C, 4r fitligatBa Semixy-Third YearOFMHGN EDITED AND MAxAaw B DYSuVDHs or THE trvsnO UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOAR" IN CONTROL OF STUDNT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Fue STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth winl Prevail- Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al; reprints. THURSDAY, APRIL 9,1964 NIGHT EDITOR: ANDREW ORLIN THE SEX DILEMMA, PART I: Premarital Sex on Today's Campus: The Fraternity: Private Club Or University Organization? REGENT SORENSON is absolutely right. In a characteristically forthright and conscientious statement, he recently im- plored fraternity and sorority leaders to cut the system's ties with the University. His solution not only resolves the prob- lem of racial discrimination in University- associated organizations, it promises to re-orient the affiliate system toward its original-and really worthwhile-reason for existing. Pare away, for a moment, the Greek letters, the pins, the ceremonies and the other superficialities, and you have the essence of the fraternity: a group of people who want to live together. If it ceases to be this, it is nothing but a fancy residence hall. CAMPAIGNERS against "bias clauses" in Greek organizations, in working to- ward -the humanitarian goal of racial equality, have lost sight of the human importance of free association. All of us to some extent need people we can feel close to, with whom we can commu- nicate and feel intimate. And the selec- tion of such friends, a very personal mat- iter, inevitably will be swayed by all the irrationalities and prejudices each of us holds. But in an impersonal place such as the University, we'd be lost without such close relationships. Just as the "in- dependent" prizes his right to pick his apartment-mates (generally by criteria even more capricious than the fraterni- ty's), the fraternity member sees any reg- ulations on membership selection as un- dercutting the whole system. All of which is fine-until the affili- ate tries to have his cake and eat it too. UNSATISFIED with merely being a large, private living unit, the affiliate chapter demands a status enjoyed by no other private housing: recognition as a University organization. Yet its demand is lopsided. It wants the benefits of Uni- versity association without the responsi- bilities. I see no way to justify this. The fra- ternity should have to choose: either be a private club or be an open University or- ganization. The answer to "Which one?" cannot be "Both." Of the two alternatives, the former is infinitely more worthwhile. If, as frater- nities constantly claim, and as it should be, the fraternity's basic purpose really is brotherhood, the latter alternative is ir- relevant. It's hard to see how a seat on SGC and an office in the SAB binds real friends any closer together. If, on the other hand, the fraternity really would fall apart without these outside props, can it, with a straight face, really claim that its foundation is "brotherhood?" THUSSETTING the affiliate system out on its own, as Regent Sorenson advo- cates, would be the real acid test of its value. It would force the system to sur- vive on its real merits-not on the false front of snobbish glamor that has so far been its lifeblood. As with any change from an entrenched status quo to a more just system, there will be numerous obstacles to surmount. For example, the sorority system now stands as the major escape from the dor- mitory for women prohibited from liv- ing in private housing by University rules. Such women are allowed to move into sor- orities only because they are University organizations. So the transition to more lenient residence rules-to giving junior and sophomores apartment permission-- must be speeded up and occur simultan- eously with the abandonment of sorority recognition. ANOTHER PROBLEM is the likely op- position from fraternity nationals, whose leaders remember the days when fraternities were privileged elites and no one (except outsiders, who were just jealous) protested the fact. But if-as they would unanimously claim - their dedication is to the fraternity existing today, rather than to their archaic nos- talgia, they should act to lead this change before someone does it for them. Regent Sorenson deserves applause, first, merely for speaking out at a Uni- versity whose leaders seldom have the guts to advocate anything more specifie than "educational excellence." More im- portant, he has shown the University a way out of the discrimination thicket- and has proposed a sounder and more legitimate foundation on which the fra- ternity system may re-establish itself. -KENNETH WINTER Acting Managing Editor EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first in a four-part series on the causes, characteristics, consequences and future of the sex dilemma on the college campus today. By JEFFREY GOODMAN THE MEDIAN female will allow sexual intercourse with en- gagement, according to at least one sample on sexual attitudes at the University. And the median male is on the borderline between allowing inter- course with engagement and with affection only, according to statis- tics compiled by Prof. Robert O. Blood of the sociology department. Prof. Blood's sample is by his own admission probably biased, since it is taken in his course in "Marriage and Family Relations in American Society." A better in- dication might be the 1953 Kinsey report on "Sexual Behavior in the Human Female" or any of a num- ber of others examining actual premarital sexual practice. * * * WITH MINOR variations, all show that at the very least, 25 per cent of college females have had sexual intercourse before they graduate and between 40 and 50 per cent by the time of their first marriage. Interviews with University men and women, cited by Gael Greene, ex-University journalist, in her recent book "Sex and the College Girl," put the former figure be- tween 50 and 80 per cent. For males more scientific studies put the incidence of premarital ex- perience closer to 70 per cent. * * * WHATEVER the current figures are on actual premarital coitus- all data reflect, of course, only reported activity and few of them from beyond the middle 50's- there can be no doubt that it is on the upswing and has been since the 1920's at the latest. The trend has stimulated in- numerable studies, evaluations, exhortations, worries and forecasts among adults, which in turn have stimulated equally fervent .de- fenses of freedom among youth. It is a significant trend, a mani- festation of larger and more gen- eral social forces in our time, hav- ing far-reaching social and psy- chological implications for mental health, the question of individual freedom, marital happiness, fam- ily -stability and the whole moral tenor of society. * * * JUST WHAT DOES it all mean? What kinds of forces are impelling this trend? What practices and attitudes characterize this liberal- ization? What are its effects, pres- ent and future? What do evidence and intuition tell us about the desirability of the present situa- tion and of possible changes for the future? Many of these questions are an- swered in statistical data; many other answers are more a matter of individual feelings and impres- sions. The discussion that follows will be a mixture of both. Some of the ideas have been or can be tested; others are personal evalu- ations. The series will concentrate pri- marily on females, for the primary reason that male attitudes and practices seem to be far less in question. One assumption is that to the extent that the double standard still flourishes, society is much less worried about its men than its women, who have tradi- tionally been responsible for ab- stinence. This assumption in turn is based on the fact that in general males are far more willing and far less troubled by sex than women. On the average, if a man finds a woman who is willing, who will take proper precautions, for whom he has at least some feeling and who he ,believes will not be ad- versely affected by the experience, he will go ahead. * * * A FABULOUS wealth of empiri- cal information exists on sexual practices and attitudes-on the incidence of premarital inter- course, whom it is with, subject evaluations after the act, tech- niques, correlations with age, edu- cation, religion and social class and effects upon engagement and marriage. A good deal of this evidence is from Kinsey, and some will claim that it is therefore invalid. But despite all the controversy-main- ly based on sampling techniques- over the Kinsey figures, a good. many experts are willing to ac- cept them as at least a good ap- proximation. In any case, there have been no other surveys which approached Kinsey's in compre- sensiveness or size. And even if his figures are too high, they are at least 10 years old, which may well make them even more realistic today. * * * BEHIND ALL of the empirical evidence, however, one fact seems to stand out boldly: sex for the college student is less and less a moralistic matter. If anything, it is increasinginly a matter of emo- tional preferences, which are moral preferences only in that they are based on perceptions of desirable kinds of interpersonal relations. Such a humanistic basis is to be distinguished froth 'a moralistic one which looks to a traditional code handed to the individual and accepted by him on faith. This aspect of the trend is a direct function of the tremendous expansion in modern times of the collective and individual mind into vast new realms of thought, doubt and consideration. Our age is one of skepticism and question- ing, and if we are not yet dis- believers in the modes of thinking that we have inherited then we are at least a-believers. * * * SCIENCE, worldwide communi- cation, greater literacy, political and sociological involvement with new peoples and the chaotic un- predictability with which modern life seems to confront us all nur- ture this critical expansion of the mind. Old answers to old questions either fall by the wayside or must be reinterpreted by each genera- tion. Not only with respect to sex but in virtually all areas, man has pushed his mind deeper into more areas of his life than ever before. The theme is doubt, and the re- sult is unavoidably a vigorous at- tempt to be free of inherited pat- terns. And the inherited pattern that has suffered as much as any is, unthinking abstinence from sexual intercourse before marriage, as well as a tendency to pass judg- ment on others who might violate the moral prescription. * * *. OTHER FORCES are more pe- culiarly urban - industrial-Ameri- can, having to do with the break- up of integrative social institu- tions. Thus the present era is seeing fewer and fewer people able to find meaningful relations with their family, church, school, work and peer groups. To the sociologist this alienation is a function of size itself, of impersonalization, of a growing automation-in its widest sense-of many phases of life and of multiplying demands on the in- dividual for time, energy and knowledge. At the same time that mass society puts the individual more on his own, the rapid chariges which characterizes the age sep- arate whole generations from each other. The socialization of the home remains- but is more and more challenged by the re-ac- culturation' of individuals into the sub-civilization of their peers. Eventually, both segments end up speaking different languages, un- able to communicate even their similarities. * * * AND EVEN without such socie- tal change, college has always meant the final separation of child and parent, the time when the young adult takes stock of what he believes and of the in- adequacy or incorrectness of those beliefs with respect to his designs and environment. And of course the bomb must The Tragedy in Cleveland THE CIVIL RIGHTS situation has come to a ridiculous pass when matters de- generate to the situation which arose Tuesday in the great city of Cleveland. . There, a Presbyterian minister was crushed to death when a tractor backed over him. He was lying on the ground in the tractor's path. The minister was a participant in a civil rights demonstration at the site of a construction project in Cleveland, and the protest included, among other tactics, assuming a prone position in the path of construction equipment, an attempt-and a clearly illegal one-to obstruct the pro- gress of the job. In this case, the young minister lay on the ground, unseen by the tractor opera- tor, who, in spite of illegal demonstra- tions, had an obligation to continue with his job. The driver unknowingly backed his machine over the poor man, and the demonstrators nearly murdered him in their understandable rage. It was only police intervention that saved his life. MY COMPASSION is with the young minister and his cause, and yet, at the risk of seeming indescribably cruel and bigoted to those who do not wish to un- derstand, I can only feel that he got, trag- ically and unintentionally, just what he asked for. He deliberately has made life a hell on earth for the tragic driver of that trac- tor-a man whom he did not know and upon whom he had no right to heap suffering and anguish. The young min- ister is dead, but his unwilling assassin must live for years and years with the spectre of his deed over his head. 3 iRAR tTAD ( 'OT n rt othat nnnr both sides will only be satisfied when the other is exterminated. There is no sense in it. This is not the Congo or Angola or Communist China. No matter how grave our disputes we supposedly do not settle them by killing each other, and no matter how great our cause we certainly are not justified in ruining the lives of innocent bystanders. I can only agree with Sen. John Stennis of Mississippi who seeks a halt to the Senate's civil rights debate until the street violence subsides. Any group who seek their rights, which justly they should have, certainly must not be allowed to ruin the lives of others in the process. Until civil rights advocates demonstrate they understand and respect the rights of all people - like the tractor driver in CSleveland-I can see no hurry to enact the legislation they seek so violently. THE VIOLENCE must be stopped, by whatever means is necessary. In Cleve- land, the organizers of the demonstration should be prosecuted as willing accessor- ies to murder or manslaughter. In Birm- ingham, the federal courts must step in and justly prosecute the church bombers. For violence never really settled or ac- complished anything, least of all peace- ful co-existence, which is what the Ne- groes want. IT IS QUITE ALL RIGHT for the segre- gationists and the integrationists to abuse, harass and even kill each other. Collectively and individually they are asking for it. They must certainly be pre- pared to take the consequences. But the millions of Negroes and whites in this country who do not look upon civil rights as a burning issue in their lives must be allowed to exist in peace. 'LETTERS': Other Side Of Boycott To the Editor: THE RECENT problems that have plagued the Interquad- rangle Council have arisen through the complaints of its members from East Quad. Certainly there are two sides to every discussion, and we are interested in present- ing some of the facts that the East Quad representatives have neglected to mention. Mr. Koza and Mr. Steinitz have vehemently asserted that Mr. Eadie, the president of Interquad- rangle Council, and several of the voting members of the council wish to censor literature distribu- tion to the residents of the quad- rangle system. We would like to point out some things that East Quad has failed to mention that snow that there is in effect no censorship at all. One is that the IQC Newsletter which goes to every resident of the quadrangle system will print any- thing submitted to it without re- vision or change, and further- more, if this is not enough, house presidents have distributed and still do distribute literature to their respective constituents with- out mailbox use. Another interesting point is that East Quad Council voted against a recent motion to allow un- restric d literature distribution to all house and quadrangle presi- dents through the mailboxes. EAST QUAD has contended that the president of IQC has misused and misailocated funds for the purchase of pizzas and a type- writer. In fact, however, the en- tire council was aware that money was to be spent for a pizza break on this one occasion, \and no ob- jections were raised at that time. The break came after four hours of a six hour meeting, and the money, $5.86, came from a fund established for such purposes. The typewriter was purchased with the knowledge of council members when both IQC typewriters became unusable. A typewriter was needed, and the cost of the new machine was nearly equal to the cost of re- pairing the better of the two broken ones. East Quadrangle has issued a statement to SGC that IQC has done nothing about the laundry problem and asked SGC to take action. (An interesting side light is that East Quad, by their own request, has no laundry service.) The point is that IQC has been working on this issue. This is in- dicated by Mr. Leonard A. Schaadt, business manager of residence halls, in the following statement: "Acknowledging the fact that fra- ternities and sororities are pres- ently receiving lower rates than residence halls for laundry serv- ices and with the information that IQC has provided me, I will ne- gotiate with the laundries for lower rates in residence halls for next semester's contracts." , * k IQC IS providing many more services for its constituents, in- cluding chess and bridge tourna- A POTENTIAL CANDIDATE SPURNED: Rockefeller Wins Cool Detroit Reception By ROBERT SELWA Daily Guest Writer DETROIT-The rally for Presi- dential hopeful Nelson Rocke- feller here Monday was, in a word, uninspiring. For some reason, the Republican who has the most to offer in combined terms of energy, ini- tiative, experience, knowledge, vigor, drive and folksiness just is not catching on with Republicans. The polls show lessening support in spite of continuous effort. The people show lessening enthusiasm despite Rockfiefeller's unfaltering enthusiasm. The Rockefeller cam- naien ha: thorough organization door than to this Presidential fair. What was supposed to he a rally had a large band, several indi- vidual entertainers, a folk singing group and countless cute Rocke- feller girls. Neither this para- phernalia nor Rockefeller's well delivered speech got anyone work- ed up. * * * THE PROGRAM began at 7:50 p.m. with an entertainer who told political jokes to an audience whose best response was mild chuckling. The group of folksing- ers invited the audience to join in a sing-along and they didn't. Al Navarro's band either sat reserved listened quietly and attentively to the Governor's speech; no one chatted while he talked-but then, hardly anyone was chatting before that anyway. THE SPEECH did not include anything that Rockefeller had not said before; like most campaign speeches it was a collection:of the candidate's favorite themes, facts, opinions and phrases. The speech covered, usually only in general terms, the role of the. Republican. Party, civil rights, job opportunity and atheistic Communism. Rocke- feller spoke emphatically, extem- poraneously, looking intently at The only applause was moderately loud clapping that lasted for about ten seconds after the speech was over. Rockefeller left the stage quickly during the ten seconds = of clap- ping and the folksingers came out again. Most of the people sat back down and listened to these singers. Significantly, there was hardly anyone discussing anything. The speech and the appearance had stirred few tongues. SOME PEOPLE went backstage after the speech and surrounded Rockefeller, trailing along with him as he signed, autographs and i : .