_______1_ ______ FHFE M IC H ICG A N' DAILY s ar )V THE MICHIGAN DAILY - 1 I Published every morning except Monday durig the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association Gnd the Big Ten News Service. MEMBEFR 55 atttted ( e litt I'IAt D I $O W W S C O H 51N ' LEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS_ The Associated Press is exclusively entfiled 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. Allrights 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 sumier byr carrier, ,$00; by mail, $1.50. During regular school, year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices : Student Publicatiis 1uilding, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Plr6ne: 2-1214. Representatives: National Advertising Servic , Inc. 11 West 42nd Street, New York, N.Y. - 400 N. Michlghn Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF . Tepone 4925; MANAGING EDITOR ... ...WILLIAM G..FERS CITY ITOR...................JOHN HEAEY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR..........RALPH G. COULTER SPORTS EDITOR........R.........rEE CARSTENS WOMEN'S EDITOR ,.'... ..ELjENOR'BLUM NIGHT EDITORS: Paul J. EliDtt Da John J. Flaherty, Thomas E~. Groehn, Thomas H. Kleene, David 'G. 'Ma~doriald, 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. OAtho t, RoaneitPulver, Lloy 85 Reich, Mr- shall Sibulman, Donald Smith, Bernard 'Weissman,, Jacob C.Seidel, Bernard Levick, George Andros, Fredr Busen, 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... athaway, Ma- rion Holden, Lois King, Sela Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Reuger. Dorothy Shappell, Molly Solomon, Dorothy Vale, Laura Wino- grad, Jewel Wuerfel. BUSINF" STAFF BU8INESS MANAGER . .RUSS B.. READ OREDlIT MANAd .............ROBERT S. WARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER..........JANE BASSETT DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, John Og- den; Servicej Department, Be'ard Rosenthal; Contrac'ta, 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'SASSISTANTS: Mary Bursley, Margaret Cowie, Marjorie Turner, Betty Cavender, Betty Greve, Helen Shapland, Betty Simonds, Grace Snyder, Marg retta Kohlig, Ruth Clarke, Edith Hamilton, Ruth icke, Paula Joerger, Mary Lou Hooker, Jane Heath, Bernar- dine Field, Betty Bowman, J.uly Trosper. NIGHT EDITOR: ARTHUR M. TAUB Life Is A Gamble... AMBLING IS WRONG in principle. But just the same, it's fascinating business - as long as you don't count the cost. Pickem Pool passed out of the University pic- ture amid quite a flurry of unfavorable publicity. It was a dishonorable racket - imagine! It refused I to pay the winners. One racket, however, has come to stay. Nothing has fastened itself upon the imagination of the drug store and lunch roo'm cowboys like the varied and ever-increasing forms of the shoot-for-the- hole machine. They offer all the sporting thrills of a child's game, pay a.winner often enough, and afford excellent fun at such a small price. Interviews with various restaurateurs and stare owners in Champaign-Urbana disclosed the aver- age weekly winnings for the owner were $25. Given about 25 machines in the campus area, Illinois students and .others - but mostly students - were spending $625 a week to get a little thrill out of life. It doesn't take much further figuring to show that. a week's takings ,would put one student through a year of school nicely, and the year's lasses would educate 40 or more in better style than many are accustomed to right now. Wasn't the depression terrible? Armistice Day, 1934. . * Aftermath By SIEGFRIED SASSON Have you forgotten yet? ... For the world's events have rumbled on since those gagged days, Like traffic checked awhile at the crossing of city ways: And the haunted gap in your mind has filled with thoughts that flow Like clouds in the lit heavens of life; and you're a man reprieved to go, Taking your peaceful share of Time, with joy to spare. But the past is just the same - and War's a bloody game-' Have you forgotten yet? .. . Look down, and swear by the slain of the War that you'll never forget. Do you remember the dark months you held the sector at Mometz - The nights you watched and wired and dug and piled sandbags on parapets?_ Do you remember the rats; and the stench Of corpses rotting in front of the front line trench,- And dawn coming, dirty white, and chill with a hopeless rain? Do you ever stop and ask, "Is it all going to happen again?" Do you remember that hour of din before the attack - And the anger, the blind compassion that seized and shook you then As you peered at the doomed and haggard faces of your men? Do you remember the stretcher cases lurching back With dying eyes and lolling heads, those ashen gray Masks of the lads who once were keen and kind of gay? Have you forgotten yet? ... Look up,.and swear by the green of the spring that you'll never forget. A s ot esS tStraight From The Shoulder AS STUDENT PACIFISTS prepare for the gen- eral anti-war meeting and R.O.T.C. boys and "long-haired radicals" confuse issues as they wrangle over their own particular brand of mili- tarism, the campus has been hearing some "straight goods." Sen. Gerald P. Nye, who, as chair- man of the recent Senatorial investigation com- mitee, :should be in a position to know the true facts, fired some rather damning blasts at the righteous'right when he spoke here Thursday. "A device for creating jingoistic and false pat- riots," he called the R.O.T.C.. Similarly he dis- posed of the C.M.T.C.. "There is a definite attempt to inculcate the spirit of war into universities and schools by munitions industries," he charged. These definite statements should end the anom- olous position of those "peacemakers in khaki" who insist on taking part in anti-war demonstra- tions while wearing uniforms issued by the War Department. But Senator Nye painted the picture 'much bleaker. "Gold of the munitions manufacturers is buying the press, radio, and statesmen of the world" was his indictment. He envisioned a clever network enmeshing world propagandizing facilities for the direct benefit of war profiteers. Constructively, the senator is rather optimistic. Though his expectation that the investigation com- mittee will receive a $50,000 grant to carry on its work next session does not sound too improbable, such suggestions as the one that the government should levy a war income tax of 98 per cent on earned incomes above $10,000 and that war supply sales to other nations be placed on a "cash and carry" basis seem to be expecting just a little too much of the present political setup. However, exaggerated as his political picture and his attempts at reform may sound, Senator Nye has given some invaluable advice con erning cur- rent conditions. His belief that the h toric policy of flag-waving will not suffice to make America enter a war should be remembered when the device is actually tried. His insistence on the insidiousness of war propaganda should be brought to mind when the pacifistic inclinations of the R.O.T.C. are loudly insisted. Because no matter how it's disguised and ration- alized, war cannot rise out of its own grisly non- necessity. -The Wisconsin Daily Cardinal. Legion Berates College Youth ARE COLLEGE PACIFISTS as superficial and silly as they were said to be recently in an edi- torial in The Nebraska Legionnaire? The editor of that publication accuses them of being postoffice and bridge players, and finding as their chief occu- pations cheering of football teams, and loafing in luxurious fraternity houses. He seems to take it for granted that one must go through the torture of trench warfare before he knows anything about.the folly of international holocausts and the dirty conniving of munitions makers. Furthermore, the average student of 1934 finds little time to play postoffice and bridge. Admittedly college pacifists are often too impul- sive in acting, and fail to grasp the relative impor- tance of various points in the peace program. They are also often too impatient, lack foresight, and spoil their own programs by acting too hastily. Their elders, however, can't condemn them for lack of foresight, because they themselves have shown that trait all too many times. American Legion men are in a position where they very naturally become resentful of outside declarations as to war. They feel that they, of all people should and do know what a hell war is. Men can't be blamed for fighting for an ideal. They were deceived by circumstance and propa- ganda. They thought they would save the world for democracy, and very likely some day we of this generation will be deceived by some similar high- sounding slogan. By educating ourselves in the sub- ject of war, its causes, results, and general futility, we of the younger generation hope to avoid being deceived. Our hats are off to you former service men. You fought because your ideals told you to. What youth wishes to do is to prevent another war. The Nebraskan editor's personal opinion concerning the refusal to fight under any conditions is that such COLLEGIATE O BSE RVE R By BUD BERNARD Michigan co-eds are complaining about the hours they have to observe. Look at this excerpt from Houghton College: "All women are requested to be in their rooms in the evening after 7:00 o'clock and lights are to be out at 10 o'clock. Girls over 21 years of age are permitted to have extension of time one night a week .-" A PROFESSOR LOOKS AT HIS CLASS Well, there they sit, the dumb, dim-witted saps- Collegiate fops in corduroy and leather, Their idiotic minds first fixed on whether I'll catch them reading Ballyhoo on their laps. --The women trying hard to look the parts Of chic I'm-oh-so-bored sophisticates- Some cross their legs at handsome addlepates. And hope that another 'college romance' starts. Concerned with dances, clothes, and football teams, What do they care for what I have to say? They're patronizing - there's not one who dreams I might be just as bored as they Pretend to be. This is a lousy way To make a living. Lord, I earn my pay. Two dollars.fine per head was put on 62 students of Queens College for hazing freshmen by rbbing rotten eggs and overripe tomatoes on their heads. Very reasonable price, a bargain we would say. After much consideration we have voted this week's "boner" prize to a professor at Clemson College who rushed into an empty classroom, cursed the class for cutting, and then discov- cred he had come to an eight o'clock instead of a nine. A new organization has sprung up on the Purdue campus. It is appropriately called the "Holding The Bag Club." The organization of this novel club grew out of the Purdue Men's habit of taking the co-eds to the well-known mixers on the campus. If the man takes a co-ed to a mixer and she in turn invites someone else to her house dance, he auto- matically becomes a member of the club. If the Purdue columnist is not lying; about 50 per cent of the men on the campus have memberships in the club. They are talking about the poor frosh at Ohio State University who always tried to date blondes so that his fraternity brothers would think he was a gentleman. Here's another excerpt from the catalogue of our "institutions of liberal education." This is from a small eastern school. "The degree to which the tobacco habit is fasten- ing itself upon the boys and girls of the present age is appalling. Its blighting effects on body, mind and morals are seen on every hand, needing no argument to show that a student who wishes to be at his best must leave it alone. Students who are either addicted to the use of tobacco or alcoholic liquors are requested not to register until they have tried and found out they can ab- stain." 1 - Y - Cotering to Your Better Taste - CREAM WAFFLES--- LUNCHEONS - DINNERS MAYFLOWER Restaurant Cor. East Street and South 4th Avenue - Ann Abor I s4 I BUY THEM NOW aI for Yourself or Wrap Them Up as Christmas Gifts i I Vk .4. 11 .1 - : t d% . t ' ,,,_\ I I, All Gif t purchases neatly boxed anI dwrapped. I 414 IzelT -1 PICTURES.-~ that pas sin the NIGHT are gone forever! Record them! Home, Children, Parties . . The most "remembera- ble" things in life with Eastman's New S. S. film. ii --- - ------ Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE A MBASSADOR HIROSHI SAITO of Japan ar- rived back in Washington to the accompaniment of much formal Oriental bowing from the large reception committee. He returned the bows, and then turned a worried eye on his luggage, smiling brightly when he spotted a large, square object. "Ah, there it is," he said. "It" was two crates of strawberries which the ambassador bought in California, and which he had been mentally eating all the way across the continent. Much ermine but few orchids are worn by smart Washington women to formal evening affairs. They consider the gardenia in better taste than the orchid. JOSEPH H. CHOATE, JR., chairman of the Fed- eral alcohol control administration, has an understanding with his assistant, Harris E. Wil- lingham. One or the other must be in the office all the time. Choate left for late lunch one day, promising to be back so Willingham could keep a late after- noon appointment. Choate never returned. The next day he greeted Willingham with a grin and remarked: "In case you'd like to know, my grandmother had a very successful funeral yesterday, thank you." Motorcycle cops assembled at the east gate of the White House is always a signal for cur- ious crowds. They gather to see the President go out. THE TAXI DRIVER grew tired of waiting outside the very grand party "Jock" Whitney was giv- ing to the Virginia hunting crowd. So he ambled in, and up to the buffet. Poking the man next to him, he whispered: "These rich people don't know how to give a blow-out, do they?" He was speaking to Whitnev 'J a " a a Oki f. " fe . r pay, " !f w r- t. s mar r f sr a" 1 Get your indoor ture information. pic- free __ - - ... : on request. & BOYCE 723 N. University INVITED You are cordially invited to come in Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday and talk over your figure problems with Miss Sally Staunton Associate Stylist for the Creators of Artist Mod i -the Customized Foundation. Miss Staunton can help you by showing you just how Artist Model foundations will give you a glamorous, beautiful figure. It isn't difficult with this nodern all-in-one foundation that consists of two detachable pieces - bras and girdle. There's no charge for Miss Staunton's expert counsel. Won't you plan to come in during her stay? From $6.50 up IMPORTED GRANULATED TURF MULL Outline of Its Uses BULBS AND TUBERS Mulch all Fall planted bulbs with "GPM" Peat Moss 4 to 6 inches deep. In exposed places the mulch should be covered with evergreen boughs, bur- lap or straw, to prevent the strong winds from blowing it away. Remove the mulch in the Spring and use Peat Moss in your other gardening work. 4 11 h IT