PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1930 Published every morning except Monday during the University year by the Board in Control of Student Publications. Member of Western Conference Editorial Association. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication o, all news dis- patches credited to it or not otherwise credited in thie paper and the local news published herein. Entered at the postoffice at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second class matter. Special rate of postage granted by Third Assistant Post- master General. Subscription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, $4.50. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- niard Street. Phones:Editorial, 4925; Business, 212r4. EDITORIAL STAFF Telephone 4925 R MANAGING EDITOR Chairman Editorial Board HENRY MERRY City Editor Frank E. Cooper News Editor........Gurney Williams Editorial Director...........Walter W. Wilds Sports Editor.............Joseph A. Russell Women's Editorr............ Mary L. Behymer Telegraph Editor.......... Harold 0. Warren Musicaand Drama.......William J. Gorman Assistant News Editor...Charles R. Sprowl NIGHT EDITORS S. Beach Conger John D. Reindel Carl S.Forsythe Richard L. Tobin David M. Nichol Harold O. Warren Sports Assistants Sheldon C. Fullerton J.sCullen Kennedy. Robert Townsend Reporters Walter S. Baer, Jr. Wilbur J. Myers Irving J. Blumberg Robert L. Pierce Donald O. Boudeman Sler M. Quraishi Charles M. Brown C. Richard Racine George T. Callison Jerry E. Rosenthal George Fisk (George Rubenstein .ernard W. Freund David Sachs Morton Frank Charles A. Sanford Saul Friedberg Karl Seiffert Frank B. Gilbreth Robert F. Shaw Karl E. Goelner Edwin M. Smith Jack Goldsmith George A. Stauter Rand Goodman Alfred R. Tapert William H. Harris John S. Townsend James H. Inglis Robert D. Townsend Emil J. Konopinski Max H. Weinberg Denton C. Kunze Joseph F. Ziasb Powers Moulton Lynne Adams Margaret O'Brien Betty Clark Eleanor Rairdon Elsie Feldman Jean Rosenthal Elizabeth Gribble Cecilia Shriver Emily G. Grimes Frances Stewart Elsie M. Hoffmeyer Anne Margaret Tobin jean Levy Margaret 'Thompson Dorothy Magee Claire Trussell Mary McCall Barbara Wright BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER T. HOLLISTER MABLEY Assistant Manager KASPER H. HALVERSON Department Managers Advertising...............Charles T. Kline Advertising............. Thomas M. Davis Advertising............William W. Warboys Service..................Norris J. Johnson Publication ......... ,.. Robert W. Williamson Circulation ............Marvin S. Kobacker Accounts ....... .........Thomas S. Muir Business Secretary . . Mary J. Kenan Thomas E. Hastings Harry R. Begley William Brown Richard H. Hiller Vernon Bishop William W. Davis . Fred Schaefer Joseph Gardner Ann Verner Dorthen Waterman Alice McCully, Dorothy Bloomgarde Dorothy Laylin J osephine Convisser ernice Glaser Ilortense Gooding Byron V. Vedder Erle Kightlinger Richard Stratemeier Abe Kirshenbaum Noel D. Turner Aubrey L. Swinton Wesley C. Geisler Alfred S. Remsen Laura Codling Ethel Constas Anna Goldberg n Virginia McComb Joan Wiese Mary Watts Marian Atran Sylvia Miller Yet if Governor Roosevelt is will- ing to dissociate himself from pure party supports and rely upon the confidence of the people of New York he will have gone far toward satisfying the voters as to is own honest intentions. The cir- cumstances surrouding T a in- many's corruptibility makes such a stand imperative; in the event of Governor Roosevelt's failure to hit the issue squarely, the governor- ship which was a few weeks ago safe within his hands may have slipped or been lost completely. A BID FOR LEADERSHIP. No one on Michigan's campus who is alive to student well-being can ignore the impending actions of the dean's office and the Inter- fraternity council with regard to deferred rushing. Yet this measure is only a barometer indicating a progressively mobile attitude toward fraternities in other aspects than their rushing. It is quite pertinent, therefore, and even tremendously important that those representatives selected for the Interfraternity council by intelligence, leadership and alert- ness to the issues at point with regard to club affairs. Never before in the life of fraternities on Mich- igan's campus has so definite an offensive thrust been made toward them. The Council this year is a position by way of being momen- tous for two reasons: the serious nature of the particular matters with which it must be concerned demands an energetic vigilance and earnest consideration; the willingness of the dean's office to await the council's proposals for the enforcement of deferred rush- ing is motivated by a hope that that body will supply an efficient and trustworthy plan for fraternity co-operation in rushing under new rules. The future of student leader- ship and voice in the management of campus as well as their so-called private affairs depends largely upon the quality and nature of the work which the Interfraternity council undertakes this year. It is quite clearly apparent, then, that the former practice of send- ing to the Interfraternity council those members who had nothing better to do, or who could do their house no wrong, or who were the only gullible ones available must be abandoned. If the houses this year fail to elicit the greatest forces of leadership and intelligent inter- est in undergraduate affairs for the new council, we predict that a sorry step will soon be taken toward a re-focussing of student matters in the eyes of the admin- istration. RELEGATED TO THE BACK- GROUND. (From Yale Daily News). Soon Yale will induct into serv- ice a new University pastor, and he will find himself confronted with the problem of religious apa- thy on our campus. By this we do not mean that Yale stands unique as the home of the atheist and agnostic, but simply that there are comparatively few of her students who look upon religious worship and belief as a vital force in their lives. Aside from the psychological or theological aspects of the modern religious situation, we have con- stantly felt that a very real cause of the apathy aforementioned is ignorance. Religious education is not zealously sponsored by the churches outside the Roman Cath- olic Church, whatever it might be in that institution; it is left to the family, who leave it to the schools and colleges, who neglect it. At Yale we have courses, well taught and comprehensive, which deal with the Christian religion. But this is not sufficient. The asso- ciation of intellectual brilliance with religious indifference has come about because of an attitude such as is adopted by the average instructor in the schools and col- leges. This individual, imbued with the doctrine that nothing should be believed before investigation, and teaching the same lesson to his classes, has found religion in- accessible. Too much of the emo- tional side is demanded of him, and he cannot give it without first finding intellectual support. So in all his lectures he passes slighting- ly over the one field which has resisted his scientific attempts at analysis, and religion drops into obscurity in all courses but those few especially detailed to cover it. Undergraduates will not yield to religious faith, until they have learned something of the facts. They will not elect studies that Well, fellows, today we go to seef the hope and pride of Mich. StateI preform. My one ardent wish is that I don't have to sit behind that old lady who didn't like my re- marks about the Ypsi players. What's more, I don't want anyone1 breathing wood alcohol f u m e s1 down my neck.-the skin isn't alll back on it yet from last week. * * * Just as an added incentive to go and see the Ann Arbor police force do tricks with their hired squad of drunks and pickpockets which they so suc- cessfully capture each week, the weather man tells us that the usual rain will be in evi- I don't like football anyway, dence at the festivities. Oh well, and the M. S. C. ticket didn't cost me anything. * *- * Signs of the season are plenti- fully scattered around us. Only yesterday the Rolls Pherret saw two lovely young ladies walking down Church Street with a football in each hand. Probably out to make the team. * * * The Rolls Society for Moral and Aesthetic Uplift has handed in a resolution to the effect that, due to the demoralizing effect of such a spectacle, upon the loyalty and pride of the student body, whoever is responsible for the turning of the side yard of the Architectural Building into a public dump should be ostracized. * ' * * A recent headline states:- Sturgis to Describe Treating of Anaemia in Eastern Lecture. Good stuff! Maybe we can get him out here to treat some of our lectures too. It's things like this that restore my faith in science. * * * There may yet be hope for the taxi situation here. The other day the Pherret saw a taxi in the Ann Arbor junk- yard. Of course there is always the possibility that it was one that had just arrived from out of town, and has not yet been added to the fleet. Anyway, it holds forth a cheering promise of change. * * * Our old pal Washtenaw T-une came out yesterday with a lovely banner declaiming "M. S. C, NEXT ON MICHGAN SCHEDULE TO- MORROW" The idea they want to get across being, no doubt, that Michigan isn't going to play any- one else before M. S. C.-at least not tomorrow. A whisper is going the rounds of the campus to the effect that Joe Parker's is going to revive the old time tradition about freshmen frequenting s u c h places of ill-oh never mind, just places. As an enforcement measure in support of this plan, they are going to serve such of the little dears as persist in coming with nothing but the purest and best of Ann Arbor milk.-At that the boys are getting off easy. They might serve them Ann Arbor water. * *.* I seem to be flooded with head- lines today. Another that caught .theeagle eye of one of the boys says:- tiROLL MUSIC AND DRMA TONIGHT: In the Mendelssohn Theatre beginning promptly at 8:30 a dance recital by Carola Goya, celebrated Spanish artist. MOLNAR APPEARS AGAIN IN NEW YORK. Henry Miller, a producer not particularly famous for integrity, tried to slip a program of two Molnar pot-boilers into the very difficult theatrical season last Mon- day night. The Violet with Ruth Gordon and One, Two, Three with Arthur Byron was the program. I am happy to record that the New York critics soundly trounced Mr. Miller for his attempt, calling par- ticular attention to the miserable over-writing in both plays, which contained hardly enough material for good one-acts, to the obvious shoddiness of the direction, the inadequacy of everyone in the minor cast, and the consequent terrible burden placed on Miss Gordon and Mr. Byron, two of the most . competent and interesting actors on the American stage. The Violet is a vaudeville skit about the deplorable tendency of feminine theatrical applicants to offer their bodies to managers (illustrated soundly by four girls acting in good burlesque tradition) and the eventual success of one girl who exploits an extremely subtle naivete (played by Ruth Gordon so charmingly and with so many intriguing, indefinable aspects of technique as to almost make the piece worthwhile). "One, Two, Three" satirises in an obvious, unsubtle way the effi- ciency of the contemporary busi- ness *man. Nordsen, a modern Napoleon, is suddenly presented presented with a situation in which he must change a burly taxi-driver with boots and a mackinaw into a sophisticated member of the aris- ticracy- an admirable theme for a musical comedy sketch. A whole banking organization is called into play. There are, of course, amusing moments but the affair becomes very tedious in twenty minutes and it lasts an unintermissioned ninety. Arthur Byron, the late warden of The Criminal Code, gives an amaz- ing display of virtuosity, excel- lently varying his tempo, manner of delivery, and style of motion. The incident is merely another illustration of the American pro- ducer's deplorable habit of forcing us to see our best actors in bad pot-boilers. Yet it has a possible local relevance. Here and else- where, there seems to be a general opinion that Molnar is marvel- ously "playable." A better opinion, I think, would have it that Molnar (with the exception of Liliom, per- haps The Play's The Thing, and one or two others) is seldom worth playing at all and then iplayable only by virtuosi, who can add tech- nical interest to compensate for the inevitable thinness. There is no Ruth Gordon or Arthur Byron among amateurs. Molnar's is per- haps the most over-rated reput- tion in America. The fact of hav- ing sat through One, Two, Three and The Violet makes this judge- ment almost a grudge. Yet there has been local evidence too. And then last year in New York, Mima, the magnificent flop. CUSTOM-MADE CLOTHES $35 to $40 Collegiate Styles CHARLES DOUKAS 1319 South University _ -~________ z k i H. W. CLARK SHOE MANUFACTURER LADIES' & MEN'S Half Sole and Rubber Heels per 98c pair All Work Guaranteed Factory: 534 Forest Ave. 2nd Branch: 1113 South U. Ave. 3rd Branch: 210 E. Washington University Music House Devoted to Music William Wade Hinshaw Cor. Maynard & William Phone 7515 I BROWN-CRESS & Company, Inc. INVESTMENT SECURITIES Orders executed on all ex- changes. Accounts carried on conservative margin. Telephone 23271 ANN ARBOR TRUST BLDG. 1st Floor German American & R S Restaurant 512 East William Street PROPRIETOR, GOTTLIEB GERRBACH Good Home Cooking EVERY SATURDAY Pig Hocks and Spare Ribs, Sauerkraut and Spatzen......... EVERY SUNDAY Chicken Dinner with Dressing....................... . SUPPERS Wiener Stelitzel------------------------------------ All kinds of steaks ..... ... ... .... ..........- .50 and Chops................................................ French or American Fried Potatoes The Cheapest Price in the City Come and Bring Your Family THANK YOU .40 .65 .55 .45 .45 :..I 11 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1930 Night Editor--DAVID M. NICHOL NEW YORK'S GOVERNORSHIP. Two circumstances, both highly trenchant, have somewhat ruffled Governor Roosevelt's once smooth course to re-election in New York state's November vote. One marked change in the political outlook is the bringing over of the Repub- ican party to a statement in favor of repealing the Eighteenth Amendment. The second is the renewed charge of corruption in Tammany affairs. Six weeks ago, Governor Roosevelt's renomination and re-election would have been conceded by all save the staunch- est Republican leaders; now there are earmarks of an embrogio in- volving even Catalinian tendencies. The Republican stand on Prohi- bition was obviously intended to equalize the two parties on that issue. And while the Wet question, judged from the standpoint of party strategy, has probably been removed from the contest, the sops thrown to the Dry Republicans at the same time the stand for repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment was taken and the more virile and ex- plicit statement of the Democrats in favor of repeal seem capable of annoying the Republican forces. The Tammany corruption charge undoubtedly accounts for the nom- ination by the Republicans of Charles H. Tuttle, who stated in accepting the race for office that there would be only one issue in the coming campaign, namely, that created by recent disclosures con- cerning the judiciary in New York city and the refusal of John F. Curry, leader of Tammany Hall, and several district leaders to waive immunity and give testimony before the grand jury. The reaction of the Democrats to graft in high places was in the usual amusing party form. Former Governor Alfred E. Smith, in nom- inating Governor Roosevelt, loudly FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Cor. S. State and E. Washington Sts. Dr. Frederick B. Fisher, Minister 10:30 A. M.-Morning Worship. "PRAYING WITH MY MIND," by Dr. Frederick B. Fisher. 12:00 M.-Sunday School Class at Wesley Hall. Subject: "Compara- tive Religions." Leader: Mrs. Frederick B. Fisher. 6:00 P. M.-Devotional Meeting at Wesley Hall. Leader: Mr. Ralph Johnson, Student Director. Sub- ject: "The Heel of Achilles." 7:30 P. M.-Evening Worship. "MODERN YOUTH FOR WORLD PEACE," by Dr. Fisher. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH E. Huron, below State R. Edward Sayles, Minister Howard R. Chapman, Minister of Students. 9:45 A. M.-Church School. Mr. Wallace Watt, Superintendent. 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Sermon by Mr. Sayles, "THE BREAD OF LIFE." 12:00 Noon-University Students at Guild House (503 E. Huron). Mr. Chapman, in charge. 5:30 P. M.-Student Friendship Hour at Guild House. 6:30 P. M.-Devotional Hour. Rev. Howard R. Chapman, Minister of Students will speak. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH (Evangelical Synod of N. A.) Fourth Ave. between Packard and 'William Rev. Theodore R. Schmale 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. ANN ARBOR CHURCHES EXTEND A WELCOM TO THE STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY ON THEIR RETURN TO THE CITY. Complete Line of Everything Musical THE MATCHLESS BALDWIN LINE OF PIANOS VICTOR MAJESTIC BRUNSWICK RADIOS UNEXCELLED MARTIN BAND INSTRUMENTS Terms to Suit FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Huron and Division Sts. Merle H. Anderson, Minister Alfred Lee Klaer, University Pastor Mrs. Nellie B. Cadwell, Counsellor of Women. 9:30 A. M.-Church School, Rally Day in all classes. 10:45 A. M.-Morning;Worship, Holy Communion and Reception of New Members. Sermon: "Re- membrance by Doing" Rev. M. H. Anderson. 12:00 Noon-Student Classes. 5:30 P. M.-Social Hour for Young People. 6:30 P. M.-Young People's Meet- ing. Leader: Rev. Alfred Lee Klaer. Topic: "Objectives." !'- 17-- ATTEND CHURCH REGULARLY The gested ternity almost merely Two Thousand Sev- enty-six sleep in Tramp Room. Pherret straightway sug- that that could be a fra- early morning news bulletin any day in the week by changing it to read:- Two Thousand Sev- enty-six Tramp in Sleep Room. DETROIT THEATRES. After an absolutely dark summer, Detroit theatres are opening with shows of quite promising calibre. The Theatre Guild has opened its Detroit subscription season with Shaw's "The Applecart." New York critics hailed the play as Shaw's most loquacious and most un- dramatic: which has been his trend for some years. The interest now seems directed more toward the production which contains, among other things, some dazzling virtu- osity from Tom Powers in whose part lies "the longest speech in the history of drama." The Guild's vow to produce all of Shaw one has long thought an unfortunate de- cision; yet its persistence in that tradition has given its Shavian productions a technical interest that attracts patronage even when the play is thought to be weak. Next week Arthur Hammerstein's musical romance of the 90's "Sweet Adeline" will replace "The Apple- Cart" at the Wilson. This show with music by Jerome Kern and book by Oscar Hammerstein, and Helen Morgan, Irene Franklin and Charles Butterworth as the prin- cipals, was the most successful musical comedy in New York last season. i m FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Allison Ray Heaps, Minister Sunday, October 5, 1930 10:45 A. M.-Morning Worship. Mr. Heaps will preach the first of a series of sermons on "Reli- gion to Live By," the subject be- ing "How Shall We Think of God?" 5:30 P. M.-Student Fellowship Supper. 6:30 A. M.-President Alexander G. Ruthven will speak on "Stu- dent Responsibility.' ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURC Division and Catherine Streets Reverend Henry Lewis, Rector Reverend Duncan E. Mann, Assistant 8:00 A. M.-Holy Communion. 9:30 A. M.-Holy Communion. (Student Chapel in Harris Hall). 9:30 A. M.-Church School. (Kin- dergarten at 11 o'clock). 11:00 A. M.-Holy Cornarunion; sermon by Mr. Lewis. 6:00 P. M.-Student Supper in Harris Hall. Dscussion Group led by Mr. Mann. BE CONSISTENT IN YOUR RELIGION 10:06 A. Sermon Urge." M.-Morning topic: "The Worship. Onward * * * An Associated Press story tells of three men who entered a Chi- cago shoestore and, after holding up the place, got fitted for a pair 'of shoes. If that had been Ann Arbor, the_ men would have been held up by the proprietor and given a pair of shoes that didn't fit. * * * I see that the women have been given another day on which they may swim in the Union pool. I object to this strongly in view of the fact that t+-hg.'rneed t he. manev that 11:00 A. M.-German Service. 5:30 P. M.--Student Fellowship. 7:00P. M. - Young People's League. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Washington St. at Fifth Ave. E. C. Stellihorn, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Service in the Ger- man language. FIRST CHURCH CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 S. Division St. 10:30 A. M.-Regular Morning Service. Sermon topic: "UN- REALITY." ST. PAUL'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod) Third and West Liberty Sts. C. A. Brauer, Pastor 9:00 A. M.-Bible School. 11 11 I