Seventy-Third Ywr EDITED AND MANAGED BT STUDENTS Of THE UNIVERSrY OF MxCHmGAN UNDER AUTHORITY O BOARD iN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUDLKCATIONs "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MIcH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in alD reprints. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: LOUISE LIND EDUCATION SCHOOL: Faculty Greets Report with Lethargy Women's Open Rush: Forerunner of New System? (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second in a three-parthseries on the education school. Today's ar- ticle concerns proposals in the re- cent five-year appraisal report and other major issues in the educa- tion school.) By MARILYN KORAL E LACK of imagination and vision of the faculty committee which wrote the education school's recent five-year appraisal report was in part responsible for the slight enthusiasm which the re- port generated among faculty. One of the report's recommen- dations was that hours taught off- campus by faculty, beyond the normal teaching load, should be eliminated or, at least, included only if they fit into a regular teaching schedule. "O v e r oad teaching" at the off-campus Uni- versity centers is now done exten- sively by education school faculty. The overload teaching problem was so serious that the committee SORORITY RUSH isn't over yet for sev- eral small houses. These houses, which will have open rush this semester in an attempt to fill their quotas, offer the sorority-directed woman a unique opportunity to see what a sorority is really like, with the "rush smile" washed off. Here is a chance for women who went through rush but ended up undecided about pledging to learn more about sev- eral houses and a chance for the woman who didn't go through rush because of academic strains to visit casually several sororities under normal, unstructured conditions. Open rush also provides a chance for a group of girls to pledge the same house. WOMEN SOMETIMES think that be- cause a house is in open rush, it is a slight on the quality of the sorority. But iquality is a relative term. If quality means that the house must be one of the so-called prestige sororities, open rush is a sign that the house doesn't rate as high as some others on the prestige continuum. But if quality means that the sorority is a pleasant place to live and has worth- while members, then open rush doesn't indicate inferior quality. That houses are occasionally forced to open rush is primarily a condemnation of the present formal rushing procedure, and secondarily a sign that the sorority system as a system is slipping from its once-enjoyed plateau of prestige. A SORORITY can't sell individuality during regular rush; it can during open rush. Rushers and rushees can't be natural during normal rush because rush, as a phenomenon, is strictly abnormal; they can be natural during open rush. Rushees are reluctant to ask important questions about the sorority during rush, but are much more at ease during open rush. Open rush was extremely successful last year with one house actually doubling the size of its original pledge class be- fore the semester ended. If successful again this year, it should become the basis. of the entire rush system. -GAIL EVANS Associate City Editor included these warnings in their report: "It is highly important that the school become aware of the simple arithmetic of academic erosion concealed in the pressures. Such teaching is now done extensively by faculty beyond their regular teaching load. "The surplus of time over and beyond the regular teaching load should be devoted to scholarly, creative and developmental pur- suits. The use of this surplus time for overload teaching constitutes a serious erosion of the faculty's capacity to pursue scholarly, cre- ative and developmental activities. "It is the contention of the com- mittee that this erosion in the case of the education school is al- ready far advanced. More specif- ically, the committee believes that this condition is one of the prin- cipal reasons for the failure of the members of the faculty to take advantage of the growing oppor- tunities for research, innovation and development and thus attain for the school the distinction of which it is capable." * * * YET WHEN theefaculty had an opportunity to vote on eliminat- ing their off-campus burdens, they turned the proposal down. "At the moment faculty are paid extra for the overload and elim- inating it would mean a reduction in pay," a source indicated. It seems that the overtime pay is important enough to them to tolerate "the simple arithmetic of academic erosion." IT IS ESPECIALLY revealing to consider this rejected proposal in the light of another plan the ap- praisal group proposed: the cre- ation of a "school within a school -a special plan for developing leaders" among students in the education school. The faculty did approve this plan, and it is now buried in, of all places, the gradu- ate committee. First, however, it was rejected by two foundations, which could have financed it. One source termed the plan "naive." But the idea of an honors pro- gram obviously could best be used a m o n g undergraduates - who study the historical, social and psychological foundations of edu- cation. These students do massive amounts of standard readings and are placed in large classes with little opportunity for. classediscus- sion or individual attention from professors in their specialty. An honors program would re- quire extra time from professors. Yet, if they were willing to take pay-cuts and eliminate off-campus overloads, this program is a profit- able one into which their extra time could be directed. AFTER "talking about it for five years," an informed source in- dicated, the school is finally be- ginning to make preliminary plans for an honors group. But consid- ering the attitude of the profes- sors, it is doubtful that they would give the time for such a special plan, even if the funds were there. Contrary to the preconceptions of many people, there are intelli- gent students in the education school who are certainly capable of a more rigorous program and more serious independent work than the school seems to give its undergraduates. "Just like the rest of the Uni- versity, the education school is supporting its graduate program at the expense of undergraduates," one source said. * * * A GOOD example of desperate- ly needed money being siphoned off the undergraduate into the graduate program is the futile educational psychology course. This requirement is of almost no benefit without practical teaching experience simultaneous with the course or prior to it. Yet at the present time 80 per cent of the school's students are getting no practical experience while they are taking this course; their time in this study is thus virtually wasted. The reason why only 20 per cent can have the needed "benefit" of simultaneous classroom experience and study is that funds are not available to pay extra critic teach- ers. In order to get the necessary funds one whole program on the graduate level might have to be closed, which the school is unwill- ing to do. Because of situations such as this, the undergraduate program is being consciously sac- rificed in favor of the graduate. * * * THERE IS one plan which would not require additional funds but would require a willingness to CINEMA GUILD: Ohio State Lantern Fosters Bad Sportsmanship A HOME-COURT ADVANTAGE and prejudiced fans are to be expected for any basketball game. But when a college newspaper promotes bad sportsmanship, it is carrying a good thing too far. This was the case at Ohio State Mon- day night. AN EDITORIAL appeared Monday in the Ohio State Lantern which encouraged the sort of behavior which prevailed dur- ing Monday night's upset of Michigan at St. John Arena. "The chips are down ... Let Michigan know it's playing the game at Ohio State . . . It's about time that teams begin to tremble a little about coming to St. John Arena . . . Don't get violent, but a little booing won't help Michigan," the edi- torial read. This hardly befits a college newspaper which supposedly reflects the student body. Organized and premeditated bad sportsmanship has never, and hopefully never will, find its way to the dilapidated, structure on State St. There are, unde- niably, individual outbursts but they are in no way sanctioned by the crowd. OHIO STATE Athletic Director Dick Lar- kins called the editorial a "new all- time low," and wrote a biting letter to the editor calling the editorial "inexcus- able." It certainly is inexcusable and at the same time serves as somewhat of an ex- planation for Ohio State's string of 31 consecutive Big Ten victories at home. -TOM WEINBERG Human Conflict A MAP, a photograph, a history course: none of these will give you a complete understanding of a city. You must forget about the usual methods of research, and go out into different communities and become involved with people be- fore you can appreciate their emo- tions and environment. One segment of my native city, Detroit, is "Greektown," which oc- cupies one block on Monroe be- tween St. Antoine and Beaubien. It is fated to suffer the same tragic destruction as the Chicago Greektown in "Good Night, Soc- rates." It will not be destroyed by temperature and time, but by de- cree. Progress must have its prag- matic evolution of banks and parking lots. I am reactionary enough to prefer the old coffee- houses, confectionaires, and show bars. After you have seen this highly evocative documentary, why don't you visit there before it's gone? Go now. As for the Greeks, they have survived many invasions and migrations. * *. * "THE KITCHEN", the feature on this exciting twin bill at Cine- ma Guild, is a thought-provoking fable and a shattering presenta- tion of a "slice of life." Peter, an emigre German cook, literally sweats out a miserable existence in a London restaurant, dreaming of the day when he can leave. He is in love with one of the married waitresses, and ulti- mately she refuses to get a divorce or have his child. The nagging, repetitious trifles of his life, in- cluding attacks on his "Germanic nature" become too much for him. He goes berserk and demolishes the kitchen with a cleaver. IT IS POSSIBLE to see the kitchen as a microcosm of the post-war world. As you read the play by Arnold Wesker, on which the movie is based, you feel that he is trying to examine the latent and inescapable violence of the world as we know it. However, it seems to me more than an occu- pationai portrait, and I fail to de- tectia socialist ideology lurking behind the capitalistic pots and pans. Primarily, it is about the inabil- ity of humans to agree or cooper- ate for their own benefit. One of the cooks says of Peter: "He talks about peace and dreams and when I ask him if I could use his cutting-board to cut me lemons on this morning, he told me--get your own." The fast-paced, numerous in- sights into the private lives and illusions of the restaurant staff are in themselves small gems of ob- servation. -Richard Centing By WALTER LIPPMANN A STUDY of what Gen. de Gaulle said on Friday.shows, I believe, that the crucial difference between us is about the realities in Asia. We do not differ about ideals and ideologies, or about aims, pur- poses and hopes. We are not trying to build a new American empire on the mainland of Asia, and France is not trying to recover the empire which she has lost. We differ about how to deal with the facts-with the fact that the Red government in Peking rules over the 700 million Chinese on the mainland, with the fact that the neighboring countries in Southeast Asia are weak and vul- nerable, with the fact that Red China is an expanding and aggres- sive power. These differences come to a sharp focus in the immediate and practical problem of the civil war in Vietnam. But even here, we are agreed in our purposes. France and the United States are both. concerned to save Southeast Asia from a conquest by the Red Chi- nese. The crux of our differences is how, not whether, to save Southeast Asia. ." * "C THE AMERICAN view is that Southeast Asia can be saved only if there is a strong government in Saigon which is able to win the civil war. Only after military vic- tory can any larger negotiated set- tlement be talked about, in fact even considered. For any sugges- tion that the United States is con- sidering negotiation will destroy the fighting morale of the South Vietnamese and precipitate in the whole region a general collapse of all resistance to Red China. On the other hand, Gen. de Gaulle's view is that there cannot be a military solution of the Viet- namese civil war. This is what he told President Kennedy in 1961. Our answer to this has been that we have no alternative but to keep on trying to win the civil war. Gen. de Gaulle's reply to this is that the situation is deteriorating toward a disaster which will leave us an intolerable choice between a humiliating withdrawal and en- gaging in a large war, at least as large as the Korean War. The time to begin negotiations is while we are still strong; that is to say, while there is an undefeat- ed South Vietnamese army and while so much of the country is still in non-Communist hands. C' * * GEN. DE GAULLE'S argument is unanswerable unless we are able to persuade ourselves that the civil war can be won. The official. American view is that we have to say unreservedly that the war will be won and refuse to think about what we shall do if it can- not be won. This is the critical weakness of our policy in South- east Asia: not that we are training and equipping the anti-Commun- ists to fight the Communists, but that while we are doing it, this is the only policy we have. If it is not a winning policy, then all is lost. We have staked everything on one card. This is a reckless and unstates- manlike gamble. A competent statesman, like any competent military strategist, never locks himself into a commitment where there is no other position on which he can fall back. In Southeast Asia we have bolted the doors and do not have that indispensable part of any sound strategy, a fall-back position. THIS IS where Gen. de Gaulle is in fact rendering us a signal serv- ice. He is opening the door to the possibility that Southeast Asia can be saved from Chinese conquest by political developments which can be stimulated and by diplomatic bargaining which can be under- taken. It is said in Washington that this is improbable, that North TODAY AND TOMORROW: Caution in Southeast Asia experiment. This is permitting stu- dents to teach prior to taking edu- cational psychology or to take it as a seminar while they are teach- ing. Objections have been raised on the grounds that most students don't have enough background n elementary psychology to begin teaching until they have had edu- cational psychology. Thus they don't have the slightest expecta- tion of the responses children give while being taught. But this is easily refutable on the grounds that students could be required to take one course in elementary psychology prior to teaching and then take the educa- tional psychology course while teaching or afterwards. None of these new ideas have been tried. IT IS THE development of these undergraduates, and future edu- cators, that the faculty is literally selling out through omission - neglect and the dearth of experi- ment in the school's curriculum. Other recommendations were supported by the faculty but never materialized because of inaction of the dean and the sluggish ex- ecutive committee. The faculty proposed that "the dean, assistant deans, director of the University School and chair- man of the Research Committee should meet regularly to care for the administrative details" of the school. This would "freethe exec- utive committee to determine im- mediate and long-range policy and to evaluate continuously the ef- fectiveness of the school." Presumably, the faculty support- ed this proposal because the exec- utive committee i snot now "free . .to determine immediate and long range policy and to evaluate continuously the effectiveness of the school." But action was never taken on this. CURRENTLY the dean and ex- ecutive committee are the only group who can care for adminis- trative details. They have an op- portunity to free themselves for important policy decisions and long-range planning. But inertia seems to be the only answer they gave to a faculty request that they begin to concern themselves more with larger issues and formula- tion of new directions for the future. Also passed by the faculty but not formally implemented was a recommendation that "admission, guidance and follow-up procedures need more vigorous examination." Neither admissions nor guidance procedures are trivial activities, and follow-up is not unimportant. But no such "vigorous examina- tion" wasuformally implemented by the dean or executive commit- tee. * * * THE FACULTY'S lip-service to these proposals is not enough. It is of little use to evaluate a school every five years if recommenda- tions are politely voted on and dis- creetly ignored. The appraisal report and its manner of implementation suggest that perhaps the faculty and ad- ministration of the education school lack initiative. What they are not doing is a shadow looming so large against the school's profile that any overall reflection must be bleak. Lethargic response to a set of proposals which are neither great innovations nor particularly im- aginative must be seen in'the con- text of progress currently being made in education schools else- where. Vietnam which is now under Chi- nese domination can never be pried loose and can never partici- pate in the neutralization of the whole region. How can those who say this really know it? It is not true that once a country is dominated by a big Communist state, it is forever dominated. We have seen Finland and Yugoslavia and in a measure the other European satellites gain an increasing measure of national .independence. Who is to say that these motives and impulses will not work on the borders of China as they are now working on the borders of Russia? In any event, the French, who know more about North Vietnam than all other Western count-ies, believe that the old fear of Chi- nese domination is still present in North Vietnam. *' * * IF THE FRENCH are right, it would be folly not to encourage them to see whether they can cre- ate in Hanoi an opening to the West. We know that in Communist Europe the two countries which have been first to achieve a large degree of national independence are the two-Finland and Yugo- slavia-which have physical con- tact with the West. Hanoi in North Vietnam is a port and is accessible to ships from all the world.- In all this we should not confuse ourselves with the notion that Gen. de Gaulle has offered a "plan" for the neutralization of Southeast Asia which we must ac- cept or reject. We must not be in too much of a hurry. Gen. de Gaulle has not proposed a plan. He has proposed a line of policy and a mode of thinking which we can- not afford to dismiss lightly. (c), 1964, The Washington Post Co. It Takes a Man To Quit Fraternity Pledge Follies THE FARCE OF RUSH is over and the folly of pledging has begun for hun- dreds of children aspiring to be real fra- ternity men. These smiling men have survived the arbitrary black-balling of the hash ses- sions. They now have the thrill of going through sweat sessions or phone duty and other fun things that will make them not only men but brothers. Of course, pledging is a learning ex- perience. Pledges learn such valuable things as the Greek alphabet backwards, forwards and inside-out. They learn all the chapters of the fraternity. They even learn the members' names. BUT MORE IMPORTANT they learn how to be "cool." They find out what is Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON, Editor DAVID MARCUS GERALD STORCH Editorial Director City Editor BARBARA LAZARUS . ............. Personnel Director PHILIP SUTIN ............National Concerns Editor GAIL EVANS.................. Associate City Editor MARJORIE BRAHMS .... Associate Editorial Director LORIA BOWLES................... Magazine Editor MALINDA BERRY........... .... Contributing Editor DAVE GOOD ....................... Sports Editor JIM BERGER............... Associate Sports Editor MIKE BLOCK..............Associate Sports Editor BOB ZWINCK............Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: H. Neil Berkson, Steven Hailer, Edward Herstein, Marilyn Koral, Louise Lind, An- drew Orlin. Michael Sattinger, Kenneth Winter. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: David Block, Mary Lou Butcher, John Bryant, Laurence Kirshbaum, Richard Mercer. Business Staff ANDREW CRAWFORD, Business Manager PETER ARONSON..............Advertising Manager LEE JATHROS .............. ..... Accounts Manager JUDY LEPOFSKY........Associate Business Manager RUTH SCHEMNITZ ... . .............. Finance Manager .TTNTIOR MANAEns- Jay Gamnel Judy Goldstein, "in" with the group. They learn how to muddle along in the group no matter how they may oppose it. They learn not to dissent. They learn about pledge unity, that strange myth of the system. They learn about pledge pranks by which they can wreak revenge on the members and be- come men in the process. One becomes a man, it is said, in the sacred rite of dumping puteric acid. They learn how to have fun at that famous Greek institution the TGIF, when the twang of the electric guitar mixes dis- cordantly with the splash of beer and the shrieks of girls. They learn that it is cool to be drunk but not to vomit after- wards. They learn that grades are im- portant, but education is not. They learn that fraternity living is lux- urious but they see that the accommoda- tions are little better than those at the quardangles. THEY FIND that even if they wanted to do so, they could not reform the sys- tem. It perpetuates itself. If it tries to become liberal it is doomed. Several fra- ternities on campus now are facing dis- aster because they took a chance on di- versity in their pledge classes. The pledges that were different depledged, leaving the fraternities in real financial danger. And eventually, they learn that the fra- ternity system on campus is dying. To be a fraternity man no longer has the status it used to have because of the rise in apartment living. The percentage of rush- ees has steadily decreased in proportion to the number of males enrolling in the University. The number of juniors and seniors living in a house has decreased CONTEMPORARY MUSIC: To Instruct and Delight' SIR PHILLIP SIDNEY said that the function of poetry is to instruct and delight. The same may be said of the music presented at the fourth concert of the Contemporary Music Festival last night. The audience heard a broad spectrum of styles and ensembles and I suggest that anyone who has yet to hear one of the concerts of this series make a point of attending the last one Friday. He will be pleas- antly surprised by the technical and interpretive excellence of the stu- dent and faculty performers. The program began with Dallapiccola's "Divertimento in Quattro Esercizi." It is a set of four songs for soprano, winds, viola and cello, of a relaxed, tonal nature. Soprano Barbara Garypie projected well and had good diction, but may have been a bit harsh in the forte sections. An early work, the "Divertimento" suffered from its sometimes uncon- vincing climaxes and was perhaps the least interesting work on the program. The ensemble, on the whole, was excellent. "THE UNANSWERED Question" of the early twentieth century American composer Charles Ives presents a- picture of the music of our country which few people know. "The Unanswered Question" presents a dialogue between chromat- ically-oriented solo trumpet and flute quartet, and the harmonically traditional ground base of a string quartet which was positioned at the rear of the hall. The work was performed beautifully, easily the most