Seventy-First Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN "Where Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth Will Prevail" STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individualopinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL OLINICK "Oh, The Army Isn't Sponsoring-It's Just Assisting" C o- vi . . ,. _ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Who Has the Best Sob Story? fraternity Life: Two Views Social Crutch ... AT VARIOUS TIMES in the next two weeks, several hundred men students will find themselves in an upstairs room of a fraternity house with several actives standing around them demanding an immediate decision on whether or not they will accept a bid. Most of these decisions will be ill-informed and poorly considered. Most rushees have, in fact, little idea of the implications of fraternity life, of the meaning of a fraternity and, above all, of the place of the fraternity in the aca- demic community. This lack of understanding is only a reflec- tion of a similar lack of understanding within the system itself. The meaning, of fraternity life is glibly answered with the single word "fellowship" and the educational function of affiliation is passed of with the phrase that "fraternity averages are about the same as the all men's average." The latter rationalization, aside from its naive equation of grade and education, avoids an essential point. The fraternity system is inherently opposed, if not to the goals, then to the means of education. The premise of fraternity life is the desirability of an econom- ically, 'intellectually and socially homogeneous group. It thus becomes the antithesis of re- evaluation of one's ideas, of the "healthy skepticism" and iconoclasm that forms the basis of intellectual experimentation. It is almost an impossibility, assuming the fra- ternity actually does become the center of the undergraduate member's college experience, for him to differ substantially on basic ques- tions and at the same. time remain in this group whose initial criterion for acceptance is largely "full compatibility." ESSENTIALLY, this is not a rehash of the old arguments about conformity. One would have to be incredibly stupid to contend that fraternity men of 1961 are all some sort of blue-eyed blond-haired Nordic types. There is certainly variation in personality and in- terests from house to house. But the fraternity remains a ghetto because it limits the possibilities of development by limiting the possibilites of independence. Join- ing a fraternity is an admission that one needs a group in which to retreat. It has been said that strong men are not molded but developed by the fraternity. But this is not true; men of strong intellect generally do not join fra- ternities. CONSIDER RUSH as a manifestation of the true values of the fraternity system. Do the houses really select rushees on the basis of personal merit and interests? Certainly not. How can a fraternity, as some .do, not invite a rushee back after his having been in the house for only 15 minutes? Obviously, they are looking for certain superficial aspects of the personality such as the clothes they wear, manners, money, and so forth. Pledging a fraternity therefore becomes not a question of giving up one's individuality; it is the acquisition of a brace in order to sup- port one's prior ideals and modes of action. It is a limitation of the possibilities of future development and is hence in direct opposition to the purposes of education in any mean- ingful and integrated sense. THIS IS NOT necessarily a conscious effort on the part of the rushee. Often it is the lure of sorority girls, beer parties. the fra- ternity pin and rah-rah that attract him. There does seem to be a pleasant life in the fraternities, especially to the freshman who knows few people. He often has no conception of the broader educational questions involved. He senses that when the fraternity man talks about "fellowship" he means mutual support. This is the reason people join fra- ternities and the reason fraternities orginally came into existence. It is true that, as the fraternity man will contend, people generally want some group identification. But there is no need for a system of identification so com- plete that the studen't is prevented from par- ticipating in the rewards of the intellectual community to which he is supposedly devoted. -DAVID MARCUS No Answer THINGS ARE PRETTY BUSY around the University these days, and it is natural that telephone lines are busy as well. Even so, it's no fun sitting for hours holding a receiver and waiting for response when you dial NO (pardon me)-66-31511. Maybe it's time for some sort of study on what's wrong, where more lines are. needed, or when extra operators should be hired. After all, it's discouraging to find that the University of Michigan isn't at home. -C. DOW Value for Some ... LEADERS of the fraternity system, in an at- tempt to make affiliated living more palat- able to the American student and the general public'have attempted to create an image of the fraternity as an institution embodying all that is good in our social system and resisting all which is evil. The most commonly espoused claim is that fraternities are not only a proponent of edu- cation but an actual educational institution. In actual fact, fraternities are socially-oriented living units which do not provide a compara- tively conducive atmosphere for study. The fact that fraternity grade averages fall .2 below the all men's average is itself inconsistent with fra- ternity literature's claims. Fraternities are not religion-oriented groups. Many of them started out as such, but now few (if any) have any connection with churches or even follow the moral codes to which the chapters pay lip service to. THE BULWARK-against Communism is not the fraternity man-college education in general forms the reistance. Fraternities are conservative only because the fathers of the members generally have enough income or sav- ings to support their sons in fraternities, and such families are normally right-wing. Discrimination is also an evident part of the fraternities, both nationally and locally. Jews, Negroes, and Orientals are almost consistently blackballed at "Christian" houses. There is now a strong trend toward chapter decisions- on this matter, but in almost every case there need be only one dissenting brother to black- ball any rushee on arbitrary grounds. Most fraternity men drink (some chapters wisely ban alcohol from house premises), and houses occasionally stage loud and sometimes destructive parties which remain a thorn in Dean Rea and Dean Bingley's sides. Such drink- ing is, of course, in violation of University and state regulations. Fraternities have recently re- ceived heavy fines and suspended social pro- bation for such activities. DESPITE these discouragements, the Greek organization does have something to offer the student. A person living on campus often finds the University large, himself small, and therefore wants to find an enjoyable group of friends. These the fraternity can provide, if the right house is chosen. Or possibly a student lacks what he considers a good social life, caused perhaps by the ab- sence of alcohol which he is unable to pro- vide himself. A fraternity house, with an or- ganized social calendar, a tradition of enjoyable parties, and brothers above age twenty-one are ready, willing, and able to fill such needs. IF CLOSER ASSOCIATION with the athletes and campus leaders is desired, the great ma- jority of such people is found in the fraternity system. Becoming a leader is less difficult if one has a Greek house behind him. Fraternities not only have contacts in all open campus orga- nizations, but also provide a ready-made voting bloc of affiliates. Few candidates strongly back- ed by the chapters are defeated. There are few major organizations open to fraternity men which are not controlled by them: the list would include the Union, SGC, the various school offices and innumerable committees. The only major activity not on the roster is The Daily, with comparatively few fraternity brothers on its staff. A CERTAIN SPIRIT of camaraderie may be desired by the prospective brother - a quality usually not found in the dormitory or apartment. A member may have the goal of living in close contact with others and sharing the emotions of his brothers, creating such spirit and tradition, One might even be searching for that elusive ideal, "True Brotherhood." This fellowship can be found in the right house, although large fraternities often have problems achieving this desirable condition, since no one can be close to all his brothers. Of course, due to size, the large houses are generally stronger on the other considerations. One particularly evident deficit in fraterni- ties, according to a number of critics, is that the fraternity system is dying out. Such conclu- sions are based on the fact that there are now a number of battles pitting the local chapter against the national organization. More and more, the chapters are breaking with their na- tionals over decisions on discrimination, since many of the chaptersrhave become more broad-minded, calling for the elimination of antiquated bias regulations. In cases where the national has called the chapter's bluff, the national has consistently lost. BUT IS THIS REALLY the death knell for fraternities, or is it the quiet rumbling of a rebirth? In cases where the individual chap- fp.~ ha..e ..a.. rc . "A+ +w_- -4----, 1% SYRIAN REVOLT: End of Pan-Arab Nationalism? By HARRY PERLSTADT Daily Staff Writer THE CAUSES of the revolt in Syria are not yet fully under- stood. But the obvious result is the destruction of President Gamal Abdel Nasser's United Arab Republic and a death knell for pan-Arab nationalism. The revolt itself was overtly car- ried off by several army officers who promptly turned the coun- try over to a conservative law pro- fessor. Mahmoun al-Kuzbari will become the Premier and Minister of Foreign Affairs and Defense. He is reportedly a friend to Syrian business interests which have been impeded by Nasser's socialization program. H is also apparently pro-West, although it is difficult at this time to be sure. The 'shake up in Syria drasti- cally affects the political situa- tion in the Mid-East and has re- percusions in Western foreign policy. The effect on the UAR is most apparent. Nasser's dream of Arab unity has suffered a defeat and his left side of the middle of the road neutralism has been shaken. The stature of Nasser as a voice of Arab nationalism and a force in the Afro-Asian block is sub- stantially reduced. He will con- tinue to develop Egypt along so- cialistic lines, but will not person- ally be in a position to spread this doctrine to Syria or other emerg- ing nations in the Afro-Asian block. If the new nations decide on government control for capital formation they will not look to Nasser but find another neutral leader. * * * TURKEY and Jordan have al- ready recognized the new gov- ernment in Syria. These two Arab countries are interested in pre- venting Nasser pan-Arabism from RED OPPORTUNITY: U.S. A-Tests:* Immoral and Stupid ONE DAY LAST WEEK Presi- dent Kennedy was so worried about U. S. ineffectiveness abroad in psychological and political war- fare that he set up a Cabinet level group to study the problem for him. The next day he resumed testing. The President is concerned, as many of us are, by the capacity of the Russians to "get away with it" as they did on test resumption with a minimum of world protest. But he makes the Russian task easier by weakly following their lead. THE BEST INFORMATION I can get is that the reasons for resumption were political. As he did on Cuba, Mr. Kennedy de- cided to split the difference be- tween appeasing the rightists and following a clear moral line. The result is apt to be the same. In Cuba, we got the benefit neither of a forceful nor of a conciliatory policy. On testing, we neither ter- rorize as the Russians do by talk- ing of a new monster weapon nor win a propaganda victory by set- ting a sharp contrast between their policy and ours. Two questions remain unan- swered in the resumption of test- ing. One is why the Russians didn't wait, since it seemed fairly clear that if they didn't start testing soon, we would. The other is why Kennedy acted so pre- cipitantly. * * * , AT FIRST, it was said we feared that the Russians after a short series of tests would put us on the spot by calling for a new moratorium. Now the Associated Press quotes unnamed scientists ,(C--+101ry -0n~r-ta+ +I-%- i we are doing some wild guessing. It would be better to base national policy on our own conceptions of what is right. * * * SEVERAL THINGS have been clarified by the Soviet resumption of testing. One is that the fear of secret Soviet testing under- ground was a bogey created by opponents of test cessation on our side. If the Soviet Union had the means or the inclination to secret underground testing, it would not be devoting so many of the de- tonations in its current series to weapons in the small kiloton range. The second is that it was equally deceptive to argue that the pro- longed test talks constituted a' plot by the Russians to keep us from testing. In retrospect, it looks the other way around. The mora- torium tended to freeze a situa- tion in which we were far ahead of the Russians, since we had made many more tests. The third observation is that we would have been better off with an agreement even on Russian terms, including the "troika.". No special network is required to detect violations of the treaty in the atmosphere where the Rus- sians are testing and where we will soon be testing, too, if our military and the Atomic Energy Commission have their way. * * * THE CASE AGAINST nuclear testing has in no way been changed by Soviet resumption. It pollutes the air of mankind. It steps up world tension. It speeds up a nu- clear arms race that leads no- where but mutual destruction. It is more urgent than ever to stop it. Are we going to drift along in the Russian wa n.__-a spreading. The nationalist move- ment in these two countries could have spread into Syria. The re- mnants of Syrian nationalism al- so could' not have been completely wiped out in the period of four years since Syria joined the UAR. The country most pleased by the turn of events must be Israel. Pre- viously pinched between Egypt on the Southwest and Syria in the Northeast, the Israeli govern- ment now finds two separate and uncoordinated governments in place of one unified political power. As a result attacks along the Sea of Galilee will probably slacken off, although attacks along the Gaza Strip will continue. But the split in the UAR does not necessarily mean better re- lations between Israel and its Arab neighbors. As long as the Arab nations lag behind Israel in industrial and technological development there is bound to be antagonism. Israeli rockets and atomic accelerators place a for- midable gap between them and the Arabs, a gap which seems almost insurmountable. * * * SYRIA JOINED EGYPT to form the United Arab Republic in 1958 when it appeared that Communist infiltration threatened to make Syria a Soviet satellite. This was two years after Suez and the year of American intervention in Lebanon. The Russian interest in Syria appears to have waned, al- though with the set-back in Ber- lin and the probable rejection of the Troika Plan, Soviet foreign policy could swing back to West Asia and again create crisis. But as of yesterday, the Soviet press agency Tass was quoting Nasser's statement that the new government was composed of "re- actionary imperialist forces." Clearly the Soviets did not plan this revolt. THE MOST interesting ques- tion concerns the Western role in the Syrian revolt. Did the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency do it again, this time with success? Did the French or British extend their influence once again into West Asia? The apparent answer is that the CIA had little to do with the re- volt. Although Kuzbari seems to be the pro-Western conservative the CIA would approve, the United States has not extended recog- nition to the new government. The United States is patiently waiting this one out. The same holds true for the United Kingdom and France. Both countries had the chance in 1956 to eliminate Nasser, but backed down to American and So- viet demands. Both countries and Israel are happy to see Nasser's UAR crumble, but they, too, are waiting before extending recog- nition. If Western intelligence played a role, it was in an approving rather than instigating manner. Hopefully this revolt was of Sy- rin a _I% ..- , "A f _ 'evi _ To the Editor: [N HER FERVOR to urge con- tinuance of "an art form that is fast being forgotten," Judith Oppenheim has missed the boat and let her artistic emotions sway her usual sense of logic and fair- ness. I refer to her position on the overcalendaring of the Panhel mass rush meeting, the IQC- Assembly Sing, and the quadrangle Christmas dances. Perhaps we should first consider the reason for overcalendaring. The Gilbert and Sullivan Society is $650 in debt and must make up the deficit this semester or fold. If after all these years of operation G&S still is in the red, what makes anyone think that one series of performances will al- leviate the situation? I don't be- lieve it. Miss Oppenheim speaks of people being able to attend Pina- fore on Friday, the quadrangle dances on Saturday, and I pre- sume the IQC-Assembly Sing and the rush mass meeting on the other nights. In addition to prob- lems with studies, I think that financial circumstances for many people will necessitate a choice, and both programs will be hurt. * * * WE ALSO MUST examine the rationale behind SGC calendar- ing rules. In order to insure that two events are not in direct com- petition, petitions must be filed and approved by SGC months in advance. When this procedure is followed by any group and its program is calendared by SGC, the very fact that SGC has given its approval should be a binding se- curity that there will be no com- petition. And when SGC turns in the other direction and overcalendars an event the philosophy behind the whole calendar operation must be re-examined and renewed in the minds of the members. Or are we to have organizations put- ting in a petition, getting it ap- proved, and then hoping that no one will come along with a better 'sob story? -Harvey M..Kabaker, '64 The Audience. To the Editor: CONCERNING SGC decision on calandering - did Mr. Moch, in his worried frenzy over the success of the often unsuccessful quad dances, ever stop to consider what type of audience oui- G&S Saturday night performance draws? In the pre-public sale of tickets which the cast engages in, easily eighty per cent of the ticket sales are made up of par- ents, faculty, fraternity and sorority members and elderly, out- of-town G&S devotees, many of whom I'm certain have never heard of your quad dance, but all' of whom I'm certain will be elated that you gave them the oppor- tunity to attend one. Mr. Moch, if you have to depend for financial salvation on the twenty per cent of the small Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre audience re- maining, I wish you all success and congratulations for defeating one of the oldest and best-loved forms of entertainment on this campus and throughout the world. -Julie Stockwell, '62 Replacement... To the Editor: MICHAEL HARRAH must grad- uate some day, so I suggest that The Daily get ready for that day and hire the writer of the letter which criticized Herblock's characterization of Senator Gold- water, in his place. The letter, praising Goldwater's stand on the Newburgh Welfare plan, was a compound of mis- statement and just plain muddled thinking. I quote: "The Senator ... does not believe that the gov- ernment should encourage ille- gitimate births by giving unwed mothers lavish welfare benefits ... Why should we subsidize im- morality?" First of all, I can hardly think that a woman will purposely have a child out of wedlock solely for the welfare benefits which accrue. A very few may do this, but the majority are subjected to shame and discomfort far beyond the few dollars the state gives them. To most women, having an illegiti- mate child is a serious personal matter, not a matter of "How many bucks can I get for him?" At any rate, even if this were the case, should the state be so heart- less as to "visit the sins of the parent on the child?" FURTHER ON, we read: "In' New York a policeman with ten children gets $250 a month from the state, while it gives a woman having ten illegitimate children $800 a month." I do not know the source of these figures, so I can- not challenge them, but I ven- ture to say that few Newburgh women and few New York police- men are so prolific. Retaliation .. To the Editor: T WAS very disappointed with the tone and the content of the editorial "Two-Front War; Death for U. S." Mr. Kalb creates an image which depicts the Chinese Com- munists as giving little thought to United States retaliatory power when they are formulating their plans for domination of the Far East. In effect what he seems to be saying is that, in a drive for power the Chinese Communists would, without a moment's hesi- tation, completely annihilate the United States with atomic weap- ons; giving no consideration to the fact that all that they would have for their effort would be a large mass of totally devastated and highly radioactive terrain. * * * OUR POWER lies not in retalia- tion but in our ability and con- viction to retaliate. The Come munists have backed down before when we have stated that we are willing and able to fight an atomic war if we are forced into one. They back down because they want to be here to dominate the world and they want a world left to dominate. Clearly danger is imminent but if we place all of our hopes on internal strife- in the Communist block we are not standing on very solid ground. To presume that the United States could create aliena- tion between China and Russia is like believing that Russia could create alienation between the United States and Great Britain. It is possible but'very highly im- probable. -Howard H. Postema,'63 (Letters to the Editor should be limited to 300 words, typewritten and double spaced. The Daily re- serves the right to edit or withhold any letter. Only signed letters will be printed.) DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daly assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1 General Notices University Faculty and Staff Meeting. President Hatcher will give his annual address to the faculty and staff on Mon., Oct. 2, at 8:00 p.m., in the Rack- ham Lecture Hall. Ali staff members and their wives are invited. The five Distinguished Faculty Achievement Awards, the four Distinguished Serv- ice Awards for Instructors and As- sistant Professors, and the Henry Rus- sel Award will be presented at this meeting. A reception will be held in the Michigan League Ballroom immedi- ately after the conclusion of the meet- ing. College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, and Schools of Business Ad- ministration, Education, Music, Natural Resources, Nursing, and Public Health: Students who received marks of I, X, or 'no report' at the end of their last semester or summer session of at- tendance will receive a grade of "E" in the course or courses unless this work is made up. In the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts and the Schools of Music and Nursing this date is by October 16, 1961. In the Schools of Business Administration, Education, Natural Resources, and Pub- lic Health this date is by October 18, 1961. Students wishing an extension of time beyond these dates should file a petition with the appropriate official of their school. In the School of Nurs- ing the above information refers tq non-Nursing courses only. School of Nursing Students: Fresh- man Tuberculin Testing Oct. 2, 4, 6, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m., Room 8, 4108 SNB. BCG Program: Oct. 16, 3:00 to 5:15, Room M, 4108 SNB. School of Nursing Students: Sopho- more Tuberculin Testing. Enrollment In Sept. 1960, Oct. 4 & 5, 3:00 to 5:30 p.m.. Room M, 4108 SNB. *Enrollment in Feb. or June, 1961, Oct. 2, 4, 6, 3:00 to 5:00 p.m., Room rM, 4108 SNB. BCG Program: Oct. 16. 4:00 to 5:15 p.m., Room M, 4108 SNB. Events Monday Engineer Mechanics Seminar, Mon., Oct. 2, at 4:00 p.m. in 305 West Engi- neering Bldg. R. M. Haythornthwaite, Prof. of Engineering Science, will speak on "Mode Change during the Plastic Collapse of Beams and Plates." Coffee at 3:30 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge. Automatic Programming and Numer- ical Analysis Seminar: "The 709 Input- Output Supervisor" by Robert Graham on Mon., Oct. 2, at 4:15 p.m. in Com- puting Center, Seminar Room. Placement POSITION OPENINGS: Alco Products, Inc., Schenectady, N.Y. --Openings for Engineers (Nuclear, De- sign, Mech. - Development, Nuclear- Chemical, & Project). Also Metallurg- ist, Engineering Programmers, Head of Instrumentation. & Control Unit, and Chemist. All require at least BS & ex- perience. Miniature Precision Bearings, Inc., Keene, New Hamp.-Staff Accountant with BS in Acet. and minimum of 2 years experience. Age 25-35. Opportuni- ty for growth with increase in respon- sibility and wages. VA Hospital, 2215 Fuller, Ann Arbor -Ass't Engineering Officer-Immediate opening for graduate engineer asAss't of Chief Engineering Officer. To be in 4 4 Ail 4 4 A I