1 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY MWAY, OMOBEA 6 I j I PLUSH LANDMARK SOLD: Tau Delta Phi Buys Hoover Mansion - , . , , , C I ASSOCIATED PRESS PICTURE NEWS The old Hoover mansion, long time Ann Arbor landmark, has been sold to Tau Delta Phi fra- ternity and is being adapted to house 40 men. The ornate building, located at 2015 Washtenaw, has a colorful history. Built at a reputed cost of $250,000 in 1918 by Leander Hoov- er, local manufacturer, it has gone through court fights, years of abandonment and disrepair, and finally restoration. x a * IN ITS EARLY years, the house was considered a showplace and was said to have $100,000 worth of furnishings. Twenty years after being built the house could scarce- ly be recognized for what it had once been. It had been sold by Hoover's widow in 1923 to Kappa Sigma fraternity, who occupied it from that date until 1932. Between 1935 and 1946 the house fell into disrepair. Weeds choked the landscaped gardens and vandals ravaged the inside of the building. In 1935 the Michigan Children's Institute tried to buy it. Neigh- borhood property owners protested that zoning ordinances forbade such a use of it, and won the bit- ter fight that developed. In 1946, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Benz of Ann Arbor bought the pro- perty from the state to whom it had reverted for delinquent taxes. They restored the place complete- ly selling it this fall to Tau Delta Phi. The house has 22 rooms, includ- ing a ballroom on the third floor complete with raised stage, foot- lights and dressing rooms. A glass- ed-in portico at the rear looks out over a huge sloping lawn. The fraternity expects to fill the house to capacity by the beginning of next year. Army. Game Reservations DeadlineSet All reservations with the Wol- verine Club for the Army-Michi- gan football game at Nw York, including those for the train trip, hotel rooms, and alumni dance, must be made no later than Mon- day, according to George Benisek, cilub publicity chairman Benisek also asked all students with any reservations to attend a special club meeting next Wed- nesday night, at which time in- structions will be given for those making the trip. "We also have a few game tick- ets left for those who want to make train reservations," he said. "The cost for the train ticket is $30, a considerable saving for those students who planned earlier to make the trip by plane." "The trip east will be made in two special coaches, each of them with reclining chairs," he added. "Buses to and from the train will be available in both Ann Arbor and New York." The train schedule: Leave Ann Arbor on the Wolverine at 7:50 p.- m. Thursday, arrive in N.Y. at 9:15 am. Friday. Leave N.Y. on the North Shore Limited at noon Sun- day, arrive at Ann Arbor 3:45 a.m. Monday. All arrangements can be made at the Student Affairs window in the lobby of the Administration Bldg., Benisek declared. Band Day Set For Saturday During the half-time perform- ance at tomorrow's Dartmouth game 37 high s c h o o l bands will stream on to the grid- iron for the second annual observ- ance of High School Band Day. Together with the University Marching Band approximately 2,500 high schoolers will form two massive formations stretching from one goal post to the other. Arrayed in colorful uniforms, the bands will first form the let- ters M-I-C-H while playing and singing the "Victors." Facing the opposite side of the field they will then swing into the letters U-S-A and play "God Bless America." Band Day was inaugurated last year at the Indiana Game by Wil- liam D. Revelli, conductor of the University Bands. Picture Exhibit To Be Displayed "Creative Photography," an ex- hibit arranged through the Mu- seum of Modern Art in New York, n.mAll - n Acaxr +khmiah Cle:14 NEW TAU DELTA PHI HOUSE-The old Hoover mansion, lo- cated at 2015 Washtenaw Ave. will be the new home of Tau Delta Phi Fraternity. The house has a colorful and expensive history. It was built in 1918 at a reputed cost of $250,000 and furnished for an additional $100,000. SCIENTISTS CLAIM: New Discovery Makes Safer Kidney Stone Cure. Possible H A R B I N C E R -This cre- ation, exhibited at Aage Thaa- rug's London show, is not a hat. It's a wire framework trimmed with gold acorns, his forecast of next Spring's fashion trend. T H E L E A D E R S T E P S OUT-This smart-stepping drum major heads a costumed boys' band during a shepherd's festival In the German town of Dinkelsbuehl, Bavaria. E N ClI N E E R S TAKE OV E R-Philip West, of North Hollywood, (behind engine) moves his English-type locomotive to main line at Golden Gate Live Steamers Club nieet near Oakland. The painless elimination of hu- man kidney stones has been brought nearer as the result of research announced by scientists at the University of Illinois, but in Ann Arbor a University Hospi- tal physician warned that the day may still be a long way off. Dr. Richard Thirlby of the Uni- versity Hospital Urology Clinic claimed that many such discover- ies have been made in recent years and that he doesn't believe that the complete answer has yet been found. HE SAIDTHAT similar methods of dissolving kidney stones have been worked out by doctors in other- cities. He added that the University Hospital seldom uses any of these methods. The Illinois researchers said they had discovered three dif- ferent ways of dissolving the stones in rats. They prove tht stones, once formed, can be made to disappear without sur- Law School Requirements Told by Dean Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law School was featured on this year's first meeting of the Michi- gan Crib Club at the League with an informal discussion on admis- sion into the Law School and a pre-legal program. Dean Stason explained to the gathering of pre-law students the details of the new "integrated" program, which is replacing the old curriculum this year. Students currently enrolled in the combin- ed curriculum may continue, but no newones will be accepted, he explained. THE INTEGRATED program calls for entrance into Law School after three years in, the literary college, as did the conbined curriculum. However, the' student must then spend four years in Law School under the new program, as com- pared with three years before.. During this time, the student takes the equivalent of a semes- ter's work in literary college in addition to his Law School cours- es. In this way he earns both a B.A. and a law degree, Dean Sta- son declared. He pointed out to students not wishing this special program that the Law School will accept almost any undergraduate degree for ad- mission to the regular three year law course. However, he did re- commend that prospective lawyers choose other fields than music and physical education for undergrad- uate study. Dean Stason .listed economics, English, history, math, science, and political science as especially fruitful fields for pre-law students. He urged that snap courses, new or partially developed courses, and subjects of. a vocational na- ture be avoided. Francke Elected President of APA Don E. Francke ,chief pharma- cist at University Hospital is the new president-elect of the Ameri- can Pharmaceutical Association, Robert P. Fischelis, the associa- tion's secretary, has announced. Francke received the bachelor of _..._.... a,,,,,--r.....,, ti. gery, and new stones prevented, according to an Associated Press story. One method; with rats, is to boost the urine output four fold. Another makes the urine acid. The third cuts down on the amount of magnesium in the rats' food. All succeed about equally, researchers said. s THE STUDIES were aimed at getting rid of dangerous kidney stones in humans without surgery, although the rat methods may not apply to humans. One treatment -drinking more fluids to make more urine-is being tried on hu- mans now. X-rays indicate that the stones in one man's kidney are getting smaller, or have disap- peared, the story said. Kidney stonesrare made of cal- cium, magnesium and other chem.- icals forming hard deposits in the kidneys, blocking the urinary tract.' They may grow large or there may be scores of little ones. * * S IN THE LAST TWO YEARS, the Illinois scientists have experi- mented with 4000 rats, studying how stones formed can be dis- solved. Tiny flat pieces of zinc are put In the rats' bladders, and these may serve as seeds for the growth of stones. In four to six weeks, the rats alomst always develop stones of various s*i%, some quite large. Sometimes, pieces of the stone break off, forming daughter stones that also grow larger. s " r BUT STONES do not form in rats who drank great amounts of sugared water daily for six weeks, so that their urine output was four times greater than nor- mal. The big water intake also dis- solved stones in rats which al- ready had them. This was dis- covered by letting stones de- velop, taking them out and weighing them, and then put- ting then back into the same rats before letting them drink .lots of liquid. Making the urine more acid, by adding ammonium chloride to the rats' food, did the same thing. Formed stones dissolved in most cases, or stone formation was pre- vented. The stones kept growing in the rats which did not get the acid treatment. CUTTING DOWN the amount of magnesium in the rat's food had similar results. This experiment was tried when chemical tests showed that the stones in the rats were al- most entirely of magnesium ammonium phosphate. Humans get several different chemical types of stones and they are often of a mixed type. But it is known that humans excrete al- most as much magnesium in their urine as calcium. New experiments are being started on guinea pigs and dogs which get stones of different chemical types. This may throw more light of the cause and treat- ment of human stones. The work now is being supported by a grant from the U.S. Public Health Ser- vice. The Illinois researchers used the bladders of rats in their studies be- cause the rat kidney is impossibly small for such experiments. But there doesn't appear to be any real difference in the mechanism of stone formation in the two ~..m. e W A R D A N G E RkS R E M 0 V E D- A shell-enrusted E N V0Y T0S Y RIAmine is hoisted onto a pontoon under guidance of an Italian "frogs. -cavendish W. Cannon (above) man" during hazardous.work of demining waters around Trieste. bassador to Yugoslavia, has been Nominated by President Truman . as U. S. Minister to Syria. ' :::; .li * VISITOR IS W E L C O M ED -Archduke Stefan, of Austria, a student at Malvern, Pa., Prep School, meets some of the players on Nw "American in Paris" set during visit to Hollywood. t, W A T E R W O M A N - Theodora Lynch Getty, actress and wife of oil millionaire J. Paul Getty, moves a load of empties in her water-from-Texas bottling plant at Burbank, Cal. AI DESIGN BY DACHE. -The corselet theme is inter- preted by Lilly Dache in a strap)- less evening bodice of black and white checked damask sprinkled with gold sequins. M. P. WITH A PRO B L E M - Ernest ° Marples, Member of Parliament, inquires of a London policeman the loca- tion of a parking space for bicycle he rides to House of Commons. MULTI-BLADE PROPULSION--Eight blades P nA, n tth R.tih Navv's VR nIane which was showm at 9R L INE W d l T R1:C C GC C U A W C DC0R b.:. --, ,,+tPCh ne crv