'AGE T~WO THE MICHIGAN DAILY. FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1939 .... ..... .... - .- ........ . ..... Radio Expert To Talk Today In JobParley Guidance Is Also Feature Of Vocational Series; Banquet Set For Tonight (Continued tron Page 1) to accept small wages during the first years of his experience, he warned. If *you don't enjoy meeting lots of people, stay completely out of the salesmanship business, Cossart ad- vised. He pointed out that one great weakness of many men in this pro- fession is that they do not have a sincere understanding of their cus- tomers, and are not able to create any new demand for the product they are selling. "There is no job so varied, so ever- changing, so much a gamble, as fashion buying," Josephine Sutton, merchandising manager of. Himel- hoch Brothers and Company, De- troit, told a group of students yes- terday in the League Ballroom. Stressing the fact that good jobs look for people to fill them, Miss Sut-. ton explained that the largest salaries are available in the publicity division and merchandising managers posi- tions. Superintendent L. H. Lamb of the Flint Schools said that the most im- portant thing of all was to "act na- tural and at ease" when being in- terviewed. "Give the interviewer a chance to find out your chatracter and personality," he said. Several points emphasized were: "don't talk too much, mention. only pertinent facts, do not bluff, and give the person in- terviewing you credit for some com- mon sense," State Shielded From Disease Mexican Plague Avoided By Cooperative Plan No longer will the state suffer the outbreaks of certain contagious dis- eases, Dr. Don W. Gudakunst, state health commissioner, pointed out yes- trday, as he explained a new co- p.perative plan for protecting the health of Michigan communities from disease among imported Mexican beet field workers. In the past, a percentage of the' 10,00 Mexicans, imported for the laborious back breaking work in the beet fields, were afflicted with tuber- culosis, syphilis or some type of con- t ,gious disease. Only last summer, Dr. Gudakunst recalled, the out- break of Shiga dysentery in Shiawas- see county was attributed to the Mexi- cans. The new plan calls for a medical examination of all prospective Mexi- cans who will be imported. None will be allowed to leave Texas who have any evidence of the aforementioned diseases. The cost of this examination will be borne by both the state health de- partment and the four farmer. asso- ciations which boast a membership of 20,000. The state will pay its share of the burden from the funds allotted by the United States Public Health Service. "It is due to the excellent coopera- tion received from thebeet growers' associations that this step has bee made possible." "It will do away with the necessary expenditure of a con- siderable amount of money for the hospitalization of tuberculosis pa- tients. The program will add greatly to the health protection of the people of Michigan" Professors To Attend Meeting Of Physicians Dr. Howard B. Lewis, professor of biological chemistry and Dr. Fred J. Hodges, professor of roetgenology, will attend the meeting of the American College of Physicians March 27 and 28 in New Orleans. Dr. Lewis will speak on the subject "Vitamins in Theory and Practice" March 27 and Dr. Hodges will, talk on "Roentgen Procedures Useful in Cardiac Diagnosis" March 28. Dr. Lewis will also address the Tu- lane chapter of Sigma Xi March 28 on the "Importance of Chemistry for the Biologic Sciences." Feature starts at 2, 3:57,'7:11, 9:23 ot of t Oucody**at'ad- rolte RSI ean the a gl 'fI~ i g gy E Thespins Burn Midnight Oil For Two Gentlemen Of Verona' Replete Preparations Made through his paces like a major. As F kthe group in the wings remarks, "He For Shakespeare's Play; just knows his stuff, that's all." Jurist Opens Here Wednesday gives his lines the quiet, powerful By MORTON JAMPEL "No! No! You look like you are in drawing room. Walk like you are- really in the forest. Motivate?" Valentine B. Windt, director of Play Production shouts, interrupting the rehearsal scene. He .sits on a chair with sceneryl paraphernalia littering the floor around him. Two script girls are next to him pointing out minor er- rors in the lines. On the stage stand Ellen Rothblatt, Norman ,Oxhandler, and Margaret Mink. Ellen and Mar- garet wearthe replete Elizabethan costumes to give them the feel of the, regalia they will wear when the cur- tain rises Wednesday on Shake- speare's "Two Gentlemen of Verona." And so the rhearsal goes. Do it over and over until its right, and Professor Windt is the man to say when a line, a scene, a play is right." Rehearsing night and day the ama- teur actors round out the rough spots in "Two Gentlemen of .Verona. In the disarray of the laboratory the- atre, with backdrops, incompleted arches, raw lumber and canvas lit-, tering the theatre, they work each night until girls' curfew time. Then the boys go through their paces, us- ually until midnight or later. Occasionally Thor Johnson, direc- tor of the Little Symphony, inter- rupts the rehearsal to have his pi- anist run through some of the scores for timing. The Little Symphony will complement the play with 14 numbers and two vocalizations. Professor Windt is satisfied with the scene and calls for Eddy Jurist, Play Production veteran. Eddygoes interpretation that was so successful in "Petrified Forest." He completes his scene first time through, and goes out to the office for a cigarette. In the office Nat Raskin and Sam Sheplow, waiting for their call, argue the merits of the play. Sam is en- thralled, with "the antique charm" of the play. Nat is trying to get a new interpretation of his lines. Mar- garet Soensken quietly smokes a cig- arette. In the room next to the office James Doll, imported from Detroit espe- cially for this play, and Robert Mel- lenkamp, Play Production's scenery designer, are painting one of the three huge back-drops that will make up most of the scenery of the play. Gradually the masterful verse of the Bard of Avon is given blood and flesh. Slowly, a script becomes a play. Hundreds of costume articles are, being completed. All of Play. Production pitches in on the scenic props. Meanwhile in a stone-walled room in the carillon tower, mildly reminiscent of a medieval castle, ThOr Johnson works on the musical scores for the play. On Wednesday the results of this prodigious effort will be revealed to Ann Arbor in the most colorful spec- tacle Play Production has done in several years. Prep Students To eet Here DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, MARCH 24,1939 VOL. XLIX. No. 126 NTotices Note to Seniors, June Gaduates, and Graduate Students: Please file application for degrees or any spe- cial certificates (i.e. Geolog Certifi- cate, Journalism Certificate,;etc.) at once if you expect to receive a de-1 gree or certificate at Commencement I in June. We cannot guarantee that the University will confer a degree or certificate at Commencement upon any student who fails to file such, application before the close "of busi- ness on Wednesday, May 17. If ap- plication is received later: than May 17, your degree or certificate may not be awarded until next fall. Candidates for degrees ar, certifi- cates may fill out card at once at office of the secretary or tecorder of their own school or college'-students enrolled in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, College of Architecture, School of Music, School of Education, and School'of Fores- try and Conservation, please note that application blank may be ob- tained and filed in the Registrar's Of- fice, Room 4, University Hall). All applications for the Teacher's Cer- tificate should be made at the office of the School of Education. Please do not delay untu.1 the lastl ASU Nominates Eight For Senate Positions American Student Union candi- dates were nominated for the Stu- dent Senate and a platform adopted at an ASU executive meeting held yesterday afternoon in the Michigan League. Those chosen to run are Joseph Gies, '39, Elman Service, '40, Harold Osterwell, '41, Frank Johnson, Grad., Mcrris Lichtenstein, '39, Mary Cum- 'mins, '42, Jack Zubon, '39, and Hugo Rechard, '39. day, as more than 2.500 diplomas and certificates must be lettered, signed, and sealed and we skiall be greatly helpe'd in this work by the early filing of applications and the resulting longer period for preparation. The filing of these applications does not involve the payment of any fee whatsoever. Shirley W. Smith. Subcommittee on Discipline: At a. meeting held on Wednesday, March 8, 1939, Mr. Edward Macal, '39 Lit., was found guilty of conduct violating the University regulations relating to the distribution of printed matter, and Mr. Howard F. Johnson, '39 Lit., was found guilty of violating the (Continueed on Page 4) Alumnus Buys Magazine Elmer P. Grierson, '14, iormer busi- ness manager of The Daily, recently bought out the American Boy maga- zine, it was announced yesterday Toward Europe, Says (Editor's Note: Tiis is the first of three arA icea reporting~ the observa- tions of Prof. Preston Slosson on con- ditions in Europe.) By IERVIE HAUFLER President Roosevelt's sentiments to- ward European affairs are unani- mdusly applauded by the British, Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department, who is now traveling in Europe, reports in a letter to mem- bers of the history faculty. England as a whole, however, seems to wonder why the President is so alarmed just now. There is a tend- ency among the British, Professor Slosson observes, to accept continental crises calmly, and the press is less "jumpy" than our own. This lack of concern, he suggests, may result from their becoming "so accustomed over here to living on the flanks of a vol- cano that they sleep soundly of nights and go about their business as usual." In Professor Slosson's opinion, how-> ever, the European situation is dan- gerous. "The ambiguous intentions of Mussolini in Italy," he writes, "seem to me highly alarming, for if he stays, in Spain, France is bound to do something about it. Hitler wil! back' Mussolini and the fat's in the fire." Italy by itself would not be very dangerous without Germany, Profes- sor Slosson believes." There is a de- lightful, though probably apochry- phal, story going the rounds just now," he relates, "that at Munich Hitler said, 'Remember this, if we' go to war Italy will be on our side,' and that Chamberlain replied, 'Well, after all, turn about is fair play; we had to put up with having the Italians on our side last time'." In Aberystwyth, Wales, where he taught for a week in the University of Wales, Professor Slosson was sur- prised to find a great many universi- ty professors holding ultra-radical views. The whole country of Wales is radical,, he writes, and the Labor Party hasa strong hold among the miners of south Wales. The Welsh be- lieve that Chamberlain is moved less by love of peace in his "turn the other cheek to the dictators" 'policy than by dread and hatred of even the mild- est forms of socialism, being unwill- ing to risk a Fascist regime in any part of Europe, including even Eng- land, rather than yield anything to the demands of 1bor. Angell To Talk On Reich Prof. Robert C. Angell, of the so- ciolo~ department, who returned re- cently from Germany after a visit of several months, will talk on "Inside Germany," at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Westminster Guild meeting. British Laud Roosevelt Attitude SI U SHOWS DAILY AT 2 - 4 - 7 - 9 - P.M. !. - FEATURE AT- 2:42 - 4:40 -7:42 - 9:42 March of Time at 2:19 -4:17 7:19 - 9:19 i I I 'University Will Begin Day Series Tomorrow Cases Show Nazi Actions By Students (Continued from Page 1) other exchange student, who is now a Party attache. A Berlin dispatch in the New York Herald-Tribune said that the Nazi party will exercise "greater control". over German. exchange students in the. future. The Herald-Tribune also announced that a member of New York's German consulate had re- signed at the behest of Federal au- thorities after he had asked exchange students in the U.S. to be "virtual spies." Sponsored by the Institute of In- ternational Education, Prof. Camillo, von Klenze left his post as "professor of German-American cultural rela- tions" at the University of Munich and became visiting professor of Ger- man at Stanford University. In an interview in the campus daily, he de- nounced American newspaper corres- pondents, who reported Nazi perse- cutions, as "nothing short of liars." More than 200 high school students from all parts of the State will visit the University tomorrow in the first of three "University Days" sponsored by the Union. The day will be featured by tours of the University and conferences of various departmental heads with the visitors. Designed to enable the stu- dents to plan a course of study in college, the conference will include the following faculty members: Dean Henry C. Anderson of the College of Engineering, Dean Henry M. Bates of the law school, Dean Clare E. Grif- fin of the business administration school, Dean Albert C. Furstenberg of the medical school, Dean Wells I. Bennett of the architecture school and numerous others. The day's program will also be highlighted by a series of tours of the University. Points of interest to be visited are the Union, the League and the athletic plant. A special organ concert will also be given in Hill Auditorium by Palmer Christian. In the afternoon a coffee hour and tea dance will be given in the small ballroom of the Union for the high school students. Starting TODAY! A preview of With e lovable stars of Four Daughters"I ,m! gJ THE SWEETHEARTS OF' "FO.JR DAUGHTERS" IN A MUST-SEE! w A -Id f State Street featuredrce oinm nd at Liberty feature and recommend ARROW UNDERWEAR Q 4, ,.2 Creeper~-. /ei doN Are You A Jitterbug Perforce? 4t 0 Rumor has it that tight, creeping, pinching shorts are largely responsible for jitterbug gyrations. Settle back m'hearties into a comfort- able pair of Arrow Shorts, no seams to bind and more room to park. Arrows are expertly tailored of durable fabrics, and completely Sanfor- ized Shrunk (fabric shrink-oeP 1t-c lth.an, .ClA from MARK REED'S nutty but nice stage hittarring Priscilla Lane V Jef frey Lynn Roland Young "Fay Bainter" May Robson ~-- w *~~'- I