Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAx UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where OpinionsA re 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 all reprints. v, ly. s ii '7,3 AY, FEBRUARY 25, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CYNTHIA NEU Modern Fraternity Life: Opportunity for Growth, .. w .l Q. 3. ' "". 'S"" ',{ _ -t', 'ODAY'S COLLEGE STUDENT need not fear joining a fraternity. The good fraternity ad there are many on this campus) recognizes needs. It will not burden him with un- ceptable standards. It will supplement his ication and add to his social life. The fra- nity will not provide a shell within which to it him. Rather, it will give him a foundation im which to enlarge himself. 'or the fraternity is a flexible structure. It es not shape its members; it is shaped by gm. As the nature of the college student has anged from the era of extreme unconcern the era of growing awareness, so too has the ternity adjusted. After all, fraternities are on npus to serve men, not to rule them. HE SOCIAL BENEFITS of fraternity always have and always will offer its major advan- e over any other type of living situation on ripus. The quadrangles offer little social life d are in such a poor administrative state that st people leave them as soon as possible. sting friendships are not easily formed in the: ads where the population changes yearly. kpartment living also has its drawbacks. In st cases social life is on a very small scale. vacy can be overwhelming. Moreover, there many nuisances connected with taking care an apartment.t )n the other hand, a fraternity is no cure-all. too, carries responsibilities. The politics of up living can be very demanding, very ener- ;ing. But the fraternity offers a four year t at some close, worthwhile friendships. The d house can list among its members many .nd individuals with strong and varying ideas. is situation provides an unparalleled lesson the art of getting along with people. When person's ideas and desires are put into flict with those of 30 or more others, the come is as educational as any psychology trse in human relationships. THE SOCIAL ASPECT has remained the same, the atmosphere of today's fraternity is inged from that of twenty years ago. The so- led fraternity man no longer considers him- ' better by definition than the independent. Alas, his attitudes and mannerisms are much the same, and he neither becomes intrinsically cool, nor intrinsically narrow once he inserts some Greek letters in his lapel. Make no mis- take about it, the fraternity man is just as serious-minded as the independent student. He is here for an education; he does not let fra- ternity life interfere with that quest. In certain areas the fraternity can help him. Exam files and tutoring may benebulous con- tributions, but the ,exchange of ideas when one lives with Far Eastern Studies majors and en- gineers, liberals and conservatives, urbanites and exurbanites, can only increase one's overall understanding. More, good houses on this cam- pus are turning toward speaker programs, in- viting members of the faculty to address them on the problems of the day. THERE ARE bad houses on campus. There are houses with bias, houses with single-minded individuals, houses which exult in their destruc- tive capabilities. But these houses are on the wane. Fraternity critics often forget that at- tacks on bias clauses originated within the fraternities when houses did start picking members without regard to any artificial dis- tinctions. A number of houses on campus draw no racial or religious lines,, and the trend will definitely continue in that direction. Fraternity critics make a bad mistake when they try to take the malpractices of individual houses and turn them into the evils of an entre system. To think in terms of a "system" which binds one to limited ideas is pure myth. There is no system at all. One can only think in terms of the relationship of individual people to specific houses. Therefore, while certain houses may offer the worthwhile individual nothing, the fra-j ternity per se is not anathema to the University. Nor is it a necessity for everyone. But the good fraternity is a worthwhile luxury. It offers social benefits that are hard to find elsewhere on a large, impersonal campus. And it offers its wares in an educational atmos- phere unquestionably in tune with the sense of purpose of today's college student. -. NEIL BERKSON '~ -r 'MltNt F tLOK OVER y. YUSHcOAUtEk Dtrwt b. UJ i L YaU W okK?" UNDERSCORE: Undeclared War in Vietnam, I r _.r. rr .w+i ..r.rrr ri. w.... rn.r.r r. + TODAY AND TOMORROW Paying for the UN By WALTER LIPPMANN VHMLE CONGRESS is considering the Presi- dent's request for authority to by half of ie proposed $200 million issue of ' United ations bonds, we must ask ourselves what ecisely is the crucial question. It is not hether the United Nations is to survive. That a misleading over-dramatization. The cri- cal question is whether the United Nations n and should continue. to enforce peace, it has been doing since 1956 on the Israeli- ;yptian frontier, since 1960 in the Congo. The deficit, which the proposed bond issue to cover, has nothing to do with the regular erations of the United Nations. The deficit ises wholly from these two highly contro- rsial peace-keeping operations. N THE REGULAR assessments for the regular budget the record is very nearly rfect. For the four years 1956-1959 inclusive, e collections were virtually 100 per cent. For e 1960 assessments-those for the year when e great number of new states were admitted the collections by the end of 1961 were al- ady 94.6 per cent. Countries in arrears do not lose their General ssembly vote until the amount owed is ual to the contributions due for the pre- ding two years. On the 1961 assessments, arly 86 per cent has already been collected. I what has not been collected, China owes er half and the rest is owed chiefly by taller Latin American countries. All of this goes to prove that the normal id conventional activities of the UN are nancially sound and that they have the pport of the whole membership-West, East, d neutral. 'HE DEFICIT Is caused by the two special operations. One, known as UNEF, consists about 5,000 troops under UN command, the pops being drawn from seven countries, none Editorial Staff CHARLES JUDGE, Business Manager PILIP SHERMAN 'FAITH WEINSTEIN City Editor Editorial Director SAN FARRELL..................Personnel Director TER SMUART ......................Magazine Editor CHAEL BURNS .......................Sports Editor ,T GOLDEN .............. .... Associate City Editor CHARD OSTLIN0 ..Associate Editorial Director VID ANDREWS ..........Associate Sports Editor .T, .sAr0Vr A n .,n..*nnrfWAfnr of them a "great power." These troops keep the peace along about 140 miles of the Israeli- United Arab Republic border. This operation costs about $20 million a year. The other special operation deals with the Congo and is known as ONUC. Its average cost since July, 1960, has been about $10 million a month. As of January of this year 21 coun- tries had, contributed to the operation with a total of about 16,000 soldiers. None of the soldiers came from any of the great powers, so that the USSR, the United States, the United Kingdom and France have no fighting men in the Congo. E DEFICIT is not due to the fact that these two operations are very expensive. They have been financed by special assess- ments, and various countries have refused to pay because they disagree with the purpose or the conduct of the special operations. Because the peace-keeping costs are not part of the regular budget, the non-paying nations can escape the penalty of losing their VN vote. The. Soviet bloc and most of the Arab states have refused to pay either for the Middle Eastj or for the Congo. France, Belgium, Portugal,j Spain and South Africa have refused to pay for the Congo. There are a ,few others who have not paid, probably because their governments are bankrupt. The bulk of the deficit is due to the fact that, for their own reasons, a great many countries dislike the special operations and would like to put an end to them. We have always supported the special opera- tions in the Middle East and the Congo and we have been paying about 40-50 per cent of the cost. This sort of thing cannot and should not go on, not because we cannot afford these trifling sums but because the United Nations should not become dependent on any one great power. The true significance of the bond issue is that it opens a way out of this quandary. The central fact of the bond issue is that interest and amortization are to be covered by the. regular budget if, as is expected, the Inter- national Court of Justice approves the plan. Our share of the peace-keeping costs there- fore would decrease to our regular share of the UN budget-32 per cent. And the penalty for refusing to pay the interest and amortiza- tion will be the loss of the right to vote in the General Asssembly. WITHOUT INSISTING that every detail of the plan as represented to Congress is perfect, it is clear that the plan, which we By JAMES NICHOLS Daily Staff Writer HE HAZY, impenetrable cloud that Norman Thomas recently described as "the great god, Mili- tary Secrecy" is descending over war-torn Vietnam. Although 4000 uniformed American troops are there and several have been killed, President Kennedy could still say, at his Feb. 14 news conference, that "we have not sent combat troops in the generally understood sense of the word." The American military personnel now in South Vietnam are train- ing the forces of President Ngo Dinh Diem, in guerrilla warfare and offering transportation and logistic support. The Yanks also fly helicopters into combat areas and accompany patrols of South Vietnamese. They are ordered not to fire unless fired upon, but they are often forced to exchange shots with the Communist Viet Cong rebels. A NEW COMMAND has been set up in Vietnam, headed by American General Paul D. Har- kins. This command would provide the necessary framework if the United States decides to send in combat troops. In this country, a new branch of the infantry, called Special Forces, has been formed to train men in guerrilla warfare. The group presently numbers about 5,000 and President Ken- nedy is expected to double this number soon. The United States is providing the Saigon government with about $200 million in military assist- ance, and another $200 million in economic aid. So far, about 95 per cent of President Ngo's 200,- 000-man army is being used to hold isolated strongholds. The rebels usually avoid these, and maneuver In the jungle between them. The few patrols sent out, often accompanied by American "non-combatants," either find no trace of the rebels or are shot to pieces from ambush. * * * RED CHINA'S Mao Tse-tung- who ought to know-has said that guerrilla warfare must fail unless the guerrillas have the support of the people on whose lands they fight. So far, the Viet Cong have not failed. Although vastly super- ior in number and supplies, the army of the South has not been remarkably successful against the ragged Communist rebels. The peasants of Vietnam are simple people, more interested in the fate of their greenish-brown rice paddies than in the manifest destiny of Marxism. The ideologi- cal struggle means to them only that Viet Cong fighters will come into their village at night and kill anyone suspected of helping the government, and that the next day the government troops will arrive, shoot up the village, and kill anyone suspected of help- ing the Viet Cong. The United States has given South Vietnam factories, univer- sities and even an atomic reactor, but peasant children are still covered with scabs because their parents can not afford the dollar face this difficult question: How much should the United States meddle in the government of South Vietnam? Many feel that victory is only possible after wide- spread reforms have been made in Saigon and in the local govern- ments of smaller units. So far, President Ngo has given promises of reform and little else. He continues to fill his govern- ment with relatives and friends, and his jails with political op- ponents. The South Vietnamese peasants have come to expect' corruption and dishonesty on all levels of the government. Local officials confiscate and sell the wood the villagers cut. * * * THAT THE TIDE may be turn- ing in favor of the government forces was indicated yesterday by a Chinese statement declaring that China's security is being seriously affected by the "undeclared war" the United States is waging in Vietnam. China demands the with- drawal of all American equipment and personnel from Vietnam, and asks that peaceful means be used, to stop the fighting. The huge Red nation expressed similar con- cern about its security Just be- fore its large-scale intervention in Korea. Although the violence in Al- geria and the spectacular crisis in Berlin monopolize the news, the sporadic and confusing struggle in Southeast Asia may prove to be the most important crisis of 1962, as it did in 1950. Ugly rumors of Chinese intervention in Laos are becoming more frequent, and the -United States appears to be gird- ing for a major stand against Communism and Chinese expan- sion in the former French colonies. Whatever the outcome of the Asian conflict centering for the moment in Vietnam, it will have a pro-' found effect on the future of the entire world. CHAMBER MUSIC: 'Players' Disappoint, Brahms Dominates THE MAJOR WORK performed by Eger players last night was the Brahms "Waldhorn Trio," Opus 40. The entire first half of the pro- gram was devoted to this work, which so surpassed the remainder that one was considerably let down at the close of the concert. This was most unfortunate, for Mr. Eger is an exceptional horn instrumentalist: his tone, a bit on the dry side, is full and clear; his phrases are exquisitely shaped; his accents are clear and sharp; his pianissimos steal one's breath. Yet the concert was disappointing. Following the intermission the players. minus Mr. Eger, performed a set of variations, Opus 121a, for 'cello, violin, and piano by Beethoven. For late Beethoven, this is a surprisingly vapid composition. The theme, with interesting accentuation, a curious starkness of adumbration, and a pleasing overall simplicity-seems full of possibilities, but nothing comes of it. The performance was suited to the music. Two elegies for piano and horn, by Poulenc and Bernstein respec- tively, followed. The first is a silly piece musically, but it gave Mr. Eger a chance to show off his finely molded arpeggios. The Bernstein is a much more satisfying work, reminescent of "Quiet City." The program concluded with Mr. Eger's transcription of the "Overture on Hebrew Themes," Opus 34, of Prokofiev. This is a bright little piece which provided the only musical humor of the evening. The writing for horn permitted a considerable display of coloration, through the use both of mutes and short rippling legato figurations which were remarkably executed. *** * * BUT LET US RETURN TO BRAHMS, which opened and dominated the program. First of all, the work is astonishing. The opening andante foreshadows the arch movements of Bartok. The climax of the adagio is a passage on a par with the best discourses of Beethoven. Throughout there is a superb sense of balance between the three instruments and a wonderful interleaving and combining of melodic lines. Further in the Waldhorn Trio Brahms achieved a balance of form which oftened eluded him. His fascination with the intellectual possibilities of the sonata form often lead to a first movement which overpowers the remainder of a composition. Here he begins with an elaboration of the relatively simple song form and concludes with a straight forward sonata. The performance was not entirely satisfying. Mr. Eger, as we have said, is good, and he shone particularly in the Brahms. Dixie Blackstone, the violinist, after a shaky entrance-another disadvantage to beginning with a major work!-revealed herself as a fine musical companion for the horn player. Her phrases are beautifully shaped and perfectly matched to his. When the two played together the real music was made. Unfortunately the pianist was not up to the mark. It Is in the nature of the instruments' involved that much ,of the rhythmic driv must be expressed through the percussiveness of the piano. But Mr. yce's accents were weakened by occasional overpedaling, and his rhythm was occasionally slack. At those moments when the principal melody was his, his fiat phrasing was in obvious contrast to that of the violin and horn. It is a measure of the stature of the Brahms Trio that it was also effective as a Duo Sonata with piano accompani- ment. -J. Philip Benkard DEVELOPMENT COUNCIL SHOW: LH&R: Late, But Great IGHTNING ALMOST STRUCK TWICE. The Lambert, Hendricks and Ross concert held last evening in Hill Auditorium, scheduled for 8:30, was delayed till 9:45. Reason? . . . No performers. But the audience remained patiently and the wait was well worth- while. Although extremely weary and exhausted from a full day's travel, and in spite of an emergency substitution from the audience for an errant bass player, the concert was full of a natural warmth and humor and a mild success. From the beginning number, Jumpin' at the Woodside, the vocal trio showed great control, itiming and ease. Jon Hendricks, lyric-writer and spokesman for the group, was at his best when he performed Gim- me that Wine, a number he admits he never tires of. Dave Lambert, a gnome-like man with a balding dome and be-fuzzed chin, showed his talent as "The World's Oldest Be-Bop Siiger" by taking John Col- trane's solo in Richard Carpenter's Walkin' and breathing a great deal of life and humor into. it. Introduced as "the world's most girl jazz singer," Annie Ross wasn't up to her usual high peak. Visably and ad- mittedly fatigued, she left the stage twice to rest, and even the now- famous Twisted was below standard. THE GROUP SEEMED BEST on Buck Clayton's Avenue C and Horace Silver's Come On Home. A great range of jazz compositions and jazz musicians were covered and, on the average, quite successfully. The concert, a benefit for the Development Council scholarship for service to the University, owes special thanks to Dick "Wigs" Wiggin- ton, '64Ed, who offered his services to supplement the instrumental background. He gave a very commendable performance and, as Jon Hendricks said, the applause he earned vas quite "a warm feeling." Like a French dessert, the concert was too short, and awfully good. Let's hope there'll be more like it. --Hugh Holland AT THE STATE: Christ-in-CelluloidP ale. WITH MGM'S MULTI-MILLIONS and God's script, "King of Kings" promises to be the greatest thing ever. But the script is much more Philip Yordan's than God's, and the result is disappointment that even this Book can't be left alone in Hollywood. Such a fictionalized account of the life of Jesus implies that the Bible is pretty pale stuff, and that if Samuel Bronston and crew had been around when the apostles were writing, they could have whipped up something that would really have lived. And thus it ad- vances the line that the Greatest Story is fiction. The Bible is frank about lustful sex and a lot of other rancid things, but you just know that Salome is featured to titillate the appetite of the audience, not to be true to the original meaning of the incident. And this most significant belly dance rates about as much footage as the Socratic Sermon on the Mount scene, which is used to cram teachings of many years into a handy package. * * * * WITH ONLY THREE HOURS to play with, and so much time spent on Roman soldier scenes, King had to be highly selective in portraying Chist's life, and it is obvious from the product that they didn't want to offend anybody. Miracles are shown to keep the Christians happy;. but only healings are shown, thus allowing the other viewers a Freudian way out. To avoid any charges of anti- Semitism, the movie puts the onus of Christ's death on Imperial Rome, more than Jewish religious leaders and the mob (not shown in this version) which shouted "Crucify him!" The post-Resurrection Christ (minus nailprints) is seen once to keep the Fundamentalists happy, and then become a shadow from afar who never ascends to Heaven. Jeffrey Hunter handles his impossible part with remarkable tact, but the "Pale Galilean" conquers, and the movie grows gray in showing only the gentle Christ, not the revolutionary one. Where is the rt 4. - ....-,,,,. -,a +.+,., .,.-- - ~r c~r c'a- s' -- n tzh LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: NSA Shirks Its Duty To the Editor: THE DECISION of the Student Government Council Wednes- day night to rescind its previous action to hold a campus referen- dum on the question of the Uni- versity's continued affiliation with the United States National Stu- dent Association was both wise and prudent. It's true and unfortunate; but at the present time, the ref- erendum would have become a conservative-liberal battleground. The NSA issue is not that it is too' liberal; but whether the or- ganization has departed from its role as a confederation of stu- dent governments. I for one believe it has to a most dangerous de- gree, and for this reason would urge withdrawal at this time out of protest to the NSA leadership who are the ones responsible for this situation. But as one who op- posed the stand of YAF at last year's NSA convention, i.e. con- servatism vs. liberalism, T, would' have been most reluctant to have seen the referendum turn on such issues as HUAC and the Cuban, invasion. And indeed it probably would have. Nevertheless, Mr. Carder and Mr. Stockmeyer, as well as the rest of the SGC have acted well in serving notice upon the NSA of a growing dissatisfaction with present trends, notice from a school which has been a main- stay of the organization since its founding. --William J. Madden, Jr., '64L Member, Brd. of Directors-YAF, Fanatics . . . To the Editor: BY ARTFUL CALCULATION or happy coincidence, Mr. Har- rah's editorial of February 17th, rebuking the Michigan Republi- cans for repudiating the Birch Society, appeared on the same all (Mr. Harrah's statement that "the GOP must be flexible enough to compass every voter from Welch to Rockefeller" would create not a party but a zoo), at the other you alienate possible supporters on fine point of doc- trine. But this is not a borderline case. The Birchites are as fanatical on the right as the Communists on the left, and surely Mr. Harrah would not advise the Democrats to try and capture Communist sup- port. Mr. Wallace tried that game in 1948, with the result that for every Communist vote he got, he alienated a dozen moderate lib- erals. Lincoln accepted abolition- ist support, but he openly re- pudiated John Brown. How could ex-president Eisenhower be happy in the same party as Welch, who' thinks him a Communist? Since Welch has already re- pudiated the chief Republican leaders, and in most violent terms, why should any of them go out of their 'way to please him? No party has gained, on the net result, by adopting a lunatic fringe; many parties have gained by cutting it off. Finally, Mr. Harrah insults the Michigan Re- publicans in assuming that a use- ful percentage of them take the position of a screaming lunatic like Welch. -Preston Slosson, Culver Military Academy Bureaucrat ... To the Editor: VICE-PRESIDENT Lewis is a bureaucrat. The qualifications of a bureau- crat to select qualified and use- fully critical people to evaluate the function of his own satrapy are dubious. The qualification of a bureaucrat to judge the recom- mendations of such a committee is also dubious. I