PAGE FOUR SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY W Cdit1107te By CRAWFORD YOUNG with engulfment by specialization and tech- Daily Managing Editor nicalism are never superfluous. Those who 'ERY QUIETLY last week WPAG News sat through the chill proceedings went away Editor Peter Denzer left Ann Arbor for impressed that in well-chosen words an im- New York. Perhaps because he chose to portant message had been reiterated. make his departure so quietly a few passing PANTY RAIDS remarks should be made about the some-PAT RID whak shbycicumsancesdsurboundingth sIf there is any moral that can be drawn what shabby circumstances surrounding his from such absurd antics as Friday night's y wa elkon.uig .st panty raid, it would seem to be that ade- Denzer was well-known during his two quate provision must be made for the chain years at WPAG for his candid and inter- ra-tion mustfeeinsefotheychain esting Point of View program, interview- reaction of animal feelings inevitably creat- ing local figures on issues ranging from ed by a "successful" pep rally. Youthful the insipid to the controversial. But it spirits once aroused to fever pitch by bon- seesth at i the comentatorramBuckt fires, bared male legs, and exhortations by seems that the commentator ran amuck ex-grid heroes to feats of extraordinary when he opened up on the secrecy in the spectatorship, have the same necessity for Police Department; first his program was outlet as water running downhill. tossed off the air--the next thing to go tld a sil was Denzer's job. It would have been a simple matter to schedule a couple of open houses at a As always, it is distressing to observe that women's dorm or two, a square dance, or honesty is not always the best policy, something on that order-and the same ODEGAARD'S SPEECHI bubbling emotions that make post-pep rally panty raids so successful would have DEAN CHARLES E. Odegaard made an ensured the success of more constructive auspicious debut in his first official appear- social enterprises. ance in the view of most of the campus at True, the problem was compounded this Friday's dedication ceremonies. Although time by the all-campus nuisance of sorority there was nothing strikingly original in his rushing. But it is to be hoped that in the remarks, a reminder of the primary im- future more forethought will prevent the portance of the literary college and a warn- recurrence of such abominable affairs as the ing to an educational system threatened . panty-raid. MATTER OF FACT: Uncertain Campaign Puzzles TheNatio Top Reporters By STEWART ALSOP SPRINGFIELD, II1.--A notable character- istic of this campaign is the bewilder- ment and timidity of the press. Gone are the days of pompous assurance among po- litical reporters (including this one). In- stead, in both the Eisenhower and Steven- son press camps, two ludicrously contradic- tory remarks are rather regularly heard. The first is: "You know, this might be another 1928." This observation is accom- panied by a sage nodding of heads by the reporters present, all vividly visualizing the total annihilation of Adlai E. Stevenson. The second remark is: "You know, this, might be another 1936." This is also accompanied by a sage nodding of heads by the same re- porters, all equally vividly visualizing the annihilation of Dwight D. Eisenhower. One trouble is, as Samuel Lubell has remarked in "The Future of American Politics," that "we are moving into a new political era in which the old rules and axioms no longer apply." Another trouble is that such facts as there are tend to cancel each other out. For example, it is a fact that Stevenson has the automatic head start of any Democratic Presidential candidate. Whenemembers of the Steven- son staff here f eel worried or depressed, they like to take out pencil and paper and do a little familiar figuring. Give Stevenson the solid South, they say and the South looks at least more solid than it did in 1948. Give him New York, which President Truman would have won without the Wallace Progressives. Give Stevenson his native Illinois, which he car- ried by a huge majority in 1948. Give him Massachusetts and the border states, which have gone Democratic in every Presidential year for as long as a middle-aged man can remember. Give him a small scattering of states which Truman carried easily in 1948, like Washington, Minnesota, Arizona, and Rhode Island. Then Eisenhower can carry California, Pennsylvania, almost all the Middle West and New England-and Stev- enson will still be the next President. But if it is a fact that Stevenson has this head start as a Democrat, it is equally a fact, in the view of almost all reporters who have covered this campaign, that Eisen- hower has another sort of head start. He is much better known than Stevenson, and he certainly seems more personally popu- lar. No reporter who has been with both candidates has failed to note that Eisen- hower attracts much larger crowds than Stevenson. Take a specific example. In normally Democratic Springfield, Mass., Stevenson drew a crowd which rather sparsely filled the space immediately in front of the speaker's stand. An Eisenhower crowd in a comparable city-in South Bend, Ind., say, also normally Democratic-stretches almost as far as the eye can reach, with small boys perched on telephone poles in the middle distance. The Stevenson aides here claim that this difference is simply a matter of organiza- tion-the Eisenhower camp, they say, sends. out sixty or so organizers before each speech (including two officers in charge of con- fetti) while the Stevenson camp can only afford to sendhout five men. It is certainly true that the Eisenhower managers have much more money to spend-three times as much as the Stevenson organization, ac- cording to Stevenson's people here. For the crucial month of October, the Eisenhower managers are planning a huge "saturation drive" with Eisenhower making dozens of "spot appearances" on radio and television. There are other known factors which should-but do not-make it possible to draw some sort of tentative conclusions about the outcome of this election. For example, there are the polls showing Eisen- hower increasing his lead over Stevenson, and the whole Stevenson strategy has been predicated on the assumption that Steven- son would begin to close the gap at about this point in the campaign. But again, in view of 1948, how much do the polls really mean? Then there is the matter of Sen. Rich- ard Nixon's special fund. Stevenson aides, who at first gleefully hailed the news, now admit that the episode is at best a stand- off between the two candidates. Some reporters are convinced that it will prove an important net asset to the Eisenhower candidacy. And everyone is agreed that Sen. Joseph McCarthy's spectacular pri- mary victory in Wisconsin was the worst possible omen for Stevenson. And so the futile speculation continues. This might be another 1928. Or it might be another 1936. Or, just to be safe, it might be another 1948. (Copyright, 1952, New York Herald Tribune, Inc.) DREW PEARSON: Washington Merry-Go-Round WASHINGTON-Top leaders of the AF of L had several private discussions over the question of breaking a 71-year precedent and endorsing a particular candidate. . Those who led in urging the endorse- ment of Gov. Stevenson included such right-wing union men as Charley~Mc- Gowan, head of the Iron and Shipbuilders workers, and Harry C. Bates, head of the Building Trades Union. Other leaders, such as David Dubinsky of the Interna- tional Ladies Garment Workers and George Meany, secretary of the AFL long had been expected to be in Stevenson's corner; but the position of AFL old-timers came as more of a surprise. McGowan, who comes from Kansas, Eis- enhower's home state, had previously ex- pressed his view to Eisenhower direct. "I told the General," McGowan reported to AFL colleagues, "that we had nothing against him personally. We thought he was a fine man. However, it was the company he kept that we couldn't stomach. "Your heart is going to be broken in the first month if you're elected," McGowan hod told Eisenhower, "because these old- guard senators have you cornered. "You think you can change their votes. But you can't. You can't change Jenner's vote, or Capehart's vote or Dirksen's vote. "These senators are elected by special interest groups and they'll never desert those groups. You will never get your leg- islation passed, and you'll find yourself taking orders from them instead of you giving orders yourself." Note-After Nixon's "expense" fund came to light, AFL sentiment deepened. Nixon has had just as reactionary a voting record as Capehart and Jenner, and AFL leaders figure that it proves their contention that a sena- tor votes the way his big money backers want him to vote. - TAFT WARMS UP - JUDGING FROM reactions along the route of the Eisenhower train, his new al- liance.with Taft is going to help-especially in Ohio. In other states it may hurt, but in Ohio, which still seems to be an impregnable Taft political fortress, Republicans watch- ed the Taft-Eisenhower peace meeting through narrow eyes-at first. When Taft returned from New York, for instance, he was asked to pose with a big Ike button, but refused, snorting: "I won't pose for any gag shot." This story got no national circulation, but it was whispered around Ohio and helped dampen Republican ardor for Eisenhower. One reaction of the Ohio Republicans was that they would give Charlie Taft a big vote for governor as a gesture to brother Bob. But now that Taft has warmed up to Eisenhower sufficiently to ride on the train with him and make rear-platform appear- ances with him, the Ohio GOP is limbering up and starting to roll. .*. * * - ORGANIZING THE DOCTORS - IT'S SUPPOSED to be a campaign secret but the Republican national committee has mailed a confidential, 50-page booklet to all GOP state chairmen, telling them how to organize the nation's medical profession against the Democrats, The advice is chiefly a blueprint of how the doctors were organized in New York and Pennsylvania during the last election. Not only the doctors, but the dentists, osteopaths, chiropractors and druggists were rallied behind the GOP banner. The booklet reveals some amazing statistics, showing how the medics propagandized their patients. The secret Republican program shows that 2,402,823 letters were mailed out in New York alone, chiefly from doctors to their patients, urging them to vote against Sena- tor Herbert Lehman. In addition, the doc- tors made 19,914 political phone calls and over 2,000 political visits to their patients. Altogether 10,771 doctors, 2,981 dentists, 3,513 nurses, 1,402 druggists and 69 hos- pitals joined actively in the campaign. In New York City, the booklet boasts, "medical doctors-were called on a battery of 30 telephones from the Roosevelt Hotel and asked to participate in the campaign by mailing letters to patients and friends. Five thousand metropolitan doctors were enlisted by this method." Despite this, Lehman was elected, and the Republicans propose increased efforts in this election. * *S* -- BOOMERANGED - THIS CAMPAIGN made some headway, particularly in up-state New -York, but in other places, the campaign boomeranged and patients told their doctors to stick to medicine. The Democrats privately concede that they lost Senator Elbert Thomas in Utah, Congressman Eugene O'Sullivan in Ne- braska and Congressman Andy Biemiller in Wisconsin, largely as a result of the doctor-to-patient propaganda. This year, the doctors were quick to jump on the Taft bandwagon, and organized a doctors-for-Taft movement long before the GOP convention. Taft was even supplied the name of each delegate's family doctor. But since General Eisenhower's nomination, the doctors have been slow to organize in Sen. Richard Nixon Pulls a Johnny Ray and C-R-R-R-R-IES On Sen. William Knowland's Shoulder after TV Address THE WEEK'S NEWS .. IN RETROSPECT.. Local". .. FOR A CHANGE, University admissions officials could survey en-i rollment totals and sit back without worrying. The final count of about 17,000 students enrolled in resident credit courses indicatee that the campus population was just about holding its own, comparede with last fall. In the administration offices, there was neither a frenzied effort to accommodate an influx of veterans as in post-war years or a publicity drive, which might have been necessary if en- rollment had continued to drop. Enrollment had reached a 6-year low last spring. The University could both remember and look for- ward to huge enrollments, but right now it was securely in the interim.r 4' * * * TWO TO ONE FOR IKE-Campus Republicans and Democrats both had something to say for themselves last week, but what thet Ike men said prevailed by sheer numerical force. Results of a Dailyt registration poll, announced Tuesday, showed that the campus pre- fers Eisenhower by a strong, nearly two-to-one ratio. More than 12,000 students voted in the 3-day poll. National pollsters have not yet run into so strong a preference in countrywide surveys. Outnumbered locally, Stevenson supporters didn't bother to ask "What about that $18,000" before organizing a campus task force. Over 100 strong, they met Thursday night to hear Prof. Preston Slosson of the history department talk on "The Man from Illinois,"t and to pin on enough Stevenson buttons to sway the confidence oft Ike backers. * * , * * SL CAUTIONED-In an address to the first fall meeting of theA Student Legislature Wednesday, Dean Erich A. Walter cautioned SL t to be governed by a sense of proportion in their activities this fall, and to make sure they knew student opinion before they took action on issues. Later, legislator Ted Friedman, '53, and other members retaliatedc that the Dean's comments "completely rejected SL." The matter t brought up a question which has bothered SL in its six-year historyt -is the body representative or not. According to a survey completed1 in the summer, most students would go along with Dean Walter's hint that the group does not effectively reflect student opinion. No one seemed to question the validity of SL's administration of elections, however, and Dean Walter praised the group on this point. It was clear that, if more effective representation was to be achieved by SL, changes would have to be made in something besides the election system. * * * * NEW ADDITION BECOMES OFFICIAL-However uncomfort- able the dedication ceremonies for the new Angell Hall addition seemed to the list of dignitaries and campus representatives present,, a feeling that it was worth it all prevailed when the procession got at look at what it had dedicated. The imposing structure, observers1 agreed, was not only the most serviceable the University campus had1 seen for quite a while, but it would also prove a boon to an archi- tecturally-lacking campus. -Virginia Voss National . .. DECLARING that his political fate lay in the hands of the GOP national committee, Sen. Richard Nixon, vice-presidential candi- date, bared his soul before a TV-radio audience Tuesday night to explain his acceptance of $18,000 for "government" expenses. Nixon denied that he had spent a cent of the money for his own personal use and insisted it was not wrong for him to have accepted the gift to help pay extra expenses for his Senate office. Many apparently decided that Nixon was in the right. GOP national headquarters reported that tens of thousands of messages poured in to congratulate the Senator. Apparently, the GOP thought so too. Without a dissenting vote, the Republican national committee decided to keep Dixon on the ticket. Calling the California junior senator a "brave man," Eisen- hower sealed Nixon's place on the ticket. Sen. Taft, on his short visit to Willow Run Thursday, echoed the sentiments of his party when he told reporters that he was and had been thoroughly convinced that Nixon was guilt-free. Emotions ran high during this historic controversy. Faced wit the possibility of being the second vice-presidential candidate in hi&#- tory to be dropped from a ticket, Nixon told his story to the American people with a decidedly melodramatic touch. After the ordeal he quietly wept on a sympathetic Sen. Knowland's shoulder, and then wept again at his meeting with the General, whp greeted his "vindi- cated" running-mate warmly. * * * * "YOU TOO"-With their vice-president expiated, the GOP turned on the Democrats. Stevenson; and Sparkman were dragged into the corruption picture. Swinging back at the bemocrats, Nixon demanded that Gov. Stevenson explain "gifts" t.o key Illinois state officials and that his running mate, Sparkman, account for the fact that his wife has been on the government payroll for 1(0years. The Illinois governor replied cooly that the fund enabled him to attract to state jobs men of "real competence" who otherwise couldn't afford to leave private employment. At first, Stevenson refused to nagie either the amounts received or the names of the donors. However, Saturday, the candidate re- versed his decision and reported that he was attempting to find out the amounts doled out to the officials. The political implications of the past confession week, are vague as yet. Nixon, in his first speech after he was "exonerated," once more went on the offensive and told voters of Salt Lake City all about corruption in Washington. He was wildly applauded. Some saw the Nixon affair as the first highly emotional appeal to the people in a lagging GOP campaign and thus predicted that his adroit handling of the matter will bring in votes for the GOP ticket. Others expressed the belief that the Nixon affair has added am- munition to Democratic shot-guns, and even went so far as to claim that the Republican corruption charges against the Administration have now been nullified. You can't some say, clean house with a dirty broom. -Alice Bogdonoff "What's So Funny About Them?" x h . t t A DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN- i1 I 1 F -- CURREN VE5 At The Michigan. CARRIE, with Jennifer Jones and Laur- ence Oliver. READERS OF Theodore Dreiser's "Sister Carrie" from which this movie has been adapted, wail be puzzled somewhat by Holly- wood's treatment of this masterpiece. While the original story is followed through most of the film, the producers have bowed to current American movie convention and have cast Carrie into a much different light. The new Carrie has now become a true heroine, something I feel the author did not intend. This is not to say, however, that Carrie fails as a movie. To the contrary, fine act- ing and careful directing have made it a very enjoyable film event. Carrie, played by Jennifer Jones, is the small town girl who comes vo the Big City and raises her- self from the sweatshop to stage stardom. During her rise to the top she is loved by both a travelling salesman, played by Eddie At The State .. . ONE MINUTE TO ZERO, with Robert Mitchum and Ann Blythe. WARS SEEN without the advantage of a few years' perspective might as well not be looked at if Hollywood's early depictions of the last war, and now of the Korean war, form any criterion. It was 1948 before we got "Battleground," "Decision Before Dawn," and other mature appraisals of the conflict with fascism. Today, the Korean war has be- come the same lifeless spectacle that was so familiar when the Japs were peering down from the sniper's perch in the palm tree. Even the villans look about the same. Unfortunately, "One Minute to Zero" not only fails to exhibit an understanding of any new purpose associated with this war; it also lacks dramatic vitality for most of the distance. Romantic interest is, as usual, the worst curse the film endures. Robert Mitchum (Continued from Page 2) and sociology, and with the current theories of supervision and management in industry. 7:30 p.m., 69 Business Ad- ministration Building. Sixteen weeks, $18. Industrial Electronics. The sixteen sessions of this course will include theory and practice of electronics for measurement and control. Subjects in- clude vacuum tubes as circuit ele- ments, amplifiers, oscillators, and os- cillators, and oscilloscope circuits; ap- plication to motor speed control and welding control. Laboratory periods will be held. Fims, sides, and demon- strations will supplement the lectures by Stephen V. Hart. 7 p.m., 2084 E. Engineering Building. Sixteen weeks, $25. Modern Man and Modern Poetry. The ethical directions and the moral search of contemporary man as revealed in po- etic expression in the present century is the theme of this course. Some atten- tion will be given to the relations be- tween poetry and philosophy since the Renaissance, with particular emphasis on the implications of nineteenth-cen- tury science and twentieth-century psychology. Dr. James R. Squires is the instructor. 7:30 p.m., 170 Business Ad- ministration Building. Eight weeks, $6. Events Today Lutheran Student Association: 7 p.m. New Center, corner Hill and Forest. Speaker: Dr. G. Mendenhall, noted scholar in Near Eastern Studies: "Let God Be God." English Department: "Christianity: To Talk of To Do." Inter-Arts Union. Meeting, 2:30 p.m., League. Everyone welcome. Michigan Christian Fellowship: Mr. Marshall Bier, M.A., Jackson, Mich., will speak on "Christianity and the Stu- dent," 4 p.m., Fireside Room, Lane Hall. Everyone welcome. Refreshments. Coming Events History Department graduate stu- dents and faculty are invited to attend "Ali Introduction to the Clements Li- brary" on Thurs., Oct. 2, 7:30 p.m. English Journal Club will meet Wed, Oct. 1, 8 p.m. Clements Library. Messrs. Calvin Lane and Colton Storm will address the Club. Graduate students in English are urged to attend. Student Players Meeting of executive committee and department heads, Mon., Sept. 29, 4 p.m., League. Student Players announces tryouts for "Brigadoon," a musical fantasy. No experience necessary. All welcome Mon., Sept. 29-Wed., Oct. 1, 7:30-10:30' p.m.; Tues. and Wed., 3-5 p.m.; League. La P'tite Causette will meet from 3:30 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the North Cafe- teria of the Michigan Union. Le Cercle Francais will meet at 8 p.m., Tues., Sept. 30, Michigan Room, League. Refreshments. let ter4 TO THE EDITOR Miffed,.. To the Editor: THE OTHER DAY I had an oc- casion to take a book out of the University High School Library and found that it had to be re- turned by nine the following morning. Reading into the night I overslept that morning but finally returned the edition two hours late. To my surprise the fine amounted to thirty-five cents. At that rate the book would pay for itself if held overdue for a total of eight hours. I have heard of en- terprising colleges but never a col- leve that engaged in private en- terprise. -C. Thomas Nakkula "CERTAINLY WE must battle for a decent and j'tm eco- nomic social order as the matrix of personal sanity and balance. Whe'n such an order is achieved many of our present day emotion- al ills will vanish. Yet in any kind of society certain universal psy- chological reactions wil manifest themselves, c e r t a i n emotional miAIICPIalU ailg Sixty-Third Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Crawford Young...Managing Editor Cal Samra.........Editorial Director Zander Hollander ......Feature Editor Sid Klaus......Associate City Editor Harland Britz ........ Associate Editor Donna Hendleman .... Associate Editor Ed Whipple ..............Sports Editor John Jenks ... Associate Sports Editor Dick Sewell .... Associate Sports Editor Lorraine Butler ........Women's Editor Mary Jane Mills, Assoc. Women's Editor Business Staff Al Green ............Business Manager Milt Goetz ......Advertising Manager Diane Johnston .. Assoc. Business Mgr. Judy Loehnberg...Finance Manager Tom Treeger. Circulation Manager r z Actuarial Club meeting, Sept. 29 Roger Williams Guild: First Baptist Room3A, Union. Refreshments, ' Church, 502 E. Huron. 9:45 a.m., Stu-I dent Class: "Books of the Old Testa- MIMES of the Michigan Union Op- ment." 7 p.m., Guild meeting. Speaker: era. Business meeting, Tues., Sept. 30,