seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERsITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY Of BOARD iN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS e Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ASBOR, MIcH. utlh Will Previll NEwS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: CLARENCE FANTO Academnics Committee: Will it Offer Enough? Feb. 23: By LEONARD PRATT short to Aeing Associate Managing Editor thought- The Student Housing Associa- uates reg tion, formed by Student Govern- SHA's ment Council with high hopes in estead of January, needs help. minans-d SGC members who pushed the tabLes in project originally intended it to was mad provide coordination for the stu- was note dents' diverse housing interest effectivei groups and thus to bring concert- cf time1 ed pressure to bear on the Ann of whati Arbor city council and local land- proach. lords. For various reasons it has The se been unable to do either. been tha Moreover, unless some action is months o taken soon to solve some of SHA's period fo problems it stands a good chance tions-SB of being twisted by an SGC elec- sentially tion campaign in which it is cer- tioning f tain to be a central issue. Monday First on the list of SHA's prob- in about lems has been a simple lack of that man time. have bee One of the association's major light. ipstruments to bring pressure on It is n the local housing interests was its er SHA's voter registration drive: graduate ents hav students are being urged to regis- because ter and vote for only those council campush members who will be favorable to becauset students' housing interests. But their own unfortunately registration is to- cominge day and SHA's life has been too participa allow it to plan a well- out strategy to get grad- gistered. decision to encourage on through the- mails in- through more effective door-to.door canvassing, graduate departments- de simply because there enough time for the more means to be set up. Lack has forced the adoption is basically a stopgap ap- cond major problem has at during the first two f its life-a fairly crucial or new campus organiza- HA has existed in an es- political context. Peti- or SGC's elections opened with elections to follow a month; the result is ny decision affecting SHA n taken in a political ot possible to say wheth- proponents and oppon- e taken particular actions- of their beliefs about housing issues or merely they were concerned with n success or failure in the election. Certainly many nts' motives were mixed and even those who did not have mixed motives felt unsure of oth- ers who did. Decisions have been made-who was to sign the voter registration letters or how much money to allow for the registra- tion "campaign"-with as much i egar d for their political conse- quences as for their effects on student housing issues. The lack of any well-defincd goals for SHA's work is the basic problem underlying both too little time and too much politics. This deficiency can only be a function of the failure of the various ad hoc housing groups, Vice-Presi- dent for Student Affairs Richard Cutler's student housing advisory committee and the SHA to sit down with one another and decide exactly where they want to go. Everyone has his own ideas of the ideal way to attack the prob- lem and is working on it with no great regard for other approaches. Even SHA seems somewhat schizo- phrenic with no idea of the areas on which it ought to be concen- trating. This confusion has led all the groups to avoid the real issue, which is neither high rents nor unfair landlords. The real issue is the obvious lack of housing for students in Ann Arbor. It is impossible to zone away a lack of beds, to in- spec, high rents out of existence or to get rid of temporary plumb- ing with lease changes. It is pos- siblc to solve all these problems by the simple measure of re- creating a working market in Ann Arbor housing. Housing organizations must con- centrate on shaking the "gentle- men's agreement" among local landlords and financiers which has kept housing at a level just low enough to yearly inflate prices and worsen conditions. The only way to do this is for students work very closely with the Office of Student Affairs to encourage large-scale out-of-town builders to enter the local market and ease some of the inflationary price and quality pressures now acting on it. This strategy implies tactics very different from those now em- ployed by the SHA and its sister organizations. Instead of making demands on the builders and land- lords, students and the OSA must begin to illustrate the actvaitages of building in Ann Arbor. When Towne Realty Inc. began to build University Towers they were greetetd with local suspicion and hostility that certainly would have frightened off other com- panies interested in following their example, It is not that rea- sonable building standards should not be enforced. Far from it. But until the campus' attitude toward builders changes from a relative- ly hostile one to a relatively en- couraging one, the student hous- ing problem at the University will remain and grow. SHA, then, needs work in sev- eral areas. It needs a month in a more relaxed atmosphere to en- able it to coordinate its efforts with other campus housing or- ganizations, sort out its varied goals and rationalize these goals with economic realities. But before it can have any ore of these, it needs the unequivocal guidance of a campus leader more concerned with the housing situa- tion itself that with either his per- sonal views of that situation or his participation in SGC politics' Such people are on campus, but none of them are currently in- fluencing SHA's course. The 3% Problems of SHA THE PROPOSAL by Robert Bodkin of Student Government Council to set up a permanent student-faculty advisory committee on academic affairs is basical- Iy a good one. However, the establishment of such a committee will not be significant unless it can break away from discussions on such comparatively trivial things as mi- nor alterations of graduation require- ments. But so far, indications are that Bod- kin's proposed committee will follow the trend of past curriculum advisory com- mittees in not suggesting any. radical changes. -The incipient formation of the new committee had roots in a recent sem- inar of faculty, administrators and stu- dents on academic problems. The discus- sion dealt with such token reforms as the addition of plusses and minuses to final grades and basing graduation require- ments on the number of courses complet- ed rather than the number of class hours. Suggestions such as there are only at- tempts at patching up the system of edu- cation the University now offers. If Bod- kin's proposed committee is to seek im- provement of the quality of that educa- tion, it must look into a reevaluation and overhauling of the whole system. DISCUSSIONS of the faults of distribu- tion, concentration and graduation re- quirements and the grading system are certainly important, but these faults will not be solved by merely altering the amount of requirements or improving the accuracy of the present grading system. Register? AT 8 A.M. THIS MORNING voter regis- tration for the upcoming April 4th election began. Unfortunately this two- week period of registration has in the past aroused little interest or participa- tion on the part of the 40 per cent of the University students who are age-wise, at least, prospective voters. Because of apa- thy, ignorance or pessimism toward reg- istration procedures, the student turnout has been far from what it could be. We urge that this situation be reversed. Along with the Student Housing Au- thority which is presently conducting a voter registration drive, we feel that the students In particular and the University community as a whole can only suffer from further lack of participation by eli- gible students. Granted ,a near-perfect turnout by stu- dents in 'the coming election isn't going to move any of several Ann Arbor politi- cal mountains---in fact, students prob- ably differ on what mountains are to be moved. But in two very significant ways, a successful voter drive would be of tre- mendous benefit to the student commu- nity. FIRST, the city officials' awareness of student viewpoints on housing, plan- ning, parking and transportation would be greatly enhanced. Increased aware- ness would be of benefit to the Univer- sity and local communities alike, re- gardless of political ideology and view- point. The future of the Ann Arbor metropoli- tan area as well as the future of the stu- dent in the University may depend to a great degree on this information flow between the town and the "Gown." And we are not talking here about a quiet col- lege town of 20,000. We're talking about a city of 150,000 or more in the very near future. Secondly, a successful turnout will be the first step in the examination of this state's philosophy in the area of student voting rights. Many of the present voting requirement laws are, at best, question- able. They can only be brought into open discussion if students show interest and involvement in their role as voting citi- zens. WE URGE, therefore, that all eligible students examine --the information that has been sent to them, that they know their rights, and that they register within the next two weeks. -CHARLOTTE A. WOLTER --ROBERT CARNEY The task of any curriculum-study com- mittee must be to increase students' chance to participate in deciding what they will learn and how their learning will be graded or evaluated. Suggesting a specified number of cours- es in specified departments will guarantee a good education is no less false than as- suming a certain number of course hours will. A student should be able to decide for himself, after talking with professors, what type of academic program will be relevant for his purposes instead of hav- ing a standardized degree program nicely set up for him. ALL MEMBERS of a class, along with the instructor, should be able to sug- gest reading material and whether they want to demonstrate their intellectual progress via tests, papers, participation in seminars, individual conferences with instructors or a combination of these, in- stead of having a syllabus shoved at them, requiring them to think on sched- ule about specified topics. And this alternate type of set-up isn't impossible because of low faculty-student ratio, as some claim. It is being done in some Psychology 101 sections, which al- ways have high enrollments. The extra pressure that involving stu- dents in curriculum and grading deci- sions would put on faculty members is alleviated by those students taking more responsibility for independent fact-find- ing and a revamping of the present lec- ture-recitation schedule. FACULTY MEMBERS can stop wasting class time as mere purveyors of infor- mation by letting students do more inde- pendent1reading instead of relying on canned lectures. The increased use of programmed learning materials, which provide a built-in testing system, can also be a help. With time freed from fact-giving, fac- ulty can devote their efforts to helping students analyze information for its use- fulness, viability and relation to other bodies of information. MORE TIME could be conserved for both teacher and student if classes would meet bi-monthly for about three hours, after students have had a change to do in-depth reading and could participate in more thoughtful, stimulating discus- sions.' It is ridiculous that a three-credit course should require three, one-hour class sessions per week just because it is a three-credit course. With this system, discussions are fragmented, uninform- ed and hardly whole-hearted, with the instructor relating what students should have read if they had had time and had not been forced to waste more time in similar, meaningless recitation sessions. BODKIN'S PROPOSED committee on academics can be useful if it can con- sider proposals similar to those discussed above. What must be sought are new ways for increasing students' involvement in and planning of their own learning experi- ences and for changing the relationship of teacher-student from one of fact-giver- assimilator to that of mutual knowledge- seekers. JF THE COMMITTEE doesn't consider these basic goals, it will be just an-~ other committee added to the bureaucrat- ic mess, giving students at most a false feeling of being "included in the decision- making process." -SHIRLEY ROSICK WhySanity? SOVIET WRITER Valery Tarsis, visiting in London for a series of lectures, was stripped of his citizenship yesterday by Soviet edict and effectively denied a re- turn to his home. The official reason for this move, long expected by Tarsis him- self, was "for actions discrediting to a citizen of the U.S.S.R." Tarsis had written several works of fiction critical of Com- munist politics. Tarsis, who had once been sent to an insane asylum, theorized that the reason he had been allowed to leave Russia for Capital Punishment-Many Loopholes By DAVID KNOKE rHE UNITED STATES Justice Department recently revealed that only seven men were put to death by legal authorities in the United States in 1965. This was the first year that legal execu- tions fell below 10 per year since the Federal Bureau of Prisons be- gan keeping records in 1930. The seven men were all convicted on murder charges. Other crimes which carry the death penalty in the 37 states which still have capital punishment are rape. armed robbery, kidnapping, bur- glary, espionage, aggravated as- sault. and desecration of a grave (in Georgia). When so few of the thousands of murders go unpunished by execution each year, it seems to me that the lawsIare ineffectual and must be either strictly en- forced or taken off the books altogether. The number of reported mur- ders each year in the United States varies from 8,000 to 10,000. One essayist surmises that there may be four times as many murders than are annually reported. In- travenous injections of air bubbles, poisonings which leave no trace, heart attacks brought on by vio- lent scares, and framed highway accidents can be arranged so that the circumstances of death appear to be accidental. YET AT any one time there are usually only 300 to 500 men and women in the Death Rows of state and federal penitentiaries. There is a movement afoot in this country to abolish execution as a criminal penalty. The pro- ponents of such movements are to be commended for their at- tempts to apply reason to the, problem, yet so far relatively little progress has been made in de- stroying the legal barriers con- fronting them. Certain practices f r o m a strong argument for immediate abolition of laws which are not uniformly enforced. Many gov- ernors are wary of taking final responsibility for failing to re- prieve or commute the sentences of prisoners. The very small per- centage of prisoners who are executed each year are thus vic- tims of one type of discrimination or another. The fact that most cases do drag out in court and appeals over several months or years knocks a hole in the theory of capital pun- ishment as deterrence. One can hardly believe that the death penalty is meant to serve as an example to other would-be criminals. If this were so, why aren't all cases rushed through court immediately after the ap- prehension of the suspected crim- inal and the sentence carried out at high noon, with public attend- ance required? The death penalty is an archaic form of retaliatory justice legaliz- ed and institutionalized by the state. Perhaps it is 'not stretqhing a point to say that legalized execu- tion is a violation of the Con- stitutional injunction a g a i n s t "cruel and unusual punishments." Modern methods of electrocution and gassing have not made the criminal's waiting any easier. And what can be said about the equan- imity of the penalty in Utah where the condemned man may pick his modus morendi from a choice of shooting or hanging? The system of capital and cor- poral punishment in the United States is in need of drastic re- form and standardization. The logical first step is with the aboli- tion of capital punishment, for it is a barbaric, and unsatisfactory way to deal with criminals. Abolition, however, is only an intermediate step in the treatment of murderers and other criminals. The concept that all criminals must be punished for their crimes is also giving way to the more enlightened concept that the re- sult of incarceration and isolation of the criminal should be to re- form and rehabilitate him so he can take a useful place in society. After abolishing the death pen- alty in America, the ultimate aim of penal reform must be a re- direction of efforts at preventing criminals from developing, rather than curing them after they have committed their crimes. TOMORROW: Suggestions for Penal Reform Dueling Nations Need Joint Scientific Effort -. , ,. . 9 1p .* By WALLACE IMMEN THAT THE ONLY efficient method for increasing our scientific knowledge is through formation of a world scientific co- operation community can no long- er be ignored. The United States and Russia are competing in a technology race-and are doing little but du- plicating efforts. The Russians are generally known to shroud their space shots in secrecy. This has been a constant source of annoy- ance to many American scientists who argue that the information from such missions is vital to all. The entire magnitude of the question as it now stands stems from the tremendous advance made in technology over the last twenty years. In the past, the communication was slow, and re- search moved at a leisurely pace as a sideline of scientists so that a central organization was not necessary. But today research is big business and the developments of one day could vitally affect many other studies being carried on at the same time. So it becomes more important to the world to have a peaceful scientific unit to organize discoveries being made. IN ANSWER to this need, Rus- sia and the United States yester- day announced that they will be- gin talks March 2 on a scientific exchange program. It may be hoped that thosewho attend these talks will do more than just talk. Russia and America, being the two giants in research, should agree to form an organization with representatives from varied branches of science established with funds appropriated from each participating nation-a central clearing house of scientific knowl- edge. The system in operation could work as a United Nations of science whose job it would be to promote research work and com- pile data on research being com- pleted and make it available to those who are doing research. The organization would consist of representatives of various branches of science from each country involved in the venture, who would form a number of committees on research in each one's own particular field. A steer- ing committee and a tribunal to design by-laws of Conduct of in- ternational scientific r e s e a r c h, should also be formed. General meetings would be held only to sider the question of the "space race," but also a uniform code of ethics must be established. The problems of space ethics re- ceived special emphasis two weeks ago in the events which occurred when the Soviet Luna 9 capsule soft landed on the moon. Scien- tists at the Jodrell Bank observa- tory in England pirated the sig- nals sent from the Russians' ship and released a picture of the moon's surface to the free world before the Russians had even an- nounced their achievement. This sensationalism should not accompany an event of such mag- nitude. A rule of general common courtesy should have been estab- lished to see that the country which makes the achievement gets the credit. The situation can be seen very clearly in the words of Peter Mill- man, director of the National Re- search Council of Canada. He commented in the New York Times recently, "It's just as if somebody gave somebody else a manuscript to look over and the second person had the book pub- lished under his name." OF COURSE, the establishment of a world organization may re- quire a concentrated effort to con- vince the heads of the nations that the competition in space is not the answer. But this can be overcome with enough support. Hopefully, the men in key posi- tions will soon see that science can work independently of politics. It indeed may take a while before they see, but when they do, it will be a great day for science. x . ' , Aw. ! ' II I , til' ,1 ~si '! Y' ' , l + " 5" t { .,..,, s , ( ,. :i k . w. t j' ' " a4 14141FFF " 1 S ", r 3w' F ' : ! ,. ,. . 1. _ ,,, 4 _ '" r r+ , w r". .a r'vy'; ..,. ...._ . +r ,y4 -r Professor Carr Lauds Generation Poets By ARTHUR J. CARR EDITOR'S NOTE: Dr. Carr is a professor in the English De- partment. C'ERTAINLY no renaissance, not even an established achieve- ment, still the new issue of "Gen- eration" is justified chiefly by its poetry-especially if the realm of poetry may include the very ap- pealing portfolio of Peter Mc- Donough's photographs. The poets -all of them-Alys Chabot, Mer- rill Gilfillan, Richard Widerkehr, Martha MacNeal Zweig, Christine Hoyt, and Barbara A. K. Adams- evince an impressive authority of than the prose, and answer Ezra Pound's imperative that poetry should be at least as well-written as prose. Hence, Megan Biesele's beautifully, elaborated fantasy-a prose Liebestod-seems not so finely wrought, so thoroughly self- understood, as Richard Wider- kehr's poem, "Bridge Tremblings." Hence, the interview with Brother David Steindl-Rast, glit- tering with theological paradox (almost at times to the edge of self parody) is really rather less profound, as it is certainly less witty, than Mrs. Zweig's sentence in "Irrelevance of Angels": Yet,,ue--God know,. issue, however, is not by any of the contributors mentioned, but by one of the finest-and most troubling and troubled-writers that this University has in any way fostered-Theodore Roethke. A long, loving essay, though a bit over-weighted with notes and ex- tended bibliography, is the work of some people's nonfavorite author,;George Abbott White. The result of devoted study, his essay achieves both eloquence and truth and should enlarge, at least local- ly, the rumor of Roethke's fame. White makes a high claim for him, that his poems "are the ful- fillment of the poet's highest task: had set his foot upon the path of the mystics-a thesis put for- ward last year in a lecture here by Ralph Mills-is not so cer- tain. For Roethke the mystic's path may have been what the writing of "A Vision" was for Yeats, the source of poetc dis- cipline and metaphors. To find that the other poets in "Generation" justify this issue is not to attribute to them high originality and force. Nor is this a fault. Frank Kermode has re- cently remarked, in speaking of the achievement of T. S. Eliot, upon the "ruinous and exhausting" expenditure of spirit entailed in p o1