Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIvRSITY Orf MICHICAN UNDER AU'JIORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF SI UDENTr PUBLICATIONS Where Opions A ree. 420 MAYNARD ST.. ANN AFBOR, Mit, Niws PHoxv: 764-0552 Edtorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual o/inions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDY, JANUARY 18, 1966 NIGHT EDI'OR: BRUCE W ASS'ERSTEIN FEIFFEJI I LIE«k ~W 0ALL 17AV HAVUING FAk)A15. JTM" )VAIYUIJG PC'&)kA P2ARK STPE T 1kMA ;TRA~Y6E CITY. UU3OV'59 AkUP 7IYO6515- &W-IU F ?"S5 U.ACk(.!6 - - OSIO)-CAWF56 )5 A CoU&)P A CC R 3E. A?09 KMkOCKS M ItOL k) The Residential College: How Ling? "ONE YEAR AGO we were told that the college's plans were three months from the architect. It has been a year now, and I ha've yet to find when we will move on this question," Regent Eugene B. Power commented at a Regents' meet- ing last September. This statement cap- tures much of the history of the yet un- born Residential College. The impetus for construction of the col- lege came in 1962 under then Vice-Presi- dent for Academic Affairs Roger Heyns. Planners hoped to have the buildings ready for th tf21 ~1n 365. It is now 1966. Money for two class buildings will not be coming, if at all, until at least 1968. The buildings are on the list of University re- quests from the Legislature for the 1967-8 budget. Dormitories, however, are a different story. The funds must come either from a bond issue, which would be paid off by students' living in the dorm paying more than actual living costs, or from gifts. As the dorms planned for the college are to be more expensive than the dorms presently in existence on central campus, gift money will be needed to keep dorm fees from going up, as they would have to do if the new construction were cov- ered by bond issues alone. Thus if' the administration does not soon come up with the necessary gift money, th'e Residential College idea will be doomed to indefinite extensions. HE UNIVERSITY is growing by leaps and bounds of such inagniture that It soon may find itself shaken apart. The large University tends to bury the indi- vidual and to dilute his academic ex- perience, Anonymity and alienation is quite a large price to pay for diversity. The concept of the Residential College is aimed at encouraging academic in- teraction antong students by combining residences with classrooms-students liv- ing together take many of the same cours- es, The college, in short, would be a semi- self-contained academic entity - small enough that students could feel a real part of a "living" academic experience; near enough to the large campus that it can draw on its vast and diverse re- sources. All this sounds great, makes good sense. But the bureaucratic history of the Resi- dential College's development throws some doubt as to whether the ideal is ever to be tested as a reality. From 1965 the opening date was moved back to.'66, then to '67, then last summer to '68. What next? 0BVfOUSLY THE PLANNING of such a large and Important undertaking in- volves careful and complex planning, Imiponderable 'China!' HAT IS HAPPENING in China today is one of the great historical facts of our contemporary world," says Felix Greene, author and producer of the film "China!" which will receive its first cam- pus showing at 4:15 p.m. today in the Mul- tipurpose Room of the UGLL. In many ways what Greene says is an understate- ment. t Perhaps the greatest historical irony concerning modern China is that while that country becomes more and more of an international imponderable, we make no. effort to overcome our ignorance of it.4 In a day when the forces which have led to the U.S.-China impasse are so clearly understood, far too many would ignore the obvious conclusion-that the forces were primarily those. of ignorance and their results those of false assump- tions. OR IT IS A FACT that ignorance in a broad sense has brought us to the present downward spiral in relations with China. Given that, it must follow that increased American awareness of China wouli certainly help to ease this strain and head off the approaching conflict. Greene's film can provide such an awareness. It can begin to provide the necessary information. Most of all it can help its viewers realize that in fact they must know much more about China than. The faculty planning committe of the college has put two years into laying out plans which Dean Haber has said should be ready in about a month. This is undoubtedly true. We would cer- tainly hope that the delays in the Resi- dential College's opening date have stem- med from Heyns' advice that things suould be taken slowly to be done well. Planning a whole new college is no small task. Last year's delay after the planning committee's meeting with President Hatcher was quite unfortunate, and cost valuable time. What seems to be costing more time, and perhaps even threatens the life of the project itself, -is the shortage of funds coming from the Office of Busi- ness and Finance. The literary college has been told it must choose between the Residential College building and new classroom buildings on central campus. WE CAN ONLY HOPE that Vice-Presi- dent Pierpont's office is doing all it can to raise the necessary funds. We also urge that the Regents ap- prove without delay the, plans which should be coming before it within the next month or so. The Regents' announcement a year ago last summer that the college was to be put off from '66 to '67 came from the same meeting that brought forth the an- nouncement of the construction of Burs- ley and Cedar Bend housing units. Regent Power was probably correct in terming these latter two projects as "stopgap" buildings. We find ourselves in the position of not knowing whether to chide the University for "buying time" with Bursley Hall and thus putting off an official, large-scade administrative com- mitment to the building of the college, or else to praise them for wisely taking their time to plan things right. THE ACADEMIC buildings for the college will be constructed at least five years later than was originally hoped for, per- haps even later if the 1967-8 budget has trouble 'at Lansing, or if the buildings get caught up in the hassle with the .state controller general's office. The plans for the dorms are supposedly near completion. The literary college executive committee will soon be present- ed with the college's entire plan. We would certainly hope that by this time the plans are fit for approval by everyone concerned--literary college faculty, ad- ministration, Regents. From the information we have been able to gather, the source of money for the dorms seems somewhat in question. The planning comnittee has rightly shied away from relying entirely on self-liqui- dating funds--this would make general dorm fees higher than they are at pres- ent. Gift money, however, seems to be lacking. The University must find money soon to get the dorms built. Right now the University's first small attack on "academic anonymity," the pi- lot project, is strangling for a lack of ad- ministrative manpower and money. The result og going half-way is somewhat of a waste of time and money, and of a good idea. The Residential College planners have taken their time, and hopefully have come up with a plan worth building. It is now up to the Office of Business and Finance to process the plans as rapidly as possi- ble, and to the administration to provide the funds for building the college's first dorms. WE CAN AFFORD no more delays. -ALICE BLOCH -HARVEY WASSERMAN U'Union Suit Doesni't Fit "EMU, CMU MAY JOIN 'U' in Union Suit," The Daily's headline said last Tuesday. As an indication of how outdated the University's attitude towards unions is, one need merely observe that Michigan State University, of all places, has recog- nized unions under a state law which the University is fighting in the courts LIE THCE ffFOR UH)RS WAN LAOPE&)CuOLIV(U THE WAY HE &OKw TU.)UTY EARS A60) COMUG2 AtO)6. UW5 WEApIti6 F,ACK ROOT- A019 CAPRIE,5 A WOHIP. HE STE5PS 3 M Y H405. i 1[ L { I Bg6IM -r6CRV LTERJ6 J HUSBAMP G6ME5 AO.6. he PICK5 ME UP AOP CARP165 MC To A CASTLE A0?MP5 V~My/ [LWOLWJS AM) ' 9"3'ME 54W5 Ain61VS ME PR6ESEVT ADD2 5 56&-THAT TI IVEQ 6GOtWTH- OUT, EVER EVES' 56AIQ-. ti iQPT EVER APTCR. 1 '' i 1 SYAi)P cTC( GKJ My HAWSU2. 7T B 1Q '~To Sk)OWL. LAAT6R MN VCIRHAS W PERS;TOP ME, ,r I a I' j'!!Illllili r Alienation in Our Society: A Review IT IS NOT CLEAR what young people mean when they say they are "alienated." Let me briefly review the concept his- torically. In the sense of estrangement from God, alienation is a power- ful theme in early Protestant theology. "God is hiding His face." The Lutheran' answer was, of course, Have faith. Do not rely on works, for they are as alienated as you. Turning the theology iinto epistemology, the Hegelians re- fered to the divorce between our subjective needs and institutions and the 'objective world given in science and social in5titutions. Hegel relied on the working out of history to bring these parts to- gether. But, reviving the Protes- tant insight, Kierkegaard insisted that we must be authentically committed in our moment by moment choices and not treat our- selves as scientific or historical objects. This "existential" answer has of course had great influence on criticism of our present over- organized routines. MARX PINNED DOWN the alienation to the people's loss of control over their productive life, and therefore loss of their primary human nature. Productive ma- chinery and rules of work had passed into the hands of an own- ing class. Products of labor be- came commodoties moving in a market, rather than uses in a community. His answer was, or- ganize politically and expropriate the expropriators. In the late nineteenth century ther was also a psychiatric mean- ing of alienation as insanity (psy- chiatrists were "alienists"). The hallucinations of the insane mind were incompatable with, or di- vorced from, sensory reality. Freud tended to extend this concept by showing that everybody was some- what psychopathological, and his bias was to relax the anti- instictual bans that led to such a deep chasm between wish' and reality. . All these extensions of Aliena- tion are deeply important and true at present. And in the conditions Paul Coodmin i '1 of today, we have found another important aspect of alienation which (I think) is meant by the Young. Modern societies increas- ingly exclude vast groups 'of people; e g. the aged, the farmers, the Negroes, the young. (With automation, the exclusion threat- ens to become wider.) To be "alienated" is to feel productively useless, without future, excluded. Further, the needs and feelings of the excluded are not paid at- tention to in the goals and de- cisions of administrative society. To be "alienated" is to feel pro- cessed, exploited, administered. WHAT FOLLOWS? First, the young cannot identify with the social goals and they say, "That's not my scene, I am nowhere." But then, as an immediate step, they say, "They are nowhere. We young are the only people. We have to go it alone; if necessary, we must resist their interference in our ives." This has been a persistent ten- dency of the present "youth" phe- nomena: the adolescent subcul- ture, the Beat movement, the paracolleges, the draft protest. But let me suggest a different and more hopeful aspect of "alienation" which is also directly relevant to today passing into the future. IN IMPORTANT respects, ad- vanced societies are too comfort- able and we call them "affluent;" they are too achieved and we say they are "establishments." Such a condition is stifling; it cuts one off from meaning, which is given only in the risky moment of growth. For example, some psy- chotherapists jocosely speak of the "California syndrome," re- ferring to people who have grown up with every advantage and sa-t tisfaction and then break at 40. complaining, "Life has passed me by." Certainly the. young of the middle class feel a frustration that leads them either to sensless delinquency or to efforts to make a better world on new premises. Among dissenting college stu- dents, it seems that just because they have been economically se- cure, they transcend economic mo- tives. Sure of $5,000 a year,- they do not need to compete for $20,000. Similarly, since they come from respectable homes, they can 'go to jail without disgrace. But this is not necessarily a sign of lack of commitment. ON THE CONTRARY, it may mean a forward step in rich so- cieties: toward productive enter- prise, social service, lively com- munity, as goods in themselves, no matter what the economic and personal costs. Copyright, Paul Goodman, 1965 The Gospel: Sts. Sorenson, Schlesinger, Etc. 40 B v RICHARD STONE Collegiate Press Service. TED SORENSEN, the late Presi- dent Kennedy's aide and now political biographer, wrote in his final chapter of "Kennedy:" "Even though he was himself almost a legendary figure in life, Kennedy was a constant critic of the myth, and it would, be an ironic twist of fate if his martyrdom should now make a myth of a mortal man." But what with the secular re- ligion that has grown tenaciously around his iemory (one makes the pilgrimage to' Arlington, buys graven images, and reads books of the Apocrypha, like "A Day in the Life of President Kennedy") it is hard to see how Sorenson's book, or Mrs. Evelyn Lincoln's "My Twelve Years with John F. Ken- nedy," or Arthur Schlesinger's "A Thousand Days" or Pierre Salin- ger's forthcoming work will shoo away the faithful. No doubt these memoirs will be read in the same devotional spirit as the way in which one reads the Gospels. And for those who pre- fer the myth to the man, I have rendered passages from three of the books to make your spirtual reading easier. The Gospel According to St. Lincoln ATRICK of Kilkenny begat Patrick of Boston; and Patrick J. begat Joseph of Hynaais; and Joseph begat Jack, who is called Kennedy and he was the second- born. And Jack went down into the land of Deceia, which is upon the Potomac, in the borders of Marylandia and Virginia. And Jack, walking by the river of Deceia, saw two brethren, Ted called Sorensen, and Evelyn called Lincoln, casting stones into the sea. And he said unto them, Follow me, and I will make you servants of mine office. And they straightway left their stones, and followed him; for they were unemployed. From that time Jack went about all Deceia, voting in its Capitol, and sitting upon its councils, and porkbarreling its bills. When, behold, his fame was told throughout the land, that is to say: he was a young and ex- ceeding handsome man. But he was possessed by a great lonliness. And Jack spake unto himself and saith, Whence cometh this affliction: and forthwith cast it out saying, The damsel Jacqueline shall appear before me; and he telephoned her and saith, Wouldst thou take in a double feature? And it came to pass that Jac- queline was bethrothed unto Jack, him which was called the Tribune,' and he took her to wife. The Gospel According to St. Sorensen Now IN THE fourteenth year of his office, and being full with ambition, Jack went forth into the wilderness; and there went out a fame of him through all the region round about. And he campaigned in their cities, being desirous of all and preaching the Row called B, which men shall know by the sign of the donkey, But the devil came unto Jack in the guise of 'a hairy man, which is called Nixon, and tempted him; and Jack wrestled with the Devil for forty days and forty nights; and cried unto him. Begone, thou (Nixon, for it is said, Thou shalt not tempt me. And when the Devil had ended all the temptation, Jack returned in his power into the city of De- ceia; and the multitude fell at his knees crying, Hail to the Chief. For they had delivered unto him great and wonderous gifts, that is to say, early returns from Ohio and Connecticut. And when he had called unto him his twelve desciples, he gave them power to advise and to de- liberate. Now the names of the twelve apostles are there: the first, Rusk, who is called Dean, and McNamara of Ford; Stewart and Ribicoff whose given name was Abe; Luther and C. Douglas; Orville and J. Edward; Arthur and Adlai the wise; Lyndon and Bobby the brother. The Gospel According to St. Schlesinger IN THOSE DAYS the multitude being full of confusion, there arose a wrath against the isle of Cubana; and soldiers walked the land crying, Woe unto- thee, Cu- bana, for in thine iniquity shalt thou be torn asunder. And the farriors came unto Jack and said, Lo, for we shall rise up and crush the Devil, as a dog doeth his fleas for it is written. And Jack saith, No, for I have wrestled the Devil and he abideth in California; and as for the dog, him which is called Checkers, he abideth with him. But the soldiers were sorely vexed and said unto Jack, Behold, for we have devised a plan. And Jack harkened unto'them; for he was not a soldier. And it came to pass that an army was raised, and the army went forth and was defeated; ard men named it the Bay of Swine. And the multitude when they heard these things, they were cut to the heart and unto Jack they gnashed their teeth and made a wrathful cry. For the soldiers had lent false council, and they betrayed him. And Jack lamented for the hard- ness of ,their hearts; and cried in a loud voice, My God, why hast thou forsaken me? And Jacqueline took him down and wrapped him in her arms; and he wept. 'I Letters: Scientists Make Poor Poets To the Editor: I TAKE ISSUE with David Knoke's accusation that science has plundered the literary world, and in so doing has left the Uni- versity devoid of freshmen Hop- wood competitors. Perhaps the same high school class in which Knoke read his first Edgar Lee Masters poem told him of that noble age when scientists wrote poetry and poets did experiments. I submit that there could never be such an age. The very objectivity which makes a man good as a scientists makes him pedestrian as a writer. The very passion which molds the greatest works of are would wreak havoc in the laboratory., The rarity of such people as da Vinci and Goethe is proof of the chasm between artistic and scientific ability. Maybe there ought to be a breed of Titans that can do every- thing well, but there isn't. Neither coaxing nor scolding will bring Thle Medlical School- To the Editor: IN REGARD to your article of Dec. 7, 1965, "Students Blast Medical School Administration," we feel that the student's com- plaints presented were valid ones. We also feel that an impression was left with the reader which was not representative of the majority of medical students. Since there is a transition be- tween secondary school and col- lege, there is also a transition between college and medical school. The responsibility one must accept, and the maturity that must develop to achieve these transitions are quite similar, and only differ in degree. The volume of information that the admin- istration and faculty must expose to the student in four years ex- pands with every dear. This leads to a situation where the student must schedule his school to realize this. Finally, we certainly hope that your article would not leave an aspiring young physician with the feeling that our medical school has any more dissatisfied students than any other school on our campus. WE HAVE a great deal of pride in the education we receive and in the school that offers it to us. We feel, indeed, that the majority of students would encourage any student wishing an excellent medi- cal education to consider our medical school. -The Medical School Student Council, Student American Medical Association, Galen's Honorary Medical Society, Victor Vaughn Society Left Out tor of the Saturday morning ses- sion in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre was a University professor whose contributions to our cul- tural environment have earned national recognition for the Uni- versity. Without his efforts there would have been no visit by the Arts Council. members. He is the front page only three. the session nificant as Winslow. fourth person in your picture-you identify His contributions to were at least as Sig- those quoted by Miss existentialist, man-is-the-sum-of- his-acts-and-responsibilities phi- losophy is quite frightening in its distortion of perspective. The protestors chose to violate certain rules of society in which they live, and they must bear the responsibility for those violations: agreed; but Catron has no grounds for assuming that they had not "contemplated beforehand" the consequences, which he would teem to imply are indefinite. On the contrary: these people had accepted the consequences as pre- scribed by law in a society which claims to operate according to these same laws as prescribed. To arbitrarily change these laws in their operation is not the ap- plication of the poetic justice which Catron champions, but a reversion to totalitarianism or mere anarchy. One of the draw- backs of being a liberal is that one is forced to restrain the desire to apply these same methods to ueh trinities as. Catron seeks tn I AN OVERSIGHT? Or is it your ,editorial position that he doesn't exist? -Jack DePree, Extension Service EDITOR'S NOTE: Robert C. Schuit .er, executive director of the Professional Theatre, very much e .fists.lie was at the far, left in our pictureof the panel, and we apol- ogize for ouitding his name fro m the caption. The slip-up resulted fium a last minute picture switch. 4