PAGE TW6 -1 r-, Ti M XI X iTZ - IT'ti M PA'ii., Dr,,". 17, n'"T Congress Will Tax If Social Act Not Lawful (Continued from Page 1) plete bill with broad coverage nut yet specific enough to cover all the phases of unemployment insurance. If only a "skeleton" bill is presented which will comply with the mere es- sentials required by the Federal So- cial Security Act, Professor Haber feels that it will remain on the record and there would be little chance in the future for the enactment of a more comprehensive program. Professor Haber praised the unsel- fishness of Gov. Frank Fitzgerald in calling the special session and yet not desiring to take the credit for pass- ing the unemployment insurance pro- vision. He also lauded the governor's attitude in not seeking political ap- pointments of his old associates. He added that the unemployment insurance bill, which the commission hopes to have ready by Sunday after- noon, will probably contain a merit rating provision to stipulate that after five years the employers' tax may vary in either direction from three per cent according to the suc- cess of the stabilization of employ- ment in the individual workin gestab- lishments. He explained that this is of special importance in Michigan for it will require a higher rate from employers of seasonal industries, such as the automotive industry, and in- sure the workers to a greater degree. Soft Playing Betters Tone, Moore Claims (Continued from Page 1) by scaffolding in the tower. Each bell is a unit by itself and they must be studied like personalities. Some bells go together and certain others never do, just like people. It requires time for a carillonneur to get thoroughly acquainted with his units. Si months is not too short a time for such a task." A telephone has been installed from the base of the tower to Mr. Pratt's clavier room where he may listen via headphones to suggesti ns from the ground regarding the playing. A carillonneur rarely ever hears his own set of bells and then it is diffi- cult to judge his own playing by the guest carillonneur's playing, who may have an entirely different technique, it was indicated by the music direct- or. After about a year's playing the bells will have acquired a more per- fect tone, according to Professor Moore who said that continuous ringing in the same spot gradually wears down the clapper and bell sur- face to infinitesimal smoothness that allows perfect tone. Compared with other bells in this country and abroad, Professor Moore who has heard many carillons, says Michigan's are "lovely in tone quality, clear and pleasant to the ear. Grad- ually townspeople and students will come to love bell music through twi- light concerts on summer evenings and at other times. To sit relaxed, at peace with the world, and listen to a concert by one who knows his own carillon, approaches the ultimate in enjoyment." i i i Alumni Seek $15,000 For Proposed Recreation Hall At Forestr y Camp -~- ~ ~ - i5 i i Pictured abeve is an architce't's sketch of the proposed rcereation buil ding fcr th' forestry camp on Lake Golden near Iron River. The addition will be a memorial to Thomas Clancy, an alumnus of the Unmversity who died in August. i - THE DAILY Offers These Timely uggestions Of Arn Arbor Merchants.j FOR HER A MAGAZINE subscription to Life. $3.50 brins joy through the year. Stfilet News Co., 208 Scuth Fourth Ave. 40A FOR HIM MEN'S CHRISTMAS GIFTS superb. Esquire Men's Wear and Tailoring. 1319 S. University. Phone 6527. -41A A MAGAZINE subscription td For- tune, $10.00, brings joy through the year. StofIlt News Co. 208 South Fourth Ave. 39A F ULL DRESS TIES, 252. Men's $3.50 full dress and tuxedo shirts 98c, $1.25. Ann Arbor Bargain Store, 113 S. Main St. Next to Sugar Bowl. 38A GIFT SUGGESTIONS new Dr. O'Connor Points Out Future In Vocational Guidance Field. . EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS I I I-'I* I This Training Needed For Happiness Of Coming Generations, He Says By ROBERT E. FRYER The future of vocational guidance as a necessary instrument in determ- ining the success and happiness of succeeding, generations was pointed out yesterday by Dr. Johnson O'Con- ncr of the Stevens Institute of Tech- nology. Dr. O'Connor, a well-known busi- ness psychologist, who has been ex- perimenting in the field of vocational guidance for 15 years, has been in Ann Arbor during the past two days giving his series of tests to students who are interested in finding just what characteristics they possess which will enable them to succeed in some particular field oftwork. Inasmuch as many students grad- uating both from high school and col- lege become discouraged upon find- ing that they, as individuals, are not suited to the jobs for which they have been training themselves or that they have talents which have been overlooked or undeveloped, it is of major importance, Dr. O'Connor said, that they discover rather early the work for which they are especially fitted. These tests, emanating from the Human Engineering Laboratory of the Stevens Institute, are designed to separate the objective type of in- dividual from the subjective and then to proceed accordingly. That is, for the latter type it is a matter of grave importance, Dr. O'Connor believes, that they find out as soon as possible in which field they are going to concentrate, because this type lacks confidence unless it has something definite to work on; this is the introvert type who is an in- dividualist and is best suited to mat- ters pertaining to research where he can work alone. Therefore, this type would acquire the special knowledge first until he gains confidence in him- self, after which time he can broaden his field. On the other hand, Dr. O'Connor believes, the objective type may go all through his college life without de- ciding definitely his field of concen- tration -merely rounding-out his general education-for he is going tol be constantly meeting and workingj with other people and it is more to his interest to broaden out first and then to procede to his field of specializa- tion. The second object of these tests is to determine what characteristics each individual tested has for various jobs. The average college student has four characteristics out of the 10 which the tests are able to measure, Dr. O'Connor said, and we can tell each individual just what combina- tion of characteristics he has just what fields of work can use his par- ticular combination. Chiang Kai Shek Death World Peace Menace (Continued from Page 1) 6:00- WJR Stevenson News. WWJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ March of Melody CKLW Johnson Family. 6 :15- WJR Hot Dates in Music. WWJ Dinner Music. WXYZ Fact Finder. CKLW News and Snorts. 6:30- WJR Jimmie Allen. WWJ Press-Radio Odd Facts. WXYZ Day m Review. CKLW Archie Bleyer's Music. 6:5-- WJR Renfrew of the Mounted. WW=J Heinrich Pickert. WXYZ Lowell Thomas. 7 :00- WJR Poetic Melodies. WWJ Amos and Andy. WXYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Musical Echoes. 7 :15- f VWJR Diamond City News. WWJ Drama: Evening Melodies. WXYZ Life of James Braddock. CKLW Hal Kem's Music. 7:30- WJR Lee Lawnhurst and Charioteers. WWJ Sweet Music. WXYZ Green Hornet. CKLW Musicale. 7:45-- WJR Boake Carter. CKLW Pleasant Valley Frolics. 8:00-- WJR Kate Smith's Bandwagon. XWJ Rudy Vallee's Variety, Hour. WXYZ_ Big Broadcast. CKLW Melody Treasure Hunt. 8 :30-- WXYZ Rochester Philharmonic. CKLW Guy Lombardo's Music. 9 :00- WJR Major Bowes Amateurs. WXYZ WPA Symphony. CKLW Gabriel Heatter. 9:15- CKLW Horace Heidt's Music.. 9:30- WXYZ Christie Street Capers. CKLW Al Kavelin's Music. 10:00- WJR Musical Program. WWJ Music Hall. WXYZ Rubinofl-Arthur. CKLW Eveoing Serenade. 10:15- :vxl5 YZ Soutbern Gentleman. 10:30-- W/JR March of Time. WXYZ Jamboree. CKLW L(o Reisman's Music. 11:00- WJR News. WW Ci Ton igics Hockey, Sports Review: Dance Music. WXYZ ChristmaIs Carols. CKLW News Reporter. 11 :5- WJR Mummers. XVXYZ Maryland Penitentiary Broadcast. CKLW Vincent Travers' Music. 11:30-- WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ (Ceor-e Kavanagh's Music. CKLW Kay Kysers Music. 11:4-- 12:0 JR Wismrport.s:Lyman's Music WJR Carl Kavell's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Henry Basse's Music. CK!,W Bennyux Coodmn's Music. 12:30---- W,T Phil Harris' Music. CKLW Little Jack Little. 1:00---- CKLW Al Kavelin's Music. ope Is aning For Seven Lost In Plane C rash SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Dec. 16. -(A')-Two women and five men lost in a giant skyliner were given un for dead toinight just as one searcher -amne upon what might be "tracks" of the airship and a new storm broke over the sncw-encrusted mountains where the hunt was centered. The blizzard covered much of a rugged region 25 miles from here in which the missing Western Air Ex- press plane was believed to have been heard when it disappeared early yes- terday. There, amid precipitous crags and reacherous canyons, John I. Hess CCC camp foreman, came upon what he thought was a clue to the airship. On a ridge near Alpine, Utah, Hss said he found "a place where a tre had been split" and further on "an- other tree was broken cff." "Seven hundred yards up the slope earth and shale had been dug up as if the wheels of a plane had struck," ielated Hess. The spot was so isolated and so difficult to rach that Hess xas forced to retrace his steps and attempt to get to the scene from the other side of the ridge. Then. the full force of the new storm developed. "You may say it is the general opinion of ofTicials concerned that the tplane occupants have perished," said A. E. Cahlan, air line official. f l !SOCIAL s DANCING Toe, tap, acrobatics. Taught daily. Terrace Garden Studio. Wuerth 1 Theatre Bldg. Ph. 9685 2nd Floor. Open eves. - - -- ...and after the show or before- DANCE (Free) and EAT 'at the MICHIG INN 320 South State Street e "At the Sign of the Clock" s h Last-Min ute Gift s i 1 of Chiang Kai-Shek," Chan said. "It Steed Comnpany Wflis only recently that it became really evident that absolute unity for China Ask For Time Dela, was the goal of Chiang," he added. Doubt was expressed by Chan that WASHINGTON, Dec. 16.-,P)- either Russia or Japan is 'involved The Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corpora- in the present episode that may mark tion notified the Labor Relations the passing of one of the leading Board today it would ask for a delay figures in the history of modern until February 18 of a hearing on the China. board's charges that the company Dr. Sun Yat Sen, who was very in- had dominated emploaye representa- tion plans in its plants. strumental in the establishment of The hearing was scheduled for to-the Chinese Republic, is in the opin- morrow. ion of Chan, the greatest leader that William Beye, counsel for the steel the Chinese people have had in mod- company, said a motion also would ern times. "Dr. Sun was the man be presented at the hearing to delay who planned for an entirely new the case further until the Supreme China. He was a great teacher, Court decided whether the Wagner i chi and speaker. Chiang Kai-Shek Labor Disputes Act was constitu-- iscefly a military leader,"Chand tional.said. Globe Theatre GroupT o Give 4 PlayS Here The Globe Theatre Company, na- tionally known Shakespearean play- ers, will present four plays in two per- formances on Jan. 16 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, it was an- nounced by Prof. Herbert A. Kenyon' of the romance languages department and director of the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. Under the direction of Thomas Wood Stevens, who was guest direct- or of the Michigan Repertory Play-, ers, summer division of Play Produc- tion, in 1931, '32 and '33, the com- pany will offer in tabloid form a matinee performance of Shake- speare's "Comedy of Errors" and "Midsummer Night's Dream." In the evening performance it will give Cristopher Marlowes "Dr. Faustus" and Shakespeare's "Taming of the Shrew."- The players, Professor Kenyon ex- plained, are famous for reducing the plays which they present to the more essentials so that each play is given) in one concise act in a rollicking Elizabethan style, with the stage set according to the modern conception of the original Elizabethan stage. Many members of the company have at various times attended the University Professor Kenyon said, be- ing affiliated at times with either Play Productiontor the Comedy Club, I~-- Candy for Christmas ' ..anG yd we r d For those who want to give the best and want to have the best we have Whitman's Chocolates, sent to us direct from the makers. Whitman's Sampler assortment, at $1.50 to $7.50 Whitman's Fairhill assortment, at 25c to $5.00 Whitman's Prestige assortment, at $2.00 to $6.00 Children's Candies, for the tree or stocking, starting at 5c. We will parcel post your order . . if you wish. BUT... ORDER NOW. TAKE THE FOLKS A BOX OF DELICIOUS CHOCOLATES. We know it will please them. Guaranteed to be absolutely fresh - from $1. 11. alkins - Fletcher Drug Co. 324 South State & 818 South State %=39ip Gifts of leather are distinct- ly masculine . . . men think of them as being their own - they invite constant ser- vice. Note how inexpen- sively your most difficult gift problems may be solved. BRIEF CASES BILLFOLD SETS DRESSING CASES CIGARETTE CASES LeateR GoStrie eather hGoods tCs1assified Directory Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cashsin advanceriHeper reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per read- ing line for three or more insertions. Minimum three lines per insertion. Telephone rate - 15c per reading line for two or more insertions.. Minimum three lines per insertion. 10% discount if paid within ten days from the date of last insertion. EMPLOYMENT WANTED STUDENT wants job in Ann Arbor during vacation. Phone Gordon, 3761. 225 FOR SALE FOR RENT: Attractive furnished home for resonable rent. 911 Oli- via. Call 7605. 217 ROOMS FOR RENT WILL SHARE five room apartment with instructor or older student. Modern and well located. Call Days, 7011. 223 928 FOREST AVE.-Pleasant first- floor single or double room forl upperclassmen. Phone 2-1767. 214 DURING VACATION WANTEDI CLOTHING WANTED TO BUY: Any old and new suits, overcoats at $3, $'$8, $25. LADIES FUR COATS, TYPEWRITERS, OLD GOLD, and musical instruments. Phone Sam, 6304. 78x LOST AND FOUND WILL PERSON who found watch in basement staff room of the Library Wednesday please return to Mar- garet Mann. Room 911 Library and receive reward. 226 ARE YOU the gentleman (?) who purloined the brown double-breast- ed overcoat from the Union tap- room Sunday between 4 and 5 inrr, '' If so, give expression to your Y'ulctide spirit-return same to the Union. No questions asked--Jinvol-' 11ntar'y nudist. 221 LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Car"f "'^wrk *t A. n" nrn" A The Carillon Today 5 P.M. Joy to. the World. Hark the Herald Angels Sing. The First Noel. Silent Night. Adeste Fidelis. This will be the last program until midnight Jan. 31. or lowers PHONE 9690 106 East Washington Street Mcmbcr of FLORIST TELLEGRAPH DELIVERY I TODAY ONLY THE GAY GAL WHO TOOK MR. DEEDS TRIES HER TRICKS ON ,A NEWMAN! i STAGE and SCREEN -Now Today and Friday! STUART ERWIN 'Women are Trouble' And PATRICIA ELLIS "Down the Stretch" Siarting Saturday -- BARBARA STANWYCK 'Banjo On My Knee' f i ®w j MEW i i l l I %{ mu& :. Adopted from the story by May Edginton j Directed by Edward Ludwig A COLUMBIA PICTURE #"-Fu1U1 W()1K ali u luw price. ox MIME d I - THE FOLKS AT HOME wouldl thoroughly enjoy the Nc i MICHIGAN CALENDAR More beautiful than ever and a joy for a year - a lovly Christmas Gift. Don't fail to take one wi/h you. If .. . - U Come to this ro-lic IHouse Pairty Extra! On Stage Pre -Holiday Festival For All! The New 80-Voice Instrmenrtl VARSITY CONCERT BAND lbirccticon of WILLIAM 0. REVELLI Prescnhng Music Colorful and Entertaining Added Attractions Popular Vocalist BUCKELEY & ANDERSON. Dance Interlude SHIRL CROSMAN.