TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Special Meals Will Be Served For Passover Reservations For Dinners W Close Today; Services To Be Held At Lane Hall Emphasizing that reservations for Passover meals would close today, David Crohn, '43, student director of Hillel Foundation, yesterday urged all interested students to communi- cate with the Foundation immedi- ately. Meals specially prepared in ac- cordance with special dietary laws of the Passover celebration will be served for the entire week beginning April 1 at Lane Hall. Traditional Sedorim, ceremonial dinners, will be served the first two evenings of the holiday. Students who wish to work for the meals may make special provisions with Rabbi Jehudah M. Cohen, di- rector of Hillel Foundation, or ei- ther of its two student directors, Robert Warner and David Crohn. Seder services will be conducted by Rabbi Cohen, Mr. Samuel Levy, David Crohn and Jack Lewin-Ep- stein, '43, and the Hillel Choral Group led by Donna Weiss, '43, will sing at the services. Campus observance of the ancient celebration of the anniversary of the Hebrews' flight from Egypt will be sponsored by Hillel Foundation with the aid of the Michigan Synagogue Council. Food of the Feast of Passover is governed by a special group of diet- ary laws. Unique among the foods is the unleavened bread, Matzoth, which symbolizes the Israelites' haste in fleeing from their bondage. 12 Plysiologists Will Give Papers At Boston Meeting Papers by 12 members of the De- partment of Physiology of the Medi- cal School will be presented during the sessions of the annual meeting of the Federation of American Soci- eties for Experimental Biology, to be held from March 31 through April 4 in Boston. Members of the physiology faculty who will be represented are Drs. John W. Bean, Charles R. Brassfield, Rob- ert Gesell, Juay Hong, Hayden C. Nicholson, Claude V. Winder and William V. Whitehorn. Students whose papers will be read include David F. Bohr, '42M, Elwood T. Hansen, Grad., J. J. Worzniak, '43M, John F. Johnson, Grad., and Arnold E. Mason, Grad. The Department of Pharmacology will offer papers by Drs. Jacob Sacks, Maurice H. Seevers and Ralph G. Smith, of the faculty, and Charles H. Altshuler, '43M. NROTC Staff Is Increased Lieut. J.G. Archibald H. Atkins, USNR, has been added to the teach- ing staff of the Naval ROTC as in- structor in sophomore navigation, the commandant has announced. Lieutenant Atkins was recently called from civilian life in Seattle, Wash,, to his new post. Daily at 1-3-5-7=9 P.M. NOW PLAYING! Senior Announcements On Sale Orders for commencement an- nouncements for senior engineers will be taken beginning today on the second floor of the West Engineering Building, over the Efigineering Arch. Present plans call for taking orders from 8 a.m. until noon and from 1 to 2 p.m. today, tomorrow and Mon- day, class vice-president Bill Colla- more announced yesterday. Three different types of announcements are available and orders will be taken for any sum over a dollar. Serving on the announcement committee with Collamore are Bill Schomberg, chairman; Bob Collins and Kenneth Nelson. The announcements themselves will be ready for dill SODI t hm ribution I i h i time in may; conamore said. Leggett Given Fellowship Herbert B. Leggett, who was grad- uated from the University in the Class of 1935 and who returned to do graduate work in 1937, is one of six American college students to be selected to study in South America during 1942, under travel fellowships instituted by Pan American Airways System in cooperation with the In- stitute of International Education in New York. T I 1 $A . ~ he T y CLASSIFIED AVERTISIN, i N ' LOST and FOUND LOST-Pair shell rim glasses. Last week. Reward. Call Godfrey, 4017. 283c ONE CHI PHI PIN. Will finder please return to Bill Schust, 1530 Washtenraw? 284c FLORISTS FLOWERS--The way to a girl's heart is to give her flowers. Be sure her flowers are from LODI GREENHOUSE. Tel. 25-8374. 270c WANTED TO BUY MEN'S AND LADIES' CLOTHING, suits, overcoats, typewriters, musi- cal instruments, ladies' furs, Per- sian lamb, mink, watches, dia-, monds. Pay from $5 to $500. Phone Sam, 5300. 229c LAUNDERING MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING-Thesis bind- ing.. Brumfield and Brumfield; 308 S. State. 6c 4I WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL- Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gr'avel Company, phone 7112. 7c TYPING TYPING: L. M. Heywood, 414 May- nard St., phone 5689. MISS ALLEN-Experienced typist. 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal typist, also mimeographing. Notary public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland. TAILORING and SEWING TAILORING; Dressmaking; Altera- ations of all kinds--Reasonable prices-All work guaranteed-Call 2-1919, 821 Packard. 285c ' -- ) j 4 ' y LAUNDRY-2-1044. Sox Careful work at low price. darned. 2c I MICHIGAN Today and Friday Only! Benefit St. Thomas Altar Society and League of Catholic Women I0 REEi SOUND MOVIE of Catholic Solemn Featuring S Father IL Ka .m. l$atlf5 t e tMis t. Rev Msgr F I Sheea, Marrat; Produced Under Superision of Perpetual Novena iHouOr o Our Sorrowful Meter ' , X'y Cf x 4Y ° i& £ \ ; . x # F .q ' i Ic t S - ., tit THEY ALWAYS HAVE THE NEWEST STYLES F RST - - - " ." a. 1oU !W = - \ t l- * v/ w =V V - - f a a " " + , "PLUTO, JR." Adults 50c Children 15c Any time (including tax) l4~7 I. ANN ARBOR GIRLS ARE A :. _';.. ;'..:. LWAYS /1 PARTIAL TO JACOBSON'S SHOES! Here are Spring-minded shoes that make much of young-In-heart styling ... famed shoes with verve . designed for your active young life! See our Pumps.. . Ties. . . Sandals.. . Casuals. . . and Sports styles today. SPORTS and PLAY SHOES 2.99 to 5.95 "We're backing them up" Marching right along with the armed forces of this country are thousands of telephone workers. They work side by side with the Army and Navy. Wherever the need is commti- nications, you are likely to find telephone men and their truicks and materials. Day and night the order is for speed and more speed. They wear no uniforms, these telephone workers, but men in uniform know how much they are nitin, into Ihe Nation's