41 TSHE MICHIGAN DTILY Junior Edition Derby Drivers Ready To Roll AKRON, O.-- (A) --Soap Box Derby drivers-the boys who scoot downhill in low-slung, gravity rac- ers-were arriving yesterday for Sunday's national championship run at Derby Downs. The 147 youngsters - each a hometown champion - will com- pete for a four-year college schol- rship in Sunday's 13th annual -All-American Soap Box Derby. The lads poured in by plane, train, bus, auto-yes, and even by taxicab. A cab brought 14-year-old Robert Reedy from his front door In Terre Haute, Ind., a courtesy of the cab company. Another champion, Gerald E. Taylor, 12 years old, came parka- tlad from Juneau, Alaska, where his dad serves in the Coast Guard. Read Daily Classifieds 'OMNIPRESENT SOLDIERY': Yugoslav Trieste Filled With Unreasoning Fear Spotlight Review Aired on 'WMDS' FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1950 TO FOSTER RESEARCH: Graduate SchoolGrants Announced by Sawyer By GEORGE S. FLINT Special to The Daily CAPIDISTRIA, Trieste - Here in the Yugoslavian-administered "B" zone of the Free Territory of Trieste it is possible to penetrate one of the few cracks in the Iron Curtain. Lying about 15 miles below the bustling port of Trieste, this for- merly Italian held city is the nom- inal capital of a cluster of com- munes on the shore of the Adria- tio. THOUGH THE Italain popula- tion here far outnumbers the Sla- vic, Yugoslav supervision gives the area a profoundly different tem- per from the northern portion of the Free Territory, under Anglo- American supervision. Capidistria is crowded with shops whose windows are nearly empty; a town whose people nev- er smile and who fear talking to strangers; a town where sold- iers seem far to outnumber civil- ians, and where the shabby Par- tisan uniform is a badge of rela- tive prosperity. The streets, once crowded with peasants and townspeople on Sat- urday afternoons, are virtually de- serted. Most of the activity comes from the omnipresent soldiery. SQUADS MARCH up and down the narrow streets, most of them young boys from the surrounding area who have "volunteered" for military duty. Walking in the beautiful old village square, now called Piazza della Marshal Tito, we saw peo- ple staring disbelief at our lit- tle group of American students and teachers. Life here is filled with unreason- ing fear. We asked to buy post- cards in a grubby little shop of the square. The proprietor refused Italian lire even though they aree the legal currency for the Terri- tory. So it is with all the townspeople -Communism for them means force, deprivation and a life with- out laughter. Museum Presents Films on Jungle "Jungle Arts, Crafts, and Peo- ple" is the subject of the Univer- sity Museums' program today, il- lustrated by moving pictures at 7:30 p.m. in Kellogg Auditorium. Two films, "Malaya-Nomads of the Jungle" and "Malaya Penin- sula" will be shown. Exhibits of South Pacific native objects are features in the fourth floor corri- dor of the Museums Building. The Museums will be open Fri- day night from 7 to 9 p.m. 01 OGoo FRATERNITY c JEWELRY 0 fJ SOUVENIRS - GIFTS TRADITIONAL MUGS 0 DIAMONDS - WATCHES CUPS --TROPHIES L. G. BALFOUR CO. O 1319 S. University o "Home of the U Official Michigan Ring" c Summer Hours, ten till five; o closed Saturdays. l:o<<--I=<--0O- iology, for laboratory studies on bacteria which cause undulant fe- ver. Dr. H. Marvin Pollard, asso- ciate professor of internal medi- cine, was given a $2,750 grant to study the value of using ACTH (the pituitary gland hormone) to patients who suffer from se- vere and prolonged inflamma- tion of the large intestine. Dr. James L. Wilson, chairman of the pediatrics and coimuni- cable diseases department and Dr. Donald A. Sutherland received a grant of $2,700. Doctors Ernest H. Watson and George H. Lowrey, of the same department, received a grant of $2,100. A PSYCHOLOGIST, Dr. Clyde H. Coombs, was awarded a $2,440 grant. Dr. Ralph D. Rabinovitch and Dr. Sara Dubo, psychiatrists received $2,000. In the dentistry school, Dr. Floyd A. Peyton was given $2,- 000. In the physical sciences, these awards were made: Claude W. (Continued from Page 1) Hibbard, $600; Cyrus Levinthal, $500; George Piranian, $500; Christian S. Rondestvedt, Jr., $1,- 200; Peter A. S. Smith, $560; Er- win C. Stumm, $500; and Brymer Williams, $900. Biological science grants were made to these people: Francis C. Evans, $1,100; Nelson G. Hairston, $1,300; Robert J. Lowry, $500; Alexander H. Smith, $1,500; Ro- bert W. Storer, $1,300; and Wil- liam R. Taylor, $1,600. In language and literature, Campbell Bonner received $150; Lawrence B. Kiddle, $87; Robert J. Niess, $50; Hereward T. Price, $300; and Clarence D. Thorpe, $150. Social science awards were given to these, people: Dwight L. Du- mond, $1,500; Paul A. Hunsicker, $150; Joseph E. Kallenbach, $610; Elmer D. Mitchell, $1,200; and Manfred C. Vernon, $740. George H. Forsythe, Jr., received a fine arts award of $389. In the health sciences, awards were given to: Russell N. DeJong and Martha R. Westerberg, $760; and Cameron Haight and W. Bur- ford Davis, $1,075. Daly-Bob Lewis DEAR MILTON-An avid adlibber passing as an Indiana farmer explains the preposterous adventures of his pig, Milton, before an audience of tired radioeers during the "Spotlight Review," one of the many afternoon audience programs given yesterday on the speech department's "Operation 4006." ________________________________* * * * V. There is a Wonderful Selection of qi t ?etneM6'*ah'fce4j at HALLERS COMPACTS IDENTIFICATION BRACELETS 0 MICHIGAN JEWELRY CIGARETTE LIGHTERS KEY CHAINS ' 0 JHALLERS JEWELERS 717 North University - Near Hill Auditorium o - c--yo --yog--yOe--yoae--=>O<=.e-:O )->o_5...; .; s s; .