Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS Housing Militants: A New Infantilism F- l Ate Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, Mici. Prevail NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This mist be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR: BRUCE WASSERSTEIN Summer Reading Program: Suggestions for Improvement FOUR YEARS AGO the Honors Council established the Summer Reading Pro- gram, in which students read over the summer required course material-usual- ly for a 200 level English course-take a final in the fall, and receive both credit hours and grade points from the Uni- versity. The program is offered to students at the nominal fee of $25 per course in- stead of the usual correspondence fee of $24 per credit hour. The aim of the program is to give those students who wish to study independently of the classroom the chance to do so. In theory, the program lets students study at their own pace, experiment with their own ideas, and go more deeply into the course material than classroom time per- mits. It is also designed to prepare the student for graduate work by helping him learn to study and think for himself. WHILE THE PHILOSOPHY behind the program is excellent, it has one ma- jor fallacy. A student can't study inde- pendently and get .a worthwhile amount out of the course unless he's had some background, or foundation, in the mater- ial. The student who takes, for example, English 231, Introduction to Poetry, and has never had any instruction in read- ing poetry will be lost when just given a book of poetry and told to read and make intelligent comments on it without any further direction. This is what the Summer Reading Pro- gram often does because it is offered to the wrong segment of students and with the wrong types of courses. Generally freshmen and sophomores are in the pro- gram, and the courses that they take are usually the introductory or 200 level Eng- lish courses. Of the 300 students who were enrolled this summer, over three-quarters of them took these English courses. The other quarter took introductory courses in his- tory, psychology, political science, and music literature. All of the courses are run in the same manner. Students are given a list of re- quired reading and told either to keep a journal on each piece read or to write a term paper on any important topic cov- ered. In the first three weeks of school in the fall, the journals are collected, graded and commented on; an hour re- view session is held by the instructor, and a three hour final is administered.. THE GENERAL REACTION to this pro- gram is "it's interesting but . . ." The course often leaves an underclassman with a feeling of confusion, or of having missed the point of much of the ma- terial. The beginning student, however brigr t, needs some direction to show him the proper guidelines--what to look for, what is relevant, how it is technically constructed, etc. This guidance takes the student out of confusion and into a position where he can read and begin to make intelligent observations. Without it, the student who has taken summer reading either for his own general knowledge or to- get a pre- requisite out of the way. has an extremely sketchy and ill-prepared background. As the program now stands, it should be opened only to juniors and seniors and of- fer 300 and 400 courses. By his upperclass years, a student should have a back- ground of knowledge and be more com- petent to do independent study. IF, HOWEVER, the Summer Reading Program is still kept open to under- classmen, direction must be added to make it worthwhile. One suggestion for improvement would be a bibliography of reference books which students could go to for clarification. Better than a bibliography would be prepared handouts (written lectures, in other words) which would explain tech- nical aspects of the novel, play or poems, development of style and general themes. These would at least be something the student could continually refer to as he read his texts, and would give the student a proper foundation for studying. To help make the journal a valuable collection of thoughts instead of mumbo- jumbo, the instructor could prepare ques- tions for the student to keep in mind when analyzing his material. Answers to these questions would not compose the entire journal, but would be an addition to the theories and ideas of the student. The questions could be either general -covering the entire topic (What is the structure of this poem? What is the sym- bolism?)-or specific-covering each item read (what is the role of fate in "Oedipus Rex?" Are the speeches in "The Import- ance of Being Earnest" meant seriously or humorously?). Generally the questions could, cover technical points in order to point them out and explain their- role. The theme,. role of characters, speeches, etc. would all be in the grasp of the student and would leave plenty for the student to study on his own without direction or re- strictions. ALL OR EVEN A FEW of these sugges- tions could make the Summer Read- ing Program of immeasurably greater value than it is now. The student would still be able to go independently and at his own pace, but would proceed along the right paths and with the background and help he needed. -MERLE JACOB { THE STRATEGIC split which has developed within Voice Political Party this week (a split which, unfortunately, will not be solved even at today's Diag rally) is an indication of the extent to which various Voice members fail to understand the relation of means and ends within the con- text of their ideology. The issue is adequate quality, low-cost apartment housing for students and the role which the University has played, might play and will play in providing or helping to provide such housing. Concern for this problem stems from rather obvious conditions in Ann Arbor-apartment rents and profits whirh are disproportionate- ly high relative to other sities and which contribute significantly to make the University almost ex- clusively a middle-class and up- per-middle-class institution, ex- tremely crowded facilities in all new buildings erected and the con- sequent detriment to students' ability to study and effectively, 12-month leases which bind all those students who leave the city for the summer, useless luxuries which are used to justify the high rents charged while space, func- tionality and soundproofing are. sacrificed. There are basically two possible ways these conditions can be remedied-1) the University could, given repeal of a 1929 Regental statement, enter the arena of apartment-construction itself, us- ing both its own money and fed- eral funds which are available for these purposes or, 2) some form of student and/or faculty group could form a non-profit corpora- tion and, with or without the use of University-owned land, receive federal funds and construct hous- ing, to be run on a cooperative basis. IF THERE were nothing more to the whole matter than simply seeing good housing erected, one might well favor the first alter- native (though neither alternative necessarily excludes the other). It is fairly clear that the University can put up a larger amount of equity capital (the approximately 23 per cent of land and construc- tion cost which a builder normally must provide, initially, from his own pocket in order to get bond or loan financing for the remaind- er of the construction cost) than could any private group. The University need not -pay taxes on its land or income and can marshal more efficiently the various specialized resource per- sons needed to plan and manage a building. On the other hand, there is potentially far more at stake here than simply the construction of good housing and the alleviation of rental conditions in Ann Arbor. While the University may well al- low a high degree of student and faculty participation in the plan- ning of structures it might erect, authority and responsibility would nevertheless ultimately remain with the University. For a stu- dent-faculty group, in which all interested persons could have an actual say, to enter the market as a private corporation would un- doubtedly mean far more in terms for improved conditions at the University. THE POINT here is that a ser- ies of housing projects which in- timately involve students in plan- ning and management (as in the case of cooperative projects) and which are clearly being erected by students and faculty for stu- dents and faculty can serve as the basis for a much broader "move- ment" through which this and other "counter-economic institu- tions" can be developed to com- pete with existing mercantile in- terests in the city. The benefits of establishing this kind of situation in Ann Arbor-- or in any place where there are distinct differentiations between suppliers and consumers - are many: -While the University may well allow a high degree of stu- dent and faculty participation in the planning of structures it erects, it would nevertheless re- tain ultimate authority and re- sponsibility. Even. if consumers could be ensured that University planners and builders would ac- curately translate their desires and needs into- blueprints and rents, the tremendous emotional poten- tial which exists in the-concept of institutionalized participation by all those concerned with an enter- prise would be lost. If accurate interest-representa- tion cannot be assumed, the issue is not merely emotional- potential lost but, indeed, whether students or non-students will ultimately decide the kinds of structures in which students live. (It is not the case, by the way, that only pro- fessional realtors or administrators can develop the expertise in real estate financing required for a successful venture; with consider- able yet still manageable effort, WHY NOT? By JEFFREY GOODMAN students are also capable of suf- ficient understanding to run their own projects.) --ONE MAY well doubt the vigor and flexibility with which the University would enter the housing-construction business. Be- fore the University could actually build structures to compete with' private housing, administrators would have to convince the Re- gents to repeal that 1929 ruling which forbids such competition. At the time, this ruling was pro- mulgated undoubtedly to protect the financial involvements of a number of Regents in Ann Arbor businesses. While today's Regents and ad- ministrators are definitely differ- ent people, there is little doubt (some high administrators admit it freely) that emotional and fi- nancial ties still exist. These ties do not necessarily work to the disadvantage of students and fac- ulty, yet it is safe to say that at least some of the University's hesitance to come to the aid of student economic welfare with University - sponsored enterprises is a function of an extreme lack of desire to sever these ties. (Yesterday's statement by Vice- Presidents Cutler and Pierpont that they are willing to work with existing groups by possibly selling University land to groups wish- ing to construct low-cost student housing is without doubt a sincere and immensely beneficial policy. The statement does, however, give some indication that the Univer- sity is unwilling to compete di- rectly with local realtors and, de- velopers-it does not pledge actual University involvement in the pro- jects and it, still requires whatever projects are constructed to com- pete dn the open market, with existing, privately - owned struc-- tures. One observer predicts that despite initially lower costs and rents, s u c h competition will eventually force expenses and rents up to the levels applying to all other enterprises.) -For those who are interested in, organizing students into a multi-issue force-one which could more effectively exert pressure on the University for concessions of authority on related issues such as dormitory planning and fi- nancing and unrelated issues such as curriculum, student rules, ten- ure and general planning - the establishment of a housing move- ment at this time has tremendous potential. Any movement must begin with an explicitly stated, explicitly un- derstood and generally accepted stand on issues of concern to po- tential constitutents, and c ?rtai.- ly Voice and other groups possess enough knowledge, enough man- power and enough access to stu- dents' ears to mobilize support on this issue. Those who are drawn into participation on the housing issue can be used to recruit more members, will be receptive to the general ideological beliefs of the movements' founders and can therefore serve as a nucleus for creating a growing and broadly- interested movement. IF THE desirability ind fLasi- bility of student-faculty construc- tion of housing can thus be un- derstood, the meaning of the stands taken by the two factions within Voice becomes fairly clear. On the one hand, there are those who are essentially and un- retrievably paranoid with respect to "administrators," "power struc- tures" and the like. These are the people who will most likely -lamor for a "sleep-in" or some other form of direct action at today's Diag rally. In their conception, nothing short of such direct action can get "the administration" to con- cese ("working with" students will not do - there must be conces- sions) what they demand; a pow- er confrontation must occur now or the "movement" will have been forever sold out. The other faction, incorrectly labelled by the first faction as moderates, feels it is far more essential to secure the University's assistance for a student-faculty corporation to construct its own housing. It is this faction which yesterday attempted to impress upon Cutler and Pierpont the need for an explicit- statement of their willingness to cooperate with such ventures-they hoped the state- ment would serve both to calm the ;fears of the militants and to clear up for the moderates exactly how committed the University was. The essential and unmistakeably correct feeling of this faction, is that, given the general reactions of University officials to demon- strations and the fact that they would react far more negatively to a demonstration coming pre- cisely when they were making every effort to cooperate with students, given these factors di- rect action would most likely de- stroy the good chance now exist- ing for University cooperation in the independent student-faculty housing venture. IF THE so-called militants really understood their ideology and the strategies which it implies they would understand the two fundamental points about this particular case which make them wrong: 1) One does not precipitate confrontation with people in authority when there are more effective means of attaining those goals which the ideology seeks, even if strategically this means one must cooperate with those in authority. Clearly the goal of a broad-based movement which has been granted legitimacy by those whom it would serve and who would serve it is better served by an independent housing venture at this time than by wild demon- strations, and clearly this goal is far more in line with Voice's ideology than the retrenchment, anger, unresponsiveness and con- tempt which those demonstrations would undoubtedly produce. 2) In any case, one can accom- plish nothing with demonstrations that have no significant support. If it were possible at this junc- ture to overthrow the administra- tion there might, within the- ideo- logy of the militants, be more strategic justification for a dem- onstration, though this is certain- ly arguable. At this writing last night, it was still not clear whether or not the truly "radical" faction of Voice-those wishing not to alie- nate the University in order to ensure greater success for the in- dependent housing projects being contemplated - would be able to convince the "left-wing infantil- ists" to (at the least) wait and see if the University would act in good faith. Most likely, it will be up to whomever gathers at today's Diag rally to decide this issue. HOPEFULLY, those interested in good student housing and/or in the possibility of students em- barking on a constructive project with far-ranging potentials will fill that crowd this noon and stop the silly demonstrations. There is a great deal in the balance. * * 4 4 4~ SE I 1' 4 Viet Nam Disagreement over, Tatc -1 Housimg-Moderation Needed BE HOUSING MOVEMENT at the Uni- versity has had its first small success. Signifying that success was the . re- markable statement issued late yester- day afternoon by Richard Cutler, vice- president for student affairs, and Wilbur Pierpont, vice-president for business and finance. Restrained but encouraging, the statement was one of the first real ex- amples of administrators working with students that this University has seen. The only unfortunate section of the reply statement was item five, that deal- ing with the University's policy toward shoddily constructed apartment build- ings., The. terms in which the question was answered were as shoddy as some of the apartment construction presum- ably is, INSOFAR as the housing protest move- ment itself is concerned this noon's Diag meeting should be a time for the consolidation of yesterday's gains. It should be a planning session for future action, for the expansion of the housing movement's much-needed grass-roots groundwork. There are elements, however, which would have the session develop into something else entirely, into an active protest. The group has asked that an ad- ministrator reply to their demands in not be forthcoming, and the technical grounds for a protest may be thought to have been established. However, it is ob- vious that such a move would be a sheer disaster for the housing movement, and any attempts to encourage it must be greeted with this in mind. JN THE FIRST PLACE, the movement simply does not have the numbers of students behind it to stage a really viable protest as yet. There could be nothing sadder than to see the entire housing movement become nothing more than dinner conversation because a premature protest made itssupporters look like an isolated minority. The movement has a tacit mass back- ing on this campus. It must take care not to alienate its possible supporters by making itself look foolish in their eyes. Moreover, a protest so soon after a sig- nificant administration concession could have no other effect than to make the group look fragmented. This would cer- tainly destroy ,Its bargaining legitimacy with the administration, a crucial toe- hold that must not be surrendered to the whim of an overly-hasty minority. A final reason for not actively protest- ing tomorrow is simply the ethical one that a protest Is not needed and protests are certainly not their own reason for VM *% e EDITOR'S NOTE: Following are excerpts of a report from a special correspondent in Viet Nam for the New Republic. AS THE American manpower commitment in South Viet Nam grows, so does friction and misunderstanding between Ameri- cans and Vietnamese. There is comradeship and devotion be- tween individuals, but the rela- tionship is basically unequal. The Americans are in a position to give, or to withhold; the Vietnam- ese can only receive, or refuse to receive. The other day I went to see a Vietnamese regional forcesmajor, whom I shall call Major Pham. For years he had been a guerrilla fighter, both against the French and the Communists, and later against Ngo Dinh Diem. But war- fare has changed greatly since his best years as a fighter. I went around to see the Amer- ican Special Forces captain who had been helping this major. The captain was away, and his deputy, a second lieutenant, immediately made it plain that he did not share the camp commander's re- gard for the major. IN FACT, his comments were scathing. Major Pham was no fighter; he did his utmost to avoid engagements with the Viet Cong. One reason for the controversy surrounding the major is a con- flict between American military and civilian advisers in the pro- vince. The military adviser thinks this ex-guerrilla leader is undis- ciplined, out-dated, hopeless. However, the civilian adviser, who knows Major Pham well, thinks that as an ex-guerrilla, Major Pham understands Mao Tse-tung's famous precept about swimming in popular waters. The civilian watched the major occupy an area the, government consid- ered lost to the Viet Cong, and was impressed by the imaginative tactics he had employed. TO THE CIVILIAN adviser, Major Pham's dilatory tactics on the battlefield ariserpartly from a kind of "If you don't help me, I won't help you" attitude that is disconcerting to Americans but that is widespread in the Viet- namese army. arrived, the Special Forces cap- tain who had befriended the major felt the same way, despite un- favorable reports from his sub- ordinates. . The Special Forces lieutenant had participated in a recent oper- ation during which American planes had bombed a Viet Cong- occupied village. Then Vietnamese army ,.units had rounded up the villagers and burned their surviv- ing homes. The villagers were al- lowed to take with them what they could carry, and the majority of them were housed temporarily in a government military outpost. The American lieutenant felt the action was perfectly justified. The villagers had been warned by leaflet time and again, for at least three months, that they should not supply the Viet Cong, that the government could not protect them if they stayed in that area, and that they should move else- where. None of them had done so. It was a VC (Viet Coig) village," the lieutenant said downrightly. MAJOR PHAM and his men had also participated in that ac- tion. Hundreds of villagers from the bombed hamlets had in fact been housing temporarily in his area. But to him, the whole oper- ation was pointless. The purpose could not have been to kill Viet Cong, for there were no Viet Cong killed either in the bombing or in the sweep through the village. Nor could the purpose have been to "liberate" the village, since the government forces knew before they began the operation that they would have to withdraw once it was over. So the only valid objective was to deny the village and its sup- plies to -the Viet Cong. But this would be achieved only for a limited period of time. To get people to move permanently from that village, one would have to give them alternative ricefields or an alternative source of income. One could not treat the people as permanent refugees, living on doles of American bulgar wheat and vegetable oil. The minute the people realized that this was in fact what the government forces intended to do, they began to filter back to their own village, despite the risks. The people know that they will have to supply rice and other' provi- sions to the Viet Cong, and that this will invite renewed govern- ment retaliation. BUT WHAT can they do, Major Pham asked? Their livelihood is there, in the bombed village. He, for one, could not forbid them to return. Nor did he forbid the people in his area from continuing to trade with and keep up rela- tions with villagers under Viet Cong control. It means added in- come for the people in his area. It also provides him with informa- tion as to what is going on in the Viet Cong areas. "I Had In Mind Something A Little Less Common" V, U' Bookstore Backers Need a New Pitch By PETER R. SARASOHN WOULDN'T IT BE GREAT. San- dals and weejens marching alongside each other. Marching by President Hatcher's house through the Diag to the front steps of the Administration Build- ing. Marching, chanting "We want a University Bookstore Now." Marching, carrying signs saying "Foil Folletts," "Smash Slater's" and"Up-End Ulrich's." But, alas, such a demonstration would be quite difficult to achieve on this campus of many diverse groups, all proud of and jealous- ly guarding their distinctness. 'Tri, O.'alid4 nt..- .nna nrva fort, student leaders are ventur- ing into an area of great im- portance to every University stu- dent-from beard to rep-tie, from freshman to graduate. Certain important-and recep- tive-administrators are watching this issue and SGCC's handling of it and will decide two things upon the outcome. One, should they commit themselves foi the Uni- versity Bookstore and work for its creation? Two. can SGC in fact muster enough student support to prove it can exist Ps a viable stu- dent organization with a true con- stituency? We must rally to -the cause and attack the problem as BBD&O might. Naturally on a smaller budget. Tom Sawyer, if you re- member, sold the chance to white- wash the fence and received the priceless items of 12 marbles, tad- poles, a kitten with one eye, and a dead rat with a string on which to swing it. The rewards for the student will be definitely as val- uable as were Tom's. Every student- wants to save money. Therefore he is inclined to support an effort for lower book prices as the U-Bookstore would offer. However, it must be made easy for him to show his Follett doesn't even like us." And so on. Signs on the Diag would also have to appeal to the different groups. For the snob-"The Brick- dusters are Supporters." For the sexy-"I Dreamed I Provided Sup- port for the U-Bookstore in my Maidenform." For the Greeks - "The Greeks are Supporters Al- so." For the scholars - "For T- Bookstore Supporters the first eight books of Will Durant's 'The Story of Civilization,' an $85 val- ue, will be offered for $1.58 in- cluding tax." And so on. For those that hate buttons, marches and signs, an all-campus 'T'ri tm l A ,,.eomnuj4,,Af er tw*ny,