FOU HE l ic j(, A tbAfL. THURSUAY, NOV. 2, '1 .i . .:...., .... . .::..yam .......a ., ..;.... .. .> _ a:u...,ra. ,eau Fifty-Fifth Year Time for a Change? DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I.- .14r r '! Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Evelyn Phillips . . . . . Managing Editor Stan Wallace . . . .. City Editor Ray Dixon . . . . Associate Editor Hank Mantho . .. - Sports Editor Dave Loewenberg . . Associate Sports Editor Mavis Kennecly . . . . Women's Editor Business Staff Lee Amer Business Manager Telephone 23-24.1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches creited to It or otherwise credited in this newspaper, All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.25. Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 194344 NIGHT EDITOR: AGGIE MILLER, Editorials published in The Michigan are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. Fiffty-Fifth Year The Michigan Daily is entering its fifty-fifth year of publication today and at the same time is beginning its ninth senester of publica- tion during the war. All the wartime responsi- bilities which are ours, we, as the senior editors, understand and will gravely undertake to meet. The Daily has a long and illustrious history of service established by students for the Univer- sity community. We take this opportunity to assure you that the high standards set up in the past will be maintained by the staff for you, the students of today. We feel it our duty to serve the University community in a double capacity: first, to give the students and members of the faculty as complete and comprehensive coverage of the University and campus events as possible, and second, to present an accurate, honest and un- biasted picture of our nation and our world at war. These things are not easy to do, but we set them up as goals worthy of our best ef- forts. We will welcome expressions of opinion from students and faculty at any time in the hope that these thoughts will help us give a fairer representation of current views on our campus. To these things we pledge ourselves and also ask your sincere interest in order to serve the University in the best way possible as a stu- dent newspaper functioning in war time. -The Senior Staff Bicycle Rule Everyone on campus during the summer and previous semesters must certainly be aware of the hundreds of bicycles tearing along the diagonals and other paths on campus. Any- one with eyes can see the destruction that bicy- cles have wrought on the lawns when impatient riders steer them around pedestrian traffic. Bicycles are a constant threat to all who walk on the campus and the damage done to the grass, not only mars the face of the campus, but results in costly repair work. There exists a rule forbidding bicycle riding across campus but few know about it and no one enforces it. The rule is necessary but it must be complemented by more practical provisions for those, who living far from campus, ride bicycles to and from class. For these people, I think that the Uniiver- sity ought to construct at all four corners of the campus bicycles racks to accomodate at least 30 bicycles each. Students riding to campus from far away residences will be able to park their bicycles at one of the four racks and walk through the diagonal to classes. This will eliminate the danger of injury to pedestrians from bicycles and will further curb the costly damage done to the campus lawns. -Arthur Kraft * YES Twelve years have' passed since 1932, during the first four years of which the basic economic philosophy of the American people had to be abandoned, and government regulation sub- stituted if we were truly to have free enterprise; 12 years during which America followed late in the path of the other democratic natigns in inaugurating a policy of social security and recognizing the right to collective bargaining. By 1936 these major reforms had been enacted in law. America had achieved its economic metamorphosis, and in recognition of the work of the first Roosevelt administration, re-elected it by the greatest electoral majority received by, any caididate since 1820. But as this era of good feeling gave way to the era of ill will, so dissen- sion and bickering became part and parcel of the succeeding two terms of the Roosevelt Ad- ministration. - New Deal is Old The New Deal had grown old; old not in the sense that, breaking all precedent, it had served three terms in office under the same leader, but old in the sense that its days of reform were ended, that there was constant bickering over spheres of authority among the host of administration-created agencies; old in that ,since the Supreme Court reorganiza- tion fight of 1937 the executive was having greater and greater difficulty in getting along with his party supporters in Congress, until in 1944 his workC had been denounced on the floor of the Senate by the Democratic leader in that House. When in July of this year the Democratic party was called on to choose its Presidential candidate, it was forced to turn again to Frank- lin D. Roosevelt, the only leader it has found, despite its having been in power for the last 12 years. Both major campaigns have been marred by mud-slinging. But ..in comparing these cam- paigns, it appears that Dewey's has been char- acterized by an attempt at straightforward analysis and presentation of the issues before the people.. Speech by speech he dealt with labor, post-war reconstruction, foreign 'policy. In each case he made his position clear. In contrast the Democrats have resorted to Sher- woodian humor, smug dismissal but no dis- proof of Republican charges, a revival of 1932 campaign issues, and a large helping of vague generalities presented in the manner of an agi- tated Cheshire cat,, vainly trying to regain its famous purr and smile. Democrats Say Thus far in the campaign we have been led to believe: That only the Democrats, by using an exclusively Democratic military strategy, have waged a successful war in Europe, and that if given four more years time, will do the same in the West Pacific, to the everlasting glory of the Democratic party. That in only eight years, with the advent of the war bom in 1940, the Democrats have rescued us from economic chaos. That if re-elected, the Democrats will speedily try to relieve racial discrimination in the armed forces, although four years of intense military consciousness have so far produced little action in that line. That, in answer to Dewey's de- tailed promise of post-war employment, Roose- velt has given us placid but vague assurance that if he is re-elected, there will immediately be provided 60 million brand new jobs, notwith- standing that between 1932 and 1940 a Demo- cratic administration, complete with WPA, PWA, and CC, had provided only 10 million jobs. (When he promised this job bonanza last Saturday night, Roosevelt saw no need to men- tion that in 1940 10 million persons were still jobless.) Old Style Campaign Roosevelt, who in July refused to campaign in a usual sense, has indeed reverted to his most common style of amused amazement at any questioning of his infallibility. His formula still is to dismiss a vital issue with a joke (it has worked for him before, so why not again?) His only hopes of re-election are that he is now in office and that he is a war-time president. Dewey has been criticized for lack of "na- tional experience"-criicized perhaps because New York State is his job, and he has spent most of his time and interest in doing that state job well. Before he became president, Roosevelt had the same job. The New Deal has outgrown its usefulness. An administration which the New York Times admits needs a thorough housecleaning can- not cope with the manifold problems of post- war reconstruction. One man diplomacy ad- ministered 'with the weapon of executive agreement can make no peace suitable to the American people, much less to an unconsulted Congress. -Monroe Fink -Raymond Shinn NO The current presidential race has so many sidelights that it is difficult for the voter to come to an honest and wise decision. Over and above the expected personality slurs and "politi- cal generalities," there are a few fundamental points that the intelligent citizen can grasp and evaluate to his own satisfaction. Candidate Dewey struck the central note of his policy Tuesday night when he asked that we . . "Direct all government policies toward the goal of full employment through full pro- duction at a high level of wages with an incen- tive for the business man to succeed." Utopia How? For. this noble statement of a goal Governor Dewey is to be commended but when we look for the means by which he wants to attain his utopia, we find no answer. The big question is HOW? This same goal the Republican party stood staunchly for in the roaring '20's and yet. we lived to regret the methods used. By the traditional GOP "green light method" which attempts to give everybody just what they want, we experienced economic convulsions which practically ruined our economic structure. Dewey advocates, and his party heartily supports him, a free enterprise which would permit freedom for anybody to do whatever he wished regard- less of the best interests of the nation. We have only to remember the activities of former president Herbert ,Hoover when he was Secretary of Commerce. Through his Trade Associations, all industry was organized into councils-a forerunner of the NRA which Dewey so caustically denounced Tuesday night-which set prices for all interests in a particular in- dustry. Here were Mr. Dewey's "government cartels" organized and fostered by his GOP predecessors and which he now claims to disavow so loudly. Here was his "fair treatment to all" in operation that keptthe small businessman swamped under by big business monopoly when the farmer, whom he now culls as a lover, could not purchase city goods because of the price. 'Green Light' Yes, this was Republican "green light" free enterprise that worked for the personal gain of the few and to the eventual desperation of the entire nation. ' Dewey knows as well as any thinking Ameri- can that the classic economyof Adam Smith has not worked in the past and will not work in the future. He knows it must be modified an con- trolled and gives lip service to this principle first introduced on the national level in 1932. Yet, is it conceivable that Dewey will be able to follow this progressive line when the Re- publican Party is riddled with Adam Smith followers? Dewey also had the unmitigated nerve to shout that Roosevelt has read the GOP plat- form and has said "me too." In reality it is Mr. Dewey who has said "rne too" to all the reforms that the New Deal has brought into being in the last 12 years. Dewey has repeatedly come forth with his "me too" on every domestic reform that this country has seen under the Roosevelt Adnini- stration. He supports collective bargaining, and social security, and all the rest. The Re- publican party now yells "bravo" but our mem- ories are not so short that we can't recall that all these might have been instituted in the 12 Republican years following the first world war. The reform movement in this country which Dewey now praises was completely sidetracked and retarded by the GOP presidents before Roosevelt. Back to Normalcy Because it is not good politics and because it arouses a distinct odium, the Republicans have failed to drag out Harding's slogan of "Sack to normalcy." But in effect that is just the line the Republican candidate is using. It was bold and imaginative leadership that brought this nation out of the depths of Re- publican chaos in 1932. Roosevelt gave a new faith and a new spirit to the nation then. It wasn't a question of how or when or why. "We must do the job, we will do the job" And now again within 12 years the nation faces an even bigger and more important task. And again bold and strong leadership will lead the way to security and prosperity at home. All through the campaign we have heard "yes, that is a fine program but I can do it better." But not once in all his utterances has Mr. Dewey ever demonstrated how. The issues are too grave and the future security of the nation is too important to trust America's future to an unproven and uncertain leader! -Ray Dixon -Stan Wallace (Continued from Page 3) Freshman Health Lectures for' Men: Fall Term-1944. It is a Uni- versity requirement that all entering freshmen are required to take, With- out credit, six lecturesin community and personal health and to pass an examination on the content of these lectures. Transfer students with freshman standing are also required to take the course unless they have had a similar course elsewhere. These lectures will be given in Rm. 25, Angell Hall at 5 p.m. and repeated at 7:30 p.m.. as per the following schedule. Lectur( 1 2 3 4 5 6 Please quired e No. Day Monday Tuesday: Wednesday Thursday Monday Tuesday note that attendance and roll will be taken. W Date Nov. 6 Nov. 7 Nov. 8 Nov. 9 Nov. 13 Nov. J. is re- Warren E. Forsythe, M.D. Director, Health ServiceC Social Chairmen are reminded that requests for all social events must be filed in the Office of -the Dean of Students on the Monday before the event. They must be accompanied by written acceptance from two sets of APPROVED chaperons and in the case of fraternities and sororities, by approval, from the financial adviser. Approved chaperons may be 1) par- ents of active members or pledges, 2) professors, associate professors or assistant professors, or 3) couples already approved by the Office of the Dean of Students. A list of the third group may be seen at any time at the Office of the Dean of Stu- dents. Eligibility Certificates: Certificates. of eligibility for extra-curricular ac- tivities can be issued at once by the Office of the Dean of Students if each student will bring with him the latest blueprint or photostat copy of his record. Women's Glee Club: All eligible students are urged to try out for the Women's Glee Club on, Thursday, Nov. 2, or Friday, Nov. 3, from 4 until 5:30 in the Kalamazoo Room of the Women's League. General Library Hours: Until fur- ther notice, the General Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, except Sunday. Sundays hours will be 2 to 9 p.m. Over-night books may be returned without penalty until 9 a.m. daily. Rules governing participation in Public Activities: I. Participation in Public Activities:' Participation in a public activity is defined as service of any kind on a committee or a publication, in a pub- lic performance or a rehearsal, or in holding office in a class or other student organization. This list is not intended to be exhaustive, but merely is indicative of the character and scope of the activities included. IIL Certificate of Eligibility; At the beginning of each semester and sum- mer session every student shall be conclusively presumed to be ineligi- ble for ,any public activity until his eligibility is affirmatively established by obtaining from the. Chairman of the Committee on Student Affairs, in the Office of. the Dean of Stu- dents, a Certificate of Eligibility. Participation before the opening of the first semester must be approved as at any other time. Before permitting any students to participate in a public activity (see definition of Participation above), the chairman or manager of such activity shall (a) require each appli- cant to present a certificate of eli- gibility (b) sign his initials on the back of such certificate and (c) file with the Chairman of the Committee on Student Affairs the names of all' those who have presented certificates of eligibility and a signed statement to exclude all others from participa- tion. Blanks for the chairmen's lists may be obtained in the Office of the Dean of Students. Certificates of Eligibility for the first semester shall be effective until March 1. III. Probation and Warning: Students on probation or the warned list are forbidden to participate in any pub- lic activity. IV. Eligibility, First Year: No fresh- man in his fist semester of residence may be granted a Certificate of Eli- gibility. A freshman, during his second semester of residence, may be grant- ed a Certificate of Eligibility pro- vided he has completed 15 hours or more of work with (1) at least one mark of A or B and with no mark of less than C, or (2) at least 2% times as many honor points as hours and with no mark of E. (A-4 points, B-3, C-2, D-1. E-0). Any student in his first semester of residence holding rank above that of freshman may be granted a Cer- tificate of Eligibility if he was admit- ted to the University in good stand- ing. V. Eligibility, General: In order to receive a Certificate of Eligibility a student must have earned at least 11 hours of academic credit in the pre- ceding semester, or 6 hours of aca- demic credit in the preceding sum- mer session, with an average of at least C, and have at least 4 C average for his entire academic career. Unreported grades and grades of X and I are to be interpreted as E until removed in accordance with Univer- sity regulations. If in the opinion of the Committee on Student Affairs the X or I cannot be removed promp- tly, the parenthetically reported grade may be used in place of the X or I in computing the average. Students who are ineligible under Rule V may participate only after having received special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs. VI Special Students: Special students are prohibited from participating in any public activity except by special permission of the Committee on Stu- dent Affairs' VII. Extramural Activities: Students who are ineligible to participate in public activities within the Univer- sity are prohibited from taking part in other activities of a similar na- ture, except by special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs. VIII. Physical Disability: Students ex-' cused from gymnasium work on account of physical incapacity areS forbidden to take part in any public activity, except by special permission of the Committee on Student Affairs. In order to obtain such permission, a student may in any case be re-c quired to present a written recom-; mendation from the University1 Health Service. IX. General: Whenever in the opinion of the Committee on Student Affairs,i or in the opinion of the Dean of the School or College in which the stu- dent is enrolled, participation. in a public activity may be detrimental to his college work, the committee may decline to grant a student the privilege of participation in such1 activity. X. Special Permission: The special permission to participate in public activities in exception of Rules V, VI, VII, VIII will be granted by the Committee on Student Affairs only upon the positive recommendation of the Dean of the School or College to which the student belongs. XI. Discipline: Cases of violation of these rules will be reported to the proper disciplinary authority for action. XII. Officers, Chairmen and Managers: Officers, chairmen and managers of committees and projects who violate the Rules Governing Participation in Public Activities may be directed to appear before the Committee on Student Affairs to explain their neg- ligence. Academic Notices To All Male Students in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: By action of the Board of Regents, all male students in residence in this College must elect Physical Educa- tion for Men. This action has been effective since June, 1943, and will continue for the duration of the war. Students may be excused from taking the course by (1) The Uni- versity Health Service, (2) The Dean of the College or by his representa- tive, (3) The Director of Physical Education and Athletics. Petitions for exemption by stu- dents in this College should be ad- dressed by freshmen to Professor Arthur Van Duren, Chairman of the Academic Counselors (108 Mason Hall); by all other students to Assis- tant Dean E. A. Walter (1220 Angell Hall.) Except under very extraordinary estry, Music and Public Health: Stu- dents who received marks of I or X at the close of their last semester or summer session of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by Dec. 2. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition addressed to the ap- propriate official in their school with Rm. 4, U.H. where it will be trans- mitted. Robert L. Williams Assistant Registrar Graduate Students: Preliminary examinations in French and German for the doctorate will be held on Fri- day, Nov. 10, from 4 to 6 p.m.in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Buil- ding. Dictionaries may be used. Anthropology 157, Evolution of Culture, will meet in Rm. 2054, Nat- ural Science, on Friday, Nov. 3. Thereafter it will meet in 35 Angell Hall. English 197: Students who have been accepted for English 197 (Sen- ior Honors Course) will meet in 3217 Angell Hall, Friday, Nov. 3, at 5 p.m. W. R. Humphreys English 211g, the Pro-Seminar in American Literature, will not be offered this year. Students who elec- ted this course should see me about changing their programs. N . N. E. Nelson English 297: Students in my sec- tion of this course will meet to arrange hours Friday, Nov. 3, at 4:15 in Rm. 3216, Angell Hall. E. A. Walter Concerts Choral Union Concerts: Helen Traubel, distinguished Wagnerian so- prano of the Metropolitan Opera, will open the season in the annual Choral Union Concert Series, Satur- day night, Nov. 4, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. She will present a pro- gram of songs and arias, and will be assisted by Coenraad Bos at the piano. The public is respectfully requested to come sufficiently early as to be seated on time, since the doors will be closed during numbers. Holders of season tickets are further request- ed to detch coupon No. 1 before leaving home, and present only this coupon for admission. Other coneerts to be given in this series are: Cleveland Orchestra, George Szell, Conductor, Sunday, Nov. 12. (this concert will begin at 7 p.m. promptly and will be broadcast nationally and by short wave. Audience must be seated before the opening of the program). Fritz Kreisler, violinist, Friday, Nov. 17. Simon. Barere, pianist, Monday, Nov. 27 (Mr. Barere will be heard instead of Josef Lhevinne, previously announced). Carroll Glenn, violinist, Tuesday, Dec. 5. Boston Symphony Orchestra, Serge Koussevitzky, Conductor, Monday, Dec. 11. Vladimir1Horowitz, pianist, Mon- day, Jan. 15. Dorothy Maynor, soprano, Satur- day, Feb. 3. Westminster Choir, John Finley Williamson, Conductor, Sunday, Feb. 11. Chicago Symphony Orchestra, De- sire Defauw, Conductor, Monday, March 19. Season tickets (10 concerts), tax included: $14.40, $12.00, $9.60 and $7.20; and individual concerts, $3.00, $2.40; $1.80 and $1.20 each. May be purchased at offices of University Musical Society, Burton Memorial Tower. On the night of the concert the box office at Hill 'Auditorium will open at 7 o'clock. Charles A. Sink, President Ruckus Night tonight at the USO. University Press Club: Members of the Faculty are urged to assist the University by providing accommoda- tions for visiting Michigan newspa- per editors and their wives, who will be guests of the University during the meetings of the University Press Club Thursday, Friday and Saturday, Nov. 9, 10 and 11. Rooms will be needed for Thursday and Friday nights, and the existing housing shortage has preempted many of the facilities used in past years. Anyone able to assist is asked to write to D. H. Haines, Dept. of Journalism, 212 Haven Hall, stating the number of accommodations available and whether or not they may be occupied on both Thursday and Friday night. The delegates will of course expect to pay for their entertainment. F. E. Robbins Appointments are being made for BARNABY By Crockett Johnson War Chest No extraneous matters must influence the election, gentlemen. If the war's doing that, there's only one fair thing to do isn't there? Call off the war! I've said that in my editorials, Too late, too. But I'm afraid it's too late- Colonel Wurst?.. It's only 1938 by, my watch. I rF r CROCA(.E-r() .oprht 94 f..dPulictins 1*- 91-14 O'lli-M7 You're right, A.A., as usual.. . A cable just arrived from Munich. a /7 B -PEACE IN 1 oUR TIME '. m Today opens solicitation of students for the War Chest drive to which all students are being urged to contribute generously for by Monday the remaining $13,000 of the $23,000 quota set for students and faculty must be raised. Booths in the League and Union will be opened for the convenience of all students and hnlmp , niimwi h . wleni tod hv rpnrefbe lent- i How can yov win the election going Chancellor Hitler has a watch like I I' ost precocious child I've '1 I .