PAGE FOUR THE MIS' aA DAIIN iwvnvv;qnAv , neurniritu, I Ti-ii..M°"?_.,.A,_1 11.29'. _T_ Dl 2 U 1JA 1 V'1111 L411 L.1 WYV l 84 iLi. l V~/LxjjtZ~xl& . Canned Lectures HE LITERARY college faculty's condem- nation of the stenographic lecture notes business met a varied reaction-approval, disgust and indifference. The faculty was undoubtedly right in denouncing the sale of the notes. Paying someone else to do your note-taking for you probably isn't morally wrong, but it is not the most profitable way to use a lecture. The theoretical justification for a lecture system is that it involves a personal element on a mass basis-a lot of students have a chance to hear and see somebody talk about the subject. Buying stenographic notes amounts to getting another, more informal textbook and thus missing part of the point of the lecture system. Most interesting thing about the lecture note business is that it indicates a certain degree of failure on the part of the lecture system or the lecturers or both. If people are willing to pay for lecture notes they must be missing something in the lecture itself. The University is appar- ently failing to train students in "intellec- tual and analytical note-taking" as the faculty said it should. Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: MARY STEIN It's hard to see why writing down what a lecturer says is considered a necessary part of university education. It might as well be acknowledged that taking notes on lectures is a device for pumping in the most information with the least expenditure of time and effort-it is, in short, a concom- itant of an overcrowded university. That doesn't mean you do better to further the mechanization process by buy- ing a little package labelled "Extract of History U." If there have to be lectures you might as well use them in the most profitable way. But the existence of the lecture-note bus- iness is a symptom of a problem the faculty can't solve simply by voting to condemn the symptom. Undergraduates are perhaps not learning as much under the lecture sys- tem as they might in some other way. Seminars are generally thought to be so difficult that only graduate students should attempt to sit in them. But prob- ably the real reason for limiting most sem- inars to advanced students is that there aren't vfry many advanced studlents, while there are myriads of students in elementary courses. Shortcuts to learning - cramming for exams and mimeographed notes on lectures, for example-indicate a fundamental disor- ientation in the way learning is organized. There's a lot more to solving that probem than condemning the shortcuts. -Phil Dawson. Can't Hap pen Here "WHAT DID YOU think of Dewey's speech last night, Joe?" "O.K. But I don't agree with him that-." "Lower your voice, Joe. Here comes one of the profs." No, it can't happen in this country, but it almost did, right here on the diag last Friday. Through a narrow interpretation of the Regent's ruling of last spring foruidding political rallies outside of organized clubs, Dean Walter halted the unorganized polit- ical debates on the diag. The act of preventing people from spon- taneously gathering to discuss one of the most vital issues of the day is just one step removed from the suppression of discussion on any vital topic. Of course, the Regents weren't thinking of prohibit- ing individual political opinions when they made the ruling; but if the ruling is applied indiscriminately to any situation, if a rally is interpreted as any chance gathering which results in a political dis- cussion, what type of discussion outside' an approved organization is beyond the reach of this ruling? Discussion between two people can just as well be consideredil a rally under a loose defiifition zA' the word.a It's too easy, however, to focus all crit- icism on Dean Walter. It would be better to put a major portion of the blame for this obvious interference with the right of free discussion on a nervous Board of Regents, which is overly intent on proving to Mich- igan taxpayers that no political party is being officially sponsored by the .Univer- sity. 'The "no-club, no-rally" ruling may be effective in keeping Michigan taxpayers happy and in keeping the old school in the black, but the Regents also owe some alleg- iance to academic freedom. The University is more than an insti- tution for the accumulation of facts in specified classrooms and books. Free dis- cussion-on any vital subject-is essential to the educational process. However, as long as the Regents con- tinue to regard possible criticism from out- side the University as a factor more worthy of consideration than the damage done to academic freedom through discouragement of free discussion, students can expect more and more censorship on the voicing of indi- vidual and group opinion. -George Reviere. Man to Man THE HAPPY little GOP theme song now goes: "Tom Dewey has taken the original tack of blandly ignoring the opposition's cater- waulings and denunciations. His approach has been to show his own proud, confidence in America, thus challenging other people to look to their own confidence and self- respect." The reference is to the Truman-Give-'Em- Hell campaign. But the Dewey innocent smile wears thin when one considers the machinations of the Republican Party-not just its No. 1 boy. The system ras been to let the lesser dignitaries carry the main political attack. No. 2 boy, Sen. Robert Taft, contributed the demise of the Taft-Ellender-Wagner Act, which would have greatly improved the housing situation, but would also have cast credit on Democrats Ellender, aid Wagner and the Truman administration in general. A strong, stand would have forced the House to pass it. No. 3 boy Haorld Stassen donated his vocal cords to the common effort, with such idiosyncracies as "even Truman has used the Taft-Hartley Act eight times!" He failed to mention that as the nation's chief administrator, his job is to enforce the law, no matter how distasteful it is. On down the list the story is the same. The House Un-American Activities Com- mittee repeatedly lashed out at the Pres- ident and Attorney General Tom Clark for refusing to divulge information relating to the loyalty of government officials. Of course all the data they requested, and testimony they accepted from such "witnesses" as Eliz- abeth Bentley, had been in FBI files for years. And heading the bureau is J. Edgar Hoover, who once assured the American Legion that he would "get" every Communist he could lay hands on. Hoover is efficient. Actually the clean politics of the Repub- licans is the dirtiest type of all-the kind that cannot be effectively answered in simple debate. Although the campaign is at the half-way stage, it isr not too late for Dewey to take off his kid gloves and to do battle on a man-to-man basis. -Craig H. Wilson. MATTER OF FACT: 'New New Deal By JOSEPH ALSOP CHICAGO-When the Republicans were beaten in 1932, it was six years before the dead stump of the party began putting out such vigorous new shoots as Thomas E. Dewey, Harold Stassen and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. It was sixteen years before the new growth pretty well covered the party's Harding-Coolidge-Hoover era deadwood. And it is precisely this obliteration of the old- style Republicanism that now virtually as- sures Dewey's election to the Presidency. If the situation here in Illinois is any test, the Democrats will not have so long to wait for their comeback. Even now, in their moment of disaster, they have found new men with new ideas, Adlai Stevenson and Paul Douglas, to nominate for the governorship and senatorship. Stevenson and Douglas may well be beat- en. Yet they constitute a startling con- trast, none the less, to the tired old party hacks the Republicans kept on trotting out for so long after the Hoover debacle in 1932. IT IS FURTHER interesting to note that while Paul Douglas's work in Illinois established his claim to the Senatorial nom- ination, the selection of Stevenson for the governorship was suggested from Washing- ton, by the most eminent of the surviving New Dealers. Ed Kelly, the retired satrap of the Cook County Democratic machine, has long admired Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. And it can now be dis- closed that Justice Douglas proposed the nomination of Stevenson, whom he had come to know and like during Stevenson's service in Washington. All this is a pretty far cry from the be- havior of the great Democratic city machines in the past. Even as recently as 1944, Ed Kelly himself was one of the Northern bosses who blocked his friend, Justice Douglas, for the Vice-Presidency and forced the choice of Harry S. Truman because he was politically regular. If you talk to Jake Arvey, Kelly's successor as Cook County leader, the apparent anomaly is rapidly explained. Arvey is no political goo-goo, but he is an intelligent, energetic and capable organiza- tion man. And he is trying to rebuild the old Cook County machine, from foundation upward, on an entirely new pattern. In the old pattern, before the 1930's, the great urban Democratic machines vot- ed their masses of untutored immigrants like sheep, securing their loyalty by little favors, Christmas baskets and the like. Then during the 1930's and early 1940's, Franklin Delano Roosevelt served as the "best precinct captain" of the urban or- ganization, as Arvey puts it. Now, however, the city machines have to deal with a much better educated, more independent second generation in all the great racial communities of their cities. And this second generation has moreover been taught by Roosevelt to expect all sorts of service and assistance from the government. (Continued from Pae 2) Series, Thursday evening, October 14, at 8:30, in Hill Auditorium. Miss Anderson will sing a pro- gram of songs and arias by Han- del, Caladara, Legrenzi, Schubert, Ponchielli, Griffes, Quilter; and will close with a group of Negro spirituals. A limited number of tickets are still available at the *offices of the University Musical Society in Bur- ton Memorial Tower. On the eve- ning of the concert tickets may be purchased tat' the Hill Audit oriinxi box ofic afterti 7 o'clock. Events Today Engineering Council: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., W. Engineering Bldg. Institute of Aeronautical Sci- ences: Meeting 7:30 p.m., Rm. 348 W. Engineering Bldg. Dr. A. M. Kuethe will evaluate the follow- ing N.A.C.A. films: "Fundamental Nature of Air- flow Separation,"s"Study of Ai'- flow by Means of Siioke," "N.A.C.A. free Spinnini Wind Tunnel." Varsity Debate: Weekly meet ing, 7:30 p.m., Rm. 4203 Angell Hall. New registrations will be accepted. Students who cannot attend should see Mr. Nadesau in Rm. 3208 Angell Hall on Thurs- day or Friday afternoon of this week. "We Ain't Got Anywhere Yet Throw Hm Overboard" -K CT's D4B D \r I'D RATHER BE RIGHT: Deimal Thught Letters to the Editor By SAMUEL GRAFTON MR. CHURCHILL'S explanation at Llan- dudno that nothing stands between Eu- rope today and complete subjugation by Communism except the atomic bomb is stu- pefying. Thus is the most complicated sub- ject in the world finally simplified down to a point at which our entire future safety is said to lie in something that can be wrapped in a sheet of brown paper, or perhaps stowed in a trunk. Our civilization now depends on an object. How lucky for us that we have it! But then, the thought quickly follows, What an accidental thing the survival of our civilization is, if it hangs on the possession of this one article. And so all the thousands of years which it has taken to develop our side of the world have done their work to no purpose except to bring us to a point at which, if we didn't have something that can be hid in a closet, we would be dead. Of all the dismal speeches which have been uttered since the end of the war, this is the most dismal. For if Mr. Churchill is right, then it is not ourselves upon whom we can depend any longer, nor upon our rightness, if we have rightness, nor upon our characters, but upon something we happen to possess, something in our hands, half-weapon, half-talisman. Our new doctrine that force and force alone is going to shape the future of the world, a doctrine which we once used furiously to reject, here reaches what might be called its purest recent expres- sion. Yet, somehow, as one studies Mr. Churchill's simple little equation to the effect that the atomic bomb equals safety and that nothing else does equal it, one has an uneasy feeling that he has left a great deal out. Maybe the whole world, in fact. THIS, THIS, he says, alone saves us. This is the barest portrait of the world that has ever been drawn; it resembles the side of the moon rather more than it does this living planet, earth, for with Mr. Churchill's an- alysis the story of our times becomes a story of things, not people. And in leaving all this out, Mr. Churchill has also left out such matters as our ability why, for three years, the Russians haven't bothered anybody, why they have sat quietly at home, why they have not blockaded Ber- lin, why they have been meek and compliant. The atomic bomb would have been the perfect explanation for all these things. But since none of these things have happened, then perhaps there is something wrong with Mr. Churchill's pure and simple equation to the effect that the atomic bomb has been and is the safety of Western Europe. Ile has put into his equation Russia's fear of the bomb, but he has left out Russia's reactions to her own fears, and the West's reactions to Russia's reactions, and he has left out all those other similar items that pile up and build up to the point at which men, finally, do peculiar things, regardless of who has what article hidden away in what closet. It is a sad speech, because Mr. Churchill is a formidable man, and a great one, and I can remember when he did not have quite so much respect for force, and for physical objects and circumstances in this physical universe. I can remember when he didn't even think it was a decisive fact that Britain was without rifles. Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corporation) r J Delta Business Meeting, Sigma Pi, Professional Fraternity: Business 8 p.m., Chapter House. Ushers Needed for Stan Kenton (Oct. 17) and Horace Heidt (Nov. 20) Concerts. Only those inter- ested in ushering for both con- certs and perhaps similar concerts later need apply. Register at Hill Auditorium today from 5-6 p.m. Modern Poetry Club: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Russian Tea Room, Michigan League. Discussion of Warren's "Original Sin" and Hodgson's "Eve," in Oscar Wil- liams Anthology. Sociedad Hispanica: Meeting, 8 p.m., Glee Club room, Michi- gan Union. A musical program is planned featuring a talk by Mr. Jose Oritz on Latin Amer- ican music and piano selections by Manuel Rios. Deutscher Verein: Meeting, 8 p.m., Rm. 3A Michigan Union. Slides on Nurnberg Trial to be shown. Open Bowling: The bowling alleys at the Women's Athletic Building are open Tuesday through Saturday evenings, 7:30- 9:30. University students and guests are welcome. United World Federalists, Gen- eral Chapter Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Hussey Room, Michigan League. Agenda: (1) Election or remain- ing officers. (2) Discussion of Minimalist vs. Maximalist World Federation. Speaker's. Every member is asked to bring at least one potential member to this meeting. The EVERY-MEMBER- GET - A - MEMBER Membership Drive commences with this meet- ing. All Students: Anyone interested in trying-out for the staff of the INKWELL, a student publication, meet in Rm. 1430 University Ele- mentary School, 7 p.m. Women of the University Fac- ulty: Afternoon Tea, 4-6 p.m., Rm. D, Michigan League. Roger Williams Guild "chat" at Guild House 4:30-6 p.m. Lithuanian Club: Organiza- tional meeting, 7 p.m., Michigan League. All students of Lithuan- ian descent urged to attend. Agend fdr Student Legislature Meeting, Wednesday, Oct. 13, 7:30, Anderson Rm., Union Cabinet Re- port: Cabinet Report: 1. Committee reports are to be turned in to Rm. 2. 2. Constitutional changes. 3. Report on Men's Judicisry. 4. Appointment of two mem- bers to Men's Judiciary. Campus Action Committee: 1. Vote registration report. 2. Report on Better Business Bureau. 3. Report on Philippine Drive. 4. Student Poll Report. 5. List of campus organizations, Culture and Education Commit- tee: 1. Report on Student Experts. 2. Report on Town Hall. 3. Report on class on Parlia- mentary procedure for members., 4. Project on job placement. 5. Report on Faculty rating pro- gram. 6. Traditions revival. Public Relations Committee: 1. Newsletter. 2. Philippine Drive aid. 3. Articles in DAILY about Leg- islature projects. 4. League organizational proj- ect. 6. Report on Essay contest. Varsity Committee: 1. Report on basketball seating. 2. Homecoming plans, 3. Report on Pep rallies. NSA Committee: 1. Plans for weekly newsletter to explain NSA to the students. 2. Privilege plan card. 3. Report on Olivet situation. Social Committee: 1. Money projects. 2. Planning social dates fqr next year. 3. Student Legislature party. 4. Ruthven tea. Elections Committee: 1. Report on meetings with prospective candidates. 2. Band on election day. New Business: 1. Student poll on political preference for presidential, gu- bernatorial, senatorial and con- gressional candidates. Coming Events School of Business Administra-] tion: Faculty -Student Coffee Hour, 3-5 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 14, League Ballroom. Arts Choral, Lit College Choir, 7 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 14, Rm. 506 Burton Tower. Association of Interns and Medical Students: First meeting of 1948-49, 7:30 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 14, Michigan Union, Room 3-A. Business meeting, and symposium by students who visted Europe this summer. ThegDaily accords its readers the privilege of submitting letters for publication in this column, subject to space limitations, the general po- icy is to publish in the order in which they are received all letters bearing the writer's signature andsaddress. Letters exceeding 300 words, repeti- tions 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. S ,s Objects To the Editor: THE ORDER BY Dean Walter forbidding student discussions on the Diagonal is by far the most serious infringement not only of academic freedom but of freedom of speech that any university cam- pus has seen in thirty years. Dean Walter, acting in behalf of the Re- gents, says in effect that any group of students discussing poli- tics on the campus is violating university regulations and there- fore subject to disciplinary action. This interpretation of the ruling is almost unbelievable. It is not only aimed at the Wallace Pro- gressives who are considerably out- numbered at these "rallies," but at every single student who might possibly be interested in politics and political discussion. Almost every campus organization has al- ready gone on record condemning the rule forbidding political speak- ers and rallies on campus. This rule is serious enough in itself, but when the meaning of the rule is stretched to such a fantastic degree as to forbid a free exchange of ideas, it is time for students to act. I urge all students to protest vig- orously and positively to'President Ruthven and Dean Walters, and by letters to The Daily. -Calvin Lippitt. * * * To AVC To the Editor: THE FOLLOWING is a copy of a letter I have sent to the University Chapter of AVC. In accordance with the pledge I had previously given, I resigned as chairman and as a member of the U. of Michigan Chapter of the AVC upon the failure of the chap- ter to take a stand discouraging the continued membership of Communists in the organization. Although I wish to thank the membership for your kindness in requesting my return as a mem- ber, I must refuse to do so; not because of personal disappoint- ment, but strictly as a matter of principle. Communism is one of the most pressing problems facing the world, the United States, and therefore the American Veterans' Committee. Anyone who has given even the most perfunctory atten- tion to world events since the close of World War II should realize that the Communist phi- losophy, as exemplified by the ac- tions of the government of the U.S.S.R., both within and without Russia, completely denies at least one of the most basic tenets of liberal belief; namely, that the individual, as such, has a certain worth and has rights, privileges, and immunities which must be protected at all costs. Definitely, the Communists in the U.S. are among the individuals whose rights must be protected by liberal organizations such as the AVC. But members of the Com- munist Party have no inherent right to belong to AVC, and since U. of M. Sailing Club: Meet- ing, Thurs., 7 p.m., Rm. 311 W. Engineering Bldg. International Center weekly tea, 4:30-6 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 14. Host- esses: Mrs. Arthur L. Brandon and Mrs. H. L. Pickerill. Alpha Phi Omega, Service Fra- ternity. Regular meeting for members and prospective pledges, Michigan League, Thurs., Oct. 14, 7 p.m. (not at the Union as previ- ously announced). Hawaii Club: Meeting, 7 p.m., Fri., Oct. 15, Rm. 3A Michigan Union. I.Z.F.A. Wiener Roast, Sun.,J Oct. 17, Island. Meet at W.A.B. 2:30 p.m. (Hillel in case of rain). Nominal fee. For reservations contact Sam Hack, 1120 Forest Ave., Phone 9431, by Thursday. Handicraft and Sewing Groups of Michigan Dames will hold a joint meeting at the home of Mrs. Gaylord Finch, 1225 Kensington Drive, Thurs., Oct. 14, 8 p.m.- Plans will be made for the White Elephant Kitchenware Sale. Fifty-Ninth Year 1 their membership in that pE belies any possibility of their b truly liberal, I cannot believe t they are desirable members AVC. Further, from bitter perience I realize the impossibi of working with Communists. Obviously, the majority of chapter, whether from mispla idealism or political naivete, agrees with my opinion on subject. Therefore, having m my position clear and hav fought as best I could for principles, I must, regretfully, associate myself from this ch ter of the AVC. --Dave Babsor Backing To the Editor: N AS MUCH as Tom Dewe not as wealthy as some of other candidates, he is forced circumstance to accept the I ronage of the dirty capital Henry Wallace, on the other ha being a dirty Capitalist himsel keeping the Commies around to see what the opposition is to. At any rate, I don't see i Tom is any more responsible the people who are supporting: than Henry is. -Lee E. Pat e * * Methods To the Editor: SOME PEOPLE who misin preted my column in last S day's Daily have suggested thf was' putting a stamp of appr on the outcome of the AVC fi The fact of the matter is 1 I was dealing with method strategy, in an attempt to dem strate that campus politics is vigorous and realistic as statt national politics. In no sense do I approve.the sulting victory for the fac which would condone, and ind invite, Communist participat If the organization were a bri club I could not support tl who might wish to know the pc ical persuasions of the memb But since the organization is some degree at least, a polit group which wishes to main the liberal label, I fail to see ] the fight could have been avoiq And since it is inconceivable me that a totalitarian philoso can work in harmony with eralism I see nothing reprehens in the attempt of the losing tion to maintain the integrity the organization. It is, to my mind, unfortur that thetoutcome was what it It is to be hoped that the issue not be laid to rest without attempt to recoup the loss. -Lyman H. Legter Edited and managed by student the University of Michigan under authority of the Board in Contro Student Publications. Editorial Staff Harriett Friedman ...Managing E Dick Maloy ............... City Ed Naomi Stern.........Editorial Dire Allegra Pasqualetti ....Associate Ed. Arthur Higbee.........Associate Ed Harold Jackson ......Associate Ed Murray Grant.......... Sports Ed. Bud Wedenthal ..Associate Sports Bev Bussey ......Sports Feature W Audrey Buttery........Women's Ed Business Staff Richard Hait .......Business Man Jean Leonard ....Advertising Man William Culman ...Finance Man Core Christian ... Circulation Man Bess Hayes ..................Libra Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Pr The Associated Press is exclusi entitled to the use for republica of air news dispatches credited to I otherwise credited to this newspa All rights of republication of all matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at, Arbor, Michigan, as second-class matter. Subscription during the reg school year by carrier, $5.00, by $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1948-49 Looking Back 30 YEARS AGO TODAY: The Governor of Michigan issued a proc- lamation closing all churches, theatres, and public halls because of the frightening num- ber of lives the Spanish influenza epidemic was taking in Michigan. 20 YEARS AGO TODAY: When freshman hazing was the rage on the Michigan campus, the answer to why Oriental students never were annoyed b:' sophomores was demonstrated. It seems the student from across the Pacific knew Ju Jitsu. 10 YEARS AGO TODAY: A bitter controversy over pulchritude hit the Library steps as a Daily wandering news- paper reporter asked students: "What is your opinion of tho legend. for mi of five. BARNABY The old Hedisch esta Barnaby! It's been solI! John! The property the town was intending to buy from the Hegdisch estate for the new S cchnnl ,'nnovI I4 hae tn cnld Oh, I'm sure an agreement can be reached with the The house on that estate is where my old friend Gus the Ghost is living! I II