Mrr 1 r " .- 1 - -II. I , - I- I I Bringing Up Freshman: .n the Political Areii By ROBERT SELWA ONE OF THE MARKS of our age is the decline of tradition. This appears to be the case in American society in general. It is certainly the case on the University campus. Few customs and traditions remain from the earlier times of the University, and those that do remain are dry and tame in comparison with those that have died. The University opened in Ann Arbor in 1841, and by the 1850's student customs were already emerging. They were robust during the last half of the 19th century but began to fade in the 20th century. By the end of the 1930's most of the colorful and virile old traditions had disappeared. The most aggressive ones make today's initiations andtypical panty raids look like tiddlywinks. The more aggressive cus- toms of old frequently were the result of the intense class and school rivalries within the University. They died out as class spirit died. They were also the result of the nature of the student body: then it was smaller, less sophisticated and more attuned to the simple and rugged things of life. The University was, after all, part of a young, developing section of the United States. IT IS REALLY NO WONDER, then that one of the earliest customs to emerge consisted of ceremoniously burning a handmade corpse. Entitled the "Burning of the Mechanics," this practice was ob- served at the end of the semester when each class completed the physics couse taught by Prof. George Palmer Williams, one of the University's first two teachers. The corpse, which represented physics, was complete with a skull borrowed from the medical school. ROBERT SELWA, A Daily staff writer, is a junior majoring in jour- nalism. A witness, one Art Tap, described. the custom as it occurred in 1860: At 10:30 a.m. the students formed a procession. The seniors led, one holding a drawn sword. The juniors followed, sev- eral carrying the corpse, all wearing masks and white robes (sheets taken from their beds) and some carrying torches. The sophomores and freshmen trailed. After parading around Ann Arbor and through a woods, the procession came to a clearing where they deposited the corpse on a funeral pyre. They sang hymns of "doleful sorrow," Tap related, and for nearly an hour they gave funeral orations that were bountifully interspersed with the howlings and lamentation of the "afflicted" mourners. They gave the corpse a complete court trial and a student judge condemned the corpse to death. The students then set the pyre afire and performed an Indian dance around it, howling like infernals. "It was rich," Tap commented. Tap did not mention it, but the inspira- tion for the tradition had come from President Henry Philip Tappan who was familiar with German student customs of a like nature at Heidelberg University. Tappan intended to direct the aggression of students toward an inanimate object rather than toward each other. He didn't always succeed. THE ETHNOCENTRISM of the classes developed through -the years into "rushes," "pumpings," colorful name- calling skirmishes--and even scalping. In the rushes of those days, literary school members and medical students, or sophomores and freshmen, dashed toward each other to push and wrestle those of the other side for some goal. In the "Great Rock Scrap," the fresh- men tried to push a huge rock bearing their initials onto the campus which was defended by the sophomores. On "Flag Day" the freshmen hoisted their class pennant up the campus flag- pole. The sophomores attacked to try to haul it down. After 30 minutes, these rushes invariably degenerated into at- tempts to chase members of the opposite side up trees. The "lits" fought with the "medics" for possession of the football field, on one oc- casion in the 1890's. Some 700 men pushed, shouted, tugged and wrestled in the battle. In the end, the "lits" won. "Pumping" consisted of bathing a per- son's head under a water pump. A group of sophomores would waylay an antag- onistic freshman and "pump" him, or vice versa. When in April, 1874, the faculty sus- pended three sophomores and three fresh- men for engaging in this custom, a great student protest followed. The sophomores and freshmen responded by drawing up a joint declaration justifying pumping. The declaration termed the suspension an act of tyranny and argued that it "destroys that freedom of student life which has been and is one of the greatest attractions of the institution." The 81 students who signed the declar- ation were then also suspended. The Uni- versity re-admitted them the next year,' however, and the custom of pumping con- tinued. The University was more successful in killing the custom of head shaving. Under this custom, members of one class raided the houses where the officers of a rival class lived. The raiders then proceeded to clip the hair and paint the faces of the kidnapped officers. Head shaving became most intensive each February just before the annual freshman banquet. Sophomores captured freshmen and cut off their hair to prevent their attendance. This custom was suc- cessfully stopped by the year 1906 through the joint efforts of the faculty and the newly-formed Student Council. CLASS ANTAGONISM also found its way into the public announcements that the classes made by means of posters. Before the rushes, classes posted warnings to each other. This 1937 freshman procla- mation was typical: The Rise and Fall "Beware sophomores: Ye Blubbering Babies . . . Ye Wearers of Rubber Diapers ... lay aside thy rattles and meet us on Ferry Field at 2 o'clock Saturday at which time ye shall have thy smelling flesh plucked from thy jellied bones ..." The freshmen replied, on another pos- ter: "We Blacklist you as Blasted, Blighted, Bloated, Blusterous,,Blasphemeous Blun- derheads. You have Belched, Bleached, Blemished Blobs to use as brains." A 1913 sophomore poster warned the freshmen to stay away from Joe's and The Orient-Main Street bars which stu- dents frequented-where the "obnoxious presence" of the freshmen "is not wanted." The sophomores also ordered the freshmen to see to it that "we, your superiors, precede your putrified carcasses through the doors." They continued: "Pollute not the balmy ozone of our sacred campus with the vile fumes of your filthy pipes. Look to lofty things, fresh- men, we will assist you to the "higher branches'." The sophomores felt it their duty to prevent freshmen not only from smoking on campus, but also from sitting in the first five rows of the local movie theatre, from "making goo goo eyes" at the women students, and from trespassing on their "game preserves" at Ypsilanti. The sophomores took on other "duties" besides these, too. According to the fresh- man class of 1911, that year's sophomores had caused "our loyal members to be massaged with loose eggs" and made them "bow down before beautiful co-eds . .." Members of different classes had always thrown eggs and other objects at each other. During the chapel services of the middle 1800's, for example, they regularly tossed hymn books, apple cores and pea- nuts. Sophomores made it a tradition to put freshmen over the fence at the time of matriculation in September. The sopho- mores felt it was a means of teaching the freshmen the "proper" attitude of respect toward upperclassmen. The fence From Mayor To Speech Writer The Faculty is Active Mayor Eldersveld addresses 4 By THOMAS HUNTER THE POPULARLY imagined protective academic outer shell of the University has hardly succeeded in keeping the faculty members out of politics. They are active, not only in the politics which normally breed within academic institu- tions, but even those of the outer com- munity, which may have nothing at all to do with university life. It would be impossible for the professor to completely divorce himself from politics today; Prof. George Grassmuck of the political science department noted. "As far as staying out of politics is concerned, no one can do it these days," the professor who took a year off to write speeches for Richard Nixon in the last presidential campaign pointed out. "Simply to claim to be out is to be in." Woodrow Wilson smashed the popular, false image of the college professor in respect to politics. The idea of a divided academic and civic community was later to contribute to his personal and political defeat and give rise to a line of non-intel- lectual public heroes. The return to nor- malcy along this popular line of thought is not only unfortunate-it is unrealistic and dangerous. It is still evidenced by the criticism of administrations which seek aid on the campus. T HERE HAS BEEN a continually grow- ing interplay between campus -and community life. Some faculty members become more embroiled than others in politics and leave campus to dabble in community affairs. Others prefer to unite the two realms very closely. Two of the more spontaneous entries into active politics are Professors John Arthos of the English department and Douglas Crary of the geography depart- ment. The two are currently heading a group of local residents who are protest- ing against a proposed apartment struc- ture and changes in the zoning code which would allow the construction of identical buildings. The politicizing in this issue is certainly limited and hardly pertinent to the pro- fessors' positions at the University, but it emphasizes the mobility of the faculty member in the community. Prof. Samuel Eldersveld of the political science department put off his plans in 1956 to do research at California's Insti- tute of Behavioral Studies for a "violent campaign" to capture the Ann Arbor mayorship from 30 years of Republican reign. BUT THEN THERE are those like Prof. Richard Cutler of the psychology de- partment, who couldn't quite beat tradi- tion when he lost a race for the vacated Ann Arbor area state Senate seat two years ago. THOMAS HUNTER, a Daily staff writer, is a sophomore major- ing in political science. Prof. James K. Pollock, who, after 40 years of seeking "to be helpful to my state when called upon to do so," has become almost a tradition himself. He received both the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the German Federal Republic for his services in the reconstruction and democratization of Germany and the American Medal for Merit, the highest civilian award, for his work in Germany during the period of occupation. Polloci- today is one of the brighter guiding lights in the state's fast-fading constitutional- convention. There are those like Prof. Grassmuck who are active nationally, as well as inter- national statesmen, such as Professors Pollock and Samuel P. Hayes of the eco- nomics department. Prof. Hayes, who was with several governmental agencies dur- ing World War II, later worked with the State Department and is now an advisor to the Kennedy administration. From neighboring entanglements to functions in international relations, the list is long and the activities are varied. REVIEWING his two-year term as mayor, Prof. Eldersveld said he be- lieved his political science background didn't directly contribute to his operation of the office. However, he admitted that it sensitized him to what was going on around him. He was conscious, for ex- ample, of the power structure in the com- munity and the values and probable votes of the councilmen. At the same time, "I had no special training in public or mu- nicipal administration and did not feel committed to any hard and fast structural principles or methods of operation." The moral philosopher, he said, would not be interested in politics purely from the empirical standpoint. Nor would the man interested in public law necessarily be led into the community. Nor, as in his own case, would one concerned wtih poli- tical thought necessarily be directed to- ward direct political actiivty, Prof. Elders- veld noted. He acknowledged a movement toward empirical research among political scien- tists. But if they are more active in poli- tics than their colleagues in other fields, it is more because of parallel interests than the result of the discipline, he said. AS FAR as political experience aiding scholarship is concerned, Eldersveld said that he believes his own scholarship was enhanced by his term in office. "My own thinking about political processes was enriched so that I became consider- ably more conscious of some things which I hadn't noticed before." But at the same time he posed a moral problem which the scholar must take into account, one often breached to him by opponents. Can politics and scholarship actually be mixed? Can the scholar retain his necessary attitude of strict objectivity while involving himself in pressures and compromises? Would he become damag- ingyl prejudiced? Is he psychologically capable of participatir Prof. Gi directly thE workings, r that faculty faculty me their "idea operations T HERE A conflicts especially professiona mands on wise, fami Eldersveld cian's staff "felt a lot but pressur with." The advi Grassmuck campaign, participati more comp; The idea campus ar healthy on couraged. has a vali other. The tion within tacts witho between th THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINEISUNDAY, MAY 6, 1962 Prof. Pollock receives award from West German l