-JAMES WECHSLER Etie lflirian Dai t Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications The UN: Off limits for Nixon? *1 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: RON LANDSMAN Publish or perish': A role for students THEDILEMMA of publish or perish is a national academic phenomenon. But that alone is riot sufficient reason for the University to acquiesce in its miscon- celved and misdirected control of the academic marketplace. Besides students, who have a c 1 e a r class interest in weakening the publish or perish syndrome, many faculty mem- bers-tenured ones at that-find major flaws in the demand for publications. The most common argument of the defenders of publish or perish-that the best researchers make the best teachers- is specious. It is of the breed of argu- ments that is logically concise but it in- vented after the fact. "Well," one might verbalize it, "We have to have it, and, come to think of it, it's good for teach- ing here, anyway.' IT IS OF the class of grand generaliza- tions, semantically pleasing but only tangentially related to reality. There are too many exceptions and too many var- iations-teachers whose research is shoddy and the good or even great re- searchers who are deadly in the class- room-to accept the argument. If teaching and research are so synony- mous, why not measure by teaching alone? The administrators would have you believe that teaching is too hard to measure, whereas all you have to do with publications is read them (or sometimes just count them). Whether you use teaching or research standards, argue the administrators, the results would be the same. But there is a difference, and others are willing to admit it. Dean William Hays of the literary college and Vice- President for Academic Affairs Allen Smith-acknowledge the distinct v a l u e s and abilities involved in teaching and research. As long as the University seeks men who have both qualities in ideal equal proportion, though, Hays and S m i t h would be satisfied. Still, as long as they admit there is a qualitative difference and a difference in rewards, we must ask which is more important to the Univer- sity and why. UNIVERSITY partakes out of ne- cessity in the game of publish or perish essentially because that's w h a t other institutions do - the demand is for "names" and names are earned by research and publication. Those are the people to get. There are at least two major assump- tions here which are seriously challeng- ed by professors who have succeeded by the rules of the game: s The rating system which establishes which are the "good departments" is vague and possibly inaccurate. This makes the reliance on national status a self-deceptive act which can and does mislead the University in its values. * The necessity of having that good name. The values inherent in the pub- lish or perish marketplace seem to go unchallenged. But the standards of pub- lish or perish'are not necessarily the'ideal standarsd for an academic institution. The basis for assigning "standing" is misleading, and thoughtless adherence to that approach by the University is ac- cordingly dysfunctional. Put simply, there is a status system which the University adheres to. Individ- uals gain status by publishing, depart- ments gain status by picking up "name" men or getting their own men to pub- lish, and colleges and universities acquire status on the relative strength of the de- partments in their respective disciplines nationally. HAYS AND SMITH are practically ser- vile in their adherence to this system, a servility that is far from becoming. The rules have been made by the good schools - Berkeley, Harvard et al. and the University is unwilling, whether or not they are unable, to buck what the "good" schools do. But there is an alternative. Current- ly researchers are supported at the ex- pense of the teachers, but there is no reason wihy this should be so. The Uni- versity, as one well-known professor phrased it, can get exactly what it wants - if it wants researchers, it can get them. And if it wants teachers - all it has to do to get them is pay them better. "That's all," Prof. Daneeka said, "just ask." But this time there's no catch. If the University wants the standard reputation, it can have it. And if it wants to get a reputation as a good' school for teaching, it can get that as well. This argument is tied in with ques- tions of graduate vs. undergraduate edu- cation. Defenders of publish or perish maintain that graduate education is much like an apprenticeship and thus it is necessary to get good scholars to work with them. But even within that limitation the University seems to have gone too far afield and the loss: undergraduate edu- cation. The emphasis on name and what it implies has left the less glamorous teachers in the dust. And the result has been only incidentally good - or else mediocre or bad - teaching of under- graduates. But universities don't make their name there, so it is of little import. There is another question here, one which concerns students. Considering the criteria used now for appointments, and the different standards that students might use, what role should students play in the selection and promotion of pro- fessors? Student groups up to now which were otherwise either willing to concede the faculty's right to select themselves or un- willing to even dare ask should re-con- sider their position. The faculty has an interest to protect -its professional standing and scholar- ship. But the students have an equal interest that may come into conflict-- their education. It is for students to de- mand, and for faculty to give, the right for a more than advisory voice in tenure decisions to students. There are full professors now who have never gotten their PhDs. They made it eventually on the basis of their teach- ing, it just took them years longer than it took the "publishers." Students have a right, an obligation in this case, really, to demand that they get good teaching. Not that it replaces scholarship as the deciding criterion, but that it be made equal to publishing as the deciding fac- tor. Executive departments and faculty members defend their right to choose their own members, guild-like, on the basis of confidentiality and competence, both of which are relevant but neither of which are sufficient. Arguments between faculty and stu- dents over choice of faculty have center- ed, incorrectly, over questions of politics, such as in the first history department forum. But there is also the question of research vs. teaching, a valid difference of values which the students have a just reason for wanting expressed. Student membership on executive or tenure committees is the only solution to this conflict of interests class. The faculty would no more give to students the right to decide on professors' quali- fications than the students should cede to faculty members the full voice over the quality of a man's teaching. An advisory voice is clearly not suf- ficient. An advisory mechanism would not give students any assurance that their recommendations were playing an appropriately significant role. Rather, joint committees should be formed, stu- dents forming a subcommittee to discuss and report on teaching, faculty a sub- committee to meet and report on scholar- ship. The relationship between the college and depart'ment executive committees cannot be ignored, of course. The col- lege can and does exert a strong hand in appointments and promotions, but within the departments there is much that can be done, much which students can do. THIS ISSUE seems to be the appropriate culmination of student power, a voice in the area of the central concern of N THE COURSE of a visit to New York earlier this week, Hubert Humphrey staged an inform- al pilgrimage to the halls of the United Nations. If he had been the man who had won the Presi- dential election, his visit - and the impassioned remarks he delivered to UN personnel about the en- during meaning and mission of the institution - would have been big world-wide news. Instead the event was treated as a social note or a footnote, or totally ignored. But for many veteran UN hands, the occasion was far more than ceremonial or sentimental. For it underlined the ambiguity and doubt that sur- rounds President-elect Nixon's conception of the relationship of his Administration to the world or- ganization. These uncertainities were enhanced by his designation of Robert Murphy as his foreign policy adviser during the transition;Murphy is on record as deprecating the UN's value and even crisply suggesting that the world would suffer no irreparable loss if it ceased to exist. IN RESPONSE to inquiry UN officials merely say without comment that, in the post-election era, neither the President-elect nor- any of his emissar- ies has yet signified any desire for consultation with Secretary General U Thant and his associates. It is possible, of course, that Nixon is unfamiliar with the protocol under which heads of state are obliged to initiate such meetings, or that he believes such a step should be delayed until he has formally assumed office. But other circumstances give the non-recogni- tion to date a more conspicuous and disturbing quality. Thus, a search of the journalistic archives re- veals no point at which Nixon. throughout his long public life, has ever entered the UN building. Con- ceivably he participated incognito in a guided sight- seeing tour at some moment of curiosity, but such an event is unrecorded, MOREOVER an examination of the two major campaign volumes released during the Nixon cam- paign-one called "Nixon on the Issues" and the other "Nixon Speaks Out"-reveals almost total obliviousness to the UN's existence. In neither does the UN rate evena special head- ing in the enumeration of the many topics on which he has spoken (ranging from "Peace" to "Respect Letteros: A study of the clipping-folder in our morgue entitled "Richard Nixon-UN" produced exactly six fragments. One, dated September 23, 1960, quoted him as favoring "the establishment of a permanent military force under the United Nations." But he apparently never reverted to the theme; the other brief citations reiterated his opposition to a Peking presence. WHILE NIXON'S AVOIDANCE of any extended remarks on the UN can hardly be deemed encourag- ing, no evidence was found in these researches that he has ever joined in the frenzied anti-UN rhetoric long fashionable among right-wing Republicans. It is as if he had systematically chosen to remain aloof from the controversies surrounding the or- ganization, and had asked his speech-writers and press agents to pretend that the UN's existence had not yet been officially called to his attention. In the collected and selected recitations and writings of the new President, the UN essentially emerges as a non-thing, worthy of the studied inattention politicians now accord the Women's Christian Tem- perance Union or the Socialist Workers Party. But an ommission or neglect that might have remained unnoticed for a while has been under- scored by Mr. Humphrey's UN appearance and the warmth of the response it evoked. Consider what the impact would have been if the visitor had been Mr. Nixon. BEFORE TOO LONG the President-elect will have to assume some meaningful posture toward an institution that still symbolizes so much of the hope of mankind, and so many of whose constituent ele- ments are awaiting a sign. What he does-or fails to do-will be one of the more tangible clues to the future. In much of the world his ascendancy has created apprehensions about a resurgence of mind- less nationalism and militarism, and those fears are manifest in many UN delegations. They will not be resolved by reports that he offered the UN Ambas- sadorship to Mr. Humphrey '(who could hardly have been expected to accept it) or some other old UN friend. No appointment will be meaningful until Mr. Nixon gives some word that he views the UN as a serious place rather than as political outer space. (Copyright, 1968, New York Post) 0a option for America" and "Pornography"). In the first 175- page volume the only reference to the UN occurs in a declaration opposing the admission of Red China; in the s e c o n d (291 pages of collected speeches) I find literally no mention of the UN. Indeed, even in his discussions of the Korean War, he omits any notation that this was the first war in history waged under the UN banner in the name of collective security; the passage merely em- bodies the complaint that Americans carried the burden of the fighting. In a cryptic reference to the futility of China's permanent exclusion from "the family of nations," he somehow avoided men- tioning the name of the family. 4 The Pot pourri E To the Editor: THE RECENT enunciation by a number of students of a brave new principle of higher education certainly merits consideration. This principle, namely the "stu- dent's right to conduct his aca- demic life as he chooses," has ad- mittedly not yet been discovered by our faculty, who have b e e n blinded by the premise that some knowledge is a prerequisite to the development of wisdom. But this is no reason to reject out of hand a novel, and possibly revolution- ary, concept of learning. Certainly the enormous resources of o u r University should make it possible to experiment with a mini-pilot- program in this direction! THE PROGRAM would of course be organized about a new degree- I would suggest a Resident in Arts. There might be several such de- grees offered, for example R.A. 2, R.A. 3, R.A. 4, depending on how long a student "resided" at the University. Naturally, there would be no hours or course require- ments for receiving a suitably-em- bossed parchment with such a designation. To make this quite clear, the concept of a "distribu- Ition - concentration requirement" would be explicitly replaced by a "potpourri option." The students in such a program might well be given a much greater latitude in organizing and conducting their courses; perhaps they might even teach the courses themselves. Fur- thermore. would it not be fairer and more practical to have stu- dentscdecide by majority voteuon the content 'of any particular course? It is quite clear that laws of physics, for instance, derived from such a participatory demo- cratic procedure would be far more acceptable, and therefore valid, than those which must be received by compulsion. I realize that there will be many who will jump to criticize these seminal ideas, no doubt on the grounds that the University's re- sources are limited and. that the success of such a program is un- certain at best. On the first point, I would say that an institution of our size and breadth should have room for every kind of program, certainly for one which has such tremendous implications for rev- olutionizing graduate education (notathe least of which wouldrbe the awarding of a much more rel- evant degree, the D. o. P., Doctor of Potentiality, than those now of- fered). And as to "success," why be bound by one of society's ar- bitrary middle-class values? After all, a little failure might be insti- tutionally therapeutic. -Prof. S. Krimm Department of Physics Nov. 25 Not Sieglinde! To the Editor: MY DAUGHTER, who studies in Ann Arbor, is sending me Naturally it was Faust's Gretchen who was singing her song "am Spinnrad" and not Siegmund's "Sieglinde." Not only that, there was no Spinnrad existing at the prehistoric time when Wagner's "Walkuere" is taking place but Sieglinde just would not have had the time to sit and sing at the Spinnrad. Her excitement starts at the very beginning of her entrance in the first act when she finds the strange man at the fireplace who is her long lost brother Siegmund and whom she falls in love with. And where would we be if Sieg- linde would have killed her child as poor Gretchen did? Siegfried would never have been born and the world would miss the operas Siegfried and Goetterdaemmerung in which she plays a leading role. Therefore please, to put us music lovers at ease, no "Sieglinde am Spinnrad" any more! -Walter Strauss Nov. 27 Smorgasbord To the Editor: THE DISCUSSION about the language requirement seems to have got stuck in the mud. On the one hand, there is the estab- lishment, insisting on the great educational merits of knowing at least one other language (Goethe even thought that for every lan- guage you knew you were a new and different kind of human being); on the other hand, there are the radical abolitionists, re- iterating their right to choose their own kind of education and not be coerced. By now it should be clear that the two parties arerlargely talking past each other. For the abolition- ists have not gone on record deny- ing the possible virtue of knowing another language; they are against being taught badly and against being told what they have to be taught. And the establish- ment has not, to my knowledge, made a plain case for coercion; although coercion is what they seem in fact torbe practising. It might help to trace some of tihe implications of this dilemma. THE ABOLITIONIST'S idea of a university seems to be some giganticintellectual smorgas- bord which justifies its existence by providing a maximal choice of morcels out of which the radi- cal intellectual gourmet can com- bine his educational repas. An in-, tellectual smorgasbord a univer- sity certainly is and this is neither its least attractive nor its least important aspect. To taste one's way through its offerings, avoiding stale dishes and anything over- spiced or underspiced, too homely or (particularly) too exotic, prom- ises to be stimulating and reward- ing. It may also be perfectly re- spectable intellectually. But providing an exciting menu of courses is not a university's only function. It also accumulates and distributes information, it oc- casionally adds a brick to what is know anywhere, it prepares its students for various roles and functions etc, etc. It also hands out degrees. And this is the point where our radicals do not seem to me to be radical enough. They want to have their cake and eat it too. They want their own, rad- ically uncoerced education, but- Just like mom and pop-they also want a degree. And just like mom's and pop's, this degree must come from a nationally recognised uni- versity. NOW, BY CONFERRING a de- gree, a university is in effect say- ing the person so singled out 1) has mastered a certain body of knowledge, 2) has acquired a cer- tain number of skills, 3) has reached a certain degree of ma- turity, and 4) has thereby intel- lectually outgrown the provincial perspective with which we are all very naturally born. Today, most American universities deserving that name include in their degree definition a knowledge of one language and culture other than "First of all, can she support me in the manner to which I hove become accustomed?" '4 -- one's own. Modest though this is, this was not always so, and there are, I am told, very good reasons why the tradition of learning for- eign languages is still so striking- ly weak-kneed and undernourished in this country. If the reasons for this fact are good, the conse- quences, it should by now be clear, are devastatingly bad. For it is precisely 19th century isolationist educational philosophy in unholy alliance with 20th century global power politics that have maneu- vered this country into its present fix. It will not do to be progressive and critical about the one, and yet reactionary and complacent about the other. It makes no sense rad- ically to protest the war, while strengthening the intellectual isolationism that keeps it going. Developing a national consci- ence presupposes devolping greater international awareness. It is these exigencies which alone seem to me to justify a degree of coer- cion-even though Igagree that such coercion should be kept to a minimum. But how can coercing a student to take a look beyond the backyard fence of his native cul- ture be exceeding this minimum-- at a time when our missiles and bombers, our hand-grenades and flame-throwers point or reach across that fence every day? AS FAR as I know, there is no law barring a student from spend- ing four years at the university taking nothing but the exciting courses he wishes to take. If he is bourgeois enough, also to want a degree-and incurious enough not to want to learn a -language-- there are still plenty of colleges across the country that do ,not include, in their definition of a student worthy of graduation, a knowledge of another language or culture. Why, then, should the University feel obliged to lower its standards to cater to self-per- petuating provincialism? Ideally, ,a working knowledge of a second language should be an entrance requirement fdr any good university. (Most European universities, including Oxford, re- quire Latin and one modern lan- guage, Cambridge any two lan- guages etc.) One of the four un- dergraduate years might then profitably be spent abroad, put- ting this knoweldge to use and widening a student's horizon. Thre curriculum of the average Amer- ican high school being what it is, this will remain utopia for some time t9 come. In the meantime, American uni- versities will have to do, alas, what the high schools ought to, but cannot or will not do. They may even have to use coercion to teach students, at long last, the languageswhich they couldhave been taught, and much, more painlessly, at an earlier age. Now if the universities teach these lan- guages badly, ways must indeed be found, and strong pressures ap- A" *' 4