THE MICHIGA N DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, _ i MEMBER 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 dis- patches 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 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: Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaherty, Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas H. Kleene, David G. Mac- donald, John M. O'Connell, Arthur M. Taub. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Kenneth Parker, 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: Rex Lee Beach, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Sheldon M. Ellis, William H. Fleming, Richard 0. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Bernard Levick, Fred W. Neal, Robert Pulver, Lloyd S. Reich, Jacob C. Seidel, Marshall D. Shulman, Donald Smith, Wayne H. Stewart, Bernard Weissman, George Andros, Fred Buesser, Rob- ert Cummins, Fred DeLano, Robert J. Friedman, Ray- mond Goodman, Keith H. Tustison, Joseph Yager. Dorothy Briscoe, Florence Davies, HelenDiefendorf, Elaine Goldberg,° Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith, Har- riet Hathaway, Marion Holden, Lois King, Selma Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Rueger, Dorothy Shappeli, Molly Solomon, Laura Wino- grad, Jewel Wuerfel. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGERh..............RUSSELL B. READ CREDIT MANAGER R ..OBERT 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 andNational Advertising, David Winkworth; Classified ;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 Snyder, Margaretta Kollig, Ruth Clarke, Edith Hamilton, Ruth Dicke, Paula Joerger, "Mary Lou Hooker, Jane Heath, Bernadine Field, Betty Bowman, Judy Trosper, MarjorieeLangen- derfer, Geraldine Lehman, Betty Woodworth. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN M. O'CONNELL College Men 1)o Not Read. . . D T iE CURRENT ISSUE of The Sat- urday Review of Literature editor- ially admonishes male college graduates for not reading more books: "Men who have never seen the inside of a college crowd the libraries . . . The American adult men who have been graduated from colleges --from the best colleges - do not read books." This criticism directed at college graduates in general is certainly true of most Michigan grad- uates and undergraduates. There is no tradition of reading at Michigan, either among students or alumni. The Saturday Review blames the English depart- ments. We blame the students as well. While Eng- lish faculty men may have their shortcomings as well as all other groups, under no system, however utopian, can or should the primary responsibility. be shifted from the student. The student himself must know that reading is one of the most impor- tant components of that nebulous thing called an education. The process of becoming well-read is a highly selective activity, but, fortunately, help is fur- nished in book reviews and various reading lists. In the General Library of the University is a list of the world's 80 best novels. Everyone should find time to read these. The Alumni reading lists pub- lished by the Alumni Association are another val- uable guide to reading in any subject. The best reading class of the country should be the college graduates. It is chiefly up to the undergraduates to make it so. As Others See It War Inevitable WE WILL HAVE WAR! And why? You would think, seeing the strained and overburdened financial structure of every nation that no country could stand war. You would think, seeing the hor- rors of conflict portrayed so graphically by active peace societies, that no country would want war. But, friend, have you ever heard a bugle? Have you heard and not felt your heart lift within you as at its silver challenge? Are you unmoved by the tempo of marching men, paced by the beat of the drums? Have you seen the battle-planes, sullen black against grey cloud, and not had something happen to your blood, some pulse of excitement at their ominous swelling roar of blended sound? Have you ever seen the lean grey prow of a cruiser slice into the green heart of a wave, lifting herself with a flying plume of white spray, without being stirred by her power and beauty? If you are a woman, yes, for war brings only fear and heart-ache to women. But if you are a man, and young, chained to a flat and tasteless round of duties in a grey World, war promises color, action, adventure! What chance have the pale words of the pacifist against the stir of martial music, the panoplay of war? Let a little of the inevitable friction between countries develop. Immediately each is on the ag- gressive. Fdreigners are different, strange -and untrustworthy. Ambitious men seize upon the distrust and an- tagonism of the multitude as a way to power and foster it. Friction increases, distrust and hostility deepen, until someone in power makes an unwise move, and national honor is at stake. Then comes conflict, sure and swift, and the pacifists are bowled over like straws in a storm. For only a meager few of those who advocated peace at any price during a time of peace will havei the fortitude of mind to withstand the epithet "slacker" and the white feather, pinned on quickly and scornfully by some former friend in the hot, emotional stress of wartime. No, to get rid of war you'll have to destroy its quality of spectacle, its glamor and its adventure. Otherwise, it has too much lure for the young and adventurous in a drab and workaday world. -Oregon Daily Emerald. By BUD BERNARD This is a sad tale of woe. It seems that there was a professor at the University of Maryland who had unmitigated aversion to puns. This said professor was taken down with influenza and when he was well on his way to recovery a well-meaning freshman called upon him. The fellow inquired about the professor's health and when he was told the malady was lifting, the innocent replied, "So you're losing your grip, huh?" It is said the professor rolled over and died without a struggle. * * * * The following is a list of "don'ts" to be remem- bered by you people who expect to go to J-Hop by a dancing instructor at the University of Wash- ington. Don't dance with a "pump handle" motion. Don't grip your partner too tight, as it keeps her from stepping easily. Don't dance with your feet apart, but step di- rectly backward or forward. Don't bump into people -look where you are going. *I *, *, * This entertaining poem(?) is a contribution of P.D.: Here- I linger- Chew My finger; Class is boring- Feel Like snoring. Why Must teachers Copy preachers? l Time Seems to pass Too slowly in class. Saying that Harvard University cannot accept a gift from the Hitler political machine, the presi- dent of the university recently refused the offer of a $1,000 traveling scholarship by Dr. Ernest F. S. Hanfstaengl, Hitler's lieutenant. Dr. Hanfstaengl was graduated from Harvard in 1907. S* * * The funeral service which stands out strong- est in the memory of a certain class at the University of Kansas was one conducted for an eccentric, but beloved old professor. At the heighth of his oratory the minister said, "The shell has broken and the nut is gone." Just a few blushes remained today for several University of Minnesota students after answering winter quarter examinations - such as designat- ing the Dalai Lama, grand priest of Tibet as a "former premier of France." Other choices included: Theodore Bilbo (Senator from Mississippi) is the inventor of billboards. Dorothy Thompson, (Wife of Sinclair Lewis, who was recently expelled from Germany) and Hugh Johnson are senators from Mississippi. Washington Ouff TheRecord By SIGRID ARNE John Boettiger, who is rumored engaged to Anna Roosevelt Dall, was one of the wits around the White House press room until he left for his new job in New York. One day a swaggering stranger rushed in and fell into talk with Boetttiger. The stranger wanted it understood that he knew everyone. "You know Boettiger of the Chicago Tribune?" asked Boettiger with a straight face. "Sure, sure. Knew him out in 'Chi,'" said the stranger. "Well, if you see him tell him I'm looking for him," said Boettiger COL LEG IATE OBSERVER I '4- ,' - i ~. U ***~* Your Rooms Rhilni Are they all rented for next semester ..? Or, if you are looking for rooms, have you found any....? Renter or occupant, you will obtain the best results through use of Daily Classifieds. Cash Rates, tic per line (10C for three or more insertions) '! 2- I "* I The Red Scare In The Schools.. . Or T HE PRESENT RED SCARE being raised by the Hearst papers and other reactionary forces has been directed chiefly at the schools of the country, many of which, it is said, are "hotbeds of radicalism, harboring pro- fessors and students whose palms are being crossed with Moscow gold." In line with the talk of the times was a recent statement by Rear-Ad- miral Woodward that "college reds" should be summarily expelled. The counter-charge laid down by Professor Slos- son Sunday that such a censorship would produce intellectual sterility, although it does not purport to be a complete argument for the case, is clearly the point of view common to the faculties of our universities and others of what is so often spoken of as the "intellectual" class - commonly with a note of popular contempt. If Rear-Admiral Woodward, Hearst, the Chicago Tribune and others of their beliefs were allowed to have their way, the schools would be purged of these supposed menaces to our civilization and a rigid system set up which would certify unto Amer- ica forever the existing bunglesome state of affairs. An appeal to common prejudices by means of carefully chosen words is all that is necessary to make a convincing case for little minds, and there are more little minds than big ones in our world, The case for tolerance, though thoroughly sound, is a much more difficult one. The whole Hearst case, however, is built on a foundation of the most paradoxical and fallacious sort. Once censorship of radical thought is begun in the universities it can very logically be extended to all liberal thought and even to all thought an- tagonistic to Mr. Hearst or whatever supreme indi- vidual or set of individuals is invested with the position of censor. Once censorship is accepted for the universities, it can very easily be enlarged to include the press and every other agency devoted to the principle of liberty. This is not the fine "Americanism" that our "patriots" cry for. It is Fascism and, as such, equally dangerous with the very Communism against which the reactionaries began their case. To what state of mind the American public might be stirred up by the ambitiious red scare is diffidult to conjecture by the very ones who are the butt of so large a portion of it -the college faculty and IThe SOAP BOX J 'Intellectual Sterility' To the Editor: It is hardly conceivable that Professor Slosson could evince typical liberal confusion concerning Communism and Fascism. Yet in his recent inter- view, like the Hearst journalists whom he dis- credits, the professor lumps Communism and Fascism together without bothering to point out the extreme differences between the two systems. I realize, of course, that Professor Slosson limited his remarks to the common characteristics, censor- ship, of both Fascism and the first stages of a so- ciety leading to Communism. I also realize that Professor Slosson does not and would not delib- erately obfuscate issues. I call him to tasli, not so much for what he said, but for what he failed to say. For an incomplete analysis can be just as harmful as inaccurate presentation. And clarifica- tion between Fascism and Communism is essential in times like these when Hearst and others pur- posely distort the essence of Communism by stress- ing the likeness between the two systems and ignor- ing their vast differences. Although both Germany and Russia have dicta- torships, their aims are worlds apart. One repre- sents the last, desperate stand of a system doomed to die because of its inherent contradictions, while the other seeks to establish a new, classless society. That both countries should use the same weapons in battle is of incidental, and not paramount im- portance. ifications, and private ownership of the means of production. (No doubt Professor Slosson is aware of this; but he should have brought it out in his interview). Secondly, censorship does not necessarily result in intellectual sterility as Professor Slosson states; it all depends on what is censored and to what pur- pose. Does Professor Slosson know that more books were published last year in Russia than in the United States and England combined? That peo- ple are paid to go to school? That Shakespeare is played more often in Soviet Russia than in Eng- land? Let Professor Slosson first describe our own eco- nomic censorship*which largely limits artistic crea- tion to the hackneyed work demanded and sup- ported by the moneyed classes. Open censorship can be readily detected and fought; but it is this subtle type of censorship which is more pernicious because it prevents people from coming to open grips with it. With or without Hearst's proposed type of direct censorship, cultural barrenness of a sort exists in our universities. The teaching of social sciences presents a superficial, fragmentary, biased analysis of socialism and communism. Students take courses and leave them with the same misconceptions and preconceived ideas as when they started. Yes, we have freedom of speech and freedom of the press - but only as long as those in control of the social system are not threatened by a move- ment which dares to challenge their status. As G I O O THE MERCHANTS of Ann Ar- bor, the J-Hop is an OLD, OLD STORY; completing their stock of for- mal dress so that you might be in the right attire f or that gala occasion which, by the way, is not terribly far off, considering that examinations will start soon and really, tuie does fly. Now I'm going to let you in on a little secret. I've been doing a little snooping around the stores and found that, although they -are not dis- playing 'their formal wear in the win.- dows, they are all set to show you their complete selection and would be more than pleased to let you snoop through their stock before the rush starts, the same as I did. It won't be long, now, either, that you'll be seeing their ads in The Daily, because, you know, we stop pub- lishing in just a week and a half.., so if you're wise,you'll take this sugges- tion seriously and stop in at your fay- orite store andi "browse"! I