* ~~W Auirih3n &iit Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS 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 all reprints. INDIAN CLASSICI 0 AY, MAY 9, 1962' NIGHT EDITOR: FRED RUSSELL KRAMER The Tribe of Miehigamua: Unjustified Secrecy- 17 tr -_ 1 V r A .A. haks Rlmentdon / k rt s f t. i A' illl II K UE TO A REQUEST ,from a member of the Board in Control of Student Publications, I Lye up plans to study Monday evening and cited at The Daily for him to arrive for an 1;45 meetIng. My thought was that he wanted discuss the current controversy involving ! newspaper's staff and the publicatio~ns ard. I put aside my personal plans and shes for what I considered was the good The Daily and, ultimately, the good of the niversity. I never got to talk with him. A few minutes fore he was to arrive, the Tribe of Michi- ,mua, a senior men's honorary, carried me out the building, tore the pants of my best suit shreds, poured cold water and red and blue 'e on me and announced that "The Sachem id the Fighting Braves" had chosen me rom among the palefaces to perpetuate the ble tribe." Outside- of i little ruffled dignity and a w bruises, the tapping ceremony does not ovoke outraged ,disgust on my part. The tap- ngg and the initiation ceremonies of the en's honoraries can be viewed simply as ex- 'essions of' some pent-up sexual neurosis llege aged men share. Others have aptly dub- d them 'fertility rites without sex.' EMBERSHIP IN MICHIGAMUA is supposed to go to junior men "because of-leadership ey have displayed, high moral character, good hIolarship, work that has been done for Mich- n, and their ability to do work in the fu- ie." It is difficult to know how the Tribe selects members, since all its meetings are closed the public, but it is apparent that certain mpus officers are always selected. The cap- ins of the 10 intercollegiate athletic teams; e presidents of the Michigan Union, Inter- iternity Councils Inter-Quadrangle Council d Student Government Coungil; the editor, bits editor and business manager of The lily are always selected no matter how im- oral, how unwilling to work and how close to inking out they may be. Traditionally, the :ond ranking member of the activities. orga- ations (with the exception of IQC) are also ;ped, but exceptions are made when some- S's attitude is considered unworthy of the norary. ICHIGAMUA OPERATES on a one man veto; each member of the tribe must agree each initiate. [ expressed my unwillingness to join the ibe to several of the current members, but ,s told that this was not a 'sufficient' an- uncement of intent. One of the current ibe officers tried to convince me to join )nday afternoon. I told him I would recon- er the points he had made and give him v final decision yesterday. iA Tribe member of the '60-61 year said that ping would not . come until Tuesday or dnesday night, and so I hoped to express r reasons for not joining before tapping and .s save both the Tribe and myself time d bother. Apparently, however, the Tribe s not willing to wait and believes that an lividual has little or no right to decide he nts nothing to do with the organization.. .T THE 'UNIVERSITY tolerates and even encourages Michigamua and the other ho- ries. Regulations of the Dean of Men gov- ing tapping and the initiations are not ictly enforced. Investigator Swoverland has M. known to follow the tappers to insure Lt they encounter no interference from oth- students or townsfolk. : , Jniversity regulations demand that "in both >ping and initiation all participants shall be equately clothed from the viewpoint of de- icy and health and the activities of tapping 1 initiation shall be conducted in such a ,nner as not to constitute an annoyance to community." [These regulations are openly violated as hinx, for example, strips off all of the, tap- I men's clothes. Another honorary covered new members with molasses and feathers : left them without transportation and .half ssed at an unknown site 20 miles from the npus. Neither drizzling rain nor cold of ht stops the honoraries from abusing un- -graduates or violating state laws concern- use of intoxicating beverages by minors. )f course, tapping and initiation are the .y events the honoraries stage in public, and is unfair to judge them strictly by these ions. Their other activities-sometimes aritable and promoting the student's posi- n in the University--are carried on in strict- secrecy. fICHIGAMUA, IT IS RUMORED, did much L to initiate or aid in gaining the Student bivities Building and Student Government uncil, and in securing student aid in raising ids for the Michigan Memorial Phoenix >ject and obtaining student representation the Development Council. -Members discuss- the Sigma Kappa case, the current OSA' .dy and the University's restrictions on out- e speakers. ; Michigamua is about the only honorary :mowledged to take significant actions on -University problems, particularly student af- rs. All the honoraries share common failings, the campus and the honorary wants to guaran- tee a "representative" membership, regard- less of the individual merit of many of those tapped. Many students who could make a worthwhile contribution to the honoraries' activities, who want to be in them, who feel a keen sense of responsibility for the pniversity's future are. not chosen because they chose to work outside the structure of the SAB-Daily-Yost Field House organization, or lack the political skills to gain major elected or appointive offices. I don't think that this creation of artificial prestige and training it gives University stu- dents to accept more easily the classed society into which they will graduate is the basic issue either. Y PROTEST against honoraries and against Michigamua in particular is aimed at the secret nature of these organizations and the activities they participate in which subvert and undermine the more legitimate forms of student government. I feel it my duty as an individual and as editor on a college newspaper to work for making the University as open a community as possible. I don't think honoraries work for this end. I don't believe they widen the channels of communication between stu- dents and administration or among the stu- dents themselves. Entirely too many decisions in the University are reached behind closed doors and in exec- utive sessions. We bemoan the apathy of the individual citizen and ,the individual student because he does not vote or fails to participate in his government. His failure, however, can be attributed in great measure to the closed elites which actually make the decisions. I can understand the desire for secrecy which student and administration leaders want. They feel that general campus knowledge of what administrators are thinking of doing could give rise to all sorts of false stories and exaggerations, that campus sentiment could build up against a contemplated decision be- fore the campus fully knew the ramifications of the decision. But, more untruths circulate when secrecy is maintained than when it is discarded. A BELIEF THAT FREE and open discussion of all issues will yield the best decisions seems to me to be at the basis of our theory of democracy and the way we are encouraged to pursue academic studies. Many people, both now in the Tribe or on The Daily staff, have urged me to join Michi- gamua for the good of the newspaper. If Pres- ident Hatcher and Executive Vice-President Niehuss are going to speak frankly before the Tribe and tell the members truths about the iniversity they would refuse to tell other stu- dents, The Daily ought to be there to hear them. Any extra knowledge of the University which the editor can gain will, of course, bene- fit his newspaper, even if he gains it in confi- dence and is obligated not to print it. This argument presupposes, however, that the editor and his staff cannot know.-the campus unless they participate in such groups as hon- oraries. This simply is not t'ue. It is the role ot the student journalist to find out what is going on about him. If reporters are perform- ing their job well, membership in a secret honorary for such a purpose would not be necessary. Each editor and each reporter must choose the means he wants to gain informa- tion. I choose not to participate in a secret or- ganization. Other editors have and will make different decisions. HAVE the greatest personal respect for many of the members of both the outgoing and incoming Tribes of Michigamua, and I will try to maximize the number of informal contacts between them and myself. My theory of student organizations is a pe- culiar one, and it necessitates my decision in regard to honoraries. If the University is going to offer opportunities and sponsor programs for students, they should be open to all. Stu- dent organizations are recognized by the Uni- versity and thus should have no membership 'requirements dxcept perhaps that of being a student at the University and sharing the stat- ed goals of the group. I do not know how many students would choose to join the Tribe if they were given the opportunity; I don't believe very many would be interested or committed enough to work for the organization. Those who really want "to fight 'um like hell for Michigan" already do through their own organizations and activi- ties and many of these would be the same people who are already selected for Michi- gamua. Others who could benefit Michigamua and the University are not now permitted to make their fullest contribution. IF MEMBERSHIP in Michigamua were thrown open, the heads of the major campus orga- nizations would want to join it and, perhaps, should be encouraged. Just as no one in the Tribe now would attempt to limit the member- ship of his 'home' activity, no one in the Tribe should try to limit the membership of the honorary. Michigamua is a closed society; its strength rests primarily on the close bounds and frank- ness of expression engendered by its nonpublic character. I can appreciate the contributions Michigamua's members are trying to make for Ayyangar To Give Karnatic Concert LAST SEMESTER a capacity audience rose en masse to cheer the Ravi Shanker performance of North Indian Classical Music. To- night at 8:30 in the Rackham lecture hall the sensitive listener has a new opportunity to become better acquainted with the art music of India. Mr. Rangaramanuja Ayyangar will present a concert demonstra- tion of the great tradition of South India, the so-called Karnatic music. For those who heard the first concert some things will be the same. The basic structure of the music for both traditions is still the raga and the tala. The raga is a scalar-melody form. It contains not only the notes to be played but also particular ornaments, melodic turns and cadences which give it a special flavor. The tala is the rhythmic framework of the piece. A tala consists of a unit of from 3 to 138 beats which is divided into smaller units by accents. The musician plays a piece set in a particular raga and tala and then improvises upon the piece, keeping in mind these two vital elements at all times. In order for the Western listener to appreciate the performance he must be aware that the performer is constantly re-creating the piece within these two restrictions. Each piece presents a new raga and tala and hence new challenges to overcome. Mr. Ayyangar, one of the great teachers of the tradition, will provide ample opportunity to learn more about this art. * * * * WHILE the general musical concepts are the same in both North and South India, the specific names of particular raga and tala vary. In addition, different instruments are used. In tonight's performance one will see the veena (or vina). This large lute with two gourd resonators has one set of melodic strings and one set of drone strings. The player can keep both the pitch center of the raga and the rhythm of the tala on the drone strings while playing the melody on the other strings. For those who know the Northern tradition, the veena will seem, at first, rather quiet. In the hands of a master such as Mr. Ayyangar, however, its power to please and move the listener will soon become evident. Thanks to the Center for Southern Asian Studies, the spon- sors of the concert, a rare opportunity to discover the beauty of this music firsthand is available to us all tonight. -Prof. William P. Maim School of Music LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Syro s DISARMAMENT: A Studyjin Futility:194550 (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first ofa three-part series tracing the world's disarmament attempts since World War II.) By JAMES NICHOLS Daily Staff Writer WORLD WAR II, in August of 1945, ended not with a whim- per but with a bang. On the eighth of that month, a single American bomber with a single American bomb blasted one of the world's major cities into ashes and and bits of radioactive dust. Demolish- ed, along with the bulk of the civilian population of Hiroshima, were humanity's various plans for postwar world peace. Something entirely new, it became apparent, would have to be devised. In January, 1946, the brand new United Nations General Assembly unanimously established an Atomic Energy Commission with the job of encouraging the exchange of technical atomic information, en- suring the control of the world's atomic energy, limiting that new and mysterious force to peaceful uses, banning nass-destruction weapons in general, and establish- ing means of inspection to insure the security of the world. In June, the United States ad- vanced its heralded "Baruch Plan." Named .for the American delegate to the AEC, the proposal was a rather remarkable one. It provided for the establishment of an auton- omous International Atomic De- velopment Authority. The body was to be given com- plete charge of "all phases of the development and use of atomic en- ergy," given "managerial control or ownership of all atomic energy activities potentially dangerous to world security," and given power to "control, inspect, and license all other atomic activities." * * * IT WAS TO BE, in short, a very powerful body with a monopoly on every phase of atom-splitting from the mining of fissionable ma- terials to the final chain reaction.' It would be given a practically un- limited right of inspection, and the veto power of the "Big Five," later to hamstring the Security Coun- cil repeatedly, was not to apply to the proposed agency. This, Russia said, would consti- tute an infringement of national sovereignty. A Soviet counter-pro- posal gave priority to prohibiting the use, manufacture and accumu- lation of nuclear weapons. All existing (i.e., American) stocks were to be destroyed within three months. Inspection and control were secondary considerations, to be dealt with in detail at some fu- ture time. What emerged, then, were ir- reconcilable ,differences between the United States and the USSR. America, with a temporary monop- oly on the world's nuclear weap-' ons, would proceed only with the greatest of caution. It sought a se- ries of thorough steps, each to be completed before the next began, each to be accompanied by careful control and close inspection. Rus- sia, with the world's greatest con- ventional army but no operational atom bombs, gave top priority to the immediate unilateral destruc- tion of existing bombs and the cessation of their production, and demanded the power to veto any action by any international agen- cy. * * * WITH THE SHADOW of a mushroom cloud lingering over- head, the UN met a disappointing' lack of success in reaching agree- ment even on non-nuclear arms. The Security Council established a Commission f o r Conventional Armaments in February, 1947. The 'United States, hoping not to lessen the effectiveness of the AEC, took the position that' the non-atomic commission should not deal with nuclear weapons. Russia contended that consideration of conventional weapons apart from nuclear ones was meaningless. The United States urged that an at- mosphere of international confi- dence was a necessary prerequisite to any valuable agreement. Rus- sia replied that this atmopshere could only be attained when fruit- ful disarmament measures had been agreed upon. The Soviet Union, in late 1948, outlined a plan whereby each of the permanent members of the Security Council would reduce its conventional forces by a third. At the same time, the AEC would reach agreements abolishing all atomic weapons and governing the control of nuclear energy. * * * THE WEST objected on a num- ber of grounds, most of them fa- miliar even then. For one thing, the Russians again coupled atomic and conventional weapons. For another, the disagreement over the principles of control and inspec- tion remained.' A third objection stemmed from the fact that no one knew with any degree of accuracy the sizes of the various conventional forces and armaments these nations had. France proposed a plan involving a commission to collect this in- formation with power to check their findings by detailed inspec- tions. Russia again cried "national sovereignty,' and vetoed such pro- posals twice. The work of both UN commissions had slid quietly to a halt. The world situation had contin- ually worsened since the war's end. Civil wars and Red-inspired revolts continued to spread. The Soviets tried to seal off Berlin from the worldfand the Allies replied with the famous airlift. In 1949, the. United States joined with Western Europe in the North Atlantic Trea- ty Organization, an anti-Russian' alliance. * * * IN THAT SAME YEAR, China, fell to the Communists and in 1950 the conflict began in divided Ko- rea. In January Russia walked out of the AEC, ostensibly protesting the presence of Nationalist China.. In April, the Soviet delegate gave the same reason as he left the Commission f o r Conventional Armaments. The UN had failed its mandate, and the world seemed no' closer to secure and lasting peace. And in 1950, a single Russian plane dropped into the frozen Si- berian wastes, a single Russian atomic bomb. To the Editor: IT.EDAILY'S coverage of the 62 Henry Russel Lecture de- livered by Prof. Youtie, Research Professor of Papyrology, contains information which is grossly mis- leading. Prof. Youtie was quoted as say- ing, "The papyrologist should al- ways be aware that fats are un- changing." Nothing could be more antithetic to Prof. Youtie's thesis which was that the papyrologist, as a result of the processes which the lecturer so carefully outlined, actually "creates" facts. These facts are the result of the papyrologist's momentary inter- pretatior. of a, given papyrus text. A subsequenti reading of the same document may result, as Prof. Youtie's well-chosen examples i1- lustrated, is a new fact which com- pletely abrogates the previous in- terpretation. TRUE, the papyrus is the final arbiter of the information which it contains; it alone knows what it wants to tell us. It is the job of the papyrologist to bring this in- formation to light. He is hindered, however, by his pathetic ignorance of the ancient languages and the elusive handwriting found on pa- pyrus texts. Any fact "established" by a papyrologist is the product of cur- rent and often meager means at his disposal. New information may turn up, as a result of which the papyrologist must be willing to ad- mit that his quondam interpreta- tion was entirely false. The facts which a papyrologist creates then, are highly susceptible to change. To say otherwise is to completely misinterpret Prof. You- tie's stimulating discussion. -Edward M. Michael, Grad Walk Out... To the Editor: AT THE meeting of Inter Quad- rangle Council last Thursday three members got up and walked out around 10 o'clock, thereby pre- venting further business from be- ing conducted because their leav- ing caused the loss of a quorum. I was one of those three; I did not leave because it was getting late and I had homework to finish, rather I left because an unrealis-. tic budget would have been passed if the meeting was allowed to con- tinue. This budget would have suc- ceeded in making IQC into an or- ganization which could do nothing but have meetings and pass reso- lutions. Is this what thee residents of the'Quadrangles want from IQC? Do they want a body which sits around passing policies and hoping that the Board of Govern- ors will support them? Or do they want to see IQC plan and sponsor activities, such as, the Duke El- lington Concert, the Michigan- Michigan State Mixer, the IQC- Assembly Sing, etc., which add va- riety to their activities and make their stay in the Residence Halls more enjoyable? The question is what can the residents do to prevent IQC from passing an unrealistic budget, one which would be against the very foundations upon which IQC was founded? They can talk to their House President, their Quadrangle Representative and even their Quadrangle President and tell them that they want a good pro- gram next year and that they feel that the budget proposed by the officers o_ IQC should be passed. If they want a poor program next year with very few big activities then the residents should just siti back, do nothing, allow the unreal- istic budget to go through IQC, and I will guarantee that they will get this poor program, --Robert S. Levine, '63 Inter-Quadrangle Council Vice-President DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an - official publication of The U3niver- ,qty of Michigan for which. The, Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. - WEDNESDAY, MAY 9 General Notices Undergraduate Honors Convocation: The annual Convocation recognizing undergraduate honor students will be held at 10:30 a.m., Fri., Mahy 11. at Hill Aud. Dr. Glenn T. seaborg, Chairman of the United States Atomic Energy (Continued on Page 8) '4 I I I A I I I I .... 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