T THE MI CHTAN DAILY TIUSDA MACH , 32 Published cvcry morning xcecpt Monday lring the Universityj year by i!he Board in Cntrol of.t t Pulications. Alc ember ni the e Western Con!fercnwc Editor;i Associationl. The Associated Press is exclu-s4vely entitlcd to tIe se for re-j publication of all new. dispatchs credied tou it or not otherwise crcdited in this paper and the local ews published herein.l i~xtered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Mtichian, as secowl class natter. Siecial rate of postage granted by 'Third Assistantl rosnmsterr Genrral. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50 Otikes Ann Arbor Press kilding, iaynard Street, Ann Arbor, o. I 'lnmtes: Eititorial, 492. ; Iusia'ss. 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF TIcdephione 4925 MANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L TOWN News. Editor...................................;David M. Nicho! City Editor. .............................................Curl Forsythe Editoria t)irtctor.............................Beach Con cr, jr. intrinsic value as a landmark in the transition of a jmusical period taken away from it by the modern composer's later works and other writers more ex- treme efforts. The suite still remains, however, as one of the foremost monuments of modern music and through the medium of an organ, the worth of its components show themselves peculiarly lucid. Liszt, who, probably has never been given his jus, due as a master because he came at a time when art was subservient to other things and music had not quite grown outof the art song stage and because the mighty figure of Wagner in the nineteenth cen- tury outshone all others, was also on the program. His "Crucifixus" from the "B Minor Mass" is gener- ally considered as one of the two most elaborate of his works for the organ. "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor" was the Bach offering for the day and since no good organ concert: P J : npnt s l:itor .,............................ Sheloon (C. wome1 I~itor .........................( ' gi r 't d .'Ih Assistant New', itor.... ......................l ort l N Iilt E;DL'ORs Fii1 k S, C~ih't J. (unlen :c27rcry 7 r} hx ltt l r e; n it''Ge ? 3er etttE It, is quite conlicte without the powerful and solid strans of the bes$ of all organ composers, the and- iencec got completeness as well as quality. The work I~~~,;iu Joal V IIn ii1, liod ard i. 1Cain1ptic1l 11 'i i'rnis Connelln I? All t . riai Claieiiee 1 ayrir"n 1' [;Iri Ca ver Bieal ric'e Ljtn Lonie n('aijiji 1' ,3 01n1 5. 'rus k lPOR'lE RS frc~l A . II ler ';Jxx'ii' l P.x ili P iW't11A . N rts l~r" rleci :Il'tstex s not too familiar either. Little known, but grad- ually becoming more familiar to organists of the twentieth century, is Hanfi who, as a pre-classicist, (wrote much in his time for the organ. The work, which was played is probably the most popular of ti ,:rthis extant works being the "Choral Prelude on 'E Feste Burg ist Unser Gott." Other standard works as well as, an unknown one by Clokey, organist at 1 Pomono college in California, were listed. The notice also informs us that next week the recital will be postponed till Friday when Mr. Chris- tian will have the assistAnce of a wonan's ouartette and Wassily Besekirsky, violinist. Good Friday music. which may or may not appeal, is the tentative Wlan for the program. "IS Jn. it W, Jii c. ': 'ir Sy " tTarr~ct ' E r i- #t *~4i. i Vii Dr. Whif fle (Editor's Note: This is the thir- ty-severith of a series of artieies on outlandish members of the Univer- sity Faculty. Another xviii nppca! in this column next week if the ed- itor feels like it.) By E. Johnny ChtCk. Though he is an Indian first, las and all the time, Dr. Grand Carve. Whiffle was born on the Hoop y Indian Reservation in 1801 the son of visionar3 parents. He was expelled from the Dentis- try school in 1802 because o' his excellent work i n demon- strating anatomy. IH e rem1In- ed in this position for a per- iod of ten years, and in 1803 wa' appointed joint profeessr anal- only, history, astronomy and the ai- lied sciences, having' already be-- come Director of the Laboratory Theatre and the clasical posture class in the Speech Department. For approximnattel7 45 years then. Herr Doktorr Whiffle has served on the faculties of the University. but that isn't all because he has served his alma mater in oche., ways. He became in 180 business manager of the Michigan Union, the Michigan League, and Newber-, ry Auditorium, which position c responsibility and integrity, etc., he holds to this very day. But was Herr Doktorr satisfied with all these multifarious duties? SI shouldsay not! During the Great War he was appointed by President Charles Evans Hughes to the diffi- cult post of special consultant on the physiological and embryological reaction of centrifugal nerve ac- tions among non-commissioned of- ficers. When the War died out in 1805 he returned to the Universitv and took up his old duties. In 1806 he batted .350 for Peoria in the Three-Eye league and in 1807 wa a BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 ' CJLARL.ItS 'V. KIINEB....s. ............... snes Mne NORRIS P. JOHNSON...................... Assistnt Mang:er Departrnent Managers A ertisng........................................Vernon Bishop Ad'teir'tuig Contrcts................................1 ryiti te. te y Advertising d'ervic ...........................fByron ( \C.Vede I bl dicati s.. ... ................................ W illiam ''. rown! Accouns.... ...................... rd i t I'Sira cno'i1 Wonen's Isiiine~tss NIMiangr.........................Ai nW. \Vernort Oni Aro"on Cilbert F. Bnr-l y Allen Clark Pobert Finn Donna Becker Mart J c ('issel Ge nevieve Field Maxine Eisch grund Ai nal n eyer Mary Ifarritian Assist ants .\idi F iuI" Kohin Ann I larshia tKathieroc Fackson lOorothy Layin (~rafton WV. Sharp 1I,roHnak A. .1o rissn, I I t )rso . i Minn ie 'ne At ie Singuc It'atf7i'vn S tor~k C la'ie .tt Al aiy t'l,J~i li "Att NIGHT EDITOR-FRANK B. (GILBRETH j THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1932 The Union ForumI Proves Successful E RNEST LEE JAHNCKE, assistant secretary of the navy, in addressing a Union forum Tuesday night, evened the series before Ann Arbor audiences as far as party affiliations are concerned. To date, four forums have been held, one each on prohibition, the office of the Dean of Students, and rne by Governor Ritchie, of Mary- land. The Union all-campus forum was an innova- tion on the campus this year. The object was to provide prominent men to speak on questions in which students should be interested, which address was to be followed by student discussion from the floor. Regardless of the political affiliations and prejudices of the respective speakers, this Union project has been a marked success this year. Many an effort has been made to arouse stu- dents to an interest in the political and govern- mental field. Apparently they have not been inter- ested in questions other than those affecting their private lives directly. However, the attendance at the three meetings held in the Union on ques- tions of government has shown that students, with the approach of a presidential election year, are showing at least a glimmer of political curiosity. The results of the straw vote, held yesterday, may bear out this thought. Apparently the Union will continue to bring prominent speakers to the campus. While this year they appear to be limited mainly to govern- mental topics, perhaps next semester, after the elections are over, the officers of the organization wil be able to offer a more varied program. At any rate the forum has had a trial, and has been proven successful. NUOIC an DRAMA CAMJNJ! IIPlON L.e1 5ts ul-1i]ed in this clmri si 'lt not bc 'mnstrd as exa1e 1:1r g tliedii gl opI 1 in of The ie. Anonoo emn- iiii'atil s tWil l disrtaircd. I'he m's of 'coiomunica s will, he vii, e ardd as condo ial upo i'r lest. Contrh- io s are ao s 'd to e brist , confini i themselves to less than 300 trd(S it' possible. Just as Hard as the "Wrining-Drys' To The Editor: The Michigan Daily "Wringing-wets" certainly die hard. In the Tuesday Daily they had headlined the defeat of the State-control, prohibition amend- ment bill in Congress as if it were a great victory: WETS KILL LIQUOR BILL' SEE VICTORY Garner Refuses to Vote; Both Parties Combine to Stop Measure.s If The Daily were a grade school publication, it probably would deceive a few morons by its mislead- ing (or lying) headlines. The Associated Press article that The Daily pub- lished stated: "The House today refused by a 227 to' 187 vote to consider a State-control prohibition, amendment. This was the first ballot directed at the Eighteenth Amendment since the Volstead Act was passed in July 1919 ---. Ninety-seven Repub- licans and 90 Democrats, drawn chiefly from the industrial states and cities joined in the unsuccessfulj effort to bring up the "home-ruin" (my pun) amend- ment." Now that an attempt ha's been defeated in both House and Senate, the whole country is looking tc The Daily editors, who never saw a saloon, to lead us out of the wilderness.? What is this "Victory" you see: L. C. Reiman, '16. The victory is in the fact that the anti-prohibi- tion cause has gained 87 votes in the House of Repre- sentatives since the last vote on the liquor question The Editors.I Industry, takes a hint from the kitchen The domestic art of baking is closely par- alleled in telephone manufacture at Western Electric, where plastic molding is an exact science. Telephone bell boxes, for instance, are no longer formed of metal They are molded from a phenol plastic compound-containing carbolic acid, formaldehyde and other ingre- dients-because Western Electric manufac- turing engineers saw the way to make a better product at lower cost. These men developed a new and exceptionally efficient type of plas- tic molding press-:and determined precise.ly how long to bake the mixture and the exact temperature to use. In quickly taking advantage of the new art of plastic molding, Bell System engineers once more showed that they have the kind of imagination that keeps American industry forging ahead. 0 BELL SYSTEM i a' x a 4 _"a'fATC4 ti A NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OF INTER-CONNECTING TELEPHONES } ; I . . c alth Education I. ______________________-________!!_____' In a notice sent out by the School of Music per- taining to yesterday afternoon's organ recital, not a few works can be said to be worthy of mention. Palmer Christian's afternoon recitals in Hill auditor- ium on Wednesday afternoons have always been composed of numbers representative of all schools and ages but few have contained other than those compositions conventionaly and traditionally suited for the average organist. Since Mr. Christian is considered a much better than average organist, he has far surpassed his pro- grams in musical ability and as a result the small but truly appreciative audiences have come to regard organ music as more individual and less as a fore- most representative of real music. Despite the atti- tude most organ audiences have .and the fact that this particular instrument has a certain imitative quality, one cannot help but feel that the old instru- ment is an. instrument in itself and should be placed in a much higher category than it is at present. Yesterday afternoon, then, marking a definite step in showing to his audience, that his instrument and not himself alone is responsible for beauty and virtuosity, Mr. Christian arranged a program that does submerge the technical and elevates the aes- thetic." THE PASSING OF FUMIGATION Division of Hygiene and Public Health By Alex Nash Contrary to popular opinion, fumigation has been shown to be of little value in the prevention of in- fectious diseases. Fumigation is based on the air borne theory 0; infection, i.e., disease germs are present in the ai. and are always lying in wait to pounce upon the un- wary. In view of the fact that the atmosphere of a sick room contains a high count of organisms it was felt that the only way to render a room innocuous for another individual was fumigation. In former years when the air borne theory of infection was universally accepted by public health officials, contagious hospitals had separate wards foi each infectious disease, vis, scarlet fever, whooping cough, et cetera. All like infectious diseases were concentrated in a certain area of the hospital. This was done, of course, to prevent cross infection suchx as patients with typhoid fever contracting diph- theria. It has now definitely been established that infec- tious diseases are transmitted by direct or indirect contact. Having shown that disease is transmitted from person to person or by touching objdects pre- viously soiled by the sick and not by the germs in the atmosphere, all the different infectious diseases may now be grouped in one ward. The first blow in the country against the air borne' theory of infection was struck in 1905 by Dr. C. V. Chapin, health officer at Providence, R.I. He grouped all the different infectious diseases in one large ward and showed by personal cleanliness on the part of the attendants, aseptic measures, etc., that cross infection could be prevented. When cross'infection' did occur in the ward it was due to personal negli- gence, carelessness, or poor technique and not by the fact that the causitive factor was transmitted by the air from one patient to another. In 1908 Dr. Chapin discontinued fumigation after diphtheria and scarlet fever and subsequent statistics have shown no higher incidence of these two diseases as a result. Terminal disinfection (fumigation) is gradually' beng replaced by concurrent disinfection. This in- cludes the boiling of dishes used by the patient, the burning of all sputa, the disinfection of all bodily secretions (excreta, etc.). At the present time amona Drogressive health Herr Doktorr Whiffle. involved in a big deal with the De- troit Tigers. playing second and short alternately for the next three years, during that period winning 31 games and losing only thirty- one. In 1808 he was waived out. of the 'American League by popular kaclaim and for the next four years played right-field for the Chicago Cubs and was known as one of the scrappiest little second-sackers in the League. Not content with reaching the top in his chosen professions Dok- torr Whiffle has enlarged his ae-- bivities to include any phase of edeu- cation or public service by which he might aid his fellow men. He has not confined these activities to the United States; his country has merely served as a laboratory in which they have been continued. Hatzoff to Herr Doktorr Whiffie. (I 1 ' 2 i _- __. _ - e. tug=m. __. . _ ._-TT ...,.. S Cl "A" I B E TO T H E D z 1 Y _. _ .. ,.: ,.... . .. _, r.,.. . . :., , w a ,, r I '-- s 7 f 1 .. 7 - 7 -__._ < AIN'T IT FIERCE? We are sorry to report numer- ous little indications of pansyism creeping into these offices. Aside from the fact that the Women's Staff has been swamped by 50 beautiful women 50, there are two women on the Sports Staff which is going a little bit too far, we think One of the Sports Women has al- ready gotten her picture all over the papers of the nation because of an exploit at the Michigan Un- ion. There is a lot more to that story than has reached the ears of' the general populace, and we heal' that the girl was framed. The complete story replete with grue- some details will appear in next month's Gargoyle. The last feminine invasion has swept even within the confines of the Rolls Column. Some sweet young thing on the Women's Staff, Therese Herman by name, has en- tered into the humor column rack- et in competition with us, but we are going to meet the emergency by consolidation. Headline in Yesterday's Ann Arbor Daily News: rn -but did you ever stop to think of all the uimrlcessayly ittle annoyances you have, many of which could be taken off your mind promptly and efficiently by frequent use of the Daly Classified Column. If you want to rent a room, recover a lost article, buy or sell something, the classifieds are the logical medium through which to transact your business. Give them a trial and be convinced. The next time you have occasion to use the classifieds just dial 2-1214. You will get results. _._~ , I _ _ _ _ --'1~~~~~; l' ; __ _ _ _ . ', \ ;' gym. ; 'I F:''. Iii II' I ) !i 'I; { . ill iii ji I ± i , VIII :I II I '';', I ,IIII, ii !' li I' i ' i', I' I I III ,j ', i;I, I I' 'ii ', , i; . 'i'I I I i i, ;' I I i l i'i ', i l. I' ', I I 11 11