Seventy-FiftbYear EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDETs OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGA1 UNDEKR AUTHORiTY OF BOARD IN CONrrOL OF TSUDrENT PUBLICATIONS >: EachTme I Cnced To See Franklin D _ ., Fraternities, Sororities: The Unexamined Life -. openiona Are free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN AEoi, MICH. tht Will PrilP# NEwS PHONE: 764-0552 by Ii. Neil Berkson Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf f writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. ,. 'I SUNDAY, SEPTEMBE, 13, 19 64 NIGHT EDITOR: LAURENCE KIRSHBAtJM Honors Housing Threatens Goals of Liberal Education HONORS HOUSING is only one more way in which the University steers away from the goals of liberal education. The thought of honors housing is not- able: put brains together and they will benefit from each other's presence, but the system does not work that way. Rather than a broadening influence, brains on brains is a narrowing one. If some of the brain power in the University is narrowly focused the school itself must follow that influence, no longer offering a broad educational experience but train- ing minds In narrow paths instead. THE PROBLEM begins with the very se- lection process, the criterion of which is none other than the almighty grade- point. The gradepoint is not so much a measure of raw intelligence, however, as a measure of exactly what kind of work individuals% are doing. Although it occa- sionally inidicates an overall knowledge, more often it is the sign of a student who learned exactly what he needed to know for his papers, hourlies and pop quizzes. Such a method of'education is not nece . sarily wrong but is definitely limiting. Take such individuals, slap them to- gether in the same living quarters, andt the result can be disastrous. The group, geared already to preserving their repu- tations through grades,-can only become more competitive. Intensely they bend to the books and grind out what they must have to pass their courses with flying colors.f THE EFFECTS are far from beneficial to the students and the University. A T ONE TIME fraternities and sororities were an integral part of college life. Now Greek chapters here contain a small percentage of University students. Their numbers have been relatively static for some years! and should begin to decline in the near future. The University has passed the system by. This has happened, I believe, for two reasons, the second of which. interests me most.' On the one hand; a fraternity offers no 'unique ad- vantages, no benefits which cannot be obtained else- where. Rush talk to the contrary, a house neither com- plements nor supplements academic life-it is a social organization and was never meant to be an intellectual proving ground. Nor does a house have some singular atmosphere which creates friendships. In these respects a fraternity is most often irrelevant to personal develop- ment. On the other Viand, fraternities are highly anti-in- tellectual. They take some of society's worst values- status seeking, materialism, conformity, discrimination- and structure them into a closed system. - THE ESSENTIAL element in any person is his in- dividuality. The University is valuable to him only in- The student forgets the existence of Uni- versity facilities other than his own desk. The University, catering to the grade- oriented student, is directed from the. goals of liberal education.. Students in such an atmosphere have no time to discover that they can learn selectively and on their own, narrowing their interests in some fields and broad- ening them. in others. They can develop no .sense of acadermic independence if they do not sometimes leave the strict outline of their course syllabi. They leave the University crammed with facts, but often devoid of originality and initiative. On the other hand, the University, in giving such an "opportunity" to students with high gradepoints, loses them. It takes the people who are leaders by virtue of their grades and further, dis- courages them from individualism. If the grade point leaders stick to the course outline like flies to flypaper, the other students have no choice but follow or flunk., CONSEQUENTLY the University ceases to be a .source of liberal education, where is taught the key to knowledge and the beginnings of wisdom, and becomes merely a trade school, an assembly line for people well qualified to make money in whatever way they have chosen. Obviously the above is an exaggera- tion, but not without pertinence. Mixture of types never hurt anyone. It should be encouraged, not stifled. -KAREN KENAH sofar as it develops his sense of self. Paradoxically, however, he can learn about himself only in relation to what he learns about everything around him. This would not be true if man could live apart from society, but he cannot. Therefore, to move with any assurance he must have a broad comprehension of the fantastically complex events which shape his life, The more limited his experiences, the more likely that he will face "foreign" situations with which he will be un- able to cope rationally. (Parenthetically, it would be interesting to analyze the Goldwater movement in these terms.) THE IRRESOLVABLE weakness in fraternities is that they narrow the range of their members' exper- iences. Take any fraternity or sorority on campus and you will find a group of people with basically the same., socio-economic backgrounds. Moreover, the group's char- acteristics are constantly in-breeding, so that the differ- ences members might initially bring to a house blend, to some extent, over the course of four years. The fraternity-sorority member, then, has a heavy. intercourse with people who are exactly like he is. This is why houses are so easy to type. Members come from the same relative environment with the same relative upbringing, the same relative values, the same relative prejudices. Group psychology, functioning at a sub-con- scious level, reinforces an entire thought system without ever examining it. A proof of this situation lies in the phenomenon called rush. Most fraternity-sorority members will quickly admit to the hypocrisy of the coming weeks. The judg- ments are all arbitrary; there is no real way to evaluate a personality. There is a way, however, to determine who "belongs" and who doesn't. Rush works because people of a certain environmental framework instinctively recognize their own. THE SYSTEM has more of an effect on some people than it does on others, and it would be ridiculous to assert that every fraternity-sorority member is an irre- trievable, conforming anti-intellectual. In addition, some houses are much narrower than others. Nevertheless, a closed system has no role in the edu- cational process. Greek life is a leftover relic from a superficial era, and there is no way that it can catch up with the present. } t K r ,,,v, / r , . t "= :' , 6 F {' F {" 71 K 'I {t L _ f _ L. i J t ' ' .. -i? j 4ic v t { . . : tR"l PARTY CHOICE: Presidential Campaign Echoes That' of 1896 / I a' ' .r,. i Hypocrisy of Crowding J//,/1 .. °! J +.f ' , j ff 4 : , rr , )t :i . .' . 2 " (({,, ' f S 7 ' r f d f . f i 't .i f ; a ~r 7§' ia'rrif 4 . i THERE CAN BE only agonizing frus- tration at the hypocrisy of a university- which makes a great show of admitting all capable in-state students and then de- nies them the education they had been promised. Where is there anything ap- proaching a livable dormitory situation in the temporary living quarters of South Quad? Where is a student to get a-liberal education when all the desired courses are closed to him? The "high standards"; of the University are irrelevant under such restrictions. . What is particularly frustrating about the "crisis," as it has come to be called, is that there is no obvious scapegoat on whom the blame can rest. It seems sense- less to blame the University administra- tion. Although certain - factors, like a large increase in the number of applica-. tions to the University, may liave indicat- ed that a crisis was coming, the adrin- istration's hands were tied. State appropriations made on a year- to-year basis prevented the University, from making long-term projections and plans. Limited to hiring faculty a year in advance, the University could not tell- from one year to another how many new faculty members it would need or belable to hire. Capital outlay restrictions and , lean budgets prevented the University from building up a cushion of faculty, classrooms and office space. , UNCERTAINTY also plagued the Office of Student Affairs in any plans it may have had to increase the amount and variety of student housing. Its plans for more housing depended on future' enroll- H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor ments, which in turn depended on the unpredictable University budget. Other variable factors included the new trends in student living and types of residence halls and the lessened restrictions on liv- ing outside of the residence hall system. The Legislature is one step away from the University administration in respon- sibility for the crisis. And yet it can- not be wholly blamed, for it is locked in the political battles which it seems un- able to, avoid. Its refusal to avoid the crisis--to provide adequate funds-can be understood only in a context of poli- tical expediency. Higher education was treated as a low priority su bject, a luxury that-with funds limited by insufficient state revenue sources-could be cut to reduce the budget. And the fact that such cuts in college aid were tolerated and even condoned in- 'icates the inability of the public to come to terms with the problems it faces, espe- cially when those problems seem worlds away.t ALL THE ADVERTISEMENT and publi- city in the past decade warning of,,the dire effects of a college squeeze were not enough. The apathy and irresponsibility fostered by the previous generation's in- ability to cope with what to. them were problems of the future has resulted in the present "crisis." --MICHAEL SATTINGER Associate Managing Editor Shrapnel IKE A PIECE of shrapnel boring into my spine, the words in that neat, in- nocent looking ad on the second page of The Daily induced a sharp stinging pain. "U. of M. UNION wishes to announce the appearance of Cmdr. George Lincoln Rockwell on Campus in October." How can a; student organization dignify Rockwell, an avowed Nazi, with an invita- tion to appear on campus? This is a man whose symbol is the twisted cross of Hit- ler. He shouts his adherence to the hideous Nazi creed. I DO NOT WISH to imply that he does not have the right to speak. He pre- sents no clear and present danger to the United States. His constitutional right to speak is not questioned. But should he speak in dignity? Should be he introduc- N ':F K ' ; -7. 6' T H E WAR RiR&S The Week inReview Issue s AwaitingSolutions By HAROLD WOLMAN THE CHOICE rather than an echo which Senator Goldwater says he offers the American pub- lic is the sort of choice which has seldom confronted this country during presidentialelections. In- .deed, it is necessary to goallthe' way back to 1896 in order to view an election when a comparable situation existed. In that election, it was the Dem- ocrat, William Jenninigs Bryan, who offered the choice, while the Republican, William McKinley, was the candidate of the status quo. Without stretching history too far, some rather interesting similarities can be observed be- tween the elec ion of 1896, con- sidered by some historians a turn- ing point in our history, and the election to be held this November. Both Bryan and Goldwater can be considered men of the West, steeped in the Western tradition of rugged individualism and direct action. Bryan, like Goldwater, shared the traditional Western attitude uof distrust and suspicion of. the urban 'and sophisticated East. * .. * LIKE GOLDWATER and his followers, Bryan disliked the East- ern financial establishment, which he .felt dominated the economic life of the country from banks and investment houses of New York City. However, unlike Goldwater, Bryan was not able to write-off the East, since his hope for vic- tory' rested in an 'alliance of Southern and Western farmers with Eastern labor. Bryan referred to his campaign trips in thenEast as forays into- "enemy country," an attitude which partially ex- plains why he was not able to con- summate the alliance. The East, for its part, feared Bryan in much the same way that it now fears Senator Goldwater. Bryan was seen as an extremist, an anarchist, whose election would sound the death knell for the United States as it had been known. The New 'York Herald Tribune denounced Bryan and the Populist movement as, "the hys- terical declaration of a reckless and lawless crusade of sectional animosity and class antagonism .No wide 'eyed "and ratle- brained horde of the red flag ever proclaimed a fiercer defiance of law, precedent, order, and gov- ernnient." * * * AS THE Herald Tribune ob- served, the effect of Bryan's cam- paign was 'to create a sectional' division pitting, in broad terms, the industrialism of the East against the agrarianism of the South and West. Faced with this situation, William McKinley chose to campaign in much the same manner that Lyndon Johnson seems to have chosen. McKinley's emphasis' was on national unity and prosperity--"the full dinner pail" was his campaign slogan. Furthermore, McKinley played upon the popular fear of Bryan's free silver monetary policy just e as Lyndon Johnson is doing with Barry Goldwater's nuclear policies. However, McKinley withhis judicious, carefully prepared speeches and his front porch cam- paign was unable to arouse much enthusiasm-a problem which Johnson, too, seemfs to be ex- periencing. Most of the enthusiasm in the campaign was generated by the Populist followers of Bryan who, like the more fervid rightist back- ers of Goldwater, were a fanatic breed. Indeed, the campaign took on the aura of a crusade; the elec- tion was seen by the Populists as a moral battle between Right and In 1896, McKinley, the conserva- tive, defeated Bryan, the radical, but it was one of the closest presi- dential elections in American.' his- tory. Bryan carried the entire South arid the West-except fo' California and Oregon. McKinley took every Northern state east of the Mississippi plus Minnesota, Iowa, and North Dakota. Of the three states which Goldwater con- siders critical for his election, California, Illinois, and Ohio, Bryan was able to win none. Yet Bryan garnered 47.8 per cent of the popular vote, and 176 elec- toral votes as opposed to Mc- Kinley's 271. Only two elections since 1896 have been closer. It might also be interesting to note that Bryan did not simply fade away after his close defeat. Instead, he was the Democratic nominee (and the losing can- didate) for President both in 1900 and 1908, and as late as 1912 Bryan still retained sufficient power in the party to determine the presidential nominee. LETTERS: Pol"aicies 'To the ditor; ON THE PAGESof the summer Daily I revealed a rumor which I had, heard concerning the Missis- sippi Project of the Council of Federated Organizations, a rumor which raised doubts in my mind aboilt the morality of COFO tac- tics. I requested an explanation from Miss Miriam Dann, the local fund raising representative of CO- FO. EDITOR'S NOTE: This article begins a series of regular Sunday morning features describing and analyzing in perspective prominent University news stories of the week. By JOHN KENNY Assistant Managing Editor and LOUISE LIND Assistant Editorial Director in Charge of the Magazine LIKE A MODERN photographic essay, this week pictured the University jumping the hurdles of crowded dormitories, Barry Gold- ater, and SGC ex-officio seats. The week, like an avant-garde movie, concluded with the Uni- versity- shown mid-jump. The issues are awaiting final resolu- tion. In an attempt to alleviate tlhe crowded housing situation which has placed 460 students in tem- porary dormitory quarters, Law- rence Lossing, '65, president of Inter-Fraternity Council, offered a proposal to allow this fall's up- perclass pledges to move into their fraternity houses without delay. * * * UNFORTUNATELY, this plan, one of the first concrete proposals for relocating the temporarily- housed students, involves only men. P a n h e 1l e n i c Association President Ann Wickins, '65, noted that sororities, already filled to capacity with members and trans- fers from other schools, would be unable to handle a similar plan for women. Vice-President for Student Af- fairs James A. Lewis, although willing to consider the plan, has thus far made no comment on it. Lewis is out of town for the leek- end and is expected to return early net wek .Hnefnllv a de- part motion asking written ex- planation of the $34 dorm fee hike made this summer without consent of the Residence Hail Board of Governors.) THE IHOUSING squeeze is one facet of the general enrollment crisis which this fall brought a record 29.000 students to the Uni- versity. Last spring, officials pre- dicted a 28,600 enrollment geared to this year's record $44 million operating appropriation. The literary college has been hardest hit by this enrollment in- crease. Literary college classes now contain more than 9500 stu- dents-250 more than expected. The freshman class alone num- bers 2,760 students. While University officials are concerned with explaining the sur- plus enrollment, some literary col- lege administrators have expressed the belief that the enlarged class sections will lower the general quality of education, especially in language recitation sections. ** * . ONE ADMINISTRATOR com- mented that larger sections and a greater number of closed courses would lower educational standards by increasing student frustration. The curious aspect of the situa- tion is that no one has yet been able to account definitely for the enrollment bulge. But almost 500 students living under strained conditions in dormitory laundry rooms, libraries and lounges last week weren't asking for explana- tions, but for adequate housing. The University's announced $70 reduction in dormitory fees for newly converted doubles and trip- les is perhaps well-intended, but does not solve the problem. an estimated 1000 University stu- dents aged 18-22 monthly cash benefits averaging $80. Eligible students are those whose fathers are retired,. disabled or deceased. Passage in an election year is al- most certain. The social security extension seeks to help those students who are presently fighting the battle of rising college costs without available parental assistance. * * * TWO NDEA bills are also under consideration. The first is a bill appropriating loan funds at a $800,000 ceiling per institution. The University will receive an es- timated $700,000 of these funds which will expire in June, 1965.. The second NDEA bill will ex- pand and extend the federal loan program for three years. This ex tended bill means more federal money will be available to more students at the University. The bill awaits conference ,action. Although the University this week finalized its reception treat- ment for Senator Barry Gold- water, expected here Sept. 26, Goldwater aids have not yet offer- ed a definite schedule of the sern- ator's visit.. When University President Har- lan Hatcher squelched rumors that Goldwater would be permitted to cross the football field' at half- time of the Air Force game, Mich- igan Republican campaign chair- man Tyrone Gillespie seemed un- perturbed: "After all, you can't waste a candidate's time at a foot- ball game."M * * * A FINAL AREA of indecision is the fate of The Daily editor's ex- officio seat on Student, Govern- ment Council. Wednesday night, Council approved a motion to .Because the rumor was a poten- tially damaging one, I wish now to take this opportunity to com- mend Miss Dann for her impres- sive frankness and honesty in ex- plaining the COFO policies which lay behind it. It is true, as Miss Dann pointed out, that our pre- judiced society finds danger to, whites much more al,arming than danger to Negroes, and hence It is also true that danger to whites is more likely to arouse concern about Mississippi brutality. No one can condemn COFO for recogniz- ing that fact because it is a fac which we all must recognize. MOST IMPORTANT, I think,;is the fact that Miss Dann was will- ing to discussI this point publicly, for that publicity concretely shows that white recruits are warned of the danger they face. In addition, COFO takes elaborate precautions, some of which were specifically explained to me by Miss Dann her- self. Since recruits are warned, and since precautions are taken, COFO cannot be accused of seeking in- jury to whites for publicity pur- poses, even though they recognize the functional positive effect of martyrdom in the case of whites rather than Negroes. If recruits are warned fully, as they are, then they have a free choice, and COFO cannot be said to be "using" them in any immoral sense. * * * THEREFORE, I wish to make it known that I have been convinced by Miss Dann on this point. So far as I know, there is no reason to withhold support from COFO . and everv reasnn t offer what- KENNETH WINTER Managing Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN Editnrial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN.............. Personnei flirector MICHAEL SATTIN(ER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY,:"........... Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE ...... Associate Editorial EDirector LOUISE LIND........Assistant jedltortal Director in Charge of the Magazine BILL ILLARD.).... .... .....Sports Editor TOMROWLAND....E......Associate Sports Editor GARY WYNER..... . .Associate Sports Editor CHARLES TOWLE......... Contributing Sports Editor Business Stafff JONATHON R. WHITE, Business Manager JAY GAMPEL ............Associate Business Manager JUDY GOLDSTEIN........,.,......iance Manager. BARBNARA JOHN4STON ......... .. Personnel Manager SYDNEY PAUKER...........Advertising Manager RUTH SCHEMNITZ ..............Systems Manager .1NIOR MANAGERS: Bonnie Cowan, Sue Crawford, Joyce Feinberg, Judy Fields, Judy Grohne, Sue Sucher. Pat Termini. C Welman. J SI I