. THE MCICI4AN DAILY i TUESDAY, APRIL A, 1941 Coal Institute Will Convene HereApril 15 Meeting To Be Sponsored By Extension Service And Engineering College Glover Will Speak All parts of the nation will be represented by merchants and fuel experts at the fifth annual Retail Coal Utilization Institute to be held here April 15 and 16 under the au.s- pices of the University College of Engineering and the Extension Serv- ice in cooperation with Michigan Re-- tail Coal Merchants and Michigan a coal and coke salesmen. Opening the two-day institute, Mr. H. A. Glover, vice-president of Is- land Creek Coal Sales Company of West Virginia, will deliver an address entitled "Modernizing Solid Fuel Merchandising. Mr. R. S. Lane, mechanical engin- eer of the Pocahontas Fuel Com- pany of New York, will give the sec- ond talk on "Satisfying the Demand for, Automatic Heat with Coal." As a special feature on the first day's program, Mr. L. J. Whitlock, Jr., of the Norfoflk and Western Rail- way Company, will present a techni- color motion picture entitled "The Power Behind the Nation." The second day's roster of speak- ers includes John D. Battle of the National Coal Association; M. J. Togh of the Michigan Bell Telephone Co., Fred L. Jewett of the Toledo , etail Cdal Merchants Assoc., and L., W. Garver of the Leckie Coal Company of Columbus, Ohio. Six Entrants Now Chosen For Finals Of Speech Contest' Six contestants were named to compete in Speech 32 finals tomorrow' in Hill Auditorium after the prelim- inary rounds yesterday. John Dreher, '41, speaking on "The Know-It-All," will participate in the final contest. John O'Dell, '41, will deliver his speech, "Medical Aid To China"; Jim Bob Stephenson, '43, "The Minister Speaks His Piece": and John Steward,. '43, "That's As Far As I'll Go." From the 14 preliminary contest- ants Dean Thomas, '42, will speakl on "Hope of the Future" and Joy Louise Wright, '43, on "The Second American Revolt." Prof. Henry Moser will aat a~s chairman of the contest. Judges will be announced later. Prof. Young Ann Arbor's Mayor-Eleet (Continued from Page 1) He has held an elective office ver since 1932 when ne was choser to represent the seventh ward on th city council. After gaining experience in coca government by holding such import- ant council posts as chairman of th' ordinance and budget committees he was elected by local voters ir 1937 to the presidency of the counci and he has held that position up tc the present time. In 1926 he had a political exper- ience which he looks back on now with amusement. In order to make ;ood his campaign promises to clean out the state conservation depart- ment the late Gov. Fred Green ap- pointed Young state director of con- servation. Young took office at thE beginning of that year with the gov- ernor's assurance that he could con- duct the agency free from any politi- cal interference. Because the forestry expert ignored requests for patronage appointments and privileges for special group' heavy pressure was put on Green. As a result Young was forced out of office and he resumed his teaching duties here in the fall. This exper- ience has given Young an under- standing of the politipal game plus a rich fund of anecdotes. The mayor-elect was born in Al- bia. Iowa in 1883. Pe began his col- legiate career at Columbia and then came here where he received his mas- ter's degree in 1911. Although he had vowed that "teaching was the last thing he wanted to do," he became an instructor at the University the fall' after graduation and has continued on the faculty until the present. He assumes the community's hfgh- est public office with unusual attri- butes. One of his colleagues on the council declared "that he has ex- tremely sound judgment" and likes to be thoroughly informea. Litzenberg Presents Recordings To Quad Prof. Karl Litzenberg, of the Eng- lish department, director of residence halls, has presented the East Quad- rangle with a recording of Brahms', Piano Concerto Number Two in hon- or of the three all-A freshmen in the East Quad last semester. The all-A freshmen, all of whom are in the lit school, are: James Con- 'nt, of Greene house; Harver Lem- men, of Prescott House and Warren Smith, of Greene House. ...- - - -..-... - - - PICTURE NEWV S I H E R E' S A S O U T H P A W S P U D- P EE L E R--How Private Hoyett Pruitt can peel potatoes so fast at Panama City, Fla., after a march from Fort Benning, Ga., surprises Wilhelmina Maddox, 4. THE IN TERM I S S I O4N--Rarely-seen Mrs. Andrew Car- negie (right) chats with Clare Boothe, playwright, at a New York luncheon for Viscountess Halifax. Miss Boothe, one of speakers, urged American women to greater "sacrifices for the democracies." 3! S P R I N C P R I N T S-As soon as Science-in the person of Harry J. Myers (left), Pennsylvania criminologist-was served, Ivy licked off the ink used to get her fingerprints at Philadelphia. Similarities, if any, to man's prints, will be studied. H E R S A R E H E A LIN G H A N DS-In these hands of Mrs. IdellaG. Manisera of Los Anigeles is a canary who's going to take some medicine whether he likes it or not. As a chilMrs. Mariisera hoped to become a doctor but fate ruled otherwise so she now ministers to birds, with special em- phasis on canaries. Once, she even sewed feathers back on a canary scalped by another bird. N dI N E W C O M E R-Lloyd Spencer' (above), 47, farmer and self-styled country banker, is the new senator from Arkansas succeeding John E. Miller who resigned to become a federal judge. Spencer's appointment is for a term of almost two years. f i JOCKEY FROM TOKYQ-Around Bowie, Md., Harry J. Takara (above), 44, who's believed to be the only Japanese owner- L A T E S N O W F A L L-.Unseasonable snow flurries might trainer-jockey in U.S., is quite a figure, known as Tki. He says have produced this frothy swirl that passes for a hat suitable for he's a little old to jockey and figures on retiring to one of his two cocail pr this nrwedynsbtinta tsesrthe work of John farms in Virginia and New York. He came to U.S.A. in 1916 after cocktail pFaresrica wo used 10 ards i dotted cheile. having been on tracks in China, South Africa, Argentina. ...::...... . .....:: J :. y. .. .. .. h:.. \r\. .:.:. r ::: \::. .r 3 .. ... ..r...... ..... .. ... _ .. _.._ r .. t.,, . a . ...... .r:.::::::rv'r.4:i}?i}'.::: :::.:. v.: ::::.:.. .: :::::::. r . . X . . ... .. , ._ . . . . .... ....... . .. .. . .. ,._ . . .x . >. F..: r t .::":::: }i}}'4... ^ w; }r:::: w.v.:: . 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