W-FMMT)AV-~ , It M C -I AN D IYY fl.'~4hJJ* W017- fl~*tt THE MTCHTAN D A I L YV S:i2.l AV Y!ri"r.31t1 3 4YV 5! . Vr e. i9.u'i] W-mmommom i VISITS OF HEAL[TH!"~lfS~ SERllE INCREASED SINCEL LASd byTER Room Calls Increased by Twenty Yale Professor Heads. Arts and Letters Body WILL HOLD CONTESTI IN CURRENT EVENTS New York Times Annual Cur- rent Events Contest to be Held in March. : i :# I Six Compared to Same Period s<1930 MARKS FIFTH YEAR, Last October. _ ------March 4 or 5 is the tentative dateE DOES BENEFICIAL WORK set for the New York Times annual --'Current Events contest, as an- Dispensary Calls Increased by f.nounced yesterday by Prof. J. L. Eleven Per Cent Over . Brunim of the journalism depart- Last October I'ment. Last year, a student at Am- /1,herst college won the first prize of According to the October report $500. Over 20 leading universities of the University Health Service * a nd colleges of the United StatesI issued yesterday by Warren E. For- participated in the event. Besides sythe, M. D., director, the depart--P the intercollegiate prize of $500, ment is doing a service which is in- Professor at 'Yale who was re- there were several medalists or first creasingly satisfactory and benefic- cently elected president of the prize winners. Among these, Orsa- lal to the student body as evidenced Amercan Institute of Arts and Let- Imus M. Pearl, '33A., was the Uni- by the increase in the dispensary ters at the annual meeting held in versity of Michigan's representa- visits this October over the total for New York. tive, winning $150. Victor Rabino- th s Octobeon er etao.-witz, '31, and Allan R. Moore, '29, th1 same month a year ago. were also recipients of smaller Mumps Epidmcic Averted. H;11prizes.# An increase inmumps was the AlexanderL. Milch, of Newark, only unusual situation observed N. J., represented Amherst college, during the past month, a situation was the intercollegiate prize winner. I whic ha. eery ndiatin o be-5'0 H' C 0 M TT[ 9 ,Louis Stern of Rochester, N. Y., at- coing han eindic atoneoftim-tending Williams college and Orrin; I Pnom ChamrmanoGoes to~~ngine H. Clark of Columbia university but did not mature as a result of Prom Chairman Goes to Engine were listed as the rumiers-up. the clinic in its preventative meas- School Class This Year; I The first of these current eventsI ures to eliminate the source of;I contests sponsored by the New York contagion. All cases of the sick- Buchan Chosen. Times was held in 1926, and was ness which could be traced were -won by a Harvard student. Prince- immediately given attention and (Continued From Page 1) ton captured the prize in 1927 and1 isolated and consequently did not Advisory-James F. Sheahan, 1928. break out in such proportion as to chairman; George Herr, Kennetht warrant a general quarantine. Sandy, Robert Goldstein, ByronDu ham o pee The sensitization tests listed be- Dalyrimple, Vincent Nash,BIra D un Completes low are time consuming skin tests Grinell, Karl Hirt, Norma Brown, C conducted by the series in which Mary Elizabeth Dunn, Ben Frankel New Commerce Book a study was made of the reaction and Gladys Icheldinger.__ of two hundred foreign substances Executive-Edward - J. McMor- Prof A. L. Dunham of the De- such as plant pollens, animal epi- mick, c'hairman; Hobart D. Skid- partment of History has completed dermals, foods, etc., on the human # more, John Duffield, Howard Gould, a 500-page book on "The Anglo- body. - Frank Baker, Kenneth McCallum, French Treaty of Commerce of1 Statistics Given. Henry Bergstrom, Alfred Palmer 1816," it was announced yesterday. The following statistics give the and Harry Cook.. The wnrk is to be nublished by h It S~kt .v.J~a.,JV'S S-y the Mother of Polar Explorer Sends Greetings to Son Now Exploring South Polar Regions ............ " ; } v " S~ i Associated J'resS Photo Mrs. Richard Evelyn Byrd, Sr., Mother of Commander Richard E. Byrd, polar explorer, sends greetings by radio to her son who is encamped very near the south pole. Gov. Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia, another son, stands behind Mrs. Byrd. Art Club Members Inspect Art Studio Members of the Art club met last night at the studios of Avard Fair- banks, associate professor of sculp- tore, on the fourth floor of Univer- sity hall, where they were initiated into the various process of sculp- ture. Professor Fairbanks demonstrat- Cd the method of modeling a head on a steel armature. He showed the students the preliminary clay model of a fountain group that he has submitted as a background for a statue of a former president of the Hawaiian islands. Students were shown a model in the formative process of- the head of Professor Fairbank's oldest son. Photographs of works Professor Fairbanks has sculptured during the past few years were shown. facts for October, 1928 and 1929. OctoberI Dispensary calls ....... Infirmary patients ...... Hospital patients ....... Room calls .,..... . Refractions ............ Upper respiratory in- fections .............. dontagions ............- . (14 mumps) -ray examinations. Prescriptions. filed... . Protein sensitization tests-.............. 1928 6589 139 22 126 162 796 2 1929 7439 138, 38 152 156 955 16 244 360 857 1300 17 35 Hutchins, 30 Year Old GraduateI of Yale, is Youngest Eve to Hold Office. Woman's - Dorothy Ellsworth, chairman; Margaret Thompson, Helen Aulph, Dorothy Sample, Hilda Mendelson, Virginia Olds, Helen Carrm, Josephine Conviser, and Emma Townsend. Publicity-William Page, chair- man; John Denler, Thomas Don- nelly, Carl Forsythe, Harvey Balch, Charles Sprowl, William Harris, Daniel Boone, Emmett Egad, Rob- ert; Crawford, Paul Erwin, and Joseph Frank.. Finance-Edward Muir, chair- man; Stanley E. Betz, Harriet Ad- ams, Betty Smith, Daniel Blumer, Albert Baker, Harcourt Batterson, Maurine Kook, Florence Taylor, Oscar Lundin, Frank Bessinger, Samuel o~ils, and Don McDonald. Athletic-Robert Clark, chair- man, Thomas Roach, Norman Dan- iels, Charles .Seda, Maynard Morri- son, James Harris, Edward Hayden, Sidney Raike, Emmett O'Neill, Walter P. Stern. Auditing-William, Kearns chair- man; Elias Miller, Robert O'Brien, Carlton VanWagoner, Joseph Stab- nick, Art Goudy, Lawrence Rahilly, Robert Amberg, Gustave R. Reich, Paul Heddon, William Larson, and Walter Lean. DEAN SADLER HONORED Dean Herbert C. Sadler of the en- gineering college was named hon- orary vice president of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers at the annual meeting of the society held in'New York last week. University Press, and will go on sale at the beginning ot next month. The book, according to Professor Dunham, is a study in secret di- plomacy and a discussion of the only treaty in international history to have been made by economists only. The latter portion of the vol- ume reviews the effect of the treaty on the industrial revolution then extant in France. Months of original research have been spent in preparing the book,I since it is inade up entirely of ma- terial obtained from hitherto un- published documents. As a feature of interest, many family papers of Gladstone appear for the frst time in the historical work. COLLECTION OF TRANSPORTATION VOLUMES DIRECTED BY WORLEY Probably the only collection of formed Professor Worley concern-. books, magazines, and reports in ing them. the country relating to the field of Many of the papers in the library transportation is located at the li- contain valuable information about brary in the office of Prof. John the lives of pioneers in the building S. Worley, of the engineering of canals, highways, airplanes, au- transportation department. tomobiles, and ships. A book con- The library contains a large num- taming colored prints of the first ber of papers, books, pictures, doc- railroad in England is one of the uments, and reports all of which most valuable in the collection. make possible a complete study of Many interesting facts about the the development of the field of life of Robert Fulton, inventor of transportation. The collection of the steamboat, have been brought these volumes is directed by Pro- to light through a collection of the fessor Worley, and each week he re- papers which were written during ceives interesting books from vari- his life, and several books have ous foreign countries, as well as been found that were written by from numerous book sellers Fulton himself. throughout the Unite d States. Professor Worley pointed out that "Book dealers -for the most part Fulton, while in England, invented are very interesting men," said Pro- a submarine that carried a large arever ineretig mn, aidPro ,number of men, and on several oc- fessor Worley, "and they are usu-ionmbesmenedbon ser- ally interested in such collections casions descended below the sur- as we have here in Michigan. Many ace. of them send us books that they think willefitinto the collection." ALPHA NU MEETS Professor Worley has recently re- . --- turned from Chicago where he pur- "Big Business" was the subject chased some valuable documents of an open forum at the regular and annual reports of railroads. weekly meeting 6f Alpha Nu, cam- *The books were formerly owned by, pus debating society, in the Alpha a well-known writer in the field of Nu rooms last night. Various , engineering, and were sold at a phases of modern industry were low price to a bookseller who in- discussed at the meeting. TERMS To Suit! Play While You Pay 601 4 . ._ _ __ CHAPELJ INAUGURATION (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Nov. 19.-Robert May- nard Hutchins became today, . at the age of 30, the fifth president of University of Chicago. Inauguration of this tall, almost boyish younb man was made bril- liant by the attendance of repre- senatives from 300 colleges and universities not only in the United States but in Canada and Europe as well. One hundred and twenty- five of them were presidents of the schools they represented. Some came from the largest and proudest schools of higher learn- ing the world; but none among them was so proud as William J. Hutchins, president of Berea col- lege, Ky., for it was his son who was being honored. Yale' university gave to Univer- sity of Chicago its first president 38 years ago when William Rainey Harper was inaugurated; and it is from Yale that Dr. Hutchins has come to the quadrangles on the midway. Today, too, Yale sent its presi- dent, James Rowland Angell, to bring greetings to its former law school dean. The inaugural services in the uni- versity chapel were held at 11 a. im., designated as the 157th convocation of the university. The MICHIGAN SODA GRILL (Formerly Maxroy) 4nnounces ITS GRAND OPENING on Thursday, Nov.21 With a complete line of Box and Home Made Candies Hot and Cold Lunches "Flowers to the Ladies" 601 East Liberty St. TYPEWRITERS RIBBQNS SUPPLIES for all makes of Typewriters. Rapid turnover, fresh stock, insures best quality at a moderate price. 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 -- I I i ..,m,. , .- :,s+iaG'"s"!IFS:' IP":SMP*.+vrr+..:=.rrrxr.*. ;. r.: "- sz.; . ;: :., dt .: yr S I t t 'i, i 1 r . 9 I= m i oults aoir Overco ats CAmleaned& (5se~d "Cash Cand carry" WTHERE can you get as good work for less money? Nowhere in the world. Some place, in another state perhaps, there may be lower prices. But nowhere in the whole country is better work being done. Doubtful? Then let us demonstrate'our Filter-Vac System just installed! That will prove it! LAUNDRY COMPANY r.." r. : R ' XX.7:'v f > I SAWYLERS -, ::: > . REFRESHMENT. The rest of us are more fortunate. Wecan take our pauses as we want them. And to refresh us, Coca- Cola is ready, ice-cold, around the corner from anywhere. The whole- some refreshment of this pure drink of natural fla- vors makes any little miniitep lorng inoruiah fp, a I I U. I i f 'Cfi .,