Seven fy-Sint! Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD rN CONTROL OF STUDENT PLBLTCATIONs Utopia U: Let Them Play Basketball Where Opinions llArA r Free. WTtheWi pnon ' 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN APBOR, MICH. N i:ws PIoNE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in Thi Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: ROBERT JOHNSTON UN Offers Hope For Viet Nam War THE QUESTION of United States inter- vention in Viet Nam has at last been moved to the United Nations. In one sense, the U.S. has, righted one of its moral wrongs by ceasing to violate the UN Charter. When one thinks of the U.S. image as the major supporter of the UN since its, inception, it seems strange in- deed that'she should have waited so long to submit the issue at all. But the close vote two days ago over bringing the U.S. peace proposal to the floor of the Security Council portends hard, going for any U.S. hope of getting support from the organization she has so carefully fostered. The Russian dele- gation can be expected to attack the U.S. on the basis of the Geneva Confer- ence of 1954, which the Russians claim dictate a complete military withdrawal from South Viet Nam. Further, Soviet Delegate Nikolai Fedor- enko said the U.S., if she wants peace in Viet Nam, must recognize the National Liberation Front as; "the only genuine representative of the people of Viet Nam." Thus far the Johnson administration has justified our presence in Viet Nam on the basis that the Viet Cong has made truly free national elections impossible. Yet our actions in that country, as 11- lustrated by our extensive bombing of the North, seem to indicate quite clearly that there is far more involved than the mere guarantee of free elections. In- deed, had it been free elections we were interested in, they should have been held nine years ago. THUS, THE U.S. must be in Viet Nam for reasons of power politics--the de- fense of South Viet Nam against country- men from the North is seen as a Mach- iavellian. pragmatic move to contain a Communist threat. Whether or not this outlook is justi- fied on the basis of its face value, such an argument will never hold up in the UN. If we advertise our purpose in Viet Nam as being containment of China in South- east Asia, then the whole plane of the dialogue will shift to where it should have been in the first place-to the core of the real reason we are fighting in Viet Nam, power politics and military defense. These issues are hard to defend in terms of innocent peasantry and a civil war, but it seems almost inconceivable that the U.S. could present any other type of defense for her "moral" ones are too full of holes. Now that the issue has cleared its first hurdle and is being openly discussed in the Security Council, it seems evident that we are going to see UN-supervised elections, probably "guaranteed" by a UN force of some kind. THE U.S., by submitting the issue to the UN, has put itself in a bind. Free elec- tions, at last proposed by the U.S. in an important official context, seem a likely outcome, unless the process is blocked by Communist demands that the U.S. with- draw immediately. Such a move would help the United States in shifting more of the popular blame for the war to the Communists, but it would not stop the fighting. By submitting itself officially to the eyes of the world, the U.S. has given the UN an opportunity to provide some hope for a future settlement. We must now hope the Communist bloc will sacrifice its advantage in morality to allow a viable compromise to be worked out. -HARVEY WASSERMAN N LIEU of an original column, I offer the following, the text of my speech given at The Daily's annual banquet Tuesday. THERE IS a standard repertory of titles for these annual ban- quet speeches, along with a re- volving file of texts from which we can choose one. Some of the usual titles: The Daily in crisis, the University at the crossroads, The Daily at the crossroads, ad infinitum. Former editor Ron Wilton did a grand synthesis and came up with, and I quote, "Crisis at the Crossroads." But I'll forget about crises and crossroads and refrain from bor- ing you with mine or, worse, my version of somebody else's. I am going to say a few things about the University, though I did vow when I started this to try to say something original and, 35,000 words under my byline in The Daily over the past 11 months notwithstanding, I've really said very little about what this Uni- versity should be. I've tossed out a lot of scattered proposals with ideas and prognostications, but never really tried to put them together to see if they add up to what I would call a university, or if they add up to anything at all. I'M GOING to be radical and focus my discussion of Utopia U in 1985 around the student. It is clear that, historically, the stu- dent has been very much neglect- ed. This seems to trace back to the origins of the university in the scholarly traditions of the monastery. The monks were students of a small body of literature left over from earlier civilizations. It was their task simply to learn what that literature said from study supervised by their elders, who had learned the same things be- fore them. Only incidentally were they students, mainly they were monks. So to this day we subscribe in practice, though we may say other things, to the idea that the only part of a student's activity that anyone should care about in an institutionalized way, and the ideal type to be held up in establishing incentive and achievement cri- teria, is the student as scholar. Such an ideal is having in- creasingly upsetting ramifications. At the undergraduate level it is facilely subscribed to and ex- pounded upon at literary college faculty meetings, but its execu- tion is a farce for all but a few in the better honors programs. At the graduate level the bull- dozer pressures of enrollment have not yet fully emasculatedhthat greatest of all enforcers of the old tradition, the PhD. But here I must agree with Kenneth Gould- ing when he says that the doctor- ate's inviolable sanctity is one of the greatest hoaxes perpetrated by the scholarly world upon itself ... And undergraduates complain of the irrelevant things they are forced to learn. SO WHAT AM I going to do at Utopia U? Since we're talking in terms of students, let's look at it from their point of view. More than likely our Utopia U fresh- man, class of 1989, is at least as confused as his 1966 predecessors. He doesn't really understand learning or scholarship or research or whatever. He just sees thou- sands of people in a complex, ur- ban environment within which he must carve out a personally satis- fying role for himself. If he isn't able to establish his own little circle of living for several of them if he's talented), he is going to be very unhappy. He'll have identity crises, maybe flunk out, be unproductive, stage riots even. He will be alienated. And heaven forbid that we should have any alienated students at Utopia U. Now our problem is easily de- fined: to line up the goals and purposes of the institution with those of these small, interpersonal groups. (The sociologists call them primary groups. but that is an ob- noxious term which I will ignore.) What we have to do is make what is personally and immediately sig- nificant and rewarding to our Utopia U student coincide with what will be most valuable to himself and to his society in the longer run. At the moment the University's small group circles are most strongly established in a flourish- ing fraternity-sorority system (one of the few such in the country), a select group of student activities, departmental honors programs and a multitude of specialized pursuits. There is some coinci- dence of University ideals and in- terests with those of these groups, but there is none with those in- volving by far the largest num- ber of people, those in the af- filiate system. In Utopia U we can encourage and try to initiate alternatives and new opportunities. SOCIAL SCIENTISTS have of- fered a workable definition of development (a word under which I subsume economic, political and social development), which can also provide a kind of definition for the very undefined Enlighten- ment concept of progress: They see development as the provision of a wider range of choice (i.e. alternatives and opportunities) for individuals and groups. For example, when I graduate from high school there are maybe 10 different things I can do, dif- ferent types of career interests I can pursue. When I graduate from college this choice will have ex- panded to perhaps a hundred. Among thesetalternatives, chances are much better than before that I will find something that I enjoy and that contributes to society as well. So let us offer alternatives to the class of '89 at Utopia U. Let us design 10 different programs the freshman canrchoose from when he starts, and build in a series of switch points and cross- roads, so that he has many oppor- tunities to change his mind, de- Michigan MAD By ROBERT JOHNSTON velop new relationships, and try out new interests without risking his gradepoint. Maybe he will want to spend a year in Tuskegee-excellent; Or a year as editor of The Daily, heaven help him; Or six months devoted to Prof. X's research; Or a semester doing independent reading; Or run a free university, designing his own courses and making them work. For that mat- ter, maybe we should just abolish most courses and make people come up with their own. In any case the important thing is to have a series of programs, of paths, to follow, with maximum flexibility, but with somewhere concrete to start. '"OING THROUGH four years at j this university's literary col- lege is, academically for most people, and again I except some upperclass honors programs, like spending four years in a swamp. You wander in, you're lost, there are no roads, no guideposts, you go one way, then another and then all of a sudden you find yourself out in the real world again, degree in hand with no clear idea of what you've done, or where next to go. The only ra- tional, ongoing order any student could bring to this would be to take all his courses from the same few professors, and perhaps he should be encouraged to do so. The hue and cry the tradition- alists raise is that classical learn- ing and scholarship will be lost. What they're really worried about is that what they teach and have spent their lives on will be exposed as irrelevant. Incompetence in giving lectures out of a text, or even giving them badly will be exposed-yes. So much the better. It's about time. But scholarship in the classical disciplines will remain an im- portant intellectual alternative for those interested. Finally, a diluted, falsified and bastardized version of this classical scholarship won't be forced onto those who could care less. AS THE INCORRIGIBLE oc- cupant of our editorial page's single acknowledged corner point- ed out in a recent piece that never quite made it into print: "It's a crime to make Cazzie Russell take history and English and call it scholarship, and it's an even greater crime to make graduate teaching fellows teach him." If Cazzie wants to play basket- ball, let him. And if there's no place but here for him to do it, let him play here. Would we were all as good in whatever we undertake at this university as he is in basketball. I started out with some visions of Utopia U, what this university ought to be. I've found myself making a plea for diversity. This is not to be confused-with a plea for the multiversity. A series of common goals asd standards must remain. If we're not in this to- gether to some extent, we're not in it at all. The concept of the general edu- cation is still a valid one, I think, and if you examine it you will find that its basis has been and will continue to be what I would call rote or institutionalized learning. It's what we get grades for and suffer over accordingly, but the only key question really asked is "What do you know?" Facts, concepts, theories, names and relationships, reel them off, two hours, time's up, hand in those bluebooks please and so on. Here I think we can make great strides in Utopia U. Electronic teaching has been proven many times more effective than lec- turers and is probably more effec- tive than recitations larger than 12 people. So let's adopt a policy of getting the grind stuff out of the way quickly' and efficiently and then go on to something in- teresting. The only function I can see that lectures serve is to reinforce the small group relationships I was discussing earlier by letting these people sit together and de- rive a sense of common purpose from enduring a, bad lecture, like going to war together-great spirit and all that. That's an important function, but it would be cheaper to show bad movies and require attendance. Like the New York electricity blackout. You force people into adverse circumstances and they might even go so far as to start talking to each other. SO WE ESTABLISH what it is we want people to know in the basic disciplines to be "well edu- cated." You make everybody in every school learn it, all of it. They must be expected to know it all and do equally well in giving it back on exams. If they can't learn it they shouldn't be here. This is a university, not a tech- nical school. Some will just take longer than others-six months for some, two years for others. In any case you have a pass-fail system, in or out. What will count, achievement wise, is what the students do be- yond this program. It will be easier for them to make forays into many different fields. If -you make a mistake now you're stuck for four months with a real bomb of a course. Three mistakes and you're in trouble. Electronics, however, has many virtues. If you don't like it you can change channels, instantly. You can try out as many different areas in a day as the determined drop-adder can in the entire two weeks allotted him. Again, don't confuse Utopia U with the multiversity. I'm not trying to fragment, I trying to reorganize. A wide range of op- portunties within the context of small group interaction in a var- iety of styles and for a variety of purposes, all of them encourag- ed and supported within the con- text of the University itself. Opportunities for self development through interactions with others is what I am opting for. THE ONLY WAY to describe this university here and now and not leave something out is to use the most generalized analysis: a $100 million per year investment in human resources. Maximaza- tion of that investment cannot help but pay off on both a per- sonal and social level. It has been pointed out that social develop- ment is the sum total of its human skills and knowledge. I put Utopia U at the fulcrum of the type of social development I'm interested in seeing. And while I wax philosophical about it, I am really a realist, because I have in fact been describing some vague, but I think well-founded ideas on where I think this Uni- versity can be in the not-too- distant future. * Wears Aren't What They Once Were 'U' Must Provide Money For Out-of-State Students WHAT RESPONSIBILITY, if any, does a state supported university have for providing financial aid to deserving out- of-state students? Should state funds be used in any way to benefit needy out- of-state students? The answer from both the University and the State Legislature seems to be the same-out-of-state students should be thankful they are allowed to attend the University at all. The University, it appears, maintains this position out of fear of adverse re- action from the Legislature. However, the University considers an extensive out-ofd-state scholarship program, even under private funds, as a matter of ex- tremely low priority. The opportunities for an out-of-state student to obtain a scholarship are very limited. The money for the few scholar- ships presently offered comes primarily, from the various alumni groups. The alumni group scholarships, however, are irregular, depending to a large extent on 'the success of the individual group's fund raising drives. Other scholarships come from private endowments, which contain numerous restrictions as to race, religion, family background and field of concentration. THE NEEDY out-of-state student can- not attend the University unless he re- ceives'scholarship money from other pri- vate sources, such as the National Merit Scholarships. These scholarship oppor- tunities are few in number and small in the amount of money provided. With ris- ing tuition and living expenses, difficul- ties have become even greater in raising the necessary money. Editorial Staff ROBERT JOHNSTON. Editor LAURENCE KIRSHBAUM, Managing Editor JUDITH FIELDS ...:..............Personnel Director LAUREN BAHR ........... Associate Managing Editor JUDITH WARREN...... Assistant Managing Editor OAIIL BLUMBERGO. ............ ..Magazine Editor TOM WEINBERG.................Sports Editor LLOYD GRAFF..........Associate Sports Editor PETER SARASOHN...........Contributing Editor MIGHT EDITORS: Robert Carney, Clarence Fanto, Mark Killingsworth, John Meredith, Lennard Pratt, There is little chance the Legislature will ever change its attitude toward out- of-state students without considerable re- appraisal by other states first. However, there must be a change in the attitude of the University. Attempts must be made to secure funds from private indi- viduals and foundations with the intent of setting up a non-resident scholarship fund of a reasonable size. It is most irregular for a state univer- sity to provide scholarships for students not residing in that state. However, few state institutions have nearly one-third of their student body made up of non- residents, as the University does, and most suffer severely from that fact. If the University does not realize it has an obligation to out-of-state stu- dents, it will find itself forfeiting many of its best students to other educational in- stitutions. -MARK LEVIN SGC Action and A New Presidei it LAST NIGHT Student Government Council took the final step in its ef- fort to make students a vital part of the process of selecting a new University President. The matter is now in the hands of the Regents. The underlying hope of all the work which went into last night's event was that a new beginning can be marked for cooperation between Regents, the new President, alumni, faculty and students. As established in the bylaws of the SGC constitution, SGC is the official spokes- man for the student body; now, follow- ing the channels which are constitution- ally established, SGC is making its bid for a student role in this most important drama, The significance of this request lies deeper than a mere exercise for student voice-it is a hope that the Regents will be endorsing close cooperation between the Regents, the new President, faculty, alumni--and students, as the new ad- ministration begins. By DAVE KNOKE WHILE IT MAY BE axiomatic that human nature changes little over 'th6,,centuries, bre very notable exception Is the manner in which men wage war nowadays, Granted the sophistication of weapons and tactics have con- siderably changed since Neander- thalean brain-bashes were the most effective way of doing your neighbor in. This is not the point; technology has always made gruesome ad- vances in killing techniques while the morality that guides men to use these has remained relatively static. What is most startling in re- viewing the long and colorful his- tory of mankind's war is the realization that war is suddenly being fought by men with entirely different attitudes from those held just a few short centuries ago. The plain fact seems to be that men no longer enjoy mas- sacring each other; war is being waged out of inertia. Time was when the common foot soldier had an immediate, personal stake in marching down the paths of glory; today he has been reduced to the mundane role of cannon fodder. BACK IN the good o1' days (al- ways idealized best by those who never lived then) when a man could take the law in his own hands, fighting was down-right fun. Rape, torture, pillage, loot- ing, gluttony, drunkness-the en- listee's life wasdone eternal round of glorious entertainment. The Teutonic war bands enjoyed the physical pleasure of fighting so much that, if the chiefs could not think up an ideological dispute to start a war, the tribes held a sort of Super Bacchanalia. The mob would gather on the opposite sides of some verdant spring meadow, and, with a super abundance of strutting, cursing, caterwalling and other sorts of bravura, would run towards each other at top speed. Pairing off, they would swing their war clubs, brandish their spearsand shields and begin pounding away without finesse, taking care not to hit any vital spots. During a daylight span, the armies would flail away at each other in concentrated earnestness, on the whole achiev- ing at day's end nothing more than a relaxing exhaustion and a gog-g f, 3c r r r i Alp ' +. m i Nowf hearty appetite. This ancient and noble custom has gone into oblivion, as today's soldiers unimaginatively attempt to. knock each other's blocks off without displaying a modicum of theatrical talent. NO LONGER do soldiers from different armies fraternize when they pause from battle; this an- cient curtesy' of the fighting man towards his foe saw its last gasp in the winter of 1914 when Ger- man and Russian troops took time out to celebrate Christmas to- gether on the Eastern Front. Once upon a time the army was a profession every young man lusted after; there was no need of a draft with a surfeit of volun- teers and wars were genetically selective. The best fighters were the ones who went home to father the next generation. Sadly, the battlefield as a prov- ing ground of manhood began to disappear with the invention of gunpowder. After all, in trench warfare, it seems rather unfair that the short man has the na- Letters:Fri Format for To the Editors: FTER reading the favorable editorials concerning the Free University of Ann Arbor and real- izing the large, concerned' re- sponse of the people, I would like to add a note of real experience with the FU so that it does not seem to be just an elevated con- cept or answer to the status quo. I would like to express the joy I shared with the other "student- teachers" in the education course of the FU. It seems that a course in education should serve not only to instruct but to educate as well. The FU course is striving for this by pursuing the essence of education and by questioning anything and everything related to the mass educational process of today. And I believe we will achieve a higher degree of suc- cess than could ever be obtained in a University classroom situa- tion. The reason for this, which also happens to be one of the most rewarding and fascinating aspects of the FU in general, is the het- erogenity of the course partici- pants. There are no narrow boundaries that limit the class to people with only a certain level of education. Rather, in contrast to the normal University situa- tural survival advantage over the tall man. No wonder the French were a nation of midgets , after World War I. Another dirty trick played on the common soldier was the in- vention of the rules of war. When restrictions started being put on the treatment of prisoners and when extra-curricular rapine was sharply curtailed by stodgy top brass, all the fun went out of the soldier's life. Mass butchery be- came the property of arm-chair generals who designed genocide programs with a minimum of waste and excitement. So instead of warring for per- sonel gain and prestige, the foot soldier had to start thinking in ideological terms of National In- terest, Home, God, and Country as prix de la guerre. Rather poor fare for the nasty business they do, Uut everyone is told that "this man's army ain't never had it so good." THEY DON'T KNOW the half of it. .e U Offers Interaction tion with the status quo or a more real situation, but even more it provides the format for the interaction of experience and idea, the atmosphere for change and friendship, and the opportu- nity to engage in something real as well as necessary, free rather than official. -Skip M. Taube, '69 Rebuttal To the Editor: THIS IS IN REPLY to Mr. Den- nis Thompson, who attacked the Young Socialist Alliance in the Jan. 29 Daily for selling but- tons labeled "Peace in Viet Nam -Support the National Libera- tion Front." The YSA supports the Nation- al Liberation Front because we consider it the true government of South Viet Nam, having the sup- port of at least 80 per cent of the population (ref.: Eisenhower, 1956; Bernard Fall, 1963). WE ALSO THINK that Mr. Thompson is misled by Johnson's .so-called peace offensive, which is nothing but a brief bow in the direction of public and world sen- timent against the war, and is a A 0 w I XA- rot. Aml t Air M WRfl- 'f - --.990A I - 4 WAI