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October 01, 1938 - Image 10

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The Michigan Daily, 1938-10-01

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

I

{ I

MJ

H.LBN w o. T or T F ir _ -UATON( Ahr ,.
Edited and managed by students of-the University of
fI1higan under the authority of the Board in Control of
tudent Publications.
Publishea every morning except Monday during the
'niversity year and Summer Session.
Member of the Associated Press
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the
se for republication of all news dispatches credited to
. or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All
gets of republication of all other matters herein also
served.
Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as
cond class mail matter.
Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier,
.00; by mail, $4.50..
Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1937-38
REPRESRNTED PR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY
- National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publishers Representative -
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y.
CHICAGO BOSTON * Los ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCO

Board of Editors

inaging Editor
itorial Director
;y Editor . .
sociate Editor
sociate Editor
sociate Editor
sociate Editor
sociate Editor
sociate Editor
ok Editor .
omen's Editor

. . . . Robert D. Mitchell
. . . . . Albert P. Mayio
... orace W. Gilmore
. . . . Robert I. Fitzhenry
. . . . . . S;R. Kleiman
.Robert Perlman
.. William Elvin
. . .Joseph Freedman
Earl Gilman

I

. . . . . Joseph Gies
Dorothea Staebler

Editor

Bud Benjamin

Business Department
isiness Manager ... . Philip W. Buchen
'edit Manager . . Leonard P. Siegelman
Ivertising Manager . . William L. Newnan
omen's Business Manager . . Helen Jean Dean
omen's Service Manager . . Marian A. Baxter
NIGHT EDITOR: STAN M. SWINTON
The editorials published in The Michigan
DaIly are written by members of the Daily
staff and represent the views of the wtiters
only.

to .

1WELCOME TO AN OLD FRIEND. A
friend with whom we have had some
fine times and good fellowship. Once we "mowed
him down" by 119-0, 55-0, 46-0, 39-0. That, alas,
was back in dad's and grandad's times.
Lately he hasn't been so easy-going. For four
years now he's pushed us around, taken all the
big numbers, and even tried to steal our goal-
posts. Do we hear him jeer-16-b, 20-6, 21-7,
19-14? But that's history, too.
"Today that man's here again. We welcome him
cordially and sincerely. Whether our 'smile re-
mains as hearty in farewell depends somewhat on
the. results this afternoon. Let's hope-we can
turn the tables on him once again. But win or
lose, we still hail him as an old friend and op-
ponent for whom we have both respect and lik-
ing. Our game with him-with Michigan State-
is one of the highlights of our football season.
Welcome back, visitors from M.S.C. May we
all, on both sides, enjoy our friendly rivalry to-
day regardless of its outcome. And may the best
team win!+
-Robert Mitchell

which fraternities will derive from such dormi-
tory building outweigh the transitory disadvan-
tages of a rearrangement of finances. Too often
men who would have made good fraternity ma-
terial eschew the disadvantages of unsatisfac-
tory housing and go elsewhere to school, fraterni-
ties lose what might have proven valuable addi-
tions to their membership. On the other hand,
if adequate and comfortable housing facilities
are available in University maintained dormi-
tories, the type of men who make good fraternity
material will be attracted to the campus and
fraterities will be widely benefited, while men
students as a whole will be more comfortably
housed.
-Carl Petersen
In Defense Of
Splendid Isolation .. .
D RING THIS BREATHING SPELL in
the European crisis, it again becomes
America's problem to devise means of keeping
out of the fracas. By examining the history of
the period from 1914 to 1918 we should be able
to formulate some program and then, put it into
operation immediately.
The first step and the most important one
which we failed to take seriously during the last
war, is that of getting and keeping our nationals
and their property out of the war zones, and
forbidding loans to either side.,
At present, the Associated Press reports that
there are about 88,000 Americans living in Europe
today. These figures include 5,890 in Germany,
5,190 in Czechoslovakia, 12,384 in France, 25,516
in Italy, 2,500 in Poland, 660 in Hungary and 706
in Rumania, all of which nations are in the dan-
ger areas in'the impending conflict. The report
continues that "these figures do not include the
thousands of tourists clamoring for steamship
passage from the war menaced areas.
At present, the navy has five vessels in Euro-
pean waters which could not possibly affordac-
commodations for evacuation of more than a
few hundred of these Americans. Many would be
able to obtain passage on commercial boats. The
remainder must be warned to flee and accommo-
dations provided and those who wish to remain
must be left to their own resources.
Property and investments made abroad by our
citizens are made at All times with the under-
standing that they are made at the citizen's
risk: that they may at any time be confiscated
by hostile powers or that they may be devastated
by war and that the United States government ac-
cepts no responsibility for them.
No loans of any kind, either by individuals or
by the government, can be permitted if we are
to preserve our neutrality. Likewise; American
ships must keep out of war zones and must not
carry contraband of war. The maligned Neutral-
ity Act, although working an injustice on cer-
tain nations, seems to be the only way of prevent-
ing a re-occurance of the happenings of 1916
and 1917. Forbidding travel except at the citizen's
risk will likewise be necessary
The second step which has already been pro-
vided for was described by Mark Foote in his
column Tuesday. The panic resulting immediately
on the declaration of war, anticipated in view of
the experience of 1914, will be cushioned or at
least forestalled by transfer of funds to this
country by foreign investors, but mainly by
domestic measures organized since 1914. First
of these is the Federal Reserve system barely
established at that time, which was set up for
just such eventualities and is now prepared'
for its work. Also, the Securities 'and Exchange
Commission with its control over commodity and
stock exchanges, and the Federal Deposit In-
surance Corp., to protect the banking structure,
have been established to stabilize economic setup
of this country.
Finally, serious consideration of some pro-
posal such as the Ludlow Resolution or the pro-
posed amendment so long advocated by Gen.
Smedley Butler to prevent our soldiers fighting
outside of this nation, or to place in the hands
of the people the choice as to whether they want
war or not. These, along with a watchful eye
over the profits of the munitions makers, ought
to prevent another mess like the last one in
which we involved ourselves.
The present halt in the march to war is only
a short respite. We must now decide whether we

wouldn't prefer "splendid isolation" to another
Pyrrhic victory like the last.
-Malcolm Long
Rail[road Dispute
Again the country has reason to be grateful for
the enlightened provisions enacted to avert a
tie-up of the railroads. Various mediation and
arbitration moves have failed, 950,000 railroad
employes voted to go on strike next Friday night
rather than accept the 15 per cent wage cut which
the railroads had proposed to put into effect at
that time.
That does not mean, however, that the em-
ployes will walk out and the trains stop moving
at the strike deadline. The Railway Labor Act
of 1926 provides that after a strike call has been
issued, the President may appoint an emergency
fact-finding commission to investigate the dis-
pute and make recommendations. No strike may
be called for 30 days after the commission's re-
port is issued.
President Roosevelt yesterday appointed such
an emergency commission-one of able and dis-
tinguished personnel. The hearings are expected
to last two or three weeks. Allowing a few days
for the hearings to get under way, a reasonable
time for the report to be written and a period
of 30 days thereafter in which the status quo
must be observed, it would be some time in
December before a strike call could become effec-
tive.
With railroads representing one-third of the
mileage in the country virtually bankrupt and
another third verging on grave difficulties, the
management and the unions are agreed that the
nation's railways face a crisis and that a program
should be worked out to avert it.
'i'.,..: ..,. -' ,..,., s -- -4 1 f -- --4

ffeer lo Me
Heywood Broun
Anybody who attempts to write newspaper
comment on world affairs while history proceeds
at its present breakneck pace must risk the
chance of being inaccurate
and grossly unfair. The whole
face of the world is subject
to change between editions.
But, after all, no day-by-day
columnist makes any pre-
' w tense of thinking of himself
as a historian or as one
whose words will be remem-
b -ered when final or even ma-
tured judgments are set down.
But these are not the times in wIch anybody
feels inspired to deal with the birds and flowers,
and even small columnists can assert the right of
self-determination and the freedom of expression.
One tries to catch, if he can, some semblance of a
pattern in the turning and twisting of events.
I am beginning to have a strong feeling that
certain men and women in progressive groups
may qualify as major prophets. Indeed, I have
listened to several American newspaper writers,
well-informed on foreign affairs, who charted
outkwith a high degree of accuracy the recent
weeks.
There are few incidents in history, and if we
were all equipped with adequate background in-
formation there would be only a minor number
of surprises. I can mention John Gunther, for
instance, as one who told me at least six weeks
ago the way in which he thought the war lords
would jump. They have followed his specifications
very closely. Almost it begins to seem as if the
pageant of history were a play carefully rehearsed
oehind closed doors and now being put on for
a public performance.
* * *
Pact Against Russia
I heard several foreign correspondents pre-
dict, a long time ago, that Adolf Hitler's inten-
tion was to isolate Russia by bringing about a
four-power pact, with Germany, Italy, England
and France as the allies. Indeed, Hitler has made
open overtures for such a setup, but public
opinion in England and France was not suffi-
ciently favorable for any such alliance to be made
deliberately and in the open.
These tactics have changed. New the pressure
is being put on in a different form. Hitler, in
effect, is saying to the. Western democracies,
"Join me in an alliance or meet me in a war. The
price of peace is fraternization with Fascism."
Instead of being asked to walk into the parlor,
England and France are being ordered to crawl
in.
Now, some will say that there is no compro-
mise whatsoever which should not be accepted to
establish peace or even to stave off war for a
little while. That is hardly the question. Time
will tell whether the acceptance of Hitler's world
leadership is the path to peace. For my pwn part
I believe it is the most certain course to war.
Again, people who have criticized Chamber-
lain severely are called to task and asked to re-
member that if he sacrificed dignity in his flight
to Hitler's summer home he did it to saye the
lives of millions. His dignity is not the issue. If
Chamberlain could avert war he would be justi-
fied in camping at any doorstep out of which
peace might proceed. But did that voice which,
roared over the radio from the Berlin Sport
Palace sound like the voice of one intent upon
bringing reason back to earth?

The FLYING
TRAPEZE
By Roy Heath
ME AND THE BRICKS
If anything gets under my hide
and more than ever makes me real-
ize that injustice is the order of the
day around this school, it is a delib-
erate attempt 'on the part of the
powers that be. the big bullies, to
get me out of this intellectual opium
den by underhanded means. I haven't
done anything to anyone and I resent
the fact that the university is trying
to give me enough rope to hang my-
self. It's no use boys. I'm wise to
your little game.-
They almost caught me though.-
The very day I set foot on this cam-
pus again, I felt it in my bones that
there was a plot to get me out of the
road. When I saw that pile of bricks
stacked on the sidewalk between An-
gell Hall and Haven Hall I knew what
it was. Just as the bounders hoped I
would, I picked up one of those bricks
and weighed it lovingly in my hand.
I glanced at Haven Hall's nice shiny
windows. Temporary i n s a n iit y
clutched my arm. Everything went
purple with pink stripes. Then some-
thing stopped me.
I'll tell you boys, it isn't worth it.
Even to get rid of me you shouldn't
risk the destruction of just as many
windows as there are bricks in that
stack. I am deadly with a brick and
those are the nicest throwing bats I
ever laid a hand on. Besides the win-
dows, I figure if I worked fast I could
make shambles out of that hot house,
or whatever it is, over by Natural
Science. Never thought of that, eh?
Besides, if you must know, it won't
work anyway, no matter how tempt-
ing you make it. I'm inhibited.
* * *
THE POET'S CORNER
My attitude towards people who
go around writing poetry has al-
ways been one of monumental
unenthusiasm. R h y t h n and
Rhyme leave me colder than a
nudist in Nonie. But times are
changing and I have to meet com-
petition. If Sec Terry can coax a
couplet out of the muse, I guess I
can too. Hi Ho, Lackaday ...
Meditations While Riding
A Surf Board
While bounding o'er the bounding
Main
Eating sugar by thegrain
I sometimes pause and wonder why
There ain't no butter in a butterfly.
* *V*
From The Trapeze's undercover
agent at the Kappa House comes tis
story of frustrated relaxation . .
The rushee or party of the first part
if you prefer, was pretty well beaten
down by a tough afternoon of attend-
ing teas and listening to such original
topics of conversation as Ann Arbor
weather, Professors, Ann Arbor weath-
er, rain, Ann Arbor weather and so
on ad nauseum. The jaunty feather
in her bonnet was beginning to droop,
and she had consumed so much tea
that she gurgled like an old hot water
bottle when she walked. It was a hell
of an afternoon.
After the Kappa House she had
one more sisterhood to attend and
she was determined to get as much
rest as possible enroute. She called a
taxi and after winding up the "I've
had such a wonderful time" stuff, she
beat it down the walk as fast as her
aching dogs would allow her, piled in,
shutting the door, lighting a fag and
kicking off her shoes all in one mo-
tion. She settled back in the seat and
inhaled a deep drag while the driver
cocked his ear for the destination.
"Delta Gamma House and drive slow,
please," she sighed.

of New York County. But the argu-
ment which he made as to the larger
importance of the Governorship in re-
lation to the very problems of racket-
eering, which he has been solving
with such notable success, seems to
us unanswerable. The underworld is
no longer localized and confined with-
in counties. It stretches its tenacles'
throughout the state, and Mr. Dewey
as Governor can aid the fight against

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE'

Pulication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the
Vniverstty. Copy received at the offiee of the Assistant to the President
until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. 1

J

(Continued from Page 2)
Yehudi Menuhin ...........F..eb. 15
Gregor Piatigorsky ...... ..Feb. 27
Roth String Quartet ......March 9
Season tickets may be ordered at
the office of the School of Music,
Maynard Street, at $12, $10 and $8
each. Orders are filed and will be
filled in sequence.
Exhibition
Exhibition of Contemporary Chinese
Paintings: The water-color paintings
of Ya-Kun Chang, a contemporary
Chinese painter of recognized stand-
ing. will be exhibited from Saturday,
Oct. 1, through Sunday, Oct. 11, in
exhibition rooms 3514 and 3515 at]
the Horace H. Rackham Building. The1
exhibition, which is sponsored by the
International Center, includes botha
brush paintings and "finger-tip"
paintings. Mr. Chang, who is at pres-
ent enrolled in the Graduate School
of the University, will be at the ex-
hibition rooms afternoons to explain
his work. Admission is free.]
Lectures
University Lecture:Thomas A. 3
Knott, Professor of English in the
University of Michigan, formerly
Managing Editor of Webster's Newe
International Dictionary, will lecture ,
on the subject "Behind the Scenes
in Building a Twentieth-Century Dic-]
tionary" at 4:15 p.m., Thursday, Oct.
6, in the Lecture Hall of the Rackham
Building. The public is cordially in-,
vited.
Events Today
i Lambda Theta: Important meet-
ing-today in the University Elemen-1
tary School immediately following~
the football game..
'ti
The Angell Hall Observatory will be
open to the public tonight from 8 to
10 to observe the moon and Jupiter.'
Children must be accompanied by
adults.
Candy Booth Committee Members:a
All girls on this committee turn in
class schedules and eligibility slips
this week at the Undergraduate Of-l
fice of League.
Coming Events
Junior Research Club. The October
meeting will be held Tuesday, Oct. 4,
at 7:30 p.m. in the amphitheatre,
third floor; of the Horace H. Rack-,
ham School for Graduate Studies. F.
E. Eggleton, Associate Professor of
Zoology, will speak on "Biological
Productivity in an Anaerobic Envir-
onment," and L. V. Colwell, Instruc-
tor in Metal Processing, will talk on1
"Properties, Uses, and Fabrication of
Plastics."
The Women's Research Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Oct. 3,I
1938, in the West Lecture Room,E
Mezzanine Floor, of the Rackhami
Building. Dr. Margaret W. Johnston,1
Dept. of Internal Medicine, will speak1
on the subject, "Indirect Colorimetry
and its Application.",
Biological Chemistry eminar, Mon-
day, Oct. 3, 7-9 p.m., Room 313 West
Medical Building.
"The Creatine-Creatinine Prob-
lem" will be discussed. All interest-
ed are invited.
Zoology Club: The first meeting
of the Zoology Club for the year
1938-1939 will be held in the Upper
Auditorium of the Horace H. Rack-
ham Graduate Building on Thursday,
Oct. 6, at 8 p.m. The program will
consist of short talks by President
A. G. Ruthven, Degn C. S. Yoakum,
and Mr. Lloyd L. Smith, Jr. Refresh-
ments will be served, and there will
be an opportunity to inspect the new
building.

Zoologists on the staffs of the De-
partment of Zoology, Museum of
Zoology, Laboratory of Vertebrate
Genetics, School of Forestry and Con-
servation, Institute for Fisheries Re-

invited to play with the Ann Arbor
Hockey Club Sunday morning. Meet
at the Women's Athletic Building
at 9 o'clock.
Vulcans: The open meeting will be
held Sunday at 4 o'clock in the Union.
The Christian Student Prayer Group
will hold its regular meeting in the
Michigan League at 5 p.m. Sunday,
Oct. 2. Please consult the bulletin
board for the room announcement.
All students interested are welcome.
Graduate Outing Club: The first
meeting will be held on Sunday, Oct.
2, at 3 p.m. in the Graduate Outing
Club Room in the Horace H. Rack-
ham Building. Enter the building by
the northwest door. Plans will be
'made for the coming year. All grad-
uate students interested are cordially
invited.
A
Churches

Hero Or A Hamlet

Disciples Guild (Church of Christ)
Hill and Tappan Streets:
10:45 a.m., Morning Worship, Rev.
Fred Cowin, Minister.
12 noon, Students' Bible Class.
Leader, H. L. Pickerill.
5:30 p.m., Social Hour and Tea.
6:30 p.m., Mr. Harold Gray will
speak on "One Man's Answer to War."
Following the address Mr. Gray will
conduct a forum. All students and
their friends are welcome.
First Baptist Church and Roger
Williams Guild: Sunday, 9:45 a.m.
University students will meet at a
group with Dr. Chapman, student
pastor, at the Guild house for a 45-
minute period of discussion on the
subject, "How Our Bible Came To Be."
Close at 10:30.
10:45 a.m. Worship in church au-
ditorium. The Rev. Frederick Cow-
in, pastor of the Memoral Church of
Christ, Disciples, will be the preach-
er, in exchange with Mr. Chapman
who will be in Mr. Cowin's pulpit.
6 p.m. The Roger Williams guild
meets at Guild house, 503 E. Huron
Three speakers on the subject, "The
Salt of the Campus." Miss Ruth
Enns, Bill. Yorks and Russ Van
Cleve. You will have a chance to ex-
press your own opinion.
An informal acquaintance hour
will follow when refreshments will be r
served.
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
409 S. Div. St.
Sundayvservice at 10:30. Subject,
"Unreality." golden Text: Job 15:31.
Sunday School at 11:45.
The First Congregational Church.
Corner of State and William Streets.
Minister, Rev. Leonard A. Parr, D.D.
10:45 a.m,, Service of worship. The
subject of Dr. Parr's sermon will be
"What comes before Peace?" Miss
Mary Porter, organist, will play
"Adagio" from Widor's Sixth Sym-
phonyhand "Benediction" by Stain-
er. The chorus choir, under the df-
rection of Mr.-Donn Chown, will sing
the anthem, "Lord, for Tender
Mercy's Sake," by Farrant.
9:30 a.m., Intermediate and High
School Departments of the Church
School.
10:45 a.m., Kindergarten and Pri-
mary Departments of the Church
School.
4 P.m. There will be a meeting of
the Teachers and Officers of the
Church School in Pilgrim Hall Sun-
day afternoon at four o'clock.
6 p.m., Student Fellowship. The
first supper meeting of the season
will be held Sunday evening.
8:15 p.m., Joint meeting of Protes-
tant Student Groups, sponsored by
the Inter-Guild Council. Dr. 0.
R. Yoder,. psychiatrist at the Ypsi-
lanti State Hospital will speak on
"Mental Health and Religion." This
meeting will be followed by a recep-
tion in the Church parlor.
First Presbyterian Church, 1432
Washtenaw Avenue.
9:45 a.m., Class in Religion for
University students lead by Dr. Lemon
in the Social Hall beneath the Church
auditorium.
10:45 a.m., "What Determines Des-
tiny?" is the subject of Dr. W. P.
Lemon's sermon at the Morning Wor-
ship Service. The Student choir di-
rected by Palmer Christian will take
part in the service. The musical
numbers will include: Organ Pre-
lude, "Fantaisie" by Franck; Anthem,
"The Kings Highway" by Williams;
Solo, "I will Sing You Songs of Glad-
ness" by Dvorak, Burnette Bradley
Staebler, and Organ Prelude, "Piece
Herouqie" by Franck.
4:30 p.m., World Wide Communion
of the Presbyterian Church in the
U.S.A. and the reception of new meni-
bers.
5:30 p.m., the Westminster Guild,
studentgroup, supper and fellow-
ship hour to be followed by the
meeting at 6:30. Prof. Howard Y.

McClusky will speak on the topic
"The Value of the Church for the
Student." All Presbyterian studentU
and their friends are invited.
St. Andrew's Episcopal Church.
Services of worship Sunday are. 8
a.m., Holy Communion; 9:30 a.m.
Ti,,nr ,irn,- 11 Q zrl---

ill Dormitories
urt Fratern'ties...

W ITHIN THE PAST DECADE the Uni-
versity of Michigan has expanded
its curriculum, it has extended its cultural and
social activities into fields unheard of ten years
ago, and has become a leader in many fields of
advanced research. But this widening of scope,
these advances in the field of learning, have not
been without their unhappy ramifications-rami-
fications which affect the student body and
through it the University.
A necessary adjunct to this broadening of in-
fluence has been the wide-spread plant expansion
of the University which has extended its physical
domain far beyond the confines of the original
campus. The Museums, the Law Qudarangle, the'
League, the Graduate School, the Carrillon and
projected buildings have added and will add their
utilitarian and esthetic contributions to the
University:However, this extension of physical
domain has necessitated extensive razing of
houses bordering the campus on all sides, houses
which in the years up to about 1928 provided
accommodations for from one to two thousand
men.
,University enrollment in 1928 was at the 9,000
mark. This year it bids fair to reach 11,000. So
in the period during which houses accommodat-
ing some 2,000 men were being razed, the enroll-
ment continued to grow by the same number. This.
condition has necessitated the removal of room-
ing houses farther from the campus, while the
shortage of desirable rooms has steadily become
more acute.
A step in the right direction was taken by the
University last year with construction of the
Allen-Rumsey dormitory and this year with the
launching of a $2,100,000 dormitory building pro-
gram to provide adequate housing for 1,000 men.
It is of course only a step, but it is to be remem-
bered that building dormitories is a costly and
tedious undertaking.

No one could listen to the tragically tired voice
of Chamberlain in his report to the empire with-
out being moved. But it also seemed to me that
few could fail to note the ineffectuality of his
words and, indeed, of his entire personality. To
be sure, history may call him a hero, but I be-
lieve it is more likely to identify him as a British-
Hamlet who was, by all the circumstances of his
background, rendered inept for the situation intl
which he was thrust..
It may be that here is the full flower and the
best example of the Tory English gentleman who
muddles through by saying mildly to the strong
tides of economic forces, "But really, sir, that
isn't cricket." Wellington fought a battle which
ended the career of the Hitler of that generation.
And Wellington remarked that Waterloo had been
won and the empire saved upon the playing fields
of Eton.
After listening to Chamberlain's "Tut, tut," I
have a notion that it may be lost in precisely then
same place.
Dewey On Top
The extraordinary scenes of enthusiasm which
greeted Mr. Thomas E. Dewey in the Saratoga
convention were, in part, the cheers of politicians
for a strong leader and a victory candidate. They
represented even more, we are confident, the re-
joicing of the whole party over its rebirth as the
representative of youth and of progress.
The brief speech of acceptance which Mr.
Dewey made was typical of his steady forthright-
ness. He minced no words about the blindness
of his own party leaders in the past. He wasted
no time in attacking his opponents in any parti-
san sense. It was toward the future that he
looked and it was the future that he proposed to
discuss in the forthcoming campaign.
His discussion of his personal problem in reach-
ing his decision to accept the nomination was
typically candid and conclusive. We share the
regret of our readers that Mr. Dewey will, upon
becoming Governor, cease to be District Attorney
management-a responsibility which, of course,
cannot be permanently sidestepped.
Much of the spadework for a program of con-
n .; m _ i r n r n-n ii- intr no s rnnr - _'h o

racketeering in
throughout the,

not one county but search, and U. S. Bureau of Fisheries,
sixty-two counties of and graduate students in zoology are

the state. As to the local problems of9
Manhattan Mr. Dewey has showna
himself to be far more than a single-
handed prosecutor. He has demon-
strated an ability to select and organ-
ize which will serve him in good steadj
at Albany and which has already giv-!
en this city a non-political, complete-
ly honest and thoroughly able District;
Attorney's office. When he goes the,
will name his successor. In the mean-
time his office has ample prosecuting
ability for the cases in hand; it has]
also the extraordinary detailed and
studied records of evidence which Mr.
Dewey's organizing ability has placed
at the service of the people of the
state.
! Mr. Dewey promises to discuss the
issues in detail during the course of
the campaign. In the general outlines
that he has sketched he has already
made plain that his face is toward
the future. He is neither for nor
against a goal because the New Deal
has adopted it. He is for the realities
of liberalism efficiently pursued, in
contrast with the ,shibboleths of lib-
eralism, lost in a fo gof incompe-

invited. Their wives are likewise in-
vited to attend.
Freshman Round Table: Professor
Howard Y. McClusky will speak on
the subject "Personality Traits - and
Their Evaluation" at the Freshman
Round Table Sunday, four o'clock,
at Lane Hall. All Freshman are wel-
come.
Varsity Men's Debate: There will
be a meeting of all men interested in
Varsity debate Tuesday, Oct. 4, in
Room 4203 Angell Hall.

1

Varsity Glee Club: Rehearsal
old men at 4:30, Sunday, Oct. 2.

fort

Glee Club: Tryouts for new men to.
be held in the club room at the
Union from 4 to 5:30 Sunday.
Eta Kappa Nu Members: The first
monthly meeting will be held at the
Union Sunday, Oct. 2 at 7 o'clock.
Dinner in the Tap Room at six p.m.
Case Club: Because of the unpre-

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