Seventy-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS THE VIEW FROM HERE Some Kosher Pigskin Predictions BY ROBERT XLIVANS . Y."':. S '.'.1"ff "fi Y, :1 i""r maX 1: . s 1 ............. Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., 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, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 NIGHT EDITOR: DANIEL OKRENT The Teachers' Strike Ends But 'The Fire Next Time' THE DETROIT teachers' strike has end- ed. The teachers have ratified a two- year contract which, while clearly fail- ing to meet their well-justified salary de- mands, provides enough of an increase to save face for both the striking individuals and the Detroit Federation of Teachers. At the beginning of the strike, the teach- ers demanded a salary increase of $1200 annually over a two year period and the Board of Education countered with a $600 offer. They have settled on $850, which will, in 1968-69, bring starting teacher salaries above the $7000 level. This salary increase, while undoubted- ly a good thing for the present teachers, is not nearly enough. It will do little to put teaching in serious competition with other occupations open to college gradu- ates, and thus will fail to draw into the teaching profession the quality and quan- tity of men and women that are so ob- viously needed. (According to one Detroit teacher, the Board of Education is short more than 800 teachers for this school year.)~ The politicians and citizens, who con- stantly speak of the complex solutions needed for the problem of the ghettos, have ignored a most obvious and pain- less measure that would undoubtedly do more to promote equal opportunity in- the future than the currently propos- e4 "solution" of investigating the Detroit police force. By paying teachers more now, De- troiters could insure that the present gen- eration of inner-city children would not be as badly-taught as their parents. But the necessary increases have not been given, and the likelihood of improved urban education over the next decade is almost nil. AND MEANWHILE, as school board, par- ents, and state legislators draw a deep sigh of relief, one odious misconception that has been nourished by teacher strikes all over the country will probably continue to grow. This is the idea that the teachers, in striking, have let the stu- dents , down. By refusing to appear in school, they have somehow "betrayed" the boys and girls who depend on them for their education. This idea is unfair, and untrue. Teach- ers, by striking, by demanding a salary comparable to what others with their education and training can earn, and by refusing to let the teaching profession go any farther toward the unprofessional mediocrity that seems to be its present trend, have finally fulfilled their obliga- tion to their students, present and future. They have finally stood up for the mere possibility of 'real education by telling America, in the only language Americans can understand, "You get what you pay for, and nothing more." And to the extent that the teachers- have accepted less than their demands, they have let their pupils down. The shortage of qualified teachers will grow, and the poor conditions in Detroit schools will grow with it. Two years from , now, perhaps we'll hear from the teachers again. And may- be next time they'll mean business. -CAROLE KAPLAN IN 1873, THIRTY MEN of Michigan sent Cornell Uni- versity a challenge to play a game of "football" at a midway point, Cleveland. The request stirred Cornell President Andrew D. White to telegraph a classic reply to Ann Arbor: "I will not permit thirty men to travel four hundred miles merely to agitate a bag of wind." The annual ritual of agitation begins this Saturday as the Wolverines march out against their first of this year's ten opponents. Of course, no season is complete without a barrage of self-declared experts predicting the outcome of the schedule. The following is my contribu- tion to the occult art of pigskin prognostication: DUKE vs. MICHIGAN at Ann Arbor (Sept. 23)-The fearsome Blue Devils, hot on the heels of a 33-13 whomp- ing of mighty Wake Forest, fly in from the tobacco fields of North Carolina for the Michigan premiere. Emblaz- oned on their uniforms is a new warning to the oppo- sition: "Football may be hazardous to your health." This will not inhibit the Blue from beginning the year with a win. Score: Michigan 24, Duke 14. CALIFORNIA vs. MICHIGAN at Berkeley (Sept. 30) --Ronald Reagan's Golden Bears overcame Oregon 21-13 in their first game. However, under the esteemed Gover- nor's famous 10 per cent slash of all state university facilities, the California eleven will only be permitted to field 10 men on the gridiron. If that isn't bad enough, the tight higher education budget imposed under the austerity program leaves Cal gridders with thinner shoulder pads and cheaper helmets. Although these short- comings could be overcome by a loud home crowd, the impending possibility of a student demonstration threat- ens to leave only the national television audience at the Berkeley stadium. Score: Michigan 28, California 17. NAVY vs. MICHIGAN at Ann Arbor (Oct. 7)-The Annapolis squad sails up the Huron River to meet the Wolverines in this traditional intersectional rivalry. Decisive Wolverine victories in recent years have left Navy brass in a quandry, and a directive from the Sec- retary of the Navy has ordered escalation of the air and ground attack. The Midshipmens' defensive backfield has given up their red-dogging and blitz and replaced it with a search and destroy operation on the opposition quarterback. All these new tactics have been fully tried at the Navy's summer training camp, the Rice Bowl, in Da Nang. Score: Michigan 31, Navy 13. MICHIGAN STATE vs. MICHIGAN at Ann Arbor (Oct. 14)-A scheduling oversight placed this most im- portant rivalry on the Jewish Holy Day of Yom Kippur. However, this fact will neither deprive either team of any starters nor dwindle the standing room only crowd. The Spartans' teamwork has been affected by the new "ability-to-pay," sliding tuition scale established at MSU over the summer to combat small legislative appropria- tions. Coach Duffy Daugherty has been forced to institute his own "ability-to-play" plan for starting gridders on the MSU eleven. This contest must be rated a toss-up, but the home crowd should make the difference. Score: Michigan 20, Michigan State 17. INDIANA vs. MICHIGAN at Ann Arbor (Oct. 21)- This is one of those contests about which little can be said and less can be written. But it's Homecoming, and who ever loses their own Homecoming game? Score: Michigan 24, Indiana 3. MINNESOTA vs. MICHIGAN at Minneapolis (Oct. 28) -The Gophers have not yet recovered from the beating they received off the playing field last year when they publicly announced their intention of having Robben Fleming be their next university president. When Flem-' ing turned it down at the last possible moment to assume the Michigan presidency, the Minnesota campus was humiliated and stunned. Rumors abound that the tra- ditional battle for the Little Brown Jug (as the Wolver- ine-Gopher rivalry is known) will be replaced this year for a fight over possession of President-designate Flem- ing. The Michigan squad, faced with the chilling pros- pect of the same university president for still another year, will fight even harder. Score: Michigan 42, Minne- sota 14. NORTHWESTERN vs. MICHIGAN at Ann Arbor (Nov. 4)-When I was a sophomore, I traveled to Evans- I ton for this contest, and cheered practically alone and in the Northwestern section. only to see the Wolverines defeated. Last year, anticipating revenge, I invited a Northwestern buddy to sit squarely in the center of the Michigan student section, only to watch him wallow in delight as we fell victim to another upset. I can't con- ceive of being so totally humiliated three years in a row. Score: Michigan 27, Northwestern 10. ILLINOIS vs. MICHIGAN at Champaign (Nov. l1- By this time in the season, the Wolverines' record will have sportswriters across the nation baffled and even The Daily sports staff will have stopped writing columns about school and politics and will have gone back to sports. A caravan of buses will bring 1,000 cheering Michigan fans into the Illini campus singing "We Shall Overcome." Only Illinois and Ohio State are contending with Michigan for the coveted Rose Bowl trip. Class will tell. Score: Michigan 14, Illinois 7. WISCONSIN vs. MICHIGAN. at Madison (Nov. 18)- The Wolverines' last away game will be played in a blizzard (e.g. Farmer's Almanac, 1967, p. 421). The teams will be kept warm on beer served at the Wisconsin student union, and the Wolverines will stumble to their ninth straight victory. Score: Michigan 21, Wisconsin 0. OHIO STATE vs. MICHIGAN at Ann Arbor (Nov. 25) -The two undefeated Big Ten teams come down to the exciting climax, only to be confronted by the preposter- ous fact that Nov. 25 is in the midst of Thanksgiving recess, and none of us will be on campus to watch the game. Only by the grace of ABC Television and Chris Schenkel (who predicted Michigan to win the Big Ten this season) can Wolverine fans follow the game at home. Score: Michigan 24, Ohio State 21. As sportswriters and Monday morning quarterbacks chuckle at this set of forecasts, just keep a few things in mind: The Detroit Lions did tie the Green Bay Packers Sunday; the Boston Red Sox are still right in the midst of the pennant race; and the Republican party did nominate Barry Goldwater in 1964. Truth Is not only stranger than fiction, it's less believable too. 4 4 Letters: A Little Traveling Music,'Conductor To the Editor: THIS LETTER deals with a problem which is of no con- cern to most, but of great concern to me, namely: distractions at Hill Auditorium productions. Last year at "Marat/de Sade" and this year at the second Bernstein concert, I made the mistake of sitting in the very rear of the auditorium, In this dark and gloomy vicinity hang out the ushers and standees, shuffling, ruffling, sniffing, whis- pering, in a rude cacophony which bugs the ear and boggles the mind. When I go to a concert and pay $6 for a seat, I don't want to be distracted by a bunch of incon- siderates. Small noises disrupt concentration, and concentration is necessary for enjoyment. I now ask the management to take a modest step or two to rectify the situation. _ NOW FOR the audience at large. To all gum chewers-those wayest out of mental retards-the axe ! Next, those simultaneously-page- turning musical score readers- out! And foot-steppers, finger- snappers, program-crinklers-be- gone! And he who would cough, or hurl foul ;abuse, or burp in one manner or another-leave! Whis- perers, grunters, hummers-to be dungeons' Ah, beasts, honk and snort no more! Or come to think of it, let's just get rid of the whole audience so that the rest of us can enjoy the show. -Rod Pratt, '68 Re-review To the Editor: I HAVE A question for the three gentlemen who so methodically searched for the petty mistakes in the New York Philharmonic con- cert of September 12. Gentlemen, what are you trying to prove: that you have a complete lack of under- standing of what it means to at- tend a live performance, total ig- norance of the realties of musical Is Johnson Mis(sile)leading? THE JOHNSON administration's decision to deploy a primitive anti-ballistic missile (ABM) defense system is an un- fortunate reaction to current political and international realities. ' Strategically, such a limited system would have only negligible effectiveness against a large-scale Soviet attack. To begin, there is little likelihood that the highly vulnerable radar needed for such a system could survive a first-strike at-, tack. Furthermore, since the ABM it- self must be equipped with nuclear war- heads, the public would have to be pro- tected against the serious nuclear fallout resulting from even the successful inter- ception of incoming missiles. Consequent- ly, anti-missile defense requires an ex- tensive network of meaningful civilian fallout shelters, a proposition costing $8 billion which the American public pre- viously scorned in the aftermath of the Berlin crisis of 1961-62. Moreover, the decision for deployment commits the U.S. to an enormous invest- ment in a relatively ineffective weapons system that may soon be made obsolete by the technological breakthroughs which might lead to a truly effective ABM de- fense. Also, as Secretary McNamara has previously remarked, such a system could be easily and cheaply counteracted by a marginal increase in the number of the adversary's offensive nuclear missiles or the development of advanced multiple warheads. The administration's decision appears to be a response to increasing pressure by, congressional; hawks to construct a "thick". system which would cost up to The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Fall and winter subscription rate: $4.50 per term by carrier ($5 by mail), $8.00 for entire year ($9 by mail). Daily except Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan, 48104. Editorial Staff ROGER RAPOPORT, Editor MEREDITH EMER, Managng Editor. MICHAEL HEFTER ROBERT KLIVANS City Editor Editorial Director SUSAN ELAN.......... Associate Managing Editor STEPHEN FIRSHEIN.....Associate Managing Editor LAURENCE MEDOW...... Associate Managing Editor JOHN LOTTIER........Associate Editorial Director RONALD KLEMPNER .... Associate Editorial Director SUSAN SCHNEPP ............... Personnel Director NEIL SHISTER............ Magazine Editor $40 billion. Given the tendency in the past for limited defense programs to snowball through bureaucratic expansion, it is highly likely that the current pro- posal will be just the first step along the path of enormous expenditures in this area. THE RAMIFICATIONS of the construc- tion of a complete ABM system for the stability of the strategic balance are seri- ous. Such a situation would lead to the production of more offensive weapons by each side because even a complete sys- tem could be at best 60 per cent effec- tive. And thus a new arms race with rapidly spiralling costs would ensue. This would almost assuredly lead to rising pressure for cutting non-defense spending at a time when the nation's priorities should be shifting to today's domestic problems. The administration is justifying a lim- ited system as a shield against the fledg- ling Chinese ballistic capacity of the 1970's. Although this might prove ade- quate for the near future it is unlikely to be useful for more than a few years, espe- cially since nuclear weaponry has a con- sistent history of the offense outstripping the defense. Moreover, developing ABM for the avowed purpose of deterring China can only lead to a reinforcement of Chinese xenophobia and continued American evasion of the diplomatic real- ity of Communist China.' Would the U.S. have gone ahead on its own with the /construction of ABM to counter the threat of China if the Rus- sians had not? After previously loudly proclaiming its interest in seeking Rus- sian concurrence in banning develop- ment of such a system, the answer must be no. IN DECIDING to go ahead, and justify- ing it by brandishing the Chinese threat, the administration is placating congressional hawks and future election year critics. But in so doing, it will open a new, costly round of the arms race in- creasing neither American nor interna- tional security. -MYRON SLOVIN -RONALD BAN 'Bab Boom' B YRON L. GROESBECK, assistant dean I I performance, or that even musi- cians of professional calibre are human? You make preference to Mr. Per- ry's review of the concert, and yet you have missed the intent behind it. The only criticism the reviewer had to make was one concerning a matter of personal preferrence re- garding interpretation of the Mahler symphony. No mention was made of the technical flaws. One is supposed to go to a concert to listen to music being made, not to hunt for human failings. There is no such thing as a per- fect concert. Even the great Toscanini did not believe that they ever occurred and often told of a dream he had. He would see himself on a podium con- fronting the perfect orchestra about to play the ideal program in the perfect concert hall for the perfect audience; and on that night he would be off. What do you demand from these musicans? The mere fact that they attempted two extremely arduous works should be sufficient cause to allow for flaws that only one who was listening for them could spot. Cou even state that in the Ives, the technical errors where not easy to spot. Before you to go your next con- cert, think. Why are you going- to search for faults, or to seek out that which might be enjoyable in a work of art. Anyone can criticize -it takes an understanding of the art to praise intelligently-or to comment on interpretational pref- erence. -Mark Lafer, '68 The Search To the Editor: S INCE MY NAME appeared in The Daily article of Sept. 13 concerning Professors Rice and Fraser, I feel that I am entitled to some space to express my com- plete concurrence in the reproofs administered by Deans Hays and Robertson in their joint communi- cation of Sept. 14. I should also add that senior members of the E n g 1i s h department concerned withnthe "search" sent a letter to Dean Haber as early as Feb. 1, 1966, listing the few top or "first- choice" prospects for a successor to Prof. Rice. These were arranged alphabetically, and Prof. Fraser was amongst them. Finally, Prof. Fraser's. "Shakespeare's Poetics" is an iconographic or iconological approach to "King Lear" and not an inconoclastic one. -Joe Lee Davis Professor of English and Chairman of the Program in American Culture Misleading TO the Editor: AS GRADUATE students in the Department of English, we want to express our stern disap- proval of your news article con- cerning the retirement of Profes- sor Warner G. Rice, Chairman of the Department of English. Profes- sor Rice has distinguished himself as 'a scholar, a teacher and an ad- ministrator during his thirty-eight year tenure at the University of Michigan. Under his leadership the English Department has achieved national recognition. He has been instru- mental in maintaining the proper relationship between teaching and scholarship in a balanced philo- sophy of education. Not only has he instituted new graduate pro- grams and curricula on the doc- toral level, as well as new degrees in English and Education, but he has been primarily responsible for improving the status of the teach- ing fellow within the department, With these considerations in mind, we feel that in deference to both the faculty and to the many hundreds of students whom Pro- fessor Rice has counseled, assisted and directed over these many years, your article in content and tone was misleading, highly ir- relevant and fundamentally in poor taste. -William Horwath -Gary Stein -Elliott M. Simon Teaching Fellows, Depart- ment of English I I N9~~ 7.L S, K t i ;, }t s N t , " i 'n;,: I ll I wj . . I "But Miss Jones, we've ALWAYS kept you on a pedestal I" "The type of necessary escalation should be left to the military experts!" ResdnilCollege Makes, Dreams Come True By JIM HECK EVER SINCE universities began accepting an ever-increasing number of students, educators have dreamed about orienting a small school atmosphere into a big school framework. The re- wards are self-evident. Apathy is far less widespread in a system which demands individual parti- cipation; emotional and mental disturbances occur less frequent- ly; and the much-feared "identity crisis" rarely exists in the small school. A student is recognized by his looks, his merits, his prej- udices, his personality and his name rather than by his IBM number. Until now, however, the prob- cept called the Residential Col- lege. The object, at the present, is "to afford still another method of education in the multiversity." But those who look deeper into the new structure find there may be even more sweeping changes made in the future. The Residential College encloses a small group of students within a framework of both physical and metaphysical walls in an attempt to exclude,them from the "great- er" multiversity. This does not mean they cannot use the vari- ous advantages of the University, but rather that the multiversity has little, if any, control over their development and progress. C~r A 41he ceN,, nn1" ct Q-j.. carpeted, and constructed with the best of acoustical devices. Semi- nars are as stimulating as spon- taneous conversation and yet they are important as a core require- ment. The professors represent diverse elements of the multiversi- ty-all claim a vital interest in this experimental concept. Fourth, the living environment is oriented so as to preserve the traditions of the home. For ex- ample, family-style dinners are the rule. Resident fellows act both as the paternal and maternal head of a group of students and take upon such traditional duties as counseling and advising. Finally, the Residential College is developing a community gov- that what goes on in the Resi- dential College is adaptable im- mediately to the whole multiver- sity system. The difficulty in establishing the Residential College was the planning andl tact involved that maneuvered such an experiment capable of feeding on the greater university. There is no doubt that it draws materials and energy from the multiversity as a para- site draws sap from a tree. But like the parasite, with each day of growth, it develops a greater security in its size and organiza- tion: it becomes as much a part of the University as Spanish moss is of a weeping willow. But what happens now? Will that the "school within a school" idea will fail miserably, all pres- ent indications point in the op- posite direction. The program has begun, and is moving along well. After this initial success it is at least hopeful that more residen- tial colleges will be developed with- in the University. THIS SPAWNING of small col- leges in the multiversity would have a tremendous positive effect. With the sectioning of groups of people into separate colleges, the multiversity would eventually de- centralize, allowing for a more positive, education-oriented at- mosphere. A sort of educational United Nations would *coordina~te the i