THE MICHIGAN DAILY __N iAT, A~pHf Room 318-320: Pre-Medic Students gmoker Room 323' Tau Upiioi1 Rho, 8'00. OOm 202 Siidenr i Wnate ieet-' ii, 4 00 (Gratiate Counhi meeting tonight at. 7:30 in the Women's Lounge of the Rackham Building. Attendance of all elected members is necessary. The Slavic Club will meet at 8:15 tonight at the International Center. Michigan Anti-War Committee will meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the. Union. All members urged to be present. All women students invited to a demonstration of table settings with lecture by Mrs. J. A. Meeks of De- troit, under the auspices of the Flow- er Arrangement Group of the Ann Arbor Garden Club, at 2:30 p.m. to- day in the League Ballroom. New America: Mr. Herbert Mc- Creedy, District Director of New America, will speak on, "What Is Happening to Education in Ameri- ca?" tonight at 8:00 in the Michigan Union. Everyone invited. Graduate students, and other stu- dents interested, are invited to listen to a concert of recorded music to- day at 4:15 p.m., in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham Building. Open Badminton: The badminton courts in Barbour Gymnasium will in English on "The Industrial Revolu- be open for play on Wednesday eve- tion Comes to Latin America" on nings from 7:30 to 9 00 until further Thursday. Apiil 18. Room 102 RIL, notice. it 4:15 pN . All( idents of Span- __- - iIU ndtlief:. imtiested aie invfted Midhgaii Dames; Biidg~e Club Will meet tonight at, Michigan League I 8:00. Coming Events The Pre-Medical Society will meet Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in the East Amphitheatre of the West Medical Building to hear speakers from both Galens and the Victor Vaughn House describe their impressions of Medical School. Final vote on the constitu- tion will be held. Flying Club meeting is postponed until Thursday, April 18, because of conflict with Institute of Aeronauti- cal Sciences Meeting. Reports will be made on the Sixth National Intercollegiate Flying Con- ference recently held in Washington, and arrangements will be made for reduced rates on flying time for mem- bers of the club. Plans will be made for a practise flying meet to be held this coming Sunday. All members are urged to be present. Polish Engineers Society will meet Thursday, April 18, in the Michigan Union at 7:30 p.m. Refreshments. La Sociedad Hispanica will sponsor a lecture by Professor James of the Geography Department who will talk 6 attndl.i 11u; dIn 1rk at hi a.) st. In teniiationlal Srkring Fetlval at hw Int raniura1l Building. Friday, April 26, 7:30 to 12:00 p.m. The In- ternational Center is offering an eve- ning of co-recreational sport, sport demonstration, and tournament fin- als with an hour floor show of pictur- esque folk dancing at the Intramural Building. Free tickets starting April 15 at the office of the International Center, 603 E. Madison Street (South Wing, Michigan 'Union). Graduate Tea: Dr. F. G. Lankford, Assistant Professor of the Teaching of Science and Mathematics, Uni- versity of Virginia, will speak on "Public Education in the South" at the second graduate tea on Thurs- day, April 18, 4 to 6 p.m. in the West Conference Room of the Rackham Building. All graduate students and faculty are invited. The Cercle Francais will present "Les Jours Heureux" by Claude-An- dre Puget at the Lydia Mendelssohn f Theatre, Friday, May 3. Mr. Elmore Jackson, National Di- rector of the Quaker Work Camps, will show movies of the Work Camps and discuss their programs for this summer at Lane Hall, 7:30, Thursday evening. Studentsinterested in Work Camps may have interviews with Mr. Jackson at Lane Hall any time Thurs- dlay. Outdoor Sports Club: Reorgapiza- tion meeting for spring activities on Saturday, April 20, at 2:30 p m. in! the Womens AthletiW Building All women sudents are invite to pa licipate Spisg plans include h-s ing, bAcycling, anoeing. possibly overnigt trips, ad Out-lodO COOk eng. Small fee for refres lents at the meeting on Saturday-. Tennis Tournaments: Women's singles and doubles, and mixed doubles tennis tournaments start Monday, April 22. Those interested sign up on bulletin board at the Wo- men's Athletic Building, or call Alice Braunlich-2-3225 by Saturday. Only one member of a mixed doubles team must be pn campus. The Congregational Student Fel- lowship will have a canoe trip Satur- day, April 20. Meet at Pilgrim Hall at 3:45 Small charge for the canoe rip and wienienI roast, ICaIl 2-1679 for reservations. I terior Decoration Section; "'Th Selction and Combination of Wall- paper, Paints and Draperies" will be explained at the next meeting of the Interior Decoration section of the Faculty Women's Club to be held at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the Michigan League. I Tv MOTYur/Eioraph TOMOTHER HANDY SERVICE DIRECTORY ...... . = :, 11 Handy Service Advertising Rates Cash Rates 12c per reading line for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Charge Rates 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 13e per reading line for three or more insertions. Five average words to a reading line. Mininmu of three lines per inser- tion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST. Our Want-Advisor will he delighted to assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-24-1 or stop at the Michigan Daily Business Office, 420 Maynard Street. WANTED-TO BUY-4 ANY OLD CLOTHING-Pay $5.00 to $500. Suits, Overcoats, furs, minks, Persian lambs, diamonds, type- writers and cash for old gold. Phone Sam-6304. Sunday ap- pointments preferred." 359 HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid for your discarded wearing apparel. Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 BEN THE TAILOR-More money for your clothes. Open evenings. 122 E. Washington. 329 TRANSPORTATION -21 WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - DriveWay gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 13 WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list- ings of your vacant houses in The Daily for summer visiting profes- sors. Dial 23-24-1 for special rates. TYPING--18 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 and his ORCHESTRA 22nd Annua 'MILITARY V% -WI LAUNDERING -9 LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work. at low prices. 16 WANTED-TO RENT-6 JRGENTLY DESIRE interview for quiet room between Monroe, Oak- land and Forest avenues. Prefer two or less other roomers. Box 6, Michigan Daily. 361 TYPEWRITING and Mimeographing Promptly and neatly done by experixenced operators in our own place of b 1~ at. modeaest 0. D. MORRILL The Typewriter and Stationery Store 314 S. State St. (opp. Kresge's) fihe 9dea LtIr A -, _, _ rw 322 South Stc ate , Dial 5031 :." I r A: 0 Moher'3 How WOlfW t voltk ,2)a y answer these quetos Who is the most advertised I doctor in the U. S.? Who made Baseball the "National Game ? With strictly phony innocence, who foxed a-U. S. President into tossing put the first ball of the season, thereby establish- ing."the great American'game"? Who has the greatest repu- tation in baseball for collecting eccentric players and actually thinks he can lick the Yanks? Read The Old Fox Turns Mag- nate, by Bob Considine and Shirley Povich. +XEA And how, banned from the air, does he still sell his attractively priced "operations" over XERA "the world's most powerful broadcasting station"? Here's the story of the goat-gland medico the authorities are finally after, and how he has made a fabu- lous fortune by methods the FCC and the American Medical Association would give theircollectiverightarmtostop. ReadCoun- try Doctor Goes to Town, by J. C. Furnas. . 10, How would you get even with a sarcastic boss? Say you were on a newspaper where three city editors and two managing editors had quit becauselthey couldn't stand the sarcastic old goat who owned the paper... Could you get even -in print? Read Merrily We Go to Press, by Phil R. Sheridan. What are Europe's newest stunts in war propaganda? Why did German loudspeakers blast out the Marseillaise to greet the French President when he visited the front? Why did the British .bomb the Nazis with tiny bags of coffee? Whose trick is it to send forged or anonymous letters to sol- diers, giving them false news about their families? Edmond Taylor, in this week's Post, tells you how warring nations use lies ., . and truth!... to fool some of the people all the time. Turn to Propaganda Changes Poisons--page 27. If you found a diamond ring and knew if you gave it back you'd be accused of stealing it, You. have almost learned to fly and... n in the air you're a wizard - chandelles are a cinch - with an instructor along. But the way you make landings is sheer suicide. Should they let you try a solo flight? Or make you quit? A story of a flying cadet's last chance.Ground- Shy, by Sparks Hausman. Suppose you were slowly starving to death in a lonely ramshackle store, and your only friend was a kid who worshiped you because he thought you really had killed Indians-would you disillusion the boy or invent more stories? Turn to page 9 of your Post for the curious story of a man with too many mexpories. Mister Ears, by Eddy Orcutt. How far Can birds travel without stopping to. eat or sleep How can birds navigate with mathematical accuracy? What bird commutes each year 11,000 miles from North to South Pole? And which one hops the Atlantic twice a year? Read odd facts about bird flightsbyRaymond S. Deck, Pageant in the Sky. k I' I