The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 8, 1986 -'Page 5 S. Quad continues 'U' transition to coed housing (Continued from Page 1) few corridors which temporarily housed women, were exclusively male halls. University women were routinely confined to the hill dorms: Couzens, Alice Lloyd, Mosher-Jordan, Stockwell, and Markley. During that period, tight restrictions governed the lives of female students. Not only were they required to live in University housing all four undergraduate years, but strictly enforced curfews kept them in the. halls at night VIOLATIONS, or "late minutes", earned women even -'earlier curfews. A woman who ' was five minutes late one night ' rhight be told by resident staff to be in an hour earlier the next night, said Edward Salowitz, director of ' research and development in the ' University's Housing Division. "I earned 17 late minutes," ,ecalled alumna Antieau, who, on every weeknight of her sophomore year, had to return to Alice Lloyd by 10 p.m. "On weekends, it was 12, and on special nights like proms," she ' said, "we could stay out 'til 1." Men, conversely, were not .,bound by similar regulations. R . SALOWITZ in a paper on the history of the University's student services, wrote that the double standard was "represented humorously as The University of ,Michigan for men and a Seminary, most perjoratively, for women." Salowitz attributes this protective policy to the dean of women's office, specifically to Dean Deborah Bacon. "She felt that if you controlled women in a remote location," Salowitz said, "you would control the men." Bacon also tried to control dating, according to Salowitz. "When a woman dated a man of a different nationality or race, she would tell the parents." TOM HAYDEN,1961 editor in chief of The Michigan Daily, documented Bacon's actions, and threatened to print his findings. Prof. Charles Lehman, then- chairman of the Student Relations Committee of the Faculty Senate, convinced Hayden to turn his material over to the committee instead. Lehman's group filed a preliminary report on several problems related to the dean of women's office in the spring of 1961. The report led to the formation of the Special Study Committee for the Office of Student Affairs, which judged the University's policy on supervising students as overly possessive and paternalistic. THE STUDY committee then suggested a new philosophy for student affairs. The University "must encourage (the student's) growing independence, meet his needs with trust in his utimate reasonableness,, permit him mistakes, and guide and counsel him without coercion," the group's report said. Just before the report was completed, Deborah Bacon resigned. University President Harlan Hatcher endorsed the new philosophy, and started to implement the committee's ideas. He dissolved the offices of the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women. Male and female housing, which had formerly been administrated separately by the respective deans, was assigned to a single director of residence halls in 1963. IN TILE FALL of 1963, the new philosophy culminated in the University's first coeducational housing experiment. Half of South Quad's 1,200 men moved to Markley Hall, and 600 Markley women took their places in the Quad. Later in the 1960s, other dorms followed the successful example. The University charted the number of students requesting coed arrangements and adapted dorms accordingly. THE FIRST mixed-corridor experiment occurred in the 1969- 70 academic year, at the request of 30 students in Mosher-Jordan. The Board of Regents required written permission from parents, which was obtained from all but one student. This venture also proved successful. "We got a letter from one father," remembered Trudy Huebner, a regent from 1967 to 1975. "His daughter (who was part of the coed experiment) had had a terrible gallbladder attack one night, and he thought it was wonderful that a couple of the guys rushed her to the hospital, and some others took care of her books," she said. "He wrote that they were all one big family." "SOME PARENTS thought that if we put men and women on the same floor, there would be a lot of sex," Huebner recalled. "And there probably was some, as always, but we also changed a lot of attitudes." Antieau agrees that some preconceptions about coed living are unfounded. "Some people approach me with the idea that having men and women in the same hall is going to stir up a lot of lust," she said. "But I say to them, 'How is seeing somebody with bed-hair in the morning on the way to brush their teeth going to stir up lust?"' ANTIEAU BELIEVES this integration will help students form realistic ideas about members of the opposite sex. "This way, people really talk to each other. It's a lot better than living with Hollywood stereotypes." In previous years, resident staff at South Quad noticed "a certain amount of artificiality" in relationships between men and women, according to Antieau. Some women felt uncomfortable when walking down male halls or entering lounges in all-male houses. "My staff said that a small number of the men saw women as meat-market objects, not as people," Antieau said. "Some of the women saw guys as 'catches.'' Antieau and her staff have tried, in the last few years, to change those ideas by encouraging coed intramural sports and placing opposite sex Resident Advisors and. Resident Directors in single sex halls and houses. WHEN THESE efforts succeeded, the building director went ahead with the plans for integration. This year, Bush and Hunt Houses of South Quad have their first male floors since the switch of 1963. Kelsey, Taylor, and Gomberg, traditionally all-male houses, each have some all- female halls. Frederick House has had coed halls for transfer students for several years. The most drastic changes came in Huber and Thronson, the houses on the seventh and eighth floors. Each had been single-sex, but now house men and women in alternate rooms on the same corridor. 'm not"worried," said Dane Spearing, an LSA junior and Resident Advisor in Thronson. "I mean, your roommate is still the same sex." Antieau is hopeful. "Studies suggest, and I believe it, that the closer the proximity of men and women in residence halls, the greater their understanding of each other as human beings." Learn Korean ARATE Improved Health/Self-Defense $01000 Introductory Lessons " special student rates " free uniform with regular membership THE ACADEMY 220 S. 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