PAGE SIX-SECTION ONE THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1940 ,naval ROTC Paiecs Quota At X110 Frosh Davidson, Annapolis Man, To Head Training Staff For Navy Commissions With Capt. Lyal A. Davidson at the helm, Michigan's newly formed Naval ROTC unit will begin its first year of activity this fall to train some 110 freshmen for commissions in the United States Navy. A graduate of Annapolis in 1910, Captain Davidson was connected with several training squadrons dur- ing the World War before being as- signed to serve on ships escorting transports to Europe. During the past few years he has been in com- mand of the light cruiser, U.S.S. Omaha enforcing neutrality in the Caribbean. Assisting him will be Lieut. Com- mander Wells L. Field and Lieut. Robie E. Palmer acting as associate and assistant professors, respectively. The former, who received his degree at the Naval Academy in 1923, has been with the destroyer squadron staff as a gunnery officer and has taught naval science for two years at Yale University. Lieut. Palmer graduated from Annapolis in 1927 and has most re- cently served as commander of sub- marine S-29, stationed at various times in Honolulu and Connecticut. The original quota for the Univer- sity had been 80 SUBWAY NOON LUNCH Tuesday, Sept. 24 Featuring SALADS with Toast and Beverage Also Special Plate Lunches SUBWAY COFFEE SHOP N. University at Thayer Opposite Hill Auditorium Dancing Every Evening The University's New Kellogg Graduate Dental Institute Tictured Pbove is the new W. K. Kellogg Foundation Institute for Graduate and Post-graduate Dentistry which was dedicated last spring. The new Institute, which was opened in conjunction with the annual dental school homecoming on April 3, will be used only for graduate work and for research and practice by men al- ready in the profession. Undergraduates will continue to use the old Dental Building ex'cpt for Oral Surgery, classes for which will be given in the new building. 35 Wolverine.Gridders To F ce Test Regents Accept $18,000 IiI Gifts For University Clara Ward Scabury Clinic Receives Largest Grant For Study Of Paralysis More than $18,000 in gifts to the University were accepted by the Board of Regents at their latest meeting Friday afternoon. Largest grant was $8.000. given+ anonymously to the Clara Ward Sea- bury Clinic for the Study of Infantile ?aralysis, a division of the Univer- sity Hospital. Another anonymous giant of $5.500 was accepted for the edition and publication of material on birds of Michigan compiled by Norman Wood, former University museum curator. Grants accepted for scholarships, fellowships and loan funds totalled nearly $3,000, including a $750 con- ribution from the Monsanto Chem- ical Co. of St. Louis for a chemicalk r research fund and a $500 grant from the Mallinckrodt Chemical Works of St. Louis for pyelographic research. Prof. Frank N. Smith of the mech- anism and engineering drawing de- partment, entire year for service in the U. S. Army ordnance corps; Prof. arl D. LaRue of the botany depart- ment, first semester; Prof. H. F. Taggart of the School of Business Administration, first semester for wvork with the national defense com- mission, and Prof. Raphael Isaacs of the Medical School, July 1 to Feb. 2,1941. Prof. John Dawson of the Law School was appointed to the execu- tive committee of the Child Guid- ance Institute. A collection of Chine.se musical in- DAILY OFFICIAL r1 Hull ii BU LLEI WASHINGTON, belt 23. The United States accused Japan TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1940 today of "upsetting" the status quo VOL. LL No. 1 in the Pacific as hig admnistration - officials studied measli'cs to counter s the Far Eastern empire's southward Textbook Lending Library, 1223 drive into French Indo-China. Angell Hall, will receive applications Secretary of State Hull said in a for textbooks and issue textbooks formal statement that it was obvious already applied for on Tuesday and "the status quo is being upset and Wednesday, October 1st and 2nd, this is being achieved under durcas. from 10:00 to 12:00 a.m. and from "The position of the United States 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. in disapproval and in deprecation o' See page 16 of the "Announcement such procedures has repcatedly been of the College of Literature, Science stated." he added. and the Arts" for further details. A cadeiiciNotices The Qualifying Examination in English for entering candidates for the Master's degree in English, as described on page 169 of the An- nouncement of the Rackham School, will not be given. The adequacy of students' preparation will be judged on the basis of the Graduate Record Examinations referred to on page 17 of the Announcement. The exam- ination in foreign languages will be held on Monday evening, Sept. 30, as announced. -N. E. Nelson struments and related lantern slides and phonograph records was accept- ed from Yung-san Shu, former stu- lent in the School of Music. DARNING & MENDING Smay cause eyestrain These are sei e - i,,uaItat)k;if done in }poor I iglit. 11 ciimrN' our l.i glting trtoday 14with um clrge r".., phoiw vow' Ikiroii Edisn offic for a 1.ight Meter survey of your room is. b___________________________ I Scores Japanese Far-Eastern Activities (Continued from Page 1) more brother of Michigan's All- American tackle in 1933, Whitey Wis- tert, rate as first choices right now with 215-pound letterman Bob Flora and powerful Rudy Sengel, promis- ing sophomore, pressing closely be- hind. At the guard slots there is little to worry about. Returning regulars Milo Sukup and Ralph Fritz hold a first mortgage on their berths, but junior letterman Bill Melzow and sophomore Bob Kolesar, 198-pound package of blocking dynamite, will undoubtedly see plenty of action. Amply fortified at the ends, too, the Wolverines have a trio of veter- an flankmen returning. Pass-snag- ging Ed Frutig, smashing Joe Rogers, and Ed Czak, all seniors, backed up by last year's reserve Harlin Frau- mann, who has developed rapidly, and first year men Otto Chady, Phil Sharpe, and rugged Rudy Smeja as- ..ure stellar performances at the flank positions. With Capt. Forest Evashevski, All- American Tom Harmon, and Bullet Bob Westfall returning for action, Crisler will possess three-fourths of a, backfield that will have few peers in the entire nation. The other spot, however, has him worried. Apparently rating the inside track on the right halfback post vacated by Freddie Trosko, fleet, hard-run- ning Norm Call has been impressive as the fourth member of the first string backfield during most of the pre-season practice. Chief headache to Crisler with this quartet, however, is the lack of a dependable punter. Harmon gets considerable distance with his boots, but he is not consist- ent, frequently slicing his kicks. Call is haunted with the same trouble. Up from the yearling squad, rangy Cliff Wise could supply the answer to the kicking worry, his booming 50 and 60-yard spirals filling the bill adequately. Another Kiski pro- duct, Wise also is acknowledged to be the best passer within 20 yards on the squad. His running, however, leaves something to be desired, and he lacks the poise and finesse which only experience can bring. Kromer Returns Another very possible solution to the half-back problem is the return of Paul Kromer to the gridiron wars. As a sophomore two years ago, the Lorain speedster teamed with Har- mon to give the Wolverines a pair of Touchdown Twins equalling any in the country. Last year, however, Kromer suffered a knee injury and it was thought he was definitely through with football. This fall the 160-pound senior returned to prac- tice unheralded, and thus far his 'Tippy' Lockard, hard-fighting soph- cmcre. Elmer Madar and Harry Kohl aira fiuhting it out for third team q.arter. A unanimous AII-American selec- tion. Harmon led the Western Con- ference in scoring last year. His passing was among the best in the country, and he seems destined to go down as one of Michigan's all-time gridiron greats. No more need be said. Rounding out the backfield in con- vincing fashion is smashing Bob Westfall. A local product, this hu- man thunderbolt broke into the line- up as a sophomore last year, soon ranked as one of the Big Ten's best fullbacks, and his sharp blocking, tackling, and line smashing should carry him to even further gridiron heights this fall. Veteran letterwin- ner Bob Zimmerman will again be (cack to spell Westfall. _.. . w I I IAi 0 1 1 a ,.. SHOP AT-302 S. State St. ___ Ilal 1a116 -- STOFFLET'S PHI LCO - ZENITH - FARNSWORT H NEW -r 9.95 u MIDGETS TABLE SETS USED m- t4.90 u CONSOLES BATTERY (Guaranteed) BATTFRY Fl FCT ___ -__ _-__ - - - 4 BUY IT NOW .. You'll Need it Later! Be in Style ... With ALLIGATOR! STOFFLET'S The "UNIVERSITY COACHER" America's Waterproof Style Leader! Here's why YOU should own an Alligator University Coacher: 1. Guar- anteed waterproof. Won't crack, fade or deteriorate. 2. 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To Replace Evvie Winner of the Chicago Award, husky George Ceithaml appears to, be aworthy replacement to Evvie as second string quarterback. Harold Free Placement Service: All graduates have been placed in business and Civil positions. OurEmployment Department contactsI firms regularly, co-operates actively with graduates STOFFLET'S Service business desiring __ d I employment. Courses Offered: Secretarial, Stenographic, Business Administration, Account- ing, Executive Secretarial, Calculator, Dictaphone. Any Make Servicing Any Year Automatic Any Type Changers ar or Hoe our Cs r me Specialty Streaml lined Instruction Plan: Courses are limited to practical business subjects only. student advances independently as assignments are pleted to 18 months, depending on c'ourse selected. Each com- I elm Who Attends: High school graduates and former college students who wish to suppl cmnt their academic education with specialized train ing leadingfdreedly to buiessmlymntorasitn them while at the University of Michigan. Registration: Office open daily for consultation. Early registration is advisable. Free iibulletin: Write, phone or call for our college litterature, which des- cribes today's opportunities in business, courses, tuition rates, and employment service. WILLIAM AT STATE I I FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY STOFFLET'S COM BINATIONS Don't fail to see the NEW PHILCO that plays records on a light beam- No needle used! TO FFLE.T 331 DIAL S. MAIN 8116 I WE WANT B I~b The Demand Is Great! You Furnish the Supply in ---I_ I Name Your Own Price I F- I T'REE! (FE! Bring your books to the STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE anytime after 8:50 A.M. Wednesday, September 25th. Open daily until 5 o'clock - Four-Color Rreproduction of ANGELL HALL I Suitable for framing to purchasers of the 1941 MICH IGANENSIAN. Limited number of pictures available. OUR NEW LOCATION 212 ANGELL HALL Save $1.50 in the basement Buy Your 'ENSIAN on Campus This Week I In I