A 'THE -MICHIGAN -DAILY Long Runways Will Be Added To Ann Arbor Municipal Airport Dr. Mildred McAfee Is Sworn In T Rula TI e oWar r' Michigan T ies Youth Dies AsAIO AII-Star Team iipeu (is On Lake Ruth Two new mile-long runways, each 300 feet wide and able to accomodate htige military planes of the kind now being produced at Willow Run, will be added to Ann Arbor's municipal airport before the winter is over as a result of the city council's decision Monday to improve the airport. In a surprise turn-about move, the councilmen voted to buy up 170 acres of farm land and stipulated that two gravel-surfaced runways for purposes of enlarging and improving the air- port. Total cost to the city will be $22,575. An offer 4y the state to pay $5,000 for the project was accepted by the councilmen. Funds To Be Borrowed The remainder of the expediture will be shouldered by the city as fol- lows: VanWagoner Seeks Fitness' Chairman LANSING, Au. 4.--(P)-In ac- cepting the resignation of Mrs. De- witt H. Merriam as chairman of the Womens Service Corps fitness pro- gram, Governor Van Wagoner said today he would appoint a sucessor "if I can find the right person." Mrs. Merriam resigned yesterday, asserting her program was being duplicated by one sponsored by the Detroit City Recreation Department and directed by Mrs. Walter O'Hair. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price, c LOST and FOUND LOST in Waterman Gym, a gold watch with L. Aldridge engraving. Call Lincoln Aldridge, 2-1417. $10 reward. 29c LOST: Mal's blue sit coat in street nearMichigan House or on Di- vision St. Call Allen D. Mann, 2-4401. HELP WANTED WANTED-Students for board jobs immediately. Apply Miss Seeley, dietitian, Health Service. MISCELLANEOUS ALTERATIONS on ladies garments promptly and carefully done. Call 2-2678. Alta Graves (opposite Stockwell). 30 PASSENGERS WANTED, one or two, to share expenses on motor trip to Mobile, Alabama. Leaving Ann Arbor Aug. 6 or 7. If interested call 5660. 26c WANTED TO RENT GRADUATE STUDENT wants lodg- ing, regular sessions, in exchange for wife's services. Write The Daily, Box 8. There is nothing that peps you up like a new Permanent, a different hair-do or one of our cocktail fa- cials while your hair is being done. We have a marvelous new cream that goes to work while you are resting. And in seven minutes you look and feel refreshed. We specialize in HAIR TINTING and BLEACHING WORK done by an expert with years of experience. For appointment call 9616 Bluebird Beauty Shoppe 5 NICKELS ARCADE Open Thursday & Friday Evenings. 1) $11.481.95 to be borrowed from the bathhouse construction fund. 2) $3,500 to be borrowed from the municipal golf course surplus. 3) $7,543.05 to be assigned from un- appropriated fuds. The money will be repayed out of the income from the airport. 140 acres of land will be purchased from the Paul Schaible farm west of the airport at a cost of, $15,000 and the 1emaining 27 acres will be pur- chased from the James Steere farm north of the airport at a cost of $3,375. Runway construction will cost $9,- 200 and will include the expense of building drainage facilities. The state grant will be used to defray half of this cost. New Airport Possibility Foreseeing a possible "start" by the city in the direction of a new airport to be built on the environs of the ex- isting one, Fred. L. Arnet, chairman of the park committee of the city council, said that his committee had "high hopes" of receiving Federal aid for such a program. He said that American Air Lines had already agreed to land its pas- senger and mail planes on the Ann Arbor runways when the improve- ments were made but added that the war may hold up the arrangement temporarily. Ip its report to the city council, the park committee stated that "air transportation is destined to become a major factor in the affairs of the nation and the world and a city with- out, an air line terminal is bound to suffer stagnation and los in its bus- iness and commercial life." Campus Vote To Determine Prom Dress (Continued from Page 1) mal plan while West and Ed Perlberg, of the Union and Daily respectively, oppose Dawson and are pushing a strictly formal affair. But the opinion of these men staunch supporter of the semi-for- means little for the campus itself is to decide, for the first time in many years of campus dances, just what they are going to wear to a big all- city dance. Tickets for Summer Prom will be available at fraternity, dormitory, sorority and co-operative houses, at the League and Union and several campus stores. They may also be pur- chased4,from any central committee member. Proceeds from the dance, the first big affair to be attempted on Michi- gan's summer campus, will be dis- tributed among Russian War Relief, United China Aelief and the Bomber 'Scholarship. Students, faculty members and townspeople are invited to help sup- port three worthy and deserving funds by attending Summer Prom, to be held from 9 p. m. to midnight, Friday, Aug. 21, in the Sports Build- ing. Hal McIntyre and his orchestra will come to Ann Arbor directly from a week's engagement at Eastwood Symphony Gardens in Detroit. -i Army Leases State Fair Grounds For $1 A Year L A N S I N G, AUG. 4-(AP)-The State Administrative Board today made formal a contract hasing to the U. S. Army the Michigan State Fairgrounds at Detroit for $1 a year until the war is ended. The action re-affirmed a previous commitment which drew criticism from some state officials. DODO SAYS: "If your har isn't becoming to you - yon should be coming to us." Tonsorial Oueries invited. The DASCOLA BARBERS Between State and Mich. Theatre Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox swears in Dr. Mildred Helen McAfee, president of Wellesley Col- lege, as a lieutenant commander and head of the "Wa ves," new women's reserve unit of the Navy, as her new boss, Admiral Ernest J. King (left), commander- in-chief of the U.S. fleet, looks on. The ceremony was in Washington, D.C. I I SIDE-NSHO W MAJOR LEAGUE RESULTS: Giant-Dodger Dimout Dispute Reaches Climax With t-1 Tie 'It Can Happen Here' OMAHA, Aug. 4.-(P)-Blackouts don't bother babies. During a practice war blackout signal at a hospital here, every cor- ridor light went out. As the black- out began, a specialemergency spot- light glowed. A boy was born. A minute later, in an adjacent room, a girl was born. Then the all-clear signal was given. One minor accident was reported. The two fathers bumped into each other while; pacing the pitch-dark corridor. * * * Degree Can Wait LINCOLN, Aug. 4. -(/P)- Jack Dodd, former University of Nebraska football star, got a degree from the school yesterday, but he doesn't know it because he is in the armed forces, somewhere in the Far East. Before he left for active duty he for- warded to the university extension division the work he hoped would give him the degrjee. Highlights On ampus .. . New Courses To Be Given The University will present two courses in metal work starting Mon- day in the Rackham Education Memorial in Detroit as part of the Engineering, Science and Manage- ' ent War Training program spon- sored by the U. S. Office of Educa- tion. Prerequisites of both courses is high school graduation with credit in physics or chemistry. Some indus- trial experience is an additional re- quirement for the course. * * * Speech Clinic Program Activities of the Speech Clinic in the work of examination and re- habilitation of individuals having defects of speech and voice will be demonstrated at 3 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Members of the Clinic staff who will participate in the program in- clude Prof. H. Harlan Bloomer, Prof. Henry M. Moser, Peggy De- Vilbiss, George herman, Mrs. Ruth Metraux and Lyman Partridge. Mills To Leave Faculty Dr. Glen E. Mills, instructor in the speech department, will leave in Sep- tember for Northwestern University where he has accepted a position on the speech -faculty. Dr. Mills has beenan instructor on campus for the last year. He taught in the first half of the summer term. Previous to his position on the Uni- versity faculty, he taught for five years at Ann Arbor High School. By. HALE CHAMPION FromBAssociated Press Summaries Well, 'the rabid Brooklyn-Giant feudists have something to .really roar about. Sore enough Monday night about a decision that gave the Dodgers a break the Polo Grounders howled to high heaven. But now fuel is added to the flames in the presence of a boon to the Giants through this same twi-night base- ball dimout idea. Last night Pee-wee Reese, Bum shortstop, hit a homer with the sacks full in the tenth after a nine- inning 1-1 tie. But because of the dimout regulations the game had to be called before the Giants could bat, and the game went into the books as a 1-1 tie, an obvious injus-r tice to the clutch-hitting abilities of a Mr. Reese, and a still more obvious injustice to the screaming Dodger clan. The promise that Sid Hudson showed as a freshman pitcher when he won 17 games is at last really coming to the fore. In his last four games he has pitched low-hit con- tests and won all four. That's quite a feat with the Senators. Chisox 5, Tigers 4 Solons 4, Tanks 3 New York ....010 000 110-3 7 3 Washington ..,030 100 00x-4 7 2 Lindell, Russo (7) and Rosar, Hemsley (2); Hudson and Early. A's 6, ed Sox 4 Philadelphia .001 200 300-6 9 1 Boston .......011 200 000-4 4 0 Marchildon and Swift; Wagner, Ryba and Conroy, Peacock4 CinCy 4, Cards 3 St. Louis .....000 000 300'-3 5 1 Cincinnati . . .211 000 00x-4 9 0 Krist, Gumbert, Dickson and W. Cooper; Vandermeer, Beggs and ,West. Phils 4, Braves 2 Boston.......000 000 200-2 Philadelphia .010 021 00x-4 Tobfn and Masi; Johnson Bragan. Pirates 2, Cubs 1 Chicago . .000 100 000 00-1 7 2 5 1 and 7 Q Pittsburgh .001 000 000 1-2 11f 0 Bithorn and McCullough; Klinger and Lopez. Detroit ......010 001 Chicago.....000 031 Bridges, Gorsica (8), Lyons and Tresh. 020-4 10 1 01x-5 10 1 and Parsons; Brooks1, Giants I Brooklyn . .. .000 010 000-1 New York ... .000 001 000-1 Higbe and Owen; McGee and ning (called in 1st half of OC.D. regulations). 6 0 8 0 Dan- 10th, In The Majors NATIONAL LEAGUE A1 s W L Brooklyn .......73 30 St. Louis .......62 39 Cincinnati ......55 47 New York......54 50 Pittsburgh ......46 53 Chicago ........48 58 Boston.........43 64 Philadelphia . .. .30 70 Pct .709 .614 .539 .519 .465 .453 .402 .300 GB 10 17% 1912 25 2612 32 41%2 Wednesday's Games New York at Brooklyn, twilight Boston It Philadelphia, night St. Louis at Cincinnati, night Chicago at Pittsburgh, night *ACN A AMERICAN LEAGUE W L New York ......70 34 Cleveland......59 47 Boston .........57 47 St. Louis .......54 53 Detroit .........51 56 Chicago ........44 55 Washington ... .42 61 Philadelphia . .. .43 67 Pet .680 .557 .548 .505 .477 .444 .402 .391 GB 12 13 17% 201/2 2312 27% 30 I er ection on. oaodern Cook YOUR POUNDING HEART WILL CHEER as every throbbing moment, every breath-taking scene, every living, pulsating climax, every bit of dramatic action comes to the screen in living flesh and blood! Wednesday's Games Detroit at Chicago New York at Washington, night Cleveland at St. Louis Philadelphia at Boston VARRri R rK JD/pdVC/fOA Alm- f OPENING TONIGHT The Department of Speech presents Michigan Repertory Players in "MISALLIANCE A Comedy of Domestic Complications by Vw Ransavd CISRiw m POER JOAN FONTAINE / -F - , I/ II