PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN ,DAILY American 'Ranger' Troops Charge Across English Beach Troops of an American "Ranger" unit charge across a beach somewhere in England under "enemy" fire after landing from the invasion barges off shore during training maneuvers which conditioned them for the Allied assault on the German-occupied city of Dieppe, France. This U.S. Army Signal Corps photo was radioed from London to the United States. League Presents Poor Man's Prom' As Dance Theme Today While those plutocrats possessed of $2.75 are having a whirl at Summer Prom down at the Sports Building this evening the rest of the campus can also step out merrily from 9 to midnight at the League's presenta- tion of the Poor Man's Prom, a gala affair especially designed to console the hearts and go gently on the pock- etbooks of all the stay-at-homes. Biggest feature of Poor Man's Prom for the war-conscious, (and who isn't nowadays?) is the fact that just as in the case of Summer Prom all proceeds will go to the United China Relief, the Russian War Re- lief and the Bomber Scholarship Fund. Though the contribution will include all the receipts from the dance, there will be no increase in the admission price from the usual for League weekend dances. Comfortable informal dates need not hesitate to attend this democra- tic all-campus affair. Doc Sprachlin will lead Gordon Hardy's Orchestra, the Harmony Quartet will sing and the Dixieland Band group will jive, all to make mu- sic for the Poor Man's Prom. Hos- tesses (you can tell them by their hair-ribbons) will be on hand to ex- tend the League's nospitality. The League wishes to announce at this time through the social commit- tee that the program of Friday and Saturday evening dances will be con- tinued right through the summer se- mester. 6 SUMMER PROM Commercial Sponsors Boyer-Cobble-Landers The Campus Shop The Wolverine' The Kay-Jay Shop Schlanderer & Sons The Mayer-Schairer Co. B. E. Muehlig Prekete's Sugar Bowl Symons Brothers & Co. Washtenaw Coney Island Allenel Hotel Lincoln Restaurant State Farm Insurance Co. Godfrey Moving & Storage 7 l\: .Also in alf Blockk Atef~ok - ~'& CASUALNESS that 'registers' Y: ".::from Registration Day on! Semester- Brown or to-semester "Block Suede smartness with * , sitche4 deiail Michigan Board Announces Date Of Bar Exams Undergraduates Eligible For Tests Under New War Emergency Rule The Michigan State board of Law Examiners will hold the Fall State Bar Examinations in Hutchins Hall on Sept. 28-30 Dean E. Blythe Sta- son of the Law School announced yesterday Due to a special war emergency ruling by the State Supreme Court, the examinations will be open to students who have completed 21/2 years of the law course, although they have not yet received a degree. Conditions placed by the court on law students taking advantage of the ruling are that they must either go into military service or complete their courses for degrees in order to secure a cerificate.. About 250 applicants from the four state law schools and others outside the state are expected to appear be- fore the board. Seventy-five of them will be students at the University Law school. The board is headed by Waldo C. Granse, of Detroit, and includes G. Douglas Clapperton, Grand Rapids, Byron L. Ballard, Lansing, Edward A. MacDonald, Detroit, and John D. Voelker, of Ishpeming. Six Local Violators Of Blackout Fined By Justice Payne Justice Jay H. Payne yesterday fined six Ann Arbor businessmen $8.35 each as the arraignment of last week's blackout violators got under way. The six were: Paul Proud, Sr., pro- prietor of Goodyear's department store, 124 S. Main Street; George Hogue, manager of the United States Employment Services, Ann Arbor of- fice, 312 E. Huron Street; Raymond Parks, proprietor of the Eighth Street Grocery, 113 Eighth Street; John Spetter, manager of the F. W. Wool- worth & Co. store at 120 S. Main Street; Clarence J. Aprill, head of the Aprill Insurance Agency, 307 E. Huron Street, and Theodore Rohn, proprietor of the Rohn Electric Shop, 116 S. Fourth Ave. Of the remaining 18 violators yet to appear in court, ten are business- men, two are automobile drivers and six are charged with leaving lights on in houses. Students Win In Golf Match Led by Dave Osler, senior member of Michigan's Big Ten golf cham- pions, most of the University stu- dents participating in the Ann Ar- bor men's golf tournament won their opening matches today. Osler shot a 73 as he whipped E. L. Cushing 2 and 1, while a teammate Bill Courtright also won easily with an 8 and 6 triumph over Andy Ber- toni. Bob Saxton who became eligible for competition this summer as one of Ray Fisher's finest baseball pros- pects was eliminated 5 and 4 by Bert Katzenmeyer. Meanwhile, in the Junior division, University students also continued to lead the parade. Howard Wikel, a sophomore, who also concentrates on baseball sailed into the semi-finals with Dick Walterhouse, a local boy, Seven Students Capture Prizes In Hopwoods , ram, Laidlaw Each Win Double Awards; $475 Given In Four Fields (Continued from Page 1) Andrew Green, Mr. A. K. Stevens. Poetry: Prof. Charles Bennett Weaver, Dr. Morris Greenhut, Miss Mary E. Cooley. While 20 contestants entered the contest this summer, the same nmm- ber as last year, they submitted only 26 manuscripts, 8 fewer than in the 1941 Summer Hopwoods. Fiction had the greatest representation, 9, while poetry was second with 7, and drama and essay tied at 5. The awards were presented by Dean Edward Kraus yesterday after- noon. The Summer Hopwood contest, es- tablished in 1938, is one of several Hopwoods sponsored by the Univer- sity of Michigan under the terms of the will of the late Avery Hopwood, noted playwright, who wished to en- courage creative writine oncampus. Awards in the spring competition have often totaled more than $10,000 and have started many well-known writers on the way to fame, includ- ing Marietta Wolff, author of "Whistle Stop" and Beatrice Borst, whose Hopwood novel "Nearer the Earth" is now on sale in various book stores. SSIDE-SHOW He Got Stuck.. MILWAUKEE, Aug. 20 -(A)-- The space between the houses at Nos. 335 and 337 North Jackson Street is not quite equal to the width of Tony Pizzinos head. Six-year-old-ony knows-he tried to travers the space and got stuck. Firemen chopped away part of the porch at 337 to free him. * * Stills For Victory.,. GRIFFIN, Ga., Aug. 20 .--(P)- Moonshiners hereabouts who have been making "mountain dew" have been asked to contribute their stills to Griffin's "mountain of srap," Appealing to 'shiners' t show their patriotism, salvage chairman W. O. Patterson sai4: "You '' can't get sugar to make moonshine, so donate that still. It will rust out by the time sugar rationing ends." Eenie Meenie.. .. LOS ANGELES, Aug. 20 -(')- Last spring Lieut. John M. Anderson, 21, Army Bombardier of Pontiac, closed his eyes and put his finger on a page of churches in the telephone directory-to pick the one at which he would attend Easter services. He did, and met Marjorie Acker- man, also 21. They were married yesterday. Willkie Will Make New War Journey WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.-()- Wendell L. Willkie, the man who op- posed President Roosevelt in the 1940 Presidential election, tonight made plans for his second wartime journey to the fighting fronts on a personal mission for the President. Although Willkie stressed the fact that his projected trip to Russia and the Near East was his own idea, he came out of a conference with the President with the statement that he would "perform certain services for the government" while abroad. Splashing out of a boat and heading for the shore, these American troops practice a commando-type assault. It was announced in London that American troops had participated in a British commando raid on Dieppe, France. This picture was made during U.S. Army maneuvers last year in South Carolina. Twelve-Game Grid Schedule Summer Session Students For Bluejackets Great Lakes Opens Season Against Michigan; Faces ToughestFootball Foes or By The Associated Press GREAT LAKES, Ill., Aug. 20.-The sturdy sailors at this U.S. Naval Training Station-largest in the world-will take, on 12 of the tough- est kind of football foes this season, it was announced today. From the time the Bluejackets /or our open against the University of Mich- igan at Ann Arbor on Sept. 26, they will be battling formidable opponents and have picked a real rugged one, Notre; Dame, for the finale of theB0. campaign in Chicago Dec. 5. Six- teams from the Western Con- Brin them in-A deal w y t ference, one from the "Big Six,"Big am n--Asquare d alwIVays' representative of the East, one Army team, and three other strong Mid- western elevens are on the Bluejack- ets' first schedule since 1918, when Island Marines in the famed Pasa- dena, Calif., Rose Bowl. Thousands of men in training will witness practice games at Great Lakes, and thousands more will see 316SState the two "home" games to be played at Soldier Field, Chicago, dedicated to the men of World War I. Navy proceeds from the games will be turned over to the Great Lakes Welfare and Athletic Fund to pro- vide facilities for recreation and atC or ix our w equipment.,~t h o i o Today's Newus Sports Ensemble This Fall On Campus 0@ .h lsh tu Str ihBsc tts# American Troops Practice Commando-Type Assault Bridge To Continue. The Michigan League announces that the duplicate bridge tourna- ments which are held in the Hussey room at 7:30 every Tuesday evening will continue for the remainder of the summer semester. Instructor Inducted ... Dr. Joseph Gregor, instructor in geology, and assistant Curator of Vertebrates in the Museum of Pal- eontology has been. inducted into the armed forces in Texas, it was announced yesterday. 11, Number 6 of a Series Appearing Each Friday "The Story of the Allenel's Food" SCALLOPS First gathered by the Indians, scallops have remained since those early days as one of our most popular sea- foods. A member of the oyster family, they are found in the shoal waters of the bays on the Atlantic coast or on the flats of Long Island Sound. The main muscle of this fish, cut into cubes and fried in deep fat to a crisp, golden brown, makes one of our most delicious and tempting seafood dishes. Try them it !. 11 I 11