THE MICHIGAN DAILY - THRSDAY, JULY 25, 1935 himself from religion and religious thoughts en- tirely, or else he makes an effort to gain a new, intelligent insight into the workings of the world, and a keener perception of his own significance in life. The latter point of view is unquestionably the most desirable, because it helps an individual to find himself, as it were, and, after all, if life is to possess any real meaning we must arrive at some conclusion regarding our relation to that greater meaning of things. This need not necessarily be bound up with the church as an institution - and it usually isn't - but is concerned with dis- covering some faith whereby the student can try to shape his life to give full expression to his own individuality, and give some clue as to that indi- v.dual's real significance. If college can aid the student in arriving at n some working philosophy of life, based on a healthy faith -even at the comparatively small expense of discrediting old church dogmas -then, and only then does the college or university have rea- son for existing. And if they do fulfill this very real need of our youth - we might almost call it a duty - then parents need not worry when a few ; insignificant provincial beliefs and doctrines are I overthrown. Better that they be bared than con- j tinue to hide the true purposes of life, and s eclipse the finer and nobler philosophy found in the church. z, , . A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON \VASHINGTON - The Deen adjournment resolu- tion gave Democratic leaders in the House a chance to put on an impressive show of their capa- city. One minute the House was cheering for adjournment. The next it was voting down the adjournment plan by crushing majorities. As it turned out, administration insiders are in- clined to thank the Georgia Democrat for his un- intended help. They expect that vote to have im- portant bearing not only on tax bill developments but on what happens to other pending New Deal measures as well. DANGERS UNFORESEEN JUST WHAT happened between times in the han- dling of the adjournment resolution is not fully disclosed. It is clear, however, that some im- portant New Deal figures were inclined to let each House member go it alone in deciding his atti- tude; to declare the administration opposition to adjournment but not to exert any other influence to beat the plan. To such advisers, it seemed that if Congress actually walked out on the White House, leaving much of the New Deal program hanging in air, Congress would have to shoulder responsibility to the voters for that act. There were others who saw a serious danger to presidential prestige in even a strong adjourn- ment minority vote in the House. They did not anticipate Senate concurrence, necessary to end the session abruptly within less than a week. They did believe, however, that Roosevelt lead- ership risked too much to take the chance. That view prevailed. The strategy of expedit, ing rather than attempting to stall off an ad- journment vote was the result. Party leaders, once the word was passed, realized that if the question hung fire the adjournment sentiment would gair strength day by day. There are plenty of House members who would welcome an escape from standing up and being counted on the tax votes ahead on the eve of their re-nomination cam- paigns. That feeling had a lot to do with the cheering for the adjournment idea. PRECIPITATING THE ISSUE BUT THE LEADERSHIP whip was cracked quickly and effectively. The adjournment cheers became "aye" votes to table the adjourn- ment resolution. What might have been the be- ginning of a House.revolt was forced to an issue before it could gain headway. As a result, the White House and its legislative lieutenants can point to that whopping majority against adjourn- ment to justify pressing the "must" program. Had Representative Deen allowed his resolution to simmer on the fire longer, there is no telling what might have happened. As it was, he pre- cipitated the issue of adjournment prematurely and New Deal House leadership, whether by White House direction or on its own initiative, took im- mediate advantage of the opportunity his move presented. a stout captain in the battle to defend freedom of the press, spoke the other day before the conven- tion of business and professional women at Seattle. His criticism of the young-man-in-a-hurry tactics of the brain trusters was particularly telling. "Those whose object is a new social order based on government control," said Dean Ackerman, "are taking advantage of the overwhelming sentiment of the American people for better social conditions and an improvement in the economic welfare of millions and are telling us that we must make haste or that all willbe lost. "This is not true. All will be lost if we make haste. Haste precipitated the World War. Haste made Communism, Fascism, and Naziism possible i Russia, Italy, and Germany. Haste prolongs a national crisis. It makes every emergency acute because it chokes opinion, reason, justice, and faith." -The Chicago Daily Tribune. AROUND TH E TOWN ... Last night our wanderings about town brought us to the sheriff's office down on West Ann street ... and to our surprise ... and we imagine yours es well . . . we found several of the deputies taking turns reading a newspaper-bound copy of Charles Dickens' "The Life of Jesus" . . . and from all observations most of 'em can hardly wait to see how the story, comes out. ** * * And incidentally . . . while looking over the jail register we noted that the officers are holding a Chinese graduate student . . on a charge of which he claims he's innocent . . . he doesn't speak the English language well and has difficulty in making himself understood . . . nobody'll go his bond . they've held him two weeks and he's going to miss all his summer school work. . . and yet nobody seems to care . . . the only person we know that has bothered to take an interest in him is Dr. Chapman of the local Baptist church . . . wonder what we'd think if we were accorded the same treatment in a Chinese bastille . . . I bet we'd holler like hell! In our wanderings we learned that Edward B. Frensdorf ... (who.. . in case you don't know ... is outstanding in national Democratic circles having run for Congress and the governorship of Michigan) . . . is very ill in St. Joseph's Mercy Hospital . . . visitors (and especially reporters) are not allowed to see him . . . nevertheless a very prominent Detroit newspaper has been quot- ing him every other day on current local Demo- cratic affairs . . . which leads us to wonder about the press. By the by ... did we ever tell you how the local police had their squad car stolen from their own back yard several months ago? . . . it was a good story ... and they're still smarting under the cha- grin of having outside police officers return it. SCREEN Four stars --shouldn't miss; three stars - very good; two stars - an average picture; one star - poor; no star - don't go. AT THE MAJESTIC Double Feature "BLACK FURY" A warner Brothers picture starring Paul Muni with Karen Morley, Barton MacLane, and others. The plot of "Black Fury" is a lie from beginning to end - so palpably false that any freshman, if he reads even the newspapers, can detect the ridic- ulous misrepresentations - but the picture is still the most important of the year, for it shows and discusses things that have been quite beyond Holly- wood's attentions before. While the ostensible reason the producers offer for the strike of Coaltown miners is the product of a feeble and barren imagination, the real rea- sons are at the same time graphically and forcibly made clear in "Black Fury." It's photography, dia- logue, and acting give the lie to its plot. Joe Radek (Paul Muni), while drunk, sways the miners to vote for a strike. Labor racketeers were the real force behind his action however, an evil agitator urging him to incite the laborers who should have been content to work under a satis- factory capital-labor agreement, which the solici- tous white-collar union leaders had negotiated. Scabs and gunmen come in, and the strikers repudiate Joe Radek. Only his heroism saves the strike, and the happy but improbable conclusion sees him receiving the plaudits of the public, while the head of the "special deputies" is led away in chains. Scenes of miserable living conditions, barren, work-ridden lives, and the brutality of hired strike- breakers make tensely realistic the powerful story. Paul Muni forgets to act again, and lives his role. Karen Morley is very good, and Barton MacLane is tougher than ever. Amusing scene: The coal tycoon (who was sur- prised to find out that there are professional strike-breaking outfits) warning the racketeer that, "I will countenance no violence whatsoever." The cinema has made a powerful invasion of a rich field. So powerful in many ways that one fears it may have frightened itself. Weeks late in arriving in Ann Arbor, "Black Fury" has been deemed appropriate for No. 2 posi-. tion on a middle-of-the-week double bill by the Majestic management. -R.A.C. Fire Destroys Hiram Walker Distillery I CLAS SIFTED DIRECTORY LAUNDRY LAUNDRY. 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 1x PERSONAL laundry service. We take individual interest in the laundry problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594. 611 E. Hoover. 3x STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006. 4x LOST AND FOUND LOST: Diamond wedding ring near University Hospital. Finder please call 2-3872 or 822 Oakland. Re- ward. FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1934 Chevrolet Standard coupe. Might accept car in trade. Can arrange terms if necessary. Edward Lauth, 520 Thompson St. Phone 7758. 43 ORIGINAL ETCHING BY DUBAIN- NE-(FRENCH ARTIST) SCENE LUXEMBURG GARDENS - $10 FRAMED. U L R I C H'S BOOK- STORE, CORNER EAST AND SOUTH UNIVERSITY. WANTED WOULD COOK and plan for a small fraternity. Next semester. Can supply references, white. Dial 7723. 41 I -Associated Press Photo. A dozen men were injured and another was believed to have lost his life whon fire, following a terrific explosion, swept the huge Hiram Walker distillery at Peoria, Ill., causing a loss estimated by officials at $2,700,000. Picture shows blaze at his height as greenish-yellow flames lighted the sky, fed by 6,000,000 gallons of whisky. Brackley Shaw To Accompany Travel Writer On Next Trip EAST AURORA, N. Y., July 23. - (Special) - Brackley Shaw, '34, '37L, will accompany Beach Conger, '32, travel writer, on his forthcoming trip for World Letters, Incorporated, to Mexico, Central and South America, and the West Indies. Shaw and Conger will leave Ann Arbor for Monterey, Mexico, Aug. 30, and will begin the work of writing and. printing travel letters for 500,000, school children from the latter point. They will return to Ann Arbor in June, 1935, having covered Central America, gone down the west coast and up the east coast of South Amer- ica and through the West Indies, the last stop being Santiago de Cuba. Shaw was prominent in class ac- tivities while an undergraduate here, Local Scouts To Attend Big National Meet A delegation of nineteen leaders and scouts from the Washenaw-Liv- ingston council will attend the na- tional Scout Jamboree in Washington during the last ten days in August, according to an announcement made yesterday by Fielding H. Yost, Scout Commissioner. Six other Scouts may still qualify for attendance, but the group of nineteen have already filed their registrations with the National Jamboree committee. Newton Squires of troop 1, Milan, Eldridge Brian and Leo Gannon of troop 1 Hartland, Giles Fox of troop 4, Ypsilanti and Robert Horton of troop 2 Ypsilanti, Thomas Colvin and John Childs of troop 10, Ann Arbor, Ted McOmber, Clark Hubbs and Hal Whittemore of troop 7, Ann Arbor, Roger Wiselogle of troop 14, Ann Arbor, David Kahn of troop 16, Ann Arbor, Warren Crandell of troop 4, Ann Arbor, John Sivers of troop 11, Ann Arbor, and Donald Martin of troop 104, Ann Arbor, will make up the delegation of scouts going under the leadership of Scoutmaster T. Bruce Bider and assistant scoutmast- ers, Ivan Parker of Dixboro, and Don- ald Palmer of troop 22 of Ann Arbor. Good Crop Weather Reported By Bureau EAST LANSING, July 24. - (IP) - The United States weather bureau to- day told of excellent growing weather for all crops, save in the northern part of the Lower Peninsula, where rain is needed. "Corn made great improvement and some is tasseling in southern coun- ties," the bureau's crop summary for the week ended Tuesday-said. "Beans also improved. Wheat is mostly cut in the southern part of the state and some has been threshed. The straw is heavy but the yield of grain rather disappointing. "Some barley has been cut and oats are nearly ripe in the south section. Both crops are generally good. The second crop of alfalfa is about ready to cut. "Early potatoes are yielding well. "The cherry harvest continues with a yield very good in some localities, but poor in others due to damage by leaf. diseases." . having been a member of Sphinx, jun- ior honorary society in the literary college, and city editor of both the regular and Summer Session Daily's in 1933-34. After this trip he will return to Law School to finish his course there. Shaw will assist Conger in getting out a weekly letter on each step of the itinerary. The two will carry printing and addressing machines with them for this purpose. Search Distillery Ruins For Body PEORIA, Ill., July 24. -(03) - The ruins cooled, workmen sought today to extricate the body of John Bar- don, 38, the single victim of an ex- plosion and fire at the Hiram Walker distillery here. Officials of the company and public authorities continued investigation as to the cause of the fire which caused $2,700,000 damage in buildings and whisky destroyed. Four of those injured in the con- flagration were still in hospitals. FOR RENT TO RENT: To faculty member or graduate student for school year 1935--'36 a suite of sitting-room with fireplace, piano, built in book- cases, and double bedroom, with pri- vate lavatory. Phone 9524. 42 The total number of books in the Harvard University (Cambridge, Mass.) library is now 3,602,000 -the largest university library in the world. Exactly 126,935 books and pamphlets were added to its shelves in 1933-34. Terrace Garden Dancing Studio Instructions in a ll forms. Classical, social, dancin~g. Ph. 9695. , Wuerth Theatre" Bldg. SWIM PICNIC a N EWPORT BATHING BEACH PORTAGE LAKE Constantly Changing Water Ends Tonight "HOLD 'EM YALE" plus "DI NKY" ________Tomorrow -- WILEY POST "A IR H AWKS" ___plus GEORGE O'BRIEN "COWBOY MILLIONAIRE" MICH IGAIN MATINEES 2c Balcony Evenings 35c Main Floor Evenings TWO FEATURES Kay Frances George Brent in "STRANDED" and Arline Judge Kent Taylor in "COLLEGE SCANDAL" MAJ ESTIC 2 MATINEES 25C"BALO. EVENINGS 35c Main Floor, Evenings -s Today - Two Features ~ " 00 IL4 O IM iU Bright Spot 802 Packard Street TODAY - 35c - VEGETABLE PLATE with Hard Boiled Egg - 40c- LIVER & BACON, with Onions ROAST LAMB, Mint Jelly --45c- GRILLED LAMB CHOPS Mint Jelly GRILLED SIRLOIN STEAK with Mushrooms - 55c - GRILLED PORK CHOPS Apple Jelly --60c - T-BONE STEAK with Mushrooms Soup or Tomato Juice Mashed or Au Gratin Potatoes Buttered Carrots, Cole Slaw,aSliced Tomatoes Coffee - Iced Tea - Milk Dessert With All Meals Dine in Comfort, Delightfully Cool! Fountain in Connection CURB SERVICE - -_ As Others See It II AND An Indicator Mussolini Overlooked rHE BELIEF that Mussolini's assault on Ethi- opia is a ruse to distract the world's attention from the fact that all is not well, economically, within the Italian corporative state is substan- tiated by the unfavorable position of the lira in foreign exchange. For the value of the lira has not only receded, reflecting internal strain in Italy; the New York exchange has seen the listing of quo- tations for "blocked" lire -lire owned by others than Italians which Fascist authorities will not allow to be transferred into the currencies of other countries and so must be spent, if spent ,t all, only in Italy. If this blocking of a portion of the Italian cur- rency means what the blocking of Central Euro- pean and Latin American currencies has meant in recent years - and dealers in international exchange say it can have only that meaning - then Italy is in sore straits financially and guard- ing its resources with utmost care. With such an 4 HELEN WtITLSY1 Saturday .IHIRLEY TEMPLE in "CURLY TOP" go .. --- - Performance Tonight MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS4 p r4 nte p 4 * * * * "CAPTAIN HURRICANE" An RKO-Radio Picture with James Barton, I( 11