PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1E, 1951 U _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1951 Changing Women's Hours I 't "Let Nothing You Dismay" BOOKS wI FIRST SEMESTER EXAMINATION SCHEDULE THERE HAS BEEN a great deal of dis- satisfaction among women students with the restrictions which the University places on their hours. This dissatisfaction has generally ex- pressed itself in mumbled complaints, vague derisions and occasional hysteria as . a coed realizes that it is 10:35. The front door of the dorm is locked and she cannot step outside for a breath of air without setting off an alarm which she isnt sure really exists. Still she is not taking any chances. But the grumbling and widely dispersed mumbled complaints have had no effect. They have not been voiced in a unanimous complaint. The sentiment has been: We have these restrictions and there is not a single thing we can do about them. This is far from true. A quick glance at the first page of the rule book distributed to all freshmen wo- men coyly entitled "Judy Be Good" offers the answer to any dissatisfaction. "Judy, the rule book was made by you or women like you," it says, going on to explain about the Board of Representa- tives who suggest the standards which are voted upon by each woman of the Uni- versity. If a need for a change arises, Judy's wise 1:30 Permissiont A LONG AS the University insists upon its strict rules for coed closing hours to "protect the women" the rules might as well be made more consistent in purpose and in substance. Several times a semester all women are given late permission because of a big event on campus. However, the rules specify that all other parties must end at midnight and that women must be out of men's housing units at 12 and men out of women's dorms and houses by 12:25 a.m. Obviously ony a small percentage of the women with dates will attend the special all-campus event. Most of the others will go to fraternity, sorority or residence hall par- ties or attend movies, games or other forms of spectator entertainment that will end by the stroke of twelve. These couples then have their choice of standing in the sub-freezing weather; spend- ing money at restaurants-although they may have just eaten at their parties; hudd- ling in cars or private apartments, if they have them, and possibly engaging in activi- ties the University's paternalistic policy is supposed to prevent; or just giving the whole thing up and going home. The fairest and most easily administer- ed solution to the problem would be to grant late permission to all groups having parties on the nights of big campus af- fairs and extend men's calling hours at women's residences to 1:25 a.m. This would keep so many couples from being left out in the cold. --Alan Luckoff T''Grading WITH FINAL EXAMS looming in the not too distant future, the traditional stu- dent gripe against over-emphasis or un- fairness in the grading system has already begun. In keeping with the old "everybody- talks - about - it - nobody-does-anything about-it" adage, many students will fail to get their two cents' worth in at the literary college conference on grading to- night. The informal discussion, open to students, faculty, and administrative officials, is not held with an eye toward definite resolu- tions but is rather an advisory conference, the results of which will later be presented in the form of a report to the college. Despite the time-consuming pre-Christ- mas round of activities, the literary college conference merits student attention. It's planned for student benefit; it will only be as effective as their interest and attendance make it. ---Diane Decker counselor continues, "A subcommittee of the Board of Representatives works jointly with the Women's Judiciary Council to investi- gate the proposal." From there the proposal goes to the women for the three-fourths vote approval. Now the question arises-Just what do the women want? Do they wish the rules to be abolished? or simply to be modified? Do they actually want any change at all? Some have said that the hour system at Michigan goes completely against the grain of modern beliefs in the equality of women. While college women are certainly no less mature than others of their age, it is hard to ask a loving mother to send her child, who perhaps has never before been away from home, out into the world of drinking parties, illicit affairs and the worldly wise. The knowledge that some sort of restriction, sim- ilar to that at home, is being enforced, is what convinces many mothers that perhaps college won't be too harmful to her innocent darling. But the absurdity of the present Univer- sity system comes with the continuation of the same restrictions for the senior as those for the entering freshman. By the time a woman has been on campus for several semesters she is qualified to judge the number of hours of sleep and study which are necessary for her individually, not for her as a member of University woman- hood. The sudden freedom of being away from home is very likely to react on the freshman as a feast might to a starving man. He just can't get enough of that which he was lacking. By the time a woman reaches junior or senior status, however, she knows how much freedom she can afford to take, and she can choose wisely. That she can make the right decision is shown by the women of such schools as Radcliffe, and Wisconsin where more leni- ent restrictions are enforced. As freshmen, women must observe hours such as all University women here must keep. As they progress, the hour they must be in the dorm becomes later, finally reaching mid- night or later for seniors on weekdays. But it is up to the women themselves to start the agitation necessary for the impetus of a campaign to change women's hours. They must show that there is a desire for this change. Certainly the need is obvious. -Gayle Greene Student.Bant THE RECENT rash of speaker's gags was poorly imitated last week by a profes- sor who tried to ban a student from his class for talking back. Prof. Isaac B. Berkson of City College of New York accused a student, Marvin Sandler of holding subversive beliefs and of "conduct unbecoming a student" and asked that a notation be made on his rec- ord to prevent him from getting a public teaching position after graduation. The incident began when Sandler said that he didn't believe that slave labor camps existed in the Soviet Union. At a request for proof, he submitted his source materials in Prof. Berkson's office the next day. In the conversation that followed Prof. Berkson said that anyone with Sandler's beliefs shouldn't be allowed to teach in a grammar or secondary school. Up to that time, according to Prof. Berk- son, Sandler had been arguing dispassion- ately. At this, however, he retorted that Prof. Berkson had no right to be teaching in any school. Prof. Berkson then ordered him not to attend his class. Sandler appeared in class the next day and was ordered to leave. The professor sought the support of the class, was ans- wered by silence and dismissed the whole class. Dean Egbert Turner has decided that temporarily, pending final action on the case, Sandler may attend the class. It is rather interesting to note that the course involved was Philosophy of Education. -Felicia Browne THE BRIGAND, by New Directions). Giuseppe Berto. GIUSEPPE BERTO, whose last book, The Sky Is Red, received a good critical re- ception, and was a middling best seller, seems to be approaching maturity as a writer, Effectively employing a simple, almost opaque prose style which we have come to associate with post-war Italian novelists (Moravia, Vittorini, et. al), Berto examines the ravages of the war and its aftermath on the social structure of a small village in southern Italy. Using the sensibility of the fourteen- year-old peasant boy Gino, the writer sketches the career of an outlaw named Michele Rende (perhaps suggested by the late Salvatore Giuliano) who, embittered by the iniquity of the peasant's lot, at- tempts to enforce land reform at the point of a machine gun. Gino's romantic sus- ceptibilities infuse the outlaw's activities with a heroic glow that contrasts purpose- ly with the negative results of Rende's joust with the authorities. The protagonist having been imprisoned on a false charge of murder, escapes and joins the partisans fighting behind the German lines in the north. Returning to the village he assumes his service has absolved him of further punishment. His sense of social justice, presumably broad- ened by his contacts among the partisans, is outraged by the post-war dislocation and he leads an abortive expedition to expropri- ate a large tract of tenantless land. This failing, he again breaks jail, takes to the mountains, and even in the eyes of the vil- lagers becomes a brigand. After futile wan- derings and constant harassment by the police, he is finally betrayed by informers and while carrying out a personal vendetta, is ignobly shot down. Except for one deviation, a somewhat ingenuous and needless attempt to expli- cate his social message (sharply implicit throughout the narrative), Berto employs the peasant boy Gino as first-person nar- rator. This hackneyed device is used to good advantage here, for it is Gino and his generation that must effect social jus- tice and land reform. Rende's way means violence and inconclusive results, a hard- ening of the status quo. It is up to Gino and his contemporaries to bring about a more equitable social order gradually, and by pacific means. Berto tells his story simply and effectively, suppressing its inner tensions and conflicts with a deceptively unsophisticated style which heightens the intensity. If his judg- ments are a bit naive, his narrative skill and sense of scene deserve a wide audience. -D. R. Crippen * * * CHOSEN COUNTRY, by John Dos Passos. (Houghton Mifflin). JAY PIGNATELLI, bastardson of melting- pot America, expresses the following sen- timents in a final chapter entitled, "O My America My New Found Land": We've just scratched the surface of our country; a newfoundland, he wanted to be telling Lulie. Everything to be done. It's still new and fresh as the day my grandfather, a hair trunk on his shoulder, stumbled down the gangplank off a bilgy sailing ship .. . He wanted to be telling Lulie, in words that weren't flannel in the mouth, the yearning of a man who might have been a man without a country (Damn the United States: I never want to hear her name again) for the country of his choice that made him feel so proud and humble when he saw the striped flag fly. Those words could be the confession of John Dos Passos, liberal son of a big city cor- poration lawyer, who damned the American way in his giant trilogy U.S.A. in the mid- thirties, then swung as violently toward sen- timentalizing grassroots American democ- racy in the mid-forties. Before bringing Jay Pignatelli, illegitimate son of a bigcity corporation lawyer to this patriotic pass, Dos Passos takes him through Europe, Harvard, and the ambulance corps in World War I. Other familiar Dos Passos country: cocktail parties with dilletante leftists; a trial of anarchists who could be Sacco-Vanzetti; a girl named Molly "whose lips felt warm and strong under him"; a girl named Hedda: "he felt grateful to Hedda, because if he hadn't had somebody to go to bed with during the final weeks of the trial he would have broken down com- pletely." A girl named June: "'Oh you're lovely,' she mumbled as she threw herself down on her back on the double bed." Then finally there's Lulie, and we're back to our starting point. None of this means very much, because Jay, like earlier Dos Passos creatures, is a one dimensional wanderer in sexual, social or intellectual worlds, where he forever re- acts, but never acts. That is, he never acts in the moral dimension so that his choices have meaning. Indeed, the world of Dos Passos is an amoral one. The values of fidelity or be- trayal, of courage or cowardice, of honor or dishonor are never in issue; and I must agree with F. R. Leavis that here must lie the great tradition where memorable characters come to life. So the accident that Dos Passos' charac- ters now salute the flag as the curtain slowly University of Michigan COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS HORACE H. RACKHAM SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH COLLEGE OF PHARMACY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SCHOOL OF MUSIC January 21 - January 31, 1952 NOTE: For courses having both lectures and recitations, the time of class is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having recitations only, the time of the class is the time of the first recitation period. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. 12 o'clock classes, 4 o'clock classes, 5 o'clock classes and other "irregular" classes may use any examination period provided there is no conflict (or one with conflicts if the conflicts are arranged for by the "irregular" classes). Each student should receive notification from his instructor as to the time and place of his examination. In the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, no date of examination may be changed without the consent of the Committee on Examina- tion Schedules. Time of Class Time of Examination 4 } Xettep4 TO THE EDITOR The Daily welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters which are signed by the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed. edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. MONDAY TUESDAY (at (at (at (at (at (at (at 8 9 10 11 1 2 3 Tuesday, Jan. 29 Monday, Jan. 21 Wednesday, Jan. 23 Saturday, Jan. 26 Monday, Jan. 28 Thursday, Jan. 31 Thursday, Jan. 24 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2-5 9-12 2-5 9-12 9-12 9-12 " 9-12 2-5 9-12 2-5 , ;- (at (at (at (at (at (at (at R 9 10 11 1 2 3 Wednesday, Jan. 30. Tuesday, Jan. 22 Friday, Jan. 25 Monday, Jan. 28 Thursday, Jan. 31 Thursday, Jan. 24 Saturday, Jan. 26 I The Leader .. . To the Editor: READ with interest the article on State Auditor General Mar- tin's comments the other night to the Young Republicans. His state- ments, quoted directly in The Daily article, sounded strangely familiar to me. At very best you could call them the same vague generalities which the Republican candidates have been spouting for several years now. I am glad to hear that Mr. Mar- tin is convinced that foreign policy is "tremendously import- ant." I am also glad to hear him admit that "we are faced today by another great power who will, if the time is ripe, try to destroy us." I was also tremendously impressed by his profound assertion that "we must lead with strength." Of course when we get right down to brass tacks we will have to admit that Mr. Martin actually said nothing at all which was new. He has merely stated what gov- ernment '.officials have already known for a long time now. When they go to the polls next November to elect United States Senator, the voters of Michigan will want more than pretty words and fancy phrases. They will want a man who tells the people where he stands on the important issues of the day. They will vote for the man who gives them the answers they want. Somehow I think that man just might happen to be Blair Moody. -Gene Mossner IFC Stand ... To-the Editor: CONGRATULATIONS to t h e IFC! Finally, the IFC is putting up a fight for its own rights. Distaste- ful articles in the Daily have claimed that the IFC has "ad- mitted it doesn't have the power to legislate the forced removal of bias clauses from fraternity con- stitutions." That is a lot of rot. The power is there. Why should the IFC pass laws that may mean the removal of fourteen houses from campus? That would mean weakening its own organization. Discrimination cannot be stopped by legislation! A national fraternity would rather lose it Michigan chapter than doz- ens of southern chapters. I know-- I tried-and I shall try again. Eventually it will come, but it wil take years. You think the IFC lacks power? Where does SL think its getting all its power? It certainly is not a representative group. People get on the SL by who they know, not what they know. How can a "cam- pus activities group" like SL tell another group what to do? Each group has its own inherent power to legislate in its own behalf. You take care of your business, SL. The IFC will take care of its own. -Dick Tinker 1 These regular examination periods have precedence over any special period scheduled concurrently. Conflicts must be ar- ranged for by the instructor of the "special" class. SPECIAL PERIODS' English 1, 2 Monday, Jan. 21 2-5 Psychology 31 Monday, Jan. 21 2-5 Sociology-Psychology 62 Monday, Jan. 21 2-5 French, 1, 2, 11, 12, 31, 32, 61, 62 Tuesday, Jan. 22 2-5 Speech 31, 32 Tuesday, Jan. 22 2-5 Spanish 1, 2 Wednesday, Jan. 23 2-5 German 1, 2, 11, 31 Wednesday, Jan. 23 2-5 Russian 1 Wednesday, Jan. 23 2-5 Mathematics 6 Thursday, Jan. 24 9-12 Zoology 1 Friday, Jan. 25 2-5 Chemistry 1, 3, 21 Saturday, Jan. 26 2-5 Sociology 51, 54, 90 Tuesday, Jan. 29 2-5 Political Science 1 Tuesday, Jan. 29 2-5 Economics 51, 52, 53, 54, 153 Wednesday, Jan. 30 2-5 SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any neces- sary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any neces- sary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Individual examinations by 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 examina- tions, see bulletin board of the School of Murtc. SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any neces- sary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH Courses not covered by this schedule as well as any neces- sary changes will be indicated on the School bulletin board. * * * * UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN College of Engineering SCHEDULE OF EXAMINATIONS January 21 to January 31, 1952 NOTE: For courses having both lectures and quizzes, the time of class is the time of the first lecture period of the week; for courses having quizzes only, the time of class is the time of the first quiz period. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. All cases of conflicts between as- signed examination periods must be reported for adjustment. See bulletin board outside of Room 3209 East Engineering Build- ing between January 7th and January 12th for instruction. To avoid misunderstandings and errors each student should re- ceive notification from his instructor of the time and place of his appearance in each course during the period January 21st to January 31st. No date of examination may be changed without the consent of the Classification Committee. X } 4 4 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Religious Survey (Continued from Page 1) tian must attend divine worship every Sun- day no matter how he feels; that he must pray regularly and consistently. In doing so he may come to know the God in whom he believes and can more fully do God's will in his daily life. * * * MANY PERSONS identify the Episcopal Church by its liturgical form of worship but have little idea what it means. Each worship service is ordered, following a regular scheme in which all doctrines are expressed in the course of a year. This year plan, the se- quence of which evolves on the basis of Christ's life, is known as the Christian or Church's year. The whim of the clergyman does not de- termine the nature of the services; these are prescribed in the Book of Common Prayer where everyone can follow and take part in them. The matters of ritual, however, are of secondary importance, according to Mr. Lew- is. In some Episcopal Churches there is more ritual than others, some "high" and some "low." The essential matters are belief in God, in Christ and in the sirit of God. There are no organizational ties between the Church of Fnttland and1American in a Diocese, of which there are about 150 in America. Over the Diocese is a Bishop who is elected in convention by the laity and clergy. This Bishop has not much auto- cratic power and is concerned chiefly with administering the convention's wishes and representing it at official functions. The national organization is run by a General Convention, which meets every three years. It is divided into two houses-- the House of Bishops, and the House of Deputies, to which each Diocese elects four clergymen and four laymen. This group elects a Presiding Bishop who is nominal head of the Church for six years. He is only a nominal head, and serves chiefly as a representative of the church. Thus the whole structure is based upon the parishes, who choose their own pastors, elect representatives to the higher bodies which choose the officials and ultimately control the purse strings. The similarity between this structure and the U.S. civil organization is unmistakeable. The parish equals the town and its rector the mayor; the Diocese-the state, the Bish- op-the governor, the General Convention -congress; the Presiding Bishop-the Presi- dent. As a final matter of belief, Mr. Lewis (Continued from Page 2) Industrial Relations Club. Meeting, wed., Dec. 19, Room 3-D, Union. Speak- er: Professor Riegel. "Executive De- velopment." Undergraduate Botany Club. Meet- ing, Wed., Dec. 19, 7:30 p.m., 1139 Na- tural Science Building, featuring stu- dent talks by club members. Officers will be elected for the next semester. Union Weekly Bridge Tournament. There will be no tournament this Wednesday. The tournaments will con- tinue Wednesday immediately follow- ing the Christmas holidays. Ullr Ski Club: Meeting to discuss Christmas vacation ski trip, Wed., Dec. 19, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-A, Union. No movies. Folk and Square Dance. Meet at Bar- bour Gym, Wed., Dec. 19, 8 p.m. Every- one welcome. Electrical Engineering Research Dis- cussion Group. Meet wed., Dec. 19, 4 p.m., 2084 East Engineering Bldg. Dr. Norman Scott will speak on "Oscilla- tions in Non-linear Systems." Kappa Kappa Psi. Meeting, wed., Dec. 19, 7:30 p.m., Harris Hall. Congregational-Disciples Guild: Sup- per Discussions Groups, 5:30 to 7 p.m., and Freshman Discussion Group, 7 to 8 p.m., Wed., Dec. 19, Guild House. Sixty-Second Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Chuck Elliott........Managing Editor Bob Keith .............City Editor Leonard Greenbaum, Editorial Director Vern Emerson ..........Feature Editor Rich Thomas ..........Associate Editor Ron Watts ............Associate Editor Bob Vaughn ......... .Associate Editor Ted Papes..............Sports Editor George Flint ...Associate Sports Editor Jim Parker ... Associate Sports Editor Jan James..........Women's Editor Jo Keteihut, Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Miller.........Business Manager Gene Kuthy. Assoc. Business Manager Charles Cuson ... Advertising Manager Sally Fish ............Finance Manager Stu Ward.......Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other mattersherein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor. Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during regular school. year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. Time of Class (at 8 (at 9 (at 10 MONDAY (at 11 (at 1 (at 2 (at 3 TUESDAY (at 8 (at 9 (at 10 (at 11 (at 1 (at 2 (at 3 Time of Examination Tuesday, January 29 Monday, January 21 Wednesday, January 23 Saturday, January 26 Monday, January 28 Thursday, January 31 Thursday, January 24 Wednesday, January 30 Tuesday, January 22 Friday, January 25 Monday, January 28 Thursday, January 31 Thursday, January 24 Saturday, January 26 *Monday, January 21 *Tuesday, January 22 *Wednesday, January 23 *Thursday, January 24 *Thursday, January 24 *Friday, January 25 *Saturday, January 26 *Tuesday, January 29 *Wednesday, January 30 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2-5 9-12 2-5 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2-5 9-12 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 9-12 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 2-5 i C.E. 1, 2, 4; Draw. 3; Eng. 1 M.E. 136 Draw 2; E.E. 5; French E.M. 1, 2; M.E. 82; Span.; Germ. Math 6 P.E. 11 Draw. 1; M.E. 135 Chem. 1, 3, 21; C.E. 21, 22 P.E. 31, 32, 131 Econ. 53, 54, 153 1L Evening, 12 o'clock, and "Irregular" classes may use any of the periods marked (*) provided there is no conflict. BARNABY If he doesn't sit out on his sidewalk, Mr. Baxter, like Oh, door trouble again. Lucky the evolution of Odkindof door.WW I acmor ij II