THE MIC HlIGA N DAILY sAR 4 ktit shed every morning except Monday during the Unirrsity yar Bard in Control of Student Publications. ber of the Western Conference Editorial Association. Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- on of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and the local news published herein. ed at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second itter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant er General ,riptiou by carrier, $4.00; b mail, .$4.&9 m: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Phoines; EdItorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF understandings of what he is quoting, is the criterion of the superior student in economics. It seems to make little difference whether the student has any conception of how the theories with which he is crammed are related to actual conditions in the out- side world. CAPUS UOffNIfON Letters published in this column should not he construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonvymous com- inunications will he disregarded. The names or coinunicants will, howeverr e regarded as confidential n on reauest Contrib- I A \'IVashi ngton. Bystander By Kirke Simpson :1932 tic meuhian ' , 1, g~c . u~cld p re 3u . kon Selephone 42utors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than. 300 words if possible. MANAGIN EDITOR RICHARD.. TOB IN Editor ............. ...... ...........Carl Forsythe To The Editor: rat DIrector ..............................Beach Conger, Jr. Ed'tor.... .......................David M. Nichol Surely all of us at the University of Michigan will regard the granting of the Loines Prize for Poetry s Editor.....................:........Margaret M. Thompson to Robert Frost as right and happy. But for reasons tant News Editor ..........................Robert L. Pierce more than those of interest in Mr. Frost my atten- NIGHT EDITORS tion was caught by the last paragraph of your news d B. Gllbr~ J. Cullen Kennedy Jera ~mesngis, story. It read: "The Russel Loines fund was col- Karl seltert George A. stauter lected by friends of the well-known lover of poetry Sports Assistants at the time of his death; an amount which is large nJ. Myers John W. Thomas J hnress .SanTowdSnsed e Jones .Jhanrle A. a ough to warrant the award of one thousand dollars to some writer of poetry every three or four years. ey W. Arnhelm Fred AE. RERs John W. Pritchard The conditions of the awards and the magnitude of ro E. aitecer Norman Kraft Joseph enihan the prize make it one of the most important literary rd' . Campbell Roland Martin G. art Shaaf 'liams Carpenter Henry Meyer Brackley Shaw honors in this country." as Connellan Albert H. Newman Parker R. Snyder E. Jerome Pettit G. U. Winters One thousand dollars is a good round sum. No hy Brockman Georga Geisman Margaret O'Brien one will deny it. And three years is perhaps not too 'm oa r Alice Gilbert Hillary Rarden greata space of time to put between any two grants ice Collins Martha .Littleton Dorothy Rundell tie randaj Elizabeth Long Eora Wadsworth of such an award. But now I want to write a sent- meldroaan Eraneh ncester Josephine leoodham ence: At the University of Michigan not merely $1,000 BUSINESS STAFF iS given away in literary prizes every three years, or Telephone SA4 $1,000 every year; not $2,000 every three years, or LES T.TKlinee...........................Businessmanager $2,000 every year; not $3,000 every three years, or iLS P. JOHNSON......................Assistant Manager $3,000 every year; not $4,000 every three years, or Department Managers $4,000 every year; not $5,000 every three years, or $5,- rnon ip y000 every year (the advantage of this sentence is that tsing.'Contract9................arry n. Begleyyyg tising Service............................yron C. Vedder it arouses keener and keener interest, Mr. Editor, tions ...................Williamn T. Brown nt ....................................Richard stratemeir until you can' shout); not $10,000 every three years, n'e Business'Manager........................Ann W. Verner or $10,000 every year; BUT $11,800 EVERY YEAR. Aronson Jo Assistants Grafton W. Sharp Let's stop on that just a moment. That $11,800 t E. Buruley Arthur F; Kohn Donalo A. Johnston I1includes this year, potentially, four awards almost C ark BaeenaLowed on Good three times as great as the one which Mr. Frost re- en rSceived. Then there is left for lesser prizes another i BHeeker Anne Harsha May seefried a Jae CaMel' Katharine Jackson ' Minnie Seng sum almost three times as great as the Pulitzer Prize. ev Field Dorothy Layin Helen Spencer e Fischgrund Virginia McComb Kathryn Stork It may be an unworthy suggestion, Mr. Fditor, but I allmeyer Carolin Mosher Glare linger wonder if all together we do not need to go back H alOM Eb W to our animated and imaginative childhood, playing with zest the game of Adam and Eve and Pinch-me, -- __~-until the last of these mighty personages brings us NIGHT EDITOR-GEORGE A. STAUTER entirely awake-to $11,800 in prizes for literary ex- SATURDAY JANUARY 16_1932-cellence, every year given to students of the Univer- SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1932 sity of Michigan-the HOPWOOD AWARDS! A few weeks ago, on the campus of another uni- versity, I was hailed by a student hawking a book of eded: Alumn i sonnets written by a man who had come to that university from a foreign country. A day later in Tell The State that same place I saw a meeting break into full en- thusiasm over the announcing of a literary prize of CORDING to the opinion of many taxpayers $300. The enthusiasm was good, and I respected it n the' state, a normal day in the life of a Ui-profoundly In fact, it forced into my minid this ity of Michigan undergraduate would have a awkward proportion: If wild enthusiasm at the Uni- ity of eventsafollows: Adrg ieat wocl v in evrsity of X is to $300, how much should the enthus- n of events as follows: Arise at i oclock in iasm at the University of Michigan be to $11,800. It. ter to cure headache and attend a "gin-orgy" may take Cornelia Skinner to solve this problem; but er t cue hadahe nd tted aginorg we can all work at it. 118 at %ight. Leave the party with a "hip- Briefly, as I see it, we all have to wake up to the "in his pocket to attend a "taxi-dance." Leave magitud eof t owoodA wa eore weca :e at 3 o'clock the next morning to return to magnitude of, the Hopwood Awards before we can 'frat" in time for the morning "liquor raid" become enthusiastic about them; and we have to be- hich. he and hi "torpid brothers" are lined come enthusiastic about them before we can make ist the wall and searched. e/ rothers aware of their significance. Potentially, the n view of the adverse publicity to which the University of Michigan is through these awards the rersi tyhastbeen subject uinrecent years, the greatest center of creative writing in the world; how great she shall be actually depends on how many ayer has a perfect right to believe these state- g :s. It is quite,natural that he accept newspaper dollars of this money ultimately comes to the hands I-ups as true factsa of people with genuine creative ability. 'here is little that the University can do to Director of the Hopwood Awards. or this sensational, untrue, and detrimental icity. Consequently, there is little that can be i to make the average taxpayer see the facts I iey really are. PURC and IIRANA f we can convince our alumni, however, that - majority of the student body is as serious, behaved, and conservative a group as student Arthur W. Poister, Professor of Organ at the Uni- rs of former years, we have gained at least versity of Redlands, Redlands, California, will give a rtial victory. The good will and respect of our guest, program of organ music, at the Twilight Organ uates, who compose a large number of the Recital, Wednesday, January 20, at'4:15 o'clock, Hill taxpayers, will certainly help to counteract Auditorium, taking the place of Palmer Christi n. )pinions of some of the 'more ignorant readers Professor Poister, who is the distinguished pupil oft e yellow journals. Marcel Dupre, is making his second annual tour, the t is with this in mind that we commend the- previous itineiy included recitals in the University >us student organizations on the campus who, of Chicago, Cornell University, Eastman School of' the' help of Joseph A. Bursley, dean of stu- Music, Princeton University and Wannamaker's, New] s, and T. Hawley Tapping, secretary of the York.f ni association, are sponsoring Spring Home- Beginning with a performance at Sioux City, Iowa,t ng. Returning alumni will have the oppor-' on January 14, this year the tour will include the :y of seeing the University operating under University of Chicago, Hope College, the University. al conditions. This is not possible at the fall of Michigan, Trinity Cathedral, Cleveland, Christ] iecoming becausp of the natural excitement Church, Cincinnati, Capitol University, Columbus,i alent in Ann Arbor during football week-ends. Ohio and Wanamaker Auditorium, New York City. pring Homecoming was established fast year Professor Poister has recently been honored by he first time, and met with marked success. request programs before the National Association of ich year we can bring a portion of our grad- Organists and the American Guild of Organists. On s back to Ann Arbor and send them homd December 10 he gave the premier performance of an n with the knowledge that students here are original composition for the organ, a Choral Sym- "gin crazed," we will have made a decided phony in D Minor with Symphony Orchestra in the forward. Memorial Chapel of the University of Redlands with WASHINGTON, Jan. 15.-(P)- More than a hundred years ago there appeared in a Boston paper a poem beginning: "Ay, tear her tattered ensign down." r Written by a youngster just out of Harvard, that bit of verse saved the frigate Constitution, "Old Iron- sides," from the ship wrecker's hands. A century later she still lifts to the surge of the blue waters where she made history, a glorious mem- orial to herself and the long dead brave who peopled her decks. But that old, never-to-be-forgot- ten verse did more than that. It set intoAmerican history a glowing page, all its own, for the name Oliver Wendell Holmes. Poet father and soldier-jurist son have kept it bright in American hearts- for more than ten decades. They have kept faith with the patriotism the father sang, that the son wrote into the vital philosophy of American law. They have made a household word of the name they bore. Never His Like. Now, his snowy head bent under his years but his heart ageless, the son has stepped off the bench of the highest court that, for all its great men, has never known just his like. Yet in severing his tie of active service to the nation, to know a little the honored retirement so long a g o fully earned, Justice Hol es displayed once more that gall ntry of spirit that in father and son alike has found responsive echoes in American hearts. He spoke in his letter of resigna- tion of the "absorbing interests that have filled my life. "But the time has come and I bow to the inevitable," the old justice added...."My last w or d should be one of grateful thanks.' There is something about those words that gives them emotional thrill, that harks back to the poet father. They are of a piece with many another touch of poetic conception the son has found words to express within the cold, factual require- ments of judicial utterance. Unwavering. Justice Holmes is renowned for the philosophy of law that guided him, for the unwavering conception of the true purpose and meaning of democratic government under law he never failed to voice. That made him known as the great dissenter, yet he\ always re- jected that view of his place in American jurisprudence. He felt himself merely keeping faith with the spirit and purpose in which the nation was born. And he ended his active career with a gallant gesture. It was like the greeting he invariably gave in court to comrades or foemen in old wars on the bench. Finger tips rose to time-frosted eyebrow in military salute as he paassed, and a twinkling glance added its own message. A New Yorker rh Wednesday -2Thursday JANUARY 20, 21, 22 -Friday ARE YOU ONE OF THE 350 WHO HOLDS A STUB WORTH 1.00? Redeem Your Pledge Coupon! LAST CAMPUS SALE AT WHICH THESE STUBS WILL BE HONORED WITH STUB $3.50 WITHOUT STUB $4.50 iT FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Frederick B. Fisher} Peter F.1 Stair Ministers 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. "FINDING THE GOOD LIFE." Dr. Fisher (Reception of members)_ 7:30 P. M.-Evening Worship. "MAMMONISM." Bishop Edwin H. Hughes of Chicago. (Wesleyan Guild Lecture) HILLEL FOUNDATION Cor. East University Ave. & Oakland Rabbi Bernard Heller, Director Philip Bernstein, Assistant to the Director Sdnday Morning, January 17 11:15 A. M.-Services in the Chapel of, the Women's League Building. Rabbi Heller will speak on "The Types of Students." THE WESLEY FOUNDATION State and Huron Streets WESLEY HALL Dr. E. W: Blakeman, Director 6:00 P. M.-"The effect of Zion- ism on the American Jew" is the topic which is presented by Miss Josephine Stern. 12:00 M.-Freshmen Group, Dr. Carrothers. Undergraduate class, Dr. Blakeman. Graduate class, Mr. Pryor. TlEf FIRST BAPTIST (HURCHI E. Huron, below State R. Edward Sayles, Minister Howard R. Chapman, Minister for Students. 9:30 A. M.-The Church School. Wallace Watt, Superintendent. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Mr. Sayles will preach. Subject: "LOYALTY TO JESUS CHRIST." 12:00 Noon-Students will meet at Guild House for forty minute discussion. Mr. Chapman in charge. 5:30 P. M.-The Student Friend ship Hour. 6:30 P. M.-Devotional Meeting. Mr. Chapman will give the ad- dress./ FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division St. Merle H. Anderson. Minister Alfred Lee Klaer, Associate'Minister 9:30 A. M.-Bible Study Class for Freshman Students at the Church . House, 1432 Washtenaw Avenue. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon: "The Secret of a better World Tomorrow." 12:00 Noon-Discussion for Upper- classmen on Ethical Issues in Cur- rent Events. 5:30 P. M.--Social Hour for Young People. 6:30 P. M.-Young People's Meet- ing. Leader: Russell Bailey of a Student Volunteer Service. fu FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Allison Ray Heaps, Minister Sunday Morning, January 17 10:45 A. Sermon Health." -M.-Morning Worship. topic: "Religion and 8:00 P. fessor 0. "Elmer M.-Open Forum. Pro- J. Campbell will' discuss Rice and his Plays." 9:30 A. M.--Church School. 5:30 P. M.-Student Fellowship social half hour. 6:00 P. M.-Fellowship. supper. 6:30 P. M.-Professor Ella M. Wil- son of the Geography Department of the Michigan State- Normal College will give an illustrated talk on "In the- Land of the Sphinx and the Scarabs." Conservative services evening, 7:30 P. M., dlation. each Friday at the Foun- BETItLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH 11 South Fourth Avenue at Large Theodore R. Schmale, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Bible Class. I i 'DRiTOAL COMMENT I DISCOURSE ON EXAMS (Daily Northwestern) eading an informal discussion group last Mon- night, Dr. Holt, well-known educator and pro- nt of the Rollins college plan, stated definitely tand on compulsory memory examinations. Such xamination is not in any sense a test of a stu- 's knowledge, he said. It merely tests his ability 'econstruct on paper,. parrot-like, the formal aa that has been shoved down his throat by a dly pedantic professor during the past month eek. he man with the most retentive memory is not ssarily the man with the best understanding of subject. Yet a person's success or failure in a ect is frequently based on his showing in an nination which requires the setting down, in high praise from many western critics. A graduate of the American Conservatory, Mr. Poister has studied piano with Joseph Lhevinne, organ with Wilhelm Middle-Schulte, and theory with Leo Sowerby and Arthur Olaf Anderson. For two years he studied organ, improvisation, 'omposition and orchestration in Paris with Marcel Dupre, pro- fessor d'Orgue au Conservatoire de Paris. He has served as professor of organ at the University of Red- lands, Redlands, California, since 1928. Dr. Rudolph Seigel, distinguished German Con- ductor will lead the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in its second Ann Arbor appearance of the season, in the Choral Union Series, on the evening of January 25, as guest conductor, taking the place of Ossip Gabrilowitsch. Dr. Seigel was born in Munich in 1878 of Bavarian parents. He is a conductor and composer of note having been a pupil of Thiel, Humperdinck and Thille. From about 1900, he has been living in Berlin. He was conductor of the Konigsberg Akademie or- chestra from 1914-1917 and since 1919 has been the By Mark Barron BE CONSISTENT It YOUR RELIGION ATTEND CHURCH REGULARLY FIRST CHURCH CHRIST SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A M.-Regular Morning Service. Sermon topic "LIFE." 11:45 A. M.-Sunday School follow- ing the morning service. 7:30 P. M.-Wednesday Evening Testimonial Meeting. v NEW YORK, Jan. 15.-( P)-One of the major mysteries for psycho- analysts to solve, when they get a few moments, is why all embroyo authors persuade themselves they cannot write except in a dingy Greenwich Village garret. Scores of those most successful with the pen not only are annoyed by New York, but it requires prac- tically a detachment of marines to lure them here once a year for con- ferences with 'their publishers. When Roark Bradford came up here to see his "The Green Pas- tures," he was uncontrollable until he was on a train again homeward bound for his New Orleans cottage where Nemo, his St. Bernard dog, lolls beneath the shade of banana 10:00 A. M.-Morning Sermon topic: "God's Man's Response." 11:00 A. M.-Worship in German. 5:30 P. M.-Student Club reports on Student Volunteer Convention at Buffalo, N. Y. Worship. CAt and 7:00 P. M.-Young League. Peo p I's ZION LUTHERN CHURCH Washington Street and 5th Ave. E. C. Stellhorn, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. Lesson topic: "Changed Hearts." t 9:00 A. M.-Service in German. THE "UPPER ROOM" BIBLE CLASS For all "Michigan" Men. The Class that is "Different." Every Saturday Evening, from, Seven to Eight O'clock. "Discussion" Section meets Sun- day Morning at 9:30. The Reading Room, 10 and 11 State Savings Bank Building, is open daily fronm 12 to 5 o'clock, except! Sundays and legal holidays. ST. PAUL'S LUTHERN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) - Third and West Liberty Sts. C. A. Brauer, Pastor Sunday Morning, January 17 9:30 A. M.-Service in German.