THE MICHIGAN D AILY TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1941 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) elected, and committees for the com- ing Annual Banquet will be selected. Five subscriptions to the Aeronauti- cal Review will be raffled among members. - Refreshments will be served. Sigma Rho Tau will meet tonight at 7:30 in the Union. Election of officers for the coming school year. Arrangements will be made pertain- ing to the annual Tung-Oil Banquet. All members are requested to be present. The Assembly Board will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in th Council Room of the League. Tan Beta Pi dinner meeting with a speaker in oom 319 of the Union at 6:00 p.m. today. will be folk-dancing, games, and re- ' freshments. Varsity Glee Club meets tonight at 8:00 in the Glee Club room of the Union for elections of officers and serenade. Final music refunds willS be made; all music must be returned.! Reservations must be made tonight for the banquet which will be helda Wednesday at 6:15 p.m. All mem-I bers unabic to attend tonight's meet-I ing who wish to come to the banquet must call Jim Berger, 8590, by 7:00 this evening. Senior Ball Committee meeting to-r night at 8:00 in the Union. Grl uaf e Students and others in- terested are invited to listen to the, regular Tuesday evening program of recorded music in the Men's Lounge of the Rackham ' Building at 8:00 o'clock. The program follows: Bach, German Club will meet this eve- Violin Concerto in D Minor; Debus- niing at 8:00 in the W.A.B. Election sey, Pagodes, L'Ile Joyeuse, and the ofi officers will be held and there First Rhapsody for Clarinet; Brahms,1 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISIN G Symphony No. 2; and Tschaikovsky, Romeo and Juliet Overture. Interviewing for Junior Girls' Play Central Committee will be this week in the Undergraduate Offices of the League, today through Friday, 3:00- 5:00 p.m. Applicants are requested to bring their eligibility cards to in- terview. JGP Central Committee luncheon meeting at noon today in the Russian Tea Room of the League. The Michigan ' Anti-War Commit- tee will meet today at 4:30 p.m. in Room 220 at the Michigan Union to plan for the final activity of this year and to elect officers for next year. All members are urged to at- tend and others interested are cor- dially invited. Christian Science Organization will meet tonight at 8:15 in the chapel of the Michigan League. Michigan Dames: The annual Michigan Dames banquet will be held at the Michigan League tonight at 6:30. All Michigan Dames are urged to obtain reservations as soon as pos- sible. Harris Hall: Tea will be served to- day, 4:00-5:30 p.m. All Episcopal students and their friends are cordial- ly invited. Coming Events Mathematics Club will meet Wed- nesday evening, May 14, at 8 o'clock in the Rackham Amphitheatir, Pro- fessor Neugebauer will speak on "Mathematical Methods in Babylon- ian Astronomy." All Male Students of Sophomore, Junior and Senior Classes and Grad- uate Students interested in opportun- ities offered by the Navy to enable them to complete their college work or to perform their National Military service in the Naval Establishment mad hear an address by Captain W. F. Amesden, U.S. Navy, Director of Naval Reserves, Ninth Naval Dis- trict delivered at 4:00 p.m. Wednes- day, May 14, in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. A. Board of Naval Officers to de- termine physical -fitness and to re- ceive applications will convene at Headquarters of the Naval ROTC, North Hall on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, May 15, 16 and 17. "Trade Unions and Communism, a Communist Speaks for Himself" will be the subject of a talk by Fred Fine, Michigan Secretary of the Young Communist League, at 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday, May 14, in the Michigan Union. Sponsored by Karl Marx Society. All Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of the Holy Com- munion in the Bishop Williams Memorial Chapel Wednesday, at 7:3G a.m. ASSOCIATED P DCT U RE NEWS V N PRESS LAUNDERING LAUNDRY -- 2-1044. Sox darned Careful work at low price. 3c STUDENT LAUNDRY-Special stu- dent rates. Moe Laundry, 226 South First St., Phone 3916. 10c WANTED TO BUY -4 CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S Main St. Phone 2-2736. 31c WANTED - ANY OLD OR NEW CLOTHING, PAY FROM $5.00 to $500 FOR SUITS, OVERCOATS. TYPEWRITERS, FURS - PER- SIANS, MINKS. PHONE ANN AR- BOR 6304 for. APPOINTMENTS. SAM. FOR RENT ROOMS to rent for fall and sum- mer. Approved house. Call 8726. 3711 TAILORING & PRESSING--12 STOCKWELL residents - Skilled al- terations promptly done. Just across the street. Phone 2-2$78. A. Graves. 28c MISCELLANEOUS BEN THE TAILOR pays the best price for used clothes. 122 E. Washington. 1, EXPERT HOSIERY and garment re- pair. Reasonable rates. Weave-Bac Shop--Upstairs in Nickels Arcade. PAINTING, Decorating, Paper Hang- er. Blending and stippling. Work samples shown. Phone 2-2943. 363 THESIS BINDING-Mimeographing. Brumfield & Brumfield, 308 S. State. 19C WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company,. phone 7112. 5c WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run listings of your vacant houses in The Daily. Dial 23-24-1 for spe- ial rates. 353 } D E B UT-Philadelphia Girls' Rowing club members prepare for first workout on Schuylkill river, L. to r.--Stella Sokolowska, Helen Muldowney, Lynn Forkan, Marge Cantwell. r STA R-Dorothy Conmingore, film star, is more concerned about her infant, whom she's feeding, than her own career. 1 SUMMER SESSION STUDENTS- Large, comfortable rooms, two. blocks from campus. reasonable. I ANTIQUE EXHIBIT AND SALE: Call 4850 or inquire 806 Hill., I Sponsored by Ann Arbor Antique Dialers Assoc., Masonic Temple, ATTRACTIVELY FURNISHED two- 327 S. Fourth, May 14, 15, 16; 10 room apartment-3-way ventila- a.m.-10 p.m. Admission 25c. 375 tion-Private bath-shower. Re- - frigeration. One adult. 602 Mon-W roe. 365 RETIRED COLLEGE PROFESSOR'SI year-round country home; Barry Ccunty, Michigan; furnished and completely equipped; available to right party for monthly rental or ^ short- or long-time lease. 372 TRANSPORTATION H. B. GODFREY MOVING "- STORAGE - PACKING Local and Long Distance Moving. 419 N. Fourth Ave. Phone 6297 29c SITUATIONS WANTED -2 SITUATION WANTED-Experienced couple for fraternity cook and por- ter. First class local reference. Phone 6764. 350 EXPLRIENCED COOK with good r£fernces would like position in raternity for fall Write Box No, 1, Mhihgan Daily.WARIN( LOS1T and FOUND I composer of over 5 _-- - -college hit songs- DUN ILL CIGARETTE LIGHTER; "Pleasure Timt" .ilver; of entimental value. Rc- ward off= red. Contact 1032 Vaughn Phone 2-4342. 381 FOR MICHIGAN - --- MON., TUES., WED., WILL THE LADY who took the blackT velvet evening wrap by mistake THURS., FRI. a fter Military Ball please return it 1 0 P.M. (E.S.T.) to the Union and receive her own wrap.NA. C. Stationi wrap. T TYPING--Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416.,1 1 c VIOLA STEIN--Experienced legal:.' r typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. FOR SALE I MY HOME in Ann Arbor Hills. An S."s= acre of lawn. A. R. Morris; 2815 Washtenaw Road. 380 THOROUGHBRED English Setter puppies, registered. Good hunting strain. 3005 Plymouth Road. Ph. 5132. 366 Persontaity Styles are dstinctively for University men who value their appearance and social standing. Thousands H 0 P E S-With Bonneville and TVA electric power, R. S. Reynolds (above) hopes to pro- duce 100,000 pounds of aluminum annually by July, 1942. He's first to try production in competition with Aluminum Co. of America. C 0 R R 1 G A N' R I D E S A G A I N-Frank if. Powers, Jr., up on Rhadamanthus and leading the national bunt cup race up to this point at the 14th jump in Berwyn, Pa., finds himself looking the other way and on the way down. His mount stumbled, tossing Powers. I SUGGEST I ON-A "sug- gestion box" government is being tried by President Manuel Prado of Peru (above). People make proposals, agency studies their vra cticability 1 0 4 Y E A R S I N I N F A N T R Y-Boasting aggregate service of 104 years, these sergeants dis- play an impressive array of service stripes. They're in the 18th infantry regiment, First division, based at Camp Devens, Mass., and are (left to right) Nathan Rosenstein, 28 years; Wade Hitchcock. 25; William Lipskie, 28, and Homer S. Smith, 23. smam m-ammammmmammasamaam MMa::3. W