THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,I } -te somewhere to have put his hand up. X would then have known his own circle was red and would have put his hand down. Y could have followed the same reasoning, and would have put his hand down. As long as all the hands remain up all the circles must be red. Of course, if any two circles were blue, one hand would have not gone up in the first place, while if all the circles were blue, no hands would have gone up. Applying that knowledge the wisest man knows all the circles must be red and that his accordingly, must be red. . ...All right, all right, you try writing it down on paper. Pubisled every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Association and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER ca~5ocidttcd allegiat4 rs -,934 ] a 19-35 MAMSON 'VVSCONSI 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...................EIANOR BLUM NIGHT EDITORS: Courtney A. Evans, John J. Flaherty, Thomas E. Groehn, Thomas 13. 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, Rleanor Johnson, Josephine McLean, Margaret D. Phalan, Rosalie Resnick, Jane Schneidei, Marie Murphy. aEPORTERS: Rex Lee Beach, Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Sheldon 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- rond 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 lueger. Dorothy Shappell, Molly Solomon, Laura Wino- grad, 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 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, Homer Lathrop, 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. Klose, Donald R. Knapp, William C_ Knecht, R. A. Kronenberger, William D. Loose, William R. Mann, Lawrence Mayerfeld, John F. McLean, Jr., Lawrence M. Roth, Richard M. Samuels, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Starsky, Norman B. Steinberg. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betty Cavender, Margaret Cowie, Bernadine Field, Betty Greve, Mary Lou Hooker, Helen Shapland, Betty Simonds, Grace Snyder, Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Mary McCord, Adele Polier. NIGHT EDITOR: THOMAS H. KLEENE New And Old Union Officials .. . As Others See It_ Third-Party Jitters (From the Baltimore Sun) N O ONE CAN SAY with reasonable assurance that a new party will not be organized; or, if such a party is formed, that it will not raise havoc with either or both of the major parties. It would seem the better part of wisdom for the latter, but especially the Democrats, who are at the moment in power and so in a position to get something done, to cease worrying about pos- sible third-party opposition and begin working on a program that will meet the needs of the peo- ple. The party that does this need have little to fear from a third-party threat. The Mountain To Maho met (From the.Brown Daily Herald) AFAIR SAMPLE of fickle youth's interest in de- bating was shown in the turnout of two men, last Wednesday evening, to take part in the compe- tition for places on the sophomore and junior teams in the Hicks Prize Debate. The time was when, according to the Harvard Crimson, "The tricks and traps of the logicians were as keenly ap- preciated as the generalship of an astute quarter- back." Today even the bait of $50 in prizes can- not lure the wary undergraduate, fearful for his reputation as a man-about-town and socialite, out of his lair of sophistication. Truly as one person would have it, the radio and the movies, and perhaps the blondes, have driven out debating. Until another passing whim shall again seize the undergraduate and debating shall again become the fad of the cream of Brown men, nothing can be done about it. All we can do is sit back on our haunches and bewail at the top of our lungs the days that used to be. Harvard, among others, has tried to bring back this past glory through the use of one of the ene- my's weapons, radio. National and international debates by means of this long-distance agency have been held, and are becoming more and more popular. More power to them. America's Responsibilities (From the Kansas City Star) N THE WORLD as it is constituted today no nation can achieve safety by burying its head in the sand. The United States, it is true, cannot afford to make commitments that would involve it in "Europe's everlasting quarreling." But neither can it afford not to recognize how some of its own policies, such as high tariffs and the Silver Pur- chase Act, have contributed to the present dis- turbed condition of international relations; nor can it afford to withhold enlightened cooperation for peace, wherever that is possible without polit- ical entanglements. The University of Virginia recently announced the organization of two divisions of a student po- lice corps, one to protect students from theft and one to protect University property. How about a organization here to protect police property from theft? : COLLEGIATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD A former college student obtained a job as travelling salesman for a jewelry firm. 'He visited a certain small town and sold the pro- pritor of its general store an order of jewelry. When the jewelry arrived it was not as repre- sented and the merchant consequently re- turned it. But the wnolesale house nevertheless, at- tempted to collect the bill, and drew a sight- draft on the merchant through the local bank, which returned the draft unhonored. The wholesaler then wrote to a law firm in the village and asked about the financial standing of the merchant and the firm replied that it was O.K. By return mail the whole- sale dealer requested the firm through its attorney to collect the bill, and they received the following reply: "The undersigned is the merchant on whom you attempted to palm off your worthless goods. The undersigned is presidest and owner of the bank to which you sent the sight draft. I "The undersigned is the owner of the law firm to whom you wrote, and the undersigned is the lawyer whose services you sought to ob- tain for your nefarious business. If the under- signed were not also pastor of the church at this place, he would tell you to go to h-." *.. Given: Two Southern California students, a vio- lated speeding ordinance, 1,000 pennies, $10 fine, one police officer. Results: Said police officer in one highly per- iturbed state of mind. Student number one was arrested, called for fine money from his fraternity brother, who ap- peared with a cigar box containing the 1,000 pen- nies. The copper accepted the coppers for the fine with numerous uncomplimentary and sultry re- marks about the juvenile humor of college stu- dents. * * . * . . A sophomore on this campus and inciden- tally a member of The Daily sport staff was financially embarrassed last Sunday, Mother's Day, and wanting to send a wire, seit the fol- lowing telegram collect: "Greetings on Mother's Day. This costs me nothing, Dad will pay." He received the following reply from his Dad: "Your Mother's Day greetings received in-rhyme. Left me with only one thin dime. The next time you send a wire collect, it will receive a round trip you can expect." * * * * Not that it's important, but girls at the Uni- versity of Washington affirm that men look better smoking pipes than cigarettes. Since girls have now taken up cigarettes, men no longer' appear very masculinecsmoking them, they have decided. One of the. co-eds declared that the rea- son men look more masculine with pipes is that they have to thrust out their jaws to hold on to them. A Latin profdssor at Indiana University came into his classroom and made the fol- lowing statement: "Open your text, gentlemen. Line four inmy book and line eight in most of yours.- It must have been a thrill - in fact we are posi - tive it was a most overwhelming sensation when two co-eds at Syracuse University tripped along the corridors of the anthropology department and smacked up against a five-foot alligator which had escaped from its cage. II . Just Before Exams Are lIniDemand In the next few weeks, hundreds of students will be completing hundreds of theses in that charac- teristic last-nute rush. Why not extend a help- ing hand to your fellow student and at the same time increase your earnings as a typist. Through the medium of The Michigan Daily Classified Column you will find ready businiess. Special weekly rates for "Typing Wanted" acts and dis- count for cash payments. Stop at 420 Maynard Street today or call 2-1214 for further particulars. Student Publications Building The Mich igan Daily T HE APPOINTMENT of two new ex- ecutive officers for the Union marks the end of the terms of a president and recording secretary who, because of their uninterrupted devotion to their tasks, have done much to further the aims for which the Union was first founded. They have planned and carried out a program of student activities which has interested under- graduates and also encouraged their active par- ticipation. Next Monday night at the annual Installation Banquet, the two retiring officers, Allen D. Mc- Combs, '35, president, and Douglas R. Welch, '35, recording secretary, will be formally replaced by Wencel A. Neumann, '36E, and John C. McCarthy, '36, respectively. In a University as large as the University of Michigan, the task of maintaining an organiza- tion that represents all the men students on the campus in the real sense of the word is difficult. It is to be hoped that the incoming officials will carry on this responsibility as well as their prede- cessors. It's The Best We Can Do... CHAIN LETTER FEVER of one sort or another has too strong a grip on the public just now to be dissipated by any other fad. Nevertheless, partially verified rumors are abroad to the effect that a certain problem labeled "Brain Teaser," published in the As Others See It column of this paper Sunday morning, has started a wave of thinking on the campus. Lest another extra-curricular activity, inad- vertently launched by the editors in a dull moment, absorb too much of the time of the student body, The Daily hastens to make known the solution of the poser. Sad to say, no written exposition (lack- ing the clarity of gestures) can be so completely satisfactory as to save thought on the reader's part entirely. This is the sticker: The king wishes to choose the wisest man from among three of his sub- jects, He tells them that he is going to blind- fold them and paint one circle in red or blue on each of their foreheads. When the blindfolds are removed, each man who sees a red circle on the forehead of either of the others is to raise his right hand. When any one of them figures out the color of his own circle he is to lower his hand. The An Editor Goes On A Crying Jag Ghosts At Hard-Hearted Frank's Bedside Move Writer To Sobs By WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE in the Emporia Gazette T MIGHT INFLICT a hardship, but to our notion all editorial writers should be compelled to read the newspapers. No man should be a slave to facts - there are limits within which fancy should be allowed to play - but an occasional fact, properly handled, never hurt any editorial. For instance, an editorial writer for the Topeka State Journal, urging pre-payment of the soldiers' bonus, spreads his verbal wings and soars aloft as follows: "The demands for immediate payment of the bonus contributed its share to the election of Mr. Roosevelt. If any ghost troubles the slumbers of the smiling man in the White House, it must be that of the man in uniform in desperate finan- cial straits, calling for help." Our emotions are pretty unstable these days. We cry easily. Ever since 1929, just let someone start talking about his wrongs and our chest be- gins to heave, our nose to run, our eyes to fill to their brims and in a minute we are off, crying as though our little heart would break, our head buried in our arms and our slight frame wracked with tremulous sob after big tremulous sob. But before we let ourselves go this time and have a good cry, we would like to finish what we started out to say about how editorial writers ought to read the news columns now and then. If the Topeka State Journal's editorialist had bothered to read his own paper, he would remember that during the campaign of 1932, considerable head was turned on Candidate Roosevelt on this point. His Republican critics charged that, by his silence, he was getting votes under false pretenses, by letting people assume he was for the bonus. So Candidate Roosevelt broke that silence. He came out against the bonus, said he wasn't in favor of paying it out of an empty treasury. This made big headlines in every paper in the country. * * * * It seems the fellows left behind in France have only themselves to blame, for if they had only kept their heads down in the trenches, or crouched lower in the shell holes, or wrangled a job driving a truck in the S. O. S., then they, too, would be eligible for a bonus. So the ones who came through alive are provid- ing all the ghosts. (Just a minute, our tears have smeared up our typewriter ribbon). It's all worked out by a system. Eighteen hours a day, sleek, well- paid lobbyists for the veterans' organizations work on Congressmen and bother the President. Then during the remaining six hours, the ghosts come on their trick. They punch the time clock, file through the Lincoln Study and up to the East Room, climb on the foot-rail of the big four-poster bed, and begin to make it hot for Hard-Hearted Frank with their big pathetic eyes. What with the lobby- ists by day and the ghosts by night, things begin to look pretty well set for the boys back home who have been sending the telegrams, paying the lobbyists and furnishing the ghosts with whatever it takes in the way of mileage and expenses to maintain a ghost in Washington. The trouble is that the President clings to some dumb idea about the Forgotten Man. He thinks that any money we can borrow should go to ending unemployment, for old-age pensions and the social security program. He stubbornly insists that the jobless and the aged should come first. He has even had the insolence to ask those poor, poor fellows, the able bodies ex-service men, to remember their obligations to citizenship, not to embarrass their country by demanding pre-pay- ment of a debt 10 years before it is due - but there - we can't go on - tears have wilted our collar and spoted our tie - we keep seeing those sad- eyed ghosts of able-bodied ex-service men perched on the walnut foot rail of that four-poster bed looking pathetic because the Old Meanie won't take two billion dollars away from the old people and COMING OUT SOON! /- Final Campus Sale TodaWy and Tomorrow'f FULL PAYMENT PART PAYMENT