-. ,.. Garg To Sell Next Week Generation, Gargoyle and Generation will make their final appearance of the semester next week. The Gargoyle will make its final4 showing Monday, and Generation will go on sale Wednesday. Although the Board in Control of Student Publications decidedj Saturday that there would be no more Gargoyles, the dummy for the final edition of the year had already been sent to the printers. "AND THE GARG'S not going to fizzle out," according to Asso- ciate Editor Norm Gottlieb, '50. "It will be the bang-up issue it has always been." A story on the trend of college humor and a take-off on Technic, the engineering school magazine will be featured. The second issue of Generation, student arts magazine, will devote its 104 pages to sections on art, literature, drama and music. Pho- tography will be introduced for the first time in the art section. "Generation is exploring and will continue to explore the pos- sibilities of presenting the differ- ent arts in a literary medium," Managing Editor Charles Olsen, '50, said. The drama section is mainly concerned with the contemporary theatre in an average community. A critical essay by Strowan Ro- bertson, Grad., entitled "All That Glitters is the Chandelier" sur- veys today's theatre, presenting its drawbacks and suggesting im- provements. Following the article is a ten- page layout of a "flexible" theatre, designed principally to show that an ideal theatre would cover such facets as music, dance, theatre-in- the-round, and all types of drama. The architecture school, in con- junction with playwrites and di- rectors, is now undertaking the project of constructing a paper - model theatre. HOG HORMONE: Experts 1lncover New Source of Wonder Drug ti By RON WATTSj Thanks to hogs, ACTH, the pre- viously scarce wonder drug, will be made available for research and experimentation in five times the original quantity. ACTH is a hormone which has worked wonders in temporarily improving patients suffering from, a large number of4diseases. EARLY experimentation with the hormone was retarded because of a great scarcity of the drug. Recently it was discovered in the Armour research laboratory that the drug could be easily extracted from the pituitary glands of hogs. Dr. Jerome W. Conn of the medical school, who has done considerable work with ACTH, believes that it is more impor- tant than penicillin, but in a different way. "ACTH has its greatest impor- tance, at the present, in investiga- ting diseases, rather than actual curing results." Actually, the hormone does not cure the patient, but removes the immediate symptoms of the di- sease, Dr. Conn said. The drug has been used experimentally at the University hospital for the past three and one half years, Dr. Conn remarked. EXPERIMENTERS with t h e drug noted that the adrenal cor- tex was stimulated following in- jections of ACTH and that widely divergent syndromes (a group of symptoms that occur together and characterize a disease) were alter- ed. feel that a tremendous amount of work is needed to validate the ef- fects and conclusions based on this information. F. W. Specht, president of Ar- mour and Co., hopes that a pre- paration can be produced so safe, that a patient can go to:a doctor's office, get an injection and then go about his normal routine with- out being confined or hospitalized. Daily Editor Wins MagazinePosition , 1 C Jo Anne Misner, '50, Daily As- sociate Editor will travel to New York in June to work as a Guest Editor for Mademoiselle magazine. Miss Misner is one of 20 under- graduate members of the maga- zine's national college board who has been chosen to write and edit a special college issue of Mademoi- selle. PORTRAITS { and GROUP PHOTOGRAPHS r, 4 l ,,. "tit I1I