I / . I i . In Tuesday, August 27, 1968 4 Page Four THEMICHIGAN DAILY, y. .. Panhel: Choice of few from many STATUS PLAYED DOWN: IFC tries to re-shape image, Computers for fraternityrush By ALISON SYMROSKI In addition to, their usual attention to social andcultural activities, the University's 24 un- dergraduate sororities last year wereforced to confront a major problem area: discrimination in membership selection and hous- ing. Amid much debate, the Panhel- lenic' Association passed a resolu- tion last fall committing itself to the elimination of required recom- mendations in membership selec- tion. This had been a controversial issue, since many national organi- zations require a recommendation from an alumna for each girl to be pledged. Often alumna will veto a girl on the basis of race or religion. Often the houses are dependent on the nationals for financial support and must take aluma recommendations as bind- ing. Last, the University's two Negro sororities were able to attain housing for the first time by re- serving a section of Oxford Co-op for a period of two years. And Panhel hopes to aid these sororities in finding permanent houses before the two-year con- tract is up, according to Vice President Karen Lowe, '69. "A sorority house is filled with a great diversity of people," she maintains. "You're not as likely to get cut off as in an apartment living with four of five others." A major duty of the Panhel lenic Association is planning in- ter - sorority activities. Among those being worked on for this' year are: Trips to the Toledo Art Museum, an exchange with sorority mem- bers from other schools, a Spring Concert featuring a well-known pop artist, a sing with the Inter- fraternity Council. horseback riding program, and a leadership conference-perhaps in the form of a retreat. On the academic side, Panhel requires a girl to have at least a 2.0 over-all average to pledge. The current average among soro- rity women is 2.92. In addition to Panhel-organized activities, the individual sorori- ties also plan after-dinner speak- ers, weekly "T.G." parties with fraternities, philanthropy projects, Christmas parties, pledge formals, etc. Panhel generally puts most emphasis however, on Rush. It is a two-week process of mixers, parties, and desserts, through which sororities meet potential pledges and girls interested in sororities have a chance to visit the houses. This year rush will be held in January, with registration and meetings explaining the me. chanics of rush. Last year Panhel had experi- mented with holding it early in the fall. However, they have re- turned to the usual winter sched- ule to give girls more time to be- come acclimated to the campus before entering the rush whirl- wind. Going through the process puts a girl under no ?obligation to join a sorority. "All you can do is take a look and try it for yourself," Miss Lowe explains. "It's a good idea to participate in rush even if you aren't interested in pledg- iig a sorority. It's a way of meet- ing people. By DAVID WEIR A ,new structure, a radicalized self-image, and the determination to increase fraternity involvement' in campus activity characterizes the, 1968 edition of the Univer- sity's Interfraternity' C o u n c ii (IFC). Under the leadership of Presi- dent Bob Rorke, '69, IFC is at- tempting to "forget the past and get into the present reality" of University life. "We have restructured IFC into- a corporate service organization; for the 46 campus houses," says Rorke. "We hope in this way to offer more of an activist or radi- cal leadership, in place of the pro- tective image we have had in'the past." Rorke is concerned with elimi- nating the "status image" con- nected with the Greek system due to ties with conservative nationals and alumni. "Group living can be a very good thing at the University," Rorke claims. "As originally con- ceived, fraternities were student power in its rawest form. Proper- ly exploited, they represent an opportunity for constructive stu- dent power-for undergraduates to do things." One of the programs IFC is in- itiating this year is a "college headstart" which entails housing boys from the Detroit ghetto for a few days in order to acquaint them with the University. Another plan is for a "radical in residence" program, where members of Voice-SDS will "live- in" at various houses in order to stimulate discussion of political issues. Another change this year is in the Rush procedure. Materials dis- tributed in the dorms during the first two weeks of September will acquaint freshmen w i t h the changes before the mass Rush meeting on Monday, Sept. 16. Following three nights, of "smokers" from 7-10 p.m. pros- pective rushees will be invited back to houses on Sunday, Sept. 22. In order to assist both rushees and houses in this process, an in- tensive, computerized counseling service will be initiated. This serv- ice will be available both Friday and Saturday of Rush week, in addition to the following Monday. "We hope to help every guy find the right house," says Rorke. "With 46 fraternities to choose from, many freshmen rush the wrong five houses, and miss the opportunity of seeing the house right for them. Although racial integration of University fraternities is consid- ered valuable, IFC recognizes the militant segregation of the two black houses as part of the na- tional search for identity and culture. IFC is however, says Rorke, planning programs of cultural in- tegration with the black houses in areas of community service and campus social life. Overall, Rorke feels that fra- ternities must niodernize and update their time-worn image, and become more involved in cam- pus activities. "The Greek system can .and should supplement one's univer- sity education. In a fraternity, a man has the opportunity to spend time in athletics, social and leadership activities, and political affairs that students in other housing units don't. '1 4 4,' "You'd be smaller the after going adds. surprized how much campus can become through rush," she I E 1 Too much emphasis seen on parties ,_ .+r ,.. WALTER SHAPIRO- Will they ever learn? f I # Y II 1 S4 y 1 A LOUD and almost falsetto voice rose unseen from the other side of the partition. between booths in the Union, "I just. don't like sharing-people." Everyday 'in class, at the UGLI, along State 1Street I glance momentarily into the, passing gallery of faces. Faces I'll never know. I nod hello to people I little note, nor long remember. It's their University too, but I can't perceive what sort of Ann Arbor it is that they know. FOR SOME perverse reason in the shower 'the other mornihg I was thinking about !fourth floor Wenley House, West Quad of three years ago. I've fallen totally out of touch with almost all of them except for a hasty nod and a word or two of meaningless banter. Dorm life is important because it repre- sents a panorama of the Uni- versity which we quickly learn to obscure in our self -con- structed cloisters. Today one is surviving some- what less than happily in Tor- onto-a fugitive from the vor- acious appetite of a military machine unable to understand students not carrying 30 credits a year in the national! interest. Another became the perfect fraternity man, veteran of countless TG's, who has now mellowed into the perfect apart- ment dweller with his life semi- molded before him. The guy next door broadened his Traverse City horizons by touring the world with the Michigan Glee Club. My old roommate has been rewarded with a grade point average just a tiny fraction below 4.0 for his compulsive goal - directed academic efforts. Another guy on the floor is now the acid WELCOME STUDENTS! f DISTINCTIVE COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for Men- And Women-- " 8 Hairstylists THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre end of a campus acid rock group. Over three years all of them probably could have become al- most anything. Instead today they are only the logical ex- tensions of what they once were., * * * ONCE I was rabidly anti- fraternity seeing the self-seg- regation of the Greeks as a unique evil. That was before I heard the ingenius theory of a friend about the way the Uni- versity really operates. Now I see that almost all of us be-. come limited in our outlook and restrictive in the people we want to know. Anyway- My friend claims that there are only 483 real people in the, University. Of course, she, doesn't know all of these real people but when combined to- gether everyone she knows col- lectively knows all 483. The rest are cardboard mock- ups made by a renowned card- board factory in Grand Rapids. It's the mock-ups who provide all the placid faces which fill the hot, crowded lecture halls. It's the cardboard cut-outs who take all the spaces in front of, you on line at Cinema Guild and it's these Grand Rapids- made mock-ups who make the line for making a counseling appointment so interminably long.., The University uses the card- board mock-ups to inflate their enrollment figures for the bene- fit of the penny - pinching, know-nothing state legislators. For if the salons in Lansing /only gave us a niggardly $60 odd million for our alleged 35,000 students, you can im- agine how littly we'd get if they ever discovered that the University is only educating 483 real people. TIME MI GAZINE and every- one else in this screwed up country has been picturing the college campus as a place where the grass is as high an an ele- phant's eye and where every pillow comes complete with a co-ed and her precious Pill. For many they are right- God if they only knew, how right. But there are others who never drink anything stronger, than beer, still smoke cigar- ettes with a guilt complex, and whose sex life, is more fancied than factual-and they p1.ler it that way. What I'm getting at is there is Just no, norm, no typical student. I suspect half of the '"immoral" behavior on this campus is motivated by a per- verse "keeping-down-with-the- Joneses," "everybody's doing it" half-admitted sense of inse- )curity. It's too bad, because that way we're all the victims of'the leering magazine writers. PERHAPS one of the major fruits of our generation-I sound like someone's mother talking about the Depression- is the ,destruction of the tra- ditional goals of society by the ever-growing ranks of the dis- enchantedt The problem of the contem- porary rejection of the shams of success is that too many doubters, just meekly gravitate to the least abrasive niches of a malformed society-teaching, social work, journalism -and too few try to create alterna- tives of their own. Oddly enough perhaps that's the University's greatest failing -not giving students a reason to ever escape academia. * * * ONE NEVER fully accepts the loneliness that accompanies the modern university. Few, really believe the orientation leader's trite pronouncement, "Nobody gives a damn what you do here -you're on. your own." But fewer, have a legitimate right to feel otherwise. The University is designated as a publicly supported t r e a s u r e trove for the goal- oriented Maybe that partially explains the bitter despair of the aim- less. * * * One summer's night I walked the streets of Ann Arbor and listened'to the whir of the fans and the steady hum of the air- conditioners. Behind all those windows were so many people I'll never know and so much I'll never understand. There is a loneliness of the too much and the too quick which haunts us all. And looking back that may be, the ultimate sadness of Ann Arbor. When your banking needs are immediate, next week or even tomor- row won't do. We know that students and faculty alike need banking services that are geared to the present. We have scheduled our bank- ing hours for your convenience. We offer NOW SERVICES: a / e 1 2 Open Saturday 9:00 until 12 noon and Friday until 8 pm. Additional hours: Drive-up windows open until 5 pm Mon- day through Thursday. Thrifti Checks still only 100 per check. FREE. 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