u 4 3 irtiigan l aig Seventy-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUDLIcATrONs I jr- -- 14-RM Where Opinions Are Fr e 420 MAYNARD $T., ANN ARBOR, MIcH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID BLOCK Sorority System Must Clmb THE SORORITY SYSTEM at the Uni- without being accused of tre versity is facing a crisis this year, the information coming out Unless sororities learn to be open with ist" circle is filtered and re both themselves and the rest of the it may be presented to th( University community they will not suc- student body. Even the wo ceed in coping with the situation. sorority system are not inf One sorority, Phi Mu, has already been what goes on in the upper forced to leave the University because Presidents' Council. of inability to take pledges. Three others, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa Delta and SORORITY PRESIDENTS Zeta Tau Alpha, are facing serious mem- afraid that the student bership problems despite what the presi- out the truth which, in t dents and members of these houses would do irreparable damag would like students to believe, tem. They want to keep qui Before anything can be done to solve problems and present a un these immediate problems, the sororities the University, showing th must reevaluate themselves. Ann Wick- stable and infallible. They ins, president of Panhellenic Association, the truth. represents the new progressive outlook Bari Telfer, executive vic which the sororities must take, but un- Panhel, has said that the se fortunately she is being hampered by to destroy the preconceived the system. Her honesty has brought many students harbor regar more criticism than praise from the rest tem. The word "preconceil of the system. When she is honest-as context seems to imply "fa she was when she first stated that the how can the ideas be anyt three sororities mentioned above are in lacious if the sororities pers difficulty, a fact that cannot be denied- or masking the truth? The: she only met with strong censure. truth is hurting them m truth would. AS STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS, the sororities have certain obligations as JF THE SORORITIES wish well as certain privileges. So far they the problems they are nom have been taking advantage of the bene- must get down off their fits while ignoring the responsibilities: take their place on ground i primarily the responsibility of keeping rest of the student organiz the University aware of what they are University. doing. They must make the men As long as all publicity is positive or own system as well as the complimentary, there are no complaints student body aware of th from the sororities, but as soon as there need to be done. is a hint of criticism or negative publi- This is the only way that city, most of the chapters are up in arms. can retain a respected p The sororities have placed themselves member of the University on a hallowed ground, establishing limits beyond which no one is allowed to go -LAU The Crusade Marehes On 11. espassing. All of the "elit- efined before e rest of the omen in the formed about circles of the are afraid;. s might find heir opinion, ;e to the sys- et about their ited front to he system as are afraid of e-president of ororities wish notions that 'ding' the sys- ved" in this llacious," but hing but fal- sist in hiding ir fear of the ore than the to overcome w facing, they pedestal and level with the ations at the nbers of their e rest of the e things that the sororities osition as a community. REN BAHR GROWTH WON'T STOP inaWhy a Smi EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first The attitudes whic na t~wo-pr series. Thisr wek's ors represent are in t article discusses s o m e problems tosrpentaei created by the size of the literary sult of certain conce college. Next week's will consider of which are pure fo how the residential college might of which arise from solve these: problems, tions of the function By BURTON D. THUMA versity, and some of from the ways people IN THE FALL of 1963 I wrote a pressure of circumsta memorandum to the faculty of willing they are to the literary college on the residen- or less perilous exped tial college proposal and related The folklore appeai issues. I propose here to elaborate tion, deeply imbed on some of the points I raised in American mind, that that memorandum, but again I in itself a "good," p hasten to add that what I have cause in some way larg to say is strictly my own opinion to imply power, state and is not to be construed as rep- by some strange logic resenting the views of either the ity. To appreciate fu: faculty or the administration, of this notion, one1 Since the steadily increasing listen to a professi( growth of the literary college with prior to 1959and t its attendant problems.was one of manifest discomfortur the important factors prompting ka was admitted to the curriculum committee to rt.z- Then too, I am alway ommend the establishment of the the respect and eve residential college, it merits fur- dawns in the faces( ther discussion here. academic relativesa when I say (in reply my opin- evitable question) thai QUITE CANDIDLY, in m pn sityha an enrollmer ion, the literary college is now too 30,000 students. large, and this opinion, at least, * * I know to be shared by many ASEODcnrb members of thesliterary college is A SECOND contrib faculty. It is, of course, not shared isthe widely enjoyed by all. In fact, I have never dis- tially a big corporatio covered any proposition that is General Motors.Does unanimously endorsed by the fac- a board of directors, ulty, including, believe it or not, vice-president, divisio that the faculty is underpaid. this case called dean Nevertheless, I do havensupport. (department chairme But, the decision to permit or en- courage the growth of the Uni- borers (laughingly re versity and the literary college is university jargon as tl the responsibility of the Board of The products, of cot Regents and such a decision is students who ro off the resultant of a complex of vec- tors, if I may be permitted a Interesting conclusi rather loose physical analogy. ularly drawn from t These vectors represent the at- Those relating to t titudes of the Regents themselves, University should be the central administration, the pass by with a shudd deans, the legislature, the faculty to the following arg and the students. It is impossible, larger the corporatio of course to assign relative and better are the p strengths to these vectors, nor are produced in a giv can directions be assigned to all hence, the sounder iti of them, but the resultant is con- in which to invest th tinued growth-a growth that bids money. But since for fair to continue indefinitely. sity, the quality of th LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: all Residential College? ;h these vec- turn the re- ptions, some olklore, some misconcep- as of a uni- which arise react to the nce and how adopt more dients. rs in the no- ded in the large size is probably be- ge size seems us, and also, c, high qual- lly the force had only to onal Texan then toehis e when Alas- the Union. ys shaken by n awe that of my non- and friends y to the in- t the Univer- nt of nearly uting factor d misconcep- ity is essen- n, not unlike it not have a president, n heads (in ns), foremen en), and la- ferred to in the faculty)? arse, are the the assembly ns. ons are reg- these beliefs. he way the run, I shall er and move ument: The n, the more roducts that en tine and, is as a place he taxpayer's the Univer- he product is hard to evaluate, and since it cannot be demonstrated that one university produces Rolls- Royces and another Volkswagens, it is quite easy to assume that all uni- versities, after all, produce es- sentially the same quality of pro- duct. The cost of production should therefore be the same and the universities of the state al- located funds on the basis of the number of units "produced." * * * IT IS TRUE that the legislature is beginning to accept 'the fact that it costs more to train grad- uate students, particularly in highly specialized scientific areas, than it does freshmen, but the complexities of the problem are not yet really grasped. Although members of the University admin- istration try manfully to explain the differences in the teaching costs for graduate students versus seniors, juniors versus freshmen and sophomores, appropriate fac- ulty-student ratios, the high cost of specialized scientific apparatus, and that a distinguished faculty costs money, they know that the really telling argument is enroll- ment. The University now is asking the legislature for a very sub- stantial increase in appropriation, much of which is simply to per- mit us to catch up to where we think we ought to be. But to sup- pose that we shall receive any such increase in appropriation without increasing our enrollment is wishful thinking of the most naive sort. Couple all this with an understandable pride and loyalty to one's own institution, an all- too-human jealousy of what many unfortunately regard as our com- petitors, and one is forced to con- clude that no state university will ever voluntarily limit its own en- rollment. If such limitation is to occur, it must be done by the legislature. To these conditions we must now add the circumstance that all state institutions are faced with an unprecedented number of qual- ified applicants, and that there exists an undeniable moral ob- . . " ...BUT IT HURTS NOW ligation to the citizens of the state to take as many qualified state residents as possible, if not more, plus a similar obligation to the nation. Furthermore, we certain- ly want to maintain the cosmo- politan nature of the student body by taking as many out-of- state students as can be squeezed in. Therefore, until the enrollment in state institutions is limited by legislative action and, prior to that, more state institutions are established, one can only conclule that the University is going to continue to grow at roughly the taking into consideration all of the current conditions. Neverthe- less, I would hold this view even if we assumed the highly improb- able event that the legislature ganted us the increase in appro- priation which most of us believe necessary to handle adequately our present student body, with our present method of operation. There would be clear benefits, of course, especially for the students, but for the faculty some of the unfortunate effects of large size might well be increased. The ad- ditional classroom and office BURTON D. THUMA, associate dean of ..the literary college, has held this posi- tion since 1951. Thuma, who received all his ; ;degrees from the University, joined the faculty in 1928 as an instructor in psychol- ogy. He is presently director of the plan- ned residential college, and has been a member of several other University com- mittees and boards. same rate as over the past five years. IT IS perfectly true, perhaps unfortunately, that many of these same growth factors operate with- in the University .itself, if to a lesser degree. Although for the most part the literary college would like very much to halt its growth, this is not true of all the other schools and colleges on the campus, and, in general, the less so the smaller the school. This fact compounds the problem of the literary college because of its, service function. If the schools thus serviced continue to grow, the literary college will in effect grow even though it were to limit successfully its own enrollment. But it must recognize its obliga- tion here, and if it does not, the other schools and colleges can in no way be blamed for establishing their own auxiliary liberal arts departments, which, I am con- vinced, would lead ultimately to a state of academic chaos. Ac- cordingly, the literary college is forced into choosing the alterna- tives of either eventually becom- ing largely a service unit or, to avoid this, allowing a proportion- ate increase in its own students. The clear conclusion is that it will continue to grow along with the rest of the University. Convocation is Disappointment WILLIAM B. JACKSON, intelligent col- lege student, has a professor who is a secret% Communist agent. The teacher (bearded, with a monocle) subtly injects Communist ideology into his lecturers. The teacher invites Jackson to his house and teaches him Communist doc- trine. After the meeting, Jackson reads his Bible and in a moment of inspiration realizes he is being duped. Jackson goes to see the dean, and the professor is fired and subsequently deported as an underis- able alien. The above synopsis comes from a 10- cent comic book sold at Christian Anti- Communism Crusade rally last Satur- day at Ann Arbor High. OUNDS PRETTY FUNNY doesn't it? Naturally a large contingent of Uni- versity liberals was there to laugh it up, and they were not dissappointed. There was Fred Schwarz, the former Australian physician, claiming that "Communism and Fascism are the same thing.", There was Herb "I Led Three Lives" Philbrick whose services as an FBI' counterspy over a decade ago give him the right to say "It's an act of treason to invite a Communist to speak on a college campus." There was vivacious Janet Greene, the crusade's new music director. Mrs. Greene formerly had a television show in Columbus, Ohio, called "Cinderella and Her Friends." She quit to join the cru- sade and warn about the evils of Com- munism by singing folk songs to the tune of "Jimmy Crackcorn." But how about a few more jokes? The Christian Anti-Communism Cru- sade is a million dollar organization. Its financial backers include the presi- dent of Schick Razor and Rexall Drugs, the chairman of Bank of America, the publishers of the St. Louis Globe-Demo- crat and Life Magazine. Its sponsors include the superintendent of public instruction for Hawaii, and the superintendent of St. Louis schools. Political allies include the governor of Missouri and Stuart Symington. Add to them clergymen like Cardinal Cushing, who said, "You're on the side of the angels, Fred." SO WHILE the crusade quietly goes about peddling its views ("Past pro- grams to restrain Communist advance have been inadequate and defensive pro- grams alone will never prevail") to thou- sands of church groups and high schools, the liberals just keep on laughing. They laughed about another anti- Communist too. Hitler. -ROGER RAPOPORT To the Editor: EVERYTHING about the first convocation w i t h President Hatcher was a disappointment. Only about 100 students showed up. Hatcher spoke in generali- ties and refused to take definite and meaningful stands. The Daily --that acute critic of campus af- fairs-has lavished nothing but praise on a mediocre performance. Hatcher wrote a good speech for the occasion. It was aimed at building undergraduate confidence in the University and advertising the University's open-mindedness about the views of undergradu- ates. The President reaffirmed Uni- versity policy that undergraduates are the core of the University, that they are not "the forgotten man" to be "phased out." But he did not demonstratethis asser- tion with specifics, nor was he willing, in the question and an- swer period, to answer specific questions specifically. AT LEAST three of the nine "specific features that speak ele- egently of the University's inter- est and dedication to undergradu- ate education"-the honors pro- gram, the UGLI, the pilot pro- gram - are questionable. These were not discussed, nor were other important matters brought up in the question and answer period. Hatcher did announce the for- mation of a blue-ribben commis- sion of interested parties to study the wide ramifications of Univer- sity housing policies on itself, stu- dents and Ann Arbor. But that is all he said. He did not indicate what its composition or major areas of concern will be. In two most important areas raised in the question and answer period-housing and out-of-state students - Hatcher met specific questions with generalities. He re- fused to make a commitment be- yond broad statements, thus blunting communication the con- vocation intended to foster. HE CONTINUALLY noted the diversity and balance of housing choices in Ann Arbor and the University's intention to foster them, but did not say whether and how the University would maintain decent housing and a free choice among housing types. The occasion called for a clear statement one way or the other so that interested students know where they stand. The matter of out-of-state stu- dents came up several times. This writer asked ifnthe University is a "federal grant university," as outlined in Hatcher's speech and if so, what are the implications on out-of-state students, the na- discuss such crucial questions as: -Does a ceiling on out-of-state students create admissions differ- entials that border on the dis- criminatory? Michigan does not have the population to produce as many high quality students as those selected by necessity from the thousands of excess out-of- state applications. -Will there be an adequate in- tellectual climate that will. retain and attract good faculty members to teach a diminishingly cosmo- politan student body? -Does not the University, which took in more federalvthan state money last year, have a moral obligation to educate more of the nation's youth, not just Mich- igan's? IN ONE OF his best points, Hatcher challenged students to use the generally untouched chan- nels of communication to air their concerns. "The easiest way," Hatcher de- clared, "is to live listlessly on a dead level of monotony or to drift . . . into quiet desperation. The next easiest is to consume your energies in the fire of undirected revolt or rebellion or to starve them in cynicism and unbelief. The most difficult and most re- warding is to combine knowledge and understanding . . . with those golden moments of clear vision and faith." This year's student activists have chosen the second road rath- er than the superior third one. Hatcher has declared he will lis- ten to those on the third only. He may be too harsh, but the third road in the long run is the most effective. * * * . HATCHER was not insulted by the low turnout. Rather he was told that the majority of students are not really interested in chang- ing their fate at the University. Nor are the student leaders who did not show up. Their picket lines, mass rallies, demonstrations and petitions have been less ef- fective by their absense from the convocation. The Daily-which thought up the convocation in the first place --did not help matters. Aside from several brief mentions on the edi- torial page and some buried ad- vertisements inside, the event got very little play. The advance story was near the bottom of the page. No eye-catching banner or box was present to draw students to the event. Had some special play been given the event on page one last Thursday, double the number of people would have shown up. Both Laurence Kirshbaum and Editor H. Neil Berkson were so OffSet As with the colleges, so with the individual departments within the To the Editor: literary college, and at this level ALTHOUGH I imagine that v- a form of schizophrenia develops.' LutHOUyHrItiainaetsoe-Since the departments are affect- untary retractions are some- ed by the same growth vectors as what rare in The Daily's letter are the schools and colleges and column, I would like to take this the University itself, it is exceed- opportunity to apologize for my ingly rare for a department to say Nov. 7 letter. Not, perhaps, for that it does not want more un- the entire letter - the bulk of dergraduate students, and even which is an accurate account of rarer for it to; say that it does my feelings-but chiefly for the not want more graduate students. last paragraph, an "irresistible" What it asks for, of course, is a thrust which I should have re- larger faculty and more space. sisted. Yet it is at the departmental level I have noticed that the entire that the effects of size are most "Offset" controversy is beginning painfully felt, because here we find to swing toward the petty and the "assembly line crew." The col- personal, and I would like to cor- lective will is to grow, the in- rect immediately any steps which dividual will is to contract; the I myself may have taken in this result: ambivalence and frustra- direction. I bear the Generation tion. staff no ill will; I merely disagree Many, of course, hasten to point with its contention that Genera- out that the difficulty which the tion and the Offset magazine can- faculty experiences as a result not exist on the same campus. of continued expansion is that in- * * * IN PLACE of my last paragraph, crease in students almost always I would like to add this thought speace, facitiebefore n ease to my letter: Since my two pre- fore, weiligetmonyfutoyake-r vious letters have appeared in The fore we get money to take care Daily, I have been treated to sev- of the increase in students, we eral deliciously large scoops of must have the increase, and, as information (in private and as a a consequence, we seem always to response to my letters). This in- be i trouble. But it is then said formation was hitherto unavail- that if only we had adequate able either to me, to the public, faculty and facilities, taking on or to the Offset officials them- more students would present no selves. I do not know whether it problem. I quite agree that the has not been released because of prouat n wot tat all te problems failure on the part of The Daily,prvdbuthtalheroem the Board of Control, or some- of large size would therefore van- body else, but I heartily urge ish I cannot accept. those responsible to air out this * * * stuffy controversy with a few fresh AT THE OUTSET I said I be- facts. lieved the literary college is now -John Knox, '68 too large and at that point I was IRINA ARKHIPOVA: Russian Singer Proves to Be Talented Artist, LAST NIGHT at Hill Auditorium, Irina Arkhipova made her North American debut in an all-Russian program. Miss Arkhipova proved to be one of the finest young artists to be heard here in many years.* This reviewer did not know what to expect since she has only one re- cording available in the United States, however let's hope that we will be hearing much more of her in the future. Her program opened quietly with several songs of Prokofieff which made modest demands on the singer vocally while showing her dra- matic possibilities. With the Moussorgsky pieces, she showed herself to be a consumate artist; "The Four Songs and Dances of Death" are among the most subtle of Russian songs and every nuance was con- veyed to the audience. The Rachmaninoff songs allowed her to show her wide range and superb command of dynamics. For her first encore she sang a song by Rimsky-Korsakov which was virtually unaccompanied. * * * * M. HER, (T n TIXv. nnmhp, - ., n -av, niee i uhich many neonl buildings, laboratories, and park- ing structures would, in all prob- ability, be built in thecentral campus area. This would mean either crowding buildings on the 40-acre square and adjacent Uni- versity land, or taking over more private property in the vicinity. The economic effects to the town of the University acquiring more property in the central campus .area are not easy for me to eval- uate.cWhether the tax losses to the city would be made up by the increase in taxes resulting from additional faculty housing, is doubtful. In any event, many householders now complain of the encroachments of the University, and further expansion will only add to their unhappiness. But more seriously, certain of the problems which the literary college now faces would be inten- sified. Large departments would become larger. Department chair- men, who now find themselves floundering in the minutiae of ad- ministrative detail, would find the goingstill harder. The task is now becoming so distasteful that many chairmen are asking to be relieved of these responsibilities, and it is becoming increasingly difficult to cajole other members of the fac- ulty into taking on the job. IN ADDITION, the problems of communication within the literary college and the University will be- come intensified. Let us, for ex- ample, call the interaction be- tween two persons a "communi- cation unit." With three individ- uals we have three such units, with four individuals six units, with five individuals ten, with six individuals fifteen, with seven in- dividuals twenty one, and so on. It is easy to see that the group does not have to very very large before it is going to break down into sub-groups that tend to lose communication with each other. A moments reflection on this phe- nomenon will reveal at least one reason for the present malaise. In the larger departments now it is relatively rare for any one member of the faculty to have more than a nodding acquaintance with many members of his own department. Faculty participation in literary college, or even in de- partmental affairs will inevitably dwindle from the present low point. It is, I think, generally true that the larger the college the smaller the attendance at faculty meetings. I have not gathered the statistics, but I wager the propor- tion of the governing faculty that attends meetings of the literary college is considerably less than it is in other schools and colleges. With less faculty participation in policy, it is only natural that ad- ministrative officers will assume more policy determination. Fur- thermore, the larger the group, the greater is the likelihood of a divergence of opinion, the more difficult it is to arrive at a satis- factory collective decision, the more the individual feels frustrat- ed, and the greater is the in- dividual conviction that the fac- ulty have little or nothing to say about important decisions. IF NOW we take the more re- alistic view that only with an in- crease in the size of the student body will we get additional fa- cilities and faculty (assuming that we can get the faculty in view of the intense competition be- tweenuniversities) then the stu- dents begin to suffer. State Street and North University will begin to approximate Times Square. The students' feeling of anonymity, en- joyed, to be sure, by a few but not by most, will be increased. Contact with the faculty will be lessened. Opportunities for par- ticipation in extra-curricular ac- tivities will be reduced and what we now laughingly refer to as student government will become an absurdity. These conditions certainly pre- vail even though we assume ade- What Happened to the Slinky? y A MAN with the hostile voice of a grouchy police sergeant boomed over the television airwaves a couple nights ago. He was describing guns, tanks, bombs:Then he launched into a devious sentence about "destroying whole cities." No, this wasn't a scenario from some Class C horror film; it was an advertise- ment for kids' toys. With the Christmas gift season quickly approaching the toy makers are already making their pitch. Evidently war toys are really "going to sell like gangbusters" this year. THE ANONYMOUS announcer, in the most authoritarian tone he could mus- ter, vividly pictured "Commando," a gift that can make any boy into a calculating killer. Plastic hand grenades come with home can become a simulated war plant. FINALLY that police sergeant turned toy salesman ended his message. He was followed by what first appeared to be an educational show for kids about the Wild West. It brought back marvelous mem- ories of reading Landmark books about Wild Bill Hickok and Buffalo Bill. But the host with the cherubic smile wasn't praising these heroes; he was de- bunking the legends of the West. Buffalo Bill was a drunken bum who was often so boozed up he couldn't sit upright in the saddle, he said. Wyatt Eary was never even a marshall in Wichita. He wrote a fictitious autobiography which made him famous. General Custer was a stupid dandy who delighted in scalping defense-