PAGE~ 21XTHE MICHIGAN DAILY Navy Deadline For Class V=7 Set For May 1. Juniors, Seniors, Graduate Students Will Be Taken In Unlimited Numbers Voluntary enlistments for college men in the Navy's V-7 unit will close after May 1, the Bureau of Naviga- tion has notified the Dean of Stu- dents' Office by letter received yes- terday. Class V-7 provides for enlistments of college juniors, seniors and grad- uate students under 28 years of age for entrance t6 Officers Training School. Accepted men are permitted to remain in the University until the completion of their academic career, but are required to elect and pass cer- tain courses in mathematics. - Unlimited enlistments, the letter said, will be accepted until May 1, and after that date entrance to the Officers Training School can be ob- tained only through enlistment in Class V-i, a new recruiting plan which will be instituted here with the opening of the summer term on June 15. V-1 is open to college fresh- men. and sophomores between the ages of 17 and 19. Complete litera- ture on this plan may be obtained at the University War Board office, Room 1009, Angell Hall. Immediate V-7Aenlistment centers are located, for Ann, Arbor men, in Detroit at the Naval Armory and the Federal Building. The Naval Aviation Cadet Selection Board has notified the University that the board has moved to new quarters at the ninth floor of the Book Building, 1249 Washington Blvd., Detroit. Varsity Glee Club Will Give Concert All the campus will have an oppor- tunity to hear the spring concert of the Men's Varsity Glee Club and also to participate in group singing when this group presents their annual pro- gram at 8:15 p.m. next Thursday, April 23, in Hill Auditorium. The Glee Club, under the direction of Prof. David Mattern, will present a program which will be divided into two parts. In the first section purely concert numbers will be sung, but in the second part, the audience will have an opportunity to sing all the well-known songs right along with the Glee Club. Interspersed in the first section of the program will be novelty arrangements of famous songs. Hudson Receies Room, Board Sch~oarship Hiermian Hu-dson, '44, nearblhind Negro student who was almost forced to leave school as a result of physical and financial handi- caps, has accepted a room and board scholarship which was of- fered to him by the Abe Lincoln Cooperative House, home of the Bomber Scholarship. Hudson, who possesses out- standing public speakingcability, recently captured first place hon- ors in the district contest of the National Extempore-Discussion, which was recently held here. A member of Phi Eta Sigma, Hudson uses Braille wherever pos- sible and is unable to read print. Because of this handicap he has developed an amazing memory in order to retain the substance of his studies without constant ref- erence to notes. Aid To Foreign Students Given By? Relief Fund (Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a. series of articles on cases benefited by the Emergency Fund for Foreign Stu- dents.) Aid from the Emergency Fund for Foreign Students extends even to University students who are in poor health. One student, who was sent here on a fellowship, discovered at the time of his health examination that he had tuberculosis. He had no other source for money, and the war had spread to his homeland, discontinu- ing transportation and freezing his funds there. The organization providing the fellowship agreed to finance his hos- pitalization in a well-known Eastern sanitarium and to permit him to take up his education after recuperation on an extended fellowship. The amount of the fellowship was enough to assure the hospitalization but not transportation to the sanitarium. Al- though not yet officially enrolled in the University, the student was given money for his transportation by the Emergency Fund for Foreign Stu- dents. He has since been cured and entered the University. Glee Club Will Sing Concluding the International Cen- ter's series of Sunday evening pro- grams, the University of Michigan Glee Club, under the direction of Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music, will sing at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Union Ballroom. Military Critic Will G''e Ti-d_14 WI ' e I k Here Tuesgay S. L. A. Marshall Lectre To Highlight Ann Arbor Cancer Control Drive S. L. A. Marshall, noted war com- mentator and military" critic, will1 speak on "Our Part in the World To- day" at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditorium. Marshall, a veteran of the first World War and the author of several recent books on military subjects, will highlight the month-long cancer drive of the Ann Arbor division of the Women's Field Army for the Con- trol of Cancer. Part of the receipts from his lec- ture will be donated to the two local hospitals, and the rest will be sent to the State and National headquar- ters of the Society for the research. education and cure of cancer. This is the first year that a public lecture has been included in the an- nual cancer campaign. Other fea- tures of the drive have consisted of canisters placed in the schools, can- vassing of the downtown business districts and special gifts from wo- men's clubs. The purpose of the campaign is to acquaint the public with the symp- toms, control and prevention of this, the nation's second highest cause of death. In a recent radio address Dr. F. J. Hodges, head of the roentgen- ology department of the University Hospital, stated that eventual vic- tory in the war against cancer would be won only through public know- ledge of this disease. Prof. Price I l ore-enti Carilloni Recit i Today Prof. Percival Price of the School of Music will presrent a carillon re- cital of French and French-Canadian songs from 7:15 to 8 pm.h )(day. The program will include songs of the French Revolution which are now being sung by the Red Army and the Free French forces and four French harpsichord pieces with a descriptive element. Submarines Cause East Coast Coal Shortage, Battle Declares Judiciary Revises Constitution (Conttiaued from, Page ?) Tells Institute Transport I Problem May Possibly Bring Priority Ratings By DAN BEIRMAN Submarine activities on the Atlan- tic seaboard-already an obstacle to large-scale coal movements -have' caused a shortage of several million tons in the Nfw England area and the coal industry's greatest problem, it was asserted yesterday by John D. Battle, executive secretary of the National Coal Association. Battle, who addressed the sixth annual Retail Coal Utilization Insti- tute on "Coal-Its Wartime Import- ance," declared that alleviation of this shortage by rail "offers a solution to avoid trouble that we think we see ahead." Foreseeing future priorities on coal if consumers do not build up their supplies within the next five months, I Battle assured his audience that "there is enough coal in the 28 states that supply it to last for a few thous- and years. It's all a question of mov- coal industry's major war-born prob- lems. In addition to the dilemma of getting men to work in rubberless1 automobiles, the war has made greatt inroads into available manpower. 1 Mushroomed defense industries I have also depleted the force of men available for work in the mines. "Even with our high wage scales, the oppor- tunity to get some of the easy money in certain war plants or shipyards is such that some men can't resist," Battle said. Battle foresaw increased industry dependence on government assist- ance, declaring that "no one dislkes more than I do to have to appeal to the government for anything, yet it so happens that we don't manufac- ture the equipment we need nor do we have the power to control labor. Pointing out that there are certain people in high government places who would like to see the govern- ment take over railroads and the coal industry, Battle said that "now is the time to pull together to avoid this catastrophe." Battle's address highlighted the two-day meeting of the Institute which saw coal men from the mid- western area convene here under the sponsorship of the engineering col- lege and the University Extension Service. organizations which fail within the scope of its authority and establish- ing rules concerning campus dances. The duties and powers of both the president and secretary of the Coun- cil are specifically listed for the first time in the revised constitution. The duties of the president are to call and preside at meetings, supervise all campus elections in cooperation with the president of the Union, notify honor society presidents of regula- tions set up by the Council for their tappings and initiations, call for prospective plans for these proceed- ings, and approve or disapprove these in conjunction with the Dean of Stu- dents, serve as ex-officio member of the Committee on Student Affairs and on the Board of Directors of the Union, to represent the Judiciary Council without a vote at meetings of the university Subcommittee on Discipline and to perform such other duties as are assigned to him by the Council and the Dean of Students. The duties of the secretary are also outlined. They include, in part, tak- ing minutes of Council meetings, carrying on correspondence, notify- ing the Dean of Students about elec- tions and recommendations for dis- ciplinary action made by the Coun- cil and contracting for Council ex- penditures. The petitions for president and secretary of the Council for the com- ing year should contain the appli- cant's school, campus activities, exact scholastic point average, draft status and any fecommendations he may have for improvement of student government. Second semester juniors of all undergraduate schools are eligible. ing it to where it's needed orderly manner." Battle cited labor as one in an of the II. -!T i.I 1 / Yes, you can SAVE! And Stil Be Assured of Beautifully Engraved 2CARDS The MAYER-SCHAIRER Company NOW IS THE TIME TO STORE YOUR FURS IN J"~ New Modern Fur Storage Vault 1. Jacobson's own cold storage vaults are humidity con- trolled and gas fumigated, providing positive all-around protection. 2. A personal fur policy protects your garment against fire and theft 12 months of the year. 3. All garments handled by fur experts. FOR SPACE RESERVATION, Phone 2.3194 and a Bonded Messenger Will Call. Charge for this comprehensive storage service. $3.00 for $100.00 value II Fur coats Cleaned, Repaired, Restyled. " 1 f A tiny pin-hole in a telephone cable can admit moisture, causing short circuits and service inter- ruptions. But Bell System men have found a way of heating this trouble to the punch. They charge the cable with dry nitrogen under pressure. 'hen should a leak develop, the escaping gas keeps moisture out. Instruments on the cable detect the drop in pressure ... sound an alarm at a nearby station... indicate the approximate location of the break. A repair crew is quickly on its way. You Get More Beer For Your Money! A Full Quart... Five Glasses... Jumbo Is 2i Times Bigger Than Standard Bottle! Y ES, Jumbo helps you enjoy Pfeiffer's Beer the thrifty I way! And what beer it is! One frosty, delicious sip will do more than any words to tell you why Pfeiffer's is famous lLooK" for flavor. Its robust, old-time tang comes from choicest barley, FIVERGLAS' malt and tender blossoms of the hop ... brewed according IN EVER to a treasured formula more than fifty years old. On draughtaveTL at your favorite tavern, poured from the familiar 12-ounce 1yv, b,1tnl r nut nf money-saving Jumbo ... we believeJ rim' A4 1