THE MICHIGAN DAILY Women To Vote Today On New Rushing Rules Delegates From All Houses Will Convene To Pass On 15 Modifications (Continued from Page 1) alty of cancellation of all the dates with the rushee. (7) New Panhellenic forms will be printed to be mailed to the rushee to take the place of phone calls when the person cannot be reached by phone. (8) For the ruling that a house may not have more than four dates with a rushee, a vote will be taken on the substitution of a penalty of cancella- tion of all dates with the rushee for the present one of cancellation of one rushing party. The rule governing formal engage- ments may be changed to (9) upon the completion of the second date, a sorority may extend an invitation for a third date, and if that is ac- cepted then the rushee may be in- vited to a formal. Provide Definite Penalties (10) For a violation of the rule against keeping rushees over the time limit at entertainments, it was pro- posed that the house be made to can- cel one date with the rushee for whom the rule is broken. (11) For violation of the rule against a rushee attending more than one formal, it is suggested that the house be forbidden to pledge the woman for whom the rule was broken until two weeks have elapsed. (12) Cancellation of all dates with the rushee for whom the rule was broken was suggested instead of the present penalty of cancellation of one rushing party for violation of the ruling against calling for a rushee on other than formal engagements. No Favors Allowed At Dinners Although there is no present pen- alty for having favors at a rushing dinner, it was suggested (13) that. the penalty be cancellation of one date with the rushee for whom the rule was broken. And again, a ques- tion of penalty, it was suggested that (14) a penalty of the removal of all rushing privileges for the fall season be imposed for violation of the rule against rushing outside the house. Since the removal of rushing privileges for the season following the formal season did not seem an adequate punishment it was sug- gested that when a house breaks the silent period rushing privileges be taken away for the following fall. The final ruling suggested was (15) that pledging be at 10 a.m. on Sat-; urday instead of 3 p.m. because foot-, ball games interfere. Hull Guest Speaker At Associated Press Meeting Bromage Goes To Conference At Bloomington{ Local Government To Be Subject Of Sessions At Indiana University Speaks At Banquet -Associated Press Photo Officers of the Associated Press and Secretary of State Cordell hull, guest speaker, are shown at the opening of the annual meeting of the Associated Press in New York. Left to right: Frank B. Noyes, president of the Associated Press and publisher of the Washington Star; Secretary Hull; Kent Cooper, general man- ager of the Associated Press, and Adolph S. Ochs, member of the board of directors and publisher of the New York Times. . Prof. Arthur W. Brornage of the political science department left last night for a two-day conference on local government at Indiana Uni- versity, Bloomington, Ind., it was an- nounced at the political science of- fices yesterday. The conference will be held today and tomorrow. The conference will be an executive session, not open to the public, and those present will include members I of the political science department at Indiana University and members of Gov. Paul V. McNutt's committee on governmental economy. It is one of the conferences spon- sored by the American Political Sci- ence Association in order to promote frank discussion on state and local government between political sci- entists and administrative officials. It is similar to a conference held here last year with Gov. William A. Com- stock participating. Topics which will be discussed at the conference will" include welfare, finance, and the structure of county and township governments. Foresters To Tke Civil Service tets s Seniors in the School of Forestry and Conservation are preparing for the second civil service examination within a year. Assistant foresters will be selected for work in the United States Forest Service from those tak- ing the exams late next month. Nearly all seniors in the School of Forestry and Conservation take these examinations although many of them are seeking positions with private' concerns this year. Trained foresters' are needed by the private lumber in- terests under the new code which demands that the land be left in pro- ductive condition, officials explained. ABOUT BOOKS GOD'S LITTLE ACRE, by Erskine Caldwell. New York: The Modern Library (1934), 95c.--A Review By JOHN W. PRITCHARD j Written last year, "God's Little Ache" was first praised to the skies by critics all over America, then de- scended upon by a bevy of outraged Comstockians and taken to court on an obscenity charge. It was vindi- cated, the court deciding that an obscene book is one whose every ele- ment is directed toward an exploita- tion of obscenity, and that in the novel under discussion only isolated portions were necessary to a true de- lineation of the life of the characters I-low-caste, or rather outcaste, in- habitants of Georgia. The natives of this section are ill- educated and poverty-stricken -they are of the class termed by Negroes, "poor white trash." Low in intellect and emotional power, they are only a few shades removed from the men- tal and moral status of dogs. Their psychological processes are sluggish; in fact, the only element of their na- ture that is not sluggish is their apti- tude for sexual activity. For this they are always ready, nor in any sense are they reticent about it. Even adul- tery is pretty general; a cuckold may or may not be angry, and if his ire is aroused, it is not because of pride nor of any moral issue, but because he feels thatrthe offender is poaching on his property. The story, which covers about four days in midsummer: Ty Ty Walden and his sons, Shaw and Buck, are busy pock-marking their land with pits 20 feet deep in their search for gold which may or may not exist there. With Ty Ty live his unmarried and unrebukedly promiscuous daugh- ter Darling Jill, and Buck's wife Gri-. selda. His daughter Rosamund is married to Will, a striking cloth-mill worker. His son Jim Leslie is wealthy, and scorns his parents, living in a nearby town. All these characters are brought together and work out their sexual destinies - sexual, not for por- nographic effect, but because they have no other purpose in life. The exception to this rule is Will. who is as woman-avid as any of them. but in whom there is a spark of latent humanity struggling for recognition. It is perhaps significant that he is shot to death while attempting to put this spark to work. As a naturalistic picture of life among these people, the novel is fine and strong. Further, as a story it is movingly entertaining. But it is not destined for any prolonged existence in the world of letters; as an his- torical document it may, perhaps, be of value in the years to come. It is doomed not because of its execution, which is unusually good, but because of its subject-matter. For mankind is becoming increasingly intellectual in its focus, and already it is with a sort of childish curiosity that we read of the doings of those who are human in form but purely animal in their emotional constitution. It may be ob- jected that stories of animals have in- dicated at least latent immortality; true, yet be it remembered that these animal protagonists, such as those of Jack London, are all endowed with unmistakably human characteristics. Thus the only character in "God's Little Acre" who arouses a sympa- thetic note inthe reader is that of Will, who more' closely approaches humanity than any of his compan- ions. Because the Modern Library is composed of immortal works of art, I think that "God's Little Acre" should have been excluded. It is well, how- ever, to place it in a popularly-priced edition, for it is worth reading and studying DIRT ChEAP-NO! WASHINGTON, April 24. - (JP)- A jury has ordered Raymond T. Baker to pay Mrs. J. Borden Harriman $850 for dumping a huge pile of earth on her Ridge Road estate without per- mission. The award ended a court trial which has been the talk of Washington society for a week. Baker was at one time director of the mint. la.1 Frankfin Clark Fry, of Akron, 0., who Avill speak on "A Church for the Atges" at the annual Luther Night Banquet, which will be held at 6:15 p.m. toynorrow at the Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Yearly Business 0f $90,000 Is Done By Unihers ityLaundry A survey and statistical account of+ the University laundry's service has recently been compiled by E. C. Par- don, superintendent of buildings and grounds. The University laundry ias in the past year taken in for gross sales a sum of $92,209.36. This figure shows a decided profit when compared with the total expenditures for the year 1933. Labor proves the greatest ex-1 pense of the University, costing $64,- 264, but materials also prove a big1 item amounting to $8,829. The main use of the laundry is to serve the University hospital, but be--t sides this it does the washing for the buildings about the campus. An average month's washing is so various as to include everything from curtains to baby napkins, and as pointed out the total number of pieces washed amounted to the large sum of 8,563,734 for the year 1933. Wife Hopes To Gain Freedom For Jacobson Plans To Continue Fight For Release Of Husband Sentenced As Spy Though the trial of Arvid V. Ja- cobson, '28, was culminated Mon- day when he received a five-year sen- tence, his wife, Mrs. Sally Jacobson of South Range, Mich., says she is "not by any means" through with her fight for his freedom. Arrested, in Helsingfors with her husband Nov. 1, from the moment her release was secured by friends in the United States, she began a struggle to free him. Writing Congressmen, influential men, and friends of Ja- cobson everywhere, she literally bar- raged the State Department at Wash- ington with letters of recommenda- tion. As a result, Horace M. Albright, the United States minister to Fin- land, was officially asked to investi- gate the case, and finding Jacobson was without legal aid, furnished him an American counsel during his long trial. Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg also took an interest in the case and found out from the State Department on March 22 that "it is unofficially un- derstood that Jacobson will be given a lenient sentence." It was but a month after that when Jacobson re- ceived his sentence, Although she herself believes that the sentence is "as light as could have been expected," Mrs. Jacobson says she will immediately begin to collect a series of character letters concern- ing Jacobson to send to both the United States State Department. and Finnish government officials. "If they but knew what kind of a man my husband is, they would know that he could not intentionally be guilty of a thing like that," she said. 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