THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28,1 1934 Depression For Dkekinson. M ANY AN ECONOMIST has been disredtedin these long, lean years of depression. But Prof. Frank G. Dickinson of the economics department of the University of Illinois was apparently the originator of a system of rating football teams that was to prove the exception. Football fans knew practically nothing about the Dickinson rating system, much less that it was the brainchild of an economics professor - which ignorance was undoubtedly in its favor. Some were vaguely aware that it was in some way designed to give more credit to these teams which played the more difficult schedules. Because Michigan football teams have regularly played tough schedules in recent years - and with conspicuous success - the Dickinson ratings have consistently favored the Wolverines. We certainly had nothing to kick about, and most schools seemed to accept the results as fair enough. The Dickinson method was the only recognized objective way of determining a national champion. It was undoubt- edly the best system that had been advanced, and it had worked admirably in practice. Dickinson ratings for the Big Ten this year, as announced Sunday, however, were sufficiently sur- prising to give the Illinois professor a mild sort of black eye and place him back once more among his not so esteemed contemporaries in the field of economics. For his brilliant system - the system that had worked so admirably in "normal" years -had not judiciously settled any disturbing dispute, but by some sort of freak had hoisted a defeated Illinois team into a questionable tie with the Minnesota outfit that is generally conceded to be the most powerful in the country (excluding Louisiana). Dear, dear, hadn't the professor ever heard of Frankenstein? As Others See It The Burning Question THE QUESTION before the world today is So- cialism or Individualism. Is it best for the eco- nomic and social good of mankind for the world to pursue a course in which the individual strives for personal achievement and gratification, leav- ing his fellow men to take care of themselves as best they may, or should mankind so arrange itself that the common good is the main objective? One important source of student information on the question comes from the faculty. The battle on this campus is waged energetically and bril- liantly, but at the same time it adds to the confu- sion concerning the merits of the two isms. A stu- dent may go to his 8 o'clock class and hear the Chicago Tribune lambasted, the individualistic system of profiteering roundly berated, and the New Deal praised to the high heavens.'Whereupon he repairs to his 9 o'clock class wondering why anybody could be other than an advocate of Socialism, only to hear his 9 o'clock professor state that the New Deal is a miserable failure, that, it is attempting to erase the natural rights of man, and that he is happy and proud to be able to say that at least 40 years of his life were spent in America as it should be. We went through the process described above innumerable times and finally reached the con- clusion that the question depends on whether ac- quisitiveness (individualism) is a basic human in- stinct, or a secondary urge. If it is a secondary urge and not an instinct, it can be moulded by education. Those who ascribe to Socialism tell us that one of the outstanding merits of a socialistic system is that every individual will be able to obtain a station in life that will afford the most pleasure to him. There will be a psychic income from work- ing at a job that a person enjoys doing, thereby reducing the desire for economic income. So far so good, but when we ask them who will perform certain undesirable tasks, they tell us that by train- ing, Society can obtain persons who will even enjoy collecting refuse. The question, then, descends squarely on the shoulders of education. When will education be- come so universal that it will physically be able to train every individual and detect the particular capabilities of each _and every person? How soon will the personnel of the educational process decide that a Society which strives to promote the com- mon good is superior to a system that places indi- vidual gains before anything else? To the grade schools, high schools, colleges and universities of the United States falls a very large part of the responsibility in determining whether this country will, and when it will, adopt Socialism. -The Purdue Exponent. Thanksgiving Quick-Lunch T HANKSGIVING DINNERS with families or friends will be few and far between this year if the present published intention' is carried out by the university authorities - for classes are to begin at 8:30 on the Friday morning following Thanksgiving Day. This ruling makes it practically impossible for more than a very small percentage of the college enrollment to get home and back without a damaging number of cuts. The 1933 April "Undergraduate Announcement Issue" of the Official Register of the University said that in 1934 classes would not commence until 10:30 on the Friday miorning following Thanksgiving. The more recently published "Cat- alogue Issue" says, in its calendar, that classes will begin at 8:30. This change affords, practically, a very short time for those who wish to get away from Princeton for Thanksgiving. It is hard to see why this quite innocent desire should be rendered difficult of attainment for those who wish to go home. Perhans it is wrong to look a gift horse in the COLLEGIATE OBSERVER By BUD BERNARD A professor at the University of Kansas once closed his lecture with an invitation to his class to ask any question they might like about the subject. Silence. The professor, who was young at the game, grew more and more embarrasse. The silence deepened. Finally he said awkwardly, "I will offer a cigarette to the first student asking a question." The silence only continued. It was frightfully embarrassing by this time and the faces began to shift hazily before the stricken professor's eyes. Finally dimly he perceived a hand go up. Relieved he pointed to the boy. "What kind of cigarette?" asked the lad. Here are a list of boners coming from Boston University: Ping Pong is a hairy ape. Astronomy: The study of mules and their habits. Macadam: A French lady. Exits: The center of the globe. "The world spins on its exits." Procrastination: A burgler who used to steal watches in the 19th century, so that many people called him the Thief of Time. An English professor at the University of California asked why horses weren't used on the English stages in the days of Shakespeare. A budding young columnist answered: "Every- one knows at that time the stages were too unstable." After engaging in fisticuffs with police, more than 500 striking New York City College students burned the figure of President Frederich B. Rob- inson in effigy at the base of the campus flagpole recently. The strike broke out after smouldering resentmhent among certain campus liberal and rad- ical groups against the expulsion a month ago of 21 undergraduates for staging an anti-fascist demonstration during a visit of Italian students had come to a head. Here's a warning to the romantic students: A professor of psychology at Western State College has discovered that a kiss, by causing extra palpitation of the heart, shortens the average human life by three minutes. Well, maybe it's worth it. A Washington BYSTANDER By KIRKE SIMPSON T HAT ADDED Democratic majority in the next House instead of the net losses generally pre- dicted before election may have special value for the administration. With better than two-thirds of the full House membership to call upon, it would seem possible to make such changes in House rules at the very outset as would ease the party leader- ship task materially. It takes only a majority of the, House to adopt ruffs. Once they have been adopted, it takes a two-thirds majority to change them. On that simple parliamentary proposition hung a lot of the Democratic leadership grief in the last ses- sion. The key rule is the so-called committee dis- charge provision. When the Democrats came to House power by a narrow margin in the 72nd Congress they put in a rule requiring only 145 signatures to a petition to discharge a committee from consideration of any bill. Theretofore it had been traditional House practice to require a ma- jority vote of the 435 total membership to force a measure on the floor. * * rTHE "LIBERAL" DISCHARGE rule was carried into the recovery Congress, although each house makes its own rules. There is not that con- tinuity in the House that pertains to the Senate and which long has blocked recurrent efforts in the Senate to choke off long-winded debate and fili- bustering tactics by revision of the rules. But for that liberal discharge rule, the last House might have avoided a showdown on some of the proposals most embarrassing to the White House. Had there been an important reduction in Demo- cratic strengthl in the next House, a chance of restoring a hard-boiled majority vote requirement to throttle asubstantial minority's demand for a vote on any proposition, would be proportionately reduced. As it is there is a Democratic margin of nearly three score votes more than a majority. Unless that number joins with the Republicans to prevent discarding the liberal discharge rule for the next session, it will go by the board. Checking up on the number of Democratic "wild men" of the new House indicates that administration leadership will have ample votes to re-establish rigid ma- jority control, at least at the outset of the session. THAT FACT MAY influence decidedly the march of legislative events beginning in January. Perhaps Postmaster-General Farley had something of the sort in mind when he undertook to reassure a nation-wide radio audience that the 74th Con- gress, so completely dominated by Democrats, would be "thoroughly appreciative of its respon- sibilities to the party." It can be argued that the Democratic newcomers will think twice about bolting party leadership 't the very start of their service. The overwhelming majority of the more than 100 new members are U t PAPER BARGAINS Hundreds of pounds of good quality Paper slightly damaged at very special prices. Including a large lot at 39c the ream WAHR'S UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 316 South State Street 11 1 ,U i F' --- I ~11 I 4-- I The Mi-eli-iam Union .. . announces a npecial Thanksgiving Dance to be given tonight froi 10 I I until 1. Bob Steinle and r the regular UNION band will provide the music. Don't forget ... (lancing from 10 until 1 tonight! $1.00 per Couple - Milign 1Union Italrooii I ______________ I ~I -- Why not gang up and buy three subscriptions to Esquire for $10.00? 9 Gargoyle Office Student Publications Building Every day - 3:00 to 5:00 P.M.' 4 I I