THIS MICHIG'A DAILY PAGE THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TRRR~ E.0H. Wilson Is To Conduct Services Here Chicago Minister To Give First Unitarian Church Sermon -OnJuly Third The Rev. Edwin H. Wilson, minister of the Third Unitarian Church of Chicago, will conduct the summer services at the Unitarian Church, his first being July 3 on "A Declaration of Religious Independence", it was announced yesterday.- The Reverend Wilson was presi- dent last year of the Unitarian Fel- lowship for Social Justge, and is se- cretary-treasurer of aie Humanist Press Association. He has been active in the campaign in Chicago to cor- rect the evils of the school system. He is a graduate of Boston University and Meadville Theological School and received an M.A. degree from the University of Chicago. Before going to Chicago, he was minister of the church at Dayton, O. During the World War he served in the U. S. Air Corps. A reception is planned at the church on the evening of July 3 which will be preceded by a discus- sion on the topic "When Does Pa- triotism Become Nationalism?" Clark Boyd will be chairman of the committee on summer arrange- ments, it was further announced, and Miss Charlotte Palmer will be in charge of the social committee of the Unitarian Church. Foresters Study Fungi In Alaska Murphy Calls Job Insurance Depression Weapon As Unemployment Commission 0pens 108 Stations IN"THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG 1 ~SCALE OP'Mtf".U * ./ R#, a f *R~rF a j D0 r f cNwnOfl6R aEga ~.CT .EPIO CH O ON CICCKr1NZ. 1jcraLoS. GAR t.I RrAR EXPL~SR~innoFFNE MAR.TECj wVFO~ UW "-"""" C0 ON 0 MAW * 90 C A M ASO[ RI CC NOS.LAh( re ^N TRIAMC6 1 #riNR Et 4 ENC MlSTACT OFICES CO>wya iiB E l MIL k~rAaT r0IiK.,a, K GiAJ"FR.\w. I: 5l ALOA .a OT A A1NdN A L N ON S W sr T WC "sN rt .. S..J P~i Ei EWY N. CST o OAN T * V* AA AO CL O NJCKO AHEN WW~ 4 R~IW 3ICS~-4 I A RSON* . ' +. cR* aZNTO t MONTALM ', {YPSN L 91 rsuT ~ 4 5c A,, * S"JOSE '* BANT H MONROE/I 1'1ti5K STTE EMPLOY ENT Itaviacg **IP Rah, Rah, Rah ... In spite of the derision with which big league ball players treat young college men just fresh out with their diplomas and trying to crash the majors, it seems that it's this oft de- rided "college try" that wins pen- nants. No better example could be found than this current season. Take the Cincinnati Reds. The Reds were at the bottom last year. They had no place to go but up and some people even doubted that. But some young kid, a kid with an aris- tocratic name and an even more aristocratic brand of hurling, came along to hurl two no-hitters and pull the spotlight of the sporting world onto the Reds. The kid's name was, of course, John Vander Meer. Vander Meer had held the spot- light of the baseball world once be- fore when he was pitching for Dur- ham in the Piedmont League. He struck out 295 men in one year and was hailed as the most promising minor leaguer. He went up to the Big Leagues with publicity galore and he came down shortly to Syracuse in the International League. Vander Meer was no great guns in the International League. But he had the stuff and Cincy recalled him. At the beginning of the season Bill Terry said that if he had Vander Meer he would walk home with the pennant. Johnny had not been up long enough the first time to get the glamour of it out of his system. He is bearing down all the time and it may pay off in a pennant. Another freshman on the team, Buck McCormick,;: has helped in in- jecting the hypo. Batting in the middle 300's, Buck has aided the team no end. And he's up there try- ing all the time. It's Different Now . . The American League is no dif- ferent. The Cleveland Indians are almost the same as.the flops of for- mer years. That is,, except for rookie Ken Keltner, sensational third base- man, and another first year man, Manager Oscar Vitt. The two new men have rejuvenated the Cleveland team and shoved them into the ri- der's seat in the pennant race. It's been the same for a long, long time. Blondy Ryan did it for the Giants with his famous tele- gram "they can't beat us." Ryan wasn't even a mediocre shortstop but his indomitable spirit carried the Giants along to the World Series. Jot DiMaggio's much heralded coming did it for the Yankees two years running. Di Mag was the spark plug that pulled runner-up Yanks into the win spot. Last year, the coming of Jimmy Ripple and Moun- tain Music Melton continued the reign of Bill Terry's Giants. Back in '34, Mickey Cochrane, thrilled over his first managerial post, pulled the Tigers to their first pennant in almost thirty years. And so it goes. Great teams, like great countries and great cultures, break down from stagnation. That's why it's so difficult to win the third consecutive pennant. The team becomes lethargic, sure of its own strength but not realiz- ing that it takes more than mere mechanical ability to win a pen- nant. That same thing may be hap- pening to the Yanks this year. Young Flash Gordon has not proved enough and a great ma- chine is slowly crumbling. It hap- pended to the Tigers in '36 and it's an old story. Dying teams need blood trans- fusions as much as do dying people. And in baseball, a team that has the stuff on paper but does not produce is a dying team. The young rookies, the first year men, the kids who are thrilled and enthused by the glory of playing in the big leagues, are the ones who instill the dash and fire in- to a baseball machine. And "dying for dear old Siwash" is often the dif- ference between "all" and "almost." Premature Funeral Held For July Fourth Victims PACKANACK LAKE, N. J., June 30-(P)-Although premature and anticipatory, this community con- ducted a "memorial service" today for "the'Americans who will be killed in action during the next four days celebrating their independence." Harry Daniels, president of the Packanack Lake Dramatic Club placed. a wreath on a store marker inscribed "In Memoriam, Victims of July Fourth, 1938." The service also included a prayer for highway and fireworks casualties "expected throughout the nation." Civic Band Plays Tonight The Ann Arbor Civic Band, under the direction of William R. Cham- pion, will give its summer concert to- night at 8:30 at West Park. O.D.MORR IL L 314 S. State St. Typewriters, Stationery, Student and Office Supplies Since 1908 Phone 6615 I Seeking new information about the growth and characteristics of forest diseases, a party of three University foresters, headed by Prof. Dow V. Baxter of the forestry school left for an extended trip through Alaskan timberlands. The group will concen- trate its study in the * vicinity of Kodiak Island, where species of trees similar to those growing in Michigan forests are found. The control of certain tree-des- troying fungi, according to Professor Baxter depends upon a knowledge of the age of trees when attacked, and such knowledge can best be obtained in virgin forests, free from man-made disturbances. This is Professor Bax- ter's' sixth trip to Alaska. He is 'ac- companied by Robert Dimler, '38 F&Q and George Dick, '39 F&C. DAILY OFFICAL I BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Public Health Nurse, $2,000 a year. Graduate Nurse (General Staff Duty), $1,800 a year. Nurse Technician (Bacteriology and Roentgenology Combined),,$1,800 a year; In the Indian Field Service (including Alaska), Department of the Interior. Assistant Gardener (Greenhouse), $1,260 a year; Bureau of Plant In- dustry, Department of Agriculture. Michigan Masonry Classes (applications to be in by July 2). Carpentry Classes (applications to be in by July 2). Tabulating Clerk Classes, $80-$125 per month. Law Stenographer Clerk, $100 per month. For further information, please call at the office, 201 Mason Hall. Office hours: 9712 and 2-4. Bureau of Appointment and Occupational Information Summer Session French Club: The first meeting of the Summer Session French Club will take place Thurs- day, June 30, at 8 p.m. at "Le Foyer Francais" 1414 Washtenaw. The Summer Session French Club is open for membership to graduate and undergraduate students of the French Department; to any student on the campus; to Faculty members and Faculty women. The only requirement asked of the applicants for membership is that they speak reasonably well the French Language.. All those interested must see Mr. Charles E. Koella, room 200, Ro- mance Language Building, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday from 10 to 11 and 2 to 3, to receive their mem- (Continued on Page 4) The Michigan Unemployment Compensation Commission today opened 108 stations in the State to schedule filing of Job insurance claims by 300,000 totally unemploy- ed. Benefits will be paid beginning Aug. 1st. The job insurance payment pro- gram, in which registration of claims is the initial step, was launched by Governor Murphy and Frank A. Pi- card, chairman of the Michigan Un- employment Compensation Commis- sion over a statewide radio broad- cast. "Job insurance is not a dole. It is another formidable weapon in the war against depression," declared Governor Murphy. "Depressions are not necessary. They don't just have to happen. It is a defeatist attitude to sit idly by and so dismiss them. "The thing to do is to fight depres- sions. And you must fight intelligent- ly. The fight will be won by the way you plan it; by the way you attack the enemy; by the will to win. It will not be won if we sit back, reconciled to the fact that such things as de- pressions have to happen. "We must fight with every wea- pon at our command." The Governor pointed to the $3, 500,000 a week expected to be paidto eligible totally unemployed men and women after Aug. 1 as a powerful weapon to be used against depression. "No one can tell me that it was ever intended that thousands should starve or be on the verge of star- vation, in this prosperous country, while hundreds enjoy the bounties of life. "I, for one, cannot accept that theory without question. We must first feed our hungry. "Who or what brought them their want, is something to then deter- mine. "Rescuers don't extinguish the fire first and then save the inmates of the burning building. Our first thought must be for human life, for susten- ance of children and mothers threa- tened through joblessness brought on by depression. "Job insurance benefits are design- ed for this purpose. They come at an opportune time. "Thd people of Michigan need every penny the Commission can rightfully disburse. "The Commission is conscious of the rights of beneficiaries entitled to receive benefits. Every legitimate step toward speed in accepting, ac- counting and paying claims has been provided. "The work is new, the personnel is new. Employers have made some mis- takes in reporting wages; workers have been and will continue to be slow in furnishing information for the records. These factors may tend to slow up the procedure. "But we will fight that, too, if it developes-and by fighting it will overcome obstacles that caused delay in other states." The Governor commended Mr. Pi- card, Commissioners Henry A. Mont- gomery, John Reid and Abner E. Larned, Executive Director for their tireless effort to administer the law. Co-ordinator William H. Frater, personnel director of Cadillac Mo- tor Company, loaned to the Commis- sion by General Motors Corporation at no cost to the State, Edward Fish- er, Walter Chrysler, William S. Knudsen and other industrial lead- ers, Governor Murphy said, deserved credit for the existence of healthier understanding between worker and employer. Reasearch Is Augmented r i, 1 .1 DON'T MISS II Our Sp SUMMER CLEARANCE V Exclusive Fashions for all Summer Occasions at Drastic Markdowns omme :1 I[ DOUBLE FEATURE BILL n Pastels, Prints $1145 & Dark Sheers formerly to $19.95 Sizes 1 l to 17- 12 to 40 Included in this group are 7 Formal Dresses. Sizes il1.to .14,E ill imm" Last Times Today TWO FEATURES! WARREN WILLIAM VIRGINIA BRUCE "ARSENE LUPIN RETURNS" cottons &Linens Sizes 11Ito 17-- 161. ONE GROUP $345 formerly to $14.95 to 2212 . . Also GAIL PATRICK AKIM TAMIROFF ANNA MAY WONG .in iirf. A LIVPEienti ic prints & Dark Sheers Sizes 1 1 to 42 $ 500 and El. i I Ill 11 I III 11 II