r Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where Opinions Are Free 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. FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CYNTHIA NEU Grade Point Average Hinders Education IT TOO OFTEN OCCURS that grades and meaningful knowledge are different matters. So many students take some courses merely to fulfill graduation requirements or to add credit hours or because the professor is an easy grader and with a fair amount of work one can get a "B" or "A" and bring up the omnipresent, all-sacred Grade Point Average. Does a friend ask you what new knowledge and insight you gain from a course-or does he ask you what grade you got? Even if the grade is an indication of new knowledge and insight (as it frequently is not), does he care to share that knowledge? Chances are that he, like almost every stu- dent, is G.P.A. oriented. It is partially his and partially the fault of the system. T HE SYSTEM chops up knowledge into three- hour, four-hour or two-hour divisions and gives them names. The system glorifies the calculating machine, which figures out G.P.A. standing to any decimal point wanted. The system ranks students according to your G.P.A. ability, and snugly fits them into a slot in class standing. And at graduation the system furnishes employers with many statistics. But can personal worth be measured in sta- tistics? It appears that the Intelligence Quo- tient (which is worshipped along with grades) can designate a statistic to a person with general consistency, but can statistics measure the ability and desire to use intelligence? Can statistics measure creativity? Can they meas- ure drive and perseverance? Can they measure initiative and energy? Can they measure de- votion or resourcefulness or honesty or self- direction or fortitude? Can grades, which are one kind of statistic, measure these? Grades don't even stand up to Shakespeare's description (in "Hamlet") of man: "What a piece of work is a man!l How noble in reason! How infinite in faculty! In form and moving how express and ad- mirable! In action how like an angel! In apprehension how like a god! The beauty of the world! The paragon of the animals!" GRADES FAIL this description because many teachers permit them to measure not over- all personal worth but merely the ability to take exams well. This ability and the grade depends further on the type of exams a teacher gives. Some students may be poor at essay exams because they cannot express their thoughts well in writing. Other students are weak at fill-in-the-blank exams because they are not able to recall names, especially technical names. Such exams frequently test not understanding but memory and at that a particular kind of memory, the memory of difficult terms. The best kind of exam for most subjects is the multiple choice exam, but the use of this kind of exam by itself would not cure the maladies resulting from - the grade-oriented education. Some of these maladies are especially bad because they defeat the purpose of education. One malady is the taking of a course for the sake of the credit hours or the boost in G.P.A. Another is the confinement of knowledge to performance in a course. Too many students study merely to do well on exams. When the course is over, they throw away their notes, sell their books or, if they keep them, stick them away in a bookshelf never or seldom to be looked at again- but to stand there erect, a testimony that the owner once searched out knowledge, probably with boredom. KNOWLEDGE should be a living organism, a thing to apply and to make use of, at least for undergraduates. The pioneers in know- ledge-the pure researchers and the dissertation writers-may come up with a product that is not immediately usable, but the under- graduate should put together a product that he can work with now and the rest of his life. The classroom experience should be mean- ingful. But for too many, it is not. How many persons discuss outside of class what they are learning in class-except to prepare for an exam and the grade it will bring? How many persons relate their class- room experience to the daily challenge of life and the deepening appreciation of it and the universe that college professors and textbooks and libraries make possible? No, many students shrug it off, commenting that they will forget most of it anyway and so it is of little use, the only use lying in the methodology of gaining knowledge. This is defeatist, for it denies the purpose of taking courses: the gaining of knowledge and insight as to the state of the world today and as to that which has led up to this state. TO MAKE KNOWLEDGE more meaningful than grades, grades should be abolished except for three: Satisfactory, Failure and Incomplete. There should be no "A"s or "B"s or "C"s or "D"s. Elimination of them would mean that the student will be working for the know- ledge and insight available from books and teachers rather than to gain a positive status symbol as an "A" or to avoid a negative status symbol as a "D". Instead of a grade a professor should put on the record an appraisal of the student: how thoughtful is he, how. well-informed, how creative, how thorough in his approach to the subject. Does he pursue varied and good sources of information? Does he ask provoca- tive questions? Does he take an enlightened position on the issues brought up? What par- ticular subjects or issues does he have appetite for? How interested and interesting is he, academically? These personal academic appraisals would better measure the total individual worth of a person better than would a grade. They would be more meaningful for an employer. They could be as long or as short as a professor wishes; he would be able to write more ex- tensive appraisals for students he-knows better. And, of course, he would have to be honest and unprejudiced. In addition, he would be more inclined to try to get to know individual students better and students would try to do their best. The communication of scholars would improve. IN ALL THESE WAYS, personal appraisals would be better than grades. There would be difficulties in a system of personal ap- praisals, but the faults of a grade system are much more severe. -ROBERT SELWA "Ho Hum - It's Sure Dull Around Here" ijj/ '--- S4 . L F . .tC 3 WATCH ON THE POTOMAC: Kennedy a ndCongress ONE OF THE FIRST of the wholly American archetypes was Invent- ed (unfortunately) by David Belasco about 1905. The Girl of the Golden West was received into great exultation both then, and several times later when no lesser men than Puccini and Sigmund Romberg attempted the transmogrification into song, each spinning his magical web of lyrical enchantment. It was received again with a little less exultation but in the right spirit, last night at the Campus. The Operetta Festival, now in its fourth week, is beginning really to grab hold; fully eighty-seven people attended the seven o'clock, and of those, at least three (old ladies at the end of my aisle) had made the pilgrimage all the way from Dexter. The rest of the audience was most -________________ ly constituted of a younger gen- eration anxious to learn what DAILY OFFICIAL pleasures it had missed. It hadn't BULLETIN missed much. I Sing Romberg AT THE CAMPUS: Even the Indians A~ HERE IS NELSON EDDY, at his rosy-cheeked, greasy-lipped prime, When he opens his mouth to sing, his voice roars across the old southwest like feeding time at the Bronx zoo. This is a thrill usually unavailable to Ann Arbor except for one last precious recording of "Shortin' Bread" in the Sugar Bowl juke box. Jeanette MacDonald (back again, ostensibly, because of last week's great performance) doesn't do so bad herself. She sings duets with a fife, played by a boy black- smith who rides the most incredib- ly stupid looking donkey ever de- vised by God or man. And when Miss MacDonald sings Liszt, she holds a hundred bearded prospec- tors, any one of whom might give the donkey a run for his money, spellbound. But, then, this is the Golden West. * WALTER PIDGEON plays a sheriff, although I ,am unable to say why with any great certainty. But then that's Walter Pidgeon. There is only one real moment of truth in this film, but when it comes, it comes with such cosmic force that even the most calloused heart cannot but be rent from rib to rib. Miss MacDonald and Mr. Eddy, now forbidden lovers, dis- cover that they were childhood sweethearts by singing a simple Indian tune. The tune; I am sure, sounds Indian only to Sigmund Romberg, but no one can deny its simplicity. To fill in the various holes be- fore and after this fine moment, there is a series of spectacular celebrations, culminating in a grand fiesta which, I must admit, looks for all the world like one of the better commercials for Green Giant Corn. In case a movie of such great pageantry is not enough to satis- fy the hungry college boy, there was also a short, a most indelicate film showing thirty wild horses of all ages nipping each other's flanks in slow motion, to a background score that sounded like a bad tape recording of the anniversary waltz, played backwards on a glass har- monica. For ninety cents how could you lose? -Dick Pollinger (EDITOR'S NOTE: Spivack is sub- stituting for Walter Lippmann, who is on vacation.) By ROBERT G. SPIVACK THE PRESIDENT'S feeling of frustration as he examines the Congresional "record" is under- standable. At the beginning of July a Democratic Congress had approved only 20 of 285 legislative requests submitted by the White House-a mere 7 per cent. Even President Eisenhower, with an opposition Congress and in his second term when his power of reprisal was diminishing, didtbet- ter than that. Of 198 requests at mid-session he won 9 per cent approval. Statistics, of course, do not tell the whole story. The White House can argue that the legislation it has proposed was much more fundamental, so na- turally opposition was more deep- rooted. The Congressional Repub- lican leadership, on the other hand, can argue that the legisla- tion was defective and that Con- gress, in its wisdom, was forced to exercise a veto power over the White House. Both are legitimate views and we can expect this debate to go on from now until November. * * * HOWEVER, there are many other reasons for the dismal show- ing the Administration has made on Capitol Hill which have little to do with the merits of the legis- lation. The basic difficulty is that there are too many at the White House who think the government of the United States is like a poli- tical convention. There is virtually no recognition of the fact that entirely different techniques are required. There are Congressmen who may be boors and their crude behavior may be legendary. But the day-by- day relations between the Capitol and the White House are subtle. Those who do not understand the delicate nature of these relations have often paid a high price to learn the lesson. In a recent medicare debate, for instance, there were innumerable lawmakers who complained pri- vately at the tactics used by the White House. Whether these complaints ever got back to the President is not known. But there reports of Ad- ministration "lobbyists" who had only the most casual acquaintance with the lawmakers impatiently outlining what the President want- ed, inferentially warning of how powerful the wrath of the White House could be, and then ending a conversation without the fog- giest notion of the bad impression they were making. The same thing happened on the farm bill. * * *, THERE IS NO NEED to endow the members of Congress with qualities they do not possess, or to ignore the basic misrepresenta- tive character of the House with its rural predominance. But this is nothing new; Congress has been like this for years. Other Presidents have accomplished more even with members of the opposition party in control. Why are thing different now? Congressmen are saying private- ly that some in the Administra- tion can scarcely conceal their low opinion of those with whom they have to deal, especially if they lacked the wisdom to be "for Kennedy" before West Virginia Others say that some of the young- er men show little understanding of the problems that Congressmen face, or their real needs. Still others say the Administration for- gets its friends. It only takes a short backward glance to see how some of the difficulties developed. For example, there was the question of the House leadership. Richard Bolling of Missouri, a strong advocate of most New Frontier policies and a protege of the late Sam Rayburn, had earned the No. 2 position. But Bolling was no "yes-man," and somehow the White House bought the idea that he would have trou- ble "putting across" the Admin- istration program. INSTEAD Carl Albert of Okla- homa was chosen, a likeable chap, but not particularly sympathetic to the objectives of the New Fron- tier. He has, of course, been un- able to deliver the votes while Bolling spends a lot of his time these days out fishing. Then there is the matter of Congressmen in shaky districts. Any number have warned that the Republicans will exploit the issue of "too many Kennedys" and that the decision to run Teddy Kennedy for the Senate could cost them their seats. No one would have objected to starting him at the bottom on a public service career, but starting at the top is a different matter. This issue alone could lose the Demo-, crats a half-dozen votes in the House. Until the White House recog- nizes that Pennsylvania Avenue is a two-way street, it is unlikely that members of Congress will knock themselves out to make the Administration look good. (c) 1962, New York Ierald Tribune, Inc. The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial vesponsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m., two days preceding publication. FRIDAY, AUGUST 10 General Notices Hopwood Awards: All manuscripts for the Summer Contest must be In the Hopwood Room (1006 Angell Hall) on Fri., Aug. 10, at 4:30 p.m. Events Degree Recital: Ann Labounaky, or- ganist, will present a recital on Sat., Aug. 11, 8:30 p.m. in Hill Aud., in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music. She will play the compositions of Lynwood Farnam, Ernest Krenek, Samuel Bar- ber, Leo Sowerby, Marcel Dupre, Jean Langlais, and Maurice Durufle..Her re- cital is open to the public. Degree Recital: Barbara Merkel, pian- ist, will present a recital on Sun., Aug. 12, 8:30' p.m., Lane Hal Aud., in par- tial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Music. Com- positions she will perform are by J.. Bach, Mozart, Bartok, and Schumann.' Open to the public. Doctoral Examination for Arthur Ben- avie, Economics; thesis: "The Impact on the Strength of Monetary Controls of Asset Shifts Involving Intermediary Claims," Sat., Aug. 11, 105 Economics Bldg., at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, W. L. Smith. Doctoral Examination for Leslie Tay- lor Hefner, Psychology; thesis: "Reli- ability of Mothers' Reports on Child- Development," Fri., Aug. 10, 7615 Haven Hall, at 7:30 p.m. Chairman, S. A. Mednick. Doctoral Examination for Raymond Edward Lekowicz, Mathematics; thesis: "A Characterization of the Analytic Operator among the Loewner-Benson Operators and on M-Dimensional Area of Continuous Mappings," Fri., Aug. 10, 3217 Angell Hall, at 1:00 p.m. Chairman, Lamberto Cesari. Last Performance Tonight: Opera dou- ble-bill: U-M Players, Dept. of Speech, present Opera Dept., School of Music in Puccini's "Gianni Schcchi and Per- golesi's "'La Serva Padrona, " 8:00 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Box office open 10-8. Placement Teaching vacancies for the school year 1962-63. Chelsea, MIch.-Libr. Allen Park, Mich.-Girl's PE, Elem. Vocal Mus. Ashland, 0.-Gen. St. Charlexoiv Mich.-Phys/Math or SS or any acad. sub. except Bi ,,. Farmington, Mich.-Grades 1, 2, 3, 5 & 6; SS/Gen. S . (Woman), Jr. HS Engl., SS/Engl., Gen. Sci/Guid.; HS Amer.& World Hist/Coa. Bsb., & Cross Country (Man). Ferndale, Mch.-th gr. Engl., 7th gr. Homeroom,. Sp. Corr., Deaf & Hard of Hear., % time Elem. Vocal Mus. Flint, Mich. (Atherton Sch.)--8th gr. Math, 2nd gr. Libr. Fraser, Mich.-Earth & Explor. Sl. (9th & 10th gr.). Fredonia, Mich.-Elem. Art. Holland, Mich. (west Ottawa Junior- Senior HS)-Jr. HS Math, Girl's PE. Interlochen, Mich. (Arts Academy)-- -HS Art. Lake City, Mich.-HS Ftbl. & Bsktbl. Coach. Muskegon, Mich.-9-10 Alt. & Arith., French/Engl. (11-12). New Boston, Mich. (Huron HS) - Instr. Music (No Vocal)-grade 4-12. Olivet, Mich.-Early & Late Elem., Jr. HS & HS Engl., Sl., Oxford, Mic.-9th & 11th Engl., Visit. Teach., Sp. Corr., Jr. HS Type "A." Port Huron, Mich.-HS Eng.; Typ/ Short., HS Libr. Romulus, Mich.-HS Home Ec., Vocal Mus., HD Bsebl., Jr. HS Math, Early & Late Elem. Rose City, Mich. (63 mi. N. of Bay City)-Elem.& HS Vocal/Instr. Mus., Biol/Phys/Chem. Stambaugh, Mich.-Girl's PE, HS Fre/ Engl. Weidman, Mich. (Near Mt. Pleasant) -Engl. (7-12). For additional information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3200 SAB, 663-1511, Ext. 3547. (Continued on Page 3) A LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Less Butter than Guns Tragic Criticism To the Editor: I THINK Mr. Pole's able article, "Depression in America will Fol- low Disarmament," is somewhat unduly pessimistic. Let me submit some further considerations t~o your readers:- 1) Most military expenditure is in itself sterile and wasteful; de- fensible only on grounds of mili- tary necessity. "Guns instead of butter" may mean full employ- ment, but it means less butter. The minor part of military expen- diture which is productive can continue in time of peace: for ex- ample, space research and peace- ful uses of atomic energy. 2) The short readjustment de- pressions which followed the transition from war to peace im- mediately after both World Wars did comparatively little harm; in four years' time in both cases pro- duction was at a higher level than before the wars. There was, to be sure, a major depression in 1929, but this was a full decade after the first war ended and was not due to turnover from wartime to peacetime manufacture. ' 3) Taxes are, and will remain, at an all-time high until there can be a large measure of disarma- ment, since military preparation in this country, and all countries, is the main charge on the national budget. Disarmament would re- move the heavy weight, which ex- cessive taxation now lays on in- dustry and must needs continue to do so until sanity strikes the Russians and they are willing to agree to an internationally super- vised limitation of armaments. We are already willing so to agree, preferring the risks of a temporary industrial slump to the strain of a war which would completely wreck our economy, or (without war) place such a continuing economic burden on our industry as has no precedent. -Prof. Preston Slosson THIE REPUBLICAN DECISION to make nu- clear testing a political issue is an ill- advised and unfortunate view. It robs the United States of the flexibility needed to con- duct test ban negotiations with the Russians and more importantly their decision drives another nail into the coffin of test ban treaty hopes. Sen. Everrett Dirksen and Rep. Charles Hal- leck have taken the emotional view about deal- ing with the Russians-a criticism that never brings results. By declaring that the United States went "hat in hand" to the Russians in their latest compromise offer, the two Repub- lican leaders have stirred fears that are hardly conducive to negotiating with the Soviets. Recent scientific evidence had given the United States an opportunity to back off from their own intransigent position. The U. S. offered to reduce the number of control posts and the number of required on-site inspection of suspicious events in the Soviet Union if Editorial Staff FRED RUSSELL KRAMER .................. Co-Editor PETER STEINBERGER .............Co-Editor AL JONES .............................. Sports Editor DENISE WACKER ....................... Night Editor CYNTHIA NEU........ ....Night Editor the Russians would commit themselves to the principle of international inspection. This small concession is based on United States ability to detect quite small atomic blasts with its delicate and complex system of devices. THE MOVE concedes no basic principle. It only makes the United State's former po- sition more palatable to the secretive Russians. It hardly goes "hat in hand" as the GOP would have it seem, nor is it even adequate to end the testing stalemate between the two world powers. Further, the issue is a rather moot one for the Russians rejected the United Staaes offer out of hand, saying it was the same old Amer- ican line, window-dressed for the benefit of neutral nations. By playing on the American public's fear of the Russians, the Republican criticism will make realistic negotiations on this issue im- possible. If the United States is ever to get a treaty it will have to, in large measure, abandon its rigid demand for inspection. Se- crecy is basic to Soviet society and the Russians could hardly agree to have international in- spection teams snooping about. SO THE GOP has insured a continued impasse on nuclear testing. Meanwhile, the bombs continue to explode and the unknown terror of fall-out spewed upon the planet. Further, the stalemate allows more nations to develop and test nuclear devices. As other nations test, FEIFFER PIC6tt1 1 1)FROK0r OF L{oU- 120 ALWAY'I irs q.to. NEVER [T ME 1 CAKtJ qov LIVE~ 10 ; -ALVWAYS IT' OW&) PRtAT ,,- OU "tMEYER OF50 IT UPI IQ" AYE' i ~~R6Hrsf It OUT( L6oj( - JiMA AT ME! LOOK A pER5D1oJ AT ME! I1 CAUT T'rL 7b 4, 11 CAIT WV lVw6H M4MoK! u. -- tv-' I 4 -4 I'm S'FAL)'vK)& OF *OU- DO WO wE lie r ..a Oft . GovJ tiv/C10 LyouR OWOJ PRIVATE LOr-rUC I4IAT6' 1OC Cs ? WVIOQ AVW' HWOP A SfWL.E WORDP VC AILZ WAXr? I ljmHA1 ii W1 G Af. I 1r1 ,I k t n Anett