NEDNEISDAY, AUGUST 12, 1942 d THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY Choral Group Will Present Last Vespers Summer Session Chorus To Sing New Numbers In Final Concert SundayI The University Chorus for the Summer Session, under Prof. May- nard Klein, will present a Choral Vespers at 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditorium. The School of Music has an- nounced it will offer for the first time to a University and Ann Arbor audience Buxtehude's "Rejoice, Be- loved Christians" and Randall Thompson's "The Peaceful King- dom." Prof. Palmer Christian will be the organist,,Prof. Arthur Hackett, tenor soloist and Prof. Blair McClosky, baritone. The reader will be Miss Thelma Lewis of the School of Mu- sic. Margaret Martin, Mary Craig- miles and Betty Mason will be among the soloists. "This is the final Vespers of the Summer Session," said Director of the Summer Session Louis A. Hop- kins. "It has become a custom of rich pleasure to join music and wor- ship as a phase of the Summer School and we are much indebted to the members of the staff and the chorus of the School of Music as well as to the Religious Education Com- mittee for these programs." "Both the faculty and students of the University and the people of Ann Arbor are invited to be our guests," said the Director. Noted Director o Tak Today 1 -Ii -r w .._ A - 11 iI The Cracker Barrel By Mike Daun Daily Sports Editor Kolesar To Play This Fall WE LEARNED late yesterday af- -* ternoon that Bob Kolesar, Mich- igan's number one guard of last year, will play football again this fall for the Wolverines. Early last spring Bob's draft board wanted to draft him imme- diately, but he asked for defer- ment to enter medical school. Whether the Army got him or whether Bob would enter medical school, it was obvious that he must give up football. Naturally, studying to be a doctor takes plenty of time, especially if you work your way through as Kole- sar planned. Bob told Crisler that because of this he would not be out for practice when the time came. The picture has changed consid- erably since the March rains be- cause Bob has landed a summer job that will enable him to save enough for next year's schooling. SIDE-SHOW Wacky WAC... FORT DES MOINES, Ia., Aug 11. -(P)--WAAC training school offi- cers are chuckling over this observa- tion from a shivering member of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps on a recent chilly morning: "I wish my boy friend would knit me a sweater." * * * Meredith's Topic To 'Insurgent Theatre' Be My Son, My Son... CINCINNATI, Aug. 11. Chester A. Lishawa, 57 and 1 grandfather, was a father today, greeting a son born wife at Bethesda hospital. -{p)- twice a again to his Charles H. Meredith, visiting member of the Department of Speech faculty, will speak on the "Insurgent Theatre" before the Speech Assembly at 3 pm. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Meredith directed "Thunder Rock" and "Misalliance" during the current Repertory season and "The Con- trast" for ,the same group last sea- son. Former president of the Con- federacy of the American Commun- ity Theatre, he has long been a leader in little theatre circles. Meredith will take on new duties in the fall as managing director of Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre at New Orleans, where he has served previously as guest director. He has also directed production in the Dal- las, Tex., Little Theatre and in the Dock Street Theatre at Charleston, S.C. This is Meredith's second season as a member of the University faculty. * * * Were His Ears Red?.. . ST. QLAIRSVILLE, O., Aug. 11.- (P)-Some golf players are good enough to shoot eagles-two under par-and birdies-one under par, but Lee Liggett got a rabbit. He killed the bunny with a hard drive down the fairway on No. 1 hole at the Belmont Hills course. * * * Think About It... NEW YORK, Aug . 1.(1P'-Two Bronx county youths who pleaded guilty to petit larceny today were asked by Judge James M. Barrett whether they read detective stor- ies. One of the boys said he didn't "believe in them." "You'd better read them," the judge said. "The detectives didn't have much trouble catching you boys." So Bob has decided to come out for the gridiron sport this fall. Going to medical school and play- ing Varsity football aren't very compatible but Bob is going to try and do it. This trick has already been tried by three Michigan men with success- ful results. In 1926 Flop Flora (bro- ther of Bob who played last year) was end Opposite Bennie Oosterbaan and studied medicine at the same time. On that same squad was Buck Sampson, Olympic swimming cham- pion, who also went to med school. Last doctor to spend his leisure hours practicing on the gridiron was Ducky Simmerall, who was captain of the team in 1931 and a star half- back. SECOND - LIEUTENANT Elmer Gedeon, former Maize and Blue 3-letter winner, became a her Sunday whe nthe plane he was navigating crashed at the Raleigh, N.C., airport. Gedeon was blown clear of the wreckage, Army officials said, but quickly recovered and reentered the flaming plane to help a companion to safety. Two others in the plane were killed. While a Wolverine athletic star, Gedeon earned seven letters, three in football, twoin baseball as a pitcher and two in track. During his senior year he won the Western Con- ference high hurdles crown. He also received a major league tryout. Coach Ray Fisher and Ken Do- herty weren't the least surprised when told about Gedeon's most recent achievement. Said Ray, "He was one of the finest competitors I ever coached." LHighligrhts On Campus .. . Today's Broadcast ... Another in the University radio se- ress "It Happened Before, will be broadcast at 3:15 p.m. today over station WJR in Detroit. The program is a dramatization of the life of Haym Solomon, anan who gave every penny that he owned towards financing the Revolutionary War. It will be directed by Jane Grills. Tom Battin will play the lead, and the radiocast will be an- nounced by George Irwin Helen Marie Griffin andJeff Solo- mon collaborated on the script which is based on research from the Clements Library. David Rich will narrate the broad- cast and Baybara, White and Phi- lipa Herman will portray major roles. Luncheon To Be Given... Citation of students in the De- partment of Speech who will re- ceive degrees in August an Oe- tber will be made at the depart- mental Student-Faculty luncheon at 12:15 p~m. today in the ball- room of the Michigan Union. The luncheon is sponsored an- nually by the speech department for the purpose of honoring tu- dents who complete work upon their degrees during the, summer session. This year :students re- ceiving degrees at the end f the summer term will also be honored. Bomber Comnand is Receiving Final CombatTraining YPSILANTI, Aug. 11.-(P)-At the Willow Run airport beside the huge bomber plant operated by the Ford Motor Company, the 90th heavy bombardment group of the Third Bomber Command, U.S. Army Air Forces, is receiving its final combat training. Lieut.-Col. E. P. Mussett, in com- mand of the group, said today that when the Willow Run bomber plant is in full production, it nay be pos- sible to supply bombardment groups stationed at the airport with planes right off the assembly lines. Doherty Says EM Will Go On After War Course FiIls Need Servedl Bly No Other Program, Asserts Track Coach Ken Doherty. varsity track coach. predicted, in yesterday's education series lecture at University High School, that PEM would be continued after the war because of its proven C values. Hepointed out that PEM fills a need in physical development served by no other program. Voluntary pro- grams in intramural athletics, Coach Doherty said, reach large numbers of students, but not enough of them seek regular, systematic and well rounded activities. He commented that a voluntary program offered to prospective sol- diers during 1941-42 attracted only seven students, and, he concluded, a large-scale program on a required basis is necessary. Coach Doherty de- clared that the program, which now serves 1800 men, will have to be ex- panded to accommodate at least 5000 students. In yesterday's lecture, Dr. George Carrothers, director of the Bureau of Cooperation with Educational insti- tutions, said that the Cooperative Study of Secondary Education has been "more widely used than any study that has ever been undertaken in this country." The Cooperative Study, he said, has devised a system through which high schools may be accurately stu- died and analyzed. The Study, Dr. Carrothers pointed out, has been used by hundreds ofschools. Local faculty study, he explained, and out- side expert advice are combined to form the final evaluation. Law Review Out Tomorrow Ceiling Price Control Is Feature Article Following the new bi-monthly publication schedule, adopted to con- form to the University's wartime three-term arrangement, the first issue of Volume 41 of the Michigan Law Review will appear tomorrow. Of greatest current interest in the new issue will be a discussion of the ceiling method of price control and rationing by three senior editors of the Review, Samuel D. Estep, George T. Schilling, and James L. McCrystal. A new series of Michigan Legal Studies, sponsored by the Law School and edited under the direction of Prof. Hessel E. Yntema, is reviewed in the magazine by Prof. Max Rhein- stein of the University of Chicago Law School. SCLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LAUNDERING LAUTNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c FOR SALE BEIGE fur coat, $25; brown jod- phurs, $2, size,12. 502 E. Liberty, Apt. 5, after 4:30. REPLIES THERE IS a reply in Box 8. HELP WANTED PART TIME DRIVERS WANTED. Must be 21 years old. Apply Check- er Cab, 515 E. Liberty. 31c STUDENT to wash dishes in ex- change for meals at fraternity house. 1015 E. Huron. Telephone 2-3179. 32c LOST and FOUND LOST-Man's gray flannel suit coat. Reward. Call R. Ketler, Lawyers Club, 4145. 35 GRAY, gabardine topcoat lost at Pretzel Bell Thursday, July 30. Re- ward. Call Ralph Harbert, 2-4509. 36 MISCELLANEOUS ALTERATIONS-Have your fall gar- ments altered and repaired now. Reasonable Rates. Alta Graves, 2-2678. 37 o bindin by Hand With quality and service built into every job. Doctors' theses bound over night. Olsen's Bookbinding Studio Telephone 2-2915 4I 815 BROOKwOOD ANN ARBOR, MICH. i mUlamau rwpr ~ ~ ~ W I_'erfcZ tioz zModern CGoi~b ' r ..... i.....n.r. ' x" + ENDS, TONIGH T Mte"""R"" A R T.K INO presents First Soviet Drama of a N.Europe'sHeroic Res stance i liml i w :: 111