I Seventy-seven years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily exp ress the individual opinions of staff writers or the editofs. This must be noted in all reprints. TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: LUCY KENNEDY l r.. _ ._.,,._ _ a Academic demoeraey: An elitist fraud DEMOCRACY IS a hard concept for the University's faculty and ad- ministration to accept when it directly challenges their elitist attitudes toward the decision-making process of this ed- ucational institution. The much-feared advent of student power means nothing more than legi- timate and democratically elected stu- dent representation on all levels of University administration. This would include membership in a number of heretofore exclusive cliques - depart- mental curriculum committees, faculty tenure committees, and college admin- istrative boards. Also essential would be the estab- lishment of a tripartite judiciary for the enforcement of all University regu- lations affecting all segments of the community and a grade review com- mittee where students would lodge le- gitimate complaints against arbitrary professorial actions in grading stu- dents. For students are equal members of the University community who are deeply concerned about the future and direction of this educational institu- tion. Student power should not be in- terpreted as the destruction of this University, but hopefully means its eventual improvement. MOREOVER, STUDENTS are concern- ed about the profound effect their educational experience will have on their lives. The failure of faculty and administrators to make higher educa- tion more relevant to student lives in a society experiencing revolutionary changes offers ample evidence that student perspectives and institutional- ized power are necessary in the plan- ning of all University policy. Higher education cannot now and never could be most meaningful when it is paternalistically granted at the professor's will to the supposedly in- ferior and naive student. Relevant and interesting curricula are more easily developed with a variety of reactions as readily available inputs. Faculty and student views on aca- demic issues are not necessarily at odds. If they are, a program should be devised so that all segments of the community are accommodated. With equal student representation, compro- mise would have to be reached. Faculty and the former faculty members, the administrators, have no monopoly on wisdom. Their knowledge is limited to their experiences, which for many have been narrowed to cities like Ann Arbor, which are far removed from -turbulent and challenging urban America. The professor who thinks he has nothing to learn from his students is a pathetically ignorant man. The objectives of the movement for equal student representation is to give the disenfranchised student the power which liberal democratic thought, so freely espoused around campus, dic- tates he deserves. Channels for influ- encing decisions which affect the com- munity of which he is an integral part must be legitimized or the only re- course the concerned student has is through illegal channels. Student power should not be inter- preted as a move by anarchists to des- troy the existing University structure. Student power only affords the student protection from and influence on the often ill-advised and arbitrary deci- sions of the current ruling elite. INVERSELY, OF COURSE, students have no monopoly on wisdom. And faculty power affords the faculty need- ed protection from the equally often ill-advised actions of students. The University decision-making process must be a democratic process with all the University's interest groups appropriately represented. An institu- tion whose stated purpose is the incul- cation of liberal values in its students hypocritically is run by an intellectual elite who have little faith in the con- structive spontaneity of the student community. The faculty readily supported stu- dent demands when they were aimed at administrators who exercised powers which rightfully belonged to student government. And they are still willing to allow select students (such as the literary college steering committee) who are not representative and do not rock the boat too often to offer com- ments. But constructive suggestions for the sharing of their power with elected stu- dent representatives who legitimately represent the majority student view- point are rejected with violent, irra- tional responses. IT IS ALMOST as if the faculty is afraid to question the -sacred cow which is the status quo at this educa- tional institution. One would think that the sophisticated professors who are supposedly articulate would have confidence in their ability to persuade student representatives of the right- eousness of their cause. Indeed faculty criticism of the stu- dent as a responsible representative is partially valid. The student's interest in the University is transient. Four years is not a lifetime of devotion to the University, but it is a significant commitment. Moreover, most professors are not permanent members of this commun- ity, as evidenced by the annual exodus of both tenured and untenured profess- ors. At times professors appear to be only clinging to the University, waiting for offers of higher salaries or increas- ed status. The accusation is also lodged that student representatives are only repre- sentative of those activist elements on campus which constitute a small min- ority of the student population. They claim most of the student body is not politicized in terms of campus affairs and cares little about the direction of the University. However, when student representa- tion becomes relevant to their lives, the well-educated student constituency on this campus suddenly becomes alive with ferment. The current system of impotent student government only en- courages apathy among the unaroused segments of the student body and il- legal, disruptive action from those ele- ments who vigilantly watch the Uni- versity's decision-making process in frustration. IT IS IRONIC that democracy is squelched at an institution where democratic ideals are so freely espous- ed, because a faculty is so frightened and insecure that it must put its trust in elitist decision-making. -MARK LEVIN Editor Academia met the world head on at Columbia U- RBAN LEHNER A yearo6 'HERE IS something eerie and almost frightening about writ- ing a column in mid-July which won't be read until late August. Part of this sensation is rooted in the normal vicissitudes of the world over time. In any given year, things have always changed between July and September. But the greater part of it is in- timately associated with the weird and distinctly special momentum which this year, 1968, has estab- lished. The list of surprises which the past few months has provided has sent the editorial writers scurrying to their thesauri for ad- jectives. The sickening sound of bursting bombs has been muffled, justifiably or no, by talk of peace -informal and diplomatic. Two public figures, both of heroic sta- ture, have been assassinated. Politically, the only surely pre- dictable element has been a per- versely cantankerous unpredict- ability. As of this writing, Lyndon has been conquered, but a new Goliath has arisen to be slain. Rocky has played insy-outsy more times than anyone wishes to re- member. In fact, the motley and quixotic band of crusaders who have gath- ered around the banner of Eugene McCarthy have adopted this year's penchant for the unfore- seen as a sort of semi-convoluted reason for existence. James Wechsler, ardent sup- porter of both McCarthy and the Mets - who also edits the editor- ial page of the New York Post - has written any number of pieces along the logical lines of: "Yes, of course his chances seem slim; but, look how well he did in New Hampshire and Wisconsin and Oregon, and everyoneadoubted he could win then; and, after all, it's one of those years where any- thing can happen." Indeed, some of the surprises have been pleasant. But on the whole, it has been thus far a year of pervading pessimism. It is a pessimism intensified by a paradox, something akin to the dismal clarity horror New Deal liberals must have experienced when they re- alized that President Johnson- who seemed in 1964 the ideal, strong, socially conscious leader -had become a monster. For this is the year when American society on every level has strained to seem liberal and righteous and responsive. Yet this very attempt to reach out to the limits has only the more conclusively demonstrated how narrow those limits are. It is terrifying to speculate that history will remember 1968 as the year of "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," when Americans prided themselves on their tolerance in applauding miscegenation, How noble and open-minded we have finally become, to cheer on the improbable alliance of an impec- cably-credentialed and genteel Negro neurosurgeon with a giddy daughter of a crusading liberal newspaper publisher. Not that we couldn't empathize with the white father, mind you. His traumas were very real to us. But, with him, our newly-con- ceived social sensitivity got the better of our pragmatic fretting, and we came to realize that love- whatever the races of the lovers, wherever they attended medical school - must finally conquer. This new concern for matters racial extended beyond the movie theatre and into the meeting rooms of the boards of directors. The columns of the Wall Street Journal have blared forth the message: businessmen are hiring and training the jobless at a diz- zying rate, often at financial ex- pense to their firms. Their efforts are impossible to criticize, because these benefac- tors are utterly sincere. Whatis pathetic is not the job they are doing, but the job that they and everyone else is leaving undone. They have made a start, they have ignited their candle, yes; but the light is hardly visible against the still profoundly black back- drop of the night. Perhaps the most patently cruel hoax being perpetrated in the name of the new responsive- ness is the facade of peace which Johnson has erected in Paris and which the national . media so far have been willing to hold up for him. The war mortality rate is soaring, the bombing is almost as devastat- ing as ever; but the war must not be criticized, lest criticism endanger the sham Paris talks. The most infuriating thing is the righteous gall which the ad- ministration has maintained through it all. When Hanoi slows down its efforts, this never constitutes sufficient re- ciprocation for our generous bombing halt. That we have halted the bombing practically not at all is never mentioned. And then, if all this wasn't bad enough, the system has sent forth Eugene McCarthy as a sopto the malcontents. McCarthy is a poli- tician of no radical pretensions, and it is unfair to criticize him froma radical perspective: But it is definitely fair to complain that - shorn of his poetry and his peculiar "intellectual" image- he seems to have few good ideas. His program for the cities -has been insulting to black leaders of every political hue. His peace pro- gram is hazy. Even his liberal credentials aren't entirely in or- der. It is bad enough that many of us will end up voting for him should he be nominated despite all this. The insult is his presump- tion, his self-appointed statustas spokesman for the disenchanted. Whether he is nominated or not, Eugene McCarthy will have epitomized a year of what have been essentially hollow gestures. And yet the alternatives farther to the left seem little more ap- pealing. One can work to organize on the grass-roots, wear Eldrige Cleaver lapel-buttons, and wait with the Panthers for the downfall of ma- terialism. Since the end seems nowhere in sight, it could be a long wait. One can join the spirit of Che on the baricades, but even if one doesn't care about the toll in other human lives this implies, there is always the danger that body as well as soul will go the way of Che. One can hook on to the scene at the Haight or Drop City, but that does little to further the cause of social justice and is prob- ably personally unfulfilling to boot. WALTER SHAP IRO .Return EVNto learning EVEN AS SUMMER WANES, the academic world is still reeling from the explosion which rocked New York's slowly decaying, but still prestigious, Columbia University last May. Despite the nationwide furor it provoked, the Columbia uprising focused on only one aspect of student objections to the modern cor- porate university-the insensitive and often highly corrupting rela- tionship between academia and the 'outside world. At Columbia the major issue was the local question of the rich white university's calculating moral reticence about the problems of the black ghetto which surrounds it. But almost as important was the far more generalized campus issue--which flared here as well during the ill-fated battle over clas- sified research-of the modern university's active participation in this nation's war machine. CONSEQUENTLY THOSE defenders of the actions of the Columbia students who stress the absence of any equitable decision-making structure easily obscure the moral vision-implicit and unstated as it may have been-which underlay the student demands. While Columbia was exploding, the generally placid and often stultifying air of Ann Arbor in the summer was somewhat disturbed by a different kind of student controversy. This one was over interim rules and the creation of an Office of Student Services. All this represented the continuing-and for the students largely victorious-battle over the University's self-appointed role as surro- gate parent and custodian of student conduct. While the specific issues involved here-a muted sit-in ban and the rudiments of a speaker ban-could be highly irksome, in many ways they represent the retrogressive battles of the late fifties and mid-sixties which unfortunately seem to have to be fought again and again. Over the past two years students have scored some notable vis- tories in destroying almost the entire edifice of in loco parentis and thereby ending women's hours and administration control over dorm visitation hours. BUT WHAT STUDENTS too rarely note is the small importance that these paternalistic remnants have to the continued struc- tural operation of the University. The battles over the University's institutional behavior are morally and politically important. And the administration's tight control over student conduct was personally very relevant. But the issues involved in both these struggles only tangentially affect what should be the prime function of the modern university-education. For here more, than anywhere else in the University the need for vast and funda- mental changes and a decisive student role is essential. Admittedly over the past several years on paper there has been growing student participation in the educational process through stu- dent advisory committees in many schools, colleges, and literary col- lege departments. The problem is that these groups operate at the behest of the school or department they are advising. Consequently these commit- tees of the timid have eschewed militance in favor of working with the existing structure for a few paltry reforms-a credit hour changed here, a course added there, and a requirement dropped somewhere else. THE PROBLEM IS that while the student generally has a high de- gree of freedom in choosing his academic program, he has almost no feeling of meaningful participation in the educational process. With the primacy of the mass lecture course, the student is iso- lated from his often unapproachable professors and, equally Import- ant, from most of his fellow students as well. When confronted with these accusations, many administrators will agree, shrug their shoulders helplessly and point to the niggard- liness of Lansing as the University nears its lset gap in the battle to retain the semblance of quality education. RUT, A LARGER SHARE of the blame belongs right here in Ann Arbor-misplaced priorities in the University budget, an empha- sis on physical rather than educational improvement, and the stulti- fying bureaucratic glorification of the status quo that afflicts too many senior, and junior, faculty members. Consequently, students this year must be prepared to demand and fight for significant participation in academic decision making. In concrete terms this means proportional student representation on all faculty committees-such as curriculum, tenure, and the ad- ministrative boards. It means a University-wide reassessment of all the faculty created principles of modern university education such as the reward and punishment aspects of grading, the exlsting relationship between teaching and research, and alternatives to the lecture method of teaching. BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE, the administration must recognize that students have too deep a concern in the future of this institution and their own educations to continue to permit the University-like a badly aging film star-to cling greedily to its decaying gran- deur while all educational values continue to ebb away. M- Fleming speaks to new students di Letters to the Editor A Fall and winter subscription rate $5.00 per term by carrier ($5.50 by mail); $9.00 for regular academic school yea: ($10 by mail). The Daily is a member of the Associated Press and Collegiate Press Service. Daily zxcept Monday during regular academic school year. Daily except Sunday and Monday during regular summer session. Suitein r Editorial Staff URBAN LEHNER ... ... .....................Co-Editor DANIEL OKRENT ........................ Co-Editor r,TTCY KENNEDY Summe' r Su ,'nlement Ed. iltor Editorial Staff MARK LEVIN, Editor To the Editor: Student Government Council wanted, this summer, to send each member of the entering freshman class an individual letter stressing the events of the summer which we feel will hamper, to say the least, your days in Ann Arbor un- less you are prepared to act upon them in the fall. The points I would like to make are addressed to all incoming stu- dents. Some may be disappointed to see that what I have to say isn't subversive - impressions of the administration to the con- trary. Due to administrative refusal to give us student home addresses, this letter was the only means we saw to warn you of the following: (1) The administration and fac- ulty enacted in July "interim" rules asserting the rights of the colleges to adjucate involving non- academic conduct of students, and ministrative discouragement to the contrary, although it is only fair to warn you that driving and parking in Ann Arbor is difficult. I would encourage students to observe the situation first-hand before making a decision about whether to bring a car to school. No one should get in the habit of letting the administration make up his mind for him. Students should also press the University to provide more parking facilities for students. (3) The rental situation in Ann Arbor remains grievously unfair to students. Join with us in selective boycotts and something may be done about it. The brunt of our boycott has centered around Apartments, Ltd. -the largest management agency in town, the agency with the most tenant complaints recorded at our Student Housing Association, and one of the landlords who re- fused to even consider the new official University eight - month The most any of these of fer is a moral uplift for dividual who chooses to them. options the in- follow STEPHEN WILDSTROM Managing Editor URBAN LEHNER Editorial Director DAVID KNOKE, Executive Editor WALLACE IMMEN ........ . .... . ... News Editor PAT O'DONOHUE .. . . . . .... . ...........News Editor DANIEL OKRENT .... .............. Feature Editor LUCY KENNEDY ...................Personnel Director CAROLYN MIEGEL ...... Associate Editorial Director WALTER SHAPIRO ...... Associate Editorial Director NEAL BRUSS ........................ Magazine Editor ANDY SACKS...................... . ....Photo Editor %1~~~ffcTrtyr,1'TV,n r ~T . h r'71AfI Yet compared with the bleak prospects for success within the system which 1968 has so pain- fully clarified, even this selfish purity is at times tempting. The National Review (which seems to be William F. Buckley, Jr.'s, attempt to work out his frustrations at never having been elected Pope) has a favorite para- phrased slogan which it marshalls occasionally to scold Nelson Rocke- feller or the Wall Street Journal: "The only thing wrong with capi- By ROBBEN W. FLEMING University President I am pleased to accept the in- vitation of The Daily to greet the students, both new and old, who will arrive in Ann Arbor for the Fall term. This is a big campus, and there is much talk these days about the impersonality of big campuses. It has been my observation that size and impersonality are not neces- sarily related. A sense of belong- ing comes from finding a congen- ial interest group, not from strug- gling to know everybody. And since the interest groups on this campus are almost limitless, the student who will make a little ef- fort to get involved need never feel alone. Loneliness and isola- tion can often be self-imposed, rather than the product of dis- interest on the part of others. your studies, your interest groups, and your social life. Since the student world is a special kind of world, and in many ways an isolated one, it is easy to forget how indebted students are to the rest of society for the ex- istence, maintenance of and be- lief in an institution of higher learning. For most undlergradu- ates, it is the parents who are, often at considerable sacrifice to themselves, making it possible for the student to attend. Likewise, no student ever really pays.to the University the cost of his educa- tion. How close he comes depends on many factors, e.g., whether he is an in or out-state student, whe- ther he is a graduate or an under- graduate, etc., but in no case does the student actually pay the cost of his education. On the average, the student pays about 28 per enPnt_ while ~ the t t.through tax