0 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 28, 194 lw Gov. Dickinson To Speak Here Cooley Cane To Be Given At Tung Oil Banquet (Continued from Page 1) fence and presented one of the pickets" to the then Professor Cooley who used it as a cane for a number of ye-ars. Among the other prizes which will be awarded at the Banquet are bronze stumps for the winners of various types of student speech contests and gavels made of tung oil wood for the runners up. The types of speech contests which will be judged are the Hall of Fame talk, nominating some noted engin- eer into the honored circle; the pro- ject talk convincing someone of an idea, the raconteur or story telling ad- dress and the after dinner speech. An additional award, will be given to the man who has done most for the organization. Red Cross Gathers More Than $1,900 Donations totalling $1,900 have been received by the Washtenaw County Chapter of the American Red Cross, it was announced yesterday. In a recent communication re- ceived from thenational headquar- ters of the American Red Cross' it was urged that the local chapters over- subscribe their quotas if possible as the need of funds for relief has in- creased considerably from the amount deemed necessary at the outbreak of the war. Scholarships, Grants, Assist 600 Students Nearly six hundred students, in- cluding 403 men and 193 women, have been the recipients of scholarships, fellowships and grants during the current school year, Dr. F. E. Robbins, assistant to the President, said yes- terday. The largest group of recipients of financial aid consists of 216 Michi- gan Alumni Undergraduate Scholars, 133 men and 86 women. Fifty are added to this group each year, and. recently provision was made to add an extra 25 freshmen annually, select- ing those from rural or semi-rural districts 'where alumni clubs are not organized, Doctor Robbins explained. Graduate students holding schol- arships and fellowships number 178, 51 being women. Six men hold De- troit and Ann Arbor Alumni Club Scholarships. The total amount awarded to stu- dents for the current year comes to approximately $150,000, Doctor Rob- bins said, pointing out that there are 11 different kinds of scholarships established by the Board of Regents. In addition, there are four dormi- tory scholarships, 65 endowment funds of which some are inactive and 42 grants made on an annual basis Not counting alumni scholarships and scholarship-holders in the Grad- uate_ School, distribution of students receiving aid according to divisions of the University is as follows, he said: literary college, 29 men and 39 women; engineering school, 56 men; Medical School, 17 men and three women; Law School, 10 men. Allied Armies Fight Against D~estru ction ENGLAND OTNT E [?uNKER UE GHENG C 0CALA / LOUVAiN A PRESS MASTRIC BOULOGNE \MER4CURTRA1 USES ABELILLE yulU/tAI REGE LILLE R/AMUR A7 MONTED DA1 VALENC ENNES-P ARRASU MAUBEUGE ABBEVILLE CAMBAI " Sp6BAPAUME * SERONN R PE AMESST MCHEL DIEPP AMINS" ST OU NTrN .A FESED No wONTMEDY ROUEN t L NGWY SOISSONSp PA RIS f ss MILES Mere are the latest developments in the heavy fi guting en the Western Front of hurope s war. Th French admitted loss of the channel port of Calais (1) and the Germans claimed capture of Boulogne, a scant five minutes by air from Britain. Belgian troop s at Courtrai (2) counter-attacked to force the enemy to halt its offensive temporarily. On the Somme Rive r (3) French troops dented enemy lines. Jn the 20- mile-wide bottleneck in the Bapaume and Perrone sectors (4) the Allies held firm. The French also reported a "strong enemy attack was repulsed" in the Montme dy region (5) at the northwest end of the Maginot Line. B o"Ten I HighIligIhis . By GEORGE SALLADE O.S.U. this week was planning May Day program on which a panoramic review of the year, depicting Queens'. athletes and other notables was scheduled for the stadium. The day's festivities are to be closed by a May supper at the local field house. It *was just three weeks ago that this column told of the selecting of a "Belle of the Forties" by the Lillian R ussi -t Club at Iowa. Since then, the lucky young lady who was selected has come into her own by reigning as Queen of the Lillian Russell Day cele- bration for the world's premier of the film, "Lillian Russell" at Clinton, Ia. She was presented at a luncheon by none other than Don Ameche. The University of Illinois holds the center of the political arena this week. The Republican Mock Politi- cal Convention at Champaign, with more than 1,000 students participat- ing. nominated New York's Tom Dewey as its candidate for Presi- dent. Pens - Typewri "Writers Trade RIDI 3102 South Coffee Hour Will Be Givell I )an v'oakum To A A ress (Ixidflate SOcial (Croup Last of the graduate coffee hours for the current year. to take place from 4 to 6 p.m. today in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building, will feature a talk by Dean C. S. Yoakum of the Graduate School on "Personnel Adjustments", accord- ing to Jean Brown, Grad., chairman of the coffee hour committee. Dean Yoakum is known as one of the four men having done research on this problem, Miss Brown added, and the results of much of his work on office efficiency and salesman- ship have been taublished in the Per- sonnel Journal. Among Dean Yoak- um's special fields of study, Miss Brown revealed, are psychology and personnel work. The coffee hour is the last of a series sponsored by the coffee hour committee of the Graduate Council. All graduate students and mem- bers of the faculty are invited to at- tend this afternoon's coffee hour. ters - Supplies With Rider's" State St. New Police Tower Furnishes County Communication .System IHANDY SERVICE Sheriff, City Sco Obtain Closer With Powerful ut Cars occurred. The police would then re- Contact Radio DR I Handy Service Advertising Rates Cash Rates 12e per reading line for one or two insertions. 10e per reading line for three or more insertions. Charge Rates 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 13e per reading line for three or more insertions. Five average words to a reading line. Minimum of three lines per Insertion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST Our Want-Advisor, will be de- lighted to assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop at the Michigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard Street. FOR RENT TO RENT for summer-seven-room furnished house. Available June 15. Call 2-3643. 428 FURNISHED APARTMENT: Four rooms; two bedrooms; three or four people; three single rooms.' 341 E. Liberty.. 481 PLJEAANT ROOMS -Single and double. 928 Forest. For summer and fall-Shower. Phone 2-2839. 479 ATTRACTIVE suburban apartments, convenient to University. Unfur- nished six rooms, $35.50; five rooms, $35.50; seven rooms, $40.50; stove, refrigerator, electric water heater, use of laundry, garage. Other apartments furnished and unfurnished. Oril Ferguson, 928 Forest. Phone 2-2839. 480 - MOVING - STEVENS INTERSTATE MOVING We Deliver In Any Direction Our Own Vans 410 N. Thayer St. Phone 2-3802 ELSIFOR MOVING & STORAGE CO. Local and Long Distance Moving Storage - Packing - Shipping Every Load Insured 310 W. Ann Phone 4297 MISCELLANEOUS -20 WANT TO contact man who owns cocker spaniel-seen in Superior Dairy with dog. Phone 5790. 473 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list- ings of your vacant houses in The Daily for summer visiting profes- sors. Dial 23-24-1 for special -'ates. LAUNDERING -9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 16 SITUATIONS WANTED -2 BY MAN AND WIFE as porter and cook in Fraternity. First class lo- cal reference. Phone 6764. 472 HELP WANTED WANTED: A University girl to earn room and board in nice family of three adults. Phone 4457. 478 WANTED-Passenger to help with driving to Great Falls, Montana, or points enroute; leaving June 12th. Edith L. Hoyle, Teacher, University High School. Phone 9570, Sat. and Sun. evenings. 467 ALERT PERSONS needed for profit- able employment; solve your sum- mer job problem by seeing Bob Decker or Pete Gossard at 1415 Cambridge before June 1st. 471 STRAYED, LOST, FOUND-1 A DOXA gold wrist watch with black band--about two weeks ago. Re- ward. Call 2-2868. FOUND: Two good reversibles-left in Metzger's Restaurant. 203 East Washington Street. 474 ARTICLES FOR SALE FOR SALE: Buick coupe, $50.00. Drive it home--sell for more. 310 No. Thayer., WANTED-TO BUY-4 BEN THE TAILOR-More money for your clothes. Open evenings. 122 E. Washington. 329 TYPING-18 TYPING-L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., Phone 5689. 374 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist and notary public-excellent work. 706 Oakland, phone 6327. 20 HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown, 512 $. Main Street. 146 ANY OLD CLOTHING-PAY $5.00 TO $500. SUITS, OVERCOATS, FURS, MINKS, PERSIAN LAMBS, DIAMONDS, TYPEWRITERS, & CASH FOR OLD GOLD. PHONE SAM-6304. SUNDAY APPOINT- MENTS PREFERRED. 359 By EUGENE MANDELBERG The new orange and white tower' behind the Fire Department should prove a boon to the police and sheriff's departments and likewise make life miserable for all law breakers. For that 196 foot tower is the new two way communication system set up by the city to coordinate the city and county law enforcement depart- ments. Until the erection of the tower, police used a two way com- munication system, but only among themselves. The little tower over the City Hall annex was able to serve he police in the city, but it was not powerful enough to send out messages through the county. Also, the sher- iff's prowl cars were not in touch with their headquarters; they received all information through the state police radio. With the new tower, however, the police and sheriff's cars will have two way communication with the police department and the police will have the added advantage of being able to send calls through- out Washtenaw County. Not only will this new system pull the police and sheriff's departments closer to- gether, but it will enable them to act much more quickly in the capture of escaping criminals. Formerly, a report to the police station of a robbery took an average of one minute and forty-five seconds to come in-after the robbery had lay the report to their prowl cars who would attempt to block the roads. Sheriff's cars would not receive word of the crime until the sheriff had 'phoned the state police and they had sent the message back to the sheriff's cars in the city. Group Installs New Officers Chemical Engineers Plan Last MeetingTonight Members of the student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will meet for the installa- tion of officers at 6:15 p.m. today in the Union. Speaker for the evening will be R. A. Hayward, president of the Kala- mazoo Vegetable Parchment Co., who will select and announce his own topic. At the beginning of the past few meetings a short quiz has been given, and as this is the final meeting of the year, the high point man in these quizzes will be awarded a copy of Perry's Handbook. New officers to be installed tonight are Lowell R. Moss, '41E, president; Orrin G. Youngquist, '41E, first vice- president; Donald W. Ryker, '41E, second vice-president; Robert K. Mc- Camey, '41E, secretary, and Bruno' Rocca, '41E, treasurer. ore in Exchange ALL YOUR tfFOLLETT'S for FOLET T'S MICHIGAN BOOK STORE 322 South State Street at North University Phone 6363 b$ FOR COOL MILD GOOD SMOKING CHESTERFIELD IS "AT YOUR SERVICE" Anywhere cigarettes are sold just say "Chesterfields please"~ and you're on your way to complete smoking pleasure . . . always at your service with the Right Combi- Your Favori te Dance n "lHits" ..( by the "big name' bands on HI CLI~'x'V I 1 IL12 Is 11 call^DCr III 11 III I I ..action room