FOUR THE -MICHTE)LN fDAILY -FRIDAY, NOVEMBER~ 1, 1935 ;J M MYIMn . y.:: a.a "". ..:. IVA a. V l:l. a fY .a^y_.4n va ,w.,,su THE MICHIGAN DAILY A - Publisned 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 socdated 6o IEaiat rss f934 p~iak'uI4 1 935 MADION4 WSCO4Sj 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 dispatches 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. Duringnregular 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., 420 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y.-400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASSOCIATE EDITOR..............THOMAS E. GROEHN ASSOCIATE EDITOR ..............JOHN J. FLAHERTY SPORTS EDITOR ....................WILLIAM R. REED WOMEN'S EDITOR..............JOSEPHINE T. McLEAN MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF EDITORS .. ..........DOROTHY S. GIES, JOHN C. HEALEY EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS News Editor.............................Elsie A. Pierce Editorial Writers: Robert Cummins and Marshall D. Shul- man. Night Editors: Robert B. Brown, Clinton B. Conger, Rich- ard G. Hershey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal, and Bernard Weissman. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: George Andros, Fred Buesser, Fred Delano, Robert J. Friedman, Raymond Goodman. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Dorothy A. Briscoe, Florence H. Davies, Olive E. Griffith, Marion T. Holden, Lois M. King, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. REPORTERS: E. Bryce Alpern, Leonard Bleyer, Jr., Wil- liam A. Boles, Lester Brauser, Albert Carlisle, Rich- ard Cohen, Arnold S. Daniels, William John DeLancey, Robert Eckhouse, John J. Frederick, Carl Gerstacker, Warren Gladders, Robert Goldstine, John Hinckley, S. Leonard Kasle, Richard LaMarcarHerbert W. Little, Earle J. Luby, Joseph S. Mattes, Ernest L. McKenzie, Arthur A. Miller, Stewart Orton, George S. Quick, Robert D. Rogers, William Scholz, William E. Shackle- ton, Richard Sidder, I. S. Silverman, William C. Spaier, Tuure Tenander, and Robert Weeks. Helen Louise Arner, Mary Campbell, Helen Douglas, Beatrice Fisher, Mary E. Garvin, Betty J. Groomes, Jeanne Johnson, Rosalie Kanners, Virginia Kenner, Barbara Lovell, Marjorie Mackintosh, Louise Mars, Roberta Jean Melin, Barbara Spencer Betty Strick- root, Theresa Swab, Peggy Swantz, and Elizabeth Whit- ney. .,BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER ..........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDIT MANAGER ............JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .... MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE MANAGER, ELIZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERS: Local advertising, William Barndt; ,Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; -Con- tracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Advertising, John Park; Classified Advertisingand Publications, Lyman Bitt- man. BUSINESS ASSISTANTS: Charles W. Barkdull, D. G. Bron- son, Lewis E. Bukeley, Richard L. Croushore, Herbert D. Falender, Jack R. Gustafson, Ernest A. Jones, William C. Knecht, William C. McHenry, John F. McLean, Jr., Law- rence M. Roth, John D. Staple, Lawrence A. Starsky, Norman B. Steinberg, Donald Wilsher. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF: Betsy Baxter, Margaret Bentley, Adelaine Callery, Elizabeth Davy, Catherine Fecheimer, Vera Gray, Martha Hanky, Mary McCord, Helen Neberle, Dorothy Novy, Adele Polier, Helen Purdy, Virginia Snell. WOMEN'S ADVERTISING SERVICE STAFF: Ellen Brown, Sheila Burgher, Nancy Cassidy, Ruth Clark, Phyllis Eiseman, Jean Keinath, Dorothy Ray, Alice Stebbins, Peg Lou White. NIGHT EDITOR: CLINTON B. CONGER Student Workers Shakespeare and the English and American classics down their throats." Anyone who has had experience with most high school English classes are aware that the classics are an unwelcome feature of the curriculum to the student and is forced to agree with Mr. Hully and the National Council to this extent. But it is much more difficult to agree with them on the reasons for the students' distaste for the classics and to follow them when they hint that' they should therefore be largely abandoned. Cramming is just another word for intensive and determined study. We do not believe that an intensive and determined study of the classics will force a student to turn to "cheap pulp mag- azines," but quite the opposite. The trouble must lie elsewhere, then. Frankly, we believe it lies with the teachers. The National Council, in its experimental pro- gram, has indicated that to turn from the work of artists of the past to the work of present day machine-made technicians is the way to hold the students' interest. There is much truth in their assumption that it is difficult for the student to grasp the aesthetic work of men of the past, yet we cannot agree that the remedy is the abandon- ment of that art for an immersion in sundry pie- bald products of present day society. A search for reality there must be, yet there is certainly a more intelligent and satisfactory path to take than the experimental curriculum. We believe that reality and resulting enjoyment of the classics by the student will be attained when the social, economic, and cultural forces amid which classical literature is born are presented to the student and when at the same time, he has an understanding of those forces in the present day society. Through such understanding great literature of the past has come to be recog- nized as such, and through such understanding the student will find a true appreciation and en- joyment of it. __ The Conninghmon -HE -I A BYSTANDER DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin iseconstructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the ofilce of the A :;is tatt. to the President until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. THE DISTRACTED 'ENTICE, Ii JI or "Johnny's so long on his trip" Oh dear, what can my balance be? Oh dear, what can my balance be? Oh dear, have I a balance? Am I overdrawn at the bank? THE FORUM 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 editors reserving the right to condense all letters of over 300 words and to accept or reject letters upon the criteria of general editorial importance 4 and interest to the campus. Attend The Forums To the Editor: Freshmen who don't attend the so-called "for- ums" held every Tuesday in the Union at 4:15 p.m. don't realize what they are missing. More can be learned there in an hour about life on the campus than can be learned in a week of roaming around. It is as though one were look- ing at college life through a telescope. Others who have had the same experiences and difficulties or perhaps some quite different get together here for a frank, open discussion of the problems. The person who started calling them "forums" had the wrong idea. What they really amount to are "bull sessions." Everything imaginable is discussed. At one, the problem of how a freshman goes about getting a date was talked over. Such problems cannot be learned in the classroom; only the experiences of others can help solve the problem. Here all one has to do is to ask the question and someone will have a suggestion for an answer. Freshmen, drop around next week. Learn college life, not as it should be but as it is. -Var. Ought To Be A Law To the Editor: I do not doubt that those who invented and developed that noblest of noble American insti- tutions, the radio, were actuated by the most altruistic motives. I have always had the deepest affection for that instrument-until I came to the University of Michigan. I am now convinced that the radio is Public Nuisance Number One. Everywhere I go in this fair town I hear one of those noise-machines sobbing away. I can't read the morning newspaper for five minutes without being jarred out of my thoughts by a loud-speaker., I can't talk with a friend at a meal without one drowning out our conversation. And now I can't' even enjoy the recuperation of a hot shower without hearing these canned crescendos crashing through the locker-room. The American citizen is a patient soul and can take a lot of punish-1 ment. But the climax is just about reached when,. for-, three successive mornings, someone has to stop his car in front of my quarters at 6:30 a.m. with a dash-board set going full blast. My room- mate and I definitely do not like hill-billy music in the last hour of our slumbers (and who does). If these dawn serenades continue, someone is going to take the law into his own hands. Spengler must have been thinking of these radio-morons when he wrote his Decline of the SWest sl -Afflicted. He promised, he promised to make a deposit He promised, he promised to make a deposit And now -- to my horror and shame - I'm afraid of A telephone call from the bank! MARY BICKEL. Those who think It Can't Happen Here might look at the Association of Brother's Keepers and scan the activities of that fictitious organization. Many of them wrote letters, published in yester- day's Herald Tribune, to the effect that there should be no welcome to Jimmy Walker. Why citizens in the Land of the Free should try to interfere with those who pursue happiness in welcoming Jimmy Walker we don't see. We don't want to welcome him, nor does our gigantic ac- quaintance include anybody who has told us that he will be among those to do to him rev- erence. Those who object to the welcome seem to us more numerous than those who objected to the way Walker ran their city; certainly they are more articulate. It seems to us that loudest shouters against the Walker welcome are potential lynchers. This department will fail to give three, or any fraction thereof, cheers, and let it go at that. BOOK REVIEW I've got myop'a On Briffault's "Europa." Courage, oh give this coward aid To read Grace Adams's "Don't Be Afraid." Even so careful a speaker as Mr. James M. Beck speaks of widely "broadcasted" expressions: and even so careful a publishing house as Funk & Wagnalls blurbs that John B. Opdyke's "Get It Right: A Cyclopedia of Correct English Usage," is "The most complete handbook in its field." OH, DELICATE, GRAY BOUGHS! Spring is too far away for men to ponder Upon their frozen fields and idle plows. Across the sky, like death's own fingers wander The delicate, gray boughs . . Pale silhouettes against that pale blue weaving Which in the tapestry of winter lies ... Too far away is spring for dreams or grieving- To lost for robins' cries. Yet there must come an hour - and a stirring In the deep blood of earth that wakens men To think of beauty and the primal luring Of Aprils born again. And this cool pattern, in the same brief hour, Escapes its chastity of autumn vows- Senses the seed, the vernal leaf, the flower . . Oh, delicate, gray boughs! -CATHERINE PARMENTER. WARBLERS OF POETIC PROSE Sir: Always on the lookout for poetic prose, I never expected to find anything like Walter Savage Landor's "There are no fields of amaranth on this side of the grave" or Thomas Bailey Aldrich's "There is no Margery Daw!" Today, though, I came across the perfect sentence on an advertising page of an old Harper's, which I read from cover to cover because it was given me and I seldom see a 35-cent magazine since the slight financial embarrassment of 1929. Some unknown copy writer in some advertising factory, now perhaps extinct, ended is appeal to the read- ing public with these words: "There is no substitute for marble." The harmony of that sentence simply haunts me, although the statement itself is not wholly true. I once subtracted my name from the pay roll of a managing editor whose heart was the substitute for marble. Aside from that, it's perfect. DAISY BELL. A Washington novelty dealer, according to th A.P., is doing a brisk business in selling copie of the Constitution. Suggested editorial to ou contemporary, the Daily Worker, The Menac of the Constitution Rocket. By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON - Nov. 1. - An- nouncement from so-called '"au- thoritative" if undisclosed Republican sources that the '36 national conven- tion would sit in Chicago, comes with little surprise. Political guessers have been in agreement for months that G. 0. P, strategy, from every point of view, demanded a midwestern set- ting and that Chicago was the most likely contender. Had the various Republican "grass roots" gatherings of last summer been more of the Borah mind for organiz- ing a western revolt against old guard eastern leadership of the party, it might have been different. An even more westernly setting for the con- vention might have been the first de- mand of the "rebels." There is very little prospect now, however, thatthe December meeting of the Republican national committee to pick the con- vention site will not ratify the Chi- cago selection. It would take a very extraordinary cash bid from some other city to upset things. *'* * * OLNE reason is that convention sites are figured as having some pos- sible effect on the subsequent voting in such areas. The big electoral vote factors for '36 are going to be the New York and Illinois returns. It is repeatedly said that Mr. Roosevelt confidently could expect reelection if he were certain of either. Quite obviously the Republicans could not seriously consider taking their convention to New York. Even if the city were prepared to make a bid for the show, of which there is no prospect, the idea of embarking on an effort to induce disgruntled western Republican contingents to join up on a harmony candidate and platform in the very shadow of Wall Street would be fantastic. For similar reason, growing out of intra-party disagreement about for- mer President Hoover's eligibility for another chance at the White House, California seems out of the conven- tion picture. It would be waving a red rag at the anti-Hooverites to go to his state, nosmatter how alluring, on a cash basis, offers from San Francisco or Los Angeles might be. * *4 *t CHICAGO, however, is in effect neutral ground between eastern industrialists and western agricultur- al bloc folks. If Illinois is to be a pivotal state in the election, what better place than Chicago for such advance advertising as national con- ventions provide? Less is heard about where the Dem- ocrats will gather to go through con- vention motions and renominate Mr. Roosevelt., The "ins" quadrennial gathering always is less of a show than that of the "outs." For political reasons, some Demo- cratic advisers look favorably upon Atlantic City for the convention. Others, however, believe it must go somewhere in the farm belt. ..BOOKS : "MRS. ASTOR'S HORSE," by Stan- ley Walker; (Stokes). THERE have been funny goings- on in this country during the las decade, Stanley Walker, who has ob- served the American pageant of daf- finess from the vantage point of a newspaper city desk, presents an as- sortment of curiosa Americana in "Mrs. Astor's Horse." Each chapter is a "special article.' The book is amusing and interesting because Mr. Walker is a good editor He knows what facts and anecdote: are interesting and he offers them in a straightforward, witty manner. He traces the decline of high so e ciety to the point where Pugilist Jac s Dempsey, in opening his new restau r rant, writes the President: "Dear Mr e Roosevelt: Your presence at my op ening would make it. I can't begin to tell you how much I would lik to have you come. If you can, wil you please let me know so I can re y serve your table." Jimmy Walker's proclivities as greeter, the lavish funerals of rub bed-out gangsters, headaches of radi advertising and life in Hollywood ar some of the subjects Mr. Walke works on. In "The Palate-Teasing Racket he explores the weird concoctions o tea rooms and food experts of th present era - the myriad ways o making a lamb chop look and tast like something else. He tells some c the unbelievable things that wen on backstage at the Hauptmann tria The high mark reached by Gener Johnson, Father Coughlin and th late Huey Long in American politicE invective is appraised by Mr. Walk with well-chosen quotations. Dadd Browning, Rudolph Valentino, Aim Semple McPherson, Mae West, Ea n Carroll, Sally Rand and Bernarr Mac - Fadden rate a chapter each. at "Mrs. Astor's Horse" is for the s d phisticated. Few of the facts are ne ll and many of the anecdotes have bee -%p toldhbfore. TBut they're well wort FRIDAY, NOV. 1, 1935 m VOL. XLVI No. 27 Hi ca Notices de Presidential Tree. The annual Land' Utilization Conference will plant a T tree in honor of President Ruthven T in the President's yard at 11:30 a.m. U today. Members of the faculty and VU others interested are invited to be U present. S .T. Dana. V President and Mrs. Ruthven will be en at home to members of the faculties, P their friends, and other residents of R Ann Arbor on Sunday, November 3, from 4 to 6 o'clock. President and Mrs. Ruthven will be C at home to the students on Wednes- th day, November 16, from 4 to 6 o'clock. t( t There will be no tea on Wednesday, S November 6. m Faculty Meeting, College of Litera- ture, Science and Arts. The regular w November meeting of the Faculty of as the College of Literature, Science, Cl and the Arts will be held in Room at 1025 Angell Hall Monday, November S 4, beginning at 4:10 o'clock.h Agenda: S Report of Executive Committee, th Remer. Report of University Council, p Sellars. Report of Dean's Confer- ence, Kraus. Report of Committee on Class Schedules, LaRue. An- nouncements. v Faculty, School of Education: The M regular luncheon meeting of the Fac- m ulty will be held on Monday, Novem- 10 ber 4, Michigan Union, at 12 o'clock. N A Faculty, College of Literature, p Science, and the Arts: Instructors are requested to send their "Freshman ce Report Cards" to Room 4, University s Hall not later than Saturday, Novem- ber 2. 0 Mid-semester reports will be called A for at the end of the eighth week. 30 Hours Per Week is N.Y.A. Maxi- S mum: Students shall work not more than 30 hours in any week or 8 hours C in any day. This corrects the error made in the notice that appeared in Thursday's Daily. N.Y.A. Committee. Faculty, Engineering Freshmen: Reports to the Mentor System on all engineering freshmen will be collected from the faculty during the week of Nov. 4. Report forms are being dis- A tributed to the faculty this week. h Mentors will confer with freshmen on a their standing during the week of Nov. 11. Faculty members will please take up routine questions with Miss a Edmands, Dean Sadler's office; refer f' other questions to A. D. Moore, Head Mentor, 268 W. Engr., Telephone 576. _ _f Presidents of Fraternities and Sor- t orities are reminded that member- p ship lists and chaperon lists are due t today in the Office of the Dean of f Students. I Angell Hall observatory will be open to the public for observation of the 1 moon from 7:30 to 10:00 on Saturday a evening, November 2. Children must v be accompanied by adults.g c Presidents of Student Organizations° t should report the names, titles and classes of all officers to the Dean ofx Students, Room 2, University Hall a not later than November 15. Formsa - should be obtained in Room 2 for the purpose. The following are the names of student organizations as listed inl the Office of the Dean of Students. Any organization which does not fur- nish the required information by No- s vember 15 will be considered no long-~ n er in existence. Any active organiza- tion not listed shoud apply for official - recognition at once.1 k J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students. Acolytes, Adelphi, Aeronautical En- . gineers, Alpha Alpha Gamma, Alpha - Epsilon Mu, Alpha Gamma Sigma, n Alpha Kappa Delta, Alpha Lambda e Delta, Alpha Nu, Alpha Omega Alpha,1 11 Am. Society of Civil Engineers, Am.t - Society of Mechanical Engineers, Ar- chitectural Society, Armenian Stu- a dents Association, Assembly, Athena, - Avukah, Barristers, Beta Gamma Sig-E o ma, Beta Kappa Rho, Black Quill. e B'nai B'rith Hillel Independents, r Cercle Francais, Chi Gamma Phi, SChineseStudent Club, Christian Science Organization, Cosmopolitan Club, Delta Epsilon Pi, Delta Sigma; Rho, Deutscher Verein, Deutscher e Zirkel, Druids, Forestry Club, Fresh- A man Girls' Glee Club, Galens. Gamma Alpha, Genesee Club, f Graduate Outing Club, Hillel Founda- it tion, Hillel Pl'ayers, Interfraternity l. Council, Iota Alpha, Iota Sigma Pi, al Junior Mathematical Society, Kap- e pa Beta Pi, Kappa Phi, Kappa Phi al Sigma, Kappa Tau Alpha, Landscape er Design Society, Les Voyageurs, Luth- ly eran Student Club, Michigamua, e Michigan League, Mimes, Michigan rl Public Health Club, Michigan Union, c Michigan Wolverine, Mortar Board, Mu Phi Epsilon, National Student o League, Nippon Club, Omicron Kappa w Upsilon, Oratorical Association, Pan- n hellenic Association, Phi Beta Kappa, a Rho Tau, Sigma Xi, Sociedad spanica, Sociedad Latino-Ameri- na, Sphinx, Stanley Chorus, Stu- nt Christian Association. Tau Beta Pi, Theta Sigma Phi, astmasters, Transportation Club, riangles, Undergraduate Council, niversity of Michigan Band, Uni- rsity of Michigan Forestry Club, niversity of Michigan Glider Club, aiversity of Michigan Outdoor Club, nguard Club, Varsity Glee Club, ulcans, Wesley Foundation, Wom- 's Athletic Association, Women's ysical Education Club, Women's esearch Club, Wyvern, Zeta Phi Eta. Lecture Oratorical Association Lecture ourse: Single admission tickets for e Admiral Byrd lecture are on sale day at Wahr's State Street Book ore. Tickets will be available daily itil the time of the lecture. Lectures: Captain Sidney Ransom ill talk on "The Great Orderly Plan Shown by (a) Astronomy; (b) hemistry, Physics and Animal Life; nd (c) Mind," at 4:15 in the Natural cience Auditorium today. At 8 p.m. e will discuss "Theosophy the cience of Life" in the Chapel of ie Michigan League Building. The ublie is cordially invited. Concerts School of Music Concert: The Uni- ersity Symphony Orchestra, Earl V. oore, conductor; with Joseph Brink- an, piano soloist, will give the fol- wing program, Sunday afternoon, ovember 3, at 4:15 o'clock, in Hill uditorium, to which the general ublic with the exception of small hildren, is invited without admission harge. The public is requested to be ated on time, as the doors will be losed during the numbers. verture to the Opera, "Der Frei- schutz" ................von Weber ndante from "Nordic Symphony" . .... .y. Hanson ymphonic Poem, "Les Preludes" ......................... L iszt oncerto in A minor, Op. 54 for piano and orchestra - Schumann. Allegro affettuoso. Andante expressivo. Intermezzo - andantino grazioso. Allegro vivace. Mr. Brinkman. Events Of Today Varsity Glee Club meeting at Hill uditorium, 7:15 p.m. sharp. Re- earsal for pep meeting, broadcast, nd making of records. Waiting Lists Glee Club: Report t Hill Auditorium 7:15 p.m. sharp or pep meeting rehearsal. International Soccer Team: All oreign or American students in- erested in playing soccer should re- ort for practice at 4 p.m. today at he Intramural Building. The team or the trip next Tuesday will be se- ected immediately after the practice. At Stalker Hall there will be a Hal- owe'en party for Methodist students nd their friends, Square dancing will be featured. Also there will be games and refreshments. A small harge will be made to cover the cost of the refreshments. Disciples' Guild: Hallowe'en ghost party, Church of Christ, Hill and Tappan, 8 o'clock. Bring your friends and yourself. Charge, 10 cents. Roger Williams Guild, 8:00 p.m. Hallowe'en party. Informal. Old clothes. Prepare for a good time. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: There will be a celebration of the Holy Communion in St. Andrew's Church today at 10:30, celebrating All Saints Day. Coming Events The University of Michigan District of the Michigan Education Associa- tion will meet in the graduate library of the University Elementary School (Monroe Street), Monday, November 4, 4:15 p.m. All members of the faculty who are interested are invit- ed to attend. The Graduate Outing Club will meet at Lane Hall on Sunday, No- vember 3, at 3:00 for a hike through Barton Hills. Supper will be served at a cost of 25c. All graduate stu- dents are cordially invited to attend. Convocation. On Sunday, Novem- ber 3, The Reverend Tred Cowin and Professor Preston W. Slosson will speak on the subject of "Religion and Politics Look at War," at 8:00 p.m. in the Congregational Church. This meeting is sponsored by the Inter- Guild Federation and will follow the regular guild meetings. The student body and the general public are in- vited. Lutheran Student Club: Rev. Hen- ry Yoder, of Trinity Lutheran Church, will speak at the meeting of the Lutheran Student Club Sunday evening, November 3, in the Parish Deserve Admiration. . . T HE GREAT MAJORITY of persons look with respect at those students who are forced to earn their way through col- lege. Certainly - those who have the grit and courage to work, in addition to attending school, should be commended, and anything that the college community can do to make their task easier should be done. Many students have been aided in working their way through school by the Federal government's relief program - this year the National Youth Administration. In this University more than 1,- 000 students have been given jobs. Most of these jobs are of a clerical or technical nature. Some of them are physical, such as raking leaves or cleaning windows under the buildings and grounds department. All of them are highly respectable positions. Recently the University NYA administration has reported several regrettable incidents - cases where students who do not have to work have jeered at student NYA employees, made fun of them and ridiculed them for having to earn their living. We are convinced that the University of Mich- igan has few of such individuals; few of such snobs who make fun of another person's attempt to overcome his misfortune through hard work When it becomes a disgrace to be poor, courage and ability for hard, honest effort a matter for ridicule, we had better all close up and go home Until then, we hope that such deplorable actions as students jeering at NYA workers will be stopped immediately. High School Study Of Classics .. . There is to be a drive against racket, and if it is successful it will rub out the gaberdine business. the Shylock automatically As Others See It . Ideas That Work Pay (From the Columbia Missourian) A SHORT TIME AGO a young man laid a slip of paper on the desk of the president of the American Tobacco Company, manufacturers of Lucky Strike cigarettes. "I will sell you that paper. for $25,000," he said. The president took the paper; the man took the money. On the slip of paper was a four word slogan: "Be Happy-Go Lucky." That slogan will appear in Lucky Strike ads in magazines and newspapers the country over. POEM OF PROTEST Windiest of the witless queries, Silliest of the sappy series Is the No. 1 vapid stumper: "Haven't you grown a little plumper?" Friends, if it please you, I acknowledge I'm not so thin as I was in college; And, Lord help me, miserable sinner, In grammar school I was even thinner. In fact, since the year 1913 I've gained a hundred and umpty-steen. O.K.? Agreed? Let's put a date to it - And stop attaching so much weight to it! FREDERIQUE. We are an old-fashioned journalist. And o the day that Sidney Smith's death was an nounced there also was printed the story tha "The Gumps" would continue to be drawn an and published. A staff of Smith's assistants wi