1933 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Temperatures In Classrooms Are Judged Correct Dr. Gates Does Extensive Research In Humidity ' Study On Campus Effects Are Noted Poorest Conditions Found In Engineering Shops And R. O. T. C. Quarters By DAVID G. MACDONALD Temperature conditions in the classrooms of the University of Michigan are exceptionally good, ac- cording to a report prepared by Dr. Lloyd R. Gates, instructor in hygiene and public health, based on research work carried out last winter on the campus. Because it has been noticed by the Health Service that there has always been a high rate of respiratory in- fections among students during the winter months, it was decided to determine in a scientific manner the - temperature conditions of the class- rooms. Seventy-two locations were selected as representative of a cross- section of the rooms where the great- est number of .tudents would be af- fected. Each building was repre- sented by at least one classroom, and an average of four trips was made to each one throughout the winter under varying outside temperature conditions. Tests were made with a swing psy'chrometer to determine relative humidity and a Bureau of Standards thermometer to determine tempera- ture. The thermostats in the various places were also checked as were conditions of air motion and the number of windows open. Effects Of Overheating The effects of overheating are shown in recent studies made at Harvard and Pittsburgh, where over- heating was acute. More than 90 out of 100 students became restless and irritable. They complained of head- aches, palpitation of the heart, in- flamed and sore eyes, and a feeling of weight on the chest was noted. Their voices suffered, it being an ef- fort to speak. Dizziness and confu- sion followed, and a weakness and a dragged-out feeling was experi- enced. Studies in the research laboratory of the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers have in- dicated the serious direct physiologi- cal effects of extreme overheating as recorded by changes in body tem- perature, pulse rite, respiratioiin and metabolism. The commission has established the fact that exposure to high temperature with subsequent exposure to chill produces a moist and distended but anemic condition of the nasal mucosa which is pre- sumably highly favorable to microbic invasion. Overheating and chill in- creases susceptibility, while habitual exposure to high atmospheric tem- perature leads to chronic atrophic rhinitis. Ideal Temperatures Finally it has been demonstrated that overheating has a direct and important effect on the performance of physical work. The commission brought out the fact that 15 per cent less work was performed at 75 degrees Fahrenheit than at 68 de- grees Fahrenheit, with 50 per cent relative humidity and no air move- ment; while at 86 degrees wtih 80 per cent relative humidity, the de- crease -amounted to 28 per cent, as compared with 68 degrees and 50 per cent relative humidity. In the Michigan classrooms the ideal temperature to be obtained with the relative humidity of 30.36 per cent was found to be 72.17 de- grees. The average of the actual temperature as shown by the official theromemeter was 73.22 degrees Fahrenheit. With the temperature only one degree higher than that recommended for body comfort, it is seen that a close watch is kept on temperature in University buildings. The few exceptions of high tem- peratures are those in the R. O. T. C. headquarters and the old Engineer- ing Shops, which run as high as 110 degrees Fahrenheit in the basements, due to steam pipes and a nearby un- derground heat tunnel. Prominent Alumnus EXAMINATION SCH'EDULE Group D K O G A Q P N C J I R E F M H L Date Saturday Saturday Monday Monday Tuesday Tuesday Wednesday Wednesday Thursday Thursday Friday Friday Saturday Saturday Monday Monday Tuesday Tuesday of Exm. a. m. p. M. a. M. P. M. a. m. p. m. a. m. p. M. a. M. P. Mn. a. Mn. ). Mn. a. in. p.m. a. M. a. m. June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June 3 3 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 10 10 12 12 13 13 -Associated Prxess Photo Among the University's most prom- inent alumni abroad is Edgar Ansel Mowrer, '13, Berlin correspondent for the Chicago Daily News. Mr. Mowrer's book, "Germany Turns the Clock Back," caused a furore in Ger- many when it was -published in this country and a subsequent unsuccess- ful attempt was made to oust him as president of the Berlin Foreign Correspondents Association. Students Make Up Dramatic Company Five Michigan students and a number of students from the Carne- gie Institute of Technology school of drama will compose a stock com- pany which will play this summer, opening July 10, at Schroon Lake, N. Y., Adirondacks summer resort. The members of the stock com- pany from the University are Fran- ces Manchester, '34, chairman of this year's Junior Girls Play and star of many Play Production vehicles; Vivian Cohen, '33, star of Play Pro- duction's "Hedda Gabler" and the Hillel Players' "Dybbuk;" Paul Wer- mer, '33M, star in "Anna Christie" and "The Dybbuk;" and Herbert Mil- liken, '33, Comedy Club star. Morton Frank, '33, business man- ager of many Play Production plays, will be the business representative of the company. S. Sylvan Simon, '35L, assistant to the director of the Uni- versity broadcasting Service and for five yars student director of the Hillel Players, will direct the produc- tions. X Each course in Group X may be examined at, any time mutuallyagreed upon by class and instructor. Other courses not carrying groupI letters will be examined as follows: Class Mon. Tues. Elem.I Mon. Mon. Pol. Sc es 11 a.m. 11 a.m. Fr., Speech; 3 p.m. 8 a.m. ci. 2, 52, 108 Elem. Math; Soc. Tues Mon. Tues. Mon. Tues. Ger. 1, Mon. Mon. Tues. Tues. Tues. 3 p.m. 10 a.m. 10 a.m. 9 a.m. 9 a.m. 2, 31, 32 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 2 p.m. 8 a.m. 1 p.m. Date of Exam. June 3 a.im. June 3 p.m. 31, 32. June 5 a.m. June 5 p.m. June 6 a.m. Span. 1, 2, 31, 32. June 6 p.m. 51, 132f June 7 a.m.t June 7 p.m. June 8 a.m. June 8 p.m. June 9 a.m. June 9 p.m. June 10 a.m. June 10 p.m. June 12 a.m. June 12 p.m. June 13 a.m. June 13 p.m. Franz Molnar, Noel Coward's Plays Realistic (Con inued from Page 3) at the directing field. He did, how- ever, probably to pride himself on his versatility. But he only made one ex- cursion into the field of production. He found his leading man refused to learn the lines as they were writ- ten, his prima donna threw a tem- peramental fit becauseshe couldn't make her customary up-center first entrance, the choruses fell down more times than they stood up. So Molnar tore up directing script,1 threw it into the auditorium; paidl off the choruses, stage-help, and hangers-on; and went away for an unmitigated rest cure somewhere on the south Mediterranean. The result was a glittering comedy at the expense of chief-actors, lead- ing ladies, composers, property-men, playwrights, collaborators, and fam- ily men; the result was "The Play's The Thing." A playwright, Turai, who looks surprisingly like Molnar himself, was the chief character and deus-ex-machina of the play. Coward was invited down tothe country for a quiet week-end by a leading and old English actress. He ran into a perfect hot bed of "arti- ness," and was so embarrassed by some of the freedom of expression the household took upon itself, that he fled to the bathroom where he wrote (in a built-in tub) the first draft of "Hay Fever." If the play is in any manner of the truth, the week-end must have been a very lively one. However, allowing for poetic imagination, there must have been a great deal of truth in it, for "Hay Fever" enraged the first audiences that saw it. They recog- nized in Coward's "Judith Bliss" their favorite actress, and were hurt at Coward's treatment of her. Thanks! Boys, Thianks!. For the wonderful business with which you have favored Lis. It has been a real pleasure to be of service to you. ENJOY THAT VACATION Beca use-- A inal We want to create brisk action! We want to bring our stocks down! We want you to know our values! SUITS $24,50 Values to $50.00 $3450 Courses listed below will be exam- ined as follows: Ed. Ed. Ed. B. B. B. B. B. A 1, B 20, C 1, Ad. 102, Ad. 152, Ad. 162, Ad. 202, Ad. 122, Wed. Mon. Sat. Wed. Mon. Sat. Mon. Tues. p.m., p.m., a.m., a.m. p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. June June June June June June June June 7 5 10 7 5 10 5 6 LINEN SUITS Special Lot .. $9 85 Values to $23.50 KING GEORGE HAS BIRTHDAY LONDON, June 3.- W) -King George V observed his sixty-eighth birthday anniversary today but rheumatism in a shoulder prevented him from attending a glittering mili- tary pageant in his honor. Repertory Players Gaining In National Recognition Annually and we will Fall with possible. greet you in the the best values .._- , (Continued from Page 3) of the United States to study theatre arts and to participate in the pro- ductions. These people are not of the common stage-struck amateur type who have been bitten by the act- ing bug, but are people interested in the theatre as an art. Many are important teachers of drama in schools and colleges throughout the country; some are directors, design- ers, technicians in community thea- tres; many are professional actors; all come to Ann Arbor for a summer of serious work in a live theatre. Critics and others who have wit- nessed the summer productions of the Michigan Repertory Players have been unanimous in their comments concerning the intelligence and en- thusiasm of the work. Thomas Wood Stevens, serving on the National Lit- tle Theatre Conference, said, "The summer program at the University of Michigan is an outstanding event of its kind in the United States." Serious-minded peop:e of the the- atre profession believe that the fu- ture of the American drama lies in the work of local theatre organiza- tions, in organizations like the Mich- igan .Repertory Players. In considering nie importance of a company like this one, it is an item of significance to remember that the group composes a college enterprise. Located at an educational center, as it is, connected definitely as it is with the currciulum in drama, it has a better chance of giving the public well-acted theatre than the average poor-benighted little theatre which depends for its subsistence on the whim of certain society matrons. A strict objectivity is maintained in the organization of the players, and all work -in the company is a matter of strictest competition. Authorities feel that if the future of the American theatre lies in the work of organizations like the Michi- gan Repertory players, then the na- tional recognition afforded this group should make Michigan proud and Ann Arbor theatregoers eager. WALK A FEW STEPS AND SAVE DOLLARS Tom Corbett Young Men's Shop 116 East Liberty St. A $3.00 Value. SHIRTS' $1.00 - Tie to Match 15c ,. i f: HAND-LASTED BRITISH SPORT SHOES Sizes 7 to 8 2/--al wid ths. S5Q This shoe sold originally for $10.50 *. 45c .20c SESSION' SEERSUCKE RLOBES A$4.50 Value. $345 N ECKWEAR Former Values $1.00to $1.50. ,NOW 68c SPECIAL LOT OF CASHMERE SPORT TIES $1.50 and $2.50 Values - 98c AowToAvo/D BONERS A SATIRE ISA MAN WHO IS 50% GOAT . ..., ,w. . .. .. I I Graduation Gifts Line-A-Day Diary with Lock. . $1.00 Fotofolio - The New Photo Album $1.00 Leather Zipper Brief Pocket ... $1.98 Don't forget FATHER'S DAY next Sunday! Greeting Cards for 411 Occasions THIS sort of thing has gone too far! 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