igerstWhi Washington THE ' IHUernDL Martin Marauders Wreck Ciampino Senators, 12-6 Win Moves Detroit To Second Place in League Pennant Race WASHINGTON, July 23.- ()- The Detroit Tigers exploded for eight runs in the 10th inning to trounce Washington, 12 to 6, tonight. The win moved Detroit into second place in the American League race, drop- ping the Senators to third. DETROIT . . ....000 211 000 8-12 WASHINGTON .013 000 000 2- 6 Yanks Shut Out ftrowns NEW. YORK, July 23.- (P)- A two-base error by Mike Chartak and Bill Dickey's double gave the Yank- ees their lone run today and a 1 to 0 victory over the St. Louis Browns. Hank Borowy limited the Brownies to five hits while the Yanks collected only three off Denny Galehouse. ST. LOUIS .. .000 000 000-0 5 1 NEW YORK ..010 000 00x-1 3 0 Galehouse, Hollingsworth (8) and Hayes; Borowy and Dickey. Indians Defeat Athletics PHILADELPHIA, July 23.- (R)- A sixth-inning home run which Ray Mack hammered into the left field. stands kept four leaders of the Cleveland Indians out of the barber shop again today, providing the only score as the Indians defeated the Philadelphia Athletics 1-0. Manager, Lou Boudreau and Coaches George Susce, Burt Shotton and Del Baker! have vowed not'to shave until the Indians break their five-game win-. tying streak. INDIANS .. . .000 001 000-1 6 0 ATHLETICS .000- 000 000-0 4 2 . Harder and Rosar; Blacl and Swift. Chisox, Red Sox Split BOS'I ON, July 23.- (AP)- The Boston Red Sox and Chicago White Sox split a double bill today, Boston coming from behind to win the first, 8-7, in 10 innings while the Chisox, aided by Vin Castino's first and grand slam homer took the nightcap, 5-1. Bobby Doerr snapped a 342- chance errorless streak in the first when he muffed.an easy pop fly. First CICAGO ..940 030 000 0-7 12 3 tOSTON . .. 190 010 923' '1-8 12 3 Humphries, Haynes (8) and Tresh; Terry, Lucier (2), Woods (9) and Partee, Conroy (9). Second CHICAGO .. .001 400 000-5 7 1 BOSTON ... .000 000 001-1 7 0 Ross and Castino; H. Newsome, Woods (9) and Partee. Braves Bow to Cubs . CHICAGO, July 23.- (P)-Claude Passeau won his tenth victory of the season today when he limited the Boston Braves to four hits while the Chicago Cubs won the final game of the series 5 to 0. BOSTON ... .000 000 000-0 4 1 CHICAGO .. .100 030 01x-5 8 0 Tobin and Masi; Passeau and Mc- Cullough. Airfield at Rome 'N ...:. ..~. ..... eld at Rome, this litter of wrecked s were burned out. Smoke can be itary airfield. Although the bomb- Edward J. Mooney of the Archdio- ntouched by Allied planes, which viers via Signal Corps radio-photo). After the Martin Marauders got through with the Ciampino Airfi planes was left on the bomb-pocked field and several of the hangar seen rising from the burning havoc the Allied bombers left of this mil ing of Rome ras been deplored by Pope Pius XII and by Archbishop E eese of Detroit, the historically valuable parts of the city were left un aimed only for military objectives. (African Air Force photo from Alg Cards Take Giants, ST. LOUIS, July 23.- (P)- A p of singles and a long fly gave1 Cardinals a run ii the second inn today and they held onto the mar for a 1 to 0 decision over the N York Giants, behind the combir five-hit hurling of Harry Gumb and Howie Krist. Ken Chase pitc a-six-hitter for the Giants. NEW YORK . .000 000 000-0 5 ST. LOUIS ...010 000 00x-1 6 Chase, Adams (8) and Lombar Gumbert, Krist (7) and W. Coop Pirates Edge Out Phils PITTSBURGH, July 23.- (P)-: Johnny Gee allowed Philadelp but two hits in seven innings tod as the Pirates defeated the Phi 3-2, to gain an edge of one game the five-game series. Gee reliev rookie Bill Brandt in the second af the Phils had scored twice, andl mates reacted handily with a thr run rally in the third. PHILLIES . ..:020 000 000-2 6 PIRATES . .. .03 000 00x-3 8 Gerheauser and Livingst Brandt, Gee (3) and Lopez. Dodgers Whip Reds CINCINNATI, July 23.-(P)-Af being held to two hits for seven in ings by Johnny Vander Meer,t Brooklyn Dodgers shoved a r across in the eighth today, ad anotherin the ninthdand whipp the Reds 2 to 0 behind Whitey W att's four-hit pitching. The Dod outfield 'made 18 putouts, equalli the Major* League record. DODGERS . . .000 000 011-2 5 REDS .......000 000 000-0 4 Japs Harvest Cabbage HEART MOUNTAIN, Wyo., J 22. - (/P) - Japanese at the He Mountain relocation center harves their first farm crop this week-' pounds of Chinese cabbage. JULY FESTIVAL: pair (* the Wixer' Idea To Be Stressed img g Ain t Ju'Summer Jamboree ned Bert The "mixer" theme will be stressed JGP's chief summer project. War hed at the July Jamboree on Palmer stamps and accompanying tickets Field next Saturday with admission for admission to carnival booths will 1 to dancing during the evening "stag be sold on the grounds, while chan- 1 or drag" and games designed par- ces on a bond to be raffled off will di; ticularly to introduce servicemen to be on sale during the entire week of per. campus coeds. the 26th in the Diagonal war stamp Townspeople and faculty members and bond booth. are also invited to the Jamboree, Fun House Planned Several houses have announced Big their booth projects, which will in- hia DAILY OFFICIAL elude a "fun house," fortune-teller, day freak show, and various games of ils, BULLETIN chance and other stunts. in Men's and women's dormitories ved -.and houses together with several ter (Continued from Page 2) campus organizations are sponsoring his -.... booths, while local merchants are ee- p.m. Tuesday, July 27, in Hill Audi- donating prizes. The Women's Ath- torium. The public is cordially in- letic Association is furnishing ath- ' vited. letic equipment. 1 Co. A To Participte on; Record Concert at Horace H. Entertainment is still being ar- Rackham Building: Another of the ranged,with a skit by Co. A of the weekly concerts will be given Tues- 3651st S.U. and numbers by Rae Nita day evening at 7:45. The program Larsen, '44 and Mickey Johnson, '46, ter will consist of the following record- the only definitely planned acts.' n- ings: Haydn's Quartet in D Major, Contrary to a previous announce- the Brahms' Concerto No. 2, in B Flat mentrBill Sawyer's orchestra will run Major, and Rimski-Korsakov's Ca- not participate. He will play at the un priccio Espagnol. Servicemen are League as usual. ded cordially invited to join the Grad- Students are still needed to work ed uate Students for these concerts. on the poster committees. Anyone .ger ~interested should contact Marcia ing Events Toda Sharpe or Georgianna Leslie, 1 The Lutheran Student Association 0 invites all Lutheran Servicemen and CLASSIFIED Lutheran Students to an Open House at Lane Hall this evening at 8:30 DIRECTORY p.m. The regular Association meet- uly ing will be held Sunday afternoon art at the home of Rev. and Mrs. E. C. ted Stellhorn, 120 Packard Street. The 703 group will meet at the Zion Parish CLASSIFIED Hall, 309 E. Washington Street, at -4:30 p.m. and go to the Stelihorn RATES home from there. Non-Contract Coi0Events .per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- "Graduate Outing Club will meet crease of 10c for each at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 25, for additional 5 words.) a Huron River trip. Two parties will $1.00 per 15-word insertion for be formed to go to the same spot, three or more days. (In- one by canoe and one by hiking. It crease of $.25 for each is essential that those who wish to additional 5 words.) rent canoes contact Mr. Hoffman, event chairman, (Telephone 2-2448) Contract Rates on Request before noon Sunday and pay reser- vation charge on their canoes in ad- FOR SALE-Table model Philco Ra- vance. A schedule of these charges dio. 1333 Washtenaw. will be left at the information desk-- - in the Rackham Building for in- MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind- spection by those interested." ing. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student S. State. Club, will meet Sunday afternoon at - ---- 4:30, at 1337 Wilmot for a social FOR ALL PICNICKERS: Left some hour and supper. rolls and mustard at the island. ----.___- Wanting some hotdogs. Take care. ---__Hank and Herb. LOST-Black leather wallet Sunday between eight and ten. Contains valuable papers. Return to Mich- n GCigan Daily. James Devantzis. Keep money. tor War Bonds Issued Here! us to a Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL nd Smoker 5T.TE Last Times Today s -- Third Floor George Patricia T rdBRENT LANE 8 P.M. "SILVER QUEEN" and Race Riots in Detroit Are Paradoxical Correspondent Tells Facts of Underground Organization in City By FELIX B. WOLD Associated Press Correspondent DETROIT, July 23.- There's a paradox in racial disaffections in Detroit, the city which once was a haven for the very forebears of the Negroes who fought with white men in the June 21 riots which cost 34 lives. Since Negro slaves fled from the south to Detroit four score years and more ago, Detroit has changed, of course, -multiplying in nationalities as well as size as it grew from a fur trading post to one of the world's greatest industrial cities. 'Hone of Automobiles' Thus modern America knows De- troit, where war plants now thunder day and night, mainly as the birth- place of the automobile industry. "F.O.B. Detroit," Henry Ford, Gen- eral Motors, Chrysler-those are fa- miliar. There was a time, however, when the name of John Brown, the abolitionist whose body "lies a-mouldering in the grave," was linked with Detroit, and the city which was to become the world's motorcar capital was a mecca for fugitive slaves. In the dramatic history of the 242- year-old community, the service of certain of its citizens to slaves in flight ranks in interest with the chapters on Detroit's part in the French and Indian Wars, the open- ing of the Great Lakes, and the auto- mobile. Headquarters of Abolition Only a river's width from Canada, Detroit was a northern terminus- of the celebrated underground railway of pre-Civil War days, so important that John Brown made the city a headquarters of his abolition move- ment. Because of Detroit's proximity to Canada, the city was ideally located for the interests of the underground. Negroes were hid- den here by sympathizers. When the road was clear, out they went to cross the Detroit or St. Clair River into Canada. While the city paid full official respects tothe rights of slaveholders at the time and cooperated in extra- dition proceedings to send slaves back to their owners, abolitionists here included many persons willing to defy the law. As a result, up to ,President Lin- er- ect artMoo'ern NOW SHOWING --- Also "AMPHIBIAN FIGHTERS" PARAMOUNT NEWS i The University of Michigan Me David Mattern, Direc invites all men on camp Get-together Sing aR Michigan Union Glee Club Room Mo nday, July 26 ---7 to