__THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDN. ubiisaed every morning except Monday during the versity year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- 1of Student Publications. [ember of the Western Conference Editorial Association 1 tht Big Ten News Service. MEMBER Asociated 'oleiate ras 1934 1935=- MAUSo WScONSIN MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and the local news lished herein. All rights of republication of special dis- ches are reserved. nteredratrthe Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as rnd class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Ord Assistant Postmaster-General. abscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, 0. During :egular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, i0. Ifices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street. a Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. epresentatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 11 t 42nd Street, New York, N.Y.-400 N. Michigan Ave., cago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 NTAGING EDITOR ................WILLIAM G. FERRIS 'Y EDITOR ............. ..JOHN HEALEY ETORIAL DIRECTOR............RALPH G. COULTER RTS EDITOR ....................ARTHUR CARSTENS MEN'S EDITOR ......................EI|ANOR BLUM xHT EDITORS: Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaherty, rhomas E. Groehn, Thomas E. Kleene, David G. Mac- lonald, John M. O'Connell, Arthur M. Taub. IRTS ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Kenneth Parker, Villiam Reed, Arthur Settle. MEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara L. Bates, Dorothy Gies, ?lorence Harper, mleanor Johnson, Josephine McLean, Margaret D. Phalan, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Muivphy. ?ORTERS: Rex Lee Beach, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. "onger, Sheldon M. Ellis, William H. Fleming, Richard 3. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Bernard Levick, Fred W. Veal, Robert Pulver, Lloyd S. Reich, Jacob C. Seidel, Marshall D. Shulman, Donald Smith, Wayne H. Stewart, 3ernard Weissman. George Andros, Fred Buesser, Rob- ,rt Cummins, Fred DeLano, Robert J. Friedman, Ray- aond Goodman, Keith H. Tustison, Joseph Yager )orothy Briscoe, Florence Davies, Helen Diefendorf, laine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith, Har- let Hathaway, Marion Holden, Lois King, Selma Levin, lizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte lueger. Dorothy Shappell, Molly Solomon, Laura Wino- ;rad. Jewel Wuerfel. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 JNESS MANAGER..............RUSSELL B.READ "DIT MANAGER...........ROBERT S. WARD MIEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .......JANE BASSETT ARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, John Og- .en; Service Department. Bernard Rosenthal; Contracts, roseph Rothbard; Accounts, Cameran Hall; Circulation nd National Advertising, David Winkworth; Classified Wdvertising and Publications, George Atherton. INESS ASSISTANTS: William Jackson, William arndt, Ted Wohlgemuith, Lyman Bittman, John,. Park, '. Allen Upson, Willis Tomlinson, Homer Lathrop, Tom flarke, Gordon Cohn, Merrell Jordan, Stanley Joffe, iichard E. Chaddock. MEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betty Cavender, Margaret owie, Bernadine Field, Betty Greve, Mary Lou Hooker, ieln Shapland, Betty Simonds, Marjorie Langenderfer, trace Snyder, Betty Woodworth, Betsy Baxter, Margaret entley, Anne Cox, Jane Evans, Ruth Field, Jean Guion, Jildred Haas, Ruth Lipkint, Mary McCord, Jane Wil- oughby. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, in charg- ing corrupt political interference with relief administration in Ohio and in plac- ing relief in that state under Federal direction, has affirmed the non-political nature of his per- sonal administration. If the governor of Ohio were a Republican it would have been a grand political coup to prove him implicated in a "shakedown" of men and business firms who had sold goods to the Ohio Relief Administration. The fact that the governor is a Democrat, however, shows that the President is disregarding party organization in'an attempt to see that the public of Ohio and the nation is dlone justice. While this may lose the President some votes among Ohio Democrats and badly upset the party organization in that state, it will surely gain him support among many other groups and in the country at large. It frequently happens that the fairest treatment of any political problem, though it alienates a strong faction, will, in the end, react favorably. The failure of many of our Presidents to see beyond a party organization has branded them in- competents. President Roosevelt has apparently learned that the Chief Executive of the United States is the leader of the whole country, not merely the head of a political party. The SOAP BOX 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 vrords. Bluebook Phobia To the Editor: I have been on campus two years and it is just growing upon me that I am not learning a hell of a lot. Looking back on my three semesters, all I remember is the constant threat of bluebooks. I think I am developing a bluebook phobia. My whole academic experience has been a continual cramming for bluebooks. If I memorize enough of what the instructor has said that that I can give it back to him on a bluebook, I pass a course and I am said to be learned. As for real knowledge, I believe that I have since lost all I had before I came here. I begin to think that maybe the system of education is not what it is cracked up3 to be. I do not consider myself wise enough to of- fer a substitution for the present system but I do suggest that the element of fear be removed. In- stead of the scare of examinations, we should try to instill a love for learning. The present sys- tem is too much like beating a child to make him learn, and, at that, to make him learn some- thing that is of no value. Disappointed Student. CL LE+GIATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD For no reason at all, a marriage involving one of the professors at Cornell University and one of the foremost families in Ithaca was receiving an inordinate amount of pub- livity. So great was the furor indeed, that even the Cornell Daily Sun, ordinarily indifferent to such marital ventures, felt constrained to give some publicity to the event. And so en the day of the ceremony one of the tryouts was let loose with instructions ft turn in a story that was full of color and interest. The night editor was just about to tear out lhis hair at the lateness of the hour when the neophyte reporter walked in. "Well," shouted the editor, "where is it? Where's your story? And by gosh, you'd bet- ter pray it's a good one." "Oh," said the budding young journalist, "there isn't any story. The bridegroom never even showed up." So many students in the colleges of Vienna, Austria, were committing suicide rather than go home with poor marks that the department of education volunteered to organize a group of in- dividuals to take the reports home and break the bad news gently. Here at Michigan we have the doubtful privilege of having our marks mailed to whatever location we choose to select. It seems hard to imagine despondent and discouraged Michiganders jumping into the Huron river, or off the observatory by the hundreds merely be- cause of bad grades. Voice over the phone at the University of Mississippi: "Is Mr. Rockefeller there." "No." "Tsk! Tsk! And you told us rushees he was a member of your fraternity." Coach Dick Harlow, new mentor of the Harvard University football squad, has a new slant on the great game, and the alumni, to judge by their cheers, love it. While other coaches plead that the game be kept "clean" and "unprofessionalized," Mr. Harlow says, "Keep it rugged." "When the legs of our youth are only developed by pressing on an accelerator," he says, "let us do al] in our power to keep the game rugged. It is the only game now which a lady cannot play." Add this to your list of definitions coming from the Carnegie Tech Puppet: A vacuum is a conversation between a bridge fiend who dees not play golf and a golf fiend who does not play bridge. A young attorney recently graduated from the University of Indiana, pleading his first case, had been retained by a farmer to prosecute a railway company for killing 24 hogs. He wanted to impress the jury with the magnitude of the injury. "Twenty-four hogs Gentlemen. Twenty-four, twice the number there are in the jury box." A Washington BYSTANDER I3 KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, March 19. HERE APPEARS to be no good reason why President Roosevelt should not go fishing off Florida whenever the spirit moves him. The legislative kettle is boiling vigorously; but with small prospect of producing anything but a steam of words at an early date. Unless Mr. Roosevelt contemplates far more active and direct personal intervention in the legis- lative debate as to issues to come than he has yet resorted to at this session, his absence from Wash- ingtcn this month for a week or two hardly would delay any important measures. The Senate's slow-motion show on work-relief resolution is an object lesson. The variety of rea- sons for all that delay runs the whole gamut of conflicting viewpoints in Congress, economic, social or just plain political, If there ever was a political Pandora's box, that is it. UST TO ADD to the rough going, Mr. Roose- ! velt tossed his anti-holding-company message into the legislative pot. In a good many ways it was the most stingingly-worded Roosevelt message to date. There is a good deal about it to suggest that whatever his fishing plans, he expects to be right on the job when that particular bill is on it: passage. That will not be until long after the Florida fishing excursion. Exactly what moved the White House to time the anti-holding-company blast exactly as was done does not appear. At a guess, however, it was the publicity mobilization of opponents of the pending bill. To that extent, these opponents ap- pear to have chucked a boomerang. They not only brought presidential wrath down on their heads, but face a Federal Trade Commission investiga- I tion of their publicity activities. SENATOR CLARK estimated that half a million letters had been dumped on congressional desks in a matter of weeks due to that activity. His own one-day mail - and a "dull" Sunday bag at that -included 6,000 letters, he said. In a week he received 15,000. Senators McKellar and Bach- man of Tennessee were so swamped that they re- sorted to a joint statement in the Congressional Record to promise ultimate answers to their con- stituents. The press gallery well could believe Clark's esti- mates. For weeks, a rain of holding company handouts had been pouring on newspaper desks, much of it from the Washington headquarters of the utility investors federation. orau n + i , Do you have typing to be done, or do you want typing to do? Or, have you lost anything In any case, your pest medium is Theichi gan Daily Classified Column CASH RATE.S LINE Ic PER (Short term charge advertisernents accepted), Pace your ad now and your resul s l COme i mi ately EDITOR: DAVID G. MACDONALD ublicizing lie Hopwoods** T HE HOPWOOD AWARDS present an unusual opportunity for the .versity to attract a class of students not ex- ssly solicited up to the present time. Instead the pwoods have remained a contest indulged in a large extent by students who happen to be at University. This certainly should not be the e with the largest college literary awards in country. y the will of the late Avery Hopwood the Uni- sity was bequeathed a considerable sum of ney and the Regents in accepting this money 'e empowered "to invest and keep the same in- ted and to use the income therefrom in per- uity, as prizes to be known as 'The Avery Hop- >d and Jule Hopwood Prizes' to be awarded iually to the students in the department of toric of the University of Michigan, who per- rn the best creative work in the fields of drama- Writing, fiction, poetry, and the essay." 'he will itself implies, and the circular issued the Hopwood committee states, that the pur- e of the awards is to stimulate and encourage ative writing. The simple fact that the contest being held yearly and that sufficient entries are ularly being received to warrant the awarding' the prizes shows that the contest has stimulat- interest here. 3ut should not a contest of this size-whose jor awards this year total $8,000 - be able to mulate interest outside the University? In se times particularly it should, and if the proper ps are taken it can draw students to Michigan o are interested in developing their creative rary talents. Ehe Hopwood Awards need publicizing abroad, ether by the University itself or by the Hopwood nmittee. A contest of this size should be one of ire than local interest. The Hopwoods are not either purpose or scope a contest of the kind )nsored by a campus magazine, but one which, rough the proper efforts should make the Uni- sity known as a place for the "encouraging creative work in writing." The University has e chance to gain a national reputation as a ater for young writers. [t .is doubtful whether any of the winners of e year's freshman awards came here primarily th the intention of entering the contest, and no ubt most of the entrants in this year's major ntest, each of whom stands the chance of win- ng a prize of $2,000, had heard nothing of the Tar is before they. came to the University. This a situation that can easily be corrected by the We'll Take .Your Word To the Editor: There's one department on this campus that does much, yet is mentioned so little. That depart- ment is the Health SERVICE. I've capitalized the word service because that is just what you receive here. (I'm writing from a bed in the infirmary.) Everybody from the doctor down to Bob (the porter) serves the patients-excellently. The nurses are splendid, efficient, smiling and immediately come to your bedside when you press the buzzer-and they come without a grouch. I've been in hospitals before, many times and in dif- ferent places, and therefore immediately appre- ciated the fine service of our nurses. The only trouble with the Health Service is that it's a little small. We really need a bigger (not better-it's perfect now) Health Service to avoid crowding during the rush sick season. Maybe you won't print this letter-maybe you'll fill the space with some other letter dealing with some campus antics, but that's all right. Yet I think it should be published because it carries a message which should interest everyone. You your- self may be up here in my bed when I leave. -Joseph P. Andriola. Bought By The Capitalists? To the Editor: We give you credit, as the editor of a well- balanced college news-organ, for reprinting, last week, an editorial "Freedom of Speech," from the Chicago Drovers Journal, via the Chicago Trib- une. We are certain that your sole purpose was to give your readers a glimpse at the magnificent intelligence characteristic of Tribune editors in choosing such a far-seeing and analyzing viewpoint from the Drovers' columns, and using it for their "editorial of the Day." We are, however, satisfied that, now you have enlightened your readers and convinced them to be content with the sincere efforts of your own writing, you will be averse to further search for startling facts about the Washington administra- tion, as set forth in the Tribune pick-up. If, however, you should at any other time feel the need for copy, similar to last week's editorialI - that is, if it is impossible to make a tight editor- ial page by letting out type and inserting leads -please let us know. We have access to an excel- lent joke book. Not one, we regret, which will bring such outright murmurs of surprise and amusement as Chicago Tribune editorials, but which can be almost as effective. If we thought there were any of your readers incapable of marking that particular bit of prop- aganda, referred to above, for what it was worth, we might easily expose it. But we are crediting your readers with at least the capacity for think- ing -Geoffrey McPhie. "Huey Long Calls New Deal St. Vitus Dance'," . ..... .... L Someoe Shuld ear of This I