THE MICHIGAN DAILY E MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890. .- vote whether they want whiskey to be sold by the glass in the their particular political subdivision. This is not, of course, a perfect bill. It makes no pretense of being one. But it-is a bill which meets the problems raised by national prohibi- tion repeal realistically. It is neither too wet nor too dry. It tries to be temperate and sane. The coming legislative debate will undoubtedly un- cover some flaws in the bill, but in the main, it appears to be one of the most sensible solutions to the problem which has yet been advanced. Th Tear ::- ,,x_ tUCIWNGpWoW S NCV iS O$SV °|i cBan( arnwantpm IMeWym., u -PaA Published every morning except Monday during the Uiversity year and Summer Session by the Board in Control. of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion a- i'the Big Ten News Service. uoriatd alriat __rsg - 1933 ( NATI.A - mve 1934 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-Gener*l. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by nail. $1.50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by mail, $4.25. Offices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 21214. Represe.tatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 Est Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Svree, Boston;r612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR.........THOMAS K,-CONNELLAN CIT EDIT OR.............BRACKEY SHAW EITORIAL DIR.ECTOR.............. HART SCHAAF SPORTS EDITOR...............ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMElI'S EDITOR....................CAROL J. HANAN NIGH'I EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- 1iam G. Ferris; John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret D. Phalan. REPOR''RS: Roy Alexander, John A. Babington, Ogden G. Dwight, Pul J. Elliott, CourtneyA. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried; Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski Thomas H. Kleene, Rich- ard E. Lorch, David G. Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, George I. Quimby, William R. Reed, Robert S. uwith, Robert J. St. Clair, Arthur S. Settle, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M.!! Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hamer, Florence Harper, Marie Held, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUS NESS MANAGER .........W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER........ ..BERNARD E. SHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER......;... . ................... CATHARINE MC HENRY iEPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trick; Cassified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Milton Kra- mer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, David Winkworth. WOMEN'S BUSINESS STAFF Jane Bassett, Virginia Bell, Winifred Bell. Mary Bursley, Peggy Cady, Betty Chapman, Patricia Daly, Jean Dur- ham, Minna Giffen, Doris Gimmy, Billie Griffiths, Janet Jackson, Isabelle Kanter, Louise Krause, Margaret Mustard, Nina Pollock, Elizabeth J. Simonds. NIGHT EDITOR: WILLIAM G. FERRIS The Proposed Liquor Control Bill. .. T HE PROBLEM of liquor control, as Prof. Robert Angell pointed out to those attending the Union Forum Tuesday night, has perplexed mankind down through many civ- ilizations and many ages. It is not a problem which can be solved in a few minutes thought; and, no matter what solution the majority de- cides upon, there will always be a protesting minority. The problem simply cannot be solved to the complete satisfaction of everyone. These facts are known, and admitted, by the members of the legislature sub-committee which has been appointed to draft a liquor control bill for Michigan after prohibition is formally repealed. The bill which they have finally decided upon, and which the chairman of the sub-committee, Carl Delano, outlined Tuesday night, is a com- promise measure. It attempts to be neither too wet nor too dry. It tries to be an intelligent means of providing liquor in a sensible manner, and is based upon the following ideas: First, the corruption caused by liquor in the past has been not only because the use of exces- sive alcohol was bad, but because the profit angle of the business, which, through advertising, en- couraged a great deal of. drinking, brought about an unhealthy state .of competition. The bill plans to remove this private profit element by havi'ng all liquor either sold directly by the State, or, as in the case of beer, by having its price regulated by the State. Second, the less alcoholic content a beverage has the less likely it is to intoxicate those who drink it. A great amount of beer, for instance, must be drunk to give the effect a single glass of whiskey might give, even though a greater amount of alcohol may be contained in the beer. There- fore, the natural thing to do is to make these beverages of small alcoholic content available for general consumption in the hope that their easy procurance will do away with the desire for harder liquors. To carry out this principle the State will allow the sale of beverages up to 23 per cent by volume (this may be modified to 16 per cent) to take place in any establishment asking for a license. Third, hard liquors, drunk to any considerable degree have a damaging effect upon the drinker. The State will therefore sell these beverages only through regulated State dispensaries, to be drunk off premises. Fourth, the bootlegger is one of the worst evils which national prohibition has developed. He can make and sell liquor cheaply. Therefore, in n,"ls t+-;Im +he romnetitiennthe hootlegger might AT THE;LYDIA MENDELSSOHN "PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD" A REVIEW By JOHN W. PRITCHARD When John Millington Synge wrote his play, he intended it as a burlesque upon Irish idio- syncrasies in the first place, and ultimately upon human nature at large. With flaws which, for an amateur company, were comparatively minor, the Detroit Laboratory Theatre last night pro- duced the comedy exactly as written, from view- points both of feeling and of technical intent, save for the omission of a few lines which early were labelled as "scorchers" and which were cut from the play so soon after its first appearance that they are now lost in antiquity. A great deal of work has been expended upon this pro- duction by the players; in fact, the company has come almost to be associated with Synge and his products. The results of their labor are gratify- ing, on the whole, for the play is developed in a fashion calculated to bring out the best of its frothy -gleefulness. On the occasion of the comedy's first presenta- tion in the early years of this century's initial decade, the actors were favored by various un- savory missiles whose resounding impacts indi- cated that all was not well in the audience's re- action. It is to be feared that the Irish are somewhat underdeveloped as regards thickness of skin, for their failure to accept a broad jest turned upon themselves is otherwise rather hard to un- derstand. Mr. Synge has studied carefully the oddities of the Irish, and he has satirised them subtly by means of caricature. The play last night was carefully produced, and Edwin Grammercy evidently gave a good deal of attention to the proper dramatization of it. There were only two flaws noticeable in the di- rection: in the first act, when two spotlights upon a twilight scene fail to give quite sufficient light, and in the last stanza, when a love scene is performed upon a bench at the rear, partially obscured by a table and chair. Acting laurels must, of course, go to Mr. Gram- mercy, as the playboy; his superior experience and natural aptitude for a role of this type make the decision somewhat obvious. The only person in the cast who approached his finesse was Tom Dougall, formerly of Comedy Club, who played the craven Shawn Keough in most amusing fash- ion. The women in the cast, more's the pity, seemed not to have grasped the idea at all. Their acting chiefly consisted of conveying an impression that' their heads were fixed to their shoulders by means of springs; and the slightest movement set the ill-adjusted crania bobbing like a ripe apple on a branch of a windy September afternoon. May Kilgour, whose Pegeen was one of the two impor- tant female parts, opened the play discouragingly enough by reading an unimportant letter as though she were addressing an outdoor crowd of many thousands without benefit of microphone; thereafter she appeared to be concentrating the bulk of her attention upon proper juggling of her really excellent brogue. She sounded a false note in her last line by producing a behemothian sob a la Stan Laurel, when all that was called for in the play is a sincere groan of despair. It is the touch of plaintiveness that creeps into Irish com- edy with great regularity, but she apparently thought the line was funny, Elaine Newell, as the Widow Quin, was annoyingly effervescent. ELMER RICE AND THE MODERN THEATRE By KENNETH ROWE At thr present moment, I would rather hear Elmer Rice speak on "The Future of the The- atre" than any other man I can think of. Elmer Rice and Eugene O'Neill seem to me to be our two most important contemporary American dramatists. Of these two, Mr. Rice, as he stated of himself in a recent publication, is one "whose own minor success has been won entirely within the precincts of what is called the commerical theatre." (Anyone except Mr. Rice would, of course, have used another word than "minor.") For nearly twenty years, now, Mr. Rice has been a successful dramatist, and in recent years a suc- cessful producer as well. He knows both the Amer- ican drama and the machinery of its public pre- sentation. When he wrote a play that no one else cared to undertake, with the experience and means gained in the commercial theatre, he produced it himself, and "Councilor-at-law" became not only the outstanding hit of 1931-32 but was returned for 120 performances the following season. The success Mr. Rice has gained has been no matter of mere conformity. Working from within he has taken the theatre unawares,, as it were, and lifted.it beyond itself. In "The Adding Machine" he created one of the earliest and still one of the best purely expressionistic and radically experi- mental dramas; in "Street Scene," a Pulitzer play, he set a new mode, the weaving together of in- dividual dramas in a cross-section of a crowded and impersonal background, which has since be- come one of the most characteristic dramatic ex- pressions of our age "Grand Hotel," Galsworthy's "The Roof," "Dinner at Eight," for example). "Councilor-at-law" was one of the most daring productions of recent years, and I believe, not only Mr. Rice's greatest play to date, but one of the most profound character studies in modern drama. These plays, and others by Mr. Rice, have not only expanded the scope of our theatre in form and thought, but have vitalized it with intimately American background. Lennox Robinson, in the w'-,N- ,_ i~im _ Arnm+ a riP "W rm. Campus Opinion Letters published in this column should not be construed as expressing the editorial opinion of The Daily. Anonymous communications will be disre- garded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. Contribu- tors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 300 words if possible. SPORTSMANSHIP TODAY To The Editor: The test of sportsmanship in a school, college, or university applies not only to the men on the team, but also to the students representing the institution together with the spectators in the stands. It is very easy to overlook a breach of ethics on the part of an athlete who is keyed to a high pitch of excitement in the heat of the game, but what plea is there, beyond that of ignorance, for the spectator who commits unsportsmanlike acts in the stands. And ignorance excuses no one. The throwing of snowballs onto the field of play and the remarks to the officials in last Sat- urday's game may be mentioned as part of the unsportsmanship of the spectators. The following may be noted as some of the things that are not done in the best university circles. First, addressing uncomplimentary remarks to the officials. Seldom are these remarks heard by the officials in question, and are more often intended as witticisms by the perpetrator. Usually the institution which harbors these persons ac- quires a reputation for cheap sportsmanship not only by some of the spectators but also by the visiting team officials and rooters of that par- ticular university which that team is represent- ing. Second, criticizing the players of either team. As a general rule these criticisms are made by players who do not know enough about the game that is being played and have no game appre- ciation. Yet they feel free to criticize the men who have won by hard work their positions on the team, and these criticisms are levelled against the players on the visiting teams and are intended to be derisive. A cheap show invites and expects insulting re- marks on the part of the audience, while at a Grand Opera such remarks would be entirely out of place and the perpetrators would be instantly ejected. Third, alibis over defeat and gloating over a victory are not in keeping with the Michigan Spirit. And Michigan prides itself on the quality of its sportsmanship when subjected to the most crucial tests, as demonstrated by the Michigan team this season. Let us have improved sportsmanship in the stands today for therein lies the essence of all that is big and worthwhile in this, one of the best educational institutions in America. John Johnstone, Tennis and Fencing Coach. --. Collegiate Observer By BUD BERNARD Love of a good joke led a professor at Marshall College to direct each member of his English class to write on a slip of paper the name of a hoary bespectacled gentleman in the portrait above his desk and to hand it in. The results jus- tified the trick. One student admitted that he didn't know who the man was, the others guessed, but none gave the right answer. All kinds of answers came in, from Mae West to Santa Claus and included such celebrities as John Keats, Longfellow, Bernard Shaw, Flo Ziegfield, and many others. At last, in order to solve the puzzling mystery, a student asked the professor whose the picture was. The professor didn't know. Attractive co-eds often turn out badly, says a judge; the unattractive ones, on the other hand, are badly turned out. Cuts are allowed at Michigan State College from 3 p. m. on the day of a formal dance till noon of the following day. FROM OUR CONTEMPORARIES Oh listen to the death knell sound, Prohibition rang the gong, And now our troubles may be drowned With women,' wine, and song. Hic, Hic, Hurray! - The Oklahoma Daily - Add these to your list of definitions: A co- ed is a girl who is old enough to get into her own jams - A text.is a book used as a stand- ard by those taking any given course. Prac- tically always written by the person who teaches the course. Sometimes read. And add these to your list of similies: Her hair was so red she used lipstick for eyebrow pencil - As pretty as garters on a windy day -As low as a worm in a submarine. -Collegiate Daily - Mid-year- examinations at Boston University were very revealing. A few of the answers were: "Theodore Drieser is a probable candidate for president, and is that author of 'Main Street'." "In 1658 the Pilgrims crossed the Atlantic Ocean. This is known as Pilgrim's Progress." "The death of Socrates was caused by an overdose of wed- lock." The Southwest College Daily reports seven "Do Mores" for college students to follow. They are: ROAST TURKEY from an ELECTRIC OVEN MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS GET RE SULTS 4 I Y9 I READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS -1 I r. a RelIigious Activitiles First Methodist Episcopal Church A COMMUNITY CATHEDRAL State and washington Ministers Frederick B. Fisher Peter F. Stair 10:45-Morning Worsip. "Finding Your Own Religious Experience" 7:30 - Evening Worship. "THE PLACE OF FAITH IN AN AGE OF SCIENCE" Dr. Fisher preaching at both services STALKER HALL (For Students) 12:15- Half-hour forum. 3:00 -International Student Group. 6:00 - Student-led devotional service. DO NOT N EGLECT YOUR RELIGIOUS ACTIVITIES Zion Lutheran Church Washington St. at 5th Ave. E. C. Stelihorn, Pastor 9:00 a.m.-Bible School. Lesson topic: "PAUL AT ATHENS" 9:00 a.m.-Harvest Festival Ser- mon in German Lan- guage. 10:30 A.M. -Service with sermon on "A Man's Worth -What He Is, Not What He Has." 5:30 p.m. - Student Fellowship and Supper. 6:45 p.m. - "The Christian Stu- dent Tomorrow.' An address by Dr. Ed- ward Blakeman. St. Paul's Lutheran (Missouri Synod) West Liberty and Third Sts. November 12 9:30 A.M. -Service in German. 9:30 A.M. -Sunday Scnool and Bible Class. 10:45 A.M. - Service in English. The Fellowship of Liberal Religion (Unitarian) State and Huron Streets Sunday Morning at 10:45 "Revolutions in Morals" St. And rews Episcopal Church Divisionat Catherine Street Services of Worship Sunday, November 19, 193° 8:00 A.M. - Holy Communion 9:30 A.M. - Church School 11:00 A.M. -Kindergarten 11:00 a. in. -Morning Prayer and Sermion. 1. 2. 3. 9o Do Do more than exist, live. more than touch, feel. more than read, absorb. i I I 11 11