!:G SIamM ffh2 .j~~ iA, i~ Wheatley Wins Rotary Club's First Award Scholarship Prize Honors Lt. Cannon, Dead Hero Of MidwayIsland Raid The first Lieutenant George Ham Cannon Scholarship established by the Ann Arbor Rotary Club was granted to William Wheatley, '45, Monday. Established in memory of the first Ann Arbor University alumnus to give his life in service of his country, the scholarship will be continued as a permanent annual award to out- standing Ann Arbor students enter- ing the University. The scholarship recipients will be selected on the basis of scholastic achievement and finan- cial need. When told of his award, Wheat- iey said, "Naturally, I am very su>-- prised. I feel that it's a great honor and I'm indebted to the Rotary Club for giving it to me." Marine Lieutenant Cannon was re- cently awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor posthumously. He died in the defense of Midway Island against a Japanese raid. Wheatley was selected for the first award of the new scholarship by a Rotary Committee headed by Prof. A. H. White of the engineering school. The Cannon Scholarship is one of several tuition grants made by the Ann Arbor Rotary Club. Awarded for only one semester for the first time,.the Cannon Scholar- ship will run for a full year in sub- sequent awards, it was stated yester- day by Dean S. T. Dana, president of the Rotary Club. He cited Wheatley as an outstanding holder of another Rotary Club Scholarship. WHO IS IT? Perspectives' CoPY Is Due BySaturday In accordance with time-honored tradition, Perspectives editors have advanced the copy deadline for their coming issue to Saturday, until which time students may submit original work of any kind for consideration. Perspectives offers encouragement to all students on campus to put into black and white their favorite ideas, in their own styles and hand them in either to the English and engin- eering English offices or to the maga- zine's desk in the Student Publica- tions Building. Perspectives is more than an end in itself, too, for meritorious poems, essays or fiction pieces may find their way to national competitions and magazines with resulting honor and monetary remuneration always a possibility. Thus, although Perspectives offers no rewards but those of personal prestige and encouragement to stu- dent writers, it may also serve as an opening to larger fields. Hobbs' Speech To Be Sunday 'soijil e1 ' a(ii Ayr d War' To Be Analyzed In Talk The Committee To Defend Amer- ica will present Prof.-Emeritus Wil- liam H. Hobbs of the geology depart- ment, who will speak on "South America and the War," at 4:00 p.m. Sunday, in the Rackhan I ecture Hall. Recently a delegate from the Car- negie Endowment for International Peace to the First Pan-American Congress for Mining Engineering and Geology in Santiago, Chile, and also representing the University's College of Engineering, Professor Hobbs was able to observe much of the amazing political transformations in South America in her relations with the United States and the Axis powers. Professor Hobbs made the journey by plane to South America, visiting all but four of the republics and mak- ing contacts with many residents. ml CAMPUS FAVORITES Brand new! Fancy, stripes, solid colors, and whites have just arrived in time for your early spring buying. These are all famous Manhattan shirts which millions of college men now wear. f a L F f: r-' X .q saved 7+ . .:1 " For finer, better fitting shirts - get some Manhattans today. We also carry "Wembley Ties" $1.00. 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