THURSDAY; JULY 16, 1942 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE- Rural School I mroveent Up To Public When the public realizes that coil- dren in rural areas should be given the same educational opportunities as those in the cities, the placement of a professionally competent teacher in -every classroom will be a practic- able possibility, declared A. V. Overn, of the University of North Dakota, yesterday at the University High Sciool. This will be accomplished through certain far-reaching changes in school organization and administra- tion, he said, in his talk for the edu- cation school lecture series. These changes include redistricting of' school attendance areas to create larger ones in rural districts, the prevention of large oversupplies and acute shortages of teachers at dif- ferent times, and the attraction of teachers to all types of areas by such inducements as reasonable tenure and compensation while in service. The next lecture will be given by Fritz Redl, associate professor of so- cial service administration, Wayne University, at 4:05 p.m. today in the University High Auditorium. He will discuss "The Need for Group Psycho- logical Securities for Growing Youth." Beware Of Those PEM Boys! Gouging, Knee Raising Become Strictly Marquis Of Queensbury By The Associated Press NEW YORK, July 15.-Those po- lite lads from Hell's Kitchen and Port Said may now push over-those who are left at least-for their gouging, knee raising and knife wielding is strictly Marquis of Queensberry. The new champion of "get him be- fore he gets you" displayed his wares here. And even top sergeantsj winced! He is Major W. E. Fairbairn, train- er of the British Commandos, on loan to the U.S. to show the American soldier, sailor and marine how to treat the Axis. Major Fairbairn, mild looking and mild talking British veteran of 57 years, explained his method to an audience made up of every branch of the service as he tossed big strap- ping exponents of Judo (Jiu-Jitsu) about the Hotel Astor's College Room. Before he got through the post- prandial exercises, the same room looked like a picnic of the Donney- brook Chowder and Marching Soci- ety. Usually correct majors from the Air Force were practising on lieu- tenant .commanders from the Navy, ensigns were tossing chief petty of- ficers about hand vice versa) and civ- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING HELP WANTED IS THERE any mother who would like to increase the family income by caring for two small children at her home during week-days? If so please call 2-3998 after 7:30 p.m. 9 MISCELLANEOUS TEACHER of shorthand or type- writing or bookkeeping to ex- change services for instruction in bookkeeping, dictation, typewrit- ing, dictaphone or calculator. Hamilton Business .College, Wil- liam at State. Phone 7831 or 4627. 14c LAUNDERING LAUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c I Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. Feature at: 1:39 - 3:40 5:41 7:45 -+9:49 P.M. .cMH.asav., rrs ~ WANTED TO RENT FURN SHED HOUSE wanted. Three or four bedrooms. Two master baths. Southeast section. Occu- pancy September first. State rent. Reply Box 100, Michigan Daily. LOST and FOUND MAN'S plastic wallet containing cur- rency and identification. Lost near I-M Building Tuesday.. Reward. Call 9393 or at 417 W. Engineering. MONEY LOST on campus Sunday. Approximately $50. Reward. Find- er please call Thor Reykdal, 2-1044. 14 EASTMAN KODAK, size 620, in black leather case. Lost near Nickel's Arcade. Reward. Call Catherine Mosher, 4121, Ext. 2138. 18c LADY'S navy blue patent leather fitted purse. Containing identifica- tion, currency and travelers checks. Lost on Cedar Bend Drive or Clo- verleaf Dairy on Broadway. Re- ward. Return to Mrs. Harryman, West Quadrangle. FOR SALE RETURN coach ticket Detroit to New York. Good until August 29. $11.50. Telephone 5881. 16 FARMS FOR SALE TWO MILES from city limits. 80 acres in good neighborhood. Re- modeled brick farmhouse among fine trees; large, attractive rooms; hardwood floors; steam heat; two baths. Two basement barns, silo, garage, orchard. $14,500. Also oth- er good farms, some with lakes. Oril Ferguson, realtor, 928 Forest. Phone 2-2839. 17c FOR RENT DOUBLE ROOM with adjoining lavatory. Also single room. Ideal location for teachers, students or campus secretaries. Garage avail- able. 422 E. Washington. 19c BROOKLYN ... I1S SHANGRI-LA.. with a "Greenpernt" accent! er ectwon in modemrn ilians who've been found wanting physically, insofar as Army service is concerned, were using uniformed men as aerial torpedoes. What is Major Fairbairn's meth- od? It's a college degree Jiu-Jitsu, it's magna cum laude Hell's Kitchen; post graduate Port Said mixed with war sense. Local Blackout Planned .Today (Continued from Page 1) in total darkness, with building ward- ens in charge of separate buildings and a special staff of observers on duty to note the effectiveness of the blackout over the city. The spotlights on the Charles Baird Carillon Tower will be off and the entire unit of the University Hospital is ready to darken its nu- merous windows within the two- minute warning period. A special observation plane will circle the blackout area to gauge the effect from the air. Urging the cooperation of all mem- bers of the University staff, Walter. M. Roth, assistant superintendent of the Buildings and Grounds Depart- ment, yesterday cautioned all per- sons occupying space in any Univer- sity building to turn, out the lights at the first sounding of the whistles and to check all adjoining corridors and public spaces for lights. In a message to the people of Ann Arbor, Mayor Leigh J. Young yes- terday pointed out the penalties for violations of the blackout rules. These are anything from a one- hundred-dollar fine to ninety days in jail depending upon enforcement by the police department. "Everybody should try to stay in- doors," Chief of Police Sherman Mor- tenson said. "We'll have patrol cars on the streets and the safest place to be is home. If you get caught on the streets, however, be especially careful to stand aginst buildings in order to prevent any accidents." Blast Rocks Cincinnati Loop, Kills Four People CINCINNATI, July 15. --')- An explosion under Sycamore Street and only two blocks from downtown Fountain Square killed at least four persons and injured five shortly be- fore midnight tonight, first reports from hospitals indicated. Cause of the blast was not deter - mined immediately, but' witnesses said a sheet of yellow flame burst from under the basement of a three- story building of the Hodge Rent-a- Car business and flashed through a gaping hole torn in the street. Whirlaway' Whirls Away With $50,000 BOSTON, July 15.-WP-Mighty Whirlaway came from far back to become the turf's top money winner of all time by beating Rouders by two and a half lengths today in the $50,000 added Massachusetts Handi- cap at Suffolk Downs. Attention placed third in the sev- en-horse field, just ahead of the early-footed Apaches as Whirly set a new track record of 1:48 1/5 for the mile and an eighth distance. Whirlaway, owned by Warren Wright, got away very slowly and did not pull even with any horse until he was half-way around the final turn where jockey Georgie Woolf called upon him to go into his sensational stretch drive. The triumph, the first scored by a favorite in this event since 1937, when Seabiscuit won, was worth $43,850 and it increased Whirlaway's total earnings to $454,366. As a re- sult, Whirly now tops Seabiscuit's earnings by $16,636. A crowd of 33,000, which made the famed "Mr. Big Tail" an even-money favorite, roared him a mighty wel- come as he came flying under the wire after running over his six rivals. Major League Standing AMERICAN LEAGUE By HALE CHAMPION From Associated Press Summaries With the season half gone, it ap- pears that more pitchers than in any recent season have a chance to win 20 Major League games. Rumors of a dead ball may have something to do with it, but an unusual number of hurlers are burning up their re- spectiveUcircuits. In the National League, Cub Claude Passeau is out in front with 13 on the credit side. But close be- hind come a good many, some of whom fattened their chucking aver- ages yesterday. Bucky Walters of the Reds picked up No. 11, but he still trails Rhine- land teammate Ray Starr, who hag 12 winners. At the same time Rip Sewell became the only Pirate to amass 10 victories. Johnny Beazley of the Cards also pitched the tenth big one as he beat Philadelphia. Other. big winners in the circuit include Whit Wyatt, and Larry French of the Dodgers and Cliff Melton of the Giants. In the American League the poten- tial twenty-game winners are also coming thick and fast. Chandler and Bonham of the Yanks, Tex Hughson of the Boston Red Sox, Jim Bagby of Boudreau's scrappy Indi- ans, and Brownie Eldon Auker all sport first-class chances. Some of their fellow hurlers are not far be- hind. Witness Borowy of the Yanks and a few of the Detroit pitchers. Dead ball or not, they're happy about it. Bosox 10, (:hisox 1 Chicago .....100 000 000- 1 7 3 Boston ......100 020 07x-10 13 2 Smith and Turner; Hughson and Conroy. Yanks 4, Indians 0 Giants 2, Pirates 6 New York ....000 000 002-2 6 1 Pittsburgh . ..002 100 30x-6 9 2 Carpenter, Sunkel (7), Adams (7) and Danning; Sexell and Lopez. Brooklyn 10, Cubs 5 Brooklyn ....013 131 010-10 13 2 Chicago .....000 210 02x- 5 9 5 Higbe, Casey (8) and Owen; Pas- seau,- Bithorn (3), Erickson (5), Pressnell (7), Mooty (9) and Her- nandez, McCullough. Braves 2, 7, Reds 6,2 Boston ..000 110 000-2 5 3 Cincinnati ...012 000 30x--6 12 1 Tobin and Lombardi; Walters and Lamanno. Boston .......000 050 101-7 9 0 Cincinnati .. .000 001-100--2 7 1 Salvo and Kluttz; Derringer, Thompson (6), Johnson (8) and Hemsley. * * * Night Games New York ...... Boston........ Cleveland ...... Detroit...... St. Louis..... Chicago...... Philadelphia. Washington ... MAJOR LE AGU E RESU LTS: Many Big League Hurlers Have Shot At Twenty Game Honors w ..56 ..49 ..49 .45 ..41 .35 .36 ..30 L 28 34 38 43 43 47 54 54 Pct. .667 .590 .563 .511 .488 .927 .400 .357 GB 61/2 81/2 1212 14 20 22 2412 Thursday's Games Detroit at Washington, night St. Louis at Philadelphia Cleveland at New York Chicago at Boston N * *A NATIONAL LEAGUE Detroit ... .000 100 101 00-3 15 0 Wash'ton .100 010 100 01-4 12 0 Bridges, White (8) and Tebbetts, Parsons (8); Wynn and Early. Chicago ......260 002 010-11 15 0 Boston ......004 000 200- 6 10 3 Dietrich, Haynes (6) and Tresh; Wagner, Butland (2), Terry (7), Ryba (8) and Peacock. City Rental Office Aids War Workers To help find housing for wartime workers, Ann Arbor has set up a homes registration office at 114 S. Fourth Ave. where houses, apart- ments and rooms for rent can be listed. The new service is part of Ann Arbor's information center and it is endorsed by all the local real estate dealers. The cooperation between realtors and the registration office 1works- something like this: A person interested in finding a room, apartment or house first con- sults the registration list. After he finds what hethinks he would like to see, he is referred to a real estate agency. The agency then shows him what the place really looks like. or ' . "t -. , , SS n '' ; . y '" ,: , "" , r _ . v Cleveland ... .000 000 New York .. . .011 010 Dean and Hegan; Rosar. I 000-0 4 1 10x-4 10 0 Donald and Brooklyn ...... St. Louis ....... Cincinnati .... New York ...... Chicago'...... Pittsburgh Boston....... Philadelphia . W ..58 ..49 ..45 ..42 .41 ..38 .37 .22 L 23 30 39 42 45 42 52 59 Pct. .716 .620 .536 .500 .477 .475 .416 .272 GB 8 141/2 171/2 191/2 192 25 36 Iee Watbih9 makes no difference as long as you are clad in a clever, cool, Batiste gown. Styled for com- fort and wear . . . $ - 9 /4 off on Summer Cottons J. H. COUSINS 218 South State Across from State Theatre Cards 7, 9, Phils 3, 4 Philadelphia . .000 100 020-3 9 St. Louis .....020 100 22x-7 11 3 1 Hoerst, Pearson (7), Nahem (8) and Warren; Beazley and W. Cooper. Philadelphia ..100 200 100-4 7 5 St. Louis .....100 107 00x-9 11 1 Podgajny, Beck (6) Naylor (8) and Warren; Dickson and O'Dea. Thursday's Games New York at Pittsburgh, night Boston at Cincinnati, night Philadelphia at St. Louis, night Brooklyn at Chicago (2) Intramural Softball Phi Sigma Delta .............11 Theta Xi..................10 Beta Theta Pi ................ 7 Phi Rho Sigma .............. 15 Phi Gamma Delta .............6 Pi Lambda Phi..............24 -n oamwnei u +..,,,. Bookbinding Scraps scewd Into Jacket Scraps of University Library leath- er are in the Army now. Seventy- five pounds of left over leather from the Bookbinding departme-nt of the University Library were delivered to Mrs. Charles E. Koella, chairman of the Ann Arbor Windbreaker Group to be made into jackets. One of these, a woman's jacket, was sent to the University of Michi- gan Hospital Unit in Little Rock, Arkansas. where it was given to the Chief Nurse. Miss Margaret K. Schi- fer, former instructor of nursing at the University Hospital. lIeep meet -Starts Today- Sigma Chi ................. . Chi Phi ...................... 7 6 [ ON APHID 22 the manufacture of Radios was stopped. However, our present selection of Stromberg Radio-Phonograph Combina- tions is still complete at OPA prices. For an instrument that will give carefree operation long beyond the duration we suggest you make your purchase soon. Only a Stromberg-Carlson gives you these 10 features Model 1025 PF* an FM-AM radio-phonograph combination ..$300, Also ? range of other models in authentic period designs. Easy payment terms are available. F f: Standard. short wave, and Fre- quency Modulation programs... (47 one dial, with one ct of controls' 2. Tay push button tuning for both FM and standard broad casts. 3. Electric tuning eye for exact manual tining. 4. Automatic drift compensator that prevents "fading." 5. Separate bass and treble controls. 6. Widest range ofnatural tor# for FM's greater scope. 7. "Full - floating," 12- inch Speaker that ptevents tone dis- tortion at any usable volume. a. Automatic record changer. 9. Permanent point pick-up - no needles to change' 10. Record storage space, with six handsome albums. Hear No. 1025-PF* (above) on any program or record, and ', 11 11111 I X... Ia 9.1 L ..IA ...J A I/!,1... .aU..J ®.a a - a aftmook. i