SUNDAY, JULY 13, 1941 THE MICHIGAAN ILY PAGE FIVE Weekly League i I Square Dances Are Scheduled Interestedi Students Urged' To Come Early; Dance Will Start At 7:30 P.M. Students who wish to enter the square dances, from 7:30 to 9 p.m. tomorrow, must arrive at the League Ballroom by 8 p.m., Mary Neafie, chairman,' has announced. Due to the large numbers that have turned out for this weekly feature of the Summer Session social calen- dar, more than 350 being present last week, i.t has been difficult for the in- structors and hostesses to take care of late arrivals. Commencing tomor- row those coming after 8 p.m. will not be allowed to enter the dancing. Instructor of the course, vhich is free to all students, through the court- esy of Henry Ford, is Benjamin B. Lovett of the social activities depart- ment of Edison Institute, Dearborn. With a crew of teachers to aid him, Mr. Lovett has come to the campus weekly during three Summer Ses- sions, to give these complimentary lessons in country dancing. Recommended dress for these class- es is informal, with low heels, especi- ally, stressed. Read The Daily Classifieds! 16 Additional Danish Ships STaken Over WASHINGTON, Juy 12.-(i')-The Maritime Commission took over 16 more idle Danish cargo ships today and simultaneously disclosed it will cost more than $3,000,000 to repair sabotaged German and Italian ves- sels which the Government proposes to confiscate under the 1917 Espion- age Act. The Danish ships are being ac- quired under the recently-enacted Ship Requisition Act which requires payment of joint compensation to the owners. Fifteen Danish vessels and the Italian freighter Carla previous- ly had been acquired under this act. Eight remaining Danish ships idle in American ports presumably will be taken over in the near future. The Treasury yesterday ordered proceedings instituted for confisca- tion of 15 Italian and one German vessel under a 1917 law permitting confiscation when a ship is wilfully sabotaged in an American port. Most of the Axis vessels, the Coh- mission announced, will be available for use within the next 60 or 90 days, but two or three of the more seriously sabotaged can not be put into opera- tion before November or December. The Danish and Axis vessels, the Commission said, will be put to use as soon as possible in connection with the national defense program. Women To Enroll In Sports Classes Women students who wish to enter the third section of classes in the physical f education department are advised to do so tomorrow in Bar- bour Gymnasium. Classes are being offered in thO following sports: badminton, body conditioning, golf, riding, beginning swimming, tap dancing and tennis. Instructions in registering for these classes includes making out a card for the section desired; com- pleting a medical examination at the Health Service and renting equipment after purchasing an equip- ment ticket in Room 15 of the gym- nasium. If You Don't Like Him, Step Hard Bad Headache Perils Career Of Hal Trosky CLEVELAND, July 12.-(P-Slug- ging Hal Trosky surprised even his manager with the disclosure today that a "thumping headache" has bothered him at least half the time during the last three baseball seasons. The Cleveland Indians' big first baseman declared emphatically that he has no intention of retiring at any fixed date, and added: "But gosh, a fellow can't go on like this forever. If I can't find some relief, I'll simply have to give up and spend the rest of my days on my farm in Iowa. "It was so bad one day last sum- mer," he recalled, "that I walked out to Mel Harder who was pitching, and asked him not to try to pick the run- ner off first base. I knew if Mel threw me a fast ball, I wouldn't even see it." Roger Peckinpaugh, Tribal mana- ger, said he knew Trosky had been bothered by headaches for several seasons but that he was surprised they were so serious and frequent. "Hal only complained to me about them twice this summer, and Thurs- day night was the first game he missed because of them." Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Ambassador's Daughter Queen At Traverse City Cherry Fete TRAVERSE CITY, July 12.-(A')--denberg will introduce Ambassador Plans in the making for months reach fruition Wednesday with the opening of the three-day national cherry festival. Always one of the top favorites in the summer-long series of western Michigan festivals, the cherry fete this year will be marked by a host of distinguished guests and a carefully- arranged program timed to coincide with the harvesting of the cherry crop. The theme around which the festi- val is built, Pan-American friendship,! is personified in the 1941 cherry queen, dark-haired Cristina Michels of Chile. She is the daughter of Ru- dolfo Michels, Ambassador to the United States from Chile, who will accompany her father and her moth- er and deliver an address on hemi- spheric solidarity at the coronation ceremony Thursday night. Other festival guests will be Gov- ernor Murray D. Van Wagoner and Michigan's two United States Sena- tors and heir wives, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Vandenberg and Mr. and Mrs. Prentiss M. Brown. From the opening salute to the queen to the final fireworks display Friday evening, the festival program is crammed with events in which a great portion of the region's popu- lation will take part. Wednesday at 10 a.m. Senator Van- Michels as the guest of honor at a Pan-American breakfast. At 1:30 p.m. Queen Cristina and her court will make their official entry onto the scene aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Escanaba. A public service of thanksgiving at the Methodist Church in the afternon and a reception in the evening for the queen and her court round out the day's program. Stockwell Will Hold Weekly Open House Residents and directors of Stock- well Hall are at home to their friends from 3:30 to 5 p.m. every Wednesday in the living room. Receiving guests will be the directors, Mrs. Florence Preston and Miss Betty Jane Wallace. Besides these teas, short weekly musical programs are arranged for by Bess Hyde, with various residents furnishing the selections. Other activities for which the hall is planning are a birthday dinner Thursday, July 17, and a dinner Thursday, Aug. 7, to honor residents who are to receive degrees. Newspaper circulation has a 120 percent coverage compared with the number of homes in the United States. British shock troops train in the technique of crossing a barbed wire fence by stepping on the back of an officer who has thrown him- self across the entanglement to make a human bridge. Scene is some- where in Northern Ireland. 11 1I .- ~joa1A Wma is MUNSINGWEAR Foundettes :y Nylon . and La ton oPantie Girdle MUNSiGWEA4 This wisp has a way with At! Naturally, too. .. because it's a MUNSINGWEAR Foundette. Purposely made with a high- comfort content to put Young Moderns at ease, it gives loads of "la-la" to bumptious young lines . . . subtly smoothihg them* out yet wisely leaving them free! 8 Nickefs Arcade I- . .- s a. P. blaustein P ~,p 'I %I Education Clubs "tan Party For Wednesday A game-party, including folk danc- ing, will be held from 8:30 p.m. to 12 midnight Wednesday in the Wo- men's Athletic Building. Plans are also being made to pro- vide other recreation such as bowl- ing ping-pong, card playing, as well as group singing. Arrangements for the party are in the hands of a joint planning com- mittee composed of Dorothy Camhan and Irene DeSarmo of the Women's Education Group, and Ivan Parker and Homer Roberts of the men's club. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) obtained from the Bureau, 201 Mason 11all. Hours 9-12; 2-4- Physics 105-1 shall be unable to meet the class at 8:00 o'clock on Tuesday morning. E. F. Barker Graduate Women .inPhysical Edu- cation. There will be a supper for all graduat" women in physical educa- tion on Tuesday, July 15, immediate- ly following the sports seminar. Reservations must be made by Mon- day at 4:30 in Room 15, Barbour -Gymnasium. TOMORROW is Bastille Day in France-the day when all Paris is supposed to be alive with fireworks while the French sing the praises of freedom, shout against oppression and embrace each other with cries of "Liberty, Equality and Fraternity." Maybe they'll invite Hitler down to help them celebrate. * * * After all .hasn't Adolf helped maintain the old adage that "Fif- ty million Frenchmen can't be wrong" by saving them from the terrors and horrors that would come from communistic oppression? * * *' SPEAKING of national holidays, the British had a big celebration of their own on July 4 to commem- orate American independence. Of course most people said that they did it to help maintain friendly rela- tions with the U.S. but it's also pos- sible that it has taken England 165 years to wake up to the fact that George III was a tyrant. M * Everyone was pretty happy about the whole affair except for a group of "ultra-patriotic" Americans who belong to a little club group called "Union Now." This group of people will just never learn anything from history-or are they stupid enough to think that the people of India and Ireland are really happy? 4, * * SUGGESTED READING for retreat- ing Russian troops: Harold Las- ki's "Where Do We Go From Here." * * * People are still angry at Lindbergh because they think he pledged allegi- ance to the American flag with a Nazi salute. They are so-o- wrong. You're supposed to hold your hand out-the only thing that Lindbergh does wrong is hold his palm down instead of up and hold his hand a little high, a la Shicklegruber. * * * MVIUCH to the objeetions of nearly everyone, some motion picture houses still insist on flashing the "Star Spangled Banner" (with sound) on the screen and most peo- ple-not knowing that one is sup- posed to keep seated unless the na- tional anthem is played by a band Boats Begin Race As 28 'Seek Title In 237-Mile Run PORT HURON, July 12. -(P)- With the seventy-two foot Royono owned by J. B. Ford, Jr., of Detroit in the lead, the 28 boat Port Huron-to- Mackinac fleet headed up Lake Hur- on this afternoon, beating against a 25-mile an hour north wind. The start of the 237-mile race off Gratiot Beach went off without mis- hap with the Royono beating the others across the line by coming up from under the Coast Guard Cut- ter Ossipee, judge's boat, a few sec- onds before the six-pound gun was fired. Hugging the line with the Royono in the cruising-racing and racing class were Apache, second on an official occasion--still insist upon standing up. Everyone event- ually has to do the wrong thing axid stand up in order to avoid the accusation of being one of them "fifth columnists." They're also playing the "Star Spangled Banner" more often at baseball games-wonder if it will ever take the place of the "seventh inning stretch." We come to admire the commun- ists more and more every day. A sword swallower friend of ours once told us that it was comparatively easy to swallow a straight blade but extremely difficult to swallow one that was crooked from tip to hilt. It must be pretty tough to swallow Stalin's line too. WE LEARNED yesterday that Jane Russell, a 20-year-old bundle of film beauty in a sexy sort of way, had been chosen as mascot of the 4th graduating class of the Army Air Corps at Stockton, Calif. What a mascot! * * * We've also heard that Miss Russell made a pretty good motion picture for Howard Hughes a few months ago. It must have been good-Will Hays won't let Hughes release it. W L New York .......51 26 Cleveland.......47 32 Boston..........42 34 Chicago........40 37 Detroit .........40 42 Philadelphia .... 35 41 St. Louis ........27 48 Washington .....27 49 Pct. .662 .595 .553 .519 .488 .461 .360 .355 Saturday's Results Boston 7-10, Detroit 5-2 New York 7, St. Louis 5 Philadelphia 4, Cleveland 2 Washington 5, Chicago 3 Sunday's Games Philadelphia at Detroit New York at Chicago (2) Washington at St. Louis (2) Boston at Cleveland (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE l 7 GB 5 81/ 11 131 151/ 23 23%/ GB 31/2 10 12 13% 1712 20 31% that N are Sright" Brooklyn St. Louis . New York Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago W L 52 25 49 29 40 33 40 37 35 35 35 43 30 43 20 56 Pet. .675 .628 .548 .519 .500 .449 .411 .263 ti wY i4 i for Boston ........ Philadelphia Saturday's Results New York 6, St. Louis 4 Cincinnati 3, Brooklyn 2 Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 1 Chicago at Boston, rain Sunday's Games Chicago at Brooklyn (2 Cincinnati at Boston (2) Pittsburgh at New York (2) St. Louis at Philadelphia (2) Fine old Chinese coats and embroideries at unusually moderate prices. For a limited period only. Thieda Mary Muyskens Corner State and Liberty (625 East Liberty, Apt. 8) Mornings 7:30 to 12. 4 I SUMMER DRESSES FOR THE BEACH uwe suggest n MARTEX BEACH BLANKETS featured in our JULY CLEARANCE ALSO MARTEX TOWELS "Always reasonably priced"w SGAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NICKELS ARCADE ! _________a______________;;><0 1h with ONE CREAM! Helena Rubinstein's Pasteurized Face Cream Pasteurized Face Cream will give you the glamour of a beautiful skin.... fine, fresh, smooth. Use it as a mas- sage cream. Use it if your skin is dry. Use it if you have any skin blemishes! Use it to cleanse your face immac- ulately. Helena Rubinstein's rich Pasteurized Face Cream is a beauty treatment in one jar! 1.00 to 4.50. Before using Pasteurized Face Cream, for a par- ticularly radiant clean-scrubbed look, wash with Beauty Grains. 1.00. Special introductory pack- age of both, in special sizes, the "First Steps to t : t >"J>$;Jd'n.) ;,. .. p ::. ' i s 1195 For festive evenings, white eyelet pique with a brief, close-fitted jacket, black vel- vet bows and straps. A Vogue Undcr-20 fashion that looks twice its little price. Other evening dresses up to 25.00. JACKET SHEERS! PRINTS! PASTELS! DOTS ! STR IPES! WHITES! DARKS! 85 $7 $10) $12-9 Globe-trotter, week-ender or stay-at-homer . . . you'll find dresses for every possible summer occasion during our big July Clearance! Sies 9-17, 12-44, 16112-26!1. i I w