THE MICHIGAN DAIL Y leveland Takes First Place As Tigers Lose Dale Traces Western Mores In Transition Tells Of Transformation From Cow Lands To Farm And Dude Ranch Area (Pontinued froh Page 1) ture of the daughter, bringing out the differences of the two cultures. le told of the coming with the set- tlers of the church, the schoolhouse and the Sunday school. He described the fusion of the cultures as it grad- ually developed, as he had seen it develop in his younger days when he, himself, was a cowboy. The transition came as more and more settlers moved in, Professor Dale recounted, "and more and more cow-punchers began to call upon the young women of - the settler class. Dimly they began to comprehend how difficult it was for a man on a raw one hundred sixty acres claim to provide his family with the bare necessities of life. They saw the pitiful extremities to which the daughter of the household was driven to secure suitable clothing in order; to keep herself attractive and to join in the social life of the community. Toleration took the place of the for- mer antagonism and they began 'first to endure, then pity, then em- brace'." Professor Dale concluded his lec- ture with a summary of what hap- pened to the cowhand and ranchmen under the new order. Ducaas Malone Viitas Southern Statesmanship (Continued from Page 1) Tony Holds Tight To Maxie .Baer Bengal Hurlers Blasted; Feller - I ALL-CAMPUS WOMEN'S TOURNAMENTS Sponsored by the Women's Physical Education Department Check in the squares below those tournaments you wish to enter. 'Gives Up 7 Hits Reese's Four Run Homer Gains Dodgers' Victory In 9th Over New York (By The Associated Press) The stay of the Detroit Tigers in first place in the American League was short lived. Weak pitching outweighed De- troit's run-getting ability today and as a result the Bengals lost a 12 to 7 decision to the Chicago White Sox Coupled with Cleveland's 5 to 2 vic- tory over St. Louis, the defeat shoved the Tigers five percentage points back of the Indians whom they meet here tomorrow in a 'double header. Paul Trout and Lynn Nelson shared the mound duties for the Tigers today and neither showed ability to baffle the White Sox hit- ters. The Cleveland Indians called up- on young Bob Feller today to stop the St. Louis Browns from kicking them around and he responded with a seven-hit, 5 to 2 triumph. Number 13 For Feller It was the 13th triumph of the season for the kingpin of Cleveland's casting corps, who whiffed 11 bat- ters and encountered trouble in only the sixth inning. The Browns, who took the series two games to one, tallied both their runs in the sixth on two walks mixed with singles by George McQuinn and Johnny Berar- dino. The Brooklyn Dodgers blasted out six runs in the ninth inning today, four on Peewee Reese's homer with the bases loaded, to humiliate the New York Giants, 7 to 3, and streng- then their grasp on the National League lead. Joe Medwick touched off the ex- plosion by hitting the first pitch of the inning into the right field stands for his second home run in two days. The Dodgers pushed across another run to tie the score and then rookie Reese broke up the game. Philadelphia and Boston battled on even terms today until the ninth inning when the Bees rallied to score six runs for an 8 to 3 victory. Slugger's Battle The Boston Red Sox spotted the Philadelphia Athletics the first eight runs today and then set off enough fireworks to gain a 12-11 victory that was decided by Capt. Jimmy Foxx's ninth-inning homer, his 19th of the season.' Foxx's blow featured the six-run last inning rally against Herman Besse, Chubby Dean and Nelson Pot- ter, and was the last of the slug- fest's seven homers, two of which were blasted by the A's Sam Chap- man. The Chicago Cubs, after relinquish- ing an early three-run lead, came back today to whip Pittsburgh's Pi- rates, 7 to 5, on Bobby Mattick's eighth inning single with the bases filled. Dormitory To Give Tea Honoring Dean Alice Lloyd, who will leave soon for her vacation in the East, Betsy Barbour House will hold its first tea of the Summer Ses- sion from 4 to 5 p.m. Friday. ( ( ( ) ) ) >) ) Archery......Columbia Round Badminton Golf......Women's Open Singles Tennis......Women's Singles Tennis... . Mixed Doubles (partner's name .............. ) Mail or bring entries to Barbour Gymnasium not later than Satur- day, July 6. Tournament lists will be posted in the Women's Athletic Building (Badminton in Barbour Gymnasium) by Monday, July 8. Name .................... Address ................ Phone ...... Summer Session Excursionists' Visit Ford River Rouge Factory Summer Session excursionists machines that drill the block in one gathered yesterday in front of An- step to the end of the line where gell Hall to travel to Dearborn in the completed motor is ready to be order to visit the Ford River Rouge lowered into the chassis on the main plant, assembly line below. The group left Ann Arbor by bus The main assembly line was, of and proceeded to the Ford Rotunda, course, the main attraction. There which Henry Ford had transplanted on a continuous conveyor belt run- from Chicago after the World's Fair ning at a uniform speed, the auto- there and where various' exhibits mobile takes shape before the eyes pertaining to the Ford car are kept of the onlookers. From a bare chas- continually on display. There the sis to a mere skeleton to the finished group transferred to Ford busses product which is driven off the line which took them to the factory under its own power in 45 minutes grounds. is one of the miracles of the modern Once inside the grounds, guides industrial age, a far cry from the pointed out the various buildings, older practice of hand craftsman- explaining the purpose of each, and ship. showed the group freighters unload- The various parts to be added ing at the company's docks on the Riger Rouge. swig from another conveyorbelt Within one of the buildings, the above and behind the line workers, excursionists followed the motor as- or lie in neat piles by the worker's sembly process from the point where side. Each man has a job to do: the cylinder block is bored by huge placing a part, tightening a set of ginia, Dr. Malone reasoned that the difference between the New Eng- landers and Southerners may have, been that while the first were occu-. pied with the church, education and business, the latter, planting gentry, 4ere free to devote their time to mat- ters such as -political philosophy. After the time of Jefferson, with the coming of men such as Calhoun, there was a change, Dr. Malone said. with the second group inferior to the first. Political philosophy turned, to dogmatism, he said, and the climate of dogmatism is not favorable to the development of great men. The south's superiority in states- manship ended with the Civil War, and, Dr. Malone seemed to feel, all signs point to the fact that there has been in recent years a decline in New England's superiority in other fields. The tide of western achievement has been a rising one, the lecturer said, and the attitude that Western- ers are "men of action rather than men of thought" is unwarranted. Two-ton Tony Galento (right) is shown holding onto Maxie Baer for dear life during their heavyweight boxing bout in Jersey City. Baer, former champion, cut Tony's:mouth so badly that Referee Joe Mangold stopped the fout at the start of the eighth round, giving Maxie a tech- nical knockout. Galento suffered a broken hand. By his victory, Baer earned the right to another bout with Joe Louis. Forester's Field Camp Opens; Ten-Week Session Attracts 60 Camp Filibert Roth, summer camp of the University Forestry School, has opened its annual ten-week sea- son on Golden Lake, in the western part of the Upper Peninsula, under the direction of Robert Craig, Jr. A total of 60 students are registered. Field work is an important part of a forester's life, and the aim of the Summer Session is to acquaint the students with the practical as- pects of forestry by utilizing the wonderful opportunities of the re- gion. Most of the time is spent out- doors in tree and shrub identifica- tion, mapping, timber cruising, fire control work, and trail and telephone line maintenance. Sufficient instraf ments and tools are kept at hand to enable all the students to become familiar with the many field duties of a forester. In past seasons the students have obtained first-hand information on fire fighting by volunteering to help fight forest fires occurring near camp. Most of the work in camp is also done by the students. A deeper in- terest and pride is taken in Camp Filibert Roth when the various camp duties, such as dish washing, clean- ing of the grounds and dormitories, and the sawing and chopping of the firewood is done by the boys them- selves. However, all the boys' time is not spent in work. Ample opportunitie; are available for recreation. The lake offers swimming, rowing and fishing. The forest provides hiking, bird and wildlife study, and botany. Many deer, as well as bear signs, have been seen. Sunday evenings are devoted to "The Campfire." Hid- den talents are brought to, light at this time as the boys and faculty participate in group singing, acting, or the playing of musical instru- ments. Iowa Pitcher Wins Award Haub Called Most Valuable Ball Star InBig Ten (Special To The Daily)- IOWA CITY, July 3-Harold Haub, University of Iowa pitcher who fin- ished his Hawkeye career in June, has been named the Big Ten's most valuable baseball player. He was picked by vote of the con- ference coaches, and will receive a gold ring emblematic of the honor. Haub Won six conference games and lost two, turning in more victor- ies than any other league hurler. He allowed 44 hits and 18 runs in 58 213 innings, struck out 44 batters, and issued only 14 bases on balls. He was credited with victories over Purdue, 2-0; Illinois, 7-4; Wisconsin, 5-0 and 4-3 (as relief pitcher in sec- ond game); Chicago, 14-3; and Min- nesota, 7-2. Two 3-hit games and a 4-hitter are in the record. North- western gave him his only 1940 de- feats, the second by a 4-3 score in ten innings. I SILVERSHEEN at 69c FULL-FASHIONED HOSIERY MIMI 345 Maynard St. Read The Daily Classifieds! NEWS for Lovers of Good Food! Tihe Flautz Cafe is now AIR-COOED For your eating pleasure we have installed a fine new air-condi- tioned unit to miake our deli- cious home-cooked, German- style food all the more enjoy- able. And as an added attraction you may hear the finest in music on our new RADIO-VICTROLA WINES Bottled and Draught I I- f' r s t '., Vj .% / / 7 ,: %. So COOL, so fresh, so easy to wear, - these youthful, lovely dresses for women and little women! 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