THE MICHIGAN DAILY id wil Szi-.... Pubiied every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- tro of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. MEMER swociatedt 1egiat__rss _ _ 9 3 4__ _ _ _ _i vtts s e WiCONSIN MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is eclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispathes 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 Ani Arbor, Michigan, as second -class matter.tSpecial rate sf postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription dring summner by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1.50. Durin 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. MichiganAve., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR4.............WILLIAM G. FERRIS CITY EDITORJON EAY :EDITORIAL DIRECTOR...............JH N HEALEY SPORTS EDITOR..T..ARTHUR AR E WOMEN'S EDITOR..................EIAWOR BLUM NIGHT EDITORS: Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaerty, Thomas E.Groehn, ThomasA F.leene, David G. Mac- donald, John M. O'Connell, Arthur M. au. SPORT'S ASSISTANTS: Marjorie Western, Kenneth Parker, William Reed, Arthur Settle. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara L. Bates, Dorothy Ges, Florence Harper, 10leanor Johnson, Josephine McLean, Margaret D. Phalan, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneider, Marie Murphy. REPORTERS: Rex Lee Beach, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Sholdon M. Ellis, William H. Fleming, Richard G. 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, Helen Diefendorf, Elaine Goldberg, Betty Goldstein, Olive Griffith, Har- riet Hathaway, Marion Holden, Lois King, Selma Levin, Elizabeth Miller, Melba Morrison, Elsie Pierce, Charlotte Rueger. Dorothy Shappell, Molly Solomon, Laura Wino- grad. Jewel Wuerfel.r BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ................RUSSELL B. READ CREDIT MANAGER................ROBERT S.BWARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......JANE BASSETT DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, John Og- den; Service Department. Bernard Rosenthal; Contracts, 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, John Park, F. Allen Upson, Willis Tomlinson, HomerrLathrop. Tom Clarke. Gordon Cohn. Stanley Joffe, Jerome I. Balas, Charles W. Barkdull, Daniel C. Beisel, Lewis E. Bulkeley, John C. Clark, Robert J. Cooper, Richard L. Croushore, Herbert D. Fallender, John T. Guernsey, Jack R. Gustaf- son. Morton Jacobs, Ernest A. Jones, Marvin Kay, Henry J. Kose. Donald R. Knapp, William C Knecht, R. A. Kronenberger, William D. Loose, William R. Mann, Lawrence Mayerfeid, John F. McLean, Jr.Lawrence M. Roth, Richard M. Samuels, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Starsky, Nathan B. Steinberg.( WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betty Cavender, Margaret Cowie, Bernadine Field, Betty Greve, Mary Lou Hoker, Helen Shapland, Betty Simonds, Grace Snyder, Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Mary McCord. NIGHT EDITOR: COURTNEY A. EVANS ......Conversation Piece ,. NSMILING, the American Mercury pips forth with a burbling comment on the critics of caps and gowns in the nation's capitol. It offers, in its May issue, $500 to the under- graduate of any American college who writes the best essay on the subject: "The Professors Got the Country Into This Mess; But We Can Get it Out." "Realizing that no one knows what a professor is trying to say or do as well as an undergraduate," they say, "the American Mercury makes this appeal to the students of the nation for a solution of the difficulties into which their former teachers have sunk us almost beyond recall." Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their professors' party. Sit down tonight and write your congressman; get him to deny the vicious rumor that some pro- fessor gasped out that Ph.D. stood for Phederal Housing Department -it isn't so. H. L. Mencken (remember?) is one of the judges. Don't neglect to write the American Mercury; tell them how we would run the country just as easily as we solved our problem of student government. Supplying A Necessary Service .. . T HE RECEPTION of large numbers of visitors is one of the cardinal functions of an educational institution the size of the University of Michigan. This University daily plays host to many guests, including friends of the institution, parents of undergraduates, high school students, some of them prospective undergraduates, and convention guests. Many of these people are, naturally enough, in- terested in making a detailed examination of the vast plant of the University. Heretofore, there has been no responsible authority to conduct guests through buildings and around the grounds. This important service in the past hasgat best been performed in a kind of haphazard fashion, ex- cept for those occasions on which the University has made a special effort. Practically the only means of guiding the visitors has been by students who have volunteered to do so. Now, through the joint cooperation of the student and business offices of the Union and the League, the University will have, all the year versity. Further, it will, by educating the people of the state and others about the institution, prove a very beneficial program. Such an effort is to be heartily commended as well as encouraged. The Daily Illini suggests that the Sing Sing prison football team is trying to get a game with the Army team to prove that the pen is mightier than the sword. A co-ed at Woodbury College who has the use of only one hand is two weeks ahead of her class- mates in a typewriting class. The rest of the girls are probably just average stenographers. Asi Others SeeIt__ Alumni And Students (From the DePaulia) [HE SCHOOLMEN tell us that the Supreme Being has no past or future, but only an ever- lasting present. In one sense the alumni of a school are the very oppoite. They have no present; they are the past, and they are the future. They are the students that were: the beauty queens, the prom leaders, the letter men, the social lions, the straight "A" people of the past. They were everything that makes a school and a live student body. They were feted and flunked, praised and preached to; they plodded and played, studied and sang. They are the stern principles of schools 'and the serious-voiced lawyers before the bar of today, but they once wore a white sweater and turned cartwheels before a wild cheering section of the past. The doctor, the clergyman, the public man of today once cut classes and attended pep rallies. The undergraduate body is not misunderstood by these people. Their ambitions for De Paul are the same. They are the history of the school, and are deeply interested in the future of the school. And so these old grads here offer their hands in a common cause and plead for a closer bond with the present student body. Let us face the coming task. We are the past, you are the present; together let us make a glorious future for De Paul. Professors Must Produce (From The Minnesota Daily) COACHING ATHLETICS is probably subject to more severe competition than any other form of teaching. If a coach does not produce winning teams, he is out. Of course, allowance is made for bad years; every coach has them. But anyone who produces consistently poor teams faces the pros- pect of looking shortly for another "parish." If coaches are hired to produce winners, then this ruthless corpetition is necessary. There are plenty of young men with young ideas and a world of enthusiasm who can take fair material and whip it into a cham ionship squad. It can be argued, of course, that a coach is not hired merely to turn out a winner six years out of 10, or more. There are still some people who think that the greatest value -of athletics is not included in the size of the gate receipts, but is found rather in the attributes of character and co-operation instilled in young men. But if athletics are conducted, primarily with a view to turning out annual winners, then a moral for education may be drawn from the American athletic situation. It is this. Assuming that most colleges aim at turning out useful citizens of soci- ety, and assuming that they can best realize this aim by instructing the student body to solve prob- lems on the basis of facts and theories evolved through time, then it follows that the best educated students will be those who have sat at the feet of the wisest instructors. In other words, it is very probable that the cqlibre of most American colleges can be raised merely by allowing the simple eco- nomical lows of supply and demand to operate in a situation reasonably approximating free compe- tition. This very condition is likely to prevail in the near future. Students have become more discriminat- ing in the past few years. Usually quick to detect weaknesses in men, they have heretofore allowed themselves merely to lose interest in courses taught by poor instructors. They are discarding that apathetic indifference to a great extent. They are demanding full value received for their tuition and time. They are no longer satisfied with halfhearted instructors who have never been successes them- selves and who have never produced a student whose success is due to their teaching. Victory, they are beginning to realize, is one of the funda- mental human objectives; nor is it sought alone on the gridiron or cinder track. In The Right Direction (From the Detroit Collegian) THE University Student Council took a progres- sive stride Tuesday when it cut in half the number of superfluous college officers. The new setup allows a president and a secretary-treasurer for each freshman, sophomore and junior class in each college. The senior officers remain as before. Although commendable, 'we believe the council's action might and should have gone further. What is to be the function of the secretary-treasurer of the numerous lower classes? This office is un- necessary and should have been eliminated with the rest. The present arrangement of the senior class officers is far from satisfactory. Four act for the class as a whole. The officers impede the smooth administration of class affairs. Petty rivalries and jealousies have sprung up among the senior officers of the various colleges. No one has authority to act for the class as a whole. The officers think in terms of their own college rather than in terms of the university. A consolidation of the officers which will clearly define where authority lies " is essential, and yet some members of the council fear that such action would be too drastic. As one member says, "When a person is elected president COLLEGlATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD Now that June is looming ahead the following contribution seems most apropos to the class of '325. Consider the senior - he toileth for four years and knoweth not which end is up. He arriveth at this fair University confident in himself and for one year all goeth well( if he lasts that long). During the second year, he wendereth if all the knowledge handed him by the venerable grey-beards is on the up and up and reasoneth that maybe he is wrong. In this junior year he arriveth at the conclu- sion that "God's in his heaven" and that every- body else is wrong. In his fourth and final year he sits around waiting for June to come so he -can graduate and go to work. He goes to bat and dribbleth a roller to the pitcher and is tackled for a 20 yard loss. He runneth the 220 and stumbleth over the second co-ed from the left. About a month before graduation (or about this time of the year) he bestirreth himself to complete a semester's work. When no job comes in he comes to the conclusion that the world is a mean nut and that he left his nut- cracker at home. Finally the great day ar- riveth with much clatter and cheers. All the great and near great come from miles around, including the fair damsel from Peoria. Yea, verily, consider the senior -he toileth but he reapeth a damn sight less than he ex- pected to. Here is an actual letter received by a Univer. sity of Illinois senior: "Dear Harry: Mary Virginia tells me you want her down in Champaign this week-end. I am asking you dear, to take good care of my little girl. I have always felt that I could trust you, so let this time be no exception and send her back safe and sound. If I didn't think I could trust you I would forbid her going. Have a good time both of you, and let me hear from you afterwards if you have time. With kindest regards, Mrs. "Dear Bud," writes B.M.N., '36, "add these to your list of silly similes:" As insignificant as Hitler without his moustache. As famous as the Dionnes without the quints. As effective as Father Coughlin without the radio. As useless as Huey Long. . . ., Damaged by a Dog-Deuter? O4&/oel f. 4-"" OP. 7ryjj4r p n. When Horace Hippohoof drops one of his rock. crushers on Ermintrude Muggins' dainty instep ... Ermie simply grips the injured dog in one hand and a sympathetic Old Gold in the other. . Old Gold has a talent for soothing stepped-on feelings. AT TRYING TIMES ... TRY A Srwoti OLD GOLD A Washington BYSTANDER Neree Alix Benefit By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, April 22. 19 ERE is a New Deal cabinet officer's working schedule, presented by himself to a congres- sional committee: "Since accepting this position, which I did with a great deal of pleasure, I have worked from early morning until late at night. Customarily I am at the office at 8 o'clock in the morning. On winter days sometimes I am 15 or 20 minutes late. "I work through until 6:15 without pausing for lunch. I go home-for dinner. I come back at night and work until 10:15. That is true of Saturdays also. Sundays I 'knock off' at 1 p.m. and take work home with me. I do the same on holidays. "Now, I love it; and I seem to thrive on it; but I think I could do a more effective job if I had an under-secretary as an understudy." The witness speaking is Secretary Ickes. And on that showing the Senate voted an under-secre- tary of the interior into the bill without a ripple of protest. jAD SEN. HUEY LONG not been busily king- fishing in Louisiana just then, Ickes might have had a tougher time. The secretary and the senator were shooting "hot shots" at each other in the news that same day. Ickes called Long the "emperor" of Louisiana. Long replied that Ickes could go "slap damn to hell." In Long's absence, however, the Senate saw a rather unusual tribute paid to the interior de- partment head with his multiple additional jobs. That implacable foe of new government jobs, Senator King of Utah, wanted to know whether the undersecretary would be an additional aide of just a change in rank and pay for an assistant secre- tary. The committee chairman said it was an additional job. "No member of the cabinet has such manifold duties imposed upon him as has the secretary of the interior," he added. "I should like to give him more duties because he is efficient," King said. And that set Senator Lewis of Illinois off in a characteristically flowery tribute to Ickes. ** THE INCIDENT served to bring out what addi- tional regular duties have been added to the interior department by transfers and consolida- tions of permanent bureaus during the present administration. These are quite aside from the special functions as to PWA and the oil adminis- tration which Mr. Ickes exercises by Presidential airection. There are 80 or so national parks, cemeteries, battlefield reservations, monuments and the like, scattered all over- the country, now under Ickes' direction, to say nothing of the troublesome prob- lems Puerto Rico adds to his lot. And after more than two years of the grind, he still loves it. Which TRACK MEET TApril 30 Admission, All Seats, 25c Willis Ward This meet is being sponsored by the Varsity Track Team for the benefit of NEREE ALIX, two-mile star, who suffered a compound fracture of the leg in the California meet. All proceeds will go to Alix to help him remain in school. Competition will be between members of the University's Indoor Cham-