TIURSDAYJULY 10, 1941 Initial Concert, Will Be Givens By Band Clinic THE MICHIGAN DAILY Intramural Tournaments Scheduled To Begin This Week In Ten Sports 0 Revelli, Guests Class' First Performance To Direct. Summer Sunday The High School Clinic Band, un- der the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli of the School of Music, will present its first concert of the Sum- mer Session at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in, Hill Auditorium. Dale C. Harris of Pontiac and Cleo Fox of Kalamazoo, two of the lead- ing high school band directors in the state, will serve as guest conductors. Sunday's program will open with, the Chorale "Komm, Seusser Tod" by. Bach and Leidzeri and will continue with Wood's "American Rhapsody;" Filmore's march, "The Footlifter," Shadwell's "Slavonic Serenade" and "Suite in E-Flat" by Holst. The band will also play "Pax et Labor" by Pares and the march, "El Cabellero" by Olividoti. Two of the band mem:bers, Virgil Wittenberg and Richard Weir of Sturgis, will present a drum duet while Kenneth Kost- mann of Monroe will offer a cornet solo. In The Majors, AMERICAN LEAGUE New York...... Cleveland ....... Bpston _.. . ... . Chicago. . ....... . Detroit .......... Philadelphia .... St. Louis........ Washington ...... W 48 46 40. 38 39 34 27 26 L 26 31 33 36 40 40 45 47 Pet. .649 .597 .548 ,514 .494 .459 .375 .356 GB 3/2 71/2 10 11/2 14 20 212/2 Intramural athletic competition in 10 sports is scheduled to get under way this week and next as part of the Summer Session's 14th annual "Play For All" program. The sports in which students have been given the opportunity to com- pete are softball, swimming, golf, squash, table tennis, badminton, codeball, and horseshoe, tennis and handball, singles and doubles. During the summer, the I-M staff under Director A. A. James will draw up all schedules, officiate at the vari- cus games and matches and supply equipment for all sports except ten- nis, squash, badminton, horseshoes and codeball. The necessary equip- :ient for these activities, however, 'will be available for rental at the "cage" in the Sports Building. Winners in all sports will be award- ed fntramural ribbons and will be given the opportunity to purchase official Intramural medals, cups, statuettes and plaques at cost price. All students desiring to compete in any of these sports who have not as yet signed up are urged to do so as soon as possible by calling Mr. James at the Sports Building. Here is a list of all activities for which the I-M has already drawn up definite plans: Softball Six baseball squacw, organized into an American League, will begin their summer softball competition at 4:15 p.m. today at South Ferry Field. Mr. James expects to organize another six teams into a National Leagae and have a "Little World Series" in August to decide the campus cham- pionship. The teams are the Blitzkriegers, managed by J. Eldersveld; the Chem- ists, headed by F. C. Benner; the Cur- rculum Workshop, directed by Ivan Parker; the Indians, captained by Art Smith; the Legal Eagles, man- aged by M. Leitson; and the Tigers, headed by Russ Waters. Today the Blitzkriegers will meet the Tigers, the Chemists will face the 'Legal Eagles; and the Curriculum Workshop will play the Indians. Swimming Every Monday and Wednesday during the Summer Session, swim- ming meets will be held at 4:30 p.m. at the Intramural Building poolj which will be open from 10:30 a.m. to noon and from 3 to 5:30 p.m. daily. Only five entries have been received for this activity and Mr. James has asked all those interested in swim- ming to contact him some time this week. Those who have entered are Frank Burham, M. Richards, C. E. Max- well, W. B. Wright, Jr., and Ray Ryn- berg. Burham won the 25-yard free style event Monday. Other events will be the 50 and 100-yard free style,' the 25 and 50 yard breaststroke and Yesterday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Games Boston at Detroit Washington at Chicago, night Philadelphia at Cleveland, night. New York at St. Louis, night. NATIONAL LEAGUE backstroke, the 75-yard medley, the plunge for distance and diving. Handball In both the singles and doubles competition in handball, the game point will be 21 and the winner will be required to win two out of three matches. The singles will be played at 3:15 p.m. and 4:15 p.m. Friday and Saturday, July 18 and 19, while the doubles has been scheduled for 3:15 p.m. Saturday, July 26. Those participating in the singles will be M. Reizen, E. Dodo, R. Lyon, P. E. Lee, R. Franci, J. Funk, M. Reade, D. Goldring and A. Chegwin. On the 26th, the team of Dodo and Levine will meet Reade and Boone while Callens and Morehouse will face Reizen and Gurman. Horseshoes The horseshoes matches will be played off Thursday, July 17. Game point will be 21 and the match will go to the winner of two contests. Eight students have entered this activity and the first round pairings are as follows: R. Nunn vs. C. Wat- son; D. Goldring vs. H. L. Pfost; M. Richards vs. K. C. DeGood, and C. Kenyon vs. A. Cappeto. Badminton On Tuesday and Wednesday, July 15 and 16, I. Giffen, G. Dunfee, O. Lefko, J. Stone, A. Chegwin and D. Butler will compete in the opening badminton singles competition. Game point will be 15. Stone, I. W. Cook, R. C. Altman, L. Schachnow and Lefko will play in the squash tourney at 4:15 p.m. Mon-- day, July 21. Golf Twenty-three students have en- tered the Intramural golf tourna- Sports Supper Will Be Given Entertainment To Be Held For Women Tuesday All women in physical education are invited to attend a supper for the sports seminar Tuesday in the Wo- men's Athletic Building, time to be announced later. This is in place of the regular class held from 4 to 6 p.m. each Tuesday, to which both men and women are welcome. Program planned for the supper will include discussions on two points, led by Miss Laurie Campbell of the department. Talk will center around recent teaching techniques and possible adaptations of such sports as badmin- ton, swimming, and the team sports to incomplete facilities. Also stressed will be accidents involved in certain activities and the means of avoiding these. The seminar, a laboratory course covering recent trends in women's athletics, is planned to fit the needs of the students, various members of the physical education department covering their particular fields of in- terest and information. It is not too late for ' students to enter this course, as it is a six-week class. Women interested in attend- ing the supper may sign up by Mon- day at Barbour Gymnasium. There will be a charge of 50 cents. ment which will be played at the Uni- versity Golf Course. The first round matches must be played by July 14 with P.G.A. rules followed in all the eighteen-hole match play events. Winners will go into the championship flight and losers into the first flight. The first round pairings are as fol- lows: J. Watkins vs. W. Anderson; J. Torbitt vs. E. Dandridge; Sam Shep- ard vs. M. Richards; T. Caldwell vs. J. Henderson; K. Johnson vs. A. Ten- nant; W. Miller vs. P. Woodworth; R. Rynberg vs. R. Hall; C. Stern vs. R. Tuohy; W. Pfau vs. D. Ladd; H. Holmes bye; J. Peters vs. F. Dunham, and W. Bury vs. H. Newell. Tennis Tennis enthusiasts will be offered the opportunity to play in both singles and doubles events in the ten- nis tournaments. The first round of the singles tour- nament will be played at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, July 17, and Friday, July 18. The doubles matches will be played at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday, July 16. All matches will be decided on the basis of two out of three sets. Three out of five will determine the semi-final and final rounds. The pairings of the singles are as follows: Victor Shukup vs. Bill Mc- Nabb; Tom Gamon vs. G. H. Seger; Alfonso Chegwin vs. J. Malette; H. G. Roudabush vs. Louis Lody; R. J. Piffs vs. C. M. Kenyon; L. Chappell vs. E. Richardson; D. Lindsey vs. L. Springer; P. E. Lee vs. Herb London, and S. Kansanandana vs. W. Row- land. The list continues with John Long vs. Joe Livers; E. O. Johnson vs. F. Thomson; Max Wexler vs. Julius Hill; R. Nunn vs. H. Means; H. Moench vs. O. B. Lefko; E. Danridge vs. D. Butler; A. L. Yuen vs. Don Smith; Cecil Bragg vs. Take Kimura; R. Franco vs. J. Koffel; M. Richards vs. A. Recknagel, and Emery Freeman, bye. Listings for the doubles tournament matches are as follows: Tom Gamon and Emery Freeman vs. A. L. Yuen and Take Kimura; Joe Livers -and F. Thomson, bye; Don Smith and E. O. Johnson vs. E. Dandridge and H. Means; W. Rowland and L. Chappell vs. o. B. Lefko and Max Wexler; and H. G. Roudabush and R. W. Kirk- patrick vs. S. Kansanandana and Malai Huvanandana. Table Tennis Table tennis matches, which may be played any place on campus, must be completed by Monday, July 14. The results of each match should be phoned to the Sports Building as soon as they are completed. Those who have entered the com- petition are C. Zimmerman, M. Rich- ards, P. E. Lee, O. -B. Lefko, Julius Hill, A. Baltacioglu, D. Lindsey, R. Laurie, Jack Tsu, C. Kenyon, Max Wexler, 'A. Moshy, L. Schachnow, H. Roudabush, D. Butler, A. Chegwin, V. Shukur and R. Chen. Baseball On Exhibition One of the 12 baseballs signed by the American League All-Star team of 1933 is on exhibition this week in the lobby of the Union. It was loaned by A. Arnold 'Berman of the United Press. German Film To Be Shown Art Cinema Will Present 'Cobbler Of Koepenick' A German film based on an unus- ual, but true, story, "The Cobbler of Koepenick," will be the third offer- ing of the Art Cinema League this summer, to be shown at 8:15 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 3, in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham School. The story concerns a cobbler who invaded a German town in order to procure a passport, arresting the mayor and appropriating the city treasury, with the aid of a second- hand captain's uniform. The exploit so amused Kaiser Wilhelm that he granted the cobbler a pardon and a passport after he surrendered. Tickets for the Art Cinema League's season of four films may still be ob- tained for $1 at the League, the Union and Wahr's book store. No tickets will be sold for individual showings. Other foreign films to be present- ed in the series are the French movies "The Baker's Wife" and "Crime and Punishment" and the English film to be presented at 8:15 p.m. Sunday in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham School, opening the season, "Peg of Old Drury." Speech Given At Kalamazoo By Edmonson By BLANCHE DRAPER (Special to The Daily) KALAMAZOO, July 10.-Dr. James B. Edmonson, dean of the School of Education, University of Michigan, and Dr. Louis Hopkins, director of the Summer Session addressed a group of 175 students and faculty DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, Brooklyn ........ St. Louis ........ New York ........ Cincinnati ...... Pittsburgh ...... Chicago ......... Boston .......... Philadelphia ..... w 50 48 39 39 33 34 29 20 L 24 28 32 35 35 42 42 54 Pet. .676 .632 .549 .527 .485 .447 .408 .270 GB 3 9%1 11 14 17 191%2 30 Yesterday's Results No games scheduled. Today's Games Chicago at Boston. Cincinnati at Brooklyn. St. Louis at New York, night. Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, night. -E Li rya moen iiIn, B ILLIARDS SNOOKER Table Tennis FAST TABLES TIP-TOP EQUIPMENT COOL AND AIRY Sports Ticker Service BILLIARD ROOM Second Floor MICHIGAN UNION Added "Winter In Eskimo Land" Paramount News "Fun On Rollers" Sunday FRED MacMURRAY in "One Night In Lisbon' All-Campus Women's Tournaments Sponsored by the Women's Physical Education Department Check in the square below those tournaments you wish to enter: E Archery - Columbia Round ® Badminton - Women's Singles n Golf - Women's Open Singles [] Tennis - Wom"en's Singles EljTennis - Mixed Doubles* (*Partner's Name:) Mail or bring entries to Barbour Gymnasium not later than Monday, July 7. Tournaments will be posted in the Women's Athletic Building (Bad- minton in Barbour Gymnasium), by Thursday, July 10. Name Telephone Number Paramount PRINTING and DEVELOPING EASTMAN and AGFA FILMS . I I -domwA-.A NOON SPECIALS OLD-FASHION BEAN SANDWICH Soup Choice of a Salad or Dessert Beverage 6E HAMBURGER AND SPAGHETTI i