PAGE FOUR THE MTCHTGAN DATIY FRIAY. OCTOB~VER 8, 1949 U . vaa.r arr. ... vva. v!ava' adv 1v.2V 7 "1 Opportunity IT LOOKS LIKE ten years of discussion, planning and research have really taken faculty evaluation at the University of Michigan out of the dream world. Apparently glued to its place on the proverbial shelf, the program was almost forgotten until 1946, when the newly formed Student Legislature decided to see what they could do. With the help of Professors Theodore Newcomb and Donald Marquis of the psy- chology department, Legislature members drew up a questionnaire. It would provide information ranging from the instructors knowledge of his subject, to his ability to arouse interest; and from the fairness of exams to the value of the textbook. The questionnaiire was thoroughly tested by the psychology department whose report said the form was "a stimulating device" but was not yet the answer to the problem. However, with amendments made by the psychology department, and with final approval of a special administrative com- mittee, it looked like things were ready to go. . . until "administrative difficulties" :sent the program back to its well-worn niche in somebody's files. NOW, FINALLY, the last wrinkles are ironed and the program is going into effect. Although the student side of the pro- gram will only be "weighed in with the rest of the data"-compiled by fellow faculty members and departmental committees, the final success of the program rests squarely with the student body. The Student Legislature, the psychology department and the deans of the literary college are to be heartily congratulated for the painstaking work and effort they have given to the plan. And now, if the cries for better teaching are to be answered, (and if tic-tac-toe anc classtime thirty winks are to be pleasantly obliterated) literary college students must accept this new and important responsibility to "themselves. A successful faculty evaluation system provides a positive opportunity for students .to help shape their own education. --Naomi Stern. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: AL BLUMROSEN Whither? MANY a bewildered coal miner is saying "Whither now, John L.?" to the boss of the United Mine Workers today. John L. Lewis surprised the 40th annual UMW convention by demanding that the Union hike-its yearly membership dues from $24 a year to $48 and zoom its initiation fee from $10 to $50. And when Lewis says 'do' the Union 'does' because in the past their gruff leader's commands have worked out. In past years they have followed his lead on a path that wandered from AFLI to independence, to CIO, to AFL and back again to independence. But in all of these moves, he appeared to have the miner's problems at heart. They even followed his tune when he reg- ularly swapped political parties on the basisI of what he could get for UMW. He supported Franklin D. Roosevelt twice. Then men were satisfied. When war came, every coal-heaver relig- iously followed him when the strikes he pro- posed interfered with war production. If he said "Go out" they went out; and they got the wage demands and privileges that were rightfully theirs. "Send the old dictator to Jail'" was the popular cry recently when one of John L.'s "no work" commands threatened to choke our basic industries at a delicate moment in Russian relations. Many with- held their judgment..UMW had a right to at least partial control of the miners' pension plan and once labor bowed to "national security" the way would be open for complete subjugation of labor. The workers dismissed the idea that their' leader was a neurotic old man with a dic- tatorial yen because everything he did was apparently for their benefit in the longest run. But now Lewis wants to jack up union dues 100 per cent. Not that the union needs money-it certainly doesn't-but because membership is "more valuable" with the pension plan in operation. A rich man's union for coal miners seems somewhat incongruous. Whither Now, John L.? -Craig H. Wilson. Talk Fest THE GATHERING of about a hundred students in front of the diag Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss politics was healthy sign. The whole thing started out calmly enough. Members of the Wallace Pro- gressives stationed themselves in front Board of Review P. T. BARNUM was wrong. There's one born about every 10 seconds and Hollywood, bless its silvered heart, knows it. In fact, the old cash register in the flickers capital must ring with joy every time a new citizen begins life-a life during which each little patron can reasonably ex- pect to see at least a thousand pictures. But the smirk which masks each movie magnate's map must diminish each time the nation's theatres display his latest "sensation." For nowadays the face of the average movie goer, we are willing to wager, falls an average two inches every time he sees an "average" picture. The sad fact of the whole matter is: Mov- ies are getting worse. And what is sadder is the fact that they are deteriorating so rapidly. And the exceptions, worst of all, are quickly becoming phenomena. "So what?" comes the old question. No- body has to go to the movies. Theyare there, and in a free country nobody is coerced to patronize them; they can take them or leave them at will, they can thrust their four-bits back into their pockets with the self-determination and good judgment of a small boy who resists the temptation of a ten-cent circus side show. All of which is, superficially, a good argument. But consider this, that in many American cities and towns the movies are virtually a monopoly, as far as enter- tainment goes. They are either the only medium of dramatic art for everybody or they are the only medium the man with the average income can afford. So its not really a take 'em or leave 'em matter. In fact, in Ann Arbor, on a Sunday night anyway, you can go to the movies or stay home, and that's all. This staying home idea is one of two solutions to the problem. The other is the establishment of a National Board of Motion Picture Review that would, or would not, recommend pictures on the basis of their educational, entertainment or cultural value. Under government supervision, this board, composed of experts, would disseminate its opinion and let the people decide whether or not to follow it. True, it would be only an opinion, and as people's opinions vary, there would be a lot of disagreement. But the board could uncover, before this nation of suckers could bite, the worst of Hollywood's efforts, the atrocities fall- ing into the "How could they do it?" class. What about free enterprise? Well, it's time the nation started questioning a free enter- prise that can foist upon the innocent public such inferior, defective, falsely ad- vertised products as have been appearing recently. Free enterprise implies freedom for the buyer, as well as the entrepreneur. You can buy a good car and pay.a high price, or you can buy a poorer car at a lower price. By that reasoning, "Another Part of the Forest" should have cost us 50 cents, which it did. But "The Miracle of the Bells," then, should have cost about a nickel. We shelled out the same for both. What kind of free enterprise is that? -George Walker "Day In, Day Out, Him And His Damn Muscles" -_ ,A, -- z. _ e2w_ _ Letters to the Editor,.. 44 E f2 %t.~ - c +G ON.1T fl wA$.4,dCW, VO Ye v.t DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Dull Campaign By SAMUEL GRAFTON THE REASON this has been such a dull election campaign is that the people do not expect anything good of the near future. Somewhere near half the population has to expect, and has to have reasonable ground for expecting, that something good may or will happen in order to make a hot cam- paign, a hard-fought, exciting campaign. In the Roosevelt campaigns the issues were relief or not relief, jobs or not jobs, then, later, isolation or not-isolation, and the cam- paigns were really campaigns. One fought for the future. The future isn't an issue in this cam- paign, and that is enough to dull down any election contest. So far as the people can see, the future will be about the same re- gardless of which party wins, a state of permanent crisis in foreign affairs, and, at home, a disorderly, unplanned, uncon- trolled retreat from the postwar boom. They look around for a break somewhere in this picture, and they don't see it. It is, as a result, a sad, complex election. All the splendid emotions of just a few years ago, our feelings on behalf of estab- lishing this as one world, and our feelings on behalf of improving our society by driv- ing hard at steady, sensible reform, are now bottled up. And it is not that the people no longer want these things; the trouble goes, deeper-they cannot seem to find a way to get these questions put on the agenda, to get them mentioned and included in the order of the day. And it is customary, especially among Mr. Wallace's supporters, to explain all this on the basis of a sinister agreement between the major parties against peace and reform. I could almost wish this were true; it would reduce our problems to a, babyish simplicity. Instead, I find I have the truly terrible feeling that the thing is much worse than that, that our disloca- tions are quite real, that the bipartisan agreement, if there is one, is the result of our dislocation and the cause of it. We cannot continue our reform movement during a jumping inflation any more than one can make a wild and somewhat drunken party come to order for the purpose of hear- ing a few well-chosen words on the subject of human happiness. The aims of our re- form movement, complete employment and increase of purchasing power, have all been accomplished, in a distorted, leering way by the inflation itself; enough so to cripple reform, if not enough so to make us safe. And in the foreign field, the point is that nobody in the world really knows whether peace is possible. The position is unprecedented; there has never been this situation of a world divided, half into cap- italist and half into communist spheres, and there is no one who can truly and positively say whether the halves can make peace. To disregard this huge, planetary shift, and to say that we are currently unhappy only because a few Democrats and a few Republicans feel like making war is absurd; that does not solve the world problem, it is merely a pretense that there is no such problem. But there is, and the bipartisan agreement is only a sign of it, not the cause. If the people sensed a real hope of makin an agreed peace, the bipartisan agreement would crack; it exists because the world, problem exists, and not because a few men have whispered together. The Russians could crack it themselves, by significant ges- tures toward peace; and if it be said that they can't make such moves, that is all the more evidence that our problem is genuine, position. And the vocal fracas got pretty and must be lived through, and not imagi- nary and to be shrugged off. So the final sad word is that our problems are quite real, even if our candidates' speech- es are not. Our trouble goes so deep that our election itself is more a sign of it than an answer to it. And it is only by realistically accepting these grim perspectives that we' can make even a beginning toward wisdom and a solution. Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) Current Movies At the Michigan ..., "LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOM- AN," with Joan Fontaine and Louis Jour- dan.. THIS AGONIZING tale of a great one- sided love is rather obviously designed to clutch at your heartstrings. And although we admire honest effort, we are forced to say that this particular tear-jerker doesn't quite come off.. For ninety minutes, Miss Fontaine sustains an unrelenting flow of tears in her vain pur- suit of Mr. Jourdan. And although she re- mains body-and-soul for Louis from valup- tuous girlhood through middle age, he stead- fastly refuses to give more than a passing damn for her. Eventually, after several reels of emotional agony, the tale drags to a weary conclusion. It must be said that Miss Fontaine does her level best to turn in an Oscar-worthy performance. Mr. Jourdan, however, ap- pears to have no more interest in the'pic- ture than in Miss Fontaine's selfless love. As the grim-visaged caricature of the handsome cad, he fails miserably in meet- ing the acting standards that Miss Fon- taine labors to achieve. Although he may, euphemistically speaking, possess some de- gree of "box office" appeal, he is sad sup- port for a sincere actress. In spite of this harsh opinion, however, the central fault here-as in many pictures seems to lie in the scenario. Love may be a powerful emotional force, but the reason- less obsession shown in this pictude is not even sentimental-it is pathetic. Further, Miss Fontaine was handed a number of lines that brought the audience to laughter when it was supposed to be hauling out the hankies. The movie-going public is usually willing to bend over backwards in accepting the improbable. But this is just too much t.o take. -Bob White. * * * At the State .. . "ARE YOU WITH IT?" with Donald O'Connor. A MISPLACED DECIMAL point is just something for an embryonic engineer to cuss over, but to Actuary Haskins, it seemed the period to his career at Nutmeg Insurance Co. Brooding over his one mistake, Donald O'Connor, Harvard's gift to the number's racket, encounters carnival man Lew Parker and finds that his way with dance steps and slide rules can have a livelier out on the midway. "He gets with it" as the performers put it, and his ex-secretary and would be wife comes along to save him from the gals in gilt and the wicked life. With the flimsiest kind of a plot to keep things going, every- body gets to show his stuff, and the in- (Continued from Page 3) Congregational Disciples Guild Deutscher Verein F. F. Fraternity Forestry Club Galens Gamma Delta Gilbert and Sullivan Grace Bible Guild Graduate Outing Club Hawaii Club Hiawatha Club Hillel Foundation Institute of Aeronautical Sciences Intercollegiate Zionist Federation of America Intercooperative Council Interfraternity Council Interguild International Relations Club Inter-racial Association Journalism Society Kappa Phi Kindai Nihon Kenkyu Kai Les Vyageurs Lutheran Student Association Men's Judiciary Council Michigamua Michigan Christian Fellowship Michigan Crib Modern Poetry Club National Lawyers' Guild Newman Club Orthodox Students' Society Panhellenic Association Philippine-Michigan Club Polonia Club Pre-Medical Society Quarterdeck Rifle Club Rogers Williams Guild Scalp and Blade Scimitar Club Senior Society Sociedad Hispanica Sphinx Students' Evangelical Chapter Student Religious Association Toledo Club Triangles Ullr Ski Club Undergraduate Psychology Society Unitarian Student Group United Nations Council of Students Underwriters United World Federalists Wallace Progressives Wesleyan Guild Westminster Guild Wolverine Club Women's Athletic Association Women's Judiciary Council Wyvern Young Democrats Young Progressive Citizens of Michigan Young Republicans Academic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar: Rm. 319, W. Medical Bldg., 4 p.m., Fri., Oct. 8. Subject: "Thiocyanate Metabolism." All interested are in- vited. Electrical Engineering Depart- ment Colloquium: 4 p.m., Fri., Oct. 8, Rm. 2084 E. Engineering Bldg. Prof. A. D. Moore will speak on "Electrical Engineering and Bi- ology." Forestry 194 Examination: 8 a.m., Fri., Oct. 8, Rm. 25, Angell Hall. Exhibitions Drawings and Water Colors from the collection of John S. Newber- ry, Jr., and Prints by the Graphic Circle: Museum of Art, Alumni Memorial Hall, daily 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sundays 2-5 p.m. The public is invited. Events Today Visitor's Night, Department of Astronomy-7:30 to 9:30 p.m., An- gell Hall (fifth floor), for obser- vation of the Moon. Visitor's Night will be cancelled if the sky is cloudy. Children must be accom- panied by adults. (Other Visitor's Nights during the first semester will be held on Oct. 22 and Nov. 12.) Geological - Mineralogical Jour- nal Club. 12 noon, Rm. 3056 N.S. Speaker, Dr. E. Wm. Heinrich, of the Department of Mineralogy. Subject of the illustrated address: "Pre-Beltian Rocks Near Dillon, Montana." All interested persons are invited. Art Cinema League presents Marcel Pagnol's "Marius," French film starring Raimu and Charpin at 8:30 p.m., Fri., and Sat., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All seats reserved. Delta Epsilon Pi, Hellenic Fra- ternity, invites all students of Greek descent and Phil-Hellenes to attend its open meeting, 7:15 p.m., Rm. 3-B, Michigan Union. Plans to hold the Mid-West Re-' gional Convention in Ann Arbor will be discussed. German Coffee Hour: 3-4:30 p.m., Michigan League Coke Bar. All students and faculty members invited. Roger Williams Guild will hold an "All Hands Party" at 8:30 p.m. at the Guild House. Come in jeans. Hillel Foundation: Sabbath Eve- ning Services, 7:45 p.m., followed by "International Night" social hour. SRA Coffee Hour: 4:30-6 p.m., Lane Hall Lounge. S.R.A. Coffee Hour: 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall Lounge. Student Peace Fellowship will meet in the Meditation Room at 7:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Coming Events Alpha Epsilon Iota invites all medical women students to their Annual Tea, Sun., Oct. 10, 4-6 p.m., 119 Park Terrace. Inter-Guild Functional Com- mittee Workshop: 2 p.m., Sat., Oct., 9, Methodist Church. All Guild committee members and presidents and all Inter-Guild representatives are urged to at- tend. W.S.S.F. Area Conference will meet Saturday at Lane Hall. Reg- istration, 9 a.m. S.R.A. Luncheon Discussion group: 12:15 Saturday in Lane Hall. Reservations may be made by calling Lane Hall before 10 a.m. Saturday. 1948 Pacific Tour members and friends are invited to see color slides and snapshots of the tour Wed., Oct. 13, 7:15 p.m., 904 Pack- ard Street, Ann Arbor. Russian Circle: Meeting, 8 p.m., Mon., Oct. 11, International Cen- ter. Slides on peoples of Russia with commentary; short talk on Study of Russian in Czechoslo- vakia. The Daily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column. Subject to space limitations, the general pol- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature and address. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tious letters and letters of a defama- tory character or such letters which for any other reason are not in good taste will not be published. The editors reserve the privilege of con- densing letters. * * * Ignorant? To the Editor: Many eop1e who support Thomas K Dewey for President do so without actually knowing the interests they are serving. An an- alysis of the financial backers of Dewey's campaigns, since 1940, shows that they are leading figures in top financial and industrial circles. The most prominent group is the oil trust. Among these con- tributors are: John D. Rockefel- ler, Jr. of the Standard Oil; Joseph N. Pew, Jr. of Sun Oil; Winthrop Aldrich of the Chase National Bank (Rockefeller Bank); Alfred P. Sloan of General Motors; George Whitney of J. P. Morgan Co; The Guggenheims of Kenne- cott Copper; Elisha Walker of Kuhn, Loeb and Co.; John T. Pratt of Standard Oil. An important influence on Dewey is Frank Gannett, a power in upstate New York Republican Politics, publisher of a string of newspapers, founder and head of the Committee for Constitutional Government, termed by Congress- man Wright Patman as "the sinis- ter lobby in Washington," and the "No. 1 Fascist organization in the United States.' One key to Dewey's political ad- vance is thathe has always adapt- ed himself to the policies of the wealthy men who control the two old parties, and has gained their confidence as a willing servant. Another key to Dewey's success is his ability to adapt himself to the corrupt Republican political machines and hack politicians. His three chief political opera- tors are Herbert Brownell, Edwin F. Jaeckle, and J. Russel Sprague. Brownell is a member of the New York law firm of Lord, Day and Lord, which has memberships in many large corporations and con- nections with Wall Street figures. Sprague is a politician from Long Island, who acts as peronal rep- resentative for Dewey. Dewey has established close connections with reactionary Re- I publican machines all over the country. His alliances are not based on policies but on the old- fashioned political devices of deals and patronage. His verynoia ntion was assured by a deal with the Grundy-Pew machine of Penn- sylvania, the Old Guard of the Re- publican Party with specially close connections with the oil trust and the high tariff crowd. Henry A. Wallace has a program to beat the Monopolies. Only the Progressive Party can act to break Monopolies because unlikethe Democrats and Republicans it does not depend on them to win. -Max Dean * * * ir. Foreign To the Editor : There is a certain white-haired old man who walks the streets of Ann Arbor almost every night. This man, whom for the sake of identity we shall call Mr. Foreign, is a man in whose body is repre- sented the evils of the world to- day. Mr. Foreign, on first sight, gives the appearance of a kindly old man--who to many of us brings back memories of our own grand- fathers; however if we should stop and listen to this person talk we would soon find out that he has a great love of freedom-FREEDOMI FOR HIMSELF but none for the Negro, Jew, Catholic, Chinaman, Jap, or, for that matter, anyone who was'not born with his beliefs and prejudices. Having heard Mr. Foreign speak on several occasions I began won- dering actually how many of these self-styled Puritans do we have amongst us. It is an old truth that claims that only out of the mouths of the very young or very old do we hear exactly what men think. IfI we only could have more old men in this world of ours we might at least know where our enemies are. Under existing conditions though, not one of us, not even Mr. For- eign, will survive in our present form if we have too many of his type to contend with. Our state is a large state and we must use all our energy to see that it is not de- stroyed from the outside; let alone from the inside. I am all for the principle of hav- ing anyone say anything any- where, but I also believe that it has now come to a point where we must define what this concept of "free speech" means. (that state- ment is not ambiguous.) Why should an individual or a group suffer because of another , individual's or group's prerogative to stand behind the staunch de- fenses of our great constitution and verbally atack everything that the total population stands for? Yes, let us listen to all our Mr. Foreigns; let us attempt to answer them; let us try to reason with them; and if we must, let us also find a way to end their mis-use of one of our so-called basic free- doms-Freedom of SPEECH. --Daniel Elyachar * * * To the Editor: .. ON FRIDAY, October first, the Daily carried on its front page a feature article on this year's drum major for the Michigan Marching Band. The article was a fine coverage of Mr. Breidenbach, who, I aim sure, is a very competent drum major. However, the first para- graph of the story made a state- ment with which I beg to differ. "Found at long last-a drum major who! can also play an in- strument." Did the writer of this statement ever stop to realize the unfairness of such a statement? If he will take the trouble to go into the records of only last year, he will find that the drum major of this same organization, the Michigan Marching Band, was one Noah Knepper. Mr. Knepper not only played an instrument in the Concert Band (perhaps the reporter should also look up the relative merits of the Varsity and Concert Bands), he was solo oboist in this organiza- tion. This, of necessity, means that Mr. Knepper had to be one of the finest oboists in the University of Michigan. Certainly he "can also play an instrument." A little more research and a few less rash statements would have helped to make this story more en- joyable to those who are accus- tomed to accuracy in newspapers. -Jean Willets. ALEXANDER M. McCOLL has just made hinmself a headline, though a small one. Entering Har- vard as a freshman at the age of 14, McColl has attracted the big type because he admits liking to read Latin. It's a disturbing re- flection on the age that the ad- mission should be considered news. -St. Louis Star-Times. Fifty-Ninth Year 1 Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ...Managing Editor Dick Maloy..... ......... City Editor Naomi Stern........Editorial Director Allegra Pasqualetti .... Associate Editor Arthur Higbee.......Associate Editor Harold Jackson.......Associate Editor Murray Grant..........Sports Editor Bud Weidenthal ..Associate Sports Ed. Bev Bussey...Sports Feature Writer Audrey Buttery......Women's Editor Business Staff Richard Halt .......Business Manager Jean Leonard ....Advertising Manager William Culman .....Finance Manager Cole Christian .... CirculationLManager Bess Hayes................Librarian Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper, All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1948-49 ~1 1. BARNAB'Y [ Hello! Scoop O'Malley speaking. Tear up the front page. I'll have a big story on a fire. As soon as I get my notes together-Hello? ... Use the kid's story of a fire drill? Not a bad idea. Call U I This is Dr. Riggs, the Principal. The newspaper? Yes, there was a fire drill. Er, that is, the fire