t AE SX TIE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURAY, MARitCH15, 1911 . ......F..... WANT STRONG TEETH?: I Tooth Decay Not Prevented By Nutriuional Diet, Jay Says amine Group HUeifer iDh e5 Letters M .e ii . SOCIAIE PRESS PICTURE NEWVS Students interested in stron g healthy teeth need not put much stress on a nutritional diet, ac- cording to Dr. Philip Jay of the dental caries research laboratory of the dental school. Dr. Jay's theory is that the be..- teriological aspect of tooth decay is more pertinent in present day research than the past emphasis on nutritional requirements. Thi theory is substantiated by studies showing a low caries rate among Europeans on st:rvation diets. Sugar is an essential to tooth decay that these people were not able to get, Dr. Jay said. Influence of Diet Dr. Jay emphasized the fact that the cause of dental caries (tooth decay) is not fully estab- Army ROT Plans Display For April 18 Radar Unit Will Spot Selfridge Field Flight Five branches of the Army ROTC unit have planned extensive displays for the Open House to be held April 18 by the engineering college. Plans for a ground radar unit that will demonstrate for visitors by spotting fighter groups flown over the area from Selfridge Field have been made by the Air Forces,. In addition. the air branch will sponsor displays at Willow Run of a turbo-jet engine in operation, an AT-6 advanced training plane. and a King Cobra pursuit ship. The Air Forces has also arranged to fly in a load of cut-away engine training aids that might be of interest to engineering students. Teletypes, walkie-talkie radios, and the combined receiver trans- mitter SCR 193, will be operated by Signal Corps members during the Open House. The Engineer Lorps will dosplay a model of a Japanese mine, and maps and aerial photographs of combat areas. Operation of a 105 mm. cannon will be demonstrated by the Ordnance branch, in addi- tion to displays of sixty and eighty mm. mortars and thirty and fifty calibre machine-guns. Two "ducks" (amphibious troop carrying trucks) will be demon strated in operation on the campus by the Transportation Corps. Bidwell Will Enter Contest Willard 'I'. Bidwell, '48P, will present a paper entitled "A Pre- scription Survey" at a "Students' Night" of the Michigan Branch of the American Pharmaceutical As- sociation on March 25. Representatives from the phar- macy college of Wayne University and the Detroit Institute of Tech- nology will present papers in com- petition with Bidwell. Cash prizes will be awarded to three winners. The speakers are selected by the faculty of their respective schools. A committee qf judges will deterni- ine the order of the winners. Last year the University took first place in the contest, which was instituted to interest students of pharmacy in taking an active part in association work. Office Awraits Bonus Details There is still no information available on exactly when or how Michigan is $270,000,000 veterans bonus will be paid, Karl Karsian, chief of the Ann Arbor Veterans Counseling Center, said yesterday. He said that veterans are get- ting ."premature information", and emphasized that full details will be announced as soon as they are known. Karsian reported that his of- fice has received hundreds of tel- ephone calls from veterans ask- ing where they can obtain "the papers for the bonus". The Fletcher bill, which would establish the bonus payment sys- tem, has passed both houses of the State Legislature and now awaits the governor's signature to become law. Journalisim Club Officers Selected The University Journalism So- ciety elected the following officers at its first meeting: James C. Mac- Donald, president; Ollie M. Lyons, Jr., vice-president; Bernard P. Ly- ons, recording secretary; Holly 0. Pederson, corresponding secretary; Donald E. Wiens. treasurer ished, but it has been generally ('oitnitee aid iccepted that the bacteria lacto- )acillus acidophilus is intimately 1'uopean Reluf tssociated with it. He ays that Lettersexplainthe leifers liep s1 ieslriig carbhyl id rates for Europe'' drive al.d ,skinpj hav "c prvhen siibci+s;ll in reduc-1groups for pledges have bee'n iiail- i> thact. I oaci lbmcount among ed t house presidents and headl' 3h)taiestu se(ll xperlets 12ilof other camnpu.s organizations, hl- caries laboratory here. Seymour S. Goldstein, president D)r. Jay ljoinlts out that many of the Famine Comnmittee, anl- .xperiments are being conducted pouhed mesCrday. oday on dental caries, and other I nounced yesterday. heories arejust ns validn as the During the drive, which will be- lietary approach being used at he Dental Caries Research Lab- )ratory in the Kellogg Foundation. Water Supply The U. S. health department, Michigan health department and .he University are studying the ffect on tooth decay of domestic water supplies. This work is being lone in Grand Rapids where small amounts of sodium flouride are idded to the water supply. The University of Illinois, Dr. Lay said, is trying to do the same -ort of thing we are with a mouth wash containing ammonia, thus changing the bacteria so that the growth of lactobacilli is arrested. Northwestern is using vitamin K as it was discovered that it in- hibits the enzyme and prevents degradation of sugar to acid which causes tooth decay. E xpressotist I P anttngs W i Be Exhibited Oil and water color paintings by Ben-Zion, Russian-born ex- pressionistic artist will be exhib- ited from Tuesday through April 2 at the Museum of Art. This exhibit will replace the scheduled showing of work by Paul Klee which has been cancelled because of difficulty in assembling the paintings. Born in the Ukraine in 1897, Ben -Zion studied Hebrew letters, and wrote poetry and children's fables for a time. He began to paint seriously in 1932 and became a United States citizen in 1936. One of the found- ers of a group of expressionistic painters known as "The Ten", he achieved special fame because of his skilled use of bold colors and distinctive design. Ben-Zion has works in the per- manent collections of the New York Museum of Modern Art and the U.S. State Department. The exhibit to be shown here is circu- lated by the Bertha Schafer Gal- lery of New York. liar' Comedy To Be Gwven, Heralded as the "barroom com- edy banned in Boston since 1776." "Ten Nights : in a Barroom" will be presented at Willow Run's West Lodge auditorium by the Village's Little Theatre Thursday, Friday and Saturday, March 21, 22 and 23. The leading role in the old- fashioned 5-act melodrama will be assumed by Fred De Turk, as Sample Switchel. Mainstays of the new theatre group who will sup- port him are Edward Marheine, Sid Owsowitz, Ivan Jurak, Laird Schmidt, Martin Beisc, Edmund Johnston, Marian Emerson, Mary Crane and Geraldine Meyer. Tickets for the performances, which will begin at 8 p.m., will be sold at the West Lodge P.X. and Wahr's bookstore. 1g4 RED FUND r I . gin March 24, the groups will pledge funds for the purchase of a heifer. By this plan of construc- tive relief, two-year-old heifers are purchased from farmers at a cost of approximately $160. These heifers are shipped through a rep- utable relief agency to any area or person in Europe designated by I the donor. Milk for Children The European farmers who re- ceive the heifers promise to give the dairy products, especially milk. to children and the calves to other needy farmers. This provides them with the opportunity of restocking their farms. The campus drive is part of a national movement sponsored by the Brethren Service Committee. Approximately 1,440 heifers have already been shipped out by the national organization, and have been received by farmers in Czech- oslavakia, France, Greece, Bel- guim and Poland. French Rations Short In stressing the importance of the drive, Goldstein said that in- formation about conditions in France show that rations are very short. Each person is allowed 10 ounces of bread a day, 5 ounces of fat a month, 3.3 ounces of meat a week and only one pound of sugar a month. Milk is available only to children under 13 years of age, and that in small quantities. Pledge cards were enclosed with the letters and should be returned to the Famine Committee with the amount of the pledge on them. Goldstein said. ChaplainWill Be Appointed Galens Appropriates Money for Salary Galens, honorary medical so- ciety, voted this week to appro- priate a salary for a full time, non- sectarian chaplain at University Hospital for one year. The chaplain's duties will be to visit the patients on the wards, be on attendance at deaths and to train the summer theological students in the functions of the hospital program Money for the chaplain's sal- ary will come out of the Galens' newsstand revenues. If the pro- gram is successful it will be con- tinued. The chaplain will be se- lected by a three-map committee which will include Dr. Albert C. Kerlokowski, Director of Univer- sity Hospital, Dr. Carl E. Badg- ley, professor of surgery and Dr. Harry A. Towsley, professor of pediatrics and communicable dis- eases. Galens also voted an appropria- tion of the first hundred dollars for an entertainment fund for the children at the Neurosychi- atric Institute. Revelli To Appear In M-usic Festival Prof. William D. Revelli. con- ductor of University bands, will take part in a public school music festival today in Akron, Ohio. Other cities in which Prof. Re- velli will appear this semester are Miami, Fla.; Dallas, Tex.; Salt Lake City, Utah,; Chicago, Ill.; Pittsburgh, Pa.; Norfolk, Va.; and Atlanta, Ga. Prof. Revelli appeared in Me- dina, Ohio yesterday and in Stock- ton, Calif., last week. - - V E T E R A N - C Y C I S T S ._Mr. and Mrs. Allen O. Wer- ner, 80, oldest married members of the Miami, Fla., "three score and ten" club, prepare to celebrate their 56th wedding anniver- sary with a spin on their bicycles. V I N E C 0 V E R E D ' -Pfe. Norman Roberts (left) and Pfe. Alfred Bongarbone meet by their, "vine-covered cottage" type of winter shelter at Army's center near Leadville, C'olo. F 0 R E S T O F S A I L S-Pacific class sloops, with 19 entered, stage a closely contested race in the annual mid-winter regatta sailed off Los Angeles harbor. W H A T A 0 B ! - George Penny, 11, looks enviously at his friend, .Jack Klein, celebrating his twenty-eighth year as a candy tester in the Mason company's Brooklyn factory. 4 S U R C E R Y T E L E V I S E D - Beneath a television H A I R D R E S S R E V I E W - Decked out in coiffures of the present and past, these Chicago camera (upper left) Johns Hopkins surgeons perform a "blue models display post-war hair styles of our nation, designed to intrigue returned veterans. Left to baby" operation, televised by RCA-Victor to 300 other doctors in right, Ann Leddy, Revolutionary period; Lee Wilson, World War I; Carol Benson, WorldWar II; the hospital to give them closeups of the technique, and Dee Michaels, War Between the tates. WHEN YOU TRAVEL. . Use THAVELERS CHECKS Why take chances? When you carry TRAVELER'S CHECKS, your money 1s insured nl 7 tl . ' 1 7 -n e, OR P H A N S - George, 7, and Nicholas, 2, Greek war or- phans, are among several adopt- ed for a year by an American film distributing company. . ......... :. 'S'"