W IY A Y Seventy-Sixth Year EWrrED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ffilmsa =-- - -m pinlons Are fe, 420 MAYNARD ST, ANN ARBOR, Micii. h in iPreail NEws PHONE: 764-05521 Is printed in 'The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This inust be noted in all reprints. )AY, DECEMBER 7,1966 NIGHT EDITOR: LAURENCE MEDOW The Literary College Faculty: A Real Disappointment Dec. By LEONARD PRATT Associate Managing Editor "IF YOU crazy mad, sex, draft dodgers don't know how to be- have you can go and fight for your country. . . we don't want any more bull shit from you kids ...y wrote a Detroit man who signed himself "Damn Burned up Dad" on a postcard which he addressed last week to Ed. Robinson, Student Government Council president. The other side of the national reaction to the University's cam- pus situation was a terse telegram from New Jersey which told SGC members that "We support your struggle. Keep sitting in." Somewhere in the middle lies just about everybody, including the 2,000-4,000 supporters of the movement here and theainnumber- albeable thousands at Berkeley who are so ready to boil over into the streets.. IT'S HARD so say whether these particular movements and the re- actions to them will continue to exist or not. But even if they die 7: The B out leaving no specific results be- hind them, they will have asked the people in the middle some im- portant questions about the kind of world we live in. There are some hints about what kind it is in the reactions to the movement here which have come in from all over. They're ex- treme, pure and simple. Either the vilest or the purest motives are laid to the protestors and either the most disasterous or the most promising future seen for the movement itself. Again, there are people in the middle, but that's not the point. The point is that anyone at all close to the emotional extremes of politics can find in the movement a fine opportunity to tout his political and social beliefs public- ally. THE SPREAD of the "protest etihc" in America, a semi-populist ethic which views the political rocess as a combination of almost natural forces to be molded by political leaders, is another big hint. Mass protest, are certainly not just an American phenomenon. Greece, Japan and Korea have taken their turns. But there the upsurges seem as much the results of the evolution of political and social systems as anything else. Aside from sporadic politically leftist protests in Europe there really doesn't seem to be anything around to match the growing American acceptance of activist politics-acceptance of it either as perfectly reasonable or as some- thing to be bitterly contested, but acceptance of it as legitimate force in any case. THAT'S a veryfunny thing. Just why it's happening I don't know, though theories about the high-level technological society are easy to throw out. I do have some ideas about people's gripes, though, gripes centering around a great disenchantment with one's ability to actually reach out into 'lack Toilet Revisited this world and do something. At the first movement "teach- in" at Hill Aud. two weeks ago, a student stood up and spoke about revolutions and he sounded like he knew what he was talking about. He was from South Amer- ica, one of the parts of the world where, when the students go out the police come in with just about everything they can carry. People listening to him almost looked envious. Here was someone who really knew what it was like. "IF YOU'RE going to write this story right, it's got to come out that we're really playing a game." a student in the movement told a reporter a few days ago. Everybody knows that no matter how mad the administration might get, it's not likely to go too far in trying get people to shut up for fear of making the University look even worse than it looks now. The movement's members won't get what they really want, there- fore, which is to do something vital, to act in such a way that others will notice them and take cognizence of their actions. For the same reason, the guaranteed moderation of the outcome, its oponents wil be denied that same satisfaction. Everyone knows that, so every- one's playing a game but the im- portant point is that this game is created by the mechanics of our society and that more and more people are finding it necessary to learn to play. And what sort of a machine is it that makes people want to play war? THAT'S THE question the movement and the extreme re- actions to it pose. Everybody's probably got his answer, and I don't like mine. By asking that question, the movement's been a success even if it doesn't attain all its campus- oriented goals. Just by existing, it's asked everyone connected with it what kind of world he lives in and how he wants to live in it. And that is a very great deal indeed. 4 LAST SPRING, in what many considered a bold move, the literary college fac- ulty in principle condemned the practice of class ranking. Their statement was fairly strongly worded, and it received strong criticism from several sources. Nevertheless, the LSA faculty defended the move as a just statement against an unjust practice. But now-in the days of the draft ref- erendum, cries for student participation, sit-in bans and 'resulting sit-ins - one could at least expect the faculty to put its money where its mouth is, so to speak. Monday, it refused. The literary college faculty soundly defeated a proposal which did not even suggest that the whole school end ranking (which the LSA faculty, un- der the Regents' bylaws, has the right to decide). It merely asked that professors who, out of conscience, did not wish to submit grades be allowed to do so. THERE WERE OTHER mitigating fac- tors in the proposal which should have made it acceptable if the faculty were as committed to ending ranking as its reso- lution last spring would suggest. First, al- though professors would not be required to give a letter grade, they would have to give an indication of whether or not the student had passed a course-a pass- fail grade. Second, professors would also have been required to give a one paragraph evalua- tion of the students they did not grade- if only in seeking employment and for use by graduate schools for admissions applicants. Chi Phi A LETTER APPEARING on todays edi- torial page admits in almost unbeliev- ably plain language goings-on in frater-' nity pledging that were supposed to have. been abolished a decade ago. As present and past fraternity men we are apalled at this type of behavior openly prac- ticed and arrogantly defended by Michi- gan students. eW commend Mr. Thomas Germain foru his courage in bringing such outmoded and blatantly brutal practices to light, and we demand that Interfraternity Council and Student Government Council conduct an immediate and open investi- gation into the pledging practices of Chi Phi fraternity. -HARVEY WASSERMAN -LEONARD PRATT, -LAURENCE MEDOW -NEAL SHISTER -RON KLEMPNER Third, any student who still wished to be graded after this would only have to ask the professors to do so. The professor would be required to give him a letter grade. THE MAIN OPPOSITION to this meas- ure, as stated by Prof. Alexander Eck-' stein of the economics department, was that allowing University policy to be de- termined by individual conscience was a "dangerous procedure." Yet, it was not apparent in his objec- tions how such a procedure could be dan- gerous unless the individual rights of students were ignored-all of which was carefully avoided by Kelman's motion. Could the procedure have been dangerous to faculty prestige? It is a sad day when a faculty member expressing his conscious beliefs in this manner is subjected to offi- cial disapproval by his colleagues. The faculty seems to have become curi- ously sidetracked on this issue. While the welfare of the students-over whom, in this instance, the faculty has so much control-should have been at least one main point of the argument Monday, it was not. Questions of procedure and precedent dominated instead. Nor was the opposition based on the fact that the motion did not state the issue strongly enough. If the faculty re- mained faithful to its statement of last might have been the basis for its defeat. But cloying caution pre- dominated over the forthrightness of the earlier statement. QTUDENTS DID NOT hold a draft ref- erendum in order that it be made worthless by an abnegation of responsibil- ity on the part of the faculty who rare- ly, if ever, find it in their hearts to even mention that vote. Students are not fighting to gain a less centralized deci- sion-making process only to hear the fac- ulty speak of "maturity" and "responsibil- ity' in the hollow phraseology of the ad- ministration. If the faculty finds itself unable to face its moral and political be- liefs squarely, then perhaps it should just get out of the way. ADMITTEDLY, there was some degree of "impolitical" handling of Monday's resolution by those who were proposing it. It seems, however, that more serious con- siderations were at stake than political ones, and that those to whom the stu- dent body entrusts four years of educa- tion might be counted on for braver and more consistent leadership, -CHARLOTTE WOLTER Associate Editorial Director Letters: A Clhi Phi Defends Pledging To the Editor: J AM SURE, gentlemen, that this letter speaks not only for my- self but for thousands of other fraternity men both on campus and across the country. We have in the past years come under var- ied criticism by many persons, the majority of whom are in one sense or another unacceptable by many of the social and personal standards we uphold. There was a time, gentlemen, when I, like Mr. Germain, felt I was being goaded, sworn at, spat upon, forced against my will to eat raw garlic, drenched while sweating with snow and water, kicked, shoved, bruised, by men who were drunk or drinking. I also was forced against my will to stare at bright lights, eat dozens of raw eggs, have my head submerged in a flushing toilet, eat large onions raw, hold my body in very awkward positions for long periods, forced to disregard all personal hygiene for long periods, written upon, degraded, insulted, forced to eat cigarettes, given too little food, too little sleep, too much work. too many exercises, and a hundred other abuses, many of them unmentionable. And I am sure this was neither particular to me nor to my fra- ternity, and that this is neither the pride nor the goal of our brotherhood. HOWEVER, gentlemen, there was a necessary and important product of this "shit" we had to eat. There arose in those long nights and hard trials something within each of us that endured a sweat session or a hellweek that Fe llo JN MARCH 1966, the Selective Service System asked universi- ties and colleges throughout the United States to compute special class rankings for all male stu- dents. This request was not in the form of a law or requirement bind- ing on universities as national pol- icy. Further, the Selective Service System yeseterday announced that a draft test, which can be used to defer students whose rank is not available, will be given this year in March, two months before rank would be submitted by this Uni- versity. OPPOSITION to the University's ranking policy can stem from three lines of thought. One argument against the rank derives from an opposition to stu- dent deferment in general and therefore an opposition to any policy which singles out some stu- dents as deserving of special fav- orable consideration by the draft boards. We have personal sympathies with this position, but it is not necessary to agree with this par- ticular argument to oppose rank- ing. If one supposes that student de- ferments are important for rea- sons of national manpower policy, and even that selective student deferments are required, a method of student selection should be fol- lowed which least jeopadizes the educational process and po'itical balance of the University. The compilation of class ranks. has a seriously distorting impact on education, intellectual cumiosity and valuable extra-curricular ac- tivity, and places the Universy more deeply in the orbit of na - tional military and foreign policy administration. Among the educa- tional distortions stemming from the rank we offer the following: 1) Ranking intensifies the cen- tral role played by grades in the educational process. Students no longer inquire; they comply. Courses are no longer selected on the basis of their inherent inter- e:,, but rather on the basis of the grade which they an he evneced we might otherwise never have seen. To one who has never com- pleted his pledging and become an active member it is very difficult tor describe that word brotherhood. It is very hard for an outsider to imagine how men can come together in times such as those, in times when one searches his self and his soul looking for the strength to continue, looking for character. There is no way to communicate it to someone who does not possess the feeling, just exactly what a brotherhood means. And so, gentlemen, we continue under fire from those outside our ranks who understand so little of what we say. Once I was outside looking in and my feelings were exiremely critical and skeptical, but I am indeed proud of that which I know, of that which I have become a part of. NO MAN will ever say to me that I am less for what I have done, nor to any of my brothers for what they have done, because the outsiders do not even begin to know what we all felt in those hard times when we needed some- one, some friend, some brother... it's called pride .. . and character. It's not foolish, but it's often forgotten, gentlemen, and this is the current status of Mr. Ger- main. I am sorry to see it, yet I am glad it has been discovered before such a person has slipped into our ranks. No man, I hope no fraternity man, and certainly no man of any character would ever retaliate his failurs in such a pet- ty manner. Such a person I could never call my brother.. In an age when Quisling and the Rosenbergs mar personal eth- ics and integrity, such lack of horor and character cannot pass unnoticed among intelligent men. MIGHT I SUGGEST, therefore, gentlemen, that since he has prov- en himself to be less than a fra- ternity man, he be given special permission to engage in sorority rush. --Frank H. Miller. Chi Phi '67 LSA Motion To the Editor: I AM DISMAYED that the lim- ited nature of the resolution proposed by Professors Gamson, Kelman, et. at., at Monday's meet- ing of the LS&A faculty seemed to be so generally misunderstood by almost everyone who rose to discuss it. For discussion was al- most entirely on other matters, many of them important to be sure related to ranking, grading, Selective Service, etc. Only one man clearly called at- tention to the essence of the- res- olution, which would merely allow, for so long as class rankings are being compiled by the adminis- tration, those teachers who feel compelled by consicence to do so, to give a Pass or Fail grade to those male undergraduate students. who consent to be so graded. THIS DOES NOT seem to me to be such an earth-shaking is- sue. It is already permissible to give certain graduate students a grade of S (Satisfactory), which is surely equivalent to "Pass." To extend this option to any course when there is mutual agreement between instructor and student is indeed a precedent, but I think not so undesirable a one as many of my colleagues apparently suppose. Either the professor who does not care to accept this option or the student who desires to have more "precise" letter grades for the benefit of future employers could have. insisted on conven- tional grading under the terms of the defeated resolution, which re- quired mutual consent for grading on a Pass-Fail basis. IT IS UNFORTUNATE that we cannot have "conscientious objec- tors" to an aspect of the grading system on those relatively infre- quent occasions when that system is used by Selective Service for purposes opposed by both student and instructor. Such an option would hardly infringe on the rights of anyone else, to whom normal grades and rankings would be available. -Edward G. Voss Assoc. Prof. & Curator Clarification To the Editor: THE LETTER of Mr. David Troup (Dec. 6) contains some rather serious errors of both fact and rhetoric. First, he notes that I took a vote in my class concerning my submission of their grades to the registrar. The outcome, he reports. was overwhelmingly in favor of submission. This is untrue. Earlier this year (before the referendum), I' took a vote among males in one class, regarding the class's attitude to- ward the University's ranking of male averages for the purpose of military manpower procurement. I recall a vote of 8-8. I am quite certain that this is the only vote to which Mr. Troup could have referred. It should be noted that he is niot one of my students. Secondly, even if his allegation were true, I fail to understand his involvement of Michael Zweig and others in what. he" considers i1- legitimate action on my part. On Dec. 6, Zweig held a vote in his two sections which meet on Tues- day. Students in each section vot- ed against the submission of grades. 10-8 and 8-5. His third section meets on Wednesday. THIRDLY, his reference to par- ticipatory democracy (which he presumes Zweig and I support), fails to recognize that I have tried to make it clear that I will pur- sue measures to protect students from any difficulties resulting from my actions. Some will judge this to be paternalistic; I see it as no more paternalistic than the "accepted channels." Lastly, his assertion that the withholding of grades is much more immoral than the war is probably an exaggeration. -Sander Kelman Teaching Fellow, Econ. I" 4 I ows Present Stand, on Ranking A Matter of Conscience 'HIERE'S SOMETHING ROTTEN in the American Economic Association. This September I plunked down $5, which entitled me to a student member- ship in the AEA and a year's subscrip- tion to the American Economic Review in the bargain. I knew what to expect in the AER, and it was there: higher-math gibberish. But I didn't know what to expect from the AEA itself. Inspired by visions of John Maynard Keynes and John Kenneth Gal- braith, I imagined a pure participatory democracy, a meeting of intellects. Editorial Staff MARK R. KILLINGSwORTH, Editor BRUCE WASSERSTEIN, Executive Editor CLARENCE FiAN'rO HARVEY WASSERMAN Managing Editor Editorial Director LEONARD PRATT ........ Associate Managing Editor JOHN MEREDITTH. ...Associate Managing Editor CHARLOTTE WOLTER ... Associate Editorial Director ROBERT CARNEY ..... Associate Editorial Director BABETTE COHN . .......... . Personnel Director ROBERT MOOREE.. ......... Magazine Editor CHARLES VETZNER..........Sports Editor JAMES TINDALL .........Associate Sports Editor JAMES LaSOVAGE........ Associate Sports Editor GIL SAMBERG .......... Associate Sports Editor SPORTS NIGHT EDITORS-Grayle Howlett, Howard Kohn, Bill Levis, Bob McFarland, Clark Norton, Rick Stern, John Sutkus, Gretchen Twietmeyer, Dave Weir. NIGHT EDITORS-Meredith Eiker, Michael Hefter, Robert Klivans, Laurence Medow, Roger Rappoport, Susan Schnepp, Neil Shister. DAY EDITORS-Robert Bendelow, Neal Bruss, Wallace Inmen, David Knoke, Mark Levin, Patricia O'DOno- hue, Stephen Wlldstrom. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS-David Duboff, Ronald Klempner, Dan Okrent, Deborah Reaven, Jennifer Rhea, Betsy Turner. ASSISTANT DAY EDITORS-Michael Dover. Steve I was wrong. iWthout consulting me-- or, I suppose, many other economists-a backroom caucus of econometricians nom- inated Prof. Kenneth Boulding of the economics department as the AEA's pres- ident-elect, and sent all AEA members a ballot giving him as the only candidate for the job. IT IS AN OUTRAGE. But such a move, which has the subtlety of a boss-con- trolled Tammany Hall convention, sim- ply points how rotten the whole system is. It is time to offer an alternative to such an inadequate way of deciding our crucial issues. It is time for a show of strength which no future candidate for time to reform the system which leaves the economics profession no choice. Some may say my proposal will hurt Prof. Boulding's chances of becoming president-elect. It may, or it may not. It could, for example; encourage many nor- mally-apathetic economists to vote for him, thus actually helping him, But how it affects his chances are un- important. It is time to start campaign- ing on issues, not personalities. It is time to offer economists a choice. FELLOW ECONOMISTS, do as I did: Write in Mrs. Elise Boulding for presi--j dent-elect of the ABA.j -MARK R. KILLINGSWORTI t hat's Our these grades are at best unreliable. 4) Institutions vary widely in the quality of their student bodies and programs. Comparisons of ranks between these institutions would be quite invalid. 5) Rankings within an institu- tion may be able to separate the very best from the very worst students and each of those from the vast middle, but it is in that latter category where Selective Service decisions must be made on the basis of grade point averages computed to two or even three decimal places. William R. Keast, president of Wayne State Univer- sity, poses the dilemma in the fol- lowing way: "The last student in the upper half of the class is found to have an average of 2.435, and the top student in the lower half of the class has an average of 2.429! "A Selective Service board, in- formed that the first student stood in the upper half and the second student in the lower half of his class, might well believe it was making a rational decision if it continued to defer the first and drafted the second. But the uni- versity would surely be remiss to mislead serious citizens in this way." 6) Classrooms become agencies of conscription; professors, the agents. The implications for aca- demic freedom and university au- tonomy will be explored below. THE OUTCOME of the referen- dum is the basis for a third posi- tion calling for an immediate end to ranking. Since it is students who are ranked and whose educa- tional environment is being affect- ed, students should make the fin- al decision on this policy. Since students voted to end rank- ing after widespread substantive debate, the University administra- tion should feel obligated to im- plement the decision, to cease ranking. Our own sympathies lie with this way of thinking and with the substantive anti-ranking argu- ments made above. CURRENT CONTROVERSY over implementation often focuses on fied 1-A as delinquents, according to communication from their local boards. Draft boards hold a per- son delinquent if he willingly with- holds available information re- quested by the board. So long as the University con- tinues to make the rank avail- able, the majority of students, who do Iot wish to forward this in- formation will continue to be in the position of facing immediate draft eligibility if they do not sub- mit under pressure to providing information to the Selective Serv- ice System. By ranking, the Uni- versity becomes an agent of this pressure. ONLY IF THE UNIVERSITY re- fuses to compile class ranks is the majority of students insulated from possible delinquency charges, because a person cannot be held delinquent for failing to report un- available information. We believe that the University should follow the lead of Cornell, Wayne State, Antioch and San Francisco State in not compiling ranks for the purpose of zhilitary manpower procurement. Students at those colleges and universities have not been reclassified 1-A as a result of the lack of available ranks. QUITE APART from these tech- nical and educational difficulties which we see in the ranking proc- ess, we hold rather deep philo- sophical and political objections, which arise out of the nature and development of the university itself. Through history, universities have existed, in varying degrees, as communitiesseparate from and, perhaps, even foreign to the larg- er communities in which they re- side. This separation has not been attributable primarily to the dif- ferential geography or to the in- telligence of its inhabitants, but rather to their commitment to a different set of attitudes and an environment in which that set of attitudes flourishes. In fact, the integrity of univer- sities has depended upon the ex- tnt +to ri nr -ha , Ima v .a mn'.. 4n and environment of the univer- sity. IT IS NOT difficult to under- stand why, for example, Michigan State University, which, through its School of Police Administra- tion, conducted CIA operations in Viet Nam, has no student free- dom of the press. Although active engagement in external activities is not necessary to produce an anti-civil-libertar- ian atmosphere (for it exists on many cloistered campuses), it is sufficient to produce such an at- mosphere in so far as the uni- versity wishes to continue such ac- tivities knowing that to do so it needs to maintain a certain sta-' bility (inflexibility?) of attitudes within its own community. A civil- libertarian atmosphere could be inimical to such desires. IN AUGUST the University surreptitiously disclosed the names of 65 students and faculty to the House Un-American Activities Committee, an act since condemn- ed by faculty resolutions and in student protests. The University gave up its au- tonomy in the face of a subpoena, and defended itself on the grounds that the subpoena was legal. Yet in the name of autonomy the University is currently fight- ing the enforcement of Michigan laws concerning the recognition of trade unions here. We believe that there are reasons why the Uni- versity chose to defend its au- tonomy in one instance while giv- ing it up in the other. The University of Michigan is jealous of its constitutional auton- omy, yet twice in recent months it has willingly surrendered to gov- ernmental pressures inimical to academic freedom and intellectual curiosity. WE BELIEVE that the Universi- ty administrators seek the kind of autonomy which reserves to the administrators themselves the wid- est possible scope of unrestricted decision making power. The rec- ognition of collective bargaining here would constrain that power, -aand s hafnrn roa mmr . h Those contracts and projects give the University a public image of serviee and good will, important components in the smooth opera- tions of a modern university and important to the prestige and pow- er of its administrators. The University has further sur- rendered its'autonomy by compil- ing class ranks for the Selective Service System. To refuse would again make the University sus- pect, thrust it into controversy, jeopardize the Sesquicentennial, and perhaps cause at least tem- porary government threats to ad- ministrative autonomy. To comply shifts the full bur- den of the impact of the admin- istration's decision onto the fac- ulty and particularly onto the stu- dents. The University chose to comply. WE HAVE CONCLUDED that the compilation of class ranks can be expected to lead to a further degeneration of the education process. Ranking constitutes an unwarranted and grossly inappro- priate intrusion into university au- tonomy, particularly the integrity of the classroom. We cannot in good conscience cooperate with this intrusion. Therefore, until this University ceases to be part of the Selective Service System, we shall: 1) Submit nothing to the regis- trar which could be converted into information used in compiling class ranks; 2) Notify students of their grades by informal means; 3) Report grades to the registrar at a time wyhen the University ceases ranking; 4) Make special arrangements for students applying for, employment and to graduate schools. We believe that this is a very serious step, taken to free our stu- dents and ourselves from tasks and severe pressures irrelevant to and inimical to education and intellec- tual experimentation. WE SEE this step as a part of the academic freedom which al- lows univiually to structture of d 4