THE ICHIGAN DAILY Faculty Shifts Announced For Hospital Dr. Wile Resigns As Department Chairman The resignation of Dr. Udo J. Wile as chairman of the Department of Dermatology and Syphilology was ac- c sed, by the Board of Regents at their last meeting. Dr. Wile, who came here as chair-+ man of the department in 1912, will coninue as professor of dermatology and syphilology. He is internation- {' r al known for his wok in this field and is honorary member of a number of national and international societ-r es.- The doctor has been Chief Medical Director and Medical .Consultant in Venereal Disease Control in the U.S. Public Health Service since 1942. Dr. Arthur C. Curtis who has been act- ing chairman of the department dur- ing his absence, will succeed him.' 4ther Promotions Listed Other promotions approved by the . Regents include that of Dr. Harold F. Falls from assistant to associate professor of opthalmology. Dr. Gor- don K. Moe received the same pro- motion in the pharmacology depart- MEAD SIGNS SUBPO r ent. Dr. William D. Robinson was tigating Committee (se made an associate professor of in- the probe in Washingt ternal medicine. Dr. John Emerson been prominently linke Kempf has been promoted to the rank (Rep., Mich.) (standin of assistant professor of bacteriology. Dr. Otto Tod Mallery, Jr., received the rank of assistant professor of in- "* * ternal medicine. trucs .H o Dr. Carl F List lefttthe surgery. de- 1 prtmet this month to go into p ac Acto sW a tice in Grand Rapids. Dr. Francis F. Rosenbaum has gone to Milwaukee Sho whe0e he will engage in practice. He Go, -s, will also be an assistant professor of internal medicine at Marquette Uni~ NEW YORK, JulyZ versity. cording to one radio l Drs. Robert A. Hettig, Robert T. great American revel, t Plumb, Maurice B. Landers,Jr, 'R ~ participation show, was. ert B. glarke, G. Kenneth Muehg, none other than H. V. K Hal V. Norgaard, Donald S. Patter- years ago when he quizze son, Roger W. Howell, Joe Jacob, school boys in the studio Betty . Owens, Robert W. Helms current events. and Walter Z-. Rundles have also left since then the vast, the University Hospital to take vari- in tes exctn ous positions throughout the country i and rewarding the pe exit or go into military service, airndv benexplgthed ly that the country seem U~l notic frenzy of charade, Peace Effioris .T~f''tpe'nts'~" fir S and lavish presents. By a 52 hours out of every w networks are devoted t of ,etertainment and on dio .trade publicationsf NANKING, July 20-(P)-Failure of $20,000 is being hande the prolonged American efforts to week in give-aways. bring peace to China was conceded The critics wail tha privately by diplomatic and other people with gifts as a qualified sources tonight, although making fools of themselv Dr. John Leighton Stuart, new U.S. tertainmnent. Fred Allen Ambassador, declared hope still ex- cast on a parody of the isted for resuming negotiations. and his opening line w Dr. Stuart, .returning from the don't want entertainme summer capital of Kuling, where he radio show has to give a presented his credentials to General- ice boxes, and automobi issimo Chiang Kai-Shek, declined the reviewers remarke other comment, saying he first in- morning: "That's too tru tended to acquaint himself fully with ny., all phases of the situation. Other quarters here and in Shang- PhilippiRouli hai, took a pessimistic view and point- ed to increased troops movements by Talk to Frene both the national government and- the Communists. Philippi Roulier, a Fre: ,-- in the School of Forestr r servation who was in Fr CSL AIF IE D the war, will give an in entitled "Paris Under t DIRECTORY tion." The third meeting oft session French Club will LOST AND FOUND 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. Union. LOST: K&E lg log slide rule in vicinity W. Eng. Bldg. Reward. Roy E. Halladay. 2274 Parkwood, Pittsfield Village. (1 LOST: Brown billfold Saturday morning on campus. ContainsA drivers' license, I.D. card, and TODAY ticket to Detroit. Reward. H. Ernest, 2-4561. (3 MISCELLANEOUS ALTERATIONS: Ladies garments. 410 Observatory St., telephone 2- 2678. Alta Graves.f PLAN for your fall suits and formals now. Expert workmanship on cus- tom-made clothes and alterations. ITS A CRC Hildegarde Shop, 116 E. Huron. LAUGH- Phone 2-4669. (10.SP MEN'S USED CLOTHES wanted. A better price paid. Sam's Store. 122 E. Washington St. 4 C L A WHAT? Only $3.001 I must have Dean McClusky of 417 8th Street, Ph. 2-7360 string my tennis rac- quet. .(27 HELP WANTED J DANCE BAND MUSICIANS wanted: Sax and trumpet. Audition Tues- day, July 23. Meet in front of Har s Hall promptly at 7:00 p.m. (5 Today- Bing Crosby Ingrid Bergman ENA FOR MAY-Sen. James Mead (Dem., N.Y.),e ated, center, signs a subpoena for appearance of IR on, D.C. of the Erie Basin-Batavia munitions com d. Looking on are Sen. Hugh B. Mitchell (Dem., W g), and Committee Counsel George Meader (right). A TOMS AID MEDICINE: U Research I )-n Treatment Foi 20-(VP)-Ac- A useful product of atomic fission egend, that experiments has been perfected at ;he audience the University's Simpson Memorial launched by Institi4e for Medical Research after altenborn 20 five years as a treatment for blood d some high diseases. audience on Successful use of radio-active noney-mak-phosphorous to treat chronic forms of miquestion- lukemia, an excessive multiplication g, qson- heof white corpuscles in the blood, and so thorough- polysythemia vera, characterized by s in an hyp- an overproduction of red corpuscles, s, show-os, is the result of the Institute's re- actual count, search on fissionable material. week on the Although radio-active phosphorous o this form is not' a cure, Dr. Frank Bethell, as- e of the ra- sistant director of the Institute, said, figures that it offers better temporary benefit than d out every X-Ray and similar forms of treat- ment which have been in use for t showering years. reward for Retards Corpuscle Production es is not en- The phosphorous is carried by the did a broad- blood stream to the points of manu- give-aways, facture of red and white corpuscles was "people where it retards the production of nt today. A these corpuscles by destroying the. %way nylons, pi'oducting corpuscles. les. Oneof The radio-active element is pre- d the next pared by bombarding it, or one of e to be fun- its salts, with deutrons, which are high speed atomic particles, in a cy- clotrpn until the phosphorous breaks er Will down into its radio-active isotope. The treatment of lukemia and poly- 'h C.lub cythemia vera in children by this new method, as well as X-Ray and inch student other treatments, the researchers in- y and Con- dicated, is of no value and even may ance during be harmful to the patient. aformal talk But the chief advantages of radio- he Occupa- active phosphorous over X-Ray ther- apy are the ease of administration- the summer either by mouth or intervenously- be held at and its freedom from the unpleasant 305 of the side effects that sometimes accom- pany X-Ray treatment. i . } chairman of the Senate War Inves- Eep Andrew J May (Dem., Ky.) 'at bihe with which May's name has 'ash,) (left); Sen. Homer Ferguson astitute Finds rBlood i sease Dr. Bethell asserted that it was too early to predict the eventual place of man-made radio-active elements in medicine. He added that it seemed probable that their greatest useful- ness would be information gained on the normal processes in the body and the ways in which these processes are disturbed by disease. Shows Disease Disturbance Radio-active substances can be traded while in the body with an electrometer, which measures the amount of radiation given off, allow- ing physicians to follow the path of the phosphorous and isolate the cen- ters of trouble. "In other words," Dr. Bethell ex- plains, "the products of atomic ener- gy may help us to learn the causes of hitherto obscure and fatal di- seases and so provide a real basis for their prevention and cure." 'U' Estabishes New Metabolism °Clinic A new Endocrine and Metabolism Clinic has been established by the University Hospital as part of the Department of Internal Medicine un- der the direction of Dr. Jerome W. Conn. 1 In addition to the management of diabetic patients on the non-medi- -cal in-patient services, the clinic will act in a consulting capacity in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with other endocrine and metabolic abnormalities. The Diet Therapy Clinic, under the Department of Dietetics, will co- tinue to function as an instructional unit for the teaching of therapeutic diets when requested by the various services. BEST COMEDY OF 1946 ut 4. \\\ Zaaosasa m xilimo~mioMM 5I Students To Give Three One-Act Plays Friday Three one-act plays, produced, directed, staged, and enacted by stu- dents, will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday during the Department of Speech Repertory Players' holiday. "Fumed Oak," a comedy by Noel Coward, will be produced by Byron Mitchel of "Tonight at 8:30" fame. Mitchel will act in the play. "The Valiant," written by Hols- worthy Hall and Robert Middlemass, will be directed by Dorothy Wine- land. Dell Hoestetler will do the set- ting for "The Valiant." Helen Currie will produce and direct "A Bright Morning," a Span- ish play written by Serafin and Joaq- uin Alvarez Quintero, and translated by Carlos C. Castello and E. L. Over- man. These performances will be pre- sented to the public without charge. Tickets may be called for at the Mendelssohn Theatre box between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. "Angel Street," "The Applecart," and "The Bartered Bride," the next Repertory productions, are all in re- hearsal now. L ttell T'o Speak 'N A At'Alftred RU' . Franklin H. Littell, Director of Lane Hall will lecture on "The Sym- bols of Sectarian Protestantism" at a meeting of the National Council on Religion in Higher Education dur- ing the last week in August at Alfred University, Alfred, New York. Littell will also serve as chairman of' a study committee on the relation of student voluntarism to academic procedures. This committee was con- stituted in 1944 to study and pre- pare a report on.the educational con- tribution of student organizations and service projects. The National Council-on Religion in Higher Education was founded to further the religious education of students at state schools by Professor Charles Foster Kent, who was also one of the initiators of the experi- mental School of. Religion in. Ann Arbor from 1926-29. Kenna To Talk At Conference. Address Speech Assembly t t'f'_ "Theatre" will be the topic of the distinguished theatrical director, Charles H. Meredith, when he speaks before the Speech Assembly at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. Meredith is guest directing here during the Repertory Season this summer. He produced "Pigeons and People;" and will do "The Apple- cart." Meredith, who is at present, direc- tor of Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre in New Orleans, has had ex- perience in every phase of the theatre, Television TJour Is Open to All People, young or old, who are in- terested in television are invited to join the group of speech students, and electrical engineers who will vi- sit the General Electric Television Station WRGB in Schenectady, New York, Prof. David Owen of the Speech Department said yesterday. The students will leave by specially chartered train, Friday July 25, and will return July 27. Prof. Owen will chaperone the tour. The students may have hotel reservations, or they may sleep on the trains. Shower rooms at station WRGB may be used by the students, Owen said. Anybody interested in television may go, from professor's sons to grown-up non-students, Owen said. People who wish to go can make reservations with Miss Maclntire in the speech office, land leave train fare of $27.50 with her. teaching, acting, producing in ama- teur theatres, on Broadway and in Hollywood, and has studied abroad. He formerly was director of the Dallas Little Theatre in Dallas, Texas when it was reputed to be the best amateur theatre in the country, aand director of the Dock Street Theatre in Charleston, South Carolina. He taught at the South Methodist University in Dallas, and at the Santa Barbara branch of the Uni- versity of Califronia, and was guest director here in 1941. Meredith started his career with the Washington Square Players, who are now the Theatre Guild. He had professional experience acting and in scene design on Broadway and in Hollywood, and spent three years studying the theatre in Europe. He has been a member of the professional theatre conference for many years. t t Back the fainme Drive GREASE PAINT 'N WIGS: Guest Director Meredith Will I1 -Today and Monday DRAGONWYCK with Gene Tierney, Vincent Price and JUNIOR PROM with June Peisser - Freddie Stewart 4 I v w v i ... IFINIE WATFCIHIIES and A ~ WATCIH REAI, "I I- ,; The Rev. J. Brett Kenna will speak on "How IDoes Jesus Save Us" at the interdenominational conference on "What Is Christianity" that is being held from 7 to 8 p.m, at the First Congregational Church during the month of July. This is the third meeting of the denominations. A short devotional opens the meeting, the guest minister speaks, and then join the conference of ministers to answer questions and to participate with students and townspeople in the discussions. The Rev. Henry Lewis, of the St. Andrews Episcopal Church presides over the discussions. I TWO WEEKS SERVICE. FOUR SKILLED REPAfRMEN. 4 I enh S 221 EAST LIBERTY STREET Ir, ; WEEKDAYS CONTINUOUS 3Oc to 5 P.M. DAILY FROM 1 P.M. Start -lid ASS-COUNTRY AND-LOVE ECIAL UDETTE UOHET SN r N i1 1 9 : r, J v M ,. ~ VR K O t .. ..o. :...r kAt l U' W I t I. ! q, 1..\ /l F /' W'