I g'( Wnttrhw AT YOUR I THREE TIC A WEEK ANN ARBOR, MHCHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1921 PRICE FI _ . fl Play 'Richelieu' - U Is Offering Of Class In Drama Eight scenes from the play "Riche- lieu', by Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton will be given by the class in Shake- TION spearean reading at 8 o'clock this evening in Sarah Caswell Angell hall, ) The action of the play takes place during the reign of Louis XIII, about the year 1641, and deals with the ef- ON forts of Cardinal Richelieu, prime minister of France, to check a con- \LLTH spiracy on the part of the nobles to dethrone , the king by allying their Iversity forces with those of the Spaniard. By the aid of De Mauprat whom Riche- lieu had pardoned after an unjust charge of treason, and of Francois, a page, Richelien succeeds in finding Univer- and revaling t'hem to the king. AI ted the love affair between De Mauprat and ,blished Julie De Mortemar, an orphan ward tion at to Richelieu, adds interest to the an an- play.I - The characters will be changed each ,y, and 1r, _ +, ,,,t1,-,8-" U ' s e t; . r_ F r Tx TO GET FRIDAY1 FOR y MEMBERS OF BOARD COMING SAT- URDAY TO TENDER PRES- IDENCY AGAIN HOPE TO END SEARCH WITH MEETING IIERE Economist May Accept if Allowed to Wait Until January First Witl' the intention of conferring HMental Exams Show Students On Probation Are Not Below Average scene to enable all members of the g i class; to participate in the recital. hy- 0LDING PtANS ARE BIGRSE gram Will Take Definite Form After Committee Returns j From EastI KING INSPECTION TOUR OF MANY UNIVERSITIESr that "Work on the plans of six new Uni- ndle versity buildings, including the addi- ivide tion to the Dental building, is pro-1 one gressing rapidly," said Prof. J. F. Shepard, of the psychology depart-~ ment, yesterday. The plans will be the completed when the committee re- foot- turns from the East, where it will f in- study the plais of buildings of many this eastern universities, according to Pro- hich I fessor Shepard. time Plans for the new School of Edu-f Dr. cation building are being drawn up by Mr. Perkins, a Chicago architect, :end' the will soon be submitted to the commit- one tee, It is hoped that the plans of all with the new buildings will be ready when pre- the state is able to provide the money the for construction of the buildings. give Professor Shepard and a party re- be- cently returned from a western trip, 'hich where they inspected the buildings of stu- many of the leading schools of the West. Professor Shepard will leave Ann Arbor on another inspecting trip; the about the middle of this' month and the will return the first, week in Septem- r f ber. with Prof. David Friday, of the econ- omics department, regarding the pres idency of the Michigan Agricultural college; at East Lansing, members of the State Board of Agriculture will meet in Ann Arbor Saturday. The special committee of the board has de- cided one Professor Friday as the most logical man to succeed Dr. Frank S. Kedzie, present head of the college.' and it is understood that a decision will be made at Saturday's meeting. Although Professor Friday recently telegraphed his refusal of the offer to Governor Groesbeck, it is under- stood at Lansing that he bias recon- sidered it, under condition that he be allowed to retain his present positions until the first of the year, at which time he is said to be willing to a- cept the M. A. C. job. Dr. Kedzie was anxious to have someone chosen who would be able to take over the work immediately, but, although the Board of Agriculture has not met since the latest decision of the committee was given out, it is thought that the other members will favor the acceptance of Professor Friday's stipulations. Professor Friday has been in Wash- ington a part of this week doing some preliminary research work in connec- tion hWith + proposed legislation for changing federal, reserve banking laws, and will continue this work un-i til about January 1. A telegram re- ceived from him by Mrs. Friday Wed- nesday, however, stated that he prob- ably would leave the ,captial that aft- ernoon, and it is expected that he will be on hand to attend the meeting of3 the Board of- Agriculture here Satur-' day. Shaw Outlines , Policy For New Weekly Alumnus Wilfred B. Shaw, general secretary of the Alumni association, and editor1 of the Michigan Alumnus, has just re- turned from a Week's trip to the East where he visited Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, Yale and Cornell, for the" purpose .of accumulating new ideas on the administering and publishing ofi the Alumnus. , "The plan now is to have a mag- azine of 24 or 32 pages, each page to" be seven by ten inches in size," said Mr. Shaw iq giving his outlook for' the new year. "This will be published, 36 weeks in the year, omitting the Christmas and Spring vacation periods1 and most of July and August. The first issue will probably be on Octo- ber 13. "It is true that the growth of this1 new weekly will be something of an evolution. Some new features that will be included are more short items and fewer long ones, one or more 1 pages devoted to Michigan Union news and longer and more detailed accounts of athletic events. . "The Michigan Alumnus subscription list has reached the 7,500 mark, which equals the number of alumni sub- scribers to the papers of Harvard and Yale. Princeton, however, has a larger subscription list that includes 85 per cent of its alumni. This is se- cured by having each class subscribe as a body." Mr. Shaw was unable to state the exact nature of the Michigan .Union news. George Brophy, Jr., '22L, the managing editor of The Michigan Daily during 'the past year, is to be the sec- retary of the. Michigan Union this Mental deficiency is not the cause of students being placed on probation. Most of those whose worjk is unsatis- factory have normal mentalities, and many are found to be above the aver- age. , These facts are shown by the r mental examinations given each se- mester to delinquent "students, ac- cording to the statement of Prof. G. M. Whipple, of the School of Educa- tion, under whose direction the tests are conducted.. ."A surprising number of students who have really excellent mental ca-" pacities are placed on probation," said Professor Whipple in a recent inter- view. His explanation of this cir- cumstance is that the student is gen- erally one who has always been able to pass courses by "bluffing," but who, when taking a course requiring con- siderable statistical study, finds hin- self unable to pass by merely having+ a good general knowledge. A number of University students! who were not on probation took the Dr. Cabot, Speaks Tuesday on Scope and Problems of Modernt Medicine SAYS SPECIALIZATION HASE BkOUGHT CHANGED METHODS mental tests at the same time with the others. In a comparative analysis, it was found that the average of the tests taken by those who were on pro- bation' was but little higher than the tests taken by those who were on probation. ''More than 80 per cent of the proba- tion students are found to have aver- age mentalities, but this number of- fers many and varied reasons for fail- ure. The most common reason is that of self support and the resulting lack of time "for application to lessons. Many students claim, that they are ig- norant of the method of studying and are therefore unable to - get the full benefit from their courses. Professor Whipple said that many students have come' to him after fail- ing examinations to say that the rea- son for the failure was due to worry over home affairs or money matters. "Part of the game is meeting just such adversities and overcoming, them," said Professor Whipple, "and I don't believe that he average student is to be entirely excused because of troubles foreign to scholastic affairs." ' Professor Whipple asserted that im- proper high school training is large- ly to blame for the number of stu- dents placed on probation. This opin- ion is substantiated by the large num- ber placed on probation in the fresh- man class in comparision to probal tioners from other classes. . Within the next few 'years it is planned to llave intelligence. tests in all high schools of the state, with, recommendation of onlF those who re- ceive a "B" grade or better. It is be- lieved this measure.- will prevent s number of the failures at the Univer- sity. "At least three distinct civiliza- tions have entirely disappeared be- cause they have not been able to com- bat disease and preserve said Dr. Hugh Cabot, dean Medical school, in a lecture ONEW SUMM, ATHLETICS F YOST BELIEVES COMPE CAN IMPROVE SPIRIT SESSION health," of the on "The Development of Medicine : in Relationj to the Community", given in ura'l Science auditorium, the Nat- Tuesday1 ~IYE FOUOBL GET INITTIONS nvitations to early fall practice ve been mailed out to 42 Michigan >tball candidates by Coach Fielding Yost. These 42 men constitute st's most promising gridiron men,; d it will be largely from this list' it the 1921 Varsity will be *picked. e date on which these men are,ask- to report is September 15.j According to Conference rulings' ne of the members can open foot-y l drill before the middle of Sep- nber. Michigan will start this Sep-I aber with the largest list of early ndidates that she has had for a nber of years. Coach Yost, although hard by the loss of Goetz and Wie- n through graduation and several' shman linemen because of ineligi- ity, is optimistic over the prospects 'this fall. The famous Michigan rtor will be assisted by Coaches, eman, Sturzenegger, Hahn, Mather, d Fisher.. Mich.igan will not open e Conference season until Octo- night. "Disease, and not war," he continued, "has been the greatest sin- gle factor in lowering the virility of the race." Until 50 years ago specialization in medicine was entirely unknown, and the general practitioner was fully acquainted with the entire scope of medicine. Specialization has been the natural outgrowth of the many dis- coveries of modern medicine. No long- er can one man assimilate and carry with him all the knowledge of med- icine. Subdivisions have become very numerous in the last few years, but lDr. Cabot is of the opinion that they will increase still more in the next few years. Development of Kos11iWdls - Closely allied with the development' of medicine has been the development of the hospital. "The hospitalization of a communitr," said Dr. Cabot, "might be termed a criterion of its industrial condition. The prospect of the state entering into medicine or public health is Causing a good deal of unfavorable comment, especially among the medical profbssion, but these men forget that the state now controls our private health by means of its laws.: "Too many of our doctors think that they are the only ones who should have anything to say about the health of the community. But 'this situation calls for the best brains of the community, and not merely the ideas of men trained in one branch. Rural Districts Lack Doctors "One of the greatest problems be- fore the American people today is the fact that the doctors in the .country are leaving for the cities, and young doctors refuse to go to the country. Unless doctors are supplied for the'. country districts," remarked Dr. Cab- ot, "it will soon be unsafe for people to live 'in the country. Too long has the medical profession preached that the sinkholes of disease were to be found in the large cities. The exact opposite is the case.. It is the coun- try where we find disease and unsan- itary conditions. . "The only solution to this problem is for the state or community to build hospitals and laboratories through- out the rural districts, so that young doctors will be encouraged to go to the country where, every convenience APPRCITION OF DANTE ISM''AGHINS~THEME1 "Dante represents the perfect bal- ance of intellectual and moral qual- ities at their highest," said Prof. W. A. McLaughlin, of the French depart- ment, in his lecture on Dante, deliv- ered in the Natural Science auditor- ium at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon.1 "He has been for many the perennial source of pleasure," declared Professor McLaughlin. "Six hundred years, ago there lived in Ravenna, in exile, a poet, well past middle age, of gentle berth, thirsting for justice and peace, a' Florentine by birth but not by character," said the speaker. "This was Dante Alighierix. His passion was intense, sublime. He was a lover of music, a draughtsman, and not insensible to color, light and shade; a master of mass and propor- tion; and a born diplomatist. Politics were his deep concern, and he was a philosopher of high intent; deeply re- ligious, ever alive to baffling prob- lems, which the mind seeks constantly to solve." He was exiled for his beliefs, and long hoped for the removal of the bann of exile, travelling about from place to place; stopping often at the homes of the nobility, whose names' he commemorated in his poems. He. remained a foe to his political en- emies, and so would not return to Florence. One day as he was walking the streets he saw a little girl of nine years. This was Beatrice, who in- spired him to write most of his lyrics. "Beatrice was his ideal,:incarnate,- his inspiration," said Professor McLaugh- lin. All these lyrics were collected in book form and they stand to this day a powerful tale 'of love. "At this time Italy was in a state of turmoil, "cities one against the oth- er; and there was murder between families," he continued. "Dante had a solution for the problem in his 'Treat- ise on Monarchy,' which took up amoAg other things' the relation be- tween the state and the church. A polemic and partisan pamphlet, it con- tains, nevertheless, much which is of interest today. Dante argued for temporal power, justice, unity, con- cord and freedom." "His title to fame is due to his 'Di- vine Comedy.' Posterity adds the opithet 'Divine,' and the work is un- rivalled for its sublimity of thought," added Professor McLaughlin. who con- DETAILS OF SCHEME NOT YET WORKED 0 Farrell Thinks Post-Season Wor Too Strenuous for.jTrack Men Coach Fielding H. Yost, Wolve football mentor and newly-appoil head of Michigan's department of tercollegiate athletics, and Coa Steve Farrell and E. J. Mather n put their stamp of approval on plan recently suggested by The V verine for the installation of a sys of summer intercollegiate athletics tween Big Ten universities, "I have not had an opportunity consider the plan definitely, of cour said Coach Yost, "but at first sig would seem that the scheme is ent ly, feasible." Five Schools Teach Coaching "There are five of, the Confere schools which in 1922 will offer,s mer' courses in coaching," he ad4 The five schools he named were: cousin, Illinois, Ohio State, Chic and Michigan. "In all of these schools the the and practice -of coaching in all m bran hes of sports are taught;" Coach Yost. "Competition bettw teams in summer school should al lot in the work of instructing them in these coaching schools, and, mi over, ought to increase the inte and spirit of the summer session v much." Coach Yost went on to say tha would be a much- better plan to h summer Varsity teams as sugges than the present system df infor teams which are now organized for purpose, of instruction in the vai coaching schools of the Big Ten., also added that the coach of thd si mer team, especially in base could count on securing a number men for his summer Varsity squad rectly from the ranks of the stu coaches, while it would be possibe get the greater part of the team fi the student body itself which would interested by such a system of sum, contests. Help Put Theory Across "Those fellows who did not p could then stand around and t notes," he went on, "and could how the game ought to be played could get a better notion of how train their own teams to play, l on. Theory ought to be well pre's ed, and this summer athlotiq would help in putting it across rig (Continued on Page' Four) Faculty Concert unusually GOO - (By V. V. T.) Robert R. Dieterle, '24M, of School of Music, gave the major I tion of an unusually fine musical 1 gram presented at the Faculty c cert in Hill auditorium last even Mr. Dieterle gave th.ree groups of lections, beginning the program i a- recitative and aria from Goun "Faust," which was enthuslaa.tic received by the large auditence. ' number gave ample opportunity the adequate display of Mr. Dieter vocal ability, on which no furl comment, is needed, for he is known in Ann Arbor as a young s er of great promise. The second group comprised I numbers of which "Adieu, C1 Louise," by Monsigny, proved the r well liked. Mr. Dieterle concluded program with four light little sc which were rendered in a most cha ing manner. Mrs. George B. Rhead, of the SO of Music faculty, contributed to entertainment with three numi from Chopin, which she played in usual excellent style. Mrs. Rhe TION PLANNED E FOR MARSHAL FOCH I . 4. - Ambassador Jus- d here Wednesday from d left at once for Paris. re was expressed by omatic representative at