THE MICHIGAN DAILY blished el g the Ur ol of Sti -y morning except Monday! ersity year by the Board in nt Publications. ember of Western Conference Editorial Wciation. '1s The Associated Press is exclusively en- ttiled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and the local news pub- l.hed herein,. Entered at the postoflice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate f postage granted y Third Assistant Post- mster General. Suscription by carrier, $4,00; by mail, $4.50. 4offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- nard Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21a24. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 492 MANAGING EDITOR JO H. CHAMBERLIN 'Editor...... ..........Ellis B. Merry Editor MhiganWeekly..Charles E. Behymer (Staff Editor...............Philip C. Brooks City Editor.... .......Courtand C. Smith Womens lEditor.........Marian L. Welles Sp>rts Editor...... ...Herbert E. Ved'le Theater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Telegaph Editor ....... ....... Rss W. Ross Assistant City Editor....Richard C. Kurvink Night Editors Robert E. Yincb G. Thonas McKean Jr Stewart hook Kenneth G. Patrick Paul J. Kern ' Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum 'Rborters Esther Anderson Jack L. Lait Jr.- Margaret :Arthur Marion McDonald Emmons A. Bo8fild Richard H. M iloy , btratton Buck '1-."Charles S. Monroe Jean Campbell Catherine Price F Jessie Church _Harold L. Passman WNilliam 13. lDavis Morris W. Quin~ Clarence N. Edelsob .ierce Rosenberg Margaret Gross David Scheyer Valborg Egeland Eleanor Scriber aror Follmer Robert G. Silbar James B. Freenan Howard F. Simon Robert J. Gessper GCeorge E. Simons laine E. Gruber Rowena Stilman Alice Hagelshaw Sylvia Stone ' Joseph E. Howell ' George "Tilley Charles R. Kufman Edward L. Warner. Jr. Uawrence R. Klein Benjamin S. Washer bonad J. Kline -Leo J. Yoedicke Sally Knox Joseph Zwerdling BUINESS STAFF T6ejepione 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM C. PUSCH Assistant Manager....George H. Annable, Jr. Advertising... ......Richard A. Meyer Advertising ..............Arthur M. Hinkley Advertising ..........Edward L. Hulse Advertising............John W. Ruswinckel Accounts ................Raymond Wachter Circulation .............George B. Ahn, Jr. Publication.................Harvey Talcott Assistants Fred Babcock Hal A. Jaehn' George Bradley " James Jordan Marie Brumler Marion Kerr m es O. Brnw a Dorothy Lyons ames B. Coper T ales N. Leningto Charles K. (orell Catherine McKinven BarbaraCromel W. A. Mahaffy Helen Dancer Francis Patrick -lvlary Divel . . George M. Perrett , Bessae U. Egefand AlexK.Scherer Ona Felker Frak Schuler . Ben Fishman: Bernice Schook Katherine Froche Mary Slate . Douglass Fuller , -.. Geoge Spater Beatrice Greenberg i rt ephenson Helen Gross Ruth Thompson -Herbert .Goldbeg' Herbert E. Varnum E. J. Hammer Lawrence Walkley Carl W. Hammer~ Hnnah Waller . Ray Hotelich SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1927. Night Editor.- OBERT E FINCH. THE COMMUNITY FUND e It has becme customary recently to think of the city service organiza- tions such as the Family Welfare bu- reau, Y. M.. C. A., and the Salvation Army and otlprs as instruments 'part from c rity because where a few years agb each conducted an an- nual drive for funds with which to carry on its work, now each receives its budget demands through the com- munity chest fun-. At the beginning of the late war, two American cities, Cleveland and 'Cincinnatti, had adopted this plan as a means of relieving themselves of continuous dries and at the same time providing for each of'its welfare organizations, Duringthe war and the years following, this system spread across the dciuntry and now 'is in use in most cities. The past week has seen the Detroit drive nearing com- pletion and tomorrow, Ann Arbor opens its annual community fund drive. Its object is worthy and deserves all the support that those ,who are willing and able can give it. THE BATTLE Since the forces of Labor first bound themselves into union organizations. for the promotion of their interests, and since the first strike was invoked in a labor dispute, the threat of in- junction and arbitrary coercion by the courts has hung like a suspended axe over the heads of labor organ- izers. Through three decades of la- bor disputes the threat of injunction. has steadily rolled up prestige 'and power, like a gathering avalanche, to the point where even the physical mastery of the classes falters. Now the issue has apparently come to its final struggle, however. Fol- lowing the recent action of the Amer- ican Federation of Labor condemning the injunction, the Interborough Rapid Transit company of New York has endeavored to obtain a court order enjoining the Amalgamated Associa- tion of Street and Electric Railway Employees from attempting to enroll employees of the transit company in that organization . The union hasl leaped into the fray with the an-; nouncement that it will "spend $100,- jury" is concerned there seems to be ____________ little reason or logic to the case. It Is, to be sure, an abrogation of trial by jury; but it also is an emergency TO BAR measure, designed for extreme cases J STUDENTS w1lere there is no time for trial by F }ROM TEAM jury. The injunction's most legiti- (By Special Rolls Correspondent) Owing to the inability of the speech mate use is in restraining violence department to agree on a date for the while both parties await a fair ad- varsity debate tryouts, it has been de. jdication of their respective rights cided not to have a student team this through deliberate court action. year. On the other hand there is little * * doubt but that the use of the injunc- Instead, a team composed of Messrs. tion has been abused. There is little Brandt, Densmore, and O'Neill has doubt that the use of injunction in been formed and will sustain the v.cal the present case, to prevent the or- honors of the school against all com- ganization of a group of laborers into ers. a union, is a ver'y very extreme appli- * * * cation of the court order, and one The date for the Min"esota debate which will be hard to sustain before was really set for Nov. 10 but dis- any just court in the United States. patches from the north promising an The proper use of the courts in la- early arrival of Prof. Hobbs led to a bor disputes is undoubtedly a very ex- postponemen until Dee. 8 In the hope cellent thing. To substitute the calm that he would be avalable for the all judicial deliberation of the trained important conflict with the Gophers. judge for the passionate and partisanr disputes of the interested parties would no doubt be an excellent thing as well. The possession 'f power, however, is a constant temptation to the application of that power for spe- THE SQUAD cific interests, and if the forces of cap- as it trotted into the stadium yester- ital gain control of the judicial sys- day for its first practice session. tem through the judges, the resultant (Prof. Hobbs is the fifth from the combination is extremely unfortunate right.) for the best interests of the public as a * * * whole. ROLLS PLANS LIBRARY It is to be hoped that the New York SERVICE FOR FACULTY test case, now about to begin, will Because of th impossibility of get- bring into the open both sides of the ( ting a book out of the library, the edi- controversy, and that it will end with tors of Rolls have consented after a very definite limitation or license much pressure to supply complete in- for the courts. Whatever the just out- formation to the most recent Mich- come may be, the rights of courts and igan aspirants for forensic glory. the lengths to which they can go * * * should certainly be clearly defined. And owing to the fervent desires of the alumni to place debating among MODERN POLICING the major sports and in order to en- Chief Justice Taft, speaking recent- able faculty men to win their "M" in ly before the National Conference on debating, Rolls will furnish upon ap- the Reduction of Crime, advocated a plication complete lists of the contro- strong program for bettering the legal versial poits. machinery of the United States for * * * the prosecution of crime. Legislation HELP! HELP! to curb delays, more police, and the In order to give the faculty team judicial direction of juries were among practice, Rolls is holding tryouts on the measures which the chief justice Ferry Field, Sunday morning at 11 proposed. But mainly the chief jus- o'clock for a University scrub team tice emphasized the point that we Freshmen will be eligible. must not let "our regard for humanity to criminals go to the point of making '"Five local ministers have agreed to effective prosecution, of crime and its act as judges. punishment subordinate to schemes * * * for the reform of criminals, no mat. RULES AND REGULATIONS ter how admirable they may be." 1. Admission will be free to all ex- There are many who would elim- cept faculty members and students of inate penitentiaries and ,jails alto- the engineering college. gether and attempt to eliminate crime 2. No speech may be longer than by confining evil-doers' to hospitals five hburs. where they might be treated for the 3. The remainder of the rules will ailment whjch caused the crime. This be omitted through the special consent assuredly is the end to which science of Chief Tommy O'Brien, Harry Til- will bring us some day. lotson, and the Ann Arbor Chamber of But at the present time those who Commerce. would do this are forgetting that such * * * an end is highly idealistic and that in the meantime we must maintain all of "Insanity," say the dapper de- the organizations for justice that baters, "is going to be lessened peace and' respectability may be main- under the new criminal laws of tained. It is an important item in New York and Michigan as a our control of crime that we progrqss means of discourse. It is to be towards the scientific working system replaced in this field by the for the control of crime under the United States Post Office Depart- present plan. To let down for one ment and the Detroit News radio moment in the hope that in the future I broadcasting stattion." something better may evolve is to lay the country open to the possibility of a huge wave of crime. Idealistic the- * * * ories must ever be subordinated to the One prominent candidate for the expedient and the immediate. student scrub team has decided to take the negative on the grounds that pis- ACROSS THE COUNTER tols were the cause of most of the The art of selling goods over the deaths in the States last year and be- counter is one that is hard to analyze cause the question of guilt isn't so im- and therefore, one which is difficult te portant anyhow. teach. Why it is that one man can sell red neckties to an octagenerian and CHICAGO GAME another man cannot sell them even RESULTS to a collegian is something that has (Bulletin) long occupied the attention of the CHICAGO-(Special to Dolls)- psychologist. And the inevitable an- Twelve Michigan Students arrived swer is, personality, safely at Stagg Field yesterday. Admittdly, there are many things * which can be done for the develop- CHICAGO, Nov. 5.-Five Michigan ment of i pleasing and an effective students had reported to the Chief of personality. Studying the whims - of Police that they -Were neither robbed people and adapting oneself to the nor injured at noon today. circumstances which arise when sep- Advices from' underworld head- arating the customer from his 'earn- quarters, however, indicate that crime ings has become one of the big de- chiefs believe this to have been an velopments in the fine art of merchan- error due possibly to having mistaken dising. the students for members of their The Federal Board of Vocational own gang. Education made a study recently of They promised that nothing of the the steps that are being taken in the sort would happen during future Mich- United States for the training of de- igan visits to the city, but that having partment store employees. The re- so many alumni to hold up had con- sults of the investigation show' that fused them. most of the large stores in the United States are maintaining some kind of HOW AN ALUMNI LOOKS bureaus of education for their em- ployees, and that they are uniting in ScAe this work with all sorts of educational institutions and mediums. ,.- This is a long cry from the day --------------- when the clerk did nothing more than (Question: Which is the alumni?) ipresent the goods to the customer and * * * let him select what it was he wanted. Fires originating in pro-British book Now the clerk studies the person with piles were touched off between the whom he has to deal, and touches the halfs to warm the enthusiasm of the sale with the finesse of salesmansip spectators at Stagg Field. and personality. The customer is * * * .. N r 1 3 I t t a . I. .1. - ,, r F r n n 1 t. 0 ,t t I t f THEATER BOOKS TIJS AFTERNOON: The University Symphony orchestra under 'the direc- tion of Samuel Pierson Lockwood in the second Faculty Concert at 4:15 o'cloek in Hill auditorium. . "DULCY" Comedy Club's latest production "Dulcy" was packed up after the per- formance last night, and sent to the ungrateful oblivion of Cain's store- house-in this case the fly loft of the Mimes theater, which is the happy hunting ground of all good scenery after the 'closing of any campus show. The untimely demise of "Dulcy" is, however, to be regretted. Not be- .cause it is a good draia-for it reads like a serial in the Saturday Evening Post. Nor because it was a particu- larly happy choice-it is more the type of play that the Senior class in High School does. But rather because of Phyllis Loughton's admirable Dul- cinea Smith. Post-prandial eulogies are for the most part ojetionable but her performance calls forth some mention. She was in character from her first entrance to the hearty and resonant kiss which brought down the final curtain. Moreover, she ac- complished something' which was ex- traordinarily difficult: she invested Dulcy with some sympathy, and at the same time retained all the comedy and humor that isto be found in Dul- cy's endless platitudes and cheery blundering. And in no small measure was there a satire of America's per- fect hostess-who is Dulcy's proto- type. In short therd were a whole complex of reasons that place the role in the mildewed album of portraits for a local theatrical hall of fame. And now that the show has closed, we can let you all in on a professional secret. It wasn't Charles Livingstone who played the piano in the second act at all, because he can't play the piano; it was Lorinda McAndrews, who played Helen Hayle last week in Mimes "On Approval." CORRECTION In an article in yesterday morning's column which was devoted to editorial notice of the deaths of Florence Mills and Isadora Duncan, it was stated that Miss Duncan died three or four years ago. This"was due to a typographical error, and should have read "three or four weeks ago." * * * AND SUB ROSA One of the latest books, which only escapes being a best seller because of the annoying fact that federal agents raided the printing establishment and destroyed the plates, is Nan Britton's "The President's Daughter" in which the love story of the late President Harding is laid bare. The book opens with facsimilies of various bills which his mistress required him to pay, and the story subsequently deals with the life of the baby girl who blessed the union. H. L. Mencken remarks that Miss Britton "achieves a portrait so grotesque that it seems fabulous, and yet so palpably true that it convinces instantly." Although we have not as yet been able to read this book, the facts of the case seem pretty well sub- stantiated and Nan Britton can go down in literary history as perhaps the most prosaic woman who ever became entangled with an unimagin- ative celebrity. Miss Britton's book, however, does not deny the fact thatkMr. Harding had 'rno children to speak of.' The book is published by The Eliza- beth Ann Guild of New York, which is one of the many new publishing houses which have sprung up to meet the demand for books by unrecognized geniuses and literary minded porno- graphers. -R. L. A. THE UNIVERSITY ORCHESTRA The University orchestra has been in' existence has been in existence for some two score years, and under the direction of Mr. Lockwood, head of the violin department of the School of Music has attained some merit in the manner of performance in the past. Usually the first program of the year is somewhat lousy, due to the fact that the personnel has largely changed from that of the previous season, but there are several perman- _ l' 1 t ' t t t COOPER'S KITCHENETTE C FAMOUS FOR FOOD This is our $.75 Sunday Dinner Rice and Celery Soup Tomato Salad Fricassee Ch.ckcn Mushrooms and Biscuits or Roast Pork Loin Dressing Mashed Potatoes Sugar Corn Ice Cream Rolls Milk or Coffee Dinner, 12-2-5:30-7 * $75 e' i I ent members of the organization and it eventually rounds into something like music. At any rate, it is the one and only of its kind in the University, and usually has a rather wide and quite 1 excellent repertoire. -E. M. 11. * * * The Governor Winthrop Desk Truly a fine piece of furniture. Authentically reproduced in Genuine mahogany-and in ap- propriate size for, the modern