GE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 29, 1952 W." JUST PLAIN 'SANDY' AGAIN: Leisure Eludes Ruthven in Retirement By DIANE DECKER Sometime after 5 p.m. on the last day of June, 1951, President Alexander Ruthven closed his desk, bade his secretary "good- bye" and walked out the door of 2522 Administration Bldg. toward a life of leisurely retirement. Looking retrospectively at the past eight months, Prof. Ruthven has conoluded that he hasn't found the leisure he expected." However, the 70-year-old Scot- tish educator admits that the "greatest blessing of retirement is that now I have more command of my time, and it is possible for me to spend what I consider to be the proper amount of time with avocations." *i THE UNIVERSITY'S former president finds retirement relax- ing-"I can smoke my pipe all the time now. It wasn't conven- ient 'before." Lighting a cigarette (because the pipe tobacco had been in- advertently left at his home, Gordon Hall) ,Ruthven contin- ued, "I've always had a large collection of briars. A good pipe smoker has one for every day of the week so he can give them a rest." By family tradition ,the oldest Ruthven boy has always been called Alexander, and the good Scottish nickname for Alexander is "Sandy." According to the' Alexander of this generation: "Before I became president, my friends in Ann Ar- bor and elsewhere always called me 'Sandy'. When I became presi- dent, they started calling me President', and since I've retired, I'm again 'Sandy' to my friends." BUT BEING retired does have its disadvantages, as Ruthven ad- mits. He had expected to miss his direct contact with students- and he does-although in his po- sition as faculty advisor to West Quad's Allen-Rumsey House, he Senate Post Goes To 'U' Professor Prof. John W. Lederle of the pb- litical science department has an- nounced that he has accepted an advisory position with the U.S. Senate Elections Committee in Washington. The committee is studying the revision of electoral laws in an at- tempt to reduce campaign abuses and excessive expenditures. Prof. Lederle, who is head of the University's Institute of Pub- lic Administration, .said that the job is on a part-time basis, en- abling him to remain at. the Uni- versity.. * * ago had heard my views on the subjects that concern me most." LIFE ISN'T ALL work and no play even for retired college presidents, however, and Ruthven spends a good deal of time at Gor- don Hall near Dexter with his hobbies. A biologist by training, Ruth- ven enjoys raising Morgan hors- es and boxers. HeI stable of Morgans1 and is director of Horse Association. had the first in Michigan the Morgan "SANDY" AND MORGANS-Former President Alexander Ruthven surveys his prize-winning horses, which have taken honors across the continent. Owner of the first stable of Morgans in Michigan, he heads the Morgan Horse Association. * * * gets an opportunity to talk to the men about their problems. Allen-Rumsey House is not his only contact with the Uni- versity. Although he has left the. office in the Administra- tion Bldg. behind him, Ruthven has moved to another on the mezzanine of the Rackham Bldg. There he makes plans for the * * * new course he is teaching for the Ann Arbor area extension service on "Modern Trends in Higher Education", handles his corres- pondence, receives visitors, and prepares speeches. "It still seems necessary for me to give a good many talks," the genial educator confided. "This surprises me because I had the feeling that everyone a long time MATH MONKEYSHINES: Sun's Slowness, Not Spinsters Forced Leap Year Adoption Ruthven proudly admits, "My horses have taken prizes across the nation from California to Massachusetts and New Jersey." Descended from a long-line of horse breeders, Ruthvenrchose Morgans because, "They are the most intelligent and tractable of breeds." One of Ruthven's disappoint- ments is that, to date, he has found no time for his writings in zoology. When he was still ac- tively engaged in scientific work, the versatile educator developed a philosophy of zoology w h i c h gained wide acceptance. "I've always planned, when I had time, to do more writing in this field," he said. And, al- though President Ruthven never got around to it, it seems pretty sure that "Sandy" will. Wage Board To Hear Plea Of Contractor, Appeal arguments by the J. D. Hedin Construction Co. of Wash- ington, D.C., contractors for the local Veterans Administration Hospital project will be heard at Wage Stabilization Board offices in Washington today, but a final ruling is not expected for at least a month. The company was fined $80,000 in penalties for allegedly paying bricklayers $3 an hour between Feb. 28 and Nov. 14, 25 cents an hour over the WSB ceiling rate. of $2.75. A second local overpayment charge was made against the Anchor Fireproofing Co., Inc., also of Washington, D.C., a subcon- tractor on the University Hospi- tal's Out-Patient Clinic project. The Anchor firm was cited for allegedly paying $60,000 in over- ceiling wages to bricklayers last year. Hearings in the case, which have been repeatedly delayed pending the outcome of the Hedin case, have now been set for April 22. Union Show Ticket Sale A nnounced Union Opera preparations shift- ed into double step yesterday as the ticket sale schedule for the 1952 edition, "Never Too Late," was announced along with a first call for scenarios for the '53 opera, Applications for organized group ticket blocs will be accepted begin- ning .Monday, according to Pro- motions Chairman Mark Sand- ground, '52. The public sale will begin a week later, March 10. The show will be held March 26, 27 and 28 at the Michigan Theatre and tickets are priced at $2.25, $1.75 and $1.25, a reduction from last year's prices. Meanwhile with an eye toward the future, Mimes President Jim McGlincy, '52, announced that competition for scenarios for the '53 opera is open. A committee consisting of Pro- fessors Marvin Felheim and Ken- neth Rowe of the English depart- ment, Opera General Manager Jim Yobst and McGlincy , will select four of the scenarios submitted. The authors of these will be asked to hand in completed scripts from which the Union Executive Board will select the one to be used. McGlincy asked that the sum- maries be handed in as soon as possible to the Union main desk. Although nothing official has been announced, Mimes officers hinted that the advance prepara- tion for next year's show may her- ald a return to the pre-war prac- tice of presenting the Union Opera in December and sending it on a nation-wide tour. 'Ensian Sale Today is absolutely the last day to purchase 'Ensians at the prevailing price of $5.50, Gor- don Hyde, '54, promotions man- ager, warned yesterday. Orders will be taken from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Student Publi- cations Bldg. or through the house representatives. Those who put off their pur- chase will have to pay an extra fifty cents, Hyde declared, for after today, the 'Ensian will cost $6:00.. Tickets Still Left For One Act Bill Tickets are still available for the remaining performance of the speech department's third bill of one-act plays, being presented at 8 p.m. today at Lydia Mendelssohn Theater. R E L A T E D B Y A D 0 P T 1 0 N -"Nutsy," a young squirrel, sits between two kittens after being found with eyes still closed by Harold Minton in Philadelphia. "Nutsy" was adopted by the Minton cat who had just given birth to kittens including this twosome. TUE WS February has its extra day today -not to provide hope for timid males but to adjust our calendar to fit the time required for the earth to revolve around the sun, according to Prof. Hazel M. Losh of the astronomy department. "Making up a calendar is diffi- cult because the natural divisions of time refuse to come out evenly," she said. The earth does not travel around the sun in an even number of days and the moon's revolutions about the earth are also irregular. * * * ACTUALLY the duration of the earth's trip around the sun is 365.24219 days, Prof. Losh added. Because the sun refused to make the journey in exactly 365% days, the calendar . devised by Julius Caesar back in Roman times ac- cumulated an error of several days by the year 1582., It was in'that year that Pope Gregory XIII instituted a calen- dar reform-undoubtedly irked by the necessity of having the day following October 4, 1582, become the 15th of the month to correct the error in Caesar's calendar. "The Gregorian calendar con- tinued the habit of inserting an extra day every four years but had a very important modification- the first year in each new century is not a leap year unless it is divis- ible by exactly 400," Prof. Losh reported. "Thus the year 2000 will be a leap year but 1700, 1800 and 1900 were not." This correction has practically wiped out the error of Caesar's calendar and leaves only the rela- tively small discrepancy of 26 sec- onds a year, Prof. Losh concluded. B E N D I N C E V E R Y E F F 0 R T -Whatever their luck, these bathing-suited anglers will catch admiring glances as they join in popular sport of surf casting at St. Petersburg, Fla. I r 1 T, u t - ".. '4 4 .a E Y E F U L F 0 R T H E Y 0 U T H F U L-Susan (left) and Georgia Rushworth have wide- eyed admiration for papier-mache creations of their uncle, war veteran Richard R. Baldwin, 26, Berkeley, Cal. This frontier scene is mechanized for animation by Baldwin. ".. Mli