HE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 2 . ~; they have the.opportunity.to.reside in the frater- nities, the upper classmen in the houses have no way of forcing them to do so, The administration should be satisfied because it is keeping first year men with poor grades out of the houses, a procedure which it has always advocated, and also because the responsibility for deciding where first year men shall live has been given to the parent. Lastly, the parent should be satisfied because he, in. the last analysis, can determine what his .on is to do. nity Council for it's very sane compromise and we urge the Senate Conimittee to pass a meas- ure that will make all factions content. except Monday during r Session by the Boar .tasct with those in the acute or convalescent stage, It is quite a human and charitable act to visit the sick, but in this disease, it may be reasonably ex- pected that you will contract the disease by the visit to the sick room. The "chronic cougher" is also too prevalent and careless in association with other not afflicted. He should stay at home,, until this symptom is alle- viated, obtain competent medical advice, and at least cover the mouth and nose when coughing. Sleeping rooms are most comfortable at tem- peratures not higher than 65 degrees Fahrenheit. Living and working rooms are found to be most comfortable at temperatures of about 70 degrees Fahrenheit for the normal human. Temperatures higher than this cause undue perspiration, thus going immediately out-doors from over heated air to a low temperature causes a mechanical thermal irritation to the mucous membranes of the nose and throat, and outer surface of. the body. In this way a predisposing condition is set up for the more ready development of germs causing infections of nose and throat. Some thought should be given to the weight of clothing; in variable winter temperatures, it should be of sufficient weight to prevent chilling of the skin surfaces of the body. To increase re- sistance, obtain adequate sleep, regulate habits, avoid fatigue, and partake of an adequate bal- anced diet. -Health Service the d in Do you realize that this would be +a poor world without FLOWERS; that there would he no joy, nothing but a barren waste- It's FLOWERS that brighten your life and make things worth while. Your table, without FLOWERS looks cold and desolate, no matter how good the food. . . Your rooms are cheerless if no Flowers are in evidence to brihgten them . . . Flowers are often the means of help- ing cure the sick. . . Flowers express your sympathy for the bereaved more than words . . . Flowers express your congratulations for the new arrival . . . Flowers are necessary at all times. ( The University Flower Shop, Inc., is always supplied with the freshest of the season's blooms at reasonable prices. Seasonable plants fresh from the hothouses. THEY GROW THEIR OWN T HE U NIVE RSITY F LOWE R SHOP, INC. Phone 9055 606 East Liberty St. MEMBER OF THE FLORIST'S TELEGRAPH ASSOCIATION- Flowers wired anywhere any time. 11 ee Editorial Associa- r P 12 P% . The. ,Theatre ER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ;ed Press is exclusively entitled to the use on of all news dispatches credited to it or credited in this paper and the local news in. All rights of republication of special reserved. he Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as natter. Special rate of postage granted by t Postmaster-General. during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by lent Publications Building, Maynard Street, chigan. Phone: 2-1214. ves: College Publications Representatives, Thirty -Fourth Street, New York City; 80 et, Boston; 812 North Michigan Avenue, EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 )ITOR...............FRANK B..GILBRETH ...........KARL SEIFBT O ...........JOHN W. THOMAS TOR.................MARGARET O'BRIEN OMEN'S EDITOR........MIRIAM CARVER THE AUTHOR OF "ANNA 'CHRISTIE": HIS LIFE-BY MORTON FRANK, Recognized peer of American playwrights is Eu- gene O'Neill, author of Anna Christie. which is to be present-ed at 8:30 tonight and tomorrow night in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre by The Hillel Players. Winner 'of the Pulitzer prize for his Beyond the Horiton, author of internationally produced plays (Anna Christie was his first play to be produced on the Continent and in England), seaman, prospector and newspaper reporter among other occupations, he has lived the ma- terial for his drama. i 5 1 1, Norman F. Kraft, tan, C. Hart Schaaf, TANTS: L. Ross Bain, Fred A. Huber, n, Harold Wolfe. Hyman J. Aronstam, Charles Baird, A. rles G. Barndt, James L. Bauchat, Donald ;harles B. Brownson, Arthur W. Carstens, ilter, William G. Ferris, Sidney Frankel, n C. Healey, Robert B. Hewett, George M. oer E. Morrison, Edwin W. Richardson, iGeorge Van Vleck, Guiy M. Whipple, Jr., White. ning, Barbara Bates, Marjorie E. Beck, um, Maurine Burnside, Ellen Jane Cooley, all, Dorothy Dishman, Anne Dunbar, Carol J. Hanan, Lois Jotter, Helen Levi- J. Manchester, Marie J. Murphy, Eleanor ;aret D. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Harriet e Western. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 GER....... -..BYRON C. VEDDER sER.......... ... ...HARRY BEGLEY NESS MANAGER........DONNA BECKER MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; ntracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- er; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cr- ert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Born the son of the romantic actor James O'Neill, he spent the first seven years of his life touring the United States, after which he schooled for six- years in various Catholic boarding schools and for four years at Betts Academy in Cincin- nati; He entered Princeton with the class of 1910, only to be expelled after a year's study for an in- fraction of college discipline. Followed years as secretary of a mail-order house, prospecting as companion of a mining en- gineer in the Spanish Honduras, and managing his father's travelling show. When his urge for the sea, strengthened by the reading of Conrad and Jack London, asserted itself, he sailed for Buenos Aires on a Norwegian barque., After two years in South America, he returned to New York, where he lived at "Jimmy-the-Priest's," a liquor resort on the waterfront that he used as his locale for the first act of Anna Christie. Came then his last experience on the sea, as a seaman on the Amer- ican steamers New York and Philadelphia. Advancing the school of experience as the best school of writing, O'Neill does give some credit to Baker's famous "47 Workshop" at Harvard for the maturity of his early writings. Like some con- temporary American playwrights, his first plays received production in the theatre of the Prov- incetown Players, laboratory of the "higher" drama.- O'Neill's most recent play, Mourning Becomes Electra, has created a stir in literary circles. His Strange Interlude broke records for length of per- formances, while his Beyond the Horizon won him the Pulitzer prize. Other plays of his include The Hairy Ape, = The Great God Brown, Dynamo, and Desire Under the Elms.. Sicre en, Reflecti ons Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep awvay from it. AT THE MAJESTIC "SECOND HAND WIFE" * *A MEDIOCRE TYPE OF A LOVE TRIANGLE DRAMA Carter Cavendish ........ Ralph Bellamy Alexandra Trumbull ........ Sally Eilers Betty Cavendish .......... Helen Vinson Little Patsy... ...........Karol Kay The story is'a whirl of marriage, divorce, birth, death, in modernistic executive offices and around tea tables in palatial mansions. Alexandra Trum- oull is a typist and winner of a popularity contest whose affections are directed toward her boss, Zarter Cavendish. On the other hand, Cavendish, for the sake of his lovely daughter, has been trying to escape a divorce from his wife. How- ever, when he is found too often in the company of "Sandra," a separation is inevitable. Caven- dish carries' on a half-hearted fight to get his daughter away from her mother and a rigid rou- dine of violin practicing. A little girl, 11 years old, comes through during the last 30 minutes of "Second Hand Wife" and almost steals the show away from Ralph Bellamy and Sally .ilers. It is almost worth seeing the picture if only to watch diminutive Karol Kay act. Added attractions: "Sherlock's Home," a fair ,omedy with Jack Haley, who is a cross between Harold Lloyd and Ed Wynn; Hearst News; "Pass- ing the Buck" with Alexander Gray, and others. There is some fair singing and good tap dancing by four brothers. Alex Gray is hardly noticeable. -A. E. B. STARS CUT PRICE SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY : { .. 65c Pond's COLD CREAM 49r 50c ProphylactIc Tooth Brushes 39c KLEENEX 1 oc. 25c Johnson's BABY TALCQM 12c' 65c Pond's VANISHING CREAM 49c 1.00 AUTO STROP BLADES 79c 35c William's SHAVING CREAM 27c packages for 25c ' I .Find your new room for the second semester with- out interfering with your exams ... Let the Classi- fied columns of the Daily find it for you . . C ALA The Ad.-Taker cordon Boylan; Allen Cleve- Efr'oymson, Fred' Hertrick, Russell Read, Fred Rogers, tdow, Robert Ward. tt, Beulah Chapan, IDoris dina Hartz Catherine Me- Schmude, May 'seefried, 50c Kolynos100 Kooyh PsASPIRIN 39t TABLETS 49c CAMELS, CHESTERFIELDS, OLD GOLDS and LUCKY STRIKES............2 at 2 -1214 FRIDAY, JAN. 13, 1933 r'. Comstocks Answers ie Will Of The People .. A SHORT TIME AGO a lame duck Congressman, who had been dis- ed in the November elections, yielded up his in favor of his successor, in order that the res of his constituents might be furthered as kly as possible. Now comes another example wift accommodation of the people's will: Gov- ir Comstock will parole first-term dry 'offend- in deference to the overwhelming wet senti- t as expressed at the Michigan polls. ie Governor had promised to do this imme- ely upon learning of his election. He has ed no time in carrying out his proposal. "The' e," he says, "should not hold liquor law pris- s in view of the repudiation of this law in November election. I ntend to free those in- es of Jackson, Ionia, and Marquette prisons as i as possible." )me persons may ask whether this move is as as, at first glance, it appears to be. Those risoned violated a standing law of the state; fact that the law has since been repealed not in the slightest degree alter that fact. laws of the state of Michigan, or of any r state, so long as they are existent, should be ected in fact if not in sentiment; and any sncy extended to a violator of a law, no mat- how unpopular that law may have been, is iucive to disregard of other laws by persons may erroneously conceive them to be un-; alar. appears, however, that the governor recog- s this element of the situation. He has limited paroles to first-term prisoners who have no r law violation on their records. It is conceiv-° that, in many cases, these offenders were not .ly aware of the significance of their offense. his connection, it is a further credit .to the 'etion of Governor Comstock that he will act ach individual case on its merits. a the basis of its intrinsic advisability, per- this act of the governor's should not be par- arly lauded; but he is doing a wise and meri- us thing in so promptly following the wishes e majority as expressed in the elections. SWIFT'S DRUG STORE 340 South State Street % i WE DELIVER, PHONE 3534 y. -I ' ii Student HeOafth. ACUTE INFLUENZA For the past five wee's, an epidemic (popularly known as acute influenza or La Grippe) has steadily spread over the country. The majority of the cases are mild, but figures to date indicate :pore persons affected than in recent years. The disease gains entrance into the, body Ljhrough nose and throat and may affect any' portion of the respiratory system, from the nose .o the lungs, where it causes an acute inflamma- ,ion. The symptoms, most commonly complained of >y victims, are cough, headache, general body >ains and weakness. The body pains are de- scribed as aching or soreness in the muscles and joints. Sore throat and vomiting attacks are also ommon symptoms. Fever usually is present, tern- >erature often reaching as high as 101 degrees to L03 degrees during the first two, days of the ill-. less, but it quickly drops to normal in five or six .:lays, providing the patient has reasonable medical and nursing care, and develops no complications. The disease itself is seldom fatal (except in the ;ery young and aged persons). However, it does )ave the way for severe complications, and other :liseases particularly pneumonia. Common compli- rations are acute infection of the ears (otitis) cute infection of the sinuses (sinusitis) and mas- 'oid bones (mastoiditis). Complications frequently occur in those persons who "try to stay on the job," "keep going" al- hough suffering from the disease; also in those vho resume their occupations, social functions, .trenuous exercise too soon following an attack :f the disease and before body strength has re- turned. The best treatment to date, for the victims of ;he ailment, is to go to bed, and stay there until .ll symptoms subside. Treatment of the severe symptoms and general care is best supplied by 'our physician, and is necessary to shorten the duration of the disease and to support those who are seriously ill Water should be taken freely, at least a glassful every one or two hours. It re- .noves toxic substances, -produced by the disease from. the body. Liquid foods and drinks are also given, orangeade, lemonade, milk, broths, malted nilk, tea, coffee,:which also supply some nourish- :ent. Later, soft foods are added, as the patient's appetite improves. Convalescence is usually rapid in the patient, ,ho has been under adequate medical and nursing ,are. Cough and weakness are the usual distress- ing, symntoms. that nersist during convalescene. & STRPES By Karl Seifer Over in Indiana they want to legalize the sale of beer and make home brewing illegal, Why don't they hold out for complete repeal and see if. they can't dry up the state entirely? The beer control bill, says a dispatch, would "follow in the wake of repeal." It'll be a wake, all right, if' Congress doesn't make up its mind about the thing pretty soon. SENV1rE MOVES TO STRENGTHEN HOUSE BEER BIL -Headline The wringing wets would like to see some- thing like that done to the beverage itself. In order to satisfy the requests of Democratic state officials that they be given the low auto license numbers customary for the vehicles of of- Tice holders, the secretary of state has ordered a new series of plates made. There's going to be in awful mess when they all try to get their names first in the Lansing telephone book. In Cleveland, Sheriff John M. Sulzman wants ,o know how he can keep prisoners locked up in .he $2,500,000 county jail when the walls are so soft that the inmates can dig out chunks. of con- ,rete with their hands. That's easy-feed them. BANK'S 1-932 BUSINESS THE BEST IN 54 YEARS -Headline We'd rather see that worked out on paper. *' * * A Georgetown, Ind., banker has installed an electric door-opener 'on his bank, which is open >nly to acquaintances of the president, You re- nember me-I -was here with Joe Smith last Tuesday. A British railway is reported to have inaugu- -ated "electrified service" on its main line. These porters will do anything for a tip. - * * HOCKEY CROWD TTS NEW nW Bothered By Borrowers,,, You really can't blame them for wanting to read your Daily... It's the best means of keeping up with the titnes ... AssociatedPress News, Sports News, Social News. . . in fact, everything that the campus cares about... but you'll save yourself some trouble and the borrower some money by showing him this... The Daily is now... DELIVERED FOR THE REST OF THE YEAR OP T ,V W% 1TP1 V 1M T" TT~v A 4- 1\TC9 nT IVY TTWT Y- III III esolutio* That Everyone. " " T HE 'RESOLUTION passed last night by the Interfraternity Coun- in regard to the ruling prohibiting first year 1 from living in fraternity houses should sat- everyone. he administration, the parent, the freshman., the fraternity man would be benefited by h a successful compromise measure. he resolution asks the Senate Committee on dent Affairs to allow pledges to live in the