Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BYS TUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN " UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ...... r~t:, rif 4 '" " "' ' >, y idt" < r .+' C.u + lW. ;: ', ..... _,r.o' °' SPOWER'h, Ye ralrt t ' TheE Past Yer and the Coming Crises POETRY by MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH ,, . A..A~. ~ ..~. vnssw. ~ sW*.-.. *f.~w..}.. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. 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. Y, AUGUST 30, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: BETSY COHN On Becoming a Freshman: One0t oOne in the Multiversity HERE YOU ARE, admitted as a fresh- man -to the University of Michigan, probably conscious of both your abilities, which are abundant, and- your human shortcomings, which you never have wor- ried too much .about. until you found yourself face to face with a university. .You see yourself, at any rate, as an in- dividual human being-lost in an over- w helming society, perhaps, .but still an individual. You're in for a surprise. The world prefers to think of you as a commodity, thanks in no small part to university spclologists. You have been mentally and emotionally measured, typed, fitted and tested. There is, in fact, a price on your head." Your mind, your- abilities and your skills will probably be worth, very rough- ly, $20,000-$50,000 a year to the American (or maybe some other) economy 10 years fromn nowp..From $1500 to $5000 a year will be invested in you as you go through school. You are a human resource, far more valuable than mineral resources. GOOD NEWS? There's more. Society is . beginning to recognize, in its own haphazard, going backwards, slow-to- achieve-consensus way, just how valuable you really are. They'll pay, in other words, $1;000, $15,000, $20,000 a year. You name it. Cars, ranch homes, round-the-world vacations, even the sexual facade. Our market. economy is an amazing mechanism. One of the greatest inven- tions, in the world. It recognizes and re- wards value quickly and efficiently. (You'll learn about the market economy in Economics 12, by the way, as you will learn about that wonderful word "so- ciety" in sociology 100. Good luck.) If you are here in search of quick and efficient rewards-whether in the form of grades, self congratulations, or "lux- urious living"-you can get them all here and more. But look at what you are doing all up and down the line: you're accepting external definitions of what you ought to like, of what is good for you. You accept the Coca-Cola ad as the model of the good life, the "A" (and not the work and thought that should go into it) as the °great goal, playboy as a way of life. For God's sake 'back up a minute and look at what you are committing yourself to. Are you going to let somebody else- be it Standard Oil or Lyndon Johnson- tell you, either directly or indirectly, what your personal values are? Are you going to let General Motors' assumption that what's good for it is good for you to go unchallenged? The fact is that all of us have to some extent. But four years in a university can serve as a period of reevaluation and re- view, for careful construction of your own life on your own terms. 'HAT I AM saying is simple: be both aware and wary, be ready to profit from every experience, balance igen- uousness with careful thought. If you are cynical you end up in your own closed box; if you don't discriminate among the ideas, the theories and the philosophies urged upon you as gospel, you end up be- ing swept off in wrong, even harmful directions. Leave yourself open to evalu- ate every new bit of fact or outlook that comes along, but remember that there are at least four years more before you really have to commit yourself to any- thing. The freshman, as he proceeds through the University, soon begins to perceive, or ought to, that he would do well to toss out "A's", cars, color television and striped ties as inherently desirable. An automo- bile is nice, but it is external to the person who drives it or owns it and hardly em- bodies within itself any values or philoso- phies with which that person can identify himself. Editorial Staff MARK R. KILLINGSWORTH, Editor BRUCE WASSERSTEIN, Executive Editor CLARENCE FANTO HARVEY WASSERMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director JOHN MEREDITH......Associate Managing Editor LEONARD PRATT ..... Associate Managing Editor 1ABETTE COHN .............. Personnel Director CHARLOTTE WOLTER.. Associate Editorial Director ROBERT CARNEY.. Associate Editorial Director ROBERT MOORE ............ Magazine Editor CHARLES VETZNER ................ Sports Editor JAMES LaSOVAGE ......... Associate Sports Editor JAMES TINDALL . . .. .. .Associate Sports Editor GIL SAMBR ... ......Assistant Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: Michael Heifer, Merle Jacob, Rob- ert Klivans, Laurence Medow, Roger Rapoport, Shir- ley Rosick, Nell Shister.. sltn~ xt1Yfxrr tUw'rYIfD ust 'At mirrad RUr.., It's the same thing with grades. Mem- orized reading lists or lecture notes ac- quired to fill blue books are external. No- body wants to commit himself or identify himself with memorized facts. The act of memorization is, by itself, of no great value. Neither is an "A", except insofar as a person is able to identify with a standard of excellence that he holds up for himself in both work and thought-a standard he has internalized. He must have a commitment, not to "A's", but to standards he believes in-which might result in "A's", but not necessarily. But how can you, as a freshman, know where to make new commitments that must be made to lend stability and mean- ing to your life? Who or what can you believe? Where, in other words, do you put your poker chips? Establish some rough standards for yourself. Standards first of excellence. You know, for instance, when you are do- ing a good job and when you are not, what's really behind that "A," when you are making the effort and when you are letting yourself follow the smoothest path. With this standard of excellence in achievement set up, you will then be able to conceptualize standards of logic, of virtue, of hope, of relevance and of per- sonal meaning. Just remember that standards must be for yourself, for what you want to do, to be and to commit yourself to. You should believe in and act upon what you think, but be generous in allowing others the same privilege. 1UT STANDARDS are only guideposts, there is still the problem of commit- ment here and now. Where do you start? Here I have a suggestion. Look through the rest of this newspaper. Pass over for a moment the many ads of the Ann Arbor merchants. You can begin to see the di- verse aspects of what we call the Uni- versity. The undergraduates, the faculty, the graduate students, sports, activities of every stripe, research, buildings, admin- istrators classes, lectures and outside speakers. It all adds up to more than the sum of its parts. It adds up to a univer- sity, not a wax museum. It's right here, and it's more than buildings and offices and books and homework. It's worth looking for. It's worth a little faith that there is something here in the way of values and ideas and ways of thinking that is valuable to you as an individual, that can, withan investment of time, effort and thought on your part result in identity and commitment to things you can believe in, not things that adison Avenue, or your roommates, or "society" want you to believe in or will believe in for you. It all reduces to a common denomin- ator, you individually, on the one hand and the part of the world that you're willing and able to make your own, to commit yourself to, on the other. It comes down to a one-to-one correspond- ence, and the University is a partner that can be indulged in and relied upon to provide the best possible source of in- spiration for commitment. The University has, or is supposed to have, a commitment to you as well. While many faculty and researchers here are interested primarily in power, profit and personal aggrandizement, there is still plenty of material left for the other half of that one-to-one corres- pondence. Don't let the University es- cape its most essential obligation: people -you. The University can teach, it cannot make you learn. And even learning isn't enough. After you have listened to lec- tures, studied books, taken notes and written papers, you have done no more than you might have done at any school or even at home (given educational tele- vision). You are halfway down the path, but by no means there. FOR THE LAST and most essential in- gredients of the educated man- alertness, sympathy and human identity and commitment can come only through close, personal interaction with other persons. The freshman, however many of him there are, has every right to demand that his professors, his graduate instructors, his counselors and anyone else that claims to be a part of the University work directly with him. Such interaction.twonenlonh nno-nn THE 1965-66 ACADEMIC year was one of the most incred- ible in the University's history, and now-happily in some res- pects, unfortunately in others - it's over. The sequence of events was long and unsettling, and was at least mildly surprising for the observer to realize the University survived them as it did. The resignation of Roger Heyns last July; the residence hall over- crowding; the near-riot over the anti-Viet Nam war float at Home- coming; the International Days of Protest; Stanley Nadel and the Committee of Aid the Vietnamese; the "war criminals" sign; the Pow- er theatre controversy; the strug- gle over state control of Univer- sity buildings; the court fight ov- er University collective bargain- ing; the legislative relations-ap- propriations crisis; the highway safety grant; the $55-M program hoax; the National Defense Edu- cation Act mess; the Power res- ignation; the venereal disease controversy; the housing issue; the bookstore protest; the draft protest; ' the presidential se- lection problem; the residential college problem. So went the year. IT CAN THUS be said, in all seriousness, that the University is in crisis. The past year affords ample evidence for that conclu- sion. Its difficulties point to a road ahead which is, if anything, even more alarming. The University is, first, clearly going to have to find a way to manage its growth. The Office of Ac a d e mic Affairs' infamous growth report, which forecasts a University enrollment of 50,196 by 1975, is probably much too low- and the 50,000 figure is much to high in relation to what the Uni- versity's facilities are going to be in that year. Happily, the report is being re- evaluated. But unhappily, no one as yet has come up with much of a solution to the problem it poses, a problem which will simply be greater when its figures are re-, vised. The 1200-student residential col- lege is an exciting and dramatic educational idea. So is the con- cept of making part of the Uni- versity into an Oxford or Cam- bridge-a large university com- posed of numerous small colleges. But will we have to spend $20 million each time we want to add 1200 more students? THE SO-C ALL E D "decision- making process" must also be re- fined and expanded. There is a very grave danger in the "closed politics" of which C. P. Snow spoke: this danger alone warrants participation by all the University community in significant decisions affecting its destiny, something which is both a means to an end and an end in itself. Students in particular must be- come participating members, not mute beneficiaries or victims, in the process of making policy, or else the meaning of a University education-the development of the whole man-will be hollow. Certainly, as experience with the psychology department student advisory committee and the fac- ulty committee on the residential college shows, such a change does not always produce quick results. But from the selection of the next president to the esoteric workings of the Budget and Plant Exten- sion Committees, the basis on which decisions are made and the people making them should-and in some cases is being-substan- tially broadened. RELATIONS between the Uni- versity and outside forces--speci- fically, with the state legislature- merit serious and increasing con- cern. The animosity some legisla- tors feel towards the University is extreme - yet the University's lobbying efforts are intent and in- efficient. So, sometimes, are its policies. No one doubts, for example, that Public Acts 124 (providing for state control over University con- struction) and 379 (putting col- lective bargaining here under the state labor mediation board) are quite possibly unconstitutional in- fringements on University auton- omy. Yet where the University could reach a voluntary private agree- ment with unions, it has not. Here, as in too many other areas, the University has not followed a poli- cy of tough flexibility, and the failure to do so will in the end spell disaster. Finally, the University must do some serious re-thinking about its student body. We are fast be- coming--if we are not already-a middle class or even upper-middle class university. This has severe and unhealthy implications both for the state of educational de- mocracy--is ability to pay, not ability, now our standard?--and educational validity-is a campus which apparently has more In- dian students than Negro students a realistic picture of our country? And yet, in rather droll appro- priateness, as the student body gets more and more affluent, its economic freedom becomes in- creasingly dubious, as high rents and the general high cost of liv- ing--about which the University does almost nothing--testify, The coming crises are not now obvious, though they will be next fall. They are not numerous, though their ramifications are many. But while there is cause for pessimism, there is also, perhaps, some cause for hope. For however stupid or short- sighted or sinister some of its members are, the University com- munity has always had a degree of flexibility, competence and courage to meet its challenges, which is surprising in view of its bulk and diversity. Those qualities will be needed sorely and soon. But if it survived this year it may even emerge triumphant next year. FOR ALL ITS failings, the Uni- versity is perhaps best character- ized by the motto of the City of Paris: "Fluctuat nec mergitur"-- flounders, but never sinks. We hope. 4, Ip Aug. 30: On the Nature of the Beast By LEONARD PRATT Associate Managing Editor ONE OF THE neatest ways of defining any organism is by describing how it works. Such descriptions fit plankton, northern lights and the solar system pretty well. They also fit universities. In an attempt to define univer- sities by their behavior Dean Wil- liam Haber of the literary college and Kenneth Boulding of the economics department and the Center for Conflict Resolution gave their perspectives on that behavior to the twelfth meeting of the Institute on College and University Administration which met here last week. Both came very close to the mark. BOULDING'S ARGUMENT is that each of the conflicts within modern universities forces an ad- ministration to deal with it a little differently than it deals with any other conflict. The result is a great deal of confusion on the part of administrators as to just what their job is. Each problem forces them to interpret their re- sponsibilities differently and thus confuses them as to where their real efforts should be concen- trated. Haber's discussion is a special case of Boulding's general treat- ment. Being closer to the realities of departmental administration than Boulding, he confirms the fact that, in a university at least, you can't administer for people who don't want to be administered for. THE BUSINESS of a university, be it teaching or research, is a very individual business. It's so individual that there really isn't much room for an administrator to affect a faculty member's work. On the other hand, a faculty member, because he is the locus of the university's raison d'etre, can seriously affect an admin- istrator's work. The every-day ex- pression of this creates the need for what Haber called the "judi- cious" exercise of the admittedly extensive authority of the ad- minisrtator. It is a shame, as Boulding noted, that more has not been done to study relationships within univer- sities. By the same token it is a shame that neither Haber nor Boulding had the time to put their heads together and take their anaylses of the university's power structure farther than they did. JUST WHAT IS the fate of an organism that behaves as Boulding and Haber correctly analyze the university as behaving? To answer that question one must realize that conflict is by no means an extraordinary event at a university. On the contrary, it is the order of the day. There are so many conflicts (in- deed must they not increase geo- metrically with 'staff size?) that Boulding's postulate about admin- istrators' role problems assumes horrifying proportions. How many diverse interests must administra- tors satisfy? What is their con- stituency? Things get even worse when in- creasing demands for attention from research projects enter the picture in weighted proportions. The resultant morass is basically the result of the fact that univer- sities are to a great extent run on- a personal basis; they breed con- flict-laden situations. They have not yet adapted themselves to a world more impersonally admin- istered. Perhaps they never will; and perhaps that is a good thing. THUS IT IS impossible for an administrator to simply make a decision and be sure that it will stick. He has to talk the faculty into it, because that is the way But can an almost $200-million- university people operate.' a-year business operate that way? Maybe, maybe not. Compromises are made daily to ensure that it can at least get along. In any case this is the real conflict within a university: the dichotomy between the way in which its faculty, the real opera- tional center of power, operates and the necessity for some sort of coordination imposed by the size and complexity of those opera- tions in their aggregate. Some theoretical work done at Ohio State University's education school indicates that the conflict cannot be resolved and that, the university as it exists cannot be governed, because the faculty will not change ist anarchic attitude and the complexity of the total operation will increase. This implies either that the or- ganization of the university must change or that' new means of government must be devised for it, perhaps even new definitions of government. NOR IS IT any coincidence that Boulding and Haber could get to the heart of the matter so quickly. They work at a university in which this major conflict is especially pronounced and is getting worse every year. It's a shame someone with the authority to do some- thing about it doesn't listen to their advice. But then, there's always 1968 .. . w Optional Counseling:Aiding Idealism E VER HAVE this happen? You have just begun to get down to work after the first four weeks of a semester. Suddenly a letter arrives announcing the beginning of pre-classification for the next semester. Already? Well, all right, you think. I'll get around to it soon. One week later you are stand- ing in a snail-paced line in Angell Hall waiting to get an appoint- ment with your counselor so he can sign his name to whatever course schedule you have chosen. In the rush it may have been cho- sen at whim with a few consider- ations for distribution require- ments and those of your major. THE FRIENDLY secretary near the door smilingly informs you that the first time you can get an appointment with your coun- selor is late next month, when all the courses you wanted to take will, undoubtedly, be closed. To further add to your woes, the meeting with your counselor is hardly adequate. After discussing your language requirement and the courses you will take for your major, little else is said. You know that there are perhaps ten peo- ple waiting outside to see the counselor with more appearing each minute. You would like to tell your counselor about your new interest in mass communications, history, or chemistry and to ask him about changing or incorpor- ating these studies into your ma- jor, but the worried furrow in his brow tells you that it may be time to leave. Maybe next semester there will be time.. . BUT YOU PROBABLY never had this happen to you. After receiving the announce- ment of pre-classification you pick up the necessary forms in Angell Hall, choose your course elections, sign the cards yourself, hand the forms to a secretary and leave. That's all. If you have a problem or an idea concerning your academic stand- ing, course elections, changes in major, etc., an appointment with the counselor can be arranged. This appointment, however, is not mandatory. It is solely to help you with a specific problem or simply to have a talk with your counselor. Impossible? Not exactly. * * * - THE OPTIONAL Counseling pro- gram was initiated this spring just to make this kind of contact be- The Associates by carney and wolter tween student and counselor pos- sible. The program has been under consideration for a number of years. According to James Shaw, chairman of the Junior-Senior counselors, those involved in the planning were worried that it would appear that they "didn't care" about the students, that they were "taking a laissez-faire atti- tude toward counseling." Others feared that no counseling at all would take place, and felt they were doing a good job of counsel- ing under the old system. Nevertheless, a faculty commit- tee began to seriously study the proposal. Later this group was joined by several students - two of them from the literary college steering committee. (Paradoxically some of the students accepted the proposal very cautiously, perhaps fearful ofrmistakes in distribution and major requirements). THE BASIC objectives of the program are to free counseling meetings from the card-signing rut into which they have fallen and to place the emphasis on the discussion (lengthy if necessary) of substantive issues. As described in the announce- ment sent to second-semester sophomores last spring (who will be the first group to test the program): "Under the terms of this pro- gram, selected students may sign their own election cards for two of their last four semesters in the College. Normally, a stu- dent following the Optional *Program will hold a thorough. discussion with his counselor when he begins his concentra- tion (i.e. while pre-classifying as a second-semester sopho- more) and when he leaves it (i.e. while pre-classifying for a Senior-year semester). More important than the con- advisor will be free to discuss, those issues more fully. In short, the Program is designed to improve both the nature and quality of academic counseling by giving qualified students greater freedom and responsi- bility in designing and carrying out their educational programs." SHAW EMPHASIZED that an- other qualitative advantage to the change was the nature of the ad- vice the faculty members would be asked to give. He pointed out that, while giving advice on spe- cific courses is difficult unless one has actually taught or taken the courses, the faculty is eminently qualified to advise the student on problems with his general aca- demic goals and his progress to- ward them. He added that one reason that counseling has lately degenerated in the eyes of the students is that the faculty counselors have been asked to give advice in areas where they are not qualified-such as individual course content and quality. DESPITE THE encouraging setup of the program and the care taken in its development, the response to the announcement mailed out this spring was any- thing but enthusiastic: of 2,777 second-semester sophomores in the literary college at, the time, only 46 elected to participate. The meagre response, however, cannot be considered indicative of strong aversiononthe part of the students. The fact of the mat- ter is that the Program was not passed until just after pre-classi- fication. had begun last semester. Therefore, there was little ad- vance publicity to encourage stu- dents to participate. Those students who were in-, formed of the new Program were, in all likelihood, worried that they. would lose contact with their counselor or that they would somehow miss required courses through the Optional Counseling Program. In addition, force of habit, i.e., the custom of seeing the counselor once a semester, may have discouraged some. responsibility on the part of the student. Not only must he try to continue to see his counselor for the more in-depth discussions that the Program calls for, but he must also contribute his ideas and opin- ions to the effort to improve the whole concept of counseling. The counselors have to know how their new plan is working, and they have an excellent vehicle for com- munication of the students' Ideas in the literary college steering committee. THE OPTIONAL Counseling Program is only one of several very idealistic programs develop- ed in the past year that need the participation of students in order to succeed-not the least of these being the new vice-presidential advisory committees. Some have criticized the ad- ministration in the past for its lack of an innovative spirit. If the idealism shown in their willingness to try these programs can be matched by an equally idealistic response from the student, this University will have taken a long step toward becoming a truly dynamic academic community. The Death Of Art' ART IS ONLY a means to life. to the life more abundant. It is not in itself the life more abun- dant. It merely points the way, something which is overlooked not only by the public, but very often by the artist himself. In becoming an end it defeats Itself. All art, I firmly believe, will one day disappear. But the artist will remain, and life itself become not "an art" but art, i.e., will definitely and for all time usurp the field. In any true sense we are cer- tainly not yet alive. We are no longer animals, but we are cer- tainly not men. Since the dawn of art every great artist has been dinning that into us, but few are 4 M "We're Not So Good At Solving Cases Like This" ., WHO~a AND i WIRETApp1q :. ,, ;,o ¢Hy} :! Mw -! " I 't t- i( M '. ' ~ & j( f SK; ,'r jn T . F A 49