Seventy-Thbird Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where OPInions AFre STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBOR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 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. SATURDAY. AUGUST 3,1963 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SUTIN CENTRAL CAMPUS PLAN: Walkway Idea Needs Prompt Execution Congress Awakes to Ask Nasty Research Questions AFTER YEARS of dispensing research funds no questions asked, Congress has become acutely aware of the large federal research program and is beginning to ask embarrassing questions. This development, unfortunately, is not altogether a good thing for Congress only dimly understands why the money is spent. its questions are apt to be narrow and mis- directed and Congressional pressures may put an unwarranted crimp in American research. Several Congressional groups are asking questions and making federal administrators uncomfortable. The first major incident oc- curred last winter when a House committee studied the operations of the National Insti- tutes of Health. It found lax accounting pro- cedures had led to abuses such as high-priced executives and plush offices paid out of NIH funds. NIH has since tightened its policies to make sure that money given fgr research is spent on research. While some hospitals and small research organizations complained that the new policies were dictatorial, the larger research organizations, familiar with the prac- tices of other government agencies, accepted * the changes, noting that NIH conforms to other research agencies. NOW CONGRESS is questioning several other research agencies. The National Aeronau-. tics and Space Administration, long the glamor- boy darling of Congress, is especially hard hit and may lose some of its research funds. Scientific criticism of the United State's man-to-the-moon program has finally reached SKudoes ONE OF THE BENEFITS of being at the University is the opportunity to listen to ex- cellent lectures, both by visitors and by faculty members. The visitors are heralded but the faculty teach with devotion and scholarship that is honored only quietly. Two faculty members for whom praise can scarcely be too extravagant are Prof. Carl Cohen of the philosophy department and Prof. Sidney Fine of the history department. Cohen's course on the philosophic bases of Communism, Facism and democracy, and Fine's. course on American history in the 20th century are among the, most popular at the University, and rightly so. The subject matter is significant, and the presentations are outstanding. Cohen's lectures are notable for their en- thusiasm. The best way would be to have someone who professes Communism and some- one who professes Fascism tell about their philosophies; Cohen does the second best thing: he described each philosophy with ,the clarity and the energy of a believer. Cohen's belief is In democracy, and he articulates that philos- ophy with elegance and meaningfulness con- parable with elegance and meaningfulness comparable with John Stuart Mill. Cohen's scholarship is apparent as he describes the lives and surrounding history of the philoso- phers as well as their philosophies. FINE PROBES into the reasons behind events and into the philosophies behind move- ments. His lectures are crisp and concise- yet full and complete. His antidotes make the characters of history live and his descriptions make the happenings of history real. He care- fully qualifies what he says and' this makes his observations of special validity. Fine adds philosophy to history and Cohen adds history to philosophy. The qualities of the lectures of these men stir the soul of the student searching for knowledge and principles. -ROBERT SELWA Congressional ears. For several years a number of influential physical scientists have com- plained that the federal government's moon program was unbalancing research efforts and wasting money on a foolish propaganda race with the Russians. Even the Russians were reported having second thoughts. Secondly, Massachusetts politics reared its ugly head. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was elected on the slogan "He can do more for Massachusetts." Apparently, more included a $50 million NASA space electronics research center. A number of private firms voiced fears that another government facility in this al- ready research-saturated area would hurt busi- ness and drain off skilled manpower. The University bid for this center when these com- plaints became known, but NASA stuck to its Boston site. The Senate space committee, with three Democrats absent, voted, 6-5, tohshelve the project, then reversed itself when the Democrats returned. But the group demanded more data before NASA gets approval for the Boston site. That debacle and some criticism of specific NASA projects by members of the House Rules Committee has lead to a request of special House study of the research policies of the agency. However, funds for NASA will be in- creased, but future appropriations will depend on the House study. A NUMBER of key questions have come up: Is large-scale federal research a pork- barrel to be used by politicians to beef up the local economy? Should more emphasis be plac- ed on projects with defense or general scien- tific significance? Should the federal govern- ment, particularly NASA, support graduate students in its research programs? ' None of these questions have been answered. Unfortunately, Congress does not even seem equipped to arrive at one. "Space science and technolog'y are still obscure topics to most of us," one leading Republican said. Less modest Congresmen have often ignor- antly attacked unspectacular, but important programs such as a NASA study at the Univer- sity of Chicago on the effects of federal re- search spending on other less-wealthy fields. THEN PORKBARRELING politics is another factor. The $50 million NASA center's life and death depends on whether Congress wants to let the young Kennedy "do more for Mas- sachusetts." Even announcements of major projects-such as the University's $5 million Hawaiian observatory-must be delayed so that Michigan's two senators can take the credit. (Ironically, a fellow Democratic senator from Hawaii stole the thunder from Senators Hart and McNamara, announcing the project four hours ahead of schedule.) Sen. E. L. Bartlett (D-Alaska) has an in- terim answer to Congress' scientific ignorance. He suggests that a Congressional Office of Science and Technology be established to help Congressmen deal with the increasing num- ber of scientific policy decisions they are being called to make. This office, like the Congres- sional reference bureau, would consist of a staff of trained scientists who would advise Congress on various scientific questions. This office would be of some help, but Congress will not be able to 'deal effectively with scientific'questions until its members are better educated to meet them. This lack of scientific understanding reflects generally one of Congress' main problems-the lack of edu- cation to grasp today's complex issues. Meanwhile, federal research agencies and institutions-such as the University-depen- dent on them will have to suffer from the bounties and evils of Congressional ignorance. -PHILIP SUTIN Co-editor By ROBERT SELWA PRESENTLY A mixture of scen- ic repose and a concrete jungle, the University is going to develop more of the former and eliminate some of the latter. The recently released plan for the future of the central campus is a major step forward in beautifying the University. The plan's primary assumption is that growth and expansion will continue, and this is a safe pre- diction. With the peacetime baby boom cramping American schools, there will be need for much more room at the University, especially beginning in the next couple years. The plan expresses the hope for preservation of the quality of pleasant intimacy. This is hard to do because of the way enroll- ment has been skyrocketing in the past decade. For the first century of its existence, the University had a tiny enrollment; then like a snowball rolling down a hill, en- rollment started increasing more geometrically than arithematically. AT PRESENT there is a pla- teau; and even at this plateau en- rollment is so large that one can scarcely know a hundredth of his fellow students. Within each unit, say the political science depart- ment, there may be a little inti- macy; but not much beyond that. 'he University is pretty well doom- ed to be a huge, unintimate col- lection of peoples. Already, as the plan points out, the central campus is composing into multi-campus areas. The plan's utilization of these areas as separate areas connected by walks is the logical thing to do. These areas surround the University's original 40 acres and it is natural that the central "quad" continue as the focus. It will do so through the plan's idea of building more libraries there. There are six academic areas around this "quad." One centers around Hill Aud. and is primarily concerned with entertainment. A' second is around the dental school and is academic. So is the Physic Astronomy Bldg. complex, the third area. Another is around the computing center and the Hill while the last academic one is based on the Law Quadrangle. The sixth area concentrates on service and is around the Administration Bldg. * * * IT IS A LITTLE amazing how walks can become permanent. The Demoracy IT IS COMMONLY BELIEVED that the "democratic process" will assure progress. But there is no way of designating excessive governmental activity so as to as- sure that it will aid progress rather than stop progress. Progress arises in every instance out of an extreme minority of opinion, not the majority of opin- ion. The seedlings of progress are often so small and unnoticed that they are ignored by those who would ptherwise destroy them in ignorance as "evil" thought or acts. But if everything were to be subjected to majority rule, every step of progress would presum- ably be destroyed in its infancy. -F. A. Harper, Liberty: A Path to Its Recovery Walkiays are designed to unify the campus and beautify it. plan, recognizing the permanence of the diagonal walks crisscrossing the central quad, makes good use of them. The walks head toward sub-campus areas and so the plan projects extensions that effectively link these areas with the central quad. The -intersections of the walks is where several libraries are already located, and the plan wise- ly provides for more libraries. A library is an ideal meeting place 'for a university. Two of the deficiences of the walks are corrected in the plan. At present there are not enough pockets of sitting areas, and the walks are too dimly lighted at night. Under the plan these ave- nues will be well lighted, and sitting areas, plazas and fountains would be more numerous. This will be one of the most pleasant im- provements. Bridges will take pedestrians over certain bad intersections and over the Huron River. In a campus that is sometimes hazardous and often irritating because of the car traffic, the bridges are much need- ed and should be built as soon as, possible. There are not many things as pleasant as a pedestrian bridge over a stream or river; the bridge or bridges over the Huron will serve aesthetically as well as, functionally There should be sev- eral of these bridges. ANOTHER GOOD IDEA in the plan is the integration of living units tq educational units. The walks help accomplish integration and the side by side construction of resident halls and classroom buildings will also accomplish it. The Boss T HE QUESTION "Who ought to be boss?" is like asking. "Who ought to be tenor in the quartet?" Obviously, the man who can do the job. I --Henry Ford At present there is too much of a separation that divides the world of living from the world of learn- ing. Breaking down the wall of sep- aration is a long-range project; something that could be accom- plished much more quicker is the conversion of streets to walkways. The plan envisions conversion of" Washington between Thayer and Forest. Washtenaw 2rom Forest to North University, Monroe between State and Forest, and, East Uni- versity north of South University. Conversion of a street that used' to run through the middle of the University of Detroit is now nearly complete, for example, and there is a universe of difference. Where cars used to travel, grass now' grows and sidewalks make their way to a grotto. AS SOON AS POSSIBLE, the University should block off the streets that the plan mentions and perhaps some others. Then the pavement could be replaced by trees, grass, sidewalks, benches and fountains. What relaxing ave- nues they would become! Conver- sion of streets to walkways, and extension of walkways, would bring about the plan's ideal of a contipuous park - like campus threading its way throughout camp- pus areas. East University should be the first street converted since im- portant elements of the campus are on both sides, and the plan. wisely gives top priority to that street. Conversion is also needed of State street, though the plan does not mention it. Perhaps the most crossed street is State; to turn the block from South to North University into a pedestrian haven would be a great beautifi- cation of the campus as well as a major improvement in safety. The plan envisions a crescent. of continuous green from the Medical Center to State street; the street itself should be part of the green. To make the University a rest- ful place of contemplation instead of a hectic place of perspiration will go far in serving education aims. A more aesthetic environ- ment will promote the gaining and appreciation of aesthetics. The University will be a happier place to live in with the, spreading of greens, and a better place to learn in with the integration of units. There should be as little delay as possible in the implementation of the Central Campus Plan. BIG TEN PRESIDENT: Selecting the Acadej (Editor's Note: The State Univer- sity of Iowa is looking for a new president. The qualifications of po- sition shed interesting light on the role of a Big Ten university.) By JAMES CROOK of the Daily Iowan IN SELECTING a president for the State University of Iowa, the board of regents will pick a man to join a very select frater- nity of ten. Big Ten presidents bear strikingly similar back- grounds and qualifications. The new SUI president will, probably follow the same tradi- tion: a man under 50, a former' professor, or educational' admin- istrator, holder of a doctorate from a major university, and a native son. It was in 1940 that Virgil M. Hancher' was elected president of the University from his position as a partner in a Chicago law firm. Integration North and South 52UrpoR'r * F HANCHER'S qualifications in- cluded two degrees (bachelors and doctor of jurisprudence) from the University of which he was to be- come president, and the distinc- tion of. studying, as a Rhodes scholar, in Oxford University. He was 44, and a native Iowan. Iowa's Board of Regents is now faced with the task of replacing him. Their first task is to estab- lish a list of qualifications for the presidency of a Big Ten uni- versity. The job is tiring, but prestige- ous. And the candidate will re- quire a good salary And ample travel provisions. * * * THE NEWEST president of the Big Ten is Elvis Stahr of Indiana University, who quit a $22,000 a year position as Secretary of the Army in the Kennedy Administra- tion to lead the Hoosier university at a salary of $27,500. Stahr had served as president of the Univer- sity of West Virginia before en- tering governmental service. The regents upped Hancher's salary this year to $28,000, perhaps' with recruiting a successor in mind. * . * MOST BIG TEN presidents were between the ages of 45 and 55 when elected to, their position. Purdue's President Frederick Hovde was elected at the age of 38, however, and Michigan State's John Hannah was only 39 when named to the top spot at East Lansing. On the other hand, Wis- consin president, Conrad Elveh- jem, was 57 when elected to lead that university in 1962. The new SUI president will probably be chosen with a definite term of office in mind, one long enough to accomplish certain long range goals for growth and pro- gress of the university. *' * * FIVE BIG TEN presidents re- ceived at least one degree from the school they later came to lead. Four were born in the same state. Native sons reaching° the presi- dency of their state university in- clude President Elvehjem of Wis- consin, President Hannah of Mich- igan State, President Fawcett of Ohio State and our own President Hancher. The presidents of Wisconsin, Northwestern, Michigan State and Iowa received all their degrees from their own university. * * * MOST BIG TEN presidents came from positions in educational administration or higher educa- tion teaching. Some advanced to rnI c Elite dent of the University of Illinois. Minnesota's O. Meredith Wilson resigned as president of the Uni- versity of Oregon to move to Min- neapolis. Harlan Hatcher left a vice-president's position at Ohio State to become president pf the University. * * NOVICE FAWCETT, president of Ohio State University, was superintendent of public schools in Columbus before moving to the University in 1956. Michigan State's John Hannah was Secre- tary of the University's Board of Trustees. Resigning as Chief of Division 3 of the Rocket Ordinance, Fred- erick Hovde became president of Purdue University and Elvis Stahr, president of Indiana University, also left a governmental position. The board of regents' last elec- tion of a president came with the selection of James Hilton, then Dean of the School of Agriculture at North Carolina University, as head of Iowa State University in Ames. He became president in 1953 at the age of 54. * * * JAMES MAUCKER was named to lead the State College of Iowa at the age of 38. He received his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from SUI. Now the regents have the task of selecting a president for its largest and most comprehensive university. Their job is not unique, for at least three other major universities (Yale, Wyoming and Utah) are seeking men to fill their top positions. The selection will not come quickly. Emory University in At- lanta, Ga. took 10 months in selecting Sanford Atwood as their president last month. * * * THE FIRST STEP in the search for a new SUI president will come when the five-man advisory com- mittee to the board of regents meets. Members of this commit- tee include faculty members Pro- fessors Charles Davidson, law; Jerry J. Kollros, zoology and J. R. Porter, microbiology; Alumni As- sociation president John G. Greer and Administrative Council rep- resentative Mason Ladd, dean of the College of Law. These men will begin to weigh the factors and match them with the candidates. It's anyone's guess as to the qualification these men think the new president should possess. Will he be as young as 38 (like Purdue's President Hovde) or as old as 57 (like Wisconsin's Presi- dent Elvehjem)? Is he an SUI CITIZENS OF THE NORTH have sat com- "pacently on their haunches in the past decade and discussed, usually theoretically, the racial strife in the South. Because Union soldiers fought for the free- dom of the slave, most Northerners hold some- what a self-righteous feeling of superiority over the Southerner. Recent racial strife above the Mason-Dixon line has repeatedly shaken the complacency of those in the North. What very quickly is the situation of the Negro in the North? He is given token integration in public e 43 111 Editorial Staff RONALD WILTON......................Co-Editor PHILIP SUTIN .........................Co-Editor DAVE GOOD ........................ Co-Sports Editor CHARLES TOWL~E. ... . . .......... Co-Sports Editor RUTH HETMANSKI...............Night Editor ANDREW ORLIN ........... ......, Night Editor schools, but school districts are often mapped so as to eliminate integrated classrooms. He is, refused service and accommodation in public places. He is blocked from many jobs by a color barrier and receives a lower salary than his white equal. He is often restricted to life in a "black ghetto" and is pressured from moving elsewhere. The crime rate among Negroes is higher than among whites, but sociologists and penologists have shown a direct relationship between crime rate and living conditions. The Negro is not allowed to move to better living conditions and the squalor which surrounds him evokes crime. AFTER 100 YEARS of second-rate citizen- ship, the Negro in the North is finally re- beling. Many are surprised; because of the past century of calm, to note the violent feel- ings erupting from the Negro and the great numbers of Negroes involved. New York City has a Negro population 10 times as large as the total population of Montgomery, Ala., C'hicago has 14 times more Negroes than total lyv ;.+' . ' '># i1 t4 ip E~WT~~