PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURPAY, ArPRI1~, 1,192 _. - French Department Will Give Ta Belle Aventure' April 29, With rehearsals for the annual French play well under way, Prof. Charles E. Koella of the romance language department yesterday an- nounced the complete cast for "La Belle Aventure," which will be given April, 29 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Andre d'Eguzon, dark horse can- didate for the hand of Helene de Tre- villac, will be played by Earl Russell, '45, while Helene herself will be por- trayed by Jeanne Crump, '42. War- ner Heineman, '43, has been cast as Valentin Le Baroyer, the bridegroom- to-be. An orphan, Helene is a ward of her uncle and aunt, le Comte and la Comtesse d'Eguzon, played respec- tively by Jack H. Vaughn, '43, and Sally C. Levy, '43.In the role of her grandm~other, Madame de Trevillac, is Constance Taber. '44. Other characters include Serignan, played by Henry C. Barringer, '42, the Marquis de Langelier, interpreted by Glen L. Kolb, Grad., and le Doc- teur Pinbrache, given by Hoe Selt- zer, '42. Didier and Gustou are played respectively by James Vizas, '42, and John Baker, '44. Marion Batchelor, '44, has been cast as Jeantine and Jane T. Belden, '45, as Madame de Verceil, with Shir- ley Robin;'45, playing Jeanne de Ver- ceil. Helen Sieg, '44, will be seen as Suzanne Serignan and Barbara Jens- wold, '43, as Madame de Machault. Directeur general of the annual presentation is Professor Koella. Staging will be done by Dr. Francis W. Gravit of the romance language department and costumes by Virginia Appleton; '42. The play selected, a three-act com- edy by de Caillavet, de Flers and Rey, was given on this campus on May 11, 1922, by the Cercle. At this time the French department had a special edi- tion of the drama printed for mem- bers of the cast and for use in French classes in the University. This year the cast have in their hands an en- tirely new edition, printed especially for the occasion. L CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Non-Contract $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 5 words.) $1.00 per 15-word insertionfor 3 or more days. (Increase of $.25 for each additional 5 words.) Contract Rates on Request Our Want-Ad Department will be happy to assist you in composing your ad. Stop at the Michigan Daily Business Of- fice, 420 Maynard Street. LOST and FOUND LOST: Heavy gold chain bracelet with two keys. Vicinity League. Saturday. Generous reward. Phone 6475. WOMAN'S brown Parker pen Mon- day. Filled with black ink. Interest- ing reward. Call Betty Shipman, 2-4514. 302c SHOWS DAILY at 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. LAST TIMES TODAY! U S pirected by Rich T*.' --p produced by Joc Also "Lure of the Surf" "Monsters of the Deep" Hunting Dogs at War World News MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind- ing. Brumfield and~Brumfield, 308 S. State. 6c WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL - Driveway gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company, phone 7112. 7c LAUNDERING LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 2c STUDENTS' BUNDLES WANTED- 6c per lb., rough dry. Shirts extra, 10c each. Handkerchiefs, 1c each, Phone 25-8441. 295c FLORISTS FLOWERS-The way to a girl's heart is to give her flowers. Be sure her flowers are from LODI GREEN- HOUSE. Tel. 25-8374. WANTED TO BUY CASH for used clothing; men and ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S. Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c CLOTHES BOUGHT AND SOLD- Ben the Tailor, 122 East Washing- ton. Phone after 6 o'clock, 5387. 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 FOR RENTI RACKHAM BLDG. (opposite). Small furnished apartment and single rooth-both newly decorated. Busi- ness, professional, or graduate women preferred. Phone 3741. 305c TYPING L. M. HEYWOOD, experienced typist, 414 Maynard Street, 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. FARMS FOR SALE 20 ACRES-4 miles, good road. Nice building spot. Some old material, $12.500Te ms-n-Farlev. 2-2475. Russian Relief eturnsMount After Bazaars Colleetion Boxes, Daee Help Inerease Funds To Proposed Goal Although figures on private con- tributions solicited from students and townspeople on behalf of Russian War Relief are not yet available, re- turns from various RWR-sponsored projects are steadily mounting, ac- cording to Harry Stutz, Grad., chief of the student unit, and Prof. Stan- ley D. Dodge, of the geography de- partment, chairman of the faculty division. The student organization added to its $1,050 already acquired, $90 from the Victory dance held last Saturday, and $125 from collection boxes placed in public schools throughout the city, bringing the total up to $1,270, or $730 shy of the proposed goal. The aim of this group, Stutz says, is to secure enough money to save the lives of "100 wounded Red Army soldiers." The third bazaar of the year pro- moted by the faculty RWR group, also held Saturday, netted $270. The two earlier bazaars brought in $235 and $140 respectively-$645 from this type of project alone. Russian War Relief, Inc., lists as materials destined for the Soviet and purchased with American funds: reference ,books, clothing, operating and surgical implements, drugs, an- aesthesia masks, hospital tents, sac- charin, gauze, wound clips, dressing and instrument sterilizers. The significance of RWR is best revealed in the Tass report of Soviet's Surgeon Smirnov, who states that over 50 per cent of Red Army wound- ed have returned to the front over an eight month period, with two- thirds of this number returning dur- ing the last six months. Maxim Litvinov, Russian ambassa- dor to the United States, has stated that it was the assistance rendered by this country and Britain in sup- plementing Soviet supplies which made it possible for the first time in history to thwart Hitler's plans. Dr. Emerson To Speak Here Eminent Doctor To Talk Tuesday At Rackhaim Dr. Haven Emerson, one of Amer- ica's outstanding doctors, will discuss "Public Health in Wartime" at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Amphi- theatre. Presenting the third in a series of five lectures upon issues which have arisen out of the war, Dr. Emerson will address his remarks to laymen rather than to his colleagues. The lecture is under the auspices of the University War Board. All students, faculty members and townspeople are invited to attend. Dr. Emerson will draw from his experience as a colonel in the Medi- cal Corps of the U. S. Army during the first World War as well as from his practicing and teaching.- At present he is attached to Co- lumbia University although he is now on campus as a visiting professor. Aside from membership in numerous and world-wide medical circles, Dr. Emerson is a director of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation of Kalamazoo. At the close of his lecture Tuesday night, Dr. Emerson will accept and discuss questions which might arise from the audience. The fourth in this series of lectures will be presented on the following Tuesday. The speaker has not yet been named. Miller Will Initiate Radiw Series Today, Col. H. W. Miller, of the engineer- ing drawing department, will initiate a series of broadcasts entitled "Fight- ing Tools," at 6:45 p.m. today on Sta- tion CKLW and Mutual Network sta- S i onls. The Garand rifle will be discussed in the opening broadcast. This gun, replacing the Springfield rifles of the first World War, has gained the ap- proval of Gen. Douglas MacArthur and his staff for its fine performance during the Bataan Peninsula strug- gle. Colonel Miller plans to discuss, one after the other, the various tools now being used by the fighting forces. The first three items will concern army equipment, the next three navy equipment, and then back to army tools again. The two weapons to beI discussed next are the machine gun, and the 75 millimeter field gun. By CHARLES THATCHER A pointed silence on the possibility of a new engine-law feud Thursday marked simultaneous announcements of the lawyers' annual Crease Ball and the senior engineers' annual pic- nic, both to be held May 1, but ten- sion mounted in the Law Quad with the knowledge that engineers would at least be organized the night of their 'dance. Although no word, either official or unofficial, could be obtained from either faction, it is known that the lawyers are still in possession of the ten-foot slide rule they purloined from the recent engineering Slide Rule Ball, and that indignant engi- neers have vowed revenge. Contrary to the belief of some that the theft was merely a publicity stunt, not only the giant rule but miniature slide rule favors for the engineers' dance as well were taken, from the Union Ballroom shortly be- fore the dance. A flippant telegram from the mar- auders to Ball chairman Burr J. French, '42E, clinched the case: "Deepest sympathy in your great loss; if there is anything we can do don't hesitate to call on us. The Lawyers." Since then hastily organized en- gineering vigilantes have determined where the rule was hidden the night of the Ball, French disclosed, but have been unable to locate it further and effect its return to its rightful owners. With the announcement of the picnic for the same night as Crease Ball, it was rumored that a mass game of "Lawyer, Lawyer, Who's Got the Slide Rule" is intended, and that vengeance-seeking engineers might steal the taw Quad in retaliation. "It's the Crease Ball now, but it will be a Grease Ball before we get through," one engineer is reported to have said. strong objection was raised in the engineering college Thursday to a Daily statement to the effect that the slide rule hung at the Crease Ball last \year following successful pilfer- ing by the lawyers. "Actually," French reported, "the lawyers did steal the rule, but heroic action on the part of the engineers rescued the slipstick from the kil- nappers, and it hung where it was supposed to at the Slide Rule Ball." Feud flames were fanned further shortly after the Slide Rule Ball when it was rumored that the barris- ters planned to raffle off the giant rule at their own dance. "Such ac- tion would be practically suicidal," unofficial engineering spokesmen said. The rumor was. promptly ..dis- counted, however, when the engineers decided that no lawyer could possibly think of anything so original. Co-Op Forum To Be Held The Intercooperative Council will sponsor a forum on "Cooperatives in the War Effort" at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Rochdale H1ouse. The speakersin- elude Marvin Lerner, '43, George Wills, '43E, Dave Tyner, '44, and Betty Zunk, '42., A buffet supper is to be served. The public is invited. Rafaelita Hilario, Grad., president of the Philippine Michigan Club and chairman of the International Ball Committee, is shown above with Raymond C. F. Chen, '44, president of the Chinese Students Club. The International Ball will be held Ballroodi. on Friday, April 17, in the Union Reser ve Fuutd Save Stdent Fr or__Starvig (Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles explaining cases for which the Emergency Fund for Foreign Students has been used. The Inter- national Bail which will be held on Friday, April 17, in the Union Ball- room, will donate its proceeds to the fund.) The Emergency Fund for Foreign Students has saved at least one Uni- versity foreign student from starva- tion One morning a call came into the International Center that a foreign student had been admitted to the Health Service infirmary suffering from a severe case of malnutrition. An investigation showed that the student had not heard from his home or received any money from there in months. He had been attempting to take a full scholastic schedule, having made a "B" average the past semester, and had borrowed money for his tuition. Working for his room, he had allotted only 35 cents per day for his ex- penses-food, personal, recreation and everything else included. Even though he spent the entire amount foi food, his diet was still inadequate. Another agency of the Center secured a summer job for him and the only remaining problem was to provide him with enough money for the basic necessities for the rest of the semester. Money was loaned to the student by the emergency fun. His malnu- trition was cleared up, and he took the summer job. The following se- mester he was the recipient of a sub- stantial fellowship which eased his financial situation. So far he has been unable to secure enough money to repay the Emergency Fund. Arbor Day Speech Will Be Broadcast By P~rof. S. Alleni Advocating increased high school observance of Arbor Day which a Michigan graduate, J. Sterling Mor- ton, '54, first set aside, Prof. Shirley W. Allen of the School of Forestry and Conservation will speak at 9: 15 a.m. today over WJR on "Arbor Day -A Symbol of the Positive Nature of the Conservation Movement." The purpose of Professor Allen's speech will be to stimulate high school programs which emphasize the significance of this national holi- day in relation to forestry's part in national defense. He will speak on the University program. In discussing his speechtopic, Pro- lessor Allen pointed out that it was just a lifetime ago (70 years) when Morton, who later became Secretary of Agriculture, founded Arbor Day while serving as a member of tie Nebraska State Board of Agricu ture. Hodges Will Broadcast On Cancer control Foday Dr. F. J. Hodges, head of the roent- genology department of the Univer- sity Hospital, will speak on "War News from the Cancer Front" at 1:30 p.m. today over WJR. Dr. Hodges' talk is 0 parr of te Gargoyle's April Issue To ExplainSports Form To explain the intricacies of good form which produce admir- able athletic performance-on the cinder paths, the tennis courts, the diamond and the golf links- is the aim of Garg's April issue. The Garg staff has prepared a careful study of form in track, tennis, baseball and golf. This newest issue of the campus maga- zine is to appear Thursday. Under the scrutiny of the cam- era's eye, Michigan's stars in the four sports have performed for the enlightenment of Garg's read- ers. With spring trying hard to get a foothold on the campus, this harbinger of spring sports will be most timely. Flag Blessing At Chapel Capt. R. E. Cassidy and Chief .Jolly of the U.S. Navy will direct the flag blessing and presentation ceremony immediately following 10 o'clock mass Sunday at St. Mary's Chapel. 1 a I- MICHIGAN TODAY! CLARENCE BUDINGTON ICILAND'S Mighty Cavalcade of Adventure Inter naional!Ball Officials FlAgine-Law Feuding Flames Fanned As Tension Mounts COMPANION HIT: "ALL-AM ERICAN COED" Frances Langford Johnny Downs Sunday... "BALL OF FIRE" weimmi I. j . s " . . J . / t , 4, .,,.... , ., 4 /,rte w~ """"+ _ ~ ' ~ , , 1\ R S , 4 Annoanctnq;jp Coning Sunday! "SHANGHAI GESTURE" BEER 1S A TRADITION! 1 ca aa~r -1. a a y . u- - : 111 I Things To Look At. The sports enthusiast will go for the magic eye sequence action photos of TRACK (starring BOB UFER), also GOLF, TENNIS, and BASEBALL. SIX beautiful, glamorous, all-around COEDS who'd brighten anyone's exist- ence, not only adorn the APRIL ISSUE, but adore it! (Honest, you'll love it too) . .. Contrasts of the UNION and LEAGUE, and pictures of B.D.M.O.C. JIM KEHOE add to our other photo features, Remember the student "lounge lizard"? He's back again in an article by a famous physical culture man. A prize short story "A Doctor's Dilemma," by Harry Anderson. Letters from former students now in the Army, and numerous other features make this month's Gargoyle the best yet. Thngs o Do.. H ERE at the University of Michigan, it has long been a tradition to partake in a glass of BEER. Everyone enjoys the smoothmess, the mellowness and the goodness of extra-fine BEER. A tall glass of BEER, with its rich body and flavor will hit the spot on these warm spring evenings. Se Your Campus Salesman, Thursday, April 16. C I i I