THE MICHIGAN DAILY IIGAN DAILY 1c 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 lrief, the editor reserving the.right to condense all letters of over 300 words. **"V*.. F I Critique - -7-, CPiblisled every morning except Monday drIng the University yearrand Summer Session by the Boad in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association nd -the Big Ten News Service. , M EMSBER , ssocatted olegiate $ress "U x~ - 1934 (iitlIet13s e IEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is enclusively entitled to the use 'r republication of all news dispatches credited to it or ot ,otherwise credited in this paper and the localnews rnbliehed herein. All rights of republication of special ispatches are reserved.- Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as econd class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Ehr4 Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer bycarrier, $1.00; by mail, 1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by nail, $4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, nn Arbor, Michigan. Phone~ 2-1214. Representatives: NationalAdvertising Service, Inc. 11 fest 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michigan Ave., 3hicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 WANAGING EDITOR ...........WILLIAM G. FERRIS NITY, EDITOR. ............r.... ,.... JOHN HEALEY ITORIAL DIRECTOR..........RALPH G. COULTER iPORTS EDITOR..... .....ARTHUR CARSTENS f MEN's EDITOR................ELEANOR BLUM IGHT EDITORS: Paul J. Elliott, John J. Flaherty, Thomas S. Oroehn, Thomas H. Kleene, David G. Macdonald, John M. O'Connell, RobertS. Ruwitch, Arthur M. Taub. PORTS ASSISTANTS; Marjorie Western, Joel Newman, Kenneth Parker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. VOMEN'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. EPORTERS: 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, Mevin C. Oathout, Robert Pulver, Lloyd S. Reih, Mar- shall Shulman Donald Smith, Bernard Weissman, Jacob C. Sidel~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, Bett HGoldstein, Olive Griffith, Harriet Hathaway, Ma- rion h lolden, Lois 'Ding, Selma Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Reuger, Dorothy happel, Molly Solomon, Dorothy Vale, Laura Wino- grad, .Jewel Wuerfel.I BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 UINESS MANAGER ...... . .......RUSSELL B. READ )REDIT MANAGER ................ROBERT S. WARD OMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .........JANE BASSETT EPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, John Og- den; Servie Department, Bernrajd Rosenthal; Contract. Joseph Rothbard; Accounts, Cameron Hall; Circulation and NatIonal Advertising, David Winkworth; Classified Advertising and Publications, George Atherton. USINESS ASSISTANTS: William Jackson, William Barndt,. Ted Wohlgemuithl, Lyman Bittman, Richard Hardenook, ohn Park, F.Allen Upson Willis Tom- lnnHomer Lathrop, Tom Clarke, Gordon Cohn, Merrell Jordan, Stanley Joffe. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Mary Bursley, Margaret Cowie, Marjorie Turner, Betty Cavender, Betty Greve, Helen Shapland. Betty Simonds Grace Snyder, Margaretta .ohlig, Ruth Clarke, Edith Hamilton, Ruth Dicke, Paula-Joerger, Mary Lou Hfooler, Jane Heath Bernar- dine Field, Betty Bowman, July Trosper. NIGHT EDITOR: PAUL J. ELLIOTT 'he Long-' -oub t Victory... T HE MICHIGAN football team has at last climbed to victory. After two orrowful Saturday afternoons, durig which time /ichigan got to its oppoients' 30-yard line only ince, the Wolverine has won.It is true that Georgia .ech did not compare with Michigan State or Chi- ago in ability. It is true, too, that Geoigia Tech is ar away from the Big Ten area, that it is a school vith which we have no natural rivalry, and that ve probably will not play them again for a long- ong time. But none of these facts can detrat from he sweetness of the first Michigan victory of the ear. The future, though far from bright, is at least iot the pitch black it was at this time a week ago. %ichigan can still win football games. To the Editor: WE HAD HOPED that The Daily this year would climb out of the rut of illusioned and hack- neyed mediocrity, and stand, like Arrowsmith, firmly on the ground. We had hoped that it would abandon a smug complacency masquerading under the title of journalism and counting for its support on groups as smugly complacent as their prejudices. We had hopedthat it would adopt a policy of ade- quate and unbiased presentation of all news, and an editorial policy thinking through the premises of the unthinking and an attitude of courage, not of evasion. We cannot think that the omission of pertinent news is due to inadequate facilities, for we are delighted daily by editorial excursions into realms far removed from the campus, where the questions, if not moot, necessarily involve a broader outlook than can be commanded. We must conclude that much is not heard because it will not be heard. We cannot think that the reporter's slate takes color from facts to be written, and must conclude that the colored sneers of red and black are painted by a biased mind. We cannot think that the mirror of the editorial mind could fail to focus upon con- troversies which are echoed by the very trees, and charge evasion. We do not charge that The Daily has murdered our citizens and destroyed our towns. We do charge that in the Ward affair may be seen the efforts of The Daily to avoid discontent by a masterly side- stepping of the real issue editorially and by a suppression of the real facts or deliberate failure to obtain credible information in the face of ru- mors that were rife. We ask why no attempt was made to discover whether the Board in Control of Athletics sched- uled the Georgia Tech game oblivious of Ward. We ask why no thought was given to the reason- able inference that the game was accepted on the express condition that Ward would not play. We ask why no effort was made to ascertain at what time Ward had been informed of this matter. We do not regard as a satisfactory answer derogatry remarks assailing dissenters merely because they were dissatisfied with what appeared to be an in- evitable probability. Nor as satisfactory the doing of nothing to substantiate or refute the stories. We do not consider ourselves answered with cries of "reds" and "racial discrimination" together with quips on the doubtful analogy existing be- tween short skirts and petitions, and allusions to hospitality. The Daily could have attempted a publication as news of what actually transired even if it did not have he courage to condemn the treatment of Ward as a Negro rather than a Michigan man in its editorials. Race discrimination was a minor point as compared with the action of the Board in Control of Athletics in this matter. We charge that The Daily does not test ideas for merit. The source of the idea seems determinative of its reception, and the taboo of social discrimina- tion as rigid as that of the caste system of India. Simply because a proposition springs from a group professedly radical is no reason to stigmatize it with the name "red," and avoid pressing it as deserving of the attention of intelligent people. Students are intelligent enough to figure out whether an idea is worthwhile regardless of who propounds it; and The Daily should be as intelli- gent in fighting for a principle regardless of'its source. As Mr. Justice Holmes said: "But when men have realized that time has upset many fighting faiths, they come to believe even more than they believe the very foundation of their own conduct that the ultimate good desired is better reached by free trade of ideas - that the best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market, and that truth is the only ground' upon which their wishes safely can be carried out." We hope for better things. We must content ourselves that the editor of The Daily cannot be both a Socrates and a Caliph of Bagdad, though he has cultivated an admirable country squire su- perciliousness. We want news on the news page and editorials on the editorial page. We do not want editorials in the news columns and doddering aphorisms and affectation in the editorial columns. Cyril F. Hetsko, '36L. Morris Weller, '35L. Robert E. Acherburg, Jr., '35L. Wm. Babcock, Jr., '35L. A. D. Kennedy, Jr., '36L. CO LLEGIATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD Commented a Hollywood casting director: "We can't use him. He doesn't look like a football player." The remark came as a result of an appli- cation for a role in a football picture by Irvine Warburton, University of Southern California All- American grid star. According to reports he is the same director who picked Ramon Novarro for the role of a gridiron giant in a recent football flicker. A.S.B. sends in the following contrib en- titled : FOR I'M A COLLEGE MAN I'm much intrigued by dancing; I like my liquor straight; I always start romancing On the very first date. I never read a textbook; The teachers dear I bluff; I like to haunt some nook While doing caveman stuff. Although I spend much money It seems I'm always flat; But I'd rather have my honey Than A's and B's at that. The college life has taught me Just what it means to live, And you can bet that I'll be here As long as Dad will - give! They are talking about the dumb pledge at the Kappa house at the University of Illinois who thinks the solar plexus is a new planet. Students at the University of Maryland have circulated a petition among the students of that institution which asks that the co-eds refuse to make dates for more than one week in advance. It seems as though all the popular co-eds on that campus are so busy that it is impossible to arrange dates with them unless one makes the engagement three or four weeks in advance. Many boys refuse to do this saying that "they wouldn't do that for Mae West herself." A beautiful Theta at the University of Illi- nois, while translating to French the sentence: "Good morning, teacher, how do you do?" used the familiar form of the word "you." The handsome young instructor, wishing to correct her, asked: "Why did you use the familiar form "thou" instead of "you"? "Well," she hesitated, "I thought that after last night ... I *U I U "U I jUl El - II THE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION presents EIGHT GREAT ATT ~.TN The Honorable OWEN Amb assador to Denmark speaking on "THIS BUSINESS OF DIPLOMACY" Hill Auditorium 8-00 P.M. Thursday, Oct. 25 Second Number STUART Noted Popular Economist speaking on "THE ECONOMY Of A BUNDANCE" Hill Auditorium 8 P.M. Thursday, Nov. 8 35c PER NUMBER AVERAGE COST... . . Season Tickets $3.00, $2.75, $2.50 Single Admissions 75c & 50c TICKETS AT WAHR'S NOW Washington Ofd The Record R EAD THE DAILY CLASSIFID A DS --1 ii By SIGRID ARNE TWITTING FRANK GORMAN about the striking textile workers he led, doesn't bother him. He tells in defense a story about mine strikes. A Negro striker was arrested following the dyna- miting of a mine. "Do you know anything about that dynamite?" asked the judge severely. "No, suh!" said the Negro. "Ah wasn't on that committee." * * * * Fall arrives in the capital. The hundred- and-one little florist carts about the streets glow with great bunches of bittersweet brought in from the nearby Virginia hills. DISTRICT ATTORNEY SAMUEL J. FOLEY of New York who is conducting the investigation of the Lindbergh case knew the colonel long before either had planned their careers. Foley was a young page in the House of Repre- sentatives when Lindbergh's father was a member. Young Lindbergh, then about 8 years old, used to enter the House occasionally to "hit" his father for some pennies. Foley was the page who escorted him on and off the floor. An attache of -the Japanese embassy had a few bad moments with a very determined Washington matron. She insisted on seeing the ambassador. And the attache's first duty was to protect the ambassador from callers with unannounced missions. Finally the lady confessed: "Well, I've simply got to know where he gets his grass seed." F0VNTAI N PE N S ARE YOU HAPPY WITH YOU R FOU NTAIN PEN? Have you a SHEAFFER, PARKEk or WATERMAN ? We shall be glad to show you. Sheaffers at $2.75, $3.25, $5.00, $7.50, $9.50, $10.00 Parker's ............. at $3.00, $5.00, $9.50, $10.00 Waterman ............ at $2.95, $5.00, $7.00, $10.00 Wai's. ...... ... at $2.25, $3.00, $5.00, $6.00, $7.50 Desk Sets-......at $5.00, $7.50, $10.00, $15.00, $25.00 Every pen guaranteed and your name engraved on barrel without expense -Pens repaired. 1s Ward ttninar* . T T WAS THE PECULIAR character- istic of the Ward-Georgia Tech matter that everyone who touched it did so only to lose in respect and esteem. The athletic de-* partment, responsible first for scheduling the con- test and then for a willingness to risk serious cam- pus disorder rather than cancel it, was guilty of placing the University and the student body in a very difficult position. The National Student League, which used the affair as a means of caus- ing as much embarrassment and gaining as much. publicity as possible, achieved neither its professed purpose of putting Ward in the game nor the greater purpose of lessening discrimination against Negroes - both in the North and the South. The Tory group of the Ward protest meeting Friday night, led by almost all the prominent extra-curric- ular men on campus, did not convince one single4 person, despite the soundness of its arguments, be- cause the group insisted upon an appalling exhibi- tion of bad manners, bad taste, and bad sense. It will be unfortunate if the Michigan coaching staff, as well as the coaching staffs of other north- ern universities, concludes that the manner to avoid situations of this type in the future is to refrain from coaching and playing promising Negro ath-, letic material. That is certainly a possibility, and if it is one which the rabid pro-Ward group over- looked it is only another indication of the short- sightedness of that' faction. But the easier and more decent way, both for the students who com- prise the University and the people of the State wh n nnrt that Uiversit, is not to schedil STATE STREET HEADQUARTERS FOR LECTURE UNIVERSITY BOO KSTORE MAIN STREET COURSE TICKETS The Ward Meeting 0_, I To the Editor: MAY A DISGUSTED graduate student express his thoughts on the conduct of certain groups at the Ward fiasco of Friday night? After four years at a provincial college, I came to Michigan for the express purpose of exposing myself to the broadening "cultural influence" of this great University. For many years I had heard of the spirited discussions prevalent upon this campus, and on Friday night I attended the Ward meeting as a disinterested non-participant, hoping to witness a refined and scholarly debate. What did I find? Much to my disillusionment, a hostile audi- ence, interested in but one side of the question, and led by an arrogant, aristocratic fraternal group, refused to confine their opposition to the estab- lished mediums of logical refutation. Insisting on preventing opposing speakers from stating their convictions, this gang adopted Hitleristic tactics of shouting down any speaker who differed with their dogmatic pre-conceived notions. Not content to even listen like gentlemen, they shouted irrelevant and frequently abusive com- ments at even the sincere professors who rose to REPRESENTATIVE BLOOM of New York is in- volved in a legal argument for one of his youngest, successful constituents. Ruth Sheneczynsky, the 10-year-old pianist, is planning a concert here soon. But the district laws prohibit juvenile work. However, Ruth has a good advocate. One time Bloom went to bat for a Turkish child being held at Ellis island. "Because she is feeble minded, she won't talk to us," said immigration inspectors. "Nonsense," said Bloom. He made the inspectors hide behind a fence and watch the child' at play with other children. He won the case. J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the Federal sleuths, looks leisurely enough when he drops in for dinner at one of the town's best rathskellers. But his office knows just where he is and calls him when any investigation "breaks." His aides come under the same rule. Hoover knows just where they are eating, and if they go to a movie later, just where they will be sitting. I f I I 1 , i t i a, f I t K EEP TH E FAMILY INFORMED OF YOUR STUDENT LIFE 4t moo," 0000, 1 ACe. Charge Subscriptions Due Now, at Publications Bldg. ) Michigan Daily II Dir-N,