PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCT. 7, 1933 PAGE SIX SATUUDAY, OCT. 7, 1933 YESTERDAY LONDON-The British government will not resume full payment of the war debts, it was learned. "Token" payments or a lump settlement would be offered as alternatives. HARRISBURG, Ill.-Nineteen per- sons were shot in a raid by picketeers on Peabody Mine No. 43. HAVANA-A plea for support of the new government was voiced by leaders today after a conference which was attended by U. S. Ambas- sador Sumner Welles. NEW YORK-John D. Rockefeller; Jr., called for government sale of liquor when the Eighteenth Amend- ment is repealed. He said that the profit motive in private sale would defeat the. aim of the repeal move- ment. Dorothy Sands, Impersonator, Highly Praised Performance Here Will Be A Complete Review Of The American Theatre Detroit Alumni Will Entertain Twelve Seniors Tapping, Anderson And Watkins Also Invited To Attend Banquet In accordance with its annual cus- tom of contacting campus leaders, the student relations committee of the University of Michigan Club of Detroit will entertain 12 students at a dinner Thursday, Oct. 19, at the University Club in Detroit. George C. Dillman, former Varsity baseball captain and shortstop, who is chairman of the committee, has planned a program of entertainment for the seniors who are to be in- vited. The three faculty representatives who are to accompany the men into Detroit are T. Hawley Tapping, gen- eral secretary of the Alumni Asso- ciation, Prof. H. C. Anderson, mem- ber of the Board in Control of Phys- ical Education, and Herbert C. Wat- kins, assistant secretary of the Uni- versity and business manager of the Varsity Band. Report Normal Enrollment In B. Ad. School The enrollment to date in the School of Business Administration is within one or two of the number en- rolled at this time last year, Dean Clare E. Griffin said yesterday. While the exact figures were not available, the number of students taking courses in business is slightly over 100. The number of students coming into the school on the combined let- ters and business curriculum has dropped slightly as compared with the figures of last year, Dean Grif- fin said. A possible cause for the drop in the number of students entering on the combined curriculum is the fact that students with no prospect of a job after leaving college find it more to their liking to continue on in col- lege as long as possible In contrast to this is the fact. that parents have found it harder and harder to supply the necessary funds to enable their children to stay in school. The fig- ures, however, show that more and more students are staying in college an extra year, Dean Griffin said. Union To Organize New Student Clubs Thousands Of State Rooters Here For Annual Game Today By CHARLES A. BAIRD Thousands of Michigan State fol- lowers will swarm into Ann Arbor to- day for the annual battle ,of the Spartans and Wolverines. All high- ways between here and East Lansing will be crowded with State rooters, utilizing all means of transportation. Several buses have been chartered by dormitories and other groups, and hundreds of hitch-hikers are already on their way.t Six thousand tickets have been re- served by Michigan State students' and faculty members alone, and the. entire east side of the Stadium has been set aside for State followers. . The Michigan game has always been the highlight of the M. S. C. schedule. Students make plans for the annual October trek to this cam- pus weeks in advance, and for days following it stories of the event are told and retold. The vanguard of State students arrived in Ann Arbor Friday after- noon and evening, prepared to make a big week-end of it. Dormitories, fraternities, and sororities were filled to capacity with East Lansing visitors The band will come to town at 10 a. m. today and soon afterward the largest contingent of followers will arrive. Saturday morning classes at State will be dismissed early for the convenience of those making the trip. Dorothy Sands, impersonator who will open the Oratorical Association lecture series Nov. 1, is not only a brilliant mimic, but knows the back- ground of the theatre as well and is perfectly equipped to present such a "one-woman show" as she will offer here, according to Prof. O. J. Camp- bell of the English department. Miss Sands' performance here will be a complete review of the history of the American theatre, and the ac- tress will present the climax scenes of a number of prominent plays in costume, impersonating the. leading actress in each case. Professor Campbell, who saw Miss Sands in Tchekov's "The Sea Gull," is very enthusiastic about her work and considers her an intelligent ac- tress. Not content with mere acting ability, he said, she has studied the history of the drama extensively, and consequently she can impersonate starts from before her time as well as 'those she has seen. A graduate of Radcliffe College, Miss Sands wrote, directed, and ap- peared in many amateur productions while there. After leaving school she played a number of small roles in Broadway plays. It was not until she appeared in various editions of the "Grand Street Follies," however, that she quickly began to win prominence as a bril- liant impersonator and caricaturist. Later, in her own show, "Styles in Acting," Miss Sands toured the coun- try. Drawing on melodrama, rural and frontier plays, minstrel shows, burlesque, and the most recent of the native dramas, she soon gained her present high repute as a mimic and authority on$ stage history. , Dr. A. C. Cole, '07 Writes Third Book Dr. A. C. Cole, '07, now professor of history in the graduate school of Western Reserve University, has just written his third book, "The Irre- pressible Conflict," which will be pub- lished in December by the MacMillan Co. This book deals with the history of the Civil War and the period from 1850 to 1865. Dr. Cole is also the author of "The Whig Party in the South" and "The Era of the Civil War," and, in addition to his pro- fessorial work at Western Reserve, is the editor of the Mississippi His- torical Review. KLOETZEL GETS AWARD A scholarship of $200 was awarded to Milton Kloetzel, '34, yesterday 'afternoon. The reward came from the Paul F. Bagley Scholarship Fund, which is used each year for the bene- fit of the most promising and worthy student in chemistry. Angell, Smith Present PlIa n To Legislature Will End Bootlegging By Governmental C o n t r o 1 And Taxation Of Liquor (Continued from Page 1) uor in the third class, he said, would be valid only at the nearest liquor store. In this way, there will be a responsible man at the store who will be in a position to keep track of the consumers in his district. The proposed plan would provide for local option, in the sense stated that the community may refuse to grant licenses, Professor Angell de- clared. If the community did not want to issue permits it may refuse, he pointed out; however there would be no law governing the importation of liquor from "wet" communities. Local restrictions would not prevent the use of consumer cards in the "dry" localities, as the consumer would be permitted to buy from his nearest store. As to taxation, the plan would levy* higher taxes on Group Three than on Group One. However, the tax would not be so heavy that it would foster bootlegging. The proposals hope to do away with bootlegging entirely, and by lowering costs to such a level bootlegging would be- come unprofitable. Also, the plan would prohibit any advertising of beverages in Group Three. "The plan, after all," Professor Angell explained, "is to deal with liq- uor control from a social welfare point of view. The plan aims to en- courage the consumption of the low- er alcoholic liquors, and to discour- age the use of more spirited bever- ages." Fall Games Held On Homecoming Day (Continued from Page 1) games will be offered by that body, and his stand was echoed by leaders in all prominent campus organiza- tions. Leaders for the two classes will be chosen, and organization effected, at class caucuses which Owen Crum- packer, '35, in general charge of the games for the Union, said yesterday would be held about Oct. 17. At these meetings of the men of the two classes their "battle orders" will be issued and general plans for the cam- paign against their rivals will be formulated. I Leaders stressed the fact that par- ticipation in these games by mem- bers of both classes is one of the out- standing events of undergraduate years, and upon this they based their belief that this year will find an even greater rivalry existent and a more enthusiastic turnout for the sched- uled tests to determine class super- iority. Roberts Lauds Indian Customs And Cvilization Says White Man's Duty Is To Educate Indians In The Existing Order "Our country might profit greatly from a study of Indian civilization," declared the Rt. Rev. W. Blair Rob- erts, Bishop of South Dakota, in his address which featured the Ann Ar- bor Episcopal Regional Conference held yesterday at Harris Hall under the auspices of St. Andrews Church. Bishop Roberts, who as missionary bishop of South Dakota is the in- timate friend and counsellor of more than 5,000 reservation Indians, spoke on "The Scope of .the Church's En- terprise."1 The Ann Arbor region includes all southwestern Michigan except De- troit. The Rev. Henry Lewis, rector of St. Andrews, was in general charge of the conference. In addition to Bishop Roberts, other church dig- nitaries in attendance were the Rt. Rev. Herman Page, Bishop of Mich- igan, and Charles O. Ford, executive secretary of the Michigan diocese. Bishop Roberts, in his address, stressed the type of work which the Episcopal church. is doing among the Sioux Indians of South Dakota. He considers it "the white man's duty to educate the Indian to enter the complicated society which the white has forced upon him." To this end, under his direction, the church is turning its efforts. Spe- cial emphasis is placed on making the Indian self-supporting by teach- ing him a vocation in the trades school. According to Bishop Roberts, it is more important that a man learn some definite trade than that he ac- quire a vague assortment of knowl- edge. LOST LOST: Notebook and Gas Analysis Text. Place, Ferry Field; Tuesday at five. Phone 3209. R. M. Waters. 81 LOST-Brown billfold Thursday, Hill or Church Street. Personal cards, bills. Reward. L. F. Richards, Phone 2-2513. 84 LOST-In Angell Hall. Ilarge cut green ring surrounded by pearls. Please call 7117. 85 FOR RENT FOR RENT-One double room and suites with cooking privileges. In desirable location. 429 S. Division. 86 HELP WANTED CAN PLACE a few students on de- sired part time work. Apply 609 Packard. 76 TAXICABS ARCADE'CAB. Dial 6116. Large com- fortable cabs. Standard rates. 2x BOARD BOARD for Jewish students. Deli- cious home cooking. Special chick- en dinner, 50c. 611 E. Hoover. Ph. 2-3478. 31 CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1 LAUNDRIES carefully d o n e and hand mended, satisfaction guar- anteed. Called for and delivered. Telephone 730F4. 1780 So., State St. 79 WE DO your laundry work for one- half the usual price. Phone 2-3739. 8x LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x LAUNDRY wanted. Silks, wools guaranteed. Quick service. Call for and deliver. 611 E. Hoover. Phone 5594. 32 Clip Coupon For Free Football Game Tickets Entries to Goldman Brothers' "Lucky 13" contest for free tickets to the Michigan-Northwestern game, Nov. 25 at Evanston, can be obtained only by means of the coupon which is printed daily on Page 3 of The Michigan Daily. No other paper has been commissioned by Goldman's to print these coupons. The final results of the contest de- scribed in detail in the coupon, on Page three will be announced Nov. 21. The Undergraduate Council is su- pervising the running of the contest. J ~i *1 NOTICE LAUNDRY TAXI-Phone 9000. Seven-passenger cars. Only standard rates. 1x WANTED WANTED TO BUY MEN'S OLD AND new suits and overcoats. Will pay 3, 4, 5, and 8, 9 dollars. Phone Ann Arbor, 4306, Chicago Buyer. 5x WANTED: Students laundry. Good work. Very reasonable. Mending free. Will call for and deliver. Dial 4929. 83 MICH IGAND ECORATIONS The best and most complete stock in the city of MICHIGAN BANNERS, BLANKETS, PENNANTS, BOOKENDS, PLAQUES- Also an attractive; line of Michigan Jewelry. AT WAHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 316 STATE STREET Formation of plans for the estab- lishment of clubs for men students according to geographical areas is now in process at the Union. For the purpose of acquainting students from the same sections or localities, groups from Wisconsin, Iowa, and the southern states are now being organized. Also planned are clubs for alumni of various prepara- tory schools common at the Univer- sity, such as Culver, St. Johns, and Lake Forest academies. There will be general get-togethers and special luncheon meetings at the Union for members of these groups. Any students interested in joining these activities are asked to report to the co-operative committee at the student offices in the Union. L2 I 'A OvertheCouner ale of ~ALROYt{COAT r iU ,s~i~ Aoffaj& . Zf- 4 46d lit c4 gdst. I1 '4; r _J~ opouti fA-/aL J~d yA y l~ca 4 tI~ /( CHIAL UNION A EN AVANT A A A A A gi., forward A 1 SEASON TICKETS A A Burr, Patterson & Auld Co. MtsgI.tseIag Fteoe.,mity Jewler, Detroit, Michigan & Wallerville, Ontario A A A For your convenience Ann Arbor Store A 603 Church St. FRANK OAKES . Mg r. It i begins I MONDAY 4 CT. 16th WE DO OUR PMT 0Q4 / _ C -' . t:. . ; , ,, , _ , WE ODOUIR P at 8:30 A.M. Little Grains of Sand V LILY PONS v at th FRITZ KREISLER Little grains of sand that collect to form large dunes easily sift unnoticed through your hands and are never found agaifi. Don't let v7ta11W tV~f tID n nw v frnm vniiAn nernAd~ntt I I r n F mi iCir 1nI . ii