t AUGUST 6, 1912 THE MICHIGAN DAILY o Eminent Blackout Test On Wide Scale To Include City Public Officials, Citizens Told To Observe Rules For Tri-State Practice New Plan Asked By The Associated Press LANSING, Aug. 5--Public offi- cials and citizens were warned today by Capt. Donald D. Leonard, com-1 mander of the Michigan Citizens' Defense Corps, to familiarize them- selves with regulations for a tri-state blackout test covering 41 Southern Michigan counties August 12. Other- wise, injustice, injuries and property damage will result, he said. Capt. Leonard said local blackouts in several areas recently had pro- The tri-state blackout test which will cover 41 southern Michigan counties Wednesday, will include the city of Ann Arbor, Chief of Police Sherman Mortenson said yesterday. duced incidents in which citizens and members of the defense corps had been over-zealous in enforcing black- out orders. He recommended that no prosecu- tions for blackout law violations be ordered without the recommendation of the local commander of the Citi- zens' Defense Corps and'the sanction of a prosecuting attorney. Leonard said he doubted whether many war production plants would participate in the practice. They are exempted, he said, but may partici- pate upon orders of the Army to in- dividual plant managers. Major League Baseball: Tie rs Lose Again; Lefty Lee Pitches Shutout For First Win These fifth place Detroit Tigers don't seem bound for any higher climes these days. They dropped their second game in a row yester- day to the sixth place Chicago White Sox, 1-0, when Lefty Thornton Lee took his sore arm out of storage for the second time this season, scatter- ing seven bits among the Bengals for his first win of the year. Adding ignominy to their futile efforts to break into the upper divi- sion, the run scored against the Ti- gers was affected by one of baseball's rarities, a home steal. Sox rookie sec- ond sacker Don Kolloway opened the sixth with a single, got around to third on a bunt and a double play, and proceeded to sneak home. Cat catcher Dixie Parsons thought the decision was all wrong and proceeded to beef about it so loudly to Umpire Bill Summers that he was tossed out of the game for his trouble. Hal Newhouser was charged with the loss, despite his fine five hit pitching performance. After two hits each in the first and second frames, the Tigers could muster up only three bare singles for the next seven inn- ings. Night games were the order of the day, with four on the docket. But the afternoon contests provided some well-pitched shutout victories. Over in Boston, the third place Red Sox uncorked a fourteen hit blast session off two PhiladelphiW A's hurlers to snap out of their doldrums, 7-0. Tex Hughson racked up - his thirteenth win of the year allowing only three hits. The Dodgers beat the dimout deadline and the New York Giants in a quick twilight game (1:51), before 23,232 fans, when rookie Max Macon pitched sparkling two hit ball for a 4-0 victory. Add vital items-The Philadelphia Phillies, it is rumored, are conceding the race to Brooklyn in the National, but rumblings from the Athletics' front office, according to iniforma- tion gleaned from the grapevine, in- dicate they are still hopeful for a crack at the title despite the Yankees scant thirty gamie lead. Which re-' minds us-have you bought your tickets to the Philad-elphia city series yet"? White Sox 1, Tigers 0 Detroit.......000 000 000-0 7 0 Chicago......000 001 OOx-1 5 1 Newhouser and Parsons, Tebbetts (6); Lee and Tresh. Theosogy Students Receive Training In IHospital4 Course BuinsRs 4, ;ints 0 New York ....000 000 000-0 2 1 Brooklyn .....101 000 02x-4 8 1 Sunkel, Feldman and Danning; Macon and Owen. *e*x*' edSo 7,As 0 Philadelphia . .000 000 000--0 Boston.......010 400 llx--7 Wolff, Fowler (5) and H. ner; Hughson and Peacock. * * * Cards Trip Reds, 5-0 St; Louis.....103 001 000--5 Cincinnati ....000 000 000-0 3 1 14 0 Wag- 7 3 0 4 Beazley Thompson and W. Cooper; (4) and West. * *~ * Walters, fJlucs 3, Chicago 0 $ Chicago ......000 000 000-0 6 0 Pittsburgh ....000 000 30X-3 6 0 Fleming, Olsen (7) and McCul- lough; Sewell and Lopez. fhils 5, lostoun 2 Boston .......000 100 010-2 5 0 Philadelphia . .100 001 30x-5 10 0 Earley, Sain (7) and Lombardi, Masi (8); Hughes and Bragan. Night Baseball Cleveland ....000 601 LO1-8 11 1 St. Louis.......000 201 020-5 12 1 Dean, Eisenstat, Ferrick and Des- autels; Galehouse, Caster, Oster- mueller, Appleton and Ferrell. Major League Standing I AlERICAN LEAGUE TwoEt Literary 'Men On Tour Here Latin-Aierican Visitors On Short Campus Stay To View U.S. Culture Two eminent visitors from South America are here for a short stay at the University, Dr. Raul Silva CastroI from Chile and Dr. Emilio Oribe of Uruguay. Both men are in the United States at the invitation of the Department of State and are snaking tours throughout the country. Dr. Castro is an influential young writer and a member of the staff of the National Library at Santiago and Dr. OribeE is a distinguished educator and one of Uruguay's most noted poets. Dr. Oribe, who arrived yesterday, is spending two months visiting uni- versities and other cultural centers throughout the nation. He is a Pro- fessor of Literature in the University of Montevideo and the was educated in that institution as well as in Paris, where he received the degree of doctor of medicine and later did graduate work in philosophy and art at the Sorbonne. He is also known as the author of numerous books, among the most re- cent being volumes of poetry and critical essays on the philosophical interpretation of art. To arrive today is Dr. Castro, who is on his way west and is interested in visiting libraries in the United States. He has published many bib- liographical studies and several vol- umes of literary criticism and has edited special editions of the works of various authors. He has made a special study of the short story in Chile an~d has published an anthol- ogy and several critical volumes on the subject. Scientific Film CopiesAvailable Nine Will onclude Sally Sessions South Aimerican Visitor Is On Wav To Ann Arbor Seas oh With Two ets oL ace Mr. Carlos Loe,'Eice prei- rGames_ dent of the newly-organized Michi- NocntCubofrnal. cuaoraniliems Tonight and tomorrow night's In State Tournament games at Ferry Field close 'Michi- gan's summer baseball schedule. Fit- tingly, the contests pit Michigan GRAND hAPIDS, MICH.. Aug. 5 against the two toughest teams on OP)-Banging out a record-shattering their schedule. 78, Sally Sessions of Muskegon con- This evening the Varsity takes the tinued to set a withering pate today diamond against the Ypsilanti Cubs, in the flashy Negro outfit which handedi women's western Michigan Michigan one of its two defeats this ' golf tournament. season. The Detroit Naval Recruit- Nicking a stroke from the Kent ing Station team, scheduled to meet Country Club record hung up several the Maize and Blue before but unable years ago by former national cham- to come because of maneuvers, will furnish the - opposition tomorrow, pion Virginia Van Wie. the 19-year- From Ray Fisher's reports, the Navy old Muskegon athlete turned back team is one of the best in this area. the challenge of Barbara Canine of In order to cope with the Ypsi Kalamazoo, 7 and 6, in the first sluggers Fisher plans to pitch left- round of tournament match play. handed Dick Bodycombe against the Entering the quarter-finals Thurs- Cubs. Dick Redinger or Bob Saxton day, Miss Sessions will face Mrs. A. will hurl against the Navy. H. Steinel of Battle Creek, who scored a 2 and 1 victory over Mrs. Richard Babcock of Spring Lake. Out'in 40 and back in 38, Miss Ses- sions carded three birdies and nine par. Strong off the tee, she missed what looked like a sure 77 when she three-putted the 18th green. W Ap rMrs. R. E. McKee of Grand Rapids en pprove gave defending champion Mrs. Hun- ter Robbins of Spring Lake a scare, (Continued from Page 1) but the titleholder rallied to win, two up. Mrs. Robbins faces Mrs. C. S. Miller, of Grand Rapids in the quar- uing body of fraternity alumni. of- ter-finals. Mrs. Miller defeated Mrs. fered three recommendations which J. T. Morey of Traverse City 3 and Governor Van Wagoner Asks Evacuation Plan / LANSING, Aug. 5- (')- The Michigan Defense Council was in- structed today by Governor Van Wagoner to develop a civilian evac- uation plan for strategic areas of the state. "I do not wish to cause undue alarm or imply that actual evacua- tions are imminent in Michigan," Van Wagoner said, "but Michigan must be fully prepared for any even- tuality." He said the plan was requested by Col. B. B. Freud, Acting Deputy Re- gional Director for the Sixth Civilian Defense Region. The areas'to be cov- ered are a military secret, he ex- plained. Civilian evacuation will not be or- dered for token air raids, the gover- nor declared, nor will it include mass removal of the entire population of any area. Such a step is the responsi- bility of the army, he said, while the state plan only will affect children, mothers, the sick, aged and infirm and persons assigned to .care for them.' Shows at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M: S....TATE --- I New York ... Cleveland ... Boston ...., St. Louis ... . Detroit ..... Chicago ... Washington. Philadelphia w 70 60 58 54 51 45 42 .43 L 34 47 47 54, 57 55 61 68 Pet. .673 .561 .552 .500 .472 .450 .408 .387 GB 1112 1212 18 21 23 302 Games Thursday New York at Washington Detroit at Chicago Cleveland at St. Louis (2) Philadelphia at Boston *IO * * NATIONAL LEAGUE W} L Brooklyn .......74 30 St. Louis .. ..63 39 Cincinnati ......55 48 New York .......54 51 Pittsburgh ......47 53 Chicago ........48 59 Boston... ....43 65 Philadelphia' ... .31 70 Pct. .712 .618 .534 .514 .470 .449 .398 .307 GB 10 181/2 2012 25 271/2 33 411/2 Five theological students and one minister are receiving special clinical training at University Hospital this summer under the direction of the Michigan Committee of the Council for Clinical Training. Rev. John Elderkin Bell, profes- sor of psychology at Park College, is supervisor of the ten week course. According to Dr. Bell, the three-fold purpose of the training is to provide a better understanding of human problems, to teach proper methods of dealing with people and to show the necessity for ministers to cooperate with physicians, social workers and others who deal with human prob- lems. The six students have spent five weeks working on a half-time basis as orderlies in the University Hos- pital wards. They have ,attended Medical School lectures and clinics and visited mental hospitals with the purpose, Dr. Bell says, of learning how various social agencies can be used in treatment of human prob- lems. Games Thursday Brooklyn at New York Only game scheduled Air Raid Wardens Lose Siren Records ADRIAN, Aug. 5.--(P)-The lost was found today, and Adrian is all set for its test blackout Friday night. Phonograph records reproducing the sounds of sirens were reported missing yesterday from a filing cabi- net in the Baptist Church, from the tower of which the blackout signal is given over an amplifier. Today Mrs. 0. E. Westgate, a church worker, said she saw the records on a table and told a care- taker to put them in a safe place. He found them, today, and city offi- cials rested easier. Repetitions of Magazines I Acquired By Library Having recently acquired a num- ber of microfilm reproductions of foreign scientific and technical peri- odicals. the University Library is making an attempt to fill one of the' most serious handicaps facing schol- ars today. These microfilms are available to scientific research workers and serve as an excellent guide to current European trends. It has been diffi- cult for libraries to obtain actual copies of foreign magazines and journals since the war broke out, but authentic reproductions on film makes them available for public use. After being passed by the Com- mittee on Microfilming 'Research Materials, an Ann Arbor firm makes and distributes the film. Over three hundred foreign periodicals are be- ing offered. The microfilm is projected n a screen. by a special machine and the reader winds the film to the page he desires to read. The library has fa- cilities for five readers. Spanish Talk Cancelled Illness has forced Senor 'Ezequiel Martinez Estrada to cancel his speech on the subject "Poesia Popu- lar en la Argentia," formerly sched- uled for 4:15 p.m. today in the Kel- logg Auditorium. were adopted by the Student Aftains Committee with the understanding that these regulations would apply only during the emergency situation. These are: "(1) That all who attend the 1942 Summer Term and similar ter~s in the following years and who in that term make the hours, grades, and honor points now required for initia- tion, be eligible not only for pledging in the fall rushing season of the Uni- versity, but also for initiation on or after December 10 following. " (2) That all who attend the 1942 Summer Term, and similar terms in following years and who ma that term make the hours, grades, and honor points now required for initiation, be eligible and allowed to room in the house of any fraternity to which they may be pledged immediately after such pledging in the absence of a binding room contract with some other party. "(3) That all students who make the hours, grades and honor points now required for initiation be eligi- ble and allowed to room in the house 'of any fraternity to which they may be pledged immediately after meet- ing such requirements, in the absence of a binding room contract with some other party. Ja p To Blame For Ban On Apple Shipment To West LANSING, Aug. 5.-(AP)-Just to add the final straw, the state de- partment of agriculture reported to- day the Japs are responsible for Michigan apples being barred from eight Far Western states. The department said two ship- ments of apples from Michigan were barred by Colorado this week in obe- dience to a quarantine against the oriental peach moth, which came to this country from Japan'in a ship- ment of fruit trees. Michigan growers must fumigate shipments to Colorado, Oregon, Washington, California, Idaho, Ne- vada, Utah and Arizona or their ap- ples will be confiscated. Fall Suits. i Al Art Cinema League presents Eugene O'Neill's ANNA CHRISTIE with GRETA GARBO MARIE DRESSLER ...also.. Welcome Little Stranger (Technicolor Cartoon) * Lure of the Trout r They're Here! All Wool Suits that are real charmers. In Pine Leaf Green, I Brown, Black, and Scarlet. 11 III I I~~~~ BrwBak adSalt