0 Section Four I LL G 4F A#tY flitir an IrtA Features ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1936 Ann Arbor Of 50 Years Ago Recalled By Prof. Goddard Germans Miss Old Traditions, VisitorReports Heidelbergers Bitter Passing Of Duels Mourned, As Are Study Habits Of YoungGermany By MARY GIES (EDITOR'S NOTE: Miss Gies spent last year in Germany as a graduate student at the University of Heidelberg, and is enrolling in the graduate school here this semester.) O, alte Bursenennerrlichkeit, wohin bist Du entschwunden!" is asked by every disappointed visitor to Heidel- berg who has seen the "Student Prince" and expects to find romance lurking in every Weinkeller. A pil- grimage to Heildelberg is no longer what it was in the days when Mark Twain sojourned up in the Schloss- hotel and used to wander over to the Hirschgasse to admire the undaunted appetites brought to^ bear on a round of rare steak smothered in fried po- tatoes and onions during the progress of a gory duel. The splinters no longer fly in the Hirschgasse, the traditional duelling Lokal of Heidelberg, and the pools of. blood on the floor are slowly being worn away by the pious feet of Amer- ican tourists. There ,hasn't been a duel there for almost two years, and the floors where innumerable gen- erations of blood-thirsty students have spilt beer and blood is gradually being scrubbed into prosaic tidiness. Even one of the magnificent old oak tables carved and engraved by about four hundred years' successive crops of lusty sportsmen has recently been sold to an American breakfast-food magnate. Alumni Complain The old alums who came back in aune for the 550-year jubilee of the University were audibly bitter. No caps and colors, the corps houses closed, and not even a delinquent student to get ridden through the Hauptstrasse tied onto a mule back- wards. In the old days the jubilee would have been celebrated with tre- mendous formal banquets and dances in every corps house on the Schloss- berg. An old waiter in one of the Wirtschaften, once the housemaster of a Verbindung, began reminiscing about the good old days. Why, he could remember when they drank a hundred bottles of champagne in one evening, and then hailed up a case of wine to finish off with. Those were the days! Students were really stu- dents then, and didn't believe in tak- ing life so verdammt ernst. The corporations and Verbindun- den - the duelling fraternities - are formally abolished. But .their mem- bers are still none the less corps stu- dents, and still believe the true badge of a red-blooded man is a gash diag- onally across the cheek from eye to chin, technically known as a "Zie-f her." The corps are a collapsed tra-t dition as far as the National Studentt League is concerned, but their mem-I ory still lingers very vividly among the older students, and the old grads stick to their colors with true Teu- tonic tenacity.t "The Good Old Days"t On the night of the Jubilee when most of the high officials had gath-I ered in Heidelberg to greet the for- eign delegates, these old gentlemen gathered down in their traditional Bierstube in the Hotel Ritter and began resurrecting old times. They just couldn't see any sense at all in the way young folks were being! suppressed nowadays-made to keep! their noses to the grindstone. Never heard of such a thing as expecting a student to study before his tenth or twelfth semester. (There's a hallowed. fable of a student who spent 40 se-r mesters at his beloved alma mater).- Tonight all the students were lined1 up in Studentenbund uniforms clos- ing off the streets for the guests, and not a Stiftungsfest in tuwn.- There were a dozen brown-uniformed S.A. men at neighboring tables, butj they obligingly ignored the loud and1 straightforward criticism of the gov- ernment'on this particular point. The honorable old gentlemen had been, discussing the situation for some; time, and naturally quenching theiri indignation with steins of Munch- ener. Finally one old reactionary1 stood up and shouted in the voice1 of a Prussian field-marshall "We want our corps-and anyone who doesn't agree can get out!" I think everyone in the room applauded, in-1 cluding the brown-shirts. Political life and thought of the nation has become an integral part of student life as it has of every 4".- t Three Views Of Student Life At Heidelberg 1oe's',re t Were Unknown To '84_Students Gives Michigan Lore T oy' Of Il oyd )ouglas' Book Was Modeled After Tutts' Tuttle By TUURE TENANDER Days when students received limit- less credit with no questions asked, when the property next to the League used to be a common, undignified to- boggan slide, and when one could get all the pie he wanted at a single sit- ting were fondly recalled by Prof.- Emeritus Edwin C. Goddard of the Law School, who has been connected with the University for a half-cen- tury. Those who have read Lloyd Doug- las' novel, Magnificent Obsession, will remember Tony, the old man who. ran a restaurant where students could order what they wished and then sign their names in a book which was hung on the wall of the restaurant with a pencil hanging by a string beside it. .Mr. Douglas wrote for The Daily and said that Tony was modeled after a character he en- countered in Ann Arbor a long time ago. Recalling Tutts Mr. Douglas could not remember the name of the restaurant proprie- tor but Professor Goddard immed- iately identified him as a man named Tuttle, who formerly conducted an eating establishment on State Street, in the sAme building where Swift's is now located. "Everybody used to call him 'Tutts'," said Professor Goddard. 'Tutts' is not, however, the equivalent of the modern 'Toots' and was not pronounced with the flippancy us- ually accompanying the rendition of "Hi, Toots." All The Pie You Can Eat "Tutts' used to be very popular with the students," recalled Profes- sor Goddard, "especially since one could eat there whenever he was broke or short of cash. One could eat in there and go over and sign his name and the amount in the book and pay whenever he liked. Tutts never quibbled about anything or pressed anyone to pay his bill. Often years would elapse before an account would be settled by an old grad who happened to drop in at Tuttle's." Professor Goddard did not re- member the actual date of Tuttle's presence on State Street but said that it was not far removed from the turn of the century. Professor Goddard came to Ann Arbor first as a student in 1884, then joined the faculty of the Law School in 1895. He was ac- tively teaching until just a few years ago when he retired to the quiet of University Campus In Days Of Prof. Goddard's Youth !.. ,.. . r: .. Airplane View Of The Campus As It Ih Today The above pictures were taken during Miss Gies' stay in Germany. The upper photo, showing Miss Gies at the extreme right, pictures the university's court with the inverted swastika and "golden Hen" above the door at the rear. The center picture shows "music in the Mensa," man's boarding house, which was located, according to Professor God- dard, on Washington Street, near Division. It was at Prettyman's that one could get all the helpings on pie that he could eat for no extra charge. Three was an old legend connected with Prettyman's, Professor Goddard said, which held that a Japanese stu- dent at the University used to take one piece of the six flavors of pie that were always on the table. by a German band and the lower p to Rothenburg. but at the same time they have fought and will fight to hold together the almost despairing fragments of their own country. How important politics are to the great majority of students is evident from a remark of a student, who is, I think typical of seventy per cent. I had asked him if the endless meetings he was required to attendsweren't a bit irksome. Well, he explained, after all, I'm first of all an S.A. man, and only secondly a student. Corps Disbanded Practically every student is in some one of the political organizations, and all are members of the General Stu- dent Organization. It is only recent- ly, with the decree of last spring, that there has come a division in the stu- dent ranks. The corps students were among the first and most ardent of the National Socialists, and they -have been the backbone of the sub- sequent political organizations. Then for some more or less obscure reason, the fraternities were ordered to dis- band. Some say it was because some nooty Saxo-Berussia from Heidel- berg gave a demonstration in public af how Hitler ate asparagus with his fingers; some preferred the story of the Rupperter who named their bull- pup mascot after Baldur von Schi- rach, the national organizer of stu- dents. The real and underlying rea- son for the wiping out of the fra- ternities lies, however, in their anti- democratic principles and organiza- tion. They formed an exclusive aris- tocratic clique which clung to the ancient prestige of a "von," and prac- ticed a tolerant noblesse oblige upon common philologists. Their brother- hood formed an*'impenetrable closed circle to all outsiders; they might be among the most loyal of the Nazi ad- herents-but then again they might not be, and there would be no way of pi ai icture was taken on a seminar trip ing seen the rigorous training arid perfect manners of the fraternity members can you appreciate their value. The National Student League is (Continued on Page 24) t l t 1 !( 1 1 1 1 his home on Hill Street. Prettyman was also the first mar. Another eating place that was on to build a tobogan slide in Ann Arbor, the campus long before students ex- continued Professor Goddard. "There pressed the desire to be taken back to was a deep hollow off of Twelfth Joe's and the Orient was Pretty- Street, right next to the present site World's Largest Cyclotron Here May Help In Medicine's Long Struggle Against Cancer By ARNOLD S. DANIELS range of the powerful forces within. In the field between the two poles Startling advances which may be During the summer the cyclotron of the electro-magnet there have been" made in the fields of medicine, chem- reached a limit of 6,700,000 volts, the placed two hollow electrodes, andt istry and physics through the use of greatest voltage which has ever been particles of matter placed between1 the University's great atom-smashing attained. Prof. Cork stated that by them move back and forth from one cyclotron were suggested recently by shaving down the poles, so that the to the other until they have attained Prof. James M. Cork of the physics space between them is increased, it terrific speed. If one of these accel- department in discussing his plans for may be possible to reach a voltage of lerated particles strikes another dur- research during the coming year. 15,00,000. For controlling the elec- ing the "bombardment," the force of According to Prof. Cork, radioac- trical apparatus of the cyclotron, their speed will smash the atomst tive elements which can be created in there are more than 80 connections within the particles.1 the cyclotron will be more powerful between the board and the instru- C At present, "heavy" hydrogen is be- than radium in the ing used in the cyclo- treatment of tumors and tron. This hydrogen is cancers. In this connec- made from a special wa- tion, he said, the Univer- ter, imported from Nor- sity of California is now way. From the vessels planning a huge cyclo- - in which it is made, the tron which will be so hydrogen is conducted large that a room in through a slender tube' which patients may be to the chamber in the3 placed can be built be- cyclotron. With the ob- tween the poles of the servers at the control' electro-magnet which is board, the effects of the the center of the instru- electricity upon the hy- ment. A cyclotron of this drogen can be carefully size would require an W Watched in highly-sensi- electro-magnet weighing tive instruments. Work about 250 tons. The k will be carried on with present University cyclo- ten assistants. tron contains a magnet The articles of the which weighs 95 tons, 80 particles within the of them steel and 15 cop- bombardment chamber per. can be watched through The force of the ra- a small round window. of the League. This was called the "Cat Hole." Down the side of this hollow Prettyman used to go with nis toboggan." The Cat Hole, Professor Goddard added, was the place where legend had it that an old bell from one of the University buildings had been buried years before. The old bell had never been seen again, and stories were told that it was buried in thet Cat Hole. In 1884, when Professor GoddardI 'irst came to Ann Arbor, Prettyman's was being operated by Jen McName, and her daughter, Prettyman ap-! parently having no connection with the establishment at this time. Asked where the students of the nineteenth century usually went when they wanted beverages other1 than those served in restaurants and boarding houses, Professor Goddard1 replied that Drake's wasnthen theI favor j te alcohol dispenser in Ann Ar- bor. "Drake's was located on Huron Street and was very popular with th e students at one time. But it hasf been completely forgotten by almost everyone now," Professor Goddard added. One of the most interesting and amusing characters on the Uni- versity campus during Professor God- dard's early years here was "Doctor" Nagele, janitor of the Medical De- partment. He was an old gentle- man who never responded to any other name than Doctor, and was consequently bestowed this official title by everyone at the University. According, to Professor Goddard, Dr. Nagele had an old bell which he always rung when the class hour was over and the next one ready to be- gin. "Old Doc persisted in shaking this old bell with the large tongue even after the University had installed in one of its buildings the official bell which sounded every hour," Profes- sor Goddard said. "This proved quite amusing, and sometimes a bit an- noying to some in attendance at the University. So on one occasion someone stole the old doctor's bell, Doc Nagele was like a man without a country without his bell, so one of the professors purchased him an- other hell and evervthin-r aain h-. A n Inside' Gets The Job, Radio's Cap. Henry Says In order for the young person of today to get started in any type of endeavor, whether in the business, technical or entertainment world, he must be a stylist and must also know someone on the "inside," in the opin- ion of Frank McIntyre, who for the past five weeks has been just an ordi- nary citizen of Ann Arbor but who in the winter months has been a radio luminary and an important figure in the Maxwell House "Showboat" broadcasts. "People speak of getting a job at the bottom of the ladder and then working their way to the top," Mr. McIntyre said, "but nowadays you have to know someone to even get a hold of that bottom rung." Started 30 Years Ago Mr. McIntyre himself, now in his fifties, started his career on the stage 30 years ago after deciding that the newspaper field was not meant for him. The greater part of his life has been spent on the stage, having turned to radio only three years ago. He has become known throughout the country for his characterization of the amiable "Cap'n Henry," skipper of radio's mythical showboat. The mastery of some extremely specialized work is deemed absolutely necessary in present day competition by Mr. McIntyre. "There is an over- production in almost everything to- day, including talent and skilled la- bor as well as material products," he added. "This means that only the very best in each type of occupation get jobs." Engineers Underpaid Mr. McIntyre considered that the technician and the engineer are par- tially themselves to blame for hav- ing to work for lower wages than their training merits. He declared that if the engineer could not get for his efforts as an engineer what he Arna, A . n, fni. r u nap ha .'.r m -na t r