THE MIChIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JUNE 3, USO Dinner To Open Campaign More than four hundred campaign instructions. Prof. Brandt will repre- rorkers and solicitors for the local sent President Ruthven at the dinner, rnited Service Organizations cam- which is subscribed by the committee aign - will attend an instructional for the Ann Arbor campaign. inner and meeting at 6:30 p.m. today Contribution boxes will be placed in n the Union, officially opening the the Union, the League and the general rive. library tomorrow and Thursday, and Miss Eleanor Hutzel, chief of the heads of dormitories, sororities and oman's staff of the Detroit Police fraternities will be contacted by mail )epartment, will discuss the problems for the student body's part in the rhich exist around training camps, campaign, Mrs. Alvin Zander, of the nd John Finlayson, chairman of the Student Religious Association, an- acal drive, will give the workers their nounced yesterday. CLASSIFIED ADVErLTISING TYPING FOR SALE IOLA STEIN-Experienced legal FOR SALE-Model "A" Ford, suit- typist, also mimeographing. Notary able for students driving home- public. Phone 6327, 706 Oakland. very reasonable. 322 John Street. YPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, UNDERWOOD portable typewriter-- 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or $20. Good condition. W. W. 2-1416. / 14c Thomas, 1207 Willard St., Phone ___ LAUNDERING._ _:N-,45.41 LAUNDRINGFOR RENT AUNDRY -2-1044. Sox darned ---_ -----FOR ---NT---- Careful work at 19w price. 3c ONE SINGLE ROOM-Two-room suite with kitchen privileges. 715 TUDElNT LAUNDRY-Special stu- Arbor; Phone 2-3643. 416 dent rates. .Moe Laundry, 226 - _-_- South First St., Phone 3916. 10c VERY PLEASANT ROOMS for girl students-summer term. Opposite LOST and FOUND Rackham Building. 917 E. Huron. __ __--_- __ Phone 8671. OST-Lady's wrist watch. White hon____-.1_.r. gold, round, black band. Call 6746. SUMMER SESSION STUDENTS- Liberal reward. 425 Large, comfortable rooms, two ,pketbook blocks from campus, reasonable. about ' Wh' zeard CallSue Call 4850 or inquire 806 Hill. 367 Biethan, 3431, or Univ. 766. 426 ROOMS-light and airy for the sum- in erfo MEN. Price fro $2.00- OST-Pair of child's eyeglasses in m00. ot water at all times. Firs Arboretum. Please notify Levy, house off State. 615 Monroe St. 1002 Forest, Phone 4620. Reward. 423 419 4 ROOMS-Double: Summer School WANTED TO BUY students pleasant furnishings; excellent location; continuous hot OD USED CAR for about $50. water. $2.00. Phone 2-3776, 417 E. Phone Dan Huyett, 2-4509, eve- Liberty. 409 nings. 420 _______420_ SUITE with private bath and shower. ASH .for used clothing; men and Double room with adjoining lava- ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. tory. Available now. Also first Main St. Phone 2-2736. 31c floor housekeeping apartment for summer school or fall. Ph. 8544- ' ANTED - ANY OLD OR NEW 422 E. Washington. 427 CLOTHING, PAY FROM $5.00 to WANTED TO RENT $500 FOR SUITS, OVERCOATS. _ _WATEDTRENT TYPE WRITERS, FURS - PER- GRADUATE STUDENT in Chemical SIANS, MINKS. PHONE ANN AR Engineering desires room next fall BOR 6304 for APPOINTMENTS. t in private home of a family that SAM- appreciates music. Call 2-43214 TRANSPORTATION__-418 -______------ --MARRIED GRAD STUDENT wants 'ANTED-Male passenger to help to rent cool, furnished, summer drive to Utah or intermediate apartment near campus after June points. Call Broadbent. N. Ix.7Write Box 10, Michigan Daily. 2119. 421 ASSENGER WANTED to share ex- MISCELLANEOUS penses to California. Leaving June WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- 10. Call Brooks Crabtree, Law Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Club. 424 Killins Gravel Company, phone 'ALIFORNIA-Leaving June 23; re- 1112. 5c turn August 1st, can accommodate EXPERT HOSIERY and garment re- 3. University 1-6803 or 15847 pair. Reasonable rates. Weave-Bac Woodingham Drive, Detroit. 422 Shop-Upstairs in Nickels Arcade H. B. GODFREY rHESIS BTNDING-Mimeographing. MOVING - STORAGE -PACKING Brumfield & Brumfield, 308 S. ocal and Long Distance Moving. State. , 19c 10 N. Fourth Ave. Phone 6297-, 29c BEN THE TAILOR pays the best __ .__ _ __ _ ___ price for used clothes. 122 E. HEAD'S HOUSEHOLD PACKING Washington. Ph. 5387 after 6 p.m. Gloria Stuart ToReplace lliadge Evans In Drama ~Babe1' Banquet Will Be Held In West Quad Keniston And Nordencyer Will T'Ialk Tomorrow At Language Fete Capping the year's activities of the West Quad's foreign language tables, a "Tower of Babel" banquet will be held at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow in the West Quadrangle in honor of the vol- untary language counselors. The men to be honored are: Frank Ryder, Grad., Robert Hacker, Grad., and Warner Heinemann, '44, German; Bertram Smith, Grad., French; Ernest McCrus, '44, Henry Sanchez, '44E, and Alberto Ramirez-Angel, '44E, Spanish; Peter Ostafin, Grad., Polish. A take-off on a Spanish Serenade will be 'one of the featured events of the evening. It will be rendered by Peter Farago, '42. Toastmaster will be Bertram Smith, Grad., whose duty will include introducing the speakers, Prof. Hayward Keniston of the Ro- n< nce Lang uaeges department, Prof. Henry W. Nordmeyer of the German department and Prof. Arthur Van Duren of the German department. Proper foreign atmosphere will be supplied by the gourds which will decorate the Spanish table, the beer steins which will be seen on the Ger- man table and the imported wine bottles on the French table which will bring back memories of Paris to the guests. Head waiters will also wear native Tyrolean, Spanish and French costumes as they escor t the guests to th~ir tables. jad. in 'To Discuss NavalFlying Here Ensign Joseph I. Jadin, U. S. Naval Reserve, will discuss naval aviation in a talk at 4:15 p.m. today at North Hall, NROTC headquarters. Ensign Jadin, a graduate of Pensa- cola, will explain the advantages of Navy flight training through which one may attain a commission in the Naval Reserve as a Naval Aviator, Only two years of college are re- quired for entrance to this program. Ensign Jadin will be at the Naval ROTC headquarters from 9:00 to 11:00 a.m. today and tomorrow and in the lobby of the Union from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. to talk to those interested in the program. Draft Advice Will Continue In Summer By hOMER SWANDER (Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of articles discussing various phases of the Selective Service Act. 'They are written in collaboration with Prof. Louis A. Hopkins. Today we will answer two of the letters we received recently in re- sponse to our invitation to the stu- dent body to send us any questions which were bothering them in re- gard to the Selective Service Act. The first, written by Philip Man- del, '42E, posed the following ques- tion: "I have become 21 since the last registration period and as I have to register in July, I may be called to service before school begins next September. "Our contact with the University is rather slight during the summer. Yet it seems to me that they should play much the same part in helping to se- cure deferment for those of us in the next registration group as they have for those in the last group. Does the University plan to do this, and if so; what are the mechanics of the ar- rangement when her students are spread all over the country?" Answer: Yes, the University will continue to aid its students through the summer months just as it has ever since the enactment of the draft law. Those person s wishing de-' ferment need only write the dean of their particular school, and that office will do everything in its power in the way of help and advice. The procedure advised by Profes- sor Hopkins is that the student send identical letters to the Dean's office and to the local draft board. This will facilitate identification by the board when tie student's record, etc., arrives from the University. * * * The second letter asks, "Does the new registration date apply to those who just become 21 on July 1?" " Answer: I hate to tell you this, but it certainly does. You are as near the army as if you had become 21, months ago. Of course, you may be able to obtain defernent on some other grounds - that is up to you and your local draft board. AIY OFFICIAL BULLETINJ (Continued from Page 5) ens of Spain, Glazounow, Violin Con- certo in A Minor. Demolays: There will be a meeting in Room 304 of the Union at 4:15 p.m. today of all members, active or majority, of the Order of DeMolay. Christian Science Organization will meet tonight at 8:15 in the chapel of the Michigan League. Harris Hall: Tea Will be served to- day, 4:00-5:3Q p.m. All Episcopal Students and their friends are cord- ially invited. American Student Defense League will meet .today at the Michigan Union, Room 305, at 4:30 p.m. All members are expected to attend. The meeting is part of the all-state con- ference of Student Defenders of Democracy. American Student Defense League dinner will be held today at the Michigan Union, Room 116, at 6:30 p.m. Reservations can be made with Gerald Davidson, 4620. Ralph Ingersoll will lead the mass meeting to be held at Rackham Aud- itorium tonight at 8:15. 'topic will be "Whose War Is It?" The meeting is open to the public. Faculty, students and townspeople are welcome. The spnsoring committee is the American Student Defense League. Coming Events A Bbard of Medical Examiners will convene at Headquarters Naval ROTC, North Hall, at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, June 4, for the examina- tion of such candidates as may desire to appear before it. All those interested in living in one of the men's cooperative houses next semester can be interviewed Wednes- day evening at 7:30 p.m. in Roomn 304 of the Union. This will be the last regular interviewing session this semester. JGP script synopsis due July 1. Please 'turn in all synopses to the Undergraduate Office of the League. All Episcopal Students: There will be a celebration of the Holy Coi- munion in the Bishop Williams Me- morial Chapel, Harris Hall; on Wed- nesday at 7:30 a.m. GLORIA STUART Announcement of the illness of Madge Evans was followed yesterday by a statement that Gloria Stuart, Hollywood film star, will replace her as the leading lady of "Man and Superman," fourth play of the 1941 Dramatic Season. Miss Evans, who was scheduled to appear in the role of the young Eng- lish heiress, was suddenly taken ill with a streptococcus infection which will prevent her filling her engage- ment. After a two yearsi absence from the screen which she has spent travel- ling with her writer-husband, Arth- ur Sheekman, the blonde star of such films as 'The Prisonei of Shark Is-I land" and "Roman Scandals" will end I her tour with her arrival in Ann Ar- bor to begin rehearsals today. Miss Stuart, who declares that Shaw is her favorite playwright and his "Man and Superman" her favorite play, has been in the movies since the age of eight. While attending the Uni- I AnnArbo versity of California at Berkeley she wrote, directed and starred in campus plays, although she majored in joairn- alism. Called "the blonde's answer to IIegy LaMarr," by Walter Winchell, her fair coloring has helped make her famous in the fifty-odd pictures to her credit. Shirley Temple, Warner Baxter and Eddie Cantor are three of the stars with whom she has ap- peared. Although her plans are still some- what indefinite, Miss Stuart may ap- pear this fall in her husband's play "Mr. Big," which George S. Kaufman will direct. The fifth play of the current sea- son which will run during Commence- ment Week at tlie Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre is Clifford Odet's "Golden Boy,'" the tale of a young musician. Luther Adler, celebrated for his work with the Guild Theatre in New York and with the Jewish Theater, will play opposite his wife, Sylvia Sidney, star of stage and screen. mammmemamme i Iere is In Today's Summary News Ann Arbor Citizens' Flower Show for 1941 will be held tomorrow in the Law quadrangle, and entries can be made without charge, it was an- nounced. Among the judges of the show is Professor Harlow 0. Whittemore, di- rector of Nichols Arboretum. The ex- hibit will be open all day, and is free to the public. Seven members of Co. K, local Na- tional Guard unit, have received pro- motions at Camp Livingston, La., where they are training. Men promoted to sergeants 'arc Er- vin W. Kitchenmaster, Ray L. White, Leslie M. Benn, Jack A. Wright and Leo A. Scholl, Joseph F. Schmitz and John A. I Pitch were promoted to corporals. Thank You! Your business h as beeh appreciated! WISE Real listings of The Daily. cial rates. Estate Dealers: Run your vacant houses in Dial 23-24-1 for spe- 353 SELL ALL YOUR I To Graduates- Good BYE and GOOD LUCK! To Juniors, Sophomores and Freshmen- BOOKS We hope to FARM MADE Miller's D See next ICE year T CREAM r l )airv Farm Stores . . .