THE MICHIGAN DY DA IDNYESWYDESDA OCTOBER 31 19 34 I MICHIGAN DAILY Welcome Victory.. . wi -'X- 1 T 1 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 aid the Big Ten News Service. M EM BER ssotated tgottgiate rezss r,u~,,n0 ,1934 1 jI eXIige4 I935e - ADMsoN wscOS" iEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Specia 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. COULTER 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 Weissman, Jacob C. Seidel, Bernard Levick, George Andros, Fred Buesser, Robert Cummins, Fred DeLaano,Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman, Morton Mann. Dorothy Briscoe,rMaryanna 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 Reuger, Dorothy 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; Accounts, Cameron 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, Mrjore Turner, Betty Cavender, Betty Greve, Helen S apland, Betty Simonds Grace Snyder, M4argaretta 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 Snobbery And The Sororities. POPLE - and particularly women - do not object to being called snobs. They like it. It goes to their egos as gin goes to their heads. That is why charges of snobbery, isolated from other charges, against fraternities and sororities always fail in their purpose. The re- action is the opposite to what is desired. Snobbery is not the main criticism of the Greek Letter System. The fact that this snobbery is based upon superficialities is ,a greater charge. And, greater than both, is the objection (at Michigan all objections are nullified by the necessity of hav- ing the houses as a pleasant place to live) that the Greek Letter System is almost always a prac- tical innoculation against a cosmopolitan outlook on life. The individual student when he or she joins a house is not a stereotype, but the fraternal life so concentrates his or her being upon his own clique and mode of living that after three years the Greek products become convinced that this is the way God has designed life for everyone. The re- mainder of the world is forgotten. In their own so- cial world they circulate as fiercely as amoebae in a wash basin of stagnant water, but they never see or think about the world beyond that wash basin. This is not snobbery and it is not a lack of in- telligence. It simply is a complete class uncon- sciousness. It recognizes its own class and looks upon the remainder of the universe, when it looks at all, with the eye of an analyist or explorer. Other people exist. One knows because one meets them in newspaper headlines, or while driving through slum sections of big cities, or in a line of statistics on unemployment. And that is all one knows of them - or cares to. If the sororities are, as Miss Alice Lloyd, dean of women, said at the Panhellenic Banquet Mon- day night, "on trial for their existence" and if they must "face issues honestly and fearlessly," one of the things which their members ought to learn is that everyone does not like a sorority girl. If they could get that into their heads, they might advance to the principle that it was (in the ma- jority of cases) not themselves who made them sorority girls rather than waitresses, artists' models, soda clerks, or vaudeville queenies. From that they might question why they are sorority girls and the vaudeville queenies are vaudeville queenies. The possibility of a social revolution, once a sorority girl starts to think about this subject, is almost appalling. In the meantime, an independent tour F OR A GOOD MANY YEARS now the University of Chicago has main- tained a sort of aloofness from the plebian things that were currently popular at other institutions of learning. Chicago, let it be known, was a place for scholars and not for college boys. If Chicago's athletic teams were ruthlessly tram- pled by mightier opponents, it was because the school on the Midway placed its emphasis else- where than on athletics. It seemed likely that Chicago might never figure seriously again in major Conference sports, but the Maroons, we were given to understand, were not worried by athletic standing; they saw the ephemeral nature of such measuring sticks. With all due regard for the truly valuable educational leadership emanating from Chicago, we always had a sneaking suspicion that stu- dents there must be enough like students every- where to resent their athletic domination by other Conference schools and wish inwardly that they might throw off the pose of disinterestedness they had been forced to espouse. Chicago students were probably as surprised as anyone else to discover this fall that they actually had a football team to be reckoned with. It took some time for them to realize that the first lop-sided victories were not just flashes the pan. By the time of the Indiana game they had become almost as football-crazy as the most rabid collegians of the land. Rallies, torchlight parades, freshman-sophomore class struggles, and victory dances have become the order of the day where football was once almost taboo in the sacred halls of learning. The Daily Maroon, student newspaper, was quick to begin elaborate plans {or a revival of homecom-. ing in connection with next Saturdy's game with Purdue. Last week's encounter with Missouri was gen- erally conceded to be a breather. There was noth- ing at stake except the Maroons' unbeaten record and little danger to that. The day before the game the Daily Maroon broke out with the bold- face line "MURDER MISSOURI!" scattered over the front page in 19 different places. No one begrudges Chicago its celebration of a season that has been amazingly successful so far. To tell the truth, we're just a little relieved to find that Chicago's scholars are human after all. As Others See It__ War TWO IDENTITY DISCS, one pending from the other were worn about the neck of every American soldier during the World War. In case the wearer became a battle casualty, one disc was cut from its string, and the other remained on the body. To safeguard the identification system further, it was made a court-martial offense for a soldier to be caught without his discs. But these Precautions were not enough, the War Department says, so now it considers a plan to tattoo soldiers for future wars. Why they were not enough-is apparent. The identity discs were not infrequently blown to pieces along with that part of the wearer's body from which the tags were suspended. The new identification scheme of the War Department is practically bomb-proof, and the term is used literally. It purposes to tattoo the sol- dier on each shoulder and hip. If so much as one member of the deceased remains, it can be identi- fied and given what might be whimsically called a decent burial. This latest proposal suggests the degree of per- fection in the planning for the next war. A "basket case," true enough, would lose his identification numbers and might cause some confusion in the hospital. The man who had the misfortune to run point-blank into a high explosive shell would also be unaccounted for. But only about one sol- dier in 5,000 goes to his death in this manner, and occasionally there is someone close enough to report that the deceased vanished in thin air. So war is becoming gradually less horrible for the folks at home. And there will be less work for the Graves Registration Service. -The Detroit News. Peace Scholarships "4 WHEN MEN SIT around a conference table they start off with an attitude of strange- ness and aloofness. One of my great hopes is to foster a friendship and an understanding between the boys and men of England and our own country. There is no way of estimating how much valte this might prove to have in the future when the boys of today become the statesmen of tomor- row." This is the opinion of the headmaster and founder of the Kent School, F. H. Sill, who stands out as one of the foremost figures in the country on the question of international relations between youths of America and England. The headmaster of Kent School believes that anything that can be done to give the English peo- ple as a whole some insight into American char- acter should be sponsored. He says, "Anything that can be done along these lines by athletic organi- zations, visiting delegates, scholarships, and fel- lowships will, I believe, be worth more and more as time goes by." Unfortunately, exchange scholarships, a large part of which were a direct result of war-time and early post-war idealism have decreased in these days of friendship and hatred, hope and vin- dictiveness, the idea of greater intercourse among nations as a cure for world ills found its widest ac- ceptance; and the generosity of people on both sides of the ocean established a considerable. num- COLLEGIATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD Evidently the Thetas have been liking the publicity they have been getting. Here's a letter received recently: Dear Bud: The Theta pledges wish to acknowledge the rapid and accurate performance of The Daily publicity staff. They, too, feel honored to think there is a person on the staff of The Daily with enough superior intellect to be a "Theta Admirer." Sincerely yours, A THETA PLEDGE This was found on the fly leaf of an old library book in the Indiana University library: If there should be another flood, For refuge hither fly, Though all the world should be sub- merged, This book would still be dry. W.H.C. sends in this answer to a "Co-eds Plea": ANSWER TO IDA WANNA I am the man with soul so white Who gets the mostest Big delight By holding hands To say good-night. I easily hold myself in check Till the third date When I start to neck; Nor unsuspecting do I fling Myself right at her With a spring But genteel like, I ask the miss: "Say, Babe, how about a kiss?" Here is a paper on "Work" written by a freshman at the University of Maryland: WHY WORK? When you work you perspire, When you perspire, you get B.O. And who the H- wants B.O.? From a Nassau we learn that the founders of Massachusetts Institute of Technology were not as technical as the later graduates of the school. It seems they built the Institute in the wrong place, and now the whole educational structure is going down for the third time. Literally speaking MIT has sunk into the ground six inches in the last 18 years. But some of the buildings have sunk much further than others, and now the masterminds of the Institute are trying to determine when the slower ones will catch up. A Washington' BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON THF4STRANGE SPECTACLE of the bankers' con- vention, coming into Washington like a lion, raging at the "New Deal," and going out like a lamb, having made a truce with the chief "New Dealer" on what looked very much his own terms, requires an explanation. What possibly could have inspired that drama- tic change of front? Did the bankers c'ome to Washington, to see the "New Deal" at work and, reversing the old veni-vidi-vici bonmot;' go away conquered themselves? Not very likely. There was something else involved. Probably that something else was a conviction on the part of the bankers of what is to be expected on election day in November. They may anticipate a Congress of a sort that seems more fearful to them in prospect than any known Roosevelt "New Deal" policy, be it of the recovery or reform per- suasion. IF THAT CONCEPTION of what all the powwow- ing in inmost and controlling circles of the banking fraternity has been about is correct, the explanation of the docility toward administration leadership, indicated in the tender of banker co- operation instead of the previously admitted an- tagonism, is easily seen. President Roosevelt may appear to the financiers as their sole salvation from the Congressional mandatory inflation bogy- man, or even worse -the central bank idea. That the peace pact between the White House and the bankers - and it is that by specific state- ment, not inference - was made on the President's terms, does not seem open to challenge: The spokes- man of the convention; President Jackson E. Rey- nolds, of the First National of New York, specially picked to make the gesture of rapprochement in introducing Mr. Roosevelt, left little to speculation. He picked up three major questions of policy that have been dinned at the White House in- cessantly for weeks. BUT HE DID NOT MERELY repeat those ques- tions. He answered them, answered them in President Roosevelt's own much-favored counter- interrogatory form. Reynolds asked if it was "avoidable" to con- tinue vast emergency relief expenditures, private or governmental, adding that the answer must be unanimous. So the President would have answered unquestionably had he been -so minded. So un- doubtedly he has answered in private conferences with bankers. M T. A2 Formal AUTUMN STYLES OF 1934 make their bow. Dif- fetent, ddshing, novel. Of course, you'll need some- thing new for this event . . . it really requires it. These gowns aren't Gibson girlish any more. That "naughty nineties" air has succumbed to the charm of the Directoire influence.and memories of Napoleon. SKIRTS - - shhh - - are slit to the knee on occasion, as they used to be in 1915, in the hysterical era of the World War - the days of tango teas and too brief furloughs. Let us suggest that you drop in today and let us show you the new selection of gowns that we secured especially for this event. Prices are reasonable, too, 16.95 and up. WRAPS are three-quarter and full length in velvet. Both self and fur-trimmed. 19.95 and up. CAMPUS F A S H ION C E N T E R .: -,., . - ., t,, ... ::,;,.. ,r , . --- -. PILLOW CA $ DOUBLE 42x36-inch Longwear Cases- . LAK FTS from the best quality long sta- ple yarn-- WARD'S famous "Fleecy- Extra wear! downs." Beauti- 9 ONLY.-. ful colors in bes ' 2 0 1I I S A 11! I'I ninA H sINU'. irht-~in