- ^!r ' r : = - ----' - - - - .- 'r -w ~- - - THE AFFLUENT PROFESSORS: A DAILY SPECIAL SECTION The University Senate. A Voice for the Faculty An Old Student Custom of Class Rivalries By NEIL COSSMAN LOOKING OUT across the campus from the window of his office, a professor sometimes takes a few minutes to consider what the University is to him-a place to teach, to write and do research. As long as he has his work and its re- wards, should he be concerned with matters such as the Office of Student Affairs, campus building plans, broad educational policies, the ultimate size of the University, and other problems which are the daily concerns of dozens of ad- ministrators? For too many of the faculty the answer is "no." "There are many members of the fac- ulty whose greatest sense of privilege is not to help run the University, but to be left alone to do their work and to let the administrators do theirs," Prof. Charles H. Sawyer of the history of art department, said recently. The University Senate, especially the Senate Advisory Committee for University Affairs, and its many sub-committees, is the official megaphone with which articu- late faculty members are able to prompt the administration. But even the voice of this articulate segment of the faculty is sometimes quite hoarse-a circumstance revealing the changed structure of the University as well as the reticent nature of the faculty. At one time, a university was firmly guided by its faculty. All the teachers met together and made policies as a group. Often they appointed persons to carry out their policies. If administrators were huge and expensive areas of research and public service. Perhaps the University Senate be- gan as the "town meeting" of the University community. At least once a year the Senate must still hold a forum, traditionally open only to members There are always at least two general Senate meetings a year and attendance is usually about 150. At times, when the Senate has considered a particularly con- troversial subject, such as academic free- dom applied to specific cases, as many as 500 members have appeared. To some of the University's teachers, these general meetings are disappoint- ing-tired presentations of lengthy com- mittee reports and petulant discussion. To others, the discussion is lively, serious and informative and it's of small con- sequence that only one-tenth of the eligible members are present at many sessions. Membership in the Senate is auto- matic for every teacher above the rank of instructor, the executive and central administrative officers of the Univer- sity and the deans of the schools and colleges. A general meeting of the Senate, such as the one held April 23, has a potential attendance of at least 1800. The same Regents' Bylaws that author- ize the rather static general Senate also form the basis for a practical, energetic and relatively busy group of sub- committees, headed by the potentially powerful SAC. The 19 members of SAC are elected by the Senate from among its faculty membership. Members serve for three years, and about one-third of the committee is selected in the spring of each year. The literary college is limited to five members on the Advisory committee, the engineering college to three members and the other schools and colleges to one member each. While this plan results in a representative body, the members do not usually see themselves as repre- sentatives of their own units, probably because they're elected at large. The com- mittee is required to hold meetings at least once a month and to meet with top administrators at least twice a year. The SAC appoints all the standing and temporary sub-committeees that are created by the Senate. There are now fourteen standing sub-committees, none of which has any legal authority over any part of the University's operation. At the sub-committee level, the Sen- ate has a chance to drive hard at the real problems of the University. There is a sub-committee on educational poli- cies (which has five sub-committees of its own), campus planning and develop- ment, public relations, student relations, research policy and University freedom and responsibility. Each committee fre- quently consults and advises an appro- priate administrative executive. For in- stance, the unusually independent and dynamic sub-committee on student re- lations sometimes meets with Vice- President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. BECAUSE the committees and the Sen- ate have no fixed authority, the per- sonalities and abilities of the members and chairmen are extremely important. Personal power is needed because there is no official power. A sub-committee chairman and his associates must take care not to become research machines for the administrators with whom they deal. Initiative is important for the sub- committee's chairman and members. They should not wait -for an administrator to ask them for a report on improving instruction, reorganizing the Office of Student Affairs, or anything else; Once a study is underway, the faculty sub-committee should seek an admin- istrator's help whenever necessary; but there should never be any doubt that the faculty is in charge of the report. Prof. Charles F. Lehmann of the edu- cation school, an active leader and critic of the Senate, once referred to the PROF. JOHN REED ... publicity harmful ".. .voluminous collections of committee reports, labored over, mimeographed and filed." In theory, there seems to be no reason why an administrator would not eagerly seize a report as it spilled out of the machine, pour over it, and start implementing its suggestions immediately. But it remains for the committee chair- man to see that his study gets more than casual notice by the administration. When a committee publicizes its study it can be assured of more definite, if not always favorable, action by the ad- ministration. Publicity puts a spotlight on the administrators and calls their hands. Some Senate leaders, though, view pre- mature publicity of their activities as doing more harm than good for the University. Prof. John Reed of the law school, chairman of the sub-committee on university freedom and responsibility, said that publicity of reports before the administration has acted on them tends to draw sharp lines between the faculty and administration and place them be- fore the public as antagonists. He said that the backstage vigor of the committee is more important for getting things done. It would be unfortunate if faculty in- itiative, control and follow-up of com- prehensive studies in reality built a wall between faculty and administration. But administration is no longer the child of the faculty it once was. More prob- ably, the situation is reversed. PROFESSORS Sawyer, Lehmann and Wesley H. Maurer of the journalism department, last year's SAC chairman, agree that the administration takes the opinions of SAC and its sub-committees seriously, relying on them to represent the faculty. Yet, Prof. Sawyer noted that the ad- ministration is depending on more wis- dom and judgment from the Senate than the Senate has been willing to give. And so, there is not only a problem in some cases of getting the administration to move with the sub-committees, but also one of motivating the Senate to take action on sub-committee proposals. Prof. Lehmann has noted that "it's all too easy for administration officials to acquire a cynical contempt for the lethargic immobility of faculty initiative." He was referring to the general Senate and to the many faculty members who take little part in Senate activities, rather than to the committee structure. But even the sub-committees are being evaluated. Prof. Reed, in the current is- sue of Senate Affairs, the Senate's of- ficial publication, reported that his com- mittee is examining "the extent of which faculty members participate in policy determination, the areas in which faculty are used and (sometimes more signifi- cant) those in which they are not, the membership of the committees and boards (how many of us are perennial or pro- fessional committeemen!) . .. The general Senate and SAC are under consideration to see if a better method of representing the entire faculty can be found. Prof. Reed said that SAC does a good job as a study group, but as the University grows larger it becomes more difficult to measure faculty opinion and communicate it to the administration. The administration then becomes more independent. THE TOWN MEETING type of Senate does not appear to be an effective device for deciding faculty action. But it has supporters. Prof. Maurer said that the present Senate structure is satis- factory and has considerable power and influence if thoroughly used by the fac- ulty. He added that, although many meet- ings have only 150 present, each partici- pant probably represents several others with similar views. A mail ballot can be used to get an opinion from the total faculty on an immediate issue, rather than a system of direct representation by schools and departments, he said. At the center of any discussion of the form faculty action should take is the teacher himself. Prof. Maurer has noted, not with great alarm, that the faculty, like any electorate, has a large number of non-participants. According to Prof. Sawyer, younger faculty men are more cautious about entering extra-curricular activities than older men. "Positions are more secure for older men, and the pres- sure is less to get out the next book," he said. Yet because the faculty is not the of- ficial guardian of the University, its collective leadership and advice is even more important. The professor, although he may have lost personal contact with many parts of an increasingly complex University, still has the human touch needed in any operation designed for people. - He sees policies react with people-him- self included- and not just on paper. He is able to watch students as individuals and not statistics. He is in the best posi- tion to protect and police his own pro- fession. An aggressive faculty and an autono- mous administration have nothing to fear from each, other if each recognizes the value of the other's perspective. Although the administrators now hold and must probably keep the operational respon- sibility for the University, their authority must be balanced with active, voluntary leadership by the faculty. was made of wooden pickets and was shoulder-high. A gang of sophomores lounged around Mason Hall waiting for a newly-enrolled freshman to come out. Posing as a cre- dentials committee, they first established the fact of his enrollment. Then they seized the freshman and tossed him over the fence into the muddy or dusty road. BEGINNING IN 1904, freshman-sopho- more hostilities ended every year with Cap Night. This event took place in June in "Sleepy Hollow" or "the Cat Hole"- terms students gave to the seven acres that formed the little valley where now Forest Avenue passes Palmer Field. Students met in Sleepy Hollow and built a bonfire. Then they gave speeches and sang. Freshmen threw their gray freshman caps into the fire, and this sym- bolized their full assimilation into Uni- versity student life. Now they, as sopho- mores, would be protecting the campus from the foolishness of a new freshman class. This tradition lasted 30 years. It died because of a growing reluctance to wear class caps. But for many decades, not merely caps but also canes, badges, pins and togues served to differentiate the classes and schools. The first caps appeared in 1868, when literary college students adopted as their official headwear the Oxford cap. It was blue, with a square top, a black tassel and a visor bearing the initials "U of M." Caps became such a sensation that by 1870 several faculty members and even acting President Henry S. Frieze were wearing them. The togue type of headwear came into vogue in 1910. The color of the togue designated the class (seniors-blue, jun- iors-white, sophomores-maroon, fresh- men-gray) while the color of the tassel designated the college. Not all undergraduate customs were school and class oriented, of course. Some-, times student spirit became directed against the faculty. Students often lodged donkeys, cows, geese and roosters over- night in classrooms, which never failed to cause disarray in morning classes. Sometimes the spirit became directed' against inanimate objects, as Ann Arbor's wooden sidewalks which they tore up and burned or the brass locomotive bell mounted on a wooden post between Mason and South Halls. Janitor Pat Kelly (nicknamed Professor of Dust and Ashes) rang the bell regularly at 5 a.m. to awaken the student for chapel service. In wintertime, the students often turned the bell over and poured water into it. The water froze overnight, silenc- ing the bell the next morning. Kelly would. then have to wake up the students indi- vidually. One winter night the students chopped down the post and carried away the bell. Their curiosity about how President Tap- pan would react to this deed was satisfied the next morning when Tappan addressed the students at chapel services. He casu- ally told them that they were attempting an interesting experiment: European students had fared well without a bell, so why not students at the University too? Of course, he added, roll would be checked promptly as usual. He said the Regents would be pleased to learn that the students had at last felt themselves able to do without the bell and wanted to save the University the expense of maintaining it. The students greeted Tappan's remarks with hearty applause. The faculty there- after began calling the rolls more prompt- ly than ever. After a month, a big, jolly undergraduate arose in chapel to ask on behalf of the students that the University let them restore the bell. A few days later it was back, and ringing regularly again. The custom continued until chapel serv- ices were abolished in the 1880's. women did not seem to abate the spirit of the undergraduate men. If anything, it boosted it, as when, for example, sopho- mores tried to make freshmen bow to the women. Although they were occasionally ogled at by freshmen, the women were generally coldly ignored. It was customary for men and women to sit on opposite sides of the library. Sometimes, though, a daring young man would sneak to the center of the library to talk with one of the fairer sex. At any rate, the women were seldom dated by men on campus. A teaching col- lege that is now Eastern Michigan Univer- sity opened in Ypsilanti in 1853, and the men made it a practice then-as some do now-to get dates in that neighboring city. One of the few traditions to survive the early decades of the University is that of the University's colors of maize and blue. Blue had always been the official color, but the class of 1867 decided to use maize with blue for Class Day. The next year the class of 1868 used maize and blue for the Senior Ball. By general consent, the two colors were used together on official Uni- versity occasions thereafter. The custom became cemented when Charles Gayley's anthem, "The Yellow and the Blue," be- came the University alma mater. The other traditions died, nearly all by the time of World War II, the Junior Hop lasting until two years ago. Today stu- dents play tennis in the Sleepy Hollow where they used to build, bonfires and celebrate Cap Night.- The Student Council formally abolished Cap Night in 1934, and class rushes ended a few years later. Class athletic contests, such as the freshman-sophomore tug-of- war across the Huron River, died at the same time. genuine class c tion of clubs, s ernments, which ism" of the cla action more cons and growth of a vented antagon sities; and the a more serious c The latter ac many of the old the 19th centui young man fron pleasures in thi For him, burnir fellow student c ral way to have Today's gener fun conscious a They are concer from their educ that their secur will greatly dep cerned not with upperclassman able to get a go The increase result of the ch student body: m more are marri dergraduates ar (like the ex-sold der the G.I. Bi horseplay of st thing to laugh in. Moreover, the today, like son raids, are tame customs of old. participant is a who, when he f time from his group rushing around to wate minority who fi thrown out of w '!Conduct unb only a watchwo *ministration. It day's less tradi IN 1870 the first woman student, Made- There are at least four reasons for the lon Stockwell, enrolled at the Univer- death of school and class rivalries: the sty. Following her example, many more mushrooming growth of the student body, women enrolled. But the presence of the which made it more difficult to develop a PROF. CHARLES SAWYER ... heads committee chosen by a board of regents, the presi- dent of the university still appeared as the leader of the faculty. Prof. Ross L. Mooney of Ohio State University has observed that "the faculty could be a community and could operate as one because its individual members could each comprehend the totality within their concrete personal experience.' IT WOULD be difficult to locate the exact point in this University's history at which the individual teacher began to lose his overview of the total enterprise. But before the 1920's, the University had only 5000 students; there were fewer buildings, fewer schools, colleges, de- partments and auxiliary services, and more emphasis on a single function-- teaching, with less attention to today's NEIL COSSMAN, a staff mem- ber of The Daily, is a sophomore majoring in history. Page Ten PROF. WESLEY MAUER former chairman THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1962