EIGHT T HE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. APRIL 13, 1548 4 TORKS, ET AL: Two Emergency Calls Give Deputy a Busy Day By CRAIG WILSON Life is just one little thing after another for Deputy Kenneth W. Dilloway, who pilots the Washtenaw County Sheriff's Of- fice ambulance. Dilloway normally handles rou- tine desk work in the Sheriff's office but yesterday he played the starring role in a "beat the stork" chase to St. Joseph's Mercy Hos- pital, and another emergency SRA To Hold Discrimiination Discussions Discrimination - its sources, components and remedies - will be discussed by four widely- known speakers and a number of University professors at an In- stitute on Cultural Conflict to be held Friday and Saturday in Lane Hall. Under the sponsorship of the Inter-Cultural Education Depart- ment of the Student Religious As- sociation, the two-day program will attack the discrimination problem from all angles in meet- ings open to the public. Featured speakers at the In- stitute will be Prof. Allison Davis of the University of Chicago ed- ucation school; Frank Loescher of the American Friends Service Committee; Dr. Herbert Seamans, of the National Council of Chris- tians and Jews; and Prof. Leon Festinger, of the Institute for Group Dynamics at the Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology. Several University professors will join the speakers in round table discussions Friday and Sat- urday. Several topics will be con- sidered. Bar Appointment The Junior Bar Conference of. the American Bar Association an- nounces the appointment of Char- les W. Joiner, assistant professor of Law, as Consultant to the Mem- bership Committee of the Jun- ior Bar Conference. dash, when the cbuy's regular am- bulance was out on call. Stik handicap His first summons came at 7:25 a.m. from Mrs. Alvin Rheimold, who lives at 38 Burton Ave. three miles outside Ann Arbor near U.S. 12. After chasing out at top speed. Dilloway had to "take it easy" coming back over the rough roads. "I got her to St. Joseph's just in time-as things really began popping," he reported after the trip. But hospital officials say the sweat was all for naught.. Mrs. Reimold's son officially arrived at 10:40 a.m.-three hours later. Both are doing quite well. No Rest for the Weary But as soon as our tired am- bulance driver is settling back in an office chair, comes another call. Mrs. Grace Sherman, 322 E. Williams St., was in a coma, according to her doctor, and needed immediate transportation to St. Joseph's Hospital. Off goes Deputy Dilloway in the 1942 Ford ambulance, which he describes as being "for emergency use only." Mrs. Sherman is "not doing so well," hospital officials said, al- though they could not reveal the nature of her affliction. "Just a little excitement in an ordinary day," Dilloway, who has No Aiaoiiatie Rent Hike Seen For AnnI Arbor Ar eaIirector Ilaines Exlains New Law No automatic rent changes are in the offing for Ann Arborites although the new compromise Federal Housing and Rent Act of 1948 has gone into effect, William C. Haines, area rent director of the Detroit Rent Expediter's of-, fice, announced.j Here are the alterations as far as the local scene is concerned: Fifteen per cent rent increases can be effected if landlord and tenant enter into a voluntary agreement., Changes in rent levels can be made when the local rent office issues an individual adjustment order. Further changes can be made if the housing expediter approves a general increase in the rent level in a rent area in response to a recommendation of a local rent advisory board. Motor courts, new constructions or conversions in the past two years and unrented before June 30, 1947, and non-housekeeping furnished rooms in private homes where there dre no more than two paying guests, were decon- trolled by the new law. the 30-day veterans preference ,c rent or purenase newly con- structed housing units was con- inued through April 1. 194:. Hold Your Bonds NEW FOOD CENTER-Replacing the former storage unit in the University Hospital, the new Food Service Building at Glen and Ann Streets will store and process most food served by University eating places. LONDON, April 12--P)-Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt today unveil- ed a bronze statute of her late husband in Grosvenor Square. King George VI and Winston Churchill were among the thou- sands who watched as she tugged a red, white and blue bunting Caimpus Cailenda r EVENTS TODAY Lecture-Abbe Arthur Maheux, of Laval University, Quebec, will speak on "Canada-United States Relations." 8 p.m.. Kellogg Audi- torium. Quarterdeck Society-7 :30 p.m.. West Engineering. Prof. E. T. Vin- cent will speak on "Gas Tur- bines." Crusade for Children-George Burke will discuss the plight of children in war-devastated areas, 2 p.m., County Courthouse, before Washtenaw County Board of Su- pervisors. At the Michigan-"Cass Tim- berlane." At the State-"The Exile." EVENTS TOlrORROW Expectant Mothers' Class-2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., Child Health Building. "The Early Develop- ment of Your Baby and His Place in the Family." Sigma Xi Lecture-8 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. Prof. Donald L. Katz of the chemical engineering department, "High Pressure Oil and Gas Fields." THOUSANDSIWATCH Mrs. FDR Unveils Bronze Statue of Husband in London from Britain's memorial to the formerAmericain President on the third anniversary of his death. Statue 10 Feet High The statue is 10 feet high. Be- neath it is the simple inscription: "-Franklin Delano Roosevelt." During the afternoon thousands of Britons filed slowly past the statue. Some dropped bouquets of daffodils at the base as they passed. In a message read at the din- ner, President Truman expressed his countrymen's deep apprecia- tion "of the honor which the peo- ple of Great Britain have today bestowed upon the memory of a great American." Truman's Message 'In the future," he said, "when Americans come to Grosvenor Square to witness the honor you have paid us by erecting a statue to Franklin D. Roosevelt, they will come remembering the gallantry of your men, women and children in Britain's darkest hour." Prime Minister Attlee propos- ed a toast "to the memory of Franklin D. Roosevelt," and Brit- ain's war-time prime minister, Winston Churchill, said: "I am glad that here in Lon- don we have now added to the memorials of Washington and Lincoln a statue to this great president, whose services to the cause of freedom were given in an even wider sphere than those of his eminent predecessors." Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip, and the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, represented the royal family at the dinner, .; * * * Food Service Building Opens As Storage, Processing Center 4.' been with the force only months, commented. eight Will You Buke25 . What is the mystic symbolism of the number 253? Whatever it is, the 253rd person to cross the Michigan seal on the Diagonal after 1 p.m. Friday, Ap- ril 16, will automatically become one of the four judges for the Michigras Parade, Ann McGrew, co-chairman of the parade an- nounced. The other three judges have not been chosen yet, but Miss Mc- Grew said that they would be prominent campus, city and state figures. The Michigras Parade will be- gin at 3:30 p.m. April 23. Anyone still wishing to enter the parade may contact Dick Slocum at 4141. - ow To Save on FILMBIL Just any scene won't do! A camera can't think, but it performs well when you hink for it. Now! A book that takes the guesswork out of photography. You'll know- not imagine-what settings to use. Gives information about all phases of camera work including color photo- graphy. Buy it today and save I by making every shot count. KODAK REFERENCE HANDBOOK . .. $3.50 Calkins-Fleteler Drug Company The Dependable Stores 324 South State 818 South State The new $1,250,000 Food Serv- ice Building went into full opera- tion for the first time yesterday. Located on the corner of Glen and Ann streets', the new struc- ture will serve as a centralized storage depot and processing point for most of the food served in University eating places. It re- places the storage unit that was formerly located in the University Hospital. The food center occupies 70,000 square feet of space. In addition to storage facilities, it houses a kitchen for testing recipes and foods, a bakery, a meat process- ing shop and an ice cream man- ufacturing departmet. Co1ombian .. . (Continued from Page 1) spite the fact that the USSR con- ducts no business with Colombia. Citing Panama City broadcasts, they revealed that while workers have been called back from a gen- eral strike throughout the coun- try, sniping and fighting still con- tinue. The Pan-American Conference, they said, is nevertheless going on in the Hondurian embassy, where the delegates are discussing the problem of Communism: Ms. Saenz stated that Colombia has only about 8,000 Communist Par- ty members, thugh they are very active. All of the people interviewed stressed the fact that Colombia is proud of Sher fifty-year record of peace and universal civil liberties. They also felt that the majority of Colombians were against revo- lution, as both the Conservative and Liberal parties have united in tihe last few days in a coalition; government to stop the disorder. They felt that the American press had magnified the affair, and that the American press had mag- nified the affair, and that the Pan-American Conference would continue. But they were sticking close to their radios. Morse Calls for IN AACPStatement WASHINGTON, April 12-()- Senator Morse (Rep., Ore.) today called on the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to make an "unequivocal rejection" of a Negro leader's po- sition on service of Negroes in the armed forces. The NAACP had not imme- diately replied. Morse was referring to a state- ment by A. Philip Randolph, pres- ident of the Brotherhood of Sleep- ing Car Porters (AFL), that many Negroes would refuse to bear arms, if drafted, unless the Army abandoned its segregation policy. Morse told the Senate he had received a telegram from Walter White, head of the NAACP, which did not make it clear whether White was definitely against the course outlined by Randolph. "I would like to have an un- equivocal rejection of Mr. Ran- dolph's program in all of its as- pects from Mr. White," Morse said. The senator said he is a director of NAACP, but added he would resign immediately if the organ- ization identified itself "in any degree whatsoever" with Ran- dolph's plan. current rat University residence halls, the Michigan League and the Uni- versity hospital will all draw on its services. Herbert P. Wagner, business manager of the hospital, has been appointed business manager of the Food Service Building and Bruce K. Lemon, Detroit bus- inessman, has been named gen- eral manager of Food Service. Wagner is a University graduate. BEATER'S G S L BARGAINS IN STATIONERY AND BOOKS U' Acquires Golf Course The University has expanded to the extent of 155 acres with the purchase of the Stadium Hills Golf Course. Present plans call for the use of the property for a self- liquid- ating housing project for faculty members, according to Robert P. Briggs, University vice-president. The property may be leased as a golf course until construction of the housing project is begun. Wito 0%qc64ยข a a NOV rok bA allI 9c Q~1d'P 4 ..Igmmmft- apw T E ffs BOOSOE 336 South State Street Phone 2-0814 ANOTHER FLOE SHOWER our #,,,,t Q aa 4(me! at ASSEMLY BALL 41 I ANNETTE MUNN of Martha Cook models a luscious black formal of net over flesh-colored marquisette in antici- pation of Heart Bid, the Assembly Ball to be held Saturday, April 17 _ .. - . ""'. . :, ,,: . :.:=. - . ' : ,.: .. r 4I -S : f ./ . f"**' YESTERDAY 7 Coeds with flowers. . . we showered SATURDAY at Assembly Ball it's up to you men to uphold the gallantry-BUT at LOWEST PRICES!!! the r I11. J .l YOU CAN'T BEAT THEM! ~fir:'. Rose Corsage Gardenia Corsac r n-r . . . . . . . 2.25 ge. . . . . .2.50 - ->nn '4 Tbiiz itIbut oneof Me/A1-miv Ilovh lressess I "I II -1