TwO THE MICHIGAN DAILY .IUZ&hAX, R OR H2-511939 ft-,,ftA r Radio Actors To Broadcast' To Give 'Rip Van Winkle' Over WJR Today Portraying that bewhiskered cen- tenarian, Rip Van Winkle, Harold Gast, '39, will head a cast of five stu- dents in the dramatization of that "story over station WJR at 9 a.m. to- day. . Included in the cast are Mar- gery Soenksen, '39, Hazel Barton, James Barton, Grad., Henry Hudson, and Bettie Howard, '39. Dr. Frederick A. Coller, chairman of the surgery department, will dis- cuss cancer at 5:45 p.m. today over station WJR as a part of the program of the American Society for the Con- trol of Cancer. Join the Choir, under the direction of Prof. Joseph E. Maddy, of the ra- dio music department, will be heard at 9 a.m. tomorrow and the Marital Relations series is scheduled for 12:30 p.m. California Professor To Talk Here Today Cosmic rays and new elementary particles of matter will be discussed by Prof. Carl Anderson of the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology at 8 p.m. today in the auditorium of the Rackham building under the auspices of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific so- ciety. Professor Anderson received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1936 for work done in investigating cosmic rays. Heywood Broun To Run For Congress In 1940 Heywood Broun, columnist for The Daily and other newspapers, has an- nounced his intention of campaigning for nomination to Congress in 1940 on a "New Deal" platform in Connecti- cut, it was learned yesterday. It will be Broun's second attempt to gain a seat in the national legislature. Congo-Ann Arbor 'Hams' Meet By HARRY M. KELSEY Two men who had never before seen each other, although they hadl carried on lengthy conversations for more than six years and correspond- ed regularly over the same period, met for the first time yesterday after- noon when the Rev. Carroll R. Steg- all, Presbyterian missionary from the Belgian Congo, arrived in Ann Arbor to visit Dr. John Kraus, son of Dean Edward H. Kraus of the literary col- lege. Friendship Via Ether This strange friendship, although' not so strange among the amateur radio "hams," began one day in the fall of 1933 when Dr. Kraus, operat- ing station WSJK, answered an un- usual telegraph signal and found it to come from ON4CSL, located at Lubondai, Belgian Congo, Afria. Since that time Reverend Stegall's call letters have been changed to OQ5AE. Reverend Stegall is a native of Chattanooga, Tenn.. and is a gradu- ate of Georgia Tech. In 1915 he was sent to the Congo and was impressed by the great length of time it took for communications to reach the out- side world, one way mail service to this country, over 7,000 miles, tak- ing from six to eight weeks. From Lubondai to the coast was a 14 day journey. He began to consider radio as a means of communication. Natives Rub Elbows In 1923 he set up his first receiver in the jungle, and the Bakete natives crowded around. All he could hear on the set was static. He put the ear- phones on the head of the most in- telligeit native, who looked at him in surprise and exclaimed, "I thought you said the Great War in Europe was over!" In 1925, while in this country on sick leave, he learned the techni- calities of radio from an acquaint- ance who had been a radio operator in the navy. On his return he was able to set up a successful station. German Club To Offer Play Post-War German Farce Set ForApril 24 The cast for the annual German play, "Die Gegenkandidaten," is busi- ly rehearsing for its presentation on; April 24, according to Dr. Otto G. Graf of the German department who is directing the play. The Deutscher Verein, in putting on "Die Gegenkandidaten," will be presenting its fifth annual play since it reestablished the presentation of a drama as a club project in 1934. Be- fore the World War, Dr. Graf said, the club had a great number of dra- matic successes. "Die Gegenkandidaten," by Lud- wig Fulda, is a comedy which reflects the political confusion of the im- mediate post-war period in Germany, Dr. Graf said. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Wood Scores Plan To Slice Relief Funds By MORTON JAMPEL The proposal to slice one and a half million dollars from WPA ap- propriations, already passed by the House and on the calendar of the Senate, will put a severe burden on local relief agencies and small com- munities, Prof. Arthur E. Wood of the sociology department pointed out yesterday. The WPA by its work program has kept unemployed from being "un- employable," Professor Wood de- clared. These men will not be sud- denly absorbed by business, he said, but will be forced to local relief agen- cies. This will mean immediate de- creases in relief given to those now on the rolls and the complete exclusion of some people now on federal relief rolls, 'Professor Wood said. It will also cause a reduced standard of living in the entire community, he pointed out. Other members of the sociology de- partment emphasized the psychologi- cal effect of the new economy move. The stigma of direct relief is much greater than work relief, they point-' ed out. Outright doles will have a de- moralizing effect upon the men, their families and the community, it was said. Local relief negates the attempt of the WPA to keep unemployed men fit to take up private employment at any time, psychologists and sociolo- gists pointed out. Wolverine Parties Feature Dancing Since the Wolverine, cooperative cafeteria, has innaugurated its policy of weekly open houses, Sunday nights have found the usual masculine hub- bub replaced by swing music and dancing couples. Informal supper dances are held each Sunday from 6 to 9 p.m. From six to seven classical music is played and for the remainder of the evening popular music is played for dancing. More than a hundred people have attended the socials for the past two weeks and according to John Scheibe, '42M, president, they are a decided success. The open houses are being held to acquaint the campus with the Wolverine. Job Parleys Close 3-Day Series Today Occupational Conference Considers Advertising And Business Personnd (Continued from Page 1) Adviser, Southeastern Junior High School, Battle Creek. 11 a.m.-Placement of High School Students, Michigan Union. Speak- er: Mildred M. Hickman, Supervisor, Guidance and Placement, Cleveland Public Schools, Cleveland, Ohio. 11:30 a.m.-Vocational Education in Action, Michigan Union. Speakers: H. W. Paine, Professor of Vocational Education, University of Toledo. 12:30 p.m.-Luncheon, Michigan Union. Outline of Cooperative Guid- ance Programs. Edgerton Speaks 1:30 p.m.-Your Life-Career Out- look. Speaker: A. H. Edgerton, Dirc- tor of Vocational Guidance, Univer- sity of Wisconsin, Madison. Stressing the need for revamping educational methods outmoded by a changing society, Dr. A. H. Edgerton, Director of Vocational Guidance at the University of Wisconsin, called on guidance counsellors to help students make the adjustments necessary for the "swift changes and reorientations of the "'30's" at yesterday's banquet. Technological change and growing industrialization have placed a pre- mium on adaptability and versatility, he declared. Inflexibility in educa- tional methods, he said, is blocking the type of education necessary ,to enable students to make these vital adjustments. Extra-Curricular Work Seventy-nine per cent of failures are due not to lack or skill or knowl- edge but to "inability to get along with people," he emphasized. Debating, dramatics, music train- ing and special radio courses are among the advantages the University has to offer to students desiring to enter the radio field, Joseph Ries, Director of the Nation's School of the Air, WLW, Cincinnati, said in the ra- dio section. For students interested in entering the announcing, dramatic and sing- ing end of the business, Mr. Ries prescribed a good musical back- ground. For those desirous of enter- ing the writing part of the business, the need for recognition of the sounds meaning was stressed. THE MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFI ED ADVERTISING RATES Effective as of February 14, 1939 12c per reading line (on basis of five average words to line) for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Minimum of 3 lines per inser- tion. These low rates are on the basis of cash payment before the ad is inserted. If it is inconvenient for you to call at our offices to make payment, a messenger will be sent Eo pick up your ad at a slight extra charge of 10c. For further information call 23-24-1, or stop in at 420 Maynard Ftreet. FOR RENT OLD COINS 5159. for sale. 1134 Forest Ave. 5611 FOR SALE-Day Bed, $7, cot $1, play pen $1, ice box $5, Boy Scout equip- ment. 523 or 525 Linden St. Call 6884. FOR SALE-English riding saddle, reasonable. Ned Arbury, 228 So. Thayer. Phone 2-2992. 573 FOR SALE-Complete set of dance band drums. Excellent condition. Cheap. Call Ronnie Maschino, 2-4401. 574 FOR SALE-Public address system. Beautiful, clear tone and in excel- lent condition. Reasonable price. Call 2-1080. Ask for Irv. 571 FOR SALE-2-wheel box trailer, 6 feet deep, sturdy construction. Call Fletcher 5838. 579 LOST and FOUND FOR RENT-Single room, with board if required. North of campus. Phone 7530. 549 FOR RENT-Furnished first floor 5 room apartment May 1st. 1602 Fern- dale Place. Phone 9540. 536 FOR RENT-Three room apartment, private bath, electric refrigerator and stove, furnished. 1201 E. Uni- versity. 539 CATHOLIC CHURCH-Three rooms unfurnished, stove, refrigerator and garage $60. Phone 2-3259. The F. A. Sergeant Coy 534 FOR RENT-Two 2-room apartments in good location. 209 S. State. Tel. 2-1124. 575 FOR RENT-Large studio room. Lavatory. First floor. Phone 2-1196. 1022 Forest. 577 FOR GIRLS-New furnished double room. Nightly or weekly. Desirable location. Call 7132. Board if de.. sired. 578 FOR RENT-Large double room with sleeping porch, choice location for graduate w o m e n. Reasonably priced. Box 14. 450 FOR RENT-331 E. Liberty St., front room, first floor. Heat, light, bath. Lady preferred. Phone 3690. 553 FOR RENT-Suite with cooking privileges for students or business men. Also single room. Shower, garage. 425 S. Division. 555 RAINEY HOTEL, 303 E. Ann St. Clean quiet rooms $1.00 night, $4.00 per week. Phone 9383 for reservations. 580 WANTED - TYPING EXPERIENCED TYPIST, University Graduate, can copyread and edit. Rates reasonable. Call 5126. TYPING-Reasonable, rates. L. M. Heywood, 414 Maynard St., phone 5689. 271 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. 5th Avenue. Phone 2-2835 or 2-1416. 79 FOR SALE FOR SALE-Sasieni Deonds $2.00 Blue Front Agor State .State and Packard. 560 FOR SALE-Complete set of drums for dance band. Excellent condi- tion. Will sacrifice at $75. Call for R. Maschine, telephone 2-4401. 546 FOR SALE-All kinds of beer in bottles, kegs, and cans. We deliver until midnight. 303 N. Fifth. Phone 8200. 515 LOST-Corwim's "Constitution and What It Means Today" in Angell Hall. Reward. Call 4054. M. W. Reider. 535 LOST-Racoon coat in Parrot. It was just like new. Reward. Call Web at 7758. 540 LOST-A men's brown and tan twin sweater set. Please return to 411 Allen=Rumsey. 538 FOUND-One man's brown oxford at P.B. Sunday night. Write Box 8, Michigan Daily. 549 LOST-One Psi U sweetheart pin near upper Hill St. Please call Mar Rogers at 5617. Reward. LOST-Brown leather wallet, con- tains draft, identification card, etc. Reward. Believed lost in East Hall or West Eng. 576 LOST-Near bank or State St., black wallet. Initials J.W.F. L. Doral. Re- ward. Phone 3998. 572 LOST--Purse containing fraternity and sorority pin, Parker Pen, Gold Elgin watch at the League Thurs- day night. Liberal reward. No ques- tions asked. Call Ellen MacDon- ald, 2-2569. 570 LOST-Gold rectangular Gruen wrist watch. Gold metal link band. Lost about 3 weeks ago. Bernie Simon, 8590. 527 LOST-"Social Disorganization" by Elliot & Merril. If found please no- tify David Jassy at 3590. 547 LOST-White print kerchief Tuesday night March 14 between Health Service and Rackham Building. Phone Goldstein 2-2276. 509 LOST-Coin purse on first floor front Natural Science Bldg. Reward. Tele- phone 3952. LOST-Large brown leather purse containing glasses and fountain pen. Call 4329. 557 HELP WANTED WANTED-Student boy to work for his room and board or both. Phone 9815. 552 MUSICIANS WANTED-1 bass play- er, one drummer. Call Polis, 7236 or 2-1937. Leave name. 556 WANTED-Canvassers, good return; minimum of one hour per day. Call Gene Freedman, 9733. 565 WANTED-Students in spare time to sell men and women's sport shoes, also nurses', direct to consumers. Customer gets a discount, students a commission. H. S. Lombard, fac- tory agent, 807 So. State St. Tel. 4844 Ann Arbor. PROFESSIONAL NOTICES CASH PAID for your discarded clothing. Claude Brown, 512 S. SANFORD Hat Cleaning and Shoe Shining. Open day and night. 121 E. Ann. 524 ALTERATIONS and dressmaking. Store, shop and home experience. Reasonable. Gladys Sturgis, 1426 Washington Hghts. Phone 2-2975. 533 SIX WHITE uniforms, size 16, short- sleeved, only slightly worn. Price very reasonable. Call 4121 ext. 303, from 8-12 or 1:30-4:30. TRANSPORTATION RESERVATIONS for vacation train rates may be placed at THE QUARRY DRUG STORE Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons. WANTED-Two to share expenses to California and Yellowstone. Leave A.A. about June 17. Call 2-3941 (evenings). WANTED-Ride to Chicago over va- cation. Call 3733. Sid. 568 TO HIRE-Car for spring vacation.f Call Jack, 8461. 563 WANTED-A ride to Cincinnati, leav- ing Friday noon. Phone 6232. Will share expenses. 567 WANTED-Vacation passenger to New York and back. 1938 Chevrolet. $13. Call Jampel, 4570, evenings. 559. WANTED-Ride over vacation to Pittsburgh or vicinity. Call George 3733. 569 WANTED-Two rides to New .Jersey Spring Vacation. Willing to share expenses. Call Bill 2-2372. 542 WANTED-Ride to Buffalo or its en- virons, April 7. Phone 2-1777, ask for Dick. 528 WANTED-Passengers to Idaho or vicinity. Leaving about June 10th via New York Fair and Washing- ton, D.C. New car. Call 7849 by March 30th-for reservation. 530 WANTED-Two rides to New York City or New Jersey Spring Vacation. Call Al 2-2372. 543 WANTED-Passengers going to North or South Carolina for"Spring Vaca- tion. Call Russell Wilson, 8747. WANTED WANTED-3-room completely fur- nished apartment in campus sec- tion for Spring Vacation. Call Skur- la, 2-2591. 554 WANTED-Old copies of Michigan Daily for Sunday, April 3, 1938, and Friday, March 18, 1938. Call Mrs. Rogers, 2-3241. 458 WANTED-Clothing wanted to buy. S u i ts, overcoats, typewriters, watches. Sam pays the most. Phone 6304 for appointment. 388 WANTED-Textbook for Political Science 52, Government of Fascist Italy. Call Ed, phone 6092. Thanks. 541 WANTED-Model A Ford in good condition. Will pay good price. Phone Tom at 8518. 545 WANTED-I want a squash racket.1 Must be in good condition. Howard! Novasel, 6539. 5321 WANTED-Three tickets for Nation- al Collegiate Swimming Meet. Call Morin, 2-2171. 537 WANTED-Speech book, The Work- ing Principles of Argument by O'Neill and McBurney. Bob Wag- ner, 2-2565. LAUNDRIES LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 9 STUDENTS-When laundry becomes a burden call 4776. Quality work. reasonable. We call and deliver. 519 BEAUTY PARLORS JUANITA'S HOUSE of Beauty, ex- perienced complete service, reason- able prices. Phone 3023, 410 Wol- verine Bldg., 4th and Washington. 514 MONTH-END SPECIAL-Regular $6 Eugene permanents $3.50. College BeautyShop, phone 2-2813, open evenings. 531, MOVING SERVICE MOVING-A and C Cartage, storage. Local and long distance hauling. Every load insured. 325 S. Fifth, Phone 9835. 522 ELSIFOR Cartage Co., Inc., local andJ long distant moving, storing, pack- ing, shipping. Every load insured. 310 W. Ann Phone 4297. 526 1H. B. GODFREY Moving, storage. Local and long distance moving. 410 North Fourth Ave. Phone 6927.1 5251 DECORATORS HOME DECORATORS-Decorating, painting. Budget plan if desired. Dial 7209. 181 PAINTING and Decorating, interior and exterior. Cleaning windows, walls, woodwork washed. Guaran- teed. Reasonable. References. Phone 2-1280 8-6. 548 PAINTING Paperhanging, wall wash- ing,' paper cleaning and all interior and exterior decorating. First class workmen. Phone W. P. Jacobson, 2-1320. 517 REAL ESTATE GRANGER Avenue-Six rooms with large living room and fireplace and three good sized bedrooms. Garage. Priced reasonably with terms. Ed- ward M. Couper, Realtor, State. Savings Bank Bldg. Phone 2-1322. 510 FOR SALE, Lease or Trade, 9 room house in Detroit, Grosse Pointe sec- tion, large living room, sun room,! fireplace, oil heat, electric refriger- ation, 5 bedrooms, newly decorat- ed. Owner, 9815. 551 FOR SALE-Choice lot on Vinewood Blvd. near Geddes Ave. Restricted section. Inquire 422 East Washing- ton. 562 MISCELLANEOUS WASHED SAND and Gravel, Drive- way gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, Phone 7112. 17 FURNACES VACUUM cleaned and re- paired. Carl Sweet, 2-3578. Succes- sor to Carl Heinzelman, formerly Marshall Furnace. 518 BLACK DIRT and manure. Also ashes and rubbish hauling. Work guaran- teed satisfactory. H. Tolman. Phone 2-2926. 523 SPECIAL-Paste Waterless Cleaner. Was $1 gal. now 79c. Factory Paint Store. Phone 2-2440. 516 CARPETS CLEANED, sewing and laying. Oriental rugs washed. Amer- ican Rug Cleaning Works, Green St. Phone 8115. 520 II SHOWS DAILY 2:00 - 4:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 P.M. II MATS. 25c EVES. 35c YOU'LL REALLY ENJOY SEEING HOW PRISCILLA GOT THAT WAY! M I I School of Social Dancing Taught daily, 10 to 10. Terrace Garden Studio' 2d Floor, Wuerth The- ater Bldg. Phone 9695. L " LAST TIME TONIGHT L.G.P.'S play for 1939 "PIG IN A POKE" Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre SOc 75c $1.00 8:30 P.M. hi 1, Feature starts at 2, 3:57, 7:11, 9:23 Ve C ng OIIgOt tog R K O RADIO S TO W E R I NG nt I-A . ~ ~Y1t _._.. n 1. KI I I TV., TTA [ ..L'Tr..Tirr T '.? ~ :5j,