id E iijiGAN I i iI . 11101, 1 1 "' Al THE MICHIGAN DAILY Establshed 1890 such situations. It is immediately apparent that an official commission of economic experts is im- perative, to unearth and present facts and give I advice on such matters. ..- ."; Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep away from it. AT THE MAJESTIC b l 4 X ITH6AR1 O , $ 50P PN bir 0. Cf ANNA b ! s . yso , m VO Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Cotrol ;of'S1tudent Publications.;. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use Jor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or no oherwse credited in this paper and the local news pulshed herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved.' second reass mnatter. Speia1 rate of postage gan b Third Assistant Postmaster-General. - 5ubscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, $50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by .a",$4.50. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard-Street. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Aepm'eeetatlves: College Publishers RepresentAtives, tcd, #4 East Tirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boyiston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, #hcao. s"a.EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING ~EDITOR..............FRANK B. GILRETH ITYEITO)1.........................KARL SEIFERT SPORTS EDITOR....................JOHN W. THOMAS WOMEN'S EDITOR.................MARGARET O'BRIEN ASSISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR.......MIRIAM CARVER IGHT EDITORS: Thomas Connellan, Norman P. Kraft, John W. Pritchard, Joseph A. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf, Brackley Shaw, Glenn R. Winters. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: L. Ross Bain, Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman, Harmon Wolfe. REPORTERS: Hyman J. Aronstam, Charles Baird, A. Ellis Bal, Charles G. Barndt, James L. Bauchat, Donald R. Bird, Donald F. Blankertz, Charles B. Brownson, Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph G. Coulter, William G. Ferris, Sidney Frankel, Eric Hall, John C. Healey Robert B. Hewett, George M. Holmes, Walter E. Morrison, Edwin W. Rich- arclson. John Simpson, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr., W. Stoddard White. Z;iatherine Anning, Barbara ates, Marjorie . Bek, Eleanor B. Blum, Maurine Burnside, Ellen Jane Cooley, Louise Crandall, Dorothy Dishman, Anne Dunbar, Jeanette Duff, Carol J . anan, Lois Jotter, Helen Levi- son, Frances J. Manchester. Mare J. Murphy, Eleanor Peterson, Margaret D .,Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Harriet l'e, Marjorie Western. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 B1 IESS MANAGER...........BYRON C. VDDER CREITMANAGR :..... .HARRY 'BEGLEY WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......DONNA BECER OEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising, Grafton Sharp; Adeiing Contracts, Orvil Aronson; 'Advertising Serv- e, Nol Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- eulation, Gilbert E. Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Fi'nn. ASSISTANTS.: Jack Bellamy, Gordon Boylan, Alen Cleve- land, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroymson, FredHertrick, Joseph Hume, Allen Knuusi, Russell Read, Fred Rogers, Lester Skinner, Joseph Sudow, Robert Ward. Elizabeth Ailer Jane Bassett. Beulah Chapman, Doris Gimmny, Bilie Griffiths Virginia Hartz Catherine Mr- Henry, Ueleii Olson, Helen Schmude, May Seefried, KAthryn Stork. SUNDAY, DEC. 4, 1932 Economic Board Needed To Settle Tax Mix-Up ... H OW can a balled-up tax situation in a state government be unrav- elled? Obviously by means of expert treatment. The tax situation in Michigan today is highly complex, and it is difficult to get to the bottom of the trouble; expert treatment is needed here. Why not an investigatory commission of economic experts, official and permanent, vested with power to dig out facts and present them, together with appropriate advice, to the legislature? Such a group is badly needed. One phase of the question which receives little publicity is this: who is going to pay for the sulppoirt of those who themselves can afford to pay but little? Here we are not referring to in- stitutional charity, especially; that situation is well on the way toward solution. But what of those groups that have impoverished themselves either through their own folly or through that of others affiliated with them? Are they to be al- lowed to pull themselves out of the mess, or is the entire state to contribute to their rehabilita- tion? There lies much of the complexity of the tax question. There are innumerable examples of this par- ticular phase of the difficulty, but let us present one incident that has caused a great deal of trouble. The Covert Road Act, passed before the era when automobiles became in general Lise, was originally intended to provide for financing of road construction and repair in districts where it was difficult for farmers to get their produce to market. If there were bad faults in a given road which was an artery for an entire farming coimmunity, the affected farmers might make use of the provisions of the Covert Act, and float a bond issue through the state on the basis of their own property. The cost of making a road prac- tically for wagon travel, by merely repairing a few localized zones (levelling a hill, filling a swale, etc.) might come to a total cost of $30,000; this, when distributed over the property of sev- eral farmers;wasno hardship, and they were usually able to pay off the bonds when they ma- tured. The situation changed drastically, however, with the growing popularity of automobiles, espe- cially in the general neighborhood of Detroit. Many districts became frantic over the prospect of concrete roads; real estate men would buy land on contract, and make use of the Covert Act to construct many more paved highways than necessary. In "boom" times (between 1921 and 1929), a 20-foot concrete highway cost between $30,000 and $35,000 per mile. And when the crash came, and real estate men defaulted on their contracts, the farmers came back into possession of property which was often bonded for far more "AIR MAIL" Duke ......................Pat O'Brien Mike ...................Ralph Bellamy Ruth ....................Gloria Stuart Slim ................ Slim Summerville Dizzy ................... Russell Hopton Irene-..................Lillian Bond Tommy..... .. ......Frank Albertson "Air Mail" is a fast-moving, stirring drama of the men who bring the mail through in modern fashion. We're cramped for space tonight, but don't turn away from this movie thinking it's old serial slash-bang stuff. . It isn't. It's good. That's why it gets two stars. Gloria Stuart continued to show the promise which she gave evidence of in earlier pictures. Pat O'Brien is even better in a swaggering what- a-man role. There is a little sex rolled up in "Air Mail," and even that would put it out of the ordinary movie of its general type. We refer to Lillian Bond as Irene, and Russell Hopton as her hus- band. -G. M. W. Jr. THE RED REVOLUTION If you're in the Art Cinema League swim, read this letter. We hope you're an intellectual and can grasp the import. To Screen Reflections: The stink of the Red Revolution penetrated the halls of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre last night, diffused by faint perfume and vague ex- halations of Detroit's Mayfair and sorority row. With tremendous crescendo the impact of the Revolution battered against the walls of Fascism. democracy, philistinism, asceticism, scholarism, professorism, and intellectual kulakism. Last night the mighty surf spent itself in the gentle rise and fall of bedizened bosoms, to whom fulle pneumatic loveliness was imparted by Fifth Ave- nue's incomparable corsetierres. Men of steel, revolutionists, tempered in the hot crucible of centuries of oppression of a class, smug in its own stupidity, emasculate in its in- tellectual vaporings, and its pietistic romantic velleities, had stamped out the last embers of what had been the glowing of a society of lubri- citous libertines who alternated conubial felicity with the rich voluptuousness of bizarre Parisian bordelloes; a society of fat-bellied shopkeepers, warm in the bourgeois security of grob Fresserei, sucking pulpy Havanas in their bloated satiety, heavily dozing upon the plump breasts of their wives. These revolutionists, confronted with the seductive yearning of such comfort averted stag- nation by the unquenchable fire of their tem- perament, by the irresistibleness of their desires, and the massiveness of their ambitions. It was with one fell sweep that they dispensed with what had been the product of the accretion of the ages. Moulded of such metal was the adam- ant Red Guard who stood immovably fixed and rigid in the defense of the day, the new day he guarded on the Nevski bridge. And it was this that was vouchsafed to the myopic vision of sanitary college professors, fresh from their classes in Contemporary Drama, Polit- ical Science, Sociology, and Victorian Literature. Were they not overwhelmed with a tremendous sense of impotence? Were they not horrified with the littleness of their souls? Were they not ridden with confusion at their cheap self-abasement?' Were they not revolted by the dreary aridity of their teachings? Were they not driven back to the mustiness of their scholarly closet? Did they not feel themselves in the presence of an alien force which disintegrated the careful order of their existence? It was the realization of the need to awaken sueh .slumbering ash-can souls that the Commu- nist Party, the National Student League and its intellectual arm, the Art Cinema League produced yesterday's work, after having gloriously duped thej pompous poltroons of the faculty and studentj body who strutted and hawed, without the slight- est consciousness that their chesty expansiveness could have suffered a speedy proletarian prick. In particular one noticed the deliberate smile with which the Radical Comrade Seidel instructed the violins to play the trenchant revolutionary an- them "L'Internationale" dimuendo et un poco rnaestoso. And so to Mr. Seidel and his revolu- tionary Kameraden was due an evening gaudy with the brilliance of a Union dance, festooned with the tender delights of the English class, sanctified by professorial respectability, and withal ennobled by the spark of revolutionary ar- dor embodied in the National Student League and its arm, the Art Cinema League. -*Mikhailovskii -Stanisavski *Aliases this column was asked to use. Campus Opinion Letters published in this con un should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymaous commiuncaios will be disregard- ed. The names of communicants will, however, be re- garded as confidential upon request. Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. THE SCHOOL OF MUSIC TRIO -IN APPRECIATION In these hurried days, when perspectives are golden instruments-we have, in the larger cities symphonies that are magnificently impressive ras to size and often-in sound-butwhen it comes to giving music an actual part in our lives, to bringing it into the intimacy of our homes and playing or listening to this "little"' music in the way and in the setting in which it was intended to be performed-it just isn't done. And as far as box office value goes, the failure of the Cham- ber Music Society to find a large enough au- dience to provide their series with a stable finan- cial basis, has shown that even in such a com- paratively musical community as Ann Arbor there is very little demand for this type of art. So, to those who have acquired the taste, it is a privilege to have an opportunity to be able to hear this kind of music as it is done by the School of Music trio. Friday night, in a compli- mentary concert for the Instrumental Music Clinic and anyone else who was interested, they gave a historical survey of compositions that have been written in this field by representative com- posers of each of the three great schools. The program included Rameau, Mozart and Bee- hoven, for the classicists-Brahms, Turina and Iansman as the moderns. The works were well chosen, not only as indications of the character- istics of their period, but from the standpoint of a varied and carefully balanced program, and the players showed an understanding and a comprehension of each of the different styles of writing, that made it all the more regrettable that this music is not more generally played and appreciated. -Kathleen Murphy. IS THERE A LIQUOR SITUATION? To The Editor: There appears to be a great deal of hue and ry about the alleged "liquor problem" at the Jniversity. Does it or does it not exist? In Ann Arbor, President Ruthven, through the Daily, tells us that "the drinking situation at raternities is a problem for the Alumni Inter- raternity Council to handle. I feel confident hat the alumni group can take care of the )roblem without the University interfering for hey understand the situation much better." ,Thursday, November 24.) The above statement ertainly presumes that a drinking situation and problem exist. In Toledo, President Ruthven tells the alumni md Rotary Club: "There hasn't been any drink- ng problem at the University for two years. There .s less drinking there than in any other town where there is an equal number of young people. Whey come to the University to get something and hey're much too busy to waste much time on iquor. Fraternities are usually blamed because hey are the only organized student bodies on ;ampus." (Toledo News Bee.) For the benefit of the students, we have it from ?resident Ruthven that there is a drinking prob- ,em. For the benefit of the alumni, there is no ?roblem. Which way, Janus? -Oscar. ALEX REPLIES ro TheEditor: We offer apologies, deep and sincere, to all chose who were inconvenienced by the antics of sur Alex last week. We hadn't, really, intended to disappoint those people with interest enough in our hero to rise at nine A. M. only to find that further exertion was necessary in chasing Alex from page to page. To be perfectly honest, we though that Alex was getting a little old; he had told so many things, and been around so much, that we thought that he might be losing his attraction for many of the students. We didn't think that so many would miss him if he left his time hallowed po- sition. After all, Alex is a diminutive cuss, and easily overlooked. But it appears that a great percentage of that quality in Alex which is com- monly 'known as "It" depends on his remaining in the locality where his fans arenused to looking for him. When the dissection of Alex was performed, we entirely overlooked the possibility that there might be dissenting voices. But so many people (including the Alex-American Girl) objected, that in this issue we have decided to collect the scat- tered pieces of Alex and put them back together again. We solemnly promise you now that Alex, having been properly chastised, won't go chasing all through the paper, with frenzied and break- fast-less people trailing him and praying for a brace or so of bloodhounds to aid in the search. Seriously, we're glad you like Alex, and now that our little experiment has proven that you do, you can expect Alex to "be around" every week, in the usual place and in the usual manner. -Alex's Boss. itorial omment TO MAKE SCHOLARS OF PUPILS The University of Chicago has given a year's trial to an educational plan similar to the Honors Course here, and proclaims it a success. The Chicago plan applies to Freshmen andSopho- mores instead of to upperclassmen as does the Minnesota honors courses. The student is expected to obtain a general knowledge of the humanities, biology and physical and social sciences. He takes but one special x- amination, given by a board of examiners and not the professor, to determine whether he has cov- ered the ground successfully. There are no other examinations or additional requirements. Although class attendance was not made com- pulsory, no "cutting" problem occurred. One stu- dent explained it this way: "So many distin- guished and able lecturers have been provided, that we would no more think of 'cutting' a class than we would think of throwing away a ON Buy Cleaning On the of a Coin Always Look to . * f i 0 +IRACLEAN ..Always Get the Best UST because all dry cleaning is the same in price does not mean it's the same in quality. Naturally, no two people do things alike, and cleaners are no, exception to the rule. It may be hard for you to make up your mind whose dry cleaning you want. But for your clothes' sake, don't decide on the toss of a coin. Shop around . . . try different methods . . compare them carefully . . . and if you aren't finally convinced that Goldman Bros.' exclusive Miraclean is the finest cleaning that money can buy, then we'll take the loss of your patronage with the best grace. That's fair enough, isn't it? ME . . ...N' !-hean a breath of cforn Phone 4213 p F;_______ ______ ' ii. ----- - - - ...__ __ _ _ __ _ _ -.Saiiiiiig- 'I For the Convenience of the Seniors The Deadline for Senior Pictures Has Been Extended to. DliEB7 15th First--Come to the Press Building and Purchase Your .Photogra-o pher's Receipt, Thn aean Appointment with one of these Official Michigan- Photographers. Dey Studio Rentschiler Studio Spedding Studio II