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July 07, 1939 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1939-07-07

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Wo Leagues
Open Season '
For Softball
welve Teams Compile
High Scores In Torrid
Heat OfFerry Field
Tuns crossed the plate fast and
en yesterday as the twelve teams
king up the National and Inter-
ional leagues of the softball pro-
m played their opening games of
season at South Ferry Field.
National League
Che powerful Tiger team of the
tional League, led by the heavy
ting of Steve Sabo and Jake Dahl-
n, formerMichigan State foot-
1 stars, compiled the biggest score
the afternoon in defeating the
?er Dupers 18-1. Batteries for the
ers were Nelson and Rankin; for
Super Dupers, Becker and
inier.
ilso in the National league, the
I Sox out-hit, out-played and out-
the Ten Old Men to finish the
ner 14-5, despite heavy hitting by
nn of the Old Men, who had a
.ble and triple in three trips to
plate. Dross was the winning pit-
r, Bertotti the loser.
a the final game of the National
gue, the Eskimos warmed to Ann
or's torrid climate and lustily
ed the pitching of Wolverine
undsman Bowers for 11 runs while
iting his team to 5. Miller, Eski-
pitcher, was belted for five runs
he first three innings before he
led down and fed the Wolverines
one hit during the remainder of
contest.,
International League
he Physical Education team
ved to be the most powerful of-
sive nine in the International'
;ue as their stickmen hammered
uns from the offerings of pitch-
Richardson and Klemak whose
awn team was limited to 6 by

University Broadcasting Begins
Summer Series Here Monday

'Iron Horse' Honored By Baseball Fans

Soloists, Musical Groups
To Be Featured In First
Broadcast - Over WJR ,
Summer Session Broadcasting will
open at 3:15 p.m. Monday with a
musical program over radio station
WJR Detroit.
The program, arranged by Ernest
Hares, SM, pageant writer whose
works have been heard nationally
over radio, will feature soloists and
musical groups.
Programs scheduled for the re-
mainder of the week will be pushed
ahead one day because of the All-
Star baseball game to be broadcast
Tuesday. At 3:15 p.m. Wednesday,
the Stay-At-Home Tourist will take
the summer visitors on a tour of the
Lawyers Club, the Union and the
League via the air waves over WJR,
followed by a short health talk on
sunburn and poison ivy. Also on the
same program will be a short book
review and an interview with Miss
Lucy Barton, costumer for Play Pro-
duction.

The "Scarlet Letter" will be drama-
tized over the air at 3:15 p.m. to 3:30
p.m. Thursday. Following this, a
short original skit, "Take Your Girl
to the Ball Game," will be presented
in order to educate women to the
science of baseball. The radio class
of Prof. Richard D. T. Hollister will
give part of George Eliot's "Silas Mar-
ner" in dramatic narrative form from
3:15 to 3:30 p.m. Friday over WJR.
Glimpses of the life and poetry of
Tennyson will be heard from 3:30 to
3:45 p.m. Friday.
Education Clubs
To Give Party
Golf, Bowling And Games
Are Featured Activities
Golf will be the theme of the Club
Party to be held by the Women's and
Men's Education Clubs at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in , the Women's Athletic
Building.
Twosomes and foursomes will be
formed and will carry through all
activities of the evening. All facili-
ties will be available including golf,
bowling, ping pong, shuffle board,
soap carving, silhouette cutting, card
games and other games, according to
Elizabeth Barrowman, chairman of
the affair.
Square dancing will be ,taught by
Jimmy Johnson with Gordon Bailey
as pianist. Sponsors for the evening
will be Prof. Mabel E. Rugen of the
Women's Physical Education de-
partment and Prof. George E. Car-
rothers of the School of Education.
Helping Miss Barrowman will be Ger-
trude Penhale, Maurine Bowling,
Margaret Jones, Willine Conrad,
Marjorie Harger, Kenneth Bordine,
Roger McFall, Charles Cline and
Cleveland Roe.
Prizes will be awarded and refresh-
ments served. A 10 cent admission
fee will be charged to cover expenses.

Navy Survey Flight 20 Years Ago
Paved Way For Oceanic Service

international Center
Holds Open House
An informal reception and open
house was held Wednesday by the In-
ternational Center affording Summer
Session residents an opportunity to
become, acquainted with the foreign
students of the University.
In the receiving line were Prof. and
Mrs. J. Raleigh Nelson, Prof. and
Mrs. Louis M. Eich, Miss Ethel Mc-
Cormick, and Miss Wilma A. Gwin-
ner and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ander-
son. Students present included Mrs.
Sada Kato, James Wong, George Lee,
Esperanza Castro, Gloria Cortes, 1e-
liciana Reyes, Mrs. M. Yen, Arif Al-
Awar, Kamali Kosambi, Alvah Zwic-
key, Alfredo Morales, Mr.. and Mrs.
Jose Santos, Heriberto Duram, Am-
na Ali, Robert Sethian, Utah Tsao
and Robert Klinger.'

Tears roiled down Lou Gehrig's dimpled cheeks in the Yankee
Stadium in New York as 61,808 spectators and numerous baseball,
friends and officials participated in Lou Gehrig Appreciation Day.
Gehrig recently terminated the greatest endurance record the game,
has, ever known because of a spinal ailment.

to hemisphere. IProf. George Axtelle of the Nc
Under the command of Capt. John western University School of Ec
H. Towers, now an admiral and chief tion will speak on "Training Te
of the Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics, ers for Reality" at 12:45 p.m. I
these three craft left Rockaway, Long day at the League under the aus
Island on May 8, 1919. From there of the American Federation
to Halifax, thence to Trepassy Bay, Teachers, it was - announced ye
N.F., and finally to Lisbon, Spain by day.
way of the Azores, the voyage was Professor Axtelle is an authori
one of stamina and courage on the his field. Editor of the John D
part of the crew, fighting almost un- Society's yearbook, he is also
surmountable odds: president for the college sectlo:
In sharp contrast to this epoch- the American Federation of Te
making trio that,- fought its way ers.

ame in the Internation-
ded in victory for the
over the strong Michi-
am 6-3. For an unbiased
e account of the game
r's Town and Gown.

I

Climate And Popularity Favor
Pacific Coast Track Teams

Three Tennis
Tourneys Open
City Singles And Doubles
And State Meets Begin
Tennis players in and about Ann
Arbor fired their opening serves in
three tennis tournaments yesterday,
the state wide novice singles tourna-
ment, the City Open singles play and
the City doubles tournament.
Limited to players who have not
won letters in college tennis, cap-;
tured major titles or ranked in the
first 10 in any state or nation, the
Novice tourney draws thousands of
players each year from public parks
throughout Michigan. Winners of
the local tournaments meet in Detroit
in August for the state crown.
The City tennis tournament spon-
sored by The Ann Arbor News and
Moe's Sport Shop draws the tennis
elite of Ann Arbor and the Summer.
Session.

Student Gives
Recital Today
Mary Porter Will Present
Organ Concert At 8:15
In order to partially fulfill the re-
quirements for the degree of master
of music, Miss Mary Porter, Grad.
SM, will appear in an organ recital
at 8:15 p.m. today in Hill Auditori-
um.
The general public, with the ex-
ception of small children, is invited.
Miss Porter's program will be:
Chorale Preludes . . . Bach
In Dir Ist Freude
Ich Ruf' Zu Dir, Herr Jesu
Christ.
Prelude and Fugue in A Minor .Bach
Prelude.. .......... Schmitt
Scherzo.. ...... ......Vierne
Improvisation (basso ostenato e fu-
ghetta)..............Karg-Elert
Sonata of the Ninety-Fourth Psalm
. ....Reubke

CLASSIFIED
DIRECTORY
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LAUNDRY - Student's Laundry.
Shirts 12c. We call for and deliver.
Phone 4863 for other prices. Mrs.
Richards. 21
AUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned.
Careful work at low prices. 1
SILVER LAUNDRY
607 Hoover Phone 5594
Free pickups and deliveries;
Price List
All articles washed and ironed.
Shirts.....................14
Undershirts ..............04
Shorts..................... .04
Pajama Suits................10'
Socks, pair ...................... .03
Handkerchiefs-...............02
Bath Towels................ .03
All Work Guaranteed
Also special prices on Coed's laun-
dries. All bundles done separately.
No markings. Silks, wools our
specialty. 9
LOST
OST-Ring-2 opals, 2 diamonds,
yellow gold. Reward. Nancy Schae-
fer, 419 N State. Call 4121 ext. 789.
26
DST-Man's gold tie clasp, with
initials C.S. on front and "Chorus
'38-39" on back'. Return to Michi-
gan Daily. Reward. 27
WANTED - TYPING
OLA STEIN-Experienced typist
and notary public, excellent work.
706 Oakland, phone 6327. 3
XPERIENCED typing, stenographic
service.Phone 7181 or evening 9609.
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KPERIENCED TYPING and mime-
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719 Tappan. Phone 3025. 28

A favorable all-year climate and
popular enthusiasm for the sport are
leading factors in the national
supremacy of track teams from the
Pacific Coast, Ken Doherty, Michi-
gan's new track coach, told members!
of the physical education depart-
ment at their weekly luncheon yes-
terday.
Doherty pointed out that over 35,-
000 fans, the largest turnout at a
track meet since the Olympic Games
in 1932, attended the National Col-
legiate meet held on the West Coast
last month. He showed newspapers
in which the track news had been
bannered and two and three pages
had been devoted to the names of
competitors, times, schools and ad-
vance dope on "probable winners" of
the different events.
National high school ratings, the
coach said, list from California alone
10 out of 20 champion sprinters;
seven out of eight champion pole
vaulters, six out of eight high jump-
ers. The distance runs are the events
in which Coast schools are weakest,
he said.
Although beaten out in most of the
events in the National Collegiate
meet, members of the Michigan team,
winners of the Big Ten champion-
ship, actually did better in most of
the events than in the Big Ten meet,
Doherty said. He gave as an example
of' the type of competition in the'
National meet the shot put, in which
the first six men to place all shot
1y
Professor Woody Visits
George Peabody College
Prof. Clifford Woody, director of
the Bureau of Educational Reference
and Research left yesterday for
George Peabody College for Teach-
ers in Nashville, Tenn.
Professor Woody will attend the
third annual Reading Institute be-
ing held there from July 3 to 15. He
will deliver three lectures on the
general topic of "Study Habits and
Reading." He is scheduled to speak
Friday morning, Friday afternoon
and Saturday morning. . Pr6fessor
Woody will return here Monday.

over 50 feet. Elmer Hackney of Kan-
sas State won the events with a 50
ft. 10 in. toss, with Michigan's Bill
Watson second.
The two-mile run was the outstand-
ing race of the meet, Doherty stated.
Although ten minutes was only re-
cently considered excellent time in
the event, five men were entered who
had run it in 9:11 or better. Four of
them finished under 9:10 to make
the fastest general finish ever re-
corded in the event. Michigan's cap-
tain-elect, Ralph Schwartzkopf, fin-
ished strong to overtake Garner of
Washington State, but could not quite
catch up to Notre Dame's Gregory
Rice, winner. ,Schwartzkopf, how-
ever, ran a great race to win the
two-mile in the Pacific Coast-Big
Ten meet a week later.
Warren Breidenbach, Michigan's
well-known sophomore quarter-miler,
finished fifth in his event behind
Erwin Miller of Southern California.
Breidenbach, whose usual race is one
of sprinting for the inside lane, re-
laxing and then finishing strong,
could not dorkinto the inside and
was forced to run a longer distance
in the end, Doherty explained.
Doherty pointed to the changed in-
terest of the spectators in track.
There was once a time, he said, when
spectators went only to see the 100-
yard dash, but now they aer inter-
ested in all of the events. He called
John Woodruff of Pittsburgh "prob-
ably the greatest 880-yard runner in
the world; perhaps the greatest of all
time."

I

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tdI

JAMES HAMILTON, Tenor
TEACHER OF SINGING
"Italian Method"
Beginners Accepted - Additions free
Studio: 831 T pan Ct.
Dial 2-3370 or 8389
CANARIES, PARRAKEETS,
LOVEBIRDS
Bird Cages, Foods, Supplies
Birds Bsarded. Reasonable Prices
MELODY AVIARIES
562 S. Seventh St. Ph. 5330

V

YPING-Experienced. Miss
408 S. 5th Avenue. Phone
or 2-1416.

Allen,
2-2935
24

MISCELLANEOUS
COLLEGE BEAUTY SHOP offers
low, prices and good work. Special
oil permanent $1.95; Shampoo and
wave with rinse .50; Eyebrow Arch
.25; Oil Manicure, Revlon polish
.50; Marinello Facial .75. Open
evenings by appointment. Phone
2-2813. 29
JSE OF PIANO-In vicinity of Wil-
liams and Division for few hours
daily during Summer Session by
composition student. Call 8042.

FF
.,
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' .

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COOL

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W
WATER TEMPERATURE 70*

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