editors: laura berman dan borus Oontributing editor: mary long inside: Sunday magazine page four-books page five-features page six-week in review Number 24 Page Three Apr il 13, 1975 FEATURES B/ack fraternities on campus: Readying I PIs, men fc By JIM TOBIN BACK WHEN EVERYBODY who was anybody belonged to a fraternity, it happened all the time. If you were pledging during fall rush you were ready to take a "stroke" or two - a stroke on the rear with a wooden paddle, that is -so the brothers at Sigma Chi or Phi Delta Theta or Lambda Chi Alpha would be sure you were ready to take that fateful step into the life of a fraternity man. Or the brothers would blindfold you and leave you in the woods someplace or make you take a lap around the Diag without the bene- fit of clothing. Of course, nobody took it too seriously and, you know they once had to go through it so you did too. U R I N G RUSH the brothers would tell you what it meant to be an SAE or a Psi U-about the fine fraternity tradition that would always fill a meaningful place in your life. And even though the pretenses were stopned after rush was over, everybody still had that special nride in old Sicrma Chi, that feelinty of "We're the best and we're gonna make it when we leave." But fraternities vanished from the mainstream of campus life during the social upheaval of the Sixties; their traditions and his- tory remaining only in the whim- sical memories of brothers-in-the- mind long gone, who now resided on the boards of corporations or on the letterheads of prestigious law firms. Protest, however, subsided, and by now most students have return- ed to more pragmatic pursuits. The frats have undergone a gradual revival ,and nowhere has that re- vival been more sharply aunarent than in the four black fraternities on camnus - Kanpa Alnha Psi, Omega Psi Phi. Alpha Phi Alnha. and Phi Beta Sirm a. THE TRADITION OF the frater- nity as a maker of men - r rigors which many thought antiquated and without relevance a few years back - remains strong and proud in these four organizations. In- deed, they defy outsiders to criti- cize the harsh process by which they prepare their members for life outside the sheltered college at- mosphere. Kappa Alpha Psi, established in 1911 and boasting 80,000 members nation-wide, is generally regarded as the most prestigious black frat here at the University. With only twenty active members and with- out a house, Kappa faces heavy odds in its bid for strength and unity, but the spirit here is un- shakable; here the bond of bro- therhood is resolute, helping ,the members to succeed in the threat- ening society which confront them. Kappa's pledge program, usually running eight to fourteen weeks for those willing to last it out, is a rigorous test of the pledgee's commitment to becoming a broth- er. For many, the commitment dissolves after a few weeks:outof five originally "on the line" this winter.--that is, stating a de- sire to pledge - only one remains, and he still has not "crossed" and become a brother. WHILE ON THE LINE, the pled- gee is led through a long ser- les of rituals, "assignments", and "joints" - twice weekly meetings where punishments are invoked for infringements on the extensive set of fraternity rules. Only rarely are the "joints" physical; more often they involve "mind games" designed to test how far the pledge can go before losing his temper or his resolve to stick it out. Senior Bill Hunter, a pre-law student, is the president of Pole- march (meaning, in the Greek, "leader in war") of Kappa Alpha Psi. Hunter is cooly confident of Kanpa's worth and the justness of its purnose. Raised in the South, he savs blacks have no choice but to form a home where they can feel secure in a society that stacks the odds against them . "What the black fraternity does I or ire for the black man on campus is, I think, to bring him into a bond with men who have similar ideals," Hunter says. "We cannot erase the fact that we are black; we can't say that society's going to look at us as Kappa men or Omega men. They're going to look at us through the eyes that we are black and so we have to deal with that. In the case of black students - there are so few of them that they bond to- gether and fight the system. Ra- cism is here." RUT MEMBERSHIP in the bond is not for the taking. The pledge process demands unquestioning fealty in a relationship which re- sembles feudalism, as Hunter read- ily admits. "You treat them (the pledgees) as slaves and figments of noth- ingness," Hunter explains. "You really degrade them and try to mentally harass them. It's like a king-slave relationship or a mem- ber of the aristocratic class and a peasant. Ed Wiggins, a freshman from Los Angeles, is the sole pledgee re- maining on Kappa's line. He talks of some of the assignments he per- forms as part of his ascent toward the brotherhood, emphasizing his feeling that nothing he has been assigned has been overly taxing or cruel: "YOU GO ON assignment to a big brother's house and if he's got some dishes for you to wash you wash them and then you sit down and talk to him about what Kappa means to him and what it could do for you. He wants resnect. You always have to remember that you're just a pledger and he's al- ready in." "Let's say you wash this big brother's dishes. Then he'll tell you, 'I thought I told you to wash my dishes.' And you say, 'Well I just did Big Brother, sir.' And he says, 'Well, I don't like the way they look, they're dirty.' You know you did a.good job and he's gonna make you do it again. You'll think he's mad but you have to keep in the right frame of mind. You know you did what he wanted." Along the way the pledgee may have to pass several days without speaking to anyone but members of the fraternity. Or he might be told to leave a crowded room with- out turning his back on anyone. At all times he must address the old- er members as "Big Brother, Sir!" or by whatever title the brother demands. One Kappa brother, ac- cording to Hunter, declared that pledges must address him as "Big Brother From Whom I Will Learn Much Wisdom." ROTH HUNTER and Wiggins ad- mit the initiation is designed to be ludricrous and humiliating to the pledge but they insist the rites have a serious philosophical base. "Outsiders say a lot of things the pledges do are silly. I agree," says Hunter. "But they're designed that way. The people who have the pledgees do them know they're sil- ly and know that for many pled- gees it affects them mentally and they have a hard time coping with it. ",I thinkc what most black frater- nities try to stress to their pledgees is that you have to pay the price to join," Hunter concludes. "We al- ways stress, 'Don't be a quitter,' because things are going to be so difficult that sometimes pledgees will quit, but we tell them, 'Look, this is life - if you quit you're go- ing to be by the wayside." But there are some who are sim- ply not willing to make the sacri- fice Kappa demands. ONE S U C H INDIVIDUAL Is Dwight Hicks, the freshman safety for Bo Schembechler's Wol- verines who has nailed down a starting position this spring. Hicks was on Kappa's line for several weeks until he decided the time he was devoting to the fraternity kept him from "being 100 per cent on the field." Hicks say there is only occasion- al paddling in the pledge proce- dure (whereas Hunter denied there is any) and stresses that this and other hazing did not cause him to de-pledge. And while he says he believes there is a need for black fraternities, Hicks is candid in his estimation of the motivation be- hind them. Daily Photo by KAREN KASMAUSKI "Where I come from (Pennsau- ken, N. J.)" he says, "our high school was predominately white. Most of the blacks here come from Detroit and they have a bad image of whites. "I tell them I don't feel that way- because I come from a different environment. My closest friend in high school was a white guy. There are whites who are prejudiced and there are blacks who are just as prejudiced and you just can't hate each other all the time. You're go- ing to have to get together and solve the problem." H1[ICKS WON'T BECOME a Kappa. Wiggins will. While Hicks sees the need for a better solution, he admits there is a necessity for black fraternities. Young and black a decade after the peak of Ameri- ca's civil rights movement, they are not completely at ease here on the - campus of one of the most widely-touted institutions of higher learning in the world. Jim Tobin, a Daily Staff the Ann Arbor stringer for; Free Press. member, is the Detroit On civil disobedience: An anti-war family puts By ROB MEACHUM adages UNTIL FOUR YEARS ago, Paul mies ba and Addie Snyder felt right at refusing home in Fremont, Michigan, the because small, conservative "Baby Food ring tru Capital of the World." The She was your everyday house- nisce a wife, he a hard-working and pros- believe perous veterinarian. Their four tions - kids were like any other of the by the children on the block - they it is ob played baseball, watched Saturday "When morning cartoons and generally war m worked hard at school. around Like most members of the town and tri just north of Grand Rapids, they that pe were fanatical Goldwater conser- to som vatives. In fact, Paul and Addie selves," were industrious workers in the But t "Choice not an Echo" campaign of Today, 1964 and later came to know Re- put the publican Congressmen Guy Vander ing the Jagt and Gerald Ford. hilt. Gu But that was some eleven years eau's in ago. Since then the Snyders have is of su their livelihood on the line about bombing the Com- ack to the Stone Age, and g to give the blacks an inch they'll take a mile, didn't ue anymore. Snyders don't like to remi- ibout the days when they d and propagated such no- beliefs still commonly held citizenry of Fremont. But bvious they have changed. the civil rights and anti- ovements got going, people here just shut their eyes ed to ignore it. Well, I think ople have to be answerable nebody other than them- says Addie. his switch was not just talk. the Snyders are willing to eir beliefs on the line, tak- ir civil disobedience to the aided by Henry David Thor- njunction - "If it (the law) ch a nature that it requires Q STRONG WAS their commit- ment not to pay any taxes for war, they decided to set up a secret bank account out of the reach of the federal officials. Furthermore since Paul is self-employed, the government couldn't garnish his wages. It was not a stance that met with favor in Fremont, a town steeped in the tenets of law and order. Such actions are not met with favor by the federal government, either. Two weeks ago, the crisis came to a head, the Snyders put- ting their civil disobedience to the test. On the snowy morning of Ap- ril, 2 at 10:00, the Internal Reve- nue service seized their home and property, valued at nearly $80,000 and sold it in a public auction at the Fremont Post Office. ing so far as to set up a command post, disguised as a vehicle Inspec- tion checkpoint, to ward off the unruly. The "unruly" were there alright -all 75 of them, heavily bundled and looking as unmenacing as any random sample of 75 Americans. They were demonstrating, how- ever, locking arms together and singing "We Shall Overcome" un- der the watchful eye of at least ten silent and taut city and state pa- trolmen. Paul and Addie were there too, wondering if what they had com- mitted themselves to was worth the consequences they and their children now faced. While the case was well-known and pleas for low bids were made to those who sym- pathised with their position, Paul and Addie were aware that. a bid by a speculator or someone equally unsympathetic could take away +har hnma antiCair if n ..c The auction was biggest single event sincn eGrher Fnnds perhaps the in Fremont decided that ....... ... I