j Ai dgau at j Seventieth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSMTY OF MICHIGAN Ten Opinions Are Free UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTRO. OFS TUDENT PUBLICATIONS Truth WW e'" STUDENT PUBUCATxoNS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH." Phone No 2-3241 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. . Y, SEPTEMBER 16, 1960 NIGHT EDITOR: PHILIP SHERMAN New Student Action In a World of Crisis H E HISTORICAL Great Confrontation of the student and the educational process recurs for the 123rd time on the University sq thl week and many of the same old pIps and characters are employed-the books, iarriculum, faculty and adininistration. As isu.il the newest being on the scene is the frenian, whose business it is to nervously begin the Confrontation, to examine, evaluate and eventually nake coherent sense of his new Bawlonment.- - xrdlnarily the Confrontation concept is one the. truly dullest, most tr.ite of :subjects. Discussion of it is relegated to wild-eyed Daily eits; Or old professors at the University. club, the average student never bothering with 3 # i, heis moved to>read long editorial r. ar commencement addresses. Historically, siich editorials and speeches have described the e ucatOna1 process as the confrontation of the $ti@ent with Ideas, a fierce individual struggle within the removed, "vory tower" community of aradem la. This educational notion Implies I.n fact that universities, in training the stu- Snjor the realities of his society, have largely detadhed him. from those realities. Usually more emphasis has been placed on development of "awareness" than on actual student action and many students complete ,!+ir education without real or sufficient train- ing In the practical ,onduct of public affairs 1W a democracy. True, college administrators sometimes follow up the John Dewey "learn 1yy d6ig" conceptby trying to involve students in "act on" through extracurricular activities, But such 'activities have provided the student With only token powers in most instances. P THE PAST YEAR, however, the classical Idea of the Confrontation has been read- justed significantly by the student himself, as strated by a recently-adopted basic policy edlaration of the United States National Stu- 4ent Association regarding "The Student and thI Total Community." While 'the student's primary obligation is to is academic program according to the USNSA 4dela ation,,his interes.ts and activities should s661 -roadened to incorporate the "total oommunty'"-the community not only of the aiPU; but oif the City, state, nation and 'Orld. -Within this new dimension, essentially S ..e of political and. social action, the student' A viewed as a viable force within and with-. out his campus community, and is charged with the corollary tasks of intellectual aware- ;ess and practical action. He should seek to clariy the, purposes of his university, then act t iove his university ii the direction of those purposes. With similar dedication to awareness 'di action, the student should approach other 1nstitutions beyond the campus-those within tohe'tal' community. This orientation should' be 4ccompaned all the while by emphasis on e student's academic wor-. iCIT:AN 'epansin' of the student's role is not simply theoretical; it has been evi- ,,nced thi ,year by significant .student partici- patierr in civic affairs all over the world. In Tarkey students vehemently demonstrated in protest when they felt their rights, had been aridged , Their demonstrations were followed by the army's seizure of the government and the xstituting of free elections to determine the country's leadership. In Korea students *Vblted against mock elections and suppres- aIon of rights by peacefully assembling in vio- Iationof the law. Eventually the government of Sng mar Rhee was eliminated. In Japan stu- dents were so violent in their protest that a vt of the American President was cancelled and the Kishiregime demolished. - .. Aid in America, the student spoke out and often' acted with similar -vigor. The most dra- r tic aspect of the 1960 American stdent movement; surely, is the Southern "sit-in" pro.- s which already has resulted in the integra- tion of lunch counters in 77 cities and the ~izhitratiori of America's need to solve its tinuing racial problem. Students this year 1ve 'critized other institutions also through ass action, mostly notably in demonstrations against the House Un-American Activities C,.mmIttee. In addition, numerous marches have demonstrated an urgent student desire k&r disarmament. Even on less dramatic, but -equally'effective; levels the American students have struck out,,e.g., in the widespread criti- Editorial Staff THOMAS HAYDEN, Editor NAN MARKEL JEAN SPENCER City Editor Editorial Director JUDITH DONER ......... Personnel Director THOMAS KABAKER .......,.... Magazine Editor THOMAS WITECKI .............. Sports Editor KENNETHMcELDOWNEY ,.... Associate City Editor cism of the loyalty oath and disclaimer afil- davit provisions of the National Defense Edu- cation Act, or in the national student campaign against compulsory ROTC. SUCH WORLDWIDE student participation, taking all forms from sitting-in to peaceful lobbying to mob violence, has been conditioned by the critical world context within which stu- dents live. It is a world apparently without leaders, a world of vast confusion, changing cultures, strained by the nearness of total war, and it has been in such shape throughout the life of almost every student. This is the environment the current freshman class in- herits-a confused, irritated world in which the classical educational process has taken on a vigorous new emphasis because the student himself has taken on a new, more active, re- bellious, militant orientation. The active stu- dent will undoubtedly grope as he moves along his educational path through a myriad of surrounding tensions, within a world society shrinking spatially and temporally but expand- ing mightily in its capacities for complete de- struction, wherein numerous, sometimes-con- flicting ideologies are compressed, wherein races and cultures interpenetrate with disturbing re- sult, wherein the sphere of knowledge grows more rapidly than ever before and extends itself beyond any human grasp. All this is understandably awesome to the freshman, as indeed it is to many other uni- versity students. And to expand its awesome- ness, the indvidual entering the university is already torn by the multiplicity of possibilities and obligations besides those to his total com- munity. He is faced with the problems of dis- covering an academic major, a living unit, a circle of associates, an extracurricular activity or two. Further, he must reconcile the demands of his overlapping roles as son or daughter of far-off parents, seeker of the post-college voca- tion, intellectual' in pursuit of truth, citizen in a local and world community. CAUGHT AMIDST such complexities many students are never able to make their edu- cation and environment personally meaningful rd coherent and, in the process, a few flunk out. Many others simply become avodists who take "gut" courses, turning away from the more challenging or tortuous possibilities of the Uni- versity curriculum. Still others "play it cool," confining and systerpatizing their horizons in order to avoid direct attacks on their long- held values and attitudes. Despite such temptation and complexity, the initial and fundamental issues before the stu- dent today are quite clear: is he capable of rationally thinking through his position? Is he responsible? Does he care for others passion- ately enough to think and act in their inter- ests? Can he actually bring about change in soial order, or is he politically impotent? I YFEELING is that these questions may be answered affirmatively. The mature student is no less capable of directing his af- fairs than other citizens. He can think through his position, perhaps more capably than most members of the older generation. He can have considerable impact and even bring about social change; witness, for example, the sit-ins and movements in other countries this year. Such actions at least indicate thatthe student is waking up Ito his environment and taking sym- pathetic interest in his fellows. Hence, the freshman should not consider college a relaxation, or a playground. Nor should he consider it a monastic retreat from which he will "someday" go forth messiani- cally. Instead, he should take up his obliga- tions to the democratic order while in college; if he fails to gain a sense of self-determination and responsibility to the human- community when young, chances are he will fail to develop such qualities. in later life and thus will take his place among those blank, uninformed beings in the "adult" community supposedly responsible for this nation's intellectual, moral and political leadership. It is hardly necessary to add that the stu- dent should choose his extracurricular activi- ties by their usefulness in fulfilling the intel-j lectual purposes of a free university and some- day, the 'social needs of the total community. In the words of the USNSA policy declaration, a student operating in this role is one both dedicated to truth and to preparing himself for leadership in a democratic society; he must be prepared to face the challenges of modern life and he must be willing to confront the crucial issues of public policy that affect him' beyond the classroom and that determine the course of his society." There are those who would claim this is too large and idealistic a task; that it demands too much commitment, too much intellectual en- An Archive Of Valued Freedoms By NAN MARKEL City Editor STUDENT owners sold The Mich- igan-Daily News to the Uni- versity Senate in the spring of 1903. A board at that time , took control of the publication, last in a chain of student newspapers be- gun with The Peninsular Phoenix and Gazeteer in 1857-58. Some faculty members hoped the Board in Control would exer- cise censorship of the news col- umns, states "The University of Michigan, An Encyclopedic Sur- vey." But the Board, led by Chair- man Prof. Fred N. Scott, "quickly made it clear that it had no in- tention of doing so, believing that a certain amount of responsibility was essential to the development of the student editors, and that the paper would lose favor with its student audience if it were known that the faculty were cen- soring it." * * * THIS POLICY brougnt the Daily. to its present independent status, where all staff members may set any well-reasoned opinions before the public on an editorial page captioned, "When opinions are free, truth will prevail." N( set editorial policy governs the editorial page ,or the news columns. This is unusual in col- lege papers. The Board added all student publications to its area of control in Nov. 24, 1908. The board in Control of Student Publications was headed by Prof. Scott for 24 years until his retirement in 1927, after "his tolerant and sympa- thetic guidinghand had started the board on its successful career and had helped many generations of student editors," the survey r& ports. SINCE 1919, the Board has con- sisted of four members selected from the faculty by the University President, two alumni, and three students elected by the student body. The Student Publications Bldg., which houses offices for the Mich- iganensian (yearbook) and Gen- eration (literary magaZine) and a large city room and $25,000 print- ing plant for the Daily, was com- pleted in 1932. The 132-foot Maynard St.prop- erty, (total cost $60,000) and the 125-foot by 50-foot building (cost $74,000) and the printing plant were financed entirely out of prof- its from student publications. The Daily is financially self- supporting. * * * THE FEW PROFESSORS, who In 1903 hoped for censorship con- trol of the paper. beause they were opposed to its former man- agement, have obviously made little headway. Yet, the Daily is hardly the im- age of one forerunner, The Chron- icle, set up in September, 1869, which "throughout its relatively long and successful life.. .main- tained a policy of frank and out- spoken antagonism to the faculty and the Board of Regents of the University." Somewhere between the poles of irresponsible independence and University control rests the Daily. The satisfactory balance which has been achieved may be chalked up to both the faculty and stu- dents. Continued responsible criti- cal questioning of the Daily from all sides will keep it there. How Ar e Wie Orienfec '0 (EiOR'rS NOTE: This i the first in p three-part series dcia- ins orientation as a Univety By JEAN SPENCER Editorial Director CONSIDERATION of the bien- nial student - administration tension period - orientation - is complicated because students and administrators conceive of the problem quite differently, Administrators envision the new student's ritualistic, semi-mystic initiation into e maze of the University as a feat of efficient manipulation performed on mial- leable hordes of humanity. Students construe the daling pragmatic functioning of adipln- istrative machinery as a wrench- ing social and intellectual rite of passage between "high school" and membership in the campus community as he knows 11, Since the ultimate experience of orientation is confusing to every- one who undergoes it, the ten- dency in discussing it is to mini- rnise or glide over differences in standpoint. * * * ALL THE CONCERN, all the confusion, all the scheduled intr- ductory procedure stems from the earnest mutual desire to make new students feel at'home in the University community. But this feeling of ease in ones environment is not easy to grasp and expose to the clear light of reason.r It is probable, in fact, that In- coming students have no idea by what means to fit themselves sat- isfactorily into the University milieu-and that administrators entertain the misconceptions of what will be good for the students which appear to be an occupa- tional hazard of administration. THE PHYSICAL PLANT of the University is maze enough to de- mand a certain period of formal initiation from any entering stu- dent. After this fact, orientation leaders and students alike fall in- to relieved agreement arni ac- quiescent lockstep. Touts of the campus are, after all, eafy to make and fun to use. So much for sheer physical oriem tation. Social orientation, such as it is, is recognized by all as desirable and necessary, but incurs more controversy. Obviously the stu- dent's need to know where he is socially is more open to interpre- tation than his need to know where he is physically. In such situations, a bare minimum of introduction to social patterns is the most feasible answer-give the new student a broad social grounding in which (or to which) he may react as an individual. Coke dates - an inexplicabl and uncompromising phenomenon which appears on the orientation prospectus-serve to Introduce the student to a concept, if nothing else. Mixers, it has 'been said, provide a broad social grounding comparable only to that of a par- ticipant in the flesh trade, or in dances after high school athletic events. The women's residence halls "big sister" program is uneven, but perhaps the most viable of the orientation instruments, Its valuable points are direct personal contact on a one-to-one level an informality, both of which are essential to achieving the feeling of ease in a new environment, * * * THE OVERALL problem in these two areas of orientation is not the number of questions which arise, on how the process Is fal- ing, on what could be done to improve It. The problem is a too- ready answer-"orientation to the wholly-new context of the Univer- sity is an individual problem that can't possibly be accomplished In a week." Thsstatement is obvious and none too helpful, in the face of two valid assumptions : First, some kind of orientation is vital to new students, and second, improve- ments in the process are neces- sary and possible. -Daily-Jtmes Warneka Artes - Scientia -"Veritas WALTER LIPPMANN: why We Owe Foreign Aid There may well be specific reasons, which we do not now know, for Mr. Khrushchev's deci- sion -to attend the General As- sembly in New York. But there is a broad reason which in itself would explain the decision. It is 'that outside of Western Europe and North America there has very recently and very suddenly been a dramatic expansion of Soviet influence. At the General As- sembly of the U. N. fifteen new African nations are about to be admitted, and by the end of this year there will probably be still more. In the main the Soviet Union has the inside track in dealing with these new nations. Moreover, it has broken into the Western Hemisphere. Inside the U. N. the influence of the Soviet Union, which for years was in a tiny minority, has increased greatly, and Mr. Khrushchev will be in New York to make the most of it. serious Assemb War which 43 per a base majori peansa ficient the An from than a IN as in tb a prep countr primiti disconi The g are ill fortune class of civil s Then ur own influence has declinedthe Soviet Union and even the ly. In the first General Chinese have the inside track. They do not stand for democracy, bly after the end of World which is impossible in most of II the. American nations, these countries, or for free and then voted together, had private enterprise, which is also cent of the votes. This was impossible. They stand for die- on which to build an easy, tatorships using technicians. The ty with the Western Euro-. handful of educated leaders in, and in itself was quite suf- the backward countries, and also to exercise a veto. Now, in countries not so backward, can mnerican states-even apart imagine themselves following the Cuba's defection-are less Soviet pattern. But they cannot quarter of the total- imagine themselves following the * * political pattern of Eisenhower THE GENERAL Assembly and Nixon and Kennedy and ;he world which it represents: Johnson, of General Motors and ponderant majority of the U. S. Steel. ies are very poor, have a All this poses for us the grave ive economy and are highly problem of how, despite the Soviet tented with their condition, initial advantage, the Western treat masses of the people powers can exert enough influence iterate and the country is to maintain their vital interests. ate if it has even a small Anyone, in my opinion, is a tool f educated menvand trained who thinks that there is. an ob- ervants. vious and easy solution to this rerisnoys.problem. What is certain is that re is no mystery as to why the solution, if there is one, will not be found by thrashing around wildly, looking for scapegoats, and trying to find someone in the foreign service to blame for the faet that Castro and Lumumba "Pray Keep Moving, Brother" 4',- exist. ' ,j _ a. ' ; ,:lr f ,# It IS CLEAR enough, I think, that on the whole and increasingly we shall have to deal through in- ternational institutions 'in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. Throughout these vast territories there is underway an historic revolution against poverty and against social and political in- feriority to the Western white man. We cannot act successfully when we act alone, because we are un- able to divest ourselves of the suspicion that we are the great counter-revolutionary power. Within international institutions, tht U, N., the 0. A. S., the World Bank and the like we can have a certain immunity, and can have influence because we have so much to contribute. The first item, then, in a solu- tion of the problem of our rela- tionship with the more or less revolutionary countries of Asia, Africa, and America, is to turn from unilateral action to action through the international insti- tutions. THE SECOND ITEM is, I believe to take the leadership of the highly developed countries in per- suading them to accept the prin- ciple that it is the duty of the haves to finance the have-nots in order that they may break the vicious circle of their backward- LETTERS to the EDITOR Singes 'Crust' . To the Editor: The Season is again with us- more people, more traffie and more noise-college is opening. For years the problem has been increasing and since Ann Arbor is a city without the influx of college students, I believe we as citizens and property owners have some rights which the city papers and The Daily could emphasize: we do have a right to come and go from our garages, our front and back doors. This means the drive- way approach and walks should be clear (by three feet, the law states). WE HAVE to maintain our