T HE MICHIGANDAILY Radio Proseminar To Offer WHRV 'Workshop' Training By MARY STEIN The 21.students in Garnet R. Garrison's radio proseminar course will get real "workshop" training before station WHRV 's mikes this semester. The students, many of whom al- - ady have professional radio ex- perience, will plan, write, produce Guitlds To Hold. Parties .Today Campus guilds will raise thy curtain on full semester program- today as two student groups holV' frolics for freshmen and trans- fer students. Lane Hall will be the scene of r party sponsored by Michiga Christian Fellowship at 7:30 p.m, A variety program with games singing and refreshments is plan- ned. Roger Williams Guild will spon. sor the second affair to be helk; it 8:30 p.m. at the Guild House. A valentine theme will be follow- ed with some time being given to the making of valentines for child- ren in University Hospital. Game- and refreshments will round out the program. and act in the shows, which will be heard over the local station be- ginning next weekend. 'Journal of the Air' One of the programs, tentative- ly scheduled for 6:15 p.m. Satur- days, will include peeks behind the ,cenes at campus activities, in- terviews with campus celebrities, commentaries on current news, and even quiz sessions. It's work- ing title is "Journal of the Air." Original dramas written and produced by the students will be eatured on the second program, tentatively to be heard at 10:45 p.m. Sundays. "Long - haired" dramas, fantasies, comedies, docu- mentary plays, and mystery thrill- "rs will all be presented. Hooperatings Later in the semester, the prose- 4ninar students will try their luck before the television screen of W WJ-TV, in Detroit, where they Ian to produce two shows. Other =lans include experimental "Hoop- ,ratings" of Ann Arbor listening habits. All radio classes will again un- dertake "Operation 4006" about mid -semester - the producing and broadcasting within the de- partment of a "telescoped," but complete, day in radio. NLRB Job Registrations Close Today Student registration for jobs as temporary employes of the Na- tional Labor Relations Board in conducting plant elections in Michigan under the Taft-Hartley, Law close today, Miss Betty Lou Bidwell announced yesterday. The NLRB will provide trans- portation to and from the jobs, which pay $10.17 per day. Stu- dents can work for several days, one day at a time if they wish. About 120 students have al- ready signed up, Miss Bidwell said. The list of students will be sent to the NLRB head in Detroit, Frank Bowen who will contact the stu- dents as they are needed. The NLRB expects to conduct some 5,000 elections in plants in lower Michigan to determine whether the workers are in favor of union shops in their factories The elections will be held in most of the large automobile plants around Detroit. Students interested in taking these positions should contact Miss Bidwell by today in .Rm. 220B, Haven Hall or telephone 3-1511, extension 2123. Officer Lists Due Today The Office of Student Affairs announced that all student or- ganizations must file a list of their officers with their office by the end of this week. V. WHITE COLLAR JOB? Profession of Baby Sitting OffersWell Paying Positions By FRAN IVICK to baby-sit, and parents who come A sure-fire way to enjoy eve- to the office looking for sitters nings has been suggested by the are given a list of the prospects. Dean of Women's office.T The profession of baby-sitting, The parents then contact the is directed by the Dean's office, sitter and arrange the wages and offers a well-paying alternative hours with her. At this point, the o any woman student who is Dean's office is out of the picture, bored with homework, men stu- except for giving the girl late per- dents, or life in general. mission, if she calls at the office, before it closes the day of her husy Sitters . after-hour escapade with the That taking care of children is youngest set. a. skilled job is evidenced by the What happens after that pro- ariety of work somesittersido.in vides the sitter with good after- )ean Mary C. Bromage, who sindinner anecdotes. ,harge of recruiting baby-sittersdn at from the women students of the 'Rock-a-Bye Baby' Jniversity, mentioned as the eve- One sitter spent her entire eve- ring employment of many sitters ning keeping a baby from lying on iuch jobs as washing and feeding its back, since a doctor had told ,he baby, reading to the older 1he parents that their offspring hildren, or otherwise amusing -:ould sleep face downward. hem, and finally, the arduous Another sitter got in practice for ask of persuading them to go to the Met, by singing to sleep a bed on time. stubborn four-year-old. The whole Not all sitting jobs require this process took nearly an hour, after much attention. Numerous girls which she retired to her school- ,ho act as sitters have nothing to books. do but stay awake, while the baby- leeps, and the parents enjoy Prof. Frankena Heads ;hemselves elsewhere. 'ay Rate Varies Lane Hall Governors Since the degree of skill needed Prof. William Frankena, of the for sitting jobs varies, so does the philosophy department, has been rate of pay. The Dean's office appointed chairman of the Board leaves this up to the sitter and of Governors of Lane Hall by the parents. Girls sign up as willing University Regents. l t 1 a Deltas Chi Will Hold Initiation Eleven Men To Join Reactivated Chapter Delta Chi, national social fra- ternity, will return to this campus after 15 years absence with initi- ation and installation ceremonies tonight and tomorrow in the Un- ion. Eleven pledges will go through initiation tonight. The men to be initiated are: John Barnes, Hugh Benedict, Charles Brown, David Cunnings, George Dunlevy, Gene Kiddon, Clark Kuncz, Cooper Matthews, Ralph Norman, Arthur Pelky and William Stricker. Installation of the chapter will be formalized at a banquet to- morrow night. John C. Trussell. president of Chicago's Delta Chi Alumni Association, will present the newly initiated men the orig- inal University of Michigan Delta Chi charter, which was first issued in 1892. Delta Chi will begin their rush- ing program Sunday along with the other fraternities, John S. Potts, Delta Chi field secretary said. Regent Roscoe 0. Bonisteel, of Ann Arbor, will deliver the prin- cipal address at the opening ses- sion of the seventh annual State Conference on Higher Education, which gets under way at 9:30 a.m. today at the Union. Regent Bonisteel's speech on "The Role of Higher Education During These Times" will follow the welcome address by Provost Adams and a general outline of the conference by Dean Kenis- ton. Group Discussions The afternoon will be devoted to small group discussions on such topics as the community col- lege, preparation of college teach- ers, and college-community rela- tions. Dean James B. Edmonson. of he School of Educati)n, and Algo D. Henderson, Associate Commis- Aioner for Higher Education for the state of New York, will be the speakers at the evening ses- sion, to be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Rackham amphitheatre. Hannah Wil Preside Final item on the agenda for today is the conference of pres- idents and deans, which will be presided over by John A. Han- nah, president of Michigan State College. The conference, which is being held at the University today and tomorrow, will be attended by representatives of the Michigan College Association, the Depart- ment of Public Instruction, and the advisory committee on teach- er education and certification of the State Board of Education. IMev B r Will Speak At S I A Lun ch Meeting Rev. John H. Burt, of the Epis. copal Studer t Foundation, will di~ (an Committe- r 1tthe SRA Sat r r1 p . tomtr Reservations ray be made fo the lunch until 10 a.m. tomorrow. Hold Those Bfonds HIGHER LEARNING: Regent Bonisteel Will Spe Before Education Conferei .'. -'s -. -..., .r ( 1 - , ^, 1!b- \\ V new soft-silhouetted PASTEL CORDUROYS for - f."3v