THE MICHIGAN DAILY IIGAN DAILY i of the Summer Session I . compositions by Bach and will include Coral Pre- lude "In dir ist Freude;" Toccata, Adigioand -Fugue in C; Air in D; Fantasia inG minor; Sonatina from the Cantata, "God's Time is Best;" and Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor. Mr. Bogart will present the following program: Lazzari-Sonata, Op. 24; Bach-Sonata in E ma- jor; Tschaikowsky-Concerto Op. 35; Scott-Kreis- in E flat major; Schumann-Vogel als Prophet; Vovacek-Perpetual Motion. The general public with the exception of small children is invited. 4J. & iablished every morning except Monday during the tersity year and Summer Session by the Board in trol of Student Publications. [ember of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- a and the Big Ten News Service. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and the local news lshed herein. All rights of republication of special patches are reserved. ntered at the Past Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as and class matter. Special rate of postage ' granted by rd Assistant Postmaster-General. hubscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail, 50. During regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by lI, $4.50. ifices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, a Arbor, Michigan. Phone 2-1214. epresentatives: College Publications Representatives, ,40 East Thirty-Fourth 5"reet, New York City; '80 i a$ton Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, cago. National Advertising Service, Inc., 11 West 42nd Nlew York, N. Y. EDITORIAL STAFF Phone: 4925 .1AGING EDITOR..............FRANK B. GILBRETH SISTANT MANAGING EDITOR......KARL SEIFFERT SOCIAT EDITORS: John C. Healey, Powers Moulton nd E. Jerome Pettit. PORTERS: Edgar H. Eckert, Thonas H. Kleene, Bruce danley, Diana Powers Moulton, Sally Place. BUSINESS STAFF Office Hours; 9-12, 1-5 Phone: 2-1214 SINESS MANAGER..... ..BYRON C. VEDDER STANT BUSINESS MANAGER...HARRY R. BEGLEY IULATION MANAGER.........ROBERT L. PIERCE SUNDAY, AUGUST 6, 1933 ension Courses. I The New Codes . . A NNOUNCEMENTS by the Graduate' School that that unit of the Uni- rsity will offer Extension courses in the future rry with them not only relief to those who will >fit from the availability of such educational asures but also extreme gratification to those ponsible for the Extension Division work of the iversity in the past. The increase in the number of courses offered this manner, the inclusion of courses which iy be taken by correspondence, and the spread- g of this work into centers where it has not en available in the past have all pointed to the ecess of the courses .as a whole. And now, with e offering of courses by the Graduate .School, to pplement those presented by undergraduate de- rtments, the entire field of extension work may said to have taken a great forward step. Students in actual residence at the University ye had little opportunity to see just what has en accomplished by this institution when it is way from home." The recent expansion apd larging enrollment in these courses however int -to the unqualified success of the venture that there can be little doubt in the minds those responsible for such work that they are ing a wonderful thing. All of this brings to mind the statements re- itly made locally by prominent educators to the ect that the new working codes and increased .ciency of machinery will make for more leisure ie for the average citizen. In which case it will up to the educational institutions of the coun- to fill in those spare moments with some- ng worthwhile. Extension courses seem to us be an important step in this direction. Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars very good; two stars good; one star just another picture; no stars keep away from it. AT THE WHITNEY . ,. "NO MORE ORCHIDS" It's the old story of the girl who has to choose between royalty and rags-with a new angle. A more-or-less trite plot is put over with a bang due to remarkable acting on the part of an A-1 cast. Everyone from Carole Lombard in the lead down to the lowliest minor character acts like he were born to his role and the result is highly convincing entertainment. The cast in the story is that although Carole wants to follow the dictum of her heart and marry the poor but talented Lyle Talbot, she is forced into an alliance with Prince Carlos (Jameson Thomas) by her unkind but rich grandfather (C. Aubrey Smith). The plot goes like this: Lovely, wealthy Anne' Holt, in love with poor, handsome Tony Gage, is being maneuvered into a distasteful marriage with royalty. Both Anne's father and grandmother are against the Prince, but her wealthy grandfather Cedric is adamant and it looks like there is noth- ing left for Anie to do but agree when her father finds himself entirely dependent upon old Cedric for financial aid when his bank is threatened with failure. Sadly, but thinking of her father's happi- ness before hers, Anne tells Tony she cannot marry him, but refuses to give a reason. Bill and Gran,. as Anne affectionately calls her dad and grandmother, can no more understand her change of heart than can Tony. They don't b'elieve Anne. So, unknown to both Anne and Tony, Bill and Gran contrive to have them meet out of town, with, a minister handy to marry them. Bill knows this gesture of independence will kill his chances of ever getting any financial help from Cedric. He sends Cedric a wire, in- forms him that his Prince can take a walk. Then Bill hops in his private plane, kisses Anne good- bye and crashes into a hillside. His insurance will cover the bank's losses, and at least he has left Anne free from the Prince and married to the man she loves. Louise Closser Hale, playing the part of Gran, practically stole the show with her inimitable comedy. In the role of the dignified-appearing dowager, who goes in for everything from drink- fng parties to dancing the rhumba, she rolls them in the aisles. Although seventy, she acts seventeen, and is the life of the party. This Lyle Talbot, playing the part of Tony Gage, certainly has what it takes. We're telling those unlucky young ladies who haven't seen him that he has everything Clark Gable has, with- out the handicap of big ears. We admire him for the strength of character he showed in spurn- ing the beautiful Carole on the boat coming from Europe because he.thought her spoiled and entire- ly too wealthy. He's a better man than we are. Walter Connolly as the sacrificing father proved likable and convincing. He upheld the claim of being one of the finest character players on the American stage by playing a role which could easily have been over-sentimental with just the right finesse. We haven't forgotten Carole. We couldn't. But we don't feel up to the task of doing her beauty and acting the justice it deserves. Suffice it to say that Carole is just Carole. That, despite a remarkable supporting cast, she held her own in the lead with plenty to spare. The rest of the cast includes Allen Vincent, a juvenile who is going places, Ruthelma Stevens (we want to see more of her), C. Aubrey Smith, Arthur Ifouseman, William Mong, Charles Hills Mails, and Jameson Thomas. Special shorts are above the average. "In the Good Old Wintertime" cools you off just to look at it. It includes everything from shots at our own Brighton ski jump, to pictures of bob-sled- ding fire-fighters in Germany. Put on your fur coat. A Gus Edwards Melody Movie, a Travelogue (too many puns), and a Graham MacNamee Newsreel, round out the program. A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON-President Roosevelt's action in deferring the effective date of a majority of the transfers and consolidations of government bu- reaus he had previously decreed removed one important reason for his return to Washington in mid-August. Had the original order stood, the 61 days of grace would have expired August 10. On that date, presumably, it would have been necessary for the President to sign re-appointments wholesale to keep the work of the abolished bureaus going,, since separation from the service is automatic where a bureau or other unit is abolished. That ax has hung over the heads of everybody connected with the internal revenue bureau, for example, since the original executive order was signed June 10. Both this bureau and that in control of industrial alcohol are to be merged into a new division of internal revenue in the treasury. Under the modification made by the President just before he left for the first half of his vaca- tion at Hyde Park the secretary of the treasury is authorized to set up the new division at any time after August 1 and prior to December 31 he deems expedient. Job Hunters Disappointed The modification gave internal revenue bureau employes, particularly those appointed during the Hoover administration, a new lease on official life. It was a new cloud of gloom, however, for a host of Democratic job hunters and their congres- sional backers who had been counting on that August date as a deadline, expecting to be taken care of when the turn-over took place. Several high ranking officials of the revenue bureau are Hoover appointees. May Indicate Repeal Beliefs It appears more than probable that one of the reasons prompting the deferred reorganization of the government tax collecting office was the an- ticipation by administration leaders of early re- peal ratification. With prohibition enforcement activities trans- ferred to the justice departinent-a matter not affected by the modification of the original ef- fective date - and with the industrial alcohol group losing its independent status, the new divi- sion of internal revenue will be re-cast when it is set up to deal with alcohol and alcoholic bev- erages on the old pre-prohibition basis as purely special revenue producers. In that connection, President Roosevelt's selec- tion of December 31 next as the deadline for com- pleting the reorganization may be significant. For one thing, it means that the job will be an ac- complished fact when Congress reconvenes in Jan- uary. It may also represent the judgment of the Pres- ident and his advisers that the Prohibition amendment will have been repealed by that time. Editorial Comment COUNTING THE PENNIES IN A $3,300,000,000 PURSE. Evidence that the projected public works pro- gram will not become a free for all pork barrel scheme is seen in the consideration given every item of expenditure. Estimates on proposed building programs have been submitted to a special cabinet board and Sec- retary Ickes, administrator of the newly created fund. After their preliminary considerations had been made, the list of suggested expenditures was sent to President Roosevelt. The presndent then re- turned the list to his board again, in order that they might trim off any remaining items showing the "pork" characteristics. It is planned to spend $3,300,000,000 in the most gigantic scheme of public construction in the history of the United States. This will include federal buildings, river and harbor improvements, and floor control works. The first group of planned constructions will cost about $65,000,000. The list includes items ranging from $50 for chicken coops to make studies in the department of agriculture, to $38,- 000,000 for Boulder Dam. There is something of assurance to the public in Secretary Ickes' statement that each of .these items, no, matter how small or how large will receive careful consideration from the board on three bases: social necessity, the speed with which the construction could be started, and the danger of bringing recurring expenses to the taxpayer. He assured the nation that the money will be wisely spent-that this is "not a grab bag." This work is typical of the present administra- tion. The hit or miss policy of political favoritism is no longer a governmental byword. Just as Presndent Roosevelt took the patronage bull by the horns last week, in recommending that all postmasters be put on a civil service basis, so the public works board, backed by the President, is doing away with much of this other type of patronage. There is little doubt as to the public reaction. A policy such as this is the very thing most ur-- gently needed to restore public faith in the fed- eral government. -The Daily Iowan. Labor Secretary Frances Perkins, Senator Hat- tie Caraway, Representatives Florence Kahn, Mary Norton and Virginia Jenckes failed to state their ages in the information prepared for the Congressional directory. This proves that no mat- ter how eminent they are logically, they are, at heart, just little women, after all. The National Woman's Party is calling its mem- bers to Washington for "the largest. demonstra- tion it has staged since the passage of the suffrage Radio Program: You are invited to come to Room 4032 Angell Hall Tues- day, 8 p. m., August 8 to hear a se-I lected radio program, broadcast by! members of Prof. Densmore's Public Speaking Class 131s as demonstra- tion of their work in radio .techni- que. A most entertaining radio hour is promised. Kenneth Hance, Chairman Members of the Faculty of the Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts: An important special meeting of the faculty will be held at 4:00 p. m., Wednesday, August 9, 1933, in Room 1025, Angell Hall. President A. G. Ruthven will be present and preside. The-executive Committee of the College will present its report. It is highly desirable that there be a large attendance. M. Gomberg, J. R. Hayden, L. C. Karpinski, D. H. Parker, and E. H. Kraus, Chairman Lecture: International Law Lec- ture: Professor Jesse S. Reeves pro- fessor of Political Science, will give an illustrated lecture on "The Chaco and Leticia Disputes" in Natural Sci- ence Auditorium Monday, August 7, at 8 p. m. The public is invited. Organ Recital: Guy Filkins, Or- ganist, will give the following grad- uation recital, Monday afternoon, at 4:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium to which the general public with the exception of small children is in- vited: Compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach: Choral Prelude "In dir ist Freude"; Toccata, Adagio and Fugue, in C; Air in D; Fantasia in G minor; Sonatina from the Cantata, "God's Time is best"; Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor. Charles A. Sink The Women's Education Club will meet on Monday evening at 7:15 p. nm. 'in the Alumnae Room at the League. Dean James B. Edmonson, of the School of Education, will speak on "Professional Problems of the Teachers." All women on the Cam- pus are welcome. The Summer Session Play Reading Group of faculty women will have its last meeting Tuesday at 2:15 in the Alumnae Room of the Michigan League Building. Mrs. Louis Keeler will be in charge of the play. Wives of non-resident faculty members of the Summer Session are cordially in- vited. V "The Physical Education Program and the Needs of the Individual," will be the title of the need address on the series of afternoon conferences in education. Professor Jackson R.. Sherman of the Physical Education DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30; 11:30 a. m. Saturday. department will talk on this topic in Room 1022, University High school, on Tuesday, August 8, at 4:10 p. in. Summer Session Orchestra: Mem- bers of the orchestra are asked to report on the steps in front of the library on Sunday evening, August 6, at 'ix forty-five. Summer Session Chorus. Mem- bers of the orchestra are asked to re- port on the steps in front of the library on Sunday evening, August' 6, at six forty-five. Signed, D. Mattern Student's Recital: The following' program of Chamber music present- ed by the Chamber music class un- der the direction of Professor Hanns Pick of the School of Music, will be given Tuesday, at 8:15 o'clock in Hill Auditorium to which the general public with the exception of small children is invited: Dohnanyi: Alle- gro (first movement) from the Quin- tet in C Minor for Piano and Strings; Hugo Wolf: Italian Serenade for two Violins, Viola and Violoncello; Ravel: Introduction and Allegro for Harp, Flute, Clarinet and StringQuartet; Brahms: Andante (second move- ment) from the Quintet in F minor for Piano, Two Violins Viola and Cello; Saint-Saens: The Carnival of Animals Suite for two Pianos, Flute, Clarinet, Strings and Percussion (Re- edited and partly re-orchestrated by H. Pick) 1. Introduction and Royal March of the Lion; 2. Cocks and Hens; 3. The Elephant; 4. Kanga- r o o s; 5. Aquarium; 6. Creatures with Long Ears; 7. Aviary; 8. Fos- sils; 9. The Swan; 10. Finale. The members of the Chamber Music Class participating in this program are: Walter Bloch, Lynn Bogart, Floyd' Burt, Grace Cushman, Wilfred Ed- monds, Elsa Eppstein, Frederick Er- nst, Albert Fillmore, Mary Fishburne,. Clinton Ford, Alice Higl3ee, Charles Law, Luther Leavengood, Margaret Martindale, N a t h a n Rosenbluth, Clyde Severance, Laura Shields, Earl Slocum, Lynn Thayer. Assisted by: Nicholas Falcone, Ruth Pfohl, and James Pfohl. Charles A. Sink First Methodist Church: Dr. F. B. Fisher will preach at 10:45 a. m. on "Tasting Deeply of Life." This is the fifth topic in the series "Success- ful Living." Wesley Hall: Student Guild at 6< p. m. Professor Heber Curtis, of the Astronomy Department, will speak on "Modern Science and Our Ideas of God." Class for students at 9:30 a. in. The last meeting of the Men's Edu- cation Club for the summer will be in the form of a picnic at Pleasant; Cissel Family Keeps UpHigh Golfig Record Ann Arbor has her share of mother-daughter golf combinations, not least important of which is the one composed of Mrs. James H. Cis- sell and Jane. The two are the out- standing pair in Women's District competition, both having several championships to their credit. Jane, a senior in the University next fall, has been playing the game six years as compared to her mother's twelve. But she has managed to do well in this comparatively short time. She won the girls' junior champion- ship of the Detroit district in 1930, and she paired with her mother in 1930 to win the District mother and daughter title. In 1931 and 1932, Jane won the co-ed championship of the U. of M. over the University course. She qual- ified in the District championship in 1931 and in the state championship this year. Mrs. Cissel has met her daughter twice in the semi-finals of the Ann Arbor City championship, and both times she emerged the winner. She also defeated her daughter in the Barton Hills championship on one occasion. The Ann Arbor city title has been Mrs. Cissel's particular favorite. She has won it in four of the six years that it has been held. Miss Jean Kyer won it the other two years, but Mrs. Cissell was not an entry either time. The two will have it out today when they meet in the 1933 city fi- nals. Jane was eliminated in the semi-finals. But the Cissels: aren't the only mother-and-daughter combinations in the Detroit district. Betty Con- nor, a sophomore at the University next year, has also atone well on the links. Betty's mother, Mrs. R. M. Connor was a pioneer in Michigan golfing circles and is still a low handicap player. in the District. Bet- ty and Jane Cissel were scheduled to rheet in the co-ed finals last spring but the match never came off. Perhaps the newest combination is the Mrs. D. B. Seeley and daugh- ter Jean. They come from a golfing family, Dana being one of the out- standing men players in this section. He holds the Barton Hills record of 66. Lake Monday afternoon. All men interested in education are invited to attend. Cars will leave the Union between four and five in the after- noon. For those Who drive, the route is five miles on the Saline Road to the overhead flashlight, and eight miles to the right. * For a Feats,- sationa1ism . CA P" I T IS PLEASING to note the amount of publicity which has given the current flight into the strato- e by Lieut.-Commander Settle. the past, such front-page headlines have reserved for those who attempt the sensa- , regardless of the scientific worth of their ctive ventures. In this instance we have the of a man who is risking his life in the name ence and doing it in such a fashion that the apers of the nation are forced to take no- vspapers do not under-rate the brave at- s of those men who, in the name of science, bir lives in some way or other so that the edge of the world might be added to. It y that in the majority of cases the work of dividual is too colorless, too plain, to war- the attention which is given less valuable ore sensational accomplishments. bunately however, we have here the case of i who, in the name of science, is doing some- very worthwhile in a manner that warrants interest. And it is interesting to follow the ion accorded the naval officer by radio- casters and newspapermen throughout the y. For once science has come into its own dering on the unusual-a man risks his life empting to get farther away from the earthz any other person-and the newspapers are to acknowledge this as a feat out of the. ry. . Musical Events SCHOOL OF MUSIC UATION RECITALS seniors in the School of Music will present * s a -C. B. AT THE MICHIGAN "THE STRANGER'S RETURN" (Showing Sunday through Wednesday) Lionel tarrymore and Miriam Hopkins are co- starred in the Phil Strong novel of rural life, "The Stranger's Return," which opens at the Michigan theatre today for a four-day showing. As the 85-year-old patriarch of a farm founded and pioneered by his family, Lionel Barrymore is said to have one of the most interesting char- acterizations of his film career. Miss Hopkins has the 'role of the city girl who goes to her grand- father's farm and finds there the peace and con- tentment she couldn't get in the city. King Vidor, prominent director, was in charge of the production, most of which was filmed on a location representing the Iowan countryside. An entire farm was reproduced for an appropriate setting for the dramatic action. Vidor, who di- rected "Big Parade" in the silent days, has such talking pictures as "The Champ," "Street Scene," "Bird of Paradise," and "Cynara" to his credit. Franchot Tone heads the supporting cast in the role of the college-bred farmer with whom the city girl falls in love. The fact that he al- ieady has a devoted wife and baby son serves to dramatize a hopeless romantic situation that turns into a small-town scandal. Tone, a comparative newcomer to the screen, appeared in "Gabriel Over the White House," "Today We Live," and i c 1 i } r t i 1 E t r t C Y * WHEN you're hungry around bedtime, there's nothing bet- ter than a bowl of Kellogg's Dil S-1214 CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY Th Corn Flakes, with milk or cream and fruit. Delicious. So easy to digest, you sleep fetter. Try at at the campus restaurant. Madeyi Kellogg inBattle Creek. The most popular cereals served in the dining-rooms of Amer- can colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They include ALL-BRa, PEP Bran Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krumbles, and Kellogg's WHOLE WHEAT Biscuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee - real coffee that lets you sleep.