali of India; Primitive Ilemandante of the PhiliIxpine Islands; Vung-yuin Chang of China. First row standing: Sada Kato of Japan; Nakibe Topuz and Behice Sadik, of Turkey; Choon-cha Lee of China; Kamala Kosambi of India; Mrs. Carmen Velas- quez -of the Philippine Islands, a former scholar; Celia Chao of China. Second row: Toyoko Nagashima, of Japan, former scholar; Civili Sinhanetra of Siam; Su- Hsuen Wt, Phoebe Wei, Ilsi-yin Sheng and Ming-chen Wang, all of China; Kikue Oshima and Naomi Fukuda, both of Japan; Katherine Tseng of China. Back row, Yao Shen, Louise Chang, Tuh-wei Chang, Victoria Kiang, Poe-eng Yu, Bing-chung Ling, Violet Wu and Jean Chu, all of China. ScholarShips Help East Meet West UGENE OIL- H ELTON- AACH I NELESS- UART- SHAMPOO & FINGERWAVE $350 Thur., FiA., St., 65c CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOP PHONE 2-1379 711 N. UNIV OPENING EVENINGS mmol I I if 1F 4.-.._ _________________ ____________________________________________________________________ - ------ - I By MALCOLM LONG Taking an education in America back for service in the Far East and bringing the East and the West into closer contact are two of the benefits accomplished by the foundation of the Barbour Scholarships for Orien- tal Women, according to University officials. Announcement of the appoint- ments for the coming year will be made next week, Prof. W. Carl Rufus, secretary of the Scholarship Com- mittee and adviser to the Scholars said yesterday. Seeing at first hand the excellent work being done by three Orientalf women trained at the University of Michigan and realizing the great op- portunities for women in the Orient, Levi L. Barbour, '63, '65L, conceived the idea of the Barbour Scholarships for Oriental women. Barbour, while on a trip in the Far East, observed the work of Dr. Oda Kahn and Dr. Mary Stone of China, and Dr. Tomo Inouyi of Japan in the field of medicine. On his re- expenses, only for the academic year. turn to the United States, he estab- All travel, vacations and personal lished the scholarships and later in- vested some $650,000 for the founda- tion. Approximately 25 awards are made annually to women of Oriental na- tionality without racial or religious requirements. The women are select- ed on the basis of scholastic attain- ment, ability to use the English lan- guage for study and classroom pur- poses, marked ability in a special field and a desire to return to her native land for service after suitable preparation is made. Selection is made by a committee composed of the President of the University, the Deans of the Graduate School, the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, the Medical School and the Dean of Women. Awards are made annually but fre- quest reappointments are made up to four years. The stipend amounts to $650 a year and University fees, which covers expenses, the students VA expense must come from the students personal resources. Most interesting are the two quali- fications that appointments, except in unusual circumstances, are made only to unmarried women, and that appointment is subject to admission to the United States under the "Stu- dent Section" of the Immigration Act. This latter provides for the entry to this country of foreigners who come only for a specified period and for the specific purpose of study. -4 11. of theit . in the Unct "Chesterfield of the finest a choicest'of se ins the correct qualities of e SC h - mo I BILL BOYD and his Orchestra at your House-Party deotes Prestige, Indiuiduality, and a Perfect Musical Evening. BOYD-PIERCE ORCH ESTRA SERVICE 204 Nickels Arcade Dial 3512 i1 11 1} F 219 SOUTH MAIN STREET 'I SIX STEPS TO MORE SMOKING PLEASURE AGEING-Chesterfield's mild ripe tobaccos, like fine wines, are aged for two or more years in huge wooden casks. Here they gradu- ally acquire that true Chesterfield nildness and bettertaste which give millions of smokers more pleasure. STEMMING-"Almost human" is what they say about the inter- esting stemming machines, whose fingers pick up the tobacco, leaf by leaf and take out the stem, leaving only the mild, tender, good-tasting part of the leaf to go into the making of Chesterfields. 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