THE MICHIGAN DAILY RIE MICHIGAN Established_1890 DAILY 4 . the rules, that co-eds favor them on the ground that they allow time for studying that could not otherwise be had. The argument is quite il- logical: either a co-ed wants to stay out on a date and rules are irksome, or she prefers to study and needs no rules. It is impossible to see any reason that would make co-eds trip the light fantastic when they would rather be in their rooms with their books. Miss Lloyd has said, with inflexibility in her tone that is hard to understand, that any change in rules is out of the question for this year. It is a cinch that they will NEVER be changed unless co-eds give strong voice to what they want. To- day there is afforded a chance to speak. -... _ Published every mnorning 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-'It the Big Ten News Service. $z.Atld Oboie 'a 3933 ATIOM . .... w a> 1934 i MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The -Associated Press 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 Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-GenerJl. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. OMces: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann ,Arbor, Michigan.: Phone: 21214. Representatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc, 40L EtThirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylton Sireet, Boston;. 612. North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL S AFF Telephone 425 MANAGING EDITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR...............HARTESCHAAF CITY E9DITOR...................BRACKLEY SIHAW SPORTS EDITOR......... ..ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMElIS EDITOR.................CAROL J. HANAN NIGH I EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph 'G Coulter, Wi- 1am G. Ferris, John C. "Iealey, E. Jerome Pettit George Van Vileck, 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: Roy Alexander, John A. Babington, Ogden G. Dwtightt,' Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Be'rnard H. Fried, Thoiflas Groehn, Robert D. tithrte Jo"seph L. I arpinsk Tioas H. Kleene,. Rich- ard !: "LorSch, David . Maddonald, Joel P. Newman, Nenrleth Parker, -GeOrge I. Qtzimby, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, dbert J. St. 'Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WQMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, Erleanor Johnson, Jose- bhine icLoan, MarJrie Morison, Sally Place, Rosalie deisk, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. - lUBIN SS STAFF - -"Telephone 2-124 BUSINESS MANAGER............ ...W. GRAFTON SHARP CRDT MANTAGERL'........BERNARD E. SHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAOER.................... . . ... . ....... CATHARINE MC HENRY iDEPARTMENT MANAGERS: -Local Advertising, Fred Her- trIck; Classified Advertising, Rtssell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- mer, 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 Gilen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Isabelle Kanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina Pollock, Elizabeth J. Simonds.. NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN C HEALEY Let's Go To The Pep Meeting!. . . H ARRY KIPKE is going to bring his boys over to Hill Auditorium to- night. Are we going over to meet them? It's the first time in many years that a football team has appeared before a pep meeting crowd on the eve of an important game, and it can mean only one thing -Kip realizes, and the team real- izes, that they need student support to win to- morrow. It's a great team. We all know it. The trouble is we know it too well. We are becoming like the sport writer who said, "Michigan strolled through to another victory over Iowa last Saturday." Football teams don't stroll to 10-6 victories in mid-season games. Not when they are playing in the Western Conference, toughest league in the country. Tonight is the time to show them we're for them. Tonight's the night to yell like h-, to let them know we appreciate the hard work they've been doing, and to tell them we'll be there tomor- row to help clinch the national championship. Student Voting Today .. t TUDENTS who wish to express themselves ,about University con- ditions will have the chance today. The Under- graduate Council has arranged a ballot including most of the much discussed thorns and roses which go to make up the University environment. Today's vote will be significant in direct pro- portion to its size. Four thousand votes will mean at least twice as much as two thousand votes. So stop at the first polling station you come to, pull out your pencil, and check your opinions. The Daily has already discussed the issues of State Street beer and residence rules. Here is the way we look at the other questions: Auto Ban T ODAY the students of this campus are going to vote on -continuation of the auto ban, in its present or modified form. The vote will not, of course, repeal the auto ban in any case. It would be just as incorrect, on the other hand, to fancy that the vote, if adverse to the present ban, would be irrelevent and unpro- ductive of concrete results. If the auto ban should be defeated at the polls today it would demon- strate that the ban, brought to Michigan largely in the interests of democracy (that is, to make the poor student feel the equal of the rich) is quite undemocratic. Certainly a democracy that is arbitrary is a wax-winged specimen. The Daily supports the auto ban as it stands now - a monument, as it were, to student democ- racy. But if the straw vote shows that student sentiment has flung itself against the ban, -our stand must, in the same interest of democracy, turn against the ban. The protagonists of the "academic privilege" system ask that students of superior academic standing be allowed to drive automobiles. They argue that this would promote selectivity and yet would abolish the old distinction based on the size of the check the student received from home. This argument, on examination, is seen to be sophistry. It sets up again the old standard of rich-class privilege - for obviously an A student must have money, too, to drive a car. In the event that a wish for a change in the auto ban is not expressed by students today, we ask one favor of the Administration: that the present rules, almost laughably severe in certain cases, be relaxed. We refer to the intemprate rule (to cite one instance) laid down for driving to and from, the Chicago game. According to Mr. Rea it was necessary in all cases to obtain written permission from him, and this permission was granted only when an older member of the stu- dent's family was to be in the car. It made no dif- ference if a student went home first, getting his or her family's car there. To do that, without written permission, was wrong and was punish- able. It is impossible to see how the University can consider that it has any proper right to dic- tate a student's behavior when he is within the sphere of parental influence. Of course it is only too apparent that this particular ban was un- enforceable. Flexibility, rather than a high-hand- ed method of this stamp, is desirable. Honor System HE DAILY last year conducted an intensive survey of the faculty's position on a possible honor system at the Uni- versity of Michigan. That survey showed: the majority of the older and more experienced fac- ulty members are unalterably opposed to the sug- gestion; the younger men are undecided but are "willing to take a chance" with the system; the professors in courses dependent upon essay writ- ing in examinations, such as English, are more inclined to favor the idea than professors in courses not dependent upon essay writing in ex- aminations, such as mathematics; the number of men in important positions who oppose the plan is so large that, regardless of student opinion, the system will not be accepted at Michigan. We don't think it should be accepted here. There is no insult to students in proctoring at ex- aminations, and the honest students know it. The proctor at an examination is in the same position as a policeman walking his beat. The policeman is there to protect the honest citizen from the advantages the dishonest person may feel inclined to take. That is the function which the proctor at an examination has. The dishonest student is in a minority at this University Just as the dishonest citizen is in a minority in this city, but some dishonest students do exist. Because of them, the honor system should not be introduced. R.O.T.C. campus, but in those.circles throughout the coun- try which always watch a vote of this type with interest. "I will support my country in any war." What is "my country"? First, this country is a demo- cratic country. The president, who has the power to declare war, is elected by the people. The Sen- ate and the House, which pass upon the presi- dent's declaration, are elected by the people. They are directly responsible to the people. What they do and how they do it is decided by the people. In short, they are the people. When they declare war it is a war desired, through representation, by the majority of the people in this country. It is the people's war. Assuming, then, - as we have a right to as- sume - that the democratic process of election will continue, future wars of this country will be the people's wars. The person who will not fight in such a case is a traitor to the American sys- tem of government, to that system under which he lives and under which he is decently protected in a complex world. On the basis of faith in the American system of government and that sys- tem's manner of doing things, as well as the his- torical record of this nation, the -average student, possessed of both a respectable amount of patriotic pride and common sense, can hardly choose any but the last statement: "I will support my coun- try in any war." Compulsory Physical Education T HE DAILY urges that students, both men and women, register an emphatic "no" on the question "Should there be compulsory physical education for men (for women) ?" Arguments in support of a "No" vote on this well-known campus dead-cat are almost too trite to bear repetition. For support of our contention, though, we cite the following bulwarks for a "No" vote: 1. Freshmen will sign up for literally anything to escape the dead-cat of freshman gym.'R.O.T.C., golf, tennis, wrestling, athlete's foot excuses, X- rays - all are used as a dodge. 2. Climbing ropes for 20 minutes or jogging about a track five times are diversions that are neither very health giving or at all conducive to love of athletics. 3. Sophomores, juniors, and seniors very seldom come back for more after their "training" as a freshman has "instilled in them the workout idea." 4. Freshman physical education is not a matter for the University to regulate. If the freshman wants exercise and athletics he will get them. If he doesn't he will evade them as surely as the sun rises in the east. So why compulsory freshman gym? Movie Prices O N THE SUBJECT of movie prices there is unfortunately little to be said. Rather we express the hope that the student, in expressing his views on this question at the polls today, will think carefully before deciding that 10 cents is enough to charge for a movie. Movies here are now 30 cents; and 40 cents for main floor seats in afternoon and evening. It is possible - it is not certain - that these prices are too high. Jerry Hoag, manager of the Michigan Theatre, a man whose comment on movie admis- sion prices we respect, has said that 40 cents for an evening show is little more than a subsistence price in these times. It would appear that a reduction of more than 10 cents in movie prices is altogether unfeasible. So be lenient. 4 If you like a rich, delicately blended beer, drink Berg- hoff Pale. If you prefer a heavier brew, get Berh off Da-k. B E 1 GRI 0J1 i B R EWING C O R P O R A I O N SOR T W AYNE - INDIANA B E RGH O FF B E ER DIS T R IB U TED 'BY GAYFORNERMginc. 515 Liberty Street, Jackson, Michigan Phone 9523 - - p; 4K 11PSY[L.l.Tf' 1 ___-_ _. . _._ ____..a __ _ _ _.. ._.. - - a i WY'a1e rirae Skyrocket Class Dances S-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s-s Boom !! ! Whistle -- - - --- - Rah !! MICHIGANv!!'! W - ver - ne Fight! Fight! Wol - ver - ine Fight! Fight! Wol - ver - ine Fight! Fight! MICHIGAN! Fight! Fight! Fight! T HE DANCE price problem is very much similar to that of the movies, with the distinction that the profit motive is elim- inated from the dance. From $1 to $10 you will get what you pay for. At $10 it may be Isham Jones, at $1 Johnnie's Eight Rowdies. The dance admission price should be governed largely by the existing economic con- dition and by the importance of the dance and the memory it will carry in later years. Offhand, it seems unlikely that any dance is now worth $10 or even $8. At times they have been worth that much, and they may be again. Vote Today! Screen Reflections A 4P~ 4 Yea Michigan Y-e-a Y-e-a Ye-a Fight! Michigan Michigan Michigan Fight! Fight! AGITATION against R. O. T. C. units in colleges is a popular sport among the more liberal campus organizations. It is an agitation which gives these liberal groups something to do, sometimes arouses the trouble and publicity to which such organizations are ad- dicted, and provides a good outlet for youthful ex- hibitionism. The colleges where R. O. T. C. work is com- pulsory there may be a good argument against this enforced militarism. But that doesn't apply to Michigan. The R. 0. T. C. here is voluntary, not compulsory.hIt is a University course just as English, Political Science, and Mathematics are University courses. It is a student activity just as the Socialist Club, the Vanguard Club, and the National Student League are student activities.. If the student wants to join, he can; if he doesn't want to, he doesn't have to. It's entirely a ques- tion of the students own personal likes and dis- likes. Why, then, abolish the unit? If the students who want to join the R. O. T. C. are not to be al- lowed to, then it may be argued that students who want to band together and discuss social problems should not be allowed to do that. The cases are the same; and prohibition would be wrong in both of them. War Participation These Are the Yells Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. AT THE MICHIAN "CHARLIE CHAN'S GREATEST CASE" When one comes to a detective story there isn't much one can say about photography, acting, and the like; they are subordinate to the plot andthe working out of the crime. The working here is done by the proverb-making Charlie Chan, and outside of his subtle remarks and the plot there isn't much to the picture that would make it out- standing. Earl Derr Biggers' story doesn't show a great deal of perfection as shown on the screen (Movies never are as good as the original plays or stories anyway). "Charlie Chan's Greatest Case" smacks of the type of thing one would read in "The Shadow" or "Colliers"; it doesn't require a great deal of intellect to figure out. Of course some poor soul is murdered so Charlie Chan masterfully steps in and solves the mystery with the aid of Corsican cigarette butts, sea-weed, a young dapper Bostonian, a valuable pin, and a proverb here and a proverb there. The best thing about the program is the short subject selection. (why don't they have the same type of selection when there is a good show go- ing on?) Besides the news, in which we see South- All we need for their execution is a good crowd. The team is going to be at the GIANT PEP MEETING on FRIDAY NIGHT in HILL AUDITORIUM to receive your expression of confidence and support in the game Saturday. Any team works better when it knows that it has support. Michi- gan is in fine shape, but it will need that extra bit of ability and Women's Hours T HE SUBJECT of women's hours is closely related to that of resi- dence regulation. The Daily is opposed to any regulation by the University in the personal mat- ter of where a student shall live, and is similarly averse to women's hours. As in the case of residence, we do not believe that the majority of parents favor the rules; and we think those parents who do want them should pay for them. The argument holds even if parents who are opposed to university regula- tion are a minority: it is preposterous that par- stamina to defeat Minnesota. Do your part in defeating Minne- sota by cheering the team and attending his Pep Meeting. +t The Team 00 Student Speakers T HE DIFFICULTY in the war ques- tion occurs between the second II ~ II