THE MICHIGAN DAILY MUSIC 0@. Piano Recital Tuesday.. . George King" Driscoll, pianist, will present a recital at 8:30 Tuesday, i' the Rackham Assembly Hall in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. Included in the program, will be works by Mozart, Debussy, Brahms and Beethoven. Driscoll, a pupil of Joseph Brink- man, has studied with Oscar Ziegler and Leon Sampaix. Since 1938, he has been a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts at Ithaca College. * * * Pianist Will Perform... Mozart, Brahms and 'Chapin will be the composers featured at a recital given by Keith Mixson, pianist, at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday, in the Raekham Assembly Hall. 4Mr. Mixson who began his grad- uate study at the University of Michigan in the summer of 1940 is a pupil of Joseph Brinkman. ,The recital is presented in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master -of Music. Clarinetist Will Play ... A clarinet recital will be presented by Carl Wickstrom at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of, Master of Music in woodwind in- struments. Accompanying Wickstrom in the program will be Mildred Minneman Andrews, pianist and Arline Burt, violist. Selections from Handel, Barbir- olli, Mozart, Debussy, von Weber and Mozart will be on the program.t * * * Harp, Choral Concert . . . Lynne Palmer, nationally known harpist and a member of the School of Music faculty, will ap- pear as soloist with the Summer Session Chorus in a concert at- 8:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Auditor- ium. The other soloist is Kenneth' Pool, organist, while Mary Mul- downey will conduct the chorus in selections from Palestrina, Holst, Gretchaninoff, Willan, Brahms, Canning, Johnstone, Krone and Shaw. Mrs. Palmer's selections will be "Sonata in C minor," by Pescetti, "Et Ron, Ron, Ron, ,Petit Patapon" and "Le Bon Petit Roi D'Yvetot," by Grandjany, and "Deep River" and "Chanson Dans La Nuit," ar- ranged by Salzedo. She has played as a member of the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra and the All American Youth Orchestra under Leopold Stoko.wski throughout the United States and South America. * * * String Quartet Recital . . . The string quartet class will be heard in a recital at 4:15 p.m. Mon- day in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The program will feature quar- tets by Haydn, Schubert, Ravel, and Beethoven performed by members of the class. * * * Instrument Recital*.. Beatrice Gaal, Marvin Bostrum and Mildred M. Andrews, pianists, will assist on a wind instrument pro- gram in the student recital series at 2 p.m. today in Harris Hall. The program will include selections from Mozart, Haydn, Pierne, Ewald, Paganini - Vognar, Scarmolin and Firestone. German V-2 Rocket Crashes, Explodes WHITE SANDS, N.M., Aug. 15- (I)-A German V-2 rocket fired by the Army technicians crashed to earth and exploded with a fiery roar, today at the White Sands proving grounds. There were no casualties. Lt. Col. Harold R. Turner, White Sands commandant, said the rocket started weaving violently and chang- ed directions three times before los- ing two tail fins at 20,000 feet, and personnel at the ground controls promptly shut off the fuel to take: the missile out of the air. The projectile crashed to earth approximately a mile and three- quarters north of the launching plat- form. Exploding fuel shot flames 1,- 000 feet in all directions. A BLOUSES LINGERIE A HOUSECOATS A ROBES A SH ORTS A SLACKS Try the SMARTEST HOSIERY SHOPPE Michigan Theater Bldg. Fish Parasite Is Described By Van Oosten A parasite which is causing in- creasing damage to lake trout and other fish in the Great Lakes was described yesterday by John Van Oosten. Van Oosten, who is in charge of the Great Lakes fisheries investiga- tion for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, has his laboratory and office facilities on this campus. He reported that more and more streams in Michigan, the other Lakes states and the Province of Ontario are being used each year by the eel- like sea lamprey for spawning. A fight against this parasite will soon be started, according to Oosten. "It's inpossible to estimate the damage lampreys cause," he assert- ed, "but Lake Huron and Lake Mich i- gan fishermen, for example, report that from 25 to 85 per cent of lake trout brought in in various catches have lamprey marks. "Some fishermen," he continued, "are in desperate straits because of depleted catches allegedly caused by the lamprey." Van Oosten estimated it will cost at least $1,000 each to provide for the trapping of lampreys in more than 20 Michigan streams and an unde- termined number in the other Lakes states from early May to mid-July every year. Nine Miles per Minute BOSTON, Aug. 15--(P)-An Army P-80 jet-propelled pursuit plane blaz- ed from New York City to Boston today in 21 minutes and 51 seconds, averaging nine miles a minute for the slightly more than 200 mile trip, House Committee Cites Broker In Surplus Goods for Contempt CONDUCTS ORCHESTRA-... Thor Johnson who is in charge of musical direction for the final pro- duction of the summer by the Re- pertory Players, Smetana's opera of Bohemian life, "The Bartered Bride." Johnson also conducts the University Symphony Orchestra for the production. 'Exclusive' Club Is Destroyed by Fire LINCOLN, Mich., Aug. 15-('))- Fire destroyed the "exclusjve" Lost Lake Woods Club early today, in- juring a Detroit woman and forcing 120 guests to flee to safety in their night clothing. Loss was estimated at $100,000 by the State Conservation Department, not including the loss of personal be- longings and clothing ay guests. WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 - P) - Benjamin F. Fields, broker in sur- plus goods, was cited for contempt of the House Surplus Property Investi- gating Committee today for failure to produce records it deemed satis- factory on a $12,936 deal in wire screening. The committee adopted a formal finding that Fields "is willful and contemptuous" in "refusing to pro-' duce the books, records, etc., called for" by a subpoena. High Wise, Jr., committee counsel, was directed to dispatch the finding to House Speak- er Sam Rayburn. Fields Not Present Fields was not in the committee room when Chairman Slaughter (Dem.-Mo.) announced the finding. The record Fields gave the com- mittee was a single sheet of note- book paper listing a gross profit of $4,442.80 on the deal and payments of $1,480.93 to Glenn Dies, $1,480.93 to Joe Doe, $400 to John Doe and $100 for travel and miscellaneous expenses. "If I had any other records I would be happy to bring them,' the rotund little broker declared. He denied specifically that he had any can- celled checks, bank statements or any other papers bearing on the transaction. Surplus Disposal Policy The committee is inquiring into general policy in disposal of surplus government property and what mem- bers have termed the apparent "spec- ial treatment" given Fields and some other brokers on orders for goods which find a ready resale at higher prices. Diverging from Fields' specific deals the committee heard Stanley G. Smith. Washington, testify he had purchased cutting tools from the Army and resold them to the Navy at a gross profit of about 20 per cent. He said he had'handled about $600,000 worth of tools but declared- that no more than five per cent came, within the Army-to-Navy category. He said he rounded up others from surplus and from "dead stocks" of private owners. Smith testified he placed orders for surplus nails with the Philadel- phia office of War Assets Adminis- tration, which sells government sur- pluses, in behalf of firms in which he was interested. Fighters TORFy In CAP Show INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 15-- (PY-- Twelve Indiana cities will view some of the nation's newest fighting planes tomorrow as a prelude to the CAP- AAF air show here tomorrow and Sunday. The Indiana wing of the Civil Air Patrol which is sponsoring the flight said a P-80 jet plane may make the tour. Cities to be visited in the northern flight are Lafayette, Gary, South Beni., Fort Wayne, Muncie, Marion and Kokomo. The southern leg will include stops at Bloomington, Terre Haute, Evansville, Madison and Rich- mond. The planes, which will make the tour in one day, will be on exhibit at the air show. 'Ensian Photos To Be Taken By NY Studio A New York studio is sending a photographer to Ann Arbor to take all senior pictures for the 'Ensian, editor Florence Kingsbury announced yesterday. The studios, well known as year- book photographers, plan to take uni- form pictures "at a price all can af- ford." It will set up a campus studio the last week in October and two weeks in November. Students will get a choice of four poses. They are under no obligation to order the pictures, but those who do so desire may use them for gifts. If senior pictures are to get into the 'Ensian, it is necessary that this studio do the photographs. Sale of coupons and scheduling of appointments will be done in the fall, Miss Kingsbury said. 'Recorders Are on Exhibit at Rackham Machines made by five or six re- cording companies will be on ex- hibit in the Rackham Mezzanine Galleries today and tomorrow during the speech conference, Harlan Bloom- er, head of the speech clinic announc- ed yesterday. This display, containing new ace- tate recording discs, cellophane discs, magnetized tape, and magnetized wire, represents the latest develop- ment in sound recording. Read and Use The Daily Classified Director the committee heard Stanley G. at the air show. Classified Directory "I 1 1' ":: '{:}}fay.... ::.. .. ...dL(.r pp :a . -" ZY7 bt0401 1ovell11es REAL story-bok ness can be your s start with "Lu Girdles, Brassiere Panties. No guara course -- but we these unmentionab do the trick. GIRDLES and Ga of Satin Lastex and suple - give s lines to a new fro GIRDLES 4.00 an GARTER BELTS- . .. v , " . fl'.f 1 loveli- if you iscite" es and ntee of * think bles will irter Belts - smooth lim smart ck. d 4.95 - 1.65 b 4 INGENIOUSLY designed Bra's that do not bind or flatten -in black, wpite or peach - Priced from 1.25. 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