01 r Argigau Da|ily Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 '"Whey Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must'be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JUNKER Sigma Kappa's Letters Show Unchanging Position "-Five Years, Eight Months and Two Days -Five Years, Eight Months and Three Days--" ., r r y 4 x- 01p a ( ~ A' ,> AT HILLEL: Stone Refreshing In Folk, Concert. IT IS TRULY refreshing to see and listen to a folk artist such as Elly Stone whose performance at Hillel last night was nothing short of remarkable. It is doubly refreshing nowadays when every would-be actor and refugee from the "art song" and German lieder who can strum three chords on a guitar is masquerading as a folk singer. Elly Stone cannot be placed in that category. She is indeed an artist, one who combines the elements of first-rate showmanship with a good voice and sdme very adept guitar technique. It was with the use of showmanship that she was able to put across two or three se- lections last night that were musically threadbare and which could not have stood up by themselves. It was Elly Stone the musician who I THE EXCHANGE of letters between Sigma Kappa National Sorority, the University's administration and Student Government. Council should be required reading for those interested in the character of words and those who write them. On October 10, 1956 SGC sent a statement to the National Council of Sigma Kappa, issu- ing "an official invitation to all interested par- ties to present all pertinent information which they desire." Sigma Kappa replied on November 30, 1956 with a statement which charged in part: "The Student Government Council is inquiring into the reasons for Sigma Kappa decisions made with respect to our own internal affairs in areas other than the University of Michigan campus." NOW, nearly two years after SGC found Sigma Kappa in violation of University regulations and gave them until this summer's national Convention to prove that they were no longer discriminatory, Sigma Kappa sent a letter to Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis saying: "National Sigma Kappa shall abide by the University or college rules and regulations now governing the respective campuses on which it has a chapter, reserving the right to regu- late Its internal affairs privately, in accord- ance with the university or college rules and regulations, provided that such rules and regu- lations must not be in violation of the Consti- tution and By-laws of Sigma Kappa as set forth in A ticle II, Section IA." Inb effect, Sigma Kappa says nothing new, but the way it says it is rather interesting. In activating on a campus, a sorority as a matter of course must agree to abide 'by the institu- tion's rules.- But National Sigma Kappa reserves "the right to regulate its internal affairs privately," a right reserved and thus held more important than abiding by University rules. Without the clause beginning with "reserving" and ending with "regulations," the letter reads, "National Normal' Housin, A"NORMAL" housing situation appears to be one wherethere is enough space for every- one. This Year the University dormitories, de- scribed as "normal" by officials, do not fulfill this definition. The women's residence halls, will have vacancies within the next week, even though Jordan Hall is closed for repairs and Tyler, Prescott and Fredrick Houses have been re-converted to men's living units. * However, the quadrangles, with 65 surplus men, on the first day of classes were over- crowded. This is'the situation, and even Hard- ing would have to stretch a definition to call it "normalcy." For the residence halls, however, it is a marked improvem(nnt. Last year women's dor- mitories housed 325 beyond their capacity. Men's residences have eliminated all tem- porary doubles and triples from their corridors. For such a system, where overcrowding has been the rule since World War II, only 65 men without rooms can be called "normal" with a smile. Sigma Kappa shall abide by the University or college rules now governing the respective campuses on which it has a chapter, provided that such rules and regulations must not be in violation of the Constitution and By-laws of Sigma Kappa as set forth in Article II, Section IA." Exactly what provisions are in that part of the secret Sigma Kappa Constitution is some- thing meaningless to everyone here except Sigma Kappas and Dean of Women Deborah Bacon. AND NOW for the third letter; the one from Mr. Lewis to Student Government Council (see Page 2). The key phrase is that "The Of- fice of the Dean of Women, in consultation with other Administrative officials, has checked the Constitution . . . and is now pre- pared to certify to the Student Government Council that Sigma Kappa meets the require- ments as stated in our published Regulations." However, the certification is nothing new, for the Sigma Kappa constitution was sub- mitted to the Dean's office when the sorority reactivated on this campus and the Con- stitution was certified to have no bias clause. THE IMPORTANT question is what Sigma Kappa national does as a matter of its own "internal affairs." The suspension of the two chapters (Sigma Kappa has 68) pledging Ne- groes and the National's refusal to explain its. action, beyond repeating "internal affairs," led SGC, two years ago, to conclude that al- though-Sigma Kappa's constitution may not 'contain a bias clause, it nevertheless acted in a discriminatory manner and therefore vio- lated University regulations. The resolution passed at the National Con- vention only reiterates Sigma Kappa's previous stand, and still fails to show that the sorority is not In violation of University regulations.. Apparently, in two years, only letters, not posi- tions have changed. -MICHAEL KRAFT Editorial Director g Not So Normal For a dormitory system which until this year needed much additional space, the con- struction of Mary Markley women's residence seems a panacea.- Now, however, it appears, to have been a mistake. An entire women's( dorm is shut for repairs, a section of Markley is not yet finished, and there are still vacancies in the women's dormitory system. TIS "ERROR" would be easily corrected, of course, if another 300 people had sought University housing. Then both systems would be overcrowded and pleas and petitions for. new dorms would be heard from all sources, Markley, despite its effects on women's housing this year, is a step in the right direc- tion. Dormitory overcrowding, along with high apartment rents, has been accepted as "nor- mal" in Ann Arbor for many years. Only 65 people with no rooms is almost enough to pro- claim a day of commemoration. --ROBERT JUNKER ~ii~:Aft . M CAPITAL COMMENTARY: :Adams'OusterAids Democrats . By WILLIAM S. WHITE enchanted her audience with John Jacob Niles' dramatic ballad "Lass from the Low Countree," and the poignant "Autumn. Leaves" which she sang in the ori- ginal French. As for repertory, Miss Stone takes us in time all the way from the 15th century to the present day; in space, she travels quickly from Israel to the British Isles, through Italy and France, across the Pyrenees into Spain, then through Poland and Germany, ending up in our own United States. Categorically speaking, she covered a broad expanse of folk idioms: the impassioned re- ligious chant, the spirited ditty, the love song, the Negro spiritual. In all she sang in seven different languages which included French, Spanish, Italian, German, He- brew and Yiddish. In fact, one of the most popularly received num- bers of the evening was a comical ditty sung in three languages si- multaneously. Her ability to com- municate the color and sipirt of a song through the controlled use of dramatic' effects was enough, to dispel the language barrier. FOR HER second encore, Miss Stone invited the audience to par- ticipate in the singing of two folk songs. The response was excellent. Both the Israeli chant, "Tumbah- Tumbah" and the old favorite, "Kisses Sweeter than Wine" were performed exceptionally well. Whatever other talents she may possess, Elly Stone is certainly capable of holding an audience, and with. a rapport that is gen- uine, She is not hesitant to make use of the grossest comedy or the most refined sarcasm in an ef- fort to convey the deepest mean- ing of a song, nor is she reluctant to stray far from the beaten path in her choice of material. There are any number of tired old fav- orites she could have brought out but one is quite pleased that she didn't. More folk artists should be encouraged to examine the fine store of material which remote cultures have to offer. The overwhelming turnout for the concert, an attendance which is unprecedented in Hillel's his- tory, is indicative of the growing interest in folk music on campus, an interest which has been on the increase during the past two years. The master of ceremonies at last night's program remarked that, gHillelpresented Miss Stone as a mere experiment, hardly ex- pecting to attract such a great number of students. Not only is it rewarding to see people abandoning their radios and hi-fi sets to listen to live, quality music, but it is equally re- warding to see folk music moving out of the so-called "chi-chi" night spots where exorbitant. prices prevent it from reaching the vast audiences that are its life-line. --Al Young WASHINGTON -The departure of Sherman Adams from the White House raises fresh problems for the Republicans and settles none. The decision to "let Sherm go" was dictated by the Congressional Republicah pros because of the recent Democratic victories in Maine. But it now looks, even to some of the realistic Republicans, to have been an extraordinarily amateurish and damaging per- formance. Though still denying that Adams did anything wrong in his rela- tionship with Bernard Goldfine, the Administration in effect has admitted that "cronyism" h'as reached into the Eisenhower White House. When the Republicans were unable to prove unlawful conduct by Truman White House associates they found that this very charge of "cronyism-" - which they in- vented-would do just about as well for partisan purposes. * * * THE ADAMS-GOLDFINE affair was a two-bit affair at most, just as were most of those in the Tru- man era. And in any retreat in any so-called scandal, the ad- ministration involved is inevitably seen by the public to be confessing some kind of wrongdoing. It is thus wise to act at once against an accused official or not at all-to cut one's political losses instantly or resolutely to ride out the storm. To have dismissed Adams months ago would have been at least logical, however harsh. This could have been presented as dra- matic proof of the Administration's devotion to the concept of the "hound's tooth." It could have been suggested that Adams was the innocent blut still necessary victim of a demonstra- tion of a rare and lofty ideal of public service, of the immensely high standards, of an administra- tion almost, but not quite, too good to be true. BUT WHAT is now plainly ad- mitted instead is that he is a victim simply of the Maine elec- tion returns - and the fear of other, coming returns. Thus the Administration has managed to get the worst of both worlds. And all because of Re- publican defeats in Maine that. most probably would have come if there never had been a Sherman Adams. This belated sacrifice is ex- tremely unlikely, moreover, to save a single Republican House or Senatorial seat. Indeed, there is good authority for the statement that the White House agreed to it mainly to avoid giving post-elec- tion alibis to Republican Congres- sional candidates who are panick- ing in the face of November. * * * HERE ARE some of the un- planned results: 1) President Eisenhower himself, because of Adams' uniquely high place, is clearly injured by the ouster. The President is, weakened in his official functions-many of which he had long left to Adams-- and also in his political influence. For it is now officially acknowl- edged that=the President's closest associate has become a Republican liability. This lcan only speak less than highly of the President's own assets to the campaign. 2) Another of those who "made" General Eisenhower politically has gone under. Adams' influence was high in the 1952 New Hampshire primary that made an Eisenhower candidacy botA% possible and cer- tain. Former Senator James H. Duff' of Pennsylvania was unseated in 1956 after having been starved for patronage by the White 'House. Former Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. of Massachusetts, the third member of this old trium- virate of Eisenhower kingmakers, is out of politics as our Ambassador to the United Nations. 3) Finally, the Republican party is now committed at the top to a refusal to face and cure its real and general weaknesses in the. campaign. The policy of blaming, it all on "Sherm"-and blaming it, on him very late in the game-is -as great a gift as the Democrats have yet had. (Copyright, 1958, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) 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 TYPEWRITT X-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 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 195 VOL. LXIX, NO. 9 General Notices School of Business Adminsratio. Faculty meeting at 3 p.m., Friday, Sep- tember 26, Room 170 B.A. Closed Social Events (for members and invited guests only) sponsored b student organizations must be regis- tered in the Office of Student Affairs. Application forms may be secured in the Office of Student Affairs. Requests for approval must be submitted to that office no later than noon of the Tues- day before the event is scheduled. A list of approved social events will be published in the Daily Official Bulle, tin on Thursday of each week. In planning social programs for the semester, social chairmen are remind- ed that the calendar' is closed seven days prior to the beginning of final examinatalons. For the present semes- ter, examinations begin 1-19-59. Summary of action taken at meet-' ing of Student Government Council, 4 September 24,;'19$8. Approved minutes meeting of May 27, 1958. Received notification of resignation, of Roy Lave from Board in Review. Received official notification ,of reso- lution adopted by National Sigma Kappa together with letter from Vice- President James A. Lewis relating 'to the statement. Approved committee to make ree- ommendations on action to be taken. by the Council regarding the status of Sigma appa; the committee was re- quested to. report to the Council as soon as possible. Appointments to the committee: Barbara- Maier, Chairman, Scott Chrysler, Mary Tower, Richard Taub, Maynard Goldman. Announced petitioning has opened for Council vacancy, to close Monday. Sept. 29; interviews, Sept. 30. Bob Ashton and Fred Merrill were appoint- ed to serve on the Interviewing:Com- mittee with the Executive Committee. Reviewed and accepted- report of fol- lowing action approved since the May 27 meeting by the interim ;committee, Office of StudentAffairs, or Executive Committee: Summer activities sponsored by stu- dent organizations, India Student As. sociation, documentary films, July 19, Aug. 16, 17; International Student As- sociation, July 18, Lowell Thomas film showing; July 22, discussion, Middle East crises; August 2 outdoor dance, Tennis. Courts, WAA. Change in calendaring Lantern Night from Nov. 7 to Nov. 3. Fall Film series, Gothie Film Society., 12 Monday night showings in Rackham Amphitheater.' Substitutions in National Student Association delegation due to cancella- tions. Approved by Council vote during summer: Renewal of American Casual- ty Company Policy No. SMD 797 to ex- pire Sept, 10, 1960 with premium modifications. Distribution of M-Handbooks to freshmen and transfer students by mail with cooperation of Office of Ad- missions, SOC to assume mailing costs unless some financial aid canbe ab- tained from the University. Activities requiring approval of sx- ecutive Committee prior to this meet- ing: September 25, Hillel oundatioi Elly Stone, folksinger, program, Hillel Foundation, 8 p.m.: September 28, Young Republicans, Senator Javits on World Peace, Rackham, 8t3O p.m.; Sep- tember 27, Assembly Association,. F+ Hop.l Aproved following petitions: Wol- verine Club, to sponsor send-off Pe Rally, Oct. 3 at 3 p.m.,- Yost' Field House; India Student Association Gandhi Day, Oct. 4, 7:30 p.m. Rackham Amphitheater; Homecoming Dance, I-M Building, -Oct. 2. Announced National Student Asso- ciation Tours project, available for delegation to an interested student organization. Received Income Statement, July 1, 1957-June 30, 1958. Received report from Course Evalua- tion Committee. Directed the Course Evaluation Committee to report their plans and alternatives; in particular, to study the possibility of expanding and improving the course descriptions of the various college catalogs as an alternative to publishing a course evaluation booklet; the report to be made as ,soon as possible. Approved November 11, 12 and March 10, 11 as the dates for Campus Elec- tions this., year. Approved information St at em eit concerning requirements for 'calendar. ing and approval of activities spon- sored by student organizations. Granted recognition to Christian Re- formed Student Fellowshp. :-This rec. ognition is temporary for one year un- der procedure adopted May 27, 1958. Approved Ron Oregg, Ann Poniger, Jo Hardee for recommendation to Vice- President Lewis -- one to be' selected as student representative on the Com- mittee on University Lectures. Rules Governing Participation in Non- Athletic, Extracurricular Activities, Any regularly enrolled student 'is eli- gible to participate in non-athletic extracurricular activities' provided' he i's not on academic discipline. Itesponsibility: Responsibility for ob- *P-- m - o - o' eifmbiit...+atmn. + ,.: 4 I *. I TODAY AND TOMORROW: U.S. Should Drop Chiang By WALTER LIPPMANN SGC IN REVIEW: Sorority Letter Falls Short of Showing Good Faith j T'HEPRESIDENT, on his return from New- port, is faced with a crisis in our relations with Chiang's government in Formosa. The Red Chinese blockade of Quemoy is effective, and there is no reason to think that it can be broken except by a war against the mainland. This war would have to be waged by the United States. The President is under increasingly frantic pressure from Formosa, and from some people in Washington, to let Chiang% air force, begin the war which we would then have to finish. In resisting the pressure to go to war, it will be difficult, perhaps impossible, for the Presi- dent to avoid a decision which means in effect that he has recovered American control of Unit- ed States foreign policy. For he will have to prevent Chiang from attacking the mainland and, having done that, he will have to insist on our right to negotiate for a cease-fire to be fol- lowed by the withdrawal of the Nationalist troops. The troops can be saved but not the offshore islands, and this country will have done all that is it is obligated to do for Formosa if it extricates one-third of Chiang's army from the trap they are in. Moreover, it is a question whether the under- standing agreed to by Secretary of State John Foster Dulles at the time the Formosa treaty was ratified by the Senate gives the President the moral right to do any more. There is no doubt that the withdrawal of the Nationalist troops will mean that Chiang has been defeated in the offshore islands, and that all hope of his return by invading the main- to us. The withdrawal and salvaging of Chiang's troops will be less bad than a war which would be enormously, difficult to localize and, if it involved nuclear weapons, would have catas- trophic effects on our whole position in Asia. For the people of Asia have no forgotten that the first time that nuclear weapons were used in war it was by the United States against an Asian people. It is unthinkable that President Eisenhower should repeat that tragedy. The evacuation of Chiang's troops will be less bad also in its effect than letting these troops be besieged and starved while we stand by and make ineffectual attempts to run the blockade. ALL THE choices are horrid. The grim truth is that Mr. Dulles has been caught in a trap which could have been avoided by insisting that Chiang withdraw his troops before this bombardment began, There is no pretty and agreeable way to get out of such- a trap. The best way out is to act with the magnan- imity and self-assurance of a great power, to disentangle ourselves from Chiang, and then to astonish the world by a show of realism and common sense about the future of Formosa. It is said that all the smaller nations will aban- don us if we do not let Chiang lead us into war. It is said that to refuse to be led into war is appeasement which will encourage a bigger war of aggression. But as against this, it can be said that our entanglement with Chiang is regarded in most of the world as sinister, and as a sign of nliti. By THOMAS TURNER Daily Staff Writer NATIONAL Sigma Kappa has resolved to obey the rules of each campus where it has chapters, according to the, letter from the sorority to Student Government Council. Were the sorority coming onto campus now this would merely be a written statement of what is assumed when any group is recog- nized: that they will obey the University's rules. There was no reason to question their intentions. But in 1954 the Cornell chapter of Sigma Kappa pledged a Negro, then a junior, and was suspended. The chapter at Tufts University pledged two Negroes, both fresh- men, and was first suspended and later expelled. SGC now had reason to question Sigma Kappa's attitudes. The Council considered the possibility other reasons had caused the sus- pensions, such . as the alleged financial weakness at Tufts and the supposedly independent no- tions at Cornell referred to at the time by local Sigma Kappa presi- dent Barbara Busch. They decided the likelihood that other of the 68 chapters might have similar weak- nesses and hadn't been suspended, plusthe National's refusal to elab- orate on the reasons for the sus- pensions, made it likely the pledg- ings of Negro girls had caused the suspensions. rority was not guilty in the first place voted for this resolution; five of those who voted the sorority guilty opposed the two-year period as too lax. The sorority convened this sum- mer and resolved, as was reported at Wednesday's SGC meeting, To "abide by the University or college rules and regulations now govern- ing the respective campuses on which it has a chapter." That is all that could have been asked four years ago when Sigma Kappa came on campus but is far from satisfactory now. For as SGC pointed out when giving the group until this month to remove its discriminatory policy shown in the Tufts and Cornell suspensions, any acts in good faith must be strong enough to overcome the bad faith shown by those actions. THE INTENTIONS of National Sigma Kappa remain open to ques- tion due to the resolution reserving for the sorority "the right to regulate its internal affairs pri- vately, in accordance with the uni- versity or college rules and regula. tions." In a 1956 letter to Dean of Wom- en Dorothy Brooks of Cornell the same Margaret Taggart who wrote the letter to SGC this fall refered to the suspension of Cornell Sigma Kappa as "entirely a matter of internal management." Andi a Pf p fn rM n action keep from not violating the literal meaning of the summer convention's resolution. MENTION at the Council meet- ing Wednesday and later in The Daily of the term "committee" brought a widespread impression that consideration of Sigma Kap- pa's status had somehow been put off, or hushed up. This is quite unrealistic - it would be next to impossible to draw up concrete alternative courses of action on the floor of the 18-member council. But with the committee report before them, SGC will have a common basis for discussion. Moreover, there is as wide a variance of opinion on the com- mittee as on the council itself. Scott Chrysler voted Sigma Kapla innocent, voted to allow the two- year period of grace and just last May voted against a proposal rec- ommending to the Regents that "no further financial aid" be given groups with bias clauses.- Maynard Goldman, on the other hand, voted for the sorority being guilty and against giving the period of grace. Richard Taub, Bobbie Maier and Mary Tower were not on the Coun- cil two years ago, but in the .vote last May Taub and Miss Maier voted "aye," Miss Tower "nay." , t. " Senimore Says .. ::: .. .... ,... . ........ ...r