I THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 2, 193& SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY M--r -"4 Publi ned every morning except Monday during tha University year and Sumimer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. 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 creditecd in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT BOARD OF EDITORS Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR............. THOMAS B~. GROEHN Dorothy S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS Publication Department: Thomas Ii. Kiene, Chairman; Clinton B. Conger, Robert Cuminlns, Richard 0. Her- shey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal. Reportorial Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman; Elsie A. Pierce, Joseph S. Mattes. Editorial Department: Arnold S. Daniels, Marshall D. Shulman. sports Department: Wiiam R. Reed, Chairman; George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred DeLano, Ray Goodman. Women's Departmen: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman; Josephine M. Cavanagh, Ilorence 11. Davies, Marion T. Holden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER .........UEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER ............ JOSEPH A. nOTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINSS MANAGER. . MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ...ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS Local Advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomnlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Adver- tising, John Park; Classified Advertising and Publica- tions, Lyman Bittman. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT CUMMINS If any music resounded in the halls then, as the carefree syncopations of last night's orchestra did, it was probably the blatant challenge of a military band, one of the most deadly of all war instruments, according to H. L. Mencken. This glorification of the spirit of militarism with its epaulettes and gold braid is one of the forces that is inexorably leading us to an obdurate state which tolerates the ugliness of war. Perhaps if all of us could see last night's splendid soldiers crouching in ambush in the nearby woods as they do as part of their training course, we would shudder rather than sigh when they clanked by us on the campus. If we could all see their text- books in which they find helpful suggestions on poison gas technique with which to most effectively cat out another college boy's lungs; or if we could read the points they study on bayonet manipula- tions whereby another man can be most expedi- ently disembowelled we would undergo a change. Or if we all only had the imagination to ". .see them in foul dugouts, gnawed by rats, And in the ruined trenches, lashed with rain. Dreaming of things they did with balls and bats, And mocked by hopeless longing to regain Bank-holidays, and picture-shows, and spats, And going to the office in the train." But many of us lack the imagination. We see the glamor and the tinsel, but not the shelishock and the mutilation. It would be stupid to begrudge anyone the pleas- ure they had last night. I only wish it had been an anti-Military Ball and that the hundreds of students actively engaged in learning to become cannon-fodder could be put on the side of peace: to throw their weight on the side of the cause that must win. Doubtfully Demiocratic*... T IS DIFFICULT to believe the ac- curacy of the American Institute of Public Opinion's poll which places Michigan in the "doubtfully Democratic" column, despite the fact that Governor Fitzgerald himself, in yesterday's Daily, said it -might be so. There are any number of factors that make the poll's results seem inaccurate to us, but foremost among them are these: 1. There is not a Democratic daily newspaper in Michigan, and the Republican press, here as elsewhere, is pounding away at the New Deal with all guns. There are less than a half dozen weekly papers that call themselves Democratic. 2. Michigan farmers were not helped, to any appreciable extent, by the AAA.; 3. The last state Democratic administration, that of Governor Comstock, was extremely un-I popular, while the Fitzgerald administration seemsI to have won quite general accord. The influence of opinion on the parties in the state government will count tremendously in the national election. 4. Michigan has no Democratic senators, and but three Democratic Congressmen. And, coupled with this, the state Democratic organization hasJ been torn by inner strife and now, with the death of Abbott, faces general demoralization. 5. The prominence of Senator Vandenberg, aE Republican, in national affairs, which, even if it does not give the former Grand Rapids editor theI Presidential nomination, will go a long way toward1 solidifying Republican strength in his home state.I Also, it might be mentioned that Michigan ap- pears to be a "pivotal state," whether or not it< really is, because the politicians think it is. ForF this reason, the Republicans, who need electoralc votes as a dying man needs life blood, will do< everything in their power to encourage the Mich- igan vote. Of course, in the last analysis, in this particular- elction, nobody can tell what Michigan, or any other state, will do in November. But unless we miss our guess, the Wolverine State will not en- dorse Mr. Roosevelt, and Governor Fitzgerald et. al., are just a bunch of alarmists.1 THE FORUMt i t. 1 I E 7 i 1 T 1 I i Night Thougats. . T IE PICTURE of young 'uns wan- dering about the campus with guide books, gaping, makes us oldsters very sad. It's un- fortunate that they should have visited Ann Arbor on one of its first sunshiny spring days, for then it is that we burst out into light clothes, go bicycle riding, and walk by couples down the diagonal. It's a splendid sight to see youths thus occupied in the picturesque confines of college, but those who take home with them that picture alone must subsequently suffer an almost overwhelming dis- couragement and disillusionment as freshmen, un- less they learn of those many moments when col- lege life would make a poor motion picture. Even undergraduate life is earnest to an under- graduate, and though there are some among us whose shoes are white the 'winter 'round and whose minds are innocent of learning, the greater part of us take our duties seriously. To most of us after those first few weeks of thrill have come periods of dejection when those hours after hours of hard, uninspired grinding away seemed futile and its intangible rewards seemed but illusory. Despite conscientious application to studies, even the best of us have felt at times a peculiar malady, an intangible, unanalyzable pressure from all sides of things undone, of deadlines to be met, of a mountain of work which seemed insurmount- able, and to even the best of us have come bitter moments when the sound of laughing couples wafted by an evening breeze have made us wish for simple eight hour jobs instead. With those eight hour jobs too there is a definite amount of work to be done. When it is done, we are through - we close the desks and play with no sense of guilt. With studies, there are infinite threads to be followed, unlimited work that can be done, even that must be done and our work, like housework, is never done. Then it is we wish we were engi- neers with ten problems to do each night; for when they were done, at least we would be through. Eight hour jobs are real; we at times come to feel that we are floating in a glorious emulsion of make-believe, and grow sick of things not savagely vital. Mixed in with those trying days before final examinations are some few exhilarating moments, when we feel that in wrestling with a challenging problem, we have thrown our weight into the struggle and gained ground, but how few those mo- wents! It must be so, and to those who work to support themselves, or throw themselves into extra-curricular activities, it is doubly true. It is in the nature of the work, the nature of human beings who must feel immediate returns for their labor, and the nature of growing youth that it should be so. But there are moments when the problems of the world are lifted, and dejection is gone --on those spring evenings walking along the Huron River paths, or in those moments when we begin to feel awakening intellectual powers responding to gentle academic massage, and then we forget those dreary uninspired hours. Just wait, bight-eyed excited little people, until you are old, weary and old, and the mark of four years of mental grov ing pains will have engraved themselves on your wise and weary eyes, Just wait ..- ressed Fit To Kill. L AST NIGHT sabers rattled in the Michigan Union, Sam Browne belts Thne Conning Towerj SCOTCH SONG The sun shines bright in Caithness The fields are fresh and free Purple is the heather Where my love left me. The moon hangs low in Lanark The blood flows rich and red Scarlet are the thistles Where my love lies dead. The wind blows cold in Arran The rain falls soft on Leith Barren are the Highlands Where they slew my Keith. The birds are hushed in Lanark The cattle softly tread Silent are the bagpipes Where my love lies dead. JOHN LATHAM TOOHEY Yesterday morning in the subway we sat next to a young man who may have been a victim of the book-sharing week propaganda. He was a newspaper-sharer, and looked offended when we left the car at Times Square and took our Herald Tribune with us before he had finished reading the rescue story. To J. G.: This is Book-Sharing, not Book- Giving Month. Have you finished "The Last Puritan"? It is Miss Patricia Collinge's conviction that the bankers' children will recite "Cashabianca." And, of course, "My Money Lies Over the Ocean." The bankers themselves will sing "Bury Me Nt on the Loan Prairie." Baseball Poem April showers and her windy, raw gust Mean some double headers in August. The former Braves are the Bees; and if the so-called locals keep the lead, they'll soon be, in the headlines at any rate, G-Men. Le Department Hancoque The little Frenchwoman who gave the book to our mother said it was a piece of her own heart. Such a small shabby book! And the gift was because of a friendship which began when our grandfather spoke to the forlorn little family who had come up the Mississippi from New Orleans. The first in Hancock County who spoke to them in the blessed French tongue. It was a friendship which lasted through two generations. We grew up with the admonition that we must take great care of the little book. We hold it in our hands, but we have an uneasy feeling that there must be a prior claim to ours. The mother of the little Frenchwoman was Cel- estine Josephine, who, when she was very young, scrawled her name on the fly leaf. She came to New Orleans from France with her parents. Per- haps she lived on the Street of Good Children. We know she was small and black eyed, and we know she learned her A B C's, her prayers, her religious duties and some careful deportment from the all embracing little book. If she slipped from her duties her contrition was great, for a shaky pen- ciled cross appears above the prayer, "Mon Dieu, J'ai un extreme regret de vous avoir offense, par- ceque vous etes infinitment bon - pardonnez moi" She grew up, she married, she had three daughters, the eldest at sixteen married a Northern soldier after the War, and they all came to Han- cock County. The grandsons of Celestine Josephine were de- bonair young men, French to the core. Anson, Harry, Eddie and Frank, with those slim graceful figures, belonged to the boulevards --not to West Main Cross Street. But neither they nor Hancock County ever knew it. Anson married the daugh- ter of a banker - but yes, a banker! A Methodist, hymn-singing, Aaaamen-shouting banker. Alas, for the great-grandchildren of Celestine Josephine. They have all left Hancock County. They have become rich men. Trust their French thrift for that. We doubt if there is a Celestine Josephine among their children. We have a shuddering suspicion there might be even a Doris, or, worse still, a Janice. But there must be some one among them who would look soberly and tenderly upon the shabby little prayerbook of 100 years ago. B. ROSS Representative Bertrand H. Snell is to be per- manent chairman at the Cleveland convention. The keynoter has been chosen. Now we want to know who is going to sing "The Star-Spangled Banner," so we can get a little sleep. No longer is this department pro-Landon. We are for somebody who reads the newspapers, so that he can get an inkling that he is a possi- ble nominee. Mr. Thomas Wolfe has published "The Story of a Novel," which is shorter than "Of Time and the River." There was a rumor yesterday that Mr. Wolfe is at work on a 200-page curtain raiser to be called "Why I Wrote 'The Story of a Novel.' "- F.P.A. "perhaps," "I think," "I believe I am right in say- ing," etc., I do not see that Mr. Deutsch is qualified to predicate the remarks of Hitler, Hearst, or the Munition Makers, much less, the attitude of God, the child or Prof. Beard. Of one thing I am sure, that Prof. Beard could at least understand the viewpoint of "the Counselor and the Professor," and in Mr. Deutsch's inability to understand, and even unwillingness to try, lie the basic grounds for a criticism of his attitude. He is displaying the very intolerance and bigotedness which his prop- BOOKS IN UNBUTTONED MOODS By DOROTHY S. GIES Oftentimes the most. charming and revealing works of great literary fig- res are relegated to complete and unmerited obscurity, save for those few curious scholars and biographers who care to ferret them out. Collec- tions of people's letters have a very dull sound; yet it is in these casual unvarnished writings that the per- sonalities of great men are most truly reflected. Even journals are too often self- conscious, with half an eye to future publication, or even an unabashed admission of that purpose, as in the case of Marie Bashkirtseff. Episto- lary confessions alone have that un- studied grace of intimate informality: we see the giant just before break- fast, perhaps, or by candellight in bed, with his halo of immortality put away for the night. It is the great mind relaxing from being great, genius in petticoats with its stays unlaced. Coleridge, for instance, describes his experiences as minister at the Unitarian Chapel in Shrewsbury: "The people here are dressy and fond of expense and the women very hand-- some. The congregation is small and my reputation cowed them into a vast respectfulness; but one shrewd fellow remarked that he would rather hear me talk than preach." How unspeakably casual is Keats' brief remark in a letter to his sister Fanny: "Yesterday I received an invitation from Mr. Shelley, a gentle- man residing at Pisa, to spend the winter with him." Sometimes among the chatty in-i consequentials of ordinary corre-I spondence comes an illuminating flash of pholosophy or theory. Thus Robert Browning defines his atti-i tude toward his own work: "I never' designedly try to puzzle people, as some of my critics have supposed.; On the other hand, I never pretended to offer such literature as should be a substitute for a cigar or a game at' dominoes to an idle man. So per- haps I get my deserts or something over -not a crowd but a few I value more." Byron, of course, never wrote by candlelight in a nightcap but always in heroic accoutrements. How true to character, for instance, is that letter to his solicitor in which he rejects with melodramatic gusto a proposal to sell his ancestral home, Newstead Abbey. One can almost hear the audience applaud as the hero rips the mortgage: "It is in thel power of God, the Devil, and Man to make me poor and miserable, but neither the second nor the third shall make me sell Newstead, and by theI aid of the fist I will persevere in this resolution. My father's home shall not be made a den of thieves. New- stead shall not be sold!" Surely Emily Post herself could not frame a. more charming letter of regret than Charles Lamb penned to his friend William Godwin, to ex- cuse his sister from an invitation: "Dear Sir: I send this speedily after the heels of Cooper to say that Mary is obliged to stay at home on1 Sunday to receive a female friend, from whom I am equally glad to escape. But I calculate thus: if Mary DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all memtiers of the ll1 versity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President tU 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1936 VOL. XLVI No. 148 Notices President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to members of the faculties. their friends, and other residents of Ann Arbor on Sunday, May 3 from 4 to 6 p.m. Apparatus Exchange: The Regents at their meeting in March, 1927, au- thorized an arrangement for the sale of scientific apparatus by one depart- ment to another, the proceeds of the sale to be credited to the budget ac- count of the department from which the apparatus is transferred. Departments having apparatus which is not in active use are advised to send descriptions thereof to the University Chemistry Store, of which Prof. R. J. Carney is director. The Chemistry Store headquarters are in Room 223, Chemistry Building. An effort will be made to sell the appara- tus to other departments which are likely to be able to use it. In some instances the apparatus may be sent to the University Chemistry Store on consignment, and, if it is not sold within a reasonable time, it will be returned to the department from which it was received. The object of this arrangement is to promote economy by reducing the amount of unused apparatus. It is hoped that departments having such apparatus will realize the advantage to themselves and to the University in availing themselves of this oppor tunity. Shirley W. Smith. Faculty Meeting. College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts: The regu- lar May meeting will be held in Room 1025 A.H. Monday, May 4, beginning at 4:10 p..m. Agenda: Report of Executive Committee - Remer.1 Report concerning University Coun- cil - Hunt. Three Special Orders: a. Degree Program in the Field of Religion and Ethics. b. Changes in Combined Curricu- la. c. Admission as a Student Not a Candidate for a Degree. Faculty, School of Education: The regular luncheon meeting of the fac- ulty will be held on Monday, May 4, Michigan Union at 12 noon. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments aind Occupational Information has received announcement of United States Civil Service Examination for Junior Forester, Junior Range Ex- aminer, salary, $2,000. For further information concerning this exam- ination, call at 201 Mason Hall, of- fice hours 9 to 12 and 2 to 4 p.m. Student Admission to Schoolmas- ter's Club Meeting: Students may se- cure passes admitting them to all sessions of the Schoolmaster's Club by applying at the Recorder's Office, 4 University Hall, or the office of the School of Education. May Festival Tickets: The "over- the counter" sale of tickets for in- dividual May Festival concerts will begin Monday morning, May 4, aL the general offices of the School of Music on Maynard Street. At that time, all unsold season tickets will be broken up and offered for sale for single concerts at $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 each. Orders with remittance to cover received prior to that date, will be filled in sequence in advance. A lim- ited number of season tickets are still available at $6.00, $7.00 and $8.00 each. (If Festival coupon from Choral Union season tickets is returned, the price is reduced to $3.00, $4.00 and $5.00 each.) Seniors, College of Literature, Sci- ence and Arts: Senior caps and gowns may be obtained at Moe's Ath- letic Shop, 711 N. University Ave. You are urged to place your order as soon as possible to insure delivery. Phi Lambda Upsilon: New Mem- bers: The keys have been recived and may be obtained in Room 3032, East Engineering Building, any time Saturday morning, Hillcl Dance Tickets; Tickets for the dance at Palmer Field House Sat- urday night may be procured at the Foundation or from Committee mem- bers. Those on the Ticket Committee of the Hillel Dance please turn in a re- port of the tickets sold and the mon- ey for them to Charlotte Kahn as soon as possible. Academic Notices History 12, Lee. I, Section 9 (Win- nacker), a written examination will be given Saturday, May 2, at 9 a.m. (Schevill, chapters 20 to 26 inclusive). Fine Arts 192 and 204. Pottery Ex- pedition. Meet at the Bear Cage at 12:15 today. (First destination Pew- able Pottery - 10125 East Jefferson Avenue. Detroit). fulfilhnent of the requirement for the Master of Music Degree, Nebbie .............., ..... Respighi Fiocca la Neve .............. Cimara Stornello ................... Cimara Quando ti rivedro..........Donaudy Amor mi fa cantare.......Donaudy Poeme de l'Armour et de la Mer .. ... '............ . .. . .Chausson 1. La Fleur des Eaux Interlude 2. La Mort do 'Armou Shceherazade ................Ravel 1. Asie 2. La Flute Enchantee 3. L'Indifferent The Green River ........Carpenter The Song of the Palanquin Bearers ............ ............. Shaw Wild Bird ...............Greenfield The Knight of Bethlehem ..Thomson The Water Mill .... Vaughn-Williams Events Of Today Delta Sigma Rho will hold its thir- tieth anniversary banquet in the Michigan Union. The banquet, start- ing at 7 p.m., will also be in honor of Professor Trueblood, one of the na- tional founders of the society. Mem- bers of any chapter who wish to at- tend may make their reservations with Sam Travis at the Lawyers' Club. Dinner will be $1.25 and the dress in- formal. Presbyterian Students and friends who have signed up for the Sylvan Estates Party today be sure to be at the Masonic Temple at 1:30 p.m., rain or shine. Coming Events Dental School Assembly at 4:15 p.m. Monday, May 4. Dean Samuel T. Dana will speak on the subject, "Conservation in the New Deal." Engineering Students and Faculty. Mr. J. Ormondroyd of the Westing- house Elec. & Mfg. Co., will speak on "The Teaching and Use of Engineer- ing Mechanics in Industry" on Mon- day, May 4, 11:00 a.m., Room 348 West Engineering Building. All in- terested are cordially invited to at- tend. Special Applied Mechanics Collo- quium: Mr. J. Ormondroyd of the Westinghouse Elec. & Mfg. Co., will speak on "The Construction of the 200 inch Telescope" on Monday, May 4, Room 445 West Engineering Bldg., 7:30 p.m. This 200-inch Telescope is the one recently constructed for the California Institute of Technol- ogy. All interested are cordially in- vited to attend. Sigma Delta Chi will hold a dinner business meeting 6:15 p.m. Monday, May 4, at the Union, for members and pledges. James C. Kiper, execu- tive secretary of the national organ- ization, will be the guest of the chap- ter. Current events contest. Pledge speakers will include Arnold Daniels, Robert Weeks, Clayton Hepler and Russell Anderson. Phi Sigma meeting scheduled for May 6 has been changed to May 5 due to conflict with Sigma Xi banquet. Election of new officers at this meeting. Cercle Francais: Meeting on Tues- day, April 5, 7:45 p.m., Michigan League. This will be the last meet- ing before election and all members must be present. Zeta Phi Eta: Initiates and pledges please plan to meet Tuesday, May 5, 5 p.m., in the Michigan League for election of officers. 'All financial ob- ligations should be met immediately. U. of M. Public Health Club dinner at the League, Monday, May 4, 6:30 p.m. The dinner will be informal. You are requested to get your tray at the cafeteria and go to the Russian Tea Room across the hall, which has been reserved. Dr. J. Sundwall is expected to say a few words. Again we give a special invitation to the Federal Students. Reservations for the Michigan Dames Banquet, Tuesday, May 5, must be made with one of the ticket saleswomen, or with Mrs. Lewis Haines, not later than Sunday eve- ning, May 3. Mimes: Regular meeting Monday afternoon at 4:30 p.m., Union. Those new members not yet initiated please attend also. Stalker Hall, Sunday: 6 p.m., Wesleyan Guild meeting. Installation of the New Student Council. 7 p.m., Fellowship hour and supper. First Methodist Church, Sunday: Dr. C. W: Brashares will preach on "Making Faces" at 10:45 a.m. Harris Hall, Sunday: The regular student meeting will be held in Harris Hall at 7 p.m. Prof. Howard Mumford Jones will speak nnl ''A r.5 rnir Tiararln,-n11 All t-f.,i A I comes she will eat: Beef, 2 plates Batter pudding, 1 do. Beer, a pint Wine, 3 glasses Chestnuts Tea & supper at moderate calculation 4d 2d 2d lld 2d 9d 4 Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The (Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, beregarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked 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. A Reply To Mr. Deutsch To the Editor- I should like to answer Mr. Deutsch's recent dia- tribe against "the Counselor of Religion and the Professor" in as brief a manner as is compatible with the length of his article and the number of mis-statements contained in it. The Counselor of Religion did not use the word "sneaky" as applied to the student's actions; he merely pointed out (not bitterly, antagonistically, or scornfully) that this material had "sneaked in," using the term in its highly colloquial, semi-face- tious connotation, and announced that its distri- bution was neither a part of the Parley nor sanc- tioned by those in charge. In other words, he dis- claimed responsibility, a perfectly proper procc- dure. No issue was made of the actual distribu- tion; it was allowed to proceed. The argument which arose was entirely a question of the exist- ence of a right. It is an anomalous situation, when people so vitally concerned with the preservation of rights, so actively alive to the subtleties by which these rights are invaded, are absolutely un- able to perceive any question of rights to be in- volved in their own actions, are oblivious to any sense of rights existing elsewhere than in the entire appropriateness of any and all means by which they choose to combat such invasions, even at the expense of impinging on other rights. That such unawareness does exist, is evidenced by Mr. Deutsch's choice of the four questions which he very rightly disposed of; none of these questions &2s 6d "You are a clear gainer by her not coming." No doubt the briefes letter of a great poet on record was Rudyard Kipling's speedy come-back to a Lon- don wag. Kipling once sold a book to a publisher at a price that netted the author one shilling a word. The publication of the fact came to the attention of a Fleet Street humnorist, who wrote Kipling saying that as wisdom seemed to be quoted at retail prices, he himself would like one word, for which he enclosed a shilling postal order. The reply came back promptly. Mr. Kipling had kept the shilling postal order and on a large sheet of writing paper returned the one significant word, "Thanks" Letter-wiiting as an art must be- long inevitably to an age of leisur-e. Letters are the memorial of a society that has time to be clever and soci- able. They fill the space in literature that after-dinner conversations fill in life. One wonders if many brilliant and scintillating epistles can issue from an age of telegrams and alarm- clocks, or if this generation of writers will leave any worthy collection of letters to be scanned with delight and enjoyment by a future age. Ingenious Freshmen Freshmen at Waldorf College (For- est City, Ia.) have been invented a lot of new facts for scientists and edu- cators. Recent examination answers revealed the following new facts: 1. Shelly unfortunately died while drowning in the Gulf of Leghorn. 2. Dido means the same, and is usually represented by Dido marks. 3. Romeo and Juliet are an ex- ample of an heroic couplet. 4. Milton wrote "Paradise Lost";