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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 6

Location:
San Francisco, California
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

an Srntirtarn Examhtrr 6 Monday. April 17. 1950 CCCC 06 7 UC Teach Granted ers, 5 Others in Bay Area Guggenheim Fellowships PRESSED HERE lr I Novelist Also Wins Award Mass Vaccinations Proposed by Chile SANTIAGO (Chile), April 16. (AP) Authorities said today they plan to have all of Chile's 6,000,000 population vaccinated because of a spreading smallpox epidemic. There are 1.381 persons in isolation and a total of 1,555 cases.

Rosalie Moore Honored Tugboat Still Missing Four Coast Guard and Air Force planes droned over the Pacific southwest of here yesterday in ever widening circles, but with fading hope of finding the sixty-nine foot tugboat Omar and its six crewmen. Below them, two Coast Guard cutters steamed about the area where the craft last radioed its position Thursday night, about 500 miles southwest of San Francisco. Then the tug's electric power apparently failed. The Omar, encountering heavy seas while en route from Honolulu, reported Thursday that one crew member had been injured and that it was forced to abandon a smaller tug it was towing. Ironically, this tug, the Golden WHEN NERYES TIGHTEN UP AND YOU CAN'T RELAX Edward F.

Braunschweiger announced yesterday he will carry his one-man campaign to re-open claims for an estimated in losses from the 1906 fire before the United States Court of Claims at Washington. His case is based on the asserted failure of German insurance companies to pay on policies held by property owners at the time of the fire forty-four years ago tomorrow. ALIEN ASSETS. Braunschweiger, who lives at 495 Twentieth Avenue, said he will argue that the German insurance firms had at least de facto permission from the Federal Government to operate here, which should constitute grounds for seizure of other German assets in this country to satisfy the claims. Braunschweiger's move followed announcement by the House judiciary committee that Congress cannot entertain his claim, because an existing law bars it from passing on any claims prior to 1934.

OLD CLAIM. ROSALIE MOORE Fellowihip in pottry Gate, which was cut adrift when high seas threatened to break her up, was sighted just off the Hawaiian island of Kauai yesterday, the Coast Guard here reported. won a Guggenheim fellowship for the same oroject last year. Dr. William G.

Dauben, assistant professor of chemistry at U. C. and radiation laboratory researcher; investigation of the chemistry of Vitamin D. Dr. William E.

Berg, U. C. as-sistant professor of zoology; investigation of the cellular physiology of the mollusk, Mytilus edulis. Dr. Francis J.

Turner, geology professor at U. field and laboratory study of the crystal structures in marbles and peri-dotites. Dr. Wolfram Eberhard, China expert and associate sociology professor on the Berkeley campus; preparation of a book on the social structure of southeast Anatolia. Dr.

Charles Madeira Rick, associate professor of truck crops at the Da Vis campus of U. studies of wild and cultivated tomatoes. Dr. M. C.

Terry, Palo Alto physician; studies of the association of taste-blindness and diabetes among the Negro population of Jamaica. Dr. Frederick Koenig, Stanford University chemistry professor; writing of a book on the principles of eloctro-chemical thermodynamics. OTHER WINNERS Twenty-four Californians twelve of thnrn Bay arpa residents -were announced yesterday as winners of John Simon Guggenheim Foundation fellowships for this year. The awards were among fifty-tight, totaling $500,000, granted in scholars and creative artists throughout the Nation.

The average award is $3,000. As usual, the University of California dominated the group. Twelve UC teachers, seven from Berkeley, four from Los Angeles, and one from Davis, won awards. Stanford had one fellowship winner, and the University of Southern California two. The awards marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of the foundation, which was established in 1925 by the late Simon Guggenheim, Republican Senator from Colorado from 1907 to 1913.

and his wife, as a memorial to their Ron, who died as a young man in 1922. 2J17 AWARDS Including this year's awards, the foundation said it has now given 2.317 fellowships with stipends totaling more than The grants are made to aid educational, literary, artistic and scientific power of the Nation, or to better international accord. Northern California fellowship winners, and the projects they will undertake, were: Miss Rosalie Moore, Fairfax poetess and playwright, whose TRY THE CONTOUR CHAIR! It's tha seientifie answer to the strain of modarn day living. 'hone PRotpecr 4-5370 for FREE Home Demontfrof Jon CONTOUR CHAIR CO. 00 Sutter, S.F.

1974 B'woy, Oak. Twd B-17's, ttne Coast Guard and the other Air Force, and two Coast Guard Martin Mariners were ordered yesterday to extend their search to cover a 200 by 500 mile oblong. 5. F. Store open till 9 P.

M. Tonitt -Limittd Numbir Only! MEN'S SHOES- flOrVOIl HI! Dr- William G. Dauben, assistant professor of chemistry at U. who was granted a Guggenheim fellowship Braunschweiger is the grand in chemistry. Photo by San Francincn Examiner.

son of a pioneer liquor dealer SPECIAL BARGAIN! IMPORTED ENGLISH BROGUE SHOES here. His own claim for $58,000. plus $80,000 interest, is based on the liquor firm's loss of sev 3-Alarm Fire In Oakland 8 and 9 eral buildings on Drumm Street in the fire. He contends the CLEARING N. Y.

to Greet Chilean NEW YORK, April 16 (INS) New York will lay out the welcome mat for Chile's President Gabriel Gonzalez Videla in its traditional ticker-tape styie money is due his parent's estate You will feel like having two pair when you see Among nationally known win ners of a fellowship was Dr. Ed thee shoes. Must be cleared to make room for new He has estimated that unpaid legatees of other estates have similar claims which would add win G. Nourse, recently resigned economic adviser to President Downtown Blaze Perils Athenian-Nile Club up to the $25,000,000. stock.

Vppen rut Inr finut English calfskin. writings have appeared in such diverse journals as the Yale Review and the New Yorker; creative writing of poetry. Mrs. -Janet I-ewis Winters, Los Altos novelist, author of "Against a Darkening Sky" and "The Trial of Soren creative fiction writing. Harry Partfh, Gualala (Mendocino County), composer and designer of musical instruments; development of an electronic musical instrument to play music on the forty-three tone per octave scale he invented.

Dr. Iauriston C. Marshall, atomic expert and professor of electrical engineering at the University of California; joint development with Partch of the electronic musical instrument. Dr. Ray F.

Smith, assistant professor of entomology (insect study) at the University of California, a study of leaf beetles of the genus Diabrotica in the United States and Mexico. Dr. Edwin Seth Morby, San Francisco-born U. C. associate professor of Spanish, preparation of a critical edition of La Dorotea by Lope de Vega, Spanish seventeenth century dramatist From 1943 to 1945, Doctor Morby was United States vice consul in Sweden.

Dr. Maria-Rosa I.ida Malkiel, wife of Dr. Yakow Malkiel, U. C. assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese who was a Guggenheim fellow in 1948; writing of a book on old Spanish literature's interpretation of the ancient Macedonian hero, Alexander.

Mrs. Malkiel also A three-alarm basement fire raged for several hours in downtown Oakland last night, threat 0 Triplt leather jolts, extended heel stats. ONLY- i tt I fe- Ti ening the exclusive Athenian-Nile Club for business and professional men. Assistant Fire Chief Carl Web Sh.tr shet 5 tn 12: fittings OFFER CANNOT bt repeated ber ordered his men to don masks as thick columns of smoke gushed skyward and spread throughout the business district at 404 Four Truman. Doctor Nourse will undertake more study of the possibilities of stabilizing free enterprise "within the structure of free government." In southern California, fellowship winners were Jay Leyda, Los Angeles writer; Dr.

Richard W. Lippman, researcher, at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles; Dr. Lawrence C. Powell, UCLA librarian; Dr. Theodore A.

Geismann, UCLA chemistry professor; Dr. Edward N. Hooker and Dr. Hugh Thomas Swedenberg both UCLA associate English professors; Dr. Howard S.

Gentry, USC botany researcher; Dr. William S. Benson, USC associate chemistry professor; Dr. Frank H. Dickey, chemistry researcher at California Institute of Technology and Dr.

David A. Lind, spectroscope researcher at Cal Tech. FLIES THE SOUTHERN Style K-1175 (illustrated) London Full Brogue, Oxford or Gibson style. Medium brown calfskin 9.00 teenth Street, near Franklin Street. The flames were confined to a FROM THE NEW McMANUS STORES TO ALL THE EAST Between Sutts basement tavern, Clark's bar, which was closed, but smoke billowed upward through the Athenian-Nile Club, occupying three stories, and damaged a tailor shop and confectionary.

') S.F 242 KEARNY and Buin 4 1 5 1 4lh SI. (V.) Oakland Branches in Europe MitU In Fnrlint a nl Ireland Hundreds of spectators watched DR. LAURISTON MARSHALL Wint tlectronia fmllowhip at the scene. THE EMPORIUM Market Strtot Shop 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Mondays till 9 p.m.

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