Seventy-Second Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY. OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "Where 4Opinions Are reSTUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. * ANN ARBOR, MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Will Prevail" LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Besmirches Own Nest Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staf writers s _ or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. r AY, MAY 5, 1962 NIGHT EDITOR: CYNTHIA NEU ro Prgrammed Learning. May Threaten Freedom f N A RECENT panel discussion, Professors Harlan Lane and F. Rand Morton advocated the use of programmed instruction for teaching attitudes and values as well as facts. Programmed learning places the responsi- bility for learning on the programmer, rather than on the student as -is traditional. The pro- grammer controls the material to be taught by progressing in tiny steps. The program involves a series of questions set up in sequence so that the student can only give, one logical response which he im- niediately is assured is right. Anything can be taught using this pattern if the sequence as- sures that the student will always answer the questions right. HIS POSES the greatest threat to our most fundamental right, freedom of thought. The implications of changing attitudes at a sub- conscious level canot be viewed in any other light. The very essence of learning is inquiry. Pro- grammed instruction provides answers, not stinulation for doubt. If the student accepts without questioning, he has not learned but has accepted on faith. Opinions FOR YEARS, The Daily, in explaining its open-forum editorial policy, has alluded to the maxim at the top of this page, "When Opinions Are Free, Truth Will $Prevail." At- tributing it to John Stuart Mill, editorial di- rectors have explained how his philosophy is of pertinence. While this has been going on, Daily staffers have searched through -the writings of Mill to find theexact context of the words. It turns out, from this search for the source, of the saying, that the saying is not always true; that free opinions alone do not, guaran- tee truth; and that accurate attribution is also a prerequisite. FOR, IT TURNS OUT, the words were not those of Mill (though he professed their philosophy) but those of Thomas Paine! Be- fore Mills was born. Paine, in his "Age of Rea- son," said: "Certain I am that when opinions are free, either in matter of government or religion, truth will finally and powerfully prevail." It follows that when references are real, then truth will prevail. -R, SELWA With programmed instruction, f there is no way to separate opinion from fact. The two are merged as far as the student can tell. This places the utmost responsibility on the pro- grammer. He is no longer a fallible human be- ing, but is the written word of fact. PROF. LANE said that the program can be perfected to teach all that a live professor, can, for it is the product of a human teacher. However, when a teacher stands up' in front of a class to instruct, he is accepted as anoth- er human being. When he talks, he' does not follow a pattern so as to leave no room for doubt. He talks in terms of opinions and usually offers contrasting views. Members of the class alsoare free to inject questions and opinions. A well educated student understands the' rea- sons- behind different stands on any given subject. He is not dogmatic and does not ac- cept on faith. He weighs the given informa- tion and chooses for himself. This is the learn- ing process. PROGRAMMED instruction assumes that the learning process can be simplified into one easy step. Not only did Prof. Lane discuss programming as a teaching device, but he also pointed to it as a method for behavioral change. In an ex- periment in an elementary school, the popular- ity pattern of the class was changed by pro- gramming verbal patterns. The least popular boy in the class became the most in demand. The implications of this are even more ap- palling. It gives power to one individual to control the entire selection process of another. PROGRAMMED learning puts into the hands of the programmer dictatorial powers of the most dangerous sort, those controlling the thinking process of the individual. Programmed instruction offers a new door for, learning the preliminary facts in a given area of study. It can be'very useful in teaching elementary mathematical, scientific, and lin- guistic concepts. It has proven especially sue- cessful in learning new languages. Using it in this way can speed up the ele- mentary background so that the learning pro- cess can start. HOWEVER, programmed instruction is a threat when it is considered for other pur- poses, for once developed it can be used by any- one for any purpose. Programming leaves the door open to thought control, which is the greatest possible threat to freedom and individualism. CAROLYN WINTER To the Editor: [N HIS EDITORIAL "Disgusting Quad Experience" Michael Har- rah painted a shocking picture of the eating habits, language 9,nd general manners of Michigan men in the Residence Halls. He le- scribes the prevailing atmosphere in the dining rooms as one that would "disgrace a pigsty" and he labels his fellow students as "swine in a meal line." Rather than referring to specific instances in specific dining rooms Harrah generalizes by saying: "This is the usual, run-of-the-millsstate of the situation.." My own experience with men's residence halls which dates back to the -days before Harrh was born, weekly lunches at West Quadrangle and ample observa- tions in the various men 's resi- dence halls fortunately, offer a rather more favorable, and I feel, a truer, image of the manners of our men in the residence halls. In- deed, I am proud to be associated with them. Of the rare and isolated quad man who steps out of line, but also of him who with a gross lack of perspective sets up the occasional juvenile misfit as typical it may be said: It is a sad bird who be- smirches his own nest. -Prof. Frank X. Braun Faculty Associate, Wenley House Disgusting To the Editor: EASILY THE most disgusting ex- perience on this campus is the use of press for ill-informed and irresponsible editorials whose pre- cepts do not fall far short of lies. The editor of any newspaper has the responsibility to at least make assertions in his editorials that have a reasonable probability of being true. It is not clear when the time last was when Mr. Harrah ate with the men in the quadrangles. If it was when he was a freshmen, then his criticisms are far outdated. If it was a recent single experience he certainly has no background for the base accusations of con- duct unbecoming a gentleman in the dining halls. Throwing food, upsetting dishes, and excessive noise are judiciary offences. At least in the S o u t h Quadrangle where I live it is required that "the men shall dress in good taste and be clean shaven." MR. HARRAH clearly implicates every man in, the Quadrangles in his base indictment. Mr. Harrah clearly owes every man in the Quadrangles his sincere apology. We may at least be assured that the great majority 'of us will pay Mr. Harrah's editorial the type of consideration it so 'richly de- serve-a hearty laugh. We can- not, after all, assign much value to a moral condemnation of over three thousand men, particularly when it is based on an extremely limited experience. It is a sobering experience to learn that there are those who will use the precious freedom of the press to desecrate the integrity of individuals of the constituency that grant this right. -James P. Starks Administrative Assistant Distortion:. . To the Editor: IT IS MOST unfortunate that at a time when so many people are fighting against encrochments on the Daily's freedom, Michael Har- 'rah chooses to write an editorial which is a flagrant and malicious distortion of the facts. His edi- torial on meals in the residence halls shows a greater contempt for responsibility, truth, and accurate reporting than most others which I have seen since I came to the University. -Daily-James Keson MEALTIME MANNERS-Daily Acting City Editor Michael Harrah hangs in effigy on the Diag. MAY FESTIVAL. Program Offers Eng lish Music THE SECOND May Festival program, including works by two British composers, Sir William Walton and Sir Ralph Vaughn Williams, was representative of the main stream of contemporary English music. The style of both men is ingratiating and directly appealing. Wal- ton is not an innovator by his own admission, but rather a painstaking craftsman, whose small catalogue of works is distinguished by its brief excursions into various musical forms (two symphonies, one opera, one string quartet, etc.). The two works heard in the concert stand as considerable testa- "ent to Walton's gifts as a melodist and orchestrator. * * * HIS ARTISTIC heritage stems from the 19th century romantic tradition in general, and specifically from the French Impressionist school. The composer's genius lies in his handling of orchestral nuances and effects. This skill was more obvious in the sparking "Partita for Orchestra," a bagatelle originally commissioned by the Cleveland Sym- phony, but technically more masterful in the excerpts from the opera, Troilus and Cressida. Here, the orchestra acted not merely as a background accompani- ment but rather as a contrapuntal commentary for the text. Walton's penchant for lyricism extends to his vocal writing which offers the soloist opportunities. for display of virtuosity. * * * PHYLLIS CURTIN, when her voice could penetrate the all-envel- oping shrouds of Thor Johnson's ambitious orchestra, dazzled the audi- ence with her purity of tone, effortles production, and unaffected dic- tion. Richard Lewis, on the other hand, seemed to be dividing his at- tentions between controlling a certain throaty quality and a 'quaver- ing falsetto. He succeeded in managing neither. Sir Ralph Vaughn Williams, during his lifetime the dean of Eng- lish composers, produced a large assortment of works in virtually every musical category. He received artistic impetus from such varied influences as German Romanticism, French Impressionism, and English folk song. * * * FROM THESE various sources he synthesized a style of his own. The cantata, "Dona Nobis Pacem," is a product of the English large- choir tradition, a movement started in the early nineteenth century. It is a majestic paean to peace, written in 1936 for the Hudders- field Choral Society and conceived as a multi-sectioned musical canvas. The texts are drawn from Walt Whitman, John Bright, and The Bible. The alternate moods of the work, whether frantic, calm, or plain- tive, blend and shift into one another smoothly. The performances of the two soloists, Donald Gramm and Phyllis Curtin, were excellent. Surprisingly the huge Choral Union Society sang with a conviction which served to elicit a sound that nearly ap- proximated the mass of mankind assembled onstage at Hill Auditorium. -David Schwartz --Ed White 'A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE' Veneer of Ciiization THE VENEER OF civilization over a man will cover the emotional party only so long as those feelings and people he holds dear remain safe within his heart. The movie, "A View From the Bridge" which opened last night at the Campus Theatre is a study of a man slowly disintegrating as he watches the woman he loves fall in love with another man. At the beginning, Eddie, played by Raf Vallone, is a 'strong, healthy, happy man, who is the informal leader of the rest of the men, loved and respected by all. At the end he is a half-crazed animal with few of the vestiges of humanity. Mr. Harrah says there is "noth- ing unusual" in students throwing and spitting food at one another, throwing salt shakers through the air, and justling and stripping stu- dents carrying trays. * * * THIS STATEMENT is not mere- ly somewhat of an exaggeration, it is simply untrue. After living in the residence halls for three years, I have never witnessed most of these supposedly common inci- dents, and those which have oc- curred did so very rarely. d r With a complete disregard for the truth, Harrah goes on to say that residents come to dinner in a "state of undress". If he had taker the trouble to do a mini- mal amount of investigation he would have found that in South Quadrange a resident without socks and with a shirt open to the navel couldn't even get through the doors of the dining room. Yet just the same, Harrah declares that this is a "run-of-the-mill" situation, and generalizes his sup- posed observations to the entire, men's residence hall system. * * * HE MANAGES to work up to a fever pitch of self-righteousness towards the end of the editorial, asking the University to inter- vene in the situation. I agree with Mr. Harrah insofar as I be- lieve that the University does have a responsibility to install certain values in its students, and if the situation were as he describes it, I would join him in urging ap- propriate action. But the facts and Mr. Harrah's editorial inst do not coincide. Nei- ther gross inaccuracies nor rant- ing and raving are very adequate subsitutes for truthful and ac- curate reporting. Editorials such as this serve only those interests opposed to the kind of University which we all desire. Daniel Gold, '63 Exaggeration To the Editor: DISMISS Michael Harrah's re- marks concerning the carnal re- sidence hall dining rooms as ob- vious exaggerations prompted not by any obJective invistigation on his part, nor even a sincere con- cern for any priblem you may believe to exist. , Mather, it would appear to me that he is in search of an issue upon which he can build contro- versy as a stimulus to interest in his editorials. Through his pandering, the Daily takes on the complexion of a tabloid scandal sheet. Kent Bourland, '63 Honesty ' . To the Editor: MIGHT I suggest that Michael Harrah, Acting City Editor, use some of his "Honesty" in report- ing the conditions of s t u d e n t dining in the Quadrangles? After two and a half years on West Quad's cafeteria staff I must ad- mit that most of these things have happened. However, Mr. Harrah implies that they, are common happenings at every meal which they are not! Fel Brunett, '64 Purpose..~ To the Editor: YOUR EDITORIAL p a g e con-' tains a quote, "Where opinions are free, truth shall prevail". If the editorial on quadrange dining rooms by Mr. Harrah is an ex- ample of his concept of "truth" or of his concept of the correct, use of the Daily's much defended editorial freedom, I shudder to think what the paper will be like if he continues on the senior staff. Mr. Harrah's editorial was the largest collection of outright dis- tortion and exaggeration of fact I have ever seen or heard of being printed for public distribution. . * * * I'M NOT SURE of the exact purpose of the editorial unless the conflict between the Daily and the Board in Control of Student Publi- cations has lost its sensationalism,. and'he is looking for another scan- dal to print even at the cost of having to create one. In. my four years in residence halls on this campus I have never witnessed conduct in the dining rooms such as described by Mr. Harrah. Since I would be the last one to question the veracity of the statements of a Daily senior-editor, I can only come to the conclusion that Mr. Harrah is a catalyst or, nucleus for such actions. And I Would suggest that he would bene- fit residence halls g r e a t l y by moving to an apartment. Thomas Moch, '62E Guardian ... To the Editor: REFRESHING indeed it is to know that public morality has at least two staunch guardians: minuet-promoting President Eis- enhower and antiseptic-mouthed Michael Harrah. And now let's get the fringes ready for all those barelegged tables that flaunt themselves all over the place! -David A. Ward, Grad. * I * * IDELINE ON SGC: Adjournment Unearned ;TUDENT GOVERNMENT Council pushed business through Wednesday night with un- ual efficiency, adjourning at the unprece- ented time of 9:20 p.m. But Council efficiency was not the only un- ;ual thing that night. The reason given for e early adjournment was that Council was view the SGC-sponsored movie "Operation >rrection," the American Civil Liberties Union m showing distortions in "Operation Aboli- >n," a film put out by the House Committee a Unamerican Activities. However, there was a more pressing ulterior' ason. Wednesday was Council President Ste- ien Stockmeyer's twenty-first birthday. LTHOUGH COUNCIL approved a motion earlier this year saying it would view the ovie, Stockmeyer and four other Council embers were not to be found in the Union llroom where it was showing. They were lebrating at a local restaurant. Such irresponsible use of what ought to ha ve yen Council time' is inexcusable. By rights mncil should have viewed the movie and then turned to the meeting, since there was other siness which could have used consideration. Council's action cannot only be condemned principle, but also in the specific instance. he Daily motion placed on the table last week a parliamentary attempt' to kill it was suc- ssfully raised from the table. But because of e shortage of time, the only action that could taken was to postpone it another week. The next SGC meeting will be the last one fore petitioning closes for senior editorial sitions. If Council is going to take a stand d not just ignore the seriousness of the aily-Board controversy, action will probably, ye to come out of next Wednesday's meet- THIS IS A huge task for one session, since Council members do not agree about the motion. If SGC fails to formulate and adopt a motion next week because one meeting is not long enough for proper consideration, Council will have.avoided an important ques- tion: When SGC has an issue before it, the body ought to have a fair opportunity to determine when and for how long it will discuss it. This decision should not be influenced by petty and personal considerations. Obviously, Council cannot afford to adjourn early every time a member has a birthday' on Wednesday. The precedent is extremely disturbing. Blame should not be levelled at Stockmeyer alone. It took a majority of the members of Council to approve the early adjournment and most attended the movie. Hopefully this epi- sode does not indicate that Council members will make a practice of putting parties before consideration of campus issues. -GAIL EVANS Speak Up ICE PRESIDENT for Student Affairs James A. Lewis will meet with the OSA Study Com- mittee this week to discuss his final recommen- dations on restructuring of his office. Lewis' report will go to the Regents for dis- cussion and action at their May 18 -meeting. The Regents are expected to take definite ac- tion then if any changes are to occur in stu- dent personnel services and policies for next fall. The Study Committee's report and the Re- gents action on it climax nearly two years of active work on repairing the OSA and many years of concern about the practices of the office. During that time, the OSA has been in and out of the headlines as it has been in and out of campus conversation and specula- tion. The OSA Study Report has lost its position as the number one campus issue during the last month and many people have simply for- gotten about it. There is but one brief week in which those who have not spoken out on the report and its philosophy and structure of extracurricular life may contribute their comment. Every mem- ber of the University community will be affect. THE STAYiNG force of his life has been his niece whom he has reared as a daughter, but who has become his ideal of pure and almost holy womanhood. He greets Catherine, "With your hair like that you look like a Madonna." He never hopes to satify his desire for her, but it is asking too much for him to give her to another man. He battles his rival, the young illegal immigrant Rudolfo, who has taken shelter in his home, with all the "civilized" weapons. He tries the law and appealing to his wife and friends for aid, but find- ing himself alone in wanting Catherine to remain with him, he starts his reversion. In mock boxing lessons he satisfies his urge to do physical harm to his opponent. The glint in his eye as he draws blood is more reminis- cent of a wolf than a man, and that is what Eddie is now. No longer is he the man loved by his friends and family; he is totally shunned by all. THE POWER of Arthur Miller as a playwright is translated with- out loss to the srceen. Throughout it is impossible not to be moved by the strength and potential goodness of all those involved because they are always trying so hard. The tightly knit construction, which makes each scene obviously sequential to the previous, contributes to the compactness and im- portance of each move or word, as does the unique camera technique. Hollywood, in its search for a "meariingful" movie with a "mes- sage" can rest on its laurels for which another long dry stretch now, as it has finally produced one which makes use of its facilities. -Malinda Berry LEGISLATIVE APPORTIONMENT: Votes Created from Dirt' (EDJITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of three articles on apportion ment.) By MARK BLUCHER Daily Staff Writer THE MINORITY members of the Legislative Organization Com- mittee decided that the majority proposal on apportionment was not a significant enough reap- praisal of Michigan's representa- tive system and withdrew from most of the majority considera- tions. Their own proposal was geared to the philosophy of 'one man, one vote' and they felt that the ma- jority proposal did not right the wrong but only succeeded in ra- tionalizing it. However, the minority did not want changes made unless the proponents showed that change is needed and that the proposed changes meet the need. "In our opinion, the majority proposal fails to carry these burdens." * * * THE MINORITY proposal is similar to the majority proposal is compatible with the bipartisan representative system. The essential difference lies in the minority proposal for a bi- partisan Senate with a 'tote-vote' system. "Thus we believe we have accomplished everything which the majority proposal seeks to do, except one thing - and that is to guarantee perpetual inequality of representation with a perpetual bias in favor of rural and Repub- lican voters," the minority said. "WE DISSENT from the ma- jority opinion for the Senate (be- cause) it is too little; and it is too late." The minority feels that. the majority proposes only half a solu- tion. They cannot see the reason for an eight-year delay before making an ultimate Senate reapportion- ment especially when that "solu- tion' merely attempts to freeze the disproportion then existing in the Senate. "What the majority in- tends to do is not to right the wrong, but rather to rationalize the wrong." Tho minn.i+.?l. fh +f +h,.. mula which equates people with square miles . . . We have always thought that only God could make a man from. dirt, but now we see that some delegates have arrogat- ed that function for themselves. Where there were people, the for- mula acts as though many of them weren't there: it conceptually de- stroys them. And where there were 'wide open space' the formula cre- ates fictfious people . . . in the image of the Republican party." The majority plan does not rep- resent people but 80 per cent peo- ple plus 20 per cent area. tn ef- tect this +ends toward the creation of what Prof. Melvin Nord (D-De- troit) the minority leader for the Legislative Organization Commit- tee calls 'pseudo-people.' + s 9 "WE FIND 'pseudo-people' pre- 'posterous. We recognize them for what they are; figments of the imagination, invented especially for the occasion in order to ra- tionalize a wrong by making it look as though at least something is equal, when in fact all that is rmalyn vi . r is fa nm- - - -n 'MOON PILOT': Disney Spo DISNEIYLAND'S LATEST f. a n- tasy, "Moon Pilot," orbited into the Michigan Theater last night and registered "A-OK" with its perhaps atypical Ann Arbor audi- ence, 50 percent of whose mem- bers were under 12 years of age. The rather timely sequence of events all begins when -Richmond (Tom Tryon) an astronaut who really doesn't like to fly, finds, himself volunteered for a space the same penetrating space rays shot destined to hurl him through that have made Charlie, the orbit- ing. chimpanzee, go berserk. * * * HERO - SPACEMAN Tryon is saved from his dire 'fate only by the consistently mysterious ap- pearance of Lyrae i (Dany Savel), a traveler from a distant planet (whose appeal is easily measured by worldly standards), who final- ly succeeds in giving him the for- mula for the protective shielding that will preserve man in space.. Strong points in the produc- tion are by far the habile screen- play and its inherent humor, which includes, a cigar-chewing senator who c a n 't understand' )f Takes Off cover what it is. Walt Disney may be credited with another successful film of ,the "good, 1i g h t entertainment" variety. For those who want more in a motion picture, there are some good shots of rocket take- offs and a hint of a moral tag- about interplanetary peace and cooperation. Louise Lind DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Academic Costume: Can be rented at Moe Sport Shop, North University Ave., Ann Arbor. Assembly for Graduates: at 4:30 p.m. In area, east of Stadium. Marshals will directgraduates to proper stations. If siren indicates (at intervals from 4:00 to 4:i5 p.m.) that exercises are to be held in Yost ~ Field House, graduates should go directly. there and be seated by, Marshals. Spectators: Stadium: Enter by Main Street gates only. All should be seated by 5:00 p.m., when procession enters Editorial Stafff HAEL BURNS....................Sports Editor [D ANDREWS ...........Associate Sports Editor F MARKS.............Associate Sports Editor Business Staff CHARLES JUDGE, Business Manager