Seventy-Third Yea7 E DITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF 'THE UNIVER~SITY OF MICHIGAN U NDER AUTHORITY Or' BOARD IN CONTROL OF~ STUDENT PUIBLICATIONS "~Where O W1'118 AreIr STUDENT PUSLICATIONS BLDG., ANN ARioR, MICH., PHONE NO 2-3241 Truth willPrmIl"' Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in al; reprints. THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: JEFFREY GOODMAN LAST GLANCE: A Corporate University and the Student Libraries Should Facilitate The Saturday Night Student HERE IS PROBABLY no better time to examine the concept of academic free- dom at this University than on a Sat- urday night. On Saturday night (with the exception of those Saturdays imme- diately preceding exam period), academ- ic freedom means you're free to try to find a place to study anywhere you please --so just go ahead and try. The two main libraries-the UGLI and General-are closed. The League Library (for women only) has such extremely lim- ited hours on week days that you can be sure it won't be open at all on Saturdays. Rackham has a marvelous library and various quiet study rooms, but if you're an undergraduate, you aren't wanted. If you live in the residence halls or a fra- ternity or sorority, chances are that noisy parties or restless roommates prohibit serious study;' besides, you didn't want to work at home anyway. There's always the good old Union MUG-if you can stand the distractions of the Saturday night crowd. Perhaps the boyfriend's apartment-or do you know better by now? You may as well face it: there's no place to go. S THE MORATORIUM on library facili- ties on weekends (extending from 6 p.m. Saturday until 1 p.m. Sunday) a gross oversight on the part of the Uni- versity, or is it an overt attempt to dictate a social life to its students? If the latter alternative is the case and if campus library policies do indeed rep- resent the attitude of the University, clearly this institution of higher educa- tion does not want its students to study on Saturday night-even if they would like to. Such an attitude is hardly in keeping with the educational goals of a university. If keeping the libraries closed on Sat- urday night is merely a gross oversight, now is the time to correct this error. THE LIBRARIES themselves are not to be too harshly criticized. In addition to comprising the fourth largest library .system in the country, University li- braries offer a wealth of services from the General Library's open stacks to the UGLI's audio room facilities. In the past they have been more than willing to help the student. Only this se- mester, the General Library decided to extend its evening hours until midnight, instead of turning out students at 10 p.m., and to open its doors one hour earlier on Sunday afternoon. The library system's past congenial at- titude toward change in itself speaks much in its favor. Students have recog- nized and appreciated this disposition. It does not seem to be asking too much now to petition the libraries to once again face an existing problem with an attitude amenable toward change. ITS SOLUTION could be easily achieved. Library administrators could open only one facility to handle that group of stu- dents which wishes to study on Saturday evening. This could be done at a mini- mum expense by operating with a skele- ton staff and keeping the fringe services closed. (Most Saturday night studiers only want a clean, well-lighted place.) This additional service would be a great boost to these students. It would be an- other demonstration of the liberal dispo- sition of University libraries and would prove that the University has not ordered the study light out on a Saturday night. -LOUISE LIND Acting Assistant Editorial Director in-charge-of the Magazine That Old Tie Religion By PHILIP SUTIN National Concerns Editor T HE FINAL EDITORIAL is a milestone. It is a time for re- flection over four years of student life as an undergraduate and four years as a journalist covering the campus scene. It is a bittersweet milestone. The four years have been interesting, exciting-a time for personaland intellectual growth. They have taken me as high as I am going to go in my journalistic career for many years to come. Yet it is a time to look forward rather than back. Thus, I would like to drop some of the impersonal formality of my past editorials to look at the Uni- versity and the things which have most concerned me. x A.* * THE MOST IMPORTANT di- rection in which the University appears to be heading is toward a mechanized, hurried, nonhumanis- tic education. The University is more a $125- million education-research-public service corporation than an insti- tution of higher education. It tends to slight education both in favor of research, at the expense of the quality and intensity of effort placed at the undergraduate level; and in favor of "efficiency," as a response to legislative and applications pressure. The corporate nature of the Uni- versity - with its many di- visions and highly specialized fis- cal and public relations arms-is unfortunately necessary if the University is to function effectively in the many diverse areas to which it is committed. The very size and scope of the University necessitate a corporate structure. A CORPORATE FORMAT need not create a businessman's out- look toward the activities of the University. However, "efficiency" is stressed. The University's use- fulness to the state is often mar- keted much like one of Detroit's cars. Individuality and social re- sponsibility sometimes get lost. The trimester is a very effective gimmick for educating more stu- dents faster. It is probably a long overdue reform in the University calendar, as students are no longer needed to help their parents tend the fields and bring in the har- vest. As this agricultural pattern has long since vanished, summer vacation seems like an anachron- ism. A three-semesternyear with one-third of the student body on vacation each semester is a more logical use of the University's fa- cilities. This arrangement in itself does not raise concern about an educa- tional speed up. The other adjust- ments in the calendar, particularly the one-week, two-hour final examination schedule and reduc- tion of in-semester vacation time' remove the last vestiges of a more leisurely age. The new final period is a particular burden, leaving less time for meaningful study and making finals less important as a summing up of knowledge gained in a course. UNDERGRADUATE education seems to get the short shift. The dynamism, boldness and greatness of the University is not found in its literary college classrooms, but in the Institute of Science and Technology, the engineering col- lege research laboratories, the Conflict Resolution Center or the Medical Center. Research is the fastest growing part of the Uni- versity. Some work is being done on undergraduate education, especial- ly by the Center for Research in Learning and Teaching and by the literary college curriculum com- mittee, which contiually re-eval- uates the college's educational program. But the spirit and drive that enlivens the research effort is missing here. Further, thegUniversity's public relations image centers on re- search. The University's outside image tends to become its self- image. Research is as important a criterion as teaching for advance- ment. The worth of the Univer- sity is defined to the public as the immediately useful discoveries it can make, not the minds it can fashion or stimulate. All this is compounded by an imbalance of financial support. State appropriations, which pay for most teaching functions, have not grown fast enough to meet the University's very pressing needs. Meanwhile, federal support has risen quite rapidly, but almost all of it goes to specific research proj- ects. Graduate education is helped as it is a function of research efforts in many fields. THERE IS also a trend toward specialization, largely a function of the increasing amount of knowledge. Specialization is neces- sary in a complex world, but pre- sents a great danger to society. Its future decision makers will only be expert in one field, unable to comprehend more than a few related areas. But future presi- dents, legislators, governors, busi- ness and higher education execu- tives will have to allocate social lectual activities. But there is no overall program for the student interested in this sort of education, the type the future decision maker will need. A true liberal education may be impossible, for reasons outlined on this page within the last week, but some substitute will be necessary to prevent gross distortions in fu- ture resource allocations and ghastly mistakes. Here, the Uni- versity could provide a real ser- vice to society. RELATED to concern for liberal education is the intellectual at- mosphere of the University. It, too, seems to be disappearing under the stresses placed upon the Uni- versity and the resulting pressure placed upon its students. Partial blame for intellectual life's dull state at the University must lie with the president. As the head of a large institution, the president sets its tone, both by his actions and by the appoint- ments of the personnel who run its day-to-day operations. Even if the president is necessarily re- moved from the detailed workings of the University, he still exercises a profound influence over its spirit and direction. WHAT HAS President Hatcher done to influencerthe intellectual climate of the University? Very little. Unlike the recent works of Presidents Nathan Pusey of Har- Daily Editor II. Neil .ierk- son's column, "Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D.," has been discontinued until the end of the semester. It will re- sume regular bi-weekly publi- cation in September. vard and Clark Kerr of California, President Hatcher's latest book is not on the future and meaning of higher education, but is a picture album of the Great Lakes. His State of the University addresses have been. bland reports to the faculty, often avoiding clearcut, forthright stands on key Univer- sity issues. Two of the University's boldest ventures towards strengthening the University's intellectual en- vironment-the residential college and the Center for Research in Learning and Teaching-are not identified with President Hatcher. Rather, they' have been pushed by dower level University officials. President Hatcher's most stun- ning achievements seem to come in the administrative and research areas, not in education. * * * COMPARED to the record of past University presidents, Presi- dent Hatcher is aloof from the student body. Its large size and the complexity of the University account for some of this aloof- ness, but certainly the President could take more opportunities than his once-a-month teas to both influence and be influenced by the student body. Although his record of com- municating with students has im- proved since last year's fair hous- ing debacle, there is much more he could do. He could regularly address the student body on vital educational and intellectual issues of the times, attempting to inspire students toward a more intel- lectual and less functional outlook toward their studies and to the University. He could create greater understanding of University goals and problems and encourage greater student interest in them by meeting more often with key student groups. HOWEVER, greater presidential leadership and involvement with students is only one step in any effort to improve the University's intellectual atmosphere. One good program calls for converting Eng- lish 123 from merely a composition tion course to an intellectual in- troduction to the University. Freshmen would meet in small sections to hear lectures on the aims of education and the goals of the University. Using readings and discussions, the student would attempt to relate his stay at the University to its goals, hopefully creating greater awareness and desire for intellectual achievement. Another needed change is a re- form of academic counseling. Cur- rently, counseling is a low-status assignment in most departments. The professors involved are only haphazardly trained or informed about their vital task. Students often receive conflicting, if not unsound, academic advice, even on as simple a factual matter as the number of credit hours re- quired to be a full-time student. Both students and counselors tend to see academic counseling as merely a bookkeeping proce- dure. With the aid of the University's professional personal counselors and the Office of Academic Af- fairs, academic counselors should be aided in making counseling more attractive and meaningful for students. The counselors should be given definitive informa- tion on all University academic regulations. However, the University should not ram "intellectual atmosphere" down its students' throats. Such force feeding will produce not intellectual appreciation but re- bellion, either now or once the students leave college. There seems to be a tendency to force feed in such projects as the Greene House experiment or the residential col- lege. The University must be care- ful not to turn intellectual havens into academic prisons where the classroom becomes the all-per- vasive part of the student's life. The intellectual atmosphere should be enticing, not enforced. * * * WHILE the University should serve as a forum for the expres- sion of all ideas, it should be strictly a neutral force in society. It should be a leader, encouraging the free expression of all ideas by all members of the University community-be they students, fac- ulty, researchers or administrators. But the University, through the mere existence of outside speaker limitations, through its stress on academics and through its propa- ganda as a service institution rather than a place of ideas, has put a damper on its most impor- tant social role. These limitations not only con- tradict one of the basic pusposes of the University but also waste brainpower, which becomes divert- ed from social action td academic problems. AS THE UNIVERSITY should be tolerant of all ideas, so should it promote nondiscrimination in the society at large. The Univer- sity's record, unfortunately, is not too good. On the civil rights issues it has been neutral or weak-willed at best. It has consistently block- ed strong action against affiliate membership selection bias. It tried to avoid taking a strong stand on a fair housing ordinance in Ann Arbor and even now does not give Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis' amendment pro- posals the strong backing they ought to have. Further, its money may be used to. tacitly support discrimination. The University urged no discrim- ination at an apartment house in which it invested $180,000 only after the local CORE chapter dis- covered the investment and de- manded action. Even so, the Uni- versity's letter merely informed the owners of Regents' Bylaw 2.14. The University should not finance this sort of anti-social behavior. Perhaps a nondiscrimination clause in all real estate investment contracts could correct the prob- lem. THE SOCIAL responsibility of the student body also has de- clined in the last four years. The number of students who partici- pated in the political life of the University or were concerned with the country's and world's major social problems has always been small. However, even this number has declined. Today a small group of students is working on poverty and civil rights in an exciting way through Students for a Democratic So- ciety's Economic Research and Action Project and through the local civil rights groups. But while the University is a center of near radical student leadership in the country, these leaders are nearly all graduate students and their presence is hardly felt on cam- pus. * * *4 THERE IS NOW a major gap in the University community's po- litical structure. There is no stu- dent o'ganization actively and liberally critical of the University. No student group outside of The Daily, which by definition is not a political action group, is actively seeking to blunt the University's trend toward dehumanizing edu- cation. No group is taking advan- tage of opportunities to partici- pate in University decision mak- ing. No group is actively challeng- ing the University on such ques- tions as "efficiency" or the rela- tionship between education and research.. Voice once filled this role, but since its heavy involvement with SAS, it has become nationally- oriented. Voice is fulfilling a ne- cessary function as campus spokesman for the nearly radical left. Its education and action pro- grams in that regard have been good. But there is no one to speak to the University. This void did not always exist. During the activist renaissance which lasted from 1960 through spring, 1963, a number of campus groups were vigorously and effec- tively challenging the University and gaining some reforms, largely in the student affairs area. BUT THIS YEAR has been a dull year. No major University issues have been of campus con- cern. Student campus political ac- tivities have been moribund-even absurd, as in the SGC election contest between SGRU and SURGe. The campus has returned to the political desolation of the late 1950's and seems destined to stay there. Some doubts have even been raised about the survival of student organizations. The upsurge of political activity -vas pretty pervasive in its time. It spread from the political clubs and action groups to even such usually inert organizations as In- terquadrangle Council and Assem- bly Association. Students were articulately and actively concerned with such di- verse interests as civil rights, re- form in the Office of Student Af- fairs and the residence halls and the end of affiliate membership selection bias. The articulate liberals who led this student movement left a num- ber of permanent monuments to their efforts but, unfortunately, not a continuing leadership. THESE MONUMENTS include the resignation of Dean of Women Deborah Bacon and end of most of the draconian practices, a re- structuring of the OSA along functional lines, judiciary system reforms with added due process safeguards, liberalized women's regulations and better dormitory living conditions. In the civil rights field, some progress was made toward regulat- ing membership selection prac- tices, but the gains have been mired in a legal tangle. Student pressure also forced a definitive University stand on a fair hous- ing ordinance. Students also have gained a greater say in University decision making by participating as ob- servers on some Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs subcommittees. But this is only a tangential position and is not being fully used by students. * * * WHY THE DECLINE in student activism? The bogeymen of tri- mester and academic pressures are certainly serious, but are not the entire answer. Students today in this corporate, nonhumanistic University are being encouraged to produce in the classroom and no- where else. The Honors Council, whose students have provided much of the past leadership, ac- tively discourages students from participating in activities. With more students than ever seeking a higher education, the academic- grades rat-race begins in high school and is never left to pursue greater social values. The pressure is constant from high school on. The trimester calendar has a more psychological than tangible impact, although it will cause grave dislocations in all student activities-from those as frivolous as Michigras to ones as important as the political clubs. The slightly shorter semester with its nearly nonexistant vacations and short final schedule symbolizes academic pressure and performance. The leisureliness of the old calendar, signifying greater importance for nonacademic life as well as giving more actual time, is a thing of the past. Finally, the gut issues of the past-OSA reform, affiliate dis- crimination, blatant local segrega- tion-have either been settled or placed in more complex and there- fore less exciting terms. People are no longer so attracted to these causes, especially as academic pressure increases. LASTLY, I would like to speak of The Daily. Unfortunately, the campus does not understand this newspaper. It is to be cherished and defended, not scorned. It is a paper freed from most of the fetters of the commercial press. The Daily, always concerned with important issues over a broad in- tellectual spectrum, rises above the commercial press. The Daily has changed much- and not always for the better- in the four years that I have been on its staff. Yet it has always striven to produce the best that journalism hasto offer, and often it has succeeded. But The Daily, as it has turned from the gut issues of the Hayden era four years ago to close cover- age of academics, research and the upper administration, and, as academic pressure closes in upon its staff, has become a duller newspaper. Some of the old excite- ment that marked the 1960-62 Dailies has gone, perhaps never to return. THE ACADEMIC AREAS, while somewhat more important than the gut issues, have been harder to cover. They are more complex and it takes more dogged work and intellectual ability to handle them. The rewards-like the two- part series on the budget process or the continuing coverage of the residential college-are great to both reporter and reader. All seg- ments of the campus community should encourage The Daily to continue this work, to place great- er effort in it. The excitement is gone because some of The Daily's most colorful staff members-the brilliant, ir- rascible personalities-have de- parted and not been replaced. A spirit of tolerance that once found a place for them on the staff and made them thrive, no matter how unpleasant they may be to the senior editors and some staffers, has long since disappeared. This has been The Daily's greatest loss while I was on the staff. These people have been replaced by com- petent, but less exciting staff members. * * * YET THE DAILY has been the best part of my experience at the University and I will always look fondly upon it. It has helped me mature both professionally and personally, and I have learned much from staffers I have worked with and from the stories I have covered. I cannot be as enthusiastic about the rest of my University career. There have been some moments when I have become ex- cited about my studies or what the University was doing, but these moments have been few and far between. A :;i IT CERTAINLY IS NICE to see that the Episcopal Church is back at the home stand these days-being narrow-minded and generally meddlesome. For a while there, one would have thought that per- haps they were minding their own busi- ness for a change. The scene this time is Ionia, Michigan, of all places, where the local high school had the screaming audacity to produce that lewd, salacious, immoral and ob- scene musical, "Damn Yankees." The problem is that one Rev. Raymond Bierlein, an Episcopalian, attended this immoral orgy. (Presumably he got his ticket from some trouble-making Pres- byterian.) And what the Rev. Bierlein saw just defies description. It seems this 16-year-old, Kristi Honson, performed the part of the temptress Lola, doing that aw- ful dance! (Yes, Rev. Bierlien, it was a strip-tease!) And she had the gall to go into the audience and tweek the cheek of several of the gentlemen. (One ques- tions whether the good reverend got his cheek pinched and didn't like it, or wheth- er he didn't and was jealous.) WELL, THAT JUST ABOUT capped it. Rev. Bierlein, whose indignation showed through, denounced the whole pornographic affair. Miss Honson, whose faith is undisclosed, but presumably she's not an Episcopalian, retorted that she didn't think her dance was so bad. Her parents agreed, and so did Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clore, in a letter to the Ionia Sentinel-Standard. Unfortunately for the Clores however, they happened to be members of Rev. Bierlein's flock, and the good cleric struck back by recommending they be excommunicated. Acting Editorial Staff H. NEIL BERKSON.....................Editor KENNETH WINTER............anaging Editor EDWARD HERSTEIN.............Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN ............... Personnel Director MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY........Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE ...... Associate Editorial Director LOUISE LIND......Assistant editorial Director in Charge of the Magazine Acting Sports Staff 13ML BULLARD ....................... sports Editor TOM ROWLAND..............Associate Sports Editor f'AR * TxIPTZ _ _ A .ei~f.P Snrts dito So this is how things stand: The Clores are on the way out; the cheek-pinching (by order of the school board) is all the way out; but the dance is still in. The situation is ludicrous; it is some- thing out of the Victorian era, which would suggest that the Episcopal Church has not progressed, in Ionia at least, into the twentieth century. DISAPPOINTING HOWEVER is the fact that the Episcopal bishop for Western Michigan, Bishop Charles Bennison of Kalamazoo, agrees, with Rev. Bierlein and believes the church "needs more clergy- men like him." What's more, the good bishop terms "Damn Yankees" "adult en- tertainment" and believes "it was foolish of a little high school to produce it." Well, la-de-da, Bishop Bennison and Rev. Bierlein and any of the rest of your clan. Perhaps you should attend to reli- gion and let speech people attend to drama. If "Damn Yankees" is adult en- tertainment, then many of the passages in the Bible had better be struck from the Sunday School reading list. Adam and Eve did a lot worse than Lola. It is hard to believe that modern day busybodies like Rev. Bierlein exist in re- ligious vestments. Supposedly our church- es have advanced past their awe of girls' jumpers and low-cut shoes, but Ionia 's Episcopals haven't gotten the word. The Clores should consider themselves fortunate, for they could be booted out of a sinking ship. While Rev. Bierlein was abhorring "Damn Yankees," "The Tropic of Cancer," "Lady Chatterly's Lover" and "Fanny Hill" were probably on sale in the drugstore a block from his church. One can only imagine that he was glad when the musical closed its run, so that he could go back to policing "smutty" books. (By the way, Rev. Bierlein objects to "The Music Man," "The King and I," "Ok- lahoma" and others of that ilk, too.) ALL THIS HAS BEEN at Rev. Bierlein's expense. Undoubtedly his cause is just. Lewdness and salaciousness have no place in clean living. But the good rev- erend's problem is that he is unable to tell what is lewd and salacious, and as a result he falls into the same trap as the Congregationalists who burned the Salem witches or the Catholics in France who persecuted the Huguenots: He knows not 'SUNDAY IN NEW YORK': Technical Difficulties Mar Production NORMAN KRASNA'S PLAY "Sunday in New York" has all the ap- purtenances of a witty, fast-moving bedroom comedy but it never quite makes it. Instead we see a likeable, rather light and vaguely amusing fairy-tale, as unrealistic as it is unsophisticated. The plot revolves around the familiar plight: should a young girl in these "modern times" remain a virgin? Eileen Taylor, played by E. J. Peaker, has come to spend a Sunday in New York with her brother. Brother Adam Taylor, played by Tom Leith, has convinced her that morality is still in style. And when she invites Mike Mitchell, portrayed by Ty Hardin, an acquaintance from the Fifth Avenue Bus, to her brother's apartment, all is upstanding, until she dis- covers, via "lingerie" in the closet, that brother has been playing around himself. Virtue goes to the wind, but Mike wants nothing to do with a beginner. All is well, that is until Eileen's fiance pops in finding them in bathrobes. Further complications evolve and the rest of the plot tries to unravel this "spicy" mess. THERE WERE ONE OR TWO moments of bright dialogue, and an interesting use of two players filling all the minor parts as well Xii.': ':'2.?:'i< '::' ... ..............:...... ... ?:' 8 ::..:'>: !;"i:":_y?::i})isi? >: ::>: =:'2i[ i}i:il-:': ?L: A