St. Louis Takes Yankees, 10.2; Hits 2 Homers White Sox Win Home Game over Boston, 4-2, As Smith Allows 6 Hits ST. LOUIS, Aug. 10.-()- The stumbling St. Louis Browns snapped to life today to overpower the New' York Yankees 10 to 2 after their star shortstop, Vernon Stephens, had been benched because of a battling slump and an ankle injury. The Brownies made 13 hits, includ- ing a pair of home runs by George McQuinn and Chet Laabs, each with one aboard. McQuinn's seven of the season came in the first inning and Laabs' 13th highlighted a three-run fourth frame. They made five hits count for five runs in the fifth and shelled Hank Borowy off the mound, bringing Marvin Breuer onto the scene for his first performance in an American League game this year. Breuer gave up the final St. Louis score in the eighth. Mark Christman, who subbed for Stephens, hit a double and two sin- gles. White Sox Beat Boston CHICAGO, Aug. 10. -(A)- The Chicago White Sox opened a long home stand tonight by defeating the $oston Red Sox, 4 to 2, behind the Ox hit pitching of Edgar Smith. A crowd of 20,336 saw the game, which gpve the Chicagoans possession of thrid place. Haegg'To Run Against Hulse, :Dodds Today NEW YORK, Aug. 10.- (P)- Bill Iulse and Gil Dodds are listed as Gunder Haegg's opponents when the galloping Swede makes the farewell appearance of his American tour in a special mile race at Randall's Is- land Stadium tomorrow night, but his real opponent will be a stop watch. Haegg has his heart set on better- ing the time of 4:02.6 recently made by his fellow countryman, Arne An- dersson, and if conditions are just right he is certain to make the bid tomorrow to provide a glorious cli- max to a sensational tour which has seen him better four American marks in seven appearances. That he is in top condition for his attempt to better Andersson's time was indicated by the 8:51.3 time for two miles he registered at Cincinnati last Saturday over a track reportedly slow. Hulse, New York Athletic Club runner timed in 4:06 in a recent race in which he finished second to Haegg, and Dodds, Boston A.A. ath- lete with a 4:06.1 mile to his credit, are expected to keep the long-haired Swede stepping along at top speed, WEDNE-SDAYk, AUTG.11, 51)4 THE MICH19AN OWIAtY I' I Engine School Receives Pieces Of Jap Bomber Plastic Glass, Fin Sent By Former Professor at Naval Pacific Station "This rising sun has set" reads the inscription pasted on a piece of the outer fabric of a Jap Aichi "99" dive bomber sent with other parts from the plane to the chemical engineer- ing department by Comm. Elmore S. Pettyjohn, former University profes- sor now stationed in the South Pa- cific. Although Comm. Pettyjohn sent only a few pieces from the plane which was shot down a few hundred yards from the South Pacific ad- vanced base where he is stationed with the U.S. Navy amphibian forces, the rusty battered parts tell their own story. Scratched Glass Sent Scratched pieces of plastic glass cowling and a plastic shield from be- tween the forward and after cock- pits, and a twisted metal fin from a bomb dropped from the plane are included in the collection. According to the inscription pasted on the bomb fin by Comm. Petty- john, the bomb landed only 200 yards from the U.S. camp. Collection Has Daylight Bomb A piece cut from a two-man rub- ber life raft, and an emergency day- light bomb, aluminum filled, with wood reinforcements around the nose and base and a pasted list of direc- tions in Japanese also form part of the collection. All glass parts are made of plastic. The only metal pieces,from the plane itself are a cover for the port gaso- line tank, another cover for the after emergency flarelocker, and a radio condenser bearing prominent Japan- ese lettring across the top. Pettyjohn Left 'U' in '40 Comm. Pettyjohn, who left the University in 1940 to enter the Navy, was sent overseas in April, 1942. He is at present in charge of the repair and maintenance of landing barges for the amphibian forces at an ad- vanced South Pacific base. While at the University, Comm. Pettyjohn was an associate professqr of chemical engineering. The portions of the bomber are now on exhibit in the southeast cor- ner of the East Engineering Building in the main lobby on the first floor. Dickinson Added To Labor Committee Prof. Z. Clark Dickinson of the economics department will go to New York Aug. 31 to serve on a De- partment of Labor committee to rec- ommend a minimum hourly wage rate for the logging lumber, timber and related products industry, a Washington announcement said yes- terday. He is one of the two Michigan men named to the committee that will be in session only until the particular wage problems of the industry are solved. Prof. Dickinson i the public member of the committee 1i i Go To G 01] ,Yj BAR'S STATE STREET or 11e "Campus-i nto-ca reer outfit." "The MLLE-tary cover ................. . coa t. "Sick II Slacks." i. "Classic shirti rocks." ee "Town and or date dress. "Go-togethers." 1,X, f kA . '' ;, r. s r u//I.0 A.0000"W' tA/ DREAM OF ALL TURKEY: Greatest Development of U.S. Is Free Enterprise, Turks Say oJb ttJ Editor's note: This is the second in a series of articles interpreting the Turkey of today. "Turks view the free enterprise in America as its greatest develop- ment," Orhan Koraltan and Orhan Bati, both of Turkey, said yesterday. "After the National Resurrection in 1919, the government wanted to Set up industries," Bati explained,' "but Turkey had been fighting wars Negro Fiction Is Discussed Stories are 'Terribly Realistic,' Hayden Says Since NegrQ artists have had to prove themselves every inch of the way their stories are terribly realis- tic," Robert Hayden said Monday in his lecture on "an interpretation of Negro fiction," sponsored by the In- ter-Racial Association..' Explaining,the harmful effects of the stereotypes, of Negroes by white authors,Hayden said, "The things which are valuable in themselves, such as Negro humor, but distorted by writers with anti-Negro bias are shunned by the Negro authors them- selves." Hayden explained that during the anti-slavery struggles there were no professional colored writers with leisure time to develop their artistic abilities. The literature of that per- iod had only one purpose, the de- struction of slavery, he said. *The next lecture, also on Negro 3:.L.. . x.:1-... 4_ -441 ..as~e et - F since 1906, and there was no money left in the country. There was no one with strength to start an indus- try of his own, so it was up to the government to see that something was done. "Consequently, the first five year plan was drawn up by which factor- ies were built up. The Etatisme sys- tem was followed," Koraltan ex- plained. "The Turkish people view the government ownership of these factories as transitory. Even now, men who have been able to accumu- late some wealth working for the government in these factories are setting up their own businesses," he said. Demirag Builds Aircraft Plant "Foremost among these men is Nun Demirag, who hashbuilt an air- craft factory, which is the largest privately owned factory in the coun- try. It is his dream, as it is the dream of all Turkey, that eventually a system of true competitive enter- prise may be set up," Bati said. "Countries such as Turkey can never develop to the scale of the United States if there is no free en- terprise," Koraltan added. "A lot has been said about communism and socialism, but human nature won't fit communism, and there is no get- ting around it." The division of labor does destroy individualism" Bati said. "I dislike this and the materialism in America the most. But this could be reme- died by permitting the laborer to have an interest in the factory at which he works." Hope To Return "Both Bati and I want to return to Turkey and set up our own busines- . r ; '.. : I~.,O O /wiH~ / 0( 0 t~e6 ...'~.h 1 f t HAT better place than our year 'round college shop to find clothes that are right for college? The editors of MADEMOI- SELLE think so, too, 'cause they've selected Goodyear's State St. as the store in Ann Arbor to show the fashions chosen by their famous board of college guest editors, and featured in the August issue of their magazine. Come see them, along with our own spe- cial choices of long-lasting classics, double-duty duds (a new breed of college clothes for classroom, study hour, v~dur'teer work or fun outdoors), and lots of super material for dates! All clothes with a consciousness of the world outside the campus . .. that I 5~