Higher Education Exam inec I' Sixty-Ninth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 The Student's Obligation... By LANE VANDERSLICE Daly Staff Writer HILOSOPHICAL DEBATE on whether a student should be primarily responsible for his own education can go on all night, but there are two factors that increasingly will force the student to answer mainly to himself for his own education. Often given as reasons for making a student responsible for this job are self-respect, a sense of responsibility and other "philosophical" considerations. But these considerations don't convince someone who believes that the primary responsibility for an education lies elsewhere. Talking about something else, Louis Armstrong once said, "if you got to ask whatit is, you ain't never going to know," and so it is with these philosophical considerations-if they haven't already convinced, they never will. Painfully evident in the last several years is the increasing financial squeeze in education. It will grow even worse, according to the best estimates. On one side: mushrooming enrollments. On the other: ap- propriations for higher education that rise slowly, if at all. According to Michigan legislative committee estimates, enrollment figures will double by 1970, reaching 270,000 students. To keep up with the expanding enrollment and maintain the same plant, investment per student in 1970 would require a total annual capital outlay for Michigan schools in the neighborhood of $60 million. A gross national product that makes educational appropriations look like a drop in the bucket may fool us into thinking there is ready money available for higher education. A glance at the State's financial situation should dispel the illusion. Usually optimistic John Dale Rus- sell, the head of the legislative committee, could only say that $60 million dollars yearly for educa- tional facilities "might" be reach- KIRK CHARGES: ed in "five or ten" years. The trend seems tobe againste U nive limiting enrollments. As another S egsltiv cmmtte U ntuy.in legislative committee study in- dicated, state college and uni- By RUSSELL KIRK versity presidents are almost unan- imously against limiting state-wide This spring, much to the chagrin enrollment. This means that more of the empire-builders at the Uni- students will be educated in pro- versity of Michigan and Michigan portionally less classroom space State University, the Michigan during years to come. And this Legislature reduced the annual means, wthout educational appropriations for these enormous doubletalk, that a greater -per- institutions by about a million haps much greater - educational dollars apiece. burden will be placed on the stu- This is a straw in the wind: dent.sstate legislators are beginning to * * * feel that the demands of state colleges for more and more money STUDENT TALENT will be the have coie to resemble a racket. one educational resource in abun- The state legislators are right. dance in the next few decades. It From UM and MSU, of course, would be utter nonsense for edu- came anguished cries of "What- cators not to demand an intensive ever are we to do about the rising use of this resource by putting the tide of enrollments?" student more on his own, and Such was their agony that their saving scarce teachers andbuild- administrators actually hinted ings. they might be compelled, after this Some might say pushing stu- blow, to raise entrance-standards dents towards learning more by as a means of reducing costs. themselves is an undesirable sec- Wouldn't that be dreadful? ond choice, one which is expedient, No, frankly, it wouldn't. and little more. No single action could do more However, after graduation the for decency in American education responsibility for learning is placed than some raising of entrance- squarely on the individual. Prepar- standards, ation for individual study should* start in college, to give good in- WHAT educationists call "the dependent study habits, rising tide of enrollments" has A professor of English at Stan- been caused, to some extent, by ford said in a recent Saturday Re- the increase of population in the view "talent is common - more United States, and by the popular common than the ability/ to con- appetite for college degrees stim- trol it." He was talking about ulated by the G.I. Bill. young writers, but the observation But nowadays this "rising tide" applies to all of us. It may take in considerable degree, is a fraud. practical developments to teach It is the universities and colleges us a philosophic lesson We should that deliberately create the tide. have learned before-that we are UM and MSU, for instance, com- primarily responsible for our own pete intensely in the recruiting of education, freshmen; mailing thousands and WITH LOANS: CongTess Aids Students By The Associated Press IT'S EASY TO SAY, and a lot of people have said it: "There's nothing wrong with education in this country that a little more money won't cure." Now the government has stepped in with a 900 million dollar pro-. gram to finance four years of aid to education. It features loans to college students, cash grants for graduate study, and pump-priming to strengthen the teaching of science, mathematics and modern foreign languages, Despite its broad horizon, this probably is not the cure for all the ills that have beset education. However, it's still too early to know. One "When Opinions Are Free Truth Will Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. Who Leads? rsities Per petj , SEPTEMBER 28, 1958 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP MUNCK OFFEE. . . BLACK C tte By Richard Taub i ,tIat Pressure thousands of expensive brochures, sending out their publicity people to every high school in the state, and inventing new curricula to attract those students who simply aren't interested in anything for the mind. As an example of this last de- vice, I give you an innovation at Michigan State. MSU now offers a "Curriculum in Food Distribu- tion," granting BA and MA de- grees. Chain grocery stores and wholesalers have given MSU some money for this boondoggle; but, as in all such schemes, in the long run most of the cost must be borne by the people of Michigan. Is your delivery boy a Master of Arts in Food Distribution? No? Then you must be living in a horse-and-buggy town. My immediate point is this: most of the big state universities and colleges will sink to any abyss of fraudulent vocationalism in order to attract those young people who won't go to college if they're ex- pected to do any thinking there.; MANY OF the really good liberal arts colleges experience difficulty in finding enough young people to fill up a freshman class of two hundred or less. The better a college is in its standards, indeed-unless it has an Ivy League snob-prestige-the more difficulty it has in attracting freshmen candidates. For most ap- plicants display a positive aversion to the works of the mind. What they, and their parents, seek in a college is social'adjust- ment, the snob-prestige of a de- gree, and promises (often delu- sory) of vocational training and advancement. But why should state funds be' expended extravagantly to satisfy such appetites? The'tuition paid at state institutions is only a fraction of the real cost of main- taining them; so you and I make up the deficit through taxation. At a state college near my vil- lage, enrollments have increased tenfold during the past decade. (This formerly was a little business and technical college, privately controlled; then the state took the place under its grandiose wing.) There are enormous; new brick buildings to house the hundreds of married couples that have enrolled, and every apartment has a built- in dishwasher. a 1 1 1 c c 7 1 t t 7 1 t x E f t r c The Faculty's Role ... JAMES SEDER , Daily Staff Writer AN AMERICAN just entering college is usually emerging from a period when it is'fashionable to be violently anti-intellectual. It is unlikely that he had any intellectual experiences at either home or school. He really doesn't know much about intellectualism, except that it is some kind of mystique practiced by bohemians, mad scientists and ex-com- munists. Then he gets to college and finds out that it is listening to boring lectures and learning how to make efficient use of an exam file. So he ends up spending his afternoons at the I-M Building and his evenings in front of a television set. And on the night before ani exam, he pulls an all-nighter to cram. Every few months he gets a vague feeling that he is missing something and begins to try and draw out his instructors. But either because their syllabus is too rigid to afford to be interrupted by irrelevant questions, or because they're intellects, the instructors are insulted and offended by the obvious groping of the student, or, most frightening of all, they evade his questions because they don't feel that it is their function to depart from' the subject matter. And so the student sinks back into 'apathy. Such is the fate of many students' at this University-and incidentally at many other schools. It's hard to blame American youth for being unintellectual, and spending all their time in front of a television set when they've never known anything else and their efforts to discover something else are rebuffed-not dramatically suppressed, but merely shrugged off. One "shrugger" is a 'professor in the engineering college (but there are several like him throughout the University) who is illustrative of an extreme example of this faculty attitude. He specializes in a rather technical aspect of applied science, He ;was asked if he made any attempt to relate his material to any broader aspects of science and uate F raudif he ever attempted to imbue his t te rau students with -any professional out- look or ethics. As for the mind-well, there's* * one course in American govern- THE PROFESSOR answered ment. That's the Department of that he did not because he did Political Science, the whole she- not have time. He paused for a bang. second and then he volunteered A book could be written about the following comment: "In any the hoodlum-and-trull element at- case, I'm not sure that it's my posi- tracted to our student bodies since tion to ge$ involved in this type of World War II, a phenomenon ,of thing." our times much resented, and com- There are two inherent dangers mented upon, by the decent stu- in this type of reasoning. The first. dents. is obvious: if every professor in * . the University, or even a signifi- cant number of them, were to take WITH FOND parents, the mos0 this attitude, this would cease to popular feature of the state col- be a university and degenerate into leges is their matrimonial market a technical training school. --and very popular this is with the The second danger is less dra- rising generation, too. ' matic, but invidious. Technical and You meet so many other won- mechanical skills, admittedly, must derful young people, you know, be developed, but if these are pre- and you can choose. sented-by-inference-as the only What may be less agreeable to thing that is relevant,; the results parents, whether or not the won- may be disastrous. Either students derful young people find spouses will accept this attitude as a ra- it is simple for them to find what tional philosophy and a material- the late Alfred Kinsey delighted ism of a new but devastingly in- in calling "sexual partners." human type will evolve, or the.stu- "I'm sure there couldn't be any- dent will follow his present trend thing wrong with Michigan State of revolt: via apathy. University," a Michigan matron The irony of the situation is murmured after hearing a public that the tendency toward the en- address by your servant. "My gineering professor's philosophy daughter is having just a wonder- can be counteracted relatively ful time there." easily. If the faculty were to look No doubt. for and try to help develop the For tho'se who like that sort of natural intellectual curiosity of thing, as Lincoln said, that is the the student, many members of the sort of thing they like. ' faculty might be surprised' -and But when this carnival and this gratified by the results. Perhaps matrimonial bureau are paid for if the administration were to em- out of some one else's pocket...? phasize that this, as well as course- The Legislature of the State of content, was one of the responsi- Michigan is not made up of fools. bilities of a teacher, the trend' National Review toward apathy could be stoppedi. A 4 )N PAPER, Student Government Council is a fairly powerful organization. And as long s SGC was content to handle issues which rere not terribly controversial, or which did .ot threaten to embarrass the University with xcessive publicity, the administration was con- ent to let the group use its authority. But now SGCI is faced with an issue, Sigma Cappa, which could bring unfavorable publicity o the University, and the administration has tepped in with a rather clear attempt to ressure the council to make the least contro- ersial decision possible. The pressure has come in the form of a letter rom Vice-President for Student Affairs James . Lewis. Vice-President Lewis's prerogative to write a etter to the Council is certainly clear. In fact, ome one from the Dean of Women's Office or he Office of Student Affairs must write a letter o SGC informing it whether or not the sorority onstitution, which is a secret matter, contains, ny discriminatory clauses. Dean Bacon, for example, wrote such a letter o the Council back in 1955 when SGC first onsidered recognizing Sigma Kappa and it is model of its kind. "Copies of the constitution f Sigma Kappa were recently sent to this office nd have been placed on file with the Adminis- :ation. Sigma Kappa has no statement any- rhere in its Constitution which refers to race, reed or color in any way." Further, administrative advice is often help- ul. However, Vice-President Lewis' letter goes urther than the first condition and is not even lose to the second. BEFORE EXAMINING the letter, two things should be noted. First, this column is in no ay prejudging the sorority. The issue is Vice- resident Lewis' letter, not SGC's decision con- erning the sorority. Second, that when Sigma Kappa was found n violation of University rules back in 1956, the onstitution was not the issue at all, (Miss acon's letter took care of that), but rather actions of the national officers of Sigma Kappa. Space does not permit re-running the entire content of Vice-President Lewis' letter, but several things can be pointed out. It begins: "The proper University officials;" notice the tone. This is a most significant letter, it seems to say. "The Proper" officials, not merely the Dean of Women, nor the Vice-President for Student Affairs, are gravely concerned with the issue. After a brief run-down on the course of events leading up to the Council decision in 1956, the letter says the sorority was placed in a "precarious' position. SGC found Sigma Kappa violating University regulations; but nowhere does Vice-President Lewis say this; in fact, he avoids it quite assiduously with a "pre- carious" position. This is, at best, a rather great understatement of the actual facts, THE CLINCHER lies in the next to last paragraph. First, the vice-president re- asserts the significance of this letter, "The Dean of Wymen in consultation with other adminis- trative officials [emphasis added] after reading the Constitution and by-laws is now [emphasis added] prepared to certify to the Student Gov- ernment Council that Sigma Kappa meets the requirements as stated in our published regula- tions." THIS IS NEWS? Miss Bacon said this back in 1955. Certainly, the constitution and by- laws have changed and it should be pointed out that they meet University requirements. But the Vice-President's letter is written in such a way that a) it carries very great authority and prestige b) it gives the impres- Sion the issue has been resolved. While a) is certainly justifiable, it is not in keeping with' Vice-President Lewis' general attitude which is usually non-directive and considerably less authoritarian; b) completely avoids the fact that the constitution never was the issue and that the national sorority's actions were. In the light of these facts, there can be little doubt that the letter was an attemept to influ- ence the Council to come to a decision favorable to Sigma Kappa. It is indeed unfortunate that at such an important juncture -in SGC's short history such an attempt had to be made.. There are eighteen students on Student Gov- ernment Council. And these eighteen feel their responsibility in this area most heavily for several reasons. First, the decision itself with its possible consequences is important. Second, some five hundred students (if the last time gives any indicatipn) will be watching the group reach this decision. Third, other Universities and colleges as well as national sororities and fraternities will be waiting for the outcome. Yet, it is necessary that these students act maturely and reach a fair, objective conclusion after weighing the evidence. A' thing seems certain: the program should increase the supply of teachers. Since the shortage is reckoned at about 135,000, that would be a step in the right direc- tion. But will the program actually open college doors for students who wouldn't otherwise go beyond high school? Will it increase the number of Americans proficient in foreign language? THE STUDENT loan program provides 10-year, three per cent loans for college students, up to $1,000 a year but not more than a total of $5,000. Repayment must begin one year after the borrower leaves college., Preference goes to good stu- dents who 1) want to teach, or 2) have shown particular aptitude in science, mathematics or for- eign language. The loan program has raised two questions: 1) Is it really going to do the job for which it was designed - help more of the na- tion's bright students get a col- lege education? 2) Is it a good idea for a graduate to come out of college already burdened with a debt of $4,000 or $5,000? Certainly, a student loan pros gram can be a helping hand, giv- ing the student less time working and more time studying. But there probably never will be ac- EDUCATIONAL PROBLEM: The' PhD's Role in Ed By JOAN KAATZ Daily Staff Writer THE RECENT Russell committee report on faculties in state educational institutions declares that financial support. of faculty members "will have to be intensi- fied and increased substantially" if the present levels of high quality education are to be maintained. It then continues to relate the sharp decline in the economic status of the college teaching pro- fessions to the number of PhD's entering fields other than educa- tion. Although the Russell report may be justified in relating declining economic conditions in institutions of higher education to a decline in the number of doctoral graduates in teaching, a much larger ques- tion arises when the report infers that the decline in teachers with doctoral degrees may relate to a decline in educational standards. Basically, how much does a PhD mean in the field of higher educa- tion? In terms of number of years, it signifies that the instructor has GETS MORE MONEY: Regents Expand Fund By THOMAS HAYDEN Daly Staff Writer A way to describe theseries of events which led from the University's decision to apply for Federal appropriations under the National Defense Act is to say that the student loan fund here is like a snowball. It has been expanded voraciously during the past two years as unemployment and recession have cut into students' wallets. At the end of last semester the University's fund totaled $1,458,000, representing a jump of $400,000 over the June, 1957, sum. Even with the increase, practically all, the funds made available were used up. A total of 5,889 loans were distributed in the 1957-58. school year, as compared to 4,959 the previous year. It was not hard to see that the pattern would con- tinue this fall, especially as the nation tried to recover from an economic depression. And it has continued. Applica- Vlucatio tions for renewal of loans are run- ning unusually high, the loans office reports. At the same time, repayments of last year's loans have been coming in sluggishly, although they are expected to pick up. Dean of Men Walter B. Rea has summed up thensituation in a single, salient sentence: "The need for loans is un- precedented." Two contributions should bright- en the picture, although it is doubtful that they are more than a temporary cure. One is a $200,000 bequest from the late Della Noble, of Pontiac. In all, the Regents have. chan- ._,neled more than $500,000 from private donors into the loan fund during the past two years. The other is an expected grant of up to $250,000 from the Federal government for which the Univer- sity applied Friday. Since each institution receives a share of the total funds proportional to its per- ter Teaching entae of the total number of ter eachng.students in the country, the Uni- versity is in at least a fair position Whether the teacher possesses a to obtain a good portion of its doctors degree or a masters degree potential allotment. is important in ,e'valuating his The national funds will be used knowledge of the subject ,matter for "long-term, low-interest" loans :' Editorial Staff RICHARD TAUB, Editor [AEL KRAFT JO torial Director DHN WEICHER City Editor DAVID TARR Associate Editor LE CANTOR.................Personnel Director AN WILLOUGHBY.....Associate Editorial Director ATA JORGENSON ..... ..Associate City Editor ZABETH ERSKINE. ....Associate Personnel Director AN JONES...................Sports Editor RL RISEMAN,. ** *..«o.Associate Sports Editor COLEMAN -.. .......Associate Sports Editor VID ARNOLD................Chief Photographer Bushness Staff But Will He En personality is important, but fur- ther stressed that those qualities necessary to a good researcher are important to a good instructor. i