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t JUDGE See Editor, Norman A: Crabbing the Party inst honors for realistic journalism in a cam- paign year go to the papers. ‘This chai supporting Herbert I second choice is Al Smith. regularity or party issues. tagged Republican and marked Democrat. But thing at all knows that « Hoover would resembl say, Charlie Curtis, a | resembles a jack-rabbit. a Smith Democracy Seripps-Howard news- of twenty-six dailies is r for President. — Its No tripe about party Hoover happens to be Smith happens to be birth- anybody who knows any- Republican party led by Republican party led by, put as much as an elephant And the difference between nda Heflin Democracy is as obvious as that between a derby hat and a nightshirt. Party loyalty is the patter that keeps the suckers | in line, while independent voters are wheedled with platforms that are cock-eyed and issues that are hokum. This country has some genuine issues, but the politician will bleed and die to keep them out of the campaign. Any party that tried to draft a square platform would split into a dozen factions. On the record of recent administrations, Judge on the Bench has voiced the opinions, that it is to waste He Corporation and that a shame a good man in the White House, that ver would be more useful as head of the Steel Smith could do more for more people by cleaning up ‘Tammany Hall. | But the Seripps-Howard position indicates how we might get back to making the clection the serious selection of a working executive, on the basis of personal character, ability and experience, and quite regardless of party. ‘Then there would be hope of restoring to the Presidency the dignity and in- fluence for leadership that it possesses in th ory. The Real Success Story HARLES Scuwas holds several national champion ships: for Good Mixing, for Optimism in Busi ness Prophecy, for Weeping on the Witness Stand and for Charming Chattiness—all likable traits, To these he now adds another—Frankness about Suc: J. Woolf puldn’t understand how “Here I am, a not over-good business man, a second-rate engineer. I can make poor mechanical drawings, I play the piano after a fashion; in fact, I am one of those proverbial Why I am cess. In a recent interview he told that for the life of him he he got where he is. of all trades who are usually failures. | Ausociate Editors, Richard J, Walsh, Phil Rosa, Jack Shuttleworth Dramatic Editor, George Jean Nathan not, I can’t tell you... . no one trait in wh something that break.” For real inspirational valuc young men, this American Magazine. ial ability, There is certainly I can find no 5} nL exeel es some men more than an even ind encouragement to beats a dozen articles in the Quite without fals the great majority consider themselves, like Schwab, just ordinary persons. The usual stuff scares them stiff. It’s the undying faith in luck that kids them along and keeps the wheels of industry turning. modesty. success Fer warning is given that evolution, far from being a settled question, is going to be made an issue of increasing Last year thirteen ght into various legi and several were barely defeated. The fun- damentalists are just hitting their stride. Now they re out to make a demonstration in force in Arkansas. law they will petition for would make it impos. sible to teach geology and would cripple the medical schools. The Science League, which is fighting them, largely of university professors and re But what chance has a professor a a pulpit-pounder or a scientist dusty with res: against a deacon convinoed that he has been washed in the blood of the lamb? annoyance. anti-evolution bills were bro Jatures, consists searchers. Younger Generation Notes. No. 9 (eg ANED from one issue of The » Student: At both Stanford and Harvard, according to Harry R. Turkel, * oothall, baseball and track are perilously near being outranked in importance by Everywhere the plaint is heard, so like that of the Princeton man’s reaction to the educa- tional reforms of President Woodrow Wilson: ‘He's trying to ¢ Princeton into a damned educational mere studies. institution Thirty-three hundred college students met in con vention at Detroit during the holidays—and voted in favor of increased church missionary work in foreign lands. President Brooks of Baylor complains that “there is entirely too much serenading of dormitory women by the men of the University. Good music wakes the girls up and bad music keeps them awake RI W. comicbooks.com