UNIVERSITY SCHOOL: NOT WORTH THE COST See editorial page Y 111kr iau 3ai 'MUGGY fligh-70 Low-48 Cloudy and warm Vol, LXXIX, No. 1 62 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, ApriI 16, 1969 Ten Cents Ten Page _. - r -r .. RTen. Cents. Taan I %Aj Residential By BARD MONTGOMERY Second of a series Everyone complains about t h e nighly touted faults of multiver- sity education - impersonality, lack of intellectual cohesion and integration, lack of contact with professors. It is these faults which the Re- sidential College was formed to correct, or at least ease. To-that end, the "core" curriculum w a s designed in the early planning along with other related under- class courses. The core curriculum, besides putting small groups of students -- eight to twelve - in a class with a professor, breaks a lot of the conventional rules of Uni- versity education. The courses come packaged in relatively traditional form. There are seven core courses and a stiff language requirement. The core courses can be explained, form- ally, as follows: Freshman seminar is a crea- tive writing course in which a senior faculty member works with a small group of students. It is essentially a writing course. by Logic and Language, taught by philosophy Prof. Carl Cohen, aims at teaching students skills of critical analysis. It is the most residential cOlege highly-structured course in RC, the only graded one, the o n 1y one without recitations. Grades are based on a standard five-hour final exam. - Human Behavior, a two-term sequence, draws lectures from all the social science disciplines. Each instructor conducts a recitation Golie ge: section and gives a three- or four- But0 lecture sequence. The course fo- the cou cuses on a particular topic e a c h is more semester and attempts to bring Theh all the disciplines to bear on that these pa topic. The university as a politi- what so: cal, economic and socializing in- effortso stitution was the topic this term, dents to Western Man, another two-term ests an sequence, is essentially a course and to on classical studies and medieval sue thei history. Outside 1 e c t u r e r s are as well bought in as human resourc- to be m es, although most of the work is competi done in recitations. The 1 - Reason and Myth in Ameri- requirem can Society, taught in the fourth LSA req semester, is intended to integrate whichs the methods and topics develop- courses. ed in the previous work. vant ed The language requirement is the ind stiffer than the literary college's. core cur In addition to developing pro- mitted t ficiency - for only eight hours mattera credit instead of 16 as in LSA- participa students must take a 300-level In co readings course in their languag'e. and Hun 'Core' and community the formal appearance of rses and the -requirements than a little deceptive. hard requirement to pass articular courses is some- ftened by the conscientious of instructors to allow stu- o pursue individual inter- interdisciplinary structure credit students who pur- r own scholarly ambitions as those who are willing easured against traditional tive standards. key distinction of the RC ments as opposed to t h e quirerents is the freedom students have within the The ability to shape rele- ucational patterns lies at ividual level. Within the rriculum students are per- to choose specific c o u r s e and patterns of classroom ation. urses like Western M a n man Behavior students de- cide what books they will read. what topics they will consider and what papers they will write. And in the Freshman Seminar students studied topics ranging from Southeast Asia to poverty in Appalachia. One group last year even took a field trip through Eastern Kentucky as part of the seminar. But even with this looseness, some students still feel the in- stitutional requirements are edu- cationally wrong. Many do not feel that RC-wide requirements are as effective in binding the col- lege community together as they are in separating students f r o m their individual motivations. Reformers contend that "there is more than one way in which a person can be a member of the RC community," and argue for options to the core courses. Their discontent is focused on the lang- uage requirement and the Logic and Language course taught by Prof. Cohen, These two courses leave 'th e least room for individualized in- tellectual efforts and both rely on standard examinations for grad- ing and passing, The dissidents contest the idea that these goals can be worth- while for every student, and hold that measuring a student's p e r- formance against arbitrary stand- ards impedes the type of intellec- tual experience the college claims to cultivate. Prof. Charles Maurer of t h e German department, coordinator of the RC foreign language p r o- gram, concedes that core require- ments are not valid for everyone, but maintains that they apply "to those people for whom the RC was set up." Prof. Theodore Newcomb, an RC founding father and now as- sistant ,director for research, has conducted studies to find out just who these RC people are. Honors and RC students rank higher in academic * ingredients such as "theoretical orientation, esthetic interests, personal inte- gration, and non-practical out- look" than the LSA sample, but have records of academic accom- plishment comparable to the LSA sample. Students in the RC and LSA samples are distinguished from the honors sample in non-aca- demic qualities such as "social ex- troversion, impulse expression. lack of anxiety and altruism." Despite these findings and the belief that the core curriculupi is appropriate for the people f o r whom RC was set up, there have been difficulties and dissatisfac- tions among RC students over the current set-up. It is here that student power be- comes significant in the Residen- See RC, Page 7 31 MEN MISSING: North Korea downs U.S. intelligence plane TOKYO (R) -North Korea said it shot down fa large U.S.; reconnaissance plane yester- day and the Pentagon report- ed one w a s missing with 31 persons aboard, raising fears of another Pueblo-type inci- dent. President Nixon discussed the incident at a series of meetingsI with his top advisers and with congressional leaders and plans to take it up today at a previously scheduled meeting of the National Security Council. A N o r t h Korean broadcast claimed the plane intruded deep into its air space and a fighter plane shot it from the sky with a single shot. The Pentagon said theI four-engine propeller driven plane' was on a track 50 miles off thej North Korean coast. It was an easy target for North' Korean jet fighters. A big search was in progress for survivors in the Sea of Japan about 95 miles southeast of the North Korean port of Chongjin. This is about 200 miles north of where the intelligence ship Pu- eblo was captured off the North Korean port of Wonsan Jan. 23, 1968 The North Koreans claimed the Pueblo invaded its waters. Washington said she was 25 miles off shore. Meanwhile, North Korea re- quested a meeting of the joint Korean Military Armistice Com- mission .at Panmujom for Friday and sources in Seoul speculated it would deal with the downing of the aircraft. The North Koreans gave no reason for calling the meeting. While the Pentagon did not Protesters win partial faculty P Y OK at Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (N-A stormy meeting of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences yesterday agreed to several demands of striking students. More than 400 senior faculty members took part in the meeting, directed by President Nathan M. Pusey, and open to the public through an unprecedented broadcast by the student-run radio station. The faculty voted to ,select a 15-member committee, in- cluding five students, to investigate the causes of the student seizure of University Hall, to decide on all disciplinary action and to recommend a "restructuring" of the university. A bitter dispute over abolition of ROTC at the nation's oldest university ended when Prof. John Kenneth Galbraith, Fleming on TV University President Robben Fleming appeared on TV last night in a panel discussion on "Campus in Turmoil." Fleming was joined by Brandeis University President Morris Abram and San Francisco State College Acting President S. I. Hayakawa, along with four students. A review appears on Page 7. PHi EPSILON PI: Fraternsity presidents 1 ~1 L'1 -Daily--Andy Sacks 0h1e for you, iunetee for tie If you didn't get your income tax in last night, it's too late now and it's not their fault. The Post Office did everything it could to facilitate the last-minute rush of an estimated 8000 returns de- posited at the Stadium St. branch after 5 p.m. yesterday. The police were out trying to unsnarl the traffic jam created by the late filers while Max Rephurn, a postal clerk, greeted customers and personally deposited their mail. ENLARGES BUDGET SURPLUS: Nixon 'asks three per cent cut. ini Social Security increases who favors abandoning mili- tary t r a i n i n g, successfully moved that it be taken up when the faculty meets again tomorrow. Some professors said it would be "disgraceful" for the 333-year- old school to "rebuke" the mili- tary under pressure from dissi- dents. A dispute broke out between Franklin L. Ford, dean of the fac- ulty, and philosophy Prof. Morton White. Ford said a philosophy de- partment office was still "occu- pied" by dissidents. White denied it. Ford appealed to the faculty to avoid hasty action in the crisis which developed after last Thurs- day's arrest of 200 demonstrators by 400 police. "We are meeting here with the university still in grave danger of destruction," Ford said. "I beg you not to forget that the final a-1immediately confirm that the WASHINGTON UP'-The Nixon ing other adjustments the cost ment will get an additional $16 responsibility to keep this place ba nl co eus i1ro rn ru si ; North Koreans had shot down the Administration yesterday disclosed would be held to $600 million, million, mostly for anticime ac- going as being a community plane, Vice Adm. John B. Colwell' that it wants Social Security re- administration sources said. tivities. This is the only program where you can live-is right in this By LORNA CHEROT deputy chief of naval operations, cipients to settle for a smaller The resulting $1 billion saving to receive moi'e money than pre- group." The Fraternity Presidents''Assembly (FPA) in a 111 tmcu case of inte ntiols aclr than proposed benefit increase comes close to being the largest viously allocated. The faculty also endorsed pro- vote accepted ast night the recommendation of the Execu- South Korean diplomatic sourcy- next year in an effort to increase proposed by the Nixon administra- Johnson's budget for the 1970 posals from "the committee of the tive Board of the Interfraternity Council that Phi Epsilon essaidthe plane was attacked ov- the budget surplus. tion in its campaign to prune out- fiscal year, which starts July. 1 university and the, city." Pi, the first co-ed fraternity, be banned from using girls in er the high seas. more than 100 In the budget proposals he lays from levels proposed in Jan- called for $195.3 billion in outlays These call for construction of their fall rush. miles from North Korea's coast. made before leaving office, Presi- uary by the Johnson administra- and $198.7 billion in receipts, leav- "large-scale" low- and middle-in- U.S. military sources in Japan dent Johnson included a 10 per tion. ing a $3.4 billion surplus: come housing units, including Ronald Natale, '71 LS&A, vice president of internal fra- said this was in easy r a n g e of cent Social Security cost-of-living The only larger reduction was Nixon's budget experts say "un- public housing; creation of a uni- ternity affairs, said that the recommendation sought to North Korean planes, benefit increase of $1.6 billion, in the area of defense spending, controllable" changes such as in versity vice president for external limit the usage of girls during open house and smokers. Phi U.S. military officials in Japan President Nixon proposes in- i which the Republican adminis- the debt interest and in farm price affairs; establishing liaison with Epsilon Pi is the only co-ed fraternity at the University. "and South Korea declined to give stead to hold the increase to 7 tration wants to cut $1.1 billion supports means the outlays John- local citizens' organizations; pay Open house is held Sunday and Monday afternons details on the search, on last ra- per cent. By delaying the effec- from levels outlined in the Jan- son envisioned.would actually cost displaced dwellers' relocation ex- O dio contacts with the missing tive date of the boost from Jan- uary budget. $196.9, reducing his surplus to $1.8 penses, and hire more minority while smokers are conducted Tuesday, Wednesday and' See N. KOREA, Page 3 uary, 1970 to February and mak- However, the Justice Depart- billion. group members. Thn dann, r ni'c. frnm 7 .n Carnpus strike continue' College Press Service Strikes and unrest continued yesterday on the campuses of Columbia University, Boston Uni- versity, Queens College, Stanford University, and Fordham' Univer- sity. Here is a breakdown of the action on individual campuses: -Negotiations broke down Tues- day between Columbia University administrators and 16 black fresh- men who have occupied the admis- sions office since Monday night to demand control over admission of black students and a black studies department. Columbia blacks are seeking support in the Harlem community. In a statement Tuesday, the stu- dents declared they "are prepared when and if necessary to escalate our demonstration up to and beyond the level of last spring's confrontation." -At Boston University, also in Cambridge, students have ended their sit-in. But they plan to meet Wednesday to decide whether to take over another building. The protest, against ROTC and cam- pus military recruitment, has had hot days of occupations and cool days of strategy-making and or- ganizing. The militants also want an end to the school's overseas program, which grants degrees to military officers interested in a later business career. -At Queens College in New York City, some 35 members of the con- servative Student Coalition tried to raid radical students holed up in the administration building. Two faculty members talked them out of it, and leaders of the in- vaders promptly charged the two with interfering with their right to protest. The sit-in has entered its twentieth day, in three shifts because of vacations and other truce periods. The militants are upset over the firing of a profes- sor and discipline of students en- gaged in earlier protests. -The sit-in at Stanford Uni- versity applied electronics labor- L nursuay evennfgs from 1 o 10 p.m. Natale said that Phi' Epsilon Pi could use the girls in all other social events and practices t h a t characterize rush. Mark Frankel, president of Phi Epsilon Pi, called the decision "an unfair -disadvantage to our fraternity." ~Frankel termed his co-ed fraternity a "new experi- ment" and claimed that the rec- ommendation "was not giving op- portunity for this experiment to expand." Frankel went on to say that the recommendation provided for "an unnatural rush" since the girls are members of the fraternity and are being deprived of participation in rush. But Natale went on to argue REVOLUTIONARY SOCIALISM ISCJ: New look on By HAROLD ROSENTHAL There is a new-left group on campus. One dedicated to revolutionary socialism and democracy. The Independent Socialist Club (ISC) was formed in January, but. it is already taking an active part in campus issues. One of the ISCs first proposals was for a Radical Students Union. The proposal was for the formation of a union consisting of groups like the Tenant's Union, Radical Caucus and other leftist groups on campus. literature contends, because they are con- trolled by authoritarian, bureaucratic class- es. The fact that the economy is col- lectivized does not mean that there is socialism. This is so, ISC members say, because the state is not controlled by the working class. ISC also opposes capitalism because capitalists possess a disproportionate share of wealth and power. Members claim the society is not run in the interests of the people. ISC's third camp perspective is derived local left, ISC members see their purpose as one of adding its viewpoint to that of other left- ist groups. They also believe their organ- ization can have an educational function through increasing political discussion on campus. Local example of ISC adding its view- point to that of other organizations are the housing proposal they made to the rent strike and their support of the wildcat strike against Chrysler. Local ISC has also been sponsoring dis- cussiong roups on various issues. One re- By cutting back an additional $4 billion on spending programs from January budget levels, the Administration arrives at its pro- posed $5.8 billion surplus. The President has placed heavy em- phasis on the role a strong sur- plus can play in curbing infla-; tion. "The $5.8 billion surplus is the fourth largest on record," Budget Director Robert Mayo said. "We think it can be attained." Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark), challenged the administration's figures, however. He contended Nixon's new budget is essentially a deficit rather than surplus and said Congress should set a spend- ing ceiling to cut it by about $5 billion. Mills is chairman of the HouseI Ways and Means Committee which In another development, Har- vard Medical School announced it would build low-cost housing in Boston to relocate all those whose homes are taken for the construc- tion of the affiliated hospitals center. The university's actions repre- sented a positive response to many of the demands first put forth by Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and endorsed Monday by several thousand students at a Harvard Stadium rally. - The academicians tried to go about their business despite the four-day student strike. Most classes went on as sched- uled, but there were- no accurate figures on attendance. Best esti- mates of the number of students participating in the strike were