TIE MICHIGAN DAILY I: a. p. UIjnstet's POOURRTI UNLOADING A FEW odds and ends along the sports front here's the answer to questions concerning the whereabouts and futures of last season's crop of Michigan grid gradu- ates . . Tom Harmon will leave Hollywood in a few days to begin training for the All-Star game and then come to Detroit to broadcast next season's football contests over WJR . . . Forest Evashevski is head football coach at Hamilton College Ed Frutig is looking forward to spending the fall either with the Green Bay Packers or the Army.. Ralph Fritz is in training with the Philadelphia Eagles . . Milo Sukup is coaching high school ball up in Grand Rapids . . and Paul Kromer now writes U.S.N. after his name. One fellow wants to know which Western Conference teams won what ttiles last seaon and here's the ans- wer to this one. . . Michigan, Illi- nois and Indians each captured three of the 13 crowns . .' Minnesota took two and Chicago and Wisconsin one apiece . . . the Wolverines came through in baseball, swimming and tennis while the Illini took the golf, hockey and gymnastics titles . . . all of Indiana's titles were scored under the same coach in cross-country and outdoor and indoor track.. . Min- nesota won in football and wrestling, Wisconsin came out on top in basket- ball and Chicago won the fencing championship. SOME TIME AGO we got together a list of the heaviest and light- est men in baseball so we're pass- it along . . . No. 1 among the big boys is pitcher Walter G. Brown who tips the scales at a mere 265 pounds . . . he's followed by catch- er Babe Pheps and pitcher Johnny Gee each of whom admits to 225 there's a trio of 220-pounders Including rne "Big Schnoz" Lo- bard, and pitchers Max Butcher and John Whithead . . . the light boys are outfielder Lloyd Waner, who weighs 148, and infielders Hal Warstler and Jimmy Webb who hit the 150 pound mark . . outfielder Paul Waner is 153 while outfielder Jo-Jo Moore lays claim to 155 pounds. -Continuing our series of short pre- views of ' Western Conference grid squads . . . today's subject: North- western . . Coach Lynn Waldorf will have one of the toughest re- building jobs in the Big Ten on his hands when the season begins. . three of his regular backs and five of his regular linemen have graduated and Alf Bauman, one of the nation's top tackles last year, is having a little trouble with eligibility . . and on top of that five of the returning let- termen are among those wanted by Uncle Sam. RETURNING backfield 'stars in- clude Capt. Floyd "Tuffy" Cham- bers and Bill de Correvont, both of whom play halfback, fullbacks Don Clawson and George Benson and quarterbacks Don Kruger and Dick Erdlitz . . . among the top linemen are guards Buss Heagy, George Zor- ich and Nick Burke and end Bob Motl . . . several excellent first- year prospects are also available. In- cluding fullback Casey Pfeifer, Otto Graham and end Bill Ohland. Yankees Trim Browns NEW YORK, Aug. 2.-()-Marvin Breuer pitched three-hit ball today as the Yankees beat the St. Louis Brown, 2-0, for their third successive shutout victory. Singles by Joe Gor- -don and Bill. Dickey, the latter after a double -by Joe DiMaggio, drove in the Yankee runs. Szantho Will Present Recital Germans Admit Soviets Are Most Stubborn Foe 1 (Contiud from Page 1) (daer Session Chamber Orchestra un- der the direction of Eric DeLamarter anl the A Capella Choir under Noble Cam will present a concert at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Scheduled to be heard on the pro- gram will be "Hymn to Music" by Dudley Buck, "Take 0 Take Those eLips Away" by Edward Moore, "June Moonrise" by DeLamarter, "Friend" by Clara Davies, "Miserere Mei" by William Byrd, Gabrieli's "Jubilare Deo," and Serge Walter's "The Road Is Calling." The other compositions are Cain's "God of the Open Air" and "Ode to The Homeland" and "Way Over Jor- dan" and "Oh Susannah," arranged by Cain. (Continued from Page 1) LOVELY, NEW COTTON CLOTHS o A Variety of Patterns in Pleasing Pastels Always Reasonably Priced G GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NICKELS ARCADE IT'S A DATE. says in MADEMOISELLE i I'. 1 t ~I was scraped out of the bones of the enslaved masses, farmers and work- ers: everything which the clique of the Bolshevist dictators could press out of the people was used for the creation of offensive fighting arma- mnents without limits." The war reports said Ukraine fighting flamed between the Bug and Dniester rivers south of Kiev, with German speed troops officially de- clared to have cut deeply again into retreating Soviet columns. The sudden shift of power in the Nazi offensive to the southern end of the huge complicated front was reported as another week of the war slipped by without extensive'terri- torial gains in other sectors being reported by the High Command. Red Divisions Trapped Yet -further Rea army divisions were reported trapped east of Smo- lensk, with German troops method- ically pressing forward to draw tight the net along the road to Moscow. The location of the new southern drive was given as 155 miles south of Kiev, the capital of the Ukraine. It evidently was launched across the Dniester from Upper 'Bessarabia, and possibly was aimed at driving a wedge between Kiev, Russia's third city, and Odessa, her chief Black Sea port. The Germans already have re- ported advance of their forces across the lower Dniester. and they were said today to be bringing their ar- tillery up to within bombardment range of Odessa, which is also an important naval base and only about 30 miles distant from the Dniester. Coupled with the land attack, the High Command said warplanes heav- ily bombed Moscow, and rail junc- tions in the upper Volga and south- ern Ukraine. While the Germans claimed to have made steady if small territorial ad- vances in the week just ended, they were putting emphasis again and again on the military thesis that the first objective is to destroy the Soviet army and not to occupy its cities. Developing Favorably This war of material against ma- terial was held to be developing fa- vorably for the Germans. Thus, an unofficial review of the last seven days said 82,000 prisoners and enough equipment to outfit a fair-sized army had been taken. Captured war material, it was said, included 737 heavy tanks. 770 field cannon, 27 complete artillery bat- teries, 1,210 machine guns, .3,000 mo- tor vehicles, 1,200 railway cars and two armored trains. Destroyed yesterday, another re- port said, were 129 Soviet planes. Dienst Aus Deutschland, comment- ing on this phase, said the tanks capturede were as many as Soviet industry can build in two months. If this keeps up, said the Germans, the Soviet arsenal soon will be empty. Intense Counter-Attacks As to how much material the Ger- mans are losing, they had little to say, only remarking that German commanders, know 'how to conserve their equipment. Although the Germans admitted they had been subjected to intense Soviet counter-attacks in the Smo- lensk area- they denied the war had become one of position, waged from trenches across a no-man's-land. In other phases of the war, an unofficial tabulation gave 166,500 tons of shipping destroyed in a week in raids along Britain's shipping lanes, including 16,000 tons sunk or damRPd vpstarcTdsv nd T'lnt neih1,t. War Outcome Still Uncertain I ' I (Continued from Page 1) It was an opportunity lost, later mag- nified when British bombers aiding Greece against Italy refrained from attack on the German-occupied Ru- manian fields in a futile attempt to avert a full scale Balkan war. Turning to the Far East, Japan, now expanding southward by con- nivance of the "Men of Vichy" into all Indo-China, faces hardly a less " nenacing oil problem than does her Berlin Axis partner. Oil from the Dutch East Indies is her vital need as much as oil from Russia is Hitler's. Yet by word of Dutch authorities they stand ready and prepared to ddstroy those wells rather than field them to Japan. On both fronts, half the world apart, the Axis team seems still threatened with ultimate oil starva- tion. ASSOCIATED PACT RE. PRESS NEwWS I 0i and brings you two dresses guaranteed to create a stir in masculine hearts. LEFT: Black rayon crepe with eye-catching multi- colored grosgrain midriff. Pleated skirt. Jeweled ornament. $19.9- RIGHT: Black rayon crepe with pleated banding in yoke effect, fitted midriff dnd rhinestone buttons. $2.95 Both dresses in sizes 9 to 17. Also available in Brown, Blue teal, Barberry red, Moss green. It wasn't all serious: Vice-President Henry A. Wallace (right in civilian clothes) and Major Otto M. Jank (left leaning forward), Iowa ordnance plant commander, burst into frame-shaking laughter at a bystander's remark, adding a touch of levity to the serious business of dedicating the $50,000,000 Iowa ordnance plant at Burlington, Iowa. Nazi trucks in Smolensk: Berlin sources say this picture shows part of a German truck column passing through a Smolensk street. Ger- man and Russian reports have both a various times claimed possession of the Russian city of Smolensk where severe fighting has been taking place. This photo was sent from Berlin to New York via radio. C O LL NS *1 Liberty at Maynard George Bernard Shaw, eccentric playwright, satirist, vegetarian, ad infinitum, recently celebrated his seventy-eighth birthday by predict- ing a victory in World War II for combined Russian, British and United States forces. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) will accompany the group as lectur- er. Reservations in Summer Session Office, Angell Hall. Special bus to boat dock and return to Ann Arbor at 9:30 p.m. English 182 will not meet Monday morning. M. L. Williams .The United States Gunboat Tutuila (above) has been damaged by Japanese bombs during an air raid on Chungking, the Chinese capital, the Navy announced. The 370-ton boat of the Yanktse River patrol was damaged by bombs which narrowly missed the U.S. embassy. No casualties resulted but the Navy said the stern superstructure of the craft was damaged slightly. :4 i I l1 w '