Laotian Situation: Confusion, Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSrrY OF MICHIGAN en Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORM T OF BOARD i CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Wil Preall" STUPENT PUBLuCATioNS BLDG. * AN ARBOR, MicH. * Phone NO 2-3241 ditorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf evriters or the editors. This mss t be noted in all reprints. DAY, JANUARY 18, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL BURNS Total Opportunity' System Can Destroy Fraternity Structure, 7HE MEN AT WILLIAMS COLLEGE have' evolved a rush plan called "total oppor- unity" which seems to provide a perfect op- portunity to destroy that school's fraternity tructure. One chapter at William's, Beta Theta Pi, has already suffered from the inception of "total pportunity." The board of trustees of Beta' ssued an injunction against the Williams chap- er preventing it from initiating any member r pledge "until further notice." The fact that he injunction came after the Williams group ad initiated a Negro sophomore in this fall's rush may or may not show that Beta discrimi- iates. The trustees claim it was issued because f the "climate of opinion" at Williams which hey interpret to be alien to the objectives of 3eta "especially in view of the policy of en- orced, rush selection of fraternity members." "Total opportunity" was developed by student eaders at Williams last spring and put into ef- ect this fall after the 15 fraternities on cam- pus had voted on its adoption. J7HE RUSH PLAN demands that every rushee who lists all 15 fraternities in a preferen- ial order be given at least one bid. If such a ushee does not receive a bid, no fraternity can ledge any of the men it has bid. The rationale behind "total opportunity" was xplained by Thomas Weinland, president of he Williams chapter of Beta who helped create he system. "Total opportunity," he said, brings pressure on the fraternities to examine a rushee 'a second or a third time." This prevents a poor first impression from hurting a rushee's hances. "The good in an individual is often not seen until you look closely at him a second ime," Weinland contends. TOTAL OPPORTUNITY" seems to have been created for the benefit of the four or five tudents every semester who rush and are not )id. While "total opportunity" guarantees that no 'ultimate force" be brought upon an individual raternity by the administration, every rushee nust receive bids or the fraternities will crum- Ae. Weinland believes that the types of fra- ernities at Williams are so diverse that every Villiams student is bound to fit into one, and hat there is at least one chapter that will want ach person. In the not very unlikely case that an in- lividual rushee is not wanted by any house, ;ome group has got to take him. No pressure rom the administration is needed; the internal pressures within the system and the will to survive will force one group to martyr its con- cepts of fraternalism and accept the boy. Just how this would be done is unclear. Suffice it to say that some fraternity sooner or later is bound to bid an individual it feels is not a proper candidate for its peculiar broth- erhood. Such an action would be completely against the basis of the fraternity system. Fraternities are self-confessed bands of men who share common goals, aspirations, and ex- perience. The group functions harmoniously ba-, cause the members have a great number of sim- ilar likes, habits and attitudes. Each fraternity develops its own "character" and looks for pledges who seem to have a similar personality makeup as the composite membership. BETA FRATERNITY, for example, had a con- stitutional ruling that a member must be unanimously approved by the local chapter be- fore his initiation. Whether or not the theory of compatible members is a valid basis for membership selec- tion, the social fraternities have accepted it as a foundation stone in their systems and in their debates. In view of the type of enforced selection of members practiced at Williams, it is not sur- prising nor it is out of place for then national fraternity to take the action it did so that in- vestigation of the situation there can be exam- ined more closely. THE INVALIDITY OF the trustees' action arises, however, from the possibility that the injunction came because the trustees thought the Williams chapter at Beta had been forced to accept a member who is a Negro. Beta's national executive secretary has con- fessed that the complaint which lead to the injunction came after the fall bids were an- nounced, not when the "total opportunity" plan was officially adopted. Weinland said that his chapter has not been forced by anyone to bid a man he did not want. He said, however, that he knew of no other Negroes in any chapters of Beta. The Beta president at this University also said he knew of no Negro members. The Chicago Maroon has reported that "a couple of Negroes have been initiated in Beta, but they, for all practical purposes, were sneaked through; when it has been known that a chapter was contemplating initiating a Negro, great and successful pressure has been brought to bear," The motives behind the injunction are cloudy indeed, but it is certain to initiate difficulties for Beta Theta Pi, Williams College, and all the nation's fraternities. -MICHAEL OLINICK By CAROLINE DOW Daily Staff writee THE COMIC OPERA situation in Laos could be written up in a combination movie of "The King and I" and "The Mouse that Roared" and the situation would still not be covered. Considering that most of the leaders of two of the three warring factions are half brothers and that at one point both the United States and Russia were opposing the one group that could bring stability to Laos, interpreting Laotian news can be difficult. Even the political science department is not sure what is going on in that little land, symbolically shaped like a key that could throw us into war at any time. Laos is a little muddy under- developed land that is *torn by an internal power struggle of three princes two of them half-brothers. Each of the Princes have taken a stand on how to aid Laos one would ask communist aid another favors the United States and the third wants to be neutralist, get aid from both and keep the other two Princes in his cabinet where he can watch them. No 'one would probably care who won 'except that there is a cold war and Laos would be one more country in the near east gobbled up. If gobbled up, the Communist would be just that much closer to India or we would be just that much closer to China. * * *. SOMETIMES WE wonder why anyone wants Laos, considering that the only economic crop is opium. The principals in the struggle are, pro-communist Captain Kong Le, a paratrooper who is support- ing the Neutralist factions and Prince Souphanouvong (also writ- ten as Souvanna Vong) one of the half-brothers andleader of the Pathet Lao. The Pathet Lao is one of the successor bodies to the Lao Issara (Free Laotian) move- ment which after the Japanese war fought for the independence of Laos against the French. In 1949 the Lao Issara movement ac- cepted the French grant of in- dependence within the French union, but the minority led by Prince Souphanouvong remained in rebellion with the support of the Communist Vietminh (the government of neighboring North Vietnam). Prince Souphanouvong has always denied he is a Com- munist but Pathet Lao has re- ceived the support of foreign Com- munist governments as they op-" pose the rightests. The Neutralist leader, Prince Souvanna Phouma (another half- brother), has been called in to head a neutral government twice, in 1957 and again last spring. On both occasions, rightests (influenc- ed by the United States) have thwarted his government and taken over the reins. Generally, the President of the neutralist government has been Ngo Diem. The pro-western group has been led by King Savang Vathana, who presumably turned over the reins to his two sons after the first fall of Souvanna Phouma's gov- ernment. Cohort Phoui Sanani- kone took the reins in a govern- ment with no Pathet Lao re- presentation. This government was dismissed last year because it was not stringent enough to the Com- munists and more rightest Prince Somsanith caie to power under the strong army influence of Gen- eral Phoumi Nosavan. * * * THE CIRCLE OF power was al- most complete when on August 9th, 1960 pro-communist para- trooper Kong Lee seized power and asked for a more neutral, less United States dominated govern- ment. Souvanna Phouma was ask- ed in again but, opposed to by both the United States and the Pathet Lao, failed to take offce and on September 11 Prince Boun Oum, of a former royal house in the South, announced that he had taken over. The United States came out for Boun Oum and then the National Assembly withdrew support of Souvanna Phouma and backed Prince Boun Oum. The King, we suppose giving up on his sons, appointed Prince Boun Oum Prime Minister. This action pre- sumably drove Captain Kong Le into the Pathet Lao as they are now fighting as a United Front. This coalition of Kong Le and the Pathet Lao, termed as the rebels, are fighting with direct communist support for a government of Sou- vanna Phouma. Rightests have been winning the Assembly battles because the United States Agencies provide most of the aid upon which Laos depends. Thus the United States has strong lobbying power. ATTEMPTS AT SOLUTION have been many and varied. Until 1954 Laos was an indepen- dent state within the French Union. However the war between the French and the communists in Viet Minh was distrubing the area and Laos was invaded in 1953 and 1954. A conference of. France, Britian, the Soviet Union, China, Laos, Qambodia, Vietnam and the Vietminh movement met in Gen- eve in 1954 to try to end fighting. The Geneva conference ended hos- tilites and decided that all forces should be withdrawn, the Pathet Lao should remain in the two northern provinces which they occupied "pending a political settlement." A n international commission comprised of India, Canada and Poland was to super- vise the carrying out of the agree- ments. Laos agreed not to join any military alliance and not to have' on its territory any foreign miIi- ------d----- S Battleground av S '.4 S lot cc Ilion " Area Chinese. Indian border dispute ' Pallstain * Gurma -Rural Cpital iChinese- Burmese ndry Settlement" LAOS j jfowesi 1 Y (see inset) .' Thfbailand a Won by C4mmunists >it ' AP Newsfeatures aY i 1 p" o tary bases except for two French bases with a limited number of ,men in each. Laos also declared its intention to "integrate all citizens, without discrimination, into the national community," and for this purpose to hold, general elections in 1955. The United States did not sign the Geneva agreements but issued a deelara- tion that it would not disturb them by force or the threat of force. * * * THE "POLITICAL settlement", of the Pathet Lao with the Lao- tion gpvernment was a neutralist government with the Pathet Lao represented by two seats in the National Assembly, with the chance to win as many more as they could, and the Pathet Lao leader, Prince Souphanav Vong in the cabinet. But the Pathet Laowon too many seats in the election for the comfort of the anti-communists and the United States. Under pressure from rightest groups and United States Agencies, Souvanna Phouma's first neutralist govern- ment' was dismissed in favor of the right wing government of Mr. Sananikone. In this government, the Pathet Lao had no representa- tion and the merry-go-round be- gan again. At the moment the even more rightest government of Prince Boun Oum is fighting for its life against the Pathet Lao. A flurry of counter-agression charges have gone through Seato and the United Nations and the nations are now lining up for a long diplomatic and guerilla war- fare seige. Laos is a bad place to fight because of the open frontiers with both China and North Viet- nam and modern warfare cannot be used in the jungle. * * * THERE ARE TWO major sug- gestions for solution. Cambodia has suggested a revival of the Geneva conference of 1954 which ended the fighting in Indochina. This conference would have the additional members of neighbor- ing Burma and Thailand and the three nations of the International Advisory Commission, Canada, In- dia, and Poland, that was set up, to supervisethe agreements of Geneva. This commission was adjourned indefinitely in July 1958 at the request of the Laotian Sou- vanna Phouma government, two months before the rightest Phoui Sananikoe government took office. The second suggestion to revive just the International Supervisory Commission was made by the Soviets. Canada has suggested that this commission look into the situation to see if anything could be done before they officially con- vene. The communists do not recog- nize the Boun Oum government and hold that they are aiding the legitimate government of Souvanna Phouma. It seems that the Soviets, at least do not wish to go to war on Laos but are using it to push; for an early East West Summit conference. The United States at this point seems convinced that any con- ference, a second Geneva or a Summit would delay a real settle- ment in Laos indefinitely wh the rebels strengthened their po tion with Soviet bloc aid. Ther fore the United States has be stalling and pouring arms it Laos. The Boun Oum governmne seems to be amenable to any c: ferences as long as they first-r cognize the legitimacy of the.BO Oum government. De Gaulle is officially backi the Cambodian suggestion of second Geneva conference and generally in- favor of talking i stead of fighting. Britain, with the experience her successful, Malayan fighti behind her seems convinced th no military decisions cou.ld ' won by the West in actual confli Britain has recognized the Bo Oum government and is favoral to a new control commission Laos. India's Nehru has written ale ter to the White House hoping f a' peaceful settlement. Nehruis. favor of a return of the Inte national Supervisory Commissi and is still recognizing the Gover ment of Souvanna Phouma w took refuge in Cambodia Dec. 9. If the Pathet Lao win the ci war Laos would no doubt be Communist state, as North Vie nam is. If Prince Boun Out forces win, guerrilla, warfare wou probably continue more succe fully than in South Vietnam a there would be no real stabili for Laos. The real hope for La lies in another government of N tional Unity such as the one th1 Souvanna Phouma twice attemr ed to set up. But . . we shall sE MICHIGAN UNIVERSITIES SEEK SOLUTION: Three Suggestions For University Co-Ordinating Agencies TODAY AND TOMORROW The Two Decisions By WALTER LIPPMIANN IN HIS LAST messages on the State of the Union and the budget, President Eisenhower, as was his constitutional duty, had stated his own views about economic policy. They differ Importantly from those of the incoming Ken- nedy administration, and they point to cer- tain basic issues which will now be much dis- cussed. As it happens, there is available for the discussion not only Mr. Kennedy's campaign speeches but the report of Prof. Paul A. Sam- uelson, which was made public about ten days Rgo. As between the Eisenhower and Kennedy po- sitions on the recession, the budget, and the state of the economy, there are two main points of difference. The one is about the current re- cession. The other is about the general condition the American economy since about 1955 when it has been shaped by the Eisenhower-Humphrey- Anderson policy. On the recession, President Eisenhower ex- presses an unqualified optimism that the re- cession will soon cure itself and that conse- quently we shall have a small budgetary sur- plus by June 30 next. The Samuelson report to Mvr. Kennedy rejects the idea that we can count on the recession curing itself quickly. The report calls for some immediate but moderate measures to reflate the economy-something in the order of three to five billions of expendi-. tures above the Eisenhower level. But these suggestions are followed by warning that the recession may grow worse. AS OF NOW no one can tell whether the stronger measures will be necessary. But there is good reason to disbelieve in the Eisen- hower optimism about the recession, that it will quickly cure itself. There is an ominous and pertinent precedent for this disbelief. In early 1958, when the second of the Eisenhower recessions was under way, the President pre- dcted a small budgetary surplus for fiscal L959, just as he is now predicting a small sur- plus for 1961 and a large surplus for 1962. But in fact, because of the recession, the 1959 budgetary year ended with a deficit of $12.00- President Eisenhower said in a message on the state of the union that "the expanding American economy passed the half-trillion dollar mark in gross national product early in .1960. The nation's output of goods and services is now nearly 25 per cent higher than in 1952." IN THE YEARS 1955 to 1960--when the con- sequences of the Korean War were over and the Eisenhower-Humphrey-Anderson economic policies were operating-our gross national product increased from $448.000,000,OO to about $503,000,000,000. (This is the President's "half trillion.") These figures mean a rate of growth of 2.6 per cent per year, which is among the very slowest of the advanced industrial na- tions of the worldl. This sluggish rate of growth is at the root of many of our domestic and of our foreign prob- lems. The Samuelson report to Kennedy says, "Had our economy progressed since 1956-not at the dramatic sprint of the western European and Japanese economies or at the rush ofthe controlled totalitarian system, but simply at the modest pace made possible by our labor force and productivity trends-we could have ex- pected 1961 to bring a gross national product some 10 per cent above the 500 billion dollar level we are now experiencing." President Eisenhower's convictions on this point were put forward most explicitly'by the Chairman of his Council of Economic Advis- ors, Mr. Saulnier, who once testified in 1949, "As I understand an economy, its ultimate pur- pose is to produce more consumer goods. This is the object of everythinig we are working at: to produce things for consumers." Then he went on to say that "if you take total gross national production, you find growth in recent years has lagged. But if you look at consumption-the thing which, as I say, I regard myself as being committed to maximize-you find that we are dongi better." The results show that if this was the right goal, the Eisenhower administration has (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second and final article in a series on co-ordination in the state uni- versities.) By PHILIP SUTIN Daily Staff Writer WITHTHE BEGINNTNG of the, 1961 session of the state legis- lature, several new proposals on higher education have been ad- vanced. Gov. John Swainson in his state of the State message sug- gested a new council on higher education. Composed of legislators, private citizens, and members of the governing boards of the state's colleges and universities, the group would review past studies, propose new ones and make recommenda- tions to the governor. Another suggestion was offered by Rep. Arnett Engstrom (R- Traverse City) who urged that the Legislative Service Bureau hire a co-ordinator to collect and make recommendations.cNo new legis- lation is needed to effect Eng- strom's proposal as the bureau al- ready has been empowered to make such an appointment and pay the official from regular bureau funds. These proposals reflect the cur- rent trend of organizing co- ordinating agencies. These groups fall into three general types - (1) one central board for all state colleges and universities, (2) a compulsary co-ordinating board or agency supervising local ad- ministration of theinstitutions, DAILY OFFICIAL LB1ULLETIN (3) voluntary arrangements of one sort or another between all the state colleges and universities. * * * TWELVE STATES HAVE cen- tral boards of control for their institutions of higher education. The first of these was established by South Dakota in 1896 and the last by Arizona in 1945. The trend toward this type of co-ordination has disappeared due to inefficiency of the arrangement. Under such a system every major decision by local administrators would have to be cleared with a central board. This leads to bureaucratic delays. The establish- ment of a central control board over previously independent in- stitutions is harsh and abrupt, hampering the operation of the component colleges and universi- ties. The second method is less cen- tralized and is gaining popularity among those who favor compul- sory co-ordination of state col- leges and universities. Among the states that have adopted com- pulsory co-ordinating board sys- tems, there is a great deal of variation in the power of the agency and the operation, A current trend among such systems is toward a lessening of the power of the central organization. The first states that adopted the plan, Oklahoma and New Mexico, gave their co-ordinating boards much authority over budgets of the member institutions and plan- ning. * * * AS SEVEN OTHER states adopted this system, their cen- tral agencies were reduced to more advisory capacities. California, the last to use this method, gives its Co-ordination Council for Higher Education very limited power. It only serves as advising agency for the governor, reviewing budgets and capital outlay plans of all state institutions, and as arbiter of disputes among the various units. In California, co-ordination is achieved by the defining of func- tions and roles under a "Master Plan." The University of Califor- nia is to provide instruction in the liberal arts scienes. nnr onfes- arts, science and vocational courses to the 14th grade to prepare stu- dents for employment or further study at a higher institution. The "Master Plan" specifies basic entrance standards for each level of education. The University of California takes the top 12.5 per cent of the state's high school students. The colleges are limited to the top third of secondary school classes, and the junior col- leges take the rest. * * * . UNDER SUCH A plan California hopes to avoid the institutional clashes of the past and to create, an effective system able to educate the rapidly increasing number of resident young people. The third approach to co- ordination is through voluntary co-operation between institutions, According to Prof. Merritt Cham- bers of the University's Carnegie Center for the Study of Higher Education, Ohio and Indiana are prime examples of this system. In these states cost studies, budget and other fiscal matters are agreed in advance before they are submitted to the Legislature. In- diana extends agreements to capital outlay programs of its four institutions as well. In Michigan, the state colleges and universities are operating un- der a voluntary co-ordination system. However, co-operation is in a rudimentary stage of develop- ment. It has not attained the high degree of discussion and agreement evidenced in Ohio and Indiana. The Council of State College Presidents meets only about once each month and is just now at- tempting to set the basic stan-. dards necessary for co-ordination. At present there are no uniform accointing, budgeting and enroll- ment reporting procedures among the nine state institutions. The smaller universities have not con- ducted cost analysis studies which are important in making compari- sons and in determining efficiency. Continued research in these areas was approved at the Jan. 9 meet- ing of the council. It will be a long time still before some standard is set. * * * THlE COUNCIL 191 alhn lnoking and engaged John Dale Russell,, chancellor and executive secretary of the Board of Educational Fi- nance of the State of New Mexico, to direct the survey. Russell 'issued a report on co- ordination in Michigan in July, 1958. In it he urged creation of a "Coordinating Board" for higher education of the compulsory type. The agency would collect and ana- lyze data on programs, facilities, finances ad operations from the various institutions and give this material to the Legislature and other agencies that would need such data. A second function would be to furnish state fiscal authorities with an estimate of operating and capital outlay appropriations for each institution. The report would also include the original request of the institution and the board's recommendation. Third, the "Coordinating Board" would advise the Legislature on all policy matters affecting the devel- opment and operations of higher education in the state. Russell, names new institutions, new ser- vices, and policies, fees, out-of- state students and development as examples of such matters. The board would make continu- ing studies on the state's higher education needs and the effective- ness of present programs. Russell stresses such studies' value to the. Legislature, institions and public, saying they are "one of the im- portant methods by which a non- coercive type of coordination can be introduced and maintained." * * - THROUGH ITS STAFF, the ,board would serve as an advisor to the state colleges and univer- sities on development and opera- tions problems. No compulsion from the Board would be involved with giving advice, Finally, the "Coordinating Board" would make audits and checks to test accuracy and uni- formity of the reports of the various institutions. Russell sees' auditing authority as necessary for' the effective functioning of the board. According to the Russell plan, the "Coordinating Board" would 'ences of other states are available for evaluation. It is time for action on problem. Continued pressure the state colleges and univer and fiscal difficulties den some form of co-ordination rangement that allows the system of higher educatio: function efficiently and effect yet at the same time mains the institutionr autonomy. LETTERS ioj . to the EDITOR (EDITOR'S NOTE: The foflowin was received as an, open letter U University Plant Manager Alfred 8 Ueker.) CONSIDER IT an utter a complete outrage that you someone under you has perm ted the continued operation the brush grinding engine du ing the busiest hours of the da Being a passionate amateur arbi culturist myself, I am fully in a cord with :our desire to preser and beautify through pruning I venerable elms and maples th shade our campus. But this brt chopper does not prune/ trees, merely grinds the twigs that a pruned. I suppose that the chc ping engine is employed to save small amount of wages and redu the number of man-hours of I supporting crew to pick up I twigs and cart them away. But evidently you did not ca to consider that by this decisi you brought to a standstill, or least very seriously impaired, I activity of this University, nam instruction. These past mornin while I was trying to present to comparatively large class of gre uate students the subject of Ma well's equations, a rather diffic subject as you will agree, the : lentless din of the twig eng: made it impossible to achieve I requisite concentration both f me as well as for my audience. The noise produced by this e gine, as it macerates a few inc thick twigs is all out of propo tion to its usefulness. For t (Continued from Page 2) hours: Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.mn. to 12:30 p.m. Employers desirous of hiring part- time or temporary employees should contact Bill Wenrich, at NO 3-1511, ext. 2939. Students desiring miacellaneous jobs should consult the builetin board in Room 1020, daily. MALE 11-Psychological subjects (hours to be arranged). 1-Laundry clerk (4-6 p.m., Monday- Friday, and 8 a.m. til 4 p.m. Satur-