THE MICHIGAN DAILY ICHIIGAN DA Established 1890 lf -- ILY organizers to make a success of the movement. It is a foregone conclusion that it must, to be efficient, come through the student body itself; it must have the confidence of the students. the plan works ;n otter colleges, and there is no r non why it should not work in the literary coi)ege of hC Universlty of Mic ;Sgal. At lelmpt8s to adopt the sy,-temr in the past have been frus- trated by the University authorities, but this has been due, no doubt, to the insincerity of the students proposing it. The plan of making every student a proctor for his neighbor, we believe, will not meet the need of the present conditions. At certain colleges, for example, everyone must sign Published every morning. except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member- of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Ptess 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 Offiee at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as seond cla 3s matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Psistant Postater-GQeneral. Subscription during summerby carrier, $1.00; by mail, $1,50. Ding regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $450 Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Representatives: College Publishers Representatives Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; $0 Bylston Street, Boston; 612 Noth Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF rciephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR..............FRANK B. GILBRETH CITY EDITOR...........................KARL SEIFFERT SPORTSJEDI[TOR.....................JOHN W. THOMAS WOMEN'S EDTO.................MARGARET O'BRI3W ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR.......MIRIAM CARVER NIGHT EDITORS: Thomas Oonnellan, Norman F. Kraft, John-W. Pritchard, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Gilenn R.. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Fred A. Huber, Albert Newmaa. REPORTERS: Hyman J. Aronstam, A. Ellis Ball, Charles 0. Barndt, James Bauchat, Donald R. Bird, Donald P. Blankertz, Charles B. Brownson, Albert L. Burrows, Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter. William G. Ferris, Eric Hall, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hewett, George M. Holmes, Walter E. Morrison, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr., W. Stoddard White. Eleanor B. Blum, Louise Crandall, Carol J. Hannan Frances Manchester, Marie J. Murphy, Margaret C. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Marjorie Weston, Harriet Speiss. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGERt.............BYRON C. VEDDER CREDIT MANAGER...... .......HARRY BGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......DONNA BECKER DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; Advertising Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ice, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke: Cir-1 culation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E a pledge to report any cases of cheating, with the result that all sign but comparatively few keep their promise. The purpose of the honor system is to place upon each student the respon- sibility of playing square with himself, and, if he fails to do this, he is the only one who will suffer. The plan, to be effective, must be com- plete. One of the greatest complaints against our American universities today is that they hamper individualism. Students are forced to conform to rules and regulations even in matters that they could best decide for themselves. Responsibility, a trait which is needed in any field that the stu- dent may enter after leaving the University sometimes seems to be the one most neglected by the educators. The innovation of the honor system would pre- sent many problems both to the student body and the university officials. It wouId be the beginning of a new era of personal freedom and personal responsibility upon the part of the students. Michigan is one of the most liberal universities in the country today; however, it cannot afford to stand still. the Duchess of Towers. Since that time nearly every great romantic actor has at one time or another played the title role. Rollo Peters, fa- mous for his Romeo to Jane Cowl's Juliet, for his Paolo to Ann Harding's Francesco. will make his initial appearance as leading man at the Bon- stelle Civic Theatre in this part. Jessie Royce Landis, who was personally selected by Constance Collier to succeed her in last season's revival of the play, will be the Duchess of Towers. This production will be one of the most ambi- tious attempted at the theatre this season. The sets, designed by Stephen Nastfogel, are elaborate, the costume plates of the New York production have been obtained and a cast of 50 engaged. There will be a special orchestra, every effort being made to make this a production of distinc- tion, worthy of the Bonstelle tradition of great plays. It is particularly fitting that Mr. Peters and Miss Landis appear in this play, for both began their careers at the Bonstelle Playhouse, and both achieved fame in the romantic drama. Miss Landis has played with Otis Skinner, and sup- ported many other stars. J. Brooks Atkinson, commenting on her performance of the Duchess of Towers, called it "one of the most brilliant and poignant interpretations of this great love story." .-Vincent Wall Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not 'be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communcanons will be disregard- ed. The names of communicants will, however. be re- garded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, connning themselves to less than 300 words if possible. Right Now! Ar. Senior? You Can't Afford To Wait Any Longer... _. U First - Come to the Stu- dent Publications building and purchase your receipt. Then - Make an appoint- ment with one of the offi- The Deadlvine for Senior Pictures has been set .. . DEC EMBE R 5th Screen Reflections "TEN DAYS THAT SHOOK THE WORLD" A REVIEW By GEORGE SPELVIN Serge Eisenstein's "Ten Days That Shook the World," which opens tonight at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre under the auspices of the Art Cinema League, is one of the best films yet to come out of Russia. It is, in effect, a newsreel of the most stirring huge mobs in the very buildings and streets where the original events took place, and note- worthy especially for its realistic attention to SISTANTS: Theodore l3arash, Jack Bellamy, Gordon historical detail. Boylan, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, Fred Hertrick, Joseph Hune, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read. Lester Skin-- To an American audience, it would appear that ter, Joseph Sudowte and Robert Wiard. there are several reasons of excluding "Ten Days Elizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Buelah Chapman, Doris -,, Gimmy, BEilhe Griffiths, Virginia Hartz, Catherine Mc- That Shook the World" from a list of great mov- Henry, Helen Olson, Helen Schmude, May Seefried, ing pictures; the chief objection being that there EKathryn Stork. Kathryn _stork. _is no attempt at the narrative technique we have THURSDAY, DEC. 1, 1932 learned to expect. There is no personal plot, no "human interest" in the way of showing a protagonist or for that matter any other clearly Lhe 'o-EdF For D.in er' defined characters. Probably that is just as welt --we have had too many Cecil B. DeMille slave ;an Is Revived. . . girls popping in and out of Nero's boudoir at will. The traditional device of setting up a dum- E CANNOT help wondering at the my hero and heroine to suffer through intimate Sagitation of Dean Alice Lloyd over historical scenes does help to center the dramatis e disregard for certain impractical rules that interest, but it's frequently pretty flimsy stuff ply to to women students. The latest ruling and we ought to make an effort to acclimate be brought out of the moth bag into the light ourselves to the method of Comrade Eisenstein's: so antiquated that most students, not knowing noble experiment. existence, have been breaking it for years. One more complaint, and we'll drop our grous We refer to the regulation that no women shall ing: we doubt very much that even Russian.- invited to fraternity houses for dinner unless without the aid of sound and a knowledge of uni- aperones are provided and the various direc- forms worn at the time by various regiments, esses or house mothers properly notified in would be able to decide which faction was being ivance. shown in some of the more hectic flashes, which This year, according to Dean Lloyd, the i'ule fly by rather too swiftly to be significant. How- .11 be "enforced." How it will be enforced is yet ever, that's the art of the cinema or something, be seen, but the fact remains that this harm- probably. ss practice is officially banned except on very On the other side of the ledger there are many ecial occasions. important things to be brought up. Primarily, We realize the advisability of having a rulin -here is Eisenstein's beautiful camera work, and hich prohibits women from remaining in fra- his characteristic insistence on realistic symbol- rnity houses unchaperoned for several hours ism (a huge tractor riding over the forces of the ter the evening meal. However, we can see no old regime-a peasant boy asleep in the imperial red for chaperones and notification of the pow- thrQne-imperial eagles silhouetted against darkn s-that-be when a woman student plans to have swift clouds-a dead girl's long hair slowly slip- inday dinner at a fraternity. ping off the rising end of a drawbridge as she lieu, Dean Lloyd has made the statement that at- on the other side). C GIVE MICHIGAN MEN A BREAK IN THE DAILY We have lately taken an unusual interest in the- speakers from other communities who appea- from time to time on the campus. Their arrival n town is hailed with great enthusiasm by thos who have been instrumental in bringing them fao Ann Arbor. Large posters are left in conspicj 1.ous places to inform the student body of ther forthcoming speeches. Everyone is "invited to attend." Preachers and professors often recommend ai - fendance at these addresses. Some instructos merely mention the speaker, others almost compde iheir classes to attend. As for the local pastors, ''ny speaker who happens to. be of their denomi- nation receives no end of praise. The Michigan Daily persists in giving long publicity stories to men about whom they ofteO have very little information. A lecture mentioned n the Daily Official Bulletin should be of some nterest to the readers, but the simple fact that 1 speaker is not a resident of this city scarcely ,seems sufficient to rate a front page publicity ;tory several days in a row. This "ballyhoo" is, obviously, very often effec - ive in bringing out a large crowd to the lectures. if they are interested in the lecture, all well and good, but countless people have received 'itter disappointment in the visiting speaker. We refer particularly to the lecturers who hold ' way at Natural Science Auditorium and Hill auditorium. These men are hailed as men of ational and international importance, yet we aave seen professors sitting in the audience who ere much better speakers and better informed n the subject than the lecturers to whom they Ire listening. However, we are not condemning all out of own speakers, but merely wish to state that in our opinion the standing and ability of our local -aen is utterly disregarded and we base our judg- S-ent of a speaker on the distance he comes to ,ppear here. Perhaps it would be a wise procedure to give t little consideration to our local men, who not. only this week, but in other weeks, have demon- 'trated their ability and skill before local gather- ings. Let's give the Michigan man a break gven if we have to listen to - his speeches with frequency in classrooms or church. -G. M. H... cial Michiganensian tographers. 9 Dey Studio Rentschler Studio Spedding Studio Pho- I MICHIGANENSI-AN 193 2-1933 1k - wi tei af ne en Su tending a fraternity house for dinner is no dif- ferent from going to a man's apartment.. This' statement is astounding. She implies that when a man asks a girl to dinner at his house he is seeking questionable privacy., It has been our experience that no chaperoneJ can exceed the hawk-like vigilance of the 25 or 304 fraternity men who do not have dates. The rule, of course, will not be obeyed. Such rules never are. Students realize that there are certain neces- sary and proper regulations that must be obeyed. In this respect only are they willing to conform. The "co-ed for dinner" ban, however, seems not only unreasonable but slightly ridiculous, and it seems at best unfortunate that an innocent pastime suddenly should have taken on such a; black appearance and has been filed among the numerous "thou shalt nots" for the women students. The IHonor Systemt In The Literary College.. THE STUDENT COUNCIL'S pro- posed investigation into the prac- ticability of inaugurating the honor system in the literary college is a project worthy of student, interest and encouragement. One of the main purposes of college is to build up the student's character so that he can fill his position in the world creditably. Any practise which hinders character development, as does the proctor system, should be corrected. By the time a person reaches college, he ought to be trusted to play fair with himself. There will 'always be -- of-,- . rim-++A-. I-hnw nlncnaa Also-and in this respect the present film excel- the "Road to Life"-there is a blgssed relief from she usual pamphlet-pushing propaganda. The -ociological lesson is there if you want it, but itc isn't jammed down your throat. It is good to ind that Lenin is not made too saintly in his; orief appearances; there is enough, but not too much, contrast between him and the wild-eyed Trotsky, the ambitious, timid Kerensky. It's nothing but a newsreel-but that's enough. Plenty. Even without the usual sympathetic, characters, it's damned exciting entertainment And with these few elegant words we'll give Mr - C. M. W.'s Screen Reflections column back to iim with the earnest wish that he will be liberal in dealing out those quaint stars when he gets around to "Ten Days." The ~;Theatre; "PETER IBBETSON" AT THE BONSTELLE "Peter Ibbetson," the Du Maurier classic whicl opens Friday night, Dec. 2, at the Bonstelle Civic 'heatre, in Detroit, more than any other drama ontains the qu ntessence of romance, the glamn- ur of the theatre. Originally intended by the author merely as ai plot for a novel, it has been translatcd to stage, screen and opera. Alexander Woolcott iin The New Yorker has given one of his usually brilliant and revealing notes concerning the genesis of this immortal story. It developed through con- versation with Henry James, and was intended merely as a suggestion for 'a nlot for the author WHERE IS ALEX? What has beconc of Alex? Where is the >iquant face which was wont to peer from be- ind loaves of bread, mountais, or what have you in each Sunday publication of the Daily? Don't the proprietors of the R & S lunch res- aurant realise how much pleasure Alex and his own peculiar lingo brought to many and varied tudents who rose at the indecent hour of nine o'clock on Sunday morning to rush madly down She stairs to the mail box and find it interest- ingly stuffed with "the Daily" and its contents yf fashion and society items, editorials and Alex's all too brief visit? To a co-ed reader who followed the weekly rdventures of Alex and his antics (to the detri-I nent of the sociology bluebook which was due Ionday morning) the Hickman act which has :ecently been imposed on his versatile travels and 2xuberant flow of language seems most cruel. Alex had grown to be a Michigan tradition, following his zig zaggy course as tenacious a :.abit as walking on the wrong side of the street and leering at the outraged so-called "Michigan Ieli," or bolting the all important nine o'clock for the proverbial cup of coffee, and postponed breakfast of tomato juice and toasted rolls. In voicing the opinion of countless readers, i raise my own feeble protest at the idea of prac-f -cally abolishing Alex 'and putting him in in- -onspicuous places on the sports page, or beneath some article headed. "Amalgamated Society of the S. P. C. A. Meets Here." As a last appeal to whoever is resppnoible for plhe cist cls of Alc, i urge most earnestly that -w hvc him back to rlieye the Sunday morning nood ie so cheerfully tried to alleviate. An Alex-American Girl, -Louise Crandall One of the prime characteristics of the higher types among more a4vanced civilization is Joy o Psseso We hope you won't think us crass in suggesting such a thing, but surely you aren't one who is satisfied in watching someone else escort and embrace the woman you desire. Ah, of course not. Then neither are you content to read the most desirable magazine in the country over somebody else's shoulder. You demand that your enjoyment, your smiles and belly-laughs, come to you direct. In short, you will be delighted to learn that your December GARGOYLE is ready for you today. Even more utterly pleasing in content and format than ever before, the latest GARGOYLE is a thing you'll be proud to have sticking out of your coat pocket. Get Your 40-1A EdA~ TTU 7"