I The Weather C, r SiV~r ian Some snow Tuesday; Wed- nesday cloudy and colder. VOL. XLIV No. 44 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1933 U a ,. . Authorities To Consider Sale Of Intoxicants Initial Union Forum For Year Presents Delano, Picard, And Angell Expect Big Crowd At Liquor Debate Will Explain Problem Now Confronting Legislature On State Ratification Features of the present general disagreement as to how the sale of liquor in the State of Michigan should be controlled will be publicly discussed for the first time locally at the openin Union Forum of the year, to be held at 7:45 p. m. today in the Union ballroom. Frank Picard, chairman of the State Liquor Control Commission, Carl Delano, chairman of the legis- lative sub-committee which drafted the first bill, and Prof. Robert C. An- gell of the sociology department, chairman of the University advisory committee that went, to Lansing a short time ago, will be among promi- nent authorities to appear during the evening. One of the largest crowds ever to attend a similar event here is expect- ed according to Dexter Goodier, '35, of of the Union Executive Council, who is in general charge of the forum. Professor Angell will act as chair- man of the meeting and later will lead the open discussion that will fol- low the addresses. Speakers will endeavor to explain the problem now confronting the State Legislature regarding the ratifi- cation of a bill for the State. As the situation now stands, there are two bills to be presented for considera- tion. One, the work of the sub-com- mittee, closely follows the system of liquor control in force in Quebec, which prohibits the sale of all spirits other than by the bottle from gov- ernment stores. Both Mr. Picard and Mr. Delano were members of the committee that drafted this bill. The second to be presented will be the one that was later drawn up by the legislative council to which the sub-committee was attached. This provides more liberal dispensing in the larger centers of the State. Following the speeches those pres- ent will be given an opportunity to ask questions concerning the details of the plans as presented. New Play Will Be Presented By Henderson Edgar Wallace's Mystery Drama To Be Featured Here All Next Week Because of interest in "Dinner at Eight," Robert Henderson announced last night that the Dramatic Fes- tival would present a second produc- tion beginning next Sunday and con- tinuing through Nov. 25 at the Ma- jestic Theatre. The second play, following the cur- rent run at the Majestic Theatre will be "Criminal-at-Large" by the late Edgar Wallace, famous for his mys- tery novels and plays. "Criminal-at- Large" was presented all last season at the Belasco Theatre in New York and in London under the title of "The Case of the Frightened Lady." "Criminal-at-Large" has been one of the most successful of the re- cent Festival productions, according to Mr. Henderson. In the Ann Arbor engagement, the leading role of Lady Lebanon will be played by Miss Minna Phillips of the New York The- atre Guild. Miss Phillips ,is one of the original 12 members of the The- atre Guild and recently appeared on Broadway in Bernard Shaw's "Apple Cart," and "Too True to be Good." "Criminal-at-Large" is both a mys- tery play and a psychological melo- drama. It centers about the aristo- cratic seat of the Lebanon family, Mark's Priory, where Lady Lebanon rules her entire household with a fanatic and iron hand. The curtain time for "Dinner at Eight" has been changed from 8:30 to 8:15 p. m. to permit women mem- bers of the University to conform with the week-night hour regulations. November Gargoyle Features Football, Fashions, B..O.C.'s Starting with a front page cover of a football player and an admiring one-girl audience, done by John Held, Jr., in the famous Heldian manner, this month's Gargoyle, to be out Thursday, continues for 40 pages in the style which made the first issue a sell-out. Besides the Held cover, outside tal- ent is employed in two of the leadingj features of the issue. One is a two page spread by Gurney Williams, '31, associate editor of Life and the new magazine of college life, University. Mr. Williams discusses "How Uni- versity Came To Be." Tom Cooley, editor of the Gargoyle two years ago, has a page devoted to not immortal poems about birds, with pictures of a fellow in a top hat making.faces at the little birdies. That popular campus monthly fea- ture, Preposterous People, is again represented, and the Gargoyle edi- tors have gone to great effort and found an even more preposterous person than they did the first time. Sophisticated Lady, a well-received commentary on woman's fashions which appeared in the first issue, is again present, and the editors have devoted a page picture spread to men's fashions, with an explanation on the next page. Four campus B. M. O. C.'s are represented, their heads pasted onto rather diminutive bodies. In truth, the B.M.O.C.'s ap- pear to have quite big heads indeed. Football again takes a prominent place in the magazine, with an ar- ticle entitled "Touchdown? Touch- down?" featuring Capt. Stan Fay, and a two page spread of action pic- tures of the Cornell, Ohio State, and Chicago games. Exchange jokes, which were none too popularly received in the last issue, have been cut to a minimum and in their place the magazine will run a feature on amusing events on campus entitled "The Proof of The Piddling." Pep Meeting Will Be Held Friday Night Undergraduate Council To Sponsor Last Pre-Game Session Of Year Varsity Squad To Be In Attendance I Cheerleaders, S And Band To Entertainment peakers, Q Furnish Sharf man Will Speak At Law_ ClubTonight Faculty Man To Address Students And Faculty On 'Law And Economics' Prof. I. L. Sharfman, head of the department of economics, will be the speaker at the second of the cur- rent series of talks to be presented for students and faculty members of the Law School, to be held at 6:45 p. m. today in the Lounge of the Lawyers Club. Professor Sharfman's topic will be "Law and Economics." The series, which was opened two weeks ago with address by James K. Watkins, former police commissioner of Detroit, has been arranged by the social committee of the club in order to acquaint those connected with the legal department with the problems of today that are closely related to matters of law. Authorities in these various neighboring fields have been invited to deliver informal talks to the law students and faculty mem- bers at various times throughout the current semester. Professor Sharfman, who is recog- nized as an authority on'economics, recently won recognition as one of a group of outstanding economists who flayed President Roosevelt's "radical experimentation with our currency.' In 1912 the economist became the chief investigator of the Department on Regulation of Public Utilities of the National Civic Federation. Then, for one year, he was a lecturer in economics at the University, becom- ing an associate professor the follow- ing year. He served as director of the investigation of anti-trust policy for the National Industrial Confer- ence Board, from 1923 to 1924, and has done research work for the In- terstate Commerce Commission, un- der the Commonwealth Fund, since 1925. Red Cross Drive Starts As Planes Fly Over Here Flight of 11 army planes from Sel- fridge Field over the campus at about 2:30 p. m. yesterday was the first step in a drive on the part of the Red Cross for members, and was made at the request of Mayor Rob- ert A. Campbell, it was learned last night. The actual campaign will open Saturday. Seniors Are Urged To Pay Dues Immediately Senior classmen were urged yes- terday to co-operate in the pay- ment of their class dues. Com- mitteemen will be stationed in the lobby of Angell Hall from 9 a. m. to 12 noon today to collect dues. Committeemen must pay their dues by Dec. 15 or alternates will be appointed, it was stated. It was also announced that no name of a senior would be included on the class role until he had paid his dues. Ha dens W1 Leave City On November 22 New Appointee And His Family Plan To Arrive In Manila December 20 Prof. Joseph R. Hayden of the po- litical science department, who was appointed Nov. 3 by President Roose- velt to be vice-governor of the Phil- ippine Islands, will leave Ann Arbor with his family Nov. 22 to sail Dec. 1 on the ship President Hoover, it was said yesterday. The family expects to arrive in Manila Dec. 20. With Professor Hayden will be his wife, his two daughters, Elizabeth and Mary and his son Ralston. Eliza- beth and Mary, aged 15 and 13 re- spectively, are at present students in University High School. Ralston, who is 9 years old, is in Angell School. While in Washington recently Pro- fessor Hayden conferred with and paid his respects to President Roose- velt, George H. Dern, secretary of war, Claude Swanson, secretary of the navy, and many other high offi- cials. During a brief stay in New York Professor Hayden conferred with Dr. Victor G. Heizer, head of the International Health Board of the Rockefeller Foundation, on health and sanitation problems in the Islands. Professor Hayden described Presi- dent Roosevelt as apparently in "a fine state of health." H. V. Rohrer, former United States trade commissioner at Manila and a lecturer at the University of the Philippines, has taken over all of Professor Hayden's classes with the exception of certain seminars. In support of "The Champions of the West" in their march for a fourth consecutive Big Ten title and a sec- ond national championship, a pep meeting will be he d at 7:30 p. m. Friday in Hill Auditorium under the auspices of the Undergraduate Coun- cil, Gilbert E. Bursley, '34, president of the Council, stated last night. Failing in their attempts to get University authorities to consent to a similar meeting atp late date last week-end, campus leaders are mak- ing early plans for this last pep ses- sion of the 1933 season, in an en- deavor to attract as many followers of the team as possible. On the eve of the traditional 20- year old struggle with Minnesota for possession of the Little Brown Jug, the meeting will be. attended by all .the members of the 1933 football squad, Bursley stated last night. The "Fighting Hu'ndred" will fur- nish music for th occasion and Tommy Roberts, '14, head cheer- leader, and junior asistants will lead in the cheering. Tht words of Mich- igan songs will be displayed on a screen erected for the purpose. Speakers, whose names will be an- nounced during the week, will be se- cured for the meeting by the Under- graduate Council. Students Will Vote ' - Nine TopicsFriday Council Plans Ballot On Subjects Of Academic, Social Interest An all-campus straw vote, on ques- tn rl-aing trnine genals- 100 per cent of the total tax levied, tions relating to nine general sub- according to the provisions of the r j ects directly affecting the academic law and social life of University students, F will be held Friday, it was announced( yesterday by members of the Under- Large Crowd graduate Council in charge of the t points about the campus and voting t will take place under the direction M illavRecital f of Union committeemen. Student directories will be used in checkingi the names of those voting so that Advance ticket sales indicated last no student will be allowed to vote night that the largest audience of the r more than once, it was explained by Oratorical Association lecture season y those in charge of the questionnaire. will be present for the appearance of One of the leading current topics Edna St. Vincent Millay, distin- r presented by the questionnaire to be guished woman poet, at 8 p. m. to- voted upon will be that regarding the morrow in Hill Auditorium. existing situation in regard to the The attendance will be considera- sale of beer in Ann Arbor. Students bly larger than that for the per- will be asked if they favor doing formance of Dorothy Sands, actress away with the restriction which now who opened the Oratorical series Nov. limits the sale of the legalized bev- 11, Carl G. Brandt, business manager, erages to points west of Division St. announced. The ban prohibiting the use of Miss Millay, the second lecturer automobiles by students is another on this year's course, will present a leading question proposed in the list. program of readings from her own Students will be given an opportunity works, including the poem which to state whether they favor the ban won her the Pulitzer prize for poetry as it now exists or if they would in 1923 and others for which she prefer its abolishment or modifica- has won high acclaim from many tion in one of three different ways. sources. Questions relating to and border- "Apart from her merit as a poet, 1 ing upon academic measures include Miss Millay is the spokesman of a those on possible establishment of generation," Allen Tate declared re- the honor system, the abolition of cently in the New Republic. compulsory physical education for men or for women, and the abolition Robinson's Dran of the R.O.T.C. The list also asks if the student believes the University should have As Next Play Pr( jurisdiction over the residences of students with degrees, undergraduate men students, or undergraduate wo- "The Round Table," by Lennox men. The question of closing hours Robinson, has been chosen by Direc- for women is also brought up in the tor Valentine B. Windt as the third ballot. Six questions relating to this vehicle for Play Production, it was topic and proposing certain hours in announced last night. the event of modification of existing Robinson is not unknown to Ann rules, are presented by the question- Arbor audiences. He made his first naire. visit here in 1929 during a lecture Of great practical importance to tour of the country. "He made such the underclassmen voting is the ques- an impression on his audiences," Mr. tion relating to class dances for the Windt said, "that he was invited to current year. Students may name come back again in 1930 by Play Pro- Synge Long Cherished Idea Of Producing Best Play In America By A. ELLIS BALL John Millington Synge, author of "Playboy of the Western World," long cherished the idea of taking his greatest play to what he called "the greater Ireland across the ocean." But it was not until 1911, four years after the Dublin opening, that he had the opportunity. Through the efforts of William Butler Yeats, an opening in Boston was made possible, and once again sponsors ran against bitter opposi- tion. Dublin papers and critics all fought against allowing the show to be produced in America, while the United Irish Societies of New York determined, through the use of prop- aganda, to "drive the vile thing from the investigating was a report that there was nothing in the show that needed even the slightest toning down. One night, however, in the middle of the second act a man arose and shouted that no "good New York Irishman" would stand for such non- sense. It was in the New York run that the leading man was hit in the face with a slice of currant cake; several eggs, which the actors in- sisted were fresh, were also thrown, but fortunately they all missed their mark. It was in Chicago that the greatest surprise awaited Mr. Synge. His show ran a complete run of five days and there was not a boo or hiss. His explanation of the miracle was that