.. Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS June 15: A Doctor, in the House? - re Opinions Are Free. 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, ICH Truth Will PrevaiA NEws PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the inidividual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. AY, JUNE 15, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: SUSAN SCHNEPP I 'Truth Coverage' for All; Responsibility of The Press By LEONARD PRATT . MUCH TO almost everyone's surprise, a state House at- tempt to create a fourth Michigan medical school, an osteopathic college, failed last Friday night, 54-38. This was certainly a curious de- feat for the House's Democratic leadership, especially after they managed to march the proposal smartly out of a committee in which it had been stalled earlier. It is a defeat which should be repeated on June 21, when the House will reconsider the bill. THE PROPOSAL-which would create a state authority to con- struct and operate a $60-$100 mil- lion osteopathic medical center in Pontiac-has had a legislative career that was mildly described by one reporter as "like a three- ring circus." When the bill was first pro- posed last fall, Attorney General Frank Kelley, in an advisory opinion, told the Senate that it could not constitutionally create a new state college without the ap- proval of the State Board of Edu- cation. And the board had already said that it would not approve such a college until its "master plan," an overall state educational blueprint, was completed at some future date. So the thoughtful watchdogs of, the people's rights passed the pro- posal in a fit of pique against Kelley. "Hell," one of the senators said later, "he can't do that to us." None of the senators seemed too concerned about the state's need for an osteopathic college, a minor issue, no doubt. WHEN THE BILL was sent to the House many thought it would die quietly. It almost did. Two votes were taken on the proposal in committee last Thurs- day. The first was two votes short of passage. The second passed the bill out of committee and onto the House floor. The dissenters? One mysterious- ly has found some extra money for a pet project, The other is rumored to be preparing for a nice trip. Democracy at work. Unfortunately for the bill's supporters, however, there wasn't quite enough pork to go around, as the House's vote indicates. But there are certainly all the chances in the world of more invitations to dinner before June 21. AS HAS BEEN becoming more and more common, the legislators are in danger of losing sight of issues in the process of proving to one another how important they are. There are really two matters here which the Legislature's cooler heads should take into considera- tion. The first is simply whether the state needs either another college or medical school. Two medical schools already exist, one at the University and one at Wayne State University. Whether the two combined are providing enough medical training for the state is probably a reasonable matter for legislative debate. But even if they are not, the real question is how to provide increases in that training for the least money. Surely the state would get more for its money by increasing the size of its two existing schools than it would by building a new one from the ground up. And in this state the Legislature is certainly working on a fairly limited budget. Whether it is fi- nancially reasonable, considering the present condition of Michi- gan's tax system, to pour millions into a new college project when the colleges which already exist are short of money seems a par- ticularly one-sided question. THE SECOND ISSUE is more fundamental. Just what is the power of the state's board of education? If it can be overriden at the Legislature's whim, what becomes of its constitutional charge to coordinate the work of the state's' colleges and univer- sities? The board at the moment is in an especially touchy spot. It is only as old as the constitution and has yet to have anyone listen to what it says with anything ap- proaching respect. Yet if Michi- gan's colleges are ever to get rid of their schizophrenic tendencies to be all things to all people; the board must have some authority. It is now beginning to put to- gether its "master plan," but if that plan is not to go the way of Gov. George Romney's "Blue Rib- bon Report," if it is not to become meaningless, its authors must swing some weight within the state. THE ONLY WAY they will swing that weight is if the' Legis- lature listens to their recommen- dations. Legislators have the pow- er, by passing this bill on June 21, to tell the board how little they think of it and thus how little they think of a .streamllined edu- cational system of which the state can be proud. * "READ ALL ABOUT IT" screams the pa- perboy of yesteryear. Today the pa- perboy is as silent as -his product, not necessarily out of choice, but from lack of extras. Now, very few "news" items escape the watchful eyes of the press secretary; press conferences are called by the Presi- dent when he is ready to inform the masses. What has happened to the traditional function of the press, to keep the public informed of the events taking place around them? Simply this: it has strayed from its former autonomous position to that of a government lackey. THE NEWS MEDIA, i.e. the press, as a result is often blamed for the lack of facts made known to the man in the street. Many experts view the problem in terms of news service monopolies and journalistic chains stretching across the country under the control of one person, or group of people, such as the Hearst chain. Critics often charge that the "cli- entele" is guilty of "believing everything they read" which results in thoughtless pages printed with the assurance that they will be read with few questions asked. These are facts, but they are not the root of the current press problem; a problem which is reflected in the blank faces voting and acquiescing on issues they know nothing about. WHO, THEN, IS TO BLAME for the mis- information of the masses? A major portion of the trouble belongs on the steps of the White House. Major policy decisions are shrouded in secrecy until the moment the consequences are felt. Last week the New York Times reveal- ed that a story of the Bay of Pigs crisis lay on the managing desk before the abortive invasion actually took place. This revelation took place in 1966; the incident occurred in 1961. The story was not given prominent coverage because the editors felt that this type of priority would endanger the na- tion for political reasons. President Ken- nedy later said that if all the facts had been known he would have been saved from making a grave error which put the nation on the bring of terror for 10 days. Five years may be a relatively short span in the cycle of history but the point is that truth should not be hidden by politi- cal maneuvers. THE "DOMINICAN CRISIS" came and left in a whirlwind; the Marines were called in before the facts were publicly available. A book by New York Times correspondent Tad Szule was printed after we became committed. His book pointed out that many facts lay buried in the swift military migration-facts that, had they been known at the time, may have changed the course of events. Ramparts magazine printed the "ex- pose" of the MSU-Viet Nam fiasco initiat- ed in the late '50's. The article was print- ed in 1966. In all three instances cited above the truth appeared ex post facto; it was too late at the time of their publication to begin the beguine. Why weren't the facts revealed at the time? What has happen- ed to American "truth coverage?" VAGUE REFERENCES to national se- curity conceal timidity and lack of ob- jectivity. But citizens, irregardless of their place in the bureaucratic machine, are concerned with national security- they demand to know exactly how secure they are. Democracy is praised the world over for the power it gives the people to decide their fate. But, decisions cannot be made with ignorance. Turning the lights off may keep the administration secure in its governmental offices; it does not aid the citizen stum- bling on his way to the good, peaceful life. Votes can be obtained by telling the people what they want to hear, but there are few long range benefits in this type of operation.' Now that their sons are dying in Viet Nam, citizens are demanding factual re- ports about the war. It is too late; we are deeply and according to the administra- tion, irrevocably committed. The truth may eventually come out but as in the past, it will be too late; the deed is done. AT THE MOMENT much of our informa- tion on the activities of the regime in Hanoi comes from other countries. Many Viet Nam reports come from individual fact-finding tours of the country, those that survive governmental editing. The involvement is 10 years old, but how long has reliable information been available from our press sources? We criticize the Communist regimes for their "truth coverage" yet ours, though a different process, has approximately the same results. In many cases we hear only what the officials deem it safe for us to hear and the press, on some notable oc- casions, has complied. It is the responsibility of the govern- ment to keep the citizens informed; it is the duty of the people to demand the facts to know the issues which they will be asked to enforce with their lives. Oth- erwise, freedom and the right to govern are of little value once the people are re- duced to the role of yes-men. THE LINES OF A SONG express this thought well: "Seagull I don't want your wings. I don't want your freedom in a lie." -PAT O'DONOHUE When Is an Education Not an Education? i.- The Reforming of General Ed- ucation: The Columbia Col- lege Experience in Its National Setting. By Daniel Bell, Co- lumbia University Press, 320 pp., $6.95 By ROBERT JOHNSTON First of a Two-Part Series WE ARE SURROUNDED on the one hand by prophets of doom who wring their hands and shake their heads in despair over loom- ing crises which they claim are overtaking this country's higher education establishment at such a rate that only the most des- perate crash program of massive reorganization, rebuilding and new building car avert complete col- lapse; and on the other by aca- demic senates and faculty com- mittees that would sooner take to the streets, erecting barricades and passing out weapons, than ap- prove any plan that might de- range, or even slightly rock, the status quo. Faculty politics is a no-man's land. Few presidents or chancel- lors dare go near it, and few pro- posals can survive it-leaving the field to controlling cliques of prima donnas. HOWEVER, intense and en- trenched conservatism in all mat- ters concerning itself notwith- standing, the American university is actually a relatively recent in- vention. While most of us think of it as originating with Plato's Academy or, at the latest, in the medieval monasteries, the grad- uate school, along with the doc- toral degree is actually a 19th century innovation. And few of today's disciplines, all of them exuding an aura of heroic timelessness, have been in existence longer than 10 years. Even history, a bulwark of hu- manistic studies, was undeveloped until the early 19th century. The subject of thisbook, general edu- cation, best defined as an inter- disciplinary liberal arts program for undergraduates, made its first appearance not in Plato's Academy but in Columbia College in 1917, with the introduction of the still- popular Contemporary courses. By the 1930's general education was a central issue in all discus- sions of educational philosophy. In 1938 Robert Hutchins had call- ed for a general education program for undergraduates at the Univer- sity of Chicago, and in 1945 Har- vard's Redbook, entitled General Education in a Free Society, ap- peared. BUT IN SPITE of these and other manifestations of great in- terest in the concepts of general education, undergraduate pro- grams have undergone few re- visions. The rising tide of spe- cialization has swept all before it. Jacques Barzun, quoted by the author (p. 55), is pessimistic: The reality is that the best colleges today are being invaded, not to say dispossessed, by the Chil1drent YOUR CHILDREN are not your children. They are the sons and daugh- ters of Life's longing for itself. They come through you but not from you, And though they are with you yet they belong not to you. You may give them your love but not your thoughts, For they have their own thoughts, You may house their bodies but not their souls, For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your advance agents of the profes- sions, by men who want to seize upon the young recruit as soon as may be and train him in a "tangible skill." His lament may yet be proved premature, and we can only hope so, for the amazing fact is that, despite allrthe blitter of scholar- ship and research eminence dis- played by the great universities in the recent American Council on Educational report on graduate education, undergraduate educa- tion almost everywhere in this country is a tremendous waste of time, effort and money. As the Berkeley riots demonstrated, new approaches and new plans are desperately needed. They have been pitifully lacking. FEW CRITICS have had much to offer in the way of concrete, effective programs for averting the disasters that they foresee or for repairingupresent chaos. Their only solution is more money for more of what we already have. On the other hand, few of the tradi- tionalists can identify with any precision the principles and their benefits which they defend so zealously, and fewer still ca offer many rational reasons for their positions. What has happened is that change has occurred by default and, while the old cliches and superficial patterns have lingered on, everything underneath has eroded away, leaving most univer- sities in the sad situation Prof. Barzun describes. THIS BOOK, a report to the Columbia faculty published for general consumption, dusts off the concepts and philosophies of both general education and liberal edu- cation, clarifies them, updates them and manages to fashion from them a curriculum and an institution calculated to provide its undergraduates with an edu- cation quantitatively and qualita- tively several times better than any they might receive anywhere else in the world. Such elusive concepts as quan- tity and quality are of course hard to pin down when discussing undergraduate education. How- ever, they can be roughly thought of as measuring the potential in- terest and absorption of students in what is offered them and as the variety and difficulty of tasks the students are intellectually pre- pared to undertake on graduation. It is clear that if Morningside Heights takesthese proposals seriously and succeeds in fash- ioning new programs out of them, then the Ivy League as a whole, which will be quick to adopt suc- cessful reforms, will continue to dominate undergraduate education in this country and the graduates will more than ever be successful out of all proportion to thier num- bers in either scholarly or worldly pursuits. THIS BOOK traces first the history of general education in the three colleges in which it has had its principal genesis and de- velopment, Harvard, Chicago and Columbia. The liberal arts phi- losophy developed in these schools underlies, theoretically at least, every liberal arts college in the country, but for those of us brought up in the large state uni- versity version of the "college," it has served in reality as little more than an administrative conven- ience, its course offerings unified only by virtue of being listed in the same section of the general catalog. BERKELEY IS the outstanding example. The student there is set down in one of the most luxuriant academic jungles in the world, supposedly to explore it, seeking out and developing his own in- terests. Such freedom only means to the departments to provide for as they will, with neither central- ized philosophy to justify nor cen- tralized control to organize the content of an undergraduate's education. As often as not, as a result, there isn't any, for depart- ments are by definition specialized and it ishwhollytnatural that, given a chance, they offer spe- cialized courses. The graduate will probably have had several mediocre English and history courses and maybe one very good course in one of these fields. Chances are somewhat poorer that he will have had an exciting course in either sociology or psychology (and certainly not in both), and they are lower still that he will have found his way into a good political science or philosophy course. Finally it is highly unlikelyuthat he will have. spent any time at all in either a good mathematics or science course, all of which leave him, at best, with half an education. AT COLUMBIA, however, the philosophy of the traditional col- lege is still very much alive. It is significant to note in this respect that academic power at Berkeley resides in the individual faculty member, jealously guarding his research funds, his graduate stu- dents and his reputation, and policy is effectively strait jacketed by the Academic Senate, where faculty members devote them- selvesto protecting each other's interests. In contrast, policy at Columbia can be discussed within a much more fluid structure with the Uni- versity Council, composed of the president, the deans and elected representatives from each school, retaining some control near the top. To date, general education has suffered from a considerable amount of fuzzy thinking in its description and implementation. This brings to the problem long experience in the general educa- tion programs of both Columbia and Chicago and the modern per- spective and analytical tools of a well-known social scientist. THE KEY to this book's ap- proach, providing the vitally im- portant link between the tradi- tional college and the modern academic environment, is spelled out in the first chapter, "Inten- tions." While the author states that "the principle is simple, the applications are never," the first step is one of definition . .. What is the college to do? "In this day and age," he says (p. 8), "and ever more in the coming day and age," its "distinctive function must be to teach modes of conceptual- ization, explanation and verifica- tion of knowledge." While the secondary school must emphasize "primary skills and fac- tual data," and the "necessary concern" of the graduate or pro- fessional school "is with special- ization and technique," the college is left "to deal with the grounds of knowledge: not what one knows but how one knows.". This rationale is restated in Chapter Five, "The Contemporary Curriculum." The "singular func- tion" of the college can be "the training in conceptual analysis in the grounds of knowledge, the criteria of theory, and the stan- dards of judgment" (p. 181). Once this proposition is accepted, all the rest of the author's analysis and his suggestions follow in logical order. HOWEVER, beforebturning to the heart of the book, "Some ModesteProposals," Chapter Three on "The Tableau of Social Change" demands attention. The rest of the book could be elim- inated with no great loss. It reads like a graveyard of old faculty reports - dull, repetitiousand largely irrelevant with respect to the changes the author calls for, for they are fully understandable quite apart from unending dis- course on the proposals that have, preceded them. One can only con- clude that these other large sec- tions of this book were written to dull the senses of the author's more traditional colleagues at Columbia who will eventually be voting on his recommendations. The author-as-sociologist is most. at home in Chapter Three, bril- liantly sketching the new com- bination of social roles that the universities are assuming, some reluctantly, some eagerly, some without even knowing what's hap- pening. The rise of the federal government in education, the im- pact and implications of the growth of knowledge and of popu- lation, and an increasing national interest an skill in "future- interest and skill in "future- oriented" planning are the major A BRISK REVIEW of man- power needs and the education resources available to meet them shows that, "Given the direction of the economy and the weight of government policy, it is quite clear that in the coming decades the demand for professional and tech- nical personnel will place a con- siderable burden on the education- al system." (p. 84). These are common enough ob- servations, if succintly put, but the author goes on to note their implications-the coming depen- dence of the economic growth rate not on physical capital but "human capital." While "physical, moneywcapital can be generated rather quickly (as the Soviet Un- ion has shown) by restricting con- sumption and 'sweating' a popula- tion," he says, "the planning of human capital is a much more difficult and arduous process," and one which requires a 25 year "vo- cational planning cycle" (p. 86). In the "already visible skeleton structure" of the new society, "the basic innovative features of the society will derive not from busi- ness as we know it today, prin- cipally the 'product corporation,' but from the research corpora- tions, the industrial laboratories, the experimental stations, and the universities." THUS: (pp. 106-7) -"The university is becoming one of the chief innovative forces in the society" and "the chief determinant of its stratification system"; -"The job of mass higher edu- cation will become the predom- inant task of the colleges in the last third of the 20th century" -With increasing differentia- tion in society, "the university takes over the function (once handled largely 'on the job') of training persons for specializa- tion"; -"Insofar as old skills will be- come obsolete and traditional-sub- jects will erode, anew, concept of 'continuing education' will, come to the fore"; and -"The university has become, at least in American life, the major focus of intellectual and, to some extent, the established cul- tural life of the country." THIS UNIVERSITY is a far cry from that of pre-World War II days, when the liberal 'arts, college which the author is seeking to revive was sedate and. secluded. In outlining these coming changes he is of course being realistic in assessing the future, but he has set himself a hard task in seeking to find a place here for "general education." Tomorrow: The Recommendatf ons 4 1:, The AID in Viet Nam: Inexcusable Development 4. THE AGENCY for International Devel- opment and its predecessor agencies have poured millions of dollars of eco- nomic assistance into South Viet Nam since June, 1954. This assistance aims at implementing the following principles, 'supposedly reaffirmed at Honolulu in February, 1966: Eradication of social injustice. Establishment of a stable economy and a better life for the people. Encouragement of a sense of national unity. SINCE THE RATIONALIZATION for this huge amount of aid is based on one of the most fundamental myths of the Viet Nam conflict-the belief that the con- flict is not inherently a civil war but rather a clear-cut case of aggression from the North and China--most of the funds that are being poured in, are going down the drain. Thus, the so-called principles "reaf- firmed" at Honolulu are a subterfuge for the true nature of the AID missions: that of bribing the people of Viet Nam and the American public into accepting the State Department's distorted view of the current Asian situation. ID IS A COUNTER-insurgency pro- AID has helped to train, equip and or- ganize a 52,000-man National Police Force, with a capability for small unit action. One of its major activities is to restrict Viet Cong sources of supply and hamper infiltration. Viet Nam expects to have a 72,000-man police force by the end of the year. AID is providing $27.03 million towards this expansion. THERE ARE SOME AID programs that are not connected with military oper- ations per se such as school development and food assistance programs, yet, these are reminiscent of the kind of lip service to working toward negotiations that has been used by the U.S. administration to cover up its escalations. A case in point was the increased step-up in bombing on the same day UN Ambassador Goldberg brought the Viet Nam issue before the UN. If the avowed principles of the AID Missions are to eradicate social injustice and to bring a sense of national unity and a better life-for the people, then the AID programs are not working. These princi- ples can never be brought about if we continue to support a police state and work against the Vietnamese people's best interests, which are the best interests of the peoples of the world. (IN JUNE 16 a group of students includ- Out of the Quagmire? THERE IS reason to think that the recent disorders in South Viet Nam have had a significant effect not only in Congressaand in the country at large, but at the top of the administration. It is no secret that Secretary of D e f e n s e Robert McNamara's Montreal speech, which broke so tadically with the ideology of the, administration, grew out of in- creasing skepticism and doubt about the soundness of our course in Asian affairs. McNAMARA HAS special rea- sons for realizing that in spite of the continual escalation of our forces in Viet Nam the forces against us are growing larger, and their fighting morale, despite deaths and defections, is unim- paired. Moreover, as the South Vietnamese army draws back from the fighting and increasingly dis- engages itself from the front, the military burdens upon the United States grow ever greater. Against this loss of confidence there is at the moment little but the President's own faith that Today, and Tomorrow By WALTER LIPPMANN let events take their course. It is dangerous to do this because it is a near certainty that no South Vietnamese government able and willing to play a substantial part in the war can be put together under Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky and his junta. This being the reality of things, the United States will find itself increasingly alone. And this is the prelude to disaster. It is the pre- lude either to the disaster of a radical enlargement of the war all over Southeast Asia and into China, or it is the prelude to the disaster of a forced and humiliat- ing withdrawal of our troops. IF THE PRESIDENT fails to take the initiative, if he does not Does he take the gamble because he believes that the Viet Cong and Hanoi and Peking are tiring of the war and will soon, be pre- pared to make peace with Gen. Ky? THE ACTUAL BLOCK which prevents his taking a real initia- tive-not merely verbal appeals for a negotiation-is rather that the war is at a stalemate. We have not won a victory, and no victory is in sight. As a result of the stalemate, a negotiated settlement of the con- flict cannot and will not look like an American success, and Lyndon Johnson has a visceral aversion to unsuccess. Whatever goes on in Viet Nam during the coming months, the critical question here at home is whether and how Lyndon, Johnson can bring himself to accept any- thing less than success in an en- terprise where he has staked so much of his personal reputation and so much of his country's prestige. IN THE PERSPECTIVE of his- tory there is nothing unusual for 0