Seventy-Fifth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS HELPING DISADVANTAGED: Tutorial Project--Fourth Year TODAY AND TOMORROW: Balance of Power: The Fed vs Johnson Where Opinions Are Free, 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. Truth Will Prevail NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily ex press the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1965 NIGHT EDITOR; BARBARA SEYFRIED Michigan Should Have Uiform Rights Laws JUDGE JAMES BREAKEY'S recent rul- THIS IS PROBABLY the first case in ing, that Ann Arbor's Fair Housing which municipal courts have been able Ordinance is constitutional and does not to make more stringent demands than conflict with state law, may create some made by the state courts. This situation basic inequities in the treatment of peo- cannot continue without creating dis- ple before the law. crimination within the civil rights laws The argument that each locale has a themselves. right. to demand more stringent laws, To weaken Ann Arbor's ordinance would while it sounds fair, is basically inapplic- able, for it conflicts with the concept of be to defeat the purpose of the ordinance equal justice for all. itself. The result would mean even more Applied to the situation here, the ar- inadequate means of eliminating dis- gument implies that people living in c towns outside of Ann Arbor, who don't The only way out of the problem creat- have their .own housing ordinance, are ed by the inequity between the Ann Arbor subject to state laws that are more len- ordinance and the state law is to bring ient than the Ann Arbor Fair Housing - them into line with each other. Ordinance. T)ie object of the Fair Housing Ordi- BUT IN ORDER for the laws to be effec- nance is to assure equal treatment in the tive, this must be done by strengthen- area of housing, yet this requirement is ing both the state laws and the Ann Arbor hardly justifiale if harshness of treat- ordinance. ment varies widely throughout the state. -BARBARA SEYFRIED EDITOR'S NOTE: Allan Levett is a PhD candidate in sociology. Robin Power is a senior in physics. Both are presently connected with the Ann Arbor Tutorial Project. By ALLAN LEVETT and ROBIN POWER THE TUTORIAL and Cultural Relations Project, an effort of University students to reach and work with disadvantaged children n Ann Arbor, is currently be- ginning its fourth year of opera- tions. About 40 children have asked for tutoring while school is out this summer. The main aim of the project is to bridge the gap between the Negro and white cultures through supplementary education on a one tutor to one child basis. EFFORT IS concentrated on Negro children who are poor and performing below their potential in school. In effect the project attempts to break into what Michael Har- rington has described as the vi- cious cycle-of poverty. Children from poor homes start off school at an intellectual dis- advantage and this disadvantage tends to increase as the child progresses through school, be- cause his home lacks books and other incentives to learning. This difficulty is compounded in the case of the Negro child. THE KINGPIN to the project's entire effort is the kind of re- lationship which the student-tutor is able to achieve with the child. The tutor has to get involved in the way the child looks at the world, to understand his level and his perspective. This takes a great deal of open- mindedness, tolerance, patience and persistance; and frequently also imagination and resource- fulness. The right kind of relationship opens up a two-way channel of communication that makes pos- sible learning and understanding for both child and tutor. THE PROJECT recognizes that the children need al kinds of encounters with a world with which they would otherwise be .unfamiliar. One child was thrilled to eat out at a restaurant with his tutor. It was the first time that he had used a saucer. But the work of the tutor is usually more complex than this. Many of the children have not only failed in their classrooms, but have an attitude toward life that expects failure for then- selves. They are adept at resisting the tutor's initial efforts to help them read and do math better. Some will show up late for the meeting, others forget to bring their work- books and then set about telling diversionary stories to a fascinat- ed tutor. THESE ARE just initial hurdles which the tutor has to overcome, if he does not himself become dis- couraged. The important ingre- dient to new learning and a new attitude toward learning for most of the children is quick early success. The tutor has to strike the ap- propriate level for his child-not so easy that it insults, and not so hard that failure is confirmed. The project places special em- phasis on mastery of language, particularly written language. THE ABILITY to read easily is an essential ingredient to continu- ed independent learning on the part of the child. It opens up avenues to such things as the richness in his Ne- gro culture in which he may take pride, but also to greater political awareness and a wider variety of job opportunity. It is the key to progress through the educational system. BOOKS ARE NOT something the children are used to in their homes. "A Close Examination Of Actual Photos Of Our Press Releases Indicates That The B-52 Bombing Raid Was A Great Success" >- M ') % ---- ptv - - By WALTER LIPPMANN H AVING very great respect for William McChesney Martin, the chairman of the Federal Re- serve Board, I have been reading and rereading his celebrated speech of June 1. The reader will remember that it was called "Dloes Monetary His- tory Repeat Itself?", and the bur- den of it was that as our prosper- ity proceeds on its record-break- ing path we must look for the warning signs of another great depression. MARTIN AND some of the gov- ernors of the Federal Reserve Board on the one hand, the Pres- ident, his Council of Economic Advisers, his secretary of the treasury and his director of the budget on the other have a very different reading of the economic condition of the country and pre- sumably, therefore, are offering different views of what action should be taken. rate. Martin, moreover, seemed to be saying that the defense of the dollar and the continuation of economic expansion may be in- compatible with one another. THE CRUCIAL QUESTION rais- ed by his remarks is whether we are on the verge of having two conflicting policies-that of the administration, which is to en- courage the continued expansion of demand, and that of the Fed- eral Reserve Board, which is to hold back the expansion. Whatever one's opinions of the two policies, no one can suppose that anything but confusion and a loss of confidence could come from trying both of them at once. This brings us to the fundamen- tal problem which has been re-- vealed by the conflict between Martin and the administration. IN CONFORMITY with the tra- ditional role of central banks, which was written into law in the Banking Act of 1935, the Federal Reserve System, though its governors are appointed by the President, is an independent in- stitution and not just one of the many departments and agencies under the President's command. It is a public but not a govern- mental institution. Thus, Martin is not, like Secre- tary Fowler, a member of the Johnson administration. THE INDEPENDENCE of the Federal Reserve Board derives from the time when the manage- ment of money and credit was the function of the bankers alone. At the end of the second world war Congress passed the Employ- ment Act of 1946 which gives the President a mandate to use his power to keep unemployment low, to keep prices reasonably steady and to promote an adequate rate of economic growth. THIS HAS LEFT US with two separate sets of officials, both of them responsible for the manage- ment of the economy. There is the Federal Reserve Board with its power over the supply of credit and the structure of interest rates. There is the administration with its power to spend and tax, to finance the debt and to give grants in aid. THE TWO SETS of powers have to be exercised harmoniously, and the problem raised by Martin's speech is how to insure harmony in action without producing a con- formity that prevents critical de- bate in the formation of policy. It is hard to see how this can be written into law, and almost certainly what we must fall back upon is an understanding that in high financial policy, the Federal Reserve Board can advise and can warn, but it must not act at cross purposes with the administration. Thus, Martin, for example, would remain free to say that credit should be restricted and interest rates increased, but the Federal Reserve Board should not carry out such a policy if it is contrary to that of the President. THIS IS, to be sure, untidy. But it is the kind of untidy arrange- ment by which so often old in- stitutions are adapted to changing conditions. (c) 1965. The Washington Post Co. a M I Furthermore published books available in libraries are often not appropriate to children who are educationally retarded. A child of ten years with men- tality and interests appropriate to his age, yet with the reading skills of an eight-year old, gets little satisfaction from books for the younger age level. ONE resourceful tutor found out the validity of these observations for her particular child. Over many weeks they worked with word cards, writing down words on cards from the child's own vocab- ulary 'and gradually extending it. (Often the child knows many more words than he can spell or even recognize.) Then recently the child, a twelve-year-old girl, produced this poem: THE GOOSE AND THE WINE Once upon a time A goose drank wine on the streetcar line. And he began to rhyme, And stomp his foot in time: "As I was leaving home, I sang a little poem, As I began to roam. "I said to myself 'I won't forget To bring along my cigarette. I bet you a dime that I won't drink wine, I will be there on time to get a shoeshine'." He was on his way home on the bus, And the bus driver said, "We don't want you- with us, SO GET OFF THIS BUS!" When he got off the bus, the driver said: "Next time you get on, you will be knocked on the head." When the goose got home, his wife stood in the door And said "What did you use your money for?" When night came his wife said this: "Don't expect to get a kiss! I don't want you anymore, You can sleep on the floor." The floor was hard on the goose's head. He wanted to go back to his bed. He was sorry that he had drunk the wine Instead of getting a shoeshine. THE PROJECT will be entering its fourth yearof full-scale opera- tion in the fall semester. Many of the staff members, up The Cities : Busing Is Not The Answer De Facto Segregation': A Cry of Despair "DE FACTO SCHOOL segregation" - meaning segregation in fact-unhap- pily has become a tool of political dem- agoguery in the Northern cities. The Civil Rights Commission, acutely aware of the pressure in Northern cities, hopes to hold meetings in the more strategic urban areas and produce both facts and educational awareness of what is a des- perate need. The commission, through its chairman, the able Erwin N. Griswold, dean of the Harvard Law School, has stated the need to focus attention on some of the prob- lems of the Northern states and cities. This is a wise and necessary decision. Schools, unfortunately, become the most immediate focus because they are the more visible and available. But is is apparent to any who choose to look ser- iously, and with a will to understand, that the cry of de facto segregation is one largely of despair. MORE THAN" TEN YEARS have passed sincethe school case decision was handed down in May of 1954. Since that time a really great amount of progress has been done. Indeed, the overall story is one of prog- ress. It is marred-and obscured-bythe evil and the violence of Selma, Ala., and that of a year before at Birmingham-- or by the murders at Philadelphia, Miss., and other instances of murder and as-- sault. These cities, and the men within them who produced the violent passions that led to the murders and the beatings, helped bring about legal reform and legislation necessary to making this na- tion truly "one nation under God, with patterns in the older areas of cities have not really changed-they have simply expanded. A high rise apartment devel- opment in a slum area, for example, will house two or three thousand persons at a site where the demolished dwellings had housed perhaps a hundred or so. Such a process is accelerated by the steady increase in population. There is not much housing choice in the central areas of the cities. It is either detriorating housing, slum housing, or new luxury apartments. The problem be- comes desperate. USE OF BUSES to remedy "de facto school segregation" has, not unex- pectedly, fallen into the hands of politi- cians who see a political advantage in exploiting the desperate wish of the peo- ple involved for something to be done. This is unfortunate, since the business of schools is'not sociological reform, but teaching. That schools have taught so well they have produced thousands of persons who recognize and cope with need for social change' is a tribute to the schools. De facto segregation cannot be changed by the bussing of pupils to produce, for a few hours a day, a sort of token correc- tion of the imbalance that exists. Bussing makes sense--and can be corrective-only in those areas where children are bussed -from bad overcrowded schools to those with unused classroom space. MERELY TO BUS for a temporary cor- rection is a waste of energy, time and money, and diverts attention from the le- viathan itself. The location of the many new schools to this time volunteers and stu- dents, have acted as tutors during most of that time. Charles R. Sleet, the main in- stigator and director of the proj- ect, has been tutoring for three years. Rudy Kalafus, an engineer- ing grad student, and Barbara Wilson, a psych major, each tu- tored two years. These three are the main pillars of the project. AS THE PROJECT has devel- oped it has constantly sought ways to assist the tutor-child re- lationship. Members of the faculty in the education and psychology depart- ments have acted as consultants. The University has made avail- able a project office in the Stu- dent Activities Building, and last year provided some administrative assistance. IN THE 1964-65 school year the project experimented with super- visors/consultants. These were mostly graduate students in psy- chology, social work, education and sociology and were each as- signed to about five tutors. The results were promising and the project plans to develop this role. For example, a course for super- visors may be offered by the psy- chology and education depart- ments, a course for supervisors may be offered by the psychology and education departments, which project supervisors may attend. THE MAIN JOB of the super- visor is to assist tutors wherever possible and to help keep tutors more closely in touch with re- sources of the project. Last year there were 140 tutors and 20 su- pervisors. For the forthcoming year the project plans to provide 150 tutors with 30 supervisors, a librarian, a full-time secretary, reading and math consultants and other re- source people. Charles R. Sleet will be full-time director. ONE recurring question that is always asked, and most intently within the project itself, is: What is being accomplished? Reassurance by parents, teach- ers and the genuine response of the children have beenencourag- ing over the years. The project is also undoubtedly popular among students, judging by the steady stream of volunteers coming for- ward. But many questions remain that can only be answered by thorough-going research. PROFESSORS Morton H. Shae- vitz and Harold L. Raush of the psychology department are cur- rently planning such research, which may get underway in the 1965-66 school year. The Tutorial and Cultural Re- lations Project is clearly meeting needs in the community and it has grown into a relatively com- plex organization. Apart from the purpose and dedication of its staff people, the great strength of the project lies in the willingness of students to volunteer, to use their initiative and to get involved. Herein are spontaneity and flexibility that seems to surmount discourage- ment and despair, and brings new hope to the lives of disadvantaged children and their families. For students too, the project provides n. nnrnt on a nrlrl tha+h i, nt 1~ a I' I' "Onward!"1 ADMINISTRATION ECONOMISTS have predicted each year's gross national product for the last five years-and with great accuracy (see above). They have aided this growth with programs of deficit spending. But Federal Reserve Chairman William Mc- Chesney Martin contends that they are not safeguarding the dollar enough in their plans for economic expansion. 'GOLD RUSH': Chalin-Still Unique, Touchig Memorable At the Cinema Guild CHARLIE CHAPLIN once said that "Gold Rush" is '"the picture I want to be remembered by." Go to Cinema Guild and see why. It has some of the most touching scenes ever filmed, plus the inimitable, sometimes hysterical Chaplin comic touch. It's always a little dangerous to try and say what a movie means, but outwardly "Gold Rush" is a satire on the tall tales of quick-found gold in Alaska. It is also a statement of frustrated hope, the danger of greed, and the suffering of those who are sentimental, weak, and kind. "Gold Rush" was 14 months in production before it premiered in New York on AugustX16, 1925. One estimated cost of production was put at $700,000. Chaplin personally made around $2 million on this movie, one of the big money-makers of the twenties. ONE WAY OF looking at Chaplin's character in this film is to see him a a bisnhemirit. fta heni lsrhinz for heautv ndlove in the 4'