THE MICHIGAN DAILY I MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 -:. .j lh Y G a . . WI '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 a- the Big Ten News Service. ssociatcd folhate rsa 1933. NIA coprAe 1934 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESSl The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the useg for republication of all news dispatches credited to itor not otherwise credited in this paper and the local newsI published herein. All rights ofarepublication of special dispatches are reserved.' Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as1 second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by dmail $4.25.I Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 21214. n.4epresetatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 Est Thirty-Fourth Street, New Ytork City; 80 Boylston Sreet, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago.c EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR..........THOMAS K. CONNELLANt EDITORIAL DIRECTOR................C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR....................BRACKLEY SHAW1 SPORTS EDITOR...............ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR......... .......CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- liam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. WOMEN'S. ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy. Margaret Phalan. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. REPORTERS: Ogden G. Dwight, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. +Gthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Thomas H. Kleene, Burnett B. Levick, David G. Mac- Donald, S. Proctor McGeachy, Joel P. Newman, John M. O'Connell, Kenneth Parker, Paul W. Philips, George I. Quimby, Mitchell Raskin, William R. Reed, Robert S.3 Ruwitch, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Han.mer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Rosalie Resnick, Mary3 Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spener. BUSINES S STAFFt Telephone 2-121 BUSINESS MANAGER...........W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER..........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE1 WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER.......... MC.ENR ........................ . CATHERINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her-1 trick; Classfied Advertising, Russell Read; Advertisig Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Alien Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson.1 ASSISTANTS: MegsrBartmess, Van Dunakin, Carl Fib- iger, Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, Janes Scott, Norman Smith, David Wink- worth.' WOMEN'S BUSNESS STAFF Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Winifred Bell, Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Betty Chapman, Patricia Daly, Jean Dur- ham, Minna Giffen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Isabelle Kanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina ollook, Elizabeth J. Simonds. l NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM -G. FERRIS "The March Of Time". HE RETURN to the air several weeks ago on "The March of Time"Y marked one of the nfost socially significant events< in the history of radio. Acclaimed by countless listeners during the past two years as one of thel outstanding programs of the radio, it has been sincerely hoped that this feature would become. aI fixture of national enlightenment. The declara- tion at the close of last season's 'series by thez publishers of Time magazine, its sponsors, that1 sufficient funds were not available for its mainte- nance brought a flood of protests- from listeners throughout the country, and the program was continued for another season.1 Definitely unable to sponsor "The March of Time" independently this year, the editors of Time were confronted with a truly grave problem. Was this entrance into the world's news fronts to be discontinued at the expense of the educational{ interests of the nation? Out of this enigma came3 again the good Samaritan, this time in the personj of a large industrial concern whch has now be- come financially responsible for the weekly por-i trayal of human drama. The elements which have constituted the successful Friday evening program in the past have been neither sacrificed nor sub- ordinated by the change in policy. The "March of Time" remains a true reenactment of the most memorable scenes from the news of the week. Prime Minister Bennett Looks At Inflation.. . P RIME MINISTER BENNETT, of Canada, thinks inflation is a bad thing. His argument is that "no country that has' once experienced inflation of its currency would want to go through it again." His reasoning is the oldest and most - pitiful known to mankind. It has confronted every prog- ressive idea the world has known. Not a single in- vention, not a single discovery has been made without someone saying, "It won't work because it never has worked." Progress means change. Yet every change that is suggested is at\acked because it proposes to do something that has never been done before. The kind of inflation that has been envisaged for this country and is already in process is dif-; ferent from other kinds in that it is to be con- trolled. This has never been done before, but that Campus Opinion A Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disre- garded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contribu- tors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. WORTHY WORSHIP, WORTHY GIVINGc To the Editor:' Glancing through the bulletin of a local church this morning, I noticed the following request:1 "'Worthy worship requires worthy giving.' "We most heartily welcome to our Sunday1 Services many worshippers who are not mem-E bers of this church, and would request the visitors to join in the financial support of these services to the extent of our minimum membership contribution: 25c per week forc each adult." So at last religion has become an economic com- modity with a price tag affixed. The performers are more than packing the house, the demand for seats is exceeding the supply, and it is foundl expedient to set a minimum price that will elimi- nate the less profitable worshippers. It would not be decorous to throw them out the door, nor is itl necessary when a gentle hint is just as effective. In this instance the hint might have been more appropriately headed, "World worship requires1 worldly giving." Such a situation is a far cry fromr the Galilean and His disdain for material posses-t sions. It may be far "easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God," but I can't believe that the economically unfortunate therefore have no need of religious comfort. -A. W. McMillan, '34.t A Washington BYSTANDER t By KIRKE SIMPSONI WASHINGTON, Oct. 30.-The farmer uprisingc in the West, featured by a call for a national farmers' strike could not have caught President Roosevelt unawares. He has been hearing about discontent there andr elsewhere over NRA versus AAA results to datel from others than the currency inflation advocates.I Men who had a lot to do with launching the NRAI idea have been among those bringing such reportsc to the White House.c What to do about it has been the question . Some1 presidential advisers think a new high-command publicity campaign to get a progress summary off all sides of the recovery drive directly before the1 people would help. That accounts for the understanding that cab-t inet officers are soon to begin a series of talks onl the progress of particular elements of the recoveryI efforts under their personal supervision.I THE substance of any such explanations un- doubtedly would be to point out that, as aI whole, the recovery program is only now getting into action.c . That is particularly true of NRA. One recent recommendation to the President is that he sig-x nalize this by formally ending the blanket code preliminary period, designed to tide over until the statutory codes for important industrial groups could be framed. A FURTHER indication of the transitory staget through which NRA is passing is the persistent rumor that General Johnson soon is to be suc-i ceeded as NRA administrator.c At the the White House it is denied that an ulti-i mate change might be made, putting a man of a different type in charge during the enforcement1 period; but when that might be done is another matter. Yet it is known that Mr. Roosevelt al- ready has made at least casual inquiries as to who might be best qualified to carry forward the NRA. FOR all the whoop and hurrah about Henry Ford's failure to date to get into the NRA boat, high administration officials see no clash of views between the White House and Mr. Ford to pre- vent full of co-operation. A face-to-face meeting between the President and Ford probably would -solve the difficulty. If either made the first move toward such a meeting, it is said the other would be quick to respond. How to get by that difficulty of who is to make the first gesture is bothering their mutual friends. Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD There was something businesslike in the attitude of one girl at the University of Wis- consin going through rushing. Through her father, a bank official, she had access to Dun and Bradstreet, the book which quotes credit and financial standings of all chapters. She investigated thoroughly before pledging a sor- erity., - * A University of Washington survey shows that the average college student carries more money in his pocket than the average professor does, and that the professor's secretary carries more than the two of them combined. * * $ Love, dumbness, and faculty intelligence are the reason for freshmen flunking out of school, according to one of the deans -at the University of Nebraska. . . * .* * Speaking a b o u t unique college classrooms. Miami University students dive into the depths. of Biscayne Bay several times a week in order to search for rare fauna. Also there are several aqua- planing classes on the west coast. A dunk means Hopwood Poetry REVIEW OF Two POEMS BY JUDD POLK By CARLTON F. WELLS In "Ann Arbor from Chubb Hill" Mr. Polk re- cords an experience that has revealed to him unexpected and stirring beauty as he stood, at sundown, on the hills to the northeast of the city. Here, as in several other Ann Arbor poems by Mr. Polk (not'reprinted in The Daily), he has used a subject based on observations and impres- sions of the local scene. As a whole the poem conveys a sense of "calm and quiet" well sustained, with the felicitous metaphor concluding the description of "shadows of the sunset," "Oh subtle pen Of light that writes on snow!" The:imagery of the poem, however, is sometimes inappropriate or blurred, with consequent vague- ness. Snow that falls "patiently, quietly . . . with deliberate softness" will not at the same time come down "fluttering briefly." Nor would a reader unfamiliar with Ann Arbor get an accurate suggestion of what Ann Arbor looks like from Chubb Hill, "a city . . . . nestled far within the hills;" not even through falling snow would Ann Arbor, which overflows the narrow valley of the terrain to the southeast of Chubb Hill, suggest "nestled far within the hills." Again, the lines "Till in full bloom the snow Drinks up the softened light that falls" mean, I think, that the snow comes faster, more thickly, bringing with it an effect of sudden twi- light; but "full bloom'' and "drinks up" have associations hardly suitable for the present con- text. Three lines farther I should also question the unidiomatic phrase "in ease," the more so because it comes at the close of one of the few rhyming lines. A poem usually is much more than the sum of its parts, but the ultimate effectiveness of a poem depends to no small extent on the rightness and harmony of its phrasing of suc- cessive ideas and images. Mr. Polk's interesting and somewnat puzzling sonnet, "The Young Chatterton, is ostensibly composed by Chatterton himself. As is well known, Thomas Chatterton is the "marvellous boy" of English poetry, amazingly precocious, who had before he was eighteen written enough significant poetry to fill two considerable volumes, only to die by his own hand after three months of bitter disappointment and want in London. Mr. Polk has chosen a single freshly conceived aspect of Chatterton's unhappy life and has conveyed that aspect - the troubled boy meditating suicide - with considerable skill. In the opening lines the "midnight stallion" seems to symbolize Death the Deliverer, always in readiness for the "time I must be off." Then, beginning half way through line four, in the best passage of the poem, are references to what Chatterton's unsympathetic neighbors were saying about this "foolish lad" in danger of "getting mad with knowledge." The next lines, referring to his father who rode away 'one night and never came back,' imply that the elder Chatterton had taken his own life for causes similar to those now harassing the boy: "They said these very things of him," the father. And the sonnet closes with the couplet, "So let them rail at me, whisper, and scoff, But I shall keep my stallion at the trough." As a matter of fact the father was an undis- tinguished schoolmaster, a singer in an old Bris- tol church, who died not by suicide but quite un- sensationally in his own home a short time be- fore his son Thomas was born. Strict historicity can of course be too much insisted on, yet in this instance such divergence from the facts in the crucial point of the poem would appear a serious blemish. Screen eflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. CANOES FOR RENT SAUNDERS Foot of Cedar Street on Huron River Flight Instruction Local Passenger Flights Special Charter Trips Airline Reservations ANN ARBOR AIR SERVICE Municipal Airport 4320 South State igh Phone 9270 ii Ngh Phone 7739 I- Save Regularly 000 One of the first requisites in building a savings account is to set aside a definite amount to be" deposited Regularly. Small sums consistently saved amount to much more than occasional large deposits. Banking Hours: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. (except Saturdays) Saturday 9 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK Member Federal Reserve System Main at Huron State at the Arcade - :VI I, Have You Purchased Your MICHIGAN- ENSIAN or $1. Down Payment 'Ensians and Student Directories On Sale at Student Publications Buildingy. CAMPU S SALE November 1st and 2nd. j. 1' 111.1 V J energy for you! 'It 'YOU'LL be taking all the mins-and the bran, found in I hurdles in high, once you + switch to that natural energy. maker, Shredded Wheat. Shredded Wheat is 100% whole wheat, with nothing added, nothing taken away. It brings you all the energy- makers-the essential proteins, minerals, carbohydrates, vita- one cereal grain, whole wheat. Find out for yourself that a bowlful of these crisp-baked biscuits is a bowlful of natural energy. Order Shredded Wheat at your favorite eating place. You won't be kept waiting, for Shredded Wheat is ready cooked, ready to eat. Use plenty of milk or cream, and top RE I N14 fop When you see Ni- agara Falls on the piachage, you KNOW you have Shredded Wheat. wl® with your favorite fruit. Keep up the good habit for at least ten days, and see how much better you (and your pocket- book) feel. THE VITALLY DIFFERENT FOOD SHREDDED W HEAT A product of NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY "Uneeda Bakers" READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS AT THE MICHIGAN "BOMBSHELL" ** Lola ...................... Jean Harlow Space ......................Lee Tracy Pops ....................Frank Morgan Gifford Middleton .......Franchot Tone Brogan..................Pat O'Brien Mac ....................... Una Merkel Marquis ............ ..... Ivan Lebedeff Junior......................Ted Healy People have often wondered what a movie ac- tress does when she gets the wrong kind of pub- licity (the kind that makes her the bad, naughty- wauty type). "Bombshell" tells the story and doesn't leave out the details. The rapid change of events in this picture keeps the attention of the audience and the verbal conflicts between Tracy and Harlow will bear no- tice because they are rather fast and furious. Ihere is evidence in this picture that Miss Har- low is trying to gradually work into more "re- fined" parts . . . at least this was more refined than "Hell's Angels." Lee Tracy is the same "Listen Sweetheart" type that he has been playing in nearly all of his pic- tures. But his energy and tongue swing the pic- ture toward the up-grade and with the assistance of Frank Morgan, who makes almost as good a drunk as Charles Ruggles, Ted Healy, Franchot Tone, Pat O'Brien, and Una Merkel, "Bombshell" is made into a rather good satire on the life of a Hollywood sensation whether the author meant it that way or not. It is humorous to see Jean Harlow work her eyebrows when she hasn't any; Frank Morgan manipulating his hands and eyebrows (he has some) while a little tipsy; Harlow's maid pull around three rather fussy looking dogs wherever I . II I