THE MICHIGAN DAILY Check-Ups, X-Ray Exams Yield Decline In Tuberculosis Cases _. A rmy Bomber Buns A fter Crash; Five Die Year-long check-ups and a system of routine X-ray examinations for every new student have yielded a steady decline in the University's tuberculosis incidence, Director War- ren Forsythe of the Health Service revealed yesterday. Pointing to the '.68 per thousand incidence rate discovered among Sep- tember entrants this fall, Doctor For- sythe compared this figure with the 15 cases per thousand found in draft board physical examinations. "This can be attributed to the increased age of the selectees," he declared. The University is one of the few institutions of its kind in the nation that require compulsory X-ray exam- inations for its entire student body. Over half of the country's 300 col- leges and, universities have tuber- culosis examinations in some form, . but the high cost of X-rays have limited their use to 32 schools. The X-rays were first introduced in 1935, and at that time the inci- dence rate was 2.85 per thousand. The elimination of active cases from the University's enrollment has dropped the rate to its present low point. About 25% of the student body have "healed" cases of the disease,, Doctor Forsythe deblare4. Although the childhood tuberculosis o these, students is no longer' activn they Orthodontists Hold Annual Convention Eighty Midwestern orthodontists will meet here today and tomorrow at the annual convention of the Great Lakes Society of Orthodontists to be held in the Rackham and Kel- logg buildings.- Immediately following the two-day program the W. K. Kellogg Institute will sponsor a short course for twentyi orthodontists from gall parts of thei country. This course will be taught1 by Dr. Bernhard Gottlieb of Baylor1 University. should pay particular attention tc sufficient sleep and an adequate diet Breaking the University's enroll- ment down into geographical groups, the Health Service has discovered a much higher tuberculosis rate among Oriental and Latin American stu- dents. "As far as the average student is concerned," Doctor Forsythenoted, "he should guard against exposure to any known cases. Keeping these 'actives' out of the University has been our share in protecting the student body." Ties To Inaugurate Series Of Lectures an Chinese Culture The first in a series of six lectures on Chinese literature will be given by Hsing-Chih (Gerald Tien), Grad., at 4:15 p.m. today in the Rackham Amphitheatre. This lecture will serve as an intro- duction to the study of Chinese poet- ry, prose, drama, novel and contem- porary literature. The next five lec- tures will be given on successive Tuesdays., Hsing-Chih is a former member of the faculty of Yenching University in Peiping, China. He is studying in the Graduate School on a fellowship. The lectures are- sponsored by the Uni- versity Chinese Students Club. Alpha Nu Observes Ninety-Eighth Year Tonight's meeting of Alpha Nu Speech Society marks the ninety- eighth anniversary of this society, which was founded on Sept. 30, 1843. In 1922 Alpha Nu helped in tound- ing the national literary and debat- ing society of Kappa Phi Sigma. Al- pha Nu was organized as a means of helping students who did not have an opportunity to take speech; work in the classroom. Today it is the only organization which gives recog- nition to men in speech classes for outstanding wo'rk. Its activities consist of practice in public speaking and debates with Athena and Zeta Phi Alpha. ;, Y 3 c c International Fete Planned Foreign Students To Wear Native Dress At Dinner Local foreign students will be offi- cially welcomed to Ann Arbor by the community and the University at the annual International Dinner, which Nov. 19 "the eve of Thanksgiving," will be given at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, in the ballroom of the Union. The Internatjonal Dinner has been an annual affair for the past 20 years. Foreign students attending the dinner will dress in their native costumes and will present a program of folk dances. President Alexander G. Ruthven will deliver a welcome address. The dinner will be open to the pub- lic for the first time this year. Tick- ets may be purchased and reserva- tions made daily at the Center through Thursday. No reservations can be made by phone. Engineers To Visit Plant Grinding .wheels and abrasives in manufacture will be observed tomor- row when the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, student sec- tion, visits a grinder fabricating plant in Jackson. I hird Concert Will Feature Dr. Rodzinski (Continued from Page 1) concerts at popular prices to its two regular subscription series in Sev- erance Hall, the three-million-dollar home of the orchestra. In addition, four all-star popular concerts were given last year in the Cleveland Public Auditorium. The attendance went above 10,000 for each coirert. Severance Hall, with its perfect acoustics and modern stage, has proven an ideal theatre for the per- formance of grand opera and Dr. Rodzinski has presented works by Wagner, Strauss, Bizet, Puccini, Ver- di, Rossini, Shostakovich and Ruben- stein within its walls. The concert at 3 p.m. Sunday af- ternoon will include the following works: Overture to "Euryanthe" by Weber; Symphony No. 5 in E-flat major, Op. 82, by Sibelius; "Iberia," Impressions for Orchestra No. 2 by Debussy; and "Scenario for Orches- tra" on Themes from "Show Boat," by Kern. A limited number of tickets for the Choral Union Series,, or for individual concerts, are still available at the offices of the University Musical So- ciety in Burton Memorial Tower. Bits of wreckage of it twin-engined army bomber which crashed in a cornfield and exploded near Find- lay, O., burn some time after the plunge. Five men testing automatic flight equipment were killed. The ship, out of Patterson Field at Dayton, O., dropped to the ground at a 45-degree angle from mist-filled clouds. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLET IN ciey n uronMeoralToer (Oontinued from Page 4) German Club Will Hold SecondMeeting Today; The Gerrhan Club will hold its second meeting of the semester at 8 p.m. today in the Women's Ath- letic Building. All those interested in German are invited to enjoy a ..program of folk dancing, singing, games, and refreshments. The newly elected officers this year are Liese Price, '43, president; Rosa- lie Pielemeier, '42, vice-president; Reinhard Wittke, '43, secretary and Jane Thoms, '43, treasurer. Engineering Text Revised Almost completely rewritten in or- der to bring it up to date with mod- ern engineering methods, a new edi- tion of "Inorganic Chemical Tech- nology," by Prof. E. M. Baker of the chemical engineering department and Prof. W. L. Badger, formerly of the same department, will be re- leased for sale sometime this week. If .1 t v. ' .. la,, O ur Cosmetic Counter Lecture: Dr. John B. Youmans, Associate Professor of Medicine at Vanderbilt University, School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, will give a lecture on "Vitamin Deficien- cies" at 1:30 p.m. today in the Am- phitheater at the University Hospital. Dr. Youmans has recently returned from France where he has had the opportunity to study nutritional problems. Events Today Junior Research Club: The Novem- ber meeting will be held tonight at 7:30 in the Amphitheatre of the Hor- ace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. Program: "Predatory Animals and Game Fish," by Karl F. Lagler of the Department of Zoology. "A Hydrodynamics Problem," by R. T. Liddicoat, of the Department of Engineering Mechanics. Sigma Rho Tau will meet at 7:30 tonight in room 311 of the West En- gineering Building. A debate with the University of Toledo on the sub- ject: "Resolved that labor unions should be incorporated" will be feat- ured. This will be the first training night for new members and will mark the opening of this semester's pro- gram. All members, old, new, and prospective are requested to attend. Tau Beta Pi: There will be an im- portant meeting tonight at 6:15 in the Union. German Club Meeting tonight at 8:00. The program will consist of folk dancing sand singing at the Wo- men's Athletic Building. Refresh- ments will be served. The meeting is open to all who areinterested. Invitation to Learning: Professor Paul Henle of the Philosophy De- partment and Professor Norman Nel- son of the English Department will discus Sir Thomas More's Utopia in the manner of the well-known CBS program, Invitation to Learning, to- night a 7:30 at Lane Hall. The dis- cussion is open to students and facul- ty and is sponsored by the Student Religious Association. Marriage Relations Lecture Series: Professor Norman Hines will lecture on "Courtship and .Pre-Marital Re-, lations," tonight at 7:30 in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Aquinas Seminar: The group study- ing the writings of St. Thomas Aqui- nas will meet at Lane Hall on Tues- day afternoons at 4:30 p.m. Music Seminar: "The Works of Pal- estriha" will be the subject of the lec- ture by Mr. Leonard Gregory of the University School of Music at the Religious Music Seminar, sponsored by the Student Religious Association, and held at Lane Hall today at 4:15 p.m. The talk will be illustrated by recordings of Palestrina's composi- tions. The Tuesday Evening Concert of Men's Lounge of the Rackham Build- ing tonight will feature Shostako- vich's Fifth Symphony and Strauss' Don Quixote with Feuermann play- ing the Solo Cello. Women's Glee Club rehearsal for sopranos and altos at 4:00 p.m. to- day in the Garden Rodm of the League. Absences are unexcused un- less reported to Marjorie Gould be- fore the meeting. the Michigan Alumnae Club will meet tonight at 8:00 in the auditori- um of the W. K. Kellogg Foundation Institute. Mr. Eugene B. Power will speak on "The Treasure House of Microfilm." Christian Science Organization will meet tonight at 8:15 in the chapel of the Michigan League. JGP Central Committee at 4:30 today in the League. Meeting room will be posted. Hillel Players: Tryouts for several one-act plays will be held at the Foundation today and Wednesday, 4:00-5:30 p.m. Anyone interested is invited to attend these tryouts. Coming Events A.I.Ch.E. meeting on Thursday, Nov. 6, in Room 1042 East Engineer- ing Building. Dr. E. H. Potthoff of the Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. will speak on "Aviation Gasoline and National Defense." Everyone is welcome. Regional Conference of the Ameri- can Association of University Profes- jors will meet at the Michigan Union, on Saturday, November 8. Morning and afternoon sessions and lunchieor. President Deibler will add ess the Ccriferenct_. The Psychology Journal Club will meet Thursday, Nov. 6, at 7:30 p.m., in East Conference Room, Rack- ham Bldg. Prof. T. M. Newcomb will discuss his recent extensive work in Personality and Social Attitudes. Re- freshments. Pre-medical Society Meeting will be held Wednesday, Nov. 5, at 8:00 p.m. in room 319, Michigan Union. Dr. Elizabeth Crosby will lecture on the film "The Development of the Nervous System." There will be a discussion of the Pre-medical aptitude tests. All pre- medics invited. International Center: The pro- gram for this week at the Center in- cludes the following: Today, at 4:15 p.m., Amphitheatre of the Rackham Building, the first of a series of six lectures on Chinese literature by Gerald Tien. Open to the public. Wednesday, November 5, 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. Music hour at the Center. Bach: G Minor Fugue (Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra); Si- belius: Symphony No. 3 (Kajanus and the London Symphony); Beethoven: Concerto in D Major for Violin and Orchestra (Heifetz, soloist; Toscani- ni and the N.B.C. Orchestra). Wednesday, November 5, 9:00 to 10:00, The German Roundtable will meet in Room 18. Friday, November 7, 8:00 p.m. French Roundtable. Attention is called to the fact that all reservations must be made by Thursday of this week for the Inter- national Dinner to be given November 19 in honor of the foreign students. Physical Education-Women Stu- dents: Individual Sports Tests will be given this week in the following activ- ities: Tennis, Archery, Golf, Friday, November 7, 1:00 to 3:00, Women's Athletic Building. Swimming, Tuesday and Thursday evenings, 8:30 p.m., Union Pool. Students are asked to sign up at the Women's Athletic Building for appointments to take these tests. The attention of upperclass stu- dents with Incompletes in Physical Education is called to this notice. Assembly Association announces that through the courtesy of Play Production, all season tickets will be on sale in the Social Director's office at the Michigan League until Thursday, November 6. Hours, 9-6. ' 1 Meet me UNDER THE CLOCK at the BMILTMORE SPECIAL ROOM RATES extended to faculty and students. The College Department is ever ready to give you assistance. THIIE BIiTMO.RE has won the unique distinction of having the largest college patronage in New York because of the thoughtful attention to college needs. B9LT"MORE David B. Mulligan, President Madison Avenue at 43rd Street, New York Direct elevator and stairway connections with Grand Central. The Calkins -letcher Cosmetic Couni.ter carries cos- metics that are nationally known. Yardley's, Tussy, Dorothy Grey, Mary Dunhill, Coty. We carry only these Brands in order to protect you. You cannot run the risk of using inferior products that might harm delicate skin. Your only protection is buying known products at a reliable store. P erfumes - i i For the finishing touch to complete your make-up -- Perfumes. We carry Lelong, Lentheric, Schiaparelli, Corday Perfumes that meet the demands of every campus occasion. Whatever your beauty needs, the Cosmetic Counter can supply them. SHEP FIELDS will be at this store THIS AFTERNOON AT 3:00 Meet the bandleader who, with Tommy Dorsey, was chosen to play for the great national defense dance caravan in Detroit toniaht. .10 g'v y tt ta nIV ci$a and ol jaestCt ht Satisfies o taeste tit takes the Right Combination o tobaccOs a end ad rare a tic heb et cigarette tobaccos, the TObaccebesbrkeye..atcan't be copied.. to ive Toacco Chesterfield thextra smoking tobaccosrekr tobaccosthtoeycpeareht makes smokers say f/I IKNJXL ,l FI NIEIr T 1 0_ x1.1 11 I 11 it