THE MICHIGAN DAILY - Announce New Radio Schedule For University Fifteen Programs To Be Broadcast Every Week, Prof: Abbot Announces Fifteen programs each week be- 'ginning Oct. 9 and lasting until April 9, will be originated by the University Broadcasting Service from the Morris Hall studios this year, according to Prof. Waldo M. Abbot, director of the Broadcasting Service. One will go out over the red network of the NBC, nine over WJR and five over WFBC. On Sunday morning from 9 to 9:30 a.m. Prof. Joseph E. Maddy, in charge of radio music instruction, will direct a. student quartet in hlymn singing on the "Join the Choir" program over WJR. At 12:30 p.m. over the same station a program on indoor gardens will be given for the first two weeks and for the remainingl19, faculty talks on marital relations. This has been arranged for the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers of which Professor Abbot has been named State radio chairman. Professor Maddy's "Let's Sing" pro- gram with choral groups from pubic schools will be heard from 3 td 3:30 p.m. each Monday over WJR. At 3:45 over WMBC the broadcasting class will review popularly priced fic- tion, travel and biography. Pat Con- ger and Stephen Filipiak, advanced students inbroadcasting, will can- duct a "Michigan .Fan Fare" from 6.:5 to 7 p.m. every Monday, Wednes- day and Friday over the same station. From 12:45 to 1:15 p.m. every Tues- day, Professor Maddys music instruc- tion course entitled "Music Makers" will go on the red network of the NBC. A series of 21 faculty talks on literature will be sent out at 3 p.m. over WJR. Prof. Gail E. Densmore of the speech department will hold his classroom broadcast, in diction and pronunciation for the third successive year at 3 p.m. Wednesday over WJR. About 20 students will participate. "Detroiters at the . University of Michigan" will go on the air over WMBC at 12:45'p.m. Thursday. This program will be prepared and pre- sented by Professor Abbot's class in broadcasting. At 3 p.m. Thursday a series of sketches based on the or- iginal source material in the Clem- ent's Library, written and acted by students in broadcasting, will be pre- sented over WJR. Charlie Zwick's or- chestra and campus news will be heard over the Campus Variety pro- gram at 3:15 p.m. Thursday over the same station. Ted Grace, '39, will be in charge. A series of talks and deonstra? tions on the national debate topic will be held at 3 p.m. Friday over WJR for the High School Forensic Association. Included on this pro- gram will be radio debates between Wayne University and Ypsilanti State Normal College and the men's and women's debating teams of the University. Three programs will be heardover WJR on Saturday. At 9 a.. stu- dents in Professor Abbots broadcast- ing class will present dramatizations of the stories of all nations written by Esther Kern, Grad. At 9:15, Prof. Louis Eich's class will be heard in dramatic readings and oral interpre- tation. The Adult Education Pro- gram will be held at 5:45 p.m. con- sisting of welfare referndum discus- sions for the first four weeks, phar- macy for the next two and current problems and music for the remain- der. More students will be used on the broadcasts this year than in the past, according to Professor Abbot. They will prepare and announce many of the programs. Students heard on the programs are those enrolled in Speech 151, 151a and 136. In addition to the radio programs, the Broadcasting Service will pre- pare three columns a week for the Daily listing outstanding programs. that can be heard in Ann Arbor. Announcement of the ,radio pro- grams presented by the University will be off the press next week and copies are available upon request to students and faculty members free of charge, Profess - Abbot said. Koussevitzky Arrives NEW YORK, Sept. 25-({P)-Serge Koussevitzky arrived here today from France on tlhe Nbrmandie. Koussevit- zky will conduct the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra during its season at Boston and on tour, when it is sched- uled to appear in a Choral Union con- cert at the University of Michigan, Dec. 7. England, France, P.J. O'Connor Student Senate To Hold Second State WPA Drop Hurricane Survivors Russia Take Stand Indicates Boom Return To Battle Creet Pleads Guilty General Campus Election Oct. 21 ____BATTLE CREEK, Sept. 2.-(#- _gains_-.-__ny-_I LANSING. Sept. 26.-P)-Michi- Four Battle Creek survivors of Nev (Contnuedsm Page )I CharCe( Vwth voti (Continued from Page 1) which had been formed by delegates gan's industrial revival was reflected England's hurricane and floods- ______ ____...Wit-- - of the League. Union, Student Relig- today in the lowest WPA case load among them a honeymooning coupl France and Soviet Russia stood defin- Though Not Citizen the League bulletin board, he ex- ious Association and other leading -ecompared notes today on thei itely committed to fight for Czecho- Plained. . campus groups. ening eperiens sovakia although France and Russia DETOIT, Sept. 26-UP)-Patrick Six of the graduating and resigning LiSenate.mediatlyfollowing Ls M. Nims, state WPA director, Afrin ex ee e have pledges under defensive alliances' .1 O'Connor. for several years a :Senators last June named alternates I ThelSenate.atmmediatelyefohlowing h dto fill their positions until the next its election investigated the housing reported a reduction of 7,683 cases in included Mr. and Mrs. Miles Robert with the war-born republic. Democratic leader in Wayne County, election and these new Senators are problem. alleged book monopolies, Ii- the burde:: to a total of 190,260; the son, newlyweds who were caught of Official quarters declined to elabor- pleaded guilty in Recorder's Court to- especially reminded to attend, Magdol brary reforms,. a marriage relations largest drop this year Gloucester, Mass. ate on the statement but it was under- day to a charge of election fraud. The pointed out: They are: Waldo Abbott, course. campus politics, and consid- -~ --F- would letFrance decide what onsi- specific charge, a misdemeano, was Jr., '39, named by Alfred Lovell, '38; ered a cooperative book exchange. : tud aeran dtck on Czesho- George Mutnick, '39, by Robert M. The agenda for tonig1tt's meeting tuted a German attack on Czecho- iaPerlman, Grad.: Edward Grace, Jr., !includes: To be -groomed sloyakia. election last year when he knew he '39, by Ernest .A..Jones, '38; Albert ' 1. Call to order by Speaker at 7:30 This presumably meant Britain and was not a United States citizen. Judge Mayio, '39, by Irving Silverman, '38; p. m Russia would accept France's deci- Donald Van Zile deferrd sentence S. R. Kleiman, '39, by Tuure TenSn- 2. Call of the Roll by the Clerk. «E E M A U D E sion but did not rule out the possi- f wder, '38, and Richard Knowe, '39, by 3 o er bility of Britain attempting to in-{for one week. Ann Vicary. '40. 3. Committee reports. fluence the French. O'Connor was in charge of precinct' Housing committee--enator Allen at _rganization work in Wayne Cunty Nominating petitions for the newly- Braun, '40. Results of recommenda- - France Girds F 'or War for Governor Frank Murphy's cam- announced election must be submitted tions by Edward Magdol, '39, (by per-GE 'w paign two years ago. He also has been to the Student Senate offices in Lane mission of the chair.- Continuation GROOM WELL'S New Shop PARIS, Sept. 26-41P)-War-time Democratic chairman of the Sixteenth Hall, which will be open for that comittee-Report by Senator Martin conditions were clamped down on Congressional District. purpose from 4 to 6 p. m. Monday, B. Dworkis, '40, chairman. Financial1 5UUeST France tonight. O'Connor is a native of Ireland. He Oct. 10 through Friday, Oct. 14, Mag- report--Senator Dworkis and Magdol. 1205 S®UTH U N IVE RS TY Not qui' 20 years after the end said he was 'pleading guilty tothe dol explained. Petitions must be signed Sex education committee-Senator, of the war that laid much of their ballot charge to "clarify my papers by not less than six students and Phil Westbrook,. '40. Negro educationPhone 481$ or Appintment country waste, Frenchmen again saw with the immigration authorities." must be accompanied by University committee - Senator Robert Gill,P4oi swelling ranks of soldiers march off Gordon L. Strohm, of Trenton, filed certificates of scholastic eligibility and Grad to the frontiers, a petition today for a recount of bal- by a S0c filing fee. 4. General Pending Business._ Civilians began fleeing the capital, lots cast fornthe Republican nominees The Student Senate was elected Motion by Senator Tom Downs, '39,_______ at the advice of the ministry of public for State Representative in the for the first time last year "to con- relative to the establishment of a works. Fourth District at the Sept. 13 pri- sider all matters having a vital bea- permanent commission to carry out The American Embassy advised all mary. Strohm trailed Richard L. Leh- ing on students at the University." the recommendations of the Spring D oes ' oiu r tu1d\ R om Americans to return home, if able to man, of Dearborn, by 21 votes. Plans for this organization to register Parley. Motion by Senator Harold1J -do so, because of "the complicated student opinion were designed by the Ossepow, '39, relative to the state j situation prevailing in Europe." Student Senate sponsoring committee, election.N eed these. Government ministers stayed con---__t i 11 stantly by their posts, ready for all emergencies. Premier Edouard Dala- dier, back from °conferring at London with heads of the British Government, called the cabinet to meet tomorrow at the Elysee Palace.g Daladier and Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet returned by airplane after conferring with Britain's Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and Secretary for Foreign Affairs Vis- count Halifax, to await final develop- ments that would turn Europe defin- itely to peace or wa. Arouses Sentiment President Roosevelt's appeal for peace to Reichsfuehrer Hitler of Ger- many and President Eduard Benes of Czechoslovakia aroused sentiments of gratitude, if not of relief, in France.1 The message also went to Daladier and Chamberlain. Daladier sent his thanks for the United States Excutive's efforts di- rectly from London. The flying trip of the Premier and Foreign Minister to London inspired French confidence that the two wes- tern democracies had done everything in their power to find a compromise between Hitler's demands for Czecho- slovakia's cession to Germany of Su- detenland and the Czechoslovak Gov- ernment's stand. Conferences of Gen. Maurice Gus- tave Gamelin, chief of general staff of national defense, with British de- fense leaders led to belief the two powers were preparing to meet any eventuality. . Should the situation grow worse overnight, another formal mobiliza- tion order was expected tomorrow to build up the force under arms already swelled past 2,000,000 by individual calls todcolors and partial mobiliza- tion orders. Ministry Issues Orders The Eczucation ilistry made ready to issue orders postponing reopening of schools set for Oct. 1, while the Ministry of Public Works asked all who wanted to leave Paris "because of circumstances" to use the railways- "which are guaranteed to them." An exodus of Americans started. One steamship line reported it. was sold out for two weeks' sailings. The Embassy's advice to Americans to leave France came several hours before Ambassador William G. Bullitt called on Bonnet to learn of the An- glo-French conversations at London. The United States Consulate said the last census of permanent Ameri- can residents of France showed there were 12,000 in 1931, although less than 5,000 were registered now at the consulate. Officials estimated about 8,000 reg- istered and unregistered Americans were in France. He Lost Five Pounds, May Lose Election GRAND RAPIDS, Sept. 26.-()- His campaign expenditures consisted of 'the "loss of five pounds while awaiting the final, official statement of votes," the Rev. James W. Hail- wood, who is deadlocked with Tunis Johnson for the Democratic nomina- tion for congress from the Fifth Michigan District, reported today. "I have spent the most enervating days of my life," Hailwood's state- ment to Louis J. Donovan, Kent County Clerk, said. ' $ s9M $5000 ca k 00 F 'T IE PGE '10 OF;H pCTOaBtR * N EWgStAp I 1- * *t For Your Reming ton Portable Typewriter Stands Waste Baskets Letter Files Typing Pper rI. Noonday Lunch 1 Visit' The Canvas-back Binders Zpipper Note'books Typewriters II I. Betsy Ross Shop ina the Arcade The Mayer-schairer. Station ers, Printers, Bin~ders, Office outfi tters WE SERVE BREAKFAST We Deliver Dial 5931 ii 1.12 South Main Street - Phone. 4514 i _ _ _ " l j ___. _ 5 II Before the Sun Is Up ... llillllf 111% 1 .. a FOLLETT car is awaiting the morning shipment of Used and New Books at the depot. As soon as it is received it is rushed to Follett's I where it is pared for sal books are rc immediately opened, -marked, and pre- e. At 7:30 when the store opens, your Cady. S E 'BOK or NEW TEXTBOOKS, if You Prefer. for ALL DEPARTMENTS at I MICH Tf A N RnOOK STORF I I i r_