, JUNE 25, 1942 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY - U .. Rehearsals For Coming Play Open. Sheridan's 'The Rivals' To Begin Run July 8 In Repertory Season By BERY, SHOENFIELD Rehearsals have begun for Richard B. Sheridan's comedy, "The Rivals," initial offering of the Department of Speechi' 1942 Michigan Repertory Players. Opening July 8 and con- tinuing through August 18, the Play- ers will present a program of five plays and an operetta. Distinguished among the six guest instructors is Howard Bay, stage de- signer for the current -production of Steinbeck's "The Moon Is Down," who will be art director for the sea- son, assisted by Horace Armistead, scenic painter, and William Kellum, stage builder. Claribel Baird returns to Ann Ar- bor for her -third consecutive year as actress and director, along with Lucy Barton, 1939 Repertory cos- tumiere. Also a repeater with the Players is ' Charles H. Meredith, managing di- rector of New Orleans' Le Petit du Vieux Carre. Following "The Rivals," will be Robert Ardrey's extraordinary "Thunder Rock," a story of a Lake Michigan lighthouse keeper who brings to life again the spirits of six people, 90 years dead. The ultra Bohemian atmosphere of a family of artists is the essence of Noel Cow- ard's farce, "Hay Fever," which opens the third week of the run. Included as one of the best 'ten plays of the year by Burns Mantle, is "Letters to Lucerne," by Fritz Rot- ter and Allen Vincent, first of the " ewer war dramas to command at- tention. Of different nature is the lighter "Misalliance," by George Bernard Shaw, a tale of an under- wear manufacturer's family. Special summer rates are avail- able on 'tickets for the summer sea-* son and reservations may be made by mail or at the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn, open daily ex- cept Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Counter sale of season tickets will open Monday and single tickets will be placed on sale the following Fri- day. Daily at 1--3-5-7-9 P.M. Cooled To Your Comfort STARTS TODAY! More Rubber. Asked In Drive Kenjp Fior Salvage -Increase 'd A plea to tuirnin ever-increasing E amounts of scrap rubber to the fill- ing station piles came yesterday from Paul R. Kempf, state salvage com- mitteeman. "With less than a week to go, Ann Arbor and Washtenaw residents must really come across in the scrap rub-. ber collection campaign if the county is to go over the top," Kempf de-' clared. The county quota is 200 tons. The drive will end' June 30 when citizens will find increasing diffi- culty in disposing of scrap rubber so that it can be used in war in- dlustry- The rubber will be weighed, tabulated and the totals will be used in the solution of the problem of gas rationing. Meanwhile, Ann Arbor's Fire Chief Benjamin Zahn discovered a verit- able lode of the precious scrap rub-r ber in a corner of the fire station. K Silent Al er t Planned LANSING, June 24.-(P)-A state- wide air raid warning, the first to test Michigan's alert system, will be sounded within a fortnight but the civilari aopulation won't know it, Capt. Donald S. Leonard, state commander of the Citizens Defense Corps, said today the general alarm will not reach the public, the test; merely designed to determine theI speed with which Michigan must act. Taxes In Brief. . WASHINGTON, June 24"1. Here are two major provisions of the tax bill approved today by t.he Ways and Means Committee: INCOME TAXES Personal exemptions lowered from $750 to $500 for single persons, from $1,500 to $1,200 for married persons; $400 credit for each dependent con- tinued. Normal tax raised from 4 to 6 per cent, with 10 per cent earned income credit retained; surtaxes in- creased from per cent on first $2,000 to 12 per cent. Beginning next Jan- uary, 10 per cent of income in excess of personal exemptions and credits will be deducted from paychecks Lo apply on taxes. CORPORATION TAXES l Present excess profits rates rang- ing from 35 to 60 per cent raised to flat 94 per cent, with post-wear credit equal to 14 per cent of net income which is subject to this rate. In- vested capital and average earnings alternatives continued for computing "excess profits." Combined normal and surtax rates-applied on income not subject to excess profits taxes- raised from 31 to 40 per cent for cor- porations with income above $25,000. Specific exemption to which all cor- porations entitled raised from $5,000 to $10,000. Numerous provisions were adopted for special hardship cases. EXCISE TAXES Taxes on beer, wine, whiskey, cig- arettes, cigars, telephone and tele- graph bills, and pari-mutuel wagers were also included. The Crafker Barrel 1 B -y Mike Dan Daily Sports Editor 0 Two Kin ds Of All-American*... Craduate Club Meets Sunday Outidoor Activities Group Anotinces Program The Graduate Outing Club, en- trusted with the organization of out- of-doors activities of graduate stu- dents. will meet at 2:30 p~m. Sunday at the northwest entrance of the Rackham Building for a hike and supper in the wilds. Chief functions of the Graduate Council are the promotion of the social, educational and intellectual activities of the graduate student body and the encouragement of co- operation and understanding between students and faculty. Students interested in assisting in planning classical record programs, luncheons, coffee hours and informal record dances are urged to attend the Graduate Council meeting at 5 p.m., July 2, in the East Lecture Room of the Rackham Building. Classical record programs at 8 p.m. every Tuesday, a Coffee hour at 4:30 p.m. July 8 and a mixer scheduled for 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. July 11, will be held in the Rackham Building, Friday Dance Theme To Be 'Bo w-Ca tcher' The League Council announces that its tomorrow evening 9 p.m. to midnight dance will be a "Bow-cat- cher." No, girls, this is not a revival of Sadie Hawkins day but the name of the theme of the evening. Decora- tions will feature fat ribbon bows, the men attending will be given bow ties, and you'll be able to tell a host- ess by a similar adornment in her curls., The dance will be accompanied by Gordon Hardy, His Piano and His Orchestra. All summer semester and eight week students, with or without dates, men or coeds, are invited to attend. A partial list of hostesses includes Anne Belshaw, Dorothy Whitemore, 'Nancy Scholes, Marianne Gooding, Mary McKenzie, Josephine Clancy, Marilynn Vogel, Dorothy Vogel, Gret- ta Scheirla, Virginia Dodd, Frances Ramsdell, Mary L. Wright, Betty- Alice Brown and Elizabeth Grimes. It is requested that hostesses be at the League by 8:45 p'.m. Friday eve- ning. High Iway Network For Bomber Plant Planned By State LANSING, June 24. -(P)- The State Highway Department moved today to fill in a $2,461,382.21 gap in the highway network which will serve the U.S. bomber plant at Willow Run. It determined low bids for seven construction projects on the Detroit industrial expressway, the hew limit- ed access route which will link De- trot and the big factory, and for the building of another portion of the road network. Eighth project calls for 1.444 miles of grading and concrete paving on the Michigan Avenue connection to the Ecorse Road, in Wayne and Washtenaw counties, and also will serve the bomber plant. Alumni Given Posts - Mr. T. H. Tapping, general-secre- tary of the Alumnus Association, an- nounced yesterday that two new members had been elected last week to the National Board of Directors of Alumni. WI Fro If t descen might hot Bi fire a get wi the w Sho baseba City Foxx, etc., some the Be But clutch pitche fire, shrug relega ball c Yes hurler twirled agains secon their starts. with test's CLE eran Athlet nings, last s tered SJoit Fr LOS Newsr fine j the C the he the fi carrie Lt.- squad the J ported MAJOR LEAGUE SCORES: illints' Home R u, Wagner's Fuse H urling Whip >Ietroit, LO By HALE CHAMPION cluding homnets by Milnar and Les om Associated Press summnarim) Fleming, he Yankees care to take a con- * * iding look behind them, they I jjillia He ts 'T.ig 1 - discover that a bunch of red- 3oston Red Sox are breathing DETROIT, June 24.--Ted Wil- nd brimstone in an effort to liams' seventh inning home run-his ithin challenging distance of 17th. of the season-and Charley torld champions. Wagner's sterling three-hit pitchin rld aftehe sn'sjob brought the Boston Red Sox a< rtly after the season's opening 1 to 0 triumph over the Detroit Ti- all writers-impressed by Bean gr natiih aetdy a suggers Ted Williams, Jimmy gers in a twilight game~i< today. Boston .......000 000 100-1 8 1 Bobby Doerr, Dom DiMaggio, at Detroit ... .000 000 000-0 3 2 and pleasantly surprised by Wagner and Conroy; Trucks and fine rookie pitching-picked Parsons oston club to push the Yanks. *rsn* when Jimmy Foxx lost his -hitting punch and the rookie Yla iS Tr'li Browns, 6-4 ors temporarily retreated under -ST. LOUIS, June 24.-The New tlhe song of praise became a York Yankees took another step out of indifference for what was of their slump today with their sec- ted to the ranks of mediocre ond straight victory over the St. lubs. Louis Browns, 6 to 4. terday one of those recruit * * s, Broadway Charley Wagner, Sx Shut Out Solons d a neat three-hit shutout st the Detroit Tigers and the CHICAGO, June 24. - Johnny d-place Bostonians chalked up -Humphries, Chicago White Sox eleventh victory in twelve right-hander who authored four Ted Williams won the game shutouts ins six 1941 starts, reverted a homer which was the con- to his scoreless form today to blank sole score. Washington's Senators on eight hits while his battery mate, Tom Turner, ,'alis Whip Af's, 9-0 helped out 'with a homer with the bases loaded. The score was 6 to 0. KVELAND, June 24.-The vet- * * southpaw, Al Milnar, gage the tics five safeties in three in- Cards Get Twin Defeat then held them hitless for the BOSTON, June 24,-The St. Louis 9ix today as the Indians regis- Cardinals' pennant hopes suffered a 9 'to 0 win with 15 hits, in- rude jolts today when the Boston Braves pulled out of a prolonged los- ing streak by sweeping a double- vorel ys header from the second-place Cardi- nals by 6-2 and 3-1 margins. C * * * Night Baseball nston Carries Sailors NEW YORK, June 4,. - A tenth-inning home run by Bert Haas romii Lost Lexington gave the-Cincinnati Reds a 4 to 3 vic- tory over the New. York Girnts to- t ANGELES, June 24.-(,P)- night after Frank McCormick had man Stanley' Johnston did a connected for his tenth roundtripper nan taney ohntonof the season with one on' in the job of reporting the battle of eighth inning to tiethe score. Bucky oral Sea, but neglected to tell Walters pitched the entire route for eroic part he himself played in Cincinn'ati and allowed only six hits. nal hours of the big aircraft * * * r. PHILADELPHIA, June 24. - Comm. Weldon O. Hamilton, Claude Passeau chalked up his 11th ron leader who first sighted victory of the season tonight as he apanese carrier Ryukaku, re- pitched the Chicago Cubs to a 3 to 1 I today that Johnston, Chicago victory over the last place Phils. WITH.FAMOUS athletic figures be- ing handed exhalted Army and Navy Commissions at the drop of a hat your columnist feels that this is a good time to talk about an athlete, who was perhaps, far greater than any of them. This guy, unlike his well-known colleag\es, rehised numerous fancy desk jobs and gold-plated titles so he could start right from the bottom, in the country's active fighting forces. This exception to the popular, trend is Michigan's Tom Harmon. Harmon is now in California working his head off to be one 6ft the country's best combat fliers. Before long he will be sent across( to get more than his share of the slant-eyed dope peddlers.f Last year the ,All-American half-' back had offers by the dozen to ac-. cept some recruiting or publicity job' for different branches of the armed forces. But he turned them all down with a cold, no. Harmon was a great competitor and he knew he could never sit around and let the other boys do the fighting. He just wanted to be a "doer" instead of an "asker" and that's all there was to it. Marshall's SCOOPFOR TODAY One Pound Brigg's Tobacco 89c 'his price effective Thursday, June 25, only Marshall's Next to State Theatre It's true that Tom asked for a two months deferment after he" applied for his commission in the ,Army Air Forces, but it was on grounds of dependents. He had all the right in the world to do this because contrary, to popular belief Harmon does not have a lot of money. ALL IN ALL, he did not earn, over $30,000 from pictures, profession- al football,-radio announcing and ad- vertising. More than half of that total was spent on a house for his parents, which he started to build before Pearl Harbor. After Tom receiyes his commission most of the money he earns will have to be sent home to support his father and mother. ! All of this is just an added incent- ive to the All-American to give the Army all that's in him. In a 'recent letter to Russ O'Brien, a close friend here in Ann Arbor, Tom said: The Air Force is a great thing. You can't imagine the tremendous advantages that it offers to any boy who wants to serve his country. The competition is tough, but it only makes my work a lot more interesting." T HAT'S HARMON for you, no mat- ter what he is in 'he gives it all he's got. He could never stand to take a back seat in anything he tried. That's why he's probably Michi- gan's greatest football player. All your columnist can say is, "that I would hate like hell to be a Jap 1iilot when Harmon is out hunting Zeros." Tribune correspondent and only re- porter aboard, was one of the real heroes of the Lexington. "When it became apparent the Lexington was in a bad way John- ston went below decks for his papers and personal effects. He came up a little later, but didn't have any dia- ries. He was lugging a badly wounded seamen. He dashed down again, still after his notes. Pretty soon he re- turned, carrying another injured man. "I don't know how many times he repeated the performance. Every time he insisted he was going after his stuff, and every time he came back with a wounded or burned sailor. He risked his life time and again." U A NEW WARNER BROS. HIT KAY FRANCIS -WALTER HUSTON .n~d iiod,; rg gl~orous.rm,4d GLORIA WARREN with PATTY HALE . FRANKIE THOMAS - SORRAH MiNEVITCH & HIS RASCALS -"Dueded 6yfJOGRAHAM Extra Richard Himber & Band Porky's Midnight Matinee News of the Day JAMES STEWART "Winning Your Wings" Coming Sunday Norma "WE WERE Shearer DANCING" U. Of M. Club Formed , By Alumni In Ecuador The Michigan Alumnus Associa- tion was informed early this week that a University of Michigan Club had been formed last May 21 in the South American city of Quito, Ecu- ador. The club was organized by 32 Ecuadoreans, members of a group which attended Michigan University last summer. -They were here sev- eral weeks and completed work which the University arranged especially for them. The group includes Augustin Ar- royo, son of Ecuador's president. "There's a good 0 BARBER SHOP in the Union' CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR RENT YOUNG MAN to share apartment. Excellent setup at reasonable rate. Phone 2-3952. LOST and FOUND LOST--Light tan gabardine rain- coat. Name in collar. Call 225 Wenley House. Reward. WANTED WANTED-Several copies of THE MICHIGAN DAILY for Wednes- day, March 11, and Sunday, April 5. Must have these copies for im- portant record files. WILL PAY. Call Mi's. Wallace, 2-3241. HELP WANTED BOARD & ROOM JOB for boy who will help with breakfast and din- ner. 7380. LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c T HE DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH The Michigan Repertory Players in 6 BRILLIANT PLAYS JULY 8 -- AUGUST 18 * THE RIVALS * LETTERS TO LUCERNE THUNDER ROCK * MISALLIANCE * HA FEVER * H.M.S. PINAFORE SPECIAL SUMMER RATES SEASON PRICES: $3.96 - $3.30 - $2.31 (including Federal tax) SINGLE ADMISSIONS: 88c - 66c - 44c (including Federal tax) ( "PINAFORE" $1.10 - 88c - 66c including tax) iINDIVIDUALIZED LAUNDRY SERVICE Each bundle done separately, by hand No Markings 11 I I