Seventy-Third Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Troth Will Prev'ail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: GERALD STORCH Rush and Fraternity Living. Two Views O OFTEN, when a freshman enters th University, he is awed by the magnitude his surroundings, and instead of rising to me them, he shrinks from his rightful position. And it is for this reason-to help the studen make a contribution to the University, over an above his academic pursuits-that the man diverse groups in the University communit exist. Among these groups, of course, is the frater nity system, which, though much-maligned b its critics and ineffectually defended by it partisans, has its definite merits and make perhaps the most sizeable single contributio to the University's betterment. U NFORTUNATELY, 4n image of fraternitie has become entrenched over the years-ar image which has no longer any basis in fact No longer exist the hazing, pledge pranks paddle sessions, and other monkey-business that fathers so fondly recall. Gone are th joy boys and the good time Charlies, who con tributed so little, and took up so much. Interfraternity Council President John Mey erholz observed recently that "the constant fun raising and hazing are things of the past . . . fraternity based on sweat sessions and constan partying is not a modern fraternity. It is no characteristic of the fraternities on the Uni versity campus. "The foremost reason for the existence o fraternities here at the University is to supple- ment and complement the students' academics and not to place other things before them. If one is not interested in working hard aca- demically, the fraternity system has no place for him." TODAY, the fraternity system places its pri- mary stress upon the very academic excel- lence and curiosity which has made the Univer- sity a leader in world education. This is char- acterized by its scholarship programs, the "big- brother" system (where a freshman can get study help from a brother who may already have taken the same course), and adequate examination files, which provide a basis for orientation and study for one's courses. "We are concerned with students' academic life," Meyerholz has said many times. "Someone in the fraternity house is always ready to help. Freshmen, new to the campus and the 'college game,' can easily fall behind. The fraternity roLlizes this and makes them aware of it, so tiat they can be helped to correct their aca- demic difficulties." This coupled with the significance of na- tional and alumni ties offers a unique oppor- tunity. Each fraternity has a group of able and successful alumni, standing by to lend a hand -to convey a part of their experience to their old fraternity. TI E FRATERNITY can be an effective force within the University, combining the other- wise undirected efforts of individuals toward the common goal of excellence-in athletics, in activities, in community service, as well as in academics. However, this is not a situation which can just materialize, and the fraternity system em- ploys a phenonemon known as Men's Rush to facilitate it. Here the brothers get a chance to meet the prospective pledges and vice-versa, in order that both may determine whom and what they want. Fraternities choose their members on the basis of personal merit, which assures both sides that the new member will find a happy and agreeable place to live for the three remaining years or so of University life, BUT NO ONE, regardless of what precon- conceived notions he might have on the subject of fraternities, can expect to know whether or not he will find fraternity life agree- able unless he investigates the situation. For this reason, every freshman at the Uni- versity should rush. Somewhere in the Univer- sity's collection of 43 fraternities, there is a house for every man who wishes to join, but this niche cannot be located without investiga- tion, To be certain, the fraternity life is not for everyone, but oftentimes this is not readily ap- parent. And only a personal contact with the system will tell. A FRATERNITY can hold a very important spot in a student's life. It is tied to his alma mater after he graduates, just as it is a vehicle to his academic success while in college. And in this fast-changing world of today, when so much depends on brotherhood of some sort, a person can use every possible bit of experience living with his neighbor, rather than avoiding them. But most important of all-even more so than the memorable parties or the exciting football games or the campus activities-most important of all, the fraternity at the University has become a respository of knowledge, a place where the student can find help in his pursuit of education. And while you can learn until time immemorial, your knowledge is of no value unless you communicate. Fraternities teach students to live together, to play together, to work together-in a life e THE FIRST semester freshman beginning of rush today has had less than three weeks et to confront an entirely new way of life, the University community. Now he must consider t another new way of life, the fraternity. He d cannot do it. Ly The fraternity system is only one part of the y University community. It carries with it im- plications which alienate it from some aspects - of the community, unite it with others. y The freshman is not ready to comprehend s the total meaning of this community. He is still s learning, and will be for some time, just what fn effect the coming four years will have on his life. Asking him, within ten days of now, to make the important decision of whether or s not to join a fraternity denies him the right n to explore the roads open to him. t. For a fraternity means so much more than s, a housing unit. The new freshman can judge s, neither the fraternity system nor an individual e house. He does not understand what fraternity - means, or how it works. In spite of the fact that there are those on campus ready to fill - him with details, he is in no position to judge - the objectivity of what he hears. A t ON THE one hand, critics often gather all t the evils of society-bigotry, conformity, - anti-intellectualism, or what have you-and triumphantly point the finger of blame at f Fraternity. Then the system's defenders in- - dignantly react ;to the tune that fraternity s life,is the difference between success and fail- f ure at the University, and, ultimately, in life. - The President of Interfraternity Council, e John Keyerholz, made a fool of himself in such a manner the other night, as he tried to convince a group of freshmen that within the - 'confines of the fraternity system lie the - answers to all their problems. His speech was riddled with inanities and distortions. "THERE IS no better way to learn the art of communication," Meyerholz told his audience, "than by associating yourself with a smaller yet distinctive, important group r here on campus." Apparently, Meerholz considers students without the system, social outcasts. Looking at Michigan, however, we find that possibly 25 per cent of undergraduates, if that many, are Greek. The number of fraternity men, espe- * cially, is declining. Last year's rush was terrible. The number of deactivations is high. At least 15 houses on campus have less than 35 men, and five or more of those face possible with- drawal of recognition because they do not ful- fill IFC requirements for number of active members. IN DISCUSSING discrimination Meyerholz claims, "To my knowledge there is no na- tional fraternity chapter on our campus that selects their members on any other basis than personal merit." Few fraternity men would agree with this statement. Several have said in effect, "We couldn't get a Jew through hash," or "Our house isn't ready for a Negro." Fact is that there are about a half-dozen houses on cam- pus, at most, which are at all mixed. Each of them has one or two people of another faith or color. Every other house is completely Chris- tian or Jewish, completely white, or, in one case, completely Negro. "THE CONSTANT fun raising and hazing are things of the past in our system," Meyer- holz says. "A fraternity based on sweat ses- sions and constant partying is not a modern fraternity." If Meyerholz means to imply that hazing -and sweat sessions are extinct, he doesn't know his own system too well. There are houses on campus which have eliminated both com- pletel y, possibly 10 of the 43 chapters. And "hell week," contrary to rush talk, has not be- come "help" week. "The foremost reason for the existence ofa fraternities here at Michigan is to supplement and compliment the student's academics and1 not to place other things before them." This is not true. The fraternity never has andl never should have anything to do with aca- demics. It is a social organization and is fine1 in that context, Few and far between are the fraternity men who can study in their houses. THE FRATERNITY is neither all good nor allf bad. The point is that the freshman rushee, for all his two weeks of knowledge about col- lege life, is not yet ready to judge for 'himselfI the exact value of the system.x He will go through rush, meet a myriad ofi faces and be pretty sure that all of, them be- long to "great guys." .They don't.e He will hear all sorts of stories about fra-t ternity life, including juggled financial ac-i counts, but he will not have any way of know-c ing what is true and what is not. He will think he is making a pretty cool im- pression while in hash sessions actives will be tearing him apart because they don't like the c color of his tie, or he has a funny nickname. c T HE ENORMITY of college life is such that c no freshman can yet have his next four 0 years in perspective. It is just too soon for himo to tell whether the fraternity system or an f miss, j..~ '4 /USA .ri A ' A 1. fJ Vt J LU Ask Supot o1erdt UNDERSCORE: Common Market,- common World By H. NEIL BERKSON ALTHOUGH THE integration of Europe is presently stalled be- cause of the whims and fancies of two old men, it is certainly appro- priate to consider the great signi- ficance of such an event. The con- cept of a united Europe is far too powerful to be forever sidetracked by Chancellor Adenauer and Pres- ident De Gaulle. To date, the rebirth of the "old world" has been studied and prais- ed primarily from an economic 'DEFIANT' : B loodbut Little Guts ALEC GUINNESS saved "Damn the Defiant" as surely as the Defiant saved the British Navy. It's hard to tell, but one some- times thinks that Guinness' agent must hate him. His recent movies including the one now at the Michigan have provided weak and weary vessels for his talents. "Damn the Defiant" is the type of movie that will appear on the late late shows on television in two or three years, on the merits of the Guinness name. In the movie, Guinness is the captain of The Defiant, a British ship trying to aid a convoy fight- ing the French in the Mediterran- ean in 1797. Besides the French his biggest problem is his senior midshipman, Mr. Gilpatrick, "one of the Navy's best officers but with a vicious streak and a silver spoon in his mouth." GILPATRICK, played by Dirk Bogarde, enjoys flogging men, beatingthe captain's 12-year-old son, and parading his pull in royal circles before Guinness. (Funny thing, it's always Guin- ness, not Captain Crawford.) Gilpatrick's main complaint is that Guinness is "too soft on the men." All things are relative, Gil- patrick thinks" that two' dozen lashes is a mild punishment. The plot being shallow and the characters being sterotyped, the producers decided to rely on the blood, pain and hell of war to carry the picture. There is en- tirely too much violence, sadism, and torture. Little boys will relish the gore, but big people will be disappointed that there is little weight or meaning in the picture to demand or excuse the excess floggings. * * IN AN ATTEMPT to make "Damn the Defiant" approach the level of Alec Guinness, the pro- ducers snuck in a half-hearted at- tempt at "message" in the guise of the labor movement. "If we all stand together we'll win, they can't hang every man in the Navy." However,, this isn't a mut- iny-merely a demand for a just hearing for their grievances, wnich appear to be legion. The characters - aside from Guinness-are morally either black or white; there is no delving into conscience or spiritual probing of the villains and their psyches. It is a real testimony to Guinness' talent that he can make a noble, good character like Crawfori pal- atable instead of the "Captain, My Captain" the role would have be- come in the hands of a lesser actor. And the writers offered little help. Guinness is a great actor-how- ever, if blood doesn't interest you, between appearances of Guinness, it's. a long arid wait. -Malinda Berry point of view. The miracle of the Common Market has brought nothing but prosperity to the six countries within its limits. France, Italy, West Germany, and the Benelux triad have disrupted, through their success, the eco- nomic policies of all other world powers. President Kennedy's widely sup- ported trade bill is nothing but a reaction to the "Six." The coun- try faces economic isolation un- less it lowers its tariff barriers. England is scrambling desper- ately to make seven of the "Six."' She is ready to reverse long Com- monwealth traditions in order to share in the new European wealth. Even the Soviet Union has showed its concern over the Coin- mon Market under the cover of Premier Khrushchev's criticisms. The Russians are now engaged in revitalizing Comecon-their own version of the "Six." * i * BUT IN SPITE of the current preoccupation with economics, history will probably give greater weight to the political aspect of a "United States of Europe." Should the dream of men like Jean Monnet and Paul Heni pak come true, it will have to be con- sidered the single most important event of the 20th century. We have lived, so far, in a cen- tury of war. And as war-making has become increasingly dangerous to the point where -it is now fatal, the search for peace has become more and more intense, more and more desperate. The beauty of European unity is that itcan be the foundation of world unity and the key to this peace. * r * LOCKEAN THEORY proclaims that the purpose of government is to bring order out of chaos. Ungoverned man, Locke says, is in a state of nature. He is com- pletely free, but completely un-, protected from the evils of his fellow man. The state of nature is a state of turmoil. Men leave the state of nature to form governments. They give up a degree of freedom in return for the protection of law. Ettrapolating from Locke, we can say that the various nations are and have always been in a similar state of nature, a state of chaos. Centuries of disorder have led to national rivalries and con- tinual war. EUROPE HAS been especially ravaged, up to and including the bloodiest war of all time, World War II. She has finally learned that the only way to submerge the rivalries is to unite the na- tions which form them. It is very important that she reach her goal. From there she must broaden her base until one Europe becomes one Atlantic Community, becomes one world. Certainly the skeptics consider the idea of world government nothing but a dreamer's fantasy. But the Common Market was scorned, too. The point is that we cannot dis- miss every 'ideal as hopeless. To accept the status quo is to deny progress. To deny progress is to condemn mankind to a future of hatred, a future of disaster. We can never afford such complacen- cy. World government is doubtless beyond the possibilities of our life- time. But the idea must be' nur- tured. If we remain in a state of chaos, nothing can prevent atomic war. A united Europe is a big step along the road away from such a war. It is 'a big step toward peace To the editor: JAMES MEREDITH spent two years seeking an education which is his by formal right of citizenship. More than $25,000 in legal and related expenditure was required to get him this far, standing at the Ole Miss gate. Now, perhaps permanently, his life is in terrible danger. What grates about the Meredith inci- dent, fundamentally is not the legal issue; not the behavior of Ross Barnett and his troops; not even the potential fissure of the Democratic Party. These are im- portant, but temporarily abstract. What grates now is the presence of The Absurd, always latent in racist social relations, which is so manifest in the present situa- tion: the massing of military and legal defenses, the chanting of the Jackson newspapers, the charging crowds in Oxford, the white stu- dents trying to attend classes but attending nothing but a single problem-the problem embodied in the small black man waiting so quietly at the gate. * * * SOME white students at Texas Christian University, in F o r t Worth, feel horror at the pro- tracted battle in Mississippi. They will wear arm bands Monday to signify their approval of desegra- gating Ole Miss. By doing so, they will be ac- cepting the discomfort of indi- vidual responsibility in their own way, as white Southerners. They are asking the United States Na- tional Student Association, Stu- dents for a Democratic 'Society, and people generally to do some little act-private or public-to- morrow to signify their committ- ment to a rapid solution to America's racial problem. As Meredith goes again to Oxford, what might we do here? ,We suggest the following: * *f * BECOME acquainted with the work of local civil rights organi- zations: CORE, the NAACP, the Human Relations Board, and es- pecially the new tutorial opera- tion which will attempt to im- prove the educational experience of Negro youth in Ann Arbor; Write the Justice Department demanding an investigation and release of Clyde' Kennard., who tried to desegregate Mississippi Southern in 1960 and tlgerefore was sentenced to seven years im- prisonment for "stealing chicken feed." Demand, too, a full-scale search for the murderers of four Negroes who have been killed in Mississippi this year for their work in civil rights. Buy a copy of the Student Non- violent Coordinating Committee's record about Albany, Ga., from Miss Martha Prescod at Osterweil Coop. Also subscribe to one or two militant Negro magazines to become better informed. * * * WRITE President Kennedy ask- ing him to withdraw political privilege from any Democrat who does not support desegregation of Ole Miss now. This list so far includes Mississippi S e n a t o r s Eastland and Stennis, all of the recently-elected congressional del- egation from the Magnolia State, Alabama's Governor Patterson, and Florida's Governor Bryant. Several of these men have deter- mining effects on the implementa- tion of the Democratic Party civil rights platform, through their seniority and prestige. Look again at a recent news- paper. Place yourself in the front- page picture between the helmet- ed state police and the clusters of angry Mississippians. Imagine being asked: "What do you think of this nigger business? You a son-of-a-bitch race mixer or a man?" Ask yourself what the answer would be. If Meredith can go again to Oxford, if students at TCU and other white Southern schools canj expose their convictions to a hostile society, what can we do but follow? -Tom and Sandra Hayden Humor... To the Editor: IN READING Miss Wacker's edi- torial on accepted procedure at "sit-down" dinners in Betsy Bar- bour, I couldn't help but laugh. Is she seriously suggesting that a clean face, clean hands, clean clothes, combed hair and, yes, even clean fingernails, are expec- tations of an adult woman- (and I'm sure Miss Wacker wishes' to consider herself adult) -unique to "midwestern, middle class stand- ards of social excellence and ac- ceptibility"? If so, pray please tell, Miss Wacker, where in Western society one might go where the converse of these "standards" is predomin- ately accepted. I know several eight and nine year olds who would appreciate their parents' moving there. I suppose this admittedly face- tious question does not do justice to Miss Wacker's editorial. In fair- ness, I should try to find some gem of truthhstemming from her ar- ticle. In so attempting, I should suggest that if the purpose of the dinner regulations be to make "la- dies" out of young women attend- ing the University, that purpose obviously is not (and perhaps can- not be) totally successful. For, as evidenced by Miss Wacker's rather sophomorically presented editorial, the regulations - (to use her words) - "sure as hell" didn't, or couldn't make a lady out of her. -Jim Worthington, Grad Football.. .. To the Editor: THIS YEAR, and for the first time thatI can remember, stu- dents who want their football tick- ets are forced to pay a levy of one dollar, which goes into the Ath- letic Fund. I think that this is quite dis- graceful, seeing that the Fund also is subsidized from tuition monies. This new surcharge would seem to indicate that the student body is not supporting the athlet- ic department enough, or alterna- tively that the department desires to give out a few more athletic scholarships. Whichever is the case, I see no reason to force support-extra support-of an activity if the sup- port does not come voluntarily. It is enough that money isdeducted from each and every student's TODAY AND TOMORROW: Mississippi Nullification 'A TASTE OF HONEY': Film Haunting By WALTER LIPPMANN THE GOVERNOR of Mississippi, Ross Barnett, has raised again the question which was posed at Little Rock five years ago. It is whether a state may use its own police and military forces to nulli- fy the law of the land. President Eisenhower defined the issue in 1957 when he said that "the po- lice powers of the State of Arkan- sas" have been "utilized . ..to frustrate'the order of the court." The position taken by Gov. Fau- bus five years ago and by Gov. Barnett today has never, I think, been advocated or justified by the national leaders of Southern opin- ion. President Kennedy, like Presi- dent Eisenhower before him, would be false to his own oath of office if he allowed the theory of nullifi- cation by force to go unchallenged and become a precedent. BENEATH and behind this high constitutional issue the Mississippi case is in several important ways much worse than the Little Rock case. For one thing, at Little Rock the question was the integration of a co-educational high school. In Mississippi, the question is in fact whether there shall be token when the Supreme Court rendered its decision against segregation in the public schools, it was a tragic mistake - by the President, the Congress, and public opinion - to dump the enforcement helter-skel- ter and through private law suits into the courts. "Integration," I wrote several years ago, "is a prob- lem in persuasion and consent. which cannot be solvedby injunc- tions and soldiers." We should be "asking ourselves whether the de-- cision of the Supreme Court does not need to be supplemented" by a national policy and program of guidance and aid as to when, where, how far, and how fast in- tegration should proceed in differ- ent school districts, and at the various levels of the elementary school, the high school, the college, and the professional schools. * * * "THE WISEST policy is to pro- ceed by stages, beginning as soon as possible with integration in the universities, in the g r a d u a t e schools of law, medicine, educa- tion, engineering, theology - and, where it can be done without caus- sing social convulsions, in the big- ger colleges. The object of this would be to train a new genera- tion of white and colored men and women who will be leaders in their "A TASTE 'OF HONEY" is a a bittersweet film displaying an unusual assortment of fresh, young craftsmen-or at least craftsmen new to. American aud- iences who are not familiar with the middle-aged English actress, Dora Bryan. The cast has been much lauded. Dora Bryan won the British Aca- demy for acting, and the entire cast was awarded the Best Film Performance Award at the Cannes Film Festival-a first for the Can- nes Festival which has previously not offered the award. . Miss Bryan is marvelously baw- dy and decadent, but gentle enough so as to be believable when she feels twinges of responsibility toward her daughter. As the daughter, Rita Aushingham has the difficult assignment of follow- ing Frances Kucka (the London production) and Joan Plowright (the New York production) who both gave sensitive performances. But newcomer Tuchingham need not fear any comparisons, for she has the hardness of Miss Kucka, the charm of Miss Plowright, and the most fascinating eyes since Audrey Hepburn. T m m * * , * , ly a teddy bear and nursery rhyme for comfort. Obviously, such an uncomplicated, controversial story demands cgnsiderable skill to re- main theatrical and yet avoid the vulgar. The theatricality can not be de- nied, but the naive approach to racial prejudice and homosexual- ity verged on the embarrassing. However, Tony Richardson's adaptation not only transfers the best of Miss Delaney's charm and insight but also discards nearly all of. the unpleasant dialogue. (e.g. Girl to homosexual: 'You'd m a k e somebody a wonderful wife.") Curiously, he changes the final scene of the script from a rather depressing note to a slight- ly optimistic tone. * * RICHARDSON also directs the picture with a sure hand that selects detail with meaningful dis- cretion and controls crowds of children as if they were a modern choreographed G r e e k chorus. Some of his shots-for example the couple looking at the sunlight from an echoing, dark tunnel- were so startling that the aud- ience gasped. The contrast be- tween the expanse of the outside f I