PAGE FOUR Editorial Opinion USG Study on Senate Rules One of the bills accepted in USG's energetic approval of nine proposals Wednesday night establishes a commUtee to study and evaluate the University Senate’s rules andj regulations. The bill’s sponsor annd temporary chairman of the study committee, Harry Grace, said the six-member group would study each section of the regulations for .its" merits end applications. ' . The Senate rules have been changing ; yearly.' it seems, to fit the faculty’s concept of increasing student responsibility. ; Two years ago, the Senate abolished the; “K" rule 3 on ’class attendance and in their place established an attendance policy. The policy lets . instructors organize their course material with the intention of encouraging students to attend class. The instructor is left free to decide whether scholastic achievement in his course depends on class attendance and to relate this policy to his students. ' • , The p ~- >rrm * J , •, . , 1 chaser of those air- htem The Senate took action only recently on the S rules mail stamps, which featured up concerning compulsory Reserve Officers Training Corps ? ide down airplanes, sold his $24 ** * , , : t investment to a group of stamp courses. It has recommended a change from compulsory dealers several* da>-3 later for to voluntary ROTC to the