_ THE MICHIGAN -DAILY a A ' f ,; %6 ' ,; , tier 4 +' i uy a j THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,- r 7_t * I ®,:!7e :oRTtir nMCPliBgor3"iVPrriT W33" g.1 a.1IFf w w.!!w " "pr --"--Y 'fi*Umi 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 VEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatchescredited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights ofrepublication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of potage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mall, $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mnail, $450. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone:.241214. 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. ERRIS CITY EDITOR........................JOHN HEALJEY 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. Klene, David G. Macdonald, John M. O'Connell, Robert S. Ruwitch, Arthur M. Taub. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Kenneth Par- ker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara L. Bates, Dorothy Gies, Florence Harper, Eleanor Johnson, Josephine 'McLean, Margaret D. Phalan, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Murphy. REPORTERS: John H1. Batdorff, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Sheldon M. Ellis, William H. Fleming, Rich- ard Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred W. Neal,. Robert Pulver, Lloyd S. Reich, Marshall Shulman, Donald Smith, Bernard Weissman, Jacob C. Seidel, Bernard Levick, George Andros, Fred Buesser, Robert Cummins, Fred DeLano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman. Dorothy Briscoe, Maryanna Chockly, FGrence Davies, Helen Defendorf, Elaine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith, Harriet Hathaway, Marion Holden, Lois King, Selmna Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba,Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Reuger, Dorothy Shappell, Molly Solomon, Laura Winograd, 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 Hal; Circulation and National Advertising, David Winlwoth; Cassified Advertising and Publications, George Atherton. BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: William Jackson, William Barndt, Ted Wohlgemuith, Lyman Bittman, John Park, F. Allen Upson, Willis Tomlinson, Homer Lathrop, Tom Clarke, Gordon Cohn Merrell Jordan, Stanley Joffe, Richard E. Chaddock. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Mary Bursley, Margaret Cowie, Marjorie Turner, Betty Cavender, Betty Greve, Helen Shapland, Betty Simonds, Grace Syder,, Mrgaretta Kohlig, Ruth Clarke, Edith Hamilon, Ruti Dice, Paula Joerger, Mary Lou Hooker, Jane Heath, Bernr- dine Field, Betty Bowman, July Trosper, Marjorie Langenderfer, Geraldine Lehman, Betty- Woodworth. NIGHT EDITOR: COURTNEY A. EVANS Let's See What The Students Think .. . THE UNIVERSITY COMMITTEE on Student Conduct will today have presented to it by President Rufhven the plan for a new all-campus Men's Council conceived by thef Student-Faculty Relations Committee of theI Michigan Union and signed, sometimes with en- thusiasm and more often with doubt, by the presidents of the Michigan Union, the Under- graduate Council, the Interfraternity Council, and the managing editor of The Daily. Before the University committee, which is composed entirely of faculty members, comes to a decision upon a matter concerning students as thoroughly as student government should, it ougt at least to make an effort towards finding out what the students themselves think of this plan. No such effort has as yet been attempted. The Student-Faculty Relations Committee is com- posed almost entirely of Union members and fac- ulty men who are very closely connected with the Union. It is this group's plan. It is not the spontaneous plan of the Michigan student body. It is not even the plan of the established and rec- ognized organization of student government. The Daily believes that this suggested govern- ment contains many features which are excellent, particularly with regard to the grants of power, and many which are bad, particularly the for- mation of the council's membership. But, whether it is a good plan or a bad one, one thing is perfectly obvious: the University committee needs a good deal more knowledge of student sentiment than it now has before making any final decisionj upon the substitution of this council for the present Undergraduate Council. What Goes On In High Places. . T IS HIGH TIME that Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism de- partment was forced to surrender the Oil Can, symbolical of the position of most loquacious lu- bricator among faculty men, as he did to Prof. James K. Pollock of the political science depart- ment last Saturday. In his official address at the Sigma Delta Chi Gridiron Dance, preceding the presentation of the Oil Can to Professor Pollock, Professor Brumm told several of his now-famed jokes(?), which were received with favor, or rather, we should say, what sounded like favor to us. One devout Gargoyle reader, however, who had evidently also attended the dance wrote us a letter, the contents of which ran as follows: "Dear Editor : "Professor Brumm committed, more or less, an act of plagiarism last Saturday night at the Gridiron Dance. He told a joke allegedly about his own honeymoon, but I find that same joke in a slightly varied form, appearing on Page 8 of the current issue of the Gargoyle. Even they did not claim it to be original but credited it to the Atlanta Seal. Can't you do something about it?" --H.M.S. We can and will, H.M.S. If we can raise the funds we will send him a new edition of "Joe Miller's Joke Book" for Christmas so that he at least will be in less danger of being embarrassed by the Gargoyle. Tsk! Tsk! Professor Brumm. COLLEGIATE OBSERVER I, Campus Opinion I 11 I . .1 I - By BUD BERNARD Last spring at the University of Mississippi the inevitable dull lecture was going on, and the students were all half-asleep. Suddenly, a timid little garter snake wearily raised its head over the window sill. Someone tittered. Scme bolder soul laughed softly. Some person who knew his own mind guffawed. Then the whole class roared. This nettled the professor. To have a com- men grass snake interrupt a lecture is cer- tainly not flattering to the ego. Leoking the snake squarely in the eye, he drawled (as only a professor who is pulling a wow like this can drawl), "Come on in, brother; you'll find plenty of your kind in here." One man who bet that he would eat his shirt has paid off. A chemistry professor at Harvard University kept his word to masticate the garment by dissolving it in acid, neutralizing the acid with a base, filtering out the precipitated material, spreading it out on a piece of bread and devouring it.. An Indian playing on a western football team is a very misunderstood person. In a recent game he had been dazzling the opposi- ticn by passing first with his right hand and then with his left. The opposing quarterback finally got wise to this turn about business and using one of the better words he learned, creamed to his team-mate, who was rushing the passer, "Keep your eye peeled for that fel- lw; he's ambidexterous." "The hell you say," retorted the rusher, "I thought he was an Indian." The senior class of Long Island University, after choosing a class politician, Beau Brummel, etc., decided to choose a class author. The vote result- ed in a tie between a Mr. W. Shakespeare and a Mr. W. Somerset Maughan. A freshman at the University of Pennsyl- vania went to see his minister when he got home Thanksgiving vacation and told him that he had lost his letter of recommendation from this worthy man. The clergyman wrote out a new one reading: "This is to certify that John Jones htd a letter of recommendation before going to the University of Pennsylvania." After a. trial period the honor system of the Tu- lane University, college of arts and science has been abolished. The announcement was made upon the recommendation of a faculty committee and the approval of a student academic board. A sidelight in the affair is that the student who was chiefly responsible for the system's trial and who is now working for its restoration is named Cram. A ashington BYSTANDER. HILL AUDITORIUM Personal Christmas Cards ?R INTI NG Correspondence Stationery. Lteeas sEnvelopes Pro nomical serice. Cal for n estimate on your next job. Printed Process Printed Engraved Z5 Z5 It is not too late, if you order at once. CARDS and 50 CARDS and ENVELOPES 50 ENVELOPES Printed c up Printed up with Nam f5with Name Hundreds of others priced 2c each and up. REMEMBER, the Christmas Cards you send renew old friendships, carry fresh and cheerful proof of your affection and rememberance to everybody who receives one. You will ind in our large display a card to fit every friend and relative, as well as'"specials" for every purpose, including many of areligious nature. 0 I Ticlets $1.00 - 1 - $2.00 Boston Symphony Orchestra SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor "ONLY MICHIGAN CONCERT"- 110 PLAYERS 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. Stockings And Things, Cont'd. To the Editor: When a non-journalistic student viciously launches an attack on a newspaper which but a few years ago was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Journalism, and is yet considered to be one of the best news-sheets in this state, his opinions, regard- less of subject, deserve little attention. And, likewise, when such a student incorporates this attack in a condemnation of The Daily's present editorial policies without reasonable con- sideration of the problems which confront every editor, he is not only unworthy of notice, but is also ridiculous. R. K. C., in his lengthy criticism of The Daily, the Free Press and the "sartorial rubbish" 'which lies in every column and page of these papers, neg- lected to suggest that the representative editors as- sume a deep and wise attitude towards the Public which they serve, and strive eagerly to present the Better Things in Life with fanatic and dauntless conviction. Since I, too, am not a student in Journalism, I feel free to express myself on the important issue I R.K.C. advanced. I am willing to agree with your critic on the point of the reporting of social func- tions, but not entirely. Each one of us has his own ideas of a society page and its articles, but the majority of us realize that wherever man may go, and whatever he may do, he cannot ignore wo- man, and so we take the social page as that part belonging to the feminine reading public. I can see no reasonable answer to the editorial question discussed by R. K. C. unless we call in a student "Brain Trust" and place it in charge of The Daily. And this, needless to say, would in- volve complications. To publish a paper fulfilling the prescribed requirements of a college mouth- piece, so nicely drawn up by R. K. C., would give rise to the question of how the many controversial subjects of today could be treated without preju- dice. Another problem would be the type of sub- ject-matter the editorial staff would consider truly interesting and enlightening to the student( mind. The business of "just managing to get out a paper once a day" would then become a full-time job, and a strenuous one, for the editors. And, I believe, the results would be hardly satisfactory to all concerned. I sincerely hope that the editorial policies of The Daily remain as they are. A campus news- paper cannot become a beacon of liberal education and an intellectual guide, and still -be considered a campus newspaper. Perhaps R. K. C. does not think of the names of all the little girl frogs in this University pond which appear on the Daily's subscription list, nor may be think of the average student who finds a very sufficient supply of in- tellectual materials in textbooks without regarding his morning paper as being a series of written lec- tures. In this matter I consider the "laissez-faire" principle quite sound and by far the most sensi- ble. -G. R. S. jAs Others See It Stein Is A Stein Is A Stein CONTEMPORARY literature's enigma, Gertrude Stein of the stuttering pen and repetitious rhetoric, is about to descend to explain to us in her most lucid style "The Making of the Making of Americans." With unadulterated Steinese she will indulge in verbal acrobatics, which may be perfect- ly plausible to her vision but, if past performances can be relied on, will fly high above the combined heads of the audiences. We await in anxious mood the irradiation of her knowledge. So much has been said and written about this idol of the intelligentsia; she has been characterized as fakir, fad and genius. Reports from other campuses where Miss Stein has discussed how Americans are made, or rather anounedr that sca. . iet would cover wht TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11 --8:15 QiJoraI Union Series N 0., D. MORR I LL THE STATIONERY AND TYPEWRITER STORE 314 South State Street 1908 If you write, we have it Phon Since e 6615 ,lw I V, N 4- By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Dec. 10-If the words of such trusted New Deal spokesmen as Donald Richberg and Ray Moley are a guide to the inside of what went on at Warm Springs, the presiden- tial "vacation" was such in name only. There never'has been a time since his inauguration when Mr. Roosevelt had graver, more far reaching decisions to shape out of a confusion of conflict- ing advice. Both Moley and Richberg shared in those "Little White House" conferences, the fruits of which the President came back to Washington to put into message form, whether fireside broad- casts to the nation at large or messages to the new congress. And those forthcoming Presidential pronouncements will show, if the Moley conception spoken to the manufacturers' convention is any guide, a middle-of-the-road course between those who believe economic factors alone should control and those of opposite view who "would reconstruct industry entirely in the light of social aims." "Thre is no doubt that a genuine boom could be produced by an observance of economic factors alone," Moley said, "but it is fairly clear that this economic soundness might require, for a time, wages so low as to be socially intolerable." THE shaping of the relief problem to a useful work pattern instead of cheaper direct pay- ments, is an evidence of this controling Roosevelt policy. An early balancing of the whole budget would be possible ,it is said, if the direct "dole" system were followed. As evidence of the pressure for that policy in- stead of work relief, a recent San Francisco speech by Chairman Winthrop Aldrich of the Chase Na- tional Bank is in point. He said the work-relief program would be three times as costly and that concentration on direct-relief soon would balance city, county and state as well as federal budgets. "If we could be assured of a sound solution of the difficulties of financing unemployment relief, one of the most disturbing factors operating against the revival of private enterprise would be removed." the banker added. O THERE you have it. A boom could be had but at-what price? Perhaps Dr. Virgil Jordan of the national industrial conference board also speaking to* the manufacturers, put it most con- cretely, although both Moley and Richberg hinted at the same thing. Announcin Another feature of th Msg Daily. In order to have sw tig of interest to everyonewewl print a special BOOK SECTON in The New Way Gains Favor... T HE APPOINTMENT of Prof. James K. Pollock to a responsible post in the forthcoming Saar plebiscite is a fine compli- ment both to Professor Pollock's ability and to thej University. Governments are turning more and more to the faculties of the universities to find competent men to handle world affairs. This has come as a result of conditions hitherto inexperienced. The rule-of- thumb politician or statesman is safe as long as he is handling something with which he is familiar, but when unique conditions are encountered, they require unique solutions such as only an intelligent man, thoroughly trained in his field, can provide. The Saar nlehiscite fnrnishes thes eniiinon-