AYT, AUJGUST 17, U144 'T H. . .T.E.C . N . _A N WIT±i.17 3..5 31V I Ar-4 .. q4 .lor Summer Interfraterniy BallWillBeHelFrdyAu rust 2 i League Will e Scene of en- Formal Affair To Mark End Of Summer Session A summer Interfraternity Ball will be held from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Fri- day, Aug. 25, in the League Ballroom, it was announced yesterday by E. Roger Hotte, secretary-treasurer of Interfraternity Council. Ralph Wilson and his band, a local orchestra, will play at the affair, which will be held on the day which marks the end of the summer ses- sion. It will be semi-formal. Late Permission for V-12's Members of the .Nav V-12 Unit -who attend the dance will have mid- night permission for the occasion, and all Greek letter men may obtain tickets from their house presidents. "The evening will be marked by fun, friendship, and fellowship," Hotte said yesterday. "Each frater- nity's emblem will be placed along the walls of the ballroom, and the familiar silver and black crest of Interfraternity Council above the banrstand will highlight the decora- tions." To Be First Summer Affair The dance is the first ever held by IFC during the summervterm, al- though the winter Interfraternity Ball is a local tradition. The ;committee for the affair in- cludes Hotte, Bill Ducker, Bob Acton, Doug James, Bliss Bowman, Don MacKinnon, Tom Bliska and Joe Linker. Nelson Shoots is Third 69 in P.G.A. Tourney SPOKANE, WASH., Aug. 16-(P)- Tournament favorite Byron Nelson of Toledo, O., charged home at a below-par pace today to defeat Mike De Massey, San Jose, Calif., 5 and 4 in their 36-hole first round match of the 1944 national P. G. A. cham- pionship. The former U. S. open and P. G. A. titlist, shooting a 3-under-par 69 on the first eighteen, held a 5 up lead at the half-way mark. He lost a hole on the third nine and was 4 up at the 27th. At the 30th, he had increased the margin to six holes, lost the 31st and coasted ou to victory with a par 4 half on the 32nd. Nelson's 69 this morning was his third successive round at that figure. The man to course requires 36-36- 72 for par. De Massey finished the first round at 75. He carded nine straight 4s on the third nine. Nelson finished three under par for the 32 holes played. VeteranyWillie Goggin, White Plains, N. Y. was an easy winner in his first round match, swamping Purvis Ferree, Winston-Salem, N. C., 8 and 7. Goggin, runner-up to Gene Sara- zen inthe 1933 P. G. A. tournament, tossed a one under par 71 at his rival to hold a 5-up advantage at the 18th. Derricotte Lost To Wolverines Michigan's football team lost its second man to the armed service in two weeks when Gene Derricotte, freshman scatback from Defiance, Ohio, passed his Army physical. Derricotte's call is expected to come before the season opener with the Seahawk's of Iowa Sept. 16. His loss follows Dick Rifenburg's enlist- ment in the Merchant Marine two weeks ago. Derricotte had shown well in prac- tice, drawing praise from Head Coach Fritz Crisler. He was a can- didate for the tailback slot with Bob Nussbaumer and Bill Culligan. Though smaller than most backfield candidates, Derricotte was one of the hardest runners on the squad~and; an accurate passer, but he was con- tinually plagued with minor injuriesI during summer practice. --ol __e et_orr n }tmdern Fo LIGHTS FOR MERCY SIGN-Lt. Lucile Morris (left) of San Francisco and Lt. Helen Bennershuster of Park City, Mont., look at lighted Red Cross on new Army transport, Marigold. - - - - -- Counsellors Needed for Cotference University, American Legion To Hold Girls' State Meeting Here Two more University women are needed to act as counsellors at the Girls' State Conference, which will be held from Monday, August 28, to Tuesday, Sept. 5, in Ann Arbor, ac- cording to Miss Ethel McCormick, League social director. There will be 220 high school stu- dents attending the conference, and, 16 University counsellors. There are 9 directors, all but one of them from other towns within the state. Coeds who would be interested in participating in the Conference as counsellors are asked to see Miss Mc- Cormick between 10 a. m. and noon and 1:30 and 5 p. m. today or to- morrow in the Social Director's of- fice in the League. Students attend- ing the summer term are ineligible, for the Conference will conflict with University classes. University Provides Housing The Girls' State Conference is a meeting for a selected group of high school students, and is sponsored by the Women's Auxiliary of the Amer- ican Legion. The University provides housing and the week's program. This year Mosher Hall will be used to accommodate those attending the Conference. The purpose of the meeting, ac- cording to Miss Alice Lloyd, Univer- sity Dean of Women, is to show high school women the professional and vocational opportunities for women at the present time. Counsellors Listed University women who will act as counsellors are either students at the present time or attended the Univer- sity last semester. They are Mar- jorie Cavins, Nancy Gillette, Jeanne Parsons, Dona Guimaraes, Helen Masson, Marcia Wellman, Barbara Osborne. Also Shelby Dietrich, Mary -Ann Grathwohl, Virginia Weadock, Mar- garet Scherdt, Betty Ruppert, and Georgia Wyman. The directors will be Mrs. Helen Gillette, of Clio; Mrs. Bertha Proes- tel, of Detroit; Miss Lelia Boyce, Al- legan; Mrs. Odille Miller, Menomi- nee; Miss Gladys Lee, Flint. Also Mrs. Loverne MacAllister, Battle Creek; Mrs. Helen Benjamin, Detroit; Mrs. Winifred Cavanaugh, Detroit ;and Mrs. Edna Alber, Ann Arbor. WOMEN AT WAR Major League Standings ... _ AMERICAN LEAGUE BOMBER SCHOLARSHIP: Summer Prom Will Be Held Tomorrow in Union Ballroom TEAMS W *St. Louis ......67 Boston .........60 DETROIT......59 New York .......58 Cleveland .......54 *Chicago .......52 *Philadelphia . . .51 *Washington .... 47 *Denotes playing YESTERDAY'S L 45 52 52 52 61 59 63 64 night Pct. GB .598 -- .536 7 .532 -711 .527 8 .470 14%/ .468 141/ .447 17 .423 191/ game. NATIONAL LEAGUE TEAMS W L Pct. GB *St. Louis ......79 28 .738 - Pittsburgh ......61 45 .575 171/4 Cincinnati ......61 46 .570 181; Chicago ........49 55 .471 28%/ *New York ......50 60 .455 30%/ Philadelphia ....42 62 .404 3514 Brooklyn .......44 67 .396 37 Boston . ......... 43 66 .394 37 *Denotes playing night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Brooklyn 3, Cincinnati 1. Chicago 11, Boston 3. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, rain. New York at St. Louis, night. TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Chicago. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh. Brooklyn at Cincinnati, morning. New York at St. Louis, night. RESULTS DETROIT 4, Boston 2. New York 11, Cleveland 8. Chicago at Washington, night. St. Louis at Philadelphia, night. TODAY'S GAMES DETROIT at Boston. Chicago at Washington, night. St. Louis at Philadelphia. IS FAMINE ENDED? Dodgers End Losing Streak as Cincinnati Bows to Bums 3-1 Vigers Whip led Sox 4-2; York Homers Victory Moves Detroit Within a Half Game of Second Place Red Sox BOSTON, Aug. 16.-(P)- Rudy York's three-run homer, a 425-foot clout, in the seventh inning gave the Detroit Tigers a 4 to 2 triumph over Boston today in the first of a four- game series before 3,078 spectators and moved the Tigers to within a half game of the second place Red Sox. In winning his seventh victory in 18 starts this season, Ruffus Gentry gave up only seven hits, two more than his opponent, Rex Cecil, who was working his second game for the Red Sox and making his debut as a starter. He recently was purchased from San Diego of the Coast League. The Tigers, who have won ten out of 12 games of their current road trip, trailed the Red Sox until the seventh. Boston grabbed a one-run lead in the opening frame and added another run in the third before De- troit scored in the sixth. Gentry led off in the seventh and was safe when Ervin Fox dropped his fly. Roger Cramer walked and Eddie Mayo sacrificed. Outlaw pop- ped out and then York hoisted his homer into the centerfield bleachers, scoring behind Gentry and Cramer. The Tigers, who lost a three-game sweep to Boston the last time the two nines tangled at Detroit, got their other run in the sixth when Dick Wakefield doubled to center and advanced to third on Pinky Hig- gins' fly. Paul Richards singled to .left, sending Wakefield across the plate. The Red Sox combined a pair of hits and a long fly to tally in the third. Johnson slammed a double off the leftfield wall and went to third on Bob Doerr's single. Jim Tabor flied deep to Cramer and Johnson scored after the catch. Detroit .......0'00 0010300-4 5 0 Boston .......101 000 000-2 7 2 -Gentry & Richards; Cecil & Partee. The Summer Prom, the only major all-campus dance of the summer semester, will be held from 8:30 to 11:30 p, m. tomorrow in the Union Ballroom, featuring Ralph Wilson and his band. The affair will be semi-formal, and it will be open to all servicemen and civilian students. Army and Navy students have been granted liberty until midnight tomorrow in order to attend the dance, and they must show their tickets before they may receive liberty cards. Tickets forhservicemen will be on sale durinig the lunch hour today at the East and West quadrangles. Wilson to Play Ralph Wilson's band is a local or- chestra, and features a University student, Jean Brooks, as vocalist. By announcing the affair as semi- USO To Holdk Entertainment, Picnic Saturday The USO will hold another picnic, featuring baseball, swimming, games, and dancing at the Saline Valley Farms Saturday, as well as the usual Iweekend entertainment. Servicemen and junior hostesses are asked to sign up at the USO as soon as possible for the picnic. Trucks will leave the USO at 3:30 p. m. Saturday and return at 10:30 p. m. Dances To Be Heldj According to custom, each junior hostess participating will pack a pic- nic lunch for two persons, and they may prepare them in the USO kit- chen. Acting Colonel Mary Sey- fried, of Regiment X, is in charge of the affair. There will be the usual Friday and Saturday night dances, and Sunday morning breakfast will be served from 10:30 to 11:45 a.m. There will be a planned program of classical music from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Sunday, and the usual Willow Run tour will start at 1 p.m. Sunday. Changes To Be Made Starting Sunday, August 28, the Willow Run trips will be discontin- ued and tours to Greenfield Village in Dearborn substituted. The USO on Monday nights will from now on be for the use of offic- ers, it was announced by Mrs. Bur- ton, USO director. t'has ToStope Presents formal, the Committee in charge in- dicated that women are requested to wear evening clothes, while men may attend in either formal dress or busi- ness suits. Corsages are prohibited, in accordance with the usual war- time University custom. Sponsor of the dance is the Bomber Scholarship Committee, a student group which has as its purpose the raising of $100,000 in war bonds which will buy a bomber now and later bring returning servicemen back to the University. Because of the nature of its spon- sorship, the dance serves the dual purpose of providing recreation for summer students and servicemen and adding proceeds to the Bomber Scholarship Fund, which has so far reached a mark of approximately $29,000. Plate Leads Committee Members of the summer Bomber Scholarship Committee include Jim Plate, chairman; Glen White, finan- cial chairman; Bob Precious, .alum- ni director; Mary Lee Mason, in charge of special drives, and Mavis Kennedy, publicity chairman. The Committee has in the past two years sponsored most of the major campus entertainment and recrea- tional functions, thereby combining those functions with constructive gains in the war effort. Several dan- ces, a concert, and a carnival are among the Bomber Scholarship achievements. J. G. P. Group To Assist Assisting the Bomber Scholarship Committee in the presentation of the Summer Prom is the committee of Junior Girls Project. The latter group includes Jean Hotchkin, chair- man, and Nora McLaughlin, Betty Vaughn, Paula Brower, Joyce Siegan, and Tady Martz. The JGP group has been in charge of posters and Diagonal ticket sales. Calkins-Fletcher Drug Stores The Dependable Stores 324 S. State 818 S. State CINCINNATI, Aug. 16--GP)-The Brooklyn Dodgers ended a five-game losing streak, defeating the Cincin- nati Reds 3-1 today. The defeat dropped the Reds into third place and snapped their winning skein of seven straight. Curt Davis went the route for the Dodgers and scattered 11 hits, three coming in the fourth for the Reds' lone tally. Ed Huesser opposed Da- vis and was the losing pitcher, his first defeat by the Dodgers after hav- ing beaten them four times. Brooklyn scored the winning runs in the sixth inning, when with two out, three straight singles by Luis Olmo, Mickey Owen and Howie Schultz, plus Gerald Walker's error accounted for two tallies. Brooklyn......100 002 000- 3 8 0 Cincinnati . . . .000 100 000- 1 11 1 Davis & Owen; Heusser & Mueller. ., U.. . Yanks Whip Indians NEW YORK, Aug. 16-P)-Bud Metheny's 13th homer of the season, with two mates aboard in the last of the ninth inning today, gave the New York Yankees an 11-8 victory1 over the Cleveland Indians in a free- hitting affair. The two teams made 35 between them, 19 by the Yankees, and used four pitchers apiece. Jim Turner, last of the New York pitchers, was the winner, and Ray Poat, third of the tribe hurlers, was charged with the loss. Besides Me- theny, Nick Etten of the Yankeesl and Mickey Rocco and Roy Cullen- bine of the Indians hit home runs. Cleveland ....200 005 010- 8 16 2 New York .. ..000 330 014-11 19 2 Klieman, Heving, Poat, Calvert & Schlueter, Supa; Donald, Borowy Johnson, Turner and Hemsley. Cubs Wallop Braves' CHICAGO, Aug. 16-(iP)-Two big innings, one including Bill Nichol- son's 27th homer, gave the Cubs an 11 to 3 victory overgthe Boston Braves in the opening game of their series today. The bases were loaded when Nicholson connected. ' With their first five batters reach- ing base safely, the Chicagoans fell on Nate Andrews for four runs in the first inning and added six more off Woody Rich in the third, when Nicholson hit his round-tripper that boosted his runs-batted-in total to 88. Every man in the lineup contrib- uted to the Cubs' total of 16 hits that made Japhet Lynn's third victory an easy one. Lynn allowed ten hits, four in the last inning. Boston .......01 000 002- 3 10 0 Chicago ......406 000 01x-11 16 11 Andrews, Rich & Klutz; Lynn & Holm. 'Cy' Adams Leadini "Cy" Adams took its fifth straight game from Colonial House in the House Softball League 10-0. Mack Barnum pitched a five hit shutout and slammed a home run. First- baseman John Babyak got three hits including a home run. "Cy" Adams leads the league. CL ASMSIFIED l IET Air Raid 'Aler Wedding of University Alumua During a "flying bomb" alert in southern England, First Lieutenant Margery E. Soenksen, WAC, daugh- ter of Mrs. J. T. Soenksen of Packard St., was married July 14 to Captain Theodore Keys, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joel P. Keys of Columbia, S.C. Col. A. S. Dodgson, Senior Air Force Chaplain in the European The- atre of Operations, performed the marriage ceremony, assisted by the minister of the recently bombed church where the wedding took place. jCapt. and Lt. Keys were attended by Capt.Ralph Finlayson, of Char- lotte, N.C. and Lt. Virginia Shewalter of Sharonville, O. The bride carried a spray of white carnations, while Lt. Shewalter's flowers were Talisman roses. The former Lt. Soenksen is a grad- uate of the University. She received her B.A. in 1939 and her M.A. in 1940. She has been stationed in the ETO since December, 1943. * * * Pvt. Forence- E. Brooks, daughter of Mrs. Viola Brooks of West Liberty St., has recently been assigned to the WAC Detachment of the Romulus Air Base. Pvt. Brooks received her A.M. from the University in 1930. She has been stationed at the WAC Training Cen- ter at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga. Prepared for Swimming CONCEALS ALL BLEMISHES WATERPOOF conceals discoloration of vaxcose or broken veins, bruises, etc., and keeps legs see-worthy all day long. WATERPROOF conceals broawn and white patches birthmarks, burns, any skin defect your swimsuit might reveal, i .m 9 7 "J 77/ Greene Asks for Health Checkup WASHINGTON, Aug. 16--A)--Abe J. Greene, president of the National Boxing Association, proposed today a plan of periodical psy- chiatric and medical examinations to keep "punch drunk and anti- quated" fighters from beating themselves to death or mental breakdown on the comeback trail. Asserting in a letter to all NBA commissions that "the manager's avarice" always has been a big factor in putting such men back into the ring, Greene urged that managers be made responsible for report- ing any signs of mental or physical deterioration to the examining boards which would be set up as adjuncts to boxing commissions. Often it is difficult for a commissioner to determine in a routine pre-fight examination whether a boxer is in shape to go, Greene said, illustrating with the case of Lem Franklin, killed in a new Jersey bout. Death was attributed to a blow on the chin that "carried to his damaged brain center," Greene said, declaring that such conditions can be diagnosed "only through a thorough medical examination such as cannot be administered in a routine boxing check." Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL! Now Showing! Playing Through Saturday! Ii i Ir FOR RENT TWO DOUBLE ROOMS, one single room for last eight weeks, 1503 Washtenaw. 23159 or 24808. WANTED R.N. OFFICER'S WIFE needs living quarters for herself and young -_- 1111 EXTRA PERFORMANCE "The Chocolate Soldier" GAY OPERETTA by Straus ,and Stange SATURDAY MATINEE - 2:30 P.M. \I. 4 I.:A IU W \11 INESMA 1 I 'III! 11111 I I OW ~ f I I Ml/'N