PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, F D.R Home To Lead Purge On Democrats (Continued from Page 1) victories were due to some extent to his direct action and to his recent plea that voters help him liberalize the party. The victories of Hill in Alabama, Pepper in Florida, Reynolds in North Carolina, Earle in Pennsylvania and McGill in Kansas were less directly attributable to overt moves by Presi- dent Roosevelt, although they were administration-endorsed in some fa- shion or campaigned as Roosevelt men. That leaves out of the roll-call such Democratic newcomers as Berry of South Dakota, Mahoney in Oregon, Nygaard in North Dakota and Stew- art in Tennessee although presump- tion places them in the New Deal band wagon. It also leaves Lucas in Illinois unclassified; but even with- out these, the Democratic Senatorial primary score at the half-way mark seems clearly shaded in favor of the New Deal and its author. Democratic House nominations show a similar if less distinctly marked trend. The President disclosed his opposi- tion to Senator George against that background. It indicates that he reads the nomination trends as warranting even more intensive efforts to make Roosevelt leadership' and New Deal loyalty an issue in the remaining Democratic contests. Even before he reached Washing- ton, the President did more than take a hand in the Georgia primaries and intensify the clash between the White House and southern conserva- tive Democrats. His addresses in Georgia paved the way for publication of a special survey report on the South as the number 1 economic problem of the nation. Development of a long range New Deal program for economic rehabili- tation of the South has been an in- dicated New Deal objective of possible political effect in that area ever since the President announced cer- tain o fthe special commission #,o make the survey. The President's em- phasis upon it in his speeches in the South only accented the importance he attaches to the subject from a national planning angle. The survey+ report agave its own graphic defini-i tion of the size and complexities of the problem. It also offered New Deal enthusiasts in the South new campaigning material in Democratic primary cobntests ahead. On the warring organized labor front, the CIO claimed credit for Governor Davey's defeat in Ohio and for Senator Barkey's renomination in Kentucky. This CIO statement was the sharpest political word from John L. Lewis since defeat of CIO's candidate for the Democratic nomina-i tion for Governor in Pennsylvania. TTHEATRE (Continued from "age z) Too Arise; Boy Meets Girl, The Crib, The ursuit of Happiness, Help Your- self, Poor Aubrey, and The Locked Room. At present three plays are in rehearsal for production early this fall: ". . . one-third of a. nation. ..", the Living Newspaper about housing; Thirsty Soil, and St. John Irvine's' Anthony and Anna. The plays last season played one week out of each month at a down-town theatre. The other three weeks they played single performances at schools, churches, community centers, and 'occasionally at . neighborhpod movie theatres. There were also a few performances at near-by cities (Let Freedom Ring played in Ann Arbor) and a short tour through the center of the state. In many ways these performance were the most interesting and valu- able part of the program. They trulyI "brought the theatre to the people", which is, of course, one of the princi- pal functions of the Federal Theatre. Statistics have been formulated which show that something like 75 per cent of the audiences have never ,seen a performance before with living actors. These. sponsored performances are brought to the school orchurch for a small sponsors' fee. -They in turn charge a very low admission fee, usu- ally from five to twenty-five cents. In some cases a teachers' group or other organization paid the sponsor's fee and admission was given free to the group. It is these fees and box-office re- ceipts which pay the largest part of the expenses of running the theatre, the "other-than-labor-costs". Some of the expenses of the theatre, publicity, for example, must come from admis- sion fees. Some expenses, like rental of office space, come from money supplied by the WPA, just as they buy trucks and cement mixers for building projects. But in the past year the admission fund has beenso built up in Detroit that the money supplied by the WPA has been cut in half. It is now, about six per cent of the salary paid to the workers. .When one remembers that the Fed- eral Theatre as a whole is the largest theatre nrganization which has ever r - I Insull Jr., Files Father's Will On WPA At Seven DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Pub.cation in the Bulletin is constructive notice toall members of th. Uwiversty. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. IN THIS CORNER 11 by.. t. Mel Fineberg (Continued from Page 3) worship at 10:40 o'clock. Rev. Earl Sawyer will preach on "The Sword of the Spirit." Misses Jean and Miriam Westerman will sing "O Di- vine Redeemer" by Gounod. Achilles Taliaferro will be at the organ. First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. The Rev. A. G. Crooks of this city will be the guest speaker at the Morn- .ng Worship Service at 10:45. He has chosen for his topic "Capturing the World for Christ." Dr. Healey Willen at the console and directing the choir. The musical numbers will include: Organ prelude, "Deck Thy- self, My Soul" by Karg-Elert; An- them, "Planets, Stars and Airs of Space" by Bach; Solo, "Great Peace Have They" by J. H. Rogers, Mr. El- well; Organ Postlude, "Fugue in G Minor" by Bach. 5:30 supper for summer school stu- dents. 6:30 Miss Elizabeth Leinbach will lead a discussion of Thorton Wilder's play "Our Town." This play was -acclaimed by many dramatic critics upon its opening in New York last winter as one of the finest achieve- ments of the current stage. Readings from the play will be given by stu- dents as part of the program. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 409 So. Division St., Sunday morn- ing service at 10:30. Subject: "Soul." Golden Text: Psalms 143:7, 8. Sun- day School at 11:45, after the morn- ing service. St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Services of worship today are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion, 11 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rev. Rob't Morris. Examination Schedule: Hour of Recitation 8. Thursday, 8-10; Hour of recitation 9, Friday, 8-10; Hour of recitation 10, Thurs- day 2-4; Hour of recitation 11, Fri- day 2-14; Hour, of recitation 1, Thurs- day 4-6; Hour of recitation 2, Thurs- day 10-12; Hour of recitation 3, Fri- day 10-12;All other hours, Friday 4-6. Deviations from the above schedule are not permitted. All classes will continue until the examination pe- riod. The Intramural Sports Building will be closed Friday, Aug. 19, at 6 p.m. All lockers must be vacated or re- newed for the school year on or be- fore that date. The locker fee is $2.50 for the period from Sept. 19, 1938 to June, 1939. Exhibition of Early Chinese Pottery, at the School of Architecture, Mon- roe Street, under the auspices of the Institute of Fine Arts upon the occa- sion of the Summer Institute of Far Eastern Studies. The exhibition has been extended by request throughout the Summer Session. To All Students Having Library Books: 1. Students having in their posses- sion books drawn from the Univer- sity Library are notified that such books are due Monday, Aug. 15, be- fore the impending examinations. 2. Students who have special need for certain books after Aug. 15 may retain such books if renewed at the Charging Desk. 3. The names of all students who have not cleared their records at the Library by Thursday, Aug. 18, will be sent to the Cashier's Office, where their summer's credits will be with- held until such time as these records are cleared, in' compliance- with the regulations of the Regents. Librairy Service After Summer Ses- sion. In the interim between the close of the Summer Session and the opening of-the fall semester the Gen- eral Library will be closed evenings, but service will be maintained in the Main Reading Room, the Periodical Reading Room, the Medical Reading Room, and the Circulation Depart- ment from 8 a.m. till 6 p.m., with the excelation of the period from Aug. 29 to Sept. 5, when the building is closed completely while extensive repairs are in progress. Graduate Reading Rooms and Study Halls both within and out- side of the main building will be closed until the .opening of the fall semester. All departmental and collegiate li- braries, with the exception of the Transportation Library, are also closed during this interval. Samuel Insull Jr. (right) in Chicago filed his father's will, disposing of less than $1,000, with Mitchell C. Robin (left), clerk of the Probate Court. The one-time multi-millionaire utilities operator left the entire small estate to his widow, Mrs. Margaret A. Insull. Tony Lics 'That Bum Ammonia' Pondering over a shovel as big as he, is Richard Malone, aged seven, who was hired and fired from a WPA road laboring job near Union- town, Pa. Two timekeepers were suspended as an investigation of the incident was started. Lyeil L. Buttermore, district WPA director, said Richard had been assigned to a job because of a "clerical error." (Continued from Page 3) called upon its gladiators for re- venge. White, first up, struck out, but he swung hard. Cochrane smashed a line drive into the right field stands- foul by inches. Then he lined what looked like a sure single into right field, but the Athletics' right fielder got to it and speared it for the sec- ond out. Charley Gehringer worked the pitcher to a three-and-one count be- fore he swung. When he did, the ball dropped into the right field bleachers, and the Tigers were only two runs behind. The crowd cheered Hank Green- berg when he stepped up to the plate, but when he bounced the first pitch off the amplifiers on top of the score- board, they went wild. They stood up and cheered as one man. They cheered like no crowd ever cheered before or since, because Goose Goslin, the old money hitter, was coming up to the plate. Goslin, the one- man who could get them that one run, was facing the pitcher. It would be indeed a pleasure if we could write here that The Goose did the Impossible. He didn't. Wfe tried hard, but he was under the pitch, and lofted an easy fly to the infield. The ball game was over. The crowd was broken-hearted, bat the bleacherites, those Sages of the Pastime of the Pellet, went away realizing that they had almost wit- nessed a baseball miracle. --H.L.S Commision Gives Jobless_$2,105,356 DETROIT, Aug. 13-(P)-A total of $2,105,356 has been distributed to 155,568 applicants since the Michigan Unemployment Compensation Com- mission started its payoff on August 1, executive director Abner E. Lar- ned said today. In the 24 hours ending Saturday morning, the claims and benefits division wrote 29,336 checks for a to- tal .of $416,416.50 for a new day's record. Statistics furnished by the Com- mission show that the highest aver- age check was sent to the city of Flint. O.D.MORRILL 314 S. State St. Typewriters, Stationery, Student and Office Supplies Since 1908 Phone 6615 Lad Bails (Out' The Automobile Regulation will i lifted for all students at noon c Friday, Aug. 19, 1938. Office of the Dean of Students. be on Though Tony Galento looked as though his latest foe, a stubborn case of pneumonia, may have worn him down a bit, physicians were of the opinion "that bum ammonia" didn't lay a glove on the heavyweight fighter. That's Manager Joe Jacobs helping to steady Tony as he left his hospital bed in Orange, N. J. Tony won't be in the ring for some time, though. Superstitions Of The Baseball World Mean Batting A verages To Players had no fewer than six gloves hanging on pegs back of the bench each day. Each mitt was slightly different from the others. Ray had one built espe- cially to handle the repertoire of Red Faber; another for Eddie Cicotti's pitching; one still different for Dickie Kerr, Tommy Blade, Yvo, witose ambi- tion is to be a parachute jumper, "bailed out" of a second story resi- dence in New Orleans, La., but got' his equipment mixed. Instead of wearing a parachute pack-or even an umbrella-he donned a cork life preserver. N Baseball players have long been regarded as very superstitious people, just as are sailors and folks of the theatrical profession. Among the most common omens are black cats, walking under ladders, lighting three cigarettes on one match, and finding a. four leaf clover, the left hind foot of a rabbit, or a horseshoe. However, you'll encounter players who resort to many other schemes in wooing Lady Luck. The player who finds a hair pin in the street feels certain that he will "get the breaks" in that after- noon's game. Or, if a wagonload of empty barrels is spotted, the player also believes he is in for a good day. 'A few 'years ago, when the New York Giants were in a hopeless slump, Manager John J. McGraw tried everything he could think of to get the team out of the doldrums, but all in vain, until one day the team spied a wagonload of empty beer kegs parked near the Polo Grounds entrance. That afternoon, the Giants ended their slump, and eventually won the National League pennant, and it was not until several years later that Mc- Graw admitted ,he had arranged for the empty barrels to be there. + Eddie Collins, when an active play-+ er for the Athletics and the White+ Sox, was in the habit of parking his+ chewing gum on his cap button, and insisted that this brought him luck, while "Wild" Bill Hallahan's good luck charm was an old Elk's tooth. Chuck Klein shies away from giv- Ing fans his autograph before the start of a game, because he believes it affects his batting average. Chuck has been suspicious of autograph hounds ever since the time he went hitless in a three game series after signing his name several dozen times for New York fans. Harry Steinfeldt, who used to play3 third for the old Chicago Cubs, would wear the same undershirt for weeks without sending it to the laundry, provided he .was in the midst of a hitting streak. Harry's friends kid- ded him by insisting that he has trying to save money on his laundry1 bill. 3 Red Faber and Buck Freeman were stars of other days who balked at being photographed when they werej warming up, incidental to the com- mencement of battles. Another not- able who always shoos the camera men away, is Robert Moses (Lefty) Grove, at present with the Red Sox. Grove also makes a practice of keep- ing the ball used in every game that he wins. The "Sultan of Swat," Babe Ruth, would never lend one of his bats to a teammate. One afternoon, however, he made a gift of one of his favorite warclubs to Joe Jackson, then play- ing with the White Sox, on the condi- tion that Jackson wouldn't use the bat against the Yanks. The next day, Jackson used Babe's gift bat, and slugged out one of the longest home runs ever seen in Fenway Park, in Boston. General Alvin Crowder, veteran right-hander, when with the Wash- ington Club, used to warm up every day with youthful Jimmie Mahoney mascot of the Nationals. Crowder had such faith in his superstition that he insisted that Jimmie be tak- en along on every road trip of the Washingtonians. When establishing his brilliant record as an iron man catcher, Ray Schalk of the Chicago White Sox , f Does a Summer Session student on the Campus become a Michigan Alumnus ... ? Yes., * He is entitled to avail hemself of the privileges, of membership in The Alumni Association if he oresires. The initiative should come fom him,* An interested Alumnus reads THE MICHIGAN ALUMNUS Order Your Subscription Now! $2.00 before August 20th Regular Price $4.00 per year .. .26 issues 11 C