THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOBER~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1, =;, 4 :, 11= "I Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER } NoociatMd rocsiate $re KAMsoN ,scous *74EMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local niews published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 11 West 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR ..............WILLIAM G. FERRIS CITY EDITOR .............. ..JOHN HEALEY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR..........RALPH G.NCOLER SPORTS EDITOR..................ARTHUR CARSTENS WOMEN'S EDITOR ....................ELEANOR BLUM NIGHT EDITORS: Paul J. Elliott, John J. Flaherty, Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas H. Kleene, David G. Macdonald, John M. O'Connell, Robert S. Ruwitch,, Arthur M. Taub. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Joel Newman, Kenneth Parker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara L. Bates, Dorothy Gies, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Ruth Loebs, Jo- sephine McLean, Margaret D. Phalan, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Murphy. REPORTERS: John H. Batdorff, Robert B. Brown, Richard Clark, Clinton B. Conger, Sheldon M. Ellis, William H. Fleming, Robert J. Freehling, Sherwin Gaines, Richard Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Jack Mitchell, Fred W. Neal, Melvin C. Oathout, Robert Pulver, Lloyd S. Reich, Mar- shall Shulman, Donald Smith, Bernard Weissmian, Jacob C. Seidel, Bernard Levick, George Andros, Fred Buesser, Robert Cummins, 'Fred Delano,Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman, Morton Mann, Dorothy Briscoe, Maryanna Chockly, Florence Davies, Helen Diefendorf, Marian Donaldson, Elaine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith, Harriet Hathaway, Ma- rion Holden, Lois King, Selma Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Reugaer, Doothy 'Shappell, Molly Solomon, Dorothy Vale, Laura Wino- grad, Jewel Wuerfel.' BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.............RUSSELL, B. READ CREDIT MANAGER .. ...ROBERT S. WARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .........JANE BASSETT DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, John Og. den; Service Department, Bernard. Rosenthal; Contracts. Joseph Rothbard; AccontrCameron Hall; Circulation and National Advertising, David Winkworth; Classified Advertising and Publications, George Atherton, BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: William Jackson, William Barndt, Ted Wohlgemuith, Lyman Bittman, Richard Hardenbrook, John Park, F. Allen Upson, Willis Tom- linson, Homer Lathrop, Tom Clarke, Gordon Cohn, Merrell Jordan, Stanley Joffe. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Mary Bursley, Margaret Cowie,. Marjorie Turner, Betty Cavender, Betty Greve, Helen Shapland.'ketty Simonds.Grace Snyder, Margaretta Kohlig, Ruth' Clarke, Edith Hamilton, Ruth Dicke, Paula Joerger, Mary Lou Hooker, Jane Heath, Bernar- dine Field, Betty Bowman, July Trosper. NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT S. RUWITCH Football On TheAir... STUDENT FOOTBALL fans whose unjust fate it is to have to remain bshind when the team goes to far-off fields will have a little more idea what is happening this year than they had last. Radio Station WWJ, which followed the team in years gone by, but did not do so last year, will be back with broadcasts of all games at home and abroad this season. Ty Tyson, popular sports announcer who has had a long acquaintance with Michigan teams, will be at the microphone. If Messrs. Quin Ryan and Pat Flanagan are working at Stagg Field today they are welcome to any listeners they may attract, but as for us, we had much too much of them last year when Michigan's schedule happened to call for three out- of-town games to be played in the state of Illinois. Partiality toward the home state teams or lack of it toward the Wolyerines was not our com- plaint, although probably like anyone else we are more interested in our team than the opposition. But in the cases of both Chicago gentlemen the indictment was for presenting supremely listless and drab accounts, even in the face of the tense- ness of the Illinois battle, the fierceness of the Northwestern game, and the big opening splurge against Chicago. We have heard both of these men give very creditable broadcasts in football as well as other sports, but last year marital diffi- culties or overdue payments on the radio set must have had them down. Today's game may be more to the stay at homes than a long-drawn out play-by-play account. 1'. By BUD BERNARD Merit System In Class Projects ... A"NEW DEAL" in campus politics and the apportioning of offices for women is promised in the drastic step announced last week by the League Council. Hereafter candi- dates for offices in class projects, such as the Sophomore Cabaret, must file petitions with the Judiciary Council, and the final appointments will be made by the League after careful investigation ' of each petition. Even to the most casual observer the tremendous improvement of the new system over the hit-or- miss method of general elections must be imme- diately evident. In the first place it puts the class project on a business-like basis. As in applying for a job, the primary consideration will be not pop- ularity and social standing but efficiency, experi- ence, and general qualifications. In the second place, every woman interested has a better chance of securing the work she desires. If she is not placed as a chairman, she will have the opportunity of working on a committee, where- as in the old system personal friendship with the chairman was the primary consideration. Independent women will have better prospects than ever before of winning offices. The merit system aims a death-blow at inter-sorority caucus- ing, and the non-affiliated woman will receive exactly the same consideration as the one belong- ing to a sorority. Moreover, in abolishing cau- cusing, the system will represent all sororities, instead of merely those belonging to the winning party. Chief among indignant protests to the merit system is that upperclass women choose officers for underclass projects. However, the members of the League Council working from a purely dis- interested standpoint are far less likely to be preju- diced than the women of one class, meeting in a general election. Objection has been made to the possible uncongeniality of a committee, appointed at large, rather than by one chairman, but cer- tainly one of the essential qualifications for lead- ership is the talent for getting along with, others. This quality will doubtless receive due considera- tion in the appointments finally made. The Union has employed the merit system with complete success. The League is taking a long step toward sounder, more efficient organization in adopting it, Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, the editor reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words. Pro, Con, And Finis To the Editor: The case of Willis Ward versus Georgia Tech has now passed out of the realm of inter-collegiate athletics and has become a matter of racial atti- tude to those who are talking about the issue .. . Those in control may be playing for time . . . a good football tactic. If Ward is badly injured in the Chicago game, the issue is settled. If the Georgia Tech players take the initiative and insist that he play (students in the South are broadening) our officials will be spared further embarrassment . It is clear that the time has passed when proven athletes may be benched because of their race and hereafter intersectional games will be scheduled only after this matter has been squarely faced. The feelings of Georgia Tech are important, but so are the feelings of the Negro students on the campuses of Eig Ten universities. Someone has said that this issue is similar to the matter of a Catholic's abstinance from meat on Friday. One difference is that the meat has no feelings and no psychological problem is involved when two or more people agree to go without. The question of Ward playing football is not just an arrangement between two coaches. It involves the feelings of a young man who has given his best to uphold the honor of his school on the athletic field. It is still more significant. Willis Ward could easily overcome his feelings, but can the Negro student in the north, and members of this race in Michigan? The issue is not one of fish on Friday, but the integrity of a people struggling to live down a powerful prejudice. Will the athletic department of Michigan help them? -Rev. H. P. Marley. To the Editor: There is an insidious rumor going about to the effect that one Harry Kipke and not the National Student League is coaching the Michigan team this fall. Of course, this ridiculous rumor must be false for the National Student has decided that either Ward will play or Michigan won't. Wednesday, The Daily concisely stated its beliefs in this matter. With these beliefs, I wholeheartedly agree. I might only add however these points: 1. That this has been the custom of southern schools for a long time and that is why no Western Conference or eastern team has ever made a similar request. 2. That the meddlesome, publicity-loving Na- tional Student League have probably made this affair an embarrassing matter for Ward, while if they had not made any fuss about it, it would have passed over unnoticed. Just why the league should try to take over the duties of coaching the football team has not been explained. This campaign may all be in vain any- way, for "Coach" Kipke has never said that Ward would not play, according to a local sports writer. -J.S.R. To the Editor: Wednesday's editorial remarks regarding the Ward issue show clearly the usual superficiality and stupidity with which The Michigan Daily edi- tors react to all significant situations. 1. Rather than seriously reprimanding the ath- letic board for scheduling the Georgia Tech game, they merely pass it off with a satirical sentence, climaxing their supreme chastisement with the word "stupid." 2. Granted that the line-up is the coach's busi- ness, it is also the business of that same man, as a leader in American sportsmanship to see that Ward does play, simply because he is a Negro. How would this campus have felt two years ago if a Hitlerite team was scheduled to play here and asked us to keep Newman off the team? 3. I am not a member of the National Student League, but even to me the "fate of Ward" is sym- Nothing is certain, says a senior at the University of Oklahoma except death and taxes and in- firmary, final exams, 8 o'clocks, pop fizzes, high- priced textbooks, week-end splurges, professors who tell stale jokes, banquet menues of green peas and mashed potatoes, and my column 'deadline. True, brother, true!' Here's a contrib. coming from Pat, a sophomore: Dear Bud: Let's Crucify the varlet Who approves fingernails of scarlet. Those rainbow digits are encouraged By him who likes to see them flourished. Let's list all cuticles of coral As nauseating and immoral. The worst that I have ever seen Are tinted shades of sickening green And from most men a dismal burp'll Come forth at sight of those of purple. While even worse are shades of rose Which peep forth from my lady's toes. Let co-ed fair tattoo their lips - For all I care, tattoo their hips, But what this country needs is jails For gals who paint their fingernails. A battle of the sexes wages at Temple University. A male critic charges that co-eds are inconsistent husband hunters; also they fawn and gush. Men students are key hunters, fops and ill-mannered a co-ed retorts. Many a romantic suit, says a co-ed at In- diana University, is pressed under the cloak of night. According to the Wisconsin Daily Cardinal we learn that professors at that institution have added materially to their income during the last year by writing over 20 textbooks that are now being used by students at that university. Many of the books are merely altered editions of old texts. That's not news to us. Add this to your list of definitions: A skele- ton, says a medical student at the University of Missouri, is a stack of bones with all the people scraped off. The campus of St. Mary College is no place for a nudist. The officials of that institution issued this warning as a battle cry of a crusade against the latest outbreak - the recent habit of. students ap- pearing in and near the campus in an unclothed condition. Here are some history boners from that depart- ment at the University of Kansas: St. Bartholomew's Day - A massacre in which many Christians were killed by Catholics. Predestination--was what was going to happen to you after death, by Calvin., Lindbergh was met with coursity in Paris. A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON THE MULTIPLE-CORNERED race -for speaker among House Democrats would be a joke in or- dinary times but for the serious problems that face party leaders in Congress next winter. The spectacle of a half dozen announced candidates, as many more potential rivals and probably another half dozen merely talked-about possibilities, does not promise a strong, tactful House management the 'New Deal" administration is going to need. Intimations that Democratic forecasters really anticipate expanded majorities in both houses do not help at all. If Chairman Farley's calculations of a Republican minority shrunken to the size of pre-Civil War times should be realized, it will vastly complicate the situation for the White House. IT IS A REASONABLE GUESS that none of the House veterans among speakership rivals dis- agree with Vice-President Garner's theory that a House party majority of 50 votes or so makes for the best legislation. Most of them are willing to say so privately if not publicly. Those who played any important part in leadership conferences in the last two sessions know that the big Democratic ma- jority was almost out of control time and again. At least two matters of gravest import for the administration are taking shape for reintroduction under such auspices this winter as to cause concern to Presidential advisers. The 30-hour week and the bonus, neither of which has much connection with New Dealism, seem bound to enlist big majorities in both houses through election commitments. President Roosevelt did not find them so press- ing in the last Congress due to his personal prestige and in part to the dismay occasioned by the bank- ing crisis. The supposedly staid Senate slapped the Black 30-hour bill through and it was all set for House ratification. No one doubted that a ma- jority of substantial proportions would be recorded if it came to a vote. Now it is coming back sup- ported by an American Federation of Labor de- mand for action and presumably, implemented by the Federation's questionnaire to Congressional candidates. Prof. George D. Strayer of Columbia University advocates the creation of a Federal department of education with a subsidy of $500,000,000. COLLEGIATE OBSERVER The Fellowship of Liberal Religion (UNITARIAN) State and Huron Streets 5 O'clock Candle-light Service-- Mr. Marley will speak on "THE LITTLE GRAND- MOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION" 7:30 - Liberal Students Union. Dean S. T. Dana, "Values in conservation" First Methodist Episcopal Church State and Washington Charles W. Brashares, Minister 10:45 Morning worship. Dr. Brashares has chosen as a sub iect dBREAD AND CAKE" in 'a series entitled at We Want." 3:00 -Students interested in the International Student Forum will meet for an informal group dis- cussion on thesimilarities todbe found .in different peoples. 3:30 to 5:30-Kappa Phi invites to tea all Methodist women students, or those of Methodist preference. 3:00 -Wesleyan Guild worship serv- ice. A series of discussions, led by outstanding speakers, on "The Place of Religion in Modern Soci- ety," will begin this evening. Mr. Ralph Segalman, student speaker, will talk on "Why I do not, Believe in Organized Religion." Supper and fellowship hour follow. Hillel Foundation C oinerl.ast Ui versity ind Oakland Dr. Bernard Heller, Director October 14,.1934 11:15 A.M .- Sermon at the Women's League Chapel by Dr. Bernard Heller- Religious Activities October 14, 1934 "FACING LiFE AS A JEW" rhursday, Oct. 8-A tea will be given by the Pt Lambda Phi fraternity. 9:00 A.M.-Bible School; lesson topic: "The Christian's Standard of Life" 10:30 A.M .-Service with sermon on- "FLOODING Ti IE EARTH WITH SAVING TRUTH" 4:00 P.M -The Student Club will assemble at the Parish Hall to leave for an ouL-door meeting. 7:30 P.M.- Holy Communion service in the German language. St. Paul's Lutheran (Missouri Synod) West Liberty and Third Sts. Rev. C. A. Brauer, Pastor October 14, 1934 9:30 A.M.--Sunday School 9:30 A.M -The Service in German. 10:45 A.M.-The Morning Worship- Sermons by the Rev. Alfred O. Meyer, Grand Haven, Michigan: "OUR MISSIONARY PRAYER" 3:00 P.M.--The Vesper Service- Sermon by the Rev. Herbert Muel- ler, St. Clair Shores, Michigan. 7:30 P.M. -- Illustrated Mission Lec- ture on "SOUTH AMERICA" by a former missionary, the Rev. Alfred 0. Meyer. Welcome DO NO~T N EGLECT YOUR RELIGIOUS ACTIVITIES Zion Lutheran KEEP THE FAMILY INFORMED OF YOU R STUDENT LIFE Charge Subscriptions Due Now, at Publicatio6n~s I Michigan Daily 4° M ailed Subscriptions $4.50 per Year $2.15/ a Semester $1.50 Football Season Al o Church Washington at Fifth Avenue E C. Stellhorn, Pastor Do you 'have typing to be done, or do you want typing to do? Or, have you lost anything In any case, your best medium is The Michigan, Daily Classified Column CASH- RATES ici PER LINE (Short term charge advertisements accepted)' *