FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1952 T. ....._;_. .. -. New 'U' Calendar r HE RECENT literary conference focussed campus attention on an problem, the University calendar. has old At this conference, perhaps one thing only was generally acknowledged; somne change should be made. Although this was never stated overtly by members of the student body attending the conference, all seemed to start from this fundamental premise. I From the standpoint of various members of the faculty, however, one change is needed-the elimination of the "lame duck" teaching session between Christmas vaca- tion and the first semester examination period when nothing is accomplished in the classroom. The Huntley-Crary plan, which has re- ceived a good deal of consideration, elimi- nates this session. It calls for moving up the opening of the fall semester, so that classes and exams may be finished before Christ- mas. A five-week Christmas vacation would follow, and the second semester would start several weeks earlier than at present. However, as Frank E. Robbins, chairman of the University Calendar Committee, has pointed out, the plan has its limitations. Setting up a calendar for the year '52-'53 by the proposed revision, Robbins came up with this: classesustart Aug. 25, moving orientation week up to Aug. 18, and the first semester ends on Dec. 19. By shorten- ing the proposed five-week vacation period to three weeks, the second semester classes could get underway Jan. 12 and commence- ment would be May 9. This calendar offers several serious drawbacks. From the standpoint of the working student, valuable days for the re- sort season and other summer jobs which last through Labor Day are being ex- changed for time in early summer or after Christmas when jobs are scarce. And, the faculty member who teaches both during the regular school year and dur- ing summer school is left with only one long vacation a year, coming at a time when his children enrolled in public schools are unable to take a vacation. Other shortcomings of the plan stand out. It would eliminate, some of the spring sports events, it would decrease crowds at athletic events during the "long vacation," and it would bring May Festival during the middle of second semester final examination. Transfer students and incoming freshmen for the second semester would find classes at the University starting before their finals were completed at the institution they were then attending. There are other elements to be considered in the Huntley-Crary plan. The time-stretch between the closing of summer school and the opening of the fall semester is now uti- lized by the maintenance men to make fur- nace, grounds and general repairs. The pro- posed calendar leaves only a little over a week for this purpose. Summer school dates cannot be moved up to conform with the Huntley-Crary year because teachers from other schools who make up the bulk of the summer student body would not be able to juggle their own teaching schedules to at- tend. It is pertinent to note that a plan simi- lar to that proposed by, Professors Huntley and Crary was tried at the University of California early in the century and dropped because of the resort industry in that State, which found itself without help late in the summer. Admittedly, the "lame duck" session should be eliminated, but the Huntley-Crary plan, as it now stands, is not the solution. -Diane Decker Religion Training CANON BERNARD IDDINGS BELL of the Episcopalian Cathedral of Chicago has condemned the nation's schools for shirking their duty of giving American youth a know- ledge and understanding of religion, thus producing a society of Henry Aldriches. "There are four varieties of human ex- perience," Canon Bell states, "none of them can be neglected in education." These varieties of experience are science, human- ities, social sciences and religion. It is Dr. Bell's opinion that no matter how fine a job an educational institution does on the first three phases, it goes for nought . . - as long as the last is ignored. What the critical churchman is forgetting is that it is no more the business of the schools to make sure that their students have faith in a Supreme Being than it is for them to tell them what political party they should vote for. It is the business of the churches to teach religion. It is the business of the educational institutions to teach science, the humanities and the social sciences. They should not over- lap into the field of the "Thou Shalt Nots." However, religion is not as ignored in the classroom as Canon Bell thinks. Such fields as philosophy, sociology, anthropology and history do deal with religion stimulating thought leaving evaluatjbns up to the stu- dent. No Coordinator of Religious Instruc- tion is needed. If America is a nation of religious illit- erates, and it is doubtful that it is, it is the homes and chuches that are shirking their duty. Contrary to Dr. Bell's opin- ion "church clubs and extra-mural agents," and not the university, can be most ef- feotive in promoting an understanding of all religions. The attempt to integrate secular know- ledge with religious knowledge is neither the task of the church nor the school but, rather, that of the student. Only after he has obtain- ed experience from both sources, and not just in one big lump, can he become balanc- ed in all four of Canon Bell's varieties of human experience. -Helene Simon Speaker Ban 0NCE AGAIN it must be observed, the University Lecture Committee had no choice. The decision was predictable; the Com- mittee did its simple duty and well. But there were factors influencing the decision which, though not acknowledged publicly, must have played an, important role in the outcome. Relevant, if embarassing, considerations are these: The recent departure of the House Un- * American Activities sub-committee has sen- sitized the press and people of this state to a point where Greene and McPhaul could have done University damage both finan- cially and academically. More particularly, the State Legislature is now considering the University's budget appropriation. And the return of the House sub-committee, coupled with the needs of political candidates, make speeches from these men the stuff which election dreams are made of. In a week of recrimination and ill-feeling there has been much harm doe to what we wishfullyethink of as this nation's funda- mental principles; attendant damage was inflicted on reputations and some people with the best of intentions have been dis- abused of them. But in the strictly local and temporal sense, had McPhaul and Greene spoken the greatest damage would have been done to the University. A heavier crackdown from the Board of Regents would have been swift; and a reac- tion from the Legislature and the voting population would not have been far behind. On the other hand should a similar wake be churned every time the University gags a speaker the people of this state will not permit the University te independence it has had in the past. Meanwhile the University will have ceased to fulfill its function as the concourse for a free exchange of ideas. All this is by way of preface to the con- clusion that the choice is between the Lecture Committee and a University which has any virtue apart from its physical plant. While this University is cursed with a Lecture Committee and a by-law, and there are still invitations tendered to people un- acc'ptable according to this standard, then it must expect bannings, outcries, disastrous publicity and assaults on democratic tenets. But without the Committee and the by-law which is its weapon, all speakers become nor- mal, bringing little public notice after an initial response to the novelty of freedom. As sheer matter of self-interest, a con- tinued reliance on these thought-control techniques is to invite recurrent crises until the day when this institution is no more a university but a mere training school for very malleable young people. -Zander Hollander Cenatral"IPlant NOW THAT it is a certainty that a student referendum on the question of the de- sirability of the 'Lecture Committee' will be a part of the forthcoming campus elections, the electorate should have an opportunity to become fully conscious of the issues involved in this important test of opinion. To facilitate such an end the Students For Democratic Action have volunteered the suggestion that all campus political groups unite in an effort to bring the issues involved in the referendum to the atten- tion of the campus. They have suggested that a speakers bureau be formed to dis- cuss the matter at various University resi- dences prior to the election. It was fur- ther suggested that an all-campus rally be held and that the proposal be publicly debated by leading students and faculty members. The SDA, which is a non-parti- san political group, is the logical coordi- nator of such actions. Since every campus political organization is effected by the existence of the Lecture Committee it will be to the advantage of all to cooperate with the SDA in this opera- tion. -David J. Kornbluh Politics POLITICS is concerned with herds rather than with individuals, and the passions which are important in politics are, there- fore, those in which the various members of a given herd can feel alike. The broad in- stinctive mechanism upon which political edifices have to be built is one of cooperation within the herd and hostility towards other herds. The cooperation within the herd is never perfect. There are members who do not conform; who are, in the etymological sense, "egregious'-that is to say, outside the flock. These members are those who have fallen below, or risen above, the ordinary level. They are: idiots, criminals, prophets, and discoverers. A wise herd will learn to tolerate the eccentricity of those who rise above the nsrrnana A o ra, . u t a minimum ,f T HE conclusions reached in Ronald Seavoy's letter in the Daily for March 4th may be cor- rect, but the definition from which he starts is .entirely incorrect. If you believe, as I do, that all forms of Communism are undesirable and that some of them are dan- gerous, matters of definition be- come very important. Mr. Seavoy says that "A Communist is by definition, one who is dedicated to the overthrow of our form of gov- ernment." An examination of three dictionaries, Websters, Win- stons and the American College Dictionary, reveals that there are several definitions of the word, none of which bear any resem-! blance to that proposed by Mr. Seavoy.j In his zeal to defend us against those who would overthrow our government Mr. Seavoy is in danger of closing his eyes to the possibility that Communism will be achieved in this country by peaceful and legal means, a de- velopment which I would regret as strongly as he would. -Joshua MClennen ** * Ye Old Quad Food. . .. To the Editor: wEDNESDAY NITE, we had an- other one of those "QUAD" meals that really tries men's souls and dental work. Several remarks were heard concerning the digesti- bility of such morsels or odds and ends of "nothing" one -can find in his meal. One of the group, who happened to be a freshman, was sort of chagrined over the loss of a much loved baby tooth he had managed to hold on to for this long a time. Our pal, Tex, thought the crushed-cherry-pit-cake had such great possibilities as extrac- tors of tooth fillings that dentists really ought consider them. He liked that flavor you get from the cherries not usually found in those ole' common fillin's. The wise Sophomore, from the group of five, liked milk. He figures that with the quad way he gets his glass of water and milk at the same time. Then the two juniors piped in, in full chorus, "Don't look at it, just eat it up quick!" Signed, The Hungry, Mistreated Five Foster Gazenhuber Gorree Maker and McGregor Reichstag Fire .,.. To the Editor: SO WHEN do we get' the "Reich- stag fire?" We've been having the buildup for some time now- when do we irrevocably prove for once and all that every Negro, Jew, and Communist is a traitor to the American Way of Life? It's not really on the books, yet, is it? It's only in the minds of the Woods and Rankins and McCar- thys so far; it's only in those con- fused statutes and rules forbid- ding those "advocating overthrow of the government by force" frorp lecturing, from teaching, from writing, from participating in any way in the normal intercourse of our society; it's only in the ambi- valent attitude we take towards the Negro and Jew where we deny him what we demand for our- selves. Let's clear the air now and get rid of the confusion. Why indulge ourselves with these balky witnesses who invoke for their protection the Bill o Rights-that's an outmoded docu- ment in our modern times; wh3 countenance these squabbling lit- tle groups who pose problems foi Lecture Committees by inviting ex-convicts to discourse for those who wish to listen on the rights of the Negro and the foreign born; why put up with the pinkish lib- erals who only, after all, aid anc abet the insidious traitorous Com. munists? Let's put a stop to it. When Eisenhower comes march. ing home let's make him president. President hell! Make him fuhrer. He can lead us to the light. He can put all these dirty Commun- ists, Jews, Negroes, misguided lib- erals, and everyone else, right where they belong. Then we can proudly face the rest of the world and say, We've done it now. -John Talayco * * * Information . To the Editor: AFTER reading the Daily edi- torial, "The Speakers and the Committee," March 5, I could onl: shudder when I realized what kind of editors would be in contrc of the Daily next year. The quali- ty of this editorial is more in keeping with Bernard Backhaut' nihility of a few days ago. And .Ltki' to (lie 6 i(or .. J; Qiv t, dNNALL " .. S 3 t { , ., ,, 9 $ R-r : '._ .,, 4 " 1 ~ ' t rt . . - _ K torial was attended by thirty to thirty-five members. 2) Not more than five people had left when+ the Abner Greene motion was introduced. 3) There was discus- sion; Abner Greene's affiliations were made known to the meeting and the Chairman even expressed some doubt as to whether Greene would be approved by the Lec-. ture Committee. 4) However, the motion inviting Greene was passed by a vote of twenty to four, with aboutveight abstentions. 5) the motion was not introduced in the last five minutes, but in the last f !t nrz n+s ways 6,,4 wP~t a their action, the Lecture Commit- tee violated the democratic con- cept that a man is not guilty un- til proven so, one of the principles the Committee presumably de- fends. What sort of "loyalty" is this which makes a mockery of the Constitution? -Joan Berler Pres., Young Progressives * * * Liberty ... To the Editor: Definitions . To the Editor: spa - , 5 , , P . = "Straighten Things Out There! Do You hear?" Mr. McPhaul's appearance on campus would have given us a spark of faith in human nature, a little hope for the future. It is be- cause the Regents and the; Lec- ture Committee would deny Uni- versity students this faith and this hope, of course, that Mr. Mc- Phaul was banned. They (and the editors too) know full well that Mr. McPhaul is no "subversive" David R. Luce * * * Animals . To the Editor: I AM a first semester freshman, and I have been here five weeks. I like the dorm, the food, my housemother, my classes, my professors, and my new friends. I am in love with the whole cam- pus. t0That is why I feel it is my duty { bring a horrible fact to the attention of my fellow students. The University has no live wol- verines! I discovered this catas- trophe when I passed the zoo be- hind the museums. (My English 1 class is in West Engineering.) There I saw foxes, raccoons, bears, snakes, etc., but no live wolver- ines. It seems that the single live wolverine on campus died a few months ago. Nobody ever bothered to replace it. I was shocked; my faith in this great institution of learning was crushed. How can the students have anyl spirit? How can the Wolverine Club exist without a wolverine? How can our basket- ball or football team win even one game? Our mascot, our symbol, our 'very life's blood has been de- stroyed! Cannot the alumni exert any influence to secure a wolverine? Can no red-blooded, 'Mid-western young man trap a wolverine for us? Is there tno solution to this disgraceful situation? Students, I appeal to you. Yale has its bulldog, Brown its brown bear, Wisconsin its badger and Northwestern its wildcat. What has Michigan} got? Foxes, racoons, * bears, snakes, and skunks! Do we want them to represent us? -June Stone, '56 * s Astrology .. . To the Editor: IN RESPONSE to a question by one of the staff of The Daily, "Is' there any scientific basis for Astrology?" I made a very incom- plete reply in comparison to the vast amount of material existing and which is pertinent to the sub- ject. However, I supplemented my statements with logical proof. D Could The Daily have found space for the factual evidence I . included, it would have saved one e upper classman from the embar- rassment of the indignity he in- flicted upon himself. s I have nondesires toengage in *the usual controversy of, "It is"- "It isn't," for the proof of any statement lies in its demonstrabil- t ity; but if the young man cares to o submit any evidence to back up s his direct statements, I shall be e happy to give him some enlight- g enment that he seems pathetically e in need of. k But I would suggest that before - he ventures further, he at least f have some slight knowledge of the n subject under discussion. If he has - not learned that much from his so- journ at Ann Arbor, then the Uni- e versity must be very remiss in its t duties. n The authentic literature of Aa y trology is comprehensible enough d that the senior mentality need not e remain in its self-imposed dark- ness. fifteen or twenty-two other items I WAS DEEPLY shocked upon of business were discussed after reading the editorial on the the Green motion had been passed speakers' ban in Wednesday's and before adjournment. Daily. I know nothing about the Young Whether or not these men are Progressive meeting or Arthur Communist or belong to "subver- McPhaul, but after what was said sive" organizations has no bear- about Abner Greene and the Civil ing whatsoever on whether they Liberties Committee I can only should be permitted to speak here have grave doubts as to the auth- My alma mater, the University enticity of the editorial's infor- of Massachusetss, freely permit- mation concerning the YP also. ted the avowed Communist Pro- Heretofore, although I have not fessor Phillips to speak on campus. agreed with the articles appearing The result was that a large num- above the names of the various ber of students for the first time authors of "The Speakers and the in their lives had the opportunity Committee," I only thought that to hear the Communist position they were drawing conclusions and presented first hand, and to ask stating opinion different from myf questions about it. That question own, but based on the same facts period clearly demonstrated t -and not drawing different con- us the hypocrisies and falsehoods clusions because the bases were which make up the "party line" second-hand and, evidently, dis- Most important of all, we made j torted information, rather than our decisions on the basis of hav- ' fact. ing heard both sides; rather than -Frederick A. Burr on simply having had McCarthy's I * *I garbage rammed down our throats. If American democracy is su CorreCtion , . iperior to Communist dictatorship T (and I am deeply convinced that To the Editor: it is), then what better away t H AVING too much reverence prove it than to allow Communists for Guiseppe Verdi, I feel that to speak here, where they can b I cannot let the Daily's mistake freely cross examined? Bannim go unnoticed. talks by Communists or anyone In Sunday's Music Supplement else can mean only one thing- Issue, in the article on Astrid Var- that those who issue the ban sec nay, it was erroneously stated that retly believe that the viewpoint of Verdi's immortal pen composed the opposition is more valid than "The Flying Dutchman." Without their own ,and have not the cour meaning to degrade the true com- age to meet it in open debate. poser, Richard Wagner, I think We oppose Communism becaus that Verdi has been greatly, al- we believe in freedom. Then wha though probably unintentionally is the use of fighting Communisn offended. if we ourselves destroy that very -Ann Bandler freedom? Remember what we used * to sing each morning in grad school-"sweet land of liberty" YP & McPhaul . . . Let's keep it that way. Morton R. Laby To the Editor: * * * CARRE'' N T A O V I ., t The State... THE HAPPIEST DAYS OF YOUR LIFE, with Alastair Sim and Margaret Ruther- ford. THIS IS the latest manifestation of a new and pleasant post-war genre in British film-the sly dig at the hallowed traditions pf Old Blighty-and as such. deserves men- tion in the same breath with 'Kind Hearts and Coronets', 'Tight Little Island', 'Pass- port to Pimlico' and the late, great 'Laven- der Hill Mob.' 'The Happiest Days' is, as the advertisements say, another bulls-eye. It is brilliant, adult, and fast-paced comedy: you should not miss it. This one has Alastair Sim (whom you will remember as the engaging Scotland Yard man in 'Green For Danger') as the headmaster of Nutbourne School, a not- quite-class-#A' institution for young gen- tlemen. His opposite number is Margaret Rutherford (sans bicycle) as the tweedy headmistress of St. Swithin's ("Effort, St. Swithin's, effort!") for young ladies. Through some , horrible bureaucratic bumble the hundred-odd lyutbourne boys find themselves sharing billets with an equal number of St. Swithinites. And, neither school will budge an inch. Im- passe.' The conceit is no more complicated than this. It is the uproarious embroidery upon the idea that counts, along with the intrepid performances of Sim and Miss Rutherford. The picture, incidentally, affords fascinat- ing comparisons with another fine, although entirely different, film about English public- school life: 'The Browning Version' now, conveniently, at your neighborhood theater. Avoid, at all costs, an animated cartoon which occupies the first fifteen minutes of the program. It will only ruin your evening. Architecture Auditorium TORMENT, a Swedish film that won the Grand Prize at Cannes in 1946. THE 20TH CENTURY has placed a pecu- liar focus on both mental fear and sex. These two items are, of course, sometimes obviously related, sometimes subtly so, and, for those of us who have drifted some dis- tance from the good Doctor Freud, some- times altogether unrelated. It is pretty clear, though, that our society has many devices to scare a man or win a woman that are more effective than a club. It is also pretty clear that most of us have felt this rather than understood it, and that, in one way or another, we pay for our. confusion. This picture, gets down very deep in that confusion and punches hard in both directions. The plot sticks to the problems of the three principals: a young man in school, a sadistic school teacher, and a girl who, in a very complex way, is involved with them both. The rewads of this single- minded attention to the central theme are depth and power. It should not be surprising to anyone in college that the pressures of the classroom and young adulthood should combine to heighten the effects of the tyranny of fear and sex. It may come as a surprise to see these pressures and their effects treated with a kind of seriousness that implies they really do exist-and with an artistry that dignifies that seriousness. The Swedish cast is extraordinarily con- vincing and restrained, despite the fact that they are forced to convey the strong- est kind of internal tension throughout the picture. Some of the curricular and extra- -Harry Gray L Lv O THE writers of Wednesday's 'Faith' & 'Hope'.. . editorial: The Young Progres- To the Editor t at46u.. sives did not sponsor McPhaul to EXCUSE ME, but re yesterday4 ht" 1 embarrass the University, by morning's e ditorial "The "forcing the issue." Nor did we Speakers and the Committee," I want him to speak on the basis cannot keep silent when white su- of his appearance before the Un- premacist, slanderous apologetics American Activities Committee. disgrace the students' newspaper. In fact, the application was filed It is a lie that Abner Green with the Lecture Committee be- and Arthur McPhaul are "two fore McPhaul was even subpoe- men whose contribution to the naed to appear. We invited him campus scene would be dubious." only because we believe he could Abner Green representing t h e have made a valuable contribu- American Committee for the Pro- T- tion towards the struggle for Negro tection of the Foreign Born, was S tySecond Year -rights by addressing the students. to have spoken on the unconstitu- Eixt-SdcndbYear The editorial referred to Mc- tional deportation proceedings that Edited and managed by students of Phaul as having "charged the have taken place under the Mc- the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of American people with genocide of Carran Act; a subject about which student Publications. the Negro race." This statement, few students are informed, yet which seems to imply that Negroes which is one of the major civil Editorial Staff are not also Americans, is itself rights crises of our day. Arthur Chuck Eliiott ........Managing Editor an indication of the need for edu- McPhaul was to have discussed Bob Keith...............City Editor cation on the Negro question. the Genocide petition presented to Leonard Greenbaum. Editorial Director McPhaul was one of the authors the United Nations by the Civil Ron Watts..........Associate Editor of "Genocide," a documentpre- Rights Congress. Bob Vaughn.......,..Associate Editor sented to the United Nations, The editors state as a reason Ted Papes.............. Sports Editor listing crimes committee against for considering Mr. McPhaul to George Flint ,...Associate Sports Editor the American Negro People. The be unfit as a campus speaker- Jan Jaesr...........Women's Editor crimes herein constitute genocide as grounds for suspicion of his Jo Ketelhut, Associate Women's Editor according to the definition adop- loyalty-the fact that "he has ap- ted by the U.N. Genocide Conven- peared here at Lane Hall in be- Business Staff tion. half of Willie McGee." I can con- Bob Miller.......Business Manager A member of the Civil Rights strue this only as the slanderous Gene Kuthy, Assoc. Business Manager Congress, McPhaul stated he did insinuation that those of us who Charles Cuson ....Advertising Manager not advocate violent overthrow of took part in the campaign to free Milt Goetz......Circulation Manager