THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAI V, DECEMBER 9, STULDY IN JEOPARDY: Department of Speech presents Brazer Calls Personal Department To Present TB STRIKES 80,000 YEARLY: Dr. Willis Emphasizes Seriousness o .TB income 1 ax *iNe e sary Comic "The sales tax is an excellent' Thornton Wil revenue-producer which is easy to comedy. "The administer and comply with, and be he a doesn't meet with too much oppo- Fieseand Satur sition from taxpayers. Neverthe--s less, it imposes an increasingly versity speech d heavv burden n rane famiie The second o Play der's Broadway atchmaker." will 3p.m. Thursday, day by the Uni- epartment. f this season's By PHILIP POWER "'People have a notion that TB' is reaching a level of relative un- importance, but I submit that a disease which sickens 80,000 peo- pie year in this country is still a disease of serious import to us From its former position of the nation's number one cause of death, killing 70.000 people a year, TB has dropped to a death rate of around 14,000 a year, Dr. Willis remarked. IT nip of ra rtracin M }t1GttVY {.lLUWr11 V11. 1t41 G 1d111111tfb # 1 JI and and those in the lower in- come bracket," Brazer said. "The present tax structure is extremely inequitable," Brazer said. Even if we have a recovery, we will find a deficit for the 1959 fiscal year which will run at least $60 million. "This is not because of an in- crease in capital outlay or gen- eral fund appropriation, but will be caused by an increase of 70,- 000 more school children this year than last and a reduction in sales and other tax receipts. Past Deficit General "In the past, the deficit in the school aid fund was made up from the general fund," he added. "Although some of us are dis- appointed that the program doesn't do much for local govern- ment, the committee chose not to take action on the relationship be- tween state and local finance and local non-property taxes. "I doubt, though, that you will get much done at the local level until the state fiscal house is put in order," he said. Professor To Lecture Here oday 1 Playbill productions, "The Match- all," a noted medical expert said the igt egonst TB, r.e Wii maker" is the story of a miserly yesterday, the fight against TB, Dr. Willis elderly Yonkers storekeeper who Thidconclusion was reached by commented, it still strikes some travels to New York City to find Dr. Henry S. Willis, Superintend- 80,000 persons every year. The himself a wife. He consults a ent and Medical Director of the United States Public Health Serv- matchmaker, who decides that he North Carolina Sanitorium Sys- ,0ie has estimated that some 55- would make a perfect mate - for tem, at the 11th annual Henry 000,000 persons in the United her. Brooks Baker Memorial Lecture.h The play begins in a Yonkers given yesterday at the School of of infection. store and moves quickly to a New Public Health Auditorium. "TB remains just as infectious, York hat store and from there to Dr. Willis. speaking on "The destructive and paiful as It did a garden restaurant in the Bat- Challenges of Tuberculosis," noted in the past," Dr. Willis said, "and tery. It winds up in the home of we must continue with our ef- one Miss Flora Van Huysen, who ,forts." i Mis o Van Huse, wh Dr. Willis noted the main lines is reminiscent of the Duchess in t where progress needs to be made. "Alice in Wonderland."h g ed To Feature 'Aside' Work Still To Be Done Directed by Prof. William P. ~In the field of clinical manage- Halstead of the speech depart- <> ment of TB, though progress has ment, the prduoction will use the been made from the days when theatrical aside to the audience, ~wolf liver, lard of a pig fed only which shows Wilde at his best, ~on vegetables and the flesh of an Thomas Skinner of the speech de- ass with its broth were used as partment indicated. 'specifics, much work still needs to Designed by Ralph Duckwall of be done, Dr. Willis noted. the speech department, elaborate- Problems still remaining un- ly painted scenery will form the msolved in this area include the iy pintd scner wil fom te ~tendency of the TB bacillae to basis of the visual production. teden y a the to drugs ued Both drop and wing settings develop a resistance to drugs used will be utilized. sin treatment and the large number of patients released from sanitoria Characters Listed who still carry lesions and could Main characters in the play in- have a relapse and turn into car- clude Sally Ann Rosenheimer, riers of the disease. Grad., as Mrs. Dolly Levi; Donald Dr. Willis praised the work of Ewing, Grad., as Horace Vander- voluntary anti-TB organizations, gelder; Nancy Engass, Grad., as DR. HENRY S. WILLIS such as the Michigan Tuberculosis Mrs. Irene Malloy; Donald Lovell, . . . spoke on TB Association, in their public in- Grad., as Cornelius Hackl; and formation programs. However, he Terry Theuer, Grad., as Barnaby that through the years there has noted that public ignorance still Tucker. aen a lot of very effective re- remains a large problem. - -_ -- search on the treatment of TBI Prof. Paul R. Rudolph will lec- ture at 3 p.m. today in the Ar- chitecture Aud. In addition to being a practic- ing architect, Prof. Rudolph is chairman of the architecture dept. School of Art and Architecture, Yale University. Prof. Rudolph's topic will be an- nounced from the platform. Slides will illustrate the lecture which, is being held under the sponsor- ship of the University architecture, school. Supporting players are Jacque- line DeCamp, Grad., as Flora Van Huysen; Lorraine Small, '59, as Ermengarde Vandergelder; Rob- ert Shaye, '60BAd,, as Ambrose Temper; Shelia Stamell, '60, as Minnie Fay and Gordon Mars, '59, as "Joe.,, Dianne Stolorow, '60, as Ger- trude; Richard Schiller, '59, as Malachi Stecht; Joel Boyden, '59, as the cabbie; Frederick Oullette, '61, as Rudolph; Tony Suarez, '60E, as August: and Sondra Sheare as the cook will also ap- pear in the production. carried on. TB Can Be Cured "In fact, in the last decade, we have made enough progress to show that tuberculosis can be cured and may be completely erad-, icated in the future," Dr. Willis said. Dr. Willis remarked that ad- vances in therapy for TB patients have reduced the amount of time patients spend in sanitoriums, the number of relapses after the pa- tient's release, and have increased the effectiveness of the final cure: Comments on Research Commenting on the progress of recent research, especially in the development of possible anti-TB vaccines, Dr. Willis especially cited recent progress made in the use of BC, a type of vaccine using artificially weakened TB bacillae which is much in use abroad but not well accepted in this country. He noted that new techniques for counting bacillae enabled sta- tistical methods to be used in determining vaccination effective- ness. I SOCIOLOGIST: Inkeles Discusses Effects Of Social Status on Laughter "Contrary to popular belief, the lower you are in social status, the He also found that in all the less likely you are to report hav- countries studied, going down the ing laughed during the past day," social status scale, people are visiting Prof. Alex Inkeles of the found to be less and less happy sociology department of Harvard, in their jobs. said at the University recently. In addition, lower status women are more likely to say they have Amn E e(t cried. I I I - Prof. Inkeles, author of studies on Russian national character prior to his present analysis of the industrial personality, said his findings on laughter hold true ,in warm countries, such as Italy, as well as cold countries, such as Britain. "The sun doesn't seem to in-, ,fluence happiness," he added. "Although I don't dismiss cul- turaldifferences," he said, "future attitudes will be based primarily on social-status position in indus- trial society. There will be an ex- traordinary number of pan- human features due to the same perceptions and patterns." There are findings which in- dicate this trend. The level of in- dustrialization doesn't make much difference in personal belief in life after death. N ew Iorker Fund Leader Raymond A. Mills, '26, of Endi- cott, New York, has been elected chairman of the University Alum- ni Fund for 1959. He is succeeding Herbert E. Wil- son, '23L, of Indianapolis, Indiana. Other officers chosen this week- end include Rosemary Scott, '46L, of Grand Rapids as vice chair- man; Mrs. Gordon Stow, '37, of Lansing, re-elected as secretary; and Prof. Wilbur K. Pierpont, Vice-President in Charge of Busi- ness and Finance, who was re- elected treasurer. The University Alumni Fund has received approximately $212,- 000 in contributions to the Uni- versity this year. NOW!, DIAL NO 1-3136 I_ FROM THE HILARIOUS BROADWAY STAGE SHOCKERI M4-M Presents A JOSEPH FIELDS PRODUCTION sUning Doris Day U Richard Widmar$ Cor GIG YOUNG IA CAL& NEXT moo=" MARTIN & LEWIS "AT WAR WITH THE ARMY" I STARTING TODAY 'y r, ' r i I'h 4 1K ' " 4 1 t , n h lS;, t !Ih u4 ' ., ilai l S L', , DIAL NO 8-6416 Fr I Ending Wednesday 1. { INflI Iii' Please Note Time Schedule DIAL NO 2-2513 "JEAN SIMMONS TOPS V" She gives a first-rate performance!" -N.Y. MIRROR - RAYMOND MASSEY -JACK CARSON PETER LORRE Directed by FRANK CAPRA PRISCILLA LANE * EDW. EVERETT HORTON - JAMES GLEASON JOSEPHINE NULL . JEAN ADAIR * JOHN ALEXANDER .1DAN NY KAYE D m mvrt meK# on mI I I I I 1 3-E-0"--1 m f4- ~I 19LA