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July 09, 1954 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1954-07-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE FOUYR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, tJY 2, 1951

HEART ASSOCIATION:
University Specialists
Given Research Grants

Seven out of a total of 17 re-
search grants recently given by
the Michigan Heart Association
were awarded to University heart
specialists.
Projects now under way in heart
research at the University will be
able to continue for the next
twelve months because of Heart
Association support.
Of the seven grants received by
University doctors, one is a na-
tional award made to Dr. Anastas-
ius S. Dontas, instructor in the
University's department of phar-
macology. Dr. Dontas is studying
the changes in the size of blood
vessels when certain nerves are ex-
perimentally regulated. The na-
tional award is made by the Am-
erican Heart Association directly.
Those remaining six University
doctors whose heart projects re-
ceived financial support from the
Michigan Heart Association are:
Drs. David Bohr, Theodore M. Bro-
dy, Ivan F. Duff, Cameron Haight,

Sibley W. Hoobler, and James L.
Wilson.
In commemoration of the Uni-
versities pioneering research in
heart disease, Dr. Franklin D.
Johnston, chief of the University
Hospital's heart station, has pre-
pared for publication a complete
volume of the papers of the form-
er Dr. Frank N. Wilson. Dr. Wil-
son, who died in 1952, is interna-
tionally remembered as one of the
first and original heart specialists
in the field of electrocardiography.
Tourist Group
Okays Bridge
LANSING WP) - The Michigan
Tourist council, meeting Thursday
at Lansing, adopted a resolution
indorsing construction of an in-
ternational bridge connecting the
United States and Canada at Sault
Ste. Marie.

L inguistic
Talks Slated
The three remaining linguistic
lectures will be presented next
week under auspices of the Lin-
guistics Institute.
Tuesday "The Program and Ac-
tivities of the International Center
of General Dialectology" will be
discussed in French by Sever Pop,
Catholic University of Louvain,
Belgium. He will spedk at 7:30
p.m. in the Rackham Assembly
Hall.
"Sound Laws and Exceptions"
will be discussed Wednesday at 1
p.m. in the Michigan League by
Prof. Ernst Pulgram of the ro-
mance languages.
Next Thursday at 7:30 in the
Rackham Amphitheater, Roger W.
Brown, Harvard University pro-
fessor of social psychology, will
speak on "A Study in Language
and Cognition."

AUBURN, Ind. (P)-An electri-
cal engineer escaped from his own
car yesterday and reported a 14-
year-old boy had forced him to
drive 100 miles with a shotgun
held at the back of his neck.
Robert B. Lehr, 32 years old,
Jackson, Mich., said the boy came
up behind him as he was smoking
a bedtime cigarette on his front
porch and forced him into his car
in the driveway.
Lehr said he finally managed to
overpower the boy when they stop-
ped for gasoline at a truck stop at
Waterloo, five miles north of here.
Sheriff Frank Carpenter said
the boy, who first refused to talk,
finally gave his name as Gary E.
Kintigh, son of a tool and die
maker at Holt, Mich. Carpenter
said the boy reported he had
hitch-hiked from Holt to Jackson

with the 16-gauge shotgun dis-
mantled in a suitcase,
Sheriff Carpenter said the boy's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Kin-
tigh, told him the boy had been
having severe pains since a pipe
fell on his head at Holt in the
spring.
Picnic Plans

Youth Forces Jackson
Man To Go 'Joy Riding'

ON SALE TODAY

V

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The University Education
School will hold a picnic and
swimming party at the new
women's pool at 4:30 p.m. to-
day.
Transportation will be pro-
vided to go to the "Island."
Everyone is requested to bring
their own food. No admission
will be charged.

-t
t.
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ill

Store Hours:
Monday thrn
Saturday
9:30 A.M.
to
S:30 P.M.

I

Q$r.

Separates and Ensembles

journalists
To Convene
Second of this summer's high
school journalism workshops at
the University will open July 19
with high school publication edi-
tors from the Great Lakes area
attending the two-week event.
Presented by the journalism de-
partment, the workshops will be
devoted to the latest techniques in
newswriting, speech coverage and
editorial procedures.
Students will gain experience in
on-the-spot news coverage by at-
tending many of the University's
various summer lectures and then
reporting on them in class ses-
sions.

I

for your vacation, playtime or campus-
appear in poplin-sailcloth-seersucker
-chambray-tublin-silklin or denim
for. ..
Summer Fun Days

m

Including names, home addresses
and Ann Arbor addresses
and phone numbers
of Summer Session students
at

BLOUSES, skirts, sweaters and fancy pants .,
just everything for unlimited fashion combinations.
And where could you find prices that are more
budget-conscious than those in our Separates Shop
at 11 I1 South University.

Diagonal
East Quad
Alice Lloyd
and

In front of Union
Law Quadrangle
Student Publications
all bookstores

I

-CAMPUS-
211 S. State
NO 8-9013
-DOWNTOWN--
205 E. Liberty
MUSIC SOS"***
NO 2-0675
for the Finest in Recorded Music

I

I

Bermuda shorts from 3.95
Clamdiggers . from 5.00
Blouses . . . from 2.50

Skirts . * . . from
Shorts . . . . from
Slacks ...from
Sweaters . .. from

3.95
3.95
5.95
3.95

JULY
CLEARANCE
SPECIALS
Groups of Blouses,
T-Shirts......1.98
Sweaters, Skirts 2.98

on'V

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I

MAIN STORE
On Forest, Just off South U.

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44

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SHOP IN COMFORT EARLY IN THE WEEK
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CLOSED
TOMORROW
and every

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399
499
599

NOW IS THE TIME TO STOCK UP ON
YOUR LINGERIE WARDROBE!
Jacobson's Annual
July SLIP Sale

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Saturday through

August 14th

47

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BEAUTIFUL OPAQUE NYLON TRICOT and DACRYLON

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