F F'I F VS 4 'er's Pay $ $ (Continued from Preceding Page) sities and a large segment of the watching public act as if he were. He is not a young businessman, building a good record, getting what are called "contacts" starting his business career in his. sopho- more year. He is not a unit of man-, power, to be classified according to skills and talent, and put through "hard subjects" which will be useful for the country's military and economic security. A student is a person who is learning to fulfill his powers and to find ways of using ther in the service of mankind. The student at his best has a purity of motive which is the markI of his true function. He wants to know the truth, to know what is good, not merely for his own orI for other people's advantage, but in order to achieve his maturity asv a student. He is granted the price- less advantage of looking openlyl at the world to discover its secrets. He is given the rare privilege of withholding his assent to the claims that the world makes for! its own particular brand of truth, and he can decide what he thinks on the basis of the evidence, not on the basis of pressure, because< this is in fact what it means to be a student, and what the world asks' the student to be. For a little time before he beginsf a life which will gradually involve. him in more and more commit- How can the flexibility and the the community leaders, the present ment to tasks and duties which tolerance, the humanity, of the .teachers have a role to play-they are not central to the concern with liberal philosophy be sustained by are the ones whose encouragement truth and ideals, the student lives firm conviction as to what can and support for the student and in a world of discovery and of pos- and should be done in the modern his interest in ideas will do more sibility where nothing is yet com- world. than anything else to make the pletely settled, where everything. I suggest therefore that the re- life of the mind a fascinating including the achievement of forms we must make in American prospect and a goal worth aiming greatness, is still actively possible. education are not primarily those for. A student must make the most i of requiring more subject matter, of this time, for it may never come although of course there are sub- WE IN THE COLLEGES must again. If his life as a student does I jects ranging from mathematics concern ourselves with the life not possess the excitement, the in- to foreign languages and world of the intellect and the imagina- nocence and the hope of the true history which must be included in tion again, and remind ourselves enquirer. he may nevera inx any good high school curriculum. and the public, that the purpose , i4 i 1%L1G , e 1 1y11V igai CA- perience a time for thoughtful and sensitive attention to the big issues of human life. If he does possess that quality in his life as a stu- dent, you can be sure it will re- main with him as a way of think- ing and acting for the rest of his days. THE REAL CHALLENGE to this country is not from the propa- ganda battle with the Soviets, nor from the science and missiles race, nor from anywhere outside the United States. The real challenge lies deep within American culture. It is simply, How can we give to our students-those who will becomej scientists, artists, writers, teach-I ers, workers, businessmen, doctors, and all future citizens--the educa- tional support they need to carry .out their mission as Americans? T1HE PROBLEM is much more complicated than requiring more subjects of more students. The true scientist, for example, depends for his achievement on the quality of his total education. The quality of his total education depends not only on the particular training he has had in science or any other field, but on the infu- sion of a passion for learning into his intellectual bloodstream. The student who has been in- spired with the desire to learn and who is given encouragement to ful- fill his desire can and will learn anything which lies within his capacity. If we are to have first- rate education, we must look first to first-rate teachers, and we will not get first-rate teachers until we bring into the teaching profes- sion the very best among our present students. Here the parents, _ _ _ ____ J-HOP , .Class of 1960 GO FORMAL in the new and exclusive "'PLAYBOY," an of education is to develop people who can think and act for them- selves, We have become so engrossed in the practical problems of edu- cation and the culture that we find our teachers talking only of "problems;" we have become lobbyists for the intellect, full of promotional devices for advertis- ing and virtues of the humanities, the sciences, or foreign languages. Even in our teaching we have been pressing for attention to cultural and aesthetic values rather than allowing the values to be seen, en- joyed and savored by ourselves and our students. We must let the poem speak for itself, in its own purity and en- chantment, without our eternal explanations and analysis. Let the music be played and listened to, without explanation, with no set of instructions on how to listen, what to look for. Let the idea generate its own response in the minds of our listeners, let them see for themselves that the idea itself is passionately held by the man who proposes it. There is too much concern just now for classifying, and thus de- feating, the new. This is intel- lectual promotional work, not creative thought, nor does it re- present progress of the liberal arts. H. AUDEN spoke in his poetry lecture last year at Oxford of a teacher of Anglo-Saxon who had lectured to him. "I do not remember a single word he said, but at a certain point he recited, and magnificently, a long passage of Boewulf. I was spellbound." - I think we need to have more people spellbound, entranced, joy- ful, enchanted. They need not stay that way permanently, but they need to know from direct experi- ence what it means to be captured by a feeling or an idea. If we are over-impressed by money and material values, if our culture is lacking in spiritual con- tent, then is it not the task of the artist, the architect, the dancer, the playwright, the philosopher, the composer, the social thinker to show us what he can do and to have enough confidence in what he is doing to work in his own way without regard to the number of people he influences or ever reaches? With the present resources of the mass media, the present de- mand for more ideas and more talent this will leave few who have such talent alone in obscurity. LIBERLAL EDUCATION is the means by which the student achieves his selfhood. To achieve the flavor of in- dividuality, for a person or an in- stitution, it is necessary to be one- self and not to be simply a cluster of approved characteristics. It is necessary to give up wanting al- ways to be liked, and wanting to have everything smooth and easy. It is necessary to discover what truths are really true and really valuable, and to discover this by oneself. No one can make these dis- (Concluded on Next Page) Haircutting To please you!! It Costs No More to have the best! -10 HA!RCUTTERS-- The Dascola Barbrs Near Michigan Theatre (Continued from Preceding Page) NCAA, and would not be able to schedule others that are in the group. The secret, of course, would be cooperation. This would not work unless the majority of the colleges and universities in the country' were ready to make it work. But they should be ready to make it work. Coaches, athletic directors, alumni, and athletes themselves should be aware that the present set-up is leading in the wrong direction, and that it has to stop somewhere. Athletics based solely on mer- cenary aims is not part of the American tradition. But it soon will be if reform is not insisted upon by those most concerned. ,19 CUT DOWN on the "big time" aspects, the "new" NCAA would need to effect cer- tain rules. Scholarships would never be more than cost, or full-ride (tui- tion, books, room and board, but NO expenses). And no extra aid, whether by the university, alumni, or anyone else would be allowed. Under this set - up recruiting would become a different story. Instead of trying to sell the pro- spective athlete a better "deal" as far as money, it would be up to the representatives of the institu- tion to try to sell him a better deal in education, coaching, and the other aspects of the college that should be emphasized. Certainly recruiting would be- come a trickier business, and would be more difficult from the standpoint of the coaches, but it is at this point that a truly alert and loyal alumni would find their calling. They, if anyone, can convince a boy that their school is the best- and without the problem of money involved, the job would be easier than it is now. W HETHER this would solve all of the BIG problems one can- not tell now; but it certainly would come closer than the present system. In equalizing all of the recruit- ing, scholarship and alumni diffi- culties, the schools would presum- ably come closer to being equal in athletic power. It would certainly be a healthier situation than any other alterna- tive, since to attract athletes, the things that would have to be stressed are the advantages of an education at the school concerned. The only way that things could be made any more equal would be to make the entrance require- ments, and the resultant academic level of difficulty the same. And this is obviously impossible if the schools of the country are to at- tempt to meet the necessities of all potential students. So, leaving this one difference as the telling point, the NCAA would be taking a much needed step toward the curtailment of the present college athletic "cir- cus" if it were to adopt an equali- zation program. Doctor Shortage (Continued from Page 4) graduating each year - approxi- mate output of three schools since 1950-the state would, by 1975, still not be up to the 1955 national physician-population ratio. How- ever, the 126 per 100,000 ratio that would be achieved would be a con- siderable improvement over the 109 per 100,000 ratio that now exists. The medical education commit- tee's answer seems to be closer to making corrections on a basis of needs; Dr. Sanger's estimate is probably closer to what will be done. But as the medical education committee has said, "Lack of funds may be a reason for postponing action, but lack of funds does not altei the acute need for expanding medical training facilities in Mich- igan." Only timehwill tell how well the state meets the need. 3715 Jackson Rd. W I'~ FOOTBALL:-major problem r: _. v FOOD for TI FOOD forI REAL S Breal Relax and enjoy Finest Di WEBER'S SUPI Having a Guest Betw or for J-H Insure Their Com WEBER' HOLIDAY HOTE wIImlkg-A Take TUXEDO RENTAL featur ng special for NATURAL SHOULDERS BLACK CENTER VENT FLAP POCKETS UNPLEA TED TROUSERS J-HOP including A I tux, cum- 1311 merbund, tie, shirt, studs and links. So. University $4500 Danc M theHi only Ann Arbor 'H105o NO 2-5539 for all YOUR I.D. CARD and $16.35 As Down Payment Balance Payable March and April. 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