The Weather *I Cloudy; Thursday rain; not much change in temperature. L ~Ii ian Iaiti Editorials Open M i nds and Closed Mouths; Can the Council Run an Honest Election; S u g a r Coating the HigU Tariff Pill. VOL. XLHI. No. 21 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 19, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS - - - i - - Capone Will Condemns Democrats Begin Court FightToday Chicago Gangster Seeks To Evade 10-Year Term For Tax Violation New Petition Goes Before Underwood 'Scarface Al' Leaves Cell To File Plea For Writ Of Habeas Corpus ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 18. - () - Prisoner 40,886 will put aside his blue-gray denim uniform tomorrow and "Scarface Al" Capone, Chicago's erstwhile gang chieftain, will emerge from the Atlanta Federal Peniten- tiary to wage another legal battle for his freedom. His petition for a writ of habeas corpus is scheduled to be heard in Federal Court tomorrow before Judge Marvin Underwood. The gangster is serving a 10-year sentence for violation of the income tax laws in 1926, 1927 and 1928, and seeks his freedom on the contention that prosecution is barred by the statute of limitations. Hearing Postponed The filing of the petition last Sept. 21 gave Capone his first few minutes in the open since he was brought to the penitentiary, heavily manacled, last May 4 to begin his term. He was taken to court for the filing of the petition, but Judge Underwood postponed the hearing until tomor- row. William J. Hughes, Jr., of Wash- ington, Capone's attorney, will cite the recent decision of the United States Supreme Court in the case of one Scharton, a Boston lawyer. "The Supreme Court held that the statute of limitations had a period of three years and that offenses com- mitted more than three years before cannot result in conviction," Hughes explained. Release Expected The attorney said that the decision is "certainly applicable to Capone's case" and that he expected him to be freed. Lindsey said that Capone is basing his attempt for a writ "issued after his conviction a n d incarceration, while the Scharton case was simply an appeal." Student Actors To Give Play By Elmer Rice Play Production To Open Dramatic Season With 'Tb - Adding Machine' The campus dramatic season for 1932-33 will open on Oct. 28 with the presentation by Play Production of Elmer Rice's play, "The Adding Ma- chine." The dates of the show were an- nounced yesterday by Mr. Valentine B. Windt, director of the production. "We will open the Friday of the Princeton game week-end, and run until the following Thursday," he said. Mr. Windt said he believed the play could stand a run of six per- formances, because, "the Laboratory Theatre has such a small small seat- ing capacity, and because the play has had a great popular interest wherever it has been produced, which should indicate large audiences for the present production." "From the point of view of the actor," he said, "it is good training to have as long a run as possible with a play. He learns, when he has to repeat a performance night after night, how to hold up the vitality of his part. This accomplishment which is so important in a professional's acting is seldom offered an amateur. So maybe we are lucky our theatre is small after all." The tickets for the show will go on sale Friday of this week in the box-office of the Laboratory theatre, Herbert Hirchman, '33, b u s i n e s s manager for this production an- nounced yesterday. All seat will be 50 cents. Socialist Cluh To He ar HENRY L. STIMSON Henderson To Head Bonstelle Civic Theatre Detroit Season Conflict With Of Ann Arbor Will Not Direction Festival Robert Henderson, newly appoint- ed director of the Bonstelle Civic Theatre, won't let his duties in con- nection with the Detroit productions interfere with the presentation of the Ann Arbor Dramatic Festival it was announced yesterday. As soon as Mr. Henderson's two week's notice with the producers of "I Loved You Wednesday," the play in which he is now appearing, is up he is expected to return to Detroit and begin work on "The Animal Kingdom" by Philip Barry. This play is to be the first on the schedule of the Civic Theatre and will open on Nov 11. For some time, Mr. Henderson had been corresponding with Miss Bon- stelle about taking over the posi- tion of assistant director and on her death t h e committee immediately appointed him to the position of di- rector. Henderson is to have full charge of the plays, policies and actors of the theatre. He announced yester- day that he planned to follow out Miss Bonstelle's program entirely. The plan of the theatre from now on will be much like the policy of the dramatic season in Ann Arbor. It will no longer be a stock company but will shift players continually as he is able to obtain headliners tem- porarily at liberty. Plays will be chosen and then a suitable star engaged to fit the play or vice versa. He plans to divide the year into four-week periods until the middle of March. Each period will be made up of four different plays. After hearing of the death of Miss Bonstelle last Friday, Mr. Henderson, boarded an airplane in New York after the show in which he is playing was over Saturday night and arrived in Detroit in time for the funeral services on S u n d a y. Following a meeting of the committee after the services, he again took a plane and arrived back in New York in time for a rehearsal Sunday afternoon. 'Diagonal' Finds Favor At Alpha Nu Discussion Holding that the Diagonal column published earlier this semester by The Daily was an innocuous and in- teresting method of humanizing the news of a university which is already burdened with too much sophisti- cated snobbery, Alpha Nu, men's honorary speech society, last night approved by a decisive majority the colunin, which was recently discon- tinued. Opposition minorities viewed the feature as lacking the dignity which is expected of a University publica- tion. Two Youths Arrested At Cavanaugh Cottage Two Detroit youths, arrested at the Cavanaugh lake cottage they had broken into Sunday, were sentenced to 20 days in county jail yesterday by Justice Jay G. Pray, sheriff's de- puties report. Three girls, all minors, who spent the greater part of two davs with them after running away Stimson Flays Recklessness Of Roosevelt Secretary Of State Says Roosevelt Lacks Definite Measures For Recovery Garner Accused Of Weak Support Hoover's Reconstruction Program Commended At Republican Meeting NEW YORK, Oct. 18.-(P)--Secre- tary Stimson told the National Re- publican Club tonight that Franklin D. Roosevelt by an "incredible reck- less misstatement of facts" and the Democratic House by acts of "reck- less irresponsibility" had delayed eco- nomic recovery. The Secretary of State said Roose- velt had "dealt a blow" at recoveryI by an attack on President Hoover'sI economic measures and the Recon- struction Finance Corporation in his speech on "the forgotten man." Criticizes Garnerc Turning to t h e vice-presidential1 candidate on the Democratic ticket, Stimson said President Hoover did not have Speaker Garner's "willingE support"in balancing the budget. He added that the activities of thet House "set back the cause of recov-s ery at the most critical period of lasts spring." Roosevelt, Stimson said "has told us of King James' ferry boats and Alice in Wonderland and Humpty- Dumpty, but upon specific questions upon which more than anything else the economic recovery of this nation depends . . . he has said nothing." Roosevelt has remained silent on the bonus, he said, when "every dayc of silence was a blow to the credit ofr his government and the restorationa of business." Attacks Governor Asserting the Democratic nominee,t as governor of New York, had done nothing to correct speculative abusest which he now criticizes, the cabinett officer said: "The people of thisb country might well ask of Franklint Roosevelt that before he sought ton be 'ruler over many things' he might better show himself 'faithful to thep few.' "o Stimson said at the outset the na-C tion was facing an election in manyI ways "more critical and importantt than any which this country has faced since the Civil War."t Music Grad In Debut s Receives High Praised Dalies E. Frantz, graduate studentk in music here, made his debut as ah professional pianist at Town Hall in 'ew York City Monday night. He was received with great enthusiasm,I receiving high praise from the music critics of the New York Evening Sun and the New York Times. The New York Sun review, it wass said, was a sheer eulogy.t Frantz received his bachelor's de-o gree here two years ag and is nowd working on his masters' degree. He was awarded the privilege of playinga in Town Hall by gaining first place b in a national contest in which 172n students participated. Frantz is av pupil of Prof. Guy Maier of thed Music school. A Extent Of America Gives Inspiration, Says Robert Frost "The size of America gives person- al confidence to every citizen, and out of that confidence comes an in- spiration for poetry," declared Robert Frost, addressing a large audience at a reading of his poetry yesterday in Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. "I expect each poem that I write to have something of that national assurance in it," Mr. Frost said. In a number of comments spread through his reading, he hit with his customary charming banter at the cult of disillusionment that domin- ates contemporary American letters, carrying out thesattitude shown in his well known saying that "there are two types of realist-the one who offers a good deal of dirt with his potato and the one who is satisfied with the potato brushed clean, and I'm inclined to be the second kind." Mr. Frost deprecated the tendency of the intellectuals to tout Europe as immensely superior to America. "When Huxley- the great Huxley, not the two minor Huxleys-spoke in America some years ago he said that he was not impressed with our size," he continued. "The answer I should. have liked to give him was: 'You should be' or perhaps, 'Look about, and you will be.'" "The inspiration for my poems comes from four or five different places in the United States and from' two or three different walks of life with which I am familiar-farming and teaching and writing," he said. "Poetry has more to do with belief than has anything else," Mr. Frost said. "Belief is the knowledge of something that is to be.": 'Slatz' Randall To Play For Annual' Formal At Union1 "Slatz" Randall and his recording orchestra will play for the Union for- mal to be held on Nov. 4, it was announced last night by John W. Lederle, '33, president of the Union. Charles Burgess4 '34E, chairman of the dance committee of the Union isI in charge of the arrangements for the affair. Burgess s a i d yesterday1 that Johnny Hamp, and Randall had< been under consideration for some time before the final decision was1 made.1 Patrons and patronesses for the c party will be the married membersI of the Board of Directors of thei Union and their wives, Lederle said.I The price of the tickets to the func-i tion this year will be $2.00 again. This affair in the past has proven to be one of the most popular of the Union dances, and, Lederle said, the prominence of the orchestra secured should insure a good crowd for the dance. Randall and his band are well known on the campus having played here for several functions in the past. ..4 Varsity Band To Play At Hoover Detroit Talks More than 90 members of the Var- sity Band will play Saturday night att the Olympia, Detroit, on the occasion of President Hoover's campaign ad- dress, it was announced last night.1 According to Manager A. Stanley McGaughan, '33A., the band will take buses directly from the Stadium im- mediately after the Illinois game andt will rush with special police escort direct to Detroit, returning to Ann Arbor after the program.+ Colby To Talk At Meeting In Union Today Secretary Of State Under Wilson Will Address University Students To Be Entertained At Dem. Luncheon Statesman To Speak Only Once In Ann Arbor; Is To Lead Discussion Bainbridge Colby, Secretary of State during the latter part of Wood- row Wilson's administration, who is to speak at the Union at 1 p. in. to- day, will be entertained at a lunch- eon at the Union before the talk, by the Washtenaw County Democratic committee, it was announced yester- day. Mr. Colby is on the way to Grand Rapids and is only stopping off in Ann Arbor for a short time. He will not speak at any other meetings in Ann Arbor, John H. Huss, '33, re- cording-secretary of the Union said yesterday. Wants to Meet Students When approached with the sugges- tion that he make an address at the Michigan Union, Mr. Colby said that he was not only willing but anxious to meet the students of the Univer- sity of Michigan. There will be a discussion period after the talk in which students may ask questions of this Democratic leader, Huss said. The assembly, however, will be over in time for stu- dents to make two o'clock classes on time. In 1912 Mr. Colby was a member of the Progressive party and did con-t siderable campaigning for Theodore Roosevelt. Faced Problems . When Mr. Colby was chsen Secre- tary of State by Wilson highly im- portant problems were facing him such as the Mexican and Irish situa- tions, the Japanese emigration issue, and the Versailles Peace Conference. He is a graduate of the Columbia Law School. and has practiced in New York for many years. After the conclusion of Wilson's administration Mr. Colby and Wilson formed a law partnership that lasted until the ex- president's failing health forced his retirement in 1923. League To Bring t Outstanding Films Of Artistic Merit# To bring to this campus American and foreign films of artistic and sci- entific merit is the purpose of the Art Cinema League, a new organiza-E tion which is being started here thisI year, it was announced last night. The films that will probably bet shown are considered by critics asi masterpieces. "Jean D'Arc," a French film; "The Cabinet of Dr. Calegari," German; "Mother," a product ofE Russia; and "The Fishing Fleet," from England, are among those list- ed. These films all have English sub-J titles and are silent. The Art Cinema League will not operate upon a personal profit basis. Any funds accumulated will be used to further the activities of the organ- ization. The films are to be Presented at the start in the Natural Science Auditorium, but later the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre is expected to be used. Another object of the Art Cinema League is to co-operate with other campus organizations to initiate oth- er artistic and intellectual enterprises. Announce Winners Of Earhart Scholarships Winners of the Earhart scholar- ships were announced yesterday af- ternoon by Mildred A. Valentine,, of the sociology department. The Ear- hart foundation was inaugurated this fall and provides for 10 traveling scholarships to be awarded on the basis of personality, interest and scholarship, and are open to seniors or graduate students interested in carrying on field work projects in the Detroit Metropolitan area. Following are the six who won scholarshins this fall and the nlace HON. BAINBRIDGE COLBY Student Council Plans Features Of Homecoming Prizes Will Be Given For Fraternity Decorations; Committee Chosen Plans for the homecoming week- end to be held on Oct. 28 and 29 got under way last night as Joseph Zias, '33, president of the Student Council appointed George Lambrecht, '34, Charles Racine, '33, and John Deo, '34, to make arrangements for the program. Prizes will be awarded to the frater- nities that are judged to have the best decorations. Rules regarding the points to be judged will be announc- ed as soon as the judges have been chosen. One of the main features of the week-end will be a pep meeting on the Friday preceeding the Princeton game. William Bohnsack, '34, and Alistair Mitchell, '33E, have been placed on a special committee to make arrangements for this rally. The Council nominating. com- mittee will meet Tuesday to select names for the three Council posi- tions which will be filled by men from the engineering and literary schools. The members on this com- mittee are Joseph Zias, Frank Gil- breth, Edwin T. Turner, Charles Racine, Richard Norris, John W. Lederle, and John Deo. Names of eligible candidates may be turned into these men before next Tues- day. It was decided at the meeting last night that the "pot situation" be taken before the Interfraternity' Council meeting tonight to get the opinion of the various fraternities on the matter. "If the fraternities want to have the freshmen wear 'pots' until next spring, the Council will postpone cap night until then," Zias said. Councilmen in charge of the com- ing elections are Alistair Mitchell, engineering college; Richard Norris, medical college; Joseph Zias, Law School; George Lambrecht, educa- tional college; Charles Racine, dent- istry college; John Deo, architectural college; Charles Burgess, pharmacy college; and William Bohnsack, Bus- iness Administration School. Dr. Poling To Lead Rally At LeagueToday Dry Leader Making Air Tour Of Chief Cities In Interest Of Hoover . Dr. Daniel Poling, chairman of the Allied Prohibition Council, will be the principal speaker at a dry rally at the Michigan League this noon. Dr. Poling, is making an air tour of the principal cities of the country in the interests of the re-election of President Hoover. He has been a lifelong advocate of constitutional liquor prohibition, and in 1912 he ran as the Prohibition party candidate for the governorship in Ohio. His work in the dry cause during the years immediately preceding the en- actment of the Eighteen Amendment was remarkable. He commanded a "flying squadron" of dry orators and spoke in 250 cities. He served at one time as editor of the Christian En- deavor World, dry organ. Drne Polnan'stonic willhe"aotriot.. To Speak This Noon r Council May Impose Limit On Number Of Social Houses Plan To Be Placed Before Interfraternity Body At Conference Tonight, Is Current Rumor Slifer Says College Has 20 Too Many Several Houses Expected To Be Forced To Close Through Small Number Of Men Pledged A plan for limiting the number of social fraternities on the campus will be brought before the Interfraternity Council at its first meeting of the year at 7:30 p. m today, it was ru- mored last night. It is the general consensus of opin- ion of campus leaders that several fraternities will be forced off the' campus in view of the results of the recent pledging. Less than ten men h a v e been pledged since formal pledging took place on Oct 11, it was revealed at the dean of student's office yesterda'y. Purdue Has 34 Houses Seger H. Slifer, accountant for sev- eral fraternities, said that in his opinion there are 20 more fraterni- ties than the campus can support. "Purdue has only 34 fraternities," he said, "and about the same number of eligible fraternity men as Mich- "No house can continue to operate with less than an average class of ten men," Mr. Slifer said, "and it is hard to keep out of the red unless there are at least 25 men living in the house. Although some of these houses that received only a few pledges may be able to continue through the year, I don't see how they' can survive. through next year," he continued. Approves Movement "I certainly believe that this move- ment to limit the number of social fraternities on the campus should be carried through the Interfraternity Council. It is clearly evident that the campus has too many fraternities." Professor Philip Bursley, counselor to new students, will address the meeting tonight on "The Scholarship of Last Year's Freshmen." Other business to be discussed is the Inter- fraternity dues and the wearing of pots by freshmen. Edwin T. Turner, '33, president of the Council, said last night that he urged all fraternities to send repre- sentatives to the meeting as several matters of business will be put to a vote. Sample Willing To Take $500 Cut Or Resign $1,000 Reduction Favored By Supervisors; Cannot Force Judge To Accept Judge George W. Sample, presid- ing magistrate of the Washtenaw county circuit court, told Supervisor George Alber, of Sharon, that he would 'resign his position if requested to do so by the Washtenaw County Board. This decision was the result of a resolution passed by the board of supervisors at its meeting Monday, requesting Judge Sample to take a $1,000 cut in salary. When asked by the salary commit- tee if he would accept the proposed $1,000 reduction on his $11,000 sal- ary, $5,000 of which is paid by the county and $6,000 by the state, Judge Sample stated that he "couldn't quite stand" that large a cut, but that he would take $500 less. Since the state constitution pro- vides that a judge's salary cannot be reduced during his term of office, the county board can.do no more than "request" t h e proposed cut, and Judge Sample may refuse to take it. With the board of supervisors and the judge both standing pat on their original decisions, the salary com- mittee, headed by Alber, thrice in- terviewed the iudge in an attenant to n Memorial To DeCou Sent Here By American Academy In Rome The arrival on the campus recent- ly of a bronze replica of a tablet erected at the American Academy in Rome in memory of Herbert F. De- Cou, '88, archeologist, has recalled the dramatic story of DeCou to the minds of the Ann Arbor people who were his friends during his residence here. Mr. DeCou took a master's degree after his graduation in 1888, and then taught Greek here for two years, after which he went abroad and continued archeological studies in Athens and Rome. He became li- brarian of the American School of Natural Studies in Rome, now the American Academy, and became a member of an archeological expedi- tion undertaken by the academy to Cyrene, North Africa. Rome and the expedition was indef- initely postponed. Although the date of his death (March 11, 1911) was only 23 years after his graduation and only a short time after he became associated with the academy, his achievements had been of such a high character that a memorial was erected in his honor in the courtyard of the academy. Friends Secure Copy Friends of Mr. DeCou in Ann Ar- bor had long wanted to place a mem- orial to him on the Michigan cam- pus, and the suggestion that a copy of the Rome tablet be obtained was heartily agreed to. Librarian W. W. Bishop of the Uni- versity Library, a close friend of De- Cou, arranged, while in Rome a few months ago, w i t h Gorham P. Stevens. director of the academy