THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1951 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ II A Word to Rushees SINCE THE semi-annual collegiate exer- cise in insincerity commonly known as fraternity rushing is beginning today, the temptation-as a fraternity member of long, If not particularly good standing-to offer a few words of advice to this year's crop of rushees should not be resisted. This year's rushees, just like the prospec- tive fraternity men of any year, will be bombarded with propaganda about the part which fraternities can play in their educa- tion. And this time they have already been informed by the Interfraternity Council rushing booklet that fraternities aim at the most complete possible development of their members' intellectual, social and physical attributes. In the weeks to come, rushees will be subjected to a barrage of a lot of other supposed benefits. They will be told of the benefits of cooperative living, ahimni contacts, social prestige and gracious liv- ing without housemothers. The 'home away from home' argument will become familiar to them. Nebulous phrases like 'character building', 'self-reli- ance', 'appreciation of responsibilities', 'so- cial ease', 'widening of acquaintance', 'nor- mal adjustment', 'stimulating atmosphere' 'expanded mental horizon', 'crystallization of philosophy of life', 'group consciousness' and others of this sort will course through their nightmares in the next two weeks. Since fraternity rushees are generally no less intelligent than other students, much of this balderdash will make' no impression whatsoever. However, since the prospective fraternity man is about to make a decision which will cost him a considerable amount of money and will return to plague him, long after he has left college, in the form of fund drive solicitations, it can scarcely be expected that he will not grab at some of these vague generalities. He will do so if only for the purpose of furnishing some justification for joining a greek letter group at all. A few truths about fraternities in general would thus seem beneficial to the rushees who is interested in making his choice with at least one eye half-way open. P BEGIN WITH, the most salient char- acteristic of fraternities on this and, I suspect, on most campuses is smugness. After surviving the rigors of both the rushing and pledging programs, there is a tendency for members, being somewhatsat- isfied with their accomplishment, to sit back and take it easy for the rest of their col- lege year. This, of course, is only part of it. All fraternity members are encouraged to feel that their fraternity is tAe most important thing in their college lives (except, of course, a mystical entity rev- erently referred to as "your university.") At least once a year, prominent alumni are dragged back to abominably-served banquets to declare that "my fraternity, next to God and my family, has been the most profound influence in my life." A further impetus toward complacency is provided at these banquets by the recitation of the names of brothers who have succeed- ed in the business world and will be glad to see any of the graduating members around job-hunting time. All of this helps to strengthen the dispo- sition to believe that, no matter how great a blotch one makes of his academic career, nor how many opportunities to widen one's experience were ignored, one's college career was still somehow a great success because of the fraternity. THE ENTIRE effort of the fraternity, its exclusive ritual (written by a group of callow teen-agers in pre-Civil War times), its precepts and its purpose is directed toward turning the attention of its members inward on a small group instead of outward. And for what reason? The fraternity answer is that a well-integrated group can work most effectively to get the greatest social and intellectual dividends out of college life for its individual members. This may be a good idea, but, unfortunate- ly, it is seldom realized. As has been pointed out, fraternities tend to be anti-social and cliquish rather than social. Furthermore, in most fraternities, there is a marked apathy toward anything of a really serious nature. Discussion of im- portant matters in art, in politics or other factors of contemporary life, while not deliberately discouraged are ce tainly not encouraged. An outstanding example of this is the pre- vailing fraternity attitude toward the weary- ing discrimination controversy. Most frater- nity men prefer not to consider the charge of discrimination in itself at all. They merely assert smugly, that fraternity constitutions are nobody's business but their own, and if they must be changed, then let them be changed in such a way that the letter of the university regulation is observed, but not the spirit. By this method, it is felt, defeat maybe turned into glorious victory. Th man who declares that it is better not to waste time on considerations of this sort because there are no real answers to them fits perfectly into the unreal seclusion of the fraternity living room. WHAT HAS BEEN SAID so far is a pretty damning estimation of fraternities. In fairness to them, however, this is not the whole story and probably represents an over- statement of the case against them. It is not so much because fraternities are outstandingly venal that these remarks have been written, but rather because fraternities are sailing under false colors. They are not all that they claim themselves to be. They do not foster intellectual growth nor "assist the freshman in the crystalliza- tion of his philosophy of life" in any healthy manner. In short, they do not contribute anything worthwhile to the intellectual aspect of a college education. What they do contribute, and it is a sub- stantial contribution in these days of sky- scraper dormitories and the liquor ban, is a social unit of respectable size. They provide an opportunity for the average student of making numbers of lasting friendships and of living with fewer restrictions than is pos- sible in the dormitories and some rooming houses. Another advantage which fraternities have over dormitories is that, while they are fully as stagnant intellectually, they are at least organized about it. Social ac. tivity of all types is more fully carried on in fraternities, and, all in all, it is more nearly possible to live as a human being in' a fraternity house than in a quadrangle. For those who must have a conclusion, what this discussion seems to simmer down to is this: fraternity life is an improvement on dormitory life, but not too great an im- provement. At any rate, rushees may clip this editorial and carry it with them to the open houses this afternoon. Perhaps it will be seized upon as a fruitful topic of con- versation; but I doubt it. --Dave Thomas. Union Library SOMETIME LAST SEMESTER the Union shortened the hours for use of its second floor Pendleton Library. The Union library is one of the favorite study places on campus for a number of men and finding its doors closed at certain hours when one wants to study has caused a great deal of unnecessary irritation. Prior to this austerity plan the library was open every day from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Now it is open from 1 to 5:30 and from "7 to 11 p.m. On Sunday's the library's facilities are not available until 7 p.m. Having been routed from my studies once too often because it happened to be 5:30, I decided to find out why. I went to see Frank Kuenzel, the Union general manager. His explanation for the new hours was that not enough men were using the library at the hours that it is now closed to make it worthwhile to pay the student librarian. The student librarian gets 50 cents an hour. And I have never seen less than 10 men in the library at any hour. On Sunday afternons when the library is now closed, there are men studying in every corner of the Union waiting for the clock to strike seven so that they can study in com- fort. I proposed to Kuenzel that the former library hours be restored and that I would recruit men who use the library to act as librarians free of charge. No dice, such an arrangement wouldn't be very efficient, he said. Is the Union, the campus men's club, using its facilities to the greatest bene- fit of its members or isn't it? Obviously not in this case. This type of grievance seems to be ripe for a Student Legislature investigation. An SL sponsored plan to provide librarians if the library's hours were lengthen'ed would be very difficult for Kuenzel and the Un- ion's board of directors to reject. -Paul Marx DORIS FLEESON: Independent Agencies WASHINGTON-The current quarrel be- tween President Truman and Congress over the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion is a colorful facade behind which a much graver matter lies concealed. It is the collapse of great principles and enter- prises because the Truman administration is proving too weak to sustain them, RFC is but one of the many independent agencies or commissions by which strong Presidents and sometimes Congress have sought to overcome or ameliorate the eco- nomic and social evils arising in our sys- tem. In the domestic field most of the great policy decisions of our time, those which shape our future, are made outside the regular departments. The departments handle routine; the independent agencies break ground. Opponents of the square, new and fair deals have always understood this. They have fought the delegations of power to such bodies and the appointment to them of men they considered too ardently attached to change. *. * * THE TUG OF WAR goes back a long way. Franklin Roosevelt's contributions to the alphabet soup were more numerous-SEC, TVA, CAB, FDIC, etc., etc. These agencies have survived the frontal assaults of their enemies as they could con- tinue to survive direct attacks. In weakness, inertia or dishonor, they cannot preserve their aims or accomplish their goals. What has been happening at a constantly accelerated pace is that President Truman has been unable to inspire them or to staff them with men whose abilities and convic- tions are of such a high order they can push onward and upward under their own steam., The President's manpower difficulties are an old story in the classic pattern of the chicken and the egg. It is hard to tell whether the selfishness of able Americans in refusing to work for the government forces Mr. Truman to resort increasingly to mediocrity and his cronies or whether able Americans shun the Truman adminis- tration because it is so much in the hands of mediocrity and the cronies. In any case, the agencies work well only in proportion to the availability of really first-class people to man them. As that pro- portion has grown less and the agencies weaker, the President has had more often to intervene personally. * * * EYEBROWS WERE RAISED when the President overrhauled the Civil Aero- nautics Board and allowed the transfer of American Airlines' overseas routes to Pan American Airways. Congress has not yet probed the rumors that swept the cocktail lounges but the prestige of the CAB plum- meted to new lows. The RFC debacle is about to be aired in public hearings which the President has dramaticized with his attack upon the crit- ical Fulbright report as asinine. Yet most members of Congress agree with the Presi- dent's stand that Senator Fulbright's single- administrator proposal is unsound; unfair to the one man who might be named and a clear violation of the commission principle. The Week's News . . . IN RETROSPECT . . . The Fraternities Meet The War Situation } r t o -Daily-13111 Hampton "Cheer up, Eddie' You're bound to meet some of the brothers over there!,, DESPITE THE DRAFT SITUATION, war in Korea and CED, the good old fraternal espirit de corps permeated The Row today as affiliates set their annual snares for rushees. A round the World... - OSEPH STALIN HADN'T MADE any major pronouncements on world affairs in two years, and some people were even beginning to think that maybe he was dead. On Friday, however, the Soviet Prime Minister emerged from obscurity long enough to make a few observations. Registering his unhappiness at the way things are going in the world, Stalin blamed it all on "aggressive forces" in control of such countries as France, Britain and the United States. These countries are leading the United Nations toward war and disintegration "along the inglorious road of the League of Nations," the Soviet leader asserted. The most ominous note in his utterances was a rather cryptic warning that UN forces face sure defeat in Korea unless Britain and the United States accept Red China's conditions for peace. Stalin's chief thesis, however, was that peace can be maintained. He said World War III "cannot be considered inevitable," and he pledged that the Soviet Union will "continue firmly to pursue a policy of averting war and maintaining peace." In Washington, State Department officials were perhaps more concerned with survival than they were with peace. To be sure, peace could easily be had by listening to Stalin and surrendering fully to his ideology and his armies. But a better course, it seem- ed, was to become as strong as possible ,in hopes that our might would discourage a Russian attack, or, that failing, would enable us to emerge victorious. To that end, Secretary of War George Marshall told Congress Thursday that the United States plans to send 100,000 more troops to Europe, and Dean Acheson warned that delay in their dispatch could mean "suicide for all of us." Earlier, the Senate Armed Services Committee unanimously ap- proved a bill calling for draft of 18-year-olds and extension of all service terms to 26 months. The Senate may act on the measure within a few days. KOREA-Bugle-blowing Red troops surged down snow-caked mountain passes in Central Korea early this week in a vain attempt to break through Allied lines. After suffering some 27,000 casualties in the first five days of their drive, the Communists were slowing up. Meanwhile, President Truman told a news conference that Gen. MacArthur still has UN authority to recross the 38th parallel, If military needs dictate such a move. * * * *, worrying about how he could keep out of the Army in order to support his wife and their seven-month-old daugh;ter. Ten days ago Shay, a Michigan State Highway Department em'ploye, hit on a scheme. He decided to set a fire in Lansing's State Office Bldg., reportedly think- ing "a little fire" would get him a probationary sentence and save him from the draft. The fire turned out to be much bigger than Shay had expected. It roared through the 28-year-old structure's two top floors for 45 hours, leaving in its wake at least $4,500,000 in damage. Shay was this week charged with arson. Meanwhile, his draft board said Shay's two dependents would have made him exempt anyhow. *, * * * Local .,*. 2-4 RULE ENDS-Shortly before the war the Student Affairs Committee decided that it might be a good idea to make fraternities hold a 2.4 grade average. Suggested by the local Fraternity Alumni Council, the rule was intended to make the fraternities maintain a grade average commen- surate with other campus groups. It didn't really go into effect until after the war, when it was enforced upon request of fraternity alumni. Campus fraternity men fought vigorously against the measure, while administrators recognized the incongruity of requiring one par- ticular group to toe the 2.4 mark when the rest of the campus had only to hold a 2.0 average. A few weeks ago, Dean Walter asked the Alumni Council for their okay on removing the rule. Following their favorable vote, the SAC last week announced that the regulation was lifted. FOOTBALL POOL-Two former University students, Lee Setomer and Robert McGuire, were fined $250 apiece Tuesday and sentenced to ten days in the Washtenaw County Jail for operating a football pool on campus last fall. MYSTERY PROJECT-Some people were confident it was to be a nudist coloy. Others would swear it was a mining venture, cornering most of the uranium in Washtenaw County. The 3,860 acres of land in the western part of the county were bathed in storybook mystery, ever since the time, five years ago, when John Hanna, a Detroit real- tor, began buying up the land for reputedly fantastic prices. Last week the mystery was at last solved. The Chrysler Corporation was behind the purchases, and intended to build a proving ground for trucks and cars. -Bob Keith and Chuck Elliott XettePJ TO THE EDITOR The Daily Welcomes communications from its readers on matters of general interest, and will publish all letters whichsare signedby the writer and in good taste. Letters exceeding 300 words in length, defamatory or libelous letters, and letters which for any reason are not in good taste will be condensed, edited or withheld from publication at the discretion of the editors. Facing Facts *.. * To the Editor: - WISH TO compliment Jimj Brown's editorial on the pres- ent necessity of sending troops to defend Europe.c Since our generation has twice before been called upon to shedI blood in the lands our forefathers deserted, this question may rea- sonably be asked, "Will we again,j and how many times in the future1 will we be asked to reconquer thisi same land?" It is wonderful to theorize on the abilities of the1 United Nations, or to listen to thec World Federalist explain point by point plans to obliviate world troubles. However, we must face the facts. The countries of the world will never voluntarily co- operate to provide permanent world peace. There is a way to end these1 periodic senseless wars once andj for all. The method is simple.- Every time we are ever called up- on to resaturate land with our blood, we should proclaim that land to be our property. Eventu- ally all lands either as a result ofr war or through the request ofE their populace will become ourj possessions. And these posses-t sions will eventually become states almost as thirty-five states were once added to the original thir- teen. Therehmay be those that proclaim the impossibility of Americanizing the world. To these1 people, I point out Hawaii which contributes more to our economy than some states and which prac- tices equality and freedom nearer to the true theoretical than any of our states. Our fighting in Korea should not be in vain. Instead of return- ing this area to its corrupted rul- ers, we should retain it, educate the people, help them raise their standard of living close to ours, and eventually admit them to the Union. After this is done, I doubt if we will ever be called upon1 again to fight in Korea. If this had been done with the areas we liberated in Europe, we would not be sending more troops there to- day. --Nistor Potcova (EDITOR'S NOTE-Mr. Potcova has1 apparently missed the point of the editorial which he refers to in his opening paragraph. It called on the United States "to defend the right{ of any way of life to exist in freedom if it desres,"-not for the forcing of all of the nations of the world to accept our way of life. Perhaps Mr. Potcova would like to see the United{ States make Great Britain her Crown colony.) -*" . . Martinsville Seven,. . To the Editor: THE STATE OF Virginia cele- brated Negro History Week by executing seven Negroes from Martinsville. Whenrthey died, part of American freedom died too. The Martinsville Seven were convicted of rape; there was an all white jury; there were forced confessions; and they were sen- tenced to die. Thousands of people tried to stop these legal murders. Letters and telegrams poured in to Tru- man and Governor Battle. Dem- onstrations bigger than any since the war, took place in Washington and Richmond. The Parliament of Finland called on Mrs. Roose- veltto intervene withhTruman. Cablegrams came by the thou- sands from people in England, France. Germany, and all over the world. But the sowers of hatred had their day, and they had their vic- tims. And such a shock went around the world at this terrible carica- ture of democracy as to make us shudder and feel the agony that others felt, for we surely cannot be indifferent to the taking of life. We cannot be indifferent to the vicious system of discrimina- tion which in Virginia has claim- ed fifty-two Negro lives since 1907 on the charge of "rape," while not a single white man convicted of rape has been given the death sentence in this period since the first court records werekept. Justice is not the motive of this rotten carry-over from slav- ery. The motive is to intimidate the Negro people in their rising struggle for freedom-full free- dom and equality. But such reck- less brutality can only intensify the struggle against jim-crow jds, jim-crow education, a jim-crow army, and jim-crow in all of its outrageous forms. And let us remind ourselves that while seven Negroes were executed for no other reason than being Negroes (they were con- demned before they were even born), twenty-one Nazi war crim- inals were freed by the Truman government, which made such a great point in seeing "justice" done in Virginia. No doubt the butchers of the Jewish people will make excellent accomplices in spreading jim-crow democracy. But what a high price they paid to murder seven Negroes! The bigots turned the whole world against themselves. You don't silence people by killing them any more. Their deaths speak. -Myron Sharpe, Grad. * * * False Rhetoric... To the Editor: FLOYD THOMAS in his editorial of February 15 may merely have been carelessly casting about for some rhetoric which would be in keeping with the usual allusions made in the "Chicago Tribune," a paper which Mr. Thomas as- tonishingly extolls for its true liberality, when he used the term "President Roosevelt's storm troop- ers" in reference to the recalci- trant Mr. Sewell Avery's being comfortably carried (not "drag- ged" as Mr. Thomas says, which he would know if he was in Chi- cago at the time and saw the pic- ture, of the event) from his office at Montgomery Ward. The order to remove Mr. Avery, who had refused to compromise in any way, was not made by President Roose- velt- or the United States Army (the "storm troopers" Mr. Thom- as refers to), but by the mediation board in the dispute, a board which included the Sewell Avery Distinguished Service Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago, who is a scholar, not a storm trooper. If Mr. Thomas reads the "Chi- cago Tribune" sympathetically, it is not at all surprising that he uses such malicious and false terminology, especially in refer- ence to the late president. I was disappointed and sur- prised to see an editorial in The Michigan Daily which contained such a false and harmful refer- ence. I have always thought The Daily's editorials among the best written and clearly thought out of any editorial section I have been acquainted with. --Shirley Weller *s : Continutation . . To the Editor: ... as I was saying in yester- day's DAILY, Garg is having a tryout meeting on Monday, Feb. 19, at 4 o'clock. Festivities will be held in the Gargoyle-Generation office on the first floor of the Student Publications Building. -Peg Nimz E1? .E ' ,, -r )" 1' y Movies --Subject for Study WH'ETHER EDISON realized it or not, his Kinetescope was destined to be a new art form. Now, more than fifty years since its invention, few people would dispute the fact that the motion pictpre has arrived as a new medium of expression, a medium with perhaps greater potentialities than any 'other. It is something of an anomaly, however, that such an institution has matured under almost no consideration but immediate practicality. Its peculiar state is largely due to the fact that it is strictly a com- mercial enterprise, with artistic merits considered incidentally, if at all. Now that it has reached an advanced state Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK ELLIOTT of development, several schools have begun to take up, in one way or another, the ac- tual study of the motion picture-as an art form, as a subject for criticism, the his- tory of the medium, and simply as enter- tainment. But most schools which have in- stituted any sort of courses at all have treated them in a rather perfunctory man- ner, making them almost extra curricular. It's about time that some school, and it might as well be this University, recognized that a study of the film has a legitimate place on the academic curriculum. Many weaknesses in current movies may be directly traced to their position as a popular art form. Such things as the star system, in which everything is tossed away in favor of some dubiously talented star, are the direct result of having to account first for the people who expect to see the pic- ture. Producers cannot afford to offend any- one, even those to whom offense might be constructive. The artificial position of the motion picture in our society has cramped its ideal development. Stuy of the sort available in a large university provides the atmosphere of free- dom which any art form needs at one time or another in its career. All this is on the side of the film. But the student would also stand to gain. The program could take the form of a series of courses: the abstract theory and techniques of movie making, study of the history of the film, using old pictures and lectures, the actual filming of a movie, us- ing student scenarios, and branch courses in criticism and social influences. In addition to the limitedly useful prac- tical information which might be picked up during the courses, the student could It Sixty-First Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Jim Brown............Managing Editor Paul Brentlinger............City Editor Roma Lipsky:.........Editorial Director Dave Thomas ..........Feature Editor Janet Watts...........Associate Editor Nancy Bylan..........Associate Editor James Gregory........Associate Editor Bill Connolly............Sports Editor Bob Sandell.... Associate Sports Editor Bill Brenton. ...Associate Sports Editor Barbara .fans......... Women's Editor Pat Brownson Associate Women's Editor Business Staff Bob Daniels........Business Manager Walter Shapero Assoc. Business Manager Paul Schaible.... Advertising Manager Bob Mersereau.......Finance Manager Carl Breitkreitz....Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches creditea to itor otherwise credited to this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor.. Michigan as second-class mal matter. Subscription during regular school year: by carrier, $6.00; by mail, $7.00. . rF [ CURRENT MOVIES t I ., A t The Michigan.. . BORN YESTERDAY with Judy Holli- day, Broderick Crawford and William Holden. HOLLYWOOD HAS formulas for its Horse Operas and Romantic Musicals, all of which are bad. But it has one formula which is good time and time again: Take a bang up Broadway hit and ventilate it with a few outdoor scenes and serve up with same BARNABY You're sure those are the two men who left the $99,987 to I II r i =1 r 1 1 7 Jane's father? And he's hand in glove with the police! And I t'll FLY down to a rendezvous with f Mr. O'Malley! They're I i II 11 I I