'TH EMICHIGAN DAEILY ublished every morning except Monday during the University year e Board in Control of Student Publications. [ember of the Western Conference Editorial Association. he Asociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re- 'cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otbegWae ted in this paper and the local news published herein. ntered at the Post Office at- Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant mster GeneraL. ubscription by carrier, $4.00; br mail, $4.50 iffices: Ann Arbor Press Building, Maynard Street, Ann- Arbor, gan. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business, 21214. EDITQRIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR RICHARD L. TOBIN rial Director ...........................Beach Conger, Jr. E(Ator ..... ,,................ .Carl Forsythe Ed'tor .......... .......David M. Nichol s Editor ....................... ....Sheldon C. Fulerton en's Editor ..... ......... . .MargaretM. Thompson 1 Reflections.. ...............Bertram J. Askwith ant News Editor .........................Robert L. Pierce NIGHT ED1TORS B. Oilbreth J. Cullen Kennedy James Inglis d Goodman Jerry E. Rosenthal Karl Seiffert George A. Stauter J. Myers y W. Arnhcim n E. Beecker as Connellan el G. Ellis e L. oinkie B. Gascoigne Sports Assistants John W. Thomas REPORTERS Fred A. Iluber Norman Kraft Ioland Martin Henry Meyer Marion A. Milzewski Albert 11I. Newman E. Jerome Pettit Georgia Geisman r Alice Gilbert Martha Littleton Elizabeth Long Frances Manchester Elizabeth Mann John S. Townsend Charles A. Sanford John \'. Pritchard .Joseph Renihan C. Hart Schaaf Brackley Shaw Parker R. Snyder (,. R.. Winters Margaret O'Brien Ilillary Rarden Porcthylundell Elma Wadsworth Josephine XVoodhlams Bra Carv Col man burial fund, insurance, church and school amounting to eight dollars a month. This left about twenty-four dollars a month for rent (company shacks), food, clothing and other necessities, for the average family. All pay was in company scrip good only at com- pany stores. These stores charged from twenty to fifty percent more for food articles than independent stores. Doctors reported that all the children were dangerously undernourished. Their diet consisted of pinto beans, potatoes and salt pork. Miners were robbed of part of the coal they pro- duced. A car of coal which formerly brought the. miner credit for 4300 pounds was bringing him credit for only 3000 pounds because union checkweighmen were not permitted to witness the weighings, although the law in Kentucky requires the presence of check- weighmen at the scales. Such was the condition in Harlan County last spring. The operators announced a 10 per cent wage. cut and the miners went out on strike. All attempts at unionizing prior to the strike had been crippled by the employers, who were organized. Men who even attended union meetings were fired byf tens and hundreds. The work of unionizing after the strike was called went better. The National Miners Union was formed. Employers saw this. This would not do; the union must be crippled. Deputies were hired; gunmen were brought in. The public was told they were there to preserve order. Actually, they were there to pick fights with the miners so that union leaders could be arrested. The plan worked. As a result of a gun-battle in Evarts thirty miners were killed, the union leaders of course, are held on charges of murder. Thirty-five others were indicted for "banding and confederating" or for criminal syndicalism. Arnold Johnson, representing the Civil Liberties ;Union was arrested on a charge of criminal syndical- ism and held im jail thirty-seven days. The legal defense of the miners is financed by contributions from working men and women the country over who sympathize with the strikers. The prosecution knows this, and knows how hard it is for working people to contribute from their scanty earnings. Therefore, they moved for change of venue. The scene of the trials was moved from Harlan Coun- ty to Clark and Montgomery counties, two hundred miles away. The defense is now wondering how they, can present their cases not having enough money to transport the witnesses. There was another motive, also, of the prosecution, in moving for change of venue. Clark and Montgom- ery counties are in the heart of the famous "blue grass" race-horse breeding section. The well-to-do farmers look down on the mountain men as "hill bil- lies," a good for nothing and murderous lot. An im- partial jury is impossible in this region, even if it were desired. Such is the situation. When one looks at it, one wonders and at the same time hopes. - One wonders where he can best throw his energies to end this sort of tyranny, and he hopes that some day soon we shall live under a social order designed for the good of all the people and not to make profits for the few and misery for all the rest. What are we going to do about it? STEWART WAY. TOASDR OLIPL WAR! Bloody War and all its horors (see Student Socialist Vol. 2 No. 1) is about to break forth upon the Michigan Campus. The ROLLS STAFF hurls down the gauntlet to all and every member or :members of the Ann Arbor Typographical Union and hereby dares them to come out and fight like a man. By consistent underhanded t a c t i c s they have attempted to make this department look so much worse than it is (no mean task by the way) that we consider it time something was done. In case there are any doubts about what this is all for, we shall explain our case. Rafael Sabatini Author of "Scaramouche," "Sea-Hawk," "Captain Blood," "King Maker" Martin canw Osa Johson America's best knowni African explorers UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Oratorical A'ssociation Presents BSINIESS STAFF TelepnhoneA21214 RLES T. KLINE........... . .........Business Manager RIS P. JOHNSON.......................Assistant Manager Department Managers tising .................. .....Vernon Bishop tising...................... .............Robert B. Callahan tising ................... William W. Davis e ...............................Byron C. Vedder 'ations ................. ...... .....William T3. JBrown elation..............................Harry . Begley ants ... ....................Richard Straterneler. en's Business Manager.......An.....An W. verner Assistants Aronsen Willard Freehling Tliomas Roberts rt E. Bursley Herbert Greenstone R A. 8altzstein rd A. Combs John Keyser Bernard E. Schnacke. Clark Arthur F. Kohn Graf ton W. Sharp ye Dalberg Bernard H. Good Cecil E. Welch t E. Finn James Lowe a Becker Anne Harsha May Seefried a Jane Cissel Katharine Jackson Minnie Seig rieve Field Dorothy Layin lelen Spencer e Fischgrund Virginia McComb Kathryn Stork Gallmeyer Carolin Mosher Clare Unger Harriman He ien Olsen Mary Elizabeth Watts Ifelen Schineede NIGHT EDITOR-JAMES INGLIS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1931 Last week, after Herculean efforts, Oscar t h e Wonder Horse and his worthy contem- poraries got out a column and handed it over to the mercies of the above-mentioned fiends. The result was horrible. It re- sembled the worst efforts of the Buzzard, and that, in absolute controversion of the explicitly written directions which were sent them with the material. Hereafter tolls will print their own column and sell it on cam- pus like the Student Socialist ......But not too much like it. Somehow or other, we don't seem able to get our minds off of that Student (Christian As- sociation) Socialist. -Every time we try to think of something silly to say that isn't. going to enrage a Dean, our minds just return tq that publication like water through a seive. We think of its daring expose .of the R. O. T. C. (Ne' Boyscouts) -its scathing denunciation of the Daily-its general bold and vigorous policy of arm-chair criticism of things about which it knows little or nothing,-ana then we sort of chuckle and shake our heads over the im- petuosity of youth. OSCAR THE WONDER HORSE Jon . Kennedy Associate Editor and Radio Announcer, Collier's GeorgeF WicIkersham Chairman, National Commission on Law Enforcement inlstonB Spesn.ce raChrc. Brilliant British Statesman and Orator rtran Philosopher, Essayist, and Publicist APPLICATIONS FOR SEASON TICKETS MUST BE RECEIVED AT 3211 ANGELL HALL BY OCTOBER 26 TO RECEIVE FIRST PREFERENCE. TICKETS FOR ENTIRE SERIES, $2.50; $3.00; AND $3.50. a able Hunter A Great Educational Opportunity ND now Capone, the king pin of American trouble hunters, has found what he sought. It as been a long search, lasting over a period of ears. He has had partial success here and there, ut nothing calculated to delight his rivals quite' o much as his current difficulty. It was a good idea of his, trying to evade his ncome tax. It was a whiz of an idea. It opened broad highway of trouble to his eager feet. In- identally, it gave the federal government an op- ortunity that his years of lawless gangdom has filed to present. ' The Czar of Bootleg has lived in sumptuous iagnificence, without a care in the world except a occasional social ostracism. America is better nown abroad because of her collective and mdi- idual wealth than for any other reason; in a recent uropean poll, Henry Ford was listed as the best nown American. Scarface Capone, with his inter- ational reputation for law evasion, has supple- tented the picture of ,his worldly success with all 1e romantic glamor of a Jesse James. Rung by rung he has mounted the ladder of nderworld fame. His name is a byword in every :me in the United States. Humor magazines run nips .about small boys who .would rather be a anster than the president, because the president as to obey the law. A youngster of our acquaint- ice pointed across the. Detroit river one day to dicate a dirty little craft speeding across the ater. "Is that a rum runner, daddy?" he asked s father. "I imagine it is," answered father, with ist the suspicion of a grin twisting t.he corners : his mouth. No more questions y ere asked; ere was perfect understanding on both sides. We are not insinuating that Scarface is the sole )use of all this filthy mess. He is, rather, the >itome of all that is elegant in gangdom. He is figure of speech (albeit a very active one) indi- iting, better than words can expres?, the enor- .ous, gorgeous, scintillating tinsel that, despite he instincive revulsion of he American people, lorifies,.the underworld of today, the very same nderworld that in Hugo's time was considered angerous in a petty sort of way, vulgar, obscene. Capone has been successful in his trouble hunt -at least, such are the rather vague indications. ut he is charged, not with repeated inroads upon ie public peace, not with giving eminent aid in opardizing the good name of the Constitution- -t, in short, with being a public nuisance-but ith deficiency in his income tax payments to the nounts of $215,oo. There must be a joker somewhere. PROHIBITION By M. Levi, Professor Emeritus. (This is the second of a series of articles on Pro- hibition by M. Levi, professor emeritus.) What is happening almost daily in the United States in connection with prohibition may be gath- ered from the fact that in ope day twenty-three persons were arrested in Detroit for violating the prohibition law. The same day one of the largest "wildcat" breweries eyer found was discovered in Yongers by prohibition agents. Again, the same day a distillery valued at $20,000 was seized in Toledo and seven men were arrested by the police. These discoveries are but a small percentage of the huge illegal trade in liquor-often poison liquor- carried on in the United States. No one can tell how much more there is that is not discovered, especially when it is remembered that every householder can manufacture liquor on his own premises. There is no exaggeration in saying that the evils of prohibi- tion overshadow a hundredfold the benefits derived from that source. It is Chesterton who wrote that "Prohibition never prohibits. It never has in history, not even in Moslem history, and it never will." Next to the business depression and the conse-d quent unemployment situation, there is nothing that! exercises the minds of the American people quite as much as prohibition. There are two parties engaged in an attempt to convince the world of their relative righteousness-the prohibitionists and the antipro- hibitionists. If the United States could be drained dry, this country would be a paradise, according to the prohibitionists. In the opinion of many antipro- hibitionists the United States would be a dreary place if liquor could no longer be obtained. In what pre- cedes, I have already indicated how, as a general rule, each party expounds its own side regardless of what the other side may advance. In .other words, it is relatively seldom that the leaders of the two parties treat the subject impartially by setting forth the good and bad that have resulted from prohibition. I have written in another connection that in all fairness it must be conceded that certain advantages have accrued from prohibition but that the evils which have sprung from it are vastly greater than the benefits. It is needless to repeat here what is so well known. What may not be so well known is that a goodly number of the foremost and sanest thinkers of the day, both native and foreign, have written on prohibition and allied subjects. I mention but a few of them: Raymond Fosdick, John Erskine, James Truslow Adams, Bertrand Russell, Walter Lipp- man, Count Keyserling, Harold J. Laski, Andre Sieg- fried, Charles A. Beard, Andre Maurois, G. C. Chester- ton, Lucien Romier, etc., etc. The writers mentioned are fundamentally opposed to moralization which later trait figures so prominently with many prohibi- tionists. Their writings breathe a spirit of high ideal- ism and a fine liberalism. They are what xnay be called above the melee by trying to instill into the mind of man self-trust and self-control in all mat- ters pertaining to his bodily as well as his mental well-being. It offends them to see grown-ups treated as if they were little children. I shall give excerpts. from some of these writers in my next letter. PAMER CHRISTIAN'S THIRD CONCERT By Richard L. Tobin "Choral Prelude" by Hanif open- ed yesterday's program, but aside from being an important German contributionto church music, prov- ed to be unexciting. Followed by "Largo," ever fresh and heart- rending under Mr. Christian's ex- pert interpretation, "Choral Pre- lude" was lost. There is a distinct repression about "Largo" which only the mus- ic of a genius can produce. The feeling is always present that Han- del was being held back, that his emotions wanted larger room than "Largo" gave him; and yet it is that same quality-the force of despair confined to deep, slow mus- ic-that creates such a tremendous power. "Largo" is a thorough emo- tional experience. "Chorale in D Minor," written by the Dutch Andriessen, may'be great organ music in its way, but to the average audience, unversed in the metaphor and cross-weaving of modern organ music, such a "Chor- ale" cannot be suitable. The trend of the music is definitely in con- trast; heavy chords are followed by shrill chords, only to be revert- ed to the massive structure which opens the number. The chords are what bother most of all; none of them are definitely melodious; there is always one note, sometimes two or three, which make the chord just wrong. In the anticipation that such a chord will be straight- ened out by the next measure, the audience accepts it as a queer trick by the author to be just a bit dif- ferent-the only, trouble w i t h "Chorale" being that the chords never straighten, never become un- tangled. "Pastelle" by the famous Karg- Elert was yesterday's most ravish- ing surprise. Beginning softly, a tremendous climax draws it rather out of the 'pastelle' class, but makes it nevertheless effective, Widor's "Scherzo," as unlike Wid- or's usual virility as night from day, was another favorite on yes- terday's offering. "Twilight at Fie- sole" by Bingham is a study in changing light, melting into the dusk of the Apennine s, with con- ventional convent bells and all. But the best, "Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor" (Bach) coming Itpays to look over the wal The industry that succeeds today is the business from $1,000,000 to $5,5 one that looks outside its own"back-yard" -a wholesale grocer to enlarge I for ways to make itself more valuable. ume 25% at a big saving in over For many years, Bell System men a soap salesman to sell $6000 w have been working out ideas to increase goods in one afternoon at a sellir the use and usefulness of the telephone. of less than 1%! For example, they prepared plans for This spirit of cooperation is or selling by telephone which helped an son why the Bell System enjoys insurance man to increase his annual portant a place in American busi 00,000 his yol- head- orth of ng cost ne rea- so im- ness. CAMPUS OPllNllON The Editor: A day or so ago The Daily published a news item taining to the change of venue in the trial of the rlan County miners in Kentucky. I thought it f