DAILY THE MICHiGAN ..ice . ,.. J_ i [t ed every morning except Monday dauring the University eBoard in Control of Student Publications. r of the Western Conference Editorial Association. ssociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fof re- of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise this paper and the local news published herein. I at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second r. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant' General. by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50 :-Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. .i EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 r MANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L. TOBIN r ....................................... Carl Forsythe Director......................... Beach Conger, Jr. *or-.......... ................. David M. Nichol tor .............................. Sheldon C. Fullerton Editor................ Margaret M. Thompson News Editor-........................Robert L. Pierce NIGHT EDITORS Gilbreth J. Cullen Kennedy James Inglis oland A. Goodman Jerry E. Rosenthal Kar' Seifert George A. Stauter. Sports Assi stants Charle , Thomas Brian Jones +1 REPORTERS Arnheim Fred A. Huber Wankertz Iarold F. Kiute Campbell Norman Kraft nneilan Edward R. Marshall eutsch Ro~land Martin Friedman Albert H. Newman yden E. Terome Pettit ver Prudence Foster bins Alice (rilbert 'ai prancesN9 Mnchester ian Elizabeth Mann John S. Townsend s A. Sanford John W. Pritchard Joseph taerrihan C. dart ShaafA ]Irackiy Shaw Parker Sny+,r Robert S. Ward G. R. Winters Margaret 0'Brian kclvcrly Stark: Elma Wadsworth Josephine Woodhams" BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 :S T. KLINE........................Business Manage" P. JOHNSON...................... Assistant Manager' Department Managers n.. .............Vernon Bishop .I Contracts ....... .Tarry '. Begley 1g Service Byr...... ...... Bon C. Vedder M s e ......... .. .iWiIiam rT '..hown .............Richard Stratemneii lBwsiness MN- iager. ........... ..........AnimXW. Vertu[ Assistants nson John Keyser Bursley Arthur F. Kohn k *ames Lowe Dicer Ann I'arshai ne Cissel Katherine Jackson Field Dorothy Layin schgrund Virginia McComb eyer Carolin Mosher iman Hlelen Olsen Grafton W. Sharp I onald A. Johiisnn, 11 Don 4.on Becruard if. Good May Seefried + M\innie Seng 1f len Spencer IKathry Stork (lare linger 1l rary Elizabeth Watts NIGHT EDITOR-JAMES INGLIS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1932 mporary Relief r Fraternities 'ICHIGAN FRATERNITIES, driven to the very shadow of complete extinction, are- iting in uncertainty and doubt, some in corn- e despair, the developments they feel must It from the intolerable situation that deferred ing and pledging have brought about. Vith 67 houses, averaging about $55,O00 in' e, and a few running as high as a qu rter of a on dollars, at stake, membership rolls, already :ted by general economic disorder, have been 'erately attacked by the deferred rushing rule, vhiclh some 200 freshmen v'ho in other years d have become affiliated with fraternities have declared ineligible. ~raternity men see only one solution to thet Tram. To abide by the present ruling.m ans >st certain ruination to some and distinct hard- to all the houses. )efinitely perceptible rumblings, growing daily1 er, presage the severity ofthe outburst that almost certainly result unless a move is made lleviate present conditions. Only by action of Senate Committee- on rStudent Affairs can a' rsal of the scholarship pledging requirements accomplished. It is on the possibility of this 3n that the fraternities are pinning their hopes. Rmoval of the scholarship requirements would n opening to the fratenities a list of 200 new for rushing and pledging, a large number of in would certainly join fraternities were it not the restriction placed on them by the Uni- ity.I the chief complaint now is Tht against the ude of the authorities. Past practice has accus- ed the fraternities to that. The fraternity com- it is based on the fact that unless something e by the University-and done soon-the fra- ities will perish. Will those in authority, like the callous, all- erful Nero, fiddle while Rome, the product of indred years of work on the part of-past gen- ions of fraternity men, vanishes in flames? ED[TOIRAL COMM1 ENT THE LEGISLATORS AT WORK (Columbia Spectator);,w This is the first and last of a series of quotations - The Congressional Record, the publication of Congress of the United States of America, with Itude to the New York Herald Tribune which had idea first.) Representative Blanton (Dem., of Texas: I will to my good friend from Nebraska that the people i in Alabama and Pennsylvania will know about t I am now saying, even if they cannot hear me. remarks are going into this Record. This Record daily into every village in the United States, and )le read the Record. Fun is made of it, but it is of the most valuable publications now that goes he people of the United States, because they get exact proceedings that happen here on the floor he House, unwarped by friendly or unfriendly spapers. Sixty copies of the daily Congressional counties, while we have that many folks in ofir city. People who desire to come to see us sometimes wire to meet them at Albany, because they have difficulty in spelling Schenectady. Some people wonder 'wheth- er it is the'name of an Indian chief or a patent medi- cine. It is an Indian word and means the "end of the trail." It is the name of one of the most pro- gressive cities in the country, and one of the most up-to-date communities, with the finest radiq station there is in the United States-and possibly in the world. (Applause.) Representative Eaton (Rep.), of Colorado: Can- not you properly say that the administration of the laws of the United States has been directed to teach- ing the Indians to depart from their old tribal customs and take their food out of a tin can, eat it and like it? Senator Reed (Rep.), of Pennsylvania: We are r told that this is the worst collapse in business and the worst depression that the country ever saw. I beg leave to doubt that. I doubt very much if the future looks as Iolak to us now as it looked to our grahd- fathers ik 1819, when not only America was prostrate and American commerce was dead but all Europe was prostrate as a result of Napoleon's war, just as she is prostrate today as the result of Kaiser Wilhelm's war. The future looked just as black to the eyes of our ancestors as it looks to us now. Ahead of them then, although they did not know it, lay an era of good feeling, a period of commercial prosperity, and America came out from the clouds so fast that it almost took their breaths away. Then they speculated, .as we have been doing, and they had a great inflation of commodity prices. and the whole business came tumbling down around their ears in A838, and to those American Senators and Congressmen and business men who looked at conditions in 1837 it seemned as if the very bottom of everything had gone to smash. It looked just as black to them as it looks to us today. It happened again in the 50's, and then came the panic of 1873. We think we have seen bank trouble in the last year or two. Why, Mr. President, in 18''3 there was only one bank in whole City of New York that was open for business. We do not know what trouble is, conpared with what our fathers faced in those days. CONC6RRENT EVENTS (Cornell Daily Sun) The Sun has no desire to drive the New York Times Current Events Contest away from Cornell and is sorry that the chaiiman of the cownmittee in charge places this construction upon its editorial of last Wednesday. The contest offers three ambitious stu- dents an opportunity to win substantial prizes, and we should hate to see it disappear. We are amazed (almost proud) to learn that Professor Cushman con- siders a brief editorial of ours influential enough te keep a large group of Atudents from taking the ex- amination. We still believe, however, that not having cram- med for the examination, they would have stood little chance. It is true, as Professor Cushman points out that "the winner has always been an alert and more or less sytematic daily reader of the press," but it b also true that he generally has put himself in win- ning form by reviewing intensively before the exami- nation. We do not say this is wrong; we do not say that the examination is unfair. We simply point out to our readers that the contest demands a close. attention to news detail than the intelligent reader normally gives, or ought to give. Let the reader scan the' copy posted on the Government bulletin board outside of Professor Cushman's office and de- cide for himself. We cannot believe with Professor Cushman that the New York Times is actuated purely by altruism in "spending some $10,000 per year- on the contest from which it expects and receives no discernible material gain." It is a magnificent scheme for getting free publicity throughout the academic year-worth in our opinion, far more than it costs. Yet, being commercial, the contest is no less commendable a an opportunity for a student to win considerable money by putting in a little extra effort. At least thirty students are grateful to he faculty committee for the time they devote to the contest reasonable publicity. ANOTHER STUDENT ON THE COUNCIL (Wisconsin Cardinal) The reorganization of the athletic council will undoubtedly arise for discussion and perhaps foi action at Monday's faculty meeting. We feel the governing body of athletics, an activity ,originally planned for the benefit of the students, could dc more toward the carrying out of the desired function of athletics by greater representation from the stu- dent body. Salient among the evils of the intercollegiate athletics system, and lying at the root of their hostil- ity to better education is the fact that they have been separated too far from the good of the students Intercollegiate athletics today do not exist "to build red-blooded men," to provide recreation for the stu- dent body, or fun for the participants. They exist for their gate receipts, out of which come funds tc pay for stadia and various minor sports. They exist "to advertise the school," or so they, tell us. But where does the student come in? Like many over-developed college institutions. athletics, once beneficial and unharmful, has grown so large and so complex that its evil aspects are difficult to eradicate. The dear little cub has grown into a fierce big bear, and he's extremely hard to tame. But it is necessary that he shall be tamed, and we want to assure ourselves that the tamers both know how and have the courage to tame him.-k Greater student representation on the board, while it will not effect reforms in athletics will dis- play the necessary common-sense in bringing ath- letics back to Wisconsin and to the student body, and the necessary courage in bucking the stereotyped and narrow views of those in the university and out who still believe that the "school spirit" of the grid. iron is more desirable than the "school spirit" of the truly educated man. I" @$* ---&' ()L" @$-Th @ i2345678901234 5678 on which senora whieh Mexican senora senora altad i234567890i23456789 senora altag speaks senora alta talks on occult afts in Michigan Union on future of arts oh darndarndarn aw shucks senora taltag talks accult arts, topic on which altag talks on topic ocult arts reviewed by I"@b$9C&&' 9 i2345678902345678 BMexican senoria @ lulc OCCULT ARTS? TOPIC DISCUSSED BY ALTAG in IN UNION MAR. -- I , *5' FRESHMEN TURN 0 UT IN SWAMS. (The editors of The Daily wish to apologize for the paragraph" which inadvertently appeared in this column last Th'ursday morning in connection with the Lindbergh kidnapping.) The sum total of forty-three freshmen signified a desire to try out for the Daily yesterday after- noon, which was lots, everythYg being equal. We didn't hear of a single' applicant for the Toasted Rolls position, which although a disappointment, is no more than we expected. Tabulations indicate that about an even 60 percent of the tryouts were editors of two of more High School publications. , * * Many Freshmen would, we be- lieve, try out for the Daily if they, knew something about the work that they would be asked to do and what would be expected of them. One of the most important features of getting a story ready for the Press is writing a head for the story. '(Sure! That's right! A headline.) Here is an example taken from real life. We strongly suspect that this is one of the ef- forts of the women's staff, but that makes it an even better example of what a simple procedure head- writing really is. This half hiv's labor is then sent through the great grist- mill of life and when it appears in the Daily it looks like this: SENORA DE ALTAG DEFENDS MARRIAGE Despite Unfortunate Experience, She Believes It Necessary to Preserve Society. ** * And now, while we are on the subject .of Senora Altag and her talks we might as well make a crit- :cal discussion of the story on the Women's Page in yesterday's Daily. This is the first sentence. (also the first paragraph). "Can we dispense with mar- riage?" was discussed by Sen- ora de Alta- in Natural ,ience Auditorium yesterday after- noon. So far so good, but let us quote further. "The married life of the sen- ora, which she related, was un- fortunate. She was married at Nineteen to a young German- American who died the follow- ing year, leaving her with a child four months old." A checkup on these figures re- veals several interesting facts. Here is the next sentence: "The loss of her husband made her yearn for a 'weltan- schauung', or philosophy of life." The author then finished up in a burst of glory with this: i "The lecturer considers mar- riagg from two viewpoints. The first is that of the individual, his evolution or development through the influence of mar- riage." *' Prof. J. Wallace Ugf of our local poetry department was interested in a recent newspaper notice about Jack Dempsey, who was to have been created a Kentucky colonel just before a bout in Booneland. He submits the following to show just how startled he really was: "Beneath the balmy skies of old Kentucky the fighting colonel rears his grizzled head, and thanks his God the ring is not as mucky as when Gene Tunney had hin leath- er-fed. But now the sunshine warms his back instead, and he can -.. , :; ,. N _; r::; fV