Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS March 2: Partying-Around at SGC 1 re Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST. ANN APBOR, Micu. 'ruth Will Prevail NErWs PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN MEREDITH Random Conscription Defeats Own Purpose By LEONARD PRATT Acting Associate Managing Editor THERE IS a certain patent ab- surdity in trying to operate Student Government Council as if it were a model of a civil politi- cal system. And sometimes-as in the SGC election that is rapidly approaching-the absurd becomes harmful and ought to be stopped. It becomes harmful when the election processes spawn "parties" that have no political justification and which only serve to confuse the election issues. The prime mover behind these "parties'" creation is the wide-spread fiction that SGC is somehow the repre- sentative government of the Uni- versity's student body. In fact it is not: less than one-seventh of that student body usually votes in elec- tions and SGC certainly does not have any powers that could in any sense be called governmental. In fact SGC might presently be more profitably be regarded as a service organization for the stu- dents, working to, further the "student interest" as its members see it. This is far from an ideal situation; it is, however, the fac- tual situation. THIS DICOTOMY between fact and desire can easily result in a great deal of 'agitation with very few results if, as is so often the case, it is not faced squarely. In an election this lack of a realistic approach to SGC is manifested by the formation of "parties" urging the election of particular people for a slate-full of reasons. Voice was the earliest of these groups, but abandoned campus is- sues in the fall of 1963. Group was next, surrounded at the time by other "political parties" that were almost ad hoc in nature; Group has been a more pragmatic party than Voice was, working with more immediate issues with fewer ultimate goals in mind. Last fall's creation of Reach political party was the culmination of this trend. TO SAY THE LEAST, the Reach machine was effective. It succeed- ed in taking the campaign by storm, putting three candidates solidly in office largely on the basis of vague and insubstantial assurances. The machine's results, however, were far from the morass which some predicted at the time. Many Reach members have shown them- selves to be energetic, adaptable and realistic representatives of the "student interest" as they un- derstand it. It must be admitted that the Reach victory also brought with it some of the most insubstantial people SGC and its committees have seen for a long time. Yet taken as a whole, Reach's effects have been profitable for SGC; the good done by those Reach mem- bers who recognized it outweighs the harm done by those who have not cared to do anything. THERE IS, however, a great danger here. For the Reach ma- chine did not operate in a vacuum: in the process of electing three out of its four candidates, it all but swallowed up two ex- tremely capable incumbents. The danger therefore is not that a machine's candidates may not be generally beneficial to SGC. It is that in the election of those can- didates of varying quality, excel- lent potential council. members may be ignored. because they are members of a weaker nachine or of no machine at all. "Parties" are not only poten- tially harmful to SGC, in that voters become more impressed by their images than by the quality of the individuals for whom they are voting. They are simply irrelevant. They represent nothing more than the social inclinations of par- ticular groups, "liberals"' tending to approve of Group and "con- servatives" of Reach. But while such inclinations toward "parties' "1 images are relevant to civil poli- tics, they have nothing to do with SGC and serve no function other than to obtain votes for the "parties" from the particular cam- pus factions. ISSUES WITH WHICH SGC is faced-housing, economic welfare. selection of the next President- do not resolve themselves along ideological lines. Participants in the Student Housing Association, for example, are members not be- cause of their association with Reach or Group, for SHA includes both, but because of their 'interest in the University's future and their personal judgement. What is important on SGC is the personal qualities of the mem- bers. Whether they support the Young Americans for Freedom is largely of no consequence. It is really quite a simple matter. Capable people will do a good job, incompetart people will not. Individuals should thus be elected on their personal merit and upon no other criteria. THE PROBLEM with pretend- ing that SGC is a model of a civil political system-and so encourag- ing the formation of "parties" during elections-is that it ob- scures these crucial personal cri- teria and substitutes for them standards which are irrelevant. Some of the individuals who came in with the Reach sweep are more than sufficient testimony to the sad results of this system. And so the system ought to change. What is basically needed is a complete reanalysis of SGC's campus role, a reanalysis cur- rently being undertaken by the Office of Student Affairs. But it will be some time before that analysis reaches any conclusions at all, much less before its con- clusions can be implemented. Until that time SGC would be well advised to promote election rules that would minimize parties' roles in elections. Expense rules already exist but as Reach. proved last fal they are easy enough 'to get around. WHAT IS NEEDED are rules restricting the number of people a candidate may enlist in his support and the number of can- didates who will be allowed to run for office on the same ticket. Such a step would go a long way toward recognizing the reali- tiac of SGC's campus role and would help to ensure that the most capable candidates would be elected to carry it out. 4 A MOTION to be presented to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Af- fairs would request the government to use a random method of selecting students from the male college student body for the draft. Noting that "those from educationally disadvantaged backgrounds tend to fall in the lower end of the distribution of col- lege grades," the faculty members who proposed the motion are arguing against the reinstatement of Korean War-type guidelines-where students from the low- er half of their classes were reclassified I-A, subject to regaining their II-S de- ferments by passing a national test. The motion notes that such tests "re- sult in relatively lower average scores for people from lower class and educa- tionally disadvantaged backgrounds than for those whose homes and schools have supported academic learning." THE RESOLUTION calling for random selection processes presumes that such methods would not discriminate against the students from the lower socio-eco- nomic strata as the process of selection on grade point average, class standIings and test scores presumably does. (Lower strata refers to students from families in the lower middle class income bracket, since with few exceptions, very few chil- dren from lower class families go to uni- versities.) Leaving aside for the moment the ques- tion of whether or not there is a valid correlation between pre-college educa- tional and socio-economic background and college academic attainment, one can see that a system of random selec- tion would not straighten out any biases that presumably exist against such stu- dents. RATHER, random selection would tend to draw from the lower strata a great- er proporldon of students as a whole than would a system of drafting from the bot- tom half of each class at every univer- sity, college, and junior college across the country. Again assuming that the proponents of random selection are correct in corre- lating background and academic attain- ment, it can be seen that: " Higher educational institutes - at which the lower half of the class stand- ings contain some lower strata students and the remainder of the lower and up- per half are higher strata students-are far outnumbered by the lower status in- stitutes, most of which have a large per- centage of lower strata students in both halves. * Drafting off the bottom of each class at every university would certainly take most, if not all, of the lower strata stu- dents from the upper status schools. In the lower status schools, the draftees would also be lower strata students, but the persons in the upper half of the classes at these schools (who would not be required to take the national test) would also be mainly lower strata stu- dents. A Under random selection, students from any socio-economic background would be subject to drafting. The advan- tage of draft exemption which lower stra- ta students in the upper ranks of lower status schools had would disappear. A much larger proportion of lower strata students over the entire country (while not at the University) would be tapped under random selection than under Ko- rean War-type selection. Under non-random selection processes where upper strata students are presum- ed to be more likely to pass the national test, this variable would be mitigated by the large proportion of lower strata stu- dents in the upper half of their class at lower status institutions who are not re- quired to take the test. TWO FURTHER arguments against the use of random sample are: the possi- bility that under probability laws stu- dents might be drafted disproportionate- ly from one stratum than from another; and there is no fully substantiated evi- dence that low academic achievement correlates to poor background. Thus if the proponents of random se- lection would consider carefully the con- sequences of such a program, they might see the possibility of entrenching the very discrimination they seek to erase. -DAVID KNOKE 0 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Regent Murphy Prpaises Hatcher Speech 4 To the Editor: EDITOR Mark R. Killingsworth's editorial of Sunday ("Hatcher Merits Raise for Viet Nam Re- marks") stated that President Hatcher's remarks on Viet Nam will confront him with "a torrent of criticism and abuse." As one Regent, let me hasten to say that he will have my full approval and support. During the past seven years the Regents have acted and spoken at all times to protect and en- courage the rights of free speech and inquiry on our campus. THE FACT THAT President Hatcher holds as inviolable his own right to speak his conscience on the most critical issue of our day is proof of the climate that we have fostered. As a woman I could not now vote or hold public office if dis- senters had not faced "torrents of criticism and abuse" over a 55 year period until the 19th Amendment was ratified into our Constitution in 1920. Freedom of speech, conscience and inquiry are the magic strengths of our democracy. I AM PROUD that President Hatcher practices his rights as a citizen in our democracy. -Regent Irene E. Murphy Jack Vaughn To the Editor: MR. JACK H. VAUGHN'S "pol- icy" address at the Union yesterday pointed, indirectly but unmistakably, to the hazards which lie in the path of the Peace Corps. The Peace Corps, old as it is, still needs definition. Mr. Vaughn failed to help much. He did seem to suggest that the word "revolution" is now respectable in Washington. At any rate he used it a lot. One expects, though, that Wash- ington's real appetite for revolu- tion was displayed in the Santo Domingo crisis. He also used the word "peace"-to which, somehow, there was a hollow ring. He disap- pointed many who expected a thoughtful and positive formula- tion of policy instead of a pasteup of platitudes and Kennedy quotes. Jack H. Vaughn himself exem- plifies one problem which the Peace Corps must surmount. He rose through the information and aid programs, went into Peace Corps, then ascended to Ambas- sadorial and Assistant Secretary rank in the Department of State. He is, as he himself confirmed, a bureaucrat. PERHAPS there is some value in looking at thermeasure of suc- cess enjoyed by the Alliance for Progress, of which Vaughn was ad- ministrator, which defined its mis- sion in phrases that we heard again yesterday-phrases liberally seeded with that word, "revolu- tion." How far, we may ask, can an arm of the U.S. government, an instrument of foreign policy, carry the work of change in other lands? The Alliance for Progress is, like the Peace Corps, such an instru- ment of foreign policy. Mr. Vaughn has served with State. with the Alliance and with the Peace Corps. His career In- dicates how closely tied these are. It remains only to inquire if the Peace Corps might preserve its independence from the policies and ultimate control of State, IT MIGHT if it were separately organized-but it is not. It might if it were staffed and directed by men independent of the State Department establishment. Mr. Vaughn's appointment seems to confirm the subjection of Peace Corps to Foggy Bottom. It is not difficult to posit situations which will find Peace Corps and its goals in conflict with the policies of State. Mr. Vaughn realizes that "revo- lution" is the task for the Peace Corps. But if he had been entirely frank would he not have admitted that so long as Peace Corps is an arm of the State Department and so long as it is directed by Wash- ingtonsbureaucrats it cannot take on this task wholeheartedly and push to its conclusion? The Peace Corps, both in its original conception and in its worked-out reality, requires a scope for its aims and methods which is not circumscribed by official policies; a staff which does not look for promotion into the State or other departments and a new, independent status in host countries. It is not enough to be informal-Peace Corps also be un- official. THERE ARE at least some who think, as I do, that what Peace Corps can be and ought to be has not as yet been attained. Image- manship and its suggestive vocab- ulary ("revolution") still persist, but they cannot obscure the fact that if Peace Corps is to serve the widest and most genuinely hu- manitarian ends and attack the truly fundamental problems of the underdeveloped world it needs its independence. --Roger M. Leed, '6'7L former PCV, Nigeria British Education To the Editor: ALTHOUGH AGREEING with with. much; of what Professor Allen said when comparing British and American higher education in a recent letter to The Daily, we feel that the following points should be made somewhat clearer: Firstly, there is none of this sad and disturbing scrabble for "grade points" in England, and the uni- versities are less like "degree fac- tories" than here. Since the Brit- ish student generally studies his own subject alone for three years, it seems likely that he will have a greater and deeper knowledge than his American counterpart, who has spent only two years in specialization, and who, even at the Master's level in the Human- ities is required to take a cognate subject of study. Whether or not the system of finals, covering nearly all of three years' work, be satisfactory, it does ensure that the subject is seen as a whole; relations and comparisons are more easily seen, and the grade system, leading to preoccupation with semester aver- ages and piecemeal, often discon- nected, knowledge is avoided. SECONDLY, there is a differ- ence in the standard of the first degrees. Large "Masters" schools do not exist in England because much of the work has already been covered in the Bachelor's de- gree, and it would seem that most of the work that is done during the first year or so of university in the U.S., is done in the 6th form at'school in England. More- over it should be emphasized that masters and doctor's degrees-for- getting the MA (Oxon. or Cantab.) -consist almost entirely of re- search, with little or no "course work." This means, for example, that a. British experimental scientific PhD, having been obtained be- tween, 3 and 4 years after the bachelor's degree, consists of far more time actually spent in the laboratory than the American counterpart. It would seem incidentally that the preliminary exam for the PhD here, aims at much the same kind of comprehensive grasp of the sub- ject as does the British bachelor's examination. The American mas- ter's degree in some cases may have covered more work than the British bachelor's, but has taken that many more years to obtain. The assignment of regular read- ings in the humanities and the closely-regulated system of work given the American undergraduate tends to discourage original thought and planning. Decisions and critical comparisons which should be left to the student- as part of his academic development are provided too rigidly by the lecturer, and there is far less freedom of choice to study those subjects which interest the in- dividual most. WE ARE NOT sure what Pro- fessor Allen means when he talks of the "homogeneity" of the Brit- ish population. Isn't more "literary style" the result of stricter school- ing in writing at an early age, rather than a social situation? There are no "freshman English" classes in British universities! The occasion of the whole thing was the book "Treason" and whether it should have been burn- ed. Each contributor on this issue made a point of taking a few shots at the John Birch Society. It was obvious that they knew little about the society. I have been a member of the societyfor the lastyear and a half; I feel it is the finest non- religious organization in the world and I am proud to be a member. To answer all of. the attacks on the society would probably be a waste of time,kmainly because few of those making 'these attacks seem to have any real concern for the facts. However, I would like to make a few comments on Mr. Kane's letter of 2/27/66. HE QUOTES the sentence from "The Politician" in which Mr. Welch calls Eisenhower a com- munist. He ignores an earlier sen- tence (in the Prologue, p. X) where Mr.* Welch is discussing attacks on the society based on "The Politician": "Despite the fact that the manuscript was no part of the materials or beliefs of The John Birch Society, and had been specifically disavowed at the founding meeting of the society, the leaders of the left made it the core of their first huge smear campaign against the society as well as myself." Mr. Kane should have read the entire book. Not only would there have been the chance. that he might have learned something, but he would also have been saved the embarrassment of making ground- less charges. Logic lesson for to- day: "The Politician" has no con- nection with the John Birch Son ciety; Mr. Van Egmond does not either. Therefore, Mr. Van Eg- mond is responsible for every statement in "The Politician." Is the society "democratic?" No. Nor is either the Catholic Church or the University. These are better than democracies; they are volun- tary organizations which a per- son can leave at any time. Any time one is unhappy with the so- ciety, he can quit. Being able to vote with one's feet has always been more effective than the bal- lot box. MR. KANE also makes the state- ment that communism "has goals equal or superior to those of De- mocracy." This is, of course, in line with his earlier concern for the facts. -Walter W. Broad, '66E Winter Weekend Good- But Not Perfect i TuE ORGANIZATION of an all-campus weekend is a mammoth task. The in- dividuals working on the Central Com- °mittee put in countless hours in an ef- fort to provide Michigan with a weekend that would be remembered. After starting with an intriguing theme there were a series of mistakes, mishaps, misunderstandings,- and mis-statements that marred what could have possibly been one of the best "big" weekends the campus has seen in years. Perhaps next year's Central Committee will find it pos- sible to avoid the following: FIRST, THERE ALWAYS seemed to be overtones of UAC fund-raising in the prices charged for admission and in the expenditures for prizes and entertain- ment. The Saturday night prizes consist- ed of horrendous coasters covered with advertising, green plastic shalt shakers, wooden whistles, and paper fans (that really went fast, according to one central committeeman). Unfortunately, none of these "prizes" could ever become a treas- ured momento of the occasion. Part of the problem in the prize budget occurred because of a change in the num- ber of each type of booth to be construct- ed in the IM Building. When petitions for booths were being accepted the Cen- tral Committee announced that there would be five skill, four entertainment, Acting Editorial Staff MARK R. KILLINGswORTH, Editor BRUCE WASSERSTEIN, Executive Editor CLARENCE FANTO HARVEY WASSERMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JOHN MEREDITH.......Associate Managing Editor and one refreshment; however, when the petitions were approved there turned out to be eight skill, one entertainment, and one refreshment booth. THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE made a pronouncement that there would be a panel of judges for all events; however, there was only one judge for the ice carving contests, a contest which led to some very bitter feelings by the partici- pants. Here was one case where the Cen- tral Committee, in retrospect, must have wished that they had done what they started out to do. It also should be noted that there were approximately 160 eggs left over from the egg toss, but contrary to the Econ. 101 theory that guns can be sub- stitutes for butter, eggs are not substi- tutes for ice picks. Thus there was a judging problem when it was found that the ice carving chair- man turned up with insufficient ice picks for the participating houses so that one group was forced to start an hour late. SPECTATORS and housing units found that nothing seemed to get started on time, and that once the contests did get started, twice two events started simul- taneously. The intriguing egg toss and the "exotic animal race" (won by a pig), and the dance contest and the "Treasure Hunt" each overlapped. The Central Committee announced that there was a budget of $200 for the con- struction of a booth; however, this was never enforced at all, and the very pres- ence of a limit simply forced students to be devious in the ways that they obtained materials for their booths. No itemized statements of expenditures were required, and alumni "donations" which ranged up to Qonn ...n.nllrmy..rl -A. G. Atkins guest lecturer engineering S. Foster in mechanical 1'. i i zc , x :. ," , ;, E - ...;z 1 x ' . .r.,,v'."' 'Treason' To the Editor: HERE IS nothing more amus- ing than watching an earnest debate in which it is obvious that none of the participants know what they are talking about. I am referring to the recent dis- cussion of the John Birch Society in your columns. of Fuq. Schutze:None Dare Call Them Water Babies SOMEONE CALLED Warren Van Egmond submitted a letter to the Daily recently in which he at- tacked an attack on Stormer's None Dare Call It Treason (an at- tack on the leftist attack on Amer- ican political morality). Three attacks ago, an article ap- peared in the Daily pointing out that Stormer's book is based on a pack of. . . ill-documented sources. Warren Van Egmond, who distrib- uted ten thousand copies of the.. . ill-documented work. . . on this campus, objected to the Daily's perverse obsession with reality. After steadfastly refusing to be drawn into "an item by item de- fense" of Stormer's 818 references, Van Egmond assured all concern- ei +ha+ "Mr Stomer ha h'en at- in our increasingly empirical cul- ture, good men fail to come to the defense of artistic fantasy. Mr. Stormer owes his best Sunday gratitude to Van Egmond who was the. first conservative thinker im- aginitive enough' to defend None Dare Call It Reason as a novel. From now on, "None Dare" will stand next to Winnie the Pooh, Alice In Wonderland, Water Ba- bies, and Wind In the Willows as one of the most delightful adven- tures in make-believe known to the English language. Perhaps Mr. Stormer will be in- spired by Van Egmond's approach to write a sequel to "Treason." "Eisenhower of Toad Hall, a Con- scious Tool of the Rat Conspiracy" 41 i f! -b"R.WK 1 AK I