4t atit SUNDAY MAGAZINE ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1921 University Opens September 16" (By Hughsten . MeBain) W hat The Daily W ould Say Should The birthdays. For example, if a And from now on, each and every was born March 9, he would year the University shall commence Liberty Calendar Be Universally figure from the first of the yes on Tuesday, Sept. 16. Christmas va- A ing 31 days for January, 28 f cation will begin Friday, Dec. 20 while A eruary, and 9 for March. 1 the recess will close Jan. 2." Such a would come on Friday while Washing- year, say 270 days, which is the posi- would find he was born on t statement seems ridiculous, but if the ton's would fall on Monday. I am tion of Sept. 27 this year. Consider- day of the year which would Liberty Calendar should ever. be uni- strongly in favor of the mid-week holi- ing the other calendar, with its 28 Liberty 12 according to thep versally adopted, such will be the days, for it splits the week up for the days to the month, this would bring calendar. situation of things here at Michigan. laborer," he said. the opening date of school Sept. 18, "The world hesitates long What is This Liberty Calendar? Of course if this calendar is ever Thursday. As school always opens undertaking such a revol This is not the only calendar that adopted, it will have its drawbacks as on a Tuesday, a permanent date- thing as changing its calen has been proposed to alleviate the ever the nations do, theyc haphazard one of world usage today, ~ '. T . . r i . will adopt a calendar similar but it is considered the best of them T he Liberty Calendar Liberty calendar, for it is e all by the foremost calendar special- logical, simple, and sensible.' ists and astronomers in the country.UUE T E7 iJT T U i F I SAT SUN The first universal calendar The calendar comes from the Am- -ON _____"_WE____ ___adoped__wsintituedb erican Equal Month Calendar associa- Caesar. It was based with c tion of Minneapolis and is beyond the 2 3 i4 L 5 6E7 able accuracy upon the rea theoretical stage.. More than two year, but in those days astronc years ago a bill was introduced in not founded upon data tha 0 i u~ui-'icome only with the discovery Congress to establish and adopt they d Liberty calendar. At the present time, earth revolved around the su though it is agreed that even a nationfoh 131 7 ay 1 9 2 as quick-acting as the United States r 9j n 2 1 1wsdsaifebcueAg, I ed after hsm, had only 10 day would consider long before adoptingedatrh ,hd ny3dy such a radical 2change.succeeded in getting a day tab T LbtCeaw ldi 'lFebruaryand added to his mo The Liberty Calendar would divide inaccuracies in the Julian y the year into 13 months of 28 days getting the calendar year aw a person have to ir count- for Feb- He then the 68th fall on proposed before utionary dar. If certainly x to the xtremoely r year to iyJulius onsider- al solar omy was at could that' the n. ;huamed Augustus ast, nam- s, so he en from )th. The ear kept ay from each. The association has figured that the months would follow as they do now, with the exception that an ad- ditional month, "Liberty," would come between February and March. Thirteen months of 28,days each would make a year of 364 days.' The extra day would be known as "New Year's Day" and would not appear on the calendar. It would always come be- tween Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. Every fourth year there would be a "Correc- tion Day," also not on the calendar, which would be recognized as a legal holiday, falling between Sept. 31 and Oct. 1. history dates will either have to be revised, or set according to the new schedule. . Professor Curtiss seemed extremely interested in the proposition that if the calendar is ever adopted it will materially assist in making the Uni- versity year uniform' "The way we could figure University dates would be to count from the beginning of the The Stoy o (By Stella Brunt) "This Liberty Calendar is the best This is a tale of adventure-genu- one I have ever seen," said Prof. Ralph H. Curtiss, of the astronomy de- ine adventure, with an atmosphere of partment. "Yet I do not think it mystery abo'ut it, and a dash of fool- should ever be adopted unless the hardiness. It did not happen in the whole world agrees to do so. Inas- Klondike nor in Russia-since-the-war, much as this calendar has been but-at Michigan! This is a story of brought up before Congress, it cer- a literary magazine and how'it "hap- taincy shows its merit. Several years pened." ago a calendar proposing a week of A few know that "Whimsies" began five days, having a Sunday every other lask year in a decidedly novel way, as week, was brought to my attention a mimeographed pamphlet, with its but its objectinable features were editorship a mystery. But how many numerous. have heard the inner side of "Whim- "There is absolutely no doubt in sies" interesting story-the why, and my mind but that this calendar would who, and how of it? prove practical and economical if There will always be a number in adopted. Lots of time would be saved any group of students who will hold that is now used by astronomers in obstinately to the notion that, just as calculating far ahead. With this cal- much as a university believes in and endar, .every important holiday would endeavors to develop the professions, have a definite fixed date with the athletics, and the social side of life, exception of Good Friday and Easter just so much should it believe in and which would, of course, come as usual encourage the arts. About two years the first Friday and Sunday when the ago, a certain small group of students moon was full after the vernal equin- became frankly dissatisfied with Michi- ox. It is interesting to note that gan because of the absence of recogni- Fourth of July, Christmas, Thanksgiv- tiOn for this phase of life, through the ing, and Armistice Day would all fall lack of any centralizing influence in on Thursdays. Lincoln's birthday the direction.. They were convinced, Sept. 16-could be easily set. The the true solar year during the centur- same could be done with other import- 1es. In order to correct the errors, ant University dates and we would Pope Gregory XIII issued a bull in have then, not as now, but a uniform, Febuary, 1582, establishing a new cal- smooth schedule that everyone would endar, according to which 11 days know and adhere to. were skipped.. Tat calendar is the "Another interesting point in con- one used by the civilized world today. nection with the Liberty Calendar is Russia alone, at the time, declined to that persons having birthdays the 29, follow the edict of the Roman Catho- 30, or 31 would have to have new lie head and continued using the Jul- an calendar which accounts for the difference, until a few years ago, of ( t ff 14 12 days between our dates and those of Russia. Another interesting calendar experi- also, that there were other groups and mntwas that used by France during individuals who felt the same dissatis- the revolutionary days. The year was divided into 12 months of 30 days faction, each, and each month was divided Because the group was particularly into three periods of 10 days, dubbed Interested in writing, their construct- decades. The French year began Sept. ive thinking ran in the direction of a 22, 1793 Every tenth day was a holi- publication. There was already a stu- day and the five days left over at dent magazine for the professions, for the end of the year, between Sept. 17 current opinion, for athletics; one for and 21, were named the "Sansculot- news; and one partly literary, but not tides" and were kept as festivals in entirely so, one for humor. Surely honor of virtue; genius, labor, opinion, there would be, in a student body of and reward. The extra day was honor- ten thousand, sufficie- interest to ed as the feast of revolution. support one publication devoted ex- The Frenchmen decided to name elusively to the fine arts, if it could be their months with the season of the put out inexpensively. Was that too year. So they evolved the following large a program? Well, at least they months: Vendemiaire, Brumaire, Pri- could begin by establishing a purely miaire, Nivose, Pluviose, Ventose, literary magazine. Germinal, Floreal, Prairial, Messidor, So it was, that one night last year, Thermidor, and Fructidor. They were five students pledged themselves to named by Fabre d' Eglantine, a poet, the cause: to share expenses, to do and lasted till Jan. 1,. 1806 when manual labor, even to furnish their France adopted the Gregorian calen- own manuscripts until outside help dar. should come, and-until it grew be- The Mohammedans have a calendar yond the possibility of ridicule-to of their own. They began their year keep identities secret. with, the time of Mohammed's flight Some weeks later the five entered from Mecca. on Thursday, July 16, 622 the Observatory by one of the back A. D. Hence their year is 622 years (Continued on Page Seven) behind ours.