PAGE Si THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, DEC. 2, 1939 L RADIO' - By June McKee "Songs You Should Sing" starts the day off, over WJR at 9 a.m. The script is "College Days." with con- tinuity and direction done by Mar- gery Soenksen, Grad. "Songs of comradeship, sung whenever -good friends gather to smoke, talk and remember" will be intermingled. The cast includes Marguerite Mink, '41, Helen Ralston, '40, Cecil Beglinger, Grad., Anne Kleiner, '40, Dick Slade, '41, Johnny Schwarzwalder, Grad., Duane Nelson, Grad., and Fred Tyl- er, '40. Donn Chown, Grad, an- 1 nounces. "Adult Education-What It Is" will be discussed at 5:45 .p.m. by Prof. Howard Y. McClusky and asso- ciates, in another "Awakening Com- munity" presentation of the Michi- gan Adult Education Program. WJR is the station, Louis Grossman, '40, announcer. Latest inspiration found in "Game of the Campus" fanmail is the ad- dress, "Mr. Maurice Hall, University of the Air, Ann Arbor" . . . When the program originally was "Cam- pus Fun", letters to "Campus Fund" abounded. Soon television will increase the radio-actor-and-speaker d e m a n d. Though at the present the supply far exceeds this demand, * t Local Church To Hear Talk BBishop Kern, Bequest Of Henry M. Loud Makes Possible Annual Addresses On Religion Bishop Paul B. Kern of Nashville, Tenn., will present the first Martin Loud lecture at 10:40 a.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist Church when ho speaks on "Out of the Depths." The Loud lectureship is made pos- sible by the bequest of Henry Martin Loud, who was forced to give up the ministry because of ill health. The bequest was made in 1897 to provide for annual lectures on the theme "the evidence, the history, the de- velopment, and the reasonableness of the Christian religion." The lecture- ship is administered by the Wesley- an Guild Corporation. A Bishop of the former Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Bishop Kern has made a study of the edu- cational and missionary work work of the church. His area comprises the territory from Tennessee on the north to Florida and Cuba on the South. He received his education at Ran- dolph-Macon College and Vanderbilt and Duke Universities. Ordained. a minister in 1902, he served as both a teacher and a preacher until he was elected bishop in 1930. He taught at Vanderbilt University for two years and later was professor and Dean of the School of Theology at Southern Methodist University. Russia's Advance Int) Finland Charted MIES I Tromso FISHERMEN' ASrandrovsk dQ PENINSULA Murmansk ON C PT LBCAPTURED O BKlaN -I-I- V----iSO--IT - -U Kemi Lulea or Oulu 4 'oRUSSIANS TAKE eaoSTRATEGIC AREA 1 0 Vasa Kuopio S oaev BOMBS FALL CITY' FIRED Kalininsk' ON CAPITAL BY BOMBING ata sHameentinna \ irs T rku Viipuri* SOVIET GUNS HELSINKI Kotka Tr BOMBARD CITY Hangoe ,nrm nKronstadt" inrd P ockholm ~ \ 0 Tallinn BALTIC SEA} l 110:45 a.m., Morning Worship. No stu- dents are cordially invited to attend. DAILY OFFI L 'dent class following the morning serv- ice. 7 p.m., Open house at the Guild The Student Evangelical Chapel BULLETIN House, 438 Maynard St. Those who services will be held in the Michigan do not attend the weekend party at League Building at 10:30 a.m, Dr. (Continued from Page 4) Waterloo are especially invited. This 1G. d'oris will preach on "The Sanc- _--__ _will take the place of the usual Guild tity of Marriage" and at 7:30 p.m. on Guild House, 503 E. Huron. Prof. program. "Unanswered Prayers." All students Philip Schenk of the English de- ____ are invited to attend the worship. partment will give Readings con- First Methodist Church: Morning On Friday, Dec. 8, a Testimonial cerning "Christ in Poetry." Worship Service at 10:40 a.m. Bishop Dinner will be given in honor of Dr. - ----Paul B. Kern of Nashville, Tenn., will Goris. At this time the work of the First Church of Christ, -Scientist: 'preach on "Out of the Depths." This past three months will be reviewed Sunday services at 10:30 a.m. Sub- service is under the sponsorship of and plans for the future will be dis- ject: "God The Only Cause - and the Loud Lectureship. cussed. Everyone interested is urged Creator." Sunday School at 11:45. to attend. Details will be announced Stalker Hall: Student Class at 9:45 later. Unitarian Church: 11 a.m. "John a-m.-t----------- -rof ----win Dewey's Lease on Lif6 and Liberal- a.m. at Stalker Hall. Prof. Roy Sw- <-o o -o is. Sronb Rv H . ale.ton, of the Engineering School will to' ism." Sermon by Rev. H. P. Marley. lead the discussion on "Concepts of FOVUNED! 7:30 p.m., Round Table, "Exploring Property Rights." Wesleyan Guild An inexpensive and pleasant a Liberal Religion," Second in a series meeting at 6 p.m. at the Methodist niepnieadpaacn of discussions led by Rev. Marley. Church\ Prof. John L. Brumm of the downtown place to eat . . . Journalism Department will speak on "Service" Specialties Fir.t"Tresbyterian Church:c10:45r"Education for What?" Fellowship STEAK HAMBURGERS Lem.n, "The Value ng Prsi Dr. hour and supper following the meet- PIES.CHILI LmnatteMrigwrhpsr-ing vI V.CHL ice. 5:30 p.m. Westminster Student__ Guild and fellowship hour. Subject, HR "T~ Mkn fCrsms, Hillel Foundation: Reform services Sunday morning at 11 a.m. The Trinity Lutheran Church: Services guest speaker will be Rabbi James G 332S. Main C1en till 2 A.M. at 10:30 a.m. Rev. H. O. Yoder will Heller, who will deliver a sermon on Open deliver the sermon. "Jews in the World Crisis." All stu- 0* SAVE for future reference! TRY ONE of our DAILY SPECIALS of GERMAN HOME COOKING Tuesday- Frankfurters Lentils Spatzen Wednesday- Baked Spare Ribs or Pig Hock Sauerkraut Spatzen or Potatoes Thursday- Stuffed Noodles Potato Salad Vegetable Friday- Fish or Sauerbraten Potato Dumpling or Spatzen Vegetable Saturday- German Bratwurst Potatoes Vegetable Sunday-- Roast Fowl or Steak French Fries. Vegetable THE FLAUTZ CAFE 122 W. Wash. - On the Corner We close every Monday. t This Associated Press map shows the course of Russia's invasion of Finland-an invasion by land, sea, and air. Soviet planes bombed Hel- sinki, the Finnish capital and a portion of the city was reported in flames. The port of Viipuri (Viborg), about 65 miles from the Soviet frontier, was also bombed. As Russian artillery pounded Terijoki, Soviet troops crossed the border north of Leningrad. Suojaervi, strategic Finn defense area, and the "fishermen's peninsula" were cut off. s: '- r' , r r" December 2nd is the DEADLINE Order your Personal CHRISTMAS CARDS NOW ! 50 smart cards only $1 -your name imprinted FREE MANY LINES TO CHOOSE FROM Student builds Auto Estimated To Travel At 110-120 M.P.H. By PAUL CHANDLER A University student who began to tinker with automobiles while he was in grade school was riding around in Ann Arbor this week in a $100 homemade car that has so much power that he is still afraid to try it out at full throttle. The college lad is 23-year-old Dan Boehm, '41E, who built the auto- mobile during his spare time last summer. It is modern in design, super streamlined, and the engine mounted in the middle. So far there is only the chassis and motor to ex- hibit, but the body will be mounted during the next few months. Constructed Car Here Boehm constructed the car in the automobile laboratory of the Uni- versity engineering college. It has a special cooling system, with the radiator in the front, a remote con- trol gear shift, and a vacuum clutch' which works off the intake man- fold. The body, which will be built of special wood and fabric construc- I State St. at South Univ. U - M I i :w tion, will stand about 45 inches from the ground, compared to 65 inches on the average standard passenger automobile. The 85 horsepower engine will move the low-slung car at a speed of 110-120 miles per hour, the builder estimates, but he is afraid to drive it that fast. "The steering is not so good when I am going fast," he ex- plains, "so I'm going to wait until I tighten her up a bit, before she gets any more trials." Car Building is Hobby Designing and building automo- biles has been a hobby of Boehm's for many years. He and his younger brother, Frank, put together a couple of homemade miniature autos, com- plete with gasoline engines, while' Dan was still in hfgh school. Dur- in' the past two years they have de- signedthree "soap-box" racers so that Frank could compete in the annual Ann Arbor derbies. The $100 was spent for old auto- mobile parts. The radiator, chassis, motor, and seats are all taken from different cast-off cars. Besides the cash, the 23-year-old student claims that he has contributed "a million dollars worth of work." The car has a wheel base of 123 inches, and is equipped with large wheels and oversize balloon tires. It weighs 2,350 pounds. The motor drives the rear wheels by means of a short Hotchkiss drive. Designed primarily as a streamlined speedster, it has seats for only two persons. CallanNamed Company Head BeCoiues Vice - President Of Borden Firm Climaxing a long business career, William Callan, '01, was last week elected vice-president of the Borden Company of New York City. Born in Philadelphia in 1878, Mr. Callan was schooled in Detroit and entered the chemical field after re- ceiving his A.B. degree from the University. After serving with several chemi- .-al firms, Mr. Callan secured a posi- tion with the Borden Company in 1927 and later became president of two units of the firm-the Casein Company of America and the Na- tional Milk Sugar Manufacturing Co. Mr. Callan was president for two terms, in 1937 and 1938, of the Chemists' Club, and is a member of the Finance Committee of the American Chemical Society. Zion Lutheran Church: Services at 10:30 a.m. Rev. E. Stellhorn will de- liver the sermon. Disciples Guild (Church of Christ): *i Tenor To Sing .before Packed House Monday A capacity crowd will greet Jussi Bjoerling, Swedish tenor, in the fifth concert of the Choral Union Series at 8:30 p.m. Monday, Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the University Musical1Society predicted yesterday. Some tickets are still available, however, at the School of Music, he added. Bjoerling'sprogram which was re- leased yesterday includes only one operatic aria-"O Paradiso" from Meyerbeer's "L'Africane"-although the tenor has an operatic repertoire of 54 roles. The rest of the program includes songs by Beethoven, Schu- bert, Richard Strauss, Emil Sjorgran, Sibelius, Frederic Clay, Stephen Foster and Frank LaForge. Since his Metropoiltan Opera de- but as Rudolpho in Puccini's "La Boheme," Nov. 24, 1938, Bjoerling has gained nation-wide fame. "Peer- less in his sphere" . . . "Fine phrasing" . . . "magnificent high C's have been some of the phrases used by enthusiastic music critics." Although only 27 years old, he is a veteran singer. He made his operatic debut at the age of 19 in the Royal Opera House in Stock- holm, and has been singing the tenor roles in Prague Vienna, Dresden and the United States ever since. Rabbi Heller To Speak At Hillel Reform Service Dr. James G. Heller, rabbi of the Isaac M. Wise Temple in Cincinnati, will give a talk on "Jews and the World Crisis" at 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Hillel Foundation, during the Sunday morning Reform Services. A reception for Dr. Heller will be held at 3 p.m. in the Foundation and a dinner will be held for him in the Union. Waugh Will Speak A series of five speeches dealing with the general topic of wild lands will be presented in the amphitheatre of the Rackham Building by Dr. Frank A. Waugh of Massachusetts State College, starting Monday and continuing through Friday. Juss' BJOEL IN SONG RECITAL S WEDI 11 s H TENOR It 4 IU 11 'MON.,DEC.4,at8:30 IN HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS AT SCHOOL OF MUSIC ^ Bathroom Adaptor $2.00 ............ .............. ................ . ........... .......... . ......... ............ ........... - ........... ............... ... ... .. .......... ............ .......... ... ........... .................. .......... .................. ............ ................... ... ......... .... ............... .......... ... ........ ........... .......... ......... ......... .. .. .......... . ... ........... ................. ............... ................. ...... . ...... ............... ......... ...... . .. .. ...... .. .. ...... . ............ w .............. . ............................. .......... ...... ....... . . . . . . . . . . . ...... ....... ............... ... .......... ... ......... ..... .......... 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