rAGr VounR THI MICHIGAN nATLY WEDNESDAY. Aftift. 09- 14al m.- - _ _ _..__~_. . . U . " E THE BOL'S MAID: Rosalie' To Be First of French Plays Given May 3 by Students The first of the three French com- edies to be presented at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 3, in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre is "Rosalie," a modern comedy by Max Maurey and first played at the National Theatre of L'Odeon, March 25, 1908. In the play Mr. and Mrs. Bol, play- ed by George Petrossian and Shirley Schwartz, eagerly await the visit of an old friend-a Mr. Poulot whom they have not seen for 15 years. Bol Has Maid Trouble Bol hopes to renew his friendshipI with Poulot and through his influence to gain advancement and perhaps even be appointed to the Legion d'Honneur. Consequently he urges his wife to use all her charms and with accompanying insults the Bols give complete instructions to the ap- parently stupid maid, Rosalie, played by Celia Taylor. Shortly, the bell rings. Rosalie re- fuses to answer. Bol tells her she need not pay for an expensive cup she has broken, she may have her Sundays free, she may have a raise in salary. Rosalie still refuses. Only after Mrs. Bol humbly apologizes for the many insults, which she had pre- viously directed at the maid, does Rosalie agree to open the door. But Rosalie returns alone. The Bols ask her where Mr. Poulot is, to which she answers blankly, "who?" Two Comedies Follow "Le Cuvier" or the "Washtub," a, play of the evening. The third, "Le Client serieux," will be played by members of the department of ro- mance languages. Tickets for the three comedies will be on sale from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., May 2, and from 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., May 3, at the boxoff ice. itter-Gild TO Have 'Cabaret' A table-tennis tournament, for- tune-telling, rat-races, games of skill, entertainment by the International Center and square dancing will be included in the Inter-Guild Carni- val Cabaret at 8:15 p.m. Saturday in Lane Hall, according to Marjorie Cavins, president of Inter-Guild Council. The Council, which is composed of' representatives from the Protestant1 student religious groups of Ann Arbor, annually presents the carni- val, proceeds from which go to the World Student Service Fund. Fred McKinney, '44P, heads the committee for the - carnival, which will be given in the Lane Hall lobby, offices, recreation room and upstairs auditorium. Students and servicemen are in- vited to hear Rev. C. H. Loucks, from the First Baptist Church, address the Inter-Guild luncheon at 12:15 today in Lane Hall. His topic will be "Reli- gion's Remedy." Highlilghts On Campus... JGP Stamp Meeting.. . All JGP stamp representatives from dormitories, sororities and league houses, must report or send a substi- tute to the Undergraduate Office of the League between 4 and 6 p.m. to- cay. All representatives are to bring with them a report of the percentage of their houses which bought stamps in the recent stamp dinners, accord- ing to Peg Weiss, JGP publicity chair- man. Ensian Covers -Arrive .,. 'Ensian covers have arrived and they may be picked up at the Student Publication Building. There are ex- tra covers available for those who were not able to get them last sem- ester. * * * Surgical Dressings Close The Surgical Dressings Unit of the Michigan League will be closed today until further notice but in- structors must report at the unit today. The unit will remain closed until more gauze arrives at which time it will be posted in The Daily. Women's Club To Meet... Faculty Women's Club will meet from 3 to. 4:30 p.m. today in the Rackham Assembly Hall. The pro- gram, arranged by Mrs., L. R. Schru- ben, will feature the Girl's Glee Club, under the direction of Miss Patty Spore, and will be followed by the annual meeting andq election of offic- ers. Dames To Hear MacKaye Child Study Group of the Michi- gan Dames will meet at 8:15 p.m. today at the home of Mrs. E. G. Vogts, 611. Spring Street. Dr. Lavinia MacKaye, pediatrician for the University Elementary School and °instructor of Public Health in the Medical School, will be the guest speaker of the evening. U' Golf Club To Meet.. A meeting will be held at 3:15 p.m. tomorrow at the WAB for all coeds in- terested in belonging to the Pitch and Putt Club, the University Wo- men's Golf Association. Those wo- men planning to attend thehmeeting should call Barbara Wallace at 2-4514. medieval farce, will be the second YO'U CA N'T "LO0SE ~~-f YOU CARRY TRAVELERS CHEQUES! That's right! Because if your American Express Travelers Cheques are lost, stolen, or destroyed uncountersigned, American Express will promptly refund your loss. 'These Cheques are handy to carry, the size of a dollar bill and are readily spendable anywhere.. American Express Travelers Cheques are issued in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100. The cost is % of 1% (75¢ on each $io0 purchased), minimum 400. For sale at Banks, and Railway Express offices. AME RICAN EXPR ESS RARA EL ER5 CH EOUES...... Petitioning for New Assembly To Be Closed Petitioning for the reorganized Assembly Board will continue until 5:30 p.m. tomorrow in the League. Petitions may be had in Miss Ethel McCormick's office. Interviewing will take place from 3 to 5:30 p.m. tomor- row and Friday- and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday in the League. Appli- cants should sign up for their inter- views when they turn in their peti- tions. Five positions are available: presi- dent, vice-president in charge of dor- mitories, vice-president in charge of league houses, publicity chairman and secretary-treasurer. All independent women are eligible to petition. However, the president should be a junior now and a senior next fall. The vice-president in charge of league houses should either be living in a league house now or have lived in one previously, so that she will be able to understand the league house situation. Hillel Group To Hold PIeni The Hillel Foundation will hold a picnic for a limited number of per- sons Sunday at the Island, Elise Zeme, '44, student director, an- nounced today. Picnickers will leave .the Founda- tion at 2 p.m. for the Island, where sports, games and singing will be followed by a picnic supper. In case of rain, the affair will take place indoors, at the Foundation, at 3 p.m. Students and servicemen are urged to make their reservations, by phon- ing the Foundation today, as only seventy-five people can be accom- modated. Fay Bronstein, '45, and Judy Jac- obs, '46, are chairmen of the Social committee and the picnic refresh- ments and entertainment committee respectively. 'The Forgotten Village' Will Highlight Program John Steinbeck's "The Forgotten Village" and dancing will highlight a movie-mixer program beginning at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Hillel Foun- dation. It will be shown twice during the evening, at 8 and 9 p.m., each time accompanied by "They Find a Home," a short, technicolor, sound film dealing with refugees in Pales- tine. CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED RAES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10c for each additional 6 words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertlrn for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional words.) Contract Rates on Request FOR SALE FOR SALE-Three formals, sizes 14 and 16. Excellent condition. Tele- phone 2-4268. PRIVATE SALE OF FORMALS- Practically new. 1709 South Uni- versity. Phone 7508. REVLON lipsticks and wind-milled face powder, nail enamels and ac- cessories at Marshalls, next to the State Theatre. SIX ROOM COUNTRY HOME in Washtenaw Hills Estates. Cement stucco exterior, slate roof, screened porch, oil heat, 105 x 234 lot, 2 car garage. Call 8827. Evenings and all day Sunday. HELP WANTED STUDENT-Men and women. Good pay. Excellent meals. University Grill. 615 East Williams. Phone 9268. MEN to work during mealtime for board. Contact cook or manager. Phone 2-3179. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING: thesis binding. Brumfield and Brumfield, 308 S. State. WANTED TO BUY WANTED: To buy one Slide Rule Ball ticket. Call Olcay, Interna- tional Center. WANT ED WANTED- Gentleman student to "We have gone through a period of growing pains in the use of sulfa drugs and now know largely what to expect and what not to expect," Dr. H. M. Pollard, University professor of internal medicine, said yesterday in an address before the American Academy of Periodontology. In 1941, 17,000 tons of sulfa drugs were administered in this country in the treatment of some 10,000,000 people, Dr. Pollard said. Since the discovery of the parent sulfanilimide in 1935 an enormous number of the drugs in the family, have been tried clinic'ally and found ineffective while a large number have not been tried at all, he added. The Army uses sulfadiazine in all cases of warfare wounds. In tropical NO MORE GROWING PAINS: Dr. Pollard Discusses Sulfa Drugs 1 cotton Cotton cotton regions another of the family, sulfa- suxidine, is being utilized in the treatment of bacillary/ dysentery, one of the three tropical diseases which are most troublesome in the present war. In the treatment of meningitis, sulfadiazine has proved extremely valuable, Dr. Pollard said. In the last war the mortality rate was 50 to 70 per cent, but reports from some camps indicate that it is as low as two per cent in the present war. Penicillin is also used in the treatment of meningitis. One of the earliest uses of sulfa drugs in this country was in com- batting pneumonia. Before the ad- vent of sulfa drugs, mortality varied between 30 and 40 per cent and as Don't be a Polar Bear-get out high as 60 per cent in older indi- viduals. Mortality has now dropped to around ten per cent as the result of the use of sulfa drugs. In the Army, pneumonia mortality which ran from 30 to 35 per cent in World War I has been reduced to about five per cent in World War II. ° Also, there are limitations to the use of . the drug, which sometimes causes such manifestations as cyan- osis, nausea, kidney damage, jaun- dice, anemia or skin rash. Toxic manifestations have been found to be less when sulfadiazine is used in preference to others of the family. "Sulfadiazine has the limelight now," Dr. Pollard said, as the "most effi- cient, least toxic and most practic- able in all situations." of that fur coat and into cotton! The calendar says it's spring! opu tarprce $9.95 Others from $6.50 to $22.95 r :f.: + ,S '« k,... co, uateC\ n atv C O o te OOtt col Oc hoo 4 U Mei a ls i u u e .5Woven Basket from Mexico .... .5 9c :Bright Wood Mexican Salt and Peppers ............ 5 9c pr. 1Mexican "Piggy Bank" . . . 25c Hemp Coasters from Haiti..1 .25 set }Colorful Cuban "Tom-Tom" Drum .... . .... 1.00 Doll Pincushions from Haiti and Guatemala , 39c ea. Mexican Glass Pitcher.1.50 Mexican Duster . 25c 217 $outh Main 9 Nickels Arcade I eft t et gg You'll Want Clothes Like These Cottoin Jerseysl~p at 2.00l SLACKS . . . Gabardine thoroughbreds. Tai- ored to fit perfectly, with the extra crotch expanse they do not "droop" but really fit. fi. 10.95 eele.. * ~ f~~fl * * GABARDINE SKIRTS with that same perfect fit, Yes, they're all wool, Natural, blue, green, and gold. 10.95 IJL I Blazers for Tonners