TE, I TIc lt' A N bnAllN PkGE THT .x . n~n..we ar_ ..x a! a-ef.:s.,aa .ce. : w !_.o .['S. 1,i " .E.. Tigers Beat Senators 3-2, York Is Home Run King DETROIT. Aug. 11.-- UP)- Big Rudy York regained the American League home run leadership and at the same time blasted the' Detroit Tigers to a 3 to 2 victory over the Washington Senators tonight in the opener of a four-game series. With the score tied at two runs in the eighth inning of a twilight game before 1;3,376 spectators, York lined Emil (Dutch) Leonard's first pitich into the lower left field stands for his 19th roundtripper of the season and his fifth in five games. That blow put Rudy one ahead of Charley Keller of the New York Yankees who had hammered No. 18 a few hours earlier at St. Louis. Washington.. .....010 000 010-2 Dq'troit.............002 060 1x-3 graves Take One Tilt BOSTON, Aug. 11.- (AP)- The 'Roston Braves took their first home game of the season from the Chicago Cubs 6 to 2 today, dividing a twin bill, after dropping the first game 3 to 0. irst. Chicago ............000 300 000--3 Boston ... .... .000 000 000-0 Seconil Boston ......100 110 070-10 16 0 Chicago.....000 000 000- 0 5 0 Boston Swamps White Sox CHICAGO, Aug. 11. -i/P)-- With 'George lvfetkovich hitting a homer ard three singles and Joe Dobson pitching shutout ball, the Boston Red Box defeated the Chicago White Sox, 10 to 0, before 19,293 tonight to even the series at a victory apiece. The Red Sox rang up 16 hits against+ Orval Grove and Joe Haynes. * *; * Browns Wallop Yanks 9"I ST. LOUIS, Aug. 11.- (P)- Back- ing up the one-hit pitching of Steve Sundra with a 16-hit onslaught against lefty Marius Russo and milk- Oana 'o Leave Tigers DETROIT, Aug. 11.-(P)-The De- troit Tigers announced tonight that .henry (Prince) 'hOana, fHawaiian right-handed pitcher, had been no- tified by Commissioner K. M. Ladis,; of a reversal of a decision granting him free agency from Milwaukee of ,the American Association. Oana is slated to return to Milwaukee $un- ;day. man Jim Turner, the St. Louis Browns ' walloped the New York Yankees by a lop-sided score today for the second straight time, 9 to 1. New York .. . .010 000 000-1 1 0 St. Louis . .. .200 340 0Ax--9 16 1 Giants Win 3-2 over Cards NEW YORK, Aug. 11.- ()-- Nick Witek hit too home rins today and the second,'±opening the last "half of the tenth,- helped bring the New York Giants a 3 to 2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals after the Red- birds had tied the score with two runs in the ninth. St. LIois ..000 000 002 0-2 10 1 New Vork . . 000 11 000 1-3 '8 0 * * * 4 Phils Cop 2-2, 1-0 Victory PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 11.-- (P)- The Phillies handed the Pittsburgh Pirates' Rip Sewell his fourth defeat of the season, 2 to 1, in the first game of a ddItbleh eader today, then came back to win a second time, 2 to 0, in a doubleheader before 11,129 in Shibe Park. Sewell has won 17 Lee Savold Knocks Out Lou Nova in Second Round of Fight .t. A O - n $-m i \ { 4 Lee Savold (center) continued his spectacular st ring of fight successes by making Lou Nova (on knees) his fourth consecutive knockout victim at Chicago when he knocked out the California contender in the second round. Referee Freddie Gilmore (rig ht) counted out Nova, one minute and forty seconds meter the round opened. The battle was staged it Wr igley Field. games. First Pittsburgh ..000 000 001-1 PhilaAe'Iphia ..6 01100 Obx-2 SecoliA Pittsburgh . . .000 000 000-0 Philadelphia . .000 001 Olt-2 *t * * * *cnnt *ale 5-2 STUDENT CHURCH: Lutherans of I To Have Hous Lutheran students of the Missouri Synod will have their own building for worship and social activities next fall, the Rev. Alfred T. Scheips, pas- tor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, announced yesterday. This purchase of the 17-room Alice Palmer Cooperative by the Michigan district of the church, for which the Bandage Unit To Be Open in Leagute Today The houses especially invited to attend the Surgical Dressing Unit from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the League are Mosher Hall, Kappa Kap- pa Gamma, Alpha Phi, and Alpha Xi Delta, Jean Whittemore, '44, chairman of the unit announced yes- terday. The house that showed the great- est percentage of participation last week was Stockwell Hall, Miss Whit- temore stated. "We would like every coed on campus to give at least two hours before the unit closes next week," she added. Stressing the fact that with the invasion of Europe casualties are mounting rapidly, increasing the de- mand for surgical dressings, Miss Whittemore said that the local unit is still working on quota number four, due last March. "If every surgical dressing unit in the country is as far behind as we are, you can imagine the shortage of dressings in our European base hos- pitals," she stated. Hillel Will Honor Company A Sunday The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation will hold a reception from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday in honor of the men of Company A, 3651st S.U., who will present a concert at Hill Auditorium Sunday. This will be one of the most impor- tant events of the Foundation's sum- mer session, Shirley Levin, head of the social committee, said yesterday. The evening will include a buffet supper. TCLASSIFIED VIissouri Synod W of Worship Rev. Scheips has been conducting services in the Michigan League, marks the first time that these Luth- eran students have had their own church center. Building To Be Remodeled The building will be remodeled by fall to contain a chapel, a service- man's center, and a social center for students, the Rev. Scheips said. The second floor of the building will serve as living quarters for the pastor and his wife. Eventually the site will be used for a new chapel arid student center to be constructed after the war, the pastor said. The Rev. Scheips who began his work last fall on campus was the first full-time University pastor to serve students of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod, Came from Nebraska Prior to his service at Michigan, the Rev. Scheips was pastor of Cal- vary Church at Lincoln, Neb., for three years. In 1937 he was grad- uated from Concordia Theological Seminary at St. Louis, Mo., and in 1940 he received his master of arts degree from the University of Ne- braska. Services for the students of the Missouri Synod will be held at the Michigan League Chapel until the new center is ready for occupancy, Pastor Scheips said. USO Volunteers Will Meet in League-Today There will be a mass meeting for all coeds who signed up as University USO Volunteers at 5 p.m. today in the League, Clare Blackford, '44, president of Mortarboard Society, announced yesterday. "We want everyone who is inter- ested to come, even if they have riot signed up yet," Miss Blackford stat- ed. No USO Dance Saturday There will be no University USO danoe Saturday, because of the Sum- mer Prom and Bill Sawyer's dance at the League, Clare Blackford, '44, president of Mortarboard which sponsors the dances, announced yes- terday. 4 8 6 6 3 0 2 0 BROOKLYN, Aug. 11.- UOP)- Af- ter being smothered for six innings by Ray Starr., the Brodklyn Dodgers tinleashed a ffive-run rally in the sev- enth ,stahza today to beat the din- cinnati Reds 5 to 2 and'end Brook- lyn's' ten-gane losing streak. Whit Wyatt gave seven hits in winning. Cincinn ti . , 000 001 001-l 7 0 Braooklyn.....000 000 50x-5 7 1 Indians Take Both Games CLEVELAND, Aug. 11.- (A')- Cleveland's Indians took both games of a twi-night doubleheader with the Philadelphia Athletics tonight, win- ning the night affair 2 to 1 on Al smith's two hitter after slugging out a 10 to 5 decision in the opener. First. Philadelphia 000 031 100-- 5 10 1 Cleveland . . .051 010 03x-10 13 1 Second - PI hila lelphia .. 000 100 000--1 2 2 Cleveand . . 010 000 Ox-2 3 0 PROBABLY GREAT LAKES: Wolverines Have No Opponent For Sept. 25 Home Opener Coach Fritz Crisler and the Wol- verines were left without an oppon-' ent for their home opening game on the Michigan gridiron yesterday when the MSC Spartans cancelled all athletic schedules for the coming football season. The cancellation of the Sept. 25 game breaks a gridiron series started in 1898 between the two challenging in-state teams. It also puts athletic director Crisler in the tight position &f finding another opponent to fill the gap' in the home schedule. Substitute May Be Found Today Crisler, indicating yesterday that he would probably have the substi- tuting team on the docket by today, listed Great Lakes, Iowa Seahawks, 'and Purdue as likely candidates. Inasmuch as Big Ten schools are committed to help service teams in Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York ........... Washington .......... Detroit .............. Cleveland ........... Chicago ............. Boston .............. St. Louis ............ Philadelphia......... W 61 55 51 51 51 46 45 40 L 39 50 48 48 49 52 54 63 Wednesday's Results Detroit 3, Washington 2 St. Louis 9, New York 1 Philadelphia 5-1, Cleveland Boston 10, Chicago 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pct. .610 .524 .515 .515 .510 .485 .455 .388 10-2 Pet. .667 .529 .529 .515 .467 .465 .454 .376 St. Louis ............ Pittsburgh.......... Cincinnati.......... Brooklyn........... Philadelphia. Chicago............ Boston............. New York.......... W 66 54 54 53 49 47 44 38 I. 33 48 48 54 56 54 53 63 making schedules whenever possible, the Great Lakes Team looks like the most probable choice. Great Lakes has the Sept. 25 slug already filled but a little juggling would enable that game to be played on the Michi- gan field and leave an opening for the second contest, likewise broken by the Spartans, to come later in the season. Purdue May Come After 13 Years If the home opener were arranged with Purdue it would be the first meeting of that team and the Wol- verines since 1930. Purdue at the present time is scheduled for a bout with Marquette for the opening sea- son date. Crisler said he had received a re- quest from Western Michigan Col- lege to fill the Sept. 25 date. The1 Broncos are loaded with Navy mater- ial for the fall as is Purdue. Tickets, already printed and in the mail for the Spartan-Wolverine tilt,a will be used for the new game, the athletic staff indicated, with refunds1 when requested. The Wolverines,1 after two and a half weeks practice, will don football pants and head- gears soon for a scrimmage, Crisler said. :x Athletic Ban Snaps Tradtiont EAST LANSING, Aun. 11.--P)-- Wartime cancellation of intercol- Ilegiate athletics at Michigan Stater College today snapped a continuoust 59-year-old "Aggie" and "Spartan" football tradition. The decision, announced by Presi- dent John A. Hannah, applies to all sports, but campus attention cen- tered mostly on the abandonment of the 1943 football schedule, for which training already had started. Voicing regret at the decision, MSC authorities went ahead with plans to keep the football spirit alive dur- ing" the war with a civilian-Army campus league which will offer fansl a free double-header every Saturday afternoon during the fall.- Hannah pointed out that only one7 man was left on campus of the 135 men who played varsity and fresh-r man football last fall and that onlyl 400 civilian men, enrolled in engi- neering, pre-medical and veterinary7 courses, will return to the campus this fall. Football training started with 50-1 odd former high school athletes, moste of them 17 years old, on hand. Decision to cancel the current schedules came after War Depart- ment officials made it plain they would not relent from their decision banning all Army trainees from in- tercollegiate competition. There are more than 3,000 such trainees atl MSC., Head football coach Charley Bach- man said the decision was made when college authorities realized theyt would have to play a major schedule with "inexperienced, immature boys." Figy Assures Food Supply LANSING, Aug. 11--(/P)-Charles Figy, state aricultura commission- er, declared today "there will bet plenty of the basic foods for us all next winter" as he returned from a conference of state agricultural com- missioners of so-called "breadbasket" states, Volo Son Is Victorious in Hambletonian NEW YORK, Aug. 11.-(IP)-Volo Song, his pounding hooves beating out sweet jive on Empire City's dance-floor race track, gave Bill Strang, the Brooklyn warehouse owner, his second straight victory in the Hambletonian today at 12,407 fans hung up a new betting record for trotting's blue ribbon show. After bowing in the first heat to Worthy Boy, the speedy colt from Mrs. James B. Johnson, Jr.'s Roches- ter, Bare came roaring back in the second and third miles under the guidance of 70-year-old Ben White to take down $23,263.92, the winner's share of a purse that totaled $42,298- .03. And for ageless Ben, it was his fourth Hambletonian triumph-a mark that no other driver has ever been able to touch. With second money of $8,459.61 going to Worthy Boy, Joe Burke's Phonograph of Plainfield, N. J., car- ried off third money amounting to $5,075.76 as he wound up fourth in the first dash and second in the last two miles. And down in the blue grass of Kentucky, Volo mite can take a bow for he sired the first three horses -another No. for the classic. The crowd was considerably under those that saw the race when it was trotted at Gashen, its home since 1930 until transferred to Empire be- cause of war time transportation problems. But the fans loosened their purse strings and sent the wagering soaring to $353,400. With the first three moneys divided among the favorites the remaining money awards went to Darnley, Rey- nolds' Gordon Gray and Lt. Elbridge Gerry's Hester Hanover. Gunder Haeggt Takes 8th Race Swede Sets Randalls island Pace at 4:06.9 NEW YORK, Aug. 11.-()-Gun- der Haegg, shy but swift Swede, won his eighth straight race in the United States by fleeing a mile in 4.06.9 to- night in a twilight meet at Randalls Island. Haegg had only a two yard edge over Gil Dodds as he hit the tape and the Boston Divinity Student in turn was only another yard ahead of Bill Hulse, New York. Hulse set the pace for the first half mile that was reached in 2.03.5 but the Swedish thunde'rbolt, who dropped into the second place slot at the very start, Mary Agynes Wall Upsets Western Bout EVANSTON, Ill., Aug. 11.-(A')- Mary Agnes Wall of Menominee, a young woman of 34 years but an "old campaigner" in, women's western golfing circles, pulled the first major upset in the current Western Ama- teur Tournament today with a re- markable'2 and 1 decision over the favored Kay Byrne. Miss Wall's victory was made pos- sible because s1ie sank two chip shots almost in succession near the close of their second round match, - - - - -- - CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request l Wednesday's Results' Chicago 3-2, Boston 0-6 Philadelphia 2-2, Pittsburgh 1-0 New York 3, St. Louis 2 Brooklyn 3, Cincinnati 2 rru -M, 11 A IT m rr MAMA= MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. IDENTIFICATION PHOTOS 35mm. Film Loads-For 36 hour service come to 335 E. Ann 6:30-7:00 weekdays. YOUNG Naval Officer stationed at University wants room and meals with private family. Write Michi- gan Daily. LOST: Sigma Nu fraternity pin. Valuable to owner. Reward. Call Donald C. Overy at 8544. WANTED: Waiters part time work at 65c per hour including dinner. ':"r Apply 512 E. William. LOST: Snapshots of Michigan Build- ings. Return to Michigan Daily. I__________________ I4 " £'e~ct W'ou 1 'I PENNdANTS Starts TODAY WTIATE jCOOL! waoo' 90-4 I AM VIE Off ev 4 Ar II-Iol MICHIGAN JEWELRY BARGAIN BOOKS WATCH LUPE THE WORKS~ Fire works Ada DIu and all Student Supplies I f LIBERTY CAFE Chinese lReslturant III Illl F ww;~,~,m x~