THE MICHIGAN DAILY my IN THIS CORNER. o by Mel Fineberg After ,dabbling a bit in the stock market and then trying the roulette' wheel after finals, it seems that may- be these are mere petty gambles when compared to baseball trades. In fact, most of the trades of recent seasons have made the numbers racket look like a compound fraction. Take a look at some of the master- minding of the baseball barterers. Our own Detroit Tigers who seem to be nestling so cozily in fifth place at the nonce might be pushing the bottom out of the league had not Black Mike Cochrane risked the, wrath of the Detroit fandom by trading Gee (Caught - Off - First) Walker and Marve Owen to Chicago by R. W. Webster each Monday and Wednesday afternoon from 5 to 6 p.m. on the golf driving range in the In-- tramural Building. John Johnstone will supervise the tennis lessons, which will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5 to 6 p.m. on the Ferry Field courts. The first meeting of the class will be held in the Intramural Building. Monday and Thursday evenings, from 7 to 8 p.m., swimming classes will be conducted in the Intramural Building pool by A. A. James, activi- ties Supervisor of the Intramural De-t partment, for Kennedy. Dixie guy named Joe. Walker and some Now, thanks to Kennedy's 9 wins in a row, he and Black Mik6 are heroes and the Sox trader. Dykes, is a bum and what is even worse, is losing ball games. Then there was the strange case of Dizzy Dean. $185,000 iron men plus $85,000 worth of baseball men changed his biological development from Cardinal to Cub and changed Chicago Owner Phil Wrigley's hair from black to grey. Now, with Dean's strange arm malady, Michaelangelo's David is the only thing that can be compared to this quarter of a mil- lion dollar bust. The Dizzy One's arm may still recover and the Cubs may still win the pennant but Owner Phil will still have been stuck. But maybe its compensation-haven't a lot of us been stuck in his chewing gum? When big money is being men- tioned, you can't omit Santa Claus or, as he is more commonly known. Tom Yawkey. The Gold Sox may come home in front this year but compound interest on Yawkey's in- vestment would buy a lot of surplus wheat. But then, what's two or three million-gulp. A couple of years ago the Cubs took it on the chin in the Chuck Klein deal. It seems that Mr. Klein could hit, run, field-in fact, do everything. But it developed AFTER Chicago bought him from Philadel- phia, that aforementioned Mr. Klein had developed a strange affinity for aforementioned Philadelphia and once away from the city of brotherly love he became afflicted with that strange diamond disease-unableum to hittum. So Mr. Klein languished around Wrigley Field for a while and then returned once more to play first fiddle in the bandbox park at Philly. The case of Wally Berger vs. Hor- ace Stoneham, business manager of the Giants, resulted in a verdict in favor of Boston. Berger could pow- der the pill in Boston but had sorely neglected the fielding aspect of base- ball. He found, as did Messrs. Stone- ham and Terry, that that neglected portion was a prerequisite to pen- nant winning. So the ponderous Mr. Berger was relegated to a pinch hit- ting post and finally traded to Cin- einnati. With so many of these big money trades going wrong it appears that big league managers are only human. They possess no intuitive ability, no divine prophetic gift which enable them to foretell the future. Instruction in string, woodwind and brass instruments will be given through August 19 in Ann Arbor High School with registration for classes open until July 4. All students entered in instrumen- tal classes will be allowed to par- ticipate in the summer band or string ensemble. Also included in the summer music program will be a harmonica band. All classes will be neld in Room B-2 of the High School and a two dollar enrollment fee will be charged. Summer violin classes will be under the direction of Miss Thelma Newell Repertory Players' Summer Season Offers Women's Roles Of All Kinds By SUZANNE POTTER The Michigan Repertory Players, celebrating their tenth anniversary season this summer, offer in their roster of plays unlimited opportuni- ties for women attending 'the Sum- mer Session. "Brother Rat," playing July 6 through July 9, has in its cast of players two roles of contrasting types. Joyce Winfry is the "prom- trotter" type of girl-the kind that makes a business of collecting pins and undergraduates. The other fem- inine role is that of Claire Ramm, daughter of the commandant of Vir- ginia Military Institute where the play takes place. Claire is the typical "Phi Beta" with horn-rimmed spec- tacles and all. However, Claire has her points, and in the process of be- ing a "regular fella" and tutoring the school lunkhead, is almost caught in the boys' room in the dead of night by her father. "The Shoemakers' Holiday," play- ing July 13 through July 16, has in its list of characters a woman of the Elizabethan type---very large and dignified. The New York production of the show imported Marian War- ing-Manley, who is one of the largest women on the English stage, to play the part opposite Whitford Kane's Simon Eyre portrayal. Irina in "Idiot's Delight" is a pho- ney Russian heiress whose disguise is pierced by a Broadway song and dance man who recognizes her as a woman he had known in a hotel in Omaha, Neb. The smooth acting of Lynn Fontanne in the New York production put the role over to per- fection. "Idiot's Delight" opens July 20 and runs through July 23. July 27 through July 30 brings "Kind Lady" to the Mendelssohn. The leading feminine part in the play is that of a wealthy London- bred Englishwoman, who takes into her huge town house a party of strange people, who proceed to "do her in." Sarah Pierce heads the property ri(*partment again, and many oppor- JiiInities are open for women interest- ed in rounding up antiques and other properties necessary to the business of the play. FACULTY RECEPTION The Faculty Reception for Sum- mer Session students will be held Friday at the Horace H. Rackham School for Graduate Studies, and not at the League as was reported in the Daily yesterday. .... i d FA R in Or NEW If You Prefer STUDENT for all departments 11111114111111 iinn un 1111 I fTfl TTfe XI WUWnCiRn 1