THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1936 TH E MICHIGAN D ALY PAGE THREE dI NEWS of The DAY i (Fromh The Associated Press) Cochrane To Be Released Friday DETROIT, July 22.- (P) - Mickey Cochrane, manager of the Detroit Tigers, remained in Henry Ford Hospital for obser- vation today, but Walter 0. Briggs, owner of the club, said Cochrane would be at Navin Field Friday for the raising of the American League and world championship flags the Tigers won last year. It was not certain the doctors would complete their exhaustive tests this week. Fire Sweeps More Northern Michigan Forests NEWBERRY, Mich., July 22.- (/P)-A trainload of men and equipment was sent to the aid of CCC workers and volunteers to- day when the forest fire along the Tahquanenon River swept across a mile strip of green timber and spread into the Lake Betsey country. The break of the Tahquamen- on fire, which had been held in check by 1,00 workers, brought fresh troubles to conservation de- partment officials. The Lake .Betsey area, wild and almost inaccessible, is highly inflam- mable, the officials said. Another fire burning in the Calspar and Buckeye region East of Manitique, also went out of control today and spread into hardwood slashings on a stiff southwest wind. The Tahquamenon fire was fed by wind of near gale proportions. Fire lines and a section of green timber were believed hold- ing the blaze, but sparks jumped the green strip and set fire to under brush, spreading rapidly into the Lake Betsey section. Iron Discipline Not Needed On S. S. Manhattan ABOARD S. S. 'MANHATTAN, en- route.to Berlin, July 22.-()-Taking steps designed to minimize the im- pression that America's Olympic ath- letes required an iron disciplinary hand on the voyage to Europe, Avery Brundage took occasion tonight to term the "deportment and spirit on the team, with few exceptions, ad- mirable throughout the trip." "Such disciplinary action as it was felt essential to take in one case pro- duced gratifying results," the presi- dent of the American Olympic com- mittee said. SBrundage refused to divulge details of the incident cited. He asserted it was not desirable to magnify or take advantage of a situation which now was considered closed but emphasized that "the entire team was the best behaved of all those we have taken abroad." It was well known aboard ship that the members of at least three teams were reprimanded early in the voyage, but warnings sounded then by Brun- dage proved effective. At that time, Brundage had received reports of late hours, drinking and gambling I ' f c I i c f 1 I t I (l i DAILY OFFICIAL VOL XLV' No. 20 THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1936 Notiees Dr. Arnold D. McNair. Whewel Professor'of International Law at the University of Cambridge, will de- liver a pulic lecture under the aus- pices of the Summer Conference for the Teaching of International Law and Relations, at 8:15 p.m. in Room 1O0, Hutchins Hall. The subject of his lecture will be "The Denuncia- tion of Treaties." Summer Session Men's Glee Club: Important full rehearsal 7 p.m. at Morris Hall. All University men are welcome. Applicants for chorus po- sitions in the Gilbert and Sullivan Opera "Pirates of Penzance" will be given a tryout after the Glee Club rehearsal. Summer Session French Club: The next meeting of the club will take place at 8 p.m. at "Le Foyer Fran- cais," 1414 Washtenaw. Prof. Ca- millo P. Merlino of the Romance Language Department will speak. The subject of his talk will be "La Fan- taisie du Langage." Songs, games and refreshments. All students registered in the Divi- sion of Hygiene and Public Health are invited to a supper party at 6:30 p.m. today at the Michigan League. Tickets are 35 cents. Barbara Bartlett. The foliowing program will be pre- sented by the University of Michigan High School Summer Music Clinic Orchestra and Chorus at Ann Arbor High School Auditorium, Thursday, July 23, at 4 p.m. The program will be free of charge to all interested. 1. Ballet Suite "Iphigenia in Aulis" .Gluck David Mattern, Conducting. 2. "Adagio and Presto" ...... Haydn String Quartet under direction of Beth Hamilton. Lee Christman, 1st violin. Nita Dickens, 2nd violin. Ellen Coleman, viola. Lois Taft, cello. 3. "From the Western World"... . ..........................D vorak Cleo Fox, conducting. 4. Two Chorales .............Bach "Glory Now to Thee." "Whate'er May Vex or Grieve Thee." "Hail Smiling Morn" .. Spofforth Chorus, conducted by Harper C. Maybee. 5. a, "Dance of the Happy Spirits" from "Orpheus" ..........Gluck b, "Musette" ...............Bach String Ensemble Beth Hamilton, Conducting. 6. "Suite Algerienne" ... Saint-Saens Paul Tammi, conducting. Women Students Majoring in Physical Education. The Department of Physical Education is sponsoring a picnic swim for undergraduate and graduate women students this Friday at Barton Pond. A small fee will be charged to cover the cost of supper and transportation. The group will leave Barbour Gymnasium at 5:30 p.m. Students wishing to go are asked to sign up and pay the fee in Room 15, Barbour Gymnasium by Thursday at 4:30 p.m. Biological Chemistry 120: The frst lecture in this course will be given Friday, July 24, at 7 a.m. in the West Amphitheatre of the West Medical Building. Students, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Except under extraordinary cir- cumstances, courses dropped after Saturday, July 25, will be recorded with a grade of E. Students, School of Eucation: Courses dropped after Saturday, July 25, will be recorded with the grade of "E" except under extraordinary cir- cumstances. No course is considered officially dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Regis- trar, Room 4, University Hall. University High School Demonstra- tion Assembly: The second demonstration assemb- ly of the University High School Sum- mer Session will be presented Friday morning, July 24, 10 a.m. in the Uni- versity High School auditorium. The program will be given by pupils in the English and mathematics classes. It will consist of the following: choral reading; two playlets, one demon- strating uses of the library and the other using well-known characters from fiction in its cast; and a "just for fun" skit in mathematics. All Summer Session students who are interested are cordially invited to at- tend the assembly. Excursion No. 7, Saturday, July 25. General Motors Proving Ground at Milford. Reservations must be made and round trip bus tickets must be obtained before Thursday noon, July 23, in Room 1213 Angell Hall. The party leaves at 9 a.m. in front of Angell Hall and returns to Ann Arbor Broken Water Main Floods Chicago Union Station -Associated Press Photo. Trains were late and travelers arriving at the Chicago union station looked out of car windows on a sea of water after a 36-inch main burst, flooding the station and the basement of the nearby postoffice. Top shows a train from Omaha pulling slowly into the station, the rails covered with water. Below, passengers are shown treading planks leading to dry land. The flood cut off the electric power for the station and Federal building. Quarter-Finals Reached In I-M EVENING RADIO PROGRAMSI TTr6.:00-WJR Stevenson Sports. WWJ Ty Tyson. WYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Phil Marley's Music. 6:15-WJR Heroes of Today. WWJ Dinner Music. Championships Are To Be XYW Day in Review. Decided In Four Other 6:30-WJR Kate Smith's Band. T TWWJ Bulletins; Tiger Talk. Sports Next Week WXYZ Dance Music. CKLW Rhythm Ramblings. 6:45-WJR Boake Carter. Intramural activities in golf, bad- w JAlbertBrothers. WXYZ Rubinoff-Peerce. minton, codeball, tennis, and hand- CKLW Song Recital. ball are progressing, and it is pos- 7:00-WJR Rhythm Review. sible that championships in all these WWJzRudy Vallee's Variety Hour. sports will be decided early next week. CKLW Vincent York's Music. Yesterday 27 golfers played in a 7:15-WJR Portland Symphony. WXZKyte's Rhythms. qualifying round. From these players, 7:30-WXYZ'Roy Shields' Music. two divisions will be made up, the CKLW Variety Revue. championship and the first flight, 8:00-WJR Tomorrow's Headliners. and tournaments will be held in each. WXYZ Death Valley Days. CKLW Stage Echoes. Two tennis doubles teams entered 8 :15-CKLW Serenade. the quarter-final round by virtue of 8 :34-WJR Musicale. WXYZ Great Lakes Symphony. victories scored yesterday.GBell and CKLW Grant Park Concert. Miles defeated the Taylor-Grein. com- 9 :00-WJR Gov. Alf M. Landon's Accept- ance Speech. bination, 6-3, 6-1, and Jones and WWJ Gov. Alf.M. Landon's Accept- Graban came from behind to take a WWXYZ Landon Speech. three-set match from Routh-White, CKLW Landon Speech. 10 :00-V/JR Hot Dates in History. 3-6, 6-0, 6-4. Bell-Miles play the WWJ Amos and Andy. winner of the Thomson-Ariosan vs. WXYZ Big Broadcast. CKLW Scores and News. Zimmerman-Anderson match, while 10:15-WJR Duncan Moore. Jones-Graban meet Griffin-Haley in WWJ Tiger Highlights: Evening Melodies. another quarter-finial contest. CKLW Horace Heidt's Music. In badminton, Gibbs, Sper, and 10:30-WJR Musicale: Lions Talesy Larin will play it out for the chain- WXYZ Ben Bernie's Music. pionhipsomeimethi wee. Oson CKLW Detroit Police Field Pro- pionhipsomeimethi wee. Osongram. advanced to the finals in codeball. He 10:45-VWJ Jesse Crawford. 11:00--V/JR Benny Goodman's Music. will meet the winner of the Sookne- WXYZ Shandor. Nirenberg match. WWJ Dance Music. Estep defeated Thomas, 21-6, 21-7, - in one handball contest, and Naeseth won from Schubach, 21-11, 21-5 in another. Divorsky, Olson, and Clark are the other players still in the run- ning.BEGINNING ning. Estep will play Naeseth and Divorsky will meet Olson IMPORT BRA By ARBOR SPRINGS THE GLORY THAT WAS The rich, fertile prairie lands K N ITTE of the west with their super- abundance of wheat and corn - KNITTED DRESSE are no more. Barren, desolate lands mark the place where once rolling fields of grain brought glory to an Empire and joy to a people. Devoid of crops, infested - with insects and T stripped of all fat, healthy ani a mals, the lands are abandoned to the harsh mercies of a terrible m drought. The Federal Govern- ment, the guiding star of its' people's destiny, has taken ac-S tion to allay the suffering of f man and beast and to bring about the rebirth of a past glory. Take proper action to keep Cot your children's health at its fort best during vacation days. Let them drink plenty of that healthful water furnished by the Arbor Springs Water Co., 416 W. Huron. This pleasant tasting water is the best thing PASTELS ANI to drink on hot days. It is cool SUITABLE FORE and delightfully refreshing. Sizes Phone 8270 for quick delivery. 11:15--CRCW Ford and Gray. WXYZ Earl Walton's Music. CKLW Mystery Lady. 11:30-WJR Charles Barnett's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Eddy Duchin's Music. CKLWHorace Heidt's Music, 12 :00-WWJ Dance Music. W/XYZ Henry Foster. CKLW Charlie Agnew's Music. 12:30-CKLW Joe Sander's Music. 1:00-CKLW Guy Lombardo's Music. German Club Will Go ToPut-In-Bay Members of the German Table are planning, under the supervision of Miss G. T. Ochs and Mr. M. F. Reck, an all-day excursion to Put-in-Bay, Saturday, July 25. The group of 20 students, under the direction of Prof. Jonathan A. C. Hildner of the German department will leave Ann Arbor in private cars at 11 a.m. They have reserved a room on the boat, which leaves at 1:30, where they will lunch and sing German songs and play German games. On the island they intend to swim and visit the caves. They will take the moonlight trip home. GIRL'S BODY FOUND DETROIT, July 22.-(,P)-The body of Margaret McPhee, nine years old, who disappeared Sunday while bath- ing, was found Wednesday 200 feet off shore in Lake St. Clair. TOMORROW ANT SALE Ex plosion, Fire Merit System Raze Factory; To Be Applied 6 Feared Dead To Post Office Firemen Still Searching Civil Service Appointment Ruins Of Chicago Dyeing Conceded By President Plant; Cause Unknown For Postmasterships CHICAGO, July 22.--(P)-A ter- WASHINGTON, July 22.-(P)- rific explosion and fire today Dealing with an issue that has been crumpled the National Fur Dressing subject to sharp debate in Congress and Dyeing Company's plant into a and the political arena, President heap of bricks and girders in which Roosevelt tonight made public an ex- Chief Michael J. Corrigan said he ecutive order directing the gradual feared at least six bodies were buried. absorption of all postmastership ap- The body of one young woman was pointments into the civil service. recovered and firemen reported they The document, signed on Monday could see "three or four more" wedged by the President and just made pub- in the debris. lic by the White Iouse, ordered that Two women and four men employes as quickly as vacancies occur appoint- were burned, and a bystander and ments shall be subject to Civil Serv- fireman were injured as flames raged ice examination. through the wreckage in the wake of For reappointment, it required that the blast. an incumbent, upon the expiration of Long after the structure collapsed, his term be found eligible by the Civil firemen continued to pour water into Service commission through a non- the ruins, still too hot to permit a competitive examination. thorough search for bodies. Several May Take Examination employes remained unaccounted for. Or, it provided that a Civil Service The factory, on North Halsted St., employe in the post office in question consisted of twofoors and a base .might take a non-competitive exam- ment, with a frontage of 40 feet and ination for promotion to the post- a depth ofr125.t mastership. alls epthfoofs1Otherwise, it empowered the post- Walls and roof collapsed with a master general to direct the Civil roar, piling bricks ten feet into Hal- Service commission to conduct an sted Street and blocking traffic for open competitive examination to test two miles in either direction,. the fitness of any and all applicants, Determining that the explosion or- with the postmaster general directed iginated at the rear of the building to "submit to the president for ap- and threw its force toward the street, pointment the name of the highest blowing out the front wall, Chief Cor- eligible." . rigan ordered an investigation to de- In short, the order placed the in- termine the cause. cumbent postmaster, or one of his He assigned men to learn if inflam- subordinates seeking promotion in the mable fluids were used in cleaning the preferred position of taking a non- furs. competitive examination or left the postmaster general free to direct that aerida H o art an open examination be conducted. The order was made applicable to first, second and third class post- Takes Second masterships. Fourth class postmas- ters, those in the smallest offices, al- IC Tennis Crownready were under the Civil Service. Tennis CrownSays G.O.P. Blocked Bill Accompanying the announcetent o f the executive order, the White iss eiachamp o n h e second House made public a letter from Sen- ator O'Mahoney of Wyoming, former conquering Mrs. May Lewis yesterday first assistant postmaster general, in the finals, 6-4, 6-3, before a large congratulating the president on his crowd. action and asserting that legislation Outsteadying her opponent, Miss to the same general end was blocked Hobart kept the ball continually in . play, forcing Mrs. Lewis into errors. the last session by a majority of The contest was close all the way in the Republican members of the the first set. Neither player attempted House. fast drives or net play, but concen- Under the present and traditional trated on keeping the ball in play. system, postmastership appointments In the second set, Miss Hobart rallied are made usually upon the recom- after the score was tied at 2-all, and mendation of the House member quickly ran the set score up to 5-2. from the district Mrs. Lewis was able to garner another game before the match was com- pleted. Gregory is the first player in men's and city singles division to enter the semi- final round. He disposed of Kasabach MIMEOGRAPHING yesterday, 6-3, 7-5, in a hectic match to advance another notch. Phelps Promptly and neatly done by won over Cherrington, 6-2, 6-3, in experienced operators at mod- another contest. Sorenson defeated erate rates. Student work a Coleman, 6-4, 6-2. specialty for twenty-eight years. 'This afternoon Angell will meet U Phelps and Graban will play Chanter iiMorr il in men's singles. The winner of these O* . i r matches will then play Gregory in 314 South State Street one of the semi-final matches. -... _---- [R& Tf therS f- -- /- SAILING SHIPS TIME WAS WHEN the sailing vessel was the only means of communica- tion between America and foreign countries. Weeks were required for the interchange of news. The pop- ulace swarmed the quays to hear the meagre reports which incoming boats brought from distant lands. TODAY continents are linked by trans-oceanic cables and radio cir- cuits. Over these submerged wires The Associated Press brings to America news of events, however re- mote, from every corner of the plan- I I among some of the athletes. Major Leagu e AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. New York ...........58 32 Cleveland ...........51 39 Detroit............48 41 Chicago...........47 41 Boston ............ ..48 43 Washington ........46 43 St. Louis ............29 58 Philadelphia .........29 59 YESTERDAY'S GAMES Philadelphia 7, Detroit 6. St. Louis 6 ,New York 5. Cleveland 8, Boston 3. Chicago 3, Washington 2 ( nings). TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Detroit. Boston at Cleveland. New York at St. Louis. Washington at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. .644 .567 .539 .534 .527 .517 .333 .330 12 in- Pct. .640 .602 .528 .518 .517 Of DL EY ED WEAR E-SUITS - COATS -- IG a wo-Piece Carrone nd Chenille, for- 0 erly to $29.75 . .15. Two - Piece String Knit and Bundura formerly to $12.95 ton Chenille - merly to $12.95 $8.95 $8.95 Chicago ... St. Louis .. New York. Cincinnati. Pittsburgh. Tn~ct+rr_ W. L. ...........55 31 ...........53 35 ......... ..47 42 ...........44 41 ...........45 42 ----- 41 4 D DARK SHADES EARLY FALL WEAR 12 to 40 II I III i iii