THE MICHIGAN DAILY, Literary Scl . Comedian Reviews Politics Course Description Book4 sweater at six, do you have to call him names? "Some of them are really serious and I like to see life's rules broken once in awhile. What the hell .,. if you don't do it when you're young, when will you have the chance?" Sahl was impressed when a University student told him of Kennedy's "steps of the Union" message in which he challenged college students to sacrifice part of their lives for the good of the country. Likes Speech "That's a great idea," com- mented Sahl with vigor. "I hadn't heard of it. Why don't they put things like that in the -papers? You know, this is how I get my material . .. talking to people . . synthesizing what I read and hear . . . It's hard to find people to talk to . .. haven't you found that?" Committee Reconsiders Driving Code Driving Cpde Revisions Chair- man Ron Bassey, '61 BAd., re- ported changes in the interpre- tation and provisions of the Driv- ing Code to Student Government Council Wednesday. Bassey explained that the com- mittee had met with Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs James 1 A. Lewis, Dean of Men Walter B. _ Rea, Mark Noffsinger of the Dean of Men's office, and Karl D. Streiff, Assistant Dean of Men, and had formally approved the following changes in the code: 1. Exemption permits will be I given to any student who is 21 or over or is a graduate student with the equivalent of a bachelor's de- gree. 2. Participants in major cam- r pus organizational activities may be eligible for special permits upon request to the office of stu- dent affairs. 3. A parking map showing fa- cilities for students in the cam- t pus area will be included in the next printing of the Driving Code. This would be in the fall of 1961. e 4. The need for the inclusion of e budgets and financial need with the application for a storage per- mit has been eliminated. - 5. In applying for business per- mits, the need shown may either be on the basis of finances or ex- perience. Bassey explained that at the present time financial need is the important factor. The committee is composed of William Warnock, '61BAd., from n SGC, Frank Mobley, '61E, of Joint y Judiciary Council and J o a n r Thacker, grad., from the Gradu- ate Student Council. d WAA To Host e Sports Group The Athletic and Recreation h Federation of Michigan College . Women will hold its annual con- - ference Saturday at the Univer- e sity. d The Women's Athletic Asso- d ciation will host delegations from Albion College, Wayne State Uni- versity, Eastern Michigan Univer- 0 sity, Western Michigan Univer- . sity, Adrian, Hope and Kalamazoo colleges and Port Huron Jr. Col- - lege. The purpose of the annual . conference, held in Ann Arbor for the first time since 1950, is to d coordinate women's sports pro- r grams among state schools and to y improve recreation and athletic programs. Although sometimes despondent, and at all times critical, Sahl is not a pessimist. He tells his audiences that "we are evolving to a new level of awareness. Cites Evidence "The sale of my records, the fact that you people are here. tonight, and the fact that the 'silent generation' is no longer silent, all testify to this. "I'm working for Hearst, and Henry Luce quotes me in his weekly news magazine ... things are *picking up.. "Next time maybe we won't have to meet in secret... but we'll talk about that later." By RICHARD OSTLING -A new edition of the two-year- old literary college course des- cription booklet is now being prepared. - Letters which are going to the. departments from the office of Associate Dean James H. Robert- ,sonf request.' information sheets on courses not in the present book, and up-to-date information on those which are. The college plans to compile a new edition, once or twice a year. The book is primarily an objec- tive supplement to the brief course paragraphs in the University' catalog. It lists outlines of sub- ject mat -N, expected preparation for the arse, type of classes, required aterials, reports, tests, and general course objectives. Includes General Courses The description book, although quite bulky, is limited to intro- ductory c u r s e s, distribution courses, and departmental offer- ings- which are often elected by non-concentrates. Since the descriptions are pre- pared by the people who teach the courses, they are not like the "course evaluation" schemes which have appeared occasionally at* SQC and elsewhere. Dean Robertson feels that such evaluations would be "fun, but not terribly dependable." He sup- ports the college's official book as "preferable to opinions picked up ,in the shower room or at a rush party." The college characteristically does not impose exact require- ments on its departments,'so the format of the descriptions varies. Some courses have not been' re- ported at all, although most of the gaps should be filled after the new survey. Available to Public Nine copies of the present .edi- tion are available for public use in the junior-senior counseling office, and five in the freshman- sophomore office. The two copies in the Undergraduate Library closed reserve section are used several times a. day. Prrofessor Lovell Dies After Illness Prof. Emeritus Alfred H. Lovell died early yesterday at the age of 76 in St. Joseph Mercy Hospi- tal following a brief illness. Prof. Lovell served continuously until his retirement in 1954. c 7 Shows ot DIAL 7-9P.M. NO8-6416 "COMEDY SPIKED WITH FARCE...A MAXIMUM OF WIT::. -N. Y.Jimes PETER SELLERS ROBERT MORLEY CONSTANCE CUMMINGS !onus Thutbe4' "the Battle t -asof the Sexes i 1 MORT SAHL ..cuts candidates STARTING TODAY DIAL NO 5-6290 ;i Please Note Time Schedule r. wc rss I I I YflT~lA~l~ENDl 1)iRlUUULNS :.Aa ,. ED M 1 1T ",IADSOB[ .GE i smPA E4 UN. w rnM y1~I N4Dor~ee~ I __ _ bU MaASo~l.d ItIL I S.G.C. Cine VuiI4 'TONIGHT at 7 and 9Saturday and Sunday at 7 and 9 Orson Welles' 'HE ROOSEVELT STORY THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS (dfncirmntnrvof FDR) edited from -L A3.~2 Ti v L,.4+