*o THE MICHIGAN DAILY The SOAP BOX Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editoria opinion of The Daily. Anonymous contributions will be disregarded. The narnesof communicants w, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief. the editor reserving the right to condense Hell Week Menace To the Editor: It was with a feeling approaching amazement and amounting almost to disbelief that I read in the current issue of the Michigan Alumnus that the Interfraternity Council at the University of Mich- igan had voted in favor of the continuance of Hell Week. As a national president of a social fra- ternity, the editor of a national fraternity mag- azine and the director of the new service for the National Interfraternity Conference, I had felt that I knew something about the trend of fra- ternity movements, and I have taken considerable satisfaction in what seemed to be the fact, that Hell Week, one of the greatest menaces to the fraternity system, was steadily becoming obsolete. persisting only in some of the smaller colleges and a few provincial-minded universities. Despite the difficulty of uprooting practices which had carried over from vicious high school fraternity programs, for they had no place in col- lege fraternities originally, I had believed that tre- mendous advances had been made toward that end, even before the depression brought problems which sobered fraternities, making them realize that their very existence was dependent upon a realiza- tion of their social responsibility and definite evi- dence that their influence was positive in giving members the right social training and creating desirable social attitudes. Today it is generally recognized that those chapters which bring dis- credit to themselves by continuing Hell Week prac- tices are doing injury to the entire fraternity cause. As a Michigan man, I had assumed that fra- ternity chapters in Ann Arbor had grown up, had put away childish things and were justifying themselves as organizations worthy of the respect of men. Somehow adherence to such a high schoolish tradition as Hell Week does not seem consistent with what I have always held to be University of Michigan standards. I had never thought of Michigan as being provincial and im- mature. If the action of the Interfraternity Coun- cil merely kept fraternity chapters in the class of kiddish organizations, denying them what should be their rightful place in the estimation of right- minded men and women as groups making a satis- factory contribution to the intellectual and social development of their members, it would be serious enough, but any mature student of the fraternity system knows that Hell Week practices injure, if they do not destroy, the very ideals for which the college fraternity stands. What an absurdity it is for men to attempt to develop a spirit of brotherhood by physically mistreating and by humiliating those who are to enter the organization named a fraternity! I know Michigan alumni, who today are mature men of affairs, yet who still hold nothing but contempt and dislike toward certain of their chap- ter brothers because pre-initiation activities gave the latter an opportunity to exercise their sadistic impulses. To minimize, even partially destroy the effect of a ritual by practices that are so completely counter to the ideals and purposes of a fraternity is not only inconsistent and silly, but it is downright dis- loyal to those who have given or are giving time, energy and thought to making college fraternities not only worthy of respect, but of highest possible value to members. At the same time, it under- mines the fraternity in the minds of its entering members, for certainly every decent-minded man resents Hell Week practices and loses admiration and respect for any organization that permits them. As a result, the chapter which carries on a program of Hell Week activities is simply weaken- ing itself with its own members. As an alumnus of the University of Michigan, I regret this action of the Interfraternity Council, for it places the institution in the class of provincially- minded colleges and universities that are clinging to obsolescent traditions consistent only with im- mature youths. As one who is vitally concerned with the general welfare of the college fraternity system, I deplore it because it does harm to have such an outstandingbinstitution as the University of Michigan take this backward step and thus bring discredit to fraternities as a whole. Both as an alumnus of the University and as a worker for the fraternity cause, I urge the recon- sideration of the question in the hope that Mich- igan fraternities will give evidence that they have grown up, have put aside childish things, and are ready to meet the challenge of today: to prove that the fraternity can do more than any other institution to give university men the social habits, the social attitudes and the sense of social respon- sibility that belong to really educated men. -George Starr Lashoir, '11. Cycle-pedia To the Editor: Among the fads of 1935 cycling appears to be second only to the chain leter craze. It is a more wholesome hobby and worthy of encouragement. A few suggestions are hereby offered in the hope that students will find more pleasure in the riding, and more power when climbing hills or facing a stiff wind: (1) The (front) tip of the saddle should be in line with the center of the sprocket shaft. (2) The handle bars should be at the same level as the saddle. (3) The seat should be so adjusted that when the pedal is closest to the ground the leg is extend- ed with no bend in the knee. This gives a maxi- mum of power and riding comfort. -S. A. Zawadzki, '35M. 12 M COL LEG IATE OBSERVER i a i By BUD BERNARD '36, sends the following contribution E.O.B., entitlud: POME When first I came a freshman green Naught but success could be seen. My grades I knew would be straight A, Phi Beta Kappa but a step away. And now there came my sophomore year My prospects now were not so clear. My hopes of A, 'twas plain to see Had dwindled slightly to a B. Quite five semesters-gone at last- I looked upon my happy past And offered up a fervent plea My kingdom for a lovely C. In gratitude of man to man, Unhappy mortals, smile who can, For with the end of my junior year I'll just be thrown out on my ear. No longer can college editors be accused of los- ing their "individual initiative" or of following the leader. The editor of the paper at the Uni- versity of California threw a bombshell into the ranks of the campus writers by coming out with an editorial in defense of William Randolph Hearst, who, all this year, has taken a universal drubbing at the hand of American collegiates. Said the California martyr: "Hearst has a perfect right to express his own opinion - as much or more so than the college editors . . a group of half- baked undergraduates." - One of the campus wise guys recently asked a pawnbroker in Detroit why he has hardly anything in his windows but guitars and re- volvers. "Well, responded the pawnbroker, "Every now and then someone buys a guitar, and strange as it seems, pretty soon some other member of his family purchases a revolver." Three professors at the University of Wisconsin have put their heads together and evolved the following rules for a happy marriage: 1. The couple should have positive ideas about the future of their wedlock. The "drift into bliss" is nonsense. 2. They should assume that their marriage is going to last, and forget about the statistics on divorce percentages. 3. The man should dispense with all feelings of sex superiority. That's poison to happy wedlock. 4. Marriage is a moral issue, a matter of the adjustment of personalities. Two hundred students at the University of Wis- consin recently gathered in the Memorial Union Building there and raised their voices in a defiant singing of the Internationale. No action was taken by school authorities. Mil READ THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I N I To Those eiors Who SubsenbeBefore Commenceent The.Mihian Alumnus (Annual Subscription Price $4.00) willbefor $2.00 foro neyear A:50% Reduction!1 During the coming 12 months this Official Publication of Michigan's Alumni will carry news of the men and women of '35 - their new locations, their work, anc their doings. Keep In Touch With Your Classmates. Order at ALUMN I ASSOCIATION OFFICES ALUMNI MEMORIAL HALL A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, May 7. T WOULD be difficult to say whether the Bank- head "Farmers' Home Corporation" bill in the Senate has definite White House approval. It :.: .;;w . ,", ':: fti "'v 1 :: ixpSEPN ROB/M' 0 involves a potential billion- dollar bond issue to be used in converting tenant farmers into small farm proprietors and Sen. Joe Robinson of Ar- kansas, Democratic leader, abandoned a bill of his own making to throw his support to the Bankhead measure. Yet, what he told the Senate failed to indicate whether President Roosevelt stood ready to launch the program if Con- gress enacted it. A provision of the work-re- lief bill would permit the Pres- ident to "subscribe" the $50,000,000 from that source to start the operation. All that Robinson would say as to presidential commitment to the plan, however, was that if the President signed the bill he "presumed" the money would be al- lotted. Opponents of the Bankhead bill brought out the fact that no treasury comment on its bond proposals had been sought by the committee which framed it. THAT THE FARM CENSUS now in compilation will show another big increase in the ranks of tenant farmers was made clear in the debate. The last detailed government figures go back to 1930. They were revived by Senator Vandenberg in his opposition to the Bankhead bill and showed 2,644,365 tenant operated farms out of a total of 6,388,648, or 42.4 per cent. Since then the back- to-the-farm migration precipitated by the depres- sion has unquestionably greatly increased tenancy. "Fundamentally, it is a cotton problem," Van- denberg said. "It is localized. I do not desire to inject the sectional viewpoint. I call attention to this solely to identify the type of agriculture in- volved." NEVERTHELESS, that section concentration will have an influence on the outcome of the pro- posal. Particularly when it has the opposition Re lgious Activities TFee FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH State and Washington Charles W. Brashares, Minister L. Laverne Finch, Minister A. Taliaferro, Music 9:45 A.M. - Class for young men and women in the balcony of the church auditorium. For the re-