Sixty-Ninth Year M- EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN n Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS uth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. . Phone NO 2-3241 'itorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. INDIVIDUAL OR ORGANIZATION? Spring Rush Study Resumes Old Dispute By ELIZABETH ERSKINE Daily Associate Personnel Director AY, MARCH 8, 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: SELMA SAWAYA Hoffa's New Drive May Return Labor to UBad Old Davs' rHE UNION PICTURE seems to be shaping up into a "big three" vying for monopolies f the nation's labor force and seeking ways ) increase profits - not in worker's benefits, ut in union funds. The recent announcement by Jimmy Hoffa eamster Union's president, of a drive to ring independent unions into his truck driver's aven has intensified the race between it, the liners Union and the AFL-CIO to corner the abor market. At this rate, one of the groups nay soon initiate cut-throat competitive meth- ds for increasing membership at the expense f the other two, methods they have previous- 7 branded as tainted by capitalism. T THE SAME TIME, the Teamsters de- cided to find out what the chances are of halking up paid strike benefits to charity, hus by-passing the necessity fo paying income ax on the funds. It's a nice way to increase he profits a bit, but who will receive the enefits - Hoffa and his boys or the workers 'ho. go hungry on the meager -payments they et when they strike under union orders? It all seems to add up to a development of he "captains of industry" outlook of the labor osses and promotes the query of whether unions remain a- means to improve the plight of the laborer or are becoming an end in them- selves. The time may not be far off when the unions, looking at their hiring halls, will announce themselves full-fledged corporations, which provide labor needed to produce the goods of the industrial corporations. The laborer who pays his dues and keeps the unions in business has long been a nebu- lous identity thought of, by the bosses, not in terms of the individual but of the masses, or occasionally his specific occupation. THE MOVE to destroy individual unions through merger with one of the big powers may destroy what little independence the workers have left. They might presumably be- come lost in the polyglot of unions with un- differentiated membership, truly little more than tools to be used by the labor bosses to intimidate the capital bosses. The insignificant union member might ask himself which is the lesser of the two evils, possible exploitation by industry or by union? If he doesn't, he may wake up one morning with the realization that he's no better off than were his ancestors in the pre-union era. -KATHLEEN MOORE -Daily-Alan Winder, 'We, the peoples of the United Nations, determined to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind and to re- affirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small . . ." - reprinted from the United Nations Charter on a mural outside yesterday's Campus UN Assembly. In the background are signs marking the various delegations. UNFAVORABLE BATTLEGROUND: Berlin Potential Western Trap OFFEE. . . BLACK By Richard Taub Apartment Pers [-A GIRL GRADUATES from high school and takes a good secretarial course, she may get a job With the University, and live in an apart- inent in Ann Arbor, whether she is eighteen, iineteen or twenty years old. However, if the same girl comes to the Uni- versity, because she is intellectually curious, she wants to grow and to learn, she must live in a University residence hall or a sorority house, al- though she is twenty-one years old, an adult in the eyes of everybody but those of the Dean of. Women's office, Confusing? Well, there is even more to it than that. Women cannot move out of residence h'alls next year-one of several reasons being that there are empty spaces in the residence hialls. Yet, the sorority system keeps merrily expanding, pulling more girls out of the resi- dence halls-and in doing, perhaps, depriving other girls of the opportunity to live in apart- ments PPARENTLY, there are three possible con- clusions to be drawn from this. 1) If a roman wants to be educated, she is to be pro- hibited from assuming very much responsibility for herself as long as possible. 2) Sorority living md dormitory living are healthier for the in- hvidual than living in an, apartment. 3) One Man control the women better if they live in >rganized housing, and this is necessary. The first argument does not make sense and he third is logically incomprehensible for a reat University. After all, a University is not 'un for administrative convenience, it is run or the students, and everybody knows that. fVoell, almost everybody Occasionally, there is some administrator who Irges regulations because they are administra- ively feasible, rather than because they are raluable to the individuals involved. But thts is >nly representative of the worst type of ad- ninistrator, and since there are few of them t the University, it is not worth further con- ideration. WHAT LEAVES US with the second alterna- tive: sorority living and dormitory living re educationally more valuable .for the in- lividual than living in an apartment. This could be the only truly logical reason or insisting that women live in organized hous- ng, because the University's goals are primarily, f not strictly, ones of intellectual growth of the ndividual. But even this does not apply very well. For lthough dormitory living may be good for some eople, and sorority living may be good for thers, we suspect there are just as many for irhom living in an apartment would be educa- lonally advantageous. There are many for whom organized living is Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor EICHAEL KRAFT JOHN WEIGHER ditorial Director City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor ALE CANTOR .................... Personnel Director AN WILLOUGHBY .... Associate Editorial Director LAN JTONECS..........................Sports Editor BATA JORGENSON..A....Associate City Editor SIZABETH ERSKINE ... Associate Personnel Director [ COLEMAN....... . Associate Sports Editor AVID ARNOLD ............... Chief Photographer distinctly oppressive, and to force them to put up with it for four years is completely unfair. BUT THERE ARE positive aspects as well. There are advantages in apartment living. For in an apartment, a person is responsible for herself-there is nobody to tell her what to do. Whatever she accomplishes, whether study- ing, cooking, buying food, or cleaning-up, must come from her own inner resource--and the apartment life will give this resource the op- portunity to grow and develop. A student in an apartment, it might be added, has far better control over her study conditions, than-one in most kinds of organized living. But the important thing is that she will be able to make her own decisions, without the guiding hand of " group pressure-or the rigid scheduling which is necessarily involved in or- ganized living. Of course, there are some who would insist that women are not to be trusted in apartments. But if a 21 year old woman is not to be trusted in an apartment-who is and when? This kind of attitude reflects a rather great lack of under- standing of the undergraduate woman at the University of Michigan. ONE OF THE MOST extraordinary bits of reasoning on this subject comes from the Dean of Women's office, with the announce- ment that apartment permissions would be cur- tailed for next year:. "Michigan is a 'residential' University for undergraduates and so stated in the Regental By-Laws. This is in contrast with some equally well - known but largely streetcar Univer- sities... . "The responsibilities as well as the privileges of group-living have long been considered inte- gral and vital parts of the total college experi- ence at Ann Arbor. 'Si monumentum requiris- circumspice."' To choose to come to Michigan saying, "Yes, but I cannot bear group-living," is like choosing Colorado for a summer vaca- tion saying, "Yes, but I cannot bear mountains." Therefore, it is obvious that apartment permis- sion for undergraduate women remains defi- nitely in the exceptional category." ANY ARGUMENT which defends a policy, because "that's the way it is," is definitely a weak one. This is especially true in a Uni- versity where some emphasis is placed on ra- tionality, as opposed to authority. Further a statement which is unable to define community in any sense other than clearly defined physical structures has rather severe limitations. We see no reason why a "residential" Uni- versity cannot be one In which students leave home to go to live at the University, and one in which many are bound together by a com- munity of interest. The student takes residence in a town other than her own. In all fairness, it should be pointed out that Ann Arbor's topsy turvy housing situation has caused difficulties in the residence halls. In just four years, the town has changed from hopelessly overcrowded with people unable to find a place to live; to one in which there are many vacancies. This does cause difficulties in arranging for housing. BUT EVEN IF one is to admit that there are educational advantages in organized living (they really are not too readily apparent), there is no good reason to subject a girl to it for four years if she does not like it. By SEYMOUR TOPPING Associated Press Foreign Correspondent BERLIN-If the Russians block- ade West Berlin the fighting odds would be stacked against any Western military effort to pry open the lifelines to this isolated city. Geography and the military bal- ance favor the Communists U.S. military leaders say the West could break through a block- ade of West Berlin. But it has not been explained how this would be feasible if the Russians counter with their larger forces. A NEW CULT? Security For Sale By SAM DAWSON Associated Press Business Editor NEW YORK ()-What ever be- came of self reliance? It used to be the mark of most Americans. They took care of themselves, their families-young and old-and their own futures. They went to work with the idea of getting ahead, maybe dreaming of being their own boss, risky as that might be. Now the emphasis seems to have swung to something called security. Many employers complain that when they interview a job appli- cant today the talk switches at once to what kind of pension plan the company has. The job seeker mentally figures how that will sup- plement the Social Security he'll collect from the government. The would-be employe also asks about the company's policies on severance pay and unemployment benefits, health insurance, sick pay and many other fringe benefits. But business itself is just as busy chasing security. Government subsidies aimed at insuring the security of various groups of industries take many forms. * * * THERE IS the familiar cry of the railroads that the airlines benefit from postal subsidies and from use of airport facilities built at taxpayers' expense; and that trucks use highways also provided by tax money. Security on the farm is a politi- cal issue. The farmer can't be made secure from the weather's onslaughts-drouths, floods, dust storms. But in, many cases he can be sure that the price of what he does raise will be supported by the government, and that in some cases he'll be paid by the soil bank for not raising anything. Industry turns to government for many kinds of security against the perils of foreign, or even do- mestic, competition. Government stock-piling has been used to fur- nish markets for, and support prices of, various metals and other materials. Pump priming in recessions is expected by many businessmen. The government hands out orders for their products, launches big construction projects, buys mili- tary supplies with a lavish hand. It makes credit easy for them if they want to expand, or gives them tax allowances. * * * SMALL BUSINESS looks to gov- ernment to make credit available on favorable terms and to watch constantly lest big business get too big - and to remember them Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush- chev has warned that Russian forces will oppose any air or ground sortie into East Germany towards Berlin. With both East and Wegt obvi- ously leary of war, this tough mili- tafy talk on both sides over Berlin may be just high powered bidding leading up to a deal at the confer- ence table. What is feared most here is a miscalculation or an accident in- volving a fateful collision between Western and Soviet troops. Defense of West Berlin is based today on the "plate glass window concept." The Russians hesitate to crash through the West Berlin window because it could trigger World War III. H-Bombs might fall on the world--including Russia. But if a blockade did spark a shooting war with the Russians, the 2,200,000 West Berliners and American-British-French garrison of some 10,000 troops would have little chance to escape. They would be swamped in a Red sea. To un- derstand why, glance at West Ber- lin's strategic position. * * * THIS OUTPOST lies 110 miles deep in Communist East Germany. It is situated in the heart of the biggest concentration of Red Army forces in Europe, more than 400,- 000 ground troops, plus tactical air units. The city is linked tenuously to West Germany by a single track rail line and a highway, both un- der Soviet control. West Berlin's unhampered access to the West is via four air corri- ,dors to the West German cities of Munich, Frankfurt, Hannover and Hamburg.- It was the availability of these air corridors which enabled the West to mount its massive 318-day airlift in 1948-49 which finally cracked the Russian land blockade of the city. THE BIG GIMMICK in the way of an airlift this time is the changed attitude of the Russians. They say they won't tolerate an- other air bridge-and that pre- sumably means they would inter- fere by means of radar jammers and possibly with fighter planes. The alternative to an airlift would be an effort to force open the rail line and highway to Ber- lin. If the Russians are determined to halt this kind of an operation into East Germany, a massive Western ground operation would be called for. Allied troops would be compelled to advance into the heart of the Russian base area on an extremely narrow front with flanks exposed to attack from nu- merically superior forces. All in all, if a real shooting war started with the Russians, the Allies would probably be too busy protecting Western Europe to pay much attention to West Berlin. West Berlin's hopes for a, secure future rest more on the ability of world statesmen to keep the peace rather than on what the fighting men can do. IE CONTINUING controversy of whether sorority rushing should take place during the spring or fall semester received additional background material this week with the presentation of the Spring Rush Study Report Wednesday night to Student Gov- ernment Council. The issue of when women should rush can be considered in several ways, just as the 70 pages of data gathered by Panhellenic and Assembly can be interpreted in several ways. The positions are essentially two: Proponents for fall rushing con- sider the following points import- ant: 1) The organizations on campus function more smoothly with more continuity if rushing is completed in the fall and does not interrupt the "organizational" plans for the year. Panhellenic can get organized immediately after rush with a full year's pro- gram and not spend half the year preparing for it. 2) The upperclassmen who rush -about 28 per cent of the total- are better off rushing in the fall. They have had a year in which to consider the picture and deter- mine their attitude. Individually, they have expressed a desire for fall. Those who have rushed be- fore have no need for an addition- al waiting period. 3) Of the group of women who rush and are dropped (this in- cludes both freshmen and upper- classmen) 42 per cent believe sor- ority affiliation to be very im- portant or indispensable. For this group, too, fall rushing is better. The emotional pressure of rushing, is over and has not had a chance to build up through the semester. The women are less committed to the idea of pledging and do not lose as much face. 4)For the affiliate system, fall rushing has definite advantages. Financially they gain. Pledges must pay a certain basic amount during their pledge period regard- less, but additional social and house fees for five extra months from approximately 600 pledges adds a considerable amount to sorority income. Sororities have a longer time to. train and integrate their pledges. Weaker houses: have a better chance of making their quotas, and houses can pick up addition- al pledges with a spring bid day-- to fill up quotas not made in the fall and to replace women who have dropped out of school. ** * SPRING RUSH supporters, however, feel that the organiza- tions are not to be considered. The individual and his college . goals, are their primary concern. This changes the picture considerably. 1) With spring rush the indi- vidual has a chance to adjust to the University academically and socially. First semester adjust- ment problems are not compound- - ed by rushing and the time it consumes. 2) Potential rushees are able to get a more realistic picture of the affiliated system and the individual houses therein. 3) The experience of women living together in the dorm for a period of time without additional social stratification caused by pledging of a sorority is a .benefi- cial and educational one.- In dormitories freshmen wo- men of all types and backgrounds are thrown together. They meet and associate. With pledging im- mediately in the fall they tend to limit their friendships and much of the benefit of living with a di- verse group is lost. The associa- tion with a particular group and the time demanded by this group, as well as a lessening of interest in their surroundings, decreases the value of dorm living. Women no longer need to ex- plore for themselves but already have a niche carved out for them by the sorority. This limiting of the individual goes against the educational and broadening pur- poses of the University. A question can be raised as to whether the one semester wait be- fore rushing can really make that much difference in the indi- vidual's friendship patterns. Will the individual gain perspective and go out of his own "type" or will the slight exposure really have no effect? Most people will agree that freshmen coming into a large school such as the Univer- sity should have the opportunity to learn about their surroundings before deciding if they want to affiliate. Whether the dorm experience of freshmen for one semester out. weighs the "pros" for fall rush de- pends on the initial premise taken. ALUMNI HALL: Provocative solutions THE WORK resulting from Al- bert Mullen's trip to the south- west via Rackham Grant shows provocative results. This project, in the form of ink sketches, tem- pera, and oil paintings, is on dis- play for the next few weeks at the Alumni Museum. It is provocative because during the year since Mullen's return he has encountered two specific and very unusual problems in the control of space on the two- dimensional canvas. Some of the paintings are particularly excel- lent because of the success with which they solve these problems. The earliest work done on this grant grapples with the control of color, form, texture, and gesture which is oriented at the center of the canvas and recedes to the edge of the frame. Sometimes the gesture moves directly outward to the frame, sometimes it is more complex and twists, spirals, or churns its way from a point near the center backwards into depth- space and then out to the frame edge. Two of the better examples of this are "Santa Fe No. 2," and "Dark Lit Tree." MULLEN encounters his first specific problem with a bold step. "Santa Fe No. 1" uses a strong vertical frame. The space motion, or gesture, moves upwards and sprays out at the top of the frame into infinity. Two other vertical oils are "Inner Tree" and "Im- provisation-Rock Face." These use wider brush strokes than any oth- er work in the show, but in "Im- provisation" Mullen seems unde- cided about whether this paint ing should 'use the 'upward-flow potential of its vertical space or knot ftself up in the middle as in the earlier "Santa Fe No. 2." "Eldorado" stands apart from the genre of this exhibit. The weight of this oil is oriented at the center of the canvas. In at- tempting to define and manipu- late the spacial properties of this center weight Mullen has used strong fragments of line: figures reminiscent of cattle-brands. This is a drastic means. It has frozen the > center space and color mo- tion into an almost static cluster. The fiat receded space at the edges of "Eldorado" has a differ- ent function than in the paintings with mobile gesture. In a radical attempt at control of this outer space; Mullen has added a broad horizon-functioning band at the top of the painting. A most per- plexing resolution. THE SECOND unusual problem Is the most recent. In "Arroyo Hondo" and "Slow Sweep Moun- tain" the artist has reversed his point of attack. He places the heaviest weight and greatest mo- tion towards the edge of the frame and recedes the space Into the center of the canvas. This solu- tion has produced the two out- 4 LATIN AMERICA: Anti-American Sentiment Grows By KENNETH McELDOWNEY Daily Staff Writer T HE GLOWING coals of the summer's- anti-Nixon, anti- American hate blazed forth last week in Bolivia. The Bolivian demonstrations broke out after an article in the Latin American edition of Time magazine quoted an American embassy official as saying the an- swer to Bolivia's economic prob- lems would be to divide the na- tion's problems and Bolivia itself among its neighbors. Even though the article made it clear that the official was only joking, the humor fell fiat in a country that has already lost ter-, ritory to its five neighbors. And in Venezuela, members of the Chamber of Deputies denounced America for humiliating Bolivia. The incidents, says Prof. Irving A. Leonard, professor of Spanish- American Literature and History. indicate that dislike of the United States is now at tis highest peak in history. He said much of the problem has historical roots. The Span- iards brought over a feudal sys- tem in the 1500's that still sur. vives today. Prof. 'Leonard de- scribed the system, which is based on farming, large land-owners and a dominant church, as direct- ly conflicting with the modern age. This history has fostered an in- feriority complex in these nations that is enough to foster anti-' American riots as well as many aganist the existing Latin Ameri- can governments. Seemingly in- significant events have been enough to touch off violent dem- onstrations. In Rio de Janeiro last Friday at least one student died in riots over an increase in college tuitions. Last month an attempt to overthrow the govern- ment in Panama was crushed within a week. Even in Colombia, which kicked out its last dictator less than a year ago, there were riots last week against the pres- ent head of government. The Co- lumbian mobs shouted for free- dom of expression and lower transport fares. South American officials are blaming the magnitude of the demonstrations on the Commun- ists. Fidel Castro's recent ouster of Cuban dictator Batista has 'struck fear into the hearts of the ,two remaining dictators Rafael Leon-. idas Trujillo of the Dominican Republic and Francois Duvalier,, of Haiti. Not only has Castro's success given hope to those who are plotting the downfall of these dictators, but now after their vic- tory, the Cuban rebels hope to lib- erate those countries that are still under the power of dictators. As a counteriforce, ex-generals in the Dominican Republic are forming a type of foreign legion that would be used to stop any so- called communist threat to the countries of Latin America, but are really intended to neutralize the Cuban rebel threat to the ex- isting dictatorships. However, out of the general black scene of political discontent, several bright spots of hope ap- pear. Ecuador's trade surplus and solid currency seems almost out' of place in economically depressed Latin America. Recently the United States has attempted to improve its position, in President ... . ...