THE,- MICHIIGAN.DAILY * - CHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 .._ r, itinerant opera companies -could come here, se- cure a major theatre for a week, and virtually coin money. Nowhere in the world is there a finer musical i series than the Choral Union series and the May Festival; the Oratorical Association lectures are unsurpassed; but we believe well-executed grand opera is something for which there is a definite place in the cultural life of this community. Whether it is to be the San Carlo or some other company, we respectfully urge some alert booker to bring "Pagliacci," "Martha," "Rigoletto," "Lu- cia," and the other classics to Ann Arbor. Screen Reflections . 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. izodatited, &.lte tat_r__s__ 9||NTIA I" EkAE 93 - MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to itor not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news publishedherein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $15 0'suring regular school year by carrier $3.75; by mail, $4.2, - Offices: Stent Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mchigan. Phone: 21214. Represe i.tatives: Cllege Publications Repr entatives Ic,40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 0 iston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago., EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.....THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR...........C. HART SCHAAF CIT!: EDITR............BRACKLEY SAW SPORTS EDITOR...............ALBERT EH.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. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPORTERS: Ogden G. Dwight, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried, Thomas roehna, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Thomas Hf. Kleene, David G. Macdonald, Joel P. 'New- man, ,Kenneth Parker, George I. Quimby, William R. Reed, Robert S. 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 Held, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phin Mc~anMarjorie Morrison, Sally Place Rosalie Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER.............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER............BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER................. .......................... CATHARINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trick; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Carl rlb- iger, Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, David Winkworth. WOMEN'S BUSINESS 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 Pollock, Elizabeth J. Simonds. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN C. HEALEY Colgate Plan Wins Carnegie Recognition. . B ELIEVERS in the "Colgate Plan" of higher education are happy at the recognition that has come to it through the; Carnegie Foundation's $120,000 award. The prin- ciple of the "Colgate Plan" delights most students and educators, and the readiness of the Colgate7 faculty to change administration details has won them the praise of every practical executive who; has been watching.- The "plan" has two aspects. The first has to do with administration or method. It may be described as tutorial; and, while generally looked upon with favor, has little in it that is original. It is in the second aspect, the quantitative or curricular part of the plan, that the originality lies. This is the aspect that has aroused the interest. This curricular part of the Colgate program is built on the principle that a student may best find the field in which he is best fitted and has the greatest chance of happiness by looking briefly at all fields. Accordingly a freshman is required to take comprehensive survey courses in five of six fields: physical sciences, including astronomy, geology, chemistry, physics, and mathematics; biological science, including botany, zoology, andr psychology; social science, including history, poli- tics, economics, sociology, and education; philoso- phy and religion; fine arts; and languages. At the end of the freshman year one of these fields is! selected, a major part of the sophomore year, being spent in introductory courses in it. In the junior and senior years the student concentrates in one department in this field. A. comprehensive examination is given in.the work of the last two years at the end of the senior year. Thus a graduate of Colgate finds himself well equipped in one field; has had an opportunity to choose that field in a sound way; and has in addition been permitted a glimpse of all major fields of knowledge. No thinking student who has experienced the difficulty of deciding what to study can fail to appreciate the principle of this system. The Carnegie award is a tribute to the results so far obtained, and an indication of faith in what the plan promises to do.- An Open Letter To Si-nor Gallo. .. Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. AT THE MAJESTIC First Run Double-Feature "The Solitaire Man" ** "The Solitaire Man" gives Herbert Marshall, in an inferior picture (he was excellent in "Trouble In Paradise"), a chance to display his mellow voice and smooth manner. Jewelry-man, ex-soldier, and leader in a rather smooth robbery circle that includes May Robson, Elizabeth Allan, and Ralph Forbes, Herbert Mar- shall tries to go straight but runs into difficulty with Lionel Atwell while aloft in an airplane. Mary Boland again displays her characteriza- tion of the American tourist, May Robson, ac- tress-extraordinaire, puts over a minor role with great success, while Herbert Marshall is below his class in an average picture with a good cast. * * * would be likely to seek, or find, a representative in the person of Bishop Cannon. It is true that there are poor-whites agrarians; but it does not follow that all agrarians are poor-j whites. There is in the South a large body of re- spectable, ambitious, industrious farmers, in many respects strangely like Michigan farmers. In some sections, Georgia among them, they are a very in- fluential part of the electorate. The present gov- ernor of Georgia boast of being the farmers' choice., But these farmers most emphatically are not poor-whites. A professor in the University who listened' sympathetically to my bitter protests against your statement, suggested that it is a popular mis- conception in the North that in the South there are only three social classes - the aristocracy, the poor-whites and the negroes. This classification takes no account of the bourgeoisie, and the inde- pendent farmers whose status I have gone to such length to explain. I shall close by suggesting that if, in the light of the new understanding I have given of the term poor-white one should want to use it again, we use it thus - po' white trash. It's much more of- fective, and much nearer the truth. - Southerner. The The;;atre DOROTHY SANDS A Review Such goings-on as there were last night at Hill auditorium have the unfortunate result that the critic is left with very little to say beyond an apology for saying nothing. Miss Sands has a saucy way with her, and such a keen eye for mannerisms that her evening on the platform is riotously funny. Also, she is an actress, one feels, in her own right. In an elusive way, Miss Sands kids some of her characters along and plays others straight. Her Lotta and Frances Starr were of the latter per- suasion, and the fact that they were excelled by several other numbers is only a proof that Miss Sands' mimicry is even better than her acting. Her outline of American theatrical history was at all times interesting, but didn't really get under way until it got down to the people Miss Sands has herself had the opportunity to observe. At that point her insight into personality and the elements that make it up brought the perform- ance to a higher level of enjoyment. After that it was a panic -in fact (why quibble on words?) a holocaust, Outstanding, to our particular taste, was her Ethel Barrymore, with cynical hands and rich foggy voice complete. However, there was Garbo, the Swedish nightingale with the bass voice, The- da Bara, the Squirming Siren, and Mae West - she of the wicked eyes. This department thinks Miss Sands has sort of nice eyes, too. Rather than fumble further to express our ad- miration, we are herewith presenting Miss Sands with our entire critical vocabulary of laudatory fwords, viz.: PRINTING-Lowest City Prices THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown = 206 North Main Next to Main Post Office Dial 2-1013 WE SELL TYPEWRITING PAPER Flight Instruction Local Passenger Flights Special Charter Trips Airline Reservations ANN ARBOR AlR SERVICE Municipal Airport 4320 South State 1 NDay Phone 9270 NgtPhone 7739 NOW.... Sparton's Own Rich Tone in The New Sparton Compact A-C--D-C Radio $29.95 Complete, this new "Compact" weighs only seven pounds, yet it has Sparton's famous rich voice. A marvelous superhetro- dyne "set up" with tone control encased in a fine inlaid cabinet with illuminated dial. An additional popular feature is the SEMI-SHORT WAVE reception which permits tuning in on police calls, aircraft reports and amateurs. ... Ill CROSLEY-SPARTON SALES 615 East William Street Phone 7912 Announcement... MAY'S VIOLIN SHOP OPEN FOR BUSINESS 4 DAYS EACH WEEK from Tuesday to Friday with a line of High Grade Strings, Reeds and other Accessories for the Musical Instrument Student. Repairing Our Specialty And Service Our Motto I I1 Collegiate Shoe Section r IIII '11 FORMAL I h? .'' .. N> * "Narrow Corner" Somerset Maugham's "Narrow Corner" hasn't been made into too good a movie. The pho- tography spoiled what might have been a fairly sincere attempt in giving a South Sea scene of romance and adventure. The best achievement in this picture is Ar- thur Hohl's characterization of a half-crazed sea captain, while Patricia Ellis is poor, wears little, and acts poorly. -R. E. L. Campus Opinion 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. To the Editor: I was so impressed with the very arresting first paragraph of the article entitled. "Tragedy at the First Methodist" in The Daily of Thursday, that- although I have, for a long time, been too weary of Bishop Cannon and his various excursions in- to the public eye to make even the most casual interest in them - I read the remainder of the article. To my genuine admiration of the opening remarks and the astuteness they showed, was added a marvelling awe of a writer whose range was so broad that he could in one paragraph delve deep into the heart of a poor, misled pub- licity seeker; and, in the next, in one sweeping clause, depict the entire political history of the South since the War Between the States (the Civil War to you). I confess to a distinct feeling of surprise at this latter statement, because I had had no idea that such a condition as the writer indicated had ever existed; though I sup- pose such lack of knowledge is excusable in one who has merely been born and bred in the South, and has never been able to view its progress from the vantagepoint of Ann Arbor - or point north of the Mason-Dixon line. It is the toleration I expect because of this ob- vious disadvantage that leads me to be bold enough to ask a few questions about this state- ment, which is as follows: "Somehow, looking at Cannon sitting there in his chair, pounding his fist and raising his arms, one knew that this man represented the agrarian poor-white South which sprang to power after the Civil War, and which only now is losing control." The first thing I should like to ask is how the writer knew this. Was it some peculiarity about the good Bishop's method of pounding his fist and raising his arms that marked him? Was it the writer's knowledge of the Bishop's ancestry which led him to deduce that there pounded a man of the people? Where did he represent them? On Wall Street, perhaps? I believe I am right in recalling that the more interesting of his activities were there. And again, attacking the problem from another angle, what is this section referred to, that has been so pow- erful for so long? Does the writer have the slight- est idea what the term poor-white means in the South? And did it drag the Bishop down in its decline, or vice-versa? Lastly, and most impor- tantly for me, who am one of the oppressed gen- tility, is he absolutely sure that it HAS fallen? As long as I was unaware that such domination ex- isted, I lived contentedly enough, but now I shud- der at the thought of having to endure such a yoke longer. Before the collapse of the plantation system, the' term poor-white was applied alike to the shifting white tenantry, and to the small inde- pendent land-holders. After the war, lack of money and resources made agrarian aristocrats, and agrarian poor-whites equal in opportunity for the first time. Very possibly, since the war had so decimated the ranks of the higher class, control was with the poor-whites. But what the writer has overlooked is the small, but important, fact that those poor-whites who profited by their opportunities, have ceased to be such, fifty years gone, and their descendants would be the first to jump at your throat for intimating that anything other, than this were true. The term poor-white today is applied to those shifting, shiftless members of the population who eke out a living wherever the wind blows them - 237 South State Street MICH IGAN vs. ILLINOIS Round Trip to .2 Champaign . . . Follow your team to the big game, by Greyhound Bus. Con- genial crowd-comfortable, cush- ioned chairs - schedules conven- iently timed. You'll save money and have a pleasant, scenic trip. SAN \ * -D r WHITF. - : ' _. _ ;mow . f r f 1';. .. 1 !t 111, r 'r. ,, \. 's t TINTING REE ! 4' rS Go Toget her Get the whole crowd togethert Save money by chartering a Greyhound bus - direct to the Stadium. Eastern Michigan Bus Depot 116 W. Huron Street Phone: 3589 SATI N 4 SBLACKA SATIN- a grand party . , . entrancing music .. . a wonderful dance date . all completed with these smart formals - budget priced. 95 admirable brilliant cogent delicious excellent grand nuts, the powerful searching swell wonderful zowee _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ! - Miss Sands may take her choice. We can do no more. -Powers Moulton Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD Ohio Wesleyan University is offering a course in Prohibition as a Government Problem. This is believed to be the only one of its kind offered at any college. Legal aspects and details of prohib- ition will be stressed rather than the general scope of the controversy. Superstitious students at the Colorado School of Mines have thrown a horsehoe over the goal posts before each football game since doing so "helped win an important game" way back yonder. Many students on or near to campuses have a new name for their girl friends; they call them "bacon" -somebody is always bring- ing them home. A certain professor at the University of Cali- fornia is decidedly more courteous than the gen- eral run of people about to hear a familiar joke. Instead of replying. "I've heard that one before," he always says, "I've always enjoyed that one." Ninety-five students of which five are girls are studying embalming at the University of Minne- sota. It certainly must be a dead course. Football has fallen in line with the depression at Wittenberg College, where seats for the games can be obtained for as low as 49 cents. The girls at Mercyhurst College, a small girls school in Erie, Pennsylvania have adopted, in the interest of economy, the NRA code-No Rouge Allowed. Observings from here and there - A new course "Personality Development," has been added to the curriculum of New York Univer- stiy - The girls that live in dormitories at the University of Chicago have no hours - A co-ed at Melville College, a small western school, sells papers in order to work her way through school Popularity is commercialized for sweet charity's sake at the "Dime Crawl" dances at the Univer- sity of Southern California. The co-eds are the hostesses for the night at a park plan dance, and the popularity of a lady is rated by the number of tickets she takes in. I The Deadline for Senior Pictures Has Been Set... DEC-EMBER, 1.5.th First-Come to the Press Building and Pur- chase Your Photographer's Receipt at the Press Building or at the Office of an Official Michi- ganensian Photographer, $3.004. Then-Make an Appointment with one of these Official ichiganensian Photographers. DEY STU DIO RENTSCH LER STUDIO SPEDDING STUDIO T HE "dollar opera" is proving as much a success in Detroit as else- d the San Carlo Grand Opera Company, e direction of the dynamic impresario )rtune Gallo, is playing its second week ty audiences in a huge downtown thea- According to Madame Albertina Rasch the model co-ed of 1933 is a combination of Venus and Mae West. How do you co-eds fit in with perfect figures of today? Here they are girls-