Sunday, May 25, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE D--- I!:.,- Sunday- - - Page Five Would Help To Promote Greater Spirit (Continued from Pa e 4) gate, begun when both were small,' Instance, has established a feud still persists. In addition, the area has a lack of large schools, forcing with Washington State, ust across Syracuse to come in contact with the state line. This competition little, high-spirited colleges. Their has nine to mean as much to spirit rubs off on Syracuse. State students as battles with Washington. Oklahoma has builtI., up a vendetta against Texas; Cola- 1T MAT ALSO SE said, with ex- upa vnsttakganstmea. ;C ceptions, that a relationship ex- rado against Oklahoma. ists between alcohol consumption In the Midwest, many rivalries and school spirit. Schools in New exist. For many years this state York, with its 18-year-old drink- has had only one really major ing law, have spirit to beat the power, the arch-rival was Ohio band. In small towns, which have State. The distance from Ann Ar- no other "things to do" besides bor to Columbus is formidable for movies and taverns, spirit flows in car-less students, and therefore the streets on weekends. frequent acts of violence have been Virginia, which is often consid- the exception rather than the rule. ered the "drinkingest" school in The rise of Michigan State pre- the country, has had its spirit sents a possibility which has yet written up in national magazines. to be exploited. Virginia is almost unique, how- Simple football rivalries alone do ever, in that it combines the East- not make school spirit, but they ern nearness to other schools with do help. There are other factors, a special "gentlemanly drinking" equally important, without which tradition of the Old South. It school spirit withers on the vine, has the best of two worlds-and tremendous spirit. G ENERALLY, the smaller a Dartmouth, too, has been able to school, the greater the spirit. maintain spirit, in the face of There develops in a small school a near-isolation in the wilds of New camaraderie and a feeling of soli- Hampshire, with the aid of a lib- darity which comes quickly to the eral amount of student drinking. surface on any possible occasion. In the Big Ten, Wisconsin, despite Thus Wabash and De Pauw, in the twin handicaps of large size Indiana, have a rivalry that out- and distance from rivals, has de- does anything in the Big Ten in veloped a notable spirit by means intensity. And Carleton and St. of the state law permitting beer Olaf, located in the same small to be sold to 18-year-olds. If it Minnesota town, go at it hammer has to, spirit can thrive on beer. and tongs whenever the chance arises. A freshman class which per- 'WEALTHIER schools also seem mits its bonfire to be lit before to have more spirit. In the The Game is hooted for the next East, the major schools are pri- four years. vate, with correspondingly higher This "smallness" need only be tuition. It takes more money to relative. Northwestern is easily the enter these schools and a feeling of shrimp of the Big Ten conference, aristocracy-or at least timocracy though large by Eastern standards. -can develop. This by itself does As a result, the student body is not create school spirit, but it can more active in displaying spirit reinforce it, than any other conference school. Northwestern, being the only Michigan students can testify to private school in the Big Ten, has this after last fall's football game, this advantage over its rivals, as when Northwesterners rode the does Stanford on the Pacific streets in convertibles and cheered Coast, Vanderbilt in the South and themselves hoarse during the Rice in the Southwest. game. State universities are thus at a School spirit often persists in further, though slight, disadvan- spite of size. Syracuse furnishes tage. In addition, the presence of a good example of this. It would large out-of-state minorities at not be out of place sizewise in the most state universities deprives the Big Ten, but the rivalry with Col- student body of the feeling that it consists of and :epresents the peo- much easier to wax enthusiastic it. Once it is started, it can snow. ple of the state-a possible source with a chorus of "Lord Jeffrey Am- ball by itself even if these faa- of school spirit. herst was a soldier of great fame" tors fade out or disappear. Without The original founders can con- than to praise the Michigan state them, school spirit has tough sled- tribute in another way to school legislature in similar fashion. ding-and the University is with- spirit. John Purdue, Ezra Cornell All these factors, sometimes to- out all of them, to a great degree. and Cornelius Vanderbilt are cele- gether and sometimes singly, grad- As a result, though the flesh may brated in song and story. It is ually tend to develop a school spir- be willing, the spirit is weak. RUNNING RIOTS: How It's Done in Eastern Schools (Continued from Page 4) astric cases gathers at midnight "Nearer My God To Thee." Ten thing had been thought out in the bellfry of Burton tower to men rush in and stamp "CON- months in advance. plan action. Perhaps twenty men DEMNED, BOARD OF HEALTH" m v form the nucleus of the action, on everything in sight. Forty men with more to follow, dash in with stretchers, wearing R Sfail here simply because Next day, at noon, the cafeteria red 'cross arm bands, and hustle ey are never planned, and is the peaceful scene it always is everyone out. The last man out left mostly up to the mindless mob at this time; just a roomful of throws a gas bomb. for execution. people slowly and cautiously eat- This is a successful. riot, if done There are three requisites for a ing. in this way, and could really bring successful riot. Then, bedlam. Twenty men results. Contrast this outline with 1) The riot must have a reason simultaneously throw their trays the usual procedure, and see why for being. There is a French phrase to the floor, shouting: "Whoever riots here can only fail, and will for this, so it must be apt. One eats this, help." A brass band rises continue to fail until something is cannot riot for nothing. One must from a few booths and plays done. protest something, whether it be _- _ __------ Union food, dorm food, ugly wom- ~ en, or Richard Nixon. It is hope- less to attempt to get up a really good riot-like spirit if you are On the Spot? only going to let it die for lack ofn h a cause.69 2) The riot must be planned. The fuses must be tapped and the wires hidden. The water mains must be located and trustworthy men placed at the spigots. The charges must be carefully set. Pass keys must be obtained. Watchmen bribed. Potential informers put out of the way (painlessly, of Use our condensed course). 3) The riot must be well run. There must be no needless damage to inflame public opinion against the rioters. With these goals in mind, let us consider a potential but hypo- thetical riot, and how one might bring it about. ALL SUBJECTS FL'OR THE sixty-fifth consecutive night, a certain student-sup- U rich s Books"ore ported, red-brick eatery on State Street has served raw sewage in the student special. 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