I1 Sew Sy-ThWr Ye NUNN EDIED AND Mm~mm BYSru1ENTs or' THE UiqE~rvI'usYOFMHA UNDER AUTHORiT OF BOARD IN CON MOL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS e Opinions Are PM STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARBoR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 uth Will Prevail" itorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al; reprints. TODAY AND TOMORROW: The Rhetoric of Economisers r. JANUARY 22, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: H. NEIL BERKSON R Announcement Creates Confusion FHE QUESTION in the minds of many political pundits in the past couple of eeks is: What gives with George Rom- ey? The governor surprised the world f politics by saying on Jan. 7 that he ould accept a draft for the Republican residential nomination. For the last several months Romney as been counted out of the picture due both his statements and his actions. ut now, on top of announcing his vailability, he has said that he will ac- apt nationwide speaking engagements try to get across his ideas on what the allosophy and practices of the Republi- an party should be. Many commentators have emphasized point once made by Richard Nixon- lat there is no such thing as a draft. A otential candidate does not sit idly by ithout a word of encouragement to iose seeking to draft him and then wind p as the party's nominee. A candidate annot get the kind of backing he needs win the nomination without working Unemploy ed? PA7Y TUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNCIL is not holding a meeting tonight. The fficial explanation is that. there is noth- ig to do. Members ,are supposed to be orking on motions but could not get lem ready for tonight. Of course the executive council could tll report on the state of current activi- .es. Members could' fill the Council °in n what they are doing so that next week hough research might have been done y everybody to ensure a high level of ebate and eliminate useless questions nd information. Most importantly, Council might have agaged in an informal discussion on ist where it should be going. Five min- be informal conferences and politicking 1 a corridor are no substitute for a dis- ussion of goals, especially since Council as settled the question of discrimina- on in membership selection of student :ganizations and is casting around for ew directions. But this might have en- iled thinking about Council by some iembers who have shown little inclina- on for this type of work. VOULDN'T IT BE AMAZING if the stu- dent body found that it could get long without a Council meeting this eek? If this turned out to be true, may- e the period could be extended to two eeks, three weeks, four weeks .... Is there a groundswell in the distance? '-R. WILTON for it. Thus, they conclude that Romney has as much as announced that he is running. PERHAPS these commentators and po- litical leaders are thinking too much in terms of typical politicians and too little in terms of Romney. For there is a supposed aspect of Romney's character which the above people often point out and which would lend a different light to recent events. This aspect of Romney's character is self-righteousness. It is said that Rom- ney considers himself to know what is the right thing to do in matters politic, no' if's, and's, or but's. His actions on tax re- form demonstrated this characteristic: he presented his tax package without consultation with either Republican or Democratic legislators and then told them it was the best package and that they must pass it. Perhaps this attitude could also ac- count for Romney's recent behavior. He is planning the, speaking tour because he knows what is best for the Republican party and the country, and he wants to tell it to the world. He said that he would accept a draft because he thinks that the party may really call on. him to serve. rTHE ACCURACY of this analysis should be known. shortly. If Romney does not begin to push his candidacy harder, but does file for re-election as governor, and nonetheless continues/to say he is avail- able, no other conclusion would be very likely. On the other hand, if Romney de- clines to run for re-election and begins to push harder for the presidential'nomina- tion it would be possible that he has merely been exercising prudent political strategy. Still a third possibility would material- ize if Romney were to put himself in the presidential sweepstakes and hedge his bet by filing for re-election. The trouble with this, however, is that Michigan elec- tion laws would virtually force another prominent Republican to put his name on the ballot. If Romney then did run for governor again, this man would be in the embarrassing position of running against Romney when he didn't even want to, and to do so without any party support. And by law he could not drop out of the race. SELF-RIGHTEOUS or prudent -we. should know by this fall which Rom- ney is. My bet is that Romneyism will have proven to have been a cult to at least one person. -EDWARD HERSTEIN BY WALTER LIPPMANN IN CUTTING BACK military spending on superfluous in- stallations, President Johnson is no doubt improving the prospects of his tax bill. But at the same time he has lifted the cover on. a contradiction in our public life. The contradiction is between what we do and what it is proper for public men to say out loud. For the fact is tliat government -federal, state and local-buys about a fifth of the goods and services produced by the American economy. To cut back this public spending substantially would pro- duce a strong reaction in employ- ment and in business. Thus, the two Republican senators from New York reacted at once when they heard that seven installations in New York state might be closed down or their operations reduced. ACTUALLY, the economies are a mere nibble at the immense costs of the defense establishment. The economy administered by the Pentagon is over two-thirds as large ar the whole economy of Great Britain. Our military supply system is now 17 times larger' than the largest private enterprise, namely the gigantic General Motors com- plex. In seven states, employment in defense industries is from 20 per cent (Arizona) to 30 per cent (Kansas) of total manufacturing employment. In fact, then, the United States economy is no longer a plain pri- vate enterprise system. Under the impact of the Second World War and of the armaments of the cold war, the American economy has become an organic mixture of pub- lic and private money, public and private management. Any serious teduction of public spending must, therefore, have far-reaching ef- fects on the whole economy. THERE ARE SOME who say they think that government and big spending can be reduced by cutting down civilian expenditures while leaving alone or even in- creasing military expenditures. This .is a device of politicians who are merely pandering to popular prejudices. There is only one way by which serious and substantial retrenchment can be made, and that is by a reduction of arma- ments. Desirable, but comparatively minor, savings can be had by re- ducing the amount of some of the civilian subsidies. But the amount will be much too small to make itself felt in the burdens of the taxpayer. , * * * THE IMMEDIATE military cut- backs we are hearing about are really concerned with waste. They will not reduce in any way the military power of the United States. They are directed only at useless expenditures, those which employ men and materials for no real military purpose. Although this kind of frugality will not affect the budget im- LETTERS to the EDITOR To the Editor: 1 FEAR yesterday's Daily head- line, "AAUP Group 'Deplores' Romney's Board Choices" is mis- leading if not false. What the Council of the State Conference of the American Association of Uni- versity Professors officially de- plored was that the appointments to state boards so far have not included active members of teach- ing faculties. The state AAUP has not asked that boards be packed with fac- ulty members. Instead, it has asked that the Governor name to each appointive board at least one per- son from the ranks of the teaching faculty of another Michigan col- lege or university. In the official statement, released by the State AAUP, Jan. 18, there is, as I in-' terpret it, no criticism whatsoever of the Governor's appointees themselves. -Prof. Ralph A. Loomis Vice-President Michigan Conference, AAUP portantly, it will have a salutary effect nevertheless. For it is de- moralizing to see public employees assigned to waste the public money. But beyond the tidying up of waste, including a certain amount of lush and conspicuous extrava- gance, there is visible on the horizon the prospect of much more substantial retrenchment. I do not myself regard it as likely that we are anywhere near a general disarmament treaty. The fundamental issues of principle are stubborn, and their reconcilia- tion is probably too embarrassing to all participants. But while what is under way is not a negotiated agreement, there are parallel trends toward the stabilization and then toward the seduction of military spending. THESE parallel trends are ac- tivated by a common realization, acknowledged in the test ban treaty, that neither side has any- thing to gain by spending hugely in pursuit of the will-o'-the-wisp of the absolute weapon. Once that point has been reached, there is a balance of power which, though relatively favorable to the United States, is tolerable to the Soviet Union and cannot be changed seriously by gigantic military ex- penditures. This is the origin of the present trend toward stabiliza- tion in both countries. At the same time, the Soviet Union has found that the burden of the existing armaments inter- feres with the vital needs of the people. It has been impossible to carry out the program for the modernization of Soviet argicul- ture by chemical means without cutting down the military budget. We can be reasonably certain that the Soviet, arguments for a reduction of armaments are sin- cere. They spring from necessity. THE UNITED STATES is under no comparable pressure, and it can be argued that we could ex- ploit the Soviet predicament by accelerating rather than reduc- ing the race of armaments. This is a conceivable line of policy, which can be held in reserve, if the Soviet government took a pro- vocative line, say in Latin Amer- ica. But if it follows the present line, which appears to be one of gradual disengagement, the American people will, quite rightly, allow themselves to become conscious of the real burdens of our defense establishment. We are paying for our necessary and invaluable mili- tary power by a failure to provide the facilities of civilian living to keep pace with our needs. * * * CUTBACKS in defense expendi- tures would cause less difficulty to the economy and encounter less political resistance if the economy were running at a good pace in- stead of sluggishly. When five and one-half per cent of the labor force is unemployed, and the na- tional product is $35 or $40 billion less than it could be, the prospects of subtracting any part of the demand for goods and services is disconcerting. It is not too soon, therefore, to begin thinking about what we would do with the resources re- leased by a cut in defense expen- ditures. We must prepare ourselves not only for the minor readjust- ments to the first cutbacks, but also for the larger readjustments which, will become necessary if and when we enter upon an ac- tual reduction of armaments.) (c), 1964, The Washington Post Co. 'll Huff And I'll Puff And I'll Blow Myself Down" -~ OTq S ..*z. -c t f S I WHAT KIND OF WORLD? Breaking Dowen' The 'Locksteps' EUROPEAN COMMENTARY: Germany Remembers, Its History CYSCOPE: The Bug under the Rug. ITY COUNCIL Monday night ' neatly shoved under the already cluttered g a complaint registered with the city Ann Arbor by the American Civil Lib- ties Union. This, in itself, is not an unusual pro- dure for council. However, in this par- ular case Mayor Cecil O. Creal and his tncil co-workers, save Mrs. Eunice L. rns, have overlooked the civil liberties aranteed all criminal suspects subject police interrogation. The ACLU's complaint is that criminal spects are not allowed their full civil erties when the Ann Arbor Police De- rtment makes taped recordings of in- rrogations without giving them fair ring. ' The local chapter of the ACLU urged ther an end to this use of microphones that all arrested persons be informed the presence of such microphones and eir right to remain silent." HE ACLU'S COMPLAINT was not an- swered, aside from the fact that the lice department prepared a statement fending "the utility of recordings." Al- this statement was immediately back- by several councilmen, the Mayor, and e City Attorney. rhe only dissenter among Ann Arbor's ficialdom was Mrs. Burns who made a She was abruptly Mayor broke in to closed and hurried subject on the agenda. cut off when the declare the matter along to the next By ELLEN SHUBART Daily Correspondent MANNHEIM-One of the main concerns of the German people today is preventing a recurrence of militarism such as existed dur- ing the Hitler reign.. To prevent an upsurge of totalitarianism, Germans recently have reopened the book of history and reminded themselves once more what can happen to a people enveloped in emotionalism and a hunger for absolute power. In Frankfurt, the trial of 22 men associated with the. Ausch- witz extermination camp began last month and will probably last until June. The men, being tried by a six-person jury, including three Frankfurt housewives, were former guards, interceptors and maintainence men at the Polish extermination camp.r * *. * AT THE SAME TIME, Frank- furt city officials have opened an exhibit at St. Paul's Church de- picting the flight of the Jews from 1939 until the end of World War II.' The story of detention, abuse and extermination is told mainly through the use ,of pictures. Un- der an enlarged picture of Anne Frank, author of the famed "Diary of a Young Girl," a wreath of flowers is kept. In addition to the exhibit, St Paul's' now houses a book shop where Germans can buy or browse through books dealing exclusively with World War II. Germans wander through the Frankfurt exhibit quietly. Yet on the faces of many of the young people there is a look of disbelief. Others merely look and shake their head over and over as they go from picture to picture. The small book shop is crowded with people leafing through the various books set aside for browsing. IN ANOTHER SECTION of Ger- many, another sign of this desire to recall the past's mistakes in hopes of avoiding their repetition recently came to light. An army officer went on trial for mistreat- ment of his men. Although testi- mony was given to indicate that the treatment afforded privates in, the Bundeswehr was not at all as strenuous as that afforded Americans troops who undergo "ranger" training, the officer was found guilty and fined. The prose- I mage? WHAT MOST needs changing is a picture of ourselves and of cutor repeatedly used the argu- ment that the army did not want to open any possibility for the resumption of Hitler-like train- ing. ALTHOUGH these are only three isolated incidents, they do point to a general trend. German agents continue to seek out for- mer war criminals even though World War II is now 19 years in the past and the defendants in trials are often over 60 years of age.The Germans seem determin- ed not to allow themselves to fall into the pattern that they were in under Hitler. The German people, living in the midst of an era of economic prosperity, are concerned about reunification of their country, the Common Market and the status of Berlin. Yet in order to push for- ward in leach of these areas, the people seem to feel the necessity for constant reminder of the past. Perhaps they agree with-Santay- ana: the man who does not re- member the past is condemned to repeat it. HOWEVER, THE ACLU has not accept- ed the city's flimsy response to its question. Later that evening, when the meeting was opened to the audience, an ACLU member rose and reminded coun- cil of the issue at hand. He told the half-listening group, "The ACLU doesn't claim that microphones are unlawful, but rather that they are unfair. It is the responsibility of the council to answer the ACLU's original question. It is the responsibility of the council to determine the moral charac- ter of law enforcement in Ann Arbor." City Attorney Jacob Fahrner then rose to say: "As far as I know police tell the suspect being questioned that he doesn't have to say anything and that what he does say can be held against him as evi- dence." Fahrner did not say that this was a practice strictly followed by the police. "As far as he knows" the police may not be informing the suspect of his rights. CITY COUNCIL did not attend to its responsibilities Monday night. It did not give a vital citizens' group the cour- tesy of reasoned discussion of the com- By ROBERT HUTCHINS FOR FORTY YEARS at least, the American system.of meas- uring the intellectual progress of the young has been regarded as a horrible example of Yankee in- genuity. As no other country could have dreamed it up, so no other country would dream of adopting it. The system is one of putting in time and accumulating units, grade points or semester hours. A unit, credit, grade point or semes- ter hour denotes a certain num- ber of class periods over a certain segment of time, with a passing grade in each course attended dur- ing each segment. If all the segments add up to the time you must remain an in- mate of the institution, if all the courses add up to the number required and if all the grades average out to the minimum de- manded, then you are an educated man. SO THE ONLY universally valid definition of liberal education in the United States is 120 semester hours. You are not supposed to ask: hours of what? how related? how acquired? Still less are you permitted to inquire what the student knows or what he can do. If his academic account book is in order, he and his education are in order, too. Of course, if his acount book is not in order, he will not be permitted to join the com- pany of educated men, no matter how intelligent and civilized he may be. The great advantage of the time -spent - credits - accumulated system is that it saves thought. You don't have to think about what education is. All you have to do is count. WE HAVE NO TIME to think. Yankee ingenuity was called upon to solve a problem never before faced in history. We were the first nation to set out to educate every- body. In a fairly short period, we have built 127,000 educational in- stitutions, with a staff of 2.2 mil- lion and a student body of. 51.5 million. This is an impressive achieve- ment. But the dramatic dispro- portion in American education be- tween the tremendous effort and the meager results, other than thesematerial results, is aused in part by the mechanical methods adopted to cope with these fright- ening numbers. * * * , NOW COMES a massive study of 440,000 high school students in 1353 schools showing some of the consequences of these methods. It is called Project Talent. It finds that the top five per cent of students can learn twice as much in the same time as the average student in the same grade. It discloses that 25 to 30 per cent of 9th grade pupils rank higher in achievement and "ability" than average 12th graders. John C. Flanagan of the Uni- versity of Pittsburgh, reporting on the study, emphasizes the waste of talent that it shows and calls, in words 'nauseatingly familiar, for "breaking the lockstep of units and credits." * * * THERE IS MORE here than the waste of talent. There is waste of the slow learner as well. While the quick student is bored, the slow one may fail. Both may drop out. Both are worth saving. Almost a third of our high school students now drop out be- fore graduation. 35 per cent of our college-age youth go to college. Only half of those who enter sur- vive to the bachelor's degree. Waste of human abilities may be the worst of the evils caused by the lockstep, but it is -not the only one. It promotes fragmenta- tion, incoherence and the study of the teacher rather than the sub- ject. It puts a premium on passing a course and forgetting it, and hence on superficiality. It inten-= sifies that air of unreality, trivial- ity and remoteness from life which characterizes our educational in- stitutions and which is an ad- ditional cause of the large and growing number of dropouts. * * * IF YOU want to break the lock- step, you have to decide what the stages of education are. You have to devise examinations, to be given by an outside agency, testing the stage the student has reached. The student should be permitted to proceed at his own pace, taking the examinations when he is ready. This takes a lot of thought and a lot of work. Programmed learn- ing, or the so-called teaching ma- chines, may help us. Programmed learning is based on the principle that goals should be set, and the student should proceed toward them at his own pace. The rapid acceptance of programmed learn- ing is the most hopeful sign since the Chicago Plan of the Thirties that we may yet escape-the lock- step. All the lockstep has to recom- mend it is its convenience. It is convenient in much the same sense in which suicide is a con- venient solution to the problems of life.S, (Copyright, Los Angeles Times) Crusades _FT IS CLEAR that democratic .9 n. . lNQ ) .t t r