FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY -- Publisned every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. - MEMBER s5otiated w o1tiatt rtss - 1934 (jj (A 1935 M4AW"SO WiSCONswn MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4F25 MANAGING EDITOR ..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR ..............THOMAS E. GROEHN ASSOCIATE EDITOR ...............JOHN J. FLAHERTY SPORTS EDITOR .............. .....WILLIAM R. REED WOMEN'S EDITOR ..............JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORS ...... .........DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HEALEY EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS News Editor ................................Elsie A. Pierce Editorial Writers: Robert Cummins and Marshall D. Shul- man. Night Editors: Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Rich- ard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, and Bernard Weissman. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence H. Davies, Olive E. Griffith, Marion T. Holden, Lois M. King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Leonard Bleyer, Jr., Wil- liam A. Boles, Lester Brauser, Albert Carlisle, Rich- ard Cohen, Arnold S. Daniels, William John DeLancey, Robert Eckhouse, Johns Frederick, Carl Gerstacker, Warren Gladders, Robert Goldstine, John Hinckley, S. Leonard Kasle, Richard LaMarcarHerbert W. Little, Earle J. Luby, Joseph S. Mattes, Ernest L. McKenzie, Arthur A. Miller, Stewart Orton, George S. Quick, + Robert D. Rogers, William Scholz, William E. Shackle- ton, Richard Sidder, I. S. Silverman, William C. Spaller, Tuure Tenander, and Robert Weeks. Helen Louise Arner, Mary Campbell, Helen Douglas, Beatrice Fisher, Mary E. Garvin, Betty J. Groomes, Jeanne Johnson, Rosalie Kanners, Virginia Kenner, Barbara Lovell, Marjorie Mackintosh, Louise Mars, Roberta Jean Melin, Barbara Spencer, Betty Strick- root, Theresa Swab, Peggy Swantz, and Elizabeth Whit- ney. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ..........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER ............JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD wOMEN SB$'INESS MANAGER ....MARGARET COWIE WOMES ADVERTTSING SERVICE MANAGER ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS. Local advertising, William a ;Sevie Dpartment. Willis Tomlinson; Con- tracts, Staney Jofe;Accounts, Edward Wohigemuth; Circulation and 'National Advertising. John Park: Classiied Adveriting and Publications, Lyman Bitt- man. BUSINESS ASSSTANTS Charles W. Barkdu'l, D. G. Bron- sou, Lwis N.IBukeley, Richard L. Croushore, Herbert D. Faener. Jak R Gustafson, Ernest A. Jones, William C. Knecht,, W iaitn C. McHenry, John F. McLean, Jr., Law- rence M. Rth, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Starsky, orman 3, Steinberg, Donald Wilsher. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley. Adelaine Callery, Elizabeth Davy, Catherine Fecheimr, Vera Gray, Martha Hanky, Mary McCord, 2k-el "'e' r'W' sDcrothy Novy, Adele Polier, Helen urdy, e .Snell. WOMB@'S ADVERTISING SERVICE STAFF: Ellen Brown, Sheila Burghr'. Nancy Cassidy, Ruth Clark, Phyllis Esman Jean Kinath, Dorothy Ray, Alice Stebbins, Peg Lo White. NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD G. HERSHEY Speaking Of Jefferson, Mr. Hearst... N THIS AGE of preposterous pan- aceas there is one which demands refutation before all others because it is being ad- vocated by a man who has the most powerful form- ative influence on public thought in America today. William Randolph Hearst is snapping the whip of propaganda to beat the public into accepting his newest "reform," - Jeffersonian Democracy. He motions with blunt palm to the name Jefferson and he would have us believe the childish notion that whatever the "fathers" did was beyond crit- icism. First let it be stated that Jeffersonian Democ- racy as such, has always been and remains today, a theory. It Was Jefferson's ideal to see an agra- rian republic and before his election he thought it possible for the farmer to resist the advances of an industrial economy. But he found it im- possible to work out of Hamilton's fiscal system with its "contacts" among the financiers of the East. He dreaded the thought of a city prole- tariat. Mr. Hearst probably knows this, however, and his knowledge indicts him all the more. For taken point by point, Jefferson's ideas were not much more radically democratic than were those of the Federalists. It was he who advocated a Senate composed of appointed "men of wealth" and it was he who shied like his contemporary, Hamilton, from the "tyranny of elected despotism." And it was Jefferson who declared that "For the public will to rule it must be reasonable." But it is obviously not Mr. Hearst's objective to enlighten. For when we remember his demands for more armaments and the largest navy in the world, and we hear him reconciling this view with Jefferson's, it can only be that Hearst is in- tent on obscuring his real identity. For one of the first acts of Jefferson the Presi- dent was to reduce the armed forces to less than when he called it Jeffersonian, because Jefferson's principles are very definite. He denied the people their right to many demo- cratic institutions which exist today. It was per- haps his aversion to the backwoods and a nation of small farms which lent more than anything else concrete, the name democratic to his actual practices after election. It may very well be that Hearst is ignorant of historical facts. But with these facts in mind and with the past performances of the baron of San Simeon before us there is at least one conclu- sion to be drawn. Jefferson's entire econmic philosophy rested on the conviction that the small landholder would remain predominant on the American scene. What- ever democratic ideas he entertained were based on this hope. Jeffersonian democracy was impracticable in 1801 because it tried to stop the march of industry which had made too large a print on America. Jeffersonian democracy is impracticable today because industry and finance are infinitely more entrenched in America than they were in 1801 or 1891. The name "Jeffersonian" must therefore be a camouflage through which William Randolph Hearst desires to hide his aim and his action. He might very well cry that "what was good enough for Jefferson is good enough for me," and mean it. He may mean it because he is displaying the1 title of a political economy which never saw realiza- tion because of its impracticability and probably never will because of its present sponsor and the present stage of America's development. The Appointment Of Dr. Elliott .. THE DECISION of the State Su- preme Court awarding the office of superintendent of public instruction to Dr. Eugene B. Elliot, may properly be hailed as a victory for popular government in Michigan. Dr. Elliot, it will be remembered, was appointed to that office last June after the sad and untimely death of Maurice Keyworth, Republican superin- tendent-elect. He was to have replaced the Demo- cratic incumbent, Dr. Paul V. Voelker, whom he defeated by a large vote at the polls in the spring election. Dr. Voelker and his policies were repudiated by Michigan people. There can be no doubt of that, even in the mind of Dr. Voelker. And again there can be little doubt that under a democratic system of government, as well as under the Michigan constituition, the appointment of a Republican by a popular and popularly elected executive should have taken Keyworth's place. The democratic thing, and the sportsmanlike thing, for Dr. Voelker would have been to pack up and leave as quietly as possible. But Dr. Voelker failed to see it that way. He refused to do so. And after barricading himself in his office, he protested long and vigorously to the Supreme Court that the appointment was un- constitutional; that he was elected by the people to serve until a successor should be duly elected by the people. And so while the public instruction of this state was left between the devil and the deep sea waiting for the high tribunal to convene, Dr. Voelker, like the dog in the manger, refused to budge. Viewing the state constitution very strictly, it is conceivable, as shown by the three to four court vote, that Dr. Voelker had a case. But looking at that document broadly, as an instrument of democratic government, designed as the will of the people, he had no alternative other than to accept that will, which decreed that he evacuate the office. And while we feel that Gov. Fitzgerald chose wisely in naming Dr. Elliot, a liberal and well- qualified educator, to the post, we deplore the fact that such a position is subject to the ravages of politics. The Conning Tower 1 A Washington A ~TW1F~I BYSTANDERT~I' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. A .ITTEK WARING I do not plant potatoes, I never raise tomatoes, I haven't any corn or wheat for sale; The govermnent has neverI In any way whatever Assisted me with credit or with kale. I wear a snow-white collar, And work for every dollar - My lean and bony fingers ever touch; 1 I have no union ticket,t And when I see a picket My sympathies are not stirred overmuch.Y I own no mines nor spindles, And, though my income dwindles, My taxes keep increasing, curse the luck! Let those who rule take warping:1 I'm liable, some morning, To squeal like any pig that has been stuck. S. E. KISER. The National Youth Administration has planned to give jobs to 94,000 pupils in high school and college, and that makes the observations of Gov-, ernor Davy about the Ohio State football team look like the petty cash account. Last Saturday Mohawk School, Schenectady, lost to Country Day School, Utica. But Mohawk,! take it from the Schenectady Gazette, has the sea- son's best alibi, "The local outfit's lack of experi- ence . . . was largely responsible for the defeat." THE STARS AND GRANDFATHER FLEMING By Grandmother Mary Beam (As told to Orson Wagon) Some man was talking from New York just now about the planetarium. He said people could go to this planetarium and see the stars as they move through the sky. I would like to go some time, but I haye always lived where we could see the stars. When I was a little girl we were taught to watch the stars and to learn about them be- cause they were God's work. My Grandfather Fleming always wanted to sleep where he could see the stars. If the shades were down he would put them away up to the top. Then he would like to look up at the stars and say: "When I look up into the heavens, which Thine own fingers framed, Unto the moon and to the stars, which were by thee ordained, Then said I, what is mon, that Thou are mindful of him. Or the son of mon, that Thou visitst him?" He always said "mon." Oh, I heard him say that so many, many times. Of course, there were other things, but I remember that so well. Grandfather Fleming knew the psalms and taught them to us children, but we never knew what hymns were. I had never heard a hymn in all my life; never seen a hymn book. Just all the psalms. The first time I ever heard a hymn was the time I was away from home. I was teach- ing school. I went to church with the people I was staying with and heard them sing the hymns. Theynwere Methodists. I learned the hymn and learned to sing it, and when I went home I was singing it on Sabbath and Grandfather Fleming heard me. He just came running. I shall never forget. He said: "What's that you are lilting around here on the Sabbath day? I don't want to hear any more of that today." I wouldn't want any one to think the Pres- byterians were always that way. Later we went into a church where we had to sing the hymns. Mother said then that the hymns were pretty; that they would do to read. Later our church, the Pres- byterian church like it is now, was organized, and Father was an elder. But Grandfather Fleming was dead then. He never sang a hymn. All these wheezes on Haile Selassie are no good, because, it appears his name isn't pronounced any- thing like that. Just how to say it we don't know, but it's something like Cholomondely. Mussolini's suggestions for peace remind us of nothing so much as the story that ends "God knows I asked for fish." There is a meretricious taint to his work, which will, in the long run, cut the ground from under his feet. - J.D.A., in the New York Times Book Review. You strop a taint, run it a long time, and it'll be sharp enough to cut any ground. CASUAL AVERSION Throw a disk and, if handy, a skittle At the man who describes a conversation as "brittle." JUNIUS COOPER. In the New York American Winifred Black is speaking of Mr. Dooley. "What a shrewd, dry humor he had, that fellow from Indiana," she comments. Nonsense! Pete Dunne's shrewd,, dry humor couldn't have bloomed and flourished if he hadn't been born in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois. CHOP -At New London, Oct. 18, 1935, a son to Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Chop, of Montville. VEAL - At New London, Oct. 18, 1935, a daughter to Dr. and Mrs. William T. Veal, of Stonington. -Norwich, Conn., Sunday Record, Oct. 20. Referred to Fanny Butcher, literary editor, Chi- cago Tribune. THE WAR (By Rhoda Rubenstein, 9. Her teacher's notation was "Not a poem.") Oh don't you hear the shell and shooting? 11 ji! By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Oct. 24. - If Col. Frank Knox of Chicago has correctly observed conditions in the corn belt, a "revolt" against AAA "regimenta- tion" is brewing there. The colonel{ told a New York audience it wasj similar to the wave of anti-NRA sen- timent among business men which preceded supreme court overthrow of1 that "new deal" agency. Anything Colonel Knox has to say rises to special significance in view of his supposed hopes of carrying the' Republican standard next year. You can find folks around Washington who credit him with the nearest ap- proach to a national campaign or- ganization of any of the Republicans mentioned for the '36 nomination. * * In this instance, however, the col- onel's gift of observation or prophecy seems to be due for a quick test. With- in little more than a week after his New York speech, AAA was canvass- ing the corn belt, particularly the corn-hog producers, generally, in every state, as to whether they want another AAA curtailment program or not. Some 4,500,000 corn and hog growers, regardless of whether they are cooperating now with Triple-A, were being asked this specific ques- tion: "Do you favor a corn-hog adjust- ment program to follow the 1935 pro- gram which expires November 30, 1935?" The AAA leaflet presenting the question to the farmers makes the flat assertion that the answer "rests with the farmers themselves," that policy will be determined by their votes., If, as Colonel Knox believes, there is widespread revolt against AAA in such pivotal corn-hog-and-polit- ical-states as Iowa, Missouri, Ne- braska, South Dakota, Michigan, In- diana, Illinois, Ohio and Kansas, it ought to be clearly indicated in the referendum returns. The AAA leaflet is supposed to be a dispassionate presentation of the case for farmer consideration; but it makes a one-sided argument, all in favor of a further adjustment pro- gram. Without it, the corn-hog pro- ducers can only expect downward price trends, if the AAA analysts have it right. Warnings of "another pain- ful production cycle" mark the gov- ernment argument. Yet the leaflet does not touch on the chief fear among AAA enthusiasts as to what might move corn-hog farmers to throw the adjustment pro- gram and its cash benefits overboard. Colonel Knox did in a way. He held that collapse of Italy's economic life under "a system of regimentation" had forced Mussolini to "the final adventure of war."" It is not the "regimentation" aspect of Italy's position but the prospect of war-time markets and prices for American farm products farmers may see in the new European crisis which Secretary Wallace and AAA Adminis- trator Davis think might play upon the new corn-hog program referen- dum. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1935 1 VOL. XLVI No. 211 Noticest Oratorical Association Lecture Course: Season tickets are on sale at the Hill Auditorium box-office from 10 to 12 and 2 to 4 today. Sophomores-men and women in- terested in trying out for the Michi- ganensian report to the Student Pub- lication Building on Maynard Street at 4 o'clock. Academic Notices Political Science 2. Make up exam- ination Saturday, October 26, 9 a.m., Room 2037 A. H. Students absent from the June examination must be examined at this time to secure credit in the course. History Make-up Examinations. The make-up examinations in all his- tory courses will be given on Satur- day a.m. 9-12, October 26, in Room C. Haven Hall. Psychology 42. Make-up examina- ation on Saturday, October 26, at 9:00 a.m. in Room 3126 Natural Science Building. Psychology 34. Make-up examina- tion on Saturday, October 26, at 9:00 a.m. in Room 3126 Natural Science Building. Psychology 108. Make-up examina- tion on Saturday, October 26, at 9:00 a.m. in Room 3126 Natural Science Building. Events Of Today English Journal Club will hold a short business meeting for the pur- pose of electing new members at 4:15 in 3231 A.H. Delta Epsilon Pi meeting at the Michigan Union at seven-fifteen sharp. Greek students on the campus are cordially invited to attend. Re- ports from appointed committees will be due. This meeting will be im- portant and all old members must be present. Hillel Foundation: Friday Night Services will take place in the Hillel Foundation at 7:45, conducted by Mr. Harry Offenbach. The services will be followed by a fireside discourse led by Dr. Heller and a discussion by the students and the singing of tra- ditional and Palestinian songs. Coming Events Economics Club: Professor F. H. Knight, of the University of Chicago, will discuss "Can Reason Govern So- ciety?" at a meeting of the club to be held Monday, October 28, 7:45, Room 302 Union. Members of the staffs in Economics and Business Adminis- tration, and graduate students in these departments are cordially in- vited. All Graduate Students are invited to attend the over-night trip spon- sored by the Graduate Outing Club on Saturday, October 26. The group will leave Lane Hall at 3 o'clock for Patterson Lake where they will stay at the University Boys Camp, which is situated 25 miles west of Ann Ar- bor in some of the most beautiful country in this section. A return to Ann Arbor will be made by noon Sunday. The approximate cost of the trip, including meals, cabins and transportation will be 80c. Blankets will be provided. For additional in- formation call Wayne Whittaker, 5745. Michigan Dames will have a Hallo- we'en party for Dames and their hus- bands Oct. 26, Lane Hall, 8:00 p.m. Old clothes will be worn and prizes will be given to the worst dressed man and woman. Lutheran Student Club: Dr. War- ren Forsythe, of the Health Service, will speak Sunday evening, October 27, in the parish hall of the Zion Lutheran Church, East Washington Street, on the subject "Student and His Health." Supper will be served at 6 o'clock. All Lutheran students are invited. Congregational Student Fellowship Radio Party 2 p.m. Saturday after- noon, Pilgrim Hall. All Congrega- tional students are welcome. Hillel Foundation: The first Sun- day School session will be held at the Hillel Foundation on October 27 at 10 o'clock. All planning to attend be present for registration and enroll- ment. :"DRAMA : 1 1 [ THE FORUM I Letters published in this column should not be construedas expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors aregasked to be brief, the editors reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance and interest to the campus. Scathing Retort To the Editor: And when all the smoke blows away, we find our worthy Medic contemporary maintaining a pre- carious fence-top straddle hold with respect to the essential issue. The challenge is still open. Can it be that the medics, so skilled in the art of inflicting punishment on helpless patients, are going to pass up this opportunity of working on the "defenseless" Lawyers? Will it be football on the Home-Coming Week- end, or are you planning to challenge the winner of the field hockey game? -The Lawyers. Campus Forums To the Editor: As one interested in bettering the relations be- tween all groups on the campus, between students and faculty and especially between the new stu- dents and their new conditions, let me state that it would be a most valuable asset to all concerned if the Freshman Forum which met for the first time Tuesday could be made into a worthwhile permanent thing. As your editorial of Tuesday expressed it, much good comes from these meetings but unfortunately they have only been planned to last for three weeks. The Daily could do a fine bit of service by sponsoring a move to found a permanent THE SCREEN AT THE MICHIGAN "I LIVE FOR LOVE" **MINUS A Warner Brothers picture starring Dolores Del Rio and Everett Marshall, with Guy Kibbee and Allen Jenkins. This story is typical of the many sugary plots that are concocted in Hollywood every other minute. It is the story of the unpopular singer, who is ground under foot by the highly temperamental actress. The hack- neyed plot finds the singer, unheard of until the moment in which he is discovered by a soap manufacturer (Guy Kibbee) for his radio program. There is a very obvious similarity be- tween this and "Broadway Gondo- lier," in which the odorless cheese is the motif as well as the point of departure. The story opens with Everett Mar- shall achieving fame on a street corner, and raising from there to a position of leading man in a play of Dolores Del Rio. She has a bad time before she agrees to let him be in the play with her, but she eventually relents'and all is well. In fact it is another of those happy ending things in which all sorts of complications arise before the hero, in this case Ev- erett Marshall, wins over the beautiful heroine to his charm and art. The final scene finds both leaving the point of all their troubles with Dolores in a wedding dress and the intended groom chasing the car down the street crying "wait for me." Of course if you've never seen this sort of thing done on the screen before when it is high time that you did, but if you're one of those people who have been to a movie a couple of times previously you'll find this a re- enactment of all that has gone be- fore. As a matter of fact, the voice of Marshall is all that the producers had to offer, and Miss Del Rio's pres- LOVE AND FRIENDSHIP A comedy by Peter Eggq; presented by Madame Borgny Hammer in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater, with Arvid Paulson and Irving Mitchell. By KARL LITZENBERG (Of the English Department) Peter Egge, the Norwegian novelist and playwright whose comedy, Love and Friendship, was presented last night by Madame Borgny Hammer and Company, needs some introduc- tion - though no justification, as those who saw last night's perfor- mance will testify - to American play-goers. This should not be so, perhaps; but the fact remains that English-speaking people are for the most part devoid of any interest in Scandinavian literature in general. We have taken Ibsen to our hearts to be sure; but our forbears were not too willing to do so, as the humiliat- ing experiences of William Archer (Ibsen's translator and British ad- vocate) seem to indicate. Bjornson, Jonas Lie, Sigrid Undset, and Selma Lagerlof are more than names to us; but there are at least a score of sig- nificant Scandinavian men of letters to whose works we are either entirely oblivious or unforgivably indifferent. One of these is the Norwegian lands- maal writer, Olav Dunn; another is the Danish lyric poet, Johannes V. Jensen; and certainly a third is Peter Andreas Egge. There is no need to argue that Egge's wcrks should all be rendered into English; but a few of them are eminently worthy of wider recognition than the Scandi- navian tongues can gain for them. Samlede Folkelivsskildringer, for ex- ample, has as much right to be pub- lished in English as Sketches by Boz has to be translated into Norwegian. Egge has not always written so wit- tily and brightly as those who saw his Love and Friendship might think. Indeed, his versatility is rather amaz- ing; and like Ibsen (who doubtless influenced the soul-searching trilogy of Egge's later period: Idyllen, Brist, Narren, 1910-1917,) he has written of many emotions, in a multiplicity of forms. His early Romances, some of them sombre, a number of them tremendously heavy, are written in a style which is quite different from that of Kjaerlighed ogrVenskab (1904), - the play of last evening,- in which style some of Egge's critics find marks of the heavy hand of Bjornson. As further evidence of Egge's versatility, let it be remarked years. Of the dialogue and situations which Egge provided, however, the Company did not take the fullest ad- vantage. Since last night's perfor- mance was the American premiere (outside New York), and since it is customary in premiere productions for various persons to "blow up" their lines, the tempo of what is real- ly a bright and fast-moving comedy was slowed down to a point where the imagination of the audience was often two speeches ahead of the speak- er. This was especially true in the first and third acts. Mme. Hammer herself was miscast as Eva; Mr. Sing- er, as her eccentric husband, fre- quently attempted to out-Herod Her- od, - which, in the estimation of this humble reviewer, he quite suc- ceeded in doing. Mr. Mitchell, as. Harald, contributed some fine bits of comedy in the first act; but in the second, owing to some circumstance entirely beyond comprehension, he superimposed Brother Crawford's de- liberateness upon the reading of lines which should have been spoken as rapidly as the tongue can move. An audience which is accustomed to the break-neck pace of Private Lives can be well astounded by the fact that Egge's play was written over thirty years before Coward's; but it cannot be satisfied with a lethargic tempo as it views a play which depends on speed to make its repartee sound like something beside country-store give- and-take. This, then, -slowness, -was what chiefly marred the first non-metropolitan production of Love and Friendship. The play was translated by Karen Dryar, with whose philology and lexicography the present reviewer can quarrel on only three points: (1) her use of the word razzing; (2) her affection for the term dumb-bell; and (3) her insistence that goodby in Norwegian must be so long! in Eng- lish. The rest of the cast included Arvid Paulson, Elizabeth Cerf, and Betsy Marvin. The same Company plays Ibsen's last play, When We Dead Awaken, tonight. Ten Years Ago From The Daily Files Of Oct. 25, 1925 Michigan. with a fetish to avenge