THE MICHIGAN DAILY a ,I I I . J DAILY If and managed by students of the University of under the authority of the Board in Control of Publications.. iea every morning except Monday during the ryear and Summer Session-. Viember of the Associated Press isociated Press is exclusively entitled to the publication of all news dispatches credited to ;otherwise credited In this newspaper. All republication of all other matters herein also at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as ass mail matter. iptions during regular school year by carrier, mail, $4.50. Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38 EPRVSEtNTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Publishers Representative %2O4AAsor AE. NEW YORK. N. Y. NICAGO 'BOSTONr LoS ANGELEdS-SAN FRANCISCO Board of Editors I Editor Director or Editor Editor Editor . . . .Robert D. Mitchell .Albert P. Mayio . . . . Horace W. Gilmore . . . . Robert I. Fitzhenry .S. R. Kleiman . .. . . Robert Perlman . . William Elvin . . .Joseph Freedman .. Earl Gilman or bor ............."..Joseph Gies Editor . Dorothea Staebler itor. . . . . . . Bud Benjamin Business Department Manager . Philip W. Buchen anager . . . Leonard P. Siegelman SManager . . lliam .L. Newnan Business Manager .. Helen Jean Dean Service Manager .. Marian A. Baxter IT EDITOR: ELLIOTT MARANISS editorials published in The Michigan are written by members of the Daily nd represent the views of the writers Iu "** F THERE IS ANY single attitude of the modern world and especially of the ed, States which is responsible for the prob-' which face us today, it is that of indiffer- ore than any single thing, we believe that to ay be laid the continued existence of poverty, ie, disease, crooked and stupid politics, and . whole regiment of economic, social and pol- L problems which accompany these more pri- y ills. Indifference is to be expected in mod- civilization. It is the hypodermic needle of hine specialization which has pervaded tissue r tissue of earthly activity from the factories hie farmer, to the retailers, to educators and inistrators. It is inevitable, but the fact that inevitable does not in itself preclude strenu- efforts to fight it. They are efforts which t inevitably be made. Theyrabsolutely must nade. We can no longer laugh at the pathetic mipts of the early textile workers all over world who tried to smash the machines ch were depriving more and more of them ork. It was no use then to tell them that the hine meant more real income for all of them, that all those who had,been displaced would newer and better jobs in an infinitely ex- ding industry. All they could see was that r immediate means of making a living had i taken away from them. So they picked up es and steel and battered, when they could, monsters which they saw were threatening r very existence. Ritliculous, we think now! we are wrong in laughing. The machine is the monster, and we are not thinking of the on or so normally technologically unemploy- very year when we say this. We are thinking Machine as it stretches out its wheels and r, and clutches every thing we do, which multiplied knowledge and activity a thous- times, which has woven and interwoven the les of the earth in its infinitely complex net eel and iron. That Machine is not conquered. ireatens us more today than it did a hundred s ago when the workers sabotaged in futile est. And unless we master indifference, the to the problem of an increasing domination he Machine and its progeny, there is no hope. * * * - te Real Issue.. IS IS THE ISSUE which underlay our edi- orial of Sunday on the pep meeting, and it is ssue, which unfortunately Mr. Heath in his nn did not see. e were not "fussing," or in a "dither" as Mr. h put it, because as he said again, "Czecho- kia is very near his heart." There are many gs much closer to our heart-our home, our ids and family, our life and peace of mind, they are precisely why we gave up half an Friday noon to attend the Czechoslovakian ing. We were not asking that five thousand iigan students storm theatres and damage erty. Most emphatically we were not asking "the rabble rousing type of showmanship h stirs up pre-game tenthusiasm and brings ;uch monkey business as ripping theaters - huilding bonfires and giving the gendarmes" think. We were asking only that it should begin to think - and intelligently. We were asking that it at least listen to those who want to tell us about the problems that affect us and the possible approaches to their solutions. We were asking that youth make its wishes known to those im whose hands its destiny and happiness lie; that it arise from its lethargy and indifference and realize its obligations to itself, if not to the rest of humanity. * * Looking Backward... AS WE WROTE that editorial Saturday and as we write this one today, we think of things that have happened since we have been at Michi- gan. We think of the Peace Strike of 1936. That was fairly successful. Close to two thousand stu- dents were there. We think of the peace strikes of 1937, 1,500 students; 1938-900 students. Last fall's peace poll received 1800 votes, and the figure is as large as it is because all the students had to do was check some questions and drop them in conveniently located boxes. Put them togethei and they spell Indifference. Where were the people to fill out those figures to the entire strength of the student body? How possibly can the United States keep out of war when it does break out in Europe, if the flesh and blood and brains which will be offered up as fodder do not object to what their govern- ment does or doesn't do? How is it conceivable that we can remain at peace when we do not even condition ourselves to a firm and unflinching stand against war? Ask your friends today whe- ther they want war or not, and you will be sur- prised at how many of them say, "Well, if we have to fight, we will, but we don't want to," or at how many of your R..T.C. friends will say, "We don't want to go to war, but if war comes, we'll be able to get better jobs." Ask yourselves if this "yes, but" attitude is- going to keep you out of war when propaganda from the pro-this side and pro-that side floods your government and your representatives. Must History Repeat? . . LOOK BACK, please look back, over the Daily files of 1914-18. It is fantastic how the student body of Michigan three years before this country entered the war was so utterly indifferent except in a vaguely pro-Ally attitude. It is horrible how calmly the Daily writer of March 22 with a screaming headline spread all over the top of the front page saying: "WAR WITHIN 48 HOURS -BERLIN" wrote an editorial headed "A Mass Meeting to Arouse Patriotism" which said: ... We don't know where we stand. Some are arguing for preparedness and immediate en- trance into the war to defend our rights. Others are urging that our country remain at peace, drawing a contrast between the bloody battle fields of Europe and an idyllic, peaceful world state. Worst of all, there are a great many who are iot arguing at all." Underline the first and third sentences of that quotation; imprint them upon your memory... And remember this, too, there was no protest against the world war before we entered it, no mass expression of ptudent opinion. When war broke out it was too late to protest even if the students had wanted to. -Albert Mayio Michigan's Favorite Son .. M ICHIGAN STUDENTS who follow Ipolitics can find real interest in the career of one of the former University members, Thomas Dewey, who the other day was selected by the New York Republicans as their candidate for gbvernor. Dewey since leaving the University has made hinms lf one of the best-known Michigan alumni, and the Daily would like to feel that he got his start and inspiration from the training acquired while he was a member of its staff. Whether or not he obtains the New York gover- norship, it speaks for his ability that he has been chosen for the effort. Dewey's most bitter critics admit that he is the most efficient prosecuting attorney that New York City has ever had and that his record of convictions against the corrupt rackets and their protectors in political life has been most im- pressive. That his selection to head the Republi- can ticket in New York has definitely disturbed the heads of the New York Democratic party is evident in the measures that they have taken to meet his candidacy. First, they have cried out that Dewey is too young for the governorship, a statement reiterated mildly by some of the more conservative old line Republicans. Second, they have drafted popular Governor Lehman for another term. Since for some time Governor Lehman has declared that he would not permit hs name to be placed on the ballot as a candidate for gover- nor, and since he has expressed a wish to run for the Senatorial position now open in New York, his choice by the Democrats and more, his capit- ulation to run again for a position he doesn't want, is evidence enough that the Democrats acknowledge that they are faced with a formid- able opponent. Opponents of Dewey say that he has had ex- perience only as a prosecuting attorney and there- fore is not fitted to handle the more diverse mat- ters of state which fall to the lot of the governor. Until such time, however, as political positions shall become the reward of men who have gradu- ated from courses for developing governmental executives, Mr. Dewey's qualifications are com- parable to those of most of the governors who have held office in New York. The fact that he has held important public positions with honor and ability, the fact that he has a record of bril- liant achievement in the political arena of the largest city of the country, and the fact that he is well acquainted with many forms of govern- mental abuse and their correction promise well for his performance as a state executive. What ever one's personal convictions of party, Michigan students both old and young must be proud of the record of accomplishment of this fellow student. We are confident that he will hrino ti on nw nRitinn the force anr1 narefu1 1/ fe ems lo )Ale Heywood Broun It might be a good idea if liberals in all lands were belled, for they seem to have a passion for strange pastures. Consider, for instance, the curi-' ous case of Captain Patterson, proprietor of the New York Daily News, who states that the masses "are cheering Chamberlain from the toe of Italy to the tip of Scotland." There was a day when Captain Joe was democratic, both lower case and in the upper brackets, but now he is closer to Cliveden than Halifax, Nancy Astor or Gene Tunney. How come this transformation? Possibly the seeming switch is not surprising. It may be that those who regarded the publisher as a champion of, progressive movements are content with too shallow an examination of Mr. Patterson's posi- tion. Indeed, he has been candid enough to admit in some of his editorials that his support for cer- tain economic reforms was based less on any passionate desire for the more abundant life than upon the shrewd conviction that the waves should temper the wind rather than risk the hurricane. Many myths have grown up about Manhattan's Caliph, and the anecdote which I cite may be wholly apocryphal. But if Captain Patterson, never said it he should have. According to legend, he once remarked, "Other newspaper publisher§ are wrong in thinking of me as a radical. I'm not radical at all. I merely try to shoo the flies off Bossie, so that she will be content to stand still and allow herself to be milked as usual." * Enlightened Self Interest It is difficult to quarrel with the' doctrine of enlightened self-interest when its objectives serve to help, even in part, the aspirations of mankind in general. But there be those who have taken up with progressive causes out of sheer shrewd ness who now seem willing to quit them out o the same motivation. Many publicists and politicians abroad think that they have hit upon a sound device for keep ing the herd tractable. Cows can be made to yiel cream even if they are not content. The new psy chology of the industrialists is to induce them to remain within their stalls by scaring the life out of them. The middle classes, in particular, are being asked to accept Hitler and Chamberlain as publi benefactors on the allegation that they have save the world from the dread of Red revolution. Thos who say that Neville dragged Europe back from the brink of war seem unwilling to face the charg that he did as much as anybody to lead his coun try and the small nations which trusted him t the edge of the precipice. It is a little as if theatrical manager were to cast the same acto for the role of the villain who ties Nellie in th path of the approaching buzz-saw and then get him to double as the lone ranger who snatche her away in just the nick of time. * * * What About Bitter Enmity One of the legends about New Dealer Joe i so feeble a folk tale that he himself has not bee] able to resist kidding about it upon occasions. This is the rumor which holds that there isE bitter enmity between Captain Patterson, 4wh runs the New York Daily News, and Colone McCormick, who is responsible for the editoria policy of the Chicago Tribune. It has been sai that though these men are cousins and associate in the financial responsibility of the two publica tions, a gulf is fixed between them. And the im" passable chasm has been explained on the groun4 that the Captain is a passionate liberal and th Colonel a devout reactionary. But there isn't any abyss any more. Joe point with pride to Bertie's cartoons, and Bertie is jus nuts about Joe's editorials. A profit is not withou honor. Old Campus, New Ideas Something like a million and a quarter of ou young people (perhaps more, for registration have been going up rapidly) have been arrivin on college campuses. The great State univers ties, the smaller number of city colleges, the aris tocratic private foundations of the East, the sma denominational colleges together furnish a educational picture of remarkable variety. Th one thing that Yale has in common with the Uni versity of Iowa, Oberlin with the University o Chicago, Rollins and Bennington with Minnesota is the inescapable fact of change. In every highe institution in the land, with the possible excep tions of West Point and Annapolis, alterations i systems of admission and of study are takin place. In almost every one, even in the great pub lic universities where mass instruction is almos enforced by huge enrollments, less emphasis i being laid on regimentation and proscription more emphasis on the individuality of the student At first thought this shift in higher educatio might seem to provide poor preparation forr civilization in which mass production of good seems to be echoed in mass production of idea and mass action in almost every phase of life Yet the development is not the result of one' whim. It has come slowly, in response to a grow ing demand from practical educators and serious minded students. The kind of life we live an plan to live in the United States cannot be serve by standardized youth shaped on an educationa assembly line. II * You By S Disillusionment Note No. 1555 (Continued from Page 2) Tom Jensen WALT B. PITKIN, the Columbia t Harold Lusk W ALTB. PIKIN, he Coumbiainvited. 'their wives are likewise in- oe a professor who qualified as a first- vited Thend C Robert Mani Irate optimist with his famous insur- vited attend. Carl Veihe lance booster, "Life Begins at Forty," Institute of the Aeronautical Sci- Richard By has done a shameless backdown in ences: The first meeting of the year Howard Lu his "Whither College Graduate," a will be held tonight at 7:30 p.m., in A d Schwargh recent treatise ofdeepest pessimistic Room 1042 East Engineering Build- Arnold Whi hue. He says graduates nowadays l ing. All prospective members are- indulge an ironic jest indeed with urged to attend. A vice-chairman, Varsity Glee C] their slogan, "WPA, here we come!" secretary, and treasurer will be elect- Researsal at 4: In bold strokes, Walt declares, "That's ed to fill recent vacancies. club room in t where they'll go, and that's where . lowing men are they'll stay." Those are bitter dregs Sigma Alpha Iota wil nave a busi- Ash for us young 'uns to swallow-we who ness meeting in the Michigan League Collette have been reared in the rags-to- this evening a . 1 p.m.Cox riches tradition, weaned on Horatio pulsory atenance. Chambers Alger, and inculcated with the finan-C e Transportation Club The Transpor- Fromm certmiracles Walt didt write thoe tation Club of the University of Mich- Gell certain yrus aldptihoverigan will sponsor a brief informal get- Gentile which might have folle d the dis-together this evening at 7:15 p.m. George whih igt av fllwe. heditsin the Michigan Union, room Goddard covery that a couple of his students nu te posted on, Uonm Gunsberg had been napping in class. number to be posted on the Unon H nsen 'ha bennaplg n lasbulletin board. After this meeting, Hagen the gathering will join with a coim- Hall Like Time And Tide mittee of the American Railway En- Harding Sinclair Lewis, the incorrigible gineering Association to attend a Hirsch satirist who came out of Sauk Center, moving picture entitled "Modern De- Jaslow Minn., with an earthy disdain for the velopments in the Remote Control of Johnson nation's Babbitts, has enrolled in Trains." All students in all colleges Kamm Dale Carnegie's course to gain poise who are interested in any phase of Kahn and learn the delicate art of acquir- transportation, whether as a profes- Kalajan ing friends. Whether it's the Dorothy sion or as a hobby, are cordially in- Kenaga r Thompson (his wife) influence, or vited to attend. LaBelle the Park Avenue affluence, "Red" Lipow Lewis now adds his bit to the grow-, Alumnae Movie: Try-outs for the Luessel ing myth that "It Can Happen Here." acting parts for students will be held Massin " * * this afternoon at the League. Stu- Mcioley Encyclopedia Cllegiana dents interested should report to the Mcinl HELL-s p i r i t u a 1 concentration Garden Room between 4 and 5:30. McLaughli camp,. Men and women are needed, comic as Pavinich THE PARROT-Babel swimming well as straight. Quaal in coke. Reizen THE LIBRARY (Saturday night) Varsity Glee Club: The following Robinson -Truth on a straggle. men will please report for rehearsal Schoen Behari Bey. tonight at 7:30, bringing eligibility Scott Shop Talk slips from the office of the Dean of Sorenson His thoughts were oppressed with Students: Steere a multi-syllabled syntax . . . Bruce Fennell Tieran f The elaborateness of her hat ef- Kenneth Heininger Tinker fectively contrasted the simplicity of Jd Linb Vias its foundation.TWiamury hVi His unpopularity among athletes William McIntosh Winne was due to the fact that he couldn't Stanley Richards Wolfe - cuss his way out of a revival meet- Jack Secrist Zwinck ing.. Clyde Clark_ His imagination was 1d elastic you William Geisert Dance Club, e could hear it snap .. Ralph J. Kelley will be a meet L.L.D.. Kenneth Marshall dents interest g Why not send us YOUR games of Howard Marschak day at 4:30 p. c expression? Charles Bowen Women's Ath d* * * Chandler Pinney the year will e Competent Authors Hugh Roberts meeting. External Ballistics by K. Popoff. Harley Spencer Ann Arbor e Gous. Critique. Henry Tuttle players, a m - * * Bob Vandenberg can accept a f o Quizzicuss' Queries Robert Nelson if qualified. M( a Have you had a sleep in the Rack- George Brooks p.m., city hig r ham Auditorium yet? Aleck Block e To the student body: Even if you Robert Brown Comi s could take Ann Arbor from the police, Yenson s what would you do with it? Austin Fink Alpha Lamb Quhtwd itiMerrill Hendershot a meeting of a Quizzicuss. Harold Levinson members init THE radio wafted the soothing H strains of "A Song in C Major,, Vincent O'Toole Wednesday, O doestans ASoginCMao, Toivo Liimatainia League. Roo done by a piano. Quietly, gradually, Emmet Anderson League bullet s the deft pianist reached a crescen- Ralph Clark is requested o n do, his keyboard genius sharply man- Jack Collns ifest even through the impersonality Ja CArthurNoticoall o a loudspeaker. Eyes half-shut n Edwin McCawley notice of the a seem ing enjoym ent, m y room m ate Harry M orhrisO t , w i h o lay comfortably on the couch, a bulky Ery Ois etudents l magazine held aloft his chest. Sud- Erwp Ptes tatin suld a denly, he threw the magazine aside RalphucPeterson dtration ou d and grabbed for a cigarette, con- Richard Skalarsky be no meeting d vinced that a cartoon by Petty was Robert Smith irreconciliable with the artistry of a Clyde Stitt Chinese St - master pianist. hi George Karpis meeting welc d Gilchrist . Paul Kent dents will be e Paul Kingary at 7:15 at th James Berger A social hour, Robert Lamson follow. t The Ed ifor Hudson Dunks t Robert Berris Physical E tTo d Charles M. Brown dents: Individ s eo. M. Brown given in Arch Howard Carruthers noeing and R Calvin Gibson noon, Oct. 7 1 Columnists Are Tender Eric Jacobsonpanning to td To the Editor:. tion is plainly a condition of myopia Swimming t Columnists are tender people. On that should be checked now, during I Tuesday and , the ordinary editorial pages of the adolescence. 8:30 until No. nation's gazettes and journals, a col- The gesture of a democracy (stu- This announ s umnist is gingerly dressed up and dents are part of it-it's about time importance f g allowed to parade. To hurl a mis- they were informed) telling other received an inc - placed adjective at him would be in democracies that we'll not supply ucation last the nature of journalistic assault and the blustering gangster's blank ma- battery. To hurl a vitrolic invective chine-gun with a round of bullets is United Pea [1 would be journalistic mayhem. I a peaceful gesture, a reasonable one Its first meeti n propose to do neither to your man on and definitely more than a mere 1938 at 7:30 e the "Flying Trapeze," Roy Heath, "noble" gesture. Nobility these days League. Allc - who is, from the gurgling tones of his is too much linked with the name of with the U.P.C f writings, still intellectually wet be- a certain "noble" old gentleman of two delegates , hind the ears. Mr. Heath, in my 68 years who talked Hitler out of is invited. T r estimation, is a cross between the ro- war, and nobly slipped the shackles the financial mantic high school editor and the onto the wrists of Czechoslovakia. fall regarding - runner on the wrong track. This was simply allowing the gang- forums, etc., The horror he chose to express at ster to load up and drive off to the World Youth the possible actions of students who next holdup. It was allowing the College durin - care enough about such adult things gangster to ride off in a Lincoln in- t as peace and democracy and decent stead of his crippled old Ford. The Stude s dealing between peoples to sacrifice Your fear that Hitler would not Congregationa , an hour at mealtime is the kind of be stopped by the firm word and the second partyc t. horror elicited by the oldtime thes- peaceful check is the attitude which night, Oct. 8, n pian barnstormers. The lights went Hitler and Mussolini hope to per- basement of t a low in the house and the bloodcurd- petuate so that they may go on in be dancing,a s ling sneer of thevillain as hemenac- their absolutist fashion of plunder, welcome. ingly traipsed across the boards to- Fear is what they thrive on. It is ex- s ward the gaudily painted Sal of the tremely significant that the 'surprise Alpha Phi farm sent the back rows into a frenzy. move tactics while Britain and France on the campu I Those down in front tossed the whole and America nap were not employed an all-campus show off with professional ennui. by Hitler in those tense days when Old Tea Room - But how the packed gallery held its Czechoslovakia had stirred up some day night from d breath and grasped its seats! Of courage and resistance in British and d course it was all overdone. So is French hearts. Stalker Hall 1 Mr. Heath. There may have been a small group New Testame To get closer to the inside rail, at that rally. There may be small shares from lub: Resev ye Division: :30 Thursday in the he Union. The fol- included: n Women students. There ing of all women stu- ed in Dance .Club to, m. in the lounge of the eti Bldg. Plans fo be announced .at tis Civic Orchestra of 40 inicipal music project ew additional musician eets Thursday at 7:30 h school. ng Events da Pelta: There will be ll Alpha Lambda Delta iated last spring, on et. 12, at 5 p.m the i will be. posted on the in board. Promptness f all members. graduate students: The Assenbly on Saturday, was issued to the grad- at the time of regis- d have read Wednes- t 7:4& pi. There wi11 on Oct. 8. udent Club: The first oming 'the new stu- held Saturday evening e International Center. musicale, and tea will ducation, Women Stu- .ual sports tests will be ery, Tennis, Golf, Ca- iding on Friday after- rom 3 to 5 p.m. Those 'ake one of these.tests to call 4121, ext. r70. +ierwr.,rill sUe .ivtrn UU ley ers xon walder te of M ec Terry N DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE' Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all menbers Waiverstty. Copy received at the *Me i# othe MAsistaat lo thetbs until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. tests. wiii be given on Thursday evenings at v.1 In the Union Pool. ncement is of particular or those students who complete in physical ed- emester. ce Committee will hold ing on Monday, Oct. 10, p.m. at the Michigan organizations affiliated C. are expected to send . The general . public he agenda will include report, plans for the lectures, symposiums, and a report on the Congress held at Vassar g the summer. ent Fellowship of the l Church will have its of the season Saturday from 9 to 12, in the the clurch. There will and games. Everyone Alpha: All Negro men us are urged to attend smoker at Josephine's n on Fourth Street Fri- to 9 to 12. . Class in "Through the ent" led by Dr. Bra- 7:30-9 o'clock Friday r I k r 4 a a s a C st i. s I t Y f 6,