Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan power and virtue On languages and requirements. and votes by ron landsman 1 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 I Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al reprints. SATURDAY, MARCH15, 1969 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDY SARASOHN "The Missile May Not Be 'So Hot, But-Boy- What A Delivery System !" WHO SHALL decide for me what my ed- ucation should consist of ? Students? Faculty? A n d if faculty, which faculty members? These questions are all hidden within the referendum on the language requirement to be voted on in the SGC elections next week. The issue at stake is not whether lang- uage should be taught in the literary col- lege, but whether it should be required of every student. This is a basic misunder- standing held by those who oppose chang- ing the status quo. The essential question is who should de- termine what should be required. That is, should a majority of any body - even a body including both students and faculty- be able to impose upon the remaining mi- nority their concept of education in the form of requirements? This question occurred to me after read- ing a professor's letter to The Daily oppos- ing a student voice in college decisions. He suggested that we consider education in its purest form-one professor instruct- ing ten students. Clearly, then, it is the professor's prerogotive to grant or with- hold a degree to the students under him, for it is on his certification that each stu- dent is granted such a degree. And it is the professor's prerogotive to determine what should or should not be required of his students to earn that de- gree. If we accept this, then by what right, does the majority of the faculty claim to be able to enforce upon a minority of its members their educational standards? A SIGNIFICANT number of professors have spoken against the language require- ment, including the chairman of the eco- nomics department, Harvey Brazer, a n d the chairman of the computer and com- munications sciences, Arthur Burks, These are men with valid academic cre- dentials, who would be willing to grant Bachelor of Arts degrees to students in that "ideal situation" without requiring a language of them. Does the view of other professors de- serve priority over these? Democracy can apply here, but along with the concept of majority rule goes minority rights. When students mouth the slogan, "Let the students decide," they should mean, "Let each student decide," for a mass of students is no more valid a group, to en- force such regulations on me t h a n is a mass of unknown faculty members. FOR ONE person to instruct me, to teach me, would be valid. But'how can 1,000 fac- ulty members decide that any given en- deavor is educationally fruitful for 12,000 students? How can they decide for me? Most, of them don't even know me. The valid objections of a significant mi- nority of faculty members should weigh more heavily than they h a v e so far on questions such as this, on such broad re- quirements. When a single decision must be made on issues, such as a new four-, year admissions plan, the selection of a dean, or admissions policy, it is under- standable that a majority could and should rule. But this question is different; the mi- nority is not imposing on the, majority in their demands, but is only asking 'for lee- way in their own educational practices. This is where t h e distinction between requirement and option becomes crucial, for the minority is not asking the inajor- ity to refrain from any action concerning themselves, but from imposing a demand on them. The argument presented here by support- ers of the language requirement concerns the quality -of the degree the University offers. By abolishing the requirement, they say, the degree which the literary college grants to all its students would be that much weaker. If this were the case, it would be a valid argument, but I must- question seriously if that is so. THE QUALITY of the degree of the lit- erary college here does not depend on the paper requirements it sets up, but on some- thing less tangible than that. The value of that degree depends, rather, on the quality of the students and faculty at the college. What is involved in this education Is not which course or specific professor I took, for this or that requirement, but the fact that I was in significant contact with num- erous competent professors in a respectable intellectual community. This is not a minor consideration. My. degrei does not rise or fall on the language requirement, but on the professors who have taught me for the four years I have been here. It is this that makes Harvard better than Michigan and Michigan better than Michi- gan State. MSU has tougher requirements than we do in distribution and Harvard has lighter ones, in language at least. But that certainly doesn't make MSU better than Michigan or Michigan better than Har- vard. Each school depends, rather, on other factors to insure its reputation- and quality. It is on the student body and on the fac- ulty that the weight of proof lies, and it is there that* it will stay, whether there is a four-year language requirement or none at all. FINALLY, it seems that the supporters of the language requirement suffer from a parochialism and a very decided propensity to ignore facts in arguing their case. , They are parochial in the belief that one cannot be an educated person unless pro- ficiency, or at least four college semesters, #i of a language is mastered. That, is paro- chial, not the decision not to learn a for- eign language. Education and sophistication take many forms, and many need not include profi- ciency in a second language. There is too much else to learn and to consider to make that a rigid demand. True, thefe is much of other cultures that is worth learning, but such knowl- edge alone does not make a person edu- cated. The faculty just cannot dictate re- quirements to all its students and expect to produce educated people. A second language is neither necessary nor sufficient to make a person educated. As for the facts, they include the ques- tion of what effect the language require- ment actually has. The faculty has been blissfully willing to act with absolutely no reliable information whatsoever on what the effects of the requirement are. Once again, the demand must be toward the minimal action. If t h e faculty is doing something and it doesn't know the effects; they should cease that action until they do know what it means. ^ The faculty's groping in the dark on this issue affects far too many students to be justifiable-on these terms. I FIND THIS, above all, to show the fac- ulty's amazing lack of precision and care in making decisions such as these. They have only their own experiences - of from five to forty years ago - upon which to base their judgments of the language re- quirement. No reputable scholar in edu- cation would dare act on so flimsy an in- formation base. It is little less than despicable that the LSA faculty does. Such actions by students would earn from the faculty the scorn they deserve, and so much more for a faculty of experience a n d supposedly scholarly credentials. I -3t y ' LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Ad Hoc Bylaw Committee position A ABM ; 4r--r,- Nixon's AM Another bomb PRESIDENT NIXON'S decision to install the controversial anti-ballistic mis- sile (ABM) defense system should raise serious concern for the future of the nation. If the project is voted funds by Congress it may well rank with the Viet- nam war and our continued fumblings in Latin America as one of the great fiascos of the latter third of this century. The decision, which follows on the heels of a Russian declaration that the deploying of such a system would ser- iously jeopardize proposed disarmament talks between the two superpowers, may well spark still further escalation of the already spiralling arms race. While Nixon repeatedly stressed yes- terday that the ABM system is defensive in orientation, the Soviet Union c a n hardly be criticized for viewing such a system as essentially offensive in na- ture. For " given the Soviet premise that the United State, is quite capable at any time of launching an all-out nuclear attack against the USSR, the ABM sys- tem can only be interpreted as a shield against the few Russian missiles t h a t would remain following a massive U.S. strike at Soviet missile installations. Only in the event of such an attack, they might well argue, could the ABM pos- sibly protect the United States against the Soviet nuclear arsenal. NIXON'S SPEECH can only have inten- sified such fears by drawing the em- phasis of the program away from China and toward the Soviet Union. Such a posture is hardly conducive to the at- mosphere of mutual trust which is so necessary to any steps toward disarma- ment, or even toward eventual decelera- tion of the arms race which is consum- ing so much of the national budget of both countries. Apart from endangering the disarma- ment talks and plunging the nation still further into an already costly arms race, the ABM system has other significant drawbacks. Primary among these is the, fact that such a system would of neces- sity take some of the control of nuclear weapons out of the President's hands. Since the system's success depends on thex rapid launching of the ABM missiles in response to an enemy attack, such con- trol would likely be put into the hands of a field commander or a computer con- nected with key radar installations. Es- tablishing the precedent of taking nuc- lear weapons out of Presidential control is not a step to be taken lightly. To the Editor: IN ORDER to avoid any future misunderstanding, let it be known that both the proposed Re- gents Bylaw draft prepared by SACUA and the draft prepared by Dr. Knauss (dated March, 1969) are unacceptable to- the stu- dent members of the student,and faculty Ad Hoc Bylaw Drafting Committee, unacceptable to SGC, and unacceptable to Graduate As- sembly. On t h e contrary, these groups endorse t h e compromise draft of tfie Ad Hoc Committee since. theyhstate th a t this draft guarantees: "(1) that no regulation gov- erning conduct will have force without the consent of those _to whom it applies, (2) that every student will be assured of ade- quate due process before a fair and independent judiciary, (3) that no judicial body may be maintained except with the con- tinuing consent of those w h o, may be brought before it, and (4) that every student tried any- where in the University will have an appeal to the Central Student Judiciary." The other drafts do not make these guarantees. We understand that the faculty Senate Assembly at its Monday meeting may wish'" to endorse in principle certain proposals in the various drafts. We hope that in any case the faculty will send peo- ple to the Thursday (3 p.m.) meet- ing of the Ad Hoc Committee to continue what have been until now very fruitful negotiations. We heard the debate at the last faculty Senate Assembly meeting and feel that with few exceptions the comments were to the point and the proposals reasonable. The "implementation" of the propos- als in the SACUA a n d Knauss drafts is unreasonable. We are in the process of incor- porating faculty suggestions into the. compromise drafts in a way acceptable to students. We certainly hope the faculty would not endanger the negotia- tions by sending to the Regents any drafts as unacceptable to stu- dents as the SACUA and Knauss drafts. -Michael Davis, Grad -Tom Westerdale, Grad Members, Ad Hoc Committee Court costs To the Editor: AN ARTICLE appearing in Thursday's Daily quoted me as saying that court costs for eviction proceedings would amount to $6.00 per day. This information is false and is an incorrect representation of my statement. My statement was that the summary eviction statute (600.56- 79 M.C.L.A.) allows the prevailing party to only tax a total of $5 for attorney's fees. I made no state- ment about court costs. In fact, court costs will amount to from $25.15 to $30.15 depending on whether the amount of rent in issue Is less than or greater than $500. This sum includes $10.00 for jury fee and the $5 for attorney fees. -Dale Berry, '70 Law Rent Strike Steering Committee- March 13 Soc Union response To the Editor: HE ARTICLE pn Friday's Daily on the action of the Under- graduate Sociology Union was misleading at one point and re- quires clarification. The Union did not, as reported, vote to "organize a University- wide boycott of classes . . ." The Union is presently concerned with undergraduate parity in sociology department tenure decisions, a larger student voice in the de- partmental decision-making pro- cess, and specific curriculum re- forms. We enthusiastically support the efforts of black students and Will Smith in negotiations with the administration for a University- wide holiday, April 4. WE BELIEVE a teach-in to dis- cuss the relevancy of university educations is desirable and we are anxious to work with our counter- parts in other departments in the organization of a teach-in. But our interests are primarily in reforms within the sociology department and we have not voted to "organize a university iwide boycott of classes . . ." The vote in question was merely an endorsement of the boycott called for by Rev. Abernathy. -Julia Wrigley, Union chrm. Clifford Olson Bonnie Jean Bengel Karen Schwab March 14 Consumer power To the Editor: PERSUADING Stephan's to low- - er its prices may not be as dif- ficult.as it seems. If ALL students stopped buyingla significant num- ber of over-priced items, Steph- an's revenue would drop. To re- gain this income, Stephan's would either have to or else think regain student lower these prices of other ways to patronage. "What--ME Go Down With The Ship?" ~iI~e Good location is the store's pri- mary attraction (and probably the reason for reported annual $10,000 rent). However, if we as student consumers are serious about not wasting our money, we should en- dure the slight inconvenience of shopping elsewhere. We need not depend upon stu- dent organizations to solve our problems if we care enough to exercise our pure student con- sumer power. -Neila Pomerantz March 13 IN ADDITION, the $7 billion cost of the ABM- program will be simply that much more federal money devoted to purposes of war rather than purposes of peace. The Pentagon itself admits that the pro- gram could potentially cost up to $400 billion. The expenditure could perhaps be justified if the need for and effective- ness of the ABM program were unim- peachable. But -it would be ironic indeed if after jeopardizing the chance for disarmament talks and spending so much money, the ABM system were discovered to be as impracticable as many of the nation's top scientists are predicting it will prove to be. President Nixon is playing for high stakes in his bid to get the projecthap- proved by a sharply divided Congress. Should the appropriation be denied, as we fervently hope it will be, Nixon will be severely discredited. THE PRESIDENT'S decision to install the controversial system is certainly a- mistake of the first magnitude. We can only hope that it will be more disastrous to Nixon's political future than to the nation's welfare. -JENNY STILLER Editorial Page Editor I S, y y' "r R 4 " " tM L.''*-" '' 0.Y^l yllb .uNifl 4wc''. - - 'M ' Ntl ^.r adomy cllednots *randmlyculed ntes* rndomy clle nots *ran dolculed notes randomly culled notes a randomly culled notes domync ies ne randomly culled notes s randomly culled notes randomly cuno 04i By HOWARD KOHN BRIG. GEN. S. L. A. Marshall (Ret.), the pugnacious military affairs analyst who appears regularly on Channel 4-TV, has a new definition for ROTC: Rangers On The Campus. "Administrators are worried about grow- ing indiscipline on campuses. A cadet corps might become a counterforce for stability," he ugres. Apparently he considers the mortar superior to the mortarboard. * * * RAY GOTTLIEB and Judy Eichenhorn announced their engagement recently in Detroit and it's not quite apparent who will be wearing the pants in the family. Ray and Judy met at a weight-watching course in Detroit, found romance over the low-calorie cauliflower and lost 155 pounds in relation to personnel in Newark's muni- cipal government, the offering of Italian- American dishes in the school cafeteria, and more Italian-American music on the campus radio station. Wait'll George and his Greek friends at Cottage Inn hear about this. WOMEN IN SWITZERLAND are still without a vote but thousands of women have been protesting in the streets of Bern to overthrow Europe's last bastion of po- litical male supremacy. The Swis government recently signed the Council of Europe's human rights resolu- tion but publicized its reservations about female suffrage. Women in Taiwan have a different prob- lem: evading the draft. The Chinese Na- tionalists have stepped up a program to into'a waiting car which whisked her away. The only casualty was a boy who fell down a stairway investigating a rumor of a second nude girl. Jenny Stiller's brother, who is a student there, says that nude girls in March are a campus tradition but that there have been more than usual this year. GONZALO ARIAS, the mild-looking au- thor of "The Sandwichman," tried to make his book come true but has only ended up in a Madrid jail. Arias' novel told of the non-violent over- throw of an authoritarian regime, easily identifiable as Spain's, brought about by a man strolling among Sunday's crowds wearing placards which red: "Non-violence. I respectfully ask that elections be called Governor Ronnie again WE HAVE embarked upon a new age . . or perhaps we're just revisiting an old one. The campus at the University of Cali- gotiations with the administration. Chan- cellor Roger Heyns also seemed amiable, issuing a statement of understanding and compassion with the demonstrators. -19