'i r Ghemtrhigau Baly Seventy-Second Year ' EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS "The Face Is Familiar" McGUFFEY READER: School Board Seeks Phonetic Patriotism "Where Opinions Are Fre@ STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. ANN ARBOR MICH. * Phone NO 2-3241 Truth Wil Prevail" Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. EDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1961 NIGHT EDITOR: JUDITH OPPENHEIM f R / -' r . . . . l _ . . tt :. , .. ,v .. r : ;By PAT, he Senior Pad r.GOLDEN, Associate City Editor THE POSSIBILITY of automatic apartment , permission for senior women has been rumored persistently this fall. Panhellenic As- sociation, alarmed that the permission might touch off a mass migration from communal birdhouses of Washtenaw to various private nests, studied the problem and- put it to a vote a week ago Monday. The final vote has not been released yet, but individual reports indicate that a policy to keep the sorority women caged for their senior year received resounding support. If the policy carries any weight, the sorority system has probably done itself immeasurable injury, Sorority houses at the University are limited to 65 active members. Every person in a house who doesn't want to live there is taking up a space that might better be filled by someone interested aid willing to participate. The sororities recognize that seniors are often sick of group living and homecoming floats. Yet hey have decided to force these women to stay in the house another year, rather than fill it with sophomores and juniors who want to go to song practice and plan Father's week- mnd. s. N THE UNIVERSITY switches to tri- mesters, the sorority system will probably Have to adjust to two-year occupancy, instead f three, since more and more students will finish their undergraduate education in three years. Women who do stay for four years will find that half of their pledge class has graduated early, and her interests differ from he underclassmen she now lives with. The onflict between working on her honors thesis and attending song practice would certainly be galling." .An obvious answer is to adjust now, so that arger pledge classes each year can fill the raps' left by uninterested seniors and three year students. In this way the system would ron out the difficulties of two-year operation before it becomes a necessity. Dirty Pool [N SPITE of the Union's recently liberalized policy of allowing women to use its front loor and eating facilities, discrimination is still rife. Two University women, seeking a quiet and riendly game of pool, intending no disorderly" r "undersirable" behavior, were unceremon- ously turned away from the door of the Inion poolroom. They were not allowed even he privilege of watching the other players. If the Union intends to preserve itself as men's club, women should not be allowed, per :e. If the Union intends to have coeducational kctivities, there is no reason for the exclusion f women from the poolroom, check cashing, nd swimming pool. HIS IS ESPECIALLY true of the first, for there are, of course, places other than the Inion where a women may swim or get a heck cashed-but, alas, for those women who re connoisseurs of the game of pool. there .re no facilities available with the possible xceptlon of downtown Ann Arbor pool halls. If the Union cannot see fit to alter its policy (for whatever inscrutable reasons of :a own), then, at the very least, the Women's league should establish its own poolroom for 7niversity ladies. -DENISE WACKER -MARTHA MacNEAL A far more basic issue is the right of an individual to choose his living quarters on the basis of experience. If automatic apartment permissions are offered to all senior women- but the sorority system has a policy against it-then freshmen definitely have to choose a style of living for a full three years. The new policy would force a freshman to commit herself to group living throughout her under- graduate career, before she has experienced even one year of dorm living. The alternatives become the possibility that she will enjoy three years of lving with sixty-five people versus the right to change her mind about group living and move into an apartment her senior year. BUT THE POLICY itself cannot keep women in sorority houses. Any woman who really objects can disaffiliate-if the pressure from her parents Isn't too heavy. Since Panhel cannotcontrol residential policies of the in- dividual houses, it is also possible for one house to set its own policy, in compliance with the University ruling. The teeth of the Panhel policy lie in the dean of women's office, where individual ap- plications for apartment permission are pro- cessed. Right now it is more difficult for a sorority woman to get processed. It is the dean's office that will pressure a senior woman who asks for an apartment. Right now it is more difficult for a sorority woman to get an apartment than for an independent. But cases are not common, since the University's automatic permission is' for women 22 and older. If the age level, is lowered to 21, the only way Panhel's conflicting policy will be enforced is by pressure from the deans. If sorority women understood the channel of enforcement when they voted, then clearly the vote represents official sorority approval of pressure from the dean's office to keep senior women in sorority houses, even though independent women may be allowed apart- ments. If they didn't understand the point of authority, then the vote was uninformed. WVHETHER OR NOT the policy is effective, the sorority system has done a disservice both to itself and to the University by keeping the discussion of this issue an internal, semi- secret matter. It isn't an internal question. This is a year of flux for the Office of Student Affairs and for all students. It Is a year when every aspect of the student-administration, student-Univer- sity relationship is under scrutiny. As a part of this overall concern about the role of the student, the right of students to choose their mode of living becomes important. That right involves not just the sorority system, but every student-and it involves the sorority system because it is part of the entire student body.'+ Certainly the sorority system has vested interests to protect, but it must also recog- Inize that- it exists within and by sanction of the University. It's decisions affect all elements of the University. And in a year of change, communication between varied interests is essential. Now that the vote has been taken, there is still one course open to the sorority system. If the vote is considered as a vote of con- fidence that sorority women do like their living, and the possibility of automatic apart- ment permission for 21 year old women does not represent a threat to the sorority system, then there is no need to have a policy at all. INTEGRATION IN THE SOUTH: The PreietsInfluence (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of three articles dealing with federal power for integration in the South. The third will consider state resistance to integration.) By PHILIP SUTIN COURT ORDERS and adminis- trative regulations are not the only weapons the federal govern- ment has to hasten integration in the South. It has the political and moral influence derived from the office of the presidency. The president, as chief of state, can bring great moral pressure to bear on individuals or state and local governments to integrate races, or at least to obey the law. AS HEAD OF his party, 'the president has great political in- .fluence among its members. He can use patronage, choice of local leaders, or direct support to speed integration. This is especially true of a Democratic president, for his party controls the South and meets little opposition there. Neither former President Eisen- hower nor President3 Kennedy have used these political powers to any great degree. Eisenhower used his power min- imally in civil rights matters, He never endorsed the substance of the 1954-Supreme Court desegrega- tion decision, although he did say that as a court decision it had to be enforced. THIS FAILURE to take strong a moral stand has been the cause of much of the violence accom- panying attempts to integrate Southern schools. Events reached crises proportions when, in 1957 Eisenhower was forced to send troops to enforce court de- segregation orders in Little Rock. Following a court order, the Little Rock Board of Education planned to open all-white Central High School to Negroes Sept. 3, 1957. The day before integration was to begin, the Arkansas na-' tional guard seized the school and on the appointed day barred the nine Negroes. On Sept. 20 the national guard was withdrawn in compliance with a court order. The following Mon- day a mob forced the Negro stu- dents from the school. Since he had previously attempt- ed to reach a solution with Ar- kansas Gov. Orville Faubus with- out success, the president was forced to federalize the national guard and send the Army into Little Rock to enforce integration. * * * NEUSTADT in his book, "Presi- dential Power" indicates that if the president had used his in- fluence this crisis may avoided. Had the presi a firm stand before h (R. I.) conference wi be might have turned of events at that point But, at that meeti held all the political ca hower could scarcely pe Arkansas governor to c integration since he ha bilized public opinion ii to accept desegregation and make intransigence untenable for Faubus. ernor had built massI his stand and was si political position and t unresponsive to sugg compromise. Eisenhower's drastic martyred Faubus in t segregationists, stiffen ance, and set peaceful back several years. * * * KENNEDY HAS DC what better during the that he has been in offi Although during the he had made his positi segregation quite clea North, he avoided speal South and let Lyndo equivocate on the is Southern voters. This so matic dualism has ch the Kennedy approac rights. Unlike Eisenhower, t administration has us fluence in a number o discrimination. Eisenho from helping the }cor integration decisions, d the civil rights field. H pose some civil rights and established the C on Equal Employment: Industries under for President Richard M. 1 The Kennedy adminis the tone for integration ber of policy decisions at segregated events ai ing to segregated clubs upon, although not infl bidden. This helps cre integration atmosphere. Toymong ACCORDING TO RE local peace group w demonstration later tl against distribution o toys. Next, they'll have tc history books, medieval and, even, the Bible. W to be a rule of human li have been dent taken is Newport th Faubus, the course ng Faubus rds. Eisen- ersuade the omply with id not mo- ni Arkansas kpeacefully e politically The gov- support for ure of his hus highly estions of order only he eyes of ied resist- integration )NE some- brief, time ice. campaign ion against ar in the krinr in 4-h THE ADMINISTRATION has used its influence to end certain discriminitory practices. The president's defense industry= em- ployment commission, now headed by Vice-President Johnson elimi- nated discriminatory hiring prac- tices at Lockheed Aircraft Cor- poration's Marietta, Ga. plant and Attorney General Robert Kennedy convinced three South serving railroads to integrate their ter- minal facilities. The attorney general pressured the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to ,adopt a rule barring seg- regated facilities. However, he has not to date backed the ICC in enforcing the ruling. Finally, Attorney General Ken- nedy mildly used his moral in- fluence in support of the freedom riders when he sent marshalls to Montgomery, Ala. when local of- ficials seemed ready to let a mob lynch the riders. * * * FEARING THE POLITICAL re- percussions of a strong civil rights policy, the administration has treaded lightly in a number of areas. By PATRICIA O'CONNOR Daily Staff Writer "REMEMBER the McGuffey Reader" echoed through the streets of a small Wisconsin vil- lage this fall and sounded a call to arms for advocates of the phonetic approach to reading against the allies of the word- recognition system.' This cry, sent up by four young fathers recently elected to the lo- cal school board, launched a cam- paign to eliminate modern read- ers abounding in word recognition devices like "See Spot, run, run, run, run," and overflowing with what they considered insipid stor- ies. * * * IN THE MGUFFEY READER, published in 1879, the four men thought they had found an an- swer. The McGuffey Reader, in their opinion, taught reading as no more modern tet could. In- stead of relying on the word rec- ognition method which stresses the child's recognition of a word as a whole, the reader allowed a "phonetics first" approach which emphasizes sounding the word out and putting it together syllable by syllable. In addition, its stories seemed to have the savor of life which they deemed would be ap- pealing to the worldly, present day six-year-olds. The board's choice of the Mc- Guffey Reader met with strong opposition. Taxpayers threatened to impeach the school board and State Superintendent Angus Roth- well- warned that state aid, amounting to about $10,000, could be withheld. THE ONLY CONCESSION made by the board was to cover with brown tape religious passages which critics pointed to as a vio- lation of the separation of church and state. The poor grammar and misspelling in the readers was considered superfluous I light of its other advantages. Tae chair- man of the board, Dennis Beula, said, "McGuffey teaches the basic morals of Americanism - honor your parents, be honest, love ani- mals." Another member of the school board, John Pleiffer, declared "McGuffey builds' recognition of the heroic, the elevated, the pa- triotic strength on which our country is based. f we had had McGuf fey's in our schools we nev- LETTERS to the EDITOR Sportsmanship .. . To the Editor: [HAD HOPED that Bump El- liott's rude encounter with Woody Hayes after the game on TV last Saturday went unnoticed but apparently it didn't. Four dif- ferent people (no Ohio State grads) have brought this up at the office this Monday morning. It's bad enough to be on the losing side, but to have the coach show the world what bad losers we can be is appalling. I hope Elliot sees fit to apoligize to Hayes. --Roy Seppala,'62 Democracy.'. To the Editor: MY YCONGRATULATIONS to Miss Judith Oppenhieim fr an excellent analysis of what is all too often the plight of the fresh- man. I would add, however, an aspect of the freshman's dillusion which she ommitted. An entering freshman expects his university to be a miniature of society either as it is or as it should be. I, and I hope most others, feel that the University should strive to be an ideal community. We should all, therefore, be shocked at the lack of democracy at the University today. The stu- dent is not considered to be an individual with certain unalien- able rights but part of a controlled mass. Legislation is enacted with- out regard to those affected by that legislation e.g. the recent Residence Halls Board of Gov- ernor's decision. The original concept of the uni- versity included a student deter- mined curriculum. At the Uni- versity the student's part in de- ciding what courses are to be offered or what distribution re- quirements should be is purely coincidental. WHAT IS MOST disturbing is that the University does not feel beholden to the United States Constitution where students are concerned. Freedom to hear what- ever one wishes is implied by free- dom of speech and both are violat- ed by such things as speaker bans. The right of due process of law is denied to students who are un- able to have counsel or have wit- nesses testify on their behalf in front of University judicial bodies. er would have had the defections we had in Korea." The dispute had gone far be- yond questions of phonetics or word recognition, The board went on to plan an entire American- ism program featuring a course in American history for seventh and eighth graders, community seminars, pupils' patriotic page- ants and a permanent display in the school of "good history books" that "tell the American story." * * * INTO THE SPOTLIGHT step- ped the self-described educational and patriotic organization, "In- dependence Hall" of Chicago. It offered financial support to the school and the four board mem- bers if state aid was withdrawn. Sentiments of the townspeople were split. A business man who took sides found his store boycot- ted by dissenters, and a minister who spoke in favor of the Mc- Guffey Readers preached to a considerably diminished congrega- tion the next Sunday. In the face of such reaction, compromises; were made. The board conceded toemake the M- Guffey Readers, strong in Prot- estant morality and 19th Cen- tury patriotism, a supplemental text rather than the basic reader for the school year, and State S perintendent Rothwell withdrew his threat of discontinuipg school aid. BUT REPERCUSSIONS have not completely died down. The dispute seems to be one facet of a growing concern with reading skills. Last month seven bpeciallsts published reports under the title "Tomorrow's Illiterates: The State of Reading Instruction Today. The report charges that at least 35 per cent of American young- sters are seriously retarded in reading and that an additional 40 per cent are not reading as wel as they might. Another attack on the "Look-Say" method lies in the recently published book, "What Ivan.Knows that Johnny Doesn't."' The attacks seem to center on the point that American children are incapable of reading perti- nent, vital material due to a lack of, vacabulary. The lack of suffi- cient vocabulary is attributed to the word recognition method. Al- though the two methods cannot always be clearly separated (the phonetic method uses some word recognition and vice versa) advo- cates of the phonetic method would have phonics introduced earlier and much more extensive- ly. THE VOCABULARY of a child learning to read primarily through word recognition suffers by the comparatively small number of words possible for him to memor- ize. He also becomes the victim of confusion. When recognizing the word "moon," by the clue "two little eyes," the words "boon," "loon," and "soon" all become con- fused with it. This necessitates limiting the number of *ords used in readers to a few "safe" words. In the 1930's when word rec- ognition was being championed, its proponents had a good case against current readers. Children wereoften reading wordseand sen- tences which had no meaning for them. Word recognition seemed to offer a solution to this in mak- ing the material more understand- able and thereby interesting to the reader. Advocates of the system wished to teach children to first "see" words and then break them into letters and syllables. The vital second step, however, came to be left out or carried out ineffective- ly. Children are bound to a nar- row range of reading material. As shown in the book "What Ivan Knows that Johnny Doesn't," American children here fall be- hind Russian children who are quickly introduced to really good literature and educational ma- terial after having gained a good grasp ofrreading skill through phonics. The Russian language necessi- tates the use of phonics in learn- ing to read due to the complexly structured alphabet of the lan- guage. English remains more amenable to differing techniques. Moreover, individual students have been observed to adapt to one or the other system more quick- ly. THE VARIABILITY possible in teaching children to read in Eng- lish could very well be used to advantage. Any method which will help to make reading more interesting or easy for children certainly is worthy of being em- ployed. But if the teacher is to instill a love of reading, there must be the long range goal of a large vocabulary enabling young stu- dents to read beyond the basic readers. A possible advantage must not be turned into a disad- vantage by ignoring or subjugat- ina this aoa. 1 .1 xingin e It supported the freedom rides, n Johnson but urged a cooling off period sue before when the decisive crisis developed. )rt of prag- Kennedy favors the politically ac- aracterized ceptable gradualist approach in h to civil integration. Claiming, as did Eisenhower, he current that he has enough power to ef- ed its in- feet civil rights action adminis- f areas of tratively, Kennedy failed to pre- wer, aside sent any new major civil rights id little in proposals to Congress this year le did pro- and did not support such bills in- legislation troduced by Congressmen inde- commission pendent of White House activities. in Defense Actually, the desire to use presi- mer Vice- dential political power is limited Mixon. by practical considerations. The straionsetSouth controls major committee tration set chairmanships in both houses of by a num- Congress. Southern Democrats, not SSpeking particularly favorable to the wel- s frowned fare programs of either Eisen- lei forhower or Kennedy, could cement aeibly - a coalition with northern Repub- licans against welfare legislation, if the administration presses civil rights. This difficulty is illustrated by ers Defense Secretary Robert McNa- mara's speech at a segregated din- PORTS, a ner in Atlanta Veterans Day. Or- till stage a dinarily, he would follow adminis- his month tration policy of not attending f military such functions, but Southerners Richard Russell and Carl Vinson o start on head the armed forces committees romances, in Congress. Antagonizing them ars appear would hamper the Kennedy mili- fe. tary program, so McNamara was --P.D.S. obliged to go to the testimonial dinner. No president is willing to sac,- T N rifice the success of a many sided legislative program .for the sake of a single issue. As long as South- erners are the dominant influence ,onia Moun- in Congress, presidential action yArizona," ,ral Science and influence will be limited to 'man, F. S. serve his entire legislative pro- gram. Let Then REE TIMES A WEEK the women of Mary Markley Hall and several other dormitories ire exposed to the "gracious living" of a sit- own dinner. This gruesome procedure at Markley is far rom "gracious," but despite constant com- faint from the majority of women it appears hat "sit-downs" are here to stay whether they ke it or not. 'Last week, over half of one house in Markley igned a plea (petitions requesting changes are liscouraged in the women's residence halls) sking that at least a decent meal be served if women have to waste more than an hour on inner. FHIS STATEMENT was prompted by a meal last Sunday when there were several tables Editorial Staff ' JOHN ROBERTS, Editor PHILIP SHERMAN FAITH WEINSTEIN' City Editor Editorial Director ;URAN PARRELL ................ Personnel Director iEat Cake of women that had to wait 55 minutes before being served, substitute main course and vege- tables which were still frozen. The women waited half an hour for the main course, chicken. They were then told' that they could not have the chicken because the kitchen had run out of vegetables. The meat and potatoes could not be served without the vegetables, although it was agreed that the women could have their dessert before dinner if they wished. Half an hour after receiving their cake, the main course was finally served-no longer chicken, but shrimp. They were lucky. If they hadn't asked for their cake when they did they would have gotten ice cream. 'By the time din- ner was over the kitchen hadrun out of cake too. SIMILAR INCIDENTS occur every year. Every year "requests" for better organization of "sit-downs," or preferably the abolition of the whole ordeal, returns. Every year these sugges- tions are turned, over to councils and commit- tees and somehow always seem to die there. The administrative communication channels in the women's residence halls are clogged up. Apparently, no one actually knows who has lU, -4U 4- +. ..m..r h .i._r' n :n° sr DAILY OFFICIAL BULLE The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of The Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.mn., two days preceding publication. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29 General Notices The Final Installment payment for Fall Semester fees is due and payable at the Cashier's Office, on or before November 29. east Portion of the Patag tains, Santa Cruz Count Thurs., Nov. 30, 2045 Nati Bldg., at 2:00 p.m. Chair Turneaure. Mathematical Statistics seminar: Seminar in Mathematical Statistics will meet Fri., Dec. 1 at 4 p.m. in 3201 Angell Hall. Prof. M. H. Belz, Univer- sity of Melbourne, Australia, will speak on "Crew Scheduling for Air Line Operations." Please note the change in date. All interested are invited. Placement, On Fri., Dec. 1, the following school will be at the Bureau to interview, TAKEN SEPARATELY, neither court decisions, federal enforce- ment, nor federal influence alone can dominate and carry out civil rights. Each is limited. Court pro- cedures make obtaining civil rights cumbersome and slow. The Justice Department is hampered by in- adequate laws which limit their effectivenn sFinallv the ni~i -