PAGE FOUR THlE AiciHGAN DAILY TRURSDAY, APPUL 250, 1946 - ---F-U------- .. ..........94 - - --- ------ IT SO HAPPENS..- *These (onipfietaiottl IHave Set 1,11 Can Junior Take A Jke? ingwith the dishes, polishing her shoes, and assisting in the purchase of groceries. THE DAILY often has reason to moan when We've liked every veteran's wife we've met, an enterprising United Press reporter turns but Mrs. Veteran is on our list as a wife of an- up a hot feature while the local AP man is mak- other choler. ing speeches about freedom of the press. In or- * der to keep our readers posted, there's at least Bumptio B n one story we'll pass along here and now. Out in Wessington, S.D., a $30,000 estate hangs BUSINESS is getting so presumptuous that in the balance. After living a semi-retirement something ought to be done in a hurry. Whe- for 20 years, Clarence Richardson decided that ther it's sheer exuberance over the manner in Webster didn't know the meaning of the word which Congress respects its wishes or just an- joke, and left the entire $30,000 to the man who other reflection of post-war self-aggrandizement could, in the judgment of his executors, do better. we don't know. Perhaps number one guesser will be the victim We do know that they've gone too far this of a pretty raw joke himself. His name is Clar- time. Says Business Week, an unusually accurate ence C. Richardson, Jr, spokesman for the commercial viewpoint, "We ought to have a fixed date for Easter, on the second Sunday of April, year in and year out." Purple Cow Outmoded The reasoning is what hurts us. We're ac- customed to the arbitrary choices of Mother's WE DON'T know whether to stand up and and Father's Day; they fill in the slack seasons cheer or get downright disturbed. for florists, confectioners, and haberdashers. A lot of people maintain that this modern But holding no special brief for the church's era is still under control, but we're inclined present selections of Easter, we dislike highly to think that Man is just a slave to the machine the motivation which produces the following or at least its products. Our latest communique from the publicity publicity hand-out justification: "Christ probably was crucified on April 7, A.D. agenit who is fast becoming overwhelmed by 30; why not settle for Easter on the second Sun- ais 1'unton runs along these lines: dyo pi? "If contentment improves bossy's output, So they can sell more ties and bonnets? dairy prospects should be bright. Now to pre- vent hoof rot, the well-dressed cow is turned out in rubber galoshes, complete with zippers." Latin Has Its Uses Few cows were available for comment, butdd.l the last cow we talked to would rather have wE w d nt ko eerythis on hoof rot. while we don't know whether this one is true, it sounded good to us. One of our friends who works on the county Take That Woman Away weekly was having lunch with an old college HERE'S one type of news story which turns cohort when a young lady walked into the up day after day to our intense regret. Our turreognizing one of the two above gentlemen own women's page is not by any means the prime she stopped to say hello, announcing that she offender, but their crime is close at hand. too, was a brother-in-arms. She worked for They speak therein of the typical campus vet- the other Local Paper, she exclaimed. erans' wife. It develops that said wife has been "Oh, the local paper," our friend mused. "De married for two years, lives in a three-room mortuus nihil nisi bonum," he stated. (This is apartment, and wears a size seven shoe. (We a phonetic approximation.) suspect what a Freudian analyst of free asso- "Thank you, thank you very much," smiled ciation would have to say about the writers' mind, the innocent as she carried the compliment off but there's another textbook.) to her sure-to-be-pleased boss. "Mrs. Veteran" is also regimented into brown * * * * hair, 23 years, 117 pounds, bridge, reading "Blon- We Recognize A Trend die" and "Terry and the Pirates," and liking blue.b She further regiments her husband into help- BEFORE the subject gets away from us-and subjects do that with astounding regularity- we want to have a word or two about this tenden- cy of our friends to flock to law schools. We were -- having our usual learned discussion the other Editorials published in The Michigan Daily night, and musing about the whereabouts of cer- are written by members of The Daily staff tain names oft taken in vain around the table. and represent the views of the writers only. When the tabulation was complete we had New Haven, Cambridge, Morningside Heights, and the neo-Gothic on S. State St. on the list in over- Bertrand Russell once wrote that fundamen- whelming quantity.I There's no one splendid solution to the natural tal criteria of the educated man is his degreq eto f w y u w 'e w re u o e of sensitivity to human suffering outside his question of why, but we've worked out some personal experience. Europe's starving mil- tentative hypothesis. Heading the list of ad- lions constitute, among other things, a test of vantages are 1) a place to live, 2) government oisntitasecagterhpe gsopleessupport in a majority of cases, and 3) the satis- our Integrity as educated people. faction of suing local cleaning establishments At this moment, we are not subject to a high- for that pair of pants they lost before they knew pressure, door-to-door "charity campaign."The the difference between equities and torts. advertising men have not yet begun to squaw. A friend of ours now attending one of these Any aid we give Europe today is given in a rela- august institutions has a more convincing theory. tively individual manner. Russell's educated Anybody can go to lit school these days, he points man has simply to write a check to Emergency out. It takes a law education to make penny- Food Collection and send it to George H. Gab- pitchers out of pipe-smokers. ler at 1210 Brooklyn St., Ann Arbor.p --Milt Freudenheim (All items appearing in this column are written by members of The Daily staff and edited by Editorial Director.) Relax Driving Regulations ['D RATHER BE RIGHT: Feckless LHotisI _ _ __ _ t 1/ s O llE' GCICON DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN By SIAMIJEL Aiti~ON IF the House of Representatives wakes up some morning with its head clear and nothing bet- ter to do, it might ask itself whither it is drifting. For the House is sort of in trouble. In pursuit of its strategy of mashing the inoffensive Mr. Truman (and the watered-down New Deal for which he stands) into a bleeding pulp, the House is perhaps abdicating its function as a full, re- sponsible, equal half of Congress. It has developed a habit of writing muddled bills, in a great angry flurry, bills which many of its members know to be poorly written and hastily conceived, and then of depositing these furious creations, like shapeless bundles of scrap paper, on the desk of the clerk of the Senate. It leaves it to the upper House to go in for the refinements of tinkering, straighten- ing out, improving, and making sensible what is, in essence, a formless expression of bitter rage. Nothing could have less shape to it, for ex- ample, than the recent House bill on selective service. This fuzzy proposal wipes out the draft for the entire summer, and then puts it up to the President to decide, two and one-half weeks before Election Day (charming!) whether to re- institute it or not. The thing is just not a law at all; it merely runs from the problem, and then, as if moved by an afterthought, fires a potshot at the President as it runs. Incidentally, the bill represents an incoherent abandonment of the House's beloved argument that we have too much one-man government in this country, for it heaps upon the President, who didn't ask for it, the awful power of deciding whether to draft, or not to draft, free Americans into the armed services. It seeks to make a dic- tator out of him, the darn dictator, which is going the long way around to prove that dictat- ors are bad. THESE legislative romps have been taking place so often as to form a pattern. It is a design for blockading and paralyzing the federal government in its efforts to attain sensible social objectives. We have reached a stage at which numerous private business and conservative in- terests which feel themselves threatened by federal action, find that they can often obtain from the House what the patent medicine ads call quick relief. The "New Republic" recently published a scary little study of House action on certain bills not very well known to the public which shows what a mood the lower chamber has boggled into. When the government wanted to bring fire insurance companies under anti-trust regu- lation recently, and planned a court test, the House immediately whooshed through a bill exempting the companies from the operations of the law. When Governor Arnall of Georgia went to the Supreme Court with an anti-trust complaint against the railroads, a bill was brought into the House to exempt the roads. It went through, wheeeee!, like that. When the Federal government tried to collect royalties from oil companies extracting petroleum from tidelands, the (Pauley) bill to exempt the companies was introduced, and you have guessed it. It passed. Here, too, the House dropped another of its cherished theories, which is that the Supreme Court is a lovely, adorable, a delightful institution, and the guardian of our liberties, for, in all three cases, the House sought to head off Supreme Court action by writing hasty and special bits of law. This legislation has now piled up in the Senate, along. with the selective service bill, and, of course, the amazing House version of price control. AND it is almost not worth while to study the fantastic House price control bill on its merits; for it is part of the other thing, of the special function the House has lately assumed as the beachhead of anti-reform. This is not legislation; it is shell-fire; and in thinking of the role of the House these days one thinks of words like revolution, and civil strife. While these are not quite appropriate, for the House acts legally, the overtones are right; the House has left it to the Senate to be the sober legislative body while it (or its majority) conducts a kind of war, using almost any weapon that lies to hand; and raising the question of who has become the rubber stamp now, and for whom? (Copyright, 1946, N.Y. Post Syndicate) Filibuster Backfire? ATTEMPTS to legally halt lynching in the Southern states have been held up by a strong filibuster in the Senate, but in the opinion of a Washington lawyer "the result of the fight has so educated and aroused the people" that lynching no longer is an "official" practice. This view, aired before the annual institute of human relations of the Chicago Round Table of the Conference of Christians and Jews, seems too optimistic a one for the American people to ac- cept without reservation. Disregarding the fact that lynching has never been official, individual cases have been publi- cized before with no apparent alleviation of the condition. Obviously something more than the mere words of a lawyer about a successful fili- buster will be needed before lynchings in the South will come to a definite end. -Lynn Shapiro Spring Term Exam Scheduie View Of Faith To The Editor: N REPLY to the letter written by Ebba Stoll and Vesta Furniss con- cerning the question of religion we would like to say a few words con- cerning the charges of narrow atti- tudes and supercilious arrogance made against the religious organiza- tions on campus. On the basis of dogma and creed we heartily agree that no one group should ever claim to have a compet and exclusive option on Truth. Reli- gion is a deeply personal matter. But it is this very personal nature that makes our faith so very much a part of our daily lives. Christianity, to us. gives a deep and abiding meaning to all the things that we think and do. It is this meaning that makes the faith that we have so real to us. It is this meaning that is the basis for the joy and beauty that life takes on when viewed in the light of Christian- ity. God, to us, is as real as the things you see and touch. To anyone who ex- periences the thrill of answered prayer the existence of God is a cetainty. We cannot explain in rational terms why Christianity gives such a vibrant meaning to life. Nor can we explain why prayer works, or why we receive such a deep sense of awareness when- ever a prayer is answered, all psychol- ogy notwithstanding. We can only say that our faith gives new life and new vision to our daily tasks. We only know that Christianity works for us. It is only because we find sucha deep joy in our faith that we would spread it to others in hope that they might find it too. The need for a rational approach to the controversy between believers and non-believers is very great. We would be the first to support any attempt to dispel the unnecessary prejudice that exists between the atheist and the theistic philosophies. Yours very truly, George R. Crossman, Garrett Graham, Grey Austin, Bar- bara Miller, Harvey W. Ander- son, Mary Anne Graham, Marjorie Lamb, Genevieve Shanklin. Expensive Union To The Editor: LOOKING around for somehing to J do on Friday and Saturday nights, I find that generally the only alterna- ti-ves are either going to a movie or attending the Union dances. As a vet- eran trying to live on $65 a month, I find that the $1.20 per couple as charged at the Union is rather steep. I wonder if this expense is justified. I am a member of the Graduate Council which is planning a mixer early next month. The admission fee will be 25c per person. At this price, we can still make a small profit as we have in the past, even providing music, refreshments, and entertain- ments, as well as dancing. If a campus organization can pro- vide a full evening's entertainment for only 50c a couple, why is the cost of the Union dances so much greater? Since the Union dances are well at- tended, they must show a substantial profit. It would seem as though their admission price could be reduced. What is the Union's purpose? Is it a non-profit organization run for the benefit of the students? Where does the money go? Perhaps Union expenses are greater than I realize; if so, is such information available to students, and how can it best be obtained? -Howard Levy June 13 to June 19, 1946 College of Literature, Science, and the Arts College of Pharmacy School of Business Administration School of Education School of Forestry and Conservation School of Music School of Public Health NOTE: For courses having both lectures and quizzes, the time of ex- ercise is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the time of exercise is the time of the first quiz period. Cer- tain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. To avoid misunderstandings and errors, each student should re- ceive notification from his instructor of the time and place of his examina- tion. In the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, no date of examina- tion may be changed without the consent of the Examination Committee. Time of Exercise Monday at 8 ...................... "9 ..................... "3 ", 10 ........... ........... "! ", 11 ...................... Monday at 1 ...................... "3 "!. 2 ...................... " "Y 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tuesday at 8 ...................... 9 ..................... 10 ...................... '', "Y11..................... Tuesday at 1 ...................... "5 "! 2 ...................... "Y "! 3 ...................... Time of Examination Thu., June 13, 2:00-4:00 Sat., June 15, 2:00-4:00 Fri., June 14, 10:30-12:30 Tues., June 18, 10:30-12:30 Wed., June 19, 8:00-10:00 Mon., June 17, Thu., June 13, Fri., June 14, Thu., June 13, Tues., June 18, Mon., June 17, Sat., June 15, Wed., June 19, Tues., June 18, SPECIAL PERIODS College of Literature, Science, and the Arts Political Science 1, 2, 52 ........... Speech 31, 32 .................... . French 1, 2, 12, 31, 32, 61, 62, 91, 93, 153 .................... English 1, 2..................... Economics 51, 52, 53, 54........... Botany 1 ........................... Zoology 1 .......................... Sociology 51, 54 .................... Spanish 1, 2, 31, 32 .................. German 1, 2, 31, 32, 348 ............. . School of Business Administration 10:30-12:30 10 :30-12:30 2:00- 4:00 8:00-10:00 2:00- 4:00 8:00-10:00 8:00-10:00 2:00- 4:00 8:00-10:00 10:30-12:30 2:00- 4:00 2:00- 4:00 8:00-10:00 8:00-10:00 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 10:30-12:30 Sat., June 15, Mon., June 17, Mon., June 17, Tues., June 18, Tues., June 18, Wed., June 19, Wed., June 19, Thu., June 13, Fri., June 14, Fri., June 14, Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any necessary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. School of Forestry and Conservation Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any necessary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. School of Music: Individual Instruction in Applied Music Individual examinations of appointment will be given for all applied music courses (individual instruction) elected for credit in any unit of the University. For time and place of examinations, see bulletin board at the School of Music. School of Public Health Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any necessary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. f.) I (Continued from Page 2) A cademic Notices English 31, Section 4: The assign- ment for Friday, April 26, will be to continue with Sonnets where we stopped on April 24. A. L. Hawkins History and Orientation Seminar today at 3:00 p.m., 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. Keeler will speak on Geometric Constructions. School of Business Administration -Courses may not be dropped after Saturday, April 27, without penalty. School of Education Freshmen: Courses dropped after Saturday, April 27, will be recorded with the grade of E except under extraordinary cir- cumstances. No course is considered dropped unless it has been reported in the office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for DROPPING COURSES WITHOUT RECORD will be Saturday, April 27. A course may be dropped only with the permission of the classifier after conference with the instructor. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for REMOVAL OF INCOMPLETES will be Saturday, April 27. W. J. Emmons, Secretary Concerts Faculty Recital: Lynne Palmer, Harpist, will be heard in a recital at 8:30 tonight in the Lydia Mendels- sohn Theater. Her program will in- clude a group of three compositions by Salzedo, Waltzes, Op. 39, by Brahms, Prelude in C major by Pro- kofieff, Deux Divertissements by Cap- let, and will close with Mozart's Con- certo for harp and flute. Mrs. Palmer will be assisted in the Concerto by Marie Mountain Clark, flutist, and John Kollen, pianist, also members of "he School of Music faculty. The pro- ;ram is open to the general public without charge. Exhibitions Michigan Historical Collections. "Public Schools in Michigan," special exhibit for the Michigan Schoolmas- ters Club. Hours: 8:00 to 12:00, 1:30 to 4:30 Monday through Friday; 8:00 to 12:00 Saturdays. Michigan "Early Ann Open daily days, 8-12. Historical Collections: Arbor." 160 Rackham. 8-12, 1:30-4:30; Satur- N 1927, the Board of Regents passed a resolu- tion prohibiting any student attending the University from driving, except in "exceptional and extraordinary cases in the discretion of the Dean of Students." The clause "exceptional and extraordinary cases" was interpreted to include the operation of cars for family, commuting, health, and business purposes. The University also put an age limit for exemption at 26. En- forcement of the ban was put in the hands of the Dean of Students Office, upon recommenda- tion of a student committee. The resolution of 1927 is still in effect. There are a number of good reasons for maintaining such a driving ban. Prior to the ruling, about four or five students were killed each year while operating automobiles. Since the ban came into existence, two students have been killed while driving, two students in 19 years. The ban has helped to establish a more democratic atmosphere on campus. The student who had a Packard convertible might have a definite social advantage over the student who walked. The ban has met with parental approv- al, and has stopped much time wasting extra- . vagance. BUT the rigidity of the ban has gone to ex- tremes. There are several regulations which should be relaxed. First, although the theory of a driving ban is good, it should recognize the relative maturity of students on whom it falls. This is especially prominent in the case of veterans. The age exemption of 26 seems too high when one con- siders the number of students on campus over 21 who have pci formed important tasks on a mature level for the last few years. 21, the age of legal maturity, would probably be a fairer, age for exemption than 26, particularly in the unavoidable. Taxis are not easy to get at all hours in Ann Arbor, and the bus system is highly inade- quate. Girls who wish to visit someone and don't like to walk alone at night sometimes find that they must use their car. It is carrying things a bit too far to punish a girl because she drives over to a league house to borrow a book or visit a friend. Finally, the driving ban as it stands now shows a certain amount of incongruity that becomes increasingly prominent in nice weath- er.. In the summer term, it is legal for a stu- dent to use the car for recreational purposes, with certain modifications. But in the spring, when the desire to play golf or go swimming is just as strong, one can not use the car for those purposes. WE DO NOT CONTEND that the driving ban should be entirely lifted. Prohibiting stu- dents from bringing cars to Ann Arbor has prov- en to be a good idea for the students themselves. But some flexibility should prevail in the ban for students who live in town and find themselves out in various residential sections with a per- fectly good means of conveyance sitting in the driveway and restrictions of every sort sitting there with it. Some leniency should certainly pre- vail for the veteran who resents being treated as if he lacked a sense of responsibility. Some leni- ency should be effected so that the student who innocently drives over to Mosher to borrow a book isn't put on probation. -Eunice Mintz Anti-Religion? To The Editor: ON GOOD FRIDAY in one of the courses in Anthropology, the Pas- sion of Our Lord was read by the pro- fessor, and then held up by him to scorn and ridicule. Previously throughout the course all religion had been steadily discounted and scoffed at; this particular core of our Christian faith was picked out, pre- sumably as an example. Many of the students were seriously offended, (needless to say the offense was not to themselves), but dared not protest for fear of endangering their aca- demic standing in the course. Now in this State University in this democracy, our hereditary free- dom of speech and of religion are held dear. Any man may hold, unmolested, any belief or no belief, and may talk about it. Yet, lest these freedoms be interfered with, no professor is free to teach any particular religious creed or indoctrinate students accord- ing to his private standards. Is he then, by the same token, free to teach atheism or anti-religion? Is he free to blaspheme God? Events Today "The Music and Dramatic Depart- ments of the University High School present "The Chocolate Soldier," an operetta in three acts, to be given in the high school auditorium at 8:30 p.m., tonight, Friday, and Saturday evenings. Tickets are on sale in the office of the University High School. Tea at the International Center: The weeidy informal teas at the In- ternationil Center on Thursdays, from 4:00 tc 5:30 p.m. are open to ali foreign students and their Ameri- can fr'ends. A seminar on Student Christian Movement will be held at Lane Hall at 4:15 today. The discussion will be led by Mr. Franklin H. Littel. The Board of Cooperation of IN- SIGHT will meet in the Council Room at Lane Hall today at 4:30. Assembly Speakers' Bureau will hold a short meeting today at 5:00 in the Assembly Office of the League. All those interested are urged to attend. Please bring your eligibil- ity cards. For further information, contact Gretel Schinnerer at 23225. (continued on Page 5) Fifty-Sixth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff --Laura Palmer I BARNABY By Crockett Johnson Horrors! He's in one of those brown Margaret Farmez Hale Champion Robert Goldman Emily E. Knapp Pat Cameron Clark Baker Des Howarth Ann Schutz Dona Guimaraes r .r Editorial Director . . . . . . City . . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate . . . . . . . . . . . . Associate .. . . . . . . . . . . . . Sports . . . . . . . . . . Associate Sports .. . . . . . . . . . . . Women's ... ..Associate Women's Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor . . . . . . . . . . Managing Editor O'Malley. Please. You've been scraping on that fiddle for an hour. How can I keep a f--H-I- studies again ... I'm afraid that he 11