.. Seventy-Sixth Year EDITED AND MANAGED BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS May 11: Mens Sano in Corpore Sano Where Opinions Are Free Trtb WUI Prevail 420 MAYNARD ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. 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. EDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1966 NIGHT EDITOR: MARTHA WOLFGANG Language Placement Tests: Unnecessary Expenses BECAUSE LANGUAGE placement tests at the University have probably not undergone thorough revision in several years, the faculty and admissions com- mittee decision to adopt College En- trance Examination Board achievement tests for this purpose was unquestionably a move toward needed improvement. In this way, too, the University hopes 'to eventually relieve itself of the inconven- ience, responsibility and expense of ad- ministering language placement tests to incoming freshmen during orientation. OWEVER, while the quality of such examinations may be improved, it seems unlikely that the University will accomplish the second part of its goal. According to Professor Benno Fricke of the evaluation and exam division of the Bureau of Psychological Services, the cost of giving the CEEB's here on campus will be at least 70 cents per student re- gardless of whether or not test booklets and other materials are reused. Although this fee has been debated with the College Board people, it cannot be lowered as the Board must collect a roy- alty on every test administered. Further, during the next two or three years while high schools across the country are informing their students of the University's requirement that one of the three CEEB achievement tests nec- essary for admission to the literary col- lege must be in a language, the Univer- sity will undoubtedly be giving a large number of these exams itself at consid- erable expense. FOR EXAMPLE, roughly 4600 new fresh- men will enroll at the University this fall and conceivably as many as 85 per cent of them will not have taken a lan- guage achievement test previously. Thus the University will spend between one and two thousand dollars simply to de- termine what language course, if any, they must take. Unfortunately the pros- pects of immediately cutting this expense to a nominal figure seem slim. Many high schools are not yet equipped with language labs or other facilities for giving the listening part of the CEEB exam, though they may be giving the written part. Since the University will be requiring both sections, it will have to administer the listening part itself-at a cost of 70 cents per student-when the entering freshman arrives for orienta- tion. The alternative is for the high school to go to the expense of equipping itself with these facilities for perhaps four or five students or for the student to take the exam at another high school. If the student chooses the latter, he may be Charged additionally to take the test else- where. THE RELATIVE VALUE of the CEEB examination is still debatable among faculty and admissions committee mem- bers. One or two feel that tests compiled Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich. Published daily Tuesday through Saturday morning. by the Modern Language Association and available to the University through the Cooperative Test Division of Educational Testing Service are of the same quality as the CEEB's and might spare much of the expense. These could be purchased by the University for an -initial cost of 25 to 60 cents and then reused without further cost. OR IF THIS does not seem to be an en- tirely feasible and satisfactory pro- posal, perhaps the University should sim- ply wait the two or three years until such time as all or most of the incoming freshmen and their high schools have had the opportunity to adjust to the new language placement testing plans here. To begin using the CEEB achievement tests immediately-with the first orien- tation groups this summer-would bring the University under more unnecessary expense and inconvenience that exists al- ready. In seeking to improve language placement tests, facilitate counseling and alleviate cost, relatively little seems to have been accomplished as yet. -MEREDITH EIKER Our County ... IN 1906, MARK TWAIN worked on a book which was to be called either "Glances at History" or "Outlines of History." The book was never finished and only two brief fragments remain extant. They were suppressed by Twain's daughter Clara, his literary executor, and were not pub- lished until 1962 as part of the collection "Letters from the Earth." In one of the fragments, Twain ex- pressed his dissent from the campaign the United States was then conducting against Philippine nationalists. A popular phrase of the day was one coined earlier by Stephen Decatur, "Our country, right or wrong!" Twain commented: "OUR COUNTRY, right or wrong! ... "Only when a republic's life is in peril should a man uphold his government when it is in the wrong. There is no other time. "This Republic's life is not in peril. The nation has sold its honor for a phrase. It has swung loose from its safe anchor- age and is drifting, its helm in pirate hands. The stupid phrase needed help, and it got another one: 'Even if the war be wrong we are in it and must fight it out: we cannot retire from it without dishonor.' "Why, not even a burglar could have said it better. We cannot withdraw from this sordid raid because to grant peace to these little people upon their terms- independence - would dishonor us. You have flung away Adam's phrase - you should take it up and examine it again. He said, 'An inglorious peace is better than a dishonorable war.' "YOU HAVE PLANTED the seed and it will grow." The seed is still growing. -STEVE WILDSTROM By LEONARD PRATT T HE UNIVERSITY'S intramural athletics program and the pro- grams of physical education and. general recreation associated with it are in big trouble. Although they were able to get along under the wing of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics for a long time, IM sports are now being pushed out of the nest with, in effect, little more than]good wishes to sustain them. This may or may not be a bad thing; what is unfortunate is that no one has decided whether it is or not and that the situation is thus in danger of being left to find its own solution without any direction whatsoever. THERE ARE two factors which have put the IM program in this position. The first is that, accord- ing to the Regents by-laws, which set up both the intercollegiate athletics board and the IM pro- gram, both intercollegiate sports and intramural sports are ad- ministered by an overall Depart- ment of Physical Education and Athletics. In practice, the result has been that the intercollegiate half, run by the athletics board, has jro- vided almost all the financial sup- port for the intramural half. Every building and most of the equipment used by the IM and physical education staffs was bought with athletics board money, the "profits" from football and, more recently, basketball teams. The second fact is the Univer- sity Events Building, now under construction by the athletics ,board. The building will cost $6.7 million, of which $5.8 million has been raised by bonds running for the next 25 years. The extra $900 thousand plus the interest on the bonds must be provided by the athletics board itself. And, as a faculty member of the athletics board said, this puts the board in a "tight belt situation for the foreseeable future." INSOFAR as the building or the athletic board itself is concerned, there is nothing unusual about tight belts; the University has built few buildings whose con- struction has come off easily. But as far as the IM program goes, this means the cupboard is bare. THIS COMES at an especially bad time as far as the IM and physical education programs go. As enrollment has risen, and as the trimester has become more of a reality, the demand for athletic facilities has risen sharply. With the completion of North Campus dormitories next fall, the need will be even greater. The University needs a new in- tramural building and fields. With the widening of Stadium Boule- vard, the IM program will lose the two football fields which 40 intramural teams have used. IM administrators have been waiting four years for a reply to their re- quest for more field space; no plans exist for IM facilities on North Campus at all. There are few who would deny these IM needs, or the obvious fact that it is the building of the University Events Building which has accentuated them. But be- tween the two, the Events Build- ing was certainly needed more, and the athletic board is evidently incapable, and will be so for quite a while, of financing them both. SO THE BOARD has quite reasonably asked for help for the IM program. Prof. Stuart Churchill a faculty member of the board re- ported the problems to the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs in April. Fritz Crisler, director of the department, is open to suggestions as to how to ease the insolvency. This makes it clear that the IM program and the physical edu- cation program have reached a turning point. There is a real question of how long, and in what form, they will exist in the future. THE FIRST QUESTION that ought;to be asked is whether the University actually needs IM pro- grams. Many would argue for their necessity. Yet it is certain that many students have not seen the inside of the IM building since Homecoming and are little the worse for it. This may well resolve itself into the question of whether an ex- panding University short of money can afford to divert funds into a physical education program, de- sirable as it might seem to some groups. It is, of course, a question of priorities, and someone with some competence in athletics and University planning ought to de- cide those priorities. At the mo- ment matters are evidently drift- ing with neither competence nor concern to resolve them. Second, it is fairly clear that if it is decided that IM sports do have a place at the University, their place ought to be with a board in control separate from the athletics board. The University is the. only Big Ten college whose IM program depends so completely upon the money provided by inter- collegiate sports. DECLINING SPORTS revenues, the rising costs of building con- struction and maintainence and the increasing costs of maintaining competitive teams in the Big Ten all indicate that the University's athletic interests can no longer be as self contained as they were in the past. The gains of the one area are no longer sufficient to offset the losses of the other. Somewhere some extra money is needed if IM sports are to be maintained. Other colleges usually take this money from student fees, assuming all students profit equal- ly from the use of the facilities. Perhaps that is the answer here. THE BOTHERSOME thing is that no one seems to care that much about the matter. If that is the case, then the IM program will die a natural death, and good riddance to it. But if anyone thinks differently, if anyone cares particularly about the IM program, he'd better get to work. * The New Community of Professors EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second article in a three- part series reprinting a speech delivered May 8 by Walter Lipp- mann at a convocation sponsor- ed by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions. III I HAVE SAID enough, I hope to reassure anyone who might think that I am glorifying the professors and attributing to them more power and authority than they are entitled to have. I do not mean to do -that. I have had my share of controversies with a good many professors. What I do say is that the com- munity of professors is in the modern world the best available source of guidance and authority in the field of knowledge. There is no other court to which men can turn and find what they once found in tradition and in custom, in ecclesiastical and civil author- ity. Because modern man in his search for truth has turned away from kings, priests, commissars and bureaucrats, he is left, for better or worse, with the profes- sors. And while we must treat the verdict of the professors with a vigilant skepticism, they do have a certain authority. It comes from the fact that they have vowed to accept the discipline of scholar- ship and to seek the truth by using the best intellectual methods at the time known to contemporary men. TO MAKE SURE that I am not overstating my thesis, let me re- peat. The community of scholars is the court of last resort in those fields of inquiry and knowledge about which scholars, as scholars, are concerned. Thus, if a professor is charged with the murder of his colleague, the court of last resort is not the faculty of his university or the faculties of all the universities. It is the judiciary of the state its which he lives. For the scholar is a scholar only part of the time and in part of his activity. In the role of murderer he is outside the field of scholarship. But if a professor is alleged to have murdered his colleague a hundred years ago, -as in the case of Professor Webster at Harvard, the court of last resort today about his guilt or innocence a ^antury ago is jnot the judiciary of Mas- sachusetts. It is the nistorians who have studied the evidence now available and have been ::onfront- ed with the findings of all the historians who have read tha his- tory of the case. After a hundred years, no one is more quaiified than are the historians to judge the case. REFLECTING on this we come close, I think, to the essential principle of academic freedom. In his relations with the laws of the land, a professor is as subject as any other man to the laws against murder, robbery, cheating on the income tax, driving his automobile recklessly. The laws for him, as for all other men, are what the law-enforcing authorities say they are. The professor has no special privileges and no special im- munity. But in the field of truth ar d error about the nature of things, and of the history and future of the universe and of man, the state and its officials have no jurisdic- tion. When the scholar finds that two and two make four, no police- man, no judge, no governor, no legislator, no trustee, no rich Today and Tom1orrow By WALTER LIPPMANNI alumnus has any right to ordain that two and two make five. Only other scholars who have gone through a mathematical training equivalent to his, and are in one way or another qualified as his peers, can challenge his find- ings that two and two make four. Here it is the community of scholars who are the court of last resort. IT FOLLOWS that they are the court of last resort inadetermining the qualifications of admission to the community of scholars-that is to say, the criteria of appoint- ment and the license to teach. No criterion can be recognized which starts somewhere else than in the canons of scholarship and scien- tific research. No criterion is valid here because it emanates from the chamber of commerce or the trade union council or the Am-rican Legion or the clergy or the news- papers or the ADA or the John Birch Society or any political party.I The selection and the tenure of the members of the community of scholars is subject to the criterion that scholars shall be free of any control except a stern duty to bear faithful allegiance to the truth they are appointed to seek. A judgment as to whether a scholar has been faithful is one that only his peers can render. The supreme sin of a scholar, qua scholar, is to lie, not about where he spent the previous weekend, but about whether two and two' make four. IV IF WE SAY that the vocation of the scholar is to seek the truth, it follows, I submit, that he must seek the truth for the simple pur- pose of knowing the truth. The search for truth proceeds best if the- scholar disregards all secondary considerations of how his knowledge may be applied, how it can be sold, whether it is useful, whether it is good or bad, re- spectable, fashionable, moral, pop- lar and patriotic, whether it will work or whether it will make men happier or unhappier, whether pit is agreeable or disagreeable, whether it is likely to win him a promotion or a prize or a decora- tion, whether it will get a good vote in the Gallup Poll. Genius is most likely to expand the limits of our knowledge, on which all the applied sciences de- pend, when it works in a condi- tion of total unconcern with the consequences of its own findings. BELIEVING THIS, I hold that the university must have at its core a sanctuary for excellence where the climate is favorablento the pursuits of truth for its own sake. In our conglomerate and swarming society the last best hopes of mankind lie in what is done and in what example is set in these sanctuaries. I do not think of them as monastic establishments shut off from the stresses and strains of the human condition. I think of them as societies of fellows within the great corporate institutions that our universities have become, as societies where the relatively few who can pursue truth dis- interestedly will find the support and sustaining fellowship of their peers. V SINCE MAN'S whole knowledge of things is not inherited and must be acquired anew by every generation, there is in every hu- man socitey a culture, a tradition of the true and the false, the right and the wrong, of the good which is desirable and the bad which is to be avoided. This cul- ture is rooted in the accepted ver- sion of the nature of things and of man's destiny. The accepted version evolves and the encyclo- pedias become outdated and have to be revised. Since the prevailing tradition rests on the prevailing science, it follows that modern men must look to the company of scholars in the universities to guard and to preserve, to refine and enrich the tradition of civility. They have to revise the curricula of studies and the encyclopedias of knowledge. THIS DOES NOT MEAN, of course, that the scientists and the scholars are to be regarded, much less are to regard themselves, as a mysterious elite of the initiated who can lay down the law of right and wrong, of good and evil in human affairs. It does mean that insofar as religion, government, art and personal living assume or imply that this or that is trueor false, they are subject to the criticism andrjudgment of the company of scholars. The prevailing and accepted science of the time is the root from which grow the creations of poets and artists, of saints and prophets and heroes. The science of an age is the material with which inspiration and genius create. TOMORROW: Transmitting Knowledge into Learning. '9 Inflation: Serious Government Mistakes . ..._ ... : : ,l w: __ YT - ,, 4 J i y . 1 :, ','f r. . 7i'".:: . "/JI '~rl s mu,.._., ; By PAT O'DONOHUE IT IS FAIRLY common knowl- edge that an inflationary trend exists in the American economy at the present time. The President has acknowledged the problem with urgent pleas to the business community to curtail both its spending and the increase in price levels. The problem is not one of diagnosing tle symptoms to dis- cover the patient's illness, but one of prescribing the cure. The confusion centers around the government itself. As the New York Times aptly described the sit- uation, the "right hand seemingly does not know what the left is doing." Despite presidential warn- ings that changes in specified appropriations could force a tax increase, the House passed a bill boosting several administration appropriations. At the same time, the House Appropriations Commit- tee made significant reductions in another money bill. EVEN THE TOP governmental economists advocate contradictory solutions. Gardner Ackley, chair- man of the Presidential Council of Economic Advisers, in a speech to the United States Chamber of Commerce, cited the continued rise in profits and evidence that prices have risen faster than business costs for labor and material as the main factors in the present trend. He said that "it is time to ask whether a further rise in the share of the profits in the national in- come is in the interests either of the health of the nation's economy costs" have been a major cause for the price increase. MOST ECONOMISTS feel that the government itself is to blame, refuting Ackley's charge against business. They feel that the gov- ernment should attempt to con- trol the situation through some action such as a tax increase. The chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, William McChes- ney Martin, Jr., and his colleagues have frequently advocated a gov- ernmental move to increase taxes and thus relieve some of the anti- inflation burden from the mone- tary policy which the Reserve Board controls and has attempt- ed to tighten. Martin claims that "the logical way to deal with in- flation would be a simple, clean- cut, across-the-board increase in taxes." THE ECONOMISTS see the gov- ernment as the primary culprit in the inflationary situation be- cause only the government can independently raise or lower total spending in the economy over a long period of time. Private forces such as individual businesses, or accidental forces, such as a mon- soon in Viet Nam, can cause in- flation for only a relatively short period of time. Thus, for serious inflation to oc- cur over any length of time, it must be sustained, or, at least tol- erated by the government. Only the government can govern the total spending power, and prices cannot rise much if the spending power does not undergo a parallel increase to support them. IF GOVERNMENTAL actions add to the demand faster than production can meet this increase in demand, inflation occurs. This has been the case in the past months with government expendi- tures soaring as a result of the various "Great Society" programs and the war in Viet Nam, and the monetary policy now in effect has not prevented a big expan- sion in bank loans and the money supply. With a simultaneous full utilization of industry the con- sumer prices have risen because of the increase of money in the economy and the increase in spending power. The government can cut infla- tion off with restraining taxes, a decrease in its own spending, and a tighter monetary policy. Be- cause such moves are unpopular, and because the President and the secretary of the Treasury, Henry H. Fowler, feel that the infla- tionary trend is only temporary, such moves have not been made. FOWLER SAID that the trend of the economy, and the likeli- hood of further inflationary pres- sures were "still unclear." Repeat- ing his stand in the past, he claimed that a tax increase could prove to be a dangerous "over- cure"-it may have its effect aft- er other forces have been working to slow down the boom. Describing the government's aim, Fowler said that the admin- istration was attempting "to slow down without stalling." The main confusion at the present time "is simply to what extent the present exuberance is a relatively tempor- a tax increase would be the wrong method of curbing the present sit- uation. These "if's" are shaky premises on which to base policy. As Con- gress showed last week, the budg- et may not be held intact. The amount of Viet Nam spending needed is never a certain figure, and there is little indication that the monetary policy will be great- ly tightened. President Johnson has made only vague attempts-such as his half-hearted request to the newly formed Labor Management Advis- ory Committee to generate new ideas on how the private sector of the economy could help solve "the crucial domestic issue of the day-the maintenance of our un- paralleled prosperity with econom- ic stability." THE PRESIDENT and his ad- visers are faced with the possi- bility of being proved seriously wrong. If they are, the present in- flationary trend could grow to dangerous proportions. The sit- uation calls for a vigorous cam- paign to bring about deflation. The government should call for a tax increase regardless of the move's unpopularity; tighten the money policy; and most import- antly, drastically curtail its own spending. LETTERS: More About Salaries, Teaching Fellows To the Editor: SINCE APRIL 3, 1966, The Michi- gan Daily has printed several articles and an editorial concern- ing grievances claimed by some teaching fellows. The primary de- mand has been for a 50 per cent increase in wages. In view of the appropriations the University is able to obtain from the Legisla- ture, the increase in teaching costs would probably come from another increase in tuition. AS A TEACHING fellow for the past two years on a quarter time basis in industry (where in my case the wages have been com- petitive and satisfactory to me), I have had no trouble in staying out of debt. I question therefore the complaint based upon poverty wages. TO BRING a bargaining agent into the picture would no doubt hamper the educational process as has been shown in several Detroit area high schools. This would not be in the interest of the students who are only mildly interested in the power plays between employer If O - m WL~7U - r_