i a1 I nid3a & Seventy-Sixth Year - EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS heo Optnions Are Free 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth W!Il Prevail' NEws 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. THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MICHAEL HEFFER Residential College's Curriculum Proposal HAVE YOU NOTICED lately how many students doodle during class? Glance at their watches every two minutes in hope of reprieve? Can't wait to get back to the dorm or apartment? Prof. Theodore M. Newcomb of the so- cial psychology department has noticed. He says, "In this huge community the students' shared academic interests are minimal. There is no close coordination between the students' academic and per- sonal lives. The students are suffering from academic anonymity." Kenneth Winter, ,'66, has noticed. He says, "University education is such a neg- ative experience for many students that they just want to get away and forget it as quickly as possible." BOTH NEWCOMB and Winter feel that a possible solution to the problem of "academic anonymity" is the residential college. Both have been working hard for several years on planning committees to try to design a 1200-student college, a "community within the metropolis," that will make University education a positive and coordinated experience. Their efforts and the efforts of their fellow-committee members have produced a curriculum plan designed to give stu- dents a maximum of intellectual free- dom and stimulation. The basic structure of the proposed cur- riculu% is a very logical sequence of core courses-so logical that it makes you wonder why we haven't tried it before. All freshmen will be oriented to college think- ing by means of a freshman seminar and a Logic and Language course. IF THE EXPERIMENTS of Prof. Alan Gaylord of the English department in pilot project freshman seminars are any indication, this course should be an im- mense improvement-over the insipid Eng- lish 123 requirement. A correlated inter-disciplinary sequence will introduce the underclassman to the History of Western Man, Human Behavior and the Contemporary World. Careful attention to limiting the areas covered each year should keep these courses from being an "introduction to nothing" and should preserve their value as an overview of Western man and his culture. THE FACULTY planners want these "core courses" to maintain flexibility by allowing students to choose sections and to pursue a study of individual top- ics. Each seminar and section will be studying its own topics, according to the interests of the teacher. . One of the most constructive aspects of the curriculum is its treatment of the language requirement. All students will be required to "attain fluency" in a for- eign language, but they can do so at their own pace. No courses will be required and no grades will be given for introduc- tory language courses. The student will take a proficiency examination whenever he feels ready. Intensive language courses, supervis- ed independent study programs and lan- guage houses will be available for the stu- dents' use: a great improvement over the present language requirement, which either terrorizes or bores the student to death. THE CONCENTRATION program will be oriented towards independent study. Instead of following a required set of courses, students will be free to organize their own concentration programs and to study individually, with help from faculty members. The calendar will include periods dur- ing which all students could be released from course obligations to study inde- pendent topics of interest. It sounds pretty good. Now the prob- lem is getting this plan to materialize, in spite of financial obstacles SOME DEDICATED faculty members and students have been creative enough to plan the residential college. Let's hope enough administrators, Regents, legisla- tors and private donors will be creative enough to get it built. -ALICE BLOCH ISR a EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is a speech givenby Rensts Likert, Di- rector of the Institute for Social Research, at the dedication of the Institute's new building March 30. By RENSIS LIKERT' JT IS TRUE that the Institute for Social Research staff has worked hard and successfully to make this day possible, but there would be no dedication today and no Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan were it not for the imagination and courage of the administration and faculty of this great University and especially its social science departments. Organizations - like plants - germinate, grow and become strong, healthy institutions in cli- mates which nurture and foster them. They do not spring into be- ing in unfriendly environments. The social science departments of this university, and especially psy- chology, sociology, economics and political science, provided the sup- portive climate which helped the Survey Research Center and sub- sequently the other centers of the Institute to flourish and grow. The sympathetic and encourag- ing support of the University's administrative officers has con- tributed equally to our success. Both have helped us become by far the largest social science re- search unit on any American cam- pus. The Institute staff is deeply appreciative of departmental and administrative encouragement and cooperation. In return, we hope that our being here has brought benefit's to all. LET US LOOK to the future. What may the institute, housed in its new building, mean for the University of Michigan, the state, and the nation? Since 1946, there has been a tremendous growth in expendi- tures to support research and de- velopment in the United States. The amount has increased from just over a billion dollars to close to 20 billion dollars today. Of this total, however, the social sciences at present receive only about three per cent. There is need for a substantial increase in social science research. New knowledge in the physical and biological sciences is being created at a rapidly accelerating rate as the national expenditures for research and development in- crease. These increasing bodies of knowledge are making our tech- nologies so specialized and so com- plex that the traditional methods of organization and management are incapable of handling the problems. Social science research on the problems of organization is needed to enable our society to make full and profitable use of our investment in physical and biological research. THIS IS ALSO TRUE of the problem of disseminating the new knowledge and encouraging its ac- ceptance and use. Our capacity to deal constructively with the many other problems of our complex, in- dustrialized society would also be benefitted by social science re- search. Stabilizing our economy is an example. The 1958 recession cost the state of Michigan over one billion dol- lars in lost payrolls. Other urgent problems include reducing juvenile delinquency, improving intergroup relations, improving leadership and management of business and government, creating organiza- tions in which people can perform more effectively and with better physical and mental health, and improving our capacity to deal constructively with conflict at all levels in our society, including differences among nations. At present, a substantial pro- portion of the 18 to 20 billions of dollars of expenditure for all re- search is spent on development and applied research. Both of these, however, are dependent upon the knowledge discovered by basic research. It is necessary, therefore, that the total research effort of the United States in- clude sufficient basic research to provide an adequate foundation for developmental and applied work. nd the BASIC RESEARCH IS support- ed now primarily by the federal government. This is as it should be. It is very much in our national be. It is very much in our nation- al interest to have substantial amounts of basic research done in all fields of science. Those nations which support and conduct re- search and spend substantial amounts on education enjoy and will continue to enjoy the greatest well-being. Their per capita in- come is the highest, their health is best, they have the greatest capacity to manage their differ- ences and conflicts and to enable their citizens to live productive, fruitful lives. Research and education, done well and adequately financed, lead to the greatest national well-being as well as the greatest national security. To serve our national interests the federal government should, and I believe will, appro- priate substantial sums to support basic research. Basic research financed by the federal government is being con- ducted in industrial, governmen- tal, and non-profit research lab- oratories and in our universities. Universities, which have always been seats of scholarship and learning, should play a much greater role in basic research than they do at present. Our leading universities should undertake the major part of all basic research, both to improve teaching and to strengthen their role as centers of American intellectual life. Our major universities cannot perform their educational func- tions well without conducting the basic research which this nation requires. The exciting pursuit of new knowledge by university sci- entists and scholars, assisted by their students, is and should be one of the most important activi- ties of our major institutions of higher learning. Research is in the historic tradition of. university scholarship. THE GREAT STRIDES made in creating new knowledge in recent decades are causing our scientific disciplines and their methodolo- gies to become increasingly com- plex. It is no longer possible for individual scientists working alone with a few graduate students to do all the researchthat is needed. Large-scale organized efforts us- ing highly complex, equipment, the cooperation of several col- leagues, and the assistance of a number of technicians are also required. To embrace the opportunity to do the research which funds from the federal government, founda- tions, and business make possible, our leading universities will need, consequently, to do this work in three different organizational ways: -Research done by the indi- vidual scientist assisted by students; -Research undertaken by cen- ters in a particular discipline or department; -Interdisciplinary institutes en- gaged in problem-oriented, programmatic research, estab- lished on a university-wide basis, and with their own re- search staffs. THE FIRST OF THESE two ways of conducting research, i.e., the individual scientist and the departmental center, are well- known and widely used. The third, the interdisciplinary research in- stitute with its own staff, such as the Institute for Social Research, is much newer and fairly unique. Let us examine briefly its role in the conduct of research. The need for such institutes springs in part from the nature of many of the problems requiring basic research. Problems on the frontiers of knowledge often must be tackled with methodologies and concepts drawn from more than one discipline. The magnitude of the methodological resources re- quired is another reason for in- terdisciplinary institutes. The sam- ple survey, for example, is by its very nature an interdisciplinary tool. It is interdisciplinary both in its origin and in its use. As a method, it uses sampling developed by mathematical statisticians; inter- viewing, attitude measurement, and content analysis developed by political attitude measurement, and content analysis developed by political scientists, psychologists, and data processing relies on sta- tistics and mathematics. The sample survey is an essen- tial research tool for many studies in all of the social sciences as well as in such fields as health, educa- tion, and business and public ad- ministration. To do basic research on many of the problems in these and related fields, a university needs to have available the facili- ties for sample surveys. This is but one example of why a major university requires the resources to do interdisciplinary research if it is to conduct research on the full range of significant problems. RESEARCH IN ALL three ways can and should greatly enrich teaching. The experience of ISR illustrates the significant contri- bution to teaching which the large interdisciplinary institute can make. Members of our staff teach courses based on their re- search covering new methodolo- gies and new substantive findings, as well as courses of more general content, at both graduate and un- dergraduate levels. Their teaching is done on invitation of a particu- lar department or school and has steadily increased over the years. More than 35 institute staff mem- bers are teaching in the social science departments and in several of the professional schools. Research, properly organized, contributes appreciably to improv- ing instruction. Probably the greatest enrichment of instruction comes from the actual participa- tion in the research. By taking part in the research, undergradu- ates, graduates, and post-doctoral fellows "learn by doing." This may increase somewhat the cost of con- ducting the research, but it is by far the best way to teach research methods and an understanding of the major conclusions emerging from research. The best instruc- tion can be given in many fields only in conjunction with research. BASED ON THE TOTAL amount of research funds in prospect over the next decade or two, it is prob- able that a relatively small num- ber of universities will establish facilities forfull-scale research in the social sciences in all three ways: The individual scientist, the departmental center, and the in- terdisciplinary institute. That is, I believe that over the next 10 to 20 years relatively few universities will establish large in- terdisciplinary social science re- search institutes with the charac- teristics which I believe are essen- tial to conduct research in the third organizational way. Important among these charac- teristics are the following: The in- stitute is organized on a university- wide basis with its own permanent staff to do problem-oriented re- search on a long-range program- matic basis. It is engaged in such research on many widely different problems. It is fully equipped with the technical resources required for large-scale social science re- search. For example, it has the facilities for conducting sample surveys, including sampling, in- terviewing, coding, and data pro- cessing. MOREOVER, even in the physi- cal sciences, where far larger sums are available for research, there are a relatively small, number of large interdisciplinary research in- stitutes. A few of these are in universities,. Others are Indepen- dent, non-profithresearch organi- zations where the basic research conducted usually contributes lit- tle to enriching instruction di- rectly. Let me paint a picture of what I believe is likely to occur at the handful of universities which es- tablish resources to do research in all three ways. Their interdisci- plinary institutes will not only conduct interdisciplinary research, they will also provide methodologi- cal and other facilities to assist research conducted in the other two ways, namely, by individual scientists and department-based centers. The experience of ISR illus- trates the manner in which the research institute can facilitate other research. For example, the Institute is providing resources to individual investigators and de- partment-based centers for such projects as the following: a study of automobile accident costs and payments, an investigation of the investment decisions of high-in- come families, studies dealing with family size and family planning, and a project dealing with law en- forcement in low-income urban areas. THE EXTRAORDINARY re- search resources of this handful of universities will enable them to become the nation's primary sources of new knowledge. As na- tional centers of intellectual lead- ership, they will attract to them the most able scientists and schol- ars because of the intellectual fer- vor and stimulation attending the creation of new knowledge. For the same reasons the iost able stu- dents will strive to be at one of these universities, especially for graduate, professional, or post- doctoral work. The plan of Judge Woodward in 1817 for Michigan's educational system and the 1936 constitution of the state anticipated this kind of key intellectual role for a major university. The intention was to have the University of Michigan perform a "capstone" role for the state's system of education. Draw- ing on this concept, this handful of universities as national centers of intellectual activity and growth could well be thought of as per- forming the capstone function for the nation's institutions of higher learning. THE BUDGET of the Institute illustrates the probable source of support for the research efforts of such universities. Approximately one-half of the institutes budget comes from various federal agen- cies, such as the National Science Foundation, the Department of Health, Education and Welfare and the Department of Defense. About one-fifth comes from foundations, one-sixth from indus- try, and one-eighth from the Uni- versity, A large proportion of our funds come from source soutside of the state of Michigan and yet Michigan benefits appreciably from ISR's presence. The research of the Institute. il- lustrates the contribution which the large interdisciplinary insti- tute, equipped to work on many different kinds of problems, can make. We find that the presence of the Institute with its research resources encourages business and governmental agencies to seek our help. Moreover, our resources aid us a ssocial scientists in our ef- forts to encourage business and government leaders to use research to help them find better solutions to their problems. ANOTHER CONTRIBUTION of research institutes is creating new bodies of knowledge and adding them to established disciplines. The inter-university consortium for political research is an exam- ple. This is an organization of some 69 universities in coopera- tion with the Institute's Survey Research Center. Each participat- ing university contributes to the support of the consortium; for most of them, this amounts to $250 per year. The Survey Research Center, through the consortium, makes available extensive data on voting behavior to the member universi- ties and trains their faculty mem- bers and graduate students in the use of survey and quantitative methods for studying political be- havior. One-fourth of all Ph.D. candidates in political science in the nation are being trained in Ann Arbor in these methods and becoming familiar with the major findings. Another example of a contribu- tion fro mthe Institute's research concerns the important impact of 'Capstone' University A consumer motivation and beha- vior upon our economy. Our re- search has demonstrated the im- portance of the consumer sector and shows that a new and prom- ising approach is available for minimizing those fluctuations in our economy so costly to this state. Our research on leadership, or- ganization and management is pointing to newer ways to organ- ize and administer which can sig- nificantly improve productivity, labor relations, employee satisfac- tion, and employee health and mental health. Perhaps another indication of the value of our research i the large and growing stream of visi- tors to the Institute from all over the world. We have become an im- portant international center of social science research. THE UNIVERSITY of Michigan model from which I believe cap- stone universities will emerge is relatively unique. Its individual scientists are widely recognized, as are its department-based cen- ters. And as our new building makes obvious, the University is far ahead of other universities in the conduct of research by the large ,Interdisciplinary institute. The University of Michigan model upon which I believe the handful of key universities will be built has come into beinig as a re- sult of two important factors. The first is the unusually fine coopera- tion among the different depart- ments and schools of this Univer- sity. There are few universities where the relationships among the departments and schools are as friendly and constructive as here and where so many successful in- terdepartmental programs exist. The second important factor is the administration of this univer- sity. In my judgment, it has been more imaginative and creative in the organization and management of research and in relating re- search to teaching ,than the ad- ministration of any other univer- sity. The University of Michigan is distinctly ahead of other major universities in these two respects. These are crucial factors inspro- viding the climate in which inst- tutes like the ISR can be created and can grow. These factors are essential for the establishment of a capstone university. THE STATE OF MICHIGAN has, today, an unique opportunity. If it chooses to do so, it can have in the University the first and one of the nation's few capstone universities. Michigan's system oft higher education would benefit greatly from such a university as an integral part of the total edu- cational structure. It would greatly enrich the research and teaching of all the state's institutions of higher education. It would make Michigan even more than now a national center of intellectual leadership. It would attract to Michigan new and highly profit- able industry. The knowledge and resources it would provide and the services it would render would significantly improve the health of the citizens of Michigan, their productivity and their per capita income. The knowledge and resources it would provide and the services it would render would significantly improve the health of the citizens of Mich- igan, their productivity and their per capita income. The cost of this university capital would be far less than its direct return to Michigan, since so much of its research budget would be financed by funds from sources other than state appropriations. RESEARCH AND EDUCATION are the keys to economic and so- cial well-being. The establishment of several universities as national centers of research and intellec- tual life can make a great contri- bution to the welfare of this na- tion. The state of Michigan once more can supply intellectual lead- ership to the nation by being the first to create a capstone univer- sity. I sincerely hope that it will embrace this opportunity and de- rive the benefits which it can bring. 4 AI E Housing Brochure.: It's About the Timing .. HE ,LONG-AWAITED Off - Campus Housing brochure has finally become a printed reality. But with the end of the winter semester only one day away, this year's booklet is of very little value. Acting Editorial Staff MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH. Editor BRUCE WASSERSTEIN, Executive Editor CLARENCE FANTO Managing Editor HARVEY WASSERMAN Editorial Director JOHN MEREDITH...... .. Associate Managing Editor LEONARD PRATT. Associate Managing Editor BABETTE COHN................Personnel Director CHARLOTTE WOLTER .... Associate Editoral Director ROBERT CARNEY.........Associate Editorial Director ROBERT MOORE ..........Magazine Editor CHARLES VETZNFR..................Sports Editor JAMES LaSOVAGE..,........,Associate Sports Editor JAMES TINDALL..............Associate Sports Editot GIL SAMBERG .............Assistant Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Michael Heffer, Merle Jacob, Rob- ert Klivans, Laurence Medow, Roger Rapoport, Shir- ley Rosick, Neil Shister. DAY EDITORS: Alice Bloch, Richard Charin, Pat Chopp, Jane Dreyfus, Susan Elan, David Knoke, Mark Levin, Steve Wildstrom, Joyce Winslow. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Robert Bendelow, Da- vid Duboff, Wallace Immen, Marshall Lassar, Dan Okrent, Lynne Rothschild, David Smith, ASSISTANT DAY EDITORS: Harriet Deutch, Kathy Edelman, J. Russell Gaines, Aviva Kempner, Helen Kronenberg, Pat O'Donahue, Susan Schnepp, Jo- seph Tomlinson, Betsy Turner, Eric Wayne, Martha Wolfgang, SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS: Bob McFarland, Howard Rohn, Dan Okrent, Dale Sielaff, Rick Stern, John Sutkus. Acting Business Stafff SUSAN PERLSTADT, Business Masager JEFFREY LEEDS ........ Associate Business Manager HARRY BLOCH............ Advertising Manager STEVEN LOEWENTHAL........Circulation Manager ELIZABETH RHEut14..............Personnel Director VICTOR PTASZNIK ................ Finance Manager ASSISTANT MANAGERS: Anne Bachman, Ken Kraus. Mike Steckelis, Amy Glasser, Gene Farber, 3e2 Brown, Carol Niemira, Beth Linscheid, Judy Blau, Maryann Vanderwerp, Bill Hunt, Steve Simmons, Sue, Benschop, Cathie Mackin, Rita Jo Rankin, Joan Vanderwerp, Randy Rissman. NTOR MANAG r RS:. ri cKns. William Krauss. As the booklet states, students already on campus apply early the previous win- ter for accommodations for the following September. So most of next year's apart- ment dwellers have already made their choices. The brochure's comprehensive checklist of things to look for when com- paring apartments won't do them much good. The booklet isn't going to be of much help to incoming students either. Most of them will be freshmen and ineligible to live outside of University housing. So unless the booklet is to be used again next year, it isn't going to be of much practical use to anyone. T1HIS IS UNFORTUNATE because the brochure contains some important new information. Most important, it ex- plains the eight-month lease policy. This policy was an honest attempt by the Off-Campus Housing Bureau to make a substantial change in the housing situ- ation. It was to help students avoid the loss of time and money involved in sum- mer subletting: Unfortunately, very few landlords have been willing to use the eight-month lease option. As the housing brochure explains, those landlords who have agreed to of- fer eight-month leases have had to in- crease their rents in order to protect their investments. But the rent boosts on the eight-month leases are so high that it almost pays to take a 12-month lease and try to sublet. EITHER WAY the student is the loser. He is caught in a bind between high rents on year leases and even higher rents on eight-month leases. And each year the situation gets worse. On the average, rents next year will be five dollars higher per person per month than they were this year. This is 0f E Buddhists Pose a Second Revolution Vf MUCH DEPENDS on whether or not the present crisis in Viet- nam is merely one more in the series of reshuffles which have been taking place since 1963. It begins to look as if it were very much more than that-no mere reshuffle among generals, but a deep popular crisis. For the Buddhists, who are the core of the opposition, are de- manding a new kind of govern- ment, not merely a change within the government, say the removal of Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky. A change in the kind of govern- ment, from the directorate of war- lords to some sort of directorate of civilians, would be not a reshuffle but a revolution. THE GENUINELY revolution- will have the predominant power when the generals go. The question then is what the Buddhists represent. We have no definitive information on this subject, in the main because it is a technical impossibility for Americans and other Western journalists to get any reliable measure of the extent and force of the opposition in a country which is ravaged by a ferocious civil war.' WHAT WE DO KNOW is that in the whole series of crises since the downfall of Diem in 1963 the Buddhists, when they have inter- vened actively, have appeared to play a predominant role. Whether or not the Buddhists are at present a majority by a n ,,f 1,orA.A n onvrnmon+ in Today and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN THERE IS, of course, discontent with the cruelties and miseries of war. Finally, but not least, there is discontent with the overpower- ing presence of a large army of rich, unreticent aliens from a dif- ferent civilization. It may well be that the situation in South Viet Nam has reached the breaking point, foreseen by a few who have studied the war at close hand. The time may have enm whn w a7 oav faePda with a of the Vietnamese. All this gen- erates a popular hatred of the war. It is a plausible supposition that the Buddhists, who have ways of being well-informed about what is going on in their country, are responding to this situation. IF THIS is what is happening, we have to take account of several contingencies. The first is that Gen. Ky and some of his fellow generals may decide to suppress the Buddhist rebellion by military force. If they do try this they are likely to pre- cipitate a civil war inside of that part of South Viet Nam where we are lodged, and the consequences of such a civil war are incalcul- able. We must not forget that the fall If we are wise we shall play that one cool. A third contingency is that a South Vietnamese government will tell us that our military support is no longer necessary and will in- vite us to withdraw our troops. If and when, this contingency con- fronts us we shall have to take a new look at the holding strategy which was so scornfully dismissed earlier this year. Although we shall have failed to do what it was never possible to do --to conquer the Viet Cong and turn the whole of South Viet Nam over to Gen. Ky's government- there is no reason why we should lose our heads. WE SHALL HAVE an undefeat- ed army in Indochina. and while it 9