AG FOU T HE MICHIGAN DAILY wID NESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1935 turned over to the University to carry on w;lh the University's present work along these-lines. While it may be unfair to expect the University tc carry on enlarged activities on its present much- icduced budget, the recognition and strengthen- ing of the University as the research center of the state is in the long run a movement of great importance toward making it of greater service to all who benefit from its activities. The an Without A Doctorate .. T HE THINGS we find in our news- papers from day to day serve to convince us that news follows a pattern of repeti- tion, in which the actors change but the action is always much the same. Only upon rare occa- sion does a completely unique happening clamor for the reader's attention. Such a unique event in the annals of higher education is the announcement that a Mr. Alan Chester Valentine has been chosen president of the University of Rochester. The awful truth is that Mr. Valentine has never obtained a doctor's degree. In Mr. Valentine's 33 years he has compiled a record of sorts. At Swarthmore he played three years on the Varsity football team, was president of the student council and president of his class and made Phi Beta Kappa. In his spare time he edited the college paper and year book. From Swarthmore he went to Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, played rugby, tennis and lacrosse, gained honors in scholastics and earned a master's degree. Back at Swarthmore, he taught English literature, became dean of men and headed a campaign for funds for the college. Finally he went to Yale in an executive capacity. But he never became a doctor of philosophy. Only one hope remains, namely, that before Rochester's reputation is too greatly sullied, some public-spirited institution will step forward and save Mr. Valentine's academic soul with an hon- orary doctorate. As Others See It i 1 V r COL LEG IATE OBSERVER 11 I I V p 1I By BUD BERNARD Here's an appropriate article for you B.M.- O.C.'s, who cxpect to meet those fair damsels at the stage door tonight. "College men are always too fresh with chorus girls," Lupe Velez, the eye-filling shake-and-shiver girl of the movies is quoted as telling a group of college students. But with this brick-bat, she sends a bunch of flowers: "College men are good-looking, usually, and might be all right for theatrical work, especially since they have so much na- tural self-assurance. The net of it is that young men from school arc probably no fresher with ladies of the chorus, than ladies of the chorus are with young men from school. And besides, you shouldn't be too tough on these fellows., Miss Velez, when you con- sider that you glorified girls receive swell sal- aries for having that very sex appeal which causes college men to behave in the way about which you complain. A large organization is rampant on the campus of Central College, Fayette, Missouri. It is a club of blasted romance. When a girl turns cold, fickle, or importunate, the fellow insists he has been HANDED THE COB. Each member of the large and growing association is the proud owner of a certificate which reads: THIS IS TO PROCLAIM THAT BILL JONES HAS BEEN ORDAINED KEEEPER OF THE ROYAL COB. A red corn cob accompanies each. Anyone wishing to start a chapter at his school may communicate with the editor of the Central Collegian for information. Heywood Broun told the following story at the dinner of the Associated Harvard Clubs in Minneapolis. It was a very cold icy morning and a little crippled newsboy on his crutch was hobbling across the main street and a trolley car was coming along. The little cripple slipped cn the track in front of the car, and then the captain of the gale team rushed forward at the risk of his life and saved the newsboy. 'It's a very curious thing," Mr. Broun said, "but a condition similar to that pictured at New Haven occurred at Cambridge during my un- dergraduate days. A trolley was coming, the track was slippery and a woman was crossing the track; she had a baby in her arms, she slipped and was lying there on the rails. It was not the captain of the Harvard team, but the substitute end on the second eleven that appeared there on the right moment. Did he rush forward and snatch the woman and her baby from danger? Not at all. He tackled the trolley car and threw it back for a loss." * ** * A professor at the University of Georgia has for- bidden his students to wear smoked glasses. He found that they were using these goggles as screens behind which they could sleep through his class. Why doesn't he provide them with rose colored glasses through which his lectures might seem interesting? Final Subscription Payments Are NowDue...! Please either mailI 'the amount of your sub- scription to the Michi- gan Daily or call at the Daily Office in the Stu- dent Publications Bldg. at 420 Maynard Street immediately. A Most Sensible Suggestion JOSEPH B. KEENAN, assistant attorney-general, made as practical and as sensible a suggestion as has been advanced in many a day when he urged at the National Crime Conference that the names of all persons sponsoring paroles and those asking clemency for convicts henceforth be made a part of the public record. The assistant attorney-general has hit at one of the principal causes of abuse in the operation of the American parole system, secrecy. We think also that he might have gone further and struck a second blow by demanding that all parole com- missioners give their proceedings enough publicity to make the general public cognizant of what is going on, and afford interested individuals and officials opportunity to appear in any particular case and make their recommendations pro or con. Too many felons who are sent to prison openly to atone for flagrant crimes are subsequently re- leased quietly, almost surreptitiously, without noti- fication even to police, prosecutor and trial judge. Consequently too many felons that ought to re- main behind bars as a matter of social safety are turned loose to prey again on a public which has not even been warned of its danger. No state knows this better than Michigan does. Mandatory publicity whenever an application or recommendation for parole release is made, or whenever a hearing is set, would bring everything into the open where all could see and know what was happening. Nor need any really deserving candidate for con- sideration for early release from confinement be harmed. As Mayor Hague of Jersey City says, there is no good reason why a person who is willing to stand up for somebody in trouble should be unwilling to have his name made public. If a man is convinced of the rightness of a cause, he certainly should be unafraid to have the world know what he is doing. If he is not convinced, then, in a matter as important as the parole of a con- vict, he ought riot to act. His recommendations are not worthy of consideration by any intelligent and consientious parole commissioner. We are not unaware of a contention prevalent in some quarters that paroled convicts have a better chance to make good if they can go back into the world unknown, without being "hounded by the police" and without the handicap of prison stigma. But we are convinced that this plea has far less substance than some of those who utilize it would like to have people believe, and we are quite certain it is grossly overworked. At the most, such an argument for secrecy be- comes inconsequential when placed in comparison with the need for public protection that only thor- ough-going parole publicity will provide. The interests of society far outweigh the interests of those who have offended against it. It is partly because we have forgotten or ignored this in one manner or another that America is having so much trouble with its crime problem. -The Detroit Free Press. 1934: The Year Of Hot Water FOR the last three years or so, only freshmen have ever bothered to turn the faucets marked "Hot" in Cathedral washrooms. More erudite upperclassmen knew, of course, that hot water wa one of those phenomena of civilization which never seemed to have touched Pitt's tall building. But 1934, before it turned that vicious corner which relegated it to the history books, stayed long enough to see a bit of local history in the making. On the last day of the old year, a young chap, J. Lucius Hassenplug, Pharmacy, '38, in the Cathe- dral on some rather vague business, made the com- mnn n ndrn ictko arf trninu the n'rnn- hnll of a T he Michigan Daily I Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE (Associated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, Jan. 8. rTHEPROVERBIAL Roosevelt exuberance ex- tends to Henry Latrobe Roosevelt, the assistant secretary of the Navy. He can spend a strenuous day in the office, drop in on a cocktail gathering, play a game of bridge before dinner, attend a dance afterward and show up at 2 a.m. on the deck of a river boat, boyishly eager for dawn and a little sport in the duck blinds down the Potomac. George Holden Tinkham has come to Con- gress every year since 1915 from the 10th Massachusetts district. He spends so little time worrying over elections that he is the wonder of his colleagues. This year he arrived home from a long trip just the day before election. He went into the ballot booth on the big day and looked over the list of names. "And there I saw that man, Tinkham, on it again," he says. "I said to myself, 'By golly! I wonder if I ought to vote for that fellow.'" A choice of comfort for her guests or the life of a sparrow faced Mrs. William Doak, wife of the former secretary of labor. Mrs. Doak was giving a party. It was raining. Just before the guests were due she found a spar- row stuck in the rain spout over the door. For Mrs. Doak there was only one thing to do. She took a can-opener and pried the little fellow loose. And the broken spout spattered all the guests. There is one prominent thorn in the social life of ambassadors and cabinet members. No matter how entertaining the party, they must leave early. They are ranking guests and no cne can leave before them. So they have to be thoughtful and disappear while it still is the shank of the evening. Warren Delano Robbins has found speech-mak- ing is one of the time-consuming responsibilities in being minister to Canada. I that count!,' LOST: Black ladies purse, containing about $40. Finder please call 2-1214 or call at Michigan Daily office. Re- ward. Box A-17, Mich. Daily. Less than eiiht hours after the above ai first appeared the purse was re- turned to the owner. Thus, through timely use of The DAILY CLASSIFIED COLUMNS, she realized a profit of 10,000% over the 40c cost of the adc. For Quick Results at Low Cost Use V **% /fi 1 1e d lAE nm I