X -1, 19411 THE.,MICHIGAN DAILY _______._____________, ... . Famous Contralto To Present Recital The Metropolitan Company's fam- ous contralto, Enid Szantho, will give her first Ann Arbor concert since the May Festival at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in the Rackham Assembly Hall. George Poinar, chairman of the violin and ensemble department at Baldwin Wallace College, will take part in the recital as violin soloist and Prof. Ava Comm Case of the Schoool of Music will serve as accompanist. Moart's Sonata No. 7 will be played by Mr. Poinar and Professor Case. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY From The. Bleachers . . . Dodgers Blitz Reds... BROOKLYN, July 10.-(A)-Ducky Medwick, Cookie Lavagetto and Billy Herman drove in all of the Brooklyn runs today as the league-leading Dodgers, behind Kirby Higbe's five- hit pitching, mowed down the Cin- cinnati Reds 8 to 3. Each of the big guns got two hits, Medwick a home run, his 10th of the year, and a single, and Lavagetto and Herman two doubles apiece. But while the Dodgers bagged 10 safeties in all, young Pete Reiser went hit- less for the first time in 19 games. It was Higbe's 12th victory against six defeats. Vander Meer's record now is seven won and nine lost. Chicago Takes Braves,... BOSTON, July 10.-(/P)-The Chi- cago Cubs opened a three-game series. with the Boston Braves today by registering a 3-1 triumph behind the seven-hit pitching of lefty Vern Ol- sen. Olsen clinched the victory, his sixth of the season, in the seventh inning when he singled to center to drive in Babe Dahlgren. The Cubs nicked Alva Javery for their initial tally in the first inning when Stan Hack singled,, moved to third on a passed ball and came in on a slow bingle past short. A pass to Dallessandro, Nicholson's double and Augie Galan's fly gave the Cubs a run to spare in the eighth. Many By For Sports Are Offered Program To Start Women July 30 TYPING TYPING-Experienced. L. M. Hey- wood, 414 Maynard St. Phone 5689. VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist in graduate school work. Mimeo- graphing and notary public. 706 Oakland. 6327. LOST and FOUND LOST--Black brief case containing material on elementary science. Call E. R. Phelps, 3397. FOR RENT FOR RENT-Until Aug. 25-Liberty near State-3-room apartment on ground floor, private entrance. Call 3468. FOR RENT-two-room apartment, nicely furnished, new refrigerator. $250month. See O'Malley or Mrs. Brown-1032 Vaughn. HELP WANTED STUDENT to work eight hours per week to apply on board. Phone 2-2320. YOUNG MAN or young woman stu- dent with some soda fountain ex- perience for part time work. Witham Drug Co., 601 S. Forest, corner S. University. LAUNDERING; LAUNDRY 2-1044. 'Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 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 Eandkerchiefs .............. .02 Bath Towels................03 All Work Guaranteed Also special prices donCoeds' laundries. All bundles done sep- arately. No markings. Silks and wools are our specialty. [Yif ere a Four-Week Physical Education Course Will Commence Monday GOOD BARBER SHOP riqlil han4 A l, yo Registrations are now being taken in Barbour Gymnasium for the four- week courses in physical education for women to begin Monday. Included in this group are sections 20 through 29. The arrangement was planned to give students a chance to receive instruction in several sports of. their choice during the Summer Session. The other two groups of courses commenced June 30, one to run for four weeks, and the other to extend through six weeks. Classes will be given in badminton at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday; body conditioning, 5 p.m. Monday and Wednesday; and riding, 7 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Three golf groups will meet, at 4 p.m. Monday and Wednesday, at 3 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday and again at 5 p.m. on the same days. Swimmers To Receive Lessons Beginning swimmers will receive in- struction at 4 p.m. Monday and Wed- nesday and at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday. Tap dancers will meet at 5 p.m. Monday and Wednesday, and tennis is scheduled for 4 p.m. Tues- day and Thursday. Instructions for registration are as follows: 1. Make out a card for the section for which you are registering. 2. If you have not already done so, go to the Health Service for a medi- cal check. This is required before participation will be allowed. 3. If you wish to rent equipment, Band To Give Concert Here The Summer Session's 147-piece High School Clinic Band, under the direction of Prof. William D. Revelli of the School of Music, will present their first band concert at 4:15 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. Composed entirely of secondary school students, the band is being used to help instruct and train the individuals who have come to Ann Arbor to study at the clinic. In the band at the present time there are 38 clarinets, 30 cornets, 17 flutes, 16 French horns, 12 trombones, 10 oboes, eight saxophones, six bari- tones, six drums and four basoons. Serving as guest conductors with Professor Revelli in Sunday's con- cert will be Dale C. Harris of Pontiac and Cleo Fox of Kalamazoo. Ken- nethKostmann of Monroe willplay a cornet solo and Virgil Wittenberg and Richard Weir of Sturgis will join in a drum duet. Chemists, Tigers And Indians Win There were three coall games in the Intramural's American League and each of the seven inning contests were won by large scores. The Chemists overpowered the Legal Eagles with a tremendous of- fensive winning by a score of 20 to 3. Smith was the winning pitcher while Takeo Kimura hurled for the law- yers. Ivan Parker, Curriculum Workshop flinger, was battered hard by the In- dians as the latter came through to win 20 to 6. Belting out three homers in the fifth behind George Moroz, the Tig- ers defeated Foster Van Vliet and the Blitzkriegers, 13 to 6. On Tuesday the Blitzkriegers will meet the Legal Eagles; the Indians will face the Tigers and the Chem- ists will battle it out with the Cur- riculum Workshop squad. purchase an equipment ticket in Room 15, Barbour Gymnasium. In connection with some of these classes, there will be informal tour- naments, to acquaint players with the etiquette of competition and to pro- vide for practice under more natural conditions. These will be especially emphasized in the golf classes, under the direction of Miss Marie Hart- wig of the department. Golfers To Compete Golfers will have a chance to com- pete in putting at 5 p.m. next Wed- nesday, when they meet at the Wo- men's Athletic Building with Miss Hartwig. It will not be necessary to sign up for this tournament. Women who have entered the singles and mixed doubles competi- tions in tennis will find their sched- ule of play posted today in the Wo- men's Athletic Building on North University and Forest. Players are urged to contact their opponents as soon as possible and arrange to play off the games on schedule. Tryouts Sought For Operetta James Wolfe Will Direct Chorus For Show Tryouts for Gilbert's and Sullivan's operetta, "The Gondoliers," which will be presented by the Michigan Repertory Players of the Department of Speech from Aug. 13 to 16 and Aug. 18 to 19, will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. Monday, July 14, in Room 506 of the Carillon Tower. Tryouts are open to both students and non-students. For those who cannot come from 4 to 6 pm. there will be special tryouts at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the same place. The chorus will be directed and trained by James Wolfe. The whole production will be under the direc- tion of Prof. Valentine B. Windt of the speech department and the faculty of the School of Music. The University Symphony Orchestra of the School of Music will also partici- pate in the operetta. Dr. Ralph A. Wolfe Is'Named Secretary Dr. Ralph A. Wolfe, Research Phy- sicist of the University's Engineering Research Department, will act as secretary at the annual spectroscopy meeting to be held July 21 through July 23 at the Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Accompanying Dr. Wolfe will be Dr. H. B. Vincent, Research Physicist, who has written a paper in collabora- tion with Professor R. A. Sawyer, physics professor now serving in the navy, and Mr. H. H. Grossman, phy- sics assistant. The paper, "Discussion of Question of Plate Calibration; Methods and Error," will be presented at the meet- ing by Dr. Vincent and Prof. Sawyer, who is coming from his post at the United States Naval Proving Grounds, Dahldran, Va., to attend the con- vention. a. p. blanstein's POTPOURRI BETWEEN June 22 and July 1, the Germans claim to have captured some 5,774 tanks, 2,330 guns and 4,- 725 planes from the Russians-which is about twice as much equipment as Col. Charles A. Lindbergh says the Soviets even had. Can it be that someone's slide rule is stuck or have the Nazis been drinking too much ersatz beer again? We don't like to doubt Russian communiques that the German troops are using wooden tanks but we frankly find it hard to believe. If recent reports on Nazi and Sovi- et equipment are at all accurate, the Reich will be using wooden tanks about the same time the U.S.S.R. starts to use bows and arrows. * * * Maybe the wooden tanks were a mirage. They have a lot of them on the Mongolian desert, you know; or aren't the Germans scheduled to ad- vance as far as there until next week? A RECENT LETTER from friends at Columbia tells us that the son of Field Marshall Wilhelm von Keitel is a student at Nick Butler's little school. As far as our friends are concerned Keitel is a very nice boy and has a lot of friend. That is all very swell and we hope he stays a nice boy and doesn't be- come an "International incident." Is there any truth to the rumor that Secretary Knox has hired a couple of cartographers to redraw the map of the world to put Iceland somewhere in the Western Hemi- sphere? Or does Roosevelt's "eastern boundary of defense activities" ex- tend all the way to Vladivostok? * * * And are the Icelanders really putting up signs on their homes to the effect that "George Washing- ton Slept Here?" * * * FROM an Associated Press story: "In the area of Polotsk, specific- ally at Borkovichi (Borovichi) and Ulla (Pulma), Red troops in a series of counterattacks . . . etc." Which all goes to prove that we need more experienced football announcers to read off these new war bulletins. We saw Ted Williams for the first time at the All-Star game and we hereby nominate him as the slop- piest looking baseball player in the majors. In fact he was almost as badly dressed as some of the Michi- gan professors. Fine old Chinese coats and embroideries at unusally j moderate prices. For a lim- j ited period only. Thieda Mary Muyskens Corner State and Liberty j (625 East Liberty, Apt. 8), Mornings 7:30 to 12. \\. .\/\\\\t \\;\\\\\\:\\ 0 Skilled Barbers * Sanitary Accessories 0 Comfortable Chairs 4 MANICURIST IN ATTENDANCE ON FRIDAYS CAFETERIA LEVEL Michigan union -.. ' NMWMNN : 6 ... ."s4 «:3) + V. a 4 I -- Just six with Zip-in Linings. 19.98 Just 17 coats tailored of sturdy camels hair and wool fabric, lined with Earl-glo rayon. Perfect for travel, for between-seasons, take advan- tage of these values. Similar coats will sell in the Fall for 22.95 and 29.95. e tion in Modern Eoolin ' i Q i H + 4 A Nis" Four size 10's, one size 11, seven size 12's, one size 13, two size 14's, two size 20's. Zip-in lining coats: two size 13's, two size 14's, one size 16, one size 18. GOODYE fR'S STATE STREET Summer Hat * Reg. $3 Values! Sisols! Toyos! o Hinokis! Fabrics! * All Headsizes ! *Cocoanut Straw Hats Fresh, crisp, new and enchanting! Y S ale 2 (ou've seen the Added styles at higher price ... now at only $2 you'll want to nw- ________! T Added nil n rnnInn.-l n limVxvJiLL EMMOM I 1c 411 11u3,.y 11CblS. Iusl IL 5 an open