THE 7 IN jAN DAIL" .H.ANDI . .. ._ .. ._. . .. r .. . . ...... . ..v .,...Y SEEN IN PROPOSED S. C. A. CHATER STUDENTS WILL NOT BE DRAWN INTO CHURCH ACTIVITIES, AS- SERT OPPONENTS. Editor, The Michigan Daily: The "Proposed Amended Charter of the S. C. A." presents manly points of weakness. The first vital defect of the "proposed" plan is that it offers no real method of drawing students into Christian work outside of those stu- dents already engaged in church ac- tivities. This may appeal as a source of strength to some of the churches ahd to those whose main interest in student religious work is denomina- tional, but for an effective, working organization on the campus the plan is too narrow. This movement to make Lane hall and Newberry hall the cen- ter only-of activities already arranged and directed by the churches presents a situation in which, both buildings might well close their doors and let the churches engage entirely unmol- ested in their customary activities. Lane hall and Newberry hall were given and dedicated to general re- ligious work among this student body and.no group of churches has the mor- al right, and we question their legal right, to take these buildings over for purely denominational actvities or to assume property, rights in these buildings.- The method of selection of the trustees as representatives of the churches brings to the board of tris- tees those, in general, whose primary concern is to ensure the success of the denominational work in their own churches. Any activity of a general nature. which seems to conflict, even remotely, will be opposed if any gen- eral work were started (by chance) under this plan. That this charter has been hastily conceived by trustees not themselves certain of their own legal status is evident from th~e following facts: The trustees issued a call in the last issue of The Daily before examin- ations, Feb. 6, for a student meeting Feb. 24, to vote on certain amend- ments, and those amendments were not the onestactually voted upon by the trustees. At this called meeting the students were then told (so we are informed by students present at that meeting) that actually they, the stu- dents, had no right to vote upon these amendments. Further, in place of the published amendments (given in the call for the meeting), a wholly new set of amendments was presented, in- cluded within this "Proseposed Amended Charter." The board of trustees .Is one whose legal constitu- tion and status appears to be a. mat- ter of uncertainty even to themselves and under what charter they are oper- BEFORE BUYING hear our new Rich-Tone Phonograph Introductory Price $200 Machine for $150 Plays all makes of Records The Wisteria Shop 330 Maynard ating equally uncertain, except that it is so construed as at some times to give them the power to elect new members to their board and at other times denies them the power. In a board meeting before any of the resig- nations had taken place these trustees stated to the women that they did not have the power to elect the chairman of the women's committee to their board, even to fill a vacancy made by a resignation. Later the bbard as- sumed the power to elect new mem-1 bers of the board repeatedly. This "Proposed Amended Charter" serves to place entirely too much pow- er in the hands of the executive sec- retary by making his "secretary for the board, cabinets, and all of its committees"; the costruction is as loose as much of the document. How- ever, assume that at some time an in- efficient busybody were accidentally made executive secretary, what pro- cess is possible under this charter to rid the organization of such a man? Student committees and trustees would call frequently upon the executive sec- retary for counsel, undoubtedly, but to saddle this official upon both the or- ganization and all committees is ab- solutely undesirable. Not to define either term of office or definite man- ner of election to office of the employed: secretaries shows a lamentable lacki of business acumen.I Since in this charter the ultimate control of the women's work rests with the entire board of trustees theI disproportionate representation (17:6) of men and women is wholly unfair. Certainly the control of the women's organization should be left in the hands of the student girls and their women advisers, and this was done< on paper in a previous "Amended 1 Charter" upon which the organization was supposedly functioning when eight women found it necessary to resign. The chairman of the wom- en's committee was by the constitu- tion made a member of the executive committee of the board of trustees on paper, but the present executive sec- retary of the men's organization ruled this member off the executive com- mittee; two meetings were held of the executive committee, probably illegal because of the failure to include a legal member. Another action of the executive secretary worth noting is his activity in changing the mem- bership of the board of trustees, sug- gesting to an influential member of a certain church that his church elect a different representative to the board. The immediate reason why eight women resigned from the advisory board should also be made clear. So far as the board was concerned they were legislated off the board. The "Revised Charter" granted by the men after many individual conferences gave the women's advisory committee legal status and power at the last meeting of the board of trustees be- fore the resignations, a resolution was passed by the board of trustees which would have legislated out of exist- ence this advisory committee. At that time the board of trustees claimed that it was necessary fou the students to vote upon this "Amendment"; how- ever by the time of the student meet- ing of Feb. 24 the board of trustees had come to a different conclusion. This resolution in question was intro- duced through the student girls' cab- inet and was evidently "inspired"; the method of its introduction and passage may afford one of the reasons for the resignation of six or eight members of the student girls' cabinet. It may be mentioned that the student girls' cabinet passed, before this time, a resolution of complete confidence in the women's advisory committee. r Anyone who considers the long years of service in Y. W. C. A. work by the group of women who resigned, will find it difficult to believe that they resigned in pique. A board of trus- tees more acutely conscious of the obligations of their office would have (Continued on Page Six) H U B E R T "Kissing Time" QA R R I cK D-ET R OIT IRENE The Sensation o14 Coninents DAYS~ STARTLING TODAY' DW iSto -0 Powerful romance of plain worth and gilded hypocrisy. A story of love that startled the churches and toppled over the gods of "high society. " FAMOUS PLAYERS-LASKY CORP. 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