PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1928 TH IHGA AL SA R"Y MRC 1. 92 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub lished herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postagie granted by Third Assistant Post master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices:tAnn Arbo ress Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITUR JO H. CHAMBERLIN Editor.....................Ellis B. Merry Editor Michigan Weekly.. Charles E. Behymer " Staff Editor...............Philip C. Broks City Editor............Courtland C. Smith Women's Editor........... Marian L. Welles Sports Editor............ Herbert E. Vedder Theater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Telegraph Editor.............Ross W. Ross Assistant City Editor.... Richard C. Kurvink Night Editors Robert E. Finch G. Thomas McKean J. Stewart Hooker Kenneth G. Patrick PaulJ. Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum Reporters Esther Anderson Tohn H. Maloney Margaret Arthur Marion McDonald Alex A. Bochnowski chales S. Monroe Jcan Campbell Catherine Price Pssie Chureh Harold L. Passman Blanchard W. Cleland Morris W. Quinn Clarence N. Edelson Rita Rosenthal Margaret Fross Pierce Rosenberg Valborg Egeland Lleanor' Scribner Marjorie lIollmer Corinne Schwarz James B. Freeman Robert G. Silbar Robert J. Gessner Howard F. Simon Elaine E. Gruber George E. Simons Alice Hagelshaw Rowena Stilman Joseph I:. Howell Sylvia Stone J. Wallace Hushen George Tilley Charles R. Kauftan Bert. K. Tritscheller Willian F. Kerby Edward L. Warner, Jr Lawrence R. Klein. Benjamin S. Washer Donald K Kline Leo J. oedicke Sally Knox Joseph Zwerdlig Tack L. Lait, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM C. PUSCH Assistant Manager... George H. Annable, Jr. Advertising..... ........Richard A. Mey.* Advertising .............Arthur M. Hinkley Advertising...............Edward L. Hulse Advertising.............John W. Ruswinckel Accounts................. Raymond Wachter Circulation.............George B. An, Jr. Publication.................Harvey Talcott Assistants George Bradley Ray Hofelich Marie Brummeler Hal A. Jaehn Tames Carpenter James Jordan Charles K. Correll Marion Kerr Barbara Cromell Thales N. Lenington Mary Dively Catherine McKinven Bessie V. Egeland Dorothy Lyons Ona Felker Alex K. Sherer Katherine Frohne George Spater Douglass Fuller Ruth Thompson Beatrice Greenberg HerbertE. Varnum Helen Gross Lawrence Walkley F.WT. Hammer Hannah Walle Carl W. Hammer SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1928 Night Editor-G. THOMAS McKEAN EXAMINATION While others talk about the Uni- versity college, and debate on educa- tional policy, the Medical school has seemingly taken one of the most sing- ular strides in the field of education recently accomplished on the campus -the inauguration of the examination at the end of the four year course. To call this newly introduced test a comprehensive examination is appar- ently a misnomer, for according to the announcement made by the Medical school officials the object of the plan for the Republican nomination seems to be shaping up much as was early expected. The Middle West will not be predominately for Hoover, it is plain, for in Wisconsin his name has not been filed, in Ohio he will have to do battle with a favorite son, and in Illinois, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, and Kansas his chances of tak- ing the delegations are extremely ! poor. Lowden's campaign, nevertheless, can hardly be expected to acquire much strength outside of the essen- tially agricultural Middle West, and even in this region he rates as a not overwhelming favorite. Hoover's pow- er in the Far West, the South, and parts of the East is not to be denied; and though the candidacy of Lowden is without a doubt the most formid- able in the way of Hoover's nomina- tion, it is by no means an insurmount- able obstacle to the success of the Hoover campaign. WOODBRIDGE N. FERRIS It is with the highest regard and most sincere appreciation for his long term of public service that the people of the state of Michigan will greet the announcement that Woodbridge N. Ferris, veteran senator and leader in educational circles of the state for four decades, has determined to re- tire from, public life following his present term in the Senate. Honored with singular recognition as he has been, fcr a man of his party, with the highest offices within the power of the state to bestow, Senator Ferris has occupied a place in public estima- tion equalled by few men of his genera- tion. Born in New York state in 1853, and coming to Michigan for the first time when 20 years old, to attend the University of Michigan Medical school, Senator Ferris soon afterward be- came identified with educational work in the Middle West. In 1884 his career as a college teacher culminated with the founding of the Ferris In- stitute at Big Rapids, of which he has since been president. Few men have wielded a more sig- nificant influence over the politics of the state than Senator Ferris. Twice chosen governor on his party's ticket, he was induced to emerge from retire- ment at the age of 70 years when, in 1922, the Republican party of the state showed signs of decadence. His victory in the election that fall was more than a political conquest-it was a tribute, sincere and fitting, of the confidence which the people of the state reposed in him. In 1924 he re- ceived an equivalent cmpliment when the Michigan delegation to the Democratic National convention cast their entire vote for him through the majority of the 101 ballots. The retirement which Senator Fer- ris apparently desires is a retirement which he has earned through years of service; but it does not mean that the veteran politician will cease to be a factor in the life of the state. In the counsel chamber and the convention hall as well as in educational circles Woodbridge N. Ferris will continue TASTED ROLL {a T'OTHER NIGHT AT some time after The Daily had gone to press the cleaning and pressing establishment I of Goldman Bros. caught on fire and burned. All the clothing which was there in the process of being made to look better was destroyed or damaged THE CAUSE OF the fire is not known but it was thought that some of the non-inflamable Miraclean which the plant uses took to burning and spread around the place. * * * AT PRESENT IT is not known just what settlement the cleaners will make for the suits destroyed. Those who have clothes there have heard many stories. Some say there will be no settlement and others vary the amount to twice the cost of the gar- ments. A POLICE GUARD had to be thrown out at an early hour this morning to prevent students from throwing old suits into the shop. At this time it was hoped that a large settlement would be made. * * * THERE ISN'T A student in townt this morning who has ever paid less than $75.00 for a suit. Several of the clothing stores in town wonder whom it was they sold all those cheaper suits to. * * * ACCORDING TO REPORTS of stu- dents the loss from the fire is in the neighborhood of $10,000,000; but ac- cording to Goldmans the loss is about $10,000. * * * IT IS ALSO reported by students that hundred or so $5.00 ties were in the plant. Personally we didn't have any there but we wish we had. We have lots of old ties at home and if they had only warned us that there was going to be a fire we could have had a whole new spring line of ties. * * * ONLY ON ONE point do the Gold- man Brothers enjoy themselves. The building is very new and they could not have paid more than two pre- miums on the insurance policy. For once it payed to have insurance. * e 4 THE OWNERS OF the concern are getting several accountants to look over the accounts of reports students will turn in. It is rumored that if the total is more than all the suitsI bought in this town in the laststen Years nothing will be paid. THAT IS A fairly safe figure, but if it had been set at five years we feel that there would have been no settle- ment. From the little statements we have heard from students who were fortunate enough to have suits in the fire, even seven years would have been a dangerous figure for students. WHY DODGE THE POLICE? WHAT RAVE YOU TO HIDE? J Mr. Rolls: Being from Chicago, it really doesn't make much difference to us if the University does put gates on the Boulevard or not, but when it comes to dodging state police in Dean Em- ery's office we begin to get a bit leary. Surely the dean isn't afraid. We wouldn't harm him for worlds- it's too much bother to carry our guns to classes anyway. not, Stuff. THEATER BOOKS MUSIC TONIGHT: The Rockford Players present Miss A. Frances Dade in "The Patsy" at the Whitney theater at 8 o'clock. STRAME INTERLUDE: By Eugene O'Neill. Boni & Liveright, New York, 1928. $2.50. "The only living life is in the past and future..... the present is an inter-- lude....strange interlude in which we call on past and future to bear wit- ness we are living...." The enjoyment of a moment's hap- piness must be atoned for by an age of pain; this is O'Neill's thesis as set forth in his new, much quarelled over play of nine acts. The life of Nina Leeds is the vehicle of the idea, and the author leaves no chance unused to drive home his. philosophy that happiness is a blessing too rich for mortal enjoyment and must be paid for by searing unhappiness which all but destroys. The technical innovations that O'Neill has introduced have the gen- eral effect of making the play as it appears on the theater boards seem to be an objective exhibition of the novel. The device of making the char- acters speak their thoughts carries the story back into the mind, hitherto the unquestioned domain of the novel, and gives a tremendous impression of conflict as well as infinite varieties of irony. But he has gone still fur- ther. The dramatic problem of Nina's life could have been solved in Act Six. There is a unity in the play to that point and Act Seven is tenuous until near the end when the interest picks up, but O'Neill has preferred to round his problem out by covering the whole of her life-another prerogative of the novel-and so makes possible Charlie Marsden's ironic solilogy "oh, rus- set-golden afternoon, you are a mel- low fruit of happiness ripely falling! ....God damn dear old....! No, God bless dear old Charlie....who, passed beyond desire, has all the luck at last.." R. Leslie Askren.- * * BEAUTY GLIMPSED Now that people no longer concern themselves with the lives and deaths of kings and queens except as re- membered scenes of plays of which they have already seen the last act, and whose family affairs they no longer have any concern totrecord in their dramatic literature, there has arisen a new type of tragic character. This character is usually a person who has in some manner managed to glimpse the ineffable passing of beauty, or to lear faiAtly the wild winds of passion and ambition. His interludes of this kind are few, but their memory is an eternal torment, an eternal reproach to his everyday life. His effort to recapture these powerful illusions is vain; he lacks courage; hi imagination is not large !enough to hold them; the only result of his strivings is death. Hedda Gabler, along with Emma Bovary, is perhaps the character that best shows the transmission of a hu- man being into a devouring and self- devouring monster, into a creature full of a scorn that turns to a wailing despair; into a woman whose life turns into death in front of her very eyes. Hedda Gabler is a, woman who never learns that the way to the thing she desires lies through the courage- ous act, through the brave renounc- ing of all self-interests that she may attain to that disinterest, which is the most self-interested of all interests, and which means the accomplishment of her will. These things Elsie Herndon Kearns, who will assume the role of Hedda Gabler at the Whitney, Sunday eve- ning, managed to catch in her por- trayal of the part last summer; she translates them into immediate min- utae of personal reaction, whose ac- cumulation makes the overwhelming tragedy. -Harold May. BEYOND GOOD AND EVIL Ever since he wrote "Les Noces," in which he attempted to put music in the Absolute, making it find ,in- spiration within itself, Stravinsky has been seeking a method by which to emancipate pure music from "story music." Last week when the Boston Symphony presented Stravinsky's opera-oratorio, "Oedipus Rex," the composer's ideal was heard for the ~March1iS Toaster Month tjfarch has beenff'' designated toaster month the country over. Man- ning-Bowman "Tip and Turn" Toasters are bei offered this month in combination with a seven piece Toasted Sandwich Service of"Golden Glow"_ _ Limoges China at a price only slightly higher than the toaster alone. During March only, $6.50 COMPLETE she Toaster and the A small payment delivers - Service together for balance, with your light bills. THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY Telephone us to reserve your set is to serve the purpose of a general to be a potent force-and it is with estimate, a final adjudication, of the downright sincerity that the people of fitness or unfitness of the student Michigan-of both political creeds- who has completed his scholastic will wish him a long and fruitful fu- work to enter the career of medicine. ture in the private life to which it is From this standpoint it in reality re- his apparent wish to retire. moves certain barriers, for, according _._...... to Dean Cabot himself, the fact that a LINKING THE LAKES student may have failed in a minor Construction work on the new Wel- medical course will not react to his land canal connecting the Great Lakes detriment if he convinces the examin- with Canadian waterways so as to ing committee that he is qualified to permit the passage of the larger Great enter the profession. Lakes ships through it and around In a certain sense the Medical Niagara Falls to Lake Ontario, is re- school has had this final examination ported to be progressing so well that in the past in the form of the State the canal will be ready for use in Medical Board examinations. Never 1930. The old Welland canal now in before, however, has the final test use is available only for boats under been coordinated with the actual pro- 265 feet maximum length and draw- cess of granting a degree, and from this ing not more than 14 feet. Locks of standpoint it assumes a much more the new canal will float the lake real educational significance. leviathans in the 600 foot class and The idea, to the outsider, seems to lock them 326 feet down to the level be an excellent one. It is perfectly of Lake Ontario, while the easterly obvious that there are more complex limit of their former route will be ex- qualifications required by members of tended from Buffalo 200 miles or more the medical profession than the mere to the lower end of Lake Ontario. ability to memorize chemical formulas Inasmuch as the completion of the and recite members of the human new canal will leave the shallows and anatomy. A man who plans' to come rapids of the St. Lawrence river above in contact constantly with all degrees Montreal as the onlyremaining bar- of human kind, as a medical man must riers against the passage of Great, necessarily come in contact with these Lake ships from Duluth to the sea, bizarre elements, not only needs but great significance may be attached deserves more training than the "pill to the construction of the new canal. and test-tube"' variety which used to At a cost of one million dollars Cana- be his measure. da is supervising the building of the On the whole it would seem as new Welland canal wholly within the though the Medical school adminis- Canadian borders. Obviously, as noth-t tration has accomplished a real and ing more or less than a sound busi- invaluable end with this new stroke; ness proposition, they have in mind and certain it is that to bring educa- the greater usefulness of the new tional examinations closer to the pur- Welland canal as an essential part of pose of the profession which they the proposed international sea cut serve is to achieve more nearly the through the St. Lawrence.1 desired ends of professional educa tion.; If Big Bill investigates, he may find E_____________NIP_ 111]11 n f't , (, }t .,. rn r.3....... SELF I(ELIANCE CAMPUS MOVIE ARRIVES THE GREAT PRODUCTION, the University moving picture, is fianlly coming to town. Tickets are only 25c which means that you can see this picture twice instead of going to a regular show in town. THE PLOT OF the picture is thinly woven so it will probably take most of the students two sittings to see the plot. But then you may see your- self in the picture and one always has to sit through two shows so that he may see his own face. * 4; TODAY WE HAD a strange experi- ence. We were called to the phone and when we got there a voice start- ed speaking to us. It was a girl's voice and we thought that she had the wrong party, but it wasn't so. IT SEEMS THAT this party, who called herself a Senior, had inter- viewed Prof. Pardon for us. The main line of his argument was that he didn't like dogs. It seems they got into his yard and made too much noise, but he didn't like tiem anyway. "There is a time in every man's educa- tion when he arrives at the conviction that envy is ignorance; that imitation is suicide; that he must take himself for better or worse as his portion; that though the uni- verse is full of good, no kernel of nourish- ing corn can come to him but through his toil bestowed on that plot of ground which is given him to till."-EMERSON. ANN ARBOR SAVINGS BANK A { ,. f 101 N. Main St. 707 N. University Ave. first time in America. Without thea- trical devices, for the participants 11 i 1 11