mU &, c Veterans Hubbell, Warneke, Davis Win Contests In National League. Lecture Series tor 1942-43 Is Announced, B B ALE CHAMPION From Associated Press summaries Yesterday was old man's day in the National League as three of the cir- cuit's most venerable pitchers turned in brilliant hurling performances. Most heartening of all was the fine performance of old meal ticket Carl Hubbell of the New York Giants. Definitely tagged as through this year, he was to be kept around most- ly as a relief hurler for his old pal and roommate Mel Ott, the new managr. Cliff Melton, the lofty lefty, was the club's No. 1 portsider and was doing very well indeed until a sore arm cost Ott his best pitcher. Then Carl, whose amazing control of the difficult screwball had kept him in there pitching with a few wins to his credit, promptly took over Mel- ton's spot and although the fans hate to see Melton out, it -sure looks good to see the crooked arm of the old Meal Ticket on the firing line again. Yesterday he polished off, a nice streak of seven wins with a four hit victory over the Phils, 5-2. Hubbell wasn't the only oldtimer who really gave out. In Chicago on his old stamping grounds, Lon War- neke recently returned from St. Louis did almost as well. He checked the Pirates with seven hits. and coasted home with a 7-1 win in his pocket. The ever-popular Arkansas hurler seems tq be doing the Cubs some of the kind of good they need. Many young Cardinal hurlers give Warneke credit for helpful hints, and maybe he can do the same for the Cubs' promising, but seldom producing re- cruits. Whether or not, the Cubs are probably willing to pay a salary that St. Louis wouldn't afford just to win a few ball games. Still a third veteran that every- body has a good word for is Curt Davis who last night chalked up his 12th win for the Dodgers. In the second game of a doubleheader which the Broks won, he bumped up against Manuel Salvo, the Braves' beanball duelist of last week, and came out on the long end of a 10-0 triumph. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c REPLIES THERE IS a reply in Box 8. HELP WANTED YObNG MAN with clothing selling experience to work from noon to six and all day Saturday. Perma- nent position. Reply Box 15, Mich. }Daily 33c LOST and FOUND LOST-Plain gold band ring. In- scription, "Solid Gold." Important heirloom significance. Generous reward. Call 2-2852. 38x FOUND--Topcoat in Univ. bldg. Identify it and it's yours. Call Bill Schoedinger, 2-3101. 39 BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS HERE Ends Tonite Tigers 7, Chisox I Chicago ......000 100 000-1 Detroit .......000 103 03x-7 Lee and' Dickey; White and sons. * * * (Continued from Page 1) 4 2 9 0 Par- been given special privileges, had talked with Weygand and Petain, and had been allowed to roam through French possessions in Northern Afri- Brooks Win Two Boston .......000 000 000-0 7 0 Brooklyn.....410 100 40x-10 15 0 Salvo, Hutchings and Kluttz; Da- vis and Owen., Boston .......000 000 102--3 8 1 Brooklyn .....022 011 10x-7 11 0 Earley, Sain and Masi; Wyatt and Sullivan. , , , Chicago 7, Pirates 1 Pittsburgh ...000 001 000-1 7 3 Chicago ......220 000 21x-7 18 2 Klinger, Lanning, Wilkie and Lo- pez; Warneke and Hernandez. * * Giants 5, Phils 2 Philadelphia ..010 010 000-2 4 0 New York ....101 000 12x-5 6/ 0 Johnson, Nahem and Bragpn; Hubbell and Danning. * * * * Night Baseball Cincinnati .... 000 000 000-0 2 2' St. Louis .....000 120 01x-4 7 1 Derringer and Lakeman; M. Coop- er and W. Cooper. New York ....300 041 012-11 12 1 Philadelphia . .100 001 000-2 7 2 Gomez and Dickey; Marchildon, R. Harris and Swift. Major League Standinga AMERICAN LEAGUE j ca unmolested. Fischer was for eighteen years the chief European correspondent of The Nation, traveling constantly from one capital to another to catch de- velopments in the international scene. One of the greatest American authorities on Soviet Russia, he lived for many years in Moscow and spent much time in Berlin in pre-Hitler days. Nov. 19, Mrs. Ruth Mitchell, sister of the late General William (Billy) Mitchell, who has experienced one of the most fascinating stories of the Ipresent war during her stay in Yugo- slavia, will speak on "The Yugoslavs Fight On". In April. 1941, she joined the Chetniks, Bulgarian and Servian guerrilla troops, and served as a dis- patch rider with the Chetnik leader. Louis Adamic, author of "My America," will speak on "Tolerance Is Not Enough" Nov. 30. Now serving as Consultant to the Defense Com- mission in Washington, he is an ex- pert on new immigrant and related matters. He is now engaged in writ- ing a series of five books intended to "end the psychological war" in America. Alexander P. de Seversky, author of "Victory Through Air Power", and one of the most determined critics of Surprise State Blackout Drills Are Promised Head Of Citizens' Defense Corps Tells Of Alerts Planned For Michigan LANSING, Aug. 14.-(X )--South- ern Michigan communities which participated in this week's blackout practice can expect orders at any time to stage surprise blackouts on an hour's notice, it was asserted today by Capt. Donald S. Leonard, state commander of the Citizens' Defense Corps. Occasional blackouts will be au- thorized from time to time to keep the public in practice, Leonard said, "but we are not going to let them continue to the point where they be- come a public nuisance.'' The 41-county blackout Wednes- day night proved, he said, that Mich- , igan citizens are willing to cooperate in air raid precautions and also showed that a good job of blacking out cities can be accomplished here. Now, Leonard said, the job is to improve'sthe speed of blackouts with surprise alerts and to train local de- fense corps. He and Lieut. Col. Wen J. Cleary, I state chief air raid warden, advised local corps to emphasize "incident" drills which call on medical, fire, po- lice and repair squads to act as they would in case of an actual emergen- cy. Such drills can be accomplished without the disruption of civilian life that a blackout requires, they pointed out. Cleary said Michigan communities must enlist more air raid wardens, particularly among housewives who will be able to serve in residential districts in case of daytime alarms. "The community which bases its air raid warden system on men who will be downtown at places of bus- iness or in 'factories and unable to get home during a day alarm is due for- a rude shock," Cleary said. "The system in each block should be such that there will be someone available' for warden duty at all times." Designer Creates Papier-Mache Armor For 'H.M.S. Pinafore' By BERYL SHOENFIELD 'gan working as costumiere for Thom- Papier mache takes on the glint of as Wood Stevens World War I prop- armor plate while wire. paper, feath- aganda show. This was an ideal ar- ers, cardboard and wood in combine raugement. says Miss Barton. since become elaborate Aztec headdresses producer and costumiere were so under the talented fingers of Lucy much in accord artistically that no Barton, guest instructor in costume sketch was ever necessary in, convey- design and creator of the 1830 finery ing Steven's plan for a costume to seen in current Repertory vehicle. her mind. Attending Carnegie with "H. M. S. Pinafore." Miss Barton were three names famil- The name Lucy Barton is usulially iar to campus drama-goers: Valen- associated with Elihaethan period tine Windt, Director of Play Produc- patterns, because of her extensive tion; Charles E. Meredith, guest in- work on wardfobes of that time for structor and director of current sea- pageants and theatrical productions, son plays "Thunder Rock" and "Mis- and it is particularly iemembered in alliance;" and Carl Benton Reid, connection with Chicago World stage and screen actor, frequently Fair's Globe Theatre. in which she seen on the local stage. did costuming for 15 Shakespearean Author of "Historic Costume for plays, including "Othello,." "Midsum- the Stage" and "Period Patterns," mer Night's Dream." "Caesar," Miss Barton specializes in pageantry "Taming of the Shrew" and "Mac- costuming, where a knowledge of beth." history, anthropology and changing New England-bred Miss Barton dress is essential, for "pageants are has been prominent in tributary the- educational and there can be no ex- atre circles since graduation from cuse for them if they are not accur- Carnegie Tech, at which time she be- ate and therefore instructive." Even 1[ With but one more wveek left be- fore SummerProm, Aug. 21, students and townspeople are urged to buy tickets now as the supply is limited and once exhausted there will be no more printed, Dick Rawdon, ticket chairman, said yesterday. Tickets may be purchased at the League and Union desks throughout the day and at several local stores as well as from any member of the cen- tral committee. Althoughit was announced last May by authoritative sources that there would be no more big dances for the duration, the sponsoring campus organizations obtained per- mission for this dance only because Summer Prom is not a social affair but rather a means to supply funds for Russian War Relief. United China Relief and the Bomber Scholarship. Wenzel To Present Violin Recital Here In partial fulfillment of the re- quirements for the degree of Master of Music, Mr. Henry Wenzel, violin- ist, will present a public recital at 8:30 p. m. today in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building, Mr. Wenzel, who will be accompan- ied by Kathleen Rinck, pianist, re- ceived his bachelor's degree from Oberlin College in 1933 and since then has been a member of the fac- ulty of Central College, Fayette, Mo., and Yankton College in South Da- kota. At the present time he is In- structor of Violin and head of the string and wind instruments depart- ment at Mary Hardin-Baylor College. Prom Tie Fast As W L Pit. G New York.......74 37 .667 Boston .........60 50 .545 13 Cleveland .......61 53 .535 14: St. Louis.......59 56 .513 17 Detroit.........57 61 .483 20 Chicago........49 59 .454 23 Washington .....46 61 .430 26 Philadelphia ....44 73 .376 33 Games Saturday Chicago at Detroit New York at Philadelphia (2) Washington at Boston (2) St, Louis at Cleveland (night) * * * NATIIONAL LEAGUE GB 1/2 12 %1/ Rural Schools Face Closure Teacher Shortage In State Termed 'Most Acute' LANSING, Aug, 14.-QP)-Dr. Eu- gene B. Elliott, Superintendent of Public Instruction, said today the war-caused shortage of teachers may result in the voluntary closing of about 1,000 one-room school houses in rural areas of the state. Reporting a survey showed Michi- gan has 2,000 fewer teachers signed up for the opening of schools next month than it needs to maintain present administrative policies, the superintendent called for drastic re- lieving action. He said none of the thousand schools he mentioned has more than 12 pupils, and that the children could be transported to nearby schools in school busses already in operation. He pointed out, however, that the schools could be closed only by vol- untary action of the officials. His survey, Elliott said, showed the teacher shortage is most acute in the smaller rural, village and cityj schools. For the most part, he said, large cities have maintained ade- quate staffs, save in some specialized fields such as the teaching of shop work, agriculture, commercial stu- dies, music, physical education and the physical sciences including mathematics. ARTKINO presents SFirst Soviet Drama of Europe's Heroic Resistance Io the Nazis RA ZKHAM LECTURE HALL TONIGHT, AUGUST 15, at 8:30 P.M. in musical comedies, Miss Barton contends, where there is "no historic obligation," the common belief that "anything old-fashioned goes" does not apply. When New Mexico brought its "Entrada of Coronado" pageant to Texas and Colorado in 1940, in cele- bration of Coronado's exploration in- to that region 400 years before, Miss Barton was on hand to design the 500 costumes-each authentic in ev- ery detail. Graphite was painted on papier mache and burnished to sim- ulate the armor of the Spanish con- quistadores - .,__ I. Brooklyn St. Louis.. New -york . . Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago. Boston .... Philadelphia W L 78 33 S69 42 S60 53 .57 52 S50 56 . 52 64 .....47 68 ....31"'76 .703 .622 .531 .523 .472 .448 .409 .290 GB 9 19 20 251/2 28 'A 33 45 JAY ALLEN Games Saturday Philadelphia at New York (2) Boston at Brooklyn Pittsburgh at Chicago (2) Cincinnati at St. Louis , 9 I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ' I f (Continued from Page 2) Tuesday, August 18th. 4:05 p. m. University High Auditorium. Oriental Colonization in Latin America, by Professor Robert B. Hall of the University Geography Depart- ment, Tuesday, August 18. 4:15 Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Professor Hall has just returned from an extensive tour of Latin America where he has been studying the Japanese and Chi- nese colonization. Maintaining Morale, by William Clark Trow, Professor of Educational Psychology Wednesday, August 19., 4:05 p. m. University High Auditor- ium. this country's aircraft, will speak here some time in December on "Vic- tory Through Air Power".' Margaret Bourke-White, famed photographer who has recently re- turned' from a journey around the world that included an assignment as radio commentator in Moscow, will lecture on "Russian Women in the War" Feb. 4. Feb. 18 will bring Walter Duranty, famous foreign correspondent for the New' York Times and the North American Newspaper Alliance, and author of "I Write as I Please", for a talk on "When East Meets West in Battle." Noted for his colorful anecdotes and flashing wit, Duranty is recog- nized as one of the foremost speak- ers on the warand its implications for Americans and for his profound knowledge of the men and motives back of today's conflict. The series will be concluded March 12 when T. R. Ybarra speaks on the subject "Latin America Tomorrow." For many years Latin-American cor- respondent of the New York Times, Ybarra has been writing on interna- tional affairs almost continuously for two decades.I The box office sale on tickets will begin Oct. 5 in Hill Auditorium. First Iron Warship Consigned To Scrap ERIE, Pa., Aug. 14.-(!P-Ameri- ca's first iron-hulled warship, the 98-year-old Wolverine, was con- signed today to the junkman to be scrapped for making into steel. After listening to considerable de- bate, including an hour's plea by James Purcell, president of the Ni- agara Historical Society, to save the vessel for its historic value, the city council instructed its engineering de- partment to take bids from scrap dealers for the ship. Originally the U.S.S. Michigan, the Wolverine was turned over to the city in 1927 but two years ago it was ordered closed to visitors. HORSES Ride at Golfside Stables PRIVATE and CLASS INSTRUCTION Free Transportation WOODED BRIDLE PATH CT A2-3441 OUT GEDDES AVENUE r TICKETS 39c Also SHORT SUBJECTS R. Proceeds to be used to buy medicines for the Russian Armies. Ann Arbor Committee for Russian War Reliet I, i L ~pI CHURCH 'II -___ _. s.._._ _. _.-_ t. DIRECTORY I FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH BY REMOTE CONTROL! The Year's Surprise Thrill SFINGERS atthe. INDW Churches First Church of Christ, SO 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at Subject: "Soul."" Sunday School at 11:45. Free public Reading Room (ontinued on Page 4) cientist,I I """"""""- with LEW AYRES LARRAINE DAY For a Complete Summer Prom- We suggest DINNER: HE ALLENEL DINNER AT THE ALLENEL adds a festival note to any occassion. The fine food and drink the Allenel offers are unexcelled in Ann Arbor. The atmosphere is one of refinement anl gayety. All in all, we recommend the Allenel for the start of an enjoyable evening. If you are plan- ning a large party call us today obout informa- tion regarding our facilities for private parties. II~ I, Ministers: William P. Lemon, D.D., Willard V. Lampe Mark W. Bills, Director of Music Franklin Mitchell, Organist 10:45 a.m. Church School Summer Session and Nursery during the hour of Morning Worship. 10:45 g.m. Morning Worship. Sermon by the Reverend Fred Cowin of the Christain Church. Union service with the congregation of the Christain Church. 6:15 p.m" Westminster Student Guild Social Luncheon followed by talk at 7:15 by Mr. Tien on "Christain Opportunity in China." The speaker is a Chinese Christain who is teaching in the Oriental Language Division of the University. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and Ralph Dunlop Music: Maynard Klein, director and John Dexter, organist. 9:30 a.m. Student Class on "Religious Counsel- ing." Dr. E. W. Blakeman, leader.' 9:45 a.m. Church School for all departments above primayy. 10:40 a.m. Church School for nurserybeginners, and primary departments. 10:40 a.m. Worship service. Dr. E. D. Kohlstedt, chairman of the Board of Home Missions of the Methodist Church will preach. Dr. Kohlstedt's subject will be, "A Functioning Faith." 11.30 a.m. Junior activity period. 6:00 p.m. Supper and fellowship. 6:40 p.m., Rev. Ralph G. Dunlop will speak on the sub- ject, "Are We The Lights?," followed by a discussion period. Wednesday: 4:00 to 5:30 p.m. Tea and open house for students in student lounge. 7:30 p.m. Mid-week service. Friday: 8:00 to 12:p.m. Informal student party. 10:00 a.m. Children's Departments of the Church School. 10:15 a.m. Adult Classes of the Church School. Student Class meets in the Guild House, 502 East Huron. 11:00 a.m. The Church at WTorship. Rev. John Mason Wells of Hillsdale College and former minister of this church will preach. Miss Delta Doran will sing. 7:00 p.m. The Roger Williams Guild meets in the Guild House._. .. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 South Division St, Wednesday evening service at 7:30. Sunday morning service at 10:30. ' - Subject: "SOUL." M 9 Surday School at 11:45: Free public Reading Room at 106 East Wash- ington St., open every day except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 a.m. until 5 p.m., Saturdays until R p.m. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron G. H. Loucks, Minister Mrs. Geil Orcutt, Associate selor. I'l i Student Coon- BASIL RATHBONE Also MARCH OF TIME "MEN OF THE FLEET" "PICTURE PEOPLE" NEWS -Starts' Sunday - ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 306 North Division at Catherine The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector The Rev. John G. Dahl, Curate George Fax6n, Organist and Choirmaster 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion. 11:00 a.m. Kindergarten,: Church Office build- ing. 11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rev. Mr. Dahl. COLLEGE WORK PROGRAM Sunday, 5:00 p.m. Student Picnic at the Saline Valley Farms. I II IB * M fi'dd;mu n rn I i I