TAEE T TIMBZH72 i)AiL *T~~).;T Ax. 7 D Expert Advocates Mosquito=Eating Fish To Prevent Expected -Malaria Epidemic ASSOCIATED LD)u RE PRESS NEWSW By PRISCILLA EAOCK "Our work with a mosquito-eating fish may avert an anticipated post- war malaria epidemic," Louis A Krumholz of the Institute of Fisher- ies Research said in an interview. "We are now working through the Malaria Control Fund of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies to promote the use of the mosquito-eating top-minnow in re- moving the source of the disease," he added. Because there is no known cure for malaria, returning servicemen might spread the disease, Mr. Krumhoz said. "For example the Red Arrow Division, which is com- posed of Michigan and Wisconsin men, is now stationed in the South Pacific. These men have been ex- posed to the disease and many of them have contracted it. Through them malaria might be spread un- less precautions are taken; remov- ing the anophiline mosquitoes, the * carriers of malaria, is the best practical measure." The project is under the direction of Dr. Lowell T. Coggershall, ma- laria expert with the School of Pub- Speech Winner, Delvers Talk On Prejudices "The distasteful racial character- istics are not all reserved for the Jewish people because in every group there are the good and the had indi- viduals," Ruth Novik,. '46, winner of the Speech 31 final contest, said in her speech, "The Thought Behind the Prejudice," in Rackham Amphi- theatre yesterday. In her discussion of anti-Semiti- cism, Miss Novik said that we should give the Jew a fair chance by learn- ing the facts about him and then thinking about him. "We should not confuse the truth with our preju- dices," Miss Novik emphasized. Danial Saulson, the second place winner, spoke on total war for the home front in a speech entitled "The Home Front Has an Obligation." An emphasis of unity of nations to pre- serve peace was brought forth by Donald Schwartz, third place win- ner, in his talk "Post-War Peace." Each semester a contest of this type is held among Speech 31 .classes in the University. Mrs. Roosevelt Tours Detroit DETROIT, Jan. 26.-(P)-For a busy eight hours on this balmy day in January, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt sped about Detroit today to chat witp women war plant workers, visit a nursery and make a speech. The first lady was here in the interests, she said, of the problems of women war workers, and at the end of a swift tour covering some 75 miles of the motor city expressed herself as pleased to have been here. Long before the end of the day, marked by extraordinarily high tem- peratures, Mrs. Roosevelt had been forced to shed the sable furs which hung about her shoulders. Under a warm sun the mercury climbed to 64 degrees. At the Packard Motor Car Com- pany slacks-clad women as well as men employees knocked off work to press about her. In the confusion Mrs. Roosevelt only smiled gracious- ly, meanwhile nodding to this and that admirer. Beware of he's on the prowl! Watch out for "Nippy Air" who walks abroad these chilly days, reddening noses and chapping ten- der lips. A tube of Roger & Gallet original Lip Pomade is your protection. Smooth its invisible film over your lips and you can defy the harshest weather. Chapped lips are not only painful-they're unsightlyl So drop in at any drug store and say "Roger & Gallet original Lio lie Health, and serving the Navy, and Dr. Carl L. Hubbs, Curator of Fishes in the University Museums. The important killer of the ano- philine mosquitoes is the Gambusia affinis affinis, which eats the larvae in large quantities. It has proven 75 to 85 percent effective in malaria control and up to 95 percent success- ful in exterminating the non-dan- gerous types of mosquitoes. Used since 1905, the effective- ness of the fish was discovered by David Starr Jordon, then presi- dent of Leland Stanford Junior University. It was then introduced into Hawaii, where it exterminat- ed the pestiferous mosquitoes with marked succes. During the first World War Hilde- brand and other workers used the fish extensively th roughout the southeastern United States, espe- cially near Army camps. The natural range of the minnow is the gulf states and the Mississippi watershed as far south as Southern Illinois and Indiana. In 1925 the fish was brought north of its natural habitat and put into waters near Chicago. There a hardy +strain de- veloped. Mr. Krumholz is now on leave from the Institute for Fisheries Research of the State Department of Conservation to work with the Gambusia affinis affinis. The fish have been living in the Ann Arbor region for three years, and Mr. Krumholz at the present time is trying to introduce them into wa- ters throughout the state. Last summer they were planted as far north as Mackinac and it is hoped that they survive the winter. Through widespread use of the fish it is believed that the malaria menace may be removed. FREYA STARK SPEAKS: Lecturer Says North African Arab Is Not Typical of Race M I LK I N C T I M E--A young Russian guerrilla, member o i detachment operating behind the German lines, milks it cow captured from the Nazii. "It is not fair to judge all the Arab people by the Arab that the American and British soldiers have encountered in North Africa," Freya Stark, petite British traveler and explorer, said in an interview yesterday. "The Arab in North Africa is a mixture, very low in the social scale, whose language does not even corres- pond to the Arabic spoken in the Near East," she explained. Miss Stark, who is traveling ex- tensively in the United States for the first time, made her first visit to the Near East in 1927 when she took a trip through Syria. Since the war she has been work- ing for the British Ministry of In- formation in the Near East. Speak- ing of the situation there she reveal- ed that there was a tremendous amount of Axis propaganda spread among the Arabs at the outbreak of the war,, most of which was directed at the youth of the country. "The services rendered to the Allies by the Arab since the war have been I " Russ.. (Continued from Page 1) friendliness and showed no resent- ment on the part of the Russians that the offer of good offices had been made. Hull himself, in summariz- ing its contents, reported that it contained an expression of gratifi- cation for the United States action. The offer, made at the request of the Polish government, was an- nounced here Jan. 17. The American note, presented in Moscow by Ambassador W. Averell Hariman, carefully avoided making any proposal of mediation in the thorny territorial dispute between Russia and Poland. This is the point of Russo-Polish difficulties on which Moscow has ex- pressed most vigorous views in favor of a direct settlement with Poland. It is also the type of question which the American government reportedly feels should be left for settlement after the war and within the frame- work of whatever post-war world se- curity organization is set up. Third GI Stomp To Be Saturday Specially invited hostesses at the GI Stomp, scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m. in the North Lounge of the Union Saturday, are members of Pi Beta Phi, Chi Omega, Alpha Xi Delta, and residents of Jordan Hall. The Stomp Saturday will be the third of its kind this semester. The Union sponsored GI Stomps were or- iginated last summer and proved so successful that it was decided to con- tinue them. The purpose of the events is to give women and servicemen station- ed on campus a chance to become ac- quainted. Music for dancing is pro- vided by recordings. IDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) p.m. in the Union. Agenda for the next group meeting will be decided. All members invited to attend. Duplicate Bridge: A duplicate bridge tournament will be held at 2:00 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 30, in the USO Club. All servicemen are in- vited as well as townspeople. Come with or without a partner. Each week is a complete tournament. A small fee of 25c will be charged per nerson. helpful in turning the scale in the Near East in favor of the Allies," she continued. "Because of their friend- ly attitude, we have been able to move freely in this part of the coun- try without using military means to keep these countries under control." "The Arab is fundamentally demo- cratic in feeling," Miss Stark explain- ed. "His religion and historic tra- dition are democratic and through natural sympathy he is inclined to- ward democracy. In fact, the idea of totalitarianism is repugnant to him." Comparing the Near East that she first visited with the Near East of today Miss Stark declared, "A ter- rific change is coming over all the Arab world. Especially since the war, the country is stepping into modern ways. This has been brought about to a great extent through the training of the younger generation." "In the Near East, I have ridden on camels, donkeys, horses, and mules," Miss Stark said smiling.. "It certainly is a far cry from traveling in the United States today." In an illustrated lecture yesterday Miss Stark described in detail her journey to Yemen for the British goernment in 1940. Prof. Talamon Speaks Tonigrht Third French Lecture Will Be Presented Prof. Rene Talamon of the Ro- mance Language Department will present a "Lecture Dramatique" at 8 p.m. today in the Assembly Room of the Rackham Building; this is the third in the present series of French lectures. The program will consist of read- ings from several well-known works of French literature. He is planning to read a part of Act II, Scene VI from "Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme" by Moliere as one selection. Prof. Talamon said he would prob- ably read a part of the humorous "nose tirade" from "Cyrano de Ber- gerac" by Rostand. He suggested that "Les Djinns" by Victor Hugo would make up another part of the program. r.Blakeman Attends Meeting Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, religious counselor, and the Rev. Edward Red- man, of the Unitarian Church, left Ann Arbor yesterday to attend a conference in Chicago on "The De- velopment of a Strategy and Program for the War-Time Campus." About 350 professional religious workers from seven states will at- tend the three-day conference. The Rev. Redman will report on the work of the local clergymen who are serv- ing as civilian chaplains among the various service units on campus. Central resource leaders include Lt. Col. Thomas Carter of St. Louis, Prof. Clarence P. Shed of Yale, Fath- er Joseph D. Connerton of the Uni- versity of Chicago, and Rabbi Harry Kaplan of Ohio State University. Dr. Blakeman will preside over the luncheon tomorrow and will be one of the leaders of a seminar group. The conference is sponsored by the Conference of Campus Religious Workers in the Middle West, the General Region of the YMCA, and the Geneva Region of the YWCA, in cooperation with the National War Emergency Council. Ruegsegger, '28, Named OPA Enforcement Officer A N A M E D for the Associated Press war correspondent killed in action in the Mediterranean Sea Feb. 5, 1943, the new 10,500- ton Liberty ship Edward Henry Crockett, slides down the ways. P U Z Z L E R -P hil Baker, comedian and quiz master, de- ci'des he has really come up against the $64 question ,in the tough one Uncle Sam has aske&. -with a march 15 deadline., GALE IRO-BPBkINS, Hollywood star, poses latest pin-up picture to to the boys overseas. shapely for her be sent M R S. M A R V I N J. W I L S 0 N smiles at 38-day-old Jimmy Wilson as he was released from the Portland, Ore., hospital where he was born while she was confined to an iron lung. STTT MTSRi P % enne A -qrtona ,- C ;-Po Orsogna. -I- ROME o ubiaco- WAY ~ .5SlpPIN Are r.CASSIO - ,4NA SE1N- Marnoar Tr Er R ehetrooR, AA1 " .. WA LC . $lN ERN tA S MA SII N % nery0mils nrthasrd fomher ,eah Anzio' Nettuno on alies iarsh ms Gae ta fGor lionq R S MAS H IN G nearly 24 miles northward from their beach- head near Nettuno on the Italian west coast, units of the Brit- ish-American Fifth Army have cut the historic Appian Way., H A T F OR S P R I N C-Spring is just around the corner- maybe-so here's one of the new chapeaux, a swashbuckling Lilly Dache model embroidered with jet beads and sequins, ex- hibited at an advance New York showing.