THE MICHTCAN DAILY 1TSDAY, sM IER 2l 1927. 1 I .___J".____ I1 "1.l.r yJJ. u...".".'1 .!t Published every morning except Monday ring the University year by the board in ntrol of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Fsociation. The Associated Press is exclusively en. iled to the use for republication of all news spatches credited to it- or not otherwise edited in this paper and the local news pub- hed herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, ichigan, as second class matter. Special rate postage granted by Third Assistant Post- caster General. Suscription by carrier, $4,oo; by mail, so. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- rd Street. Phones: Editorial, 4925; Business 21214. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR JO H. C.IAMBERLIN Editor....................Ellis B. Merry Staff Editor... ....Philip C. Brooks City Editor.............Courtland C. Smith Editor Michigan Weekly..Charles E. Behymer Women's Editor..........Marian L. Welles Sports Editor............Herbert E. Vedder Theater, Books and Music.Vincent C. Wall, Jr. Telegraph Editor. . ... ... Ross . W. Ross Assistant City Editor.....Richard C. Kurvink Night Editors Mar Alexa Emm Strat Jean Jessi Sydn Willi Willia 'mas(t Orvi Clare Marg Edith Marj Jame Robe Milt Elai4 Josep rt E. Finch G. Thomas McKean ewart Riooker Kenneth G. Patrick J. Kern Nelson J. Smith, Jr. Milton Kirshbaum Reporters garet Arthur Charles R. Kaufman ander N. Donald J. Kline Bochnowski Sally Knox nons A. Bonfield Jack L. Lait, Jr. ton Buck Richard H. Milroy Campbell Charles S. Monroe e Church Catherine Price ey M. Cowan Mary, E. Ptolemy am B. Danis Harold L. Passman am C. Davis Morris W. Quinn n de Ia Vergne Pierce Rosenberg lie L. D~owzer David Scheyer. nce N Edelson Robert G. Silbar aret Gross Howard F. Simon h V. Egel an' George E. Simons orie Follmer Alfred L. Singer s B. Freeman Sylvia Stone :rt J. Gessner George Tilley on L. GollsteiE Edward L. Warner,J ie E. Gruber Leo J. Yoedicke ph E. Howell Joseph Zwerdling Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER WILLIAM C. PUSCH Assistant Manager.... George H. Annable, Jr. Advertising..............Richard A. Meyer Advertising..........Arthur M. Hinkley Advertising...............Edwad L. Hulse Advertising..-.......John W. Rsinckel Accounts...............Raymond Wacter -; Circulation . .......George B. Ahl, Jr. Publication ...... ....Harvey Talcott Assistants Fred Babcock Ray Hofelich George Bradley Marsden R. Hubbard James 0. Brwn Hal A. Jaehn James B. Co'pe James Jordan Charles K. (orr\ll Marion Kerr Bessie U. Egeland Thales N. Lenington Ben Fishman W. A. Mahaffy Katherine Frochne George M. Perrett Douglass Fuller Alex K. Schrer Herbert Goldberg William L. Schloss L. H. Goodman Herbert E. Varnum Carl W. Hammer TUESDAY, SEIPTEMBER 27, 1927 Night Editor-NELSON J. SMITH, JR. THE CHEERING SECTION Continuing its efforts to fill entirely the block "M" cheering section for the three big home football games, the Student Council committee in charge has effected an arrangement whereby students who have already mailed their football applications may yet en- roll in the cheering section. For each of the 150 male students who are needed to fill it, this section offers the opportunity to secure a much better seat at each of the big home games than would otherwise be obtained as well as to support the Varsity team in the best vehicle of or- ganized cheering. Previous arrange- ments have been made with the ath- letic association so that all members of the sections may obtain their reg- ularly allotted number of extra tick- ets, and may exchange their tickets to the section for one outside if they so desire for any game. Under such circumstances, the sec- tion should commend itself to both the students who have not yet applied for their tickets and those who have already sent in their applications. THE IRISH ELECTIONS With the vindication of the Cos- grave government in the recent Irish elections the political situation of the Emerald Isle has assumed a position of stability which it has scarcely ap- proached since the granting of the Free State autonomy. The Labor party and the Fianna Fail group, led by deValera, have apparently been decisively put out of the picture, for the new Cosgrave organization will go into the Dail with a working majority of six votes over the combined opposi- tion of all, other parties. The defeat of deValera and John- son, the labor leader, is probably the best thing that has happened to Ire- land in many years. It means that in place of the soap box radicalism of the extremists the rather sound and liberal government of Cosgrave will be given full reign. Ireland can not go forward as long as she is torn by dissension within, and the gaining of power by any of the radical groups would mean a retardation of economic and social progress until the island weathered another severe political CAMPUS OPINION Annonymous communications will be disregarded. The names of communi- cants will, however, be regarded as confidential upon request. AN INDICTMENT Sept. 24, '27. To the Editor: Your paper this morning refers to the suggestion of Dr. Burroughs, fol- lowing Sir Arthur Keith's recent state- ments before the meeting of the Brit- ish Association for the Advancement of Science, that it would be a goodj thing if we could all take a scientific holiday and close up every laboratory for ten years while we shift and as- similate all this new "maze of revo- lutionary knowledge"--for, says the Bishop, "human nature is not fitted to be entrusted safely with the enormous powers which science is putting with- in its reach." It is easy to point out, as Professor Cooley has done so well in that treas- ure of mellow wisdom-"Life and the Student"-that "the timid Christian is afraid of a rough-and-tumble hand- ling of the facts. He wants to take out an insurance policy on what he is used to regarding as sacred, to lock it up in a safe at a bank. He has no real confidence in its vitality; would protect it, protect it to death. He will use force to suppress opposition, or rather get others to use it for him, because he does not trust the freedom he is supposed to cherish." It is easy to pile up-and some one should con- stantly pile up before the church- evidence of what Principal Jacks of Oxford in his happy terminology calls the "lost radiance of the Christian re- ligon,' and, indeed, of its practical impotence in the life of the world to- day. But in the end we shall go back, as the Bishop does, to human nature, i.e. to the everyday problems of human beings who are "not yet fitted to be entrusted safely with the enormous powers which science is putting with- in its reach." And the question arises: "What is the Church doing to lead the 'man in the street' to such personal experience of dynamic spiritual- and ethical reality as will be adequate for his needs in a world much changed be- cause of the ,tremendous advance made in other fields during the quarter of a century in which the church is accused of having been dormant?" This question is one of vast and vital implications, and cannot be solved or dismissed by declaring a mental holi- day but rather by bringing the best brains everywhere to bear on a tre- mendously complicated situation on which the nature of the immediate future of the race seems largely to depend. It has not been an easy task for the church to get adjusted to the new knowledge of which, in the nature of things, its leaders could hardly speak with any large degree of first- hand understanding, but it is a task which should have been earnestly and honestly tackled in a spirit of ad- venturesome .co-operation that would welcome truth wherever found. Be- cause they have sidestepped or been deliberately dishonest in their atti- tude to changing viewpoints, the church and its auxiliary organiza- tions, now largely preoccupied with buildings and budgets, have failed to meet the needs of and lost caste with the generation which is now going to apply the new knowledge to the prob- lelems of the world and solve them,- if they can. The hope of the world, so far as the religion of Jesus is concerned, is in the increasing number of eager, cyni- cal, idealizing, puzzled, keen-witted, eiancipated group of young men and women who have discovered the church's betrayal of the principles of Jesus. They have come to have noth- ing but contempt-or still more dead- ly, indifference-for the ecclesiastical reading of the Sermon on the Mount with one eye, the other being pain- fully squinting at the collection plate to see if anyone is seriously offended. And they will go almost any length to regaiji lost leadership of Jesus in the e affairs of state and church. The an- swer to the church is in its master's answer to Nicodemus: "You must be born again!" What the church needs today as much as nineteen hundred years ago, is a complete change of mind and vision. It needs to be pulled out of itself; it needs to loose all the non-essentials which in some remote past may have been of great value, but nowJiave lost all meaning. One looks in vain in the deliberations of the recent Lausanne Conference for anything that really touches any of men's serious problems. If the churches ultimately fail to become the, community beacon lights they were meant to be, it is possible that that function will increasingly pass on to our schools and colleges, and that much spiritual strength.may come to us in working with those who must guide the destiny of laborers TOASWDRLLS THE WE Y APPARS Published with the intention of tak- ing the news of the campus to the folks back home, the first issue of the Michigan Weekly yesterday came into being. The new publication is not very 1 big, but it at least appears to be bet-t ter than its name might suggest to the illiterate.c . . * The success i obtaining subscrip-c tions is believed by some to be due to President Little's endorsement, be-t cause' of his great and constantly in-6 creasing popularity among the stu-d dents., s* *s ECHOES OF FRESHMAN WEEKa Due to a misfortune of a purely ac-~ cidental nature, the special moving1 picture program Sunday afternoon scheduled as a part of Rolls Fresh- man week, very narrowly missed beingr a failure. Members of the Student Council who were in charge of the1 affair almost forgot to make the necessary arrangements with Baron Butterfield, owner of Ann Arbor's three super-theaters. However late Sunday morning one ofa the boys suddenly forgot he was aI councilman and got busy. And as a1 result, the program was saved. * * * - Ten freshmen were on hand and inI allotted seats when the first pictureI flickered across the screen. Two more{ arrived at 3 o'clock to check in on the{ attendance rolls and see the remain-' der of the performance. * * * The program came to an abrupt end half an hour before the scheduled time, when the operator delayed in changing reels. The audience decided they had seen enough, and departed before the action could be resumed. * * * It had been planned to present the main picture of each of Ann Arbor's movie houses. However, by the time all the animated cartoons, news reels and slapsticks had been run off, time was left only for the presentation of part of 'the' Rae's feature offering. * * * Managers of the local theaters were extremely disappointed over the re- sult. "We will continue showing the pictures for several days,' declared their spokesman, "so that all may have a.chance to see them." OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES Dear Ben: One week we were treated like kings, and then suddenly things changed. For next year, I suggest all Freshmen shall be warned, and told to provide themselves with the follow- ing euipment: 1 pair of trousers cut off at knees. (Saves rolling.) 1 coat with sleeves sewed in back- wards.' 1 extra seat for trousers. (Saves embarrassment after 15 minutes of inland rowing.)' 1 set of telephone linemen's climb- ers. 1 public speaking text. 1 copy of "How to Propose." 1 policeman's whistle. 1 pair of running shoes. (May make other articles unnecessary.) I leave it to your humane instincts to see that in future years all Fresh- men are provided with these articles. A Freshman. * * * THEY'RE OFF The would-be fiery-tongued mem, bers of our campus debating societies will get hot tonight in the opening program of the season. * * * Up at Adelphi the huskies will fight ti out over the proposition that fra. ternities are detrimental to Freshmen. If they had only held the question over until initiation time, they would have little difficulty in finding plenty of Frosh to support the affirmative.' * * * After observing specimens of theI men of '31 who are displaying them- selves so prominently about the campus the big question appears to be whether the fraternities are not the ones most liable to harm. AMONG other things, painting the window sills on the old Physics build- ing can scarcely be called gilding the lily. A freshman standing in front of Angell Hall stepped boldly up to an upperclassman and said "Will you please tell me where the campus is?" THEATER BOOKS MUSIC 8:30 AND ALL'S WELL Editor's Note: The curtain is ris- ing on the New York season, and little comment has been made about it in this column. Since it is an intention to keep as much abreast of the pass- ing show in Gotham as possible, a contributor submits the following thumbnail comment of the shows now current in Broadway theaters:) Tidings from Manhattan, home of the carnivals and peep-shows, seem to bear witness that Thespis, Muse of the dramatist's agile typewriter, lies prostrate, stricken perhaps by the caloric Indian Summer. The man- agers and producers, devout if calcu- lating worshippers at her temple are, indeed, but now beginning to revive her with their offerings. Prominent among those votive pul- motors and blood-transfusions by which the showmen strive to bring last season's bloom back to Thespis' cheeks, one finds "Burlesuqe" a salty Odyssey of the Columbia wheel. It is a postgraduate of the "Broadway" school of playwriting, said even to challenge that turbulent saga in color and adroitness. "The Command to Love," another offering of but yes- terday, is declared to be akin to the ruby epics of the smoking-cars in its boudoir manner of telling how a French ambassador gave his All for his county. It is a jocular anecdote, quite unfit for relation in this chaste sheet; Miss Mary Nash and other notables are involved in its judicious indelicacies. "Women Go On Forever," which features Miss Mary Boland, lately a Cradle Snatcher, is also rumored to be no show to take your Aunt Sarah from Walla Walla to, lest she cut you off in her will.. It Is a bitter, gritty, and somehow fine tragedy, barely on speaking terms with the decencies; and dealing cross-sectionally with the inmates of a cheap boarding house. One episode concerns the seduction of a sex-starved spinster by a blind boy who fancies her beautiful. "The Trial of Mary Dugan," in which the Platin- um-tressed Miss Ann Harding is again suffering prettily, is the latest of the trick-plays. The scene is a court- room throughout; the curtain never falls,courtrecesses taking the place of act divisions. An exhilarating frameup by the author of "The 13th Chair," it tells of a Follies girl who apparently has slain her sugar daddy, lest she succumb to his bedroom blandishments - thus demonstrating that the wages of sin is a good box- office report. "Revelry," on the other hand, is an intriguing, if Democratic, rattling of the bones of a Republican administra- tion, just past with Berton Churchill of "Alias the Deacon" as an alchholic and amative President of these United States, an ingenuous zero who sui- cides to foil impeachment. And in "Four Walls," John Golden, hitherto the most Listerine of the impresarios, touches the unsanitary if profitable pitch of a gangster's life and loves, thus leaving the kindergarten of the drama for its first grade. For those quaint souls who still cling to the decencies of the theater, there is G. S. Kaufman's "Wild Man of Borneo," a rich cartoon of a lov- able but unveracious side-show fakir of the Gay '90's. There .is also "Pic- wick," which puts Dickens' pinguid hero on the stage as he should be put -if he must be. The drama is often at its worst when a book-worm; and "Pickwick," while entertaining when considered, as a series of tableaux- vivants, takes a bit too long to pass a given point to be valid drama. As for the revels and saturnalia, chief among them is of course the al- ways vendible "Follies," in which the M. Ziegfeld, wresting back his mantle from the predacious Shubert's returns to knock the revue customers for a row of Venus de Milos. Also promi- nent are "Padlocks of 1927," Texas Guinan's gay and untidy attack on the civic virtues; "Good News," Joe Col- lege set to music; the Negro "Rang Tang," a fleet and dull-witted pick- aninnny with the licorice Miller and 'Lyles; "A La Carte," an intimate re- view, notable chiefly for its sketches by Mr. George Kelly, an album of acid photographs of the American burgess. And then, for those old enough to vote, there is always Win- throp Ames' "Mikado," with Gilbert's tartest verses set to Sullivan's sugar- ed score. ...... So goes the season. -By Robert Wetzel. The Shuberts are planning, in a quiet way, to build another theater in { { 1 1 I I I 1 I { Ili { i . { llt ®i