$4e tir ]Dt aily Seventy-Fifth Year EnrrED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS OF THE UNIYERSTrY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AuTHO ITY OF BOARD IN CONTaOL bF STVDENr PUBUCATIONS Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. The University's Better Side: Jack Manning hy H. Neil Berkson mA0 MAYNARD ST., ANN AROOm, MICH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers orthe editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, 24 JANUARY 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: LAUREN BAHR What Comes After the Glamor of 'Greekuess' TODAY IS PLEDGE SUNDAY. For the women who have taken part in rush, it marks the climax of two weeks of con- stant, if not confused, activity. Although the emotional states of those involved range from euphoric to depres- sive, the universal feeling is one of re- lief because it is over. However, as the pledges are carried over the portals of their soon-to-be-homes, "it" has just be- gun. What will they find when the glamor of "Greekness" wears off? The fraternity system has been un- der strong attack in the last decade. It. is a diminishing college institution, and many rejoice at the prospect. Although the opposition acknowledges certain su- perficial comforts afforded by the sys- tem, better feed and greener lawns are hardly indispensable assets. 'TRADITIONALLY, the fraternity system has been attacked because of its nab ture. It is a selective group. However, the present difficulty with the system is not its selection process, but its prod- uct. A self perpetuating unit can become, narrow and, if it does, it can be socially' and intellectually stifling. The value of college is confrontation with and learning from differences. The identification that may occur from in- ternal breeding limits the scope of the individual. 1Iowever, this stifling experience can occur in any group which is too self-ori- ented. Just as the sorority woman is criticized for her "in"' group, so should the beatnik be made aware of his closed community, and the residential college should beware of self-centered isolation. Furthermore, it is not the individual in the group that prevents diversity, for by definition he contributes to the varie- ty of parts that compose the whole. It is the image of the group which is perpetu- ated by opponents and proponents of the system which encourages social and in- tellectual suffocation. THIS YEAR PANHELLENIC has shown an awareness of the problems that confront the system. The new rush pro- posal illustrates the initiative and real- istic approach of its leadership. How- ever, it was not accepted by the sorority membership; they were afraid. This fear focused on change-the assumption of greater responsibilities for themselves and for the prospective sorority women. A be- lief in their own maturity and ability to act as women was lacking, as was their recognition of the future. It would be appropriate at this time for sorority women to examine their rai- son d'etre. Under the barrage of attacks it has perhaps been lost. A SORORITY is a social group which encourages and exists from the inter- action of its members. Mystic bond or not, it's a living, functioning unit. It is the individual's relation to the group that makes it a productive or {destructive ex- perience. In a campus of this size the undergraduate sorority provides a very necessary nuclear group. However, it should be recognized just as that, a home base, from which it is very important to emerge; it is a part of the University but it is not the axis upon which the Univer- sity turns. Such a group needs the cooperation of its members and clearly defined direction through its leadership. In his relationship to the group the in- dividual may derive many benefits. One learns through contact with different personalities and opinions-2000 soror- ity women may not be easily stereotyped. As a member the individual is subordi- nate to the system, but her identity must remain separate from it. PERHAPS THE BENEFITS that can be derived from the sorority system can be attained from other sources. However, it would demand a great deal more indi- vidual effort, and at a university this size where the primary concern of its popula- tion is the pursuit of a respectable grade- point, it is dubious that such an effort would be made by many people. In the next few years the problems and promises of the sorority system will be under further scruitiny, and future gen- erations will not be kind. The system should pause and reflect upon its pur- pose, for it should not be satisfied with sunporches alone. -KAY HOLMES "YOU KNOW," he said, "most of what The Daily says about the University has merit. Lord knows ther are a lot of soft spots, and you do quite a job of putting a spotlight on them. But you don't focus enough on the compensating factors-the people who make the University bearable and sometimes even exciting." The speaker: John J. Manning, Jr., who, although he most certainly wasn't blowing his own horn, is one of the people who does make the University both bear- able and rewarding day after day. Jack Manning is the administrative assistant in the literary college's Junior-senior counseling office. He is the resident director of Fletcher Hall. He is a teaching fellow in the English department aiming for his PhD. sometime this summer. If you can catch him running between one of his three offices, chances are you can tie him up for a whole day. He has an aptitude for assuming other people's problems until they are eliminated. MANY STUDENTS have come in contact with Manning, and most would testify to his extraordinary suspicion of red tape. When dealing with people he doesn't talk rules and regulations unless they make sense; he is the first to worry when when they don't. Thus, when a number of student activities people seemed especially dazed by trimester pressures last December, Manning decided to launch a full-scale study of the relationship between classroom and extra-class- room life. His object: to determine whether or not the literary college could provide any concrete recognition of the role of activities. Primarily on his own time he has spent long hours researching the problem, looking for both significant patterns and solutions. ON HIS OWN TIME as well, Manning last year talked to virtually every resident adviser in the dormitory system in order to prepare a housing office report on how to attract better staff. Indicative of the University's other face, Director of Housing Eugene Haun, who had encouraged the report, had yet to read it six months after it was turned in. Manning has his faults, too. He is a Massachusetts Republican with certain qualms about Texas Democrats, The University should have more people like him. * . . . THE ALREADY-PUBLICIZED course description proj- ect moved into its critical phase over the weekend. Questionnaire forms came off the presses and have now been distributed. The aim of the project-to provide concentrated, public student comment concerning courses and profes- sors at the University-has proved beyond reproach. Sceptics have centered their fire, and rightly so, on the lack of a scientific sample. The participating student groups shared this con- cern long before the proposed booklet was announced. The handicaps to a scientific sample, however, were insurmountable. Both time pressure and the necessity of University cooperation-class records would be needed to conduct such a sample, and the University would be understandably reluctant to provide such a sanction- were considerations. AT THIS POINT two things become necessary. In order to be defensible, the booklet must represent a very high response. Moreover, student comments must be thoughtful. As trite as that may seem, if this booklet is merely a means to pay back grudges it won't be of any use. In any less-than-scientific survey the danger of getting only extremes of opinion is great. The success of this survey depends on the considered participation of everyone. War Footing 9K 'A ~A?~INN, L y. 2i -Cy 'clA+4a.4'v. ut The Week in Review Staying in Movies-and School By JOHN KENNY Assistant Managing Editor and LOUISE LIND Assistant Editorial Director IN THE SECOND WEEK of the winter term, student activity experienced an upward surge as several student groups picketed and "stayed-in" local movie houses, and eight others prepared a questionnaire for a course eval- uation booklet. More than 600 students par- ticipated in the stay-in demon- stration initiated by Student Gov- ernment Council at the Michigan Theatre Friday night; 30 others from Voice Political Party, the Independent Socialist Club and the Young Democrats picketed outside. A second demonstration was scheduled for last night. Both demonstrations were called to protest the recent admission price increases at the three But- terfield theatres in Ann Arbor. Students hoped to counter the 25 per cent price increase by ie- maining in the theatre through part of the second show, thus preventing the accommodation of patrons for ,that performance. GRADUATE Student Council, Inter-Quadrangle Council, Assem- bly Association. Student Employes Union, International Students As- sociation, the Lawyers Club and the Young Republicans endorsed the SGC action. Student leaders hoped to use the demonstration to influence the Butterfield management to lower prices and to urge the Re- gents, with a minority interest in the Butterfield chain and two representatives on the ' x-man' Butterfield board of directors. to "take a stand" and use their in- fluence to reduce prices to the original level. SGC planned no further protest action until Wednesday. in the hopes that some agreement could be reached before further action is taken. The Butterfield theatre man- agement seemed fairly unrespon- sive to the student protest Friday night. Gerald Hoag. manager of the Michigan Theatre, noted that the students were "having their fun," and claimed "there is no chance" that prices be lowered. ON THE SURFACE, student agitation over the theatre price hike almost seems to be an index of the fact that ,theterm.,is only two 'weeks old and, exams- and papers required in literary college courses will not fall due for sev- eral weeks. The entire issue seems to belong to the general category of "college days." However, there is a deeper is- sue: prices charged by Ann Arbor merchants are generally inflated; the Butterfield increase is not an isolated event but one in a series of prices rises students wish to halt now. Meanwhile this week, eight stu- dent groups - Assembly Associa- tion, Interfraternity Council, The Daily, Panhellenic Association, Graduate Student Council, Inter- Quadrangle Council, the Michigan Union and the Women's League- continued work on a course evalu- ation booklet scheduled for ubli- cation in The Daily in February. Representatives from the eight groups completed a questionnaire to survey student opinion on courses and teachers. It sis sched- uled for distribution among stu- dents early this week. * * * IN OTHER student action, As- sembly President Maxine Loomis called Monday for a merger be- tween Assembly House Council and Inter-Quadrangle Council. Miss Loomis cited three reasons for the proposed merger: -The growth of co-ed housing on campus and the construction of co-ed Bursley Hall on North Campus merit a co-educational governing body; -Staffing of a single,. co- educational body would eliminate current recruitment problems and would allow for a more selective and extensive recruitment system; -A merged Assembly and IQC would provide a "center of con- tact" between Bursley Hall and Central Campus. * * * ALTHOUGH this proposal raises several problems concerning the implementation' of the merger, it is basically a sound one and seems a logical follow-up to the recent -and pending-decision to merge the studenthstudents activities groups of the Union and the League. From the administration this week came the statistics on stu- dent dropouts during the fall term. According to the figures released by the office of the associate dean of the literary college, substan- tially fewer literary college stu- dents were asked to leave the Uni- versity at the end of last semester than after the fall semester in any of the past few years. The number of students asked not to return (including some later readmitted) this term drop- ped to 299-a decrease of 103 from the previous fall term. The percentage of students who dropped out because of academic difficulty was cut almost in half, as only 1.4 per cent were forced to leave. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR:' Theatre Scandal a la. Berkeley A Sword of iDamocles 'THEY'RE RIOTING at Michigan" is a headline, or radio or television news announcement, that is presently appear- ing in some of the University administra- tors' worst nightmares. With the touchy budget review process getting under way in Lansing, and with that greatest of all public relations schemes, the Sesquicentennial fund drive, gathering carefully nurtured momentum around the country, the very thought of the word RIOT is enough to give said ad- ministrators of these programs the screaming heebeejeebees. The best laid plans of mice and men... The ugly spector of Berkeley pis haunt- ing their thoughts like a sword of Dam- ocles. Many reasons can be advanced why Berkeley won't happen here. No leaders like Mario Savio, no issues concrete enough and strong enough to really get a hold of, student apathy or even hostility toward "socialist RIOTS." BUT SUCH DISCUSSION is meaningless if Berkeley does happen here, as it might. Who is to say what unnoticed is- sue might set off the bomb, what lead- ers might suddenly appear to organize the mobs, what mobs might appear out of nowhere to join the excitement? RIOT is a powerful and magic and strange word, cropping up in the strangest places. It wasn't a RIOT at the Michigan The- atre last night, but a thousand or so stu- dents, cramped into close quarters with at least a semblance of a common griev- ance ... the administrators better thank their lucky stars. Right now, for a change, the students are holding a few trump cards. Played well, some meaningful returns can be H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor reaped. The University administrators have considerable vested interest in the status quo-$100 million worth, if one -wanted to be dramatic, Sesquicentennial plans plus the Lansing appropriation. It is therefore entirely logical to say that campus tranquility is worth a good many millions to the University. What is it worth to the student? Those millions aren't going to benefit him. He won't be here when they start to take effect. The students, in return for being tranquil, deserve their return here and now. And the administration, if' pressed, knows it is going to have to give them these returns or watch that sword of Damocles come down upon its collec- tive neck. A LONG LIST of demanded returns can be handed to administrators. Barry Bluestone made one up not long ago. No promises, delays, evasions or excuses need be accepted in return. Either administra- tive action or student reaction. Black- mail? Not exactly, fair bargaining is a nicer term. Here are a few not-unfair demands: -Make more University facilities avail- able to show movies that students can at- tend while boycotting the Butterfield conspiracy, and if Butterfield tries to play rough, i.e., use its influence to cut off the sources of movies for non-Butter- field Ann Arbor showings, the University has both legal talent and considerable influence to use in return; -Change the Regents policy so that a cooperative bookstore can be set up to sell new books at discount prices on Uni- versity property; -Work to get more teeth into Ann Ar-' bor's fair housing laws and more inspec- tion into slum apartments and rooms for students; pricing practices for all non-University/ housing could also stand inspection; To the Editor: EVERSINCE the children at Berkeley came up with an excuse to get a little pr, their counterparts here at the factory have been waiting for their chance. Along comes the Great Theatre Scandal, and they have it. It's nice to see them finding an outlet, all in the great Ameri- can tradition. But what is so sacred about the old rate of $1 per adult head? I agree with the Butterfield boys- the rate should be changed-but maybe to $.50 This is because the average movie is worth about this (given a high rate of inflation). WHAT the stay-inners are tell- ing the owners, though is that the movies are worth $1 per head. It seems that these students would rather be charged $1 for a $.50 movie than be charged $1.25. This is understandable but still kind of silly. I refuse to participate in any- thing but a stay-home until the goal is made a $.50 ticket or a $1 movie. What we really need in this area is free-enterprise pay TV, high quality at a reasonable price. Competition would do more to bring down the movie prices than all these demonstrations, resolu- tions (and letters to the editor). -Walter W. Broad, '66E UMSEU To the Editor: I WOULD like to clarify the na- ture of the Student Ernployes Union in relation to the letters printed in The Daily Jan. 23. It appears that at least four out of 26 students employed by Drake's are satisfied with their wages and working conditions. From this it would seem a logical conclusion. (if these four students are rep- resentative) that the union has no place at Drake's. However, UM- SEU, because of its unique dual function may operate in two dif- ferent capacities. The first of these two capacities is that all employes unions-bar- gaining and mediation relying on the power of strike-but because of the nature of a student work force, being, mobile; and easily re- placeable, this traditional function is not a practical one for a student employes union. Therefore in this particular case we cannot exercise the primary and most powerful function of a labor union. We must utilize an-' other force which is just as pow- erful but in a more intangible way, that of, public opinion. In this second capacity we may function as a social reform agency calling community attention to what we feel is of vital concern. * * IF WE were acting strictly as an employes union, we could not take any direct action without the consent and participation of the employes involved. However, there is a possibility that these people's jobs might beendangered if they did participate in this kind of union activity. In this particular instance we are using this second power of public opinion to put pressure on an establishment which pays wages below the stan- dard we are trying to achieve, $1.25 an hour. I sincerely doubt that the 26 student employes all are satisfied with their working conditions. This kind of action cannot pos- sibly affect their jobs and it will call attention to a situation that should be remedied. --Gail Smiley, '67 UMSEU Executive Committee Vocational School? To the Editor: I WOULD LIKE to ask Mr. Vetz- ner and the 70 students who backed out of history of art 102, what is a university? It appears to me that a lot of students who are now attending the University should be in a trade school, for all they want from the University is a developed skill in one narrow field. It would be interesting to know the number of scholars walking around this campus who are mere- ly putting in their time between orientation and graduation. How many are looking for the path with the least work and the small- est amount of knowledge, and how many are willing to sacrifice the grade point for knowledge? If a person can graduate from a university knowing no more than the material in one specific field, then that university should be listed as a vocational school. -Nancy Kriegn,'68 'COLLEGE GIRL': Get Yourself Some Better Entertainment At the State Theatre ANYON who decides to protest X high ;movie prices by staying an extra quarter of the way through the show now at the State Theatre deserves the Purple Heart. First there is a feature called "The Sound of Speed," starring Lance Reventlow and the Scarab (no, silly, it's a racing car!), whose sole 'purpose seems to be that of testing the bass response of the State Theatre's speaker systems. Then, following a rather medio- cre cartoon, comes an even worse motion picture, "Get Yourself a College Girl." Apparently it's writ- ten into every Miss America's contract that she has to make a movie whether Hollywood likes it or not, so look-out-Doris Day- here-comes-Mary Ann Mobley! She and the other up-and-coming young starlets in the film display a wide range of acting talent (from worse), while at the same time dressing so as to display everything they've got (or else emphasize some things they haven't). SINCE THE PLOT of "Get Yourself a College Girl" is about as thin as Quad soup (Miss Mob- ley plays a modern-day Joan of Arc who does a slow burn more than once during the course of the picture), MGM has padded it to the hilt with no less than six name combos,- possibly to take everyone's mind off Miss Mobley's own particular style of singing. Among these are the Animals (so-called because they look like animals, act like animals and sing like animals), the Dave Clark Five (the poor man's Beatles, who somehow manage to croon out a song with a minimum of lip move- ment, sort of pop-song ventrile- quism), organist Jimmy Smith (the poor man's E. Power Biggs) and-worst of all--Astrud Gil- berto, who sounds as if she were ELLA FITZGERALD CONCERT: An Evening of Top-Flight Entertainment LAST NIGHT'S Ella Fitzgerald show provided a tasty blend of top-flight jazz. The mixture included many styles and incited some interesting comparisons. The program opened with the always-cohesive Oscar Peterson Trio in performances of jazz originals that were arranged for a recent album. Terry played with crackling zest and humor and floored everyone with his con- versational brand of scat singing that is really a vocal adaptation of his horn phrases. .* * more showy and metallic style. Miss Fitzgerald varied her tem- pos and moods effectively and was accompanied by a formidable jazz group in its own right, the Roy Eldridge Quartet, featuring the lyrical piano of Tommy Flan- agan. Flanagan's spare, linear style contrasted sharply to Peter- I