Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Vhen Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MIcH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. "This Has Got To Be Decided B Us Germans" ..f ' . ' Q A.= + '"" ' y " ,. . . a . .r.. / y = - MAY 22. 1959 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH DONERI Participation in Activities: Two Differing, Views" -;; F AW F Wire "DON'T TAKE yourself and. your activities too seriously and get a certain amount of enjoyment out of each day." -Speaking at the Air Force Academy, Presi- dent Dwight D. Eisenhower so cautioned the cadets, helping to forestall a tendency to evalu- ate all activity in terms of individual usefulness. While the President's words were intended for the men in Colorado, his message is ex- tremely fitting on the campus where the idea of simply enjoying an activity is passe. Accord- ing to a loud local Hyde Park orator, University stuldents are too smitten with their own impor- tance and refuse to consider participating in activities unless they would contribute to their own personal benefit.. Before joining an activity, whether it be stringing a yo-yo or evaluating the concept of academic freedom, a student will consiously or niot probably ask himself certain questions: Will this endeavor directly or indirectly bene- fit me educationally? Will it enable me to obtain a better position after I graduate through experience, training or contacts with other people? Will it help me fit better into the' "campus systems*'; that is, Union, IHC, IFC, Panhel, et al. If I am affiliated, will it benefit the house? THE IDEA of participation for simple personal mjoyment rarely enters the picture. If con- sidered at all, pleasure is only a fringe benefit; .."> . and it should be a lot of fun, too." Unfortunately, the majority of those partici- pating in activities utilitarian purposes have :one so because they feel it will in some way enhance directly or indirectly, "their per- sonal development." Of course it is sound and logical to be pri- marily interested in obtaining a comprehensive education. But excluding those activities which are, and rightly so, of the "Mickey Mouse" from the scene wrecks a balance between the aca- lemic and the pleasant which must be main- tained. Individuals who come to college with the intention of losing themselves in libraries are just as close to being deprived of a complete ligher education as those who decide to con- entrate on the 'flip side of life." Each individual must strike a healthy balance between the two. Unjustified . , . THE LMOC (Little Man On Campus) is usually about the same height, weight and breadth as the BMOC (Big Man On Campus). Although his speech may not be polished by semesters of debate in campus politics, it's difficult to separate the LMOC from a crowded University lecture hall. About the only material things that distinguish a BMOC front a LMOC are an early registration pass and a neatly pressed coat and tie. But there is another distinction. The LMOC has been given the middle name of "Apathy." Student Activities People (SAP) have branded him with this label for his failure to spend approximately 25 hours a week debating the complex problems confronting the Student Government Council, run off posters adver- tising a soon-to-come "Campus-Wide Yo-Yo Contest," or the implications of a philosophical interpretation of fraternity bias clauses. WHY DOES the LMOC cringe at the thought of student activities? Why does he spend his spare moments on Goethe, girls and good times? The answer lies in the LMOC s impres- sions of Student Activities People. While the LMOC may have somewhat of a prejudiced view due to the constant stream of apathy charges point at him, he still has a few constructive comments on student activities. He views extra-curricular activities as an escape from the dull routine of lectures, study and reality. On the other side of the fence, the BMOC will stoutly defend this "waste of time." His defense is usually two-fold. Opportunity to express his opinions on matters of campus importance is listed high on the imaginary. "Why I am in student activities" lists. The trouble with this argument comes when the SAP is embroiled in a campus controversy. Too often his high, per- sonal ideals are subjugated to the will of his- "student activities group." And often, he sees an easier pathway to success in student activi- ties through group cooperation instead of per- sonal indignation. THE student activities participant also points to his "soundly conistructive contribution to the University." No doubt the various student activities on campus do contribute a great deal to the functioning of the University. However, their members' personal ideals are often largely determined by those of their group. Too often the student in extracurricular activities is con- stantly reminded that his primary concern is an unthinking dedication, and potential sub- ordination, to the University viewpoint. Again, personal ideals are lowered to the University level. The LMOC-BMOC controversy will probably continue for years to come on this campus, and is largely an individual matter. The indi- vidual who joins student activities must only do so with a conscious awareness of the dangers involved. -BARTON HUTHWAITE +_. . 00~i LEGISLATURE: Education Budgets Face Long Struggle By ROBERT JUNKER Daily Staff Writer WITH THE UNIVERSITY budget coming up for Legislative considera- tion within the next few weeks, it is time to take a tally of sympa- thies on various crucial committees. The most crucial of all committees, the Senate Appropriations Com- mittee, is headed by Sen. Elmer Porter (R-Blissfield). Here the Univer- sity budget will begin its long road to approval. On this committee are two men who have serious complaints against state universities. Sen. Porter believes the University has been somewhat uncooperative in providing information to the Legislature on how its money is spent. He wants to know what salary is paid for each University position; for example, how much a professor in the English department receives or how much department chairmen are paid. "AVE WON'T have any trouble getting any information we want," Sen. Porter said. "The universities will have to give it to us or the public mind will turn against them." Some doubt has been expressed locally as to just what Sen. Porter wants which is not already provided for him. The University supplies a chart yearly showing every salary paid in each school or college of the University, and how many people earn each salary. Sen. Edward Hutchinson (R- Fenneville), a member of the committee, said the University has "always provided all the 'information we want." He, too, wants a detailed accounting "to show just where the money goes." He said Michigan State University offers such courses as canoe- ing and basketweaving. "State money should not support these things," Sen. Hutchinson wants accounting, which MSU has not provided, to tell him whether or not the state is, in fact, supporting canoeing. This desired detailed accounting presumably extends to the University, too, although Sen. Hutchinson did not specify just what additional infor- mation he wanted. HE ALSO LASHED OUT against political science departments at the state universities which contain professors, all of whom are of the same political philosophy. He said the University's political science depart- ment provided a balance between conservative and liberal viewpoints on the faculty. He said since these are both basic American political phi- losophies, both should be taught in state universities. "Judging by graduates and upperclassmen, many schools do not pre- sent a balanced viewpoint, however," Sen. Hutchinson noted. The state universities should be investigated to see if they show favoritism to one political party or the other. He said this investigation was not tied to appropriations, however. A friend of state universities has also spoken up. Rep. Arnell Engstrom (R-Grand Traverse) said, "I find the information provided by the University to the legislative committees adequate. Anything we've wanted, they've given us." Engstrom is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, which also passes on university budgets. THE LEGISLATURE is somewhat upset by what it considers inade- quate accounting by state- universities. Add to this the current cash crisis and the necessity of the University receiving additional funds for faculty salary increases, and the situation promises to provide a difficult time for obtaining the increased appropriations Michigan higher educa- tion needs next year. GENERATION: Recent Issue Among Most Successful 4 . y~' r" W41400 Pa(r 0 CAPITAL COMMENTARY: Should Use Ex-Presidents By WILLIAM S. WHITE N EARLY all ancient societies had councils of elders which met in times of peril to direct or solemnly to assist the course of public policy. These old boys represented more than old wisdom. They stood as visible symbols of the long conti- nuity of the civilizations of which they were a part. They were living proofs that the way of life of their tribe or country had long endured. And their continued presence sug- gested that it would go on sur- viving. Some nations still have institu- tions quite similar in meaning to the system of elders. Great Britain has the monarchy, which is infi- nitely older and deeper rooted than any British government. The monarchy claims little political power, and that is its greatest strength. For a Briton may aoso- lutely despise his government of the moment -- officially "the Queen's government" or "the King's government" - and still wholly love and respect the Queen or the King, and thus the country. Belgium and Holland, too, have monarchial systems binding past to present. Of all the great West- ern powers, the joint custodians of what we call Western civilization, only three have nothing compar- able to a council of elders. And of these, one-Italy-is the seat of Roman Catholic Christendom, with all its ,timeless, cementing tradition. And another, France, has something indefinable, a con- cept of "La Patrie," the Father- land, that is above and beyond any given political leadership. THUS, THE United States alone in the West puts its full faith upon a passing administration. Many believe we need something more- something that would never in- trude upon the government but. would advise and shore up that government in time of danger. For a century and three-quarters we have been tossing upon the rubbish pile of history those of high station who have outlived their terms. At the moment, no use is being made of the great experience and accumulated know- ledge of two former Presidents of the United States, Herbert C. Hoover and Harry S. Truman. Within a mere hour, as time goes these days, a third former President, Dwight D. Eisenhower, will join these two in their singu- lar form of unemployment. Mr. Eisenhower, too, will be finished come January of 1961. NOT TO USE the talents of such men-and not to find a way to use the talents of all who will become ex-Presidents in the long tomor- rows--seems hardly sensible. Even Federal judges after retirement may be still called to emergency duty on the bench. And five-star officers, generals of the Army and admirals of the fleet, remain five- star officers for life. Those who suppose that Mr. Hoover or Mr. Truman, or Mr. Eisenhower after he leaves the White House, could contribute nothing do not well understand the country. Each of them has a rocklike personal following and will have as long as he lives. Sit- ting together on a council of eld- ers, whatever its title might be, they -could immensely add to na- tional strength and unity in any crisis. For each would be above any possible suspicion of personal ambition or partisan malice. Each would have nothing what- ever to gain--and all that was in him to give. A bipartisan group )f Senators headed by Jacob K. Javits of New York proposes that we place our retired President upon a new ad- visory council on national security. Mr. Javits and his associates want also to appoint to this council 25 other leading. citizens. Their plan may be open to objection in detail. But surely in its principlein its central purpose of putting the sage memories of the past into the serv- ice of the present, they are on the right track. (Copyright 1959, by United Features Syndicate, Inc.) ' MANY STUDEN way or the otl to absorb any of t others are too stif enjoy the lighters Only a few have mise-realizing as cator pointed out. work but fun. Unfo are never relaxede INTERP By T Associated POLITICAL deve Asian states ar the theory that C Tibet has seriously munism in the are The scales dip fi and there are so alignment that bL be drawn. In Ceylon, for it ment is on the tee tion of three lef Communist-cabin ment has been a c skyites and other7 have gone over tot and whether theg question. The Com 42 per cent of the are working desper ation in which the THREE YEARS A ing in Ceylon t TS have gone too far in one her. Some become too relaxed he real educational benefits; T and tense to loosen up and side of University life. come to a realistic compro- a University of Chicago edu- , that "college is fun-hard rtunately the bright studen'ts enough to realize this fact." --CHARLES KOZOLL RETING THE NEWS IDEALLY, the present issue of the University Inter-Arts Mag- azine should represent the best creative writing that a student body of almost 25,000 was able to produce within the past few months. Wile nobody knows whether or not this aim has been achieved (if it has not, the fault is more likely to lie with timid stand-offish authors than with the editors), it is easy to imagine thaT the 56 pages of this year's final edition of Generation' closely ap- proaches it; within the memory of the reviewer, it is among the most successful issues. Comparing the various sections, fiction seems again to take the first place. Two of the four stories treat racial problems. Connie Wil- :" Tibet and the Chinese . M. ROBERTS Rported a considerable decline in Red prestige. d Press News Analyst What happens in the current crisis will have a lopments in several Southeast considerable bearing on the continuing validity e providing testing points for of this report. hinese Communist policy in In Laos, virtually divided into two states by damaged the future of Com- Communist rule in two northern provinces a. which began during the Viet Minh war with rst one way and then another, France, the central government has recently many shadings of political gained strength to the point where it controls ack and white charts cannot the provinces and can demand the surrender of two Communist battalions which sought to nstance, a neutralist govern- retain their own officers on being incorporated eter-totter after the resigna- into the national army. tists-but not international et ministers. The govern- NEWLY INDEPENDENT Malaya is _pushing coalition of moderates, Trot- the anti-Communist campaign which suc- Marxists. The leftist parties ceeded its victorious war with Communist guer- the opposition in Parliament, rillas, and working against the election of a government can survive is a leftist government for the new state of Singa- nmunists, who received only pore which will vote next week. vote in last year's elections, The betting is, however, that heavily Chinese ately to foster a chaotic situ- Singapore will elect a government strongly sym- ey hope to gain strength. pathetic toward Red China. AGO there was a strong lean- toward closer affiliation with Context Set LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Fraternities:Comradeship of Mob or Team. To the Editor: DISCUSSION of the fraternity system has in recent months focussed on the issue of dis- criminatory practices in recruit- ment. It may be asked whether, important though this question is, it does not divert attention from more fundamental considerations. As I write, my fraternity neigh- bors across the road are hurling rocks or beer cans at the Jewish fraternity adjacent and dashing beer bottles into the street, while shouting anti-Semitic obscenities of which: "Christ, don't you guys be chicken before those lousy, . Jews" has so far been the least offensive. This follows by ten rminutes a half-hearted attempt to set the Jewish house afire. Some, if not all, participants are prob- ably drunk. It is 2:45 a.m.; the disturbance began at about 2, as it has for the past four or five nights. It is worth stressing that this is not an isolated instance. Com- parable doings, although not al- ways directed against the Jewish house next door, have been a nightly occurrence, weather per- mitting, and appear to constitute a routine, but probably unorgan- ized, social activity. Affiliates of other fraternities regard this fraternity as a "good, all-around house" with a diversi- fied program of activities; its members are referred to as "good" guys." If it differs from some other fraternities it may be in the de- gree to which it is a "jock house," +ha+ ir nne with a heavv and sue- radeship and solidarity among fraternity members. But though this is an answer of a kind, it is not much help to an interested onlooker trying to evaluate the desirability of the §ystem. For comradeship is no unalloyed bless- ing. In itself it is neither good nor bad. In order to judge it, it is first necessary to know whether this is the comradeship of a team or the comradeship of a mob. Certainly, team activities are important to this fraternity; ac- tivities, that is, characterized by an organization of means for the attainment of specified group goals. Intra-mural and varsity athletics, dances, and other social undertakings are of this sort. But participation in these does not necessarily suffice for assuring a distinctive identity to the fra- ternity man. At one time, perhaps, they came closer to conferring the status that he, having made a con- siderable financial investment in his membership, feels a right to expect. There are still schools where organized recreation is largely available only to members of Greek-letter societies. At Michi- gan this is no longer the case. But there is also a sizable emo- tional investment in fraternity life. A fraternity is, after all, a secret society, replete with ritual and symbols which attest to the exclusiveness of the organization and the "chosenness" of its mem- bers. It is clear that the fraternity man will view himself as having a unique claim on eminence. But fraternity ideology is, in a special sense, heavily masculine. This im- poses limits upon the ways in which members can attain distinc- tion, whether individually or ,col- lectively. For example, it rules out accomplishment through scholar- ship. How, then, can fraternity men, deprived of their recreational monopoly and tied to a code based upon a particular definition of masculinity, achieve eminence? One avenue is provided by violence. Brute force has always played a significant role in fraternity life. "Hell Week," now defunct, is an example. Its abolition has left un- met the need for testing manhood through demonstrated competence in violence. Athletics have not suf- ficed. Perhaps the frenzy previously vented within the fraternity sys- tem during Hell Week can now be dissipated only by being turned outward into the community. By casting beer cans at his neighbors in the company of his fellows and bawling obscenities into the night the fraternity man meets the pre- requisites of masculinity as he has conceived them. He shows that he as a member, and his fraternity as an organization, are not subject to the moral and legal limitations binding upon other members of the community. This is indeed comradeship, but of the mob, for its aim is disorder. The opponents of the fraternity system weaken their case wnen they base it upon doubts as to the seemliness of these organizations on a university campus. The point is not that fraternities have no business at our university, but that no proper place for them exists in our society. -Ernest Lilienstein, Grad. liams' first published story, "New Apartment," is set in "just about the best neighborhood" of a Northern town; Alan Kent's more; concentrated and powerful Ku Klux Klan story "Cross of Flame" takes the reader into the South. A charming account of a sensitive childhood is afforded by Ann Don- iger's perceptive and extremely well-sustained story "The China Boat." Prof. Alan Seager, finally, retells an old Eastern folk tale "en miniature." * * * AMONG THE POETS repre- sented, Conrad Pendleton's and Bernard Keith's contributions seem to have the most immediate ap- peal. Peter Sharkey's two poems show a bold attempt at subjective imagery without always being able to fuse all the elements into a coherent pattern. Christopher Wolske experiments in Japanese ideograms, but his haiku oily occasionally go beyond apleasant lyrical impressionism to attain the intensity of his Far Eastern mod- els. A GOOD contribution in a too frequently neglected genre is Louis Megyesi's scene "Michael's Song -in spite of its lack of dramatic tension a well-developed retro- spect portrait of, an aging farmer. Freshman Hopwood Contest win- ner Barbara Stoler contributes an impressively mature essay on the poetry of Wallace Stevens, the only apparent flaw being a rather simplified view on the function of the imagination within Conmunist systems. One general comment should perhaps be added concerning the conspicuous absence of any hu- morous element in the magazine-- both past and present. Adding some colour in this direction might make for a more balanced overall impression. -Ingo Seidler German Department DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no edi- torial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Build- ing, before 2 p.m. the day preceding publication. Notices for Sunday Daily due at 2:00 p.m. Friday. : q oscow and international Communism. But ammunist economic assistance turned out to a mirage, and a United States State Depart- ent intelligence estimate last January re- Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor CHAEL KRAFT JOHN WEICHER torial Director City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor SETTING in context the Soviet Union depicted by University President Harlan Hatcher last night..,. ".. . the underdeveloped countries are in a hurry and the Soviet way is fast." "The industrialization of the world is the master trend of our time; perhaps it is not in- evitable, but it is strong enough as a demand and appealing enough as a promise to set the key terms of the world-wide competition be- tween the two dominant systems of economic, military and political power. That the under- developed countries-containing two thirds of mankind-are still underdeveloned is a world Senirnore Says E J-. .. f,_ ,t. i , . t '.' : #; >,i " 0 -A ,