PAGE six THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JANUAP.Y 14, 1954 i MOLLUSKS MUST GO: U' Prof. Tackles Egypt's Snail Menace By MARGE PIERCY Prof. Henry van der Schalie of the zoology department has recent- ly returned from Egypt's Nile Ba- sin, where he is heading the World Health Organization fight against a disease carried by snails living in drainage ditches. This disease, schistosomiasis or bilharziasis, as it is,variously call- ed, afflicts 60 percent of Egypt's f armers. "IT'S FATAL in severe cases, but its worst effects are the loss of vitality it causes along with low- ered resistance to other diseases. This shows up particularly in times of crises, like wartime," the curator of the University mollusk collection elaborated. Working in an area of 5,000 acres along the Nile, Prof. van der. Schalie and his team are carrying on a four point pro- gram of snail control, treatment, sanitation, and education. One of the chief difficulties in working with the natives, accord- ing to the professor, is in adjust- ing to the slower tempo they use in: dealing with any problem. "It is hard for most of these people to realize how poor the sanitation f a- cilities are," the professor added. "All their water supply is concen- trated in the canals and drains, and the contact is almost certain to give them the disease." ** * * ONE OF THE first goals of the WHO project is killing the snails. Tartuffe Costumed in outfits befitting the wealth and magnificence of the court of Louis XIV, the speech department will contin- ue its performances of Moliere's "Tartuffe" at 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- ter. Tickets are priced at $1.20- 90c-60c with a special student rate of 50c in effect tonight. All seats are reserved. Drama Critic Cites Current Theater Woes Referring to the theater as "The Fabulous Invalid," RusselldMc- Lauchlin, Detroit News drama critic yesterday cited the theater's problems in the final speech as- sembly of the semester. " Relating the change in the num- ber of theaters in the Detroit area and the lack of "summer stock" houses and vaudeville, he referred to the Times Square area in New York City as merely a real estate project. McLauchlin told how this section is controlled by a few cor- porations without whose support a theater cannot run. COSTS OF production are very high due to demands of well-or- ganized stagehands, musicians and press agents, he said. Plays then become either smash hits or flops; withno moderate success possible. "I don't think commercial theaters in their present form can meet the challenge of tele- vision," McLaughlin stated. "The form must somehow, be chang- ed." He suggested festivals and or- ganized audiences as examples of possible changes. Quoting actor- manager Sir Henry Irving, Mc- Lauchlin added "the theater must live as a business or die as an art." FELLOWSHIP, THRIFT: 'U' Co-Ops Stress Living Economy. By DAVID KAPLAN With the cost of living contin- ually rising, University co-opera- tives are faced with the problem of climbing expenses, but by buying necessities in large quantities and using their own labor, co-ops have been able to keep the weekly1 charge to members down to $12.50. The major objectives of coopera- tive living are non-discriminatory fellowship and thrift. Current weekly rates for room and board average $12.75 for the men and $12.50 for the women. TO ATTAIN this economy, each member of a co-op works approx- imately five hours per week, pre- paring food, doing cleaning or maintenance work or performing administrative duties. High costs for any homeowner, as well as for co-opers, are food and rent. The average food cost for each student runs close to $5.50 per week, while rent is $4.40. The usual home expenses such as heat, gas, electricity; wa- ter, telephone, maintenance and replacements, insurance and safety measures, are all a part of the students' share in running a co-op. In addition to these items, there are fees for housemanager's oper- ations, social and educational ex- Fire Control Talk By Stewart Slated Gilbert I. Stewart, director of the State Conservation Depart- ment's forest fire experiment sta- tion at Roscommon, will discuss fire control matters at 1:15 p.m. today in the West Medical Rm. of the Rackham Building. Allinterested forestry students and faculty are invited to attend, according to Prof. Kenneth P. Davis, head of the forestry de- partment. penses, and a small amount for loan repayment. Luther H. Buchele, Executive Secretary of the ICC, says that "Increases over the years have for the most part been increases in food costs for which you can blame the war, and increased mainte- nance costs whichdhave resulted in better living conditions." Roomers are provided with clos- et space, a desk, chair, bookshelf, and a bed, along with a place for entertaining guests, eating priv- ilege, and the use of each house's laundry facilities. Boarders are as much a member of the house and have the same work duties and privileges*as room- ers, except for lodging. They may use the house to entertain guests, to study, to read magazines and to listen to music. They can live in the co-ops during vacation periods, and can use the houses to purchase cigarettes, candy, records etc. wholesale, and get a sizable dis- count on dry-cleaning. Victorian Authors' Exhibit To End The Victorian Authors' Exhibit currently on display in the General Library will end tomorrow. The Rare BookDivision of the Library has placed the first edi- tions of these old books, along with brief explanations, in the glass cases on the first floor. The sec- tions include poetry, essays, ,dra- mas and fiction by such Victorian authors as George Bernard Shaw, Mathew Arnold, William Thacke- ray and Algernony Swinburne. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Your Discontinued Textbooks I -Daily-Dean Morton PROF. VAN DER SCHALIE PREPARES SLIDE OF SCHISTOSOMIASIS are worth real money! If sold to Ulrich's WITH your currently good ones. YOUB BEST DEAL-FIGURE IT OUT! Ulrich's sell your discontinued books to over 600 college bookstores. This way we get the highest possible prices for YOU. At least 25% of the books used this semester are now obso- rT Until now, this has been done with copper sulfate, which is im- mediately lethal to snails but not harmful to people or farm animals. But, because this does not af- fect the eggs, newer poisons are being tried. Point Four has ap- Historical Collection To Show First Ann Arbor Automobile By LOIS BLUM University students are not the first Ann Arbor residents to com- plain about local restiaints on driv- ing cars. The first recorded complaint was issued by Edward W. Staebler in December, 1900 in regard to his Trimoto of that year's model, be- lieved by the office of the Michi- gan Historical Collections to be the first automobile in Ann Ar- bor. . * * "THERE is a hill to climb which the machine has climbed but twice out of many trials and we do not care to try any more because of the jeers from the onlookers," was the way in which Staebler ex- plained local difficulties when he wrote to the company requesting that they exchange the automobile for a more powerful one. Staebler's correspondence re- garding that car is part of an exhibit which will begin Monday at the Michigan Historical Col- lections' general office and read- ing room, Rm. 1604, Rackham Building. The present display is devoted to business papers and the purpose of the exhibit is explained by Prof. F. Clever Bald, assistant director of the Collections, as an attempt to show how social history can be found in what appear to be strictly business papers. In regard to the Staebler pa- pers, Prof. Bald stated that they serve also to recall old times for those who remember the early days of the automobile as well as to in- form younger people of what cranky things the horseless car- riages were in the first part of the century. Included in the collection on ex- hibit are others of the Staebler family papers, records kept by a country doctor near Romeo, Mich- igan, recording births before the days of the government statistics on the subject; and papers of prominent people from the state such .as Chase S. Osborn, former Governor of Michigan and Regentj of the University.I propriated $4,000,000 to aid this project. The professor, who has just been appointed to the Commission in Parasitic Diseases of the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board, took his doctorate at the University in 1934, and has been here 25 years. His job as curator of the mollusk collection at the museumgives him charge of one of the( largest of its kind in the United States. Residence Lighting To Be Discussed "Residence Lighting to Fit Structural Elements in the Con- temporary Home" will be the 'topic of an Illuminating Engineering So- ciety seminar at 1:30 p.m. today in Rm. 2084 East Engineering Bldg. The meeting will be open to the public. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) the University." Faculty members and graduate students of the various lan- guage departments are invited. Episcopal Student Foundation. Tea from 4 to 5:30 at Canterbury House, Fri., Jan. 15. All students invited. Episcopal Student Foundation. Can- terbury Club, 7:30 p.m. Fri., Jan. 15, at Canterbury House. Evening of Fun. Labor Relations Law Workshop, 100 Hutchins Hall, 10:00-12:00, 2:00-4:30, Sat., Jan. 23: Subject "State and Federal Labor Relations Agencies." Panel mem- bers: E M. Sconyers, Commissioner in Charge, Federal Mediation and Concil- iation Service; Thomas A. Hermansen of the Wage and Hour and Public Contracts Divisions of the U.S. Dept. of Labor; George E. Bowles, Chairman of the State Labor Mediation Board; Harry N. Casseliman, Regional Director of the National Labor Relations Board; John P. Boyce, Chief Referee, Mich. Em- ployment Security Commission; John Reid, Commissioner of Labor, State De- partment of Labor. Luncheon: Anderson Room, Michigan Union, 12 Noon. Speaker: Representa- tive Louis C. Cramton, of Lapeer, Mich- igan, discussing "The Equal Right to Work"-discussion of F.E.P.C. legisla- tion. Faculty and students are cordially In- vited to attend. 4 Iete or discontinued. 11 -,-another Ulrich service - I I 'I ' w FUN with a FUTURE I Buy the BEST! 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