7 srĀ° THE MICHIGAN DAILY diss Fingele To Play Piano On Air Lanes Becomes Vice-C hairman Wilson To Talk On Molecules Scientist Spectra Will In ASC Explain Lecture ormer Michigan To Be Featured On BingCrosby Coed Star Hour 1o Appear April 11 The talented fingers of a former music student here will play for a nation Thursday, April 11 when Mar- lene Fingerle still be featured on Bing Crosby's Music Hall program over a national hook-up.' Miss Fingerle, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fingerle of 1230 White Street, will appear on the program with her piano partner and teacher, Harry Fields, former Joulliard fel- lowship student. Now a student at Bard's Music and Dramatic School in Los Angeles, Miss Fingerle finished her junior year at the University. She began her studies at the School of Music at the age of. eight and was a special student under Prof. Joseph Brinkman. However, deciding at the end of her junior year that she did not wish to become a teacher of music, she left the Univer- sity to study at Bard's. She is study- ing both piano and voice. While on campus, Miss Fingerle appeared in several Play Production Jpresentations and wrote two musical composition8 for the Junior Girls Play. She was vice-president of the Stanley Chorus, a member of the Choral Union and served in the Soph- omore Cabaret. Miss Fingerle made her concert de- but last November at the Masonic Auditorium in Los Angeles. On Cros- by's program she and Mr. Fields will play one classical and one modern ,rrangement. H ealt h Departnient Starts Rabies Drive, Dr. Emerson Says The State Health Department is gathering its forces in a drive to stamp out rabies in Southern Mich- igan and four laboratories are as- signed to diagnose this d.sease, Dr. Herbert W. Emerson, director of the University's Pasteur Institute stated in an interview yesterday. Dr. Emerson expressed his regret, however, that the Health Depart- ment did not give the people the option whether dogs should be quar- antined or vaccinated. "It is my contention that such a plan would have resulted in less resistence on the part of the citizens," he declared. He suggested that if the Health Department would have allowed the 47 counties affected by the quaran- tine to vote upon the issue they would have had more enthusiastic cooperation. The results in those counties elect- ing vaccination for dogs would have afforded valuable data as to the value of vaccination, and the com- parative outcome between counties voting for quarantine and those electing vaccination would have pro- vided the Health Department with valuable infor antion in determining which method would be most satis- factory to recommend or use at a future date, '.0 Emerson maintained. Prof. E. Bright Wilson, Jr., of Har- vard University will speak on "The [nternal Motions of Molecules and Their Infra-red Spectra" at 4:15 p.m. today, in Room 303, Chemistry Build- ing. The lecture is sponsored by the local chapter of the American Chem- ical Society, and is open to the pub- lic. Professor Wilson will deal with the various ways in which different atoms in molecules can move in respect to each other, and with the infra-red spectra of the atoms. For the past several years Professor Wilson has been especially interested in this pro- blem, and with infra-red absorption spectra, said Dr. L. 0. Brockway of the chemistry department, who is in charge of the American Chemical Society lectures in Ann Arbor. Winner in 1937 of the Pure Chem- istry award of the American Chemical Society, Professor Wilson is a mem- ber of the faculty of the Harvard chemistry department. In 1937 he was in Ann Arbor in connection with the summer symposium of the Phys- ics department which dealt that year with infra-red spectra. New Slogans For Campus Rally Sought Newly coined slogans for the all- campus Peace Rally should be submit- ted to The Daily, it was announced yesterday by the Campus Peace Coun- cil, composed of 12 organizations who are sponsoring the local Rally here April 19. Slogans now being sought by the Council will act as subsidiary aids in publicizing the Rally, the main slo- gan of which is "The Yanks Are Not Coming." Acceptable slogans will be printed in The Daily as they come in. The Rally, which has been planned- "to articulate the students' desire for peace for America," will have as its main speaker, Sen. Gerald P. Nye, Republican from North Dakota, who has gained wide recognition as an unceasing attacker of the munitions industry and as a -veteran isolation- ist. University Club To Meet T. Hawley Tapping, general sec- retary of the Alumni Association, will hold an organizational meeting of the new University of Michigan Club of Northville today in the Northville High School Building. Price To Give Fourth Recital Today's Carillon Concert Arranged By Belgian . Prof. Percival Price, University car- illonneur, will present the fourth in a series of spring carillon concerts at 7 p.m. today. The music for the concert has been arranged by Gustaaf Nees, City Caril-, lcnneur, Mechlin, Belgium, who also wrote the compositions to be played in the last half of the concert. The first group consists of selec- tions from Netherlands composers, "Menuet" by J. K. Baustetter, "Alle- gretto" by R.A.S. Peichler and "Flem- ish Dance" by Oscar Van Durme. The compositions by Nees are "Praeludi- um," "Etude," "Thema met variaties," "Andante" and "Menuet," and "Vla- amsche Suite" in four parts, voor- spel, volkslied, ballade, and vlaamsche dans. - Jwclal to the Daily) AUSTIN, Texas, April 3.-"Ghost Writiig" the practice of preparing themes and reports for some one else's class work, gets a thumbs-down ex- pression of opinion from three-fourths of American college students. What may be more surprising to. some. however, is that the other fourth is either indifferent or openly in approval. These are the results of a poll conducted by the Student Opinion Surveys of America, collegiate rampling organization of the under- graduate press, of which the Michi- gan Daily is a member. "What is your opinion of the prac- tice of students paying ghost writers to prepare themes and term papers for them?" was the question present- Award $s Offered One hundred dollars in cash and production in the Guignol Theatre of the University of Kentucky is of- fered to the person who submits the winning play to the committee in Lexington, Ky., before November 1. ed to a scientific cross section from coast to coast. Disapproving were 75 per cent; in- different were 10 per cent; approving were 15 per cent. Answers to the query were tabulated by the interviewers in five different categories to indicate the intensity of feeling on this issue. These re- sults are given below: Strongly opposed ... 54 per cent Mildly opposed.......21 per cent Indifferent..........10 per cent Mildly in favor .......8 per cent Strongly in favor......7 per cent Significantly it may be noticed that a majority of students, 54 per cent, is in the strongly-opposed class. Also, the trend of approval, looking down the preceding row of figures, dwindles down to a mere 7 per cent at a rapid rate. The chief argument of those who favor ghost writing is that in effect it often helps students by giving them more time to study for miore import- ant and pressing courses. On the other hand, the majority of those op- posed condemned it as plain scholas- tic dishonesty. Collegiates 'Bury' Ghost Writers With J. P. Morgan & Co. incor- porated, forsaking the realm of pri- vate banking, Thomas W. La- mont became vice chairman of the board, in New York. Internatiionalist To Give Lecture Here On Brazil Sociologist Has Organized Rio de Janiero Schools For American Students The first and probably still fore- most Brazilian geographer and soci- ologist, Dr. Carlos Delgado de Car- valho, who lectures here on Brazilian affairs Tuesday, April 16 through Monday, May 6, is a true interna- tionalist, both in education and his activities since he completed his studies at the London School of Economics. Born in Paris, Dr. Delgado speaks at least four languages fluently, ac- cording to Prof. Preston E. James, of the geography department. After studying at the University of Laus- anne, Dr. Delgado continued his work at the School of Political Sciences in Paris, later attending the London School of Economics in 1918-1919. Since that time, Dr. Delgado has been active in several fields, geogra- phy, sociology and educational work, in Brazil. In 1929-1930 he organized the Rio de Janicro summer schools for American students in cooperation with the Institute of International Education in New York. Many of his books on the geography of Bra- zil are the definitive works in their field. He is a member of many schol- arly societies in his own and other countries. His talks Ihere,m nder the auspices of the division of social sciences, are made possible by the Carnegie Endow- ment for International Peace. Six formal lectures will be given, in ad- dition to informal talks and various luncheon meetings. Schedule of the lectures is as follows: Tuesday, April 16, Glimpses of the Human Geogra- phy of Brazil; Friday, April 19, An Outline of the Economic History of Brazil; Tuesday, April 23, Problems of Race Mixture and White Acclimatiz- ation in Brazil; Thursday, April 25, Present Trends in Brazilian Educa- tion; Tuesday, April 30, as annual speaker at the Phi Kappa Phi ban- quet, The Immigration Problem in Brazil; Monday, May 6, The New Bra- zilian State. Law Student Wins First Bates Award The first annual payment of the recently-established Henry M. Bates Award of 200 dollars was made to Clifford Eugene Gressman, '40L, Dean E. Blythe Stason of the Law School announced yesterday. The Award was set up anonymous- ly in honor of Dean-Emeritus Bates. Pens - Typewriters - Supplies "Writers Trade With Rider's" RIDER'S 302 South State St.Al I V' t HANDY SI E VICE I IECTOB 3J He knew what they'd find in that old cowhide trunk Handy Service Advertising Rates I Cash Rates 12c per reading line for one or two insertions. 10c per reading line for three or more insertions. Charge Rates 15c per reading line for one or two insertions. 13e per reading line for three or more insertions. ]Five average words to a reading line. Minimum of three lines per inser- tion. CONTRACT RATES ON REQUEST,. Our Want-"Advsor will be delighted to assist you in composing your ad. Dial 23-21-3 or stop at the Michigan Daily Business Office. 420 Maynaard street. STRAYED, LOST, FOUND - 1 LOST-"-'L ongines" wrist watch. Re- ward, Phone Economics Depart- ment Extension 738. 353 LM0T- -Mall's 1ainrlnen watch withI TRANSPORTATION HOME: You can find a ride home very econom- ically by inserting a Ride Ad into The Daily. Find passengers for your car or seek your ride now. 15 words for 36c. Dial 23-24-1 now! ARTICLES FOR SALE--3 PLYMOUTH 1932 Deluxe Roadster. Good condition-$95 cash. 314 North Ingalls. Apartment I. Eve- nings. - 357 WANTED-TO BUY-4 HIGHEST CASH PRICE paid for your discarded wearing apparel, Claude Brown, 512 S. Main Street. 146 WISE Real Estate Dealers: Run list- ings of your vacant houses in The Daily for summer visiting profes- sors. Dial 23-24-1 for special ra tes. TYPING- 18 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935 or 2-1416. 34 VIOLA STEIN - Experienced typist and notary public. excellent work, yOUNG HEIRS MIGHT BE SURPRISED-but he knew the fortune that was paid the Hawkinses when the railroad came through in '78 and how they never spent or banked a cent of it. r The old-time country editor was like that. He knew his county like the back of his hand, from the secret thoughts of the supervisors to the last thank- you-marm on a dead-end road. He knew every man, woman, and child and their Great-Aunt Nellie who ran off with the lightning- rod agent. He knew the story of every yellow old record in the courthouse-and what the boys were laughing at in the livery stable last Sunday. He knew what chance the town had of getting that button factory, and why the parsonage would have a new tenant soon. 1 The people he wrote for were just as much an open book to him as the news he wrote for them. He wasn't being quaint when he put the results of the school spelidown on page one, or filled five pages with country correspondence. That was meat and drink to the folks out on the R.F.D. routes- far more important than the Boer War or even silver at 16 to 1-and he knew it. That old-time country editor had grasp... com- plete, integrated understanding of all the news Economics, world politics, finance, industrial man- agement, material resources, labor, social theory- they all began to matter somehow. They got you into wars and strikes and hard times. Science be- gan to matter when diphtheria and t.b. were found not to be acts of God. Art began to matter when your daughter carne back from Paris or Peoria call- ing you a Philistine. America's mind, stretching, pushing out its ho- rizons, called for more news... more kinds of news...news from beyond the railroad depot. And the news poured in-from the just-hatched wire services, from specialists of all kinds, from the syndicates, the feature writers, the correspondents, Soon the old one-man grasp was gone. The tor- rent of news was too great and too swift, its sources too many and too remote, for any one man to han- dle and absorb it all. And if the editor was swamped, the reader was drowned. In self-defense, he learned to pick his way about his newspaper, snatching a bit here and a bit there, mostly according to the ingenuity of the headline-writer. Often he missed news of impor- tance; often he failed to see what a series of day-by- day stories added up to in the end. That somebody turned out to be The Weekly Newsmagazine. With its advantage of time for re- flection and discussion, the Newsmagazine made this task its single-minded purpose. It set out to do the country editor's job with a world-wide scope and on a national scale. .To take all the week's news and make the pic- ture make sense to the average intelligent Amer- ican. To set it against a fully comprehended back- ground. To write it vividly, compactly, forcefully with full appreciation of the mind for which it is intended ... with the touch of human under- standing that brings people and events to moving, breathing life. The Newsmagazine is written by experts, but never far experts. No story in TIME can go gallop- ing off on a hobby; it must be paced firmly and smoothly to the brisk stride of the whole magazine, whether the subject is world affairs or politics, or business or finance, or medicine, religion, or the arts. That is why TIME seems to be written by one man, who knows TIME readers as the old-time coun- try editor knew the folks in his county. That is why the average TIME reader starts at the begin- ning and goes through to the end, feeling that every line gives him something that he wants and needs and can use. This is one of. a series of advertisements in which the Editors of TIME hope to give College Studentsa clearer picture of the world of news- gathering, news-writing, and news-reading--and the part TIME plays in helping you to grasp, measure, and use the history of your lifetime as you live the story of your life.