THE MICHIGAN DAILY CHIGAN DAILY Established 1890SCreen Relcions ~I'1 AT THE MAJESTIC I" **k "THE BOWERY" Chuck Connors....... Wallace Beery Steve Brodie........... George Raft Swipes McGurk ...... Jackie Cooper Lucy Calhoun............Fay Wray Iii S o - - s -- DI yt~TRH ~ADc'rcoS36 Wes. ,,] " f Published every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- tion a-14 the Big Ten News Service. " aciated ( otlr iate re 1933 HM1O7 ,-3934 as MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated-Press is exclusively entitled to the use for repubication 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 isapatches are reserved. Entered atrthe Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. *L'0. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; by 2:iil, $4.25.' Oices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2-1214. Represetatives: College Publications Repreentatives, lnc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Sreet, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR...........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR.............C. HART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR.........................BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS'EDITOR...............ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR..... ............CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- liam 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. REPORTERS: Roy Alexander, John A. Babington, Ogden G. Dwight, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Thom~as H. Kleene, Rich- ard E. Larch, David G. Macdonald, Joel P. Newman, Kenneth Parker, George I. Quimby, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, 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 Hanmer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Sally Place, Rosalie ;,Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 .;BUSINESS MANAGER .............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER . ............BERNARD E. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER .. .. . M..C HNRY. i)EPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trick; Classified 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: RALPH G. COULTER Welcome Home The Victors.. I N THE GAME yesterday Mich- igan mounted another rung in the ladder leading to national championship. The game was hard fought; many writers will say that Illinois had the upper hand. But when the gun went off the score was Michigan 7, Illinois 6. At three-thirty this afternoon the team will re- turn. A large crowd will be at the depot to meet them. Students, faculty members, and towns- people who want to help give the men the pep they will need if they are to continue undefeated will be on hand to show their enthusiastic appre- ciation with a royal welcome. Judge Sample's 'Public efender'. . In this story of the nineties there is a good at- mosphere built up for the plot which concerns itself with the battle between Steve Brodie and Chuck Connors for the position of toughest and best man in the Bowery. In the beginning Con- nors operates the best saloon in the district, and Steve Brodie is becoming a more and more dan- gerous rival for him. Each one is the leader of a volunteer fire brigade, and the main object of each when someone yells "Fire" is to get his men together and to be at the fire before the other. A street fight ensues, and the whole Bowery takes part, completely neglecting the blaze. Chuck and Steve continue to exchange hostilities, and when Lucy Calhoun, a sweet, penniless young thing from Albany, appears, the competition becomes more acute than ever. Present at all events in the pot is Swipes McGurk. Swipes is an orphan whom Chuck picked up in the gutter and made his protege. Steve and Chuck compete for Lucy, Swipes, the Bowery, and a stronger hatred of each other until Steve is driven to making his famous jump from the Brooklyn Bridge. "The Bowery" is an excellent vehicle for Wal- lace Beery's entertaining personality, George Raft's sleek egotism, and Jackie Cooper's boy- hood appeal. Each one does an excellent charac- terization, making the story quite real. Contrary to Mae West's "She Done Him Wrong," this story has very little feminine appeal, the slight emo- tional trend being entirely masculine except for those parts in which Fay Wray is present. It is good light entertainment. The added attractions at the Majestic include a Merrie Melody cartoon, a comedy containing some accomplished acrobats, and a news reel in which are shown Mrs. Roosevelt, Prima Carnera, Frances Perkins and others all offering a contrast to the gay nineties, the Bowery, and Ta-ra-ra Boom De Ay. C. B.C. CamusOpinion 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. UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL DISCIPLINARY ACTION To the Campus: In answer to numerous inquiries, I am taking this opportunity to clarify the past action of the Undergraduate Council disciplinary committee. Four cases have been passed on the faculty dis- ciplinary committee. In each of these cases the identical recommendation was made -two weeks suspension. In two cases the recommendation was followed verbatim, in two other cases the two weeks stipulation of the student committee was removed and the penalty made indefinite suspen- sion. There have been numerous other cases where individuals and groups have been warned - in some cases verbally, in some by a formal hearing, and in some by mail. Hopwood Poetry A' THESE poems, "Windy Eucharist" and "Pity the Dead," are by E. Florence Swanson, Grad. For permission to publish them we are indebted to Poetry, in whose pages they first appeared. Miss Swanson is competing in the Hopwood Contests for the first time this year. On Tuesday the poems will be reviewed by Mr. George Helm of the English Department. Windy Eucharist I am so straitly bound to earth that I must cry To birds that flock across the morning sky, Saying, "Deliver me, I die." And all the while Under their wind-tossed file Of frail omniscience, I revile Earth sweet with springtime, roots released Out of strong ice, imprisonment ceased, And the sleek wild things come to feast On new green grass and water flowing free, The very Eucharist that should be Wine and nourishment to me. Fool that I am, who have not had Grace enough to make me glad, For whom all tenderness is sad; Who to this banquet bring no sweet Vessel of ointment, wipe no feet Worn with rich travel, and more fleet Than mine that lag along the way: Since I must watch birds fling the day Under their wings, and enviously cry, Saying, "Deliver me, I die." Pity the Dead Pity the dead who lie in impervious prisons With their still hands precisely folded, and their eyes Forever bandaged against the surprise of morning. Lest they should ever come forth in happier dis- guise, Lest they should ever become as sweet as wind and rain, They are constrained to stay as dead men ever. Now while I live there have been walls enough To keep me from the full sweet savor of living, And when I die I would have even my flesh release me. Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE GEN. HUGH JOHNSON, recovery chief, has a powerful swing to his walk and a "bark" in his voice that frightens off the timid. But a startled office boy can attest they create the wrong impression. The boy walked into the general's office to find him lying on the floor, reaching under the carpet in an attempt to change some wires that lead to a buzzer in the outside office. The General had found out that the buzzer was so loud it got on the nerves of his secretarial staff. THE human factor in the recovery program crops up even in the legend of cold figures being collected by the administration through the President's re-employment census. An Iowa employer had a novel plan for taking up the farm surplus. He advised that married women be forbidden employment so they could stay .home and raise families that would eat up the surplus. One business man added a postscript which said: "I employ one man and have no use for him. He is my wife's brother." "5ISTIE" DALL, little yellow-haired grand- daughter of the President, went shopping with her grandmother. She was intrigued particularly by a glass paper- weight containing two dice which she could shake around. To the store clerks she whispered that she would be back to buy it for her grandfather "so he can have some fun." EVEN the periodically heated hearings in the senate's investigation of the stock market draw nothing but "parlor cussing" from the commit- tee's chairman. Senator Fletcher of Florida is addicted to "dang it." Senator Carter Glass of Virginia rips off a snorting "dad bum it" when he is riled. WHEN President Roosevelt made his Russian announcement he handled the matter in a manner worthy of the sharpest of the trained newspaper men facing him. Some hundred orrespondents w'ere ushered into the President's office. Then the door was locked. Itwas the first time any such order had been given. But the President wanted to give the men all an even chance in the dash for tele- phones. * * * * FINANCIAL experts keep an eagle eye on car- loading as an indication of the health of business. But General Johnson, who is responsible for the administration's plan to revive business, has his own favorite index. "Never mind loadings," says the general. "How many overalls are selling?" PROBABLY the first potatoes that ever took a parachute jump turned up in a fluffy, mashed condition on the White House dinner table re- r ilia "The WALL STREET JOUR- NAL is business and financial education. Send for sample copy a"d special student rateswith-HC out obligation. 44 Broad Street, Ni m York." PRINTING-Lowest City Prices THE ATHENS PRESS Downtown - 206 North Main Next to Main Post Office Dial 2-1013 WE SELL TYPEWRITING PAPER ia MICHIGANL Y"1 A .UFW 4T Have Your Shoes Repaired by an Shoe Repairer )NEST WORK AND HONEST PRICES Smith's Quality Shoe Repair Service 705 -Packard at State Stop in on your way to Ferry Field * .- IN.I SUDDEN. SERVICE v dl w :periencc r I .71 19 ,, 1 {W Y 1 AlL FIRST NATIONAL BA AND TRUST COMPA Established 1863 Oldest National Bank In Michigan NK NY ble >n Every Baking Service Availa Domestic --- Foreign Under U. S. Government SupervisiO Member Federal Reserve System DJAILYI i ce- - CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS I 'C] ITZ RE LS I in Thursday Nov. 9, at 8:15 Hill Auditorium Tickets $1. $1.50,$2. A limited number of season tickets are still available at $5., $7, $8.50 and $10. UDGE GEORGE W. SAMPLE is reported in the local press to have advocated the substitution of a public de- fender, elected by the people, in all criminal cases in place of counsel employed by defendants. His plan would violate one of the most sacred principles of common-law freedom, for it would remove from the judge and jury the decision of guilt or innocence and place it in 'the hands of this official. "He (the public defender) would reveal all evi-; dence for an acquital if he believed the respon- dent innocent of the crime charged," Judge Sam- ple has been quoted as saying. "If, however, he believed the respondent guilty, he would take no prolonged steps to bring about liberty, but would demand justice the same as the prosecutor." Besides being a violation of the rights of free- dom, this plan, if it were put into effect, would, in our opinion, be a violation of the section of the State constitution which guarantees the re- spondent "assistance of counsel for his defense." According to the judge, this should apply only to those who are adjudged innocent by the public defender, whereas those whom he thinks are guilty should be denied this privilege. All that would be necessary to hold a trial of a man would be to ask the public defender whether the respondent, in his opinion, were guilty or not guilty. If he said not guilty, then the respon- dent could have a trial according to the law, with his constitutional rights fully upheld. If on the other hand, the defender ruled him guilty, let' the learned judge of the law pass sentence on him without further ado. Such a procedure should boost the judge's number of convictions, if nothing else. We can see Judge Sample's point. It is much harder to decide a case when the counsel for the Disciplinary action at this University is handi- capped by the lack of suitable penalties. There are three possible at the present: 1. Probation. This means practically nothing unless the indiviual is interested in some extra- curricular activity. To my mind it is doubtful, then, if removing some man from the healthful competition of a campus activity and giving him a couple hours more leisure time every day is advisable. In cases of poor scholarships, pro- bation has merits, but in cases of conduct it is usually leisure time that has caused the trouble. 2. Addition of hours. This penalty regardless of its merits cannot be applied now as the fac- ulties are discussing it, and for the present are opposed to its application. 3. Suspension. A university ruling, "ifa student is guilty of public intoxication he shall be sus- pended from the university." Consequently 1 under the present system we must either let a student off entirely or place him on probation (which is a close equivalent) or else we may suspend him. There are many cases where a student merits some punishment but does not deserve being sus- pended for the semester or year. It was for this reason that we established the precedent of two weeks suspension. The individual' is sent home and a letter is sent to his parents explaining the action. He must at the expiration of the two week period present a letter from his parents to his Dean stating that they have talked the matter over with their son and asking that he be rein- stated. This penalty is based on the theory that the home can do more for the individual than the university. It is the system in use at several east- ern colleges. In closing I might say that our disciplinary com- mittee has no spy system, that we don't go around looking for misconduct cases, but that every re- commendation thus far taken has been in cases where the offense was so pubplic as to result in arrest. In each case the individual pleaded guilty. If anyone has any suggestions for the better- ment of student disciplinary action, or if anyone can suggest any other suitable penalty, the com- mittee would be glad to hear-from them. Gilbert E. Bursley President, Undergraduate Council At Arizona State College the Women's Ath- letic Association recently sponsored a dance. HORAL UNION SERIES FOR GIFTS LEATHER GOODS FOR GIFT BILL FOLDS BRIDGE SETS BRIEF CASES LETTER CARRIERS KEYTAINERS NOTEBOOKS DIARIES BOOK COVERS MEMORY BOOKS ZIPPER CASES UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE' S q STATE STREET MAIN STREET Has a "SLOUCH" a Stride That Has "SNAP" and "STYLE"? And WHY? Drooping shoulders ... baggy trousers . . untidy topcoats ... unblocked hats - all go hand in hand. So WHAT? When he sends his clothes to SWISS, he'll throw back his shoulders; he'll have a reason to be proud. IT'S TIME FOR US TO CLEAN QUTi(Z AND YOUR TUX OR FULL DRESS