THEA MICHIGAN DAILY AN DAILY, __ _ :\ . : all power is his, in a degree to which he could never have dreamed. Mr. Comstock is indeed Michigan's man of the year. As his neighbors, the people of Ann Arborl have reason to be proud of him. The pressing fproblems which confront .his administration re- quire a leader of the first order both in sagacity and courage. We hope that Mr. Comstock will measure up to these needs. We wish him success. t public obviously did not. "Rain" was the same success here that it was in many other cities. "Horsefeathers," "Arsene Lupin," and "Water- loo Bridge" follow in the order named. "Blessed Event" and "A Bill of Divorcement' 'tied for tenth, but I though the latter had more lasting sighifi- cance. By "cycle" pictures reference is made to booms of a certain type of drama due, in most cases, to some contemporary influence. Examples are the Political Satire (The Phantom President, The Dark Horse, Washington Merry-Go-Round), the South Seas and Exotic collection (Goona-Goona, The Virgins of Bali, Congorilla, Bring 'Em Back Alive), and the Broadway Columnist set (Blessed Event and Is My Face Red?). C I , 4 l S 3 Oklahoma's Hell Week For Critics ... 3 .. ' ' '. A-l shed every morning except Monday during the ity year and Summer Session by the Board in. of Student Publications. er of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- Ld the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Lsocated Press is *clusively entitled to the use ublication of all news dispatches credited to it or eerwise credited in this paper and the local news ed herein. All rights of republication of special aes are reserved. ed at the Post Oifice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as class matter. Special rate of postage granted by ssistant Postmaster-General. ription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by A T THE UNIVERSITY of Oklahoma recently a student reporter wrote an article criticizing the institution's fraternities. Thereupon a group of that cultural center's elite, styling themselves the Deep Dark Mystery Club in the best juvenile fashion, captured the reporter, carried him out into the woods and lashed him with a whip. Then, their self-assumed duties as preservers of Oklahoma's sacred honor having been fulfilled, they drove away, leaving the stu- dent reporter to walk home in his pajamas during freezing weather. Tnt.kin~in h~r ;ic minlin of ftr A few superlatives of the year: For the most collapsed comeback: (1) Pola Negri, for the header "A Woman Commands" and (2) Clara Bow, for "Call Her Savage." The worst pictures of the year: (1) Clara Bow in "Call Her Savage"; (2) Pola Negri in "A Wom- an Commands"; (3) Marian Marsh in "Unde- 18"'; (4) Warner Baxter in "Amateur Daddy'; (5) Richard Dix in "The Conquerors"; (6) Eric Lin- den and Mary Kornman in "Are These Our Chil- dren"; (7) Will Rogers in "Down to Earth." The sexiest pictures of the year: (1) Jean Har- * sen' vesV: 40 East Th: on . Street, go. Publ1cations Building, Maynard Street, an. Phone: 2-1214. College Publications Representatives, by -Fourth Street, New York City; 80 oston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, iers ncienu uereis a inngiing o Two forces altogether too prevalent in America. First, low in "Red-Headed Woman"; (2) Jan-Harlow . in "The Beast of the City" and (3) Clara Bowsin there is that disobedience to law and commonx EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 ANAGING EDITOR...............FRANK B. GIBRETH TY EDITOR................KARL SEWFFERT ORTS EDITOR:..................JOHN W. THOMAS OMEN'S EDITOR.................MARGARET O'BRIEN ,SISTANT WOMEN'S EDITOR......MIRIAM CARVER ORkT EDFI- .RS:: Thomas Connellan, Norman F. Kraft John W. Prithard, Joseph A. Renihan, C. Hart Schaaf; Brackley Shaw, Glenn R. Winters. ORTS ASSISTANTS: L. Ross Bain, Fred A. Huber, Albert Newman, Harold Wolfe. PORTERS: Hyman J. Aronstani, Charles air'! l. Ellis BallC harles G. Barndt James L. baucha, unald F. Blakertz, Charles B. Brownson, Arthur W. Carstens, Ralph. G. Coulter, William G. Ferris, Sidney Frankel, Eric Hal, John C. Healey, Robert B. Hewett. George M. Hollies,- Walter E Morrison, Edwin W. Richardson, rohn' Simpson, George Van Veck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr., Wi. Stoddard White. fatherine Aning, BarbaraBates, Malorle E. Beck, "leanc(r B: Blu m, Maurine Burnside, Ellen Jane Cooley, Louise Crandall, Dorothy Dishman, Anne Dunbar eanette DuI,. Caol. 1 .Haan, Los Jotter, Helen Lev- ofa, Frances J. Manchester, Mare J. Murphy, Eleanor Peterson, Margaret D. Phalan, Katherine Rucker, Harriet Spess. Marjorie Wester sF BUS&N1SSSTAFF Tephione 2-1214 isINESS MANAGER.............BYRON C. VEDDER WEDIT MANAGER................HARRY BEGLEY OMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......DONNA BECKER PARTMENT MANAGERS: Advertising. Grafton Sharp. Ndvertsing Contracts, Orvil Aronson; Advertising Serv- ce, Noel Turner; Accounts, Bernard E. Schnacke; Cir- aulaton, Gilbert E Bursley; Publications, Robert E. Finn. SISTANTS: Jack Bellamy, Gordon. Boylan, Allen Cleve- and, Charles Ebert, Jack Efroyniaon,Fred Hertrick, oseph Hume, Allen Knusi, Russell Read, Fred Rogers, Lester Skinner, Joseph Sudow, Robert Ward. lizabeth Aigler, Jane Bassett, Beulah Chapman, Doris alm Y Billy 'Grffths, Virginia artz Catherine Mc- Eear, Helen Olson, Helen Schmude, May Seefried, Cathryn Stork. WEDNESDAY, JAN. 4, 1933 ,ccess To Michian's few Governar . S THE BELLS ring out the. old year and sound a welcome to the new, ichigan gets a new governor and its share in e "new deal." The political institutions of the state face the ost critical year in their history, and William A. >nastcck receives the honor which he has long light, elevation to the highest office in the wer of the people of Michigan to give. It was a sperate electorate, weary of a depression-ridden kld, that finally turned upon its traditional Re- blicanism to the man who had three times dly sought the honor which is now his. But the sweetness of victory has been short for r. Comstock. The Herculean task now thrown ion his shoulders will require a leadership on his' .rt such as no governor of the past has been q uired to assume. It was a protest vote that Ve him victory, and the people will expect that er protest shall have meant something. They ll expect something new, something better from jiistock and the Democrats, The passage of the 15-mill amendment further mplicates matters muddled badly enough al- "dy by the inroads of the depression, The new iinistration must find a new source of revenie i, in doing so, it will need to tread onisomeone's ee. No one will want to pay new taxes, but i maintenance of the state government will re- acre the enactment of such a measure. If the -mill amendment precludes the enactment of income tax, as many believe, the only alterna- uie will be a sales tax, and that will be a hard rl for the liberal Democrats to swallow, for it in part, assess the people who can least af- Fd it. Zconomies in the state government will be the at step required of the new administration. A mmission has just recently reported with a long of recommended economies.This list will be 4eIu1 when the slicing begins. While it will not necessary for the new government to begin a ries of drastic removals since it has a clean 4te with which to start, the host of claimants r political rewards will make the problem none e less difficult. The liquor situation will be another prime Ioalem. The attitude of the people of the state ;Michigan can no longer be questioned. They LVe spoken decisively against Prohibition. The ate constitutional provision has been repealed, it the legislative enactment still remains on ie statute books. The legislature has only to pass repeal measure to end the era of state Prohi- decency which so often manifests itself'in all good people inflamed with impressing their own ideas upon another group, particularly when that group is in a minority. Secondly, there is that appalling puerility which is a part in some degree, at least, of nearly all American colleges. The former is a problem for the public authorities of the nation. The latter asininity is within the province of the individual college itself. Childishness in college students is most notice- able, of course, in fraternity hell weeks, when the upperclass brothers put their pledges through an- cient flummeries designed to make them good Dekes, or good Delts, or good Betas, or good:what- nots. It is assumed that the pledges are nice enough fellows, "good material" in fact, but in need of some aid so. that their characters may conform to the common standard. This aid is rendered by making the pledges feel cheap. Na- turally, it doesn't work. The kind of person whose character will be altered by a week of nonsense hasn't got a character worth bothering about. All the other types of characters will be the same after as they were before, no matter how fervent are the brother's ministrations. Yet many fraternities persist in their childish- ness, and by their persistence lower their own standard, the standard of their college, and the standard of college students in general. The more fraternal episodes of the type sponsored by Okla- homa's Deep Dark Mystery Club a 'college may have, the further is that college removed from culture, from intellectual superiority, from all of those things which should, but all too often do not, characterize higher education in America., The hell week outbursts of fraternities are essen- tially a product of cow colleges. Their heritage is the grass roots, and they have grown via the barnyard. They will be abolished by the frater- nity members themselves only when the brothers have achieved a mental maturity slightly, if ever so slightly, above the level "commonly assigned to college boys. Screen Reflections Choosing the ten best motion pictures of the year becomes both an increasingly difficult and an increasingly interesting task when that year is marked with several outstanding examples of bet- ter entertainment spotted with "cycles" which were usually nipped before they became formula pictures, and punctuated with amazing rises to popular fame and two or three blasted comebacks. Almost every selection (and there were mil- lions) contained the most-ballyhooed picture of the year, "Grand Hotel." Katherine Hepburn's The Ten Best Shows f11932 1. Grand Hotel 72 2. Arrowsmith 70 3. The Guardsman 65 4. I Am a Fugitive from a Chain Gang 63 5. Dr. Jekyll and Mr, Hyde 59 6. Raini 54; 7. Horsefeathers 37 8. Arsene Lupin 36 9. Waterloo Bridge 31 10. A Bill of Divorcement 18 wVotes received. touching work in "A Bill of Divorcement" put it among nearly everyone's first ten, while the other consistent performer was the dramatization of Edward Burns' famous convict nightmare, "I Am 'a Fugitive from a Chain Gang." Beyond that "Call Her Savage." Phenomenal rises to fame: Lee Tracy, Charles Laughton, Herbert Marshall. A few of the prettiest: Sari Maritza, Constance Cummings, Gloria Stuart, Carole LomDarct, Kath- arine Hepburn, Mae Clarke, Bette Davis, Dorothy Lee, Dorothy Jordan, Loretta Young, Madge Evans. Most ridiculous title of 1932: "They Call' It Sin." Weightiest event of the year: Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle returns to the screen. Least funny comedians: James Gleason and Zasu Pitts in "The Crooked Circle." Most capable feminine lead: Katharine Hep- burn in "A Bill of Divorcement." Funniest character: The half-witted dog in Dis- ney's "Mickey Mouse." Remember him as the radio announcer at the football game? Most futile leading ladies: Gwili Andre in "The Roar of the Dragon"; Sydney Fox in "The Mouth- piece." Best cartoons: "The Bears and the Bees"; the color cartoon of King Neptune; and "The Wild Party." The biggest cad of the year: Monroe Owsley the bounder! Stars with poorest vehicles: Barbara Stanwyck, Elissa Landi. Stars with the best vehicles: The Barrymores. -G. M. W. Jr. We suppose those West Coast games were in- teresting, but in these diggin's the football season long since passed and people are thinking about next summer's baseball schedules. -Detroit Free Press. STARIS _& STRIPES i t L a "1 U 1 . r s a ,. ,, . , Is Inexpensive Very ffective Scientific Laboratory Supplies EBE BAC &.SON CO. ESTABLISHED 1843 NEW DANCE PROG-RAM' Dancing During Dinner 6:00 - 7:15 Friday Saturday - Sunday Call AL the Adtaker 200-202 E. LIBERTY ST. 2121 4 I r The oratorical I '~"~'"Association presents the Brilliant Lecturer -k'A Michgan Students Large Size..... . ..$1.00 or 38x10..............$2.00 Oil Painting.........$1.00 "A Relative or Friend Will Appreciate Your Photo Reduced Prices on Application Photos Only $1.75 a Dozen WILL DURANT Author of "The Story of Philoso- phy," Studies in Genius," and other works, 'at the Hill Auditorium Wednesday, Jan.11I CHUBB'S It Really Helps a Lot and SAdvertising REMBRANDT 7S'UDIO 12E.rLibyM c.Cy Formerly. Mack-& Co. Admission SOc and 75c Tickets at Wahr's DAILY CLASJSIFIED ADS ARE INEXPENSIVE EVENING DANCING SATURDAY NIGHT ONLY ' [ 9:30-12:30 iI ! : _______________-_ q l By Karl Seiffert Technocracy, says Senator Couzens, is a stimu- lating doctrine that should stir the American peo- ple to do something atout their economic plight. That may all be, but it seems. a lot like merely giving a new name to the corner that prosperity is just around. n 1 AdML /M The Senator points out that the present con- dition of the nation is the result of the "financial drunk" previous to the 1929 crash. That would make this technocracy thing a sort of socio-eco- nomic tomato juice cocktail. 'll rr ! . An oil refining company has announced a one-cent per gallon "slash" in gasoline prices, following a general three-cent in- crease in the Detroit area. Many more of these slashes and Detroit motorists will have to collect their welfare doles on foot. * *: 1 has been the keynote of the Varsity's success A Branch County boy who demanded $900 in an attempted bank holdup the other day told the prosecutor that he had only done it "for a jokeY' so county officials, entering into the spirit of the thing, laughingly tossed him into a jail cell. Horses, says a harness manufacturer, are grow- ing in popularity, and he's coming out of retire- ment to start an active business again. Well, that may be true, but there must still be enough horses left so that it will be a long time before the farmers take to harness as a steady diet * * * and is the one outstanding reason why Michlgan Men have patronized the Varsity for 26 years. The excellence of the Varsity is not merely a by-word, but proven by the continual growth of its clientele. It is for you now to enjoy the benefits of modern laundering developed through ye ars .of e per _Ien' point tnere was no sustained agreement. A staff straw vote conducted among members of The Daily gave the results, shown above, "Grand Hotel," "I Am a Fugitive," and "A Bill of Divorcement" largely speak for themselves. All were doniinated by actors or actresses amaz- ingly fitted for the portrayal' of their roles. "Grand Hotel" produced Greta Garbo, John and Lionel Barrymore, Wallace Beery and Joan Craw- ford. "I Am a Fugitive," with Paul Muni (real name Muni Weisenfreund) of Yiddish Art Theatre fame, was "made" more by the story than by the character, not forgetting, of course, the tremen- dous contemporary appeal that was attendant upon it. "Arrowsmith"' was: as good .as. Helen Hayes made it. It placed second in The Daily vote, with, 70 votes. "Grand Hotel" had 72. "The Guardsman" belonged to Lunt and Fon-' tanne. The reviewer didn't see this one, but it acquired a reputation earlier in the year that A distinguished pianist has recommended music as a cure for business, troubles, pay cuts, etc., etc. He says music is to the soul what milk, butter and eggs are to-the bodt. The trouble with most of the radio crooners is that they are only about half baked. i -1 - f# There is a story about a professional wrestler in Detroit who was disqualified for promiscuous slugging after he had knocked both his opponent and the referee out of the ring. That business of hitting his opponent was the big mistake. A Mount Clemens bank, closed some time ago has gone into receivership. The receiver's name fittingly enough, is Schutz. m i For Call and Delivery Service Phone 2-3123 3ut it will need to proceed with caution. The Teal amendment authorized the legislature to up a liquor commission to handle the alcohol ,fic. But, in setting up such a commission the te will be defying the power of the national ernmcnt. If, however, the statutory provisions repealed without substitute legislation, the e will become "wide-open" with only the I-- n~a©"oifr~r n to maifain 441axr nri r- - A Wisconsin fisherman who was, found i possession of a sturgeon, which it is illegal to catch there, told game wardens that the fish had jumped out of the water and broken its neck when it fell on the ice. After waiting ahile' the innocent bystander decided he'd" have to clean the creature himself after al. s fY k r i I'N TTim I I