:. * ....... ... - OGDEN L. - - ---j -Associated Press Photo A quiet back-stage struggle between old guard Republicans and followers of President Hoover for control of the party organization is expected to break into the open after March 4. The main contest will center about the chairmanship of the national committee now held by Everett Sanders. Talk among Republicans is that Sanders desires to relinquish the post and both camps are scouting about for his logical successor. Among possibilities discussed by the old guard are J. Henry Roraback, vice-chairman of the national com- mittee, and Henry P. Fletcher. On the Hoover side the names of Secretary Ogden Mills and Walter F. Brown, postmaster-general, have been heard. Poe Play Has First Showing At Virginia U. 'Politian' Premiere Is Pre- sented At The College Poet Attended UNIVERSITY, Va., Jan. 20.-(IP)- University of Virginia, which Edgar Allen Poe attended as a youth, proudly acclaimed itself today as the scene of the world's premiere of the famous poet's only play. The drama "Politian," a tragedy based on a Kentucky murder trial, was presented Thursday night be- fore an audience in which sat a num- ber of biographers and literary his- torians. It was sponsored by the Raven society, honorary scholastic group which meets in the memory- haunted room Poe occupied as a student. Tonight Dr. John C. French, Johns Hopkins university librarian and first president of the Poe society of Bal- timore, will address the Jefferson so- ciety, of which Poe was president during his student days. Although the son of two wander- ing actors, Poe's literary efforts never turned to drama with the excep- tion of "Politian," of which he evi- dently thought so little that he never bothered to complete it to his satis- faction. One century after it was penned, Poe's alma mater introduced the drama to the theatre on the poet's 124th birth anniversary. Critics at the university praised the play, both for its literary worth and for its adaptability to the stage. Dr. James Southall Wilson, Poe professor of English literature, term- ed the performance "an event of ro- mantic interest; the sort of thing that would have moved both Poe's interest and his mirth." He said it was "remarkable how the lines come to life when effectively spoken and how vividly dramatic some of the situations are on the boards." Lalage accepts Politian's love only upon his promise to kill Castiglione. This vow Politian makes in a drama- tic closing scene in the Roman col- iseum. Lions Spoil Fun By Remaining In Camp WOLF ISLAND, Mo., Jan. 20.-() -Playful as a pair of milkfed kit- tens, Denver M. Wright's lions re- fused to leave his camp on Hog Is- land in the Mississippi River near here, when he opened the door of their cage today, preparatory to staging a synthetic lion hunt. Wright himself released the lions from a position he had taken atop the cage. He said he planned to stage the hunt Saturday or Sunday. B e f o r e releasing the animals Wright inspected all the firearms in the party to make sure they were not loaded. "No one is going to shoot them but me or my son," Wright explain- ed, remembering his first attempt to stage a hunt when the lions were shot by interlopers before he or his party were able to hunt them. After the inspection the members of the party were required to sign a document releasing Wright from liability in the event the lions should cause death or injury to members of the expedition. Then Wright climbed atop the cage outside a barbed wire barricade erected for protection of the "safari" and opened the hate. One of the lions darted from the cage, ran a few steps to the front, then turned sharply and dashed through the barbed wire fence bor- dering a runway supposed to direct the animals away from the camp. The other lion, which was either ill or tired, walked out of the cage languidly, and then caught the spirit of his more energetic companion and followed him through the fence, which members of the expedition had been assured was lion-proof. This caused consternation within the barricade and the hunters won- dered whether they were safe, as the barricade consisted of the same type of fence as the runway. But their fears were unfounded. The more lethargic of the lions sat down on his haunches, hung out his tongue and yawned prodigiously. . Fundamental aspects of human nature are disregarded by Techno- cracy, although some truths are car- ried in its propaganda, it is declared by Prof. I. L. Sharfman of the eco- nomics department. The idea of a nation run by scien- tists and engineers, a government in which economic and social values will be determined by the amounts of energy required to do various jobs, in which political government, traditional business methods, and so- cial customs would be literally "junked," is a startling one, the eco- nomist declared in an interview. Technocracy's scientific claims, he said, should be checked carefully be- fore it is accepted as the next step after democracy. "While a road building machine may be possible which, worked by 3 two-man shifts will tear up and re- lay 8 miles of 60 foot payment in 24 hours, and while it may be true that similar marvels might be per- formed right and left if engineering was given a free hand, they will get .little popular backing, if it is neces- 'Dramatic Clubs Denied Use Of French Plays Publisher Threatens Act Against Union Mimes' Debts Sharfman Says Technocracy Disregards Human Psychology To For (Continued from Page 1) University organizations denied the use of French plays. In a statement made last night Ann Vernor, '35L, who, as business manager of Comedy Club, has been dealing with French, said, "I think the attitude taken by French toward Comedy Club is rather unfair in the light of all the circumstances. Comedy Club has always been fair and above-board in its dealings with this organization and has never tried to make illegal use of any plays. The problem which arose in connection with 'Meet the Prince' was one which could not have been foreseen or pre- vented by the present personnel of Comedy Club." "Inasmuch as Samuel French," she continued, "is in a position to in- fluence to a great degree the success or failure of any representative of the little theatre movement, and in view of the present precarious position of the theatre as a whole, I believe it shouldrbe more lenient in its dealings with organizations such as ours." 4 Dearborn Men Killed As Truck Hits Freight DETROIT, Jan. 20.-(A)-Investi- gations were under way today to de- termine all the facts surrounding an accident Thursday afternoon in which four men lost their lives and seven were injured in a railway crossing crash. The men were riding in a truck owned by the city of Dearborn, re- turning from a day's work for the welfare relief fund. The truck was in collision with a Wabash freight train as it backed across a grade crossing. sary, as the technocras demand, that the country be placed under a dictatorship of technical experts," said Professor Sharfman. "It is prob- able that the people would junk the machines before they would submit to any such new autocracy of the trained few. The technocrats need more psychologists, socioligists and philosophers just now in their ranks, who know that human nature is a scientific fact as well as are power driven machines. 'Electric Dollar' Vague "Neither is it at all clear that our price and cost system is due to be displaced by some unit such as the 'electric kilowatt hour,' whose nature and use is entirely vague. The tech- nocrats have also over estimated the number of men who are permanently thrown out of work by the machine. That large numbers are re-employed in new industries is common knowl- edge. Perhaps the best contribution of technocracy will be its energy sur- vey. If this is accurate, it will fur- nish a background for reasonable change as well as for the millenium the technical enthusiasts predict." "Figures presented by the techno- crats showing the recent great changes in industrial life through the application of science do not tell us anything distinctly new, but they do step upon new ground when they blandly state with little evidence, but as if self evident, that these fig- ures imply the doom of our present economc system. Howard Scott, leader of the movement, holds that, 'It is the fact that all forms of en- ergy, of whatever sort, may be meas- ured in units of ergs, joules, or cal- ories that is of the utmost import- ance. The solution of the social prob- lems of our time depends upon the recognition of this fact.' Here we have a statement of elementary physics coupled with .another of ap- p a r e n t I y tremendous importance. The two, however, have no obvious connection, no evidence to show how a recognition of the fact that energy may be measured will bring about a solution of our social problems. Statement Obvious "Again the Technocracts say,'a dol- lar may be worth more, in buying power, so much today and more or less tomorrow, but a unit of work or heat is the same in 1900, 1929, 1933, or the year of 2000.' This merely states a very obvious and well known fact, and implies that units of work required to manufacture an article are the proper standards of its value. Yet a crank shaft of soft steel, heavy and unsatisfactory, which requires more work to make is much inferior to the lighter and superior alloy steel shafts now in use. "Investigations showing the effect of scientific developments and of the increase in machinery upon the mod- ern world are of value, but sweeping and unproven proclamations about the effect of these upon the present organization of society are to be de- plored." Communist Party Plans Local Workers' Forum A workers' forum will be held Sun- day afternoon in Pattengill Audito- rium, Ann Arbor High School, under the auspices of the local unit of the Communist party. William Nowell is scheduled to speak on "The Signifi- canceof the Socialist Construction in the U. S. S. R." ci gr P _=N; MYUA HESS Phenomenal Woman Pianist FRIDAY, JANUARY 27 k