Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 1$, 1970 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 18, 1970 UNIVERSITY: On creating a new institution (Continued from Page 4) in preparing experts in interna- tional conflict; with enriching the quality of our culture, not in con- tributing to its corruption; with enhancing the beauty of the nat- ural world, not in desecrating it. New fields like ecology, Afro- American studies, and urban stud- ies that are from the outset so- cially-conscious will continue to be initiated, while the more tra- ditional fields like law, engineer- ing,. medicine and social. studies w ill accelerate their already marked reorientation toward so- cial concern. IT IS ALSO LIKELY that the content of social "science" and the humanities will be freed from the spell of pseudo-science and incorporate once again explicit value judgment. It will become in- creasingly obvious that an uncon- scionably large amount (though by no means all) of the models, methods and data processing is sham and self-deception. In its early positivist days, be- haviorism reflected the admirable conviction that social laws could be disclosed and t h a t through them social scientists could in- fluence society for human benefit as the natural scientists did in their realm. There are no doubt some who continue to believe this, and many more would certainly find this act of faith as an im- plicit self-justification underlying their social research. But it is hardly a secret that many elaborate projects in the social sciences are undertaken to advance the "state of the art," to satisfy the researchers' aesthetic and play instincts, or simply to demonstrate sophisticated skills to one's colleagues and professional leaders, particularly those in charge of promotions and grants. Rather than bring students in so- ciology and political science clos- er to social ills (much less to any reasonable program for their amelioration) the impressive ar- r a y of tapes, cards, print-outs, graphs and tables too often raises an impenetrable wall protecting the young researcher from t h e shock of social truth. EVER MORE AWARE that what is politically and humanely significant can seldom be quant- ified (and well tutored in t h e Vietnam example of policy by computer), the new students in social studies urge direct encount- er, face to face, I-thou rapport with those they are studying, ful- ly aware that interpretations ofI such encounters can only be high-c ly subjective. Even economistsi and engineers are being challeng- ed by those who insist that these1 fields concern themselves w i t h alternative ends, not only withi the most rational, or least costly means, with the "why" of an is-1 sue ,not only the "how." The high- est market bid and the lowest ma-1 terial cost are no longer deemed adequate determinants of a pol- icy or -design. Qualitative social1 losses and gains, those disturbing "externalities," must be taken] heavily into account.I Understandably, this return to1 subjectivism, to intuitive sensi- tivity, is even more likely in the humanities, where, too, the fetish{ of numbers has had immense suc-4 cess. Since the humanities were, long the traditional home of crit- icism and value judgment, their displacement by "hard data" ex- ercises should be chalked off as a, major, triumph for the mechani- zation of thought. But, it seems, both students and faculty are re-' calling what was said in those' "statements of purpose" which hopeful applicants prepared for' the graduate schools, the "corny"' "sophomoric" lines about the na- ture and destiny of man, the dra- ma of humanity and so forth. There is a good chance that these sentiments may yet prevail over anxious professionalism, t h a t philosophy, history and .literature may again become majistra vitae, teacher of life. BESIDES. PREPARING the new student for humane service, the content of education will also seek to enrich the lives of the students themselves. Paradoxical though - it might seem, the move to rele- vance in education will be accom panried by a renewed appreciation of our cultural heritage. From the courses that the new students have initiated, both in their "free universities" and, more recently, in "credit" courses, it is clear that they aspire to humane self-fulfillment as well as humane service, that they take very ser-' iously t h e humanist ideal of a many-sided personality and arf eager to take advantage of the possibilities that affluence a n d leisure provide f o r this enrich- ment. Moreover, contrary to the argu- ment of those who denounce the emphasis on relevance, the two interests - self and service - are symbiotically joined: great liter. ature, philosophy, history and art comprise the richest source of the very ideals that relevant, socially- conscious action attempts to real- ize. The present education, in sharp contrast, is concerned with neither the student's cultural growth nor with humane service: it is given over almost entirely to the range in between, the func- tional skills by which economized theory becomes economized prac- tice. RATHER THAN SHARE with their students the experience of g r e a t works, professors in the, humanities train memory and an- alytic skills. Instead of joining in a cooperative encounter with cre- ative genius, faculty and students are immersed in survey texts, summary outlines, and successive criticisms a n d interpretations, ending with the professor's own "contribution" to this endless re- arrangement of "concepts and da- ta. But this, again, is as it should be in a system that wants only able technicians, functionaries dedicated to absurd or destructive enterprises a n d psychologically unable to do very much of value either for themselves or for any- one else. ORGANIZATION NOTICES Bach Club meeting Wed., Mar. 18 at 8:00. 1236 Wash. (corner of SU at Forest). Program: "Bach vs. Marcello Elegance vs. charm". Featuring live perf. (Catherine McKelvey, flute; Cor- nelia Schorr, piano) of Bach's Sonata in E minor & Marcellos Sonata in F Ma- jor. Miss McKelvey will conduct the pro- gram. The Ageless Science of Yoga. Asana and Posture class sponsored by the Self Realization Fellowship, Mon. or Wed., 8-9:00 p.m., call Lin1]a or Dale, 761- 9825 after 6:00 p.m. ** * * University Lutheran Chapel: March 18, 10:00 p.m., 1511 Washtenaw, Mid- week Lenten Vespers, The Rev. Rich- ard Kapfer. University of Michigan Flyers: Fed- eral Aviation regulations for pilots. Mr. Verdon W. Kleimehnagen, FAA accident prevention specialist, Thursday, March 19, 1970, 8:00 p.m. Multipurpose, UGLI. Rent your, Roommate with a Classified Ad DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 6) The annual Convocation recognizing un- dergraduate honor students will be held at 10:30 a.m., Fri., Mar. 20, at Hill Auditorium. Dr. William N. Hubbard, Jr~ Dean of the Medical School and Director of the Medical Center and fu- ture Vice-President and General Man- ager of th Pharmaceutical Division of the Upjohn Company, will address the Convocation on "Compassion and Com- petence." All undergraduate classes, with the exception of clinics and graduate sem- inars, will be dismissed from 9:45 to 12:00 noon for the Convocation. How- ever, seniors may be excused from clin- ics and seminars. The honor students will not wear caps and gowns. Main floor seats will be reserved for them and for members of their families and will be held until 10:15. Doors of the Auditorium will open at 10:00. The public is invited. The Henry Russel Lecture will be de- livered by John Arthos, Prof. of Eng- lish, Wei., Mar. 18, 8:00 p.m., Rack- ham Amph. His lecture topic is "Shake- speare and the Ancient World." The Henry Russel Award will also be made at this time. SGC MINUTES Approved: WHEREAS: The U.S. government (i.e. the military-industrial complex) en- gages in a policy of oppressing peoples around the world in forms of genocidal wars, suppression of popular reform and revolutionary movements, a n d employment of people as slave labor; WHEREAS: The University of Mich'- igan supports this denial of a human's right to life by allowing recruiters on campus from companies that employ the U.S. government's genocidal poli- cies. WHEREAS: A human's right to life is certainly more important than the right of engineering or any student's right to be interviewed by anyone they choose. BE IT RESOLVED: That SGC take a firm and unyielding position against the government's imperialistic policy, against university complicity with the ,war effort, and against university re- cruitment policy. BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That SGC demands that recruitment by corporations that aid the war effort and/or are exploitative at home or abroad be stopped. That if the Uni- versity does not immediately halt re- cruitment, then SGC support any at- tempts short of physical violence to persons by any groups to prevent these warmongering companies from recruit- ing on campus. Specifically, SGC urges students to take immediate action against Atlantic-Richfield at n o o n tomorrow. That SGC set up a committee which will establish guidelines for acceptabil- ity of corporations for the privilege of recruiting. Roll Call Vote: YES: Brand, DeGrieck, Gorman, Lewis, Martin, Nelson, Scott, Van Der Rout. NO: Anderson, Warrington. Approved: MOVE: That SGC condemns the ad- ministration and Fleming for their crude attempts to subvert the BAM demands; MOVE: That SGC vigorously supports the BAM demands (especially for 10 per cent black enrollment by Fall 1973 with adequate financial aid); FURTHER MOVE: That SGC urges the Regents to pass the BAM demands in their entirety next week and urges students to actively show their support by attending the Regent's meetings and expressing their feelings in a way which cannot be ignored. Approved: WHEREAS: The Dean and the Execu- tive Committee of the LS&A School in a highhanded and arbitrary fashion at- tempted to suspend a student, Bob Parsons, without due process; WHEREAS: This attempt was thwart- ed by mass action by the student body; BE IT RESOLVED: That as long as students are exercising a de facto pow- er in academic discipline, the situation should be institutionalized; FURTHER RESOLVED: That SG C transmit to the faculty of the College of LS&A and of the other colleges a proposal that all codes of academic conduct be written by committees with party voting membership of students and faculty, with the resulting code to be approved by the whole faculty and the whole student bodyin each college in the manner they see fit: FURTHER RESOLVED: That col- lege faculty agree that no student will be disciplined for personal nonacademic conduct under any faculty code. Approved: WHEREAS: SGC moved that t h e "fact" sheet distributed in mass quan- tities by robben and friends wasbiased and evaded the entire issue of cor- porate recruiting; WHEREAS: SGC demanded the rob- ben distribute the truth (as SGC sees it) at his expense; WHEREAS: robben said with a smile on his face, "I believe in equal time. But, you have a budget - use it." E IT RESOLVED: That SGC con- demns robben phieming for his un- fair and biased treatment of the issue and his blatant repression of the truth on campus; BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED : That SGC condemns robben for using his office of the presidency to propagan- dize for and to further the doubtful cause of the warmongering corporate elite. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Further information at Career Plan- ning 3200 SAB, 764-6338. Council on International Educational Exchange, listings of programs for study, travel and work abroad. Rehabilitation Counseling Employ- ment Exchange, jobs in rehab. services booklet. City Planning Dept., San Antonio, Texas, full time employ plus masters in urban planning. St. Cloud State College, Minn., grad. assistantships in student personnel services. State Univ. of New York at Bingharn ton, programs in biol., Engl., geol., math, music, psych, soc, sci., and Span- ish leading to MAT and] MST. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE 212 SAB, Lower Level Interviews at Summer Placement: MARCH 18: Good Humor, Det. men and women drivers of ice cream truck, nationwide, good pay. MARCH 19: Classic Crafts Corp, summer college prog., company reps. car nec. MARCH 20: Kelly Services, register for typing, file clerk, bus. mach. oper., computer, switchboard, gen. office wk. Camp Michigania, U of M Family Camp, men for archery, riding,Fboat- ing, swimming (WSI), riflery. ANNOUNCEMENT: City of Elmhurst seeks students for Summer Forestry Program. Good salary. University Coopertive REDUCED PRICES PARTIAL LISTING OF SERVICES Save 2-3c gal, on gasoline Save money on appliances Save 10% on haircuts JO0"IN THE COO00P COOP OFFICE, Basement, Michigan Union, 761-2808 STUDENT CREDIT UNION, 1 st Floor, Michigan Union EMPLOYEE'S CREDIT UNION, 508 E. William The University Cooperative is non-profit, consumer service organization, owned and controlled by its members University UCCooperative V k The Senior Staff of the 1971 MICH IGANENSIAN extends applications to any student member of the University Community for a position on the Junior Staff. N I TIHE POSITIONS ARE: Academics Editor Associate Academics Arts Editor Associate Arts Campus Life Editor Associate Campus Life Organizations Editor Associate Organizations DAVE'S CORVETTE & CUSTOM SHOP Expert Autobody Repair - Speed Parts Sold All Makes and Models - Specialize in Fiberglas 310 N. River YPSILANTI - 483-3441 Senior Section Editor Sports Editor Associate Sports Publicity Director Sales Manager Associate Sales Copy Editdr Design Editor, Applications may be obtained at the MICHIGANENSIAN Office or the Student Publications Business Office, 420 Maynard St. APPLICATIONS ARE DUE MARCH 20, 1970 I Li il______________________________________________________ c a, * 4 0 I